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Page-DB-Sunday Times-sentinel -

Pomeroy-Middlepo,rt....,.GalllpoiJs, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

October 27, 1991 .

Autumn's haryest crops -u·p as .-visual Hall9ween

lly IIAMIIA~A MAYEM
For AP SpecUII Fe11tures
It's time to decorate for Hatlowcen, so Beverly Simons is plann!ng a trip wilh the kids.tci the youp1ck-em pumpkin patch not far
from her weekend house near
Pawling, N.Y.
"Pumpkins are so c hea~, an.~
t~ey make a great decoratiOn,
says Simons, a public relations
director in New York City.
She a~d her husband, Gordon
Conley, hke to go all-out at Halloween for family and friends .
When tlfey give parties, costumes
are optional but decorations are a
must Guests sometimes carve and
carry home their own jack- o'lantern.
At _their last party -.an indCJ?routdoor aflarr for 35 w1th carvmg
on the deck ...: a family of paper
ghosts swayed in the breeze in the
entryway, and pumpkins consorted

wilh gourds, autumn leaves, Indian
com and bittersweet on tables and
mantelpiece. Other times, they bundied com shucks, 8 feet tall, in rib-_
bons and ringed them with pots of
chrysanlhemums outdoors.
"It's not expensive and· adds so
much to a party when the guests
see you've gone all out," Simons
says.
Professional party planners, floral designers and i~~rior dccorators agr~. By combmmg the bounty of autumn's harvests w1th candy
com and candles in uaditional colors, they say, decorating for HalIoween can be both quick and relatively inexpensive. ·
Beverly Church, a New Orleans
party consultant and co-author of
"The _Joys of Entertaining"
(Abbeville, 1987), says you should
decorate to excess for the best
effect. "The entrance sets the tone
and, of course, decomte the table

where you are serving."
{and gold) marking pens arc availAt the front door, amass pump- · able at an supply stores.
kins in various sizes and shapes.
For easy entertaining, Church
You can also pile them in the fire- , combines the menu with the decor.
place,..;... if you're ·nO! planning to She orders a 6'foot hero with sanduse i~
wich flllingsonly in the foul' feet in
Make a wreath with a base of the middle. She then uses each end
moss and attach miniature pump- of _lhe bread Iot a floral arrangekins, ffesh flowers and autumn meot. From the top of the loaf she
leaves.
sc!)Ops out enough bread to msert a
Bales of hay can be used for small bou~uet set in a plastic bowl
extra pany ~ts. For ~ded decor, and florists foam.
tie the bales w1th b1g nbbons, plaid
New . York decorator S~m
perhaps. To make cleanup eas1er, Botero hkes to take the fam1har
carry each bale indoors in a.large elements .of Halloween and use
plastic garbage bag. Once the 'bale them in a slightly different way.
1s in place, roll the bag down and For exarr.ple, cut a big jack
tuck it underneath. Before remov- o'lantem out of orange paper and
ing the bale, pull the bag up to use the cutout as a base for a table
cover.
arrangement of gourds, candy com
. If you're using placecards for and black an~ orange tapers.
dmner, Church suggests: Wnte
Another tdea for a tablescape:
names in silver on autumn leaves. Arrange com husks radiating in a
Slit miniature pumpkins across tl)e · circle from the center of the table.
top and insert a leaf in each. Sliver Fill small clear glass bowls with

·
·
·
•
h
•
·
to survzve toug times
CatifiSh P. , odu·ce ...'S ho,ne
.1'
,
.

WASHINGTON {AP) - The
rise of the catfish - from lowly
backwater scavenger to the king of
aquaculture- is being undermined
by slipping farm prices after a
decade of impressive growth. .
The Agnculture Department
said catfish prices at the farm tumbled again last month, to 59 cents a

I '

pound, the lowest levci in four
years. At the same time, farm- .
raised catfish pmce•sed during the
month was up 21 percent compared
with a year ago, and totaled 33.2
million pounds.
.
While average prices last year
ranged from a low of 72 cents to a
high of 78 cents, this year's prices

Economic conditions
• f

By STAN EVANS
GALLIPOLIS - The recovery
continues and essentially is unfolding as we anlicipated. However, two
factors muddle its recognition generally: 1). it is still
early in lhe recovery phase and 2).
the magnitude of
the growth that we
expect to return is
significantly' beIowaverageinhis- ···
taical tenl!s. As a

result, to the average person in business or on the street, 1t is difficult to
distinguish the difference between
the so-ailed better conditions now
and the circumstances not that long
ago when the U.S. was in recession.
In fact, the degree of improvement i8
probably only obvious to number
crunchin~ economists as it is a broad
range of Improvements, mosdy slill
smaltish, that sum to grudgingly better overall economic conditions.
From the broadestperspective,lhe
eoonomy'scurrcntsiblationismarked
by growlh, agood pmtion ofwhich is
a function of a rebound from the
contraction justexperienced. This has
translaled into some moderate growth
in employment and slill limited pressure on prices which continue to
padually C'-!ISC· By sector, the indUS·
trial segment and expons are the
leading sources of growth at present.
· Theconsumcr'serratic inclination to
spenjl a litlle more is conuibuting
slishtly to ·overall growlh, but restraintremains the individual's waleh-

word. The prevailin~ improvement
in housing/construcuon persists, but
in a less than typical fashion than
historically wimessed 81 this stage of
recovery as the lingering impact of
this segment's past excesses impedes
activity.
,
Looking forward, there appears to
be no reason to fear "the dreaded
doui&gt;le dip recession" that a sufficient number of pundits 1111d media
types persist in uumpeting. More
importantly, no evidence has emerged
to alter our expectation of an expansion with growth of sub-par levels.
The "hangover" of the 1980'9
excesses, difficulties on both the
supply and demand sides of the credit
equation and the geneilillack of pent
up demand are among the factors that
wiU result ina slow growth economy.
A more fully developed version of
current conditions is what we con- .
tinue to anticipate for the economy
through the end of this year and into
1992.
'
Namely, growth will gradually
accelerate and become more obvious. However,the level auained will
be less than average allowing pric!!_:f
pressure to remain relatively subd1
Overall growth will be led by the
indusuial sector and trade, supplemented by some contribUtion from
less than average consumer demand
and improvement in housing/construction from still mther low levels
of activity:
[Mr. Evans is an Investment Broker for The Ohio Company in their
Gallipolis office)

·
have fallen steadily from 69-cents Delta (arm; said tanners locally
in January.
,
receiving even less for their catfish
"I h&lt;JPC most of us will weather 1han the 59-cent U:~D~J.""er~ge
this stdiin;-but it's baaright now," announced Monday for September.
said Billy Davis, a eatfish fanner in
A large processing plant in his
Belzooi, Miss.
. area was paying 55 cents a pound
In a recent repon, USDA said this weelc; while smaller !inns were
fanners hooked on catfish may be offering even less, Davis said.
forced out of the business if the
,
As a resul~ &amp;orne farmers are in ·
·industry retrenches under current
prices.
"itrrible financial shape," he said,
•'The catfish indusuy is facing a as they pay off real estate loans and
critical period that could have long- a summer's worth of feed and fuel
term implications for the future of costs.
the industry," it said . "These
Davis said his own fuel biU was
prices are placing considerable ceo- $16,000 last month and $18,000 in
nomic pressure on farmers and if August. His feed costs reached
sustained at this low level, a .$1!0,000 in August and $142,000
retrenchment in the industry may in July, and total $570,000 for the
occui as wowers are fon:ed out of year.
.
business.'
.
"You put all these costs in these
Davis, who devotes 550 water fish, mostly from about April till
acres to catfish ~t liis Mississippi October,'' he said.

are

.·

.

~reats

·Twins
·edge Braves
for ' crown

;

candy com and intersperse "them on lowccn is 'trick or treat,"' says R..:
the husks with orange and black Scott BfQmley, a New York aithl- ·:
votive eandles and tiny gourds.
teet who Often decorates night .•
For a more sophisticated look, clubs.' "Make _lhe .decor so bizarre :
steer clear of the true black and · that people know you are tricking -&gt;
orange colors.
.
them, and it will be a treat."
.
"Soften them by using natural
.For a table centerpiece, he sug-:;
tones in an orange cast,'' says gests creating .illusions such as an .,
Ren~y Reynolds, a floral designer upside down fruit compote, usingj
whose book , •'The Art .of The wax or wooden frUit, glue and•
Party " will be published by skewers.
'
~
Vikin'g Penguin next year.
'_'Turn your pictur~s ups~de ; ·
"Hydrangeas and pyracantha , d?wn," he says. "If you re servmg ~
which has bright orange-red dmner, use m1smatched cutlery and"
berries, can be cilt from the yard. 'plates."
···
- . '
And peach-tone flowers such as
In dance clubs, lighting and:
roses go beautifully with lhese.'·'
reflective surfaces are used to ere- :
. Even if you're a sophisticate, ate mysterious spaces, and Brom- ·
you don't have to forgo fantasy. ley was a master of the big effect in:
Reynolds dresses old mannequ 1n his decomti6n of New York's Stu';
parts and arranges them on a table dio 54 in its prim,e. He _says you:
as if the rest of the f1gure were can change the d1mens1ons of a.
under it.
room by taeking up mosquito !let- ~ .
"There are wonderful inflata- . ting or creating a foreSI of "trees~· .
bles around now,' • he says. fr~I?; slim slrips Qf Mylar that 111n~
"Dmosaurs and pterodactyls are cellmg to floor.
.
·
•
availableandmoreinterestingthan
''Once,"herecalls,"wefilleda:
the obvious Mylar balloons. Look vestibule-halfway up with plastic ;
for ,them at a natural history muse- packing pellets and people had to~
urn or toy store."
walk through the pellets to gel to _,
"The phrase that identifies Hal- lhe party."
-~
•

Thanks to all of you in Gallipolis, for being my
"Good
•
'

•
Vol. 42, No. , 23
Copyrlghled 1~1

· FAU. IPICIAL

.. .

.

Union members rally.in
support of steelworkers _
RAVENSW®D. W.Va. {AP)Union members said they drove
from as far away as Michigan to
show suf,portfor 1,700 idled United Stee workers at Ravenswood
Aluminum Corp, because it's
important for unions to stick
together.
·
More !han 300 cars from out of
state brought hundreds of union
supporters to join a crowd of about
5,000 at a rally Saturday for the
Ravenswood Aluminum workas.
"This is democracy in ·action,"
said Merle Anmstrong, a member
of United Sleelworkers Local 5668
in Ravenswood.
"They can come after us next.
And the whole purpose of a union
to stand up together for solidarity,"
said Brenda Paton, a United Auto
Workers member from Deuoit
The I, 700 workers have been

\

. POSTER CONTEST WINNERS • The preschool class at Carleton Sc:honl received the r1rst
plate ribbon for the Bus Safety Week poster .
contest held there last week. Picturell, J.r, are
'Teacher Teresa Porter, Adarn Wils(ln, Nicki

Our self·liQI'lting I 00% tl'lermostoticolly controlled Model-l 000 !'los revo-.
lutionized pellet stove recl'lnology. Elegant and efficient. the iOOO
tearures a 65 lb. nopper wrrn o coil spring feed sysTem for carefree
operation. A beautiful addition to. any liv1ng space. it delivers 40.000
BTU's of 1\eor at only .9 grams per hour particulate emiss1ons. The
Quodro-Fire 1000. fill&lt;! and forget it .. you hove more important things
do.

1 Stcllon, 10 Paget 25 cenlo

. A. MuiUrnedlt Inc• .._,,1111*

· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, OctobeJ 28,-1991

Wilson Glenn Johnson and David Young. Sec;
ond pl~ce went to the junior/senior class and
third place to Jennifer Grey or the primary
class.

Bus Safety Week observed

SAVE $179

ONE TON FUEL FREE WITH PURCHASE OF I
QUIDRA ·FIRE PELLET STOVE IEFOII OCIOII1311t.
All stoves I• stock ••• reedy for l....dlate delivery

Several activities were carried
out as the Meigs County Board of
Menial Retardation observed Bus
Safety Weel: last-week'.
' · ·
·• The MR/DD program provides
uansportation to over 90 children
and adults each day. The program's
buses travel more than 380 miles,
totaling 95,000 miles annually .
Meigs .Industries vehicles travel
over 100,000 miles a year to provide sheltered employment to adult
enrollees. Carleton School provides
transportation to children over the
entire county as opposed to a district.
.
Staff within the program attended an eight-hour course in "Passen-

~­

HOURS: 9-5 Mon.·Sat; Closed Sunday. Evtnlnga by Appointment.
FREE PARKING
701 SECOND AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
Beside Paperdoll Dresa ShOp

A.P.R. FINANCING ON
NEW CARS

ger Assistance Training" sponsored everyone participated in bus evacuby the Ohio Department of Trans- ation drills to prepare for emergenpilrtation. The training is mean~ to cy situations.
.
1mprove overall safety and provid.~ -- ·Througb&lt;W the week, students
ed specific training on helping stu- of Carleton School competed in a
dents and adults who have physical . Bus Safety Week poster contest.
handicaps. In addition to this Contest winners are lhe pre-school
course, bus drivers are required to class members who made the
hold America Red Cross First Aid poster as a group project The class
certification, including training in used the theme of how to be safe
dealing with 'epilepsy seizul'es and on and outside of the bus in their
other medical conditions.
poster. The seco!ld place winner
Enrollees· and staff attended a was the junioi/senior class and
presentation· of the film entitled third place the primary class.
"Death Zones". The film emphaBus Safety Week was observed
sizes that passengers share w1th in school districts and MR!DD prodrivers the responsibility for safe grams nationwide.·
uansponation. Following the film

off the job since last Nov. 1, when
their contract expired:-They say
they have been locked out;
Ravenswood Aluminum, which has_
hired I ,000 replacement workers,
says the union members are on
strike.
George Yost, a member of the
Plumbers and Steamfitters Union in
Saginaw, Mich., said the
Ravenswood Aluminum dispute
could spell uouble for his union.
"It's not a matter of where it's
at, it'S just a matter of :-vhen it's
going to get to you. And 1f we continue to let people work at lower
standard of wages, receive no pension, no insurance, it's going to get
caught up with us," Yost said.
"We could have the same problems. We could end up on strike, in
the same scenario where we're out
and the company doesn't want ,to

negotiale fairly." said Hugh Lester,
l!ead of a UnitCU Steelworkers local
in Detroit. ·
"We could end up on strike.
They could replace us," Lester
said.
Many of those from out of state
at the rally near the aluminum plant
also had come to West Virginia
two years ago to suppon the United
Mine Workers in its 10-month
strike against Pittston Coal Group.
Some of their vehicles displayed
signs reading, "Standing Up
Together For America Convoy."
A guard who answered lhe telephone at the plant gate Saturday
referred questions to Ravenswood
Aluminum spokeswoman Debbie
Boger. She did not answer her
office phone Ibis weekend and does
not have a home phone listed in
Ravenswood directory assistance.

Supplem(4ntal coaching con.tracts
approved by Eastern School Board

•

10

Pardy cloucfy tOI!IghL Low •
near SO. Tuesday, mosdy sunny,
high near 70.

.'

EnVIIOAamo
Hooting, lno.
Like a good neighbor, Srare "arm·is !here.

J.D, 10-S
Super Lotto: .·
l-17 •13-18-4344
Kicker:529364

·Truly - Matchless

11A11 - .....

State Farm Insurance Compame~ • Home Othces : 81oom•ngton , tll•no•s

Pick 3:398
Pick 4: 6865
Cards: 2-H, 5-C,

Page4

·GALLIPOLIS•••
my neighborhood.
For the I!OSt 27 years, I've been heiP.ing my ne~hbors
here in Gallipolis protect the thi!I!P. ihey value with
State Form insurance. I'm P.roud of this community
and grateful for lily many friends here.
·

Ohio Lottery

Two supplemental coaching
· contracts were approved and several names were added to the substitute teachers' list at a meeting last
week of the Eastern Local Board of
Education held at Eastern High
School.
,
Approved supplemental contracts went to Dennis Eichinger,
junior high boys basketb.all coach,
and ·Tammy C&amp;pehart, vo1un~
assistant girls basketball coach.
Richard Coleman, Sue Grace,
Betty Hutchinson, David Kaufman,
and Bonnie Kibble were hired as
substitute teaChers for the remainder of the cUJTent school year. The
. board also employed Kay Bailey as
an in-school suspension monitor to
be used on an as needed basis on a
pun:hased service co~uact, ~eceivmg $5 an hdiir; effecllve unul Dec.
31.

Kay Bailey waS employed as a
substitute secretary and the resignation of substitute teacher Karla
Brown was accepted.
. ·
The Board heard a brief report
from Supt. Richard D. .Smith
regarding the Coalition's efforts
pertaining to equity and adequacy
of funding for Ohio School, and lhe
status of grants for programs with
~tbe~niversity of Rio Grande.
Smith ~so reminded members of
the OSBA Capital Conference set
for Nov. JJ ,J3.
The request of Joe Bailey,
David Chadwell, Debbie Weber,
arid Janice Weber for partial tuition
reimbursement in accordance with
the provisions in the master agreemcnt was approved.
Approval was given to a contract between Eastern Local, the
. Meigs County Schools and the

.

University of Rio Grande in ~
to the State DejMU11cnt of Education's Rural Dernonslration Graill ,
Payment for a computer and
printer at Riverview Elemenwy
was approved as was advertising
for fl~et insurance for the year.
Honor rolls for lhe first six week
pading period were noted and resolution of commendation to the
swdenw given.
• ·
A special meting was set for
Tuesday at 6 p.m . at the liigh
school cafeteria, with the next reg·
ular meeting scheduled for Nov. 21
at 6:30 p.m. at the cafeteria,
Attending were Ray Karr, president; Charles Knight, vice president, and members, Bill Hannum,
l. 0. McCoy, and Jim Smilh.
An executive session was held
to discuss personnel matters.

HURRY, OFFER ENDS OCT. 31

1991 BUICK SKYLARK 4 DR.

1989 BUICK RIVIERA .

Power windows, air, tilt, stereo.

Loaded, leather Interior, local exec. trabe.

saaaa

•::t $12,900

#086

lion on Saturday in Columbus. The band will
march in tb.t'Datlonally televised Michigan
Thanksgiving Day Parade.

BAND RECEIVES SUPERIOR RATING •
The award-winning Eastern High School
Marching Band, u,nder the ~irectlon of Willial!l
Hall received a superior rating at state compel!-

'

'

EHS band earns superior rating·
The ·band will be making its first ers will be holding their annual
The Eastern Marching Band
earned a superior rating at the major out-of-state appearance in craft show on Nov. 9. The marchOMEA State Marching Finals held · the nationally televised "Michigan ing band, concen band and seventh
at Cooper Stadiuin in Columbus on Thanksgiving Parade" which will grade band will perfonn, kickingSaturday. This is the second con- he aired on CBS on Thanksgiving off the show at 9 a.m . when the .
secutive year that the band, under morning. The band will also, take doors open. The show will .run
the direction of William Hall, has part in an indoor "Baule of the from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the gym~a­
received a superior mting.
Bands" contest the night before lhe sium and the public is invited .to
come and hear th~ bands.
The band was the smallest to parade.
,
.. .
participate in Saturday's contest.
This is a umque compeuuon m
Performing before fans and judges, that there is no class size structure
the 32-member band captured five and the 32-member Eastern Band
"I" ratin~s from the six judges. will have to compete against bands
Two Coolville ·women were
Three "I s".are necessary for a many times its size. '.'There ;u-e nine
arrested
on Saturday afternoon and .
superior mting. ·
bands in the contest," said Hall,
}:astern's field commander, "with Eastern being so small no . charged with grand theft by decejh
Sherri Wolf, also captured a superi- one expects us to do anything. So, tion following an incident that took
or rating. 'Ibis is the first. time in there Is absolutely no pressure, and place at Big Wbeel on Friday night.
Meigs Coonty Sheriff James M.
lhe band's history lha,t a field com- we can just do it for fun."
.
Soulsby
reports that Big Wheel
mander received a superior rating
The EHS Marching Band is the
at state competition.
smallest band to ever receive an
Commenting on the perfo1- invitation to participate in that
mancc, director, Bill Hall said, parade.
"This was very rewarding. We
During the next f~w weeks, lhe mg that two females - Melissa A.
IUive tried all season to put togelher band will be practicing new music Fouse, 21, and Tina M. Blair, 30 •
a suong performance which both for the two mile parade, and also had purchased merchandise and
the judges and band felt was our start ·making the transition from had' written a check in the amount •
·of $597.70. Appropriate identificabest. We're really glad it came at marching to concen !ieason.
this time. Now we can relax a bit
As a pan of the efforts·to raise lion was provided.
On Saturday morning, Campbell
and prepare for the Deuoit trip."
money for the !rip, the band boost-

1991 BUICK REGAL 4 DR.
V-6, power windows, cruise, tilt,
door lockS, stereo.

1991 BUICK CENTURY

c•••·•••aocat

·COIIPIRI OUR
PIICDI

trict supervisor Alan Holter, rigbt, presented the
team with the trophy during the recent annual
meeting and banquet or the SWCS held at Meigs
High School.

Two Coolville _women charged with grand-theft

*12,888
.IIOUDIID

URBAN TEAM WINNERS • The Southern
FFA team laking the trophy in the urban soil
judging contest consisted or, left to right,
Steph.nle Sayre, Michelle Brown, an_d Jo~n
Amos. Meigs Soil and Water ConservatiOn DIS·

4 Dr. V-6 eng., power windows,
tilt, cruise control, door lockS.

$11,888

contacted the Coolville offiee of
Bank One, Athens , N.A., and
learned that the check would not be
honored. Bank One had closed the
account because the writer had
only' deposited $60 to open the
account and had written over

$3,000 worth of bad checks.
Beegle then went to the bank in
Coolville to get informatiOII and.
swements and, on the return trip to
Pomeroy, stopped at the subjects'·
residence and took them into custody.
.
,

Due to lack of room at neighboring county J8ithe
. 'Is, '!"d the bookinabilitY.to set bond, pau- were
ed
· and released to appear m court on·
Monday.
.
. Most of the purchased mercband1se was recovered at the home of

OAK HILL, Ohio {AP) ·Authorities still are tryir)g to determin~ what caused a WQman to lire
shots rrom her southern Jackson
.County home, seriously injuring
one police officer and wounding

another. ·
The officers were ~nding to
a 911 emergency call Friday at the
home of Carrie Wong, 48, of Oak
Hill.
Terry Snyder, 25, of Oak .Hill,

tisted ·
·
· ..
m senous ~dillon laiC
~aturday at Grant ¥edica1 l::enter
m Columbus foUowmg suraay for
gunshot wounds ~ the face, Jackson Coun!Y Sherifrs Deputy John
Regen said. ·

r~~~i!ic~~5~1~*~- - Authorities still searchingfo;· motive

.

)

h'

was

�•

Commentary

•

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel "
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio . ,.
Monday, October 28, 1991
·::
.

.

'

•

WASHINGTON - While . ments and othersources 10 get their way around the law and consumers
you're stiU learning how 10 change mailing lists. In some cases, par- are still deluged with mail from
Pomeroy, Ohio
diapers on your newborn, s(,lllleone ents get the " Important Notice" companies with official vemiage in
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA
you don' t know is sdteming to even be(ore the baby is born.
their titles.
make a buck off the baby. Within
Babies are the newest targets of
They are often no more than a
days after your baby's birth, you mass mailings, but they aren't the post office box or an answering
~MULTIMEDIA, INC.
· may receive an "Important fii'SL Social SeCurity has long been service. For example, the Feder.al
Notice" in the mail, alerting you 10 a staple for mass mailers looking · Record Service Corp. that acts as a
the fact that junior needs a Social for a quick buck, and the elderly . go-betwee11 on Social Security
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Security card. For $15, tlie outfit have! been an easy mark.
- · . ~'aBriRd
..sTHfoREriCOnfaRnDtsS eDv!Ven .haNs .'~
Publisher
1510
with the official-Sounding name - .
Now, some of the same outfits ·
Federal Record Service Corp. that market their services to new But if you went to the company's
will take care·of it for you.
parents also play the game with Washington , D.C., address, you
PAT WHITEHEAD
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Don't
do
it·.
It's
a
waste
of
brides
. If a woman changes· her would fin.d one woman answering
Assistant Publisher/Controller
General Manager
money. The Social Security card is name, she needs a new Social the phone who says she is just an
free and the application can be Security card. It is free, but there answering service. The name on
AMEMBER or The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association and
ordered over the phone. In 45states are plenty of expensive couriers the door is Alternative Business
lhe American Newspaper Publisher Association.
,
it wiD be sent au10matically if you offering 10 do the job for a fee.
Systems.
check
a
box
on
the
birth
certificate
Gwendolyn
King,
Social
SecuriIn King's two years as adminis·
LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
application. But there are plenty of ty Administration commissioner, is trator, she has seen a slew of popwords long. Allleners are subjecr to editing and must be signed wilh name,
entrepreneurs out there banking on angered by these opportunists. She up companies trying to ma.ke a
address and telephone number. No unsigned leners will be published. Letters
the fact that you don't know that.
told our associate Jim Lynch, "I buck on the underlying confusion
should be in good taste. addressing issues. not personalities.
What the firms do for the $15 think we really have to hit these and suspicions about the Social
(sometimes more) is take the infor- guys and hit them hard."
Security Administration. Among
mation you give them, fill out an
She has the ammunition. The them was the "Social Security Proeasy government form and send it Deceptive Mailings Prevention Act tection Bureau," which charged;i!S
back to you so you can mail it to of 1990 requires a mailer to clearly cusiOmers $7. In return, they go! a
the Social Secunly Administration . . state -that it is a private company '.' gold embossed"- Social Security
They perform no other function, and does not repreSent.the federal card to replace their dtab official
except to lighten your waUet.
government. The act also allows copy. "representation in WashingThese lazy entrepreneurs appar- fines up 10 $100,000. But, as King ton, D.C., to protect your Social.
ently sift through birth announce-. knows, the businesses find their Security benefits," and an entry in
The Daily Sentinel welcomes letters regarding the Nov. 5 election.
However, in the interest or rairness, no election letters will be accepted arter 12 noon on Wednesday, Oct. 30.
Individuals should address issues and not personalities.
Letters purely endorsing candidates will not be used.
Letters should be 300 words or less. All letters are subject to edit·
ing and must be signed with name, address and telephone number.
Telephone numbers will not be published. No unsigned letters will be
published. All letters should be in good taste.

Deadline for pubHcation of
election letters Oct. 30

Riffe and Voinovich
square off on Job plums
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - House Speaker Vern Riffe has seen both parties suffer and benefit from the patronage system in his 32 years in the Legislature. But he says Gov. George Voinovith may have gone too far.
He appointed a special House comminee last week 10 investigate the ·
Republican governor's personnel policies. He said he wants 10 make sure
that no laws have been broken.
.
Rep. Wayne Jones, [).Cuyahoga Falls, was put in charge of the investigation. He said Friday that he plans hearings within two weeks.
Voinovich has laid off about 160 state employees in recent weeks and
says another 800 will be let go in the next several montlts. An undetermined number are holdovers from Democratic Gov! Richard Celeste's
administration.
•
Voinovich denied being, unfair to anyone. He blamed the state's tight
revenues for layoffs that he said are needed to keep the budget in balance.
The so-called spoils system is not what it used to be. Most of an estimated 55,000 state agency employees ~orkers, reportedly all but about
6,000, are protected by Civil Service laws.
.
Riffe, D-Wheelersburg, said women and minorities· also have greater
protections these days, but he has heard allegations of unfair treaunent
from both.
Jones said the committee will get into specifics, not only looking at
layoffs but whether the workers·are being replaced. He said laid-off workers already are calling' him with complaints.
"Some said they were told thetr jobs were abolished, and that-the
names of their jobs were changed and someone else was hired to do exactly tlte same thing," Jones said. He said· replacement hiring would be a
"major thrust" of the investigation.
_
Jones promised to be fair.·" l' m not going 10 use this thing for a political football. If the committee finds the administration did nothing wrong,
they will get a clean bill of health," Jones said.
Seven Republicans will be on the 20-member committee.
Curt Steiner, Voinovich's deputy chief of staff, said the administration
intends 10 cooperate although ' we've been extremely fair." He pointed
out that all Civil Services workers are entitled 10 appeal to the state Personnel Board of Review.
,
A$ for the smaller number who were hired by Celeste, ·ostensibly
because of their political connections, Steiner said Voinovich is entitled to
hire ~pie he believes will better serve the administration and the state.
·R1ffe said Voinovich. in last year's campaign, wrote letters to state
employees, saying they had nothing to fear from him. "This presents a
credibility problem that he will have to deal with down the road," the
speaker said.

Berry's World

Sagacity moves front and center
Welcome to the annual awards
banquet of the Association of Sagacious Pundits.
We were about to call off the
event this year for lack of notable
nominees, but the Senate confmnation hearings on Clarence Thomas
came along at the last minute and
provided us with a cornucopia of
candidates.
Before we begin, let. us review
the ASP position on Justice
Thomas. We believe he did not
deserve the hell he was put
through. We believe that- until
proven otherwise -he is a decent
person who struggled hard to get
where he is. We believe he is a
refreshing and fiercely independent
thinker who will irritate left and
right alike.
On the most intriguing debate of
the year - who was lying? - we
don't know whether to believe
Clarence Thomas 'or Anita Hill.
Perhaps the two of them ·were seeing the same circumstances differently. Perhaps one or both of them
are gifted with remarkable internal
spin-control systems that allow
them to lie and think they are

telling the truth. We don't know.
But we do know that the circus that
was conducted to determine the
truth deeply offended our basic
sense of fairnesS.
That brings us 10 the fU'St cate·
gory - the Salem Witch Trial
award for hanging the accused on a
bare pretense or justice. And the
Platinum Asp goes to ... radical
feminists everywhere. We're not
talking about women's rights
activists here, folks. We're talking
fanatics, to whom the mere charge
of sexual harassment was tantamount to guilt. No testimony needed. Just lay your head on the block
here, Clarence, and hold still while
Molly hoists the hatchet.
A related award, for the Most
SopHistic Sachem, goes to. Sen .
Robert Byrd, D-W.Va. Bobby gets
the Golden Asp for declaring, with
specious logic and thundering bornbast, that he had watched the witnesses and he knew, by .God, that
Clarence was guilty l;lecause Prof.
Hill "did not flinch ... showed no
nervousness ... spoke. calmly
throughout.'l. This IS w~_at it has

In politics, even more than in until he discovered the Truth and
religion, conversion comes mainly saw the Ligh\ in the most painful of
through crisis.
ways: Those dead diners were his
So there seems to be only one friends, acquaintances, conexplanation. for why the House of stituents. As fast as a madman can
Representatives covered itself with squeeze a trigger 23 times,
shovelfuls of shame the other day Edwards experienced a conversion- refusing to ban a single assault by-crisis.
weapon on a day devoted to com"For me, suddenly the old argubatttng crime. Apparently, there ments ring hollow," he told his
weren't enough crises 10 go around. House collea~ues. ''We hear,
There was just one . fresh 'Guns do not kiU, people do.' Tell
tragedy: 23 diners in Luby's Cafe- that 10 the families of those 22 cititeria in Killeen, Texas, murdered zens who are dead today.'' (The
by one man firing two assault final death toll was 23.)
· weapons, one day before the House
He put his day-old views into a
vote.
century of context: "For genera~d so there was just one con- tions in my roral Texas district.
v~rsron : the congressman from ~ns have been a way of life. This
KiUeen, Rep. Chet Edwards, who'd 1ssue is not about gun control; it is
been a National Rifle Association ·· about saving lives.... Today, ·this
kind-of-guy for as long as he could House must make a choice about
remember,
·
guns, not hunting rifles, but about
The freshman Democrat had assault weapons, about Uzis .... We
planned 10 vote "no" on a ban of hear about the right to bear arms,
13 do
· all
d
·
· h D tha
mesuc y rna e assault guns, an tm!&gt;Oflanfng L oes I mean,

Joseph Spear

come 10 in the TV age: You don't by anybody who accu.ied the nomisweat, you ain't guilty. What I hear nee of anything; 2) in America,
now is that Bobby Byrd wants· to thank God, you are innoceni until
solve the Supreme Court problem proven guilty. And might we sugby moving it to West Virginia, gcst that if you don't likci~ there
where he can look after it. I know could be a spot open at the Beijing
this because it was leaked to me.
Daily News.
.
.
Which brings us to the Red HerAnd now for the two most presring award. Silver Asps go to the tigious prizes, both carved from
six Republicans on the Judiciary stinksiOne:
Committee for trying to divert
Outrageous Asp awards go to
attention to the leak of Anita Hill's Sen. Alan Simpson, R-Wyo., and
story rather than the story itself. Sen . Howard Metzenbaum, DDid they really think that such a Ohio, both of whom recklessly
. sensational charge cQuld be kept tossed around unsworn and unveriunder wraps? Maybe we should fied charges.
give them our Stupid Asp award.
Posturing Asp awards go to Sen. ,.
And that leads us to the award Howell Heflin, D-Aia., who·talks
for the Dumbest Media Comrnen· . like he's got a mouthful of Moon
tary. Ste.p up. Tom Wicker. and Pie anti seems incapable of asking ·
receive your Bronze Asp. The New ;1 question in less than 10 minutes.
York Times columnist opined that And 10 Sen. Dennis DeConcini, D- '
in nomination hearings, there is no Ariz., who shamelessly defended
need for a standard of proof. ''Why himself in the Keating Five scandal
should anyone seekmg such an by staging photo ops ·with his
exalted and powerful position be grand~aughter and w.ho tr.ied to
accorded the benefit of-the doubt establish hts bona frdes m the
when truth is in dispute?" he Thomas hearings by talking about ,
asked. There arc 98 reasons Mr. h'is mother. You could pave your
Wicker. and the top two arc these: driveway. with the stuff that's
1) any nominee could derailed between hts ears.

pe

Today
I.n hi. story
.ll
---------------"'l'""__. :. ,____
By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Monday, Oct. 28, the 30lst day of 1991. There are 64 days
· left in the year.
·•
Today's Highlight in History:
On Oct. 28, 1886, the Statue of Liberty, a gift from the people of
France, was dedicated in Ne~ . Yode Harbor by President Cleveland in the
presence, of liS sculptor, Frederic Auguste Bartholdi.
. .
.

Ondusdale:
~

,

·

.

In 1636, Harvard College was founded in Massachusetts.
.

- ~-

•
In 1776, the Banle of White Plains was fought d~g the Revolutionary War.
In 1919, Congress enacted the Volstead Act, which provided ·for
enforcement or Prohibition, over President Wilson's veiO.'
In 1922, fascism came to Italy as Benito Mussotini took control of the
government.
.
In 1936, President F111lltlin D. Roosevelt rededicated the Statue of,Libeny on its 50th anniversary during a re-election campaign stop in New
York.
In 1940,Italy inv~dtd Greece,d~!!. World War II.

though, that absolutely no limits
can be placed on the possession of
fm:anns? Surely not, not bazookas
in every garage or grenade launchers in every living room, surely
noL"
But, of course. the words of
first-termer Edwards rang hollow
to 24 7 of his colleagues who 'd
alrca~y made up their minds that
they were going to toss this bone to
the NRA . Many had already
opposed the NRA once this year by
voting for the Brady Bill's waiting
period for handgun purchases.
These representatives, after all.
did not have the benefit of a mass
murder. in their own backyards to
sharpen their insight
·

If common sense ruled politics, .
the ban would have passed unanimously. Here's what it was really
about: The Bush administration
banned· a handful of assault
weapons made in foreign countries
- such as the Uzi and AK47 because they have no legitimate
sporting purpose for hunters or Larget shooters and areQ't w~ns for
self defense, but are for raptd-ftring
of the son .used by people bent on.
multiple murder of outgunning
cops. But President Bush, in his
· own L1tindless compromise to pacify the NRA, refused to ban identical guns that are made in the United States. That's what this bill
would have done, just as a similar.

.

i

,

\

.

llld

Martin Schram
Senate bill already did.
Would it. harm law-abiding
Americans who·want suns for their
O\l'n pro~tion or sporting purposes? No, they have r~plied in poDs:
68 percent of gun owners favor a
ban on these assault weapons used
by murderers and drug gangs.
In the House Ieday are 247 representatives who surely see the
logic of that, but fear being
anacked back home by the NRA.
They need 10 hear, in~t.ead, an ultimatum from vOters who care about
protecting our cops and fighting
crime: It's time for your conversion
by electotal cri~is. Ban those
assault weapons - now! - in the
final House-Senate conference bill,
or your career in Congress will
come to a quick dead-end."I'll be honest with you - my
game plan for my first term as a
congressman in a marginal diStrict
was 10 lay low and not be controversial," Chet Edwards told me.
"Now I don't know how I'U come
·out. I deeply regret that it ~ a
tragedy of this magnitude to open
my eyes 10 this iSsue. But the very
reason I've decided to speak out
now is that I don't want my col·
leagues to have to witness first
hand a mass murder in their districts before
they see the .light" . •
.

'
"

·i

'

.;

'

I

•I Columbosl as• I

.

PA .

.fhe~t of the rain and drizzle
for awhile moved out of the state
overnight. Lows were 1110stly in the
40s•and 50s.
.· The clou$ shout~ start hr¢ing
up over Ohi9 tonight as a hfgh
pressure system builds over the
· upper Great Lakes. The clearing
skres will allow temperatures to
drop into the 40s and 50s,
The record high temperature for
this date 81 the Columbus weatherstation was 77 degrees in 1989.
The record low was 21 in 1976.
Sunrise this morning was at
6:55 a.m. Sunset will be at 5:35

'.
·'

...

W.: VA.

.Meigs County
announcements
Haunted house open
The haunted house at The Locomotion on Mechanic Street in
Pomeroy will continue through
Extended forecast
Thursday from 7:30 to .11:30 p.m.
· Wednesday Through Friday:
Cost
is $1 per student and $2 for
Fair
and
unseasonably
warm.
,
1
adults.
except for a slight chance of showers extreme west each day. Lows
Annual bazaar
mostly in the 50s. Highs in the 70s.
The St. Pap! United Methodist
Church in Tuppers Plains is having
its annual bataar on Friday and
Saturday from 9 a.m . to 4 p.m.
Beck: He was a.resident of Ashland There will be crafts, comforters,
County since 1973 and was quilts, Chrisunas gifts and baked
employed for many years as a goods available. Coffee and cookmachinist with the Mesta Machine ies wiD be served.
·
and Tool Company, PittSburgh, Pa.
He was also a farmer. A United
Hunter's sarety course
. States Army Veteran, he was a
A hunter's safety-course will be
member of the Homestead Amity held Nov. 4, 6, II and 13 from
·Lodge No. 582 F &amp; AM in Dravas- 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. at the Coolville
burg, Pa., Scottish Rite Valley of Lions Club Building in Coolville.
Pinsburgh and the AARP.
For more infonnation call Robert
Mr. Beck is survived by a niece, Pullins at 667-3831, Ed Wigal at
Mrs. Marilyn Mowrer, Ashland, 667-6656 or Ed Rood at 667-6348.
and several other nieces and
nephews.
Literary Club to meet
Besides his parents, Mr. Beck
The Middleport Literary Club
was preceded in death by his wife. will meet Wednesday at the home
Veva Keller, iniApril.
of Mrs. George Hackett at 1:30
Services will be held Wednes- p.m. Mrs. Ri,chard Owen will
day at 1:30 p.m. at the Heyl Funer- review "The Tragic Dynasty." Roll
al Home, 227 Broad St.. Ashland. call will be a Russian literary or
with Rev. Thomas McFarren offici- musical personality.
ating . .Burial will be in Fairview
Cemetery in Galion.
Revival
Friends may call at the funeral
The Mt. Olive Community
home one-half hour prior to the ser- church will have revival Thursday
vice:·
throu~ Saturday at 1 p.m. nightly.
In lieu of flowers contributions Wilham Villers , Annamoriah.
may be made to the Brethren Care W.Va., will be the evangelist. PasNursing Home in Ashland.
lOr Lawrence Bush invites the public.
Dorothy Higgins

-----Weather----Soutb·Central Ohio
Tonight, variable cloudiness
with the low around 50. Tuesday,
mostly sunny with the high around
70.
.

--Area deaths-Fannie Maynard
Fannie Maynard, 69, Racine,
died Saturday in Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Born April 28, 1922 in Martin
County, Ky. , daughter of the late
Sammy and Julia Runyon Marcum,
she attended the Old Regular Baptist Church.
Surviving ue her husband,
Cecil Maynard, whom she married
Jtily 6, 1940 in Martin Count)',
Ky.; three sons, Ri!ilhard· Maynard
and Sammy Maynard, both of
Ewington, and Cecil Maynard Jr.
of Racine: four daughters, Mrs.
James (Shelba Jean) Wickline,
Mrs. John (Julia) Murphy, and Mrs.
Dave (Sandra Kay) Grindstaff, all
of Racine, and Mrs. Ronald
(Catherine) Conkel of Minford; 15
grandchildren and 11 great-grandchildren: a brother. John Marcum
of Hamden; and six sisters, Mrs.
Don (Eva Lou) Lawson of Lancaster, Mrs. Roosevelt (Olive) Newsome of Dundas, Mrs. ·Howard
(Shirley) Parsley, Mrs. Delbert
(Opal) Metheney, and Mrs. Lucy
Maynard, all of Ewington, and
Mrs . Ben (Ernestine) Clay of
AmesviUe.
She was also preceded in death,
by one grandchild, one brother and
one sister.
Services wiD be 9 a.m. Tuesday
in the Little Pearl Regular Baptist
Church, Vinton, with Brothers
Ivory Sowards, Sam Franks and
· Joshua Hicks officiating. Burial
will be in the Marcum Cemetery,
Rt. I, EwingiOn. Friends may call
at the McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, Vinton, Monday from 6-8
p.m.

Darwin Petrie
Darwin (Pete) Petrie. 61, of 325
Bulaville Pike, died Sunday, Oct.
27. 1991 at his residence following
an exte11ded illness.
He was special agent for the
Prudential Insurance Company for
29 years and was a member of the
Life Underwriters Association. He
was employed by Western South'ern Insurance for 10 years and also
repreSented the Greater Ohio Securites Company. He owned and
OJ!Crated the Jumbo restaurants at
Rto Grande, Centenary and Addison and was a homebuilder and real
estate developer. He also owned a
farm in Raccoon and Springfield .
Townships.
He graduated Rio Grande High
SchooJ ,in 1949 and also attended
Rio Grande College-.
Born April 24, 1930, a\ Chillicothe, he was the son of the late
Clarence H. Petrie and Nannie Cal·
icoat Petrie, of Rio Grande.
He is survived by his wife,
Patricia Neal Petrie; twO daughters,
Susan Banks, Gallipolis, Sandra
Petrie Forgey, Rio Grande; and one
son, Steven Neal Petrie, Gallipolis;
one grandson, Joel Banks; and one
sister, Darlene Russell, Gallipolis.
He was preceded in death by
one brothet, who died in infancy.
Funeral services wiU be II a.m.
Wednesday at Waugh-HalleyWood Funeral Home with Rev.
Alfred Holley, officiating. Burial
wiU be in the Pine Street Cemetery.
Visitation will be Tuesday from
6 to 9 p.m. at the funeral home.
Pallbeaeres will be Richard
Haft, Dwayne Forgey, Bobby
Clark, Fnnk C. Petrie, Sr., .Raben
· Lowell AUan, and Raben R. Sauri·
ders.

r.

Dorothy Pearl Higgins, 66, of
Wolfe ·Pen Road in Pomeroy, died
on Sunday, Oct. 27, 1991, at Holzer Medical Center following an
extended illness.
Born in Meigs ·county on Jan.
20, 1925, she was the daughter of
Amber Pearl Atkins Warner of
Pomeroy, arid the late Hennan E.
Warner. She was a homemaker.
Besides her mother, she is survived by two sons. Mark Warner of
Pomeroy and Keith Higgins or
Yankeetown . P.a.; a da~ghter ,
Sandy Wilson of Salisbury, Md.;
two sisters. Ada Nease and Lois
Thompson, both of Pomeroy; three
brothers. George ("Jack"), Dale,
and Ted Warner.
of Pomeroy ;
four grandchildren; and several·
nieces and nebhews.
Memorial services will be
announced at a later date.
Arrangements are under the
direction of the Birchfield Funeral
Home in.Rutland . .

all

Garden club to meet
The Wildwood Garden Club
will meet Wednesday at I p.m. at
the home or Kathryn Miller. For
roll call bring a favorite leaf.
Class offered
A tree top angel class will be
·offered at the Meigs County Public
Library in Pomeroy on Nov. 20 at
6:30 p.m. The cost of the class is
$12 and registration is required.
Materials needed include one-half
yard of white satin or cream colored muslim and two and one-half
yards of lace. Michele Garretson is
the instructor.

Judgment sought

~..

~ ..... .. . . . $ \ 'ft

. . . . .......

expected to generate large swells the southeast will puil moist air · :
along the mid-Atlantic Coast aitd i,DIO the Mississippi Valley. $evcft :
posssibly cause some beach era- s10rrns, some with hail-and torna· -; ~
• sion.
does. were predicted from Ilardi ~ ·-'
Cool, dry weaiher was expected Texas to southern Nebruka.
~ -~ today throughout .the Nortbeast.
The highs Ieday WCJt expected
Cold air pushing south from New to be in the teens and 20s in tile
England is likely to push tempera- Plains; in the 40s in New Fnglmd
lures below freezing by Tuesday and the Pacific Northwest; 11111 in. ·0'~ ~.
morning.
the 50s in the Great Lakes area. ~•~'""'· '""
· Showers and strong winds .from . There will be highs in the 80s _: .
across the South.
•

Landfill meets.-~ health
orders, gets lif!lit increase .
By MELINDA.POWERS
Morg'an Township facility could
OVP News Starr
handle the extra waste.
Six hundred tons of garbage a
Although 600 tons per day may
day.
seem like a lot of trash. Don
The Gallia County Landfill Graves, of Mid-1\merican. said that
recently ' received a temporary · amount meets the six-county waste
extension to take in that much · district's needs .
trash, and what's temporary could
"That's about the amount that
become permanent.
the district generates per day, probThe Ohio Environmental Pro- ably closer to 650 tons," Graves
tection Age!lCY approved the e'l.ten- said. "The EPA wouldn't have
sion on Oct. 2, and in the permit given (the extension) to us unless
was a clause to allow the landfill's they thought we needed it."
operator, Mid-American Waste
Two of the Athens-Gallia,HockSystems. Inc., 10 request a perma- · i~g-Jru;kson-Meigs- Vinton waste
·nent extension.
dtstnct s four landfills, the Allied
To do so, Mid-American must facility in McArthur and the Wellsubmit an approvable plan within ston landfill, are now closed. And,
30 days to show the OEPA that the Graves said, the operator of the

EMS units answer 11 calls
Units of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services answered
II calls for assistance over the
weekend.
At 3:06p.m. on Sarurday, Rutland unit went 10 Nichols Road for
a brush fire at the Keesee property.
At .3:54 p.m., Rutland unit went to
a brush ftre on State Route 143 at
the Basham property. At 6:19 p.m.,
Rutland depanment weni to a rekindled fire at the Basham property. At 7:53 p.m., Middleport squad
went 10 Page Street for Clyde B~x­
ter, who was taken to PleasantYalley Hospital. At 10:45 p.m., Rutland squads went to New Lima
Road for a motor vehicle accident.
Shawn Humphreys was treated and
not transported.
On Sunday at 7:55 a.m., Rutland
unit took John Nelson to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 8:38 p.m..

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS None.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES ,
Em'ma Chapman and Melissa
Downing.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS
Ralph Ours, Pomeroy.
St' NDA Y DISCHARGES
None.

Pomeroy squad went to Pomeroy
Nursing and Rehabilitation Center
for Ralph Ours. He was taken to
Veterans. At 10:20 a.m .• Middleport squad went to Riverside
Apartments for Sherry Reed, who
was transported to Holzer. At I I :56
a.m., Pomeroy squad went to U.S.
Route 33. Gina Amott was taken to
Veterans.
At 1:35 p.m., Rutland squad
went 10 Dext,er. Eva Nicholson was
taken to Holzer. At 8:39p.m., Middleport unit went to Cole Street.
Genevee Chesher was taken to
Holzer.

446 4$14

Stocks

.

~-

-

~

...

- l . ,.,..

280 W. Main St.

£eo :JYLOnis

Meigs Local School Board

Your Vote and Influence Appreciated

"' " ''''

o~n•• ,

. .. • "-l • •"' ..,,.. • .,, .&gt;'nlr""'l

o • f ~y• • ••

THANK YOU

;a •: r o .; • ., tl" o ,,.

O#"~'&gt; tl"' '

I

~ ... -, ~ ~ tot·--·'

..

Graves emphasized that his
company was not looking to• •
encourage out-of-state dumping jo J;; ,
Gallia County by seeking tlie
extension. Besides what is lrideil ·~
in from Point Pleasant, W.Va., all ~
the waste going in10 the facility is
from the district, he said.
•

-

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213--~
Publifthcd every al'lernoon , MondaY

•I

through Friday, 1 U Court SL, Pomeroy,

Ohio by Lhc Ohio Valley ~bliahing
CompanylMI.lllimodla Inc., PomCroy,
Ohio 45169, Ph . 992·2156: SotOnd el. .
JK8l.acc paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

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LARIAT

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RIVERSIDE MOTORS 1t': ·

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Leo MOrris • Box 212 Rudand. Ohio 742·2455
Retired E11ployee of the Melas local School District

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Athens/Hockin~ County line esti· -~·
mates that faCility has only one ' - ·
year of capacity lefL
. ~ That leaves the Gallia County ~
landfill.
. ;
Bob Saunders. landfill supem· ~ ·- ".
sor, said the Galtia fscilityhas·been~ .· ·'
averaging 260 10 300 IQns per day : ·
since the time of the extension.
.
"We really are in an emergency
situation," Saunders said. "With tbe ~- ·· •
other landmls closing, it was really
puUing the pressure on us. We had •
to turn away many haulers. and
even local people who wanted 10 !
dump their trash."
':- '
Prior to the extension, the land· -fill was limited 10 128 10ns per~- · •

MANY MORE SHARP CAROLINA VEHIClES 10
.
CHOOSE IROM

• VOTE FOR AMAN WHO CARES •

Paid Far lj TH (aadldate

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Kilbarger landfill on tbe -:-••

ONLY$6500

Call 304-675·1244 for Appt or Information

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Fueling. 6 cyl, a.l r cond., cruise, lilt wheel, dual tanka
·
Carolina truck.
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Suite 112 Valley Drive
Pt. Pleasant, WV.

t1

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Advcrt.illng Rcprultlnt.llt.ive, Branham
Ncwapapcr SaletJ. ?33 Third Avenue_
Now YOrk, NcwYvra 10011.

Am Ele Power .............. ... .30 7/8
Ashland Oil ..................., ..28 1/4
AT&amp;T................................38 1/8
Bank One ..........................44
Bob Evans ........................ 18 5/8
Channing Shop.................. l9 7/8
City Holding ..................... 16.
Federal Mogul.. ................. 14 3/4
Goodyear T&amp;R .................47 5/8
Key Centurion .................. 14 1{2
Lands' End ........................ 21
Limited Inc....................... 23 3/8
Multijlledia Inc .................. 21 5/8
Rax Restaurant .................. 5/16
Robbins&amp;J'4yers ............... .37
Shoney's Inc.................... .l8 l/4
Star Bank ..........................24 l/4
Wendy lnt'l......................... 9 3/8
Worthington Ind ............... 19 3/4
Stock reports art the 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided by Blunt, Ellis
and Lcewi of Gallipolis.

John A. Wade, M. D.

VOTE FOR •

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Daily Presa A Notia~ion and Uac Ohio
Ni:!WIPI,PCT A11ociation, National

Holzer Medical Center
Friday, Oct. 25
Discharges - Lacy Banks ,
Leeann Blagg. Eugene Carrington,
Mrs. John Nicholson and daughter,
Mrs. Charles Norville and daugh· . l!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ll
ter, Alva Reed, Connie Saunders,
Leslie Steele.
Births - none.
Saturday, Oct. 26
Discharges - Barbara Magne·
son, Emma McNerlin. Francis
Northup.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Friend, of Cottagville , w :v a., a
daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Kirkhart, of Thurman, a daughter.
Sunday, Oct. 27
Discharges - Dallas Allbright,
Arnold Dickerson.
Births - none.

SPRING VALL ~Y CINEMA

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Member: The AIIIOC'iaLed Pre., 1n1And

Complete Medical/Surgical Care
For Ear, Nose ·&amp; Throat Including
.A_sthma,--AIIergy &amp; Hearing Aids

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p.m.
Arotmd the nat,on • .
.
Snow whitened some parts or
the the.Piains and the West today,
including Denver, Salt Lalte City
and Bismarck, N.D.
·
·Rain fell on Nashville,' Tenn.,
and Cincinnati, Ohio.
Hurricane Grace churned across
the open Atlantic Ocean ·hundreds
of miles £rom land. The ~tonn was

Candidate For

Oliver T. Beck, 88, 2000 Center
St., Ashland, died Sunday, OcL 27,
1991 81 Samaritan Hospital in Ashlend.
·
Born.March 27, 1903 in Crawford County, he was a son of the
late William and Lydia Grimes

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Trustees to meet
Th e Lebanon Township
'Trustees will meet Wednesday at 7
p.m. at the township building.

Winter scene class olfered
A ceramic lighted winter scene
class will be offered at the Meigs
County Public Library in Pomeroy
on Nov. 13 at 10 a.m. Materials
will be furnished and the cost is
$13.50 which is payable upon regA judgment suit in the amount istration. Jane Coates will be the
of $3.800 has betm filed in Meigs insuuctor.
•
County Common Pleas Court by
Neilia Seyler of Pomeroy against
Coin Club to hold meeting
Alan Stone C.ompany, Inc. or
The 0 Kan Coin Club will meet
Chesterhill. .
on Monday at Burkett Sarber Shop
The suit alleges fhat Alan SlOne in Middlepon. Trading session and
Company, Inc. damaged motor social hour at 7 p.m. will precede
vehicles and other propeny belong- the meeting. Refreshments will be
ing to Seyler when crews were served and new members are welapplying materiaiiO a graded area. come.

OUver T. Beck

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IND. ·

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By Tlie A.uoclated ~eas
Forecasters say there's no end in
sight to the unseasonably w.arm
weathet.
.
The National Weather Service's
, extend¢ forecast calls for highs in
the 70s through Friday. And there's
~&gt;:.~~~t chance of rain through

MICH.

and Dale Van Atta
a sweepstakes. The Social Security ·''
Administration foUowed the results
of one of these "sweepstakes ... and ,
found that the ·. winners each i .
received. a check for 9 cents; .
The mailings often prey on the '
fears of the elderly. which strikes a · ·
personal nerve with King. She
remembers seeing her grandmother - :
respond to a mailing that urged her ;
to donate money or watch her ben-.. '
efits disappear. "She was scared
she would lose Social Security," ,
King recalled. "It was a real eye
opener to see how frightened she
was.''
Questions about Social Security
cards and .coverage can be
resolved, for free, by calling 1-800· •
SSA-121'3. .
. COSTLY •, MOVE - The
Niuiomil Tran~portation, Safety
'Board is movipg its Washington •
headquarters to new and more
expensive digs. Congress wasn't _
too happy about aP.proving the
move to an office 'twice the size
and double the rent of the old
office. But NTSB administrators
said if they didn't get the $2 million they.needed for the move, they
would move anyway and lake it out
of salaries. That is no small threat
since NTSB makes Safety recommendations that affect millions of
Americans ott the roads, in the air
arid on the railways. NTSB Chairman James Kolstad said he needed
to move for moie lab space. but the
new lab lakes up _only one-twentieth of the added space.
MlNI-EDITORIAL- Stanford
University is apparently unchas- '
tened about the recent scandal surrounding the way it spends government research money. Once the
Stanford spending habits were
unco'vered last year, the federal
government imposed new accounting rules for 'universities. Now
· Sta~ford says the government
should pay it $10 million to compensate the school for the increased
work involved in complying with
the new rules. We're reminded of
the boy who killed his parents and
then tlirew himself on the mercy of
the co urt because he was an
orphan.

The Dally Sentinel PIIJI 3 .

Unseasonably warm weather'continues

By Jack A.Tiderson

,Make Congress ban assault weapons

HERE COMES THE JUDGE

forecast for

Opportunists target .new parents and se"iors ;

111 Court Street

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

( llllr 1 W1 '&lt;~IIH~t
.Tuesday, Oct. 29 '

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The Daily Sentinel

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Monday, October 28, 1991

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, ~ ,.._, ,. ......., ,.,.

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The Daily Sentinel

Sports

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Capitals, Canucks get taste of reality

Tension•packed World Series comes to an end

Meigs eighth graders defeat
Fairland squad in overtime

Labonte captures Busch ,
Grand National Championship

Redwomen win one, lose two on road

State breaks into AP's top 25 after seventh win

W. VIRGINIA

Rio Grande kickers emerge
with 1-0 loss to Thomas More

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, 18 IJraegle beat Ruta:en ......................... 21·7
18 Clemlon beat N.C. State ................... 29-19
20 But Carolln~ beat Pittsburgh ........... 24-23
21 Oklalaoma beat Kaa11.1 ........................ 41·3
21 llaJIDr beat TCU ................ " ................. 28-9
23 , Pittalnargb kilt to But CaroUna ......... 23·24
24 Oeoqta beat Kentucky ...................... 49-21
Ill ArbD• .................................. ~d not play

NAnf!~~IGGS

Sahsbury Township Trustee
'

• Resident of Salisbury Township over
40 y,ears•
• World War II combat veteran
• Retired after nearly 40 years of
employment from Smit.h·Nelson
(formerly Blaettner Auto).
• Life member of Disabled American
Veterans
· • Member of American Legion, VFW,
and Daughters of America Lodge
'

Vote for a (andldate who will adively work to maintain
·roadways and assure (Ontinued rasped for cemetarl~s
within the Townsh1p.
··

Palll for~, IH caiHIItklle • Natlla• Blags, 31960 State Rolle 124, Po111ro~ OH 992-5913

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Ditka stayed with his quaner· Ollen 35, Beapb 3
AP Spo111 Writer
back and Harbaugh responded by
Houstoa continued its torrid
The last ume the Washington going 3-for-3 on the 52-yard win· stan, going 7· I for the fiTSt time
· Redskins beat the New York ning drive. That drive was set up and droPI?in$ Cincirmati io 0-8 for
·Giants, they won the Super Bowl:
by a 12-yard punt by Tommy Bam· the second ume in franchise history
After S11ndafs rous.~ c;::me· hardt.
back viclllry at Giants S1 1. • the
Harbaugh hit Wendell Davis for
·Warren Moon threw for TDs of ·
Redsk.ins just might .start thinking 27 yards, ran Neal Anderson on a 61 yards to Drew Hill, 6 to Hay·
abput another NFL championship.
draw 10 the 18, then hit Anderson wood Jeffires and 14 to Ernest
Washington rallied fro.m a 13.0 with a 6-yard pass to the 12 before Givins and had 211 yards passing .
halftime deficit to beat New York finding Tom Waddle for lhe deci· in ihe first half, whcn the 'Oilers
1?·13, giving the Skins their first sive 1D wiih 54 seconds left
jumped to a 23·3 lead. ~ rmisbed
8:0 record ever, They lead the NFC Lions 34, Cowboys 10 .
with 289 yards, hitting 24 or 37
East by. three.games - four over
Erik Kramer, a refugee from the
-~;ng h'IS f'trSt
New York- and are the league's Canadian Football League, threw passes.
Erik Wilhelm, m....
· onir, IDlbeaten entry.
his fust two NFL touchdown pass· · pro start in place of injured Boomer
'This was a long time com· es before a sellout crowd at the Sil· Esiason, completed 12 of 24·passes
ing," said coach Joe Gibbs after verdome, the ffrst in six years.
for just 106 yards and cornerback
Washington broke a six-game loS·
He replaced Rodn~y Peete in the Cris Dishman had a thil:d-quarter
ing streak against the Giants.
rust period and completed 9 of 16 interception, his fifth of the season.
"We feel like we got the mon· passes for !08 yards, with a 26· Falcoas 31, Rams 14 .
·
key off our backs - finally," said yard TD to Willie Green and a fO.
A familiar sight and sound
defensive end Charles Mann of the yarder to Barry Sanders.
.
greeted the Falcons at Atlanta's
Redskins. "This feels real satisfy· ·
Detroit had four takeaways Ful10n County Stadium. The fans
ing."
two fumbles and two interceptions were doing the tomahawk chop and
Nothing about the first half was - as Detroit (6-2) remained tied chanting.
.
satisfying for the Skins. New York with the Beats atop the NFC Cen·
And the Falcons responded as
drove 75 yards and 64 yards to tral. Wil.liam White returned a the Braves have in basel:&gt;;!)!, Chris
field goals by Raul Allegre and blocked field goal 55 yards for a Miller ·passed for 237 yards and
Rodiley Hampton had a !-yard TD touchdown and Ray Crockett three touchdowns - 19 yards to
run for a 13.0 leall.
''
return~d an interception 96 yards Floyd Dixon, 20 yards to Andre
But irrepressible Washington for a score.
Rison and 55 to Michael Haynesstormed back as Mark Rypieri hit 49ers 23, Eagles 7
·
before leaving with bruised ribs
Gary Clark for TDs of 7 and 54
The Niners got their first road and a bruised left knee.
yards, then rookie Ricky Ervins win of the year in overpowering
Miller was 14-for-19 in his besl
rushed for first down after first style. The defense had six sacks, statistical day. Atlanta had the ball
down before Chip Lohmiller recovered three fumbles, intercept· for 40:01.
clinched it with a 35-yard field goal ed a pass,and held the Eagles to 29 Seahawks 20, Chargers 9
Piitsburgb Steelers linebacker Bryan Hinkle
DODGING THE STEELERS - Cleveland
with 51 seconds left.
yards rushing on 14 carries. Don
Seatde took its fourth win in the
Browns running back Leroy Hoard dodges his . (53) and defensive end Keith WiUis (93) put the
"I'm
only
a
rookie,
but
you
get
Griffin
intercepted the pass and last five games to improve 10 5-4
opponents in the second quarter Sunc!ay as . hold on Hoard. (AP LaserPhoto)
a sense of how important this game recovered one of the fumbles. - it's first time above .500 this
is," Ervins ~d.
Charles Haley had three sacks and season -despite being outgalned
While Washington was staying Larry Roberts two.
320·217.
perfect, the league's other unbeaten
Jim McMahon, out for two
But the Seahawks J!Ot some bit
team tasted defeat as the Chicago games following arthroscopic plays, from rookie. John Kasay's ·
Bears came back for a 20·17 deci· surgery on his right knee, returned, club record-equaling 54-yard field
sion at New Orleans. The Saints aggravated the irijury just before goal, his eighth .field goal in a roW,
droP.ped to 7-1.
halftime and left. Jeff Kemp, and a 51-yarder to Chris Warren's
'You win one, it's one win. signed a week ago, came on but . 55· yard kickoff return that led to a
You lose one, it's one loss,' ' Saints sustained a coriCussion and wound
CLEVELAND (AP)- Dare the three wins all of last season and period bo.unced off the right coach Jim Mora said. "We've won up in the hospital for X-rays. So 5-yard pass by Dave Krieg to Mike
Cleveland Browns think about took over .second place in the AFC upright, and Neil O'Donnell was a lot of games this year as a team. McMahon limped back into the Tice for a TO.
The Chargers (1·8) got three
intercepted by Clay Matthews near Today, we lost one as a team."
returning to the playoffs so soon Central Division.
game and finished.
·
field
goals bY John Carney.
"Hopefully it will snowball and midfield to end Pittsburgh's final
after the humiliation of I990'1
In other games, it was Detroit
McMahon did get the Eagles Vikings 28, Carcllaals 0
"I don't think in any way, shape we can keep winning and get a shot drive with just over a minute left
34, Dallas 10; San Francisco 23, their first offensive TD in 14-plus
Maybe the Vikings can schedule
"We were able to move the ball. Philadelphia 7; Denver 9, New . quancrs, covering 43 possessions,
or form do we want to Start looking at the playoffs," defensive lineman
at the big picture," Bernie Kosar Michael Dean Perry said. "It feels The stats were not bad," coach England 6; Houston 35, Cincinnati as he connected with Keith Byars the Cardinals again after winning
two ~ames in three weeks by a
said Sunday after the Browns beat real good, not only to beat Pitts- · Chuck Noll said. " But we just 3; Atlanta 31, the Los Angeles for a 19-yard score.
combmed
62-7.
the Pittsburgh Steelers 17-14. burgh, but it was a division game couldn't push it in the end zone. Rams 14; Cleveland 17. Pittsburgh Broncos 9, Patriots 6
Herschel
Walker starred in this
"Definitely we are playing a step that we needed to stay in the hunt." The ball didn't bounce exactly our 14; Seattle 20, S~ Dtego 9; Min·
New·
England,
the
NFL's
worst
one
as
Minnesota
moved 10 4;5, the
By no means was it a dominant way today."
at a time.' '
nesota
28,
Phoemx
0;
and
Green
team
last
season,
has
been
rough
at
.
same
record
as
Phoenix.
Walker
It did bounce exactly the
Cleveland (4-4) won its second performance by the Browns. The
Bay
27,
Tampa
Bay
0.
home.
The
Patriots
surprised
Hous·
ran
for
touchdowns
of
16.
1 and 5
straight game and beat Pittsburgh Steelers had two shots at tying or Browns' way. They scored their Redsklns 17, Giants 13
ton
and
Minnesota
and
nearly
did
yards.
.
(3·5) for the ninth time in their last winning in the fourth quarter, but rust touchdown in the second quar·
~e
Giants
(4-4)
.d?minated
the
the
same
to
Denver.
The
Cardinals
ma11aged
just
10 meetings at Cleveland .Stadium. Gary Anderson's 52-yard field · ter on a deftected pass that landed openmg half, outgammg the Red·
Jason Staurovsky had two field
The Browns surpassed their total of goal attempt midway through the in the arms of Leroy Hoard in the skins 207 yards to 35. Washingto~ goals for New England (3·5), but seven first downs and had the ball
for only 20:53.
end zone - with ·Hoard I ying nat
never
got
mto
Gl8nts
.temtory
unbl
his
25-yarder
with
the
score
tied
6·
Packers 27, Buccaneers 0
on his back. Kosar's pass had been
5:36
was
left
m
the
th1rd
quarter.
6
was
blocked
by
DeMis
Smith
in
In a game dubbed the ".Bay of
tipped by Keith Willis at the line of
Then
the
Reclskins
tonk
ch&amp;rgc.
the
founh
quaner.
He
never
got
a
Pigs."
Green Bay won its second
scrimmage, and it landed ·in the
Ryp1en
found
Clark.
twice
w1thm
chance
to
tie
it
after
David
Tread·
of the year, both against Tampa
arms of the stunned Hoard, who
2:52
and
.
t
he
Redskms
converted
well's
third
field
goal,
a
34-yarder
Bay . The Packers (2·6) were
•
had been tripped up working his
mn~
straight
third-down
plays.
with
1:56lef~
put
Denver
on
top.
sacked
six times, but they also had
"We staned off in a big ball of way into the end zone.
MARTINSVll.LE, Va. (AP) Emns
ate
up
the
yardage
and
the
Hugh
Millen
took
the
Patriots
six
sacks.
And the defense forced
Hoard has caught nine passes
Bobby Labonte's season, which fire on the very first lap at Day·
clock
on
the
62-yard,
14-play
drive
·
from
their
16
to
Denver's
IS
with
eight
turnovers,
including Brian
began in flames, ended on a con· tona," Labonte said. '·'The first this year, five of them for touch·
to
Lohmiller's
field
goal.
14
seconds
to
go.
The
Patriots
had
Noble's
fumble
n:covery
for a TD.
race of the year, and there we are. downs.
siderably more positive note.
Bears
20,
Saiats
17
no
timeouts
left
as
Millen
scram·
Mark
Murphy
had
two
or
the Pack.
"It's been a tough year. We That was no fun , believe me. We
" Needless to say, I was very
Jim
Harbaugh
was
in
a
danger·
bled
and
got
to
the
6.
He
was
tack·
fiV~:
intereeplions.
ers'
happy at the way the breaks went
fought back the whole way, and had to fight back from that deal. "
Tampa Bay (1· 7) wound up
Four times Kenny Wallace took our way," Kosar said.' "To say I ous situation -coach Mike Dilka led with 5 seconds left and could
I'm just glad it's over," Labonte
was
tllinking
of
benching
him
not
get
off
another
play
in
time
for
with
third-string quarterbick Jeff
said Sunday after capturing the points lead, and four times had a couple of breaks is an under·
because
be
was
2-for-19.
a
chance
at
the
tie.
·
Carlson after Chris Chandler was
NASCAR's 1991 Busch Grand Labonte an swered by taking it statement.' '
yanked.
Kosar completed 21 of 29 passback.
National championship.
The
younger
brother
of
1984
es for 179 yards in his eighth con·
To appreciate his drive to the
title, one need only recall the pic· Win ston Cup champion Terry secutive game without an intereep·
ture of Labonte climbing out of his Labonte went ahead to stay two tion. His 262 passes without an
servin~ aces and four digs. Neff
A weekend road uip to northern Michelle Spears.
interception represent the second·
mangled, burning Oldsmobile at weeks ago.
two k1lls and seven digs, and
"They
played
well,
we
didn't,"
longest such streak in NFL history, Ohio resulted in two wins and one
the fust of the series' 31 races.
behind Bart Starr's 294 passes loss for the University of Rio Fields said. "Lake Erie has a scrap- Andrea Hedges supplied three kills.
In the Wooster game, Zempter
without an interception for Green Grande volleyball team as it winds PY team, one of the beuer teams
res:orded
nine kills and two block
they've ever had."
_
down its regular season.
Bay in 1964-65.
110Ios,
Cooper
had seven kills and
Cooper was also credited with
The Redwomen, already assured
The touchdown pass to Hoard,
coupled with Mau Stover's 34-yard of a berth in the District 22 Play· three block solos, as was Teresa three digs, Sharp netled three kills
field goal, gave Cleveland a I 0-0 offs after winning the Mid-Ohio Zempter, who had 18 kills and 10 and three serving aces, Spears had
flve kills and four digs, and Wray
The progression of the Universi· district game. Despite a sluggish lead. Pittsburgh cut it to 10· 7 just Conference championship last digs. Spears netted six kills, while served up two kills Bn4three digs.
Tiffany
Neff
pro':ided
the
R~
·
weekend,
fell
to
Lake
Erie
IS
·1
3,
ty Of R1o Grande soccer team was performance in the opening IS . before halftime on O'Donnell 's I ·
On Oct 22, the Redwomen met
slowed Sunday when the Rio kick· minutes, Rio Grande came alive yard run out of the shotgun forma· 10· 15 , !1 - 15 , 5-15 on Friday. women with four kills and 10 digs. the College of Mount St Joseph,
Robin
Sharp
chipped
in
with
three
ers lost 1..0 to Thomas More (Ky.) and scored both of its goals in the lion. It was the Steelers' fust score However, the team regrouped Sat·
the top-ranked team in District 22,
first half, both by Kiley, the junior in the first half in the last four urday to hand losses to Notre Dame kills, two serving aces and I0 digs, and
at Stanley L. Evans Field.
lost8·15,11·15. TheRedwom(Ohio) 15-5, 15·8, and Wooster, while Shelley Wray contributed
weeks.
Thomas More's defense and an midfielder from Cincinnati.
en
then
recovered in the same
three kills and six digs.
Kiley scored his first goal on
inability to capitalize on some of its
The Browns rebuilt their 10· 15·3, 15·0.
match
to
defeat Midway (Ky.) 15·
At Notre Dame, the Rio ladies
Coach Patsy Fields noted that
opportunities hurt the Redmen, assist from Manley, and did it point lead in the third· quarter,
6,
15·
10.
who earlier last week had defeated again without assist 10 minutes using their· recently discovered no· Lake Erie's team, one of the best m were "their old selves again,"
"By losing, it made me look at
District 22 and Mid-Ohio Confer· later on what Coach Scou Morris· huddle offense for part of a 15· the school's history, and a total of Fields said, easily putting away .the the team and decide to try different'
host
school
and
Wooster.
Agatnst
22
blocking
errors
dented
Rio
ence rival Cedarville 2-0 at sey called "a great individual play, 68 · yard drive capped by
things to prepare fot the playoffs,"
effon."
·
Cedarville.
Kevin Mack' s !·yard run . Kosar Grande ' s chances for a win, in Notre Dame, Zempter and Cooper Fields said.
each
had
II
kills,
and
Cooper
pro·
The Redrnen netled 25 shots on had third-down completions of 19 spite of a 24-kill offense perf or·
Thomas More, which took
The Redwomen, now 35·7, baV·
goal
to Cedarville 's six, while and 10 yards to Brian Brennan on mance from Billina Cooper and an vided four block solos and four el again
seven shots on goal and had three
Tuesday when they meet
digs.
Spears
added
four
kills
and
18- dig finish on defense by
corner kicks, scored about 10 min· Egnor had five saves and his coun· the drive.
Thomas
More
(Ky.).
four digs, Sharp had four kills, two
utes into the fast half and main· terpan for the Yellow Jackets was
Rod Woodson , however ,
Jained the advantage, assisted by 12 credited with four.
returned the ensuing kickoff 47
"The second half indicated a yards, sparking a lO·play, 50-yard
goalkeeper saves. The Redmen
fired in a total of 31 shots on goal, very ctose game, but in all actuali· drive climaxed by Warren
six of them by Ricardo Campbell ly, it was a very one-sided perfor- Williams' !-yard scorin~ run, and
and four each provided by Earle mance," Morrissey remwked. "I 'm Pittsburgh was back within three.
Manley and Joe Kiley. The team always pleased to walk away with a
The Steelers got the ball two
was also credited with two comer win, but this also demonstraled to more times, resqlling in Ander·
me that when our team has their son' s mi ssed field goal and
kicks.
Jim Egnor, who has been Rio backs up against the wall, they can Matthews' interception.
Gnmde's stren~ at the goalkeep· take it bead-on."
O' Donnell was making his sec·
Included: Cleaning
The Redmen close the regular ond start in place of Bubby Brister,
er's position th1s season, netted five
season at home Wednesday, 3:30 sidelined by a sore knee. Two
Oiling
saves.
The Redmen faced a happier set p.m, against Wilmington. They will interceptions marred an otherwise
Adjusting
of circumstances with the enter the contest at 6-10·1 overall, decetlt performance by the second·
Same Day Service
Greasing
Cedarville victory on Oct. 23, in addition 10 being 5·3 in the dis· year quarrerback, who completed
which. represcnled their next 10 last trict and 4·2 in the MOC.
AU Parts Extra
.
19 of 35 JliiSSCS for 221 Yards·

Cleveland edges Pittsburgh
17-14 for second straight win

.

Fr~nso

Redskins edge Gia11ts 17,.13 to •
remain only unbeaten pro team
By BARRY WILNER

.

·· ·Herd drops 38-31 tilt

The Dally Sentinel Page 5
)

'·

on pinch-hitter Gene Larkin ' s Brian Hunter's head and Gladden
'
.
bases-loaded pinch single over a clapped his way home.
drawn·in outfield off loser Alejan·
" Both teams had an opportunity
dro Pena with one out in the lOth.
to do something," said Puckett,
"I knew a fastball was com- who won Game 6 with a home run
ing," Larkin said. "I just wanted to in the II th inning off Charlie
make contact and hit.a fly ball. As Leibrandt.
soon as I hit it, I knew the game
The Braves' best chance carne
was over and that we could relax in the eighth inning when Lonnie
and enjo.y the . world cham pi· Smith .made a brutal base-running
onship."
mistake to cost them the go-ahead
As soon as Larkin's drive took run.
'
off for the outfield, a wave of white
Smith led off with a single and
Homer Hankies started and didn't · Terry PendleiOn followed w~h a
stop (or several minutes.
drive to the left-center field gap.
It was time to stop the chop.
But Smith lost the flight of the ball
" It's tough right now to realize and held up at second, decoyed by
what we accomplished, especially shortstop Greg Gagne and
with another team over there cele· Knoblauch at second. Pendleton
bmting,'' said Smoltz, who gave up ended up with a double, but Smith
six hits in 7 1·3 innings. "You only got 10 third on a hit he should
never think about losing."
have scored on.
In 1990, it seemed all the Twins
The Twins missed a chance to
and Braves did was lose as each score in the bouom of the eighth
team fmished last. But for the first . when Hrbek lined into a double
time in baseball )lfstory, two teams play with the bases loaded.
went from wars( t&amp; first and ended
"I was nervous from the start,
up in the World Series.
and then things got worse," llrbek
· It was Minnesota's second said . "Thi s whole Series was
World Series title in five seasons.
intense."
THAT'S IT - Tbe Minnesota Twins' Gene
ond is lbe Twins; Kirby Puckett. Larkin's single
After each team blew several
The Braves won all three games
Larkin watches his tenth·inning single fty with
gave the Twins a 1·0 victory to win. the World
opponunities, Dan Gladden got the in Atlanta, two on close plays at the
Atlanta Braves pitcher Alejandro Pena. On sec·
Series in MinneapoUs Sunday. (AP LaserPhoto)
Twins staned on their way to the plate to end things. The little·
championship when he led off the known Lemke singled home the
lOth with a bloop double 10 left off winning run in the 12th inning of
Pena and moved 10 third on Chuck Game 3, tripled and scored the
Knoblauch's sacrifice. Atlanta winning run in the ninth innin~ of
with Vancouver beating Washing·
By JOHN KREISER
" For them to come back and
manager Bobby Cox then in ten· Game 4 on Jerry Willard's sacrifice
.. AP Sports Writer
ton on Thursday to take over the score two on the power play the
tionally walked Kirby Puckett and fly and had two triples in Game 5.
After a start they could only No. I spot in the overall standings; way they did, that's not something
Kent Hrbek to get to designated He will be remembered as giving it have dreamed of, the Washington
Since then, nothing has gone that pleases me," Washington
hitter Jarvis Brown, w·ho entered a great try , but not as a world Capitals and Vancouver Canucks right foJ'-either team. The Canucks coach Terry Murray said after Win·
the game in the ninth as a pinch champ.
got a fast dose of reality.
lost Saturday night in Edmonton nipeg rallied on power-play goals
runner for Chili Davis.
"I can take some satisfaction in
The Capitals and Canucks were and both teams were beaten Sun· by Stu· Barnes and Ed Olczyk.
Larkin, batting for Brown, hit this," Lemke said, "bull can only the NHL's hottest teams over the day night
"This game tonight is not acceptPena's first pitch over left fielder feel disappointment right now."
first three weeks of the season,
Washington turned·a 4-1 deficit able."
into a 5-4 lead in Winnipeg, only to
In Sunday's other NHL games,
see the Jets score twice in the third Buffalo beat Hartford 5·1 and
period for a 6·5 victoey. Edmonton Boston downed Chicago 6-3.
completed
a home-and·home Jets 6, Capitals S
By JIM LITKE
In the last few seconds before it
Hours later, he took a deep
From there on ou~ Minnesota's
sweep
of
the
Canucks
with an easy
Winnipeg took a 4-1 lead just
came to rest, you could almost see breath and tried again. ' 'I'll tel.! Jack Morris and Atlanta's John
AP Sports Writer
6·3
win
in
Vancouver.
·
12:06
into the game before the
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - The the tension spinning off with each you what," Puckett said finally, Smoltz matched scowl for scowl,
Depite
the
losses,
both
the
Caps
Capitals rallied. Peter Bondra and
baseball flew and flew off Gene revolution.
excusing himself, "I got an ulcer pitch for piu:h, and most important,
"! can't smile, I'm too tired," from this. I ought to check myself zero for zero. There were plenty of (8·3· 0) and Canucks (8 -3-1) Dino Ciccarelli scored in the first
Larkin's bat. taunting left-fielder
Brian Hunter's desperate reach Minnesota's Kirby Puckett said. into Fariview Hospital tomorrow. "
moments early in the game to go remained on top in their divisions. period to make it 4-3, then Bondra
and Sylvain Cote scored
first, then bounced and boun ced "My emotions are drained. It was
That would put him at the end after the nails, but the fust time it But the honeymoon is over.
and finally just dribbled onto the such a great feeling to win, but I of a very Ion~ line. 1
happened in concert came in the
warning 011Ck.
can't reaDy explain it right now."
Starting m the dampness and eighth.
sunshine of spring and ending in
Both teams loaded the bases ,
autumn in the comfort of climate' ·. both had their slumping RB! guys
control, the Minnesota Twins and at the plate with one ou~ and both
Atlanta Braves played 350 games AUanta's Sid Bream and Minneso·
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. (AP) go. On fourth and 18 at the Moe· between them, the last incredible Ia's Kent Hrbek came away empty
By Dave Harris
tage. Fairland drove to the Maraud·
_ Kenyon Earl compleled 15 pass· casin 23, Todd Donnan's pass to seven of those against each other. after hitting weakly into inning·
The Meigs Marauder eighth er eight and was facing a fourth
es for 296 vards and three touch· Troy Brown slipped out at the two- And in the last inning of the last ending double plays.
grade football team defeat~ Fair· and four, but Hansen intercepted a
game, the last swing decided who
..
downs Saturday as tl)e Moccasins yard line.
"You get to the .point you don't land recently 14·8 in ovenime, the Hager pass and the Marauders had
, , held on to upset Divisio!ll-AA's
Tennessee,Chattanooga took would be fmt.
know what to do," Twins manager game was played at Bob Robens pulled out the victory.
. . 6th-ranked Marshall.
over and Muhammad Shamsid·
Game 7 began with Braves lead· Tom Kelly recalled. ·
Field in Pomeroy.
James White led Meigs on the
Earl's 22-yard touchdown pass Deen ran the ball47 yards on the off man Lonnie Smith shaking
• ,.
."Do you bunt him over, do you
Th e Dragons scored on their ground with 13 carries for 57
catcher Brian Harper's hand before take three swings, do you just keep second offensive play of the game yards, McKinney added 37 yards in
. ,. . to James Roberts with 9:07 remain· fust play of the series.
ing put the Moccasin~ ahead for
Earl ran one yard for a touch· he stepped into the bauer's box at trying and trying? The harde st when Logues ran 76 yards around 10 carries. Hansen was three of six
... , good.
down and completed TO passes of 7:38 p.m. Sunday ni~ht. It was a thing, the wo~t pan of the game, is right end. Quarterback Ryan·Hager in the air for 60 yards. Paxton had
very classy gesture, g1ven that just dealing with the players when you ran the extra points and the first one catch for 60 yards, Pullins one
The Moccasins (4·3 overall, 2-2 66 and 7 yards.
Southern Conference) and The
The Thundering Herd played three games eartier, Smith had uied don't score. ... It's so hard becaus;: period ended with the Dragons for 22 yards and Mash cine for 15.
Thundering Herd (4-3, 1·2) tallied without starting quarterback to sepuate Harper from his senses you're dying inside. You feel like holding a 8·0 lead.
Mash had seven tackles and one
.. · up 62 points and eight touChdowns Michael Payton, one of four Mar· on a world-class collision at the you 're not doing enough to help
Meigs tied the game with 7:26 fumble recovery to lead the
•
in the fust half and were tied 31-31 shall players who became ill last plate. It also marked just about the themget a run."
left in the first half when James Marauder defense, Canterberry also
going into intennission. .
week. True freshma~ Todd Don· last time anybody on either side
White scorea from three yards out recovered a fumble.
Tbe second half remamed score· nan, son of coach J1m Donnan, smiled for the next 3 1/2 hours
That
sCore capped offa 65 yard, 13
Logus .led Fairland on the
The fact is, they weren't doing
less until the third quarter, when completed 10 passes for 164 yards witl!oul feeling guilty.
play
drive.
Chad
McKinney
added
ground
with nine carries for 84
much for them selves . either.
Marshall threatened with 2:31 to and a touchdown.
the extra points to tie the game at yards, Hager added 58 in 15 car·
eight. Herbie Bush tipped a Fair· ries, Hager was two of four in the
land punt with around two minutes air for 12 yards.
left in the half giving Meigs the r----''' - - - - - - - - FRESNO, Calif. (AP) - Fresno hopes, and he vowed ihere would
The Top 10 ·were unchanged (7-0), which received four first· ball at the Dragon 49. Quarterback
State coach Jim Sweeney feels a be "no double-bogeys this year" this week and Fresno State and place votes and 1,412 points fol · Brent' Hansen hooked up with Paul
benh, albeit the final one, in The - a reference to a 73 · 18 loss to UCLA (5·2) were the only new lowing a 29·7 victory over Oregon. Pullins for 22 yards and Eric Pax.. . Associated
Press college football Nonhern Illinois last year which additions to the Top 25. UCLA,
COUNTY MAPS
The three-point gap between . ton for 23 yards but time ran out in
poll is no more than his unbeaten knocked them permanently out of which has been ln and out of the Miami and Washington is the the half with Meigs at the Dragon
IN STATE IIOOK
Bulldogs deserve.
the Top 25 after two weeks at No. rankings this season, climbed back smallest since the Huskies moved four yard line.
A book containing aU of West
Fresno State (7·0) is one of only 24.
Virginia's. 55 county maps is available.
to No. 23 after beating Arizona into the third spot on Sept. 29.
Gary Canterberry fell on a Fair- Printed 'On 16•22 inch double spread
four unbeaten teams in Division f.
"I'mhappy that fmally the writ· State 21-16.
Notre Dame (7 ·I) beat Southern land fumble at the Dragon 26 yard pagea,
each county has a separate map.
A following a 48·22 victory over ers have read the papers. But we've
Illinois, 17th last week, and Cal 24-20, Penn State "(7·2) wal·
line
giving
the
Marauder
excellent
The
book
contains 144 pagea.
·
.· · Big West Conference rival UNLV got five more games 10 go to reach Pittsburgh , which was 23rd , loped West Virginia 51-6, Nebras- filed position. But the Little The atate'e
34,242
milee
of
roads
are
Saturday night, and Sweeney said our goal, and that's the top 20, " dropped out of the Top 25 after ka (6·1) mauled Missouri 63-6 and
shown
in
detlil.
Towns,
cities
and
Marauders
turned
the
ball
over
on
.. . he's delighted that the Bulldogs added Sweeney, whose team visits losses on Saturday. Illinois lost to California (6·1) defeated San Jose
vWages are indued and located, and
downs.
finally broke into theTop 25.
another Big West rival, Utah State Northwestern and Pittsburgh fell to State 41 · 20. Florida (6·.1) and
there
is much additional information. To
Meigs received a big break with
But he said he's got higher (1·6), on Saturday.
East Carolina.
order
Weat Virginia County Map book,
Alabama (6· 1) did not play.
3:01 left in the game when Hager
Iowa is lith, followed by Texas ran a quanerback keeper 36 yards send $14.85 (price includes delivery).
accepted.
Florida State remained No. I, A&amp;M, Ohio State, Tennessee, Col· for a touchdown, but the play was VISA and MaoterCard
Couaty
Mapa
followed by Miami, Washington , orado, Clem son , East Carolina , called back for clipping. Regula·
'
1121 Puoto Place
Michigan, Notre Dame, Florida , Syracuse, North Carolina State and tion ended with the score tied at
LJDdOD Statloo, WI ~
Alabama, Penn State, Nebraska and Oklahoma. Rounding out the Top eight
(6011) 8116-3331
25 are Baylor, Georgia, UCLA,
California.
Other State County Map Boob available
Meigs
recieved
the
ball
first
in
'
include: AR, FL. IN, KY, NC, OH,
Florida State (8·0), which rallied Arkansas and Fresno State. ·
overtime and was facing a third and
Clem
son
(4·1·
1)
jumped
three
PA, SC and TN.
to defeat LSU 27-16, received 53
nine at the Dragon 19 yard line.
.••
of 60 first-place votes and I ,492 places to No . 16 afte r beating Hansen hooked up with Ben Mash
points from the nationwide panel of North Carolina State 29-19. The for a 15 yard l!am 10 the Fairland
•
Wolfpack (6-1) fell seven spots to four yard line. After Chad McKin·
spons writers and broadcasters.
•
'•
Miami (7-0) got three flfst-place No. 19.
ney took it to the one yard line,
East Carolina (6-1) rose three Hansen dove in for the score. The
1 Florida State beat LSU ....................... 27· 16
votes and 1,415 points after down'
ing Arizona 36-9. But the Hurri· spots 10 No. 17 after edging Pitts· pass for the extra points failed, but
2 MtemJ beat Arizona ............................. 36·9
•
•
canes lost ground to Washington burgh 24·23.
the Marauder held a 14·8 advan·
. AWEST VIRGINIA COMPANY
3 WuhlDaton beat Orel(on ,,,,,, ,,,,.,, 29-7
4 MJ.chll(an beat Mlnneaota (Frldayl ........ 32·6
BUY1-GET1
5 Notre Dune beat Sonthem Cal ........... 24-20
8 l"lorlda ..................................... did not play
..
7 A 1 1"'~a .......................... ;........ dld not play
..
8 Peu State beat Weat Vlr&amp;lnla ......... ;.. 31·6
9 Nebraata beat Mluourl ........................ 63·6
10 CaJlfomla beat San Jote State ........... 41·20
11 Iowa. beat Pardue ............................... 31·21
PICKUP OR DINING ROOM ONL
t
12 N. Carolina State lo1t to Clemson ...... 19-29
Not Wid will aM ......
~-T--·-~13
Tezaa
A
•
M
beat
Hoa1ton
.................
27·18
'
14 Ohlo State
._ beat MichJfan State ......... 27·17
•
•
15 Teaaeaaee .............................. u did not play
'
18 Colorado beat Kanau State ................. 1CHI
17 DJinoll lolt to Northweatem .............. 11·17
'i

.. .
.-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

-.

· Monday, October 28, .11191
Page ' ,4

·Twins win Game 1 to complete storybook.year
By.JIM DONAGHY
AP Baseball Writer
MINNEAPOLIS - A few
months won 'I be enough to talk
about this Worlcl Series. It really
deserves a lifetime.
lp less than four months, the
MinbesOta Twins will.open spring
training in Fort Myers, Fla. No
doubt, the topic of conversation
will be their 1·0 victory over the
Atlanta Braves in Game 7 of the
World Series.
Someday, it will be a Series dis·
cussed with the same reverence as
Reds-Red Sox in 1975 or Yankees·
in 1960. One thing is for
.. Pirates
sure- the 1991 World Series will
never be forgotten.
After six incredible games,
Game 7 on Swiday night was quite
special in its own unique way. For
.the first time in Series history. a
game went into extra innings score·
less.
·
Jack Morris refused to give up a
run, no matter how hard the Braves
!Jied, and went the distance, allow·
10g seven hils and stnkmg out
Morris, the Series MVP, was
. eight
2·0 in three starts with a 1.17 ERA
John Smoltz matched him pitch·
for-pitch until the eighth.
..
"We both had our opponumues
and we buth managed to get out of
it," the 36-year-old Morris said.
f'rom start to fl!lish, this World
. Series was filled with one improba·
.. ' ' ble play and one unlikely hero afu:r
' ''' another. From Scou Leuis to Mark
Lemke.
Three games were settled in
extra innings and four times a game
' ', '
was won with. the final swing . both records. Game 7 was decided

Monday, October 28, 1991

'·

•

Shaver Repair Clinic • All Brands

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5 P.M.-9 P.M.

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TUESDAY, OCT. 29th
4:00 'til 7:00 p.m.
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MIDDLEPORT, OH. 45760 ·
(6l4). 992·6491,

'i
)

I

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Vl

~I

)1\
.'

.,

�...

&lt;

'

·-

" 28, 1991
OCtober

~

By The Bend

r· l '

.

The
Daily
.

S~ntinel

Public Notice
prem, .., ,...,ddrelnorltw•

'

'•

·Retail
•
semlnar
planned

By Brian J, Reed
I
\

i

'"":'":"---:----:-:'""::"':'--.~~~~~

Information presented in "Take
~ Charge", a program co-sponsored
by the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce and the Ohio State Uni·
versity Cooperative Extension Ser·
.vice, has been most helpful and
;informative.
·:. One of the most interesting
Items to come out of the program
:was presented last week by local
-Cooperative Extension Agent John
;Rice.
Entitled "Keys to Successful
'Towns", the information . was
;derived from the work of Dr. Cor;nelia Flora of Kansas State Univer.Sity.
· Lack of space prohibits me from
going into any depth here, but you
, might be interested in the high• lig hts. I think we all should be.
'
According to this particular arti·
j clc, there are eight features com1 mon to successful communities:
i I . Controversy is considered
normal in successful communities.
i In fact, it is expected. It is not treat·
: ed as bad, wrong or abnormal, and
' neither were the people who presented controversy. The opposite
was revealed in dying communi·
\ lies. People in these failing towns
~ avoided controversy and refused to
~ address issues.
.. 2. People in successful towns
•!le.Id an objective view of politics.
• :riley did not side with someone in
r.lhc political arena out of friendship
~~Qile • nor did they oppose some; Qlle simply because that person was
:21 e4ucator, a business person or a
·~1arrner. People in those dying com·
C"mlmities PERSONALIZED THEIR
.l'OLITICS. They were unable to
; ~arate the person from the job,
.,~ving loyalty to people mther than
: -1•sues. The "good old boy clique
~plerailcd to the end.
-;:. '3. In prosperous small towns,
the emphasis in schools was on
aC~~demics rather than sports. In
)lying towns, school systems tried
to hold the community's interests
by promoting loyalty to sports.
'When academic programs deterio·
rated, people move their kids to
:~tter schools.
: 4. In successful communities,
&lt;there was a willingness to risk for
l hc good of the- town. Prosperous
~owns had enough success to want
•risk, and they had success because

I

they did risk. Dying. towns, the
report says, had neither.
5. In a related vein, successful
towns ~ad_:ovillingness to tax them- .
selves, m()vmg beyond want into ·
action. Dying towns ~imply
~topped at identifying needs, lhink·
mg that someone else should pay
for their gain.
6. Successful towns were able to
expand, making a place for more
people. Townspeople in dying
communities woilld not share their
powers and authorities with new·
comers.
.
7. Successful towns aJso had the
ability to learn from anyone. Citi·
zens m dying towns didn't want to
learn from any.one who wasn't
exactly like them.
8. Finally, successful towns
were Oexible, disbursing community leadership. Many were involved
in the work and mission of the
community. In dying communities,
a small clique of people controlled
all the decision-making communities,.

Historic Headlines ..."A Nixon
landslide is apparently clear",
declared the headlines in The Daily
Sentinel during this week in 1972.
The campaigns of Incumbent
President Richard M. Nixon and
his Democratic challenger George
McGovern were heating up as
Election Day, 1972 drew nearer.
Locally, Dr. Alphus R.
Cristensen, President of Rio
Grande College, promised that the
new community college at Rio
Grande would be a "big bargain"
for residents of the community.
Those comments were made at a
meeting of the MiddleportPomeroy Rotary Club.
A.R. Knight of Pomeroy, owner
of the Pomeroy Motor Company ,
was recognized for 50 years in the
automobile business.
And from the "!·Kid· You-Not"
Department, a select group of
Me1gs High Scbool Band members
were set to make their debut at the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation
District meeting. Dn you remember
their name? They were the "Nut·
Meigs", of course.
Take Care.

I

:'Brennan speaks to Rotarians
: Debbie Brennan, 1990-91 principal at Meigs Junior High School
•'a nll presently .principal at Pomeroy
- EI ~ me ntary, was guest speaker at
. t~e- recent meeting of the PomeroyMiddlepon Rotary Club.
' She stated 180 students were
tecognized for academic excellence
,9r:academic improvement through
the Meigs Junior High School Aca·
demi~ B~?&lt;&gt;sters Program Iast!Xear.
· ·~be . m&lt;hcated the program has
. "great potential" for upgrading the
level of all students because it rec·
•agnizes not only excellence' but
' im'provement throughout the entire
system.
' The Rotarv Club was one of ohP.

~p hilathea

Public Notice

MONDAY
POMEROY · The Meigs County Veterans Service Commission
will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. in
the Veterans Service Office in
Pomeroy.

Public Notice

RACINE .• Southern Local
Chapter I "Observation Day" will
be held Tuesday. Observation for
kindergarten · will be Tuesday and
Wednesday. All Chapter I parents
are invited to attend their children's
classes. For further information call
the student's school.
WEDNESDAY
SCIPIO TOWNSHIP • Trick or
treat will be held Wednesday from
6 to 7 p.m. with costume judging
and refreshments at7:15 p.m. at the
fire station.

in Middleport will be held Wednes· ·
day from 6 to 7 p.m. Those wishing
to treat the children should turn on.
their front lights.
POMEROY • Trick or treat will
be observed in · Pomeroy on
Wednesday from 6 to 7 p.m. Those
wishing to treat the children should
tum on their front lights. .
RACINE · Trick or ueat in the
Racine area will be held \Vednesday'6 to 1 p.m. Those participating
should turn on front lights. The
siren will sound to start and stop.

Visits family
Mary Andrews, Hilliard, former
resident of Long Bottom, ~ nd
daughter of Rose Mary Milliron,
Columbus, spent the weekend visit·
.ing friends and relatives in the
Long Bouom area.

I

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S!'9p 1f191Jt!-!a M • • WM!AIU
•

..,..

New arrival

GUN SHOOT.

Jim and Lori (Powell) Black,
Midwest City, Ok., announce the
birth of a daughter, Morgan Shea,
on August 26.
She weighed seven pounds and
!3 ounces and was 21 inches .long.
Paternal grandparents are James
. and Betty Black, Mandeville. La.
· Paternal great-grandparents arc
Helen Black, Coal City, W.Va.,
and Dorothy Gowen, Paris, Tenn.
Maternal grandparents are I van
·and Carolyn Powell, Racine.
Maternal great-grandparents arc
Frank and Delores Cleland and
Wanda Powell, Racine.

••••••menta,

....,t.

The game of darts was· played
originally with small arrows shof at
an empty wine barrel.

-ELECT~ho: Ellen J. Rought
When: November 8, 1991
What: Mayor of Pomeroy
Why: Full Time Mayor
Paid for br the Candidate
Ellen J. Rought· lSI Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy, OH.

.

r,~ry2~:':"· Clerk

EVERY

BOB JONES
1----------------- EXCAVATING

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

THAHK YOU

WORK

Sormtning fjooa's Jl{ways CooKing Jlt

I MASON FAMILY

RESTAURAN:T
AVDRIONNA PULLINS

Birth is announced
Tom and Stacie Pullins, Long
Bottom, are announcing the birth of
their ftrst child, a daughter, Audri·
onna Renae, on Sept. 22.
The infant weighed nine pounds
and eight ounces and was 21 inches

long.
Paternal grandparents are
Theodore and Becky Pullins, Long
Bottom, and great grandmother is
Mallie Pullins, Alfred.
Maternal grandparents are Dave
and Susan Hall, New Haven,
W.Va.: ·and Nancy Hall, West
Columbia, W.Va. GreaJ srandpar·
ents are Lera Hall, Point PICMant,
W.Va., and Gene and Sally Bljlnd,
l.e!lltt. W.Vo

~,

MORGAN BLACK '

Care • Concern • Compassion

.ADVERnSEMENT
FOR BIOS
Mtlgo County

Bura•1 I Nlple, Y,mltld '

AmNTION

Public Notice

4424 Emtrton A-u•
ADVERTISEMENT
County Commlulontre
PorktrlbUfll, Wut VIrgin'*
. • FOR BIDS
Meiga County CourthouM
28t04
llttga County
Pomeroy, Ohio 457H .
Coplea of the Conlraal
CommiMio-1
t·. •
Commlalloner•
Burgua a Nlplt, Umltld
•Meige County Department Documenll may ba ob· Melg1 County Dep1rtmlint
t1lned
at
the
oHiot
of
of
Human
Senlou
4424 E
• of Humon Services
· Burgan • Nlplt, Limited,
171 R-Siretl
meroon Avenue
•
175 Rico Streel
located
11
4424
Emereon
·
Middleport,
Ohio
45
n
Parterabu~t~at
Vlrglnlo
7
. Middleport, Ohio 45789
Caple• of the Conlroet
~ ,In
accordance wl1t1 Avenue, Pertceraburg, W.at · In eccordan_u with
Section 307.86 of the Ohlc Vlrglnll 28104 upon pay. Soodon 307.H ol lht Ohio Documtnta mly be ob·
Reviled Code, aealed bid• mtnt of TweniY-Five dolllln RmHd Cade, teoled blda talnod 11 the office of
IOi the Telephone, Data anol (125.00), NON~ QF WHICH for IIUtrlor Fumlahlng1 lor Burgou l Nlplt, Umlted,
lht Melg1 County located at 4424 Emerton
Security Sy1tem for the WILL BE REFUNDED.
The front of lho envelope Deptrtment of Humen Avenue, Porkaraburg, Wut
11olge County Deportmenl
Ill Human S...Vtcea will be tnclotlng the bid mull be 3trvlcea wtll be rectlvtd at Vlrglnlo 28104 upon PIY"
fee'elved It the offlce of lhe morl&lt;ed "S..Ied Bid, Humin .he ofllee of the llolg1 moni of Twenty-Five Doltan
M1lg1 County Commlulon• Strvlou Department ·=ounty Comml11lopera ($25.00), NONE OF WHICH
era,
Molge County Telephone, Dote and Olelga County Courthouae: WILL BE REFUNDED.
Tht front of lht envllope
Courthouu, Pomeroy, Ohio Security", bidder to furnllh Pomeroy, Ohio 45711 untli
2:00 p.m. (local tlmt) on enclotlng tha bid mull be
~5788 until t :30 p.m. (locel their own bid form.
Tht County Commllllon· Nov. 4, tl81 1nd then 11 morl!td "Soiled Bid, Human
lime) on Nov. 4, 198t tnd
then at 11ld office publicly tr1 are bound by Fed,11r1l uld office publicly opened Strvlcea Deportment
ltw whloh prohlblt1 con· 1nd read aloud. Furnlohlnga•, bidder to
opened and rtod •loud.
WORK covered by the trectlng from 1n lltlbllth- WORK covered by the furnleh thllr own bkllorm.
Tht Commltalo-• are
Contract Document• In• ment they or 1 flmlly mtm• Contract Dooumen11 In·
etude the !allowing lltmr btr m1y hive • flnaiiCIIal elude the following Item• bound by Federal lew which
for whloh bide will be prohlbllt controcdng from
'fl&gt;r which blda will bt lntoreot ln.
Tht Board of County ICCII!IIed:
•n utabll•h-t they or 1
~--:
Commlttlon«a
m1y
aooopl
Fumlthlngl
for tht
fernlly member may hevt 1
Ttlep"-, Data tnd
tho
lowtll
bid
or Nltct lhe · Mllga County D1ptr1mtnt flnoncJ-tl-t ln.
Seourlly Syetem
bid for tht Intended
of ......, a.arta••
The Board ol County
Melge County Deptrtmtnt b11t
purpo11,
1nd
rtHrvt
tht
Arahfttote Eellrnllle
Commlttlontre
may aoctpt
.of Hlllftlft Servtcu
right to reject •ny 1nd all
•126,000.00
the lo-t bid or ttltat tht
pen thtreof.
The Contract Documenta beat bid for the Intended
The Contract Document• blda or 1ny
Mtlg1
County
llotrd
mar
be •-'ned 1t:
purpo1e, and rtHrtt tht
')lay be ex1mlnecl el:
of ComllllulontrO
Tht
Olfloe
of
the Mtlga
right
to riJtct eny and all
,;;.lht Olflct of tiM Mtlg•
MIII'J HobetaHer, Clerk , .
blda or any pert lh«Mf.
·". Coun:!:.uCommlellontre
.Mtlgl
nty Courthau• l-(~1::!.0)..:,2t:!.,::21,l:2ta=.._ _ _--4:'-------=---1Mtlat County llotrd
, ~,.r- ofCOmmlutann
· .. PorMfOI', !)hlo 457118

r7=~;:;:;;~~;:::=1tt;;;:;=:~;:tt;:=======:t========.
YOUNG'S • SHIUI &amp;·TREE Is Yow Roof Reocly For Anottttr y..,. af let and 5loW'I
. TRIM and
. ( New's The· 1111111•
.
S RO Flail Out.
IG &amp;
REMOVAL
ALL JACK
Ofl
CONS RUC
•LIGHT HAULING
T noN
992 2653

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

contributing ·sponsors for the pro·
graml
Mrs. Brennan hopes to get the
program underway at Pomeroy this
current year. The fust meeting on
POMEROY · The children's
the program ~ill be held Nov. II at · movies "Henry Hamilton: Gmduate
7 p.m. at the school's PTO meet· Ghost" and ''Selfish Giant" Mid·
CHESTER • The Chester Vol·
in g.
dleport Library on Monday at 7 unteer Fire Department has sched·
The program is designed to p.m.
uled trick or treat for Wednesdaystimulate all students to academic
from
6 to 7 p.m. The siren will
improvement through recognition,
RI.J"ILAND • The Rutland Gar- sound to start and stop.
awards, bumper stickers and other den Club will meet Monday at 7:30
means.
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Robert
PORTLAND · Trick or treat
John Rice, past president of the Kennedy on Hysell Run Road.
will
be held in the Portland area on
Rotary Club, was in chi!J'ge of the
Wednesday
from 6:30 to 7:30p.m.
meeting held at the Heath United
TUPPERS PLAINS • Trick or Those wishing to treat the children
Methodist Church.
treat in Tuppers Plains will be held should turn on their front lights.
on Monday from 6to 7 p.m.
BASHAN • The Bashan Ladies
RUTLAND • Trick or treat in Auxiliary will be holding their
Lesley and Peggy Roush, Carl Nel· the Rutland area will be held Mon· · annual Halloween party on
son, Julia Lee, Clairmont Buckhan· day evening from 6 to 7 p.m. Those Wednesday at 6 p.m. at the fire
non and Pat Shrivers.
participating should tum on their house for the areas of Bashan
Next month's meeting is set for- front lights.
E~gle Ridge, Keno and Rainbo~
Nov. 14 at 6 p.m. This will be the
Rtdge.
Thanksgiving dinner with the offi.
REEDSVILLE · Trick or treat
cers serving as hostesses.'
in Reedsville will be observed
MIDDLEPORT • Trick or treat
Donna Hartson closed with Mon~y eve~ing from 6 to 7 p.m.
pmyer.
·
The suen will sound to being and
The Ladies worked on end. Those participating should
grapevine wreath~ made.by Kathy turn on tljeir porch lights.
lhle as their service project for the
residents of Overbrook.
TUESDAY

Public Notice

.

p.m.

r,~~

'-'i;;;i;;;;;;;i;;;i;
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day or that event. Items ·
must be received well in advance
to assure publfcatlon In the cal·
tndar.

··,

BU_SIDeSS
.
. ·s·· erVICeS
•

CHRISTMAS
AUCTION

lours of the· Smoky Mountains, Christus Gar·
dens, Dollywood, Dixie Stampede and a day in
AsbeviUe, N.C., where-they visited the Biltmore
Estate.
·

TRIP ENJOYED • Forty senior champs aad
their guests from Bank Oae, Athens, with
escorts Donna Nelson and Maxine Griffith,
recently enjoyed a week In Gatlinburg with

Ladies meet

The regular October meeting of
the Philathea Ladies of the Middle·
·.port Church of Christ was held
·recently with Donna Hartson pre·
siding. Farie Cole has the opening
'prayer.
, . Ella Mac Daugherty had devo; ttpns. She read from the book of
Hebrews and "Taking His Word
: seriously."
Secretary, treasurer and flower
reports were read and approved.
~ Named on the prayer list were

Downtown Coliunbus, Inc., and
the Ohio Council ·of Retail Mer·
chants are co-sponsoring the sec:
ond in a series of infonnative retail
seminars on Nov. 6 from 8:30 to 10
a.m. at the Columbus Museum of
An, 480 East Broad Street.
These seminars are intended to
bring in retailing experts to share
their knowledge and provide a
forum to share ideas. with col·
leagues. The sessioDs are (jesigned
for store managers and staff._
The workshop, "Getting Ready
FQr Christmas," explains that it is
never 100 early or too late to learn
-bow to capitalize .on the most
important selling season .of the
year. Participants will learn how to
build a winning Chrislfllas selling
plan. The cost of the workshop is
$10 per person in advance or $15
per person at the door.
James Dion, senior consultant at
Urban Marketing Collaborative
Ltd., will be the speaker. He has an
extensive background in retail marketing, buying, administration and
catalogues, as well as several years
in consulting.
Those interesting in attending
should respond by Wednesday to
Downtown Columbus Inc. ; 41 S.
High, Suite 1600, Columbus, Ohio
43215 or by phone, 469-8441. A
continental breakfast will be
served.

ORDAINED • Charles Willett was ordained
ordlnitioQ sen-tee to be held at Hillside Baptist
recently in special ordination services held at the
Churcb, Rev. Howard Casey of the Fellowship
Hillside Baptist Church. Rev. WiDell resides In
Baptist Church in Vleana, W.Va., was the guesl
Mason, W.Va. with his wire, Kay, .daughter; · speaker. Pictured, l·r, are Roa Cloacb, Rev.
Anl!le, and son, Greg. He is assistant pastor ot• Howard Casey, ~ev : Charl~s Wlllett, ~ev .
HUISide Baptist Churcb._Witbthis beiDa tbe fll'st
James_R. A-cree · Sr., Dan Hood and Joe
Humphrey.

!&gt;ou"ded and d•

111e Dally Sentinel-Page 7

lntwfere with the forming
tht wiatorn'
liObtltldalldtP.thiQIInat
IIIOIIOWI:
. on•
cul-tlvallng of the flrot
wealern one-half
l•bo·ve ducrlbtd P,reml11•:
32, town 4, Range .
endbtlng thutmtproperty 11 of the Ohio Company'•
CARPENTER
aonveyed byForrutA. Warll' Purchue, 1nd beginning 11
__
., ,.,. ,
1nd Eulal. Ward hit wlfo to
ooutheul corner of oald
_ 0 _ _ ,.
H.A. Cola ond Onolbl ~le Fraollon No. 32, and running
_ _.... ond ,..,...,11 1
Does your health insurance
by~ dlled Augutt 24: wnttolandonowownedby -e1 ....... _..
11145 and NCOrded In Book Lane VIneyard (formerly
...,Rootloe
policy build a cash value?
153, at Page 8t7 of Dood ownedbyReubenWoboter);
~•-lo!U•Are your cosls increasing
R-.-da of Melga County thence north far enough to
Polnl...
Ohlo,uaept0.3hcrethtreoi m1ko one hundred acrea;
(FREE ESTIMATES)
rapidly?
conveyed by H.A·. Cole lnd thence oaol to the Fraction
y.• ( • .YOUNG Ill
Have you compared ·
OMita Cole huaband tnd llno;thenceoouthtolheplace
coverage lately?
wilt, to·kit· ~lice Coopior by of beginning, containing
992 621
detddotadAprl13,t847,and
twenty-five.
acreo,
more
or
•Contact lhe
recordedlnBook15htpege leu,andtylnglntheweatern
Hn
National Association for the ·
230'of Mid Deoid Recordo. on•half ol real '"ale for· 11;R~::::;:=;;;;~
Being lhe ulna rHI 11• mar'ly owned by bucy 11
Self-Employed
tate
conQYed 10, H.A. Cole Oaborn, deceaaod.
614·446-NASE
.Lumber Co., Inc., by Homer
Being the oamo real eo·
A. and Ontlta Cole by deed tate conveyed unto W. fred
'GROOM
,_,ded In Dood Boo~ t65 Oaborn by Hernan G. Ooborn
Pogo204,MalgaCountyDood and Allee Oaborn, hla wile,
·ROOM .
RtC:ord1.
by deed dated October 10,
Co~npl11t1 Grooming
AVON CHRISTMAS
Deed Roftrence: Volume 1982, recorded In Deed Book
18t,
Pogo
283,
Melgo
co~nty No. '217 at Pagit 89, Deed
For All lrlllls .
OPEN HOUSE
Deed Recorda.
Recorda of Meigs County,
Parcel 4: The following Ohio.
0. U. INN, Athens
EMILEE MERINAR
real Hblbl being In Socllon
Deed Reference: Volume
Own1r
&amp; Operator
OCT. 29- OPEN 1·7
5, Town 4, Ranget2 Orange 238, Page 345, Meigs County
Townohlp, Illig• 'county, Deed Rtc:orda.
Evervone Welcome
614-992-6820
Ohio, ond bounded and d..
Whoreaa, ouch Judgment
Pomeroy,
aCrtbed aa'followa :
ordera auch realproptJIY to
- Bl!lllnnlng In the center of W aotd l&gt;y the underalgned
Stall Route No. 68t, where to oatlafy lhelotal Bll!Ount·Of
lhtWtitllneoflheChrlatlan ouch Judgment: Now, ther.,.
•Remodeling and
Cliurch.Cametery lnteraecte fore, public notice Ia hereby
Home Repai111
thocenttrofuldStateRoute: given that I, Jamoa M.
oRooflng
thtnctwoat1107.Hfoolalong Soulaby of Melg• County,
•Siding
,
thecenttrohald
Stale
Route
Ohio,
wllloellouch
real
prop·
NOV. 2 - 7:00
(to wh.lre the Weat line of erty at public auction, for
•P~lntlng
' Guy Boggan' 57.84 acre caoh,lothehlghulbldderof
SYRACUSE FIRE
FULLY INSURED
farm, dncrlbed In Vol. t66, an amount that equala al
FREE
ESTIMATES
page 99 of tho Molga County least:
STATION
Dood Recorda,lnteraectsthe
As I~ the courl's order,
CEDAR
Dan Smith, Auctioneer ·
center of tald State Route) the fair market value of the
thencesoulti 0 dog. 22' west parcela 11 determined by the
CONSTRUCTION
Toys, Furniture, Gifts, Tools
721.9 feet alcng the aaid weal county audllor ,In the amount
992·6648 or
line: ·thence aouth 88 dog. ol $84,950.00 or lho total
REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLE
ea1t 20117.88 fHt to the ctn· amount of the Judgment,
69~·6864
ter· of State Route No. 7; Including all taxes, eosaa•
thence north 4 dag. 40' weal menlo, charger, panaltlaa,
90 feel olong tho center of and lnlereal payable subs•
nldSbittRoute, to theaouth- quenl to the delivery tc _tho
eutcornercftheOhloValloy prooecutlng allorney of lha
FIREWOOD
Manufocturlng Corp.; th.lnce dellnquentlandtax cerUflcate
North 87 dog. 50' weal 349 or master list of delinquent
SELLERS
loot to I lOt now owned by the tracts fore total of$3t,240.59.
Ohio Vlllly Mtnufecturlng
The first auch sale shall
Hardwood Slabs
Corp.; thence north 2 dog. be between the hour,t ol 8
For Sale
tO' eut 125 IMI with the line a.m. and 4 p.m. altha front
Read
ohald Ohio Valley Manulac- atepo ol lhe courthouse In
Great Price!
turing Corp; thence ooulh 79 Meigs County, Pomeroy
CALL
the
dog. 30' -1 272 feel-wllh Ohio, on Friday thet5th dey
the line of uld Ohio Valley of Novomber, 199t.
OHIO PAWT CO.
£1assl0edsl
Manufacturing Corp.; thence
If aald parcels do not ••
north 58 dog. 25' -1 244 c~ve a aufflclent bid, they
992ftotwlthth.lllneohaidOhlo ohall be offered for sale,
Valley Manufacturing Corp.; under the same termo and -======~
thence
north t dog. 45' eaol condlllons of the flrol sale 't
Public Notice
Public Notice
•VINYL SIDING.
229.5feetwllh thellneohald and at tho ume Ume of day
•ALUMINUM SIDING
company
tMhe
ooulh
line
of
and
el
the
same
place,
on
lng 1/4 of an ecre: rooervlng
IN THE COMMON PLEAS tho rlghllo lily ond.molnblln 1 the Chrlotlan Church tot· Wednesday, the 27th day of
•BLOWN IN
thlnce
w111
336
fHt
along
Novembtr,
1991,
for
an
COURT OF MEIGS
INSULATION
droln or aewerlrom th.lh0u11
COUNTY, OHIO
now on tho following d• the south line of the Church amount that equalo atleaat:
Ao In lhe court'o ordeo,
HOWARD E. FRANK
lcrlbed premlaea: Situated lot and the oouth llno of the
cemetery
to
the
oouthwesl
.
the
fair merkel value ol the
MEIGS COUNTY
In Orange Townohlp, Mtlge
TREASURER,
County, Ohio, being In Sec- cornar of uld cemelery; percelus determined by the
PLAINTIFF,
tion No. 5, Townohlp No.. 4, thence north 0 dog. 38' east countyaudllor,lntheamounl
llew 11-.. Ioiii
CASE NO. VO DLT 01
Range No. 12 and bounded 265.t feet olong the west l!ne of $84,850.00 or the total
"Free
Ettimetea'•
va.
and deactlbed 11 followa: of nld cemetery to the r,tace amount of the Judgment,
THE OHIO VALLEY MANU· Beginning In the middle of of beginning, conta nlng Including Ill taxet, atMa•
PH. 949·2101
FACTURING
22.36 ecru.
mentl, chargu, penaltln,
State
Highway
No.
7
Wnt28
or Its. !~~~·_211~0
.CORPORATION, ET AL,
Excepting and reMmng and lnttroat payable turod• 6 fltl, and Saulh 18·112
NQ SUIIDAY
.DEFENDANTS,
10
the
former
Grantor,
Edda
quent
to
the
dtllvery
to
the
from the Noithtlat cor·
NOTICE OF SALE UNDER ntr of aald Section No. 5: Boggeaa,htradmlnlatralora, proaecutlng attorney olthe ~::;;:;~~~:;:::=.
JUDGMENT OF FORECLO. th.lnce Wilt 18 rod• to an oxecutore,heiraandaoslgns, delinquent land tax certificate r
SURE OF UENS FOR
Iron pin; th.lnce South 8·1/2 on•olxt•nlh (t/t6) olall oil oo muter llat of delinquent
DELINQUENT LAND TAXES rod1 to an Iron pin; thence ond gu lying under ond toactsforatotalof$31,240.59.
RACINE
WhtrHa, judgment hio EJiot tl rode: thence North So within the premlteo hereby
Jamn M. Soullby,
been randered egolnot cer- t12 rodo to tht plaoeofbtgln· conveyed, developed, pro.
SHERIFF
FIRE DEPT,
tain parcala of real property· nlng, containing o.as ol on duced ond removed thoro- tO (14) (21)(28) 3TC
for tax•••
.
Bashan luilclng
acre, rnoreorltlt,lnd being from,
charges, penaltln, lnteree1, 1 part of tht ume premlua
Subject to an oil ani! gu Real Estate General
and coolo •• followa:
conveyed by Florrl• 0. ~mb, leaat from Edda Boggeso to
Parcel Number·Taxeo, Inter• et
SAT. NIGHT
al., to Forrut A. Ward by B.H.PulnamdotedAprll241h,
~~~ and Ptnaltlea
tll48, and recorded In Vol.
6:30 P.M.
warronty
deed
of
date
Man:h
t0.00780.0DO-$ 391.14
S
• c- 28
17, t844, lnd recorded April 4t, page 38 of the Lease
t o.oomJI00-$17,273.12
tart1ng
t7,
t944,
In
Deed Book No. Reoardo ol Meigo County,
09-00866.000-$1,44t .70
F•&lt;llorw Choko
t5t, pege32t, Deed Recorda Ohio.
t1·00785.00tJ.$1,8t5.61
SubJect
to
the
right
of
the
12
Gout•
Dnly
of Mtlga County, Ohio: over
t o-oona.ooo-s1 o,st9.02
Grantora, Guy G. Boggeu
Strictly
and
acrou
the
llr1t
horolna·
Total·$3t,240.59
bova deocrlbed preml111 and Myrtle C. Boggeu, their
Parcel 1: Situated In the elth.lr
the-dllch running helro and aulgns, to con·
County of Mtlg1, State . of throughto the
flral above d• ttrucl, maintain, repair a alx
Ohio, ond In the Townohlp of octlbed promiMI
ctoo• Inch aewer line to a run on
Orange, end bounded and lng Stale Highwayand
AUTO PARTS
No.
7 or to aold realoalale,togelherwllh
deacrlbed 11 followa!
Speclallzlnt in·
tho ravine running North and the right ol lngrero and
Being In Soollon No. 5, South on lht flr1t above egresa for aald Grantors,
Custom
Fr.we ltptiir
Town1hltt No. 4 ond Range deocrlbed premlaH, which their ogento, uolgna and
NEW
&amp;
USED PARTS
No.12 oflheOhlo Company'• ravlntllll w..t of tho houae lnvlteea, to conatruct main~
fOI
All
MAKES &amp;
PurchaM In Orange Town· on the 1111 above deocrlbed taln and repair the aald sewer
ohlp, Melgo County, Ohio, Townahlp of Rutland, ln.the line.
MODELS
beginning at the Soulhweat County cf Meiga 1nd State of
Subject to all easements
992-7013
corner cf 1 5.28 acre tract of Ohio:
and hlghwaya of record.
MIDDLEpORT - . 2 Apl.
or 992·5553
land oiThoOhlo ValloyManuReference Deeds: Vol.
house, up 2 BR, bath, LR ,
Beginning
about
eighty
01 lOU Fill
faclurlng Company, a corpo- one rod• and fourtHn llnka t66, page 99; and Volume kit. Down, studio type with
ration, dncrlbed In deed eut from tht center of Wtll 227, Page 409, Melg_,• County kit &amp; bath.
1-800·141·0070
recorded In Book t9t, 11 page
DAIWlfl o•o
of Section 38, Town 8, Deed Records.
283 of lhe DHd Recorde of line
J/311'91 lin
Jack W Carscv·Reallor
Parcel 5: Situated In the
Range
14
of
the
Ohio
Com·
Melga County, Ohio, thence pany'a Purch••• 1tthe north· County of Melga,ln the Stale
The Besllll R!!JI E~lillC
South 58' 25 Eut 244 feet: 1111 corner · of Jo1ephu1 of Ohio, and In the Township
thence North 711' 30' Eut 272
·lind: t h e n c e l - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - feel to lhe Eaat Nnt of lando Cerpenter'o
Real Estale General
of Guy G. and Myrtle C. ooulh 44 roda to the northweot
corntr
of
Grant
Boggeoa, thence North n.5
feet to the Saulh line of oald Romlne'a land; thence Nit
DOZER and
5.28 acre tract, thenct Wtot 70.1/2 roda to tht northeaot
After
raising
vegetables
and
feeding
cattle
for
50
of
Grant
Rcmlne'e
corntr
475 feet•long the Sauth·llnt
-BACKHOE
of allld 5.29 ten tract to tho land: thenoe oouth t8 roda years, my wife and I have decided to sell the farm.
piece of beginning, contain· and 23 Iinke; lhiiiOt ..., n The farm is located on State Route 124 in Reedsville,
lng o.85 acre. EKcaptlng and rode end 22·112 llnkt to the Ohio. There is a 3500 foot frontage on the Ohio River
rnervlng on•aiKIMnlh (1/ weot line of Jtmll
t8) of allollond gaa underty· Chapmu'a lend: thence with a pasture fed by a creek that never runs dry. The
(614)
lng uld premlMI u herato- north eo rod• to tho center of farm consists of315 acres of land. 'J40. acrcs of good
fore ex.. pted and reurvod the road; thenceaouth67·t/2 crop land, (com is making 180 bushels to the acre
696-1
degr- wut 18 rodo and 6
by provloua grentor1.
And being part of lht real llnkl: lhance north 78•t/2 this year) 100 acres of prime vegetable land, 97 acres
tlblte conveyed by Edda dogr- weot t4 roda; thence treated pasture land, 77 acres of timber, and 40 acres
BoggttlloGuy G. and Myrtle north 4 rod• to tht center of underlayed with. 60 foot of Good graveL
IALI IESFIVAL
C. Bogan• by deed dated the 11id tlcllon No. 38;
There is enough bam and feeding space on property
October 21, 1950, ond r• thence wtot 10 lht ploce of
SPECIAL
beginning,
containing
33
and
corded In Book t66, at ptge
for 200 catllc. Cattle are already started on feed.
98 ol tho Deed Rocordt of 87/100 ecreo, more or Ina.
Dood rlloronctt: Voluma There are I big, upright and 2 bunker silos full of
Mel~unty, Ohio.
·
Reference: Volume teo, Poga 37; and Volume good silage, and com cribs consisting of 10,000
tl5, Page 718 of the Mtlga 234, Pagp 41t, llelga County bushels of com. So'me fields have electric high tensile
Offer Ends Oct. 31
Deed Recordt.
County Deed Record•.
wire
for
snip
grazing
cover
crops
for
the
winter.
Por
..
l
3:
Tho
lo-ng
Ptrctl 2: Situate In the
A complete line of equipment for raising, grading,
Weot10 rode; thence South deocrlbed prendua, altueled
21·112 rodo; thtnce Eul 52 In the Townahlp of Orange, and cooling vegetables, and for raising com and hhy
rodt 1nd 2 f•t: then.. North County of Molgo 1nd Sllllt at
2•t/2 roda; thence Wnt t8 Ohio and bounded and dt- for the caltle. On the property also is a large' shop
949·2826
rod a; thence North 27 rod a to ocrlbed aa followo: Being In w\th tools and spare parts, etc. There are 4 Stuppy
10-3, mo.
the r,t•ce of beginning, con· Sec:tlon No.5, Town.,lp No. greenhouses with gas and wood heaters.
No. t2 of lhe .
lain ng 5.28 acna, more or
The house is well kept with 9 rooms, (2 full and Y,
Purch•u,
leaa·: excepting tht following
the middle bath) a modern kitchen, drapes and carpet in all
deecrlbed prlttnlau .con·
FOR SALE
No.
veyed 1o Blaine Hlrdwoy by
rooms. Surrounding the house and dog run is a chain
Florrie 0. L.emb end bounded
All Hard Wood
link fence.
and dncrlbed •• followa:
For Residential
Beginning 35 feel Eaat of-the
th.l Northeaat
On the farm there is also 2 other older hquses being
NorthHtlcorntroflotNo.3 llld Section No.5; thtt,..l used by farm personnel. The houses have free natural
and Commercial
lnW.W.McCune'•FirotAddl- Weal2t rod• 1CJ.t/4 fMt
Dump Truck
gas supplied to them. All-buildings have metal roofs.
liOn
to lht
Vlllllga
of Tuppero ~~the~C~h~~~~~~~·~n~Ch~,.~c~h~~
P1elno,
Ohio,
In tht centtr·of lhtnce Sauth 8 roclo:
Delivery or Pick·
Inspection and priced by appointment only.
the Tupper• Pllllna and Allred
Up Your
Road, now on pl1t11 Mill St;
Warren and Lillian Pickens
CLASSIFIEDS
the11001 Eatt 170 fool; thence
Alao SpiiUIIr
64578 State Route 124
South 2011oot; thtnct Wut
A
Reedsville, Ohio 45772
Services Available
110 loot; thtnct In 1 North•
Brightlsfeg!
waetlrfr dlrtcllon to the
Phone: (614) 378·6289
Call 1192·61~
pi- o beginning, oonltln·

:f

Consider this ...

. Public Notice

NE
4:30 P. M. DIY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

Monday, October 28, 1991

! ;::=:=:=:=:=:========;;;;:;:~:=================~~------~--~--~~~~--------~~P~ag~e::6

''
'

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

. .........
' '

20 SESSIONS
For $2o.oo·

NREVER
BRDIIE

MONDAY ·Turkey Club with French Fries and Soup ·'
TUESDAY· Cheeseburger, Onion Rings, and Salad
WEPNESDAY • Sauert&lt;raut and Spare Ribs, Choice of Potato,
Soup &amp;Salad Bar
.Creamed Chicken over Biscuits
Beanie Weenies, Cole Slaw, Hot Rolls,
Soup &amp;Salad Bar
1VBSDAY • TR11R8DAY, CIDLDR&amp;lf tltCDU 12 L\T ru&amp;
FROII CHILDRD'I MDV. (EXCLUDES DRINK &amp; DESSER11
LDIJT 1 CHJLD PER .ADULT

Own

'

I CAlif OtiT ORDERS AVAiLABLt 18041 77S:Dil
.IEl'IIORI GET
DIICOVNT

•VISA • MASn:RCARD • AMERICAN !XPRESS

•FIREWOOD

•
Roofs, s•lngles
Repairs, Gttfers
. Bulid119 a.nd Remodellg . . For Old &amp; New

•

BILl SLACK
'992 2269
"

USED RAilRQM) TIES

We GuaranWe Your Satl1faetlon

IRIImiMAIIS

·ROOFING
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleening

' Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-21(&gt;8
/ 1 mo. pd.

.

JO!UHD.JACIS

"-

,_

How•d l. Writ11tl

NEW- REPAIR

~

.

..

.,,

(

' · . "· .... ., .. '"

~.

t'"

"4• '

•st-.

.

-·-

AIR CONDmOHERS • HEAT PUMPS and
FURNACES FOR MOillE.&amp;DOUIIi.EWID£ HOMES
0

0

0

0

0

.
0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

'

I

0

0

0

o

0

o

0

0

0

0

0

0

o

0

0

0

t

BENNETT'S
·~~~i.'::E
·
COOUNG
t.ocafltl an Sefford Schaal .d. _o fUt. 141
(614) 446·9416 or 1·11D0·172·5'967

GUN

CLUB
GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS
Starting Sept. 22
12 Gouge Foctory
Choke Onlr

ATS INSULATOR®
VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOW
We WW Not Be Undersold _
•save up to 50% on Fuel Bills
*Increase the Value of Your Home
*Call for Free Estimates
'

742·2328

INDIPIIIDEJIT · .

IDn/rto

CAIPIT CUAIIIIS
and TIU FLOOI CAll
•Re11onable fla1e1
•Quality Work '
•Free Eatlmetea
•Cerpat Hat F1at Dry
Tirfte

'

•High Gloaa on Tile
Floor Flnleh
MIME llWit Ow,..
h. I, lui ..... OH.

OVEN -IEPAII
AllliADS

Iring H In Or Wt
Pick Up.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIYICE
992·5335 or
915-3561

&amp;croll Frem Pttt Office I
117 L

· BISSELL
BUILDERS

GUN SHOOT
FORKED RUN

SPORTSMAN
CLUB

CUSTOM IIII.T
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

"Af Rtastnoble Pritts"
PH. 949·2101
or 111. 949·2160
Day or Night ' · ·

Begins Sept. 15

LINDA'S
PAINTING
IIITEIIOR • EITEIIOI

FREE ESnMATES
'l'lke the ••In oet of
,.rntlng.
Itt •e tlo It far you.

VEIY IWOIIAILE
HAVE IEFEIEIICES

.16141915-4180

IG-23-Dt 1 mo. pd.

J&amp;L

Enry Sunday 12 Noon
Factory Guns Only
9/9/91/2 mo.

n

-

-

3 Announcements .

BULLDOZER 1nd
. BACKHOE WORK,
HOME SITES,
LANDSCAPING
WATER 1nd SEWER
UNES

IMPORTAHT NOrtCE
tor •no~~ 10 .,.
..... In 1112 Olllo 'lo11oy Phono
lo Fllday Nov, 1. Anyone
.-ng oddMiono, dollolono,
thlftQU In while or ylt11ow
P'tll' or wtohlng to advonl ..

TRUCKING AVAIWLI
FREE ESTIMATES

5:00PII. I 100 151 1830 or mall
Information to Chomalon Dlroc-

t92·7458

Announcements

,..,.tnon.

o.o

ahould

call

bolwoon

8:00AM.

tOI'I, Inc, PO lox 22, Norwalk

Ohio 44857.

RENT·TO·OWN
loctory Authoriztd Repoir
TV • VCR· Stereo
Boom Sox ·C. D. Ptay~r
Scanner .. Typewriter
Cordless Phone •

Microwave· Radar

A&amp;B

COMPLETE AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

Delee lor

Convei1Ible Tops,
carpels, Headliner &amp;
Seat Covers and
Minor Auto Repair.

IWII ST.IWON, W.VA.

HJ041

'773·9560
1119181 1 mo. pd.

BISSEll &amp; lUilE
(ONSTIUCnON
ellle,w Ho-

Hoone

Entertainment
Center
H.l.(.

Pamoroy

992·3524
912711 mo.

I&amp;C EXCAVATING
IUlLDOl.G

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER l!o
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS t!o
HOME SITES
HAULING :
Limestone, Dirt,
Gravel and Coal
licensed and Bonded

PH.

eGarat~s

•ce..pltte

leRtO~IIIJ
Stop &amp; Cempare

FrH Est•atll

'15·4473
667·6179

5-31-'90 Hn

ISID APPliANCES

9DDUWA11Am
WASIIIIS-S 188 lfl

DIYIS-S6t.,

llflltiiUTOIS-$100 .,

IAIMIS-...a...-$125
•

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

992-SUS or 915·1561
Acron Fr1111 I'MI OHka

614-992·5591
9-11 -1 mo. pd.

'

Unettldttdt Slncerw ArN
Slnallo All -'nd uroo1v1oo
AWOl! Vou. C"ontldontlat. W'rilo·
Slnatoo, P.O. loa 1043, Go~

llpolla, OliN&gt; 45131.

·

4

Giveaway
2 Voor Old Fomole Dot. To Good
Home, In Country, SpacM,
Shott, 614-446-1271, Ahwlp.m.
~ mo. okl female puppy to •
good homo. 304-87~8.

Looko Ukt Norwalgon Elk
Hound, Ooa, ftml.._ lo 0oo4
Homo. 114-446-IM'It.
·
Male Cit to QiVHway. Naut•rtd
&amp; daclawod. 304·837·2435.
To giveaway 4 hunhy orange
kltlena. 2 male, 2 ltmat.. 304.
~76-2383.

Lost &amp; Found

6

Found : Look1 Like Notwtlgen

Elk

Hound,

Do; Female.
~nd At 141.

VIcinity 01 At. 775,

614...6-8478.

Lost, Rottweller puppy, 7-montha ~d In tM GrNt Bend
Area. Call Jim Foremen at ,.,..,
84H338.
Losl- Rod whHo taco, 114-:IN8592

.

LOST• C:.t, Jl..... rdl, gray onot
whhe milt ~ near Z&amp;h • Jet..

BALLET, TAP &amp;

3210.

JAZZ CLASSES

7 .

Iorson, POint Plolunt. 304-175-

.

Yard Sale

AGES 3 and UP

THE DANCE
COMPANY
992-6289

•·•··

'

REDUCE; Bum ott Fat While
Vau SIMp, Tllb OPAL Avallablo

10.28-lt·1

1111,.!tfn

I'OMIIOY,OIIO

-~

HOWARD .
EXCAVATING

N.UU lUND PIOOUal

538 Bry1n Ptact
Middleport, Ohio

flllliiS-$115 ...

4

At: Fruth PhlnniCJ.

JAIIES IEESEE
992·2772 or
742·2097

•cao I)YIIIS- Sit .,

• 4-11·16-Hn
--··- •

INSULATION
•VInyl Siding
•Repl-ment
Windows
•.Roofing
•lnaulelfon

NO SUNDAY CAI.LS -

-·

FOR A-8-C.

Gallipolis
&amp; VICinity
ALL Vard Saloo 11uet 1e Paid In
Advonco. DEADUNE: 2·00 p m

lho day bolonl tho IIIIi 10 .Un'

Sundoy lllhlon • 2:00 p m'
Fridoy. llondoy lllhtOn • 2!o0

p.m. Sotuo:dly.

Pomeroy,
Mlddllpon
&amp; VlclnHy •
All Yll'd hloe lluol h l'oltt In

Uvonco. Doadlno: 1:ttlrtoo lhe
AD . dly
lho ed .. lo f!ln.
lllhlono t :IIOpfto ~
rou Sunday
Mondly
m
R£ADV 'C"AS!t ......
y. lllftlon 10·11111
• .•

·

•••

•

I'

�Page 8 The Dally Sentinel
PubliC sate
&amp;Auction

8

~nda~Ckrtober28,1
.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

41 Houses for Rent

Television
Viewing

'N' CARLYLE®·by.Lari')' Wrlpt

Apartment
lor Rent

44

The Dally Sentlnel~ag• 8 •

2 Story ,... Comer Lot In
Ch"""''· Ohio. .Excotlont CondHion. 11114·132.f810, 1104-1132· · WUI 'ttw YDW1Q m•n thlt clllld
le70,114-311~1.
.
mo on i0/24111 ploooo coli bock,
I ho11o a oolutlan. 304-i82-2811.
1bf, Furnl- •.731 Roor
Third Avo,.,.. Gollpollo. 11445
44841'11), 1~1340.
Fumlahad
2 IR houoo In Pt. Pt.o-1. Juot
. Roams
romodotod, now carpet vory
nlco. No polo. Clll304-f7i.1311. Roomolor ront•- or month.
Starting II s-. Golllo Hotol.

Rick P u - llucUon Comp0ny,
"'U limo ouellonotr, comploto
IUcllon . .leo. Llc111ood Ohia,
WOOl Vlrgtnlo, 304•713.f711S.

Want~ to Buy
3 Wootmorllnd grope ponollod
~·r din- pll.... ,,..._

9

111

Bob Wllllomo • Sono ~14-192·

Stoking Rooponolblo Pooplo To
A1111 Nlct 2br, Unfumllhed
Houa On Chttham Avenue;

Wontod To Buy: Junk Alrtoo,

Dopooh. l14-4411-21115.

W.Med to buy, Standing timber,

Rtlt~nce A Muat. 1300/rno.
Ptuo lltlilllol . And 1 Month

15441.

M.tal 1.,.,_..1-0013, After

•

us;esao.

1:00 (J). ())

Sieoplna roamo wHh -wng.
Aloo tra1tor · -· All hoO(I.upo.
Coil •ftor 2:00 p.m., 304·Tr.l1851, llooon WY.
.

a,500 CREDIT CAROl

AloO

11..

~.

NO

.52 A Loti I Roome"1·112 Bathe,
Ltrgt K tchtn 0", LA, 3br,

Allagn lnc:ludl~ children over

Carpet 751 Fh.141, Gllllopllo,
i14-44H871.

• tho ogo ol ano tor cottlat typo
VI~"".~
ooolgnmonto. lnlorvlowlng ooon 3br, LA, Dining Room, Equlpood
· - - ~ E 2524
In your lf'll. For appoln1menl kitchen, Btth, Gtral)l, CA. Gat
~~
;.;.;::..:.'~:::-:..=:lll::·=::.::·~--1 coli CASTINQ 14121 171-2004, Moot, I#N $20'o. 614·112-6364.
1310.00/Doy Procooolng Phono Mondoy through 'Frldoy, I om to
4 roomo ond both, good condl·
Orderol Poople Coli You. No Ex· a pm.
tlon, e~rpittd, tiKtrle, Uue. Old
N
nry 1.f00.2Mo Noodod lnimtdllloly: 51\'llot for RIYir Road, Gttnwood, WV. 304wolk·ln aolon. Coli 6144411-11152 576-2141.
.
Mon lhN Frl. 10 to .1.

.,;.. odv•--. ;:

14170, WHh Elpando In County

$250 • Dopoolt.
,,.._,_

Rotoroncoo.

1UI 14x70 2 ~~~- ·mobllo
hamtJ. rwflrtncn, plue dtpa•lt,
304.frS.TIIi.
2 Bedroom Moblio Homo With
Largi Add On Room, -Prlv••
Lot, Gorago, Control Air, And
Mooting, Claoo To Town
$3211/mo, Pluo UtiNtloo W
Cquntry
home
compltlly SOcurlty Doliooh.l14-448-1314.
rtmodlltd, fully lnsulattd, 3bdrm, 2·blth, LA, DR, Modtm 2 bodroom mobllo homo, Sond
kitchen, bo1h oil &amp; wood fum, Hill Rood, 304.f75-3834.
vinyl siding, 3-outbulldlng, 1 112
acr11, wlllllkt mobllt homt for 2br Unlumlohod On Cora MIN
Road .Off Rt. 3zs, .No Pota.
trado, m,ooo, 114-m·B:H
Dopoolt Rtqulr.d. 114-241-1822.
GOVERNMENT HOMES F""" $1 2br Mobile HoiTII, R•f•rencn
!U Rtpalr). Dollnquont Tax And Dopoo• Roqulrod. No Poto.
ProPI"'r· Aepoueulana. Your 114 4414a711.
Aroo 11 10He2-8000. Eld. GH·
10188 'For Currant ROjlo Llot.
3br Traitor For Ront, 814-141·
11530.
OWN YOUR OWN NICE HOME
FOR $1,600 Full Prtco. Govom- For rent, nlct :J.IR inobll•
mtnl AgonciN LIQuldotlng. homo total oloct~c. Nlco
1.fOS.564-6500 Ext. MOIII8 For :1.;k;hood, Mlddl1port. 114-

cr.t:nco

51

. · ~~·~1:! ·

.

Pomaror.
AUITRAUA WANTS YOU
Exceltonl
Poy,
lono!Mo,
Trlneportltlon,
4Q7.32-4,.7,
Exl m. ·lo.m.·10p.m. Toll
Rolundod.
AVON I AI Arooo I Shirley
Sp01ro, 304-171-14211.

Trimmed Or Token Down
Froo Eotl-1 304-1182·21154
Aok For Todd.
WIU Do lobyallllng Mondoy
ThN
lo " ' A,...
Or
Youro,Frldoy
Rio Qronde
114245-5813.

Will glvo corolo -.~y poroon,
wlllb'1 good reloronco, e14-

m.

FEDERAL GOVERNMENT IS
HIIIINO.
ITIJiOOOI'Ir. 1· Would Uka to do llobyollllng In
101oll4
Eld. G 118 For mw " - · AockiPrlngo ,,.a,
POIMI'oy 11WG.m-l
lmmodloto RtOJIORU.

.fa:oooo ·

Fmancial

lndlvlduolo Or COuploo Eogor To
Woril WHh Ctilld,.n And
Aclalut w. Arw trlelcled For an.

114-44tJ.3644 oftor 7 p.m.
·
Floh Tonk, 2413 Jockoon Avo.
Paint PINunt, 304oi7J.20tl3,
lull lino Troplcol llohl blrdo,
1111111 anlnls and 1uppl 11.
Qoldon Rotrlovor pupo. 1-moloo,
1-lomoloo,IIO N. 114·11112.fll3
Reg. Chlnooi Chor.Pol pupo,
loto of wrlnl&lt;olo, 5t4·MII-2711t.

Ql

AollForHOmo . . ..

KUWAIT,

I.WDI WORkERS
NEEDED:
121.00 A Up Por Hour. Tax F,.o.
loth llllllod 6 Unlklllod For
Info. CoN 115-77'N505 ExL K•

....

Renta ls

Real EstJie

31 Homes for sate

Mllftlenanoe Min : knawiulg1 ol
lloollnfoi~
oondNionlng, AIIOWTILY MUIT IELLII
- - r y. Exporlonoe Ro+ d To loll: 2 ltory Sbr
hltplul.
...
...,,_.,.
with -Rt
" ' to:
....
mont
tlllnl c - Lot lri Choohl.., Ohio.
Conti-. Flnonclng
Pt. Ptr
• oglot!!L?OO ..In EoAvollablo. to4-fS2.ent 1104'
...... Pl. Pleoolnt. ... 25110.
132-mv, 114o317o014t. •
IWIAGIR TRAINU
l·ltory houao In Rutlond, l·
LookinG For An ~W In bdrm upololro opt. 3-bod,_,
II.,. ........... ut
k A Upoltlnl; - l l l r l Uvlng nm,
f::PNo
~'f:!''t:.~ 2-bod-, llothroom, dining
OWn PoW
And !.1!'1 ldtcllon, utll~y nn, UIIJng
,_.
F""' Within. ..,,ti00,114-J112.2AI
Pr-lono o llonogomont s lodRIOIII Holjoe, ttl Klnoon
llovo A~ I And 2 Drlvo, Qalpotlo; Uvlng Room,
~:
Dining R~·r-n• lath,
Clone ..... Wllh Uo. ,.... il Contrlll Alrc.; .. ~......
2
AI• ~ KinA ·r Ohio
111otonoo ~,;,.
Rl• Plou, ~ lolao Cloll C'olrao And Clinic au;
......... Holplllt lui Hoi llpollo City lcllool Dlatrtci. 114tiJDIIIP'f.
.;.;.;...;;:.;::__
MH1U.

::r"'""""'

OCt

:..:-a:-::..:

r:::.a

._.co..

,=:

____

41 Houses for Rent
I IR, otovo A ,.~lg. lum., now
carpet, wllher I dryer hookup,
1221 per rna., 1200 dip., e mo.
looN. 142 Fourth Avonuo, Go~

llpollo. 114-44141117.

2 IR ~~L.""'!rol hoot, cor·
pat. Ty: ..,...,....31 doyo, 87J.
t313oftwl.
•
:1-bdrm homo, Rutlond1 no poto,
rofo$260
· pluo, •!10-doP,
avt/1,
Nov1, IM-M2.em
3br HouM, In IC1n1ug1,
l2?llmo. 1260 Dopoolt. 114-3~
2441.
.
.

I

I

I

I

IMYI

I

I

•

·-

I

\1'1/'fAT ,WAf Tiff ATT11UPf oF T/11f
/

/

fvPG~AflY

VICTIM

WI'IO /.OJr til{ APDIN(I MAC:HINE ANP ·
PICTfONA~Y ?

30

.Q

tJ 8&gt; .
.AQJ 108 32

PHILLIP

'' (J).I!nlerlllntMnt
~Ltttt:rr:~cS
Tonlgltt

.
I

ALDER

Sllreo.
Mllt'leci...WIIIi Clllldlttt

lillie 1 811r Stereo.

~'C..
7:351D Benford • Son

e

The CoH•a• v..,.. fu·

1180 Yawtha zso 4 whlller. 304· ;
175-31110.
•'

Nlglti11JI!t IIMI (2:00)
Sllreo. Q
0 llurdir, She Willie Q

.
'

QIIOnllloge

Ill NFL MtindiJ Night

Mllch·Up

4-15" Otdo Rly Whlo, Gd Cond,
114-4411-3411.

78

Ql PrlmeNIWI

10 Prlnct Yellant

camping

1:01 (I) MOYIE: S.llm'a Lot (PI 1
ol 2) lPG) (2:00)
1:30 Ill 0 . Lilli Hlallllolalrr..
Honn

Farm Supplies
Proarom, 110 Coblo Chonnolo
Equipment 0
Compo11Dio, 11211. 114-44f.3371.
&amp; Livestock
Ntw:
U-Force
Controll•,
Froodom Sllc~ ~~co­
Uood: ·Oomo
l.Mogozlnoo,
Ptuo I Nlntondo U1111011. 114- 61 Fann
311.f203 Aftor 3p.m.
79 Campers&amp;
Rata Or Mlco? In Your _ ,
Buy ENFORCER; Klllo roto •
=....;Mot;;;:.:o:;r.:.;H::;om:.:.:e::s:.__;· .~ ·.
mlco • In onlw 1 loodlng,
1873 20' Wlnneblga malar ; •
GUARANTEED! Avllloblo a1:· 1522.
home, toob and ruM good,..... •
Bolin Truo Voluo Ito~ .11 WOOl
73 1roctor, Comfort Klng1 $3100 abo,
Moln • -· Chootor, un
••
251 gil, duel rtmol .., gooa
~
rubber, 114·992·7302 latl IVIfto
Services
lngo
•
'\
Jlm'o Farm Equlpment1 ,SR. 35,
Woat Qaliloollo, 814...11-II1TI; · 81
. Home
Wldo ootoctlon now I uood form
lroctoro &amp; lmplomonto. euy,
Improvements

· -·11141

Martians arrive on Ellrt11 to
help aavo a candy factory In
A1111111 IOWn that Ia In
danger or lollng HallOween
trNta t:tevif villain . (0:30)

~·or 1111 IlliCit

1:00 (J). 0 MOVIE: 'She S.JI
1111'1 ln.--" NBC
Monday lllghllllllll Movltl

IS THII-JKJNG-Cf' Reei'&lt;NIN&amp;.

(2:001

Delsll, wide trant, PI, due
ramot~ 1VT.ol-11hp, $3500, 114-

141-21J11

Livestock

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondhianal lltotlmo guaro,.
111. Lac.ll ret..ncH fumlahld.
F,.. ootlmotoo. Coli colloct 1·
114-237-o488, doy or night.
Aogtr~

nng.

FOOIIIIIf' It Chiefs (L)

Slareo.

,.
'.
:;

Stereo.

1111

••
'•

scand~vldeotape.
Stereo.
OWWf
TltM

8111 menl WMerprOC&gt;- : 1
,1

Wreetllng

ill HalliWill Now Stereo.

BARNEY

,,

AN' TH' BIG HAND
15 POINTIN' TO
TH'SEAT OF
YORE
BRITCHES!!

JU6HAID II

Curtla lmprovomtnto: o;
YNra Ex......... on Otdor • ' ; :
Nowor - · · Worlc,
Room Addltlono
Foundollon
Rooting,1 ,, •
KMchona And Balho. Froo E• •
tlmot•l RoloriiiCOI, No Job To ; ,
Big Or SmoiiiM-441-&lt;1225.
,, .,
JET
,.
At ration llaton, repaiNCI. N•w· '•
I ,.bulft mocoro In otock, RON "
EYANI, JACKSON, OH. 1-1100.
537-1121.
•
Ron's TV Service, specializing ,.. :
In Z'onHh oliO oorvlclna mool "'·
other brandl. HauM. etiTt, alto
oomo alltlllonco ropolro. WV •'
304.f7J.2318 Ohio 114-441So2414. ••

DO YOU KNOW
WHAT

TIME

IT 15??

NOW

I KNOW
·-WHAT
TIME
IT 15 !!

Father Dowling befriends a
woman held ~ by her
family.

s-. 1;1

a•

1 Ac1rtllZttltrllng
4 Plawlnli
m11blo
, 7 Thaullnd
10- woll thai
endowoll
12 Diva's
.P.clallw
14 Gum•
15 Seaweed
16 Abtl'l
brother
17 Filch
18 Literary
works
20 Spooky
22 Mourn lui cry
(3 wda.)
24 - - aoale:
uae1he cuh
reglttar
26 Pertltn oil
30 HaiiWIY
31 On a cruise
33 ElCIIIIVIIY
3-4 Mo1htr of

under•

s1andlng
40 Sparkling
42 Wallar•
45 Panned
47 Inherent

...

charKter

51 Mal lcoektalll
52 Dl1trlc1
54 Buckaya
51 tit
55 But. tbbr.
58 BaHarlna'a
oklrt
57 Moun1aln lion
58 - degree
59 Word ol
nega11on
60 Female bird

3 lnllrmllltl
4 Rubdown
or till
5 Wra1h

DOWN

-

11 Floh eggs
13 Sound ol
heollatlon
19 Exerct11
aystem
21 Ribbed fabric
23 Medicinal
root
24 Edgta
25 - fill
(obaaaolon) "
27 MlaaKetl ol
the comlc1
28 Space
29 Chemical ·
parllclo
30 2001, Roman·
32 Ja10n, lor

7 oiOIIIIm 1tar

1 Fabrlca1e
2 Bevoragea

Paul -

a Tennltl player

adfuet when Bll retuma from
the war. Stereo.Q
10:00ID Non
(I) (f) C. EVMII Koop, II.D.

11111H1t f•poatn
.Norllitm

b"':~ I:.::~~

'
lor romance and you'll lind 11. The Altro· Graph Matchmaker · Instantly reveals which signs are romanllcally per·
lec1 lor you. Mall S2 plus a long, self·
addrilsaed, stamped envelope to
Malchmaker, c/o 1hls newspaper, P.O.
BERNICE
Box 91428, Cleveland , OH ·44101 -3-428.
BEDEOSOL 8AGmARIUI (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) Be
extremely carelul how you phrase your
commenta when talking to a sensitive
friend today. You might aay aomethlng
you think Is harmleao that your pal will
lind olltnllvt.
CAI'IICOIIN .( "- 22....... 11) Something you're presenlly Involved In mlgh1
require greater reaour-than you have
al your dlepoaal. To be on the aate aide,
start IOOkln(IIOr becko\IP IOUrCft(
AQUAIIIUI (olan. 20-fltll. 11) Uollaltr,
you're a cooperllllve peraon, but today
you may no1 be a 111m player. When
you make thlnga more dlfflcull tor othlmportan1 objectlvea can be alt~ lned In ere, you and up making 1hlngl more dllthe year ahead, but you might not have llcult lor you.
an euy time doing 11 . In IIIC1, your auc· . PIICEI (Fell. 20·11aroh 20) lhl1 can
could be rath« remarkable. be a productive day for you, provided
you follow a pracllcal blueprint. H you
provided you'relenacloua.
SCORPIO (6at. f+Nov. 22) You could don'l. hell or your time may be spent
meet wllh reelslance today In 111uatlons correcting your own mlatakoa.
Where !here 11 100 much locus on your ARIEl (lllrclt 21-Aprll 11) There Ia
1811-lntoreata.
your con- nothing wrong wHh 1he way you think
sldtrJtfonslncludetlle other guy, 09ot1 ' 1oday, but you mlgh1 have to comprothlnga can happen. Know wh«e to look mlae wour ldtn In order 10 placate

ASTRO-GRAPH

Will build potia covo,., dockll '
ocrtonod roomo, put up vlny ·
olding Of t"llor lklrllng. 114\'
24UI17.
·

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

\

Clrtor'o Plumbing
Fourth ond Plno

o:J~~t3f:.ia

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

w,._,

11Q ltaroralt 21' collin .......
t4000. 1m Fonl dumptruck
$2600, 114-tt2.flla
1m JOOJI Commoncho. ,.,.

suo.

.......... lor hunting,
2·
lltclrfC b1 tlnsrd hlltn.

-

1)011,110,114.e4S 1411

1871 "-d s.w. Choot~l Wont
lamlone Ta Uvt In FOJ Their
loerd. 114 441 341t.

. •.

,•1

·when

,,

someone who has anoth« perspective.
TAURUS (Aprtl ..._, 201 Benellclal
developments ate a strong probability
lor you today, buill you're not wHHng to
share them with o111«1. your lortunate
endlngl could be without true joy.
QIMINI ,..., 21..iune201 Condltlon11n
general appear favorable lor you 1oday
- wtth one exception: There'• a posal·
blllly thai you mlghl repeat an error In
judgmonl you prevloully made.
CAIICEII (.liM 21......, 221 Don't lake
lhlngl at lace value today, eapeclllly In
y011r ~nlnclal allalro. Thoro could ·be
bo1h hidden beMfl11. 11 well.u plllllla.
Which will havelo be evaluated In detail.
LEO (.lufr 21-Atll. 221 A wlltlngnao to
cooperate and a dellre to do what's
bM!Ior Ill concerned will tllcolhe atlng
oul or any oppoalllon you'rtllktly 10 en.
counter todoy. Practice glvo arid taka.
YIIQO (Alii· 21-ilepl, 211 You might
not be u ller1 lo opponunltlelurly In
the day u you wtll be later on. II you dllcover there II aomtthlng y011 milled,
retrace your IIepa u quickly u you
can.
UIRA (llepi. ZI-Oct. 231 Your methodl
lor doing thlnga today will be lnnovallvo
andlmlglnatlve. However, you might be
olowed down a bll by aooocla1ea who
cannor matCh your progrnalvo ,
thinking.

·

one

1D Hllflllln
OcMI Challeltge (T)
Ql WOtltl Nawl
II]) 700 Cltlll Willi Pill
Robttllon
10:01 (I) MOVIE: ........ Lot (PI 2
ol 21 (PQ) (2:00)

10'.30 Ill Crook arid ChaM

cllwn

''\•"

...

Ill:'...: . Ottllll d

GrMd Pill Ft0m Fort
' Lltude&lt;dlll, Fla. (T) .
8 tporta Tonlgltl

CELEBRITY CIPHER

OTitldT

Hill
I eAllllliD
'lstllliiO

10 Ill

Ctltllfll'f Clphtlf cryplogrtlmf. . . cra~le(l from quotalioo• by ltrnOUI ~. pat! and present

.,

.

I'IIIM

. Tile •Dull Ill

. . Cl'eak (2:00)

11:35~orinlgidlhow

·a

LO.IIYDCA

OT1relti1MIIInr

GIOGAM

DM

'&lt;I I

·

BSLXHIIHV
DM

D J

U H DJ W
I H S

CI

CFOJP .

UIHMMD.IW

CFH

C F H

CFOC

I K

LDJIYDCA

'

PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "The leg&amp; aren't so beaullt ul; I just know what ·to
do with lhem ." - Marlene Dlelrlch .

r·

'•-·

'..••.
.••
'

-.

UGHBP .

12:00 ()) (]) .......

IDle ~ eoto.......liOt-•

...

EKII le1ter ifllhl t~ l llndl lor tnoiMr . TOCJiy'l Cflll.' K~lll P.

lullll'

"a'
~
•
Clllnll'lllll

~.

51 A metal
53 WWIIIItl

.

11:10(J)=i
(!)
Joumll

•

36 Sktltton p1r1 ··
39 Sail
41 Prevent
43 Rtt· - • .- •
44 Old movlt
•·
45 o..lra
48 Wulthy
48 No
49 Fro11
·•
SO Portalnlng to .:

11:00(1). Ill aiL,O .....
. ID Night CCiut:t liJ
(l) Ntiwwallti
IDle ArMitiO 111111
1...,.,_~;~

Naatase

9 Eacapo (al. )

6 Nlbble1

aaa•tltiO women

Joel'e slick lwln brother
arrtvn In Cloely one slep

..

Anower to Pro•- Pozlle

Mila.
35 Natural color
37 Shipping unit
38 Two word1 of

Cha~ene end r;lal)' Jo try to

llli 11J

8optlc Tonk Pumolng JIIO'-Go ilia
Ca. RON EVANS l:NTERP~ISES,
Jackoon, OH 1-IOO.f.37-1121.
Dovlo
-Voo Sorvlco,
lloorgoo Crook Rd- Porto, aupo
pll•, pickup, ond dollvooy. t14441-&lt;12M,

84

Gllplrll ol AcMniUf8.
Ql LIIIJ King Uvel
0 Flllter Dowtln(l Mylltrtll

9:30 1111

Pass

stareo. c... ~

••
-=·

82

a

Mtrrpllf 8Jown A
smaii·IOWn family
unk~ potlllseS a

H

R:rlrai Commw~, A•hMnr.,..;•.
II lmprovomonto. lnoludlng : .
Plumbing, Etoctrtcol. lnlllronco ":
etalmo A&lt;coptod. 114-281·1111. .

sara

n Eltperience

(I) (f)

Complete Mobile Home Sei..Upsl ::

Surlltuo Army Clmoullougo CUllom ~k Houtlna. Con
clothing, lniulatod docriin Houl To Hll- Soloo Or Locomoutlo'!t! covorotlo 130, colly. Chuck Wlnlomo Trlplo
toothor
us Combol
· knlhl
co~ ~ l'ruc*Jng. 114-24WOM.
hort clolhtna.
old timor
doolor. 8om "lc•oorvlilo'a ~!on­ Aou'- Umouolno cottlo,
-/coli polrw and yollllng
Whl~poot ooll cloo.nlng oloc. dY¥111o, WV booldo Pool umco
etove, $100. Nechl eewrng m• At. 21 N. ,rl, Sot, lun, noon.e:iiil holloa. lt4-HM110
PM (utondocl
-.o· durlnt
chino dh Ill ott. I choir, 111. -lnQ
_ _,, 304-273-11151.
B•utltul oek cofftt table,
T1ansporlat1on
Ethon Alton, $100. P-n clnlng WATER WELLS DRILUED: Foot,
toblo • I chalro, 1300. 2 llrvo Prom~
W1ter GYitln.
loblo tomJII, 125. R- king
4
mt.
71 Autos for
bodo~ 120. Ph.l14-311' tood.
al31.
WHITE'I MITAL DETECTORS
Ron AIII'"!!J__ ,1_210 Socond 1871 Oldo CUIIIoo, now tlroo
Avenue, 0........-. Ohio, 114- wotor A luol pumpo, 1750. soc!
52 Sponlng GOOds
4111-1871.
.
441-4221.
Now Rornl"fon .-1 liiOO
tm_ Cllryalor COl
ong,
Building
30.01 3 1o
vorloblo - · 55
$371. 304411•73111. '
~~.
Supplies
11711 -t.c Lomono, :101, v.a,
Antiques
53
0111
•llor I :SOpniiM-141,13711. ,
Block, twlck, - • .,._, wino
· llnlo4o, .... CloUdo Wln- 11711101040 Clllco, With Air, Soo
Buy or - · Rlvorlno Antlquoo, 1124 E. Moln It-, P-row. ·toro, Ria Qr-, OH Coli 114- At 2120 Chathom Avonuo, llozoll
Houra: M.T.w. 1D:OO o.m. to 1:00 241-812\
Dick- $1,000 Finn.
p.m,_!undor 1:00 to f :OO p.m. oct- Bpoclolo, two oor
1112 T~op Monti Corio, PS, PW,
l14oVR•2121.
gorogoo •
24x24xN3iiii.OO, ......... $1100. Coli 30424127xH4tH.00,27d21 ..
171-14'10. '
~ MIICIIIanaous
14541.110, Praclolon Pool Fromo
lulldoro, IM-WI-3&amp;41.
1113 Iuick Ro.ill Yol, oun-rool,
Merchandise
olr1 CNioo, AMIFI coooofto. Ex·
cootont oondhlon. Con llo -n
Pet• for Sate
1-HHimlle KtrotiM Hilt•, 56
at 2tU Moplo AVO.
1,000 ITU, 160. Uood Ono
SooMn. 1 Aluminum Storm
Door lt-112"131·112" ... Uood 1
Yoor.IK-446-1031.
10 . . , _ I Tob 8_l!lngtoo,
Mlxod Colora, ltiN In
$10 Por .......; llntirU WOOCI
And Coot ......... 121. · -

s-. c

. ()) (]) • AIICli1ontlaJ Nlgltt

ltU, trade, 8;00..5:00 WHkdlyl,

Sot. tlil Noon.
Molropollo Molino Oo315C, 3 cyll

ACROSS

Gllcllaap Talk

MY UNCL.E Wf.JO YtORKr:&gt; ~ 1t\ECIA

East

The World AlmanaJ Crossword Puzzle

Stento.
iliOn

., '

13..

ll'tlt
Paso
Pass
Pass
Paso
Pass

Soatli

The USA-2 team won the third NEC
Pus
Pass
World Junior Championship, held in
Pass
Ann Arbor, Mich., in August. In the 4NT
All pass
semifinals, Canada defeated Australia SNT
144-91, and USA·2 beat USA·I 211·70.
Openinc lead: • 4
In the final, USA·2 triumphed by 231·
191. The winning team consisted of L - - - - - - - - -- -...J
Martha Katz. Debbie Zuckerberg, I
John Diamond, Jell Ferro, Brian Plat· l
nick and Wayne Stuart.
• Today's board from the final result· moods from the dummy, played oil
ed in a slam swing to USA·2. Katz, as tbe diamond ace and claimed on a high.:
South. and Zuckerberg bid well to the crossrulf.
best slam. In response to the two The Canadians reached six clulis by .
. Blackwood bids, North showed two Nortlt. Diamond did well as East, lead· ,
key cards without the spade queen (the lng the diamond nine. The declarer.'·
spade king counted as a key card) and should have finessed , but he rose with",
then denied a side-suit king. Wesl led a dummy's diamond ace, led a spade to
dianiorul to Eut's nine and Katz's tbe ace and ran the ~rt queen. Ti!at •
queen. Katz led a low heart, conceding finesse lost, a itiamond went to the :
the trick to West 's king. Back came a king, and the club king scored later. ,.
club. Declarer won with dummy's ace, The contract was two down, with a ··
.rulled a club low in hand, cashed the swing of 14 international matcbpoints ,
A·J of hearts, discarding two dia· to USA-2.

Ma/Or and Polly try to help
caaey wi1h 11« Interview a1
achool. Sloreo. t:l
liD MOYIE: 'Fiink.....n:

tm KTM 121 Dirt llko, $995. '
,

.•

Vulnerable: East-West
Pealer: West

By P~lllp Alder

1:00 (J). 0 Salul'tt.y Nlgltt
Live~ Hosts Wayne
and Gart11 pr.-1 classic
sketches 1rotn 18 yea11 ol
Saturda~Night Uva. (1 :00)

s-. 1;1
s-. 1;1

JCPonnoy VCR, Excollonl Condition, R-o Control Eooy To

.KQ I0 93
• AJ 9 3
tAQ6

U.S.A. wins
world junior title

1D NFL Monday Night

111e1r_past. (R)
(I) Ill Chllclhood
1111 IIJ. ,....,.. Did The

Auto Paris &amp;
Acpessorles

.,

SOUTH

and MacGyver recall
harrowing a&lt;IVenlures !rom

76

t

•s

F-Q

()) (J). MacGyvtr Pate

AP.f... Roooonoblo Priced. Fot.
tor • Fruh Form, SR 143 1 milo
South of Corpontor, follow
olgno. Opon.S-doy Bom.Jpm

.K7 5

.K87 5 4

0

Stereo.

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

tf32

• EAST
• 86~ 4
.10 6 2
tKI0 97

WEST

.7 2

eFantiiJFIIUd

6~1188.

10·11·11

NORTH
.AJ

'

ID MOVI : Tire Aquartana
(2:00)

-·

rI

BRIDGE

0 Tltt Wlllana
7:01 (I) Too Clou lor Comfort

.·

·.;,_,. Hf WAf

._nice,

I

I* I' I'J I' I' I'

see.

oer-1;1
I...,_

Drogonwynd coaory Po"lon,
SltiMM and Hlm•r•n kltt•na.

{a":.::0

lng.-MUll
Hovo A Commlt1mont
·
!lpoclo!lrH
-·
To
Uto With-Emotlonol
Problomo. Profooolonol Poront
Trlllnlng Prov- Call
114 441 1211 For lnlormollon
£ilglbllhv Roqultornonto,

'·

Stno.

for Sale

oesoo,

.,.

SCIAMUTI ANIWIIS
'"~S
Simian - Grace - ShOwy - Carbon - NEIGHBORS
.I thought I had finally grown up. I had typed a very
professional letter to my ~r only to find out it was
displayed on the refrigerator for the NEIGHBORS to

c-

Wlitel ol

RENT20WN
114-44tJ.:tt58
V1 '11 Fumllure
Solo A Choir, $11.10 Wook·
Rocllnor, 15.47 Wook, Swlvil
Rockor, S:U3 Wtok.Bunk Bod
Complota IU1 Wtok, 4 Dr-r
Choot, 13.21 WMII; Pooler Bodroom Suha, 1 pc., $11.17 Wtok,
lncludoo loddlng.Counlry Plno
Dlnotto Whh Bonch &amp; 4 Cholra,
$10.81 Wook.OPEH: llondoy
Thru 8oturdoy, ll.m. to lp.m,
Sundew 12 Noon Till lp.m. •
Mlloo 011 Routt 7 on Routt 141,
In Contonory.
Stove: 3 yra. old, $121, good
aond. 304.e7!-1608.

and

De·lt•llt~ Tonlgltt

1 &amp; 2 bdrm olll In Middleport,
UIUhto Fum, dot~ roq, no polo,
Multi Unit Rontol, 1 YNr Old. IM-m·2218.
Vlnfl Slclng, low Mllnltl'llnce, 1 • 2·bdrm In Pomoroy l Mid·
Someont to do yerd work, mul1 Contrally Locatod, $58,100. 114- dloport, coil 114-112-2403 bot·
have own equipment, t mlltl 446.. 511.
Wtonl-lpm
from Pt. PINNnl 304-87J.I832.
PRICED FOR QUICK SALEI 3 1 Bedroom Apirtm•nt, In Rio
Sodroom Homit With urgo Lot Orondo, e14-311o9141.
...,. llonogor Poohlon OpOn: In Mercerville, IM-25&amp;.1752.
Htw Haven ar-. Pk:kup apo
1 bedroom tumlshlcltpartmtnt,
llllcotlon In ponon ot Dolttr Unique 4-BR houu on 10-ICNI, utllltloo pOle!. In hlploy. Ono par·
Cen.nll Store, 2407 J•cbon Bradbury R01d, extra building, IQn OCCUpir1q', 304-273-3071.
Avonuo, Pt. Ploooonl, WV 25~. $27,500. 814-ti2·2861 or 216,395-2311
1 IR opt. In Pt. Ploooont. Yory
ct11n 1nd roomy. W11h~,.,
14
Business
hookup. No polo. Coli
171·
32 Mobile Homes
Traln(ng
13111.
1·BR unluml- In Pomoro~l
12160 11180 Vogo 2 IR total Wltlf', Mwap, tr11.tt n~mov•
electric, "1'c::~t, door~, ••· paid, doDod ond ,.....,... ,.
tra nice, 81
75.
qulr.d, d14-m-20M.
1$11 Baron 12111J5, 2br, 2 AC, 2·BR In Mlddloport. No poto.
Underpinning, Wuhtr, Dryer, Poy own utihlooi, $200 I* mo.
AtlriQerltor, Stove, Part Fum. o-Miolor- raq~r.d.
P. ~. Qood Concltlonl eM- at4-m-2211 doyo.
448-2811 After 5p.m.
2br
Fwnlohod
1230/mo.
1111 Skyllno 12l65, Goo Hoot, Rrloroncoo, Socurlty Dopoolt 0t
ACi Furnhure Far Salt Af110. 1200. 411 oocond Avonuo. et4614-Mt-1218.
441-2221, 111 441 :1511.
1177 Chomolon 121115, 3 lod· Apartmonto, romodolod, con- ·
room 8x10 !lock, Sit Up On Ron• vtnltnll location, unlumlifilll,
tod LoL 304-f71.f001.
whh 1tov1 1nd rafrtgltltDr.
Roloroncoo ond dopoolt, IIM11711 mobUt homo on 1·118 e75-7t:tt, e75.fl3e.
.
Jorry'o Run Rood, Applo
Orovo. $15,000. Will Mil mobllo BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
haiH up.~rate. 304-525-5033 or BUOOET PRICES AT JACKSON
114-81111-4451.
ESTATE!,.. 531 J-on Plko
from 5t'""mo. Walk to ohop a
18M 14:170 cuatam bulb, no movloo. eon 114-441-218.11. ECH.
down p.ymtnt, t1U aver lotln
poymonto It 1212.22 mont(). 1· CINn 2 bodroom Gl'"""d lloor
11&gt;1. ,...,.,.., dopOoH, no polo,
304.ft:l·345t oftor 7:00pm.
304.f76-all2 ollor 1:00 PM.
1181 14•'10 twa bodroam moblt.
home, totlf lite, IXC cond, lftlr Efflcloncy Aportmont, 1011 112
S.cond Aven111, GI.Uipolls,
1:00PM 304-87J.711118.
Utllltloo Paid, Dopooh Roqulr.d.
1881 Filming 14x70 s bod- $171/mo. e14-37J.21n.
roomo1 2 bitho, oil oloctrlc,
contra air, undorponnlna wit h FO&lt; ront• Now 1 bdrm •Ill. tum
blacko thot 11iot. $17,11011. You or unturn. In Middleport, 814Movol304-414-2001.
m.e225orm-1304.
18112 Kontucklon mobllo homo, Fumlohod 1br Dropoo And Cor·
14' w.., 3 bldroorn, private pot 1 Monlho Loioo, 1215/mo,
ownod, nov• Uliod ln,_wlll p0y Still DopooH, Utllltloo Pold, 258
lo&lt; moving up to 1w mllaa, Stato Straol, 114-441-31117.
Sovo 14,00; S12ill00. 304-372·
Fumlohod 2 Roomo A Both,
231hftor 1:00 P •
CIUn, No Ptt1il. Reference •
2 Roome Attochod On 1 Ac,..c 1 Dopooh Roqulra 114-4411-1518.
Milt Out Of Centerville, un
County Road 11, $12,0110. 114- Nicely Fumlohod Aponmont,
1br, nert ta Ut111ry, Plrklng,
281-2554.
central hl•l, t lr, reference ,._
Now 11112 14x72, 2 or 3 bod· qulrod. 614-441-&lt;1331.
modotO. 2 lull llotha,
ohlnglo roof, vinyl oldlnQ, R21 Furnlohod opt. All ulllllln paid.
1 BR, upotolro, 2nd Avo. Good
coiling, 2xl R20 wollol o~ cond.l14-141-1123.
lncludod $11,117.00. Col 1
Fumlohod Efflcloncy, $11J5/mo.
-~.
Utllhln Pold, Sha,. Bat~ ':/
35 Loll &amp; Acreage
Socond Avo, Oolipotla, e 4
i411Aftor7p.m.
20 Acroo MIL, 1 Milo Pool Chor·
lolo Hllto, on O.J. Whllo Rood, Furnlthod RNt Woodbumlng
loot Ollor Ovor 121,0110. 114- Flroplico, All Utlli!ta Paid, ln.
441•1100.
eluding Coblo, lloilltllul Rlvor
Vtew, In ·Kintug~, FOitere
Mobllo H- Porlto 114-4411-t102.
Groclauo living. 1 and 2 bodroom oportmontt II Ylllltlo
M•nor
and
Alvertlde
Apartment• In Middleport. From
$196. Cllll14-m-1711: EOH.
In lllddlopoll, Cilia. 1 ond 2
bedraam tumlthecl lpl, ICNnl
with utllllloo paid, ,.loranco ond
dopooh roqulrod, :1114-8112·25141:

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RESERVATIONS EARN TO MSO
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TRAINING.
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PRINT NUMBERED II'
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.

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1:35 (I) Andy Grlltlth

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about 11\e lhlke. The ICida

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Sorgaln Solo: Nlco !root !roo
11trfgorato,. • oldo by aldo &amp;lop
lroozoro woro 1260, cut to $1111.
Woohoro woro $115 cut to $125.
Dryoro 111, Woohoro 175,
Rolrigorato,. !root !roo ·111,
troozor 1125. All oold with Chrllllnllftl .,. ., $11 I , .•.
guorontoo. Sklgga Applloncoo. Llltlo glrlo dr-1, I A IL 304614-4411-73$8.
171-1454.
Bordmtn Furniture, Point Coo~ Homo Dollvory. Minimum
Pl101nt : "Buy one, Qtl one 01 4 112 Ton, $5I POr Ton, 114frH" Lllne Recliners, pr/CII - 384-33311.
$291.15,
$311.95,
$411.11,
1511.15.
Colomon oloc1rlc hl'noco, good
Corpol lx12 $50 &amp; Upl Silo on cond,I~IT-7321ahor lpli\
All Outoldo C.rpot: 13.11 &amp; Compute;;l.aor Turbo X1: 112K
14.H i Kltc:htn Carpet, S7i VInYl EQA C"'Df Clnl, IIOml
$4.H. Solo On /itt Corpot In TliO I 114 ftoppy dloc drlvoo.Slack! Molloh•n Clrpoto, 114- TIM compoloblo. Pd. ISQO. Will
448·11144.
toko - - · 304olll(i.S314.

17

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Household
Goods .

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~_;G;I,. H;.:.,.:. O.I:;. N_I;T. -·1.~,. ~j. .~ ~~V::

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Merchandise

VInton Aru. W111r, Trath Ptlcl,

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MODELS
CATAL.OQ

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11

MQN., OCT. 2i

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0 1•1 1Y u..g Inc. Ft WQrii,"TX

Top Prieto Pold: All 01!1 U.S.
Colno, Gold Ringo Sliver Colno,
Gold Colno. M.T.B. Coin Shop,
151 s-.d Avonuo, Oolllpollo.
Would llko to INoo or
leaH/purchase 1m1U town ,..
taurant, 915-85~870 anytime

Emplo y ment

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�Page-10- The Dally Sentinel

Monday, October 28, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
•

Con~J-;It uht iou,., '/()

Halloween .brings in bookings
at ·'haunted' St. JamesHorel

Ou1·

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By RICHARD BENKE
Associated Press Writer
CIMARRON, N.M. (AP) BirdS drop dead, things vanish, the
deadbolt snaps shut on the front
door, glassware floats, and Pat
Loree says she was knoclced to her
knees by lhe "presence" in Room
18.
.
"It doesn't taJce a seer to see why
HaUoween's a busy time at the SL
James Hotel.
Twenty-six people died violent·
ly there in the late 1880s - includ·
ing fiVe people in one day, according to local legend. Bullet holes
pock the dining room ceiling.
Records show that gunfights
·claimed the most vil;tims, although
there were a few stabbings, too. ·
The hallway upstairs is lined
with the pictures and names of
famous Wild Wes1 figures who

WINNING TICKETS • Florida's Lottery
Secretary Marcia Mann announces Sunday that
there were six winning tickets in Saturday
night's LOTTO drawing that will share in the

Officers appointed
Officers were appointed at lhe
recent meeting of the Middleport
PTO. New officers are: Bonnie
Balcer, p~sident; Donna Hartson,
vice president; Niese! Ger8rd, second vice president; AI Hartson, .
secretary; Mrs. Shetia BeVins, treasurer; and Rhonda Casey, Rhonda
Neece and Kelly Buzzard, ways
and means commtuee.
.The Middleport PTO will meet
Nov. 12 at 7 p.m. Steve Dixon will
be the spealcer. The topic of discussion will be "Drugs are an Illusion." All parents are urged to
anend.

The six numbers drawn late Satur- gish economy and th e World
. Series, lollery spokesman Ed
day were 7-16-17-23-27-30.
Although the grand prize falls George said.
about $6 million short of the $94
" We debunked the myth that
million estimate lhat fueled sales the lottery is recession proof," he
last week, lhe six winners will still said.
receive nearl y $15 million each,
Record sales were made last
Sunday and Monday. The rest of
paid out over 20 years.
Sales probabl y fe ll short of the week, however, was slighdy off
expectations because of lhe slug-· the forecast until Saturday, when
sales picked up again, Mann said.

Grady reassigned

STEVEN E~ GRADY

ASAA Steven E. Grady has
been· reassigned to lhe USS Eisenhower CVN-69 now stationed in
the Persian Gulf.
He served aboard lhe USS Mid. way during July 30 t990-0ct. 18,
1991. During Operation Desert
Storm , he earned the National
Defense, Navy Unit Commenda·
tion, Southwest Asia Battle E and
received Sailor of the Month for
August.
·
He served in evacuation in the ·
PhiliP.Jlines during Operation Fiery
Virgile.
He is an aviation support equipment technician airman.
He is the son of Paul and Cathy
Grady , Bowman ' s Run Road,
Racine.

Romine-Bickar reunion held .
The Romine-Biclcar reunion was
held recently at the Eli Dennison
Post No. 39 on Beech Grove Road
in Rutland.
Attending were Charles a~d
Otillia Romine, Rutland, and Alice
Plantz Middleport; Kathryn, Jtm
and A~nene Lambert and Jim Lam·
bert Jr. and Amber Vaughan; Kenneth Romine, Rutland, Bernard
Romine , Annette, Clay Russell,
Middleport; Ernest, Tex, Sheena
and Sheila Romine and Bob
Brooks Columbus; Elmer, Schar·
loll an'd Sherry Morris , Steve,
Tammy Morris, Charles, D1anna
and Charles Morns II; Terry,
Drema, Teresa and Melissa Flesh-

stayed at the St. James, including tinued spinning."
Room 18, closed to the public,
Billy the Kid, Pat Gan-ett, Bat Mas· .
is
hardly
bigger thai! awalk-in
terson, · Tom ·''Black Jack"
closet.
It
holds
a dusty oak bed
Ketchum, Doc Holliday and Buffaframe withopt a mattress. Dbzens
lo Bill Cody.
Loree, a former co-owner, no of dead flies are scattered on a winlongei worlcs here. But one night i.n dow sill.
" We ' ve never ~~d anybody
1986, she !;llys, she showed Room
sleep
in here- not with the things
18 to
Kenneth Wright of Pres· ·
that
are
going on, " said ownerno, Calif., and encountered a not·
manager.Ed
Sitzberger.
sO:-friendly gllost,
"Swir1ing-- .lhat's IOOgentlc.
Siuberger keeps·talting birds in
He was raging," Wright, a gynethe
lobby of the 120-year.-old hotel
cologist, said by telephone from
and
15 smaller birds in a coffee
Fresno.
·
shop
aviary. He says two birds
" It came down at me and
passed ine on my right and I felt dropped dead after he showed
like I was being struck at," Loree Room 18 to five people in 1987.
Chefs and bartenders report that
says. " I indeed fell to my kn~s. ·:·
food
and cro*ry diSappears from
I got back .up and at that pomt 11
under
their .noses and glassware
came back at me and Jcnoclced me
floats
and
shatters.
back to my Jcnees and went up to
the comer (of _the room) and con·

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Pick 3: 054

Pick 4: 4230

I,

Cards! 2-H, 2-C,
6-D, 2·S
f&gt;ll'lly cloudy IGI1lpl. Low
neor 45. Wedlltlday; m011Uy
sunny, hl&amp;h In mid 70..

Page4

or.

Vol. 42, No. 124

Copyrlghled 1991

Martha Moore and Rulh Crouch
entertained the" Asbury Eagles
Class recently wilh a dinner at their
home in Syracuse.
Bill Winebrenner asked the
blessing ,and the business meeting
was opened with prayer by Dick
Ash.· Beulah Ward had devotions
on "Christianity."
Secretary, treasurer and flower
fund reports were given and
accelJie(l.
The church will serve lhe Amer•
· ican Red Cross Bloodmobile on
Dec. 18.
.
The bazaar has been postponed.
Dick Ash reported the sign for
the church has come and will be

.
.
By BRIAN J. REED
of.Aorida, was present along·with
Sentinel News Sta!Y
Surveyor Gene Triplett.
Renewed discussion of the proTeaford told the· commission
posed "Rollin's Crest" subdivision that Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
near Racine dominated discussion District would be serving residents
at the quarterly meeting of the of the proposed "Robin's Crest"
Meigs .C?unty Regional Planning subdivi~ion, and that be ~ticipated
CommiSSion on Monday afternoon; that Ohw Power and Nauonal Gas
Bruce Teaford of Teaford~Real· and Oil would also be servil)g those
ty, the realtor representing property residents if ~..~hen !he .commisowners Richard and Sherry Payne sion approved u.., subdiviswn.
.

erected as soon as possible.
. Dorothy Winebrenner closed \hC
meeting with prayer and a game
was conducted.
The dinner was held in honor of .
those members going to Florida for
the winter: Charlie and Irene
Hoback Bill and DOrothy Wincbrenner 'Carroll and Addie Norris.
AI~ attending were Dick and
Betty Ash, Franklin and Wanda
Rizer, Beulah Ward and guest,
Viola Miller, Irene Parker, Je~n
Stout, Hollie Robertson, Marcta
Karr Bob Smith, Emma Jean
CongO, Mary Lisle and guests, Lou
Ferrell, Linda Ferrell, Mark and
Viclcie Morrow and the hostesses.

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DoiiPoole, General Manager of within the subdiviSion.
TP.C, stated that two easements are
According to Jon Jacobs of the
all that hold up the installation of Meigs County Health Department,
the water line. He said that the several lots within the proposed
Ohio Environmental Protection subdivision are sloped in such a
Agency and the districrboard have way that the septic tanlccan only be
alre!ldy aPJXQved the plan..
:
installed in ~ertai~ portions of
There was extenstve discussiOn those lots. ThiS ~wrement would
between commission members dictate wlieJe buildings · especially
concerning the potential problems houses • on those lots could be
with sewage treatment on the lots placed.

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Meigs County Commissioner .
Ric~ E. Jones .stressed his concern that potential buyers might not
be aware of that restriction until
after the lots wer~ purchased and
Teafor~ suggested that language
regardmg the sewage system
restrictions within the subdivision
be placed on the plat map of the

area.

Action on the subdivision was

again tabled pendin,g finalization elf
details. The subdivtsion committee
expressed its plans to meet in the
next two weelcs 10 work out details.
Otber BllliDeiS
In other action, the planning
commission voted to appropriate
S·l ,649 from its 1992 budget
toward the printing of a new
tourism brochure for the county.
Continued on page 3

Village objects to transfer of
liquor license; hearing sought

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stall'
Objection to a transfer of the
Middleport Lunchroom liquor
license will be made with the Ohio
Department of Liquor Contrpl by
Middlepon Villige Council.
AI Monday night's meeting of
council, a resolu\ion·was passed
setting forth the village's objections to die transfer of a type TFOL
permit ~luses Dl, D2, and D3, and
a motion was passed requesting
that a public hearing be held on the
matter.
The request to L'9,uor Control is
for a transfer of the bcense held by
Jon W. Kloes, dba Middleport
Lunchroom, 195 Norlh Second St.,
to Harley ·E. McDonald and Randolph Fraley, Jr., dba Boars Nest at
,.~, 981'!9!11!. Seamd S!fCCL .
__
The reso ulion objecting to the

Duane and Hazel Stanley have
returned from a trip to the Smoky
Mountains and Blue Ridge Mountains and visited the Biltmore
Estate in Asheville, N.C. and Old
Salem in Winston-Salem, N.C., and
Monticello near Charlottesville,
Va. and other interesting places.
Nellie, Ruth and Jeremy Lowe
visited Pat lowe and family in
Akron ·and. saw for the first time,
Nellie' s 27th great grandchild.
They also spent a few hours visit·
ing NeUie's granddaughter, Kathy
and Ed Schrock and family in
Hartville.
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Harrisonville area news··

man, Groveport; Robert Romine,
Bob Jr., Cookie, Jeff and Cyrstal
Nellie Lowe speni four days in
Romine, Rick, Jackynn and Jessica Ashville recently visiting her son,
Romine, Columbus; Rose, Henry Roy Lowe and family.
II, Eliubelh and &lt;;hristopher Scott,
Pete.and Helen Young and their
Columbus; Bill and Barb Romine, daughter, Karen, Three Mile,
Bill Jr., Timmy and Pana Romine, W.Va., recendy visited her sisters,
Lorretta Romine and Shawn Bessie 0~ aild Nellie Lowe.
Custer, Columbus; Melvin and
John and Ann Williams have
Jessie Romine, Groveport; Charles . teturned from a trip to St. Louis,
Romine, Melvin Jr. and Kimberly, Mo., and Decatur, 111•.• where they
Columbus; John and Josephine visited relatives and to Michigan,
lliclcar, Carl Blatt, Mildred Bickar, where they visited their son, Carl,
Margaret Rife, Mary Bickar, and family.
.
Theresa Bronosky, Huntington,
Nellie and Ruth Lowe recendy
W.Va.; Bob and Judy Snowden and spe~t a day visiting Nellie's sister,
· Edith Lambert, Rudand.
Lena Pauley, at a nursing home in
PortSmouth.

1 Section, 10 Pag• 25 cente
.. A lluiU!Mdla lno. Newepa.,...

Pomeroy·Middleport, Ohio, TUesday, October 29, 1e91

PlaD.ners renew talks on proposed subdivision

Asbury Eagles.Class honors members

huge jackpot. Winning tickets were purchased
in Ft Myers, Hialeah Gardens in Dade County,
Miami, Springfield in Bay County, Tampa and
Wellington in Palm Beach County. (AP)

Six to split Florida jackpot
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP)Cooling off a week of Lotto frenzy,
Florida officials announced Sunday
that a smaller-than-expected jackpot of about $88.2 million will be
shared by holders of six winning
tickets.
None of lhe winners had identified themsel ves by late Sunday,
said louery secretary Marcia Mann.

Chiefs
edge LA
Raiders

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Ohio
Lottery
.
.

transfer as passed by Council cites
"great problel!)s ·With criminal
activity and other inappropriate
activity while Harley E. McDonald,
Randolph Fraley, Jr., and Jon W.
Kloes owned , managed, and/or
operated the Middleport Lunchroom".
It further states that lhe village
and its officials, "have become
aware of the fact that a substantial
.number of individuals arrested for
drt!$' trafficking in Meigs County,
Ohto over the past two to three
years were frequent patrons of the
Middleport Lunchroom, and that a
substantial number of transactions
involving sales of narcotics to
undercover police officers either
originated. in or took place in the
Middleport Luncl!room".
_Mayor .full HQff!nan a1S9 noted
lhat the Lunchroom is· within 500

feet of the playground at Diles
Park, and that should be a factor in
the Liquor Department's decision
to transfer the license.
The mayor was authorized to
advertise for sale some Middleport
Fire Department equipment which
is no longer in use. No minimum
bids wiU be set forth, it was decided. He noted that the new ladder
truck is expected to arrive sometime in November.
·
Jean Trussell was commended
for setting up the recent downtown
revitalization meeting held at the
American Legion hall. Mayor
Hoffman reported many of the
merchants' are interested m seeing
the project go fOI'WII(d.
It was reported that the Ohio
Depar!rnent of Natural Resources
has turned down the villap;e' s
Continued on PIKf 3

Economy shows 2.4%
DOINATIOIN MADE • In boncir of tbe large
tree that stood in front of The Farmers Baak
and Saviop Company, wblcb bad to be removed
because of extensive remodeUag, the bank bas
contributed money to Boy Scout Troop No. 149
to fmance the planting of new trees tbrouJ!bOut

tile county, T"be scout troop will determine
where the new trees are needed and ti1e mooey
donated will be used to purchase the trees. Pre·
seating tbe cheek to Bob Anas, right, scout mas·
. ter for Troop. 249, is Paul Kloes, president of the
Farmers Bank and Savings Company.

.Peace talks begin Wednesday
'

0

By RUTH SINAI
Associated Press Writer
MADRID, Spain- Israel said a
deadly ambush today of its suldiers
in southern Lebanon would not
deter it from talking peace in
Madrid, while the Palestinians
spelled out their demand for an
independent state.
A bomb killed three Israeli sol-·
diers and wounded six in Israel's
self-designated " security zone."
On Monday, terrorists killed two
Jewish settlers and wounded six in
an attack on a bus in the occupied

•

West Bank.
Groups optJOSed to Arab negoti·
ations with- .the Jewish state
claimed respons ibility for both
auacks.
The peace conference opens
Wednesday, and the Middle East
delegations will lay out their posi·
lions the next day.
"We are Slill committed to tallc·
ing lleBce with whoever has peace·
ful Intentions toward us. These
incidents are an attempt to derail
prospects" for progress, Israeli
government spok_esman Yosst

r---Local briefs--..
Motorists asked to be. watchful
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman urges all motorists to drive
with special caution on Wednesday evening, Oct. 30, when Trick or
Treat night is held in the villaget. Trick or Treat night will be
between the hours of 6 and 7 p.m., with the siren being sounded at
the beginning and end of this ~riod.
·
,
Residents wishing to provide treats for the youngsters are asJced
to turn on lheir porch lights.

Damage moderate in accident

too
·Maybe that's an odd question for Bank One to
ask Especially considering we're one of the largest
issuers of credit cards in the country.
But time and again we hear the same question
from customers."How much is tOo much debt?"

Moderate damage was incurred to two vehicleS' with the driver of
one being cited for failure to mainta!JI assurf4! clear disllince in an
accident on West Main near the tntersecuon of Sycamore tn
Pomeroy Monday evening.
According to Pomeroy Police, Rebecca Davidson of Pomeroy,
suuck the rear of a car driven by Linda Flinn of.Portlaild who was
stopped in·traffic. There was damage to the rear of the Davidson
vehicle, and to the front end of the Flinn car. ,A passen~e~. Rachel
Davidson was taken to Veterans M~monal Hospttal by the
. Pomeroy EMS for treatm~nt.of minor injuries.

•

•

We'll do whatever it takes to help you and them , high, low or about average. To get yoor Credit Guide,
come up with an answer That'swhy we're offeringThe . calll-800~766-1515, or visit your nearby Bank one:.
&amp;ink Ch Credit Guiddt extJh\ins the ~sand don'ts We're ready to send you a free copy
of consumer credit.And it includes a oorkSheet to help .today. All you~ to
you figure out whether your current level of debt is doisgiveusasignal.
Whateverittahes.~ · ·

Police probe 3 theft complaints

.=

BANKEONE.
Mttnltrtr RlC.

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Three incidents of theft are under investigation by Pomeroy
Police.
·
Rollie Stewart of Union Terrace, Pomeroy, reported lhat sometime between 3:30 p.m. on Friday and 6 a.m. on Sawrday his h~e
was entered and left in a state of disarray. D_rawen~ were empued
onro the ~. a water bed was damaged, ptctw:es were ~moved
from the walls, and a stero and spealcers, clock llldio, some ptcwres,
a telephone, cash and a stand from a bedroom were taken.
~COlt Shank reported that sometime between I~: 30 a.m: and 6
a.m. 011 Sunday someone ref!!Oved cassettes from his car whteh ~
parlcing near hiS hOme on Umon Ave., Pomeroy.
· ..
Radiaton were removed from 11 vehic~ on tl1e •
car stora.ge
Jot on Liberty Lane owoed by Hobart Goggms,~l93 Beech SL, Mid·
·
Continued on page 3
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Olmert said in Madrid. ·
The second·largest PLO faction,
the Syria-based Marxist' Popular
Front for the Liberation of Palestine, claimed responsibility for
Monday's bus attack.
The Iranian-backed Shiite Muslim group Hezbollah, or Party of
God, claimed responsibility for the
southern Lebanon bombing in a
statement is.sued in Lebanon' s
southern port of Tyre.
Gunmen also wounded five
Israeli soldiers in a separate area of
the security zone today, the army
said. No group claimed responsibility.
Soviet President Mikhail S.
Gorbachev arrived la!e Monday
and President Bush arrived today to
lend moral and political support to
the sensitive negotiations. Their
countries are co-sponsoring the
tallcs.
· The leaders were to meet today
for a mini-summit, whose _quiet
convening reflects the vast ·post·
Cold War changes that have helped
bring Israel and its Arab enemies to
the bargaining table.
Traffic in the Span\sh capital
was chaotic as police and anti-ter·
rorist squads, part of ·a 12,000strong security deployment,
blocked off streets to clear the way
for Vlf motorcades.
Both leaders also were to meet
Israeli Prime Minister· Yitzhalc
Shamir, who arrived this morning.
Meanwhile, Faisal Husseini,
leader of a group advising the
Palestinian delegation, said today
that they hope 10 secure an agreement for autonomy leading to an
independent Palestinian state.
That state, he said, would later
join in a confederation with Jordan .
Asked if this demand was coor·
dinated with the PLO, Husseini
said: "Yes."
Israel rejects lhe idea of an inde,
pendent Palestinian state, but
agrees to a form of Palestinian confederation wilh Jordan, with wbom
·the Paleatinians·are participating in
tile Madrid conference in.a. joint
delegation.
The violence in Israel, meanwhile, gave bpponents of the peace
. talks new ammunition.
On Monday, Shamir faced
C!)ntinued on paae 3
...~

.,

... ....-.......'

gain during third quarter
.WASHINGTON (AP) - The
economy, beset by recession since
the middle of last year, started
growing again in lhe July-September quarter, rising at an annual rate
of 2.4 percent, the government said
today •..
It was the biggest advance in the
gross national product, the country's total output of goods and services, in more than two years and
was the clearest signal yet that the
1990-91 recession has come to an
end.
However, a string of wealc business rep(jrts in recent weeks has
heightened fears among Washing·
ton policy-makers and private
economists that the economic
rebound may be short-tived, wilh a
brief period of growth followed by
a new recession next year.
The Bush administration is
counting on the Federal Reserve to
keep that from happening by supplying a further cut in interest rates,
somethinl! th~t financial markets
believe is imminent given comments f.ionday by Federal Reserve
. Chairman Alan Greenspan.
The 2.4 ·
GNP increase

--""'P"-

was lhe biggest advance since the
early months of lhe Bush presidency, when the GNP rose 3.6 percent
from January through March .of
1989. .
The pickup in growlh was not
accompanied by a rise in inflation.
A GNP price index that measures a
fixed marlc~et of goods rose at
an annual rate of just 2.1 percent in
the lhird quarter, the slowest pace
for inflation in five years. It fol·
lowed a 3.1 percent increase in
inflation in the spring with the
improvement credited to falling ·
food prices.
The 2.4 percent GNP inc rease
followed three straight declines as
the country slumped into a recession last summer triggered by
falling consumer ~onfidenee and a
spike in oil prices after Iraq's iqva, ston of Kuwait.
The GNP .fell at an annual rate
of 1.6 percent in the last three
month s of 1990 followed by
declines of 2.8 percent and 0:5 per·
cent in the first half of this year. .
The strength in the third quarter
was led by a 3.8 percent jump in
consumer spending, the biggest

wluilll team Ia 1M 81 " a
FFA Rwl'll SollJDCIPII· Recopltioa to . . .._
eame at tile rteellt uaul ••t'lal,ld •
of SWCS lleld at Melp Hlp'ScllocJI.

RuRAL TEAM WINNERS • Alaa Holter,

left to ript, 1M

Melp Coaa!J Soil and Water C0111ervatioa Dis·

___ ____

trict anpenilor, praated a trophy to Stephanie
Sayre, Christie Cooper., and Michelle Friend,
!.... -............ ,.....
, _,
~-

advance since mid-1989. In addition, the economy was helped by a
slowing of business reductions in
their inventories. ·
However, economists are worried that sluggish retail sales in lhe
past two months mean that consumers have turned cautious again
and lhat will trigger furth17 big cutbacks in business inventories.
Beyond inventorie$ and con sumer spending, econ0111ic Strength
in the summer was provided by a
6.6 percent increase in business
investment in J!lant and equipment
and a huge 20.6 percent jump in
housing construction . Both these
areas have weakened in recent
weeks. analysts said.
Holding lhe economy back during lhe summer was a $20.2 billion
worsening of the country's trade
deficit as a small 0.1 percent rise in
exports was swamped by a 12.9
percent jump in importS. Trade has
been one of lhe few bright spots for
several years, but economists fear
that could be drawing to a close as
America's major overseas marlcets ·
face economic slowdowns of their
own.

'*'

~

'"

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