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.
Ohio

Monday, November 4, 1991

Ohio Lottery
BELLEFONTAINE, Ol)io (AP)
- A_Playboy playa~ate wbose husband was shot and killed by a f!UI
will,continue to work for the magazme s 900 telephone line, but also ·
wants to warn others of the dangers
of stardom, her agent said.
SJacy-Arthur, 23,-who-was the
1990 Mrs. Ohio, plans pul&gt;lic
appearances beginning this week to
tell people how her husband, James
Arthur, 36, was shot when he
refused a man's request to take pictures of her.
"SI8Cy has a story to tell- this
.hysteria of people stalijng sws,"
said her agent, Chris--Miller. "She
wants to warn people there··are nuts
out there."
!ames Lindberg, 32, of Woodland, Calif., shot Arthur three times
outside a downtown building the ·

Eagles
wallop
Giants

I

F. "Bill,_Harris .

TRDS-£
1 111
•nllll•lll
IO'H'UI TOWNSHIP

Plar,~t was her dream. That was

TIAIK

J

ELECT

PATRICIA
-CALAW-Y

ORANGE TOWNSHIP CLERK

ELECT

•Adult &amp;Pediatric Allergy
•Hearing Aids
•Recurrent Ear Infections
in Chndren
•Asthma
•Headaches
•Runny Nose
•Snoring
•Mandrement of Skin &amp;
Facia Lesions
MEDICARE ASSIGNMENTS A&lt;aPTED

675·1244
Suitt 112, V6r Dr~ Pl. Pltalllll

. VOTE FOR

-ELECTWho: E_
Uen J. Rought
When: November B, 1991
What: Mayor of Pomeroy _
Why: hll Time Mayor

Meigs Local School Board
Putting Our Children -First in Education
Paid for by the C.ndldale,
-38218 S.R, 143, Pameroy, Ohio 4578$

THANK YOU

MEIGS COUNTY RESIDENTS
Wou_ld you like to purchase a 50x100 ft. building lot in a
good location for only $3 500?
Would you like to budd a new home and pay
· no real estate taxes for '15 years.?
Would you hke to have up to $5000 FREE for site

•

'

,.

.

-

,..,

~.

1 Section, 10 Pogeo 25 cen11
Au...lmedill Inc. NewopaP!If

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tue•day, November 5, 1991
-

School issues, term limits alllong Ohio issues
•

repeal part
district's tax base, city council term
limits and ·mayoral races in three of
the state's largest cities arc among
issues Ohio voters wil\)lecide at
the polls today.
'The repeal effort stems from a
dispute over textbook content. The
question of whether to limit terms
is contained in two P.roposals in
Cincinnati. Mayors will be elected
in Columbus, Toledo and Akron
and hundreds of other local races
and money issues will be decided.
. There arc no statewide races or
issues.
Secretary of State Bob Taft estimated 2.6 million people would
vote today. That would be a turnout'
of 45 percent of the 5.7 million
Ohioans registered to vote.
Voter turnout in Columbus was
running about as expected late in

say the

50 percent those
registered were expected to vote,
he said.
Lucas County Board of Elections Director Gary Byers estimated that 56 percent of Toledo's registered voters would cast ballots.
comparable to the turnout in the
1989 municipal elections.

In 35 districts, voters will decide
whether they want to pay an
income tax to support schools.
A 5-milllevy is the target of the
repeal proposal in the northeast
Ohio community of Willard. The
levy provides about $640,000 of
the district's nearly $8 million budget.
Voters will decide 1,099 tax
The loss would force major budlevies, 59 bond issues and 315 get cuiS in the district of 2,400 stuother issues. The issues include 247 dents, S_uperintendent David
money requests for 218 school dis- · Hirschy said.
triciS.
At issue is a textbook ser-¢s
One of those districts is in called "Impression," which some
Cincinnati, where a 9.83-mill levy parents say contains improper
will be decided. The board of edu- ma1crial. PareniS say the books has
cation says the 51,000-student sys- references to suicide, abuse and
tem faces a deficit as much as $47 possibly the occult. ·
million this year. The levy would
The school district says there are
generate $46 million a year for five no references LO the occult and that
years.
the rest of the ·subjecl maucr is

.l~~r!!~'!'! !o.tll!'~ ~~!~"I !a!!.-

....

McELROY, JR.
RICHARD B•.BAILEY PAUL M.Candidate
For
SAU.SBVRY·rOWNSBIP
·cLIJIK

Care • Concern • Compassion

Paid for br the Candidate
Ellen I. Rought • 158 Uitcoln Hill, Po111ror, OH.

Vol. 42, No. 129
Copyrtghll!d 1991

J- -1

JOHN A. WAD~ M.D. INC.
BOARD CERTIFIED
SPECIAUZING IN

'

.

Jim's dream. Jim would not want
ON PARADE • Students at Rutland Elemen~
· _ _,HpartiCipate
~a'!;ll-;coween liilliiS
costumes. Students 'rrom tbe sebool
somet~ing like this -to ~elnll[dt_!
. ltiJhl !iS~ I-------------=·P.aii~IOJ~Ily:ll_le,~ndldll!-o:'"!-:lllrrl..
t.ary took to tbe streets on Friday to parade ibeir
parade each year so the putifrt--&lt;Jream.
· .
may see tbelr outfits.

EAR·NOSE-THROAT
ALLERGY

•

at

Y111r lata WiD Be Appreciated

AJ:thur's ~e~ wi!S Sa!Jifllay. .
M1ller s8Jd hts chent 1s afraid but will continue her work with

POMEROY • Head lice is gen-If your child has an itchy
-Thoroughly ~ash or dryerally a more embarrassing prob- scalp and you suspect head lice, clean clothmg, beddmg, and p_erlem than a serious one, according look for lice and nits behind the s~nal eallte~s tha~ay be carry_,~
to Norma Torres, R. N., of the ears, at the crown or the head, and hce. S ttems tare 1mpracu .
at th~ nape of the neck Most to dry clean, such as stuffed ani·
M · c t Health De
bu~'~ts ha ou~ls often eno~a:;u:;,er:;; important, check the roots ~f indi· mals, in a p~tic bag for ten days,
:an im · r:t health issue
nts vidual hair strands.
.
or put them m your dryer, set on
·of yofog children.
pare
-If your child does have hce, htgh, and run tt for one full cycle.
· ~estauons
·
carpets, upholstery
. L'tce m
usua 11y occur ask your pediatrician whtch treat-· and-Vacuum
mattresses completely.
m young
three
to 10, •m,.;e.n,.;tto-u•se•.- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .
who
playchtldren,
together,ages
share
clothing
or bats, or are in close contact with
one another, she said.
Lice cross all economic and
educational boundaries and they
infest families from all walks of
life, Torres noted, as she gave hints
on how to prevent and treat head
lice.
·
Her suggestions:
- Teach your children not to
.borrow personal items from
-friends, such as combs, brushes,
Paid for by the Candidal&amp;,
hats, hair ribbons, scarves, towels
46686 Gulhrie Road, Coolville, Ohio 45723
or clothin~. ·

Low tolllptiQ mid :zoo._. Wedaesday m•lly cloudy.Higb
In mid 40s,

Page4 ·

~s:. owned. then shot and killed

Tips on how to avoid head lice: Torres

Pick 3: 184
Pick 4:2578
· Card$: 6-H, 6-C,
10-D, 9-S

If you do, Contact Jean Trussell, Housing
Spedalist, for further Information.
Phone (614) 992-6782
_..,12~37!!!J~

t.:Ou1nCil members
to four colisectoiive two-year terms. .
A counterproposal calls for no limiiS on the number or terms served.
If both issues pass, the one with the
most votes would become law.
A third proposal would require
the city to use proportianal representation to elect council members.
With that method voters rank their
candidate preferences in order,
from one to nine.
Proportional representation was
used in the city for more than 30
years, untill959.
A court has ordered tine innati
to revise its at-large system of
electing council members. Today,
nine members will be chosen from
among 26 candidates.
In Columbus, Republican Dana
Rinehart chose not to seck re-election to a third four-year term as
mayor. Voters will choose between
Republican Greg Lashutka , a former city attorney, and Dcmocral
Ben Espy, a city councilman who
is seeking to become the city's first
black mayor.
Toledo Mayor John McHugh is
challenged for a second two-year
term by Paula l?ennypacker in a
non-partisan election. The candidates were the top two vote-getters
in the city's primary. ·
Akron Mayor Donald Plusqucllic is seeking his second full fouryear term . The Den:'ocrat w~s
appointed to an unexp11ed term m
January 1987. He faces Republican
Michael Callahan.

~-·-··

\•

VOTED YET? • PoDs will remain open until 7:30 tonight so if
you haven't voted yet, there's still time. Indications late this morning were that tbere would be a heavy turnout of voters in Mei~
County. At Pomeroy's third ward, poll worlters said that business
'had been brisk all morning. Here Daisy and Chuck Blakeslee mark
their ballots.

Pomeroy. Co~ncil t~ pledge

ThJ. oervleelo prorided throu,h the jotnlerforlo of lhc
or
Middleport aDd the Co•ernor'o Omee e of Appalaetwi.
- - - - - - - - --------- ----- - -~---

sum

for Yule electrical hook ups
Vital services to Maig·s County cbildr•n and adults
have bean cut due to a severe lack of funds.

We need .your help
to avoid even deeper cuts.

left seated, social services supervisor for the
Meigs County Children Services, wilh Bonnie
Carroll, coordinator of Post Adoption
Resources, sealed right, and Linda Well, adoption supervisor, center, both of the Athens
County Children's Services, and Ruth Powers,
Meigs L'brarian, standing right.

POST AI&gt;OPTION RESOURCES • Books
and other literature on a variety of post adop·
tion services are now available at the Meigs
County Library. At the library when the materi· ·
als were delivered were Charles Knopp, social
services worker, standing, and Cynthia Mills,

YOU CHOOSE•••.
I MILL FOR ,.BREE YEARS OR

.11-county area adoptio~ project
_will continue through next fall
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Starr
The dynamics of adoption on a
family and how LO a~apt to the lifelong process is the project empha·
sis of Post Adoption Resources of
Southeastern Ohio which Monday
placed a variety of materials in the
Meigs County Library.
.
Linda Well, adoption supervisor
at the Athens County Children Ser·
vices, said that the project began

CD,. MENtAL RftiRDI,ION SERVICES IN
~ ,.RINIPOR,ItiON
~ HO' LUNCH PROGRAM
_
~ -PHYSICAL 'BERIPY FOR CHILDREN or,
:?( CIRLmll SCHOOL PROIRAM

last fall with a federal adoption
opportunities granl and will continue in an 11 -county area through
September, 1992.
The emphasis. she said, will be
on developing a core of adoptive
families, therapists and social
workers committed 10 p_roviding
continued service for adoplivc families.
The counties served through the
grant are Athens, Gallia, Hocking,
Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs, Mor-

--Local briefs-____,

I

'

EMS units answer two calls
Two calls for assistance were answered by uniiS of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services on Monday and early Tuesday.
On Monday at 2:35 p.m., Middleport squad went to Pearl Street
andJransported Violet Bailes to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 4:28 a.m. ·on Tuesday; Syracuse unit went to Third Stree_t.
Retha Snyder and Pat Snyder were treated but not transported. ·

Tbe Only Good Choice Is •••

Meigs schools may get project

v·OTE FOR the
carleton school/meigs industries levy

david weber, coaamiHaa cbalnaaa •1-1111

·

Cari11Dn Schooi/Melga Industries Committee, P.O. Box 307, Syracuse, Ohio 45779

.

. The Athens-Gallia-Hocking-Jackson-Meigs-Vinton Solid Waste
District has submitted a grant application to the Ohio Environmental Education Fund of lhe Ohio EPA.
. .
. .
If the grant application ts funded, the d1str1ct will tmpleme~t a
pilot project in the Meigs County Local School Dtstncl The proJeCt
• wiU emphasize positive soli~ waste.managemem pracucc:s by offering students hands-on learnmg acuv1ues dealmg wtlh ljtter, water
pollution and conservapon of natural resources.
..
.
Terri Belville, pubhc educatio~-awareness-adve!"'smg coordma- tor for Jhe. district, said the deadlme for the submttlal or the g~ant
applications was Nov. I and if the dtstnct does recetve the fundmg,
the project will begin in February, 1992.
.
.. . .
Meigs County elementary schools that w1ll. be paructpaung .m
this project include Riverview, Syracuse, Han-isonville and Sahsbury. .
-.

'"

,,,

gan, Perry, Scioto, Vinton, and
Washington.
·
Post adoptive services, Well
explained, are based on the belief
that adoption is a li(e-long process
which impa cts on the adoptee,
adoptive parents and the birth parcniS througho ut their lives.
Services provided through the
gram will include pub!ic informalion events, distribution of literature about adoption, crisis intervention Lhe development of local sup- .
por~group s for adoptive families,
literature proytded 10 local ch1ldren
services for staff development and
adoptive parent education, fun. filled events for adoptive families,
training for mental health
providers, caseworkers, and adoptive pareniS and toncurrent support
groups for adopted children, ages
eight through 18 and their parents.
These concurrent groups, she
said, are offered free of charge and
can make a tremendous impact on
the adoptive f~mlly. Many profesSionals dealing with adoptees do
not understand the dynamics that
adoption creates within a family
unii and therefore cannot offer
appropriate treatment to families
experiencing diffiCulty .
Anyone who wants more information ·or services should contact
either Well or Bon'nie ClliToll, program coordinator., at 592-3061 ,
Athens County Children St!rvices.
Families are also encouraged to
have their nanles added LO mailing
lists for adoption events, a quarter·
)y newsletter and trai~ing opportu·
nities.

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Starr
Preparations for Christmas were
made when Pomeroy Village
Council met in regular session on
Monday night.
Council agreed to pledge up to
$500 for electrical hook ups, maintenance and installation necessary
to hang Christmas banners and
other decorations in the Pomeroy
business districllatcr lhis month.
According to 'Clerk Brenda
Morris, who attends Pomeroy Merchants Association meetings on
behalf of council, spotlights have
been donated LO the assoc ialion for
usc with the green banners, which
were first purchased last year.
Additional banners have been purchased for the upcoming season,
and many of llle' older decorations
have been refurbished.
According 10 Morris, the ban-

ners arc now SCI 10 hang on Main
and Co~un Slrects,"Wiili the refurbished candy cane decorations 10
hang on Sceond Street.
Council voted lasl month to
onee again approve free parking iri
the downlown shopping district for
the Chrisunas season. ·
The second reading of an ordinance granting Christmas bonuses
of $200 to full-time village
employees was held, with all council members voting in favor.
Th ird and final readings were
held on resolutions authorizing Village Administralor John Anderson
to apply for Issue Two funds on
behalf of 1hc village and changing
language in the village building
permit laws.
Lear pick-up
Leaf pick-up dates for this year
were set last night. Leaves will be
picked up in Precinct I on Lhe 181h
of October, Precinct 2 on the 19lh

JID.d..Frccinct3_on.th(;_20th.-Those -----1
residents who wish to have leaves
picked up arc instructed to bag the
leaves and leave them at the curb
on the appropriate day.
In other action, council also:
- reviewed a proposed resolution ·
from ODOT regarding pavement
markings and iee and snow comrol
on State Routes within village limilS;

- discussed structures within the
village in need of demolition and
properties in need of cleanup and
maintenance;
• approved the Mayor's Report
of fines collccled in lhe amount of
$3,185.
Present, in addition to Morris,
were Council President Larry
Wchrung, Council members Bruce
Reed, Belly Baronick, Bryan
Shank , and Thomas Werry; and
Mayor Richard Seyler.

Five elected to new terms
on Meigs County Fairboard
Five members were electe,d for
three year. terms to the Meigs
County Agricultural Society Boat;d
of Directors at Monday mghl s
meeting held in the secretary_'s
office on lhe Rock Spnngs Fao_rgrounds.
The only new member elected
was Mary K. Rose. Re-elected
were Jennings ~eegle, Ed Holler,
Addalou Lewis, and Dan Smith.
Others on the Boatel are Bill Radford, Barbara Fry, C. W. Henderson Roger Spencer, Lori Reed, JciT
Fol'mcr, Vtrgil Windon, Tim
Bearhs, Charlie Shain , and Jim

Sheets. A total of 107 votes were vcntion was set for Jan. 14-17 in
cast.
Columbus.
New officers will be elected a1
II was decided a1 the meeting 10
the December mccti ng.
sell ·both membership 'tickciS and
Arrangements were made at the season tickciS in 1992. Both, it was
meeting 10 request from the Ohio ex plained, will be good for
Dcpartmcnl of Agriculturcrthat the entrance in to the fair every day.
1992 Fair be set for Aug. 17-22. The difference will be in the cost,
Next year's fair will again be held · season tickets will be $10, and
for six days. it was decided. Mary membership tickets, $12, and only
Gilmore, secretary, reported that those with membership tickets will
the extra day brought in additional have voting rights. Membership
revenue of approximately $&amp;,000.
tickets will also be available only
Plans were also made to change to Meigs Couo1ians who arc 18 or
the fence to include the race horse , older, and registered voters. barns. The Ohio Managers Con-

Decision could come-today in
Ohio redistricting dispute
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- A
three-judge panel will rule in a dispute ov&lt;;r whether federal or state
courts should decide legal disputes
arising from Ohio's new legislative
redistricting plan.
'
The ruling could come today.
Lawyers for DemocraiS argued
with GOP counterparts for more
than two hours Monday . The
judges later indicated they won't be
long in reaching a decision.
Republir.ans argued that the fed,

eral courts should leave reapportionment to the Ohio Supreme
Court, which the GOP controls 4-3.
The Democrats urged the federal panel to retain jurisdiction.
U.S. District Judge Nathaniel
Jones, a Democratic appointee of
former Prc.sid·em Jimmy Carter,
presided over the hearing and said
the case would be taken under
advisement.
Sitting with !ones were U.S.
District Judges John W. Peck of

Cincinnati, a Democrat, and David
Dowd of Akron, a one-time GOP
candid ale for the Ohio Supreme .
Coun.
The panel extended until 4 p.lfl.
1oday a temporary restraining order
it issued in the case last week . Lawyers said that indicated to them
that a decision would be made·
within that span.
.
The restraining order prohibitS
Secretary of State Bob Taft from ·
Continued on page 3

�i

Commentary

_,--

...

.,..,.,.

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---

I

Fish and Wildlife at oddswitnitself
By Jack

Democrats denounce Bush,
take shots at one another
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
MANCHESTER N.H. - Democratic presidential candtdates put
therr Bush-bashmg ~ampaign styles on dispfay Saturday, auditioning at
the party's state convention for backing m the first-act pnmary of 1992.
They chorused denunciations of President Bush and engaged m spats
among themselves as a sideshow.
Five of the six maJor declared Democrats appeared before about 2,000
party activtsts at a cavef!!OUS Manchester ~ory. Therr speeches were the
frrst big show of the pnmary campatgn, wtth 117 days to go before the
Feb. 18 balloting among those hoping to challenge Bush.
That's a late stan for New Hampshire, and party leaders said it meant a
big bloc of potential camprugn workers was uncommitted and available to
the candidate who could convmce them.
It wasn'I easy Saturday amtd placards, balloons, and hubbub with a
loud speaker system that made much of what they said indectpherable.
"Here we arc, starting ... a pressure-cooker campai~n," said state
party Chairman Chris Spirou. " We are accustomed to havmg a year and a
half to make up our minds. Now, we're going to have four months."
Bush was tile Larget of tile day and Bush-bashing tile theme, wtth no
apolo~ies. "If not now, wben?" cried Sen. Tom Harkin of Iowa, lea';ling
off. ' ... I've got news for you, George Bush. Next year, the Amencan
people are gomg to 'eto you. ''
He said Bush's pohcies have produced "death, deficll and tile dcpres·
sion" in tile United States, whtle the prestdent roams the world. Harkm
said Bush should stay home "and see the damage your policies are doing
to America."
, ,
Formllr Sen. Paul Tsongas of Massachusetts pointed 10 Bush s tnp Sat·
urday 10 Kennebunkport, Maine,' to .mspecl storm damage to his summer
home. "George Bush, come to New Hampshire and see the damage
you've done to the people of this state," Tsongas said.
He also blamed Bush for the rise of rightist David Duke, GOP candidate for govemor.of Louisiana. Tsongas said m~ially divisive Republican
campaign tactics produced Duke and now Bush •s trymg to dtsown htm.
"I say to George Bush, take in your child ... and show the bloodlines
of the Republican Party,'' Tsongas said.
Tsongas also stirred an intnun'!'ll' dispute, re~ti_ng his ~emand th_at
Harkin give back campwgn contrtbullOns (rom potiucal acuon commll·
tees and accept no more.
"Give the money back," he said. "Just give the money back."
, Harkin insisted that he W8$1'L going to compete with the Republicans
with one hand tied financUllly.
•
"Let's not stan attacking each other," he snapped at Tsongas b;lck·
slage. Gov. Bill Clinton of Arkansas had clashed witll Gov. L. Douglas
Wilder of Virginia on Friday night over a Wilder comment that Chnton
said suggested he had been mfluenced by Duke's success to make welfare
an ISSUC. Wilder denied it.
'
.
While tile candidates paraded m New Hampshuc, two-ume candtdate
Jesse Jackson announced in Washington he will not run again in 1992.
Former California Gov, Jerry Brown was the only candidate missing.
His J?WPIC said he'd been locked out; Spirou said he had opted out, dism1ssmg the convenuon as "a cattle show" and then belatedly seeking to
parttcipate in a Friday night forum the party sponsored.
.
Minor candidates- Larry Agran, fonner mayor of Irvme, Caltf., and
Tom Laughlin, the "Btlly Jack" movie actor- also got time.

.Today in history
·
By Tbe Associated Press
.
Today is Tuesday, Nov. 5, the 309th day of 1991. There are 56 days
Jert in tile year.
Today's Highlight in Htstory:
On Nov. 5, 1605, tile " Gunpowder Plot ' ~ failed as Guy Fawkes was
seized before he could blow up the English Parliament.
' On this date:
· In 1782, the Continental Congress elected John Hanson of Maryland
: its chairman, giving him tile title of President of the United States in
; Congress Assembled.
' In 18'72, suffragist Susan B. Anthony was fined $100 for attemptmg to
: vote in the presidential election for Ulysses S. GranL (However, Anthony
: never paid the fine.)
• In 1895 George B. Selden of Rochester, N.Y., received tile first U.S.
: patent for ~ automobile.
: In 1911 Calbraith P. Rodgers arrived in Pasadena, Calif., having com, pleted the frrst transcontinental ailplane flight in 49 days. {Rodgers had
: left Sheepshead Bay, N.Y., Sept. 17 in a Burgess-Wnght biplane, and
' required about 70 stops along the way.)
: In 1912 Woodrow Wilson was elected president, defeating Progres·
sive RepublicatUTheodore Roosevelt and mcumbent William Howard
Taft who ran on the regular GOP ticket.
I~ 1940 President Fmnklin D. Roosevelt won an unprecedented third
term in office as he defeated Republican chaDenger Wendell L. Willkie.
In 1946, Massachusetts Democmt John F. Kennedy was elected to the
U.S. house of Represenl8tives.
,
..
.
In 1956, Britain and France staned landing forces tn Egypt dunng
fighting between Egyptian and Israeli forces around the Suez Canal. (A
cease-fire was declared two days later.)
In 1968, Richard M. Ni~on defeated Vice President Hubert H.
Humphrey and third·pany candidate George C. Wallace for the presiden·
~ In 1974, Ella T. 'Grasso was elected governor of Connecucut,
. tile firrst
woman to win a U.S. governorship without succeeding her husband.
In 1983, in a gesiiii'C of Christian unity, the Vatican released a letter by
Pope Iohn Paul IT in which the pontiff praised Martin Lutller, tile father of,.
tile Protestant Reformation.
In 1985, Mormon Ch~h president Spencer W. Kimball died in Salt
Like City at age 90; he was succeeded by Ezra Taft Benson.
In 1989, dea1h claimed pianist Vladimir Horowitz i'n New York at age
BS and singer-songwriter Barry Sadler in Murfreesboro, Tenn., at age 49.
Ten years qo: Buckingham Palace announced that Princess Diana was
exneeting her rtnt child. (Prince William was born the following June;
hers-leoond in line 10 the British throne after his fatller, Prince Charles.)
Five years .,: The White House reaffumed a U.S. ban on weapons
sa1ea 10 Iran as 11 souaht to curb speculation that an arms deal witll Tehran
mJabt bave been connected to the ~lease of American hostage David

J--.

' ' • ·'lbou&amp;ht.

ror Today: "I never vote for any=' l always VOle against.''

...... w.c.l'leldl, American cornedi111 (1880-I

•

Record lows reported around ·Buckeye State ·
Wednesday, Nov, 6

I_A~cc~u-~W~ea~t~he~re~ro~recz:a~st~~~or~~~~~!!!~~~~;~~

'I

and Arkansas. In 1900 tllere were someone else:
Anders~n ~
an estimated 1,600 Louisa black ' - Fish and Wildlife let the June 21
11.
bears. The bears' habitat has been ' deadline pass, giving tlie excus_e
destroyed by developm~£ and lclg..-..__Lha! tt \\/anted_to do yet another set- are·using-it-to keep the bear-off
gin g. LouiSiana outlawed !lear enlific study ~n tlie bear, but the "threiltened" list, .but he said
hunting in 1989, but that has not \delay buys stx months for the committeeisearnestinitsdesire
stop~ tile poachers.
•
,Black Bear Conservation &lt;;ommit- pr 9 tect the bear. "Everybody's '
Ftsh and Wtldlife first began to tee t~ work out local opuons for teputation is on the line here,' ';
worry about the Louisiana black handlmg the problem.
Lloyd told us.
•
bear in 1982. But when nothing
On the ~urface, the comminee
TJie Endangered Spedes.-Act·-had been don• by 1987;· two ' sounds lik~-a good idea= a-co111i:-~comeS• up for reautllorization next'
touisiana members of the Sierra tton o.f pnvate lando.wners, state year and friends of the timber.
Club staned a petition to force Fish agenc1es and umber mdustry and tndustry in Washington are eager to·
and-Wildlife to make-up its mind-. - environmental-groups. B~t Ron gut it. If tile Black~ Con~rva-,
In June of 1990, Ftsh and Nowak, a bear e~pen for FtSh and tion Committee has even mmor
Wildlife announced it was ready to Wildlife, told our rep~rter Jllick success with protecting the bear,
list tile bear as "threatened," anL Jiudn1Ck that the eommmee was a_ without using the federal Jaw, then~
invited public commenL The dead- "tool of lumber interests."
the White House will make the:
line for the decision was June 21,-- Murray Lloyd, tile orgamzer-of - cl1Cthartlle prorection ofspecies: 1991. But a lot can and did happen the committee, is both a memllerof - should be left to local groups. • ,
in a year.
tile Stcrra Club and the Loutstana
But if local jurisdictions had,
The timber mdustry shifted into Forestry Association. He told us b~en paying attention in the first
high gear and helped form the that he met in July with staffers place these animals would not
Black Bear Conservation Commit- from the Office of
have been threatened.
to work a local
G
progress of David Duke in his bid
mental president" who doesn't Endangered Species Act
act chaired by Vice President Dan to become the next governor of
know the defimtion of the term.
allows a state to come up with its Quayle. OMB worries aliout the . Louisiana has implications beyond
One Ftsh and Wildlife field own means of protecting a threat- cost of environmentalism and the the hoUQ,ds of tile state. The fear in
biologist told us, "It's pressure ened species. That appeals to the council worries about its effect on Washington is that Duke represent.(
from the timber industry, plain and Bush administration, because, competitive industries, but netther an undercurrent of racial bigotr)'
stmple."
under the guise of local autonomy, is paid to worry about the bear.
that won ' t go away. His back~
At one time, the bear ranged any number of environmental prob·
Lloyd acknowledged that there ground in white supremacy causeS,
over Louisiana, Texas, Mtssisstppi Jems can be ianored or blamed on were some on his committee who__ and !lis_ blatantly bigoted statements;
r=~..--..----~:--,~---7
~---r-7---_;_-:'::'7~...,
---;;....., about blacks don't seem td have;
hurt him at the polls. Duke ha~
~ow
touched a segment of the popuJa,
FoR THe.
tton that wants a scapegoat to takO:
HaRD
the blame for the ills ·of society;
Both
political panic~ in Washing·;
PaRT.
ton are finally wakmg up to the
l"'..aliz:ation that Duke touches a seg:
ment that votes.
~
MINI-EDITORIAL - The;
frenzy to find out who leaked the
Anita Hill storv to the media ha~
reached ridtculous proportions ...;
an official probe by the Senate and,
a reward being offered by ultraright supporters of Justice Clarence
Thomas. Overlooked in the centro,
versy is tile fact that if no one had
leaked the information to tile pub!
lie, then the Senate Judiciary Com~
miuee would have gone on its
merry way, scruunizin~ Thoma~
without ever takmg senously thevery serious charges of sexuat
harassment. Whether or not Hil(
told the truth, such an allegatioq
cannot be shuffled to the bottom of
the bill of parti'culars by an all
~~~
all-white Senate commit~
,.-"ll~l --th:ot"f.l.ilcd·Ul recognize thnignitil
of what it had.
:
'

D l

A

INO

an amendment to require· a balanced federal budget. Thus, if a
Constitutional Convention we!e
called for any other reason, then
SJR 4, wou!ll essentiallf1iCWi .
drawn and Ohio's petition would
have no force and effect.
Time has passed for rhetoric on
balancing the fedeml budget. Time
has now come for action. It is projected that by 1992, the federal
deficit will raise to $348.3 billion.
It is mind-boggling 10 think that the
federal government will spend
almost $350 billion more than it
w1U have to spend ne~t year. What
is even more mind-boggling is that
the total federal deficit is now a
trillion dollars.
.
The end result is clear. With this

•

areas.

In California, this has meant a
shift of political power from San
Franc1sco to the areas soutll of Los
Angeles and nortll of San Diego. In
Illinois, it has meant the continued
shift of power from Chicago to
western and nortllwestern suburbs,
some quite distant. In Maryland,
the city of Baltimordll&gt;is losing
power to t~e Washington, D.C.,
~uburbs.

These shifts should mean that
traditional Democratic strength in
the central cities will give way to
newly emerging Republic power in
the suburbs. But Democrats remain
upbeat about what they have seen
so far.
"We have more than held our
own," sars Rep. Vic Fazio, DCalif., chaumtu\ of the Democratic
Congressional Campaign CommitLee. "Actually, in the rtrst dozen
states to fmalize their redistricting,
we have done amazingly well, and
I doQ't see any reason to think tllis
trend will chanse."
In many states what is drivmg
the remapping is the 1982 Voting

Rtghts Act, and subsequent court
decisions, which m;~ndate that
minority populations may not be
broken up among districts m order
to dilute their votmg strength. This
means that where sizable numbers
of voters from one racial group
exist, a minority district must be
created.
Currently, there are 22 blacks
and II Hispanics in Congress.
Democratic National Committee
redistricting consultant Mark Gersh
predicts that, "Perhaps 20 new
mmority districts will be created by
the time redistricting ends.''
Democrats, he says, are pushing
this process "because it is the
law.' But Democrats also admit it
is good politics since, except in the
Cuban areas of South Florida,
minorities tend to vote Democmtic.
Here is how redis tricting is
developin~ m tnree key states:
Texas ts a good example of the
p~essure to create new minonty
dtsincts. Te~as gained three new
House seats from the 1990 Census, '
and ba~ed on its newly aeproved
remappmg, all three wiU likely ~o
to mmorilies - one Hispanic dtstrict in Houston, one in San Antonio and a new black disrrict in Dal·
las.
Actually, the GOP is crying foul
in Texas. In the name of creating
!"inority districts and protecting
tncumbents, tile Democratically
controlled process created a. number of strangely shaped, obviously
genymlllldered districts.
The GOP hopes that the federal
couns will throw out the redistrict·
ing, Texas is one o£16 states under
the Voting Rights Act, and,
because of past practices, must submit its redistricting first to the Justice Department and then to the

federal courts.
California's plan is already
headed for tho courts. Befitting the
nation's largest state, the process of
reapportinnmg the stale to accommodate eight new con~ressional
districts is also the nauon's most
chaotic.
In California, the process is not
just pitting Democrat against
Republican - politicians wish it
were that simple. The California
process has pitted Democrats
against Republicans, congressional
Republicans against legislative
Republicans, northern California
against Southern California and
numerous ethnic groups against
each otller in a fight to carve out
specialty districts (black majority,
Hispani_c '!lajority, Asian majority,
gay maJOnty).
The strangest California battle
has been between members of the
GOP. Republic~ns in th~ le~isla­
ture wer~ pushmg a redlstr~ctmg
they belteved would maxtmtze
GOP strength. But in doing so
some districts :-verc redrawn in
suclf a way that meum bent Repub·
Jicans would be pined against each
other in 1992. So these Republicans backed a Democratic plan
designed to protect incumbents both pemocrati~ and Republica.n
- even lhoup tt would not maxtmizc GOP gams. . . ,
.
In the end, Cahforma s RepubUcan governor Pete Wilson vetoed
three different remapping plans,
and tile whole matter is now headins for the state Supreme Court.
Since the court is solidly Rep!lblican (6-1)', their decision should
favorlheGOP.
Illinois' redistrictin~ plan is also
in the courts. A three·Ju~e fedeml
panel must now draw JUmois new

congressmnal district lines, because
the legislature became deadlocked.
Both parties have submitted their
versions to the panel, which heard
two days ot arguments. Now it will
dectde.
What seems clear m llllnQts is
tllat the GOP will gain strength no
maner what the panel decides. The
only question Is how much, and
whether major Democrauc incumbents will have 10 face each other
in 1992.
(C)I991
NEWSPAPERENTERPRISE ASSN.
If any trend has emerged, 1t is
the continued shift of political
power from the central cities to
suburban areas.
0

Berry's World

a

45°

\.

I I·-

'
'

W. VA

Today's elections at a glance
Today's Elections at a Glance

Highlightsofba~:~::;~;i;~:ti~~today:

PENNSYLVANIA -Republican Dick Thornbur~h. the former
governor
and U.S .appointed
attorney general,
vs.vacant
Democrattc
Sen. year
Hams
Wofford. Wofford
to seat left
earlter this
by
h H·
death of GOP Sen. Jo n GOVERNOR:
KENTUCKY_ GOP Rep. Larry Hopluns vs. Democratic Lt.
Gov. Brereton Jones. Gov. Wallace Wilkinson barred from seeking
re-election.
.
MISSISSIPPI- Democratic Gov. Ray Mabus seeking second
d.
term vs. Republican businc~~:G~i~~~r •cc.
PENN.SYLV ANIA - . Democrat Lucien Blackwell vs. Rcpubli·
can Nadine L. Bulford and two other candidates. Incumbent Btll
G the Democratic Whip, resigned.
raJiRGIN!A _GOP state Rep George Allen vs. Democrat Kay
·
C C
be
Slaughter, a member of the Charlottesvtllc tty ounc•1· 1ncum m

D.F~enchSiau_
ghterJr.,a RepubllCanandunclcoftheDemocratiC
candtdate,
rctrrmg.
--MAYORS:
BALTIMORE- Democratic incumbent Kurt Schmoke heavily
favored against lawyer Samuel Culotta, a pcrenmal Republican can·
d1date
BOSTON - Two-term Mayor Ray Flynn heavily favored in
non-partisan race against Edward Doheny, president of tile Boston
teachers union.
.
DALLAS_ Voters havc·59 names to choose from m non-paru·
san race to succeed Mayor Annette Strauss. Front-runners arc for·
mer GOP Rep. Steve Bartlett and Democrats Kathryn Cain and For·
rest Smith.
,
.
HOUSTON -Incumbent-Kathy Whiunire;-elccted-m-1982, mthree-way, non-partisan race that could be headed for ~unoff. She
faces lawyer Bob Lanier and state Rep. Sylvester Turner, who
would be the ctty's first black mayor.
INDIANAPOLIS- Democratic state Sen. Louis J. Mahern
faces Republican Stephen Goldsmith, a fonner prosecutor. Wmner
succeeds four-term Mayor Wtlliarn Hudnut Ill.
PHILADELPHIA_ Democrat Edward Rendell, a fonner prose·
cutor favored over Republican Joe Egan. Mayor W. Wilson Goode
prev~nted
by Jaw from seeking third consecutive term.
SAN FR ANCISCO -Incumbent Art Agnos faces four chal·
lengcrs, including city Supervisor_Angela Alioto, daughtcr or a '•OC·
mer mayor, and fonner Police Chtef Frank Jordan. The race ts nonpart•san
.
BALLOT ISSUES:
WASHINGTON STATE _ Term limns on state and federal
politicians, legalized euthanasia, abortion rights guaramccs, proper·
ty tax rollback.
TEXAS - State lottery, prison bond.
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA - Manufacturers and dealers of
assault weapons could be made !table for damages for vtolcncc
resulting from use of p;uns.

~ational ~ebt out of control, n~t
JUSt our chtldren, but our_grandch!l.
.
n ;
d!Cn a~d gr~t grandchildren wtll rcsol~uon. I hope tllat til 1sse ~ill,
pay Lhts nauonal debt. We cannot__ ~tr~ng messi!,gc.,,to both th~ ~lifo-=---·
onun~mortgagmg1hes(riotote Clcnfan~ Congress ~at we,
. ',
genemttons.
arc senous about trresponstb1e.
The fed~ml government cannot unbalanced ff&lt;!eral spendmg. ~er~
conun_ue thts careless and C!ltefree haps voters wtll ~Jso be sendms;
spending approach. Rather, n must strong ~essages m the _future tO:
approac~ govemm_ent spendmg m a P:CStdenttal and con~tonl!l can-~
responstblc fashmn, wtth a bal- dtda~s who have failed to liye u~
anee~ federa.l budget ma?date to therr balanced budget promtses: 1
hangmg_over liS head. That s the
As al":ays, please feel free 10'
way Ohto and many other sta~es call or wnte me, .State Senator Jad
and local governments deal wnh Mtcbael Long, tf you have an t.
government ~dgets. .
quesu11ns or ~omments about ~
Senate Jomt Res?luuon 4, w~s or any other ISSUes. My number~
adopted _by the Ohto Senate thts (614) 466-8156 and my address .ts
past sesston. I am pleased t? ~~te the Statehouse, Columbus, Ohto
that I am a co-sponsor of thts JOtnt 43215.

Congressional redistricting __R_ob_er_tJ_.m___:::ag:..__ma_n

•-1

·- ---Area deaths
Russell V. Grimm

•

_.. Russell V. Grimm, 63, High
Street Extension, St. Clairsvtlle,
died Monday, Nov. 4, 1991 at his
residence.
Born March 30, 1928 at Letart
~ails, he was a son ?f tile late Bert
lind Chlorus Coe GmnmJ He was a
construction worker, a Protestant
by faitll and an a veteran of World
War II serving with the Umted
States Army Air Corps.
• Mr. Grimm is survived by his
wife, Shirley Grimm, a son, David

Grimm, Carroll; a daughter, Paula
Norman, St. Clrursville; one brother, Robert Grimm, Columbus; and
three grandsons.
Prtvate services and buml will
be held at the convenience of the
family.
Toothman Funeral Home m St.
Clairsville is handling the arrange·
ments.
·
Memorial contributtons may be
made to the Wheelin~ Communoty
Home Care and Hosptcc, 439 Warwood Avenue, Wheeling, W.Va.
26003.

Nellie Sexton
The Daily Sentinel

I

Jl

aceumu1~:

MADRID, Spain (AP) - As
Arab and lsmeli delegates lefl the
Madrid negotiating table, declaring
theid meet again but not•when or
where, Israel offictals were defiantly openin$ a new settlement m the
Golan Hetghts.
- The inauguration of·the -Kcla
seulement Monday on the strategic
plateau Israel seized from Syna in
the 1967 Middle East war came·
right on the heels of antago~istic
direct talks between tile Israchs and
Synans in Madrid.
The S~rUln~ said

intense and the positions of Syria and Israel's right-wing government
so unyielding that tho hopes for
peace that emerged from the fourday Madnd conference are unlikely
to survive without sustained,
hands-on American diplomacy.
The process may tak years ,
although Palestintans suggest theii
sessions with Israel could resume
in less than three weeks and
progress could atlcast be made on
that front.
President Bush, whose secretary
of state
months

gence orAr~b positions at the con·
ference.
Th' Palestinians_wereJl...e,xibile,
willing to discuss the establishment
self-rule in the Israeli-occupied
West Bank and Gaza Strip as a first
step to eventual statehood, while
Syria was unyieldfrlg.
Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir
notcd 1how ~e promis!ng tone of
the Palcsuman-Jordantan dclega·
twn's d11ect talks with lsrae! cony wtth Israel s tcy
· with

unless
annexed in 1981, is
returned.
The Israch hard-liners and Sovt·
ct immigrants at Kela were equally
adamant that the Jewish state hold
onto tile Golan.
Mtddle East passions arc so

pauses were to be expected. ·
"We have a long way to go and
interruptions will probably occur,
but hopes are bright,'' he said
Monday in the United States.
Israel saw hope in the diver·

fron~ agamstlsrael," Shamir
said on Israel radio.
But he offered nothing in the
way of comprom 1sc.
Shamir, in an interview wllh
Israel Television, was asked if he

dep~e~,

records: TolcOO, 16
JJmi·
ous record 17 in 1951; C~
14 desrees, previous record 22
degrees in '9~8; Mansfield, 13
degrees, prev1ous record 24 Ia
1967; Columbus, 14 degrees, previ.
ous record 19 in _1908; Clevellnd,
16 degrees, prevtous record 18 in
1951; Akron-Canton, 14 degrees,
prcv10us record 17 in 19!H;
Youngsto~n. 13 llcgrees, previous
record ISm 19~1.

By DAVE SKIDMO!lE
Associated Press
Wrtter Th
ON (AP)
WASHIN_GT . ,
e
Bush
s hopes for
legtslau~n granung b~nks broad
new busmcss opponunmcs .arc 10
shambles af~cr the measure s lo~sided defeat 10 the House.
Before rccess mg at the end of
!h•s month, Con_gress must replentsh the nearly tnsolvcnt Federal
Deposit Insurance Corp. or.leave
the agency •n dang~r of J'a' 1 '.~f. 10
protc~t the natton s 11 m1 ton
deposuors.
One possibility is a bill pending
-·-

in the House that would increase
the FDIC's authority to borrow
from taxpayers and toughen regulat1on of weak banks.
But Monday evening's 324-89
House vote, which came after three
days of debate, severely dimmed
chances lor passmg the wide-rang·
1ng overhaul of banking laws the
administration had proposed nine
months ago.
Among other changes, the
administration wanted to pcrmtt
banks to expand freely across state

•.

wo.~d constdeder hal~g. setllinemenu
m u•e occ.u~t terr~tones . ~
lor Palestmtans endmg Lberr upnsmg.~ga'!lst Israehh rulei
h
I dtd not , ear o sue a. proposal, but Ithtnk that !here ts no
connccuon between the tssues.The
mtefadah has to end and '!!C ~
mc~ts ~Ot have
h=
Y . . y, most o e
_
~f parttctpants and Lh~usands of
JOurnalists 10 ~Madnd for the
mopm,~e~nto~!uls•~lc~tionneerence were gone
or
1

tor::·

Nabil Shaatll, a close adviser 10
PLO chairman Yasser Arafat,
praised Secretary of State James A.
Baker III's "deft ability" to push
the Arabs and lsraehs to the negotiaung table.

Bush banking plan crippled by vote
a~mmtslra~mn

hncs for the first time since 1927
and enter tile securities business for
the first t1mc since 1933.
,
The interstate prOVISIOns had
survived largely intact, but
Democrats added restrictions on
banks' ent·ry-in to-thc securities
buswcss that bankers and the
administration found unacceptable.
In the end, the admmistrat1on was
pressing for the btU's defeat.
Democrats also had deleted the
administration's proposal to permit
commercial corporatmns to own
•

banks and had rolled back recent
bank incursions into ·•e
"' tnsurance
business under state laws.
Treasury Secretary Nicholas F.
Brady called on tile HQjlse to "now
craft new comprehensive legislation ... including an appropriate
balancing of interests between the
insurance, securi~es and banking
industries."
"A narrow recapitalization of
the bank insurance fund will only
delay the day of reckoning," Brady
sa1d.

d
J
ff:
--Columbm-aslrs-----Admi··ni·-s tra-tiOD de en· s ay-o s-for an extenSiOn
,
f0 feOrgamze
WILMINGTON, Del. (AP) Columbia Gas System Inc. and its
princtpal pipeline subsidiary have
asked a federal bankruptcy court
for a lour-month extensiOn in ftling
thetr rcorgantzaUon plans
The motion , filed Fnday-i n
Wtlmington, asks that the deadline
be extended from No v. 28 to
March 28, 1992.
Columbia Gas and the Columbia
Gas Transmission Corp. say the
size and complcxitN&gt;f the proceed·
ings are the pnncipal ~easons for
the request. The .reor~antzaUon of a,
regulated pubhc u.t•h ty holdmg_
company presents tssues that arc
· a Chap~r
'" II
not nonna 11 Y foun d10
pros;Tcedh mg, they satd. . f' J d f
e two compantes I c or
protectton under Chapter II of the
U.S. Bankruptcy Code on July 31.

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (AP) _ Here arc
the OhiO Loucry drawmg selec·
tions made Monday mght:
Pick 3 Numbers
1·8·4 eight, four)
(one,
Pick 4 Numbers
2·5·7- 8
(two, five, seven, etght)
Cards

6 (s1~) of Hearts
6 (six) of Clubs
10 (ten) of Dmmonds
9 (nine) of Spades

Weather
South·C~ntral Ohio
Tonight, vanable cloudtncss.
Low 25 to 30. Southwest winds 10
10 20 mph. Wednesday, variable
cloudi ness with a high 4) ,Lo 50.
Chance of prectpttlltion is 20 percent.
•
Exten~ed forecast:
Thursday through Saturday:
Continued un seasonabl y cold
through the pcnod A chance of
snow showers Thursday. A chance
of flurries extreme northeast Friday. Otherwtsc fair. Fair Sa1urday.
Highs mmnly in the'30s. Lows gcncfally in.the20s

.Hospital news

!

........ i

Assoe~ted

By The
Press .
no significant
,
'east pans of the state Wednesday
Most of Ohio experienced
Light snow isapo~aib' ay again night.
,
record low temperatures this mom· tonight over plll'IS·of-tll
;-espe;The temperature . at the
ing with readings falling into the cially _northern Ohi~. S!IOw is pos- youngstown Mu~icipal Airport
10- to 20-degree range, the Nation- Stble m eastern Oht~ on Wedn~s- · ~lunged to a new record low of 13
al Weather Service said.
day. Low pressure wtll be movmg ,1 at2:18 a,m. Wday, breakmg tile old
A cold Canadian air mass com, east and .no.rtheast over. •southern .record of IS set in 1951. Today ts
bined with clear-LoiJartly cloudy__c~nad~tomght..and:as !l ·does, tt tlle'lhir!l consecutive day ·of record
skies and light winds to make a wtl~ trad a cold front mto northwest low temperatures recorded at the
very chilly morning.
Ohto by around day,break Wednes.~ airport;-~
Scatte~ flurries fell across tile day. ~now flum~ ~d snow showSome of the major weather scrstate Monday night, but there was ers wdl be a posstbthty over nortll- . vice reporting stations and their

Nellie Nadine Sexton, 75, d1cd
Saturday, Nov. 2, 1991 in , Payson,
Artz.
Before rcmement, she was
employed as a beautician. She was
' Company/Multimedia Inc:., Pomeroy,
a member of the Payson Elks AuxOhio &gt;167611 1 Ph. 1192·2tli6. Soo:ond &lt;lou
iliary, H.O.P.E.S.
pooloi• pola at Pomeroy, Ohio.
She was born Aug. II, 1917 in
Member: The Auociat.ed Pre., Inland
Pomeroy.
Datly Prell Aatoc'18tion and the Ohio
Survtvors include her husband,
Naw1paper Aa1oelaUon, Nat.ional
Advertitinl Repretentatn·e, Branham
B.C. sc~ton , of Payson; three sons,
"" Nowopapor Sale•&lt; 733 Third Avenue,
-.-Ronald...M.-Castlc.,-of- P.hoenix,- ----~-­
New YOrt, Ntw Yurk 10017.
·
An z., Larry M. Castle, of ChanPOSTMASTER: Send addre11 cha n~orct~ to
dler,
Ariz., Lloyd Slagle, Jr. of Las The Dally Scntinol, Ill Court Sl,
Vegas, Nev ., four grandchildren '
Pomeroy, OH1o 45189.
aod two great-grandchildren.
,
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Veteran~ Memorial Hospital
' By Carrier or 1\tot.or Route
Funeral services were held at I
MONDAY ADMISSIONS
One Weok........., ...................... ....... St.60
p.m. Tuesday at Payson F.uncral
Ono jllontlo... .'..., .... . .... .. • . . ... ..$11 95
None.
Home with burial in Mountain
One Year. ........................................ $83.20
1'
MONDAY DISCHARGES ·
BINGLE COPY
Meadows Memorial Park.
1 •
Abranda Storms, Paul Harris, Pearl
PJUCE
,
Memorial donations can be
Hawthorn, William Anderson and
made to H.O.P.E.S., P.O. Box 114,
Russell Eshelman.
II
Payson, Ariz.
er mly remU in advance direct ·to T~~
I Golllpclll Dolly 1\oibuna en a 3 6 or 12
Holzer Medical Center
mon&amp;h buil. Croc:llt Wlll bl rtven curicr
Sharon K. W~ight
Monday, Nov. 4
' OI&lt;hwooll.
Disrhargcs
- Willlam Bond,
Friends of Sharon Kay Wright,
1 ~ No tubKTip~lon• by mai~ pormil~cd in
Wanda
Brooks,
Lawrence Butler,
1 ' area• whtrt home tamer lti"Yice II
who died on Sunday, may call at
Greta
Cole,
Wtlliam
Davis, Roger
; iavailable.
Ewing Funeral Home from 2 p.m.
Henry,
Cindy
Kahnc
, Teresa
I
Mall loboerlpllono
to 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. on
IM14e Go Ilia Coon!)&gt;
McFall,
Reta
Montcasllc,
Lois
·! •13 Woeka ......................................... $21.8-4 Tuesday, and one hour ,prior to the Musser, Anna Panlow, Mrs. Ron' 211 w..u. ' ............................... S,43.16
service at Laurel Cliff Free nie Springer and son, Thelma
: r 62 Wookl ......................................... $84.78
MlflhOdllt ellllrch on Wedne\day. Stumbo, Linda Webb.
1
Outaldo Oallla County
40'
• ' 13 w..b ............................. ....... 823
Puneml services will be held at the
Birtlls - Mr. and Mrs. Dennis
\ 211 Woob ...... , ...................................~.60
church
tomorrow at I p.m ., with Howell, of Oak Hill, a daughter.
~ 52 Woob .........................................~.40
• Rev. William Williams officiating.
(U8P8liiS.980i
Publi1hed every allcrnoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohio by the Ohio Valley Publi1hing

' :::·~~:~:;~~-=~~·;:: ~::~

q;._~ l

,

M.ideast talks break up, settlement bui~~ing g,oe.~ on .

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Columbus 44•
\.

Let's balance the federal budgetSen. Jan M. Long ~

WASHINGTON (NEA) With congressmnal redistncting
about one-thud complete, 1t seems
clear that the GOP is ahead. But
Democrats say they are not doing
nearly as badly as they had expect·
ed.
Only a relaove handful of states
are gaining or losing seats m
Congress as a result of the 1990
census. However, all states must
redraw their congressional district
boundaries to reflect internal popu·
lation shifts.
If any trend has emerged thus
far; it is tile continued shtft of polit·
ical power from the central ctties to
suburban, and now far-suburban

MICH.

and a e ran tta :

..

This past week, the Ohio Senate
returned to session, callin~ for a
Constitutional Convenllon to
require a balanced federal budget.
Senate Joint Resolution 4, petitions
Congress to submit to the State's
for ratification an amendment to
the United States Constitution to
rcqutre a balanced federal budget
Alternatively, Senate Joint Res·
elution 4, also calls upon Congress
to convene a Consutullonal Con·
vcntion for the purpose of adopting
an amendment to the Constitution,
for ratification by the State's, to
require a balanced federal budgeL
Most importantly, Senate Joim
Resolution 4, petitions Congress to
call that Constitutional Convenuon
for the sole and limited purpose of

·-=---=--""" -- ····- - -·-· ·;......~ -··- - - .
111e Dilly SeryUnel Pll• s
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Pomeroy-MiddlePOrt, Ohio . ·,

•

Page-2-The Dally stnttnej,
Pomeroy-MiddlePOrt, Ohio ;
TUesday, November 5, 1991 : ·

WASHINGTON- In 1902,
President.
Theodore Roosevelt- Pomeroy,Olilo
showed
mercy
10 a Louisiana black'
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
bear captured· by his hunting party
....:: a gesture that illSpif&amp;rtHe Tetl6y
Bear.
•
·
~MULTIMEDIA, INC.
George Bush has not been liS
accommodating.
The Louistana black bear is now
ROBERT L. WINGETT
estimated
to number less than 300,
Publisher
P.ossibly as few as 70, but the
'kinder, gentler" Bush administraPAT WHITEHEAD
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
lion is balking at putting the bear
Assistant Publisher/Controller
General Manager
t!!!der tbe protection oLthe Endan·
gered Spectes Act
In a rerun of the spotted owl
AMEMBER o! The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Associa~on and
the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
fiasco in the Pacific Nortllwest, the
U.S. !'ish and Wildlife Service is
LEITERS OF OPINION-are welcome. They should be less than 300
finding every excuse m tile book to
words long. Allleum are subject to editing and muSI be signed with name,
avoid federal protec~ion for the
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
bear. Scientists within tile Fish and
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.
. Wildlife Service think the bear
deserves to be listed as "threatened." But their bosses answer to
Interior
Manuel

111 Court Street

, November a, 1111

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The Daily Sentinel

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CLEVELAND (AP) - The 'unclassified political appomtccs
Steiner said the number of polit·
number of state employees fired left over from the Celeste adminis- teal firin~s in the Voinovich
during the fliSI 10 months of the tration were f1rcd. Unclass1f1ed admmistrauon has been so low that
Voinovich administration was a polttical appointees have no ;ob Republican leaders have comfra ction of the layoffs ordered security under civil service laws.
plwncd about hmited opportunities
when Richard Celeste became govThe newspaper said the to find patronage jobs for party
ernor in 1983, a newspaper report- Vomov1ch admmistrlllion had not appointeeS. .
cd today.
previously spcctfled the number of
" It's ironic. Our own party says
The (Cleveland) Plamj)~alru: Celeste appomtees who were fired we're
not doing anywhere near
said__C.elestc's Democra~e-admmis- - from unclassified iobs.
what
they
wanted," Steiner said.
tration furloughed 1,197 state
employees in its first year.
o~l'.f..' ,
Gov. George Vomovich's
JJ lClQ VO
agaznS pOS Q
l
Republican admimstratton, whtch
has been critidzed by House
WASHINGTON (AP) _ Amer- the month!~ mcctmg of the agenSpeaker Vern Rtffe, D-Whcclcrs· icans won't have to pay that extra cy's govemmg boand.
burg, over layoffs of Celeste-era penny for postage the governors of
The vote ends the rate case,
employees, has latd off !58 state th U S Postal Servtcc dcctdcd which began more than 18 months
employees since January.
t~ · ·
ago when the Postal Service
~ C!!LLS~LI!.c:LJUR2!&lt;J&lt;Silliln..li!L---\ft "''Vcmors fai led to muster requested a 30 cent fttSI class rate.
Voinovtch sa1d the some 194 h
g
.
vote Instead the rate was set at29 cents
'
tneeded
e necessary
unantmou
s
increase the stamp pnce by the •independent Postal R~te
10
by a penny to 30 cents a rate the Commission. The Postal Servtce
•• commtsst
. 'on
•••
agency has been seck 1ng for more tw1cc asIced th c Ra~
than a year and a half. The govcr- to reconsider and lwtce was rejectContinued from page I
nors voted _
favor of the ed.
10
6
3
enforcing a SUite law requiring can- increase a Postal Serv 1cc
Today's failure to override that
didates for the Legislature to meet spokcsma~ S31d
action ends the maL_Ler, a Postal
a one-year residency rcqutrcment
The decision was announced at Scrvtce spokesman satd.
m the distncts 1n wh1ch they seck
clectton.
Ohio 's new map of 99 House
and 33 Senate districts, adopted
Oct I. by the Rcpublican-con Rutland PTO Carnival
mceung on Monday at6:30 p.m. in
trolled apporttonmcnt, w1·11 app 1y to
The
Rutland
PTO
Fall
Fcsuval
Pomeroy to sign up for a novice
the November 1992 electiOns
will be held Saturday from 6-9 p.m. ham radio class. A novice boolc
unless invalidated by a court.
The plan, chall enge dby thc two at the elementary sc hool. There may be ordered at that time and all
Democrats on the five. membcr will be food, games, prizes, a coun· money for books must be turned in
board, lumped 20 Democrauc and try store w1th craft and gift 1tems. at this meeting. The five-weelc
two Republican House meum bents Door pnzcs will also be awarded.
class is offered free of charge to the
public. For further information call
nto
12
districts.
Thts
means
most
1
Free clothing day
will have to run against each other,
992-6857 after 5 p.m.
The Gallia·Mcigs Community
retire or rnovc to a new district •.n
Aci10n
Agency wtll hold a free
order to run next year.
•
clothing.
day on Thursday from 9
Monday's hearing was a contm·
uatton of a case in which the same a.m. \O noon a1 the old high school
panel rul ed unconstitutional in building in Ches htre.
SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
September two House districts in
446 4114
Veterans Day dinner
Mahoning Cou nly thut were drawn
There will be a Veterans Day
10 years ago.
Dinner
on Monday at the MiddleIn that decis1on, the ;udgcs
port
Legion
Annex at noon for the
retained jurisdiction to sec tha! the
pOSt
unit
and
tnVIICd gues ts. A
corrections it ordered for Mahomng
hym~
smg
will
begin
at I p.m. the
County were earned out m the new
Narrow
Way
Singers
of Letart,
redistncttng plan.
The September decision, tn a W.Va . The hymn sing is open to ,
case that wasn ' t filed until 1988, the pu bltc.
found that the 1981 plan illegally
Radio class
diluted minority voung strength m
·
There
will
be an orientauon
Mahoning County.

ls- '- ·te

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t l h 'ke

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Deczszon
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Meigs announcements

Stocks
Am Ele Power ..................30 3/8
Ashland Otl ......................28 3/8
AT&amp;T................................ 38 1/2
Bank Onc ..........................45 3/4
Bob Evans ........................ 18 7/8
Charming S®p.................. l9 3/4
City Holding ..................... l6 1/2
Federal Mogul. .................. l5 3/4
Goodyear T&amp;R .................. 50 1/4
Key Centurion .................. .14 1/2
Lands' End ........................20 1/2
Limited Inc....................... 23 7/8
Multimedia Inc.................. 22 3/4
Ra~ Restaurant .................. l/4
Robbins&amp; Myers ................ 36 1/4
Shoncy's Inc...................... 19
Star Bank ........................... 25 1/4
Wendy lnt'I.........................91J8
Worthington Ind ............... .19 518
Stock nports llrt lh1 10:30 a.m.
quotes pro~ldtd ., Blulll, E/111
and Loewl of GoJ/Ipo/JJ,

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15, 18111

Ohio

Giants fall to ~4-5 folio . g
30-7 s~b~ck to Philadelphia
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - , of·the gill)!&lt;;." Giants coach Ray frorri its 40 "fire in the frrst period
Almost every week since the-sea---.Handley S&amp;d.
which carried to a first down at th~
-=-=~~staried~Philadelphia Eagles . Jeff Hostetler was sacked four Giants' 26 with the help of IS-and
coach Rich Kotite promised to give umes and fumbled the ball aw~y 1.7-yard pass completions from
rookie James Joseph substantial onc.e UllWI~e_rush of_Regjlle McMahon to Fred Barnett.
.playing time:
- Wh1te, Clyde Sunmons, _Mike Pitts,
Bef9re the half ended, McMa·
He finally did Monday night.
Jerome Brow,n and M1ke Go]•c. bon and Jackson teamed up on their
It took a back injury tq Keith New York wound up with~ yards long TD pass play and 'Ruzek
Byars in the third period-of"MOn: on the ground and 134 passmg.
kicked a 36-yard field goal. J~ckday's 30·7 wiri over the New 'loit · . "The Eagles defense played son caught McMahon's JliiSS at the
Giants for Kotite to tum 19 Joseph, well BCf?SS the boa,d and,! did~'t Eagles' 45, then outran pursuers to
a seventh-round draft pick this have ume to throw,
sa1d the end zone on his 73-yard score,
year. ·
.
Hostetler.
the longest of his ();!!l)Cr...
Joseph responded with ·68 yards
Hostetler, who completed 9 of
. The field goal was set up when
and two touchdowns on 18 carries 17 passes for 142 yards, left the Seth Joyner sacked Hostetler who
.as he helped the Eagles snap a game in the final.quaner with an fumbled. Reggie White, recovered
four-game losing streak.
injured left ankle. Phil Simms, last and returned il 3 yards to the
The Eagles boosted their record year's ·Starter, made his first Giants' ~2.
to 4-5 and left the defending cham- appearance of the season, completThe Eagles boosted their lead to
pion Super Bowl Giants with the ing one of two pass.es for nine 20-0 after a IS-play, ?().yard drive
same numbers, both long shots to· yards.
.
.. __ . in the third period, capped- by
reach the playoffs.
The Eagles' offensive line, a Joseph's 11-yard touchdown run,
Joseph said that at halftime he subject of criticism all s'eason, the longest gain in the drive that
~~..,· ~lay.
played one _(lf its best games. It took 9:05 off the clock,
- =
'just fortunate to get a o;:x:nea hOIC$ f9r Joseph and Byars,
The Gian)S returned the ensuing
chance," said the 6-foot-2 running who gained 39flirds on 10 carries.
kickoff to their 38 and scored in
back out of Auburn.
More important, the offensive three plays to make it 20-7. Jeff
''I'm -sorry it came at Keith's line gave up just two sacks, pro- Hostetler threw 55 yards 10 Odessa
expense," Joseph said, adding that tecting Jim McMahon, who played · Turner at the Eagles' 6. A pass
Kotite told him this wee)c he would with a brace on his right knee as interference penalty in t)le end zone
IRRESISTABLE FORCE- Philadelphia
scored two touchdowns and ran for 68 yards on
play
more.
the result of surgery five weeks against Wes Hopkins placed the
Eagles James Joseph runs with the ball during
18 carries as the Eagles defeated the Giants 30·7,
The
Eagles
not
only
beat
the
ago.
McMahon completed 16 of26 ball on the I, from where _Rodney
fourth quarter action as New York Giant Pep(AP LaserPhoto)
Giams
for
the
sixth
time
in
their
passes
for 229 yards, including a Hampton dove into the end zone.
per Johnson tries to bring him down. Joseph
last seven meetings, but handed 73-yard connection with Keith
Philadelphia completed its scorthem their worst licking since a 44- Jackson. McMahon ranwice for . ing in the fourth quarter on Ruzek's
?loss 10 San Diego in 1980. ·
14 yards.
'third field goal of the game, a 25"We were mentally prepared
The Ea~les took a 3-0 lead 51 yarder, arid Joseph's 1-yard dive
but got beat physically. Obviously seconds into the second period on capping a five play, 36-yard drive
we didn't play well in many phases Roger Ruzek's. 38-yard field goal. · after the Eagles took over when the
Ph•ladelph1a started the drive Giants fell shon on a fourth-and-3.
COLLEGE STATION, Texas Infractions. But to coach Tony down and close us down for two
(AP) - Texas A&amp;M's basketball Barone, the punishment the Aggies years, they did a good job,"
program escaped the death_penalty received has the same effect.
Barone said Monday. "But I don't
from the NCAA's Committee on
"If the NCAA wanted to shut us think that's fair. I'm probably not
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) en by Iowa, but that it played so ings.
supposed to make observations."
Ohio State coach John Cooper poorly and didn't get trounced.
Cooper made it clear be wasn't
"The amazing thing is as bad as blaming the loss on quarterback
The NCAA placed the"Aggies wasl\'t surprised his team was beat·
on lwo years probation Monday for
. we played or as well as they · Kent Graham, who passed for only
what if called major violations
played, we still had a chance to win 97 yards and had an interception.
91'.0000. 8, Toronto 18.0000. 9, Rium•n
under
former
coach
Kermit
Davis
the ball game up until the last Nor did he finger an offensive line
83.5000. 10, Apple Creek Waynedale
Computer ratings
Jr., now an assistant coach at
81.0000. .
play," Coopet said Monday.
• that permitted GrahiJlll to be sacked
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) - Tho fi ·
~on 16- 1. WheelenbLlrg
Chipola Junior. College in MarianBut a pitiful passing game was six umes nor a receiving corps that
141
. 2, Wca. Jeffe:n:on 134.5000. 3,
n•l wot.kl)' football computer ratinp as
-- na, Fia,-~ · - - ···
the difference when the Buckeyes - CooiJcr saia droppCif five passes.
rdouod by lhe Ohio High School Athletic
Amanda·CieucrecJr. 130.0000;"'"4 ,
·
PomllfCful.h
Eut
J
26.3333.
S,
Colu.mb~.~a
The
Aggies
will
not
be
jlermit·
Al~ll,i.on, by division and reaion, wilh
needed help through the air.
"Kent Graham is only as good '
bi·lovcl poinLI (top four t.tlnu: in each re·
Re-ady 126.0000. 6, COlLlmbus Hartle~
ted
to
participate
in
postseason
play
Cooper
said
his
team's
16-9loss
as
we
{the line and receivers) allow
Jim 1dvance to ~gional sc:mif'lnlll):
120.1666. 7, o.k Hill 9S.oooo. a,
this season. They also will be limitto Iowa wasn't the fault of the peo- him to be," Cooper said. "I don't
Brookville 97 .7222. 9, Cintinnni
DIVISION I
Ro&amp;im l-1, Cle~d•nd SL Ian•tiw
WyominJ 92.0000. 10, Columbus Aetde·
ed to two scholarships for the
pie calling the plays but of the care who it is, if they don't have
my 80.7500.
Zl6.0000. Z, E•dld Zll .0000. 3, Lake·
1992-93 season and can have only
players executing them.
time to throw, or if the receivers
wood 119.5000. 4, Beret 162.0000. 5,
DIVISION V
eight instead of the usual 15
COlUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ICcol Rooo..... 161.5000. 6, Middlcbuq.
Re&amp;ion 17-l, Sand..Uy 12.5.0000 2,
"I'm not sitting here .sayipg the don '.t catch the ball ... "
Oahon 120.5000. 3, Fairport Harbor
""· 161.0000. 7, w....., Hvof.
expense-paid official visits for the For the frrst time since 1987, some- fact that we C!llled that many passes
While Iowa maintained a patient
iii&amp;IS9.33Jl. I, Lakewood S1. Edwud
Hantirtg 110.!000. 4, Mt:llmeld 9!.5000.
•
1992 calendar year.
one other than Cleveland St. lost the game," he said. "I'm j0st · mixture of passes and runs that ate
157.0000. 9, s.... pwille 153.5000. 10,
5, Moaadore 92.5000. 6, Columbiana
Eaobkc Norlhl47.0000.
90.5000. 7, F""'""' Sc !oacph 85.5000.
In addition, the infractions com- Ignatius is The Associated Press saying we were not effective up ground and took time .off the
Rrt&gt;m :!-1, a-... :!05.51100. 2,
8, lndep~ndence 78.5000. 9, Lucu
miuee accepted the university's state high sc hool football poll throwing the ball. We called more clock, Ohio State was always in a
MoooUion W - m.= l, Tolo73.5000. 10, Sebring McKinley 70.5000.
do St. John'• 16J.36t0. 4, Akron EUet
elimination of off-campus recruit· champion. And for the first time passes and had more sacks and for hurry, Cooper said.
Resion 18- 1, Blwl'ton 118.0000. 2.
165.5000. s. BNIIIwidtiS!.OOOO. 6, Son·
Odphoa St. John'a liS.SOOO. 3, Minner
irig for men's basketball during this since 1987, Newark Catholic is whatever reasiln we didn't get the
"ll seemed like they had the
duet~ 154.m7. 7, Toledo St Fnncis.
I08.5000. 4, Deli'"" Ayenvill~!~.12:1~
past spring.
back at No.1.
143.4444 . I, Nonh C1n10n Hoover
5, St. Ucnry 90.SOOO. 6, Vtn Buren
job
done.''
'
ball
for a long period of time and it
t37JOOO. 9, Mwillmllck:Jon 132.9444.
81.!5000. 7, McComb 84 .5000. S, Edon
The
commitlee
said
it
had
Newark
Catholic
rallied
in
the
Cooper
said
that
Iowa
shut
seemed
when we got it. maybe we
10, w""~ ll22:ltl.
80.4444. 9.1Ut:il&gt;ille 80.2:!Z2. 10. r.....
authority 10 impose lesser penalties voting by a state panel or sports ~own the Buckeyes' robust running were too urgent trying to score,"
:1--1, DobUrt 211.0000.2, Pi·
ria St. Wendelin 76.5000.
qua 19"5 .0000. 3, Colwnbul BroothaYCn
Res,ion 19-1, Newark Catholic
if it determines a case is •' unique."
writers and broadcasters to over· gl!J!le and forced them i~io passing, Cooper said. "Field position was a
(91.0000. 4, Orovc City 119.5000. 5,
147.0000. 2, Woodlfield 131.0000. 3,
•
take Malvern and win the Division
Mon~nold 165.5000. 6 (lic), M~nofiold
Mil vern 113.0000. 4, · ·Sh1dy1idc
wh!~h scaled Oh10 State s. fate.
factor in the game, slarling with the
- The university!s effons to gain v poll championship.
~hdiaon , OaUoway Wst.l.lnd 148.5000.
101.5000. S (tic), Ca ld well, RcedsviUc
We called 34 run~.mg pla_ys opening drive. We got the ball one
full presidential control over the
Also locking up poll champi·
I, Picterinaum 145.5000. 9, Llnc11ter
Eutem 72.0000. 7, Willow Wood
137.0000. 10 (lie), Troy, Wencr"Yille
~~d 3~ passmg plays, he sa1d.
t•me m good field position and conSymme~ Valley 66.0Cl00. I, Sugar Grove
intercollegiate
athletics
program
onships
were
Cincinnati
Princeton
S.U1)1126.0000.
Bome
Union 6!.5000. 9. Heolh 63.11000.
That
s
not
h~e
th1s
Oh10.
State
vcrtcd
that into a touchdown. Other
affected
the
punishment
A&amp;M
in
Division
I,
Fostoria
in
Division
Reaion 4-1, Cincinnati Princeton
10, StrubWJ·fnnklin 53.6666.
,_
received, the committee said.
2]9.0000. 2, CitlciM1ti El&lt;ler ZI0.9444.
foo,tball team th1s Y~· Obv•ously, than that, we just weren't in synch.
Repr&amp; 20-1, Cincinnlir.i Mariemorn ·
"Those actions, combined with II, Cincinnati Academy of Physical were more of a runnmg team. Out We-didn't do the things in this
3, C'"terville 195.0000. 4, Olford Ta·
135.5000. 2. Middletown Fenwick
'
Education in Division Ill and
lawanda 116.5000 . S, Middle1own
121 0000. 3, Marion Plcmnl12l0000. 4,
the swiftness, thoroughness and Akron Manchester in Division rv. of the 32 passes we called, we game that we have been able to do .
115.5000. 6, Cincinntti Wcatcm Hilla
Cilii::inn1ti Country Day 117.3181 . 5,
17•U444. 7, Cinc innati Andeuon
Ceduvillo 11!.5000. 6. B1~bridgo Po~t
decisiveness of the university's
Newark Catholic, which has auempted 24 and we completed in some of the previous games that
163 .0000. I. Cinc:innni Moeller
Valley IOlSOOO. 1, Unioo City MUsiui·
response
to
the
matters
in
this
curc•ghL
we won."
160.7500. 9, Harrilon IS6.6666. 10,
nawa Valle~ 19.8145 . I, Lockland
rent
case
,
led
the
committee
won
six
state
championships
on
the
10
"If
you
don't
throw
the
football
Trailing by a touchdown going
&amp;1 .38&amp;1 . 9, Milfotd Center Fairb1nk1
~~NLgS.Ue 139.5000. ...
determine that this case merited field, pocketed its third poll title in and ca!ch it better than that, you're into the final quarter, the Ohio
11 .0000. 10 (tic~ Sooth OuleMn Soulh·
R~M S- 1, Sta.~berwille 186.4444.
eu~em, C.nal W~nthems 79.000Cl.
Jess than the required full range of the last 10 years. The title was also not gomg to beaLmanr. teams, par· State staff called passes on 15 of 22
2, R•ylud Buckeye 154.3333. 3,
penalties,·
• the committee said.
the third for Princeton, which won tiCularly a good l£llm hke I~wa. ' . plays. Graham completed 3 for 11
YOIIOIJIO"" O.onoy 1521!33. 4. Bcloh
Walt Bruch U2.0000. S (lie), Akron
"Had not the university's presi- earlier poll crowns in 1979 and
. Oh1o State h'Dd come Into the for 38 yards, with three others
B..duol, Al:nJn Hobon 131.5000. 7, M.di·
r\allon a1Dukttbal1A" oclatlon
dent not responded as he had l·n J9SS.
oon 124.!000. I, llubbud 114.0000. 9,
gamr
255 yards a game dropped by receivers. Iowa's
oy Tho.,,,""'',,.,.. ·
CAPE won the Division III poll on the averaging
RichfiCI.d Raere \13 .7122. 10, Ravc:nna
grou~d.
Iowa
laughed at ~t defense had as many sacks as the
All
Tlmu
EST
both
instances,
a
broader
ranger
of
two
ye11rs
ago,
while
Fostoria
also
101.11000.
Rtf. on 6-:-1, focLor:it 184.0000. 2,
EASTERN coNFERENCE
penal tics . would ha vc been won its only previous poll crown in figure, pumng the backs 10 a v•sc Buckeyes had completions.
Bay YWaae Bay 172.0S5.S. 3, Holland
Allonllclllvlslon
imposed."
and aUowing jyst 124 yards on 42
The Buckeyes travel to MinSprinlfwd 161.2500.4, Solm 159.5000.
Orl•ndo
....
'i
~-;,~___!:~
Barone, named in Mar,h to 1989. Manchester ca~tured its fust rushes.
5, O.tfton Midview 131.8610.6, Bellewe
ncso.ta for. a game. Sa!~rday. They
w~sh!"s1on
2 o 1.000
rebu'ld the Aggies' basketball pro
ever poll championship.
123.SOOO. 7, Panna H11. Holy Name
The
loss
dropped
.the.
Bu~keyes lost m thCir only prev1ous trip out122.0000. ! , Olmo1otl Fllb lll.lSll. 9,
M;om•
.......... 1 o 1.000 112
gra~ as bl'nd
s'ded b the sch 0 1•
There was little dispute in the
BowUna Green 109.5000. 10, Puma Pad·
. New Jeney ...... I o LOOO 112
'w 1 •1
Y
•
four biggest divisions, where the fr~m a ue for seco~d m the_ BI~ Ten side Ohio, 10-7 10 Illinois.
1 1 .5oo '
.. 1116.51100.
.
Asked what his team had to
Bootm
arship ruling.
leader received a .clear mandate w1th Iowa and Indiana mto a uc for
, Reaiori 7- 1, Uniontown Lakr.
fourth with l_llinois. Now 6-2 over- shoot for after the Iowa loss, Coop~U.JJ;!~ ..... ~ J ::
J
''I'm stunned by it,'' Barone from the voters.
2:S..Oll5. Z, Por\lm"'lh 169.0000. 3,
t.Guilvillc 161.0000. 4 (tic), Columb1.11
con&lt;uiOI•l•lon
said. "The scholarship"situation is
But inDivision V, Malvern had . all ...and 3·2 m the conference, the er said, "The only goal we have
B•hcrort, Ph.Uo 147.0000 (Bc:cchcroft
MiiC··hi w'""" ...... 2, o, L000
5oo
far more devastating ·than anything come •'nto the· fl'nal poll · n fl'rst Buckeyes also plummeted from right now is to win the game this
willl playolf ber\h bucd on LhUd·lcnl
"~·
.. ... ..
·
else that could have been done as
13th to 19th in this week's rank- week."
.
................... 413.3333 .. JSB.SOOO).
P.di:'~:
:~~
far as I'm concerned.
place by nine points over Newark
6, Mt:ConnoloYillc MO!J•n 140.0000. 7,
All••" ........... o ' .ooo .Ll/2"When you're tryl·ng to bu•'ld a Catholic and with a 32-point lead
McMhllr VtniO&lt;I 111.!333. 8, LoainJ11011
Chodo\\e ......:o.· 0 2 .000 2
over third-place W~d._
116.0000. 9, Colu.mbua E11t 114.0000
tO, Pnutah WILkins Memorial
Clevehnd ........ o 2 .ooo 2
program, one of the options you
However, despl' te winning 20-14
1~.!000.
WESTERNCON•·••ENCE
have to have is numbers, and
Reaion 1-1, St. Marys Memoritl
in announcing his voluntary
Mldw"~'''r•• P&lt;~. GR
they've effectively taken away_the over Wellsville and capturing more
SEATTLE (AP)- Ken Griffey
IU .OOOO. :1. Doy10n llunbor 155.0000. 3,
s•• Antoruo ...... 2 0 1.000
recruiting process for ·our basket· first-place .votes than anyone else Sr., who is ending a baseball career retirement, the Mariners said Gri£• Norwood 154.0000. 4, ~aryaville
o.n,.,.
1 1 :SOO· ~ 1 ·
ball team...
in the division, Malvern slipped all studded with honors, says his finest fey,41, could be offered a job with
•· - •·n .oooo.5, Dofilhce 142.!000., 6, Ur·
-bua 117.;,000. 7, Lima Shawnee
.
, d
~~ton .::::::: : : :~l:: :
Barone is starting his first sea- theNwayto~th.cirdth. •
hthour C~l)lelealate in his 19 years in their organization.
.111.0000.1, H&gt;mllton Rou 100.11000. 9,
1
295
Fnoilln H.OOOO. 10, Wuhino&lt;"' COWl
~~... ....... o • .ooo • 112
son as coach with 11 scholarship
ewar..._ a o 1c receiVe
e maJor gues - when he took
2
Mianll y,... 91.11000.
·r;·
,
iiic
~,
,~
.ooo
players
and
four
walk-ons.
points
and
II
frrst-place
votes,
with
the
field with his son.
1
.DIVISIONW
Goldm Stote ....... 2 o 1.000
"There are kids out there right Woodsfield totaling 285 points on
"Playing with Junior over the
WE'LL
l•ai• 9-1, Oinrd 1~. 5000 . 2,
Mentor Lato Cubolio 1S9 •.SOOO. l.
"'"''"" . ......... . 2 o 1.000
five frrst-plaee votes.
l~t t':"o seasons was defin_itely the
Alhubula Rubor 15S.OOOO. 4, Minerva
LA cuppcn ····
I ' .5oo :
now that want to come to Texas
Newark Catholic is making a h1ghhght of my career,'' Griffey
· OVERLOOK
ru.sooo. '· Youn,I~OWII Mooney
1;;:-.J;'
:
;n
...
:::::::
:
:
1l::
A&amp;M
that
can't
because
of
what
record
16th
appearance
in
the
playsaid
as
the
Seattle
Mariners
YOUR. FIRST
1
13!.1110. 6, s"""'"" 11.0000. 7. eon.
bnd Laltmow 127.000().'1, Uluicl,.ville
S•mmemo ...... ' ' .500 '
somebody else did,'' Barone swd. orfs this weekend. From 1978 to announced his retirement Monday.
o.l"'"" 116.0000. 9, r ...,.,.,.. u,.
~.1 ., 0,.;,;;;· 0 2 .ooo 2
".I do'n't .unders!B"d that. I have .a 1987, the Gre.en Wave won six
Griffey followed his son, Ken'
ACCIDENT
lulirte 114.1777. 10, OnadmtNUCtllndian
N•t,•meuchcdulol
d•fficultume trymg 10 make a log•· state titles and lost in the fmal three Griffey Jr., to the Mariners and
· Volloy IOIIJOOO.
0
11
1
1
R..... 10-1, Twilllbolnl Clluabcr·
'M:.w!~!:~~~ewYoot, ?:JOp.m.
cal connecuon With what happened other times. They were frrst or sec- they became the first father-son
:'~o~
~1::'a
~t~
~.:::"..!,'::~~
W. 19f.OOOO. 2, AJtron St. ~inceni·St
10 the past and the future of our.- onirin theplayoffs eight years in a · duo to play in the major leagues at
Phil•dclohiu• Wuh~pn. 7:30p.m.
'opeclol Modolltt Auto Polley, vour
Mary 111.4444. 3. Cattalia Ma1aret~
U~hatAua.... l:JOp.m.
basketball team."
the sa
t.
J ·
h
rotoo won't go up with ~·r firot
149.0000. 4, 8••)1110 lll.OOOO. , Oak
Ch.ulotteOIDeuoit,r:3op.m.
·university officials contended row. f
. .
f .
me •me. unlor, as 1 e
accldont:
-· ·-Hubor 131.0000. 6, RookY RiVer
IZI.SOOO. 7, Swan"" tWOOO. I, lolill·
~~:. ~ M!Jmlc. 8 p.m.
that Davis and assistant coach
A ter miSSin~ the play~f. s 10 younger Griffey is called, is
Unllkoolmllor pollcleo thot requlro
buryL.ullUOOO. 9, Willonlll2.5000.
c~,....,;,~~;"'~~i~3o~!-'m.
Fletcher Cockrell furnished A&amp;M 1989, they lost 10 the s~m,_fmals already a two-time Americ'an
thrM yuro of policy ownorohlp,
10, a...tu.l a.-ol01.5000.
Ro.... 11~1,- 179.6666. :1.
f.:!:::".:~:W."":\si~P~~false or misleading information last y~ar to eventual Dms1on V L?n~f~yiiS~~~~~-tl~2eiAI
. J.
l~~'!,O::,~~~,"llowothe IXtmptlon
Columltua D.sal•· 167.0000. 3, Utica
SacnmontoOIScoui~ I Op.m.
seven times in the•course of a champion St. Henry.
153.!000. 4_. Soulh Poln1 120.0460. l,
son~...,;·" D&lt;rt•u. IO:Jo p.m,
school invcstigailon about recruit·
St. ~gnauus ~ad won the _last Star and a member of the Big Red
~~~;:~~~ =~~~:::.:::~r~.•,r•.
•ol!:laod 106.0!!4. 6, Colum·
booo Bcaloyl04.0000. 1. Nclooovillc-Yook
w~.~
,1 1 (;',';:',.LU"'·'o:30p.m._==I=:W~en~ of Syracuse transrer Tony three btg-school niles_. but a parr of Machine in Cincinnati that won
roductlono ond brooder covero-.
11.01100
.•. - " ' w.. 16.16t0. 9.
dropped the Wildcats. to lith two World Series in the 1970s. He
R1 11 '"""P'
-~ 1ono.beQin 11 01rly·•• ~~
ByuvUie M..dowbroak 13.0000. 10,
Chico&amp;•" B•m;7,~fi.m.
Scou and talent scout Rob Johnson. losses
.
••
NewfeneyOIAUioddFI1u,7:JOp.m
.
m
the
final
poll.
But
they
did
make
hit
a
home
run
against
every
major
ago
21ond
oro ponlculorlyottroc'J1Kemllest.orid.n77.11000.
~~~=:O:~~::t;J:.O.;·m·
the playoff field.
league club except Cleveland.
, tl.. for tho 41to 14 .,..r old.
Re&amp;lttn 12- 1, Ketterina Alter
110.00JO. 2, S1. ru:ia Onham 131 .0000.
o.u. .., Mlnnooou,l•m.
tf you hove 1 oofo drlv)'!III'8COrd
3, Btllttf'ook-14115000'. 4, Cinoinna~i "'·
S~IOIIMIIwiW&lt;I&gt;&lt;!;'B
,.
t•••••••••lllili•lllliliiiliilllliil~lllillllli.,._.
,.~-~
-'"'It hoWiow v"our cor lnour:
COlden
::lOp.JII.
-•.
..
Acad•my of Pbt•i~d £duc1~io n
PoNancJ u San Ant.onio, 8:30p.m.
ence premium c.n be wtth the
1&lt;16.5000. 5, !pn.lfioid lt0111011 RJd11
PhooniutLACUppen.I0:30~m.
.,M. .AJIIQ..blil~ ,floG~.SIIto.
116.5000. 6, Sprin1bo•o 1!~ .0000. '1.
Indiana at Sacramcn\0, 10:30 p.m.
Auto lnaurance COiiipln6et. ~ ··
liaa! Min, kiftp m.oooo. 1. c;.,~.
06
7
nad Purotll Muiat1 129.SOOO. 9, Now
t..ll~~U!..~~t:; · REGU·
Prl lD
Coli Ul obout thlo Clr lnMJronco
•••mond 126.0000..10, HMni1ton lbdin
JIIIIL
~
brolkthrough far ufo drlvet'o.
109JIIOO.
DMSIONI\'
['!.oo;,~::;asporiiTron..,uona
CINCINNATI {AP) -· Opening
IIW. W1
lti:iaa ll-1, 0.111 Milia Ha•Jr.en
BASEBALL
D~
fo~
the
Cinc.innati
~eds
in
~
l
14d.6rtl. 2, C.mpb•ll Memorial
IJ0.$000. !, .U... N10dl-t !0,0000.
louo4yll6.7l00. !, .....,
l&lt;Jt.OOOO. f, H- 1116.0000. 7, Ltnla
from Columbu• of the (nternltion•l
Sladium.
o oloo IODM41 ~ A- 16.1~ 9,
0... Jllllo 15.5000. 10, N'""' U...
'SftnLS MAltlNERS-PlmdKon
Gametime is 2:05p.m.
1uwuoe Services
or~~r., St., ...tlloldcr, .. ..,. •••••"' '
The Reds have won the last nine
lllkil 14-1, W.rioa Bloia
IJUCIM. 2, lprlalflald Colhollo
~"it.....
seasoA openers at home, .including
Bl M
214 EAST MAIN
1:11.-.
I Ciur 1o.OGao. "'
~IDA ~RUN5-Ijomed Dkk
twice against the Padres, in 1977
••
•
DoWioo
015000. '· ~
E!j"
""'""'....,
........
~
_,
ond
.
and
1990.
·
tllrlli&amp;AIIIliO. .. c-, _ 7, - POMEAOY
nJI)OD. I, I f - Blm~
:~r::~c;s::~t's.:::M~~
Instead of the usual open date
992·8887
lt.JiliiO.
'·
Liooalo 17JIIOO.
a...., Moclt, Jim Monn md Scoo&lt;"Diez·
following Opening Day, the Reds
10,.-0.PookiSJCIOD.
15-1, Aaillao4 Mtple10o
~~ORK METS-Nomod Mike
and Padres are scheduled 10 play a
PASTOR, JOHN CORCOUN
I
• 2, Celoa~ou C:nnl'itw
C.bbo"lllh4 boot -h. Barry Fo01o
night gameWed
Tuesday
'~
__..:_
ItiU.III. ...· u-•Wo
dq~t 001oh, D1v1 LaRoche biiUpen
sda and an. after·
, _.
-r
c. ....,_ , Ctlholle
H!llibol
coach,
ond
lobo
S&lt;ephonaoa
b•llpoo
noon
game
ne
Y
.
... IIUIIGD. I , - llllitli Uot.
. . -.
The remainder of the schedule
THE PUBUC IS INVITED •
.... tOI.- 7 . - p... """
has not been announced.

.Sharks hold ~rief lead, but -Jose .
, ~3th - straight NHL encounter
lry The Alloclatecl Pr~ . goal late in the first period and
!~e San !ose Sharks are sull Mike McPhee's score late ip the
WBIIln~ to wm ,on the. road. II) the second period. Rookie Kevin Todd
meantnne, they regettmgc~... · scored on a power play for New

!be Sharks, for the (trSJ ume m

th~JT h1story, took

,;,\','''

Cooper not surprised by defeat

Scoreboard

.:

Final AP
-prep-poU--released

,

Ohio Sportlight
KENT, Ohio (AP)- Lance Hostetler's goal in life always lras llecn tO
be a rootball coach.
For as long as he could remember, he envisioned himself worlcing with
young men, instructing them in various techniques of the game. ·
Of course, the coaching pan was supposed to begin with the completion of a high school, college and, perhaps, professional playing careers.
As he has discovered, things don't always work out that way. ·
Hostetler&amp;aw his playing career as a senior offensive lineman for Kent
State end prematurely when a recurring shoulder injury forced the Massillon High product'lil give up.the game a few weeks ago.
"I was real sad," Hostetler said. "To give up football was the hardest
decision I ever had to make.''
When Hostetler approached Kent State coach Pete CordeUi to talk
about his future, Cordelli could relate.
He had been a rising, young quarterback at North Carolina State before
injury ended his playing days and launched his coaching career.
·
···1 knew what that was like, what Lance was going though, and what
his thoughts were," Cordelli said.
"I talked 10 Coach Cordelli and we both agreed that my future health
is more imponant,'' Hostetler said.
·
Cordelli added, "lance will remain with the team for the time being
and will help out the coaching staff.''
Hostetler said having to leave the game has been difficult.
"The thing is, football is my whole life and it's been very, very hard to
give it up," he said. "Being around the game and liking it so much .. :
well, that's why I'm going into coaching."
Hostetle('s_shoulder popped out the frrst time in the 1990 game with
Ball State.
.
"With exercise and rehab, doctors thought I could get it back into
play-ing shape,'' he said.
h gav.e out for good against North Carol ina State in September.
Doctors told him that unless he was going to play professional football,
he would not require su_rgeJ.Y,_Hoste.!l.e.r says.ncrve damage caused by the.
injury is beginning to stabilize.
In an attempt to put a good spin on what's happened, Hostetler Sl\YS
that while his playing days may be over, his coaching career is getting an
early start.
"This could be a great opponunity, to get a chance to begin my coach·
ing career," said Hostetler.
. .
"I mean, I don't know all I'd like to know about coaching, but I'm
anxious to learn. And a good way to start is how I'm slarting- at the college level, helping the regular coaches out as much as I can. By spring, I
hope to be able to help a lot more."
Evenwally, Hostetler wants to be a high school head-coach. ·
After transferring to Kent State from Michigan State in 1988, Hostetler
moved between the offense and defense.
He started all II games at center in 1989, and earned a second letter at
the position in 1990.
However, the pesky shoulder problem and the pounding that centers'
shoulders absorb forced still another move.
· - ·.

Ken Griffey Sr., retires

-----

Reds ope· n'se· a·.son
A '} 6 • ' 92
on

•Jf-

...........,-.

:~1~l::'s~!~;J";j~:h.~

..i! :

•
=

c.··=

..

~~/ni~~o~a~~~~i~ ?;~~Nr~~~

BAUD'
..
R

__....

RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD

. . . ...

.. ,.

ROGAN @

,
~ 19i1
REC. Y1 OPP.
~- ~·
THAOU(lH 11/3191
RECORD PTS. PVS. TOP25 IIEC. EXTRA POINTS
1 Florida St. g.o-o 1,492 t 3·D-O 35-26-0 14.3 vs. Soulh Carolina
2 Washinglon tie 11-0-0 1,413 3 2·D-O 35-19·2 1980 last win at USC
2 Miami(3)1ie 7·0-0 1,413 2 2·0·025-24·1 5-tvs.WesiVitginia
Michigan
7·1 ·0 1,314 4 2·1 ·0 37·20-1 19651asllosstoCals
5 Nolle Dame 8-1·0 1,239 , 5 1+0 35-30-1 Mitet,NOrecord 17TDs
6 Flotida
7·1·0 ·1,219 6 3·1·0 37-21·0 Naed2WslorSugatBowl
7 California
7·1·0 1,073 10 1·Hl 34·23·0 L.ost5s~to Beavers
7-1·0 1.060 7 2·1·0 28·23·0 SS-Hauison saved day
8 Alabama
9 PennS!.
1,004 B 1·1·0 38·29-0 32·1·1 vs.Maryland
7-1·0 969 ,11 ..; !-1 -0 31-25-1 .BigwlnaiOhioSiale
.: 10 Iowa
Nebraska
6-1·t 884 9 1-1-1 28·27-2 22s~ai hlwinsvs. KU
TexuA&amp;M
6-1 ·0 851 12 1·0-0 25-24-1 Lead SWC with 4-Q record
13 Tennessee 5-2-0 770 14
5·2·1

4

Easl Catollna '

.

_____

.- - T

-~~~---~--~----~----~w.~~~'~
· '·--~~~--~----·~~~--~
,[

HERNDON, Va. (AP) - If his
9-0 Washington Redskins ever lose
a game this year, coach Joe Gibbs
wiD be able to say "I told you so."
"We're not a very dominant
team," Gibbs insisted Monday in
reviewing Washington's 16-13
overtime victory Sunday over
Houston. "Each week ror us, it's a

Lebanon results
LEBANON, Ohio (AP) Angie's True Tom caught a tiring
Rootbeer Slammer at the wire and
the featured pace Monday night at
Lebanon Raceway resulted in a
dead heat.
Angie's True Tom paid $3.80,
_$3 .l!!ld $2.40. Rootbecr Slammer
ed $6 20 $
return
· , 9.20 and $4. Kyle
Ruler paid $3.80 for finishing third.
The daily double combination of
2-3 returned $16.40.
A crowd of-1,447 wagered
$149,542

MAC players of
)tleek are honored

CAR CARE

Qua~ity

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

S1695
Most Cars With
Regul• ·Wheels ·

BRAKES

FRONT OR RtAR

•lnlloll podslthoeo

•Aesurt.ce rotor/drum•
•Repack front beering•
•Rebuild rear wheel cylinders
•lntptet mester cylinder
•Rotd '"'

!~m~~~O

11111 &amp; additional
utralf nndld.)

POMEROY ·'·
· HOME AND AUTO...
lAST 1WN

992·209C

POMEROY, OH.

SERVING THE AREA 25 YEARS

•

SALE
_W;v_

STOVE PIPE

~
WOOD HEATE

6~x2' 21 gauge........3.U
6•x2' 24gaugt ........ 6.79
21 gauge........6.99
24 gaugt........9.59

399!5

24 gouge 1dj. elbow, quarter

jolnto, collll'l 1110 tn atock

..
CAST IRON

l:t
-----AIR

GRATES

11.99
13.99

24to,.

CIRCULATOR

10995

IOiod

.
6" or 8"

•

Replaces one se&lt;llon ol slove
plpoond lunnels heal lost up Jho
llack back Into the room!

919, 9113,
13xl3

CHIMNEY
CLEANERS

FIREPLACE
TOOL

1695

CHIMNEY
BRUSHES

9.99
6' Round

SET

OIIMr ~usia ~ocl

799

,. .......

13.99 30io~
OI~K slm tnd

......, dot""

Cast Iron, lncludea shovel,
broom and poker.

ICIIS11f11S.Io Sic~.
Also ~.., polsk ad l&lt;&lt;osiOdH.

COMFORT GLO/SUNnAR

[Crosley)
•

CERAMIC
HEATER

~~UNVENTED
GAS
HEATER
95

7981

199

NO llames,
fuel, calls,

2·hlot oolllngo 25011500 wan.
Fan forced quertz hllltr wllh
8Uto lhlnna...J. WRII-Q 36t-751

5-yr. warranty.
AutomeUc thermootat, v1rlabla
1peod fan. Midi In thl U.S.A.
709-113

K.N _,__::-ENE HEATERS
It lOTOlOMI

OMNI
I·QS

mounL

FiOS'tex·
PJPf HEATING-CABLE

129 per loot

14995
573-111

20,000 BTU. Burne
12•11 hOUI'I.

1.H gtUon fuel Clptclly. 3 1111p
wick tdlutlll'.
57U71

O'DELL
6341, MAIN ST.

POMIIOY
5-2·1

Service Before, During ana,

PRICES IN EFFECT
THRU NOV. 16

strugg le.' ~

, Maybe so , but collectively tile
teams Washington 'faces between
now and the end .of the seaSOn arc
28-34, with archrival Dallas; at 6-3,owning the best record.
The Redskins have the NFL' s
fourth-best offense and thirdranked defense. That dcfensi vc
unit, anchored by end Charles
Mann, linebacker Wilber Marshall
and cornerback Darrell Green, has
allowed only two touchdowns at
home this season.
"That's not in my mind set,"
Gibbs said when asked whether his
squad could duplicate tile feat of
the 1972 Miami Dolphins. "I'd be
surprised. Can you dream about
things? Sure you can dream about
things, but, no, you just can'tlook
at that and say it's very realistic."
NFL coac hes are generally a
reserved, modest bunch who could
find a problem for every dollar if
they won a megabucks louery. But
if those coaches ever got together
and picked a captain for the
"We're Taking 'Em One Day At a
Time" team, Gibbs would be a
prime choice.

s•

O'DELL$ .

~~-- hllllr.wlclul.

61 ..._742•206.0

..__

We're not a
very dominate
team: Gibbs

John Vanbiesbrouck made 39
sav11s aod N~w York extended its
winning
to six.
·
Vanbiesbrouck recorded his
11th career shutout. It was the
Rangers' frrst shutout against the
Flames since Feb 2 1973 when
· '
·
...,.,_.

the
Boston 6-4.
David Bruce~s power-play goal
in the second period put the Sharks
ahead. But the lead d1dnot hold' up
as Peter Zezel tied it 39 seconds
into the third period and Wendel
Clark scored at 6:48, giving the
Maple Leafs a 2-llead.
In the final four minutes, Clark
and Mike Bullard added powerplay goals. Toronto improved to 43-1 at home, but is 0-7-0 on the ·
road.
Canadiens 3, Devils 2
Montreal won its eighth straight
game when Mike Keane jammed
home a rebound 38 seconds into
overtime.
The Devils tied it at 2 midway
through the third period when Peter
S.tastny, headed off on a line
change, flipped the puck in from
center icc and bad it hop over
goalie Patrick Roy's stick.
The Canadiens took a 2-0 lead
on ex-Devil cap_tain Kirk~ullc(s

Burna 28-341 houra. 1.12 gallon
tuet c~plctty, Wt otock over eo

ER

NOV. 3rd fO NOV. 6fh
J"' 7•00 r.an.
EVANGELIST, GREG FOSTER

•

eyes on tbe puck during fi~ period NHL action
Mondar night. (AP LaserPboto)

ALL EYES 'oN - New Jersey Devils
defensemim Scott Stevens, left, and Montreal
Canadielis Guy Carbonneau, cente·r, keep all

R-

:::.::::: : :

~0

....,..

Jersey earl)" in the third period . .

a ~~into the Rangers 4, Flames 0

thud period Mo~day mght. But
they wound uplosmg .4:1 toToro~. to at Maple Leaf Gardens for theiT
13th slra1ghtdefeat.
·
.
. $aniose•s0-ll•OO!I ·theroadm
Us frrst ~~n a!ter lo~ng all s~ven
games on us fust eastern swmg.
The expansion~ is 1-15-0 overau. .
·
"It's going to be'fun growing
with this team," San Jose forward
Wayne Presley said. "It's a young
club and I think we're learning
right now about the hard days~ aod
the good days are about to.come."
In other
Montreal defeated New
the New York

Texas A &amp; M cage program placed
on two years probation by NCAA

the fust-year franChise was baseil
in Atlanta.
Mike Gartner and Paul Brolin
scored goals 59 seconds apart,
putting New York ahead 2-0 just
2:40 inw the game.
Islanders 6, Bruins 4
•
Steve .Thomas and Pierre -Tor:
geon, two &lt;if the Islande~s · nelv
acquisitions, each scored two g~
as New York woll'·for only the second·time in I0 games:
~--

79
74
!J

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

Mokoo 1 hul 11pe o·f
onr alro. Soll-rogut•·
ilon ldiUIII tO
ltmp••ture.

Connec1or klt.

�'

!,

•.

r

•
~

Oh'lo

By The Bend

. The. D-aily S~ntinel
·

The

Business Services
.

TueSday, November 5, 1991

.

Page-6

:IIHM/
AIR CONDIJIONEIS ·HEAT PUMPS IIIII ,
FUINACES FOI MDIII &amp; DOUIIIWIDE HO.

Consider this ...

0

' .

• which conclu
the
· of Director Yeago,
:Wednesday.
performed
night was the
~-· ~ddleport Trophies and Tees "Aika-Seltzer'' jingle: "No Mauer
ood Prosecutor Story were respon· What Shape your'Stomach's In."
si.ble for underwriting the hand·
Ohio University President Ver- ·
snme plaques presented to each non R. Alden was wrapping up a
pjlllicipant, and Overbrook Center four-day tour of South Vietnam,
P[ovided the facilities and boun· auempting to expand OU's educateous refreshments for each ses- tional efforts in Saigon.
•
SIOD.
At home, the 1967 Chevrolet
: Thank you.
Camara had the "widest stance of
any car in its class" • and retailed
: In i966 ... Political advertising for about $2,500.
atld news copy also dominated the
R.H. Rawlings Sons Co. in Midpeges of The Daily Sentinel in dleport, meanwhile, told car buyers
i)l66, ·and most of the names will to "Rally 'Round the Dodge, Boys"
ptobably sound familiar to most of with its 1967 Polaro.
~u . .
How's your memory this week?
• .Incumbent Republican County
C!ommissioners Robert Clark and
Take Care.
Charles Karr, Sr. were re-elected,

~/fred community

children the meaning of masks and
how to replace fear with God •s
love.
'
Others present were Pam and
Richard Yost, Doris Lloyd, Marta
Dillinger, Nellie Parker, Pat,
Mallhew and Kevin Keaton, Alan
Lackey, Stacie and Alan Watson,
Russell and Eloise Archer, Sharon
and Philip Boyles, Shelia, Dan and
Kirk Spencer, Richard and Florence Spencer, Sarah Caldwell,
Marilyn Robinson, Charlotte Van
Meter, Nina Robinson, Laurie,
Ashley, Matthew and Jessica
Boyles, Osie Follrod, Meg, Evan
and Brandon McCamey and Lloyd
Brooks.
Guests of Marguerite. and Delbert Stearns were their daughter
and children, Laura, Daniel and
Leah Cohen, Akron.

True friends

0

0

0

0

o

0

I

0

0

o

0 •O

·

o' o o

0

o

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

MO. . IOMI

'.'

.

···-

~

New arrival

COLORING CONTEST WINNERS •
These youngsters took first in their respective
age categories in the Pomeroy Sundry's Halloween coloring contest. They are from· the left,
Whitney Thoene, four and under;. Austin Cross,
five and six; Chris Pickens, seven to nine, and

Sarah Craig, 10 to 12 year olds. The pictures or
the local winners will now be placed in competition with other Sundry Store winners for a bat·
tery powered mini race car. Pictured with the .
children is Diane Hendricks, assistant manager
of the Pomeroy Sundry Store.

Dale and Linda Teaford, Racine,
· announce the birth of their daughter. Lindsay Dcsirae, on Oct 15 at
Holzer Medical Center.
She weighed seven pounds and
one ounce and was 21 inches long.
Maternal grandr,arents are Mr.
and Mrs . Larry 0 Brien, Racine.
Maternal great grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Adams,
Racine; and Mr. and Mrs. Re~
O'Brien, Pomeroy.
•
Paternal grandparents arc Mr.
and Mrs. Dale Tea(ord, Portland:
paternal great grandmother is Mrs.
Allan Teaford, Hebron.
Mr. and Mrs. Teaford have twin
sons, Dale and Derek, and a third
son. Darin.

PINS AWARPED • Veterans Memorial !'lospita! Administrator Scott Lucas, leh1 presented
specially designed pins to employees of the Radl·
ology Department Monday as a part of tbe
observance of National Radiology Week, Nov. 4·

9. With Lucas froD! the left are'Kim Shamblin,

department bead; Kelly Shears and Mike Sharp,
technologists. Other department technologists
awariied tbe· pins but not pictured are Kim
Roush and Lewis Tharp.

.

~

•
,
·

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace
'

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 99H156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M:
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

Words

DIVS

16
15
15

1

3

6
10

15
1&amp;

Monthly

TUESDAY
POMEROY · The American
Legion Drew WcbsLCr Post No. 39
will hold its annual oyster supper
on Tuesday during the regular
meeting. Dinner is at 7 p.m. and
meeting at 8 p.m. All members arc ·
urged to auend,
POMEROY · The Ohio Eia Phi
Chapter, Bck1 Sigma Phi Sorority
will hold a Longebergcr Basket
Party on Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
parish house of Grace Episcopal
Church.

' •••.,..,••.eo diu:oune tor ldl .,.id in

.
parish house with soup, sandwiches
SYRACUSE . Th e. Prcs bytenan
. and pic
Church in Syracuse will have a
·
soup supper on Election Day
SALEM CENTER • The Salem
beginning at 11 a. m. Bring contain- Center Volunteer Fire Depanment
ers for carry-out. vegetable beef will hold an Election Day-dinner on
soup, .sandwiches and pie will be Tuesday from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. at
avm lable.
the ftrchouse.
·
RACINE · The Racine United
Methodist Church will have an
Election Day dinner on Tuesday
beginning at I I a.m. through the
evening meal. Soup, sandwiches
and desserts will be available.
RACINE · The Southern Junior
High Boosters wi ll meet Tuesday
at 7 p.m. at the junior high. All
interested parties arc invited to
attend.
FOREST RUN • The Forest
Run United Mcthedist Church will
have an Election Day dinner on
Tuesday with vegeiable soup, bean
soup, pic and cake. Takc-,out orders
arc welcome.

WEDNESDAy
.
TUPPERS PLAINS • The Tuppers Plains vFW Post No. 9053
and Ladies Auxiliary will sponsor
the "Voice of Dcmocmcy" contest
on Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the
post home in Tuppers Plains. The
public is invited to attend and furthcr information may be ohiiined
by calling Mary Bryant at 985 3376.
•
THURSDAY
RACINE • The Racine Arne
can Legion Post No. 602 will mee
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the post
home.

•sentintl il not rftpansiblt for errarslhiJ

Cl•vt'l Jar to be re-enacted

fint 1d~~t .

!ChecK

tor lttOtl first dawo ad runs in PIJ*) . Csll btfalt 2 :00 D m
d., th• DYblir; .. ton 10 m•t.contetlan.
'Ads thlt must be paid In ed¥anr;t are

GtUfa County

A..a Coda614

Ctrd or Th.,••

' 441-0allipoli•

hi MeniCuiim ·

displ~y,

311- VInlon
241-RiO Grinde

wlllelso epp .., In the Pt. Pl•••nt

COPY DEADLINE -

DARIN TEAFORP

Birthday observed

.,•

••

MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAP.EA
WEDNESDA~ PAPER
THUIISOAY PAPER
FRIDA~ PAPER

~19i1ter

-

143-Ar~bia

'"d the Gllli ·

Dist

.20

.30
.42
,80
.05/ dov

Mtigl County

Maion Co ., WV

Aru Code 114

Artl Code 304 ·

992 - Middleport

1575 - Pt . PIIISIMI

918 -Chn ..,
843- PorUand
247-Lettfl flllo
9&amp;9 - fhcine

7'2- Rutland
667- CooN-illt

371-Welnot

.

DAY IIEfOAE PUILICA.TION
-11 ,00A .M. SATURDAY
~ 2 '00 P.M . MO~DAV

SUNDAY PAPER

The third birthday of Darin
Teaford was celebrated recently
wtth a party at the home of his parents, Dale and Linda Teaford
Racine.
'
A "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtie" theme was carried out with
cake and tee cream bemg ~rved.
Attendmg were hts lwm brothers, Dale, and Derek Teafor~.
g~andparcnts, Lar.ry and Phylhs
· 0 Bnen, ~llld Wllldlt 'l'eafoitl,
great grandparent.!, Bob and Florc,nce Adams and Re~ and Mary
.0 Bnen .
Others_attending were Carol,
·1oshua and Chelsea Papc, Diane
d Kyle Wolfe, Kenda and KeUy
Rizer •. KyiJC Wolfe and Briuany
MorantY:.
.
Sendmg cards and gifts were
Jim O'Brien, Raymond Adams
Sue Lightfoot and Dennis and Elli~
Teaford .

2H-Gu'f0n D~t.

Busin•• Ctrd 1nd legll noticetl

pons D1ily Ttlbunt, rtlching 0111r 11.000 homes

i4.00
.
18.00
19.00
113.00
11 .30/ doy

Po,neroy

3e7-Ch•hire

'A clauitiad edvertistmant placed in The Oeity Sentinel te• ·

c: ..n - cl•sifitd

Ov'r 16 Worda

Classified pa~es ,corer the
following ielepltonf' exc/wnp:es ...

''rice of 1d tor ell c.,i'lllllltlln i1 double price of 1d cost.
'7 point line ty.,. only u11d

458 - Leon

576 - ~pple

Gro.,e
773 - Ma•on
882:.. New Haven
895 - Litltt
937-Burtlllo

•

2 :00P .M . TUESDAY
2 '00 P.M . WEDNESDAY
2'00 P.M . THURSDAY
2:00P.M . ~AlDAY

•

· Oet Ruuftc Fast

BALLET, TAP &amp;
JAZZ 'CLASSES

Delivery Qf Pick·

Up Your Own
Also Splitter
Services Available
· Call 992-61 ~

........_'GROOM
·ROOM

'992-6289
'·6·1 mo.

GUN SHOOT
FORKED RUN

SPORTSMAN
CLUB

. 614-9112-6820

Factory Guns Only
919/91/2 ....

SPECIAL
20 SESSIONS
For $20.00
Offer Ends Oct. 31

FOREVER
BRONZE
949·2826

10-31 mo.

•VINYL SIDING
ei(LuM INUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSEll
SIDING CO•.

.... ._ ....

"Free EttimatH"

PH.949·21D1
· or Its. 949·21110
NQ SUNDAY CAUS

EXCAVATING
BULLDOZER and
BACKHOE WORK,
HOllE SITES,
' LANDSCAPING
WATER and SEWER
UNES
TRUCKING AVAIWI.f
FREE ESTIMATES

I would like 10 think
my Door Roc!~t
Ntlghbora, L.B. Com·
munlly Auoclollon for
olllhelood end klndrieu
during tho !ott ot our
beloved brother, Woy·nol·
PulllnL
'
And 1110 tho Rev.
Chlrftl Etton tor hit
wonderful oormon. Your
klndnou will olwayt be

AliT

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

992-3838
FIREWOOD
SELLERS
Hardwood Slobs

Tht Pullin• Fomlly

••
•
•
''

~

••
•••
.,••

.•

••

•'• .
•

'-------.J .

~Rooftnt

Pluml&gt;lfttl

lnd
wo,.

In
TRUMAN H.
Real Estate General
PRIDDY on his
.....;..;.----II 80th birthday.
You ara not here to
us say Happy
tiBllrthday to you, bUt
It hera .Is not a year
oas by that we

mls•d you

your

birthday

..~~
, ~~~·~:~~~~~~~· theevery
year.other day

Your Loving Wife,
Macle &amp; Family

Far Sole
· ... Great Pr.icel ··
(~

OHIO PALLET CO.
992· 11mo.
WHALEY'S
AUTO.PAITS
Spa dallz.... In

c..teMFr-lttHtlr
NEW &amp; USED PUTS
FOI All awES &amp;
MODELS

992·7013
or t9.1·5553
01 fOil flO

1·100-141·0010

..... OtiG .
?t 31 1'11 ""

VERY NICE! Brick &amp; lrame Rand1 Style Home wilh 5
rooms. 3 bed'ooms. liJI b&amp;Jement. 26 x 14 anached
garage, fireplace, central air. ASKING $59,900

WE NEED USTINGSIINTEREST RATES ARE REALLY
GOOD AND PAOPEIITY IS MOVING...IF YOU HAVE
EYER CONSIDERED SELUNG OR BUYING NOW IS
THE TIMETO DO ITl GIVE US ACALL WE'RE HERE TO
SERVE YOU!
HENRY E. CLELAND.........................................t92-t181
TRACY BRINAGER-........................................141-2431
JEAN TRUSSELL.....................................- .....148-:IteO
JO tiLL. ... ~.........................................................III-44.
OFFtcE........................._........................"''"'"''IIN211

IAONE .
FilE DEPT.

EVRY

IFIIEE ESTIMATES)

I

V. (. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomwoy, Ohio

.1(.14.'90

BOB JONES
EXCAVATING
DOZER and
BACKHOE
WO~K

(614)
696-1006

convtrtlble Tapl,
carpets, Headliner a.
Seat coven and

6:30P.M.

Starting s.,t:u

Poclery a.Ht
:;
12 ............ O.lf '

Strictly r.r.,.OII
• ,
~-------9·-13-·~-~~·-~ ;

·-·BISSELL . )
BUILDERS

CUSTOM IIII.T ~
HOMES &amp;GAUGES

"All-Mille Priats"

Fadory Aurhorittd Ropcir
TV • VCR • St01eo
Boom Box ·C.D. PI aye&lt;
Scanner • Typewriter
Cordless Phone·

Microwave· Radar
Detector

Ho111e
Entertainment
Center ·
Hie. .

Pomeroy

992·3524
9127/1

, •• 949·2101 '
or Res. 949·2160 -'

Day or Night -· , .
NO SUNDAY CAW • •
. 4-1&amp;-K.

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

Plclr ...

915·3561

Ann fNIII Pest OHicel
217 E. SeceM St.

POIIEIOY,

LINDA'S
PAINTING
INTEIIOI • m11101

FREE ESTIMATES
Jake the palll Ht oJ1

pelnillflo
let •• ~~ It for JCH1.
YIRY IWOIAILE
HIVE IEFEIEICIS

16141915-4110

..

.:
;·. II '

12 Gauge Factory -'
Cholet Only
.'

1

,......

Till-COUNTY
RECYCUNO
Sl'flll!Mk Yau

AU IIAIIS
Iring It Itt Or We

lEI'S APPLIANCE
SEIVICE
992·5335 or

1•

.. [.'
Storting S.,t~ 22;: ·

OVEN IEPAII

25~.:'it:'
•. 111111)
For
pry Alii...._
Cane

1 WHkOnly
Nov.1thN 7

T~.CO.ty Ia , _
tam-t pm 7 UJII w.JI '

buying ol non-llnoua
mellll. l..oclled on

Po-.oybn1tJ....
Jcc. of At.:t&amp; 1Q ·•

Ph. H2-5114

1-PIIillln

CAIPITCU~

allli11U ROOI CAB ·
•IINIOnlble Rttla . •
•au.tlty Wolk · . .
•Free Eadm.t11
•CirPift H11 F11t Dry
Time

'

•High Gloa on
Flopr Finish

1!)·23-1] 1 .... pd.

T~

lilliE UWIS, Ow..,
II. I, lo!IIM. 011.

742-2451

J&amp;L

,,tNSiiLATION
•VInyl Siding
•Rip'-ment
Windows
•Roofing

3·14.'91-tfR

r------..--"f:,

........_

BISSEll &amp; IUIII ·•
COISTIUCnON

•lniUlltron
JAMES KEUEE
t92·2772or
742·2097
531 Bryon Place
MlddltpOrt, Ohio

'

.'
....•

•Garaps

.C:OII1plett

Re1110tWing

,f

Stop &amp; Co•p•e

:)

Fr11 Estbaat11

•

. :~
. ,,

985·4473
667·6179

..

S.ll-'10 Ill' ,_,
• &gt;

" l

Announc emr•1h

USED APPUAIOS .
toUYWAIUim

WAIIIII$-Stot"

III'IIIS-Slt.,

liblo ,.,.

.IIWTOIS-$t00 "

lloclplflml,
Unlttletled?

UIIIIS---$12\ "
rlliZIIS-S ItS .,

..., tn1111-sn .,.

Minor Auto Repair.

1-(3041
773·9560

"2-SUS tr 915-S561
&amp;crota F,.., Pest Dffk1
,_.DY,OIIO

liiii/GI 1 mo. pd.

,-

RENT·TO ..OWN
liME IUIII PIODICTS

IEN'HPPLIANCE •
SERVKE

IWN ST. MASON, W.VA.

"

SAY: IIGIII

ROOfiNG

A&amp;B
COMPLETE AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

..
'

lashMW.... ':

- 1-lor • e....lor
P-Ing

EXCEPnONALI Split level-frame construc1ion, 9 rooms,
NEW _ REPAIR
5 bedrooms, 2 baths, deck, woodbomer, storage building,
basement &amp; lencing. plus 1 car garage on .45 aere lot
Gutters
ASKING $69,500
,. .~ .. ·~·........ - " ...... ................_. .... ,.,..... ..tit-.... Downspouts "· ·
REEDSVILLE· IMMEDIATE POSSESSION1 '1 floor block
Gutter Cleaning
home with 2 bedrooms, ·1car garage, rearscmened porch,
·oulbuilding. ASKING $21,000
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
POSSIBLE MONEY MAKER!· This listing has the polen·
1ial tor 3 apartmenl units, ~ame construotion, gas space
949-2161
heating and a 50+ x tOO parf&lt;ing lot. Agood investmelit
919191/1 mo. pd .
proper)y lor only $29,500.... Make An Offer!
SR 124 1987 Forrest Park Mobile Home, situated on 1.1h"'
aae 3 bedrooms, includes most tumishings, additional
features are a 17 x 52 garage wllh oompre•sor and 2 • 15
x52 cerpo/11. ASKING $32,500 Make An Oller.

GUN SHOOt.

.

11114/lfn

~.

992-2156.

'THE DANCE
COMPANY

Every Sundoy 12 Noon

1 card ol Thanks .

·ADS

AGES 3 and UP

Owner &amp; Operator

All Veterans interested in
starting an AMVETS
Service Organization
please gel in touch with
Bob Smith at Smitty's in
Pomeroy.
There will be a meeting
to elect officers on the
1Oth of Nov. the number
is 992·6484.

- 11-

- Conlllfl'tt

-

Begins Sept. 15

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
· .PUBLICATION

Safah Kelley, Mr. and Mrs.
Chris Kolloff, Kelley and Jonathan,
and Mr: and Mrs. Joseph Kelley, ~·
Columbus, were weekend visitors '
of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Crow. Joining
the group for dinner on• Sunday
were Dorothy Neutzling, Mr. and
Mrs. Bobby Crow, Robby Crow,
Christi and Kellie Collins, and Mrs.
and James Crow, Meredith, Wesley
and Carrie.

CLASSFtm

8-1

Complete Grooming
For All Breeds .
EMILEE MERINAR
Pomeroy,

· - Roorn Addltic)ns
- Gutter work

992-2269

FOR SALE
All Hard Wood

. DumpTruck

CARPENTER SERVICE

BILL SLACK

USED RAILROAD TIES

and Commercial

YOUNG

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD
.

992-6648 or
698·6864
;

Real Estate General

BLIL LETIN BOARD

Announce visitors

WH0-0-0-0 .
(31 h;p '
yoo?

SHRUB .&amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

FAil fES11VAt

A'

Modem Woodmen hold holiday party

ldvlnee

adl - Give.wav 1nd Found 1d1 under 15 Wflfdt will be
run 3d.,, 1t no ch•ge

REEDSVILLE • The Olive
Township Trustees will meet Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at the Reedsville
Fire House.
POMEROY · The Ethel Lee
Ladies Auxiliary No. 2171 will
meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. with
potluck at 7 p.m. Plans will be
made for the auxiliary Christmas
party.
·

•Siding
•Paiming
FULLY INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES

For Residential

Rate

. broken updiVtwill btch1tilld

Meigs, G.lli1 or PilliOn counti• muu tie pre·

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day of ·that event. Items
must be received well in advance
to assure publication in the calendar.

Hom• Repairs
•Roofing

CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION

y

CHESTER • Chester United
~
Methodist Church will have an
•
Election Day dinner on Tuesday
; There are friends, and then there becomes of you.
from
II a.m. to I p.m . Plate lunchftC friends!
·
, Those who are there when
SQmetimes, V!ey arc more like a es include ham loaf, scalloped
potatoes, green beans, cole slaw or
things are fmc
, ,., •T·' ''""fl8N8ll\'lhan a•friend.
ROCK SPRINGS · The Rock
applesauce,
roll and drink for
:. When trouble comes it's like a
Or another sister or brother, they
$3.50. There will also be so up, Springs United Methodist Church
~gn.
have been.
will have an Election Day dinner
• They turn and walk out the
A true friend is there through sandwiches, pie or cake.
on Tuesday with vegetable sou p,
door.
thick and thin ·
PORTLAND · Revival services bean soup, corn bread, pies and
~ Those friends you hear from no
They are there, right up until the
at the Portland First Church of the sandwiches. Bring contai ners for
more.
end.
take-out.
•
A friend like this is more pre- Nazarene w1ll be held Tuesday
through Sunday at 7 p.m. nightly.
; A true friend is very rare.
cious than diamonds or gold.
POMEROY • The Women of
: Right from the start, you lqlow
This you should know without Jan and Kathy will perform. Jim Grace Episcopal Church will have
Hcckathron will be the evangelist.
tl)ey_care
being told.
an Election Day luncheon at the
1 When you are down, and hope
(This .was written for Keith and
ii about to die.
Debbie Vaninwagen in memory of
, They raise your spirits way up two dear friends, Bill and Norma
hJgh
Andrews.)
• Someone to tell your troubles to.
• Fredlt Vanlnwagen
The Coolville Lions Club was the talk, a si lver collec tion was Windy Gilbert, Coolville. and Don
: Someone who cares what
the scene of the Halloween party of taken for UNICEF.
and Drenda Elliott, Guysville.
•
the Modem Woodmen of America
Group singing and a game, "The Cheer plates and cards were sent to
:
Camp 10900. .
Musical Pumpkin," were led by shut-in members. Contest prizes
_U
The f!leeting opened with prayer Jennifer Cald:ovell and Marjorie were won by J~lius Adams, Martha
VV 1
by Jcss1e Brook, Coolville, and Malone, Coolville. Drawmg pnzcs Caldwell ana Ida Ltvtngston,
'·
continued with the Woodm en's were won by H.L. Henderson, Coolville; C. L. Henderson, Alfred;
The Civil War raid on Guyan- enacted on Saturday from II a.m. Creed, the Pledge of Allegiance to Alfred; Sue Breedlove, Tony and David Scarberry, Parkersburg.
deiie, W.Va., will be re-enacted in to 12:30 p.m. A Civil War ball with the Flag, and God Bless America, McPherson and Juanita Littreal, W.Va.
H1mtington, W.Va. on Sunday and both ladies and gentlemen in Civil· led by Hank Douglas, Athens, John Coolville. The ribbon for best cosFrances Henderson. Coolville,
~nday.
·
War ball costumes is from 7 to II Breedlove and Ida Livingston, tume :-vent to M1chelle Caldwell, announced that the annual Christ·
; The event is sponsored by the p.m. on Saturday.
Coolville.
Coolvtlle.
mas P.arty of Modern Woodmen
II County Commissioners, the
A Sunday skirmish will occur
Moments of silent prayer were
Wedding presents from the Camp 10900 would be held Dec. 7
Virginia Infantry (Confeder- with actual Civil War cannon and observed for deceased 50-year camp were given to George and at Coolville Lions' Club.
the 9lst Rcgtment Ohio mortar firing from a steamboat. A members, Carl Findling, Alfred,
ltfantry (Union), and die Sons of final parade for review of the and Wilma Griffin O'Brien,
Clllfederate Veterans,
troops closes the events at 3 p.m. Columbus.
:The actual raid occurred in on Su~day. Other events will be
A talk on Halloween safety was
N9vembei 1861. The reason for the occurring during the day. The First deli vcrcd by Dalton Forrider,
Sbow
Sale
raid was ihat the Union Army wllS Regiment of the Ohio Light Coolville. He has liecn local scout·
~ting in Guyandotte, a Confed- Artillery of the Sons of Vetcr~n~ master for many years. He told
lati!JI'd~y, Mot ember 9t J:99J: l
. I
crite community. The Confeder- Reserve will be a part of the reenth
d d 1 h .. 0 b ·
cymg
atha, under Gen. Jenkin~, attacked actment. This group is the military ysafout s a,n aaku tsHtallat
8!¥1 captured 90 men sending them arm of Gov. William Dennison fun~.Y rues m es owccn more
!Swllda~, November o, 1:991
'
them prisons. The West Vir· . Camp No. 125 Sons of Union Vet·
Missy Scarberry, a. nurse in
Union troops retaliated ·by eran.M
s of· the
P.IIL•Sp
•
C Civil War, which cov- parkers burg, .w.va., d'1scus sed Lhe ..
"
aiiiCking Guyandotte and burmng ers etg~ . ounty.
. ·
UNICEF program of collecting
,.
the !Own in order to rid the area of
In addiuon .w!'te rmd, the Army , money instead of Halloween treats.
Pollllt Pleua•
.. ~~cesh" trash. One house sur- of Northern Vugmta of the Sons. of The money would then~ sent to
National Guard
v!Ved • the Maclie Carroll ho!(se · Confedem~ V~terans.•s c~vem~g needy children abroad. Following
which Madie Carroll refused to for a meeung m conJunctton wtth
. . NDII'tb.
1CI¥e when the tQWn burned. This this re-enactment. Attendees will
•
had been brought down river . be coming from New York City,
fltlll Glllipolis. The house is now Maryland, Virginia, North Caroli~ -·-•
na, South Carolina and Ohio. This
~«e
showing the' musi- is being sponsored by the West
~rua::ft Jemie Wade, the only Virginia Dtvision Sons of Confed·
feinlle
ty of the Battle of Get- crate Veterans. Keith Ashley of
l~butl_. will be performed at the Rock Springs is West Virginia
~· Methodist Chwch on Division Chief of Staff and Seere·
FftcMY at 8 p.m. to kick-off the tary and is helping 10 coordinate
w u'rtd.lt II free 10 the public.
the affair.
puriliJ the weekend the Union
Any interes~ in leamin¥ about
ro Otlll'torl will set up at Ceredo Civil War re-enacting in military or
Camp Pilnlont was located civilian style is ur~ed to attend th~
in'111e Civil
Tile Confedelltes event For further mfonmation con·
willll tP CIIIIP • Clmp Pulllll in tact Ashley at 992-7874from 5 to
o~, Tile raid will be re- 11 p.m. dally.

w••

0

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOW-~

news

Poets corner...

w._

0

ATS INSULATOR•

--

';er

0

(61111 .• •••,.16 if 1

~

I•

0

l.ocaiH On Saffenl Sditll!lltl. eff It, 1j1

: FYI ••• If your curiosity really despite challenges from Democrats
has the best of you, tho~ goblins Kenneth ~er and Paul Simon. ·
·who graced the front page of The
Clarence E. Miller, elected for
:Daily Sentinel on Friday were his ftrst term as U.S . Congressman,
·Attorney Jennifer Sheets, Diana was urging voters to "do the coun:Farley , Homer Smith, Jr ., and try a favor and take the rubbercKathy Wilfong (in that order).
stamp Congress from L!IJ."
.
Another similarity to today's
'
: Thanks...Middleport Trophies headlines • the Eastern Htgh
)and Tees, Meigs County Prosecutor School marching band made their .
•Steven L. Story, and Overbrook ftnal performance for the 1966 sea!Center in Middleport are to be son, as the Eagles took on the
!commen&amp;:d for their .specific assis- Southern Tornadoes at EHS. One

•

0

BENNEtT'S
... COOUH
,•• a
. .

•

: The Alfred United Methodist
G:hurch will host its Thanksgiving
!)inner on Nov. 17 at 12:30 p.m.
'the public is invited to attend.
• The Alfred UMC held a Hal loween Party for the community
rccen~y ..Everyone enjoyed the fun
ltiusc, contcsLS, wiLCh's stories and
refreshments. Judges of costumes
were Ester Lackey, Keith Weber
ind Deb Eichhorn. In the six and
IInder category. Sarah Xost was the
J!rettiest; Aaron Yost, ugliest; Dei·
c1ra McCarney, most original. In
the elementary, Tiffany Spencer,
dreuiest; Bobby Keaton, ugliest;
Qanielle Spencer, most original. In
the older group, Susan Pullins,
~ttiest; Sharon Hausman, ugliest;
ituth Brooks, most original. Kathy
Vfatson received the prize for
I!UCSSing the number of candy com.
l Rev. Sharon Hausman told the

0

.

By Brian J. Reed

.

0

lind.....0:....1'•
....

I

._.

a..:,

!lnalot
AliA.- And L,,.,...,!
"wilt You. ·c:annJu : , --..:

Slnglto, P.O. ... 1M1, IIIII''
llpolle,

Olllo-

�·--

.•.

j

NovamtMtr 5,

The
4

Sentinel

Giveaway

32

Kltttna~ I w•lw &amp; 6
mont"'•· 304~'f5..3478.

Fret

44

MQbll&amp; Homes
tor Sale

long holr0d 1 !1..1• col: block "
whitt, woula.makt 1 nlct pet tor
child. 614-446-3318.
Purtbrtd

O.rman

Lost

Up
Lot

&amp; Found

EIHButEIMI

5 month old black and tan m.le
dOg, contact E!la• Hill, McKan~

1.'

80NIN7IO.

zio Rldgo Rd, 614'9411-20011

Gno

35 Lots&amp;

Irish st1ter dog, 8 yr old malt,
SR143
near
Harrltonvlllt,

Pot.,

Bo,d,_

=

The

, .

M

TUE•• NQ\1. I

'

M

I!VINING

lloroury Topoz, ~'/Sj

'

ltltt llxuo E8410, on opllono: .
11,000 m._, blllnol of war,
Jlnty.I-IOoftwlp,m, ,

--r~....;.s1

..;.;.,R,.;;..u.;..c,;,;,."...;,j
.'

overCl. .,...

F~mlohod

Int., nllds_ tend. and wlieel.'

$3000, 114-M~-2~00

'·. -

·:

72 Tl\lcks tor Sale

Huffmtn Farm, t'lalna V.llty

T

I

LOST· Whltt

malt

Shltzu,

hairtd Mtd.
dog. Mill
p11tahort·
golf
Lost:
IIHCrlok
whHt,
court•. 6&gt;'-245-IIOJS.
Lost: whHI cover on Fourth

Flarldo Pr_,y lor 1111, oxcol''Do we stock- exercise unicycles?' ' .

r:--:::-:::::::--r:========::1
11

Help Wanted

-:::~7:!:.::.:..::::-::::::--­ 18

ltnl, - h .,.., lot ond mallllo

homo. FOr·dololo coil ,..,._

5112

Ren1als

Wanted to Do

"SCUM LETS ANSVfiiS

Avtnuo, Galllpollt Ohio, 614· F1rni hllp waniOd tmllklrl, 114256·1335.
1112-2122

Y dS 1

GAI.UPOUS JOBS Not Ad..,.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

$7 Por Hour Ptuo Ttpo, INII'VIow
304-87U7111- 3And 7.
lndlvlduolo Or Ccuploo Eogor To
Wort! WNh Chlldran And
Ado-..o Aro - F o r In• - Spoci&lt;lltaod FOIIor Poront·
1!18. lluot Hovo A CcmmNtmont
To . U11 Whh Emollonol
Problomo. Profoollonol Porot11
Trllnlna Po1&gt;vldod. P10111 cau
114 411'828t For lnlormotlon
About Eligibility Roqulr...,.lo,
""'
. For HOmo a-..
MIINonanco: Knowlodgo or
hoollnt.
olr
oond~lonlng,
oltctr!Col ,_111ry, Exporltnco
with uwae- treltiMnt ~1nl
holplul. Roply to: Box Cl.AOII8J
c/o Golllpollo OtNy Tribuno, 82o
Third Av..,.., Gllllpallo, OH

Glrla MYII Be 11

ALL Yord Sol11 Mutt So Pold In
Advonco. DEADLINE: 2:110 p.m.
tho doy botora tho od It to run.
Sundoy ldlllon • 2:00 p.m.
~ridty. Mondoy ldlllon • 2:110
n.m. Saturdly.
~oylng Solo: Furnlturo, Appllanc.., Air Conds, Aiding

Mowor1 Wood Eolor, Chlln Sow,
Ho.unnold Goodo, 614-446·7133.
Public Sale
&amp;Auction
Alck Pur10n Auction CQmpany,

lull t1m1 auctlonHr, complete
auction HrVIct. Llcenlld Ohio,

'!VIII Vlrgtnlo, 304·n:J.611.1.

9

,.nt

to buy ltandlng timber I
pint, Tim BNrht 61'1-9112-78110

'ob Wlnlomo l

·

Winltd to buy, Standing Umbtr,

!449.

Sono 614-Vtl2·
.

WoniMI To Buy: "Chlidrono VCR
Ttpoo, 614·379-2284.
Wontld · To Buy; J101k Autoo
Wl.lh ()f Without
call
Lorry Llvtly.IM-311-1303.
Wontld To Buy: Junk Autot,
Scrap llllol 114-441-GOIS, Aftor
2p.m.
Top Prlcoo Pold: All Old U.S.
Colno, Gold Ringo, Stlvw Cclno,
Gold Colno. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
11!tltcond Avonut, Gollpollt.

llol....

Wltntld:
Old prowor
lullt · - ·
old
rodio
porlo, old rodio
- ··
11uiN Rlidloo
botora mutt·
11M2. hovo
Any
OQndlllon. Chucllo. , _ 304882..2220. Big monty tor ....,.

-

Employment Serv1ces

I

'

Help Wanted

PIMIAY PROCESSING

OAOEASI PEOPLE
CALL YOU.
HO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.
. 1.aoo.245-G242.

PIIONi

AVON • AN or-, cau Mtrllyn
Wuvor314-882-2141.
1-S.tlOo Poottlono, 2-Phont
"-tori/ Rocop«lonltt, lind
lnquiM to Aoyol Otk AClub, 3SUI f111Wo0do Ad
=~ colllorlnttrYiow 114A Dolly SliMy 01 UOO For
Buylnt llorchtndln. · Buyor
No E1ooritnoo N oory. IIWU-zN2, Elt.3883.
AUSTRALIA WAHTS YOU
EICIIIoN
Pay,
BonoiNo,
Tronoporlltlon,
407..212-41117.
Ell. 171. llo.m..tOp.m. Toll
Rtlvndod.
AVON I All - · I Shl~oy

Spooro, :104-1'11-1421.

Bobpllor Noodod In lly H=
3 Dlyo A WoN. PlooH
A - To: CLA IIIII, Clolllpollo
DollY Trlbll~ 1 825 Third AYIIMIO,
Gotilpollo, .... 415U1.
So APill 01 AS40 ltlllon AYoor
Compony Hoolh And Nutrlonol
I......,, No Elpor- Nooory. COmpony Will Troln, can
Mo. Crowfllnl, IM 111- can
EvoniOOtl-'ltlp.m.
·
caoo llonogor, ACCESS To
HUIIIInAII -~
Inc..:: Hove A Conunlftmonl
To
ng With Cl1lldron With
E-lonlltll-, loOhlloro
Doano And ElporiooiOt Profor·
ood: Hovo Ylltd Drivon
And lol•
tot Ollnl- To: ACCESS, P.O.
... litO, Goltlpollo, Ohio 46831.

Llconoo,- -

DRIVERS
Elm To 1110 Wit, lmoll Ptdl·
~~~'"·eo. car.
Drl-

you pold 30f I
llllto? Thll to whll wo poy. Uvo
lood .... unlood poy, .........
Lalo •
iwOnll. .... pottiltaod loodo,
Molar . . _ lnoullnco ofll.
40tK pon w•h _ ,
............ ftolpoy.IN

......,.,....., ..........
""'* .........
a

=

- BY the WEEK

Financml

y,.,. Or Ofdlr,

In my homl, lrngutlr
1 must. 304-

21

1185 Ford f.ZSD, 4 Wt.ol Drivo,
Auto, 311 Wlnd10r, 11,000. 814388-111121.
.

Business
Opportunity

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

rtcommends tt\1t you do busl·
n... with peoplt you know, and
NOT to und money thro1,1gh the
m1U until you have lnvestfgattd

tho oftorlng.

locll Vending AOU11 For Sale.

Will Soil All Or Pori. Ropoal

3 Bedroom Story And 112 Unlv~
nlohld Ho&lt;l• 1117 Socond

Strllt, New H.ven, $27Jimo,

Pluo Oapoolt, 3044'11-3481.
3 bodroomo wtlh gorago, 12!10.
monlh, r1fennca1 l depoaH,
304-182·2111.
.

loa Spllttor FOr Ronl. Evono
Mellon, I~

'

FarmSupplie s
&amp; Livestock

Bu1ineu. Above Average ln-

comoii-80Q.881·2000.

For Solo: Ntw tNovw Uoodl
Doora, Pri'IMlng, · Stro: 32180,
1110
3 l.orgo TobKco
PrHO loloo, 145 Eocl1.114-441Farm Equipment
tm, Evonlngo &amp; W11klndo.
111 MF Tnctor M,350; li'liF.
Lowroy · Clonl 01on; 4hp 82,1115; 110 IF With Buoh Hog, ·
aluminum Brloa•
Str1ton Gro.._ Blado, And Plow, $3,4!0.
motor; new gok:f electric rqe. OWnor Wilt Flnanco. 114-2861122.
304-t75-7e73 oftor 7p.m.

••ell.

3333.

u....-

-po-,

pro~, eaperience ~.
IIOnd ,....,. to Dolly Sontliitl
PO Ba 72tB Pomoroy, ON

461SI
Wort! lor Oldotly lody In hlr
......_ Pomeroy .,.., r8l1rance
..... 114-112-2237

Wort! " - homo $60 por 100
-'"~~
....... lnlonntllon
oond IIMip to K.S. EnttrpriHO
P.O. Ia llrt.JII~I::-• NJ
07205. 201·
•

12

Shuatton
Wanted

Elp_o.-,.. Haopltol Aldo
ovoillblo lor homo nurtlng coro.
114-31'1·7123.

14

·old c.ntora Colloct-: Willing I Ft. Blllh !log, Good Condition
To Soli Koyotono tiD Automotlc Gf Trado Fer 4 FL Buoh Hog.
ProjiCtor, 40 Ylll'll Old, $50. 114-441-0020

614-446-1233.

Goo ..... $111. 114..2118-1434.
23 Professional
GOOD USED APPUANCES
SeiVIces .
Wallhlrs, dryers, rtfrlglfltora,
r
t -. Skoggo Applltncoo,
Po You NHd Someone To CINn
· Uppor Rlvor Ra. B•ldo Stono
Your Homa Gf onlco, Run Er· 42 Mobile Homes
Craot llotol. catlll4-446-7318:
rondo F« You, Typo l.oltora Or
lor Rent
Aaport1 Do Hllhl'l Insurance
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Billing, No'ilrtzt Papon, Mm A
Ccmplolo homo lumlohlngo.
12XIO,
3
mi.
out
188,
2
BR,
wotor
Clown ·DoiiYII' Hollum Bollons?
liollra; lion-Sot, 8-5. 614-441·
II So, Contoct: Qlrl Friday Sor· pold, S231/mo, Rol. • OapaoM. 0322, 3 mlloo out Bulavlllo Ad.
r1c11. Mackie Rickard Lavender, 614-446-2082, 441-1055.
Froo Dollvory.
OWner, --3'110.
lf7t llchua, 2 bodroom, 111
PICKENS FURNITURE

lttctrlc,

Real Estate
31 Homes tor Sale
.52 A Lot I Roomo 1·112 lothl,
Lorgo KilchlnJ. OR, LA" 3br,
carpet. '1St Kl.l41, Goloopllo,
114-441-7m.
10 yr, old, 3 bod- homo In
Bradbury, 2 otorogo building
wHh oloctrlc, llghtld bul!ocbal
couri, doa k'\'~ owlmmlng
~.

$45,IJOO, I

4537

ABSOWTELY MUST SELLII
Rlducod To Soil: 2 Story 3br
Comtt Lot In ChMhlra, Ohio.
Ercotlonl Condlllon. Finlnclng
Avolloblo. --ttsv, 1104'

132·7870; 814-317-0141.

3 ICrll riUI cellar houU, drU·

lod wol , dug woll, 2 Out·

bulldlnp, ·prage, moM.Iy llvll,
ood hunllng, comor GunviNo l
rlbbl• Road; 7 mllel from bowlIng alloy, At. 62, 304-755·7210.
'3 Bldroom HOIIIO, 111 Kin-

Drlvo, Golllpallo. Living Room,
Dining Room, Khchon, Both,
cantrol Air, VInYl Siding, carpttld. 2 car c.... ~. Within
Wolklng Dlotonco or Tho Pool,
Golf Coaroo And Clinic. Gil·
llpollo City School Dlotrlct. 614·
245.St52.
3br, LA, Dining Room, Equlpl&gt;ld
Kitchen, Bath, Gar1ge, CA, G11
Hoot, Low l20'o. 614-m-t314.
Brick Home In nice loctllon at
Golllpollo Forry, Will Torry
Subdlvlolon, 3 bodroomo, 2
balht, DR, K, LA, largt flmlly
room. Couf1ny lo Broktrt.

Business
Training

Shown by -lntmont only.
304-t75-2029.

Rllreln
NowttiSoulhlaolorn
Buol- Colllgo, I~ Yllloy
Plaao. Call Todliy, 1143870
AoglotwOIIon -.121118.

Dupt•• houtl plue exlrt lot.
Both tid" rudy to rent. l~o~y

~

turnllhld,

304-IJI.

.

HowiiJood
Ho&lt;!Mhold lumlohlng. 112 mi.
Jorrlcho Ad. Pl Pl1011n1, WV,

lVII MilO 2 bodtoom mobllo
homa, ............. plua tlopotll, call !104-t71·1410.
304475-71181. '
Portoblo opt otu woohor &amp;
2 bodtoom trolllr, o - l wotor do:yer, szso. 114~1-3231.
lumlohld, RtforoncM, Alto
AENT20WN
troller opor:o. North At. 1 Locuot
11-8-3158
Road on right, Pt. PH, :104-171·
Yl'ra Fum1tu111
IOJS
Solo 6 Chllr, $11.10 WHk;
2br llobllo Homa For Ront, 114- AocUnor, $!1.47 Wook, Swlvol
Rockor, $3.83 WMk.Bunk Bod
441.0722, 114-441-7788.
Ccmplolo 18.41 WMk, 4,Drowor
2br Unlurnlohld, 12150 On Chool, $3.28 Wool!; Poolor BodGoorgoo Crook Rood, OtiUpollo, room SUllo, 7 pc., SIU7 WHk,
Aoforonco And llopotll . lto- lncludoo Boddlng.Ccuntry Plno
qulrM, 114-441-436i, 304-175- Dlntllo Wtlh BonCh l 4 Cholro,
$1G.III Wuk.OPEN: Monday
2330.
Thru Soturdoy, lo.m. to lp.m'
3 BR moblit homo, Bob Sundty 12 Noon Till Sp.m. •
llcCcrmlck Ad.ltl 445 H61.
IIIIM on Routt 7 On Routo 141,
In Coni_,..
FOr ront,omoll 2-BA lrallor In
Hllllford, WV, SilO ptuo utllhloo, s..,. coal--waod ·bu,...,., 1 ..'1•
tlopotllrwquliod. 3JI4.882..21D4
tl-.o houl1 ep~akera, and •
Mobile lor - or IIIO, IH'I Hondo EIHo, 114-1112·2433
.
SWAIN
colt 114412-1100
AUCTION l FURNITURE. 62
Two 2llr Mobllt H-, Oapoolt Olivo st., Qollpollo.
&amp; UIOd
And Aolortncot Aoqulrod, cau lumNIM'o, ~~"4'4e l;'101om &amp;
Aftor 2p.m. 111 111 ts27.
Wortl-1
51.
Apartment
Uood Rolrlaorolor, Bldo By Sldo,
44
~. Kot "Point; 30 Inch
tor Rent
Eloctrlo Rongo Ccppor, Hot·
point; Wuhlr And OrYor WhNo
1 l 2 bdtM
In Mlddloport, OE; Mlcrowm wiil~o:.GI. All tn
Utll~oo Fum, op roq, no poto. Good CondNionll~22.
IM-m-2211.
VI'RA FURNITURE
lbr Unlvmlohld Aportmanl On
111 AY141ue, All Utllltltt lfl. UVINQ ROOM: Solo l Choir
Cludod, Dopoott And Aoror-· SIH.OO~ Aocllno~ . S14V.DOi
Aoqulrod, Ill 441 431V, 304- Swlvot HOCkor, $tv.u0; ColiN &amp;
8'11-2330• .
End Tobl11, 181.00 lot.DIHINQ
ROOM: Toblo With 4 Plddod
2 b••roaM IPirtmlf'lt, HUD ICo Cholra, IMV.DO; c-ry Plno
D1n011o Wit~ Bonoh And 3
ChllraH lat.OO; Molchlng 2

Now

1.

·-

2 l A - opl. :zThkd An.
814-4411-31118 or 2 11103 botoro
p.m.
2·Apto Pomoooy, 4-f00111, I-both
untumlahlcl, on Bunernut Ave,

~-2·1R In lltdd'-l.

No polo.
Pay own lllllllloO, 8200 por mo.
~ roqulrld.

2llr
Furri~"!:o\
$230/mo.
At....- I
ty Dopook 01
8200. 481 s;c;;;l Avonuo. 114••,'•,e~.

3

Rontol propot12J.
. 3 BA lull Elftcloncy Afoo!t- . Ul!lroiro,
boMmoN, In cl nmno. l&gt;r!Cid OUiot, Woll KIP!, NlcOiy Fur·
lo nil. 114·246-t •
n!oM,tJ, . ~rpotod, All UtiiNIM
FumiOMO, Air CondNionlng,
Unlq~ 4-BA,houN on 10.1Crte,
Br1diM'y Aoed, 11tr1 building, 114-441-21102.
1~;1100. a14-tl2-2881 or 2113»&gt;..23tv
Very nice, newer S.BR A1nch,
briCk lront, =~ 112 bo... Fum- •1 - . . 1 loth,
monl, oak hi
llooro, 1110 Cloon, No Pill: Aotorouoo l
ICrll
S.ml from Holur Dopollt Poq~irod. -1811.
HOi.iltol, SA II!..... lOlling Ntooly F - Aporlnwd.
134,io0, colll14-llr2.. ra.
lbr, 1101 to Ullrruy, porllfnt,
oonlral - · a~,.~noo ,..
32 Mobile Homes
qulrod.IM-44Utor sail
F u . - llftolonoy, ....,._
Llllltlol Pold, lhoN .allltt. 107
to Down On Pro l)o lood Ho-. All You Pay It Tu And Aw, -patio, IM-446·
TIIIO F- With AD!Iiovld CrldM. 4411 An• 7p.m.
call El- Homo"Contw At; 114- - - ltvlng. 1 and 2 bod112·1220.
, _ oporimonto II Vlllodo
and
Rlvorltilo
1V71 Wlndtor, 14110, 2 IR, lltMr
141M lood_, odd-on. 114-245- Aloort-o In 11-..,.. F Iiiii. Coii1Mo182·771t EDit.
0330.
1ft
Wddlt~art, Ohio. 1 end 2
IHO M17V, loth I 112
TOIII Eloctrlc, $12,1100. 114-37'112430, 114-143-Z757.

•
Roto Gt Mlco? In Your - ?
Buy ENFORCER, Klllo ri10 I
mlco In only 1 ftldlng,
GUARANTEED! Avllllblo ol:
Baum Truo Volut St~,.1t Will
M•ln Sll'HI, CM8tar, utt
Roto 01 Mlco? In Your_,
Buy ENFORCER, Kllll rtlo I
mlct In on"' ·Avdablo
1 folding
GUARANTEEOt''
ol·'.
"·' Truo Voluo Lumbar, 134
0 ·-r
Eut Main Stroot, Pomoroy, OH
RATS OR MICE?
In Your Hauoo? Bur JNFOR·
CER. Kllio Alto And lllco In
OniJ 1 Folding. QUARAHTEEDI
Avolloblo At: c.ntror . _ 11
Cou~ Stroot; Spring · "Villoy
Hordworo, m JockoOn Plko;
Gdon Truo Ylluo LBR, Vlno
Siroot AI Third Avonuo, Gil'
llpollo, Ohio.
Lu1mon
R·t030
Slorwo
Rocolvtt, 3D Wofto Por Chonnol,
Excollont
Condition, . $1110
0.8.0 ., 814 418 4831 Allor 7p.m.
ShopomNh IIW l mokM cloe
oondor &amp; drillp,.. l lunnlng
lolho coll304-773-5707
Snoppor Aiding l.own -~.1 t
Hol'll Power, 4 Yur. Okl, t4DO.
cau 614~1-2713.
•
Solo $35· 117'11 Oldomobllo,
noodo wOfl.. $100. 304-182..2m.
Split, dry llrowoocl, 12!1 lood,
304-IV5-381M.
Surpluo Army camoullougo
.clothing, lnoulotld diCron

'
GIN grlndo&lt; mllor, Now Hollond

hovblnd. "

:~.
::vr

Now"-!='?:-;

ho~ 2 ~·- ·~ 2

·--· - · ' pl. hMCII no tiU com.,.,.

=.::c:...

ttr. Que. oond. J04of71.4211.

100
tl,no; 140

' U.. - .
lnlomotlonol $2,380.

*-.

13,250;
OWnor Will 1 ' - , 1
1622.

63

Livestock

~,tltt::::--::2~Hor:-•"""'~'=o-oo_o_o""N"'•-•"'kl
~ 11or
s••• il
- .....
-:
INti 1111
Cloldlng;
IIIII A0HA ·
• HaiHfo,
110 0ayo Trolnlng. I - 2.
5 - h Old lttglotorld TonWolkor Cell, Good Blood
Uno,IM-441&gt;0020.
Attonllon: DllrY..n And For•

Dn::'l

Gr$. -

rnll'l,

.,...

1 0

352.Q231.

•-'1.

Alvltlhl Anllqutl,

1124 E. Moln Stroot, Po.. roy.
Moura: M.T.W. 10:00 o.m. lo 1:00
p.m., SUndoy t:GO to 1:00 R.m.
614-9112·2521.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

3 CFA Hlmaloyon
1180oo., fii.II:Z.22t1

Klttono,

AKC ~- -.nlono,
Cllrn Tlirrlero, Poodloo, Had
Shott, Wormed. :104-1'11-2113.

Cllpboord Pol ar-tng And
loordtng Konnol l'onnOt VII~
nory Aoll_o_!~ o,;,.., Tommy
Ponnoll,

,....,,..2731,

ti!l
J.D. Blodo
I,
RobuiN
P..Ccm~::oly
o,
r
Forti Llh; 1187!11iC Ploli-Up, All
~-=~lof!l Cotld~.~l ..11+.W-

(-Pl 782 High

&amp;., Mlddloport
Avon For Solo, Hugo tlotNtlon
ot Now, Old Doaonno,. And CoJ.

........... -.

~~~· now dlopor bog. lt4-448'

i]

Vans &amp; 4 WD's
'
tm Ford Club Wogon Phont•
1-*:.;.;.m:::.;·111;,;12::..... . , . . - - -- '
-:-:
,.
11110 GMC 350, Auto, Air, $1,500. ~
114-311-1121.
•
,
1111 ChOYy 314 Ton, 4 Whloi ,
Drlvo, 4 Spot&lt;!,. 359, Air Con· •
d~lonlng, TIH wnool, Sunroat.l
614-37'11-273V.
''
tilt Plymoth Voygor Von SE,
41.tC mil-. 4-Cvt, IUIO, ICtidlnt
do. .go
$4500, ll-5pm
114-IMt-2600
.

IllS Chovorolll 1"""11, w-,
hlrdtop, 283 auto, PS, PB, AC,
57,000 octuol mlloo, runs-looko
good, 114-24r-.292

1111 Mu•ana. I cyl., autamaue,
lntorlor. 304'1'l'Wtll0.
1m - . runo tii!Od. good
u,.., bod7 lair, SAliJ. 3()4..458.
1638.

75

I-

I

It · $

OIUI(,

0

YOU HEARl) THE
MIGHTY ZEUS!

THR SHOULD

AS SOON AS I GET
STUFF LIT•••

G•T IHIIMil

1...,.,,..,..,._.,.....;,.,..,;__ _
1
'
12

i:lb.irg!!l~

a

e

v:'HP ":t'a~~o~ l~·
On Motor, Uko
orror 304s-..204o,.. ,
,'

76

.aP~moN•w•

.

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

79

304-1114401.

i Cltureh StrHt Stillion

Campers&amp;

~ Ezpedltkln

0

ma Wlnobogo, 2411. 31,1100 oc-

tual mlln wlfh 4.0 two cyl. Onln

Services

A FW61MC5T e-A¥.5

WANT!510 KNOW
· WHAlS IN IT.

HAL.F &amp;'APTY. ..

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
IJncondlllonal IHitlmt guaran·

aa

rererenc• fumllhed.

FrH ntlmatH. Clll eoll.ct 1·

114·237-o488, doy or nlglrt.
Rogers Buemenl Watll'proollng.

e

Comploto Mobllo Homo Sot-Upo, ,
Ropolro; Comrnorlool, R...-. ·
tlol lmprovomonto. Including:
Plumbing, Eloctrlcol. l n . _
Clolmo Accoptld. 114-2!6-1111.
Cu~lt Homo lm.,..._nto:
Y~lrl E•ptJitnCI On Older .. .I
Nowor Homoo. Room AddMionoi, ·
FoundOIIon Work, · -lng '

WHAR DiD YOU L'ARN
TO

e.: :
tlm1tnl Aeflrencn, No Job To

OL'

Kltchent And 81th1. Free

BEG LIKE THAT,
BULLET ?

lor,....
luloll Aoaal: LAiodod,
114-441-ml.

W.SI

The older of the two independently
published bridge magazines in En·
gland started in 1926 as Bridge Maga·
zine. It is now just called Bridge. This
monthly publication, with material
for all levels from the club player to
the expert, costs $35 a year, including
t.ransatlanlic airmail (212· 886-5860).
Tod ~y·s hand is taken from an arti·
cle by my fao«ite contributor, David
Bird, who writes about the monks of
St. Titus.
Tbe Abbot was sitting South. He is a
cantankerous pei'Sorl who enjoys a pint
of beer, and he 'greatly overrates his
. bridge ability.
East won the first trick with the
spade" king, cashed the ace and
switched to the club jack. The Abbot
won In the dummy,.ruffed a club in his
hand and led the diamond five: two,
queen, eight.
If West had started with the K-2
doubleton in diamonds, declarer had
to cash the ace. But if East had tbe 10·
8 doubleton, declarer had to return to
hand to lead the diamond jack, pinning

2t

Pass
Pass
P..S

3t

t

~

Nord!
2t
3t

4t
Pass

East
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening lead: • 4

.......
~

•
!he 10.
•
The Abbot went for the amothtt,
play, ruffing a club in band ud lea~:
ing the diamond Jack: Now East bad Iii
score the diamond 10 to defeat !be"
game.
~~"No need to chortle about it," sa'Jlt
the Abbot. "Playing the world's ~
obvious false card from 10· 8-3 ba~
qualifies you·for a kni&amp;bthood."
_:
· "I was just a bit upset by tbe • ft
you insulted me," replied East. "WI_._
10·8 doubleton in diamonds, I would
play back a third round of spades ,tp
Ioree dummy to ruff and protect part·
ner's king·tQ-three."
@ 1.1, ....,.APEII EMil:U F II AI . . r4 ...

''

ACROSS
1 Honey bee
genus
5 - - lna
poke
9 Place ol
worship

12 Pronuncia·

lion mark
t3 Spots
t4 Dolts
16 Person ol
power

18 Author Wlelll
19 Naval abbr .
22 Culta
24 Pigpen
25 Appearonca
27 Fragrance
29 Sutter

· 38 Command
40 Magnitude
41 Employ
44 Pronto
46 Tonnll
equipment
47 Lily genua
49 Aquatic
animal
51 - tooth
53 Portrayed
57 ~lng or Crete
58 Ughtly
59 Broak In two
60 I cannot tall ·

DOWN
t Consumed
tood
2 Foot
3 Mlschii¥0UI
child

woundr

3 t Resident ot
Boln
35 Card game
· (2 wda.)
37 Llghlh11ded

movem1nt

7 ObJects of
· worohlp
8 Uodoroland?
tO Hllo garlands
11 Colorado

4 RoasUng

lUCk
5 Lond a hand

6 Ballet

park

rnManAdlai
s - - , Tho ,
From Ube&lt;IF-'Ie The

Impact ot the IHinoll
Otmocrat whO ran tor
presleltlnt In 1952 and 1956 Is
examined. (19
.40

l!lleHunter

a world Na

0 700 Club With Pot

ASTRO-GRAPH
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

!':' ·~·

.'Birthday

Qolllpoll~ Ohio

No¥• •• 111'1

IN

a

There· is' pooslblllty you might do
something In the year ahead mora slg·
nltlcant than anything you've done pre·
vlously. Both chance and lrlands will be
among the key etemen1s.
SCORPIO (Oct. 2&gt;1-No¥. 221 You could
be quite lucky today - II you operate
along progra&amp;Sive lines and deal with In·
tangibles. But It you get bogged down
with lhe traditional, the opposite might
be true. Scorpio, treat yoursett to a
birthday gin . Send tor Scorpio '&amp;AstrQ·

Electrical &amp;
RefrigeratiOn

lnstNments

.

Robertlon

Graph predictions to r lhe year ahead by TAURUS (AprU 20-Moy 20) Where mu ·
mailing $,1.25 plus a long, sell-ad· tual interests are concerned . don't play
dressed, stamped envelope to Astro· down or ignore your male's suggestions
Graph, ciO·Ihls newspaper. P.O. Box 'tod ay. Your partner might be able to
91428, Cleveland. OH 44101-3428. Be spol certain nuances you'll overlook or
don't understand.
sure to state your zodiac.sign.
GEMIII
(Mar 21-June 201 You could be
SAOtnARRIS (No¥. 23-Dec:. 211 Your
financial proopects look good today, . rather lucky at this time in opening up
especially If you're plomollng or selling an avenue for additional ·earnings. It's
...somethlng..;that ,ls. both. il!l)J$1181 ..81ld __,similar to_S9'!'.! 1hlng thai has_ b~Q ~·
eraling l ncome for a triend . ·
expensive.
.
· Helptul CANCER (June 21·Ju1J 221 II you have
CAPRICORN (Dec.
22·Jan. 111
contacts can be established In this cy- met someone recently whom you'd tlke
cle through club or professional affill· to know better, don 't be bashful about
atlons. Try to spend more time In both opening up lines ot comrnuniCallon.
This Individual has been walling for you
ot these areas.
AQUARIUS (J•n. 20-Feb. 11) Chal· to make your move.
lenges that associates reel are 100 In· LEO CJUIJ 23-Atrtf. 221 The timing Is
tlmldallng aren' t likely to scare you off right to push lor a close in a matter that
today. You're In tune with your Inner self you feel can ,enhance your prHtlge and
and you, better than anyone else, know security. Stop dragging your leal.
VIRGO (Atig. 23-ltpt. 221 This Is a
what you can do.
PISCES (Feb. 20-~rch 201 You're rather unusual day where you could
very good at conceptuaNzing today, and learn the mosl lrorn what you t..ch. It
you,shouldn't treat yoilr Inspirations In· you have constructive lntormallon lo
differently . What you conceive can be pasa onto others, now Is the time to talk
about 11.
accomplished.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll1tl If you have LIIRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 231 Somallmea,
the well-Intended tips given to us by relto make a critical change today, don't
atives are of 111111H value. However, II
be wishy-washy , timidly using halt mea·
Aunt Minnie or Uncle Joe tells you
surH. For best results, make a total
something today, be a good llatenef .
altorallon .
·

'

10:05 (])MOVIE: Tllu~ lnd
Ugltlloot tRI (2:30)

=

10:30 121 Crook lnd ChoiM
Spirit ol Adoenlln

11 :GO (%) •

(I)

Ill •

llDI 1121.

o
® Night Court Stereo. 1;1
IDNOWI_.,

'

"" .- §~~.~~ ,~~'!.,~~·!?~

.. -·· ......,. . . .,.

••=•'.!li•l!ll•••••••
~Wour

Cortor"l Plumbing
Fourth ond Plno

84

Soatll

Spoclal Bette Midler, Richard
Gare and Antellco Huston are
IntervieWed. C1 :00) Ster80. 1;1
\ZlSINgglt fer Delila C18CJ

1!,1100 BTU warm morning
hooter. Looky luol vllvo. 175
614-843-5211
.

llorizoni!IOO.-

By Plolllip Alder

w•

'

''

Atrlllon Motors, rep~nct. New ;
·&amp; re-built motora In stock, RON 1

1!.1!: ~ 'TIIrto.,, low , mlloo,

. •l

Dealer: North

&lt;D(1)
a.rbl.. w~~~n

1

- - tnoo; tllllforlzM

·~East-West
Vulnerable:

e

connors go on a disastrous
w..ken[taway. (Pt 1 of 2)
Stereo.
ID
nt ~
ill Frontl
Frontline
llDI 1121• MO IE: 'Poling:
tneplrtd by ThM Rill
Stotllla' CIS Tueadly Mo¥11
(2:00) Stereo. D
·
1!J Tueaday Nftjht Flghtl (LI
~llhvflle Stereo.
Larry King Uwf
0 Flthtr Dowling Myotwleo
Fethtr. Dowling's lite 11 put In
danger beeauto of a
photograph. (R) stereo. 1;1
9:30 (I) (I) Colch Hayden
buys a new horne without
asking Christine tor 11or
opinion. Stereo. C
·
~Amazing Glniia Japan
10:00 (%)II aJ Law • Order
· Painful memories come beck
when I woman recaus hor
lriand 's murder. Stereo. 1;1

AND A REOA.L.IST

11-£ ,~5515

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

, """' ..rlllgo,

Etrtlt

~ Ill 11 RoHtnnt The

JET

tJ7653

Night Aunt Ruda's personal
ang.r overshadows tho true
account ol an arrest. Stereo.

Gtnorolor, $5,200. 304-t75-2135.

81

tJ 9 8 2

'1064 ,

WllnHa to $111'¥1¥11 1;1
9:00(%)
(!) In tho Hut of tile

Motor Homes

=-114~~·

OhoiiJ _

. (2:00)

Improvement Tim dacldBS to
teach the oldtr boys a
leiiSorl about lying. Stereo.

EVANS, JACKSON, OH. I~ •
537-9528.
,
~~~~~--~~·
Aon'a TV Service, apecllllllng :
IV71 Chrnlor ~bo1 !10 ong, In Zonhh oloo -lng moot 1
othlr brandt. HouN calli, alto ,
1M-112·2t11304-171-11-.
oomo opa&gt;tlonco ropolro. WV •
tHO Chryolor Ccnlobo LS, 6- 304-tJS..2310 Ohio 114-441-2454. ~
c:yt, outomotlc, .a cor, lOlling
tnoo 080, no ruot. 1-1' Room 1ddlllona, aiding, roofing,
vlnyt fOI!Ioc_. wl-,
2HJ
corpontry by AI Tromm, •*1112·
"" camoro z·21, at,ooo octuol 2328. CA\.L COLLECT
mlloo, window otic- build
~llko now) $11,i0o, 114- Soptlc Tonk Pumolng_$VO•Golli&lt;l
Co. RON EVANI INTiiAPHISES,
Jackoorl, OH 1-«&lt;I-t37-9521.
1111 lplrlt 4 Cyllndor, Clood
Davlo
Sow·Yic
8tr¥1co,
$1110, Gtorgot Crook Ad. Porto, oupplloo, pickup, ond dollvory. 814IllS lulat! - . , oil 0111-. 441-0294•
mlloo. 114-446-4110 oltor

~117

0 Rln Tit Tin, K·t Cop Q
1:05 Ill MOVIE: Joe KICid (PGl
8:30(1) lllil Home

li71' Ford robulft meter ond

t11n1m~•lon.

SOliTH

a

fl
!

Big Dakola Form Homo, Built
On Your lol. 1 Bod,_ 3
Sotho, 13V,IH And Up - ·

7311.

'). ·

."'

tAK ~

,9$2
t tO 8 t
tJIO t3

Tho Otymplld Many

athletes try and fill, only to
try again for an Olympic gold
medal. Athletes featured
include Percy Williams and
Alain Mlmoun.
Cr011fl,.
7:351]) Binford l Son
8:00(%). (!) 1'1 Fly AWIY A
hooded tlgure emerges in an
lnvasttgation. Stenio. C
CD MOVIE: A Man.r iT
HUINinflfft (2:00)
I]) Ill. Full HouN
Stepltonle's dance lessons
take their toll; Re~ tricks
Jesse. Stereo. !;I
ID ill Nove K2: a rival ot
Mount Everest tor the tallest
mountain in the world.
Stereo. C
llDI 1121•Retcue: 11 1 A
teen becc&gt;rnes a viCtim of a
gun accident; armed robbers
ar!frsued . Stereo. C
tiD MOVIE: High Pla'lfto
Dr tR) (2:00)
I!J Mu-, Sho Wrate Q
!II On stage Stereo.

1m Corio, 35G Englno,
$800, 30+77W101.

-

lllllcal

flt..VER .)pooN

"'
~

~

Ill

Boats &amp; Mofors
for Sale

Big Or Smollll14-441-o22!.

1m F«d LTD, 114-112·11162
1m Cllovotto, 4 Spold, mo.
114-31W847. .

........... Good lronopoflolion
- · 11,1100. For lntor.
.... ian Coli --342. Aotc

57

A

1- 11'1 MY fA(Z.

..,..,.btl,

GU 44

locro.. Momo. Storto tt/1/tt 10
o.m. To 7 p.m. And 0.11¥ Thoro
:•:. Unlll All Sold. 114-446B1by bed, m11tr. ., chlnglng

I

,..,~.

tiiS F·2110 truck, Grnoty troctor, plow l tlllor. :J04.175.&amp;m.
4 compiOto Olorm wlndowo with
tcrMnl, nt 12'"121", S10 MCh.
304-t75-4171.
lllnl Oacltohunde: INdY to flO,
4 kHchon chllro, -boord
~~~-•--.
r·­
llftiV. 0111 IU atiiiU,
odd lobloo, t.mpo, -.1 ptoyo; hMMI
noodo noodlo

go~N Wl'f'fl

73

' "· local

=o: =o:..

WA.r

-'""'" :I04-IJ1.7721J.

71 Autos lor Sale

Buy 01

•

Atlardlllt• Hlltlh In·

ouronoo For Tho Soli EmploVOd,
WVA And Ohio, 114-446-N.lSE,
Any! I. ..
Boby pip lor ..... ·-1-2017.
BNI Crank. DVM. Lorgo anlmol

Whootcholr, Wolkor,
2
ca.. ~ Clood Ccndlion,
1210, 11
'1222 Ell M, 11431NI'III.
WIITE'S IIETAL·OETtCTOAS
Ron Allloon 1210 Socond
Cloli'poiJo," a.~o.
Bow
Boco
-· ChllroN2V.DO.IEDAOOM: Paotor Bod:
room SUHo CS pc.l, $34V.OO; 4 55
Building ·
Drowor ChMI; 144.15; Bunk
Bod, R21' Completo Full lion
Supplies
Sot 1 SIOI.6o Sot; 7 pc. cador
Btaroom SuNo, Ntv.OO.OPEN: Block, lorlcll, olpoo, .winMonday Thru Soturtloy, lo.m. lo Mntoto, otc. Cloildo Wlnlp.m., SUndoy 12 Noon Till lwt, 'Ato Orondo, ON Col 114Sp.m., 4 lllloo on Aouto 7 On 241-1121.
Routt 1411n Contonary.
56 Pats lor Sale
52 Sporting Goods
aroom' .... BuiiiiiY Shoo-Pol
Bruwno Fool boll Ttc ~o ProiOr Dnlomlng._ All loo'oido, olyioo.
Soallna. All Goma, 1
2281, limo Pol Food Diller. Juli&lt;l
Wlllb. Coli 114 41\123~ t 114-~1217.
Antiques

2237.

I EVT coNFV.5ft&gt; •. l

..

," '

EAST

WEST
tQ1064
'JI73
tK2
tB 7 6

IJl•
I WhHI of Fortune 1;1
C e Family FIUd
a Be I Sl8r Stereo.

2,400 mlloo.IIDia-311611.

lloiiiiiJ , _ _ 2A TnctO.
10 ~ ltl,flll~ lntomatlontl,

Cuotom U-ock Haullna. Con
Haul To H I - Or J.o.
c•moufl1up caveralll $30, colly. Qluck Wlllomo Triple
CIHI! Truatdng. 114-246-IOH.
llllhor us CcmbM - Cor·
hart elothlnrl, old timor knllo
Hay &amp; Grain
doolor. Som ...._.lllo'o , Son- 64
dWIUo, WV Paot otfloo,
Storogo Avolloblo .IS. Por
AI, 21 N. F~, Ill, Sun, -...:DO Groin
B"""!J~ Mor;on Formo, At. 35,
Pll t - dod - . t1urtng
••glniO, - -hunting -~ 104-213-1111.
Hay: l Smoll boloo.
Solurdor only pickup. 304-175·
1112.
.
.

CM-.

Eltle!ll!lnmtnt Tonight
Ster~:.'ll
Mlir111d...With ClllkiNn

74 Motorcycles
~ -::,111::::--:S_;;ta_;;u~ki;:4,;..:;"1J.:,:.;onol.:;.:.m:_c_lo,_
trool. . 1 .
•· ....,
........ --••• -•'4
·~
_ .nt_ .auy, runo ,_,
ootl,
lrldo, I:ON:OO -yo,
SoL 111-.
1111 Hondo'- · 100 CC,

WATER WILLI DltP t EO: Foot,
Praon~.=-·
1t111.
mt.Wotw Quoron.
·

53

7:30~,ow~=-~j

MY PAflFNrf. wf~E ~'cH

U-~11

t73
'AKQ •·
tAQ9
tAKQ92.

7:05 Ill Too CloM lor Camfort

Jlnl'o Firm E:r,:'-nt. SR. 38,

TransportatiOn

~ o.~'~.~v421crz

and Itt ply far IIHif, 41h Sl.,
S)'I'ICUM, 814oll2·5324

2 BR homo In Rio Orondo.
Within wolking dlotonct of co~
17 Miscellaneous
ltgo. $2!0/mo. pluo utllhlu.
IIIII Tho Smollo: Plllt olr, clun Mutt olgn loon. 614-tll-4011.
wotorbllnratlon .,.,... avoll·
lble. ..... ~~ 11C-446~ GOVERNMENT HOMES From S1
tU Rtpolrl. Oallnquont' Tu
1121.
Property. RtpotHnkmt. Your
Aroo ttl 805-1162-1000. Elll. QH.
18 Wanted to Do
10181 For Curront Aopo llot.
OWN YOUR OWN NICE HOME
FOR $1,1D0 Full Prtco. Govom. . .ltllng In lr,own Homo, mtnt ~~~~- Llouldotl!'l.
D Ell. HOtlrla For
Any Ttmo, Any
, Drop lno t-805AN Wttcomo, Well lporilncod, lmmtdlalt Aallltanc,e.
Llvo In Contonory Atoo, lt4-14t· HouH tor 1111 or ,.nt, 3 BR, full
!!4:11.
bntmtnt, Burdtttt Add. Pt.
CNA will ooro tor ottlorty In my Ploounl. 014-241-11435.
llomo or you,., cotll14-tv2-717'11 3Houu lor Solo: Domogld by
E l A,.TREE SERVICE. Topping, lire. Cln bllttn et Aahton, WV.
Trtmm!ng, Tree Removal, Hldge $15,000. 304-tlS-2311, 175-3978,
•
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:lll-7111.'
Mulll Unll Rontol, 1 Ytor Old,
Vlnrl Siding, LDw M1lntenence,
Clnlrolly I.Ocotld, $1V,IIOO. 114446-tSII.

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drlvt, nry aood condl· 1
lion. low mtlllgo, fCM.Ill-3433 ;
ortl'/5-71011.
:
1888 ford BroncolcBitck, fully
Loaclld, Automat Tr1n1ml•
ll!an..!'" Tlroo, Aluminum Rimo,
• .........2112.
•
11"' QMC 314 tan 8,000 miles. :
11500. 814-912-3488 or 304-t75- &lt;

Equipment
for Rent

hours. Reftrencn

171-7262.
Hood Chrtotmoo C..h? · Work
from your home ttunlng en•••-· For lnlormollon I oppllcatlon, lind llil-oddreotompod onwlopo to: Muokln·
gum lral Publlohlngc Box 1111,
ZonMYIIIo, OH 43m '·
No Elporlonco -..ry. A
Dally Solory 01$:1100 For Buying
M.orehlndlto. 114-3Q.2082. Elf.
3883.
Pomaroy POSTAL JOBS SI1.'11$1UOihr. No oxp. noodod. For
oom ond oDDIIcotlon lnlo., con
1-211-116J.IU17am-10pm 7aoyo.
POSITION AVAILABLE: Vlctlmi
Atolotonco caoo . Mlnogor.
Provldo Dncl llorYico To VIc·
time or Vlotonco. ...,.,_., 1n
Soolll Work, lloittld Flold Gf
Equlvolont Elporioilc:o. Ell·
oOrtonoo Wartdna Wllll Elionolly 0101urllo&lt;l Popullllon.
Sond R...,.. To Sondra McFor·
lind. WoodiOnd Con-, 3011
VInton Plko, Clolllpollo, OH
45131. EOE.
POSITION AVAILABLE: Vlctl. .
Atolllonoo Spoclollot. Ro_..
olblo FOr Tho Dovolopmont1 Jm.
- i o n And . _ ......
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Wit~ Rllalod
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Em«lonllly Dloturlood
lion And Elportonco Gf Tra nlng
In Ccmmunltr OtgtniZotlonti.
Sind ANUIM To sandra McFat•
lind, WoodiMII C.rt•, 30•
VInton Plko, Clolllpollo, OH
45131. IOE.
Wontod motlvotod
$at,1104U,OOO 111 yoor, l'!'lnlng

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Chlllpl Muot Soil Quickly. 1-8001155-t383.
45631.
loCII Poy Phono Routt Low
Moturti/ dopondoblo bilbyoltfor Coot, High Rolum. 1-tOD-1'11·

w1nt1

Wanted to Buy

ahtr Gpm.

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304-t95-3118.
LOST: 2 mo. old colic&lt;l klllon.
loot· Comp Ccnloy orwa. Chll~'o
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PUT DOWN.'' SIX OF
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II-IE OT~ER

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304-t7S.I400.

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800-233-8281, 24 Hra.

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houoopol, 614-112·5120 .
l~T·Anguo hllfo~ 830 lbil. on

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Viewing

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NE'I.T '/EAR, M 't'OOI/6 $TIU. GOTT~ AAK£
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U311mo.NoPei8•• UI ' ne.

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Pup, 10 WMkl 0td1 61-1•1329.

6

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Apartment
.lor Rent .

Now 2 hclroom Full Both, Ul
LA, KNcllon, Loto Clblnolt,
Slovo Rofrltoralor Wllh Bor Adloin 0R, 140011no. IIWIN053
Allot I p.m. Aldnoy, Ill, No
Polo.
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FrH To Good . HolM, Small
Puppltl, Oachahund, Beagle
Basten Mh1, 614-245-6631. . .

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BORN LO.,., ..

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SNAFU® by Bruce BeaUle

Ohio

1991

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�Page-.1 0-The Daily Sentinel

•

1\Jeaday, November 5, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

U. of Iowa students,
Rock hall names inductees
profs gather to share grief
By GREG SMITH ·
Associated Press Wrlt~r
IOWA. CITY, Iowa (AP) _
Universily of Iowa studen~s and
· · professors came together today to
share their grief over the shootin's
of five coll!lllgues. The school s
president told the hushed gathering
it was time 10 "begin the long and
difficult process of healing."
·
Classes were canceled and the
university community was invited
the student union to try to sort out
. emotions taised by ·the killings Friday by a disgruntled former graduate student. More than 200 staff
members and students came.
"We cannot make sense of
this," university President Hunter
Rawlings told the .group .."We are
out of our depth. Last Friday, the
. universicy was senselessly diminished."
.
He said the healing process
would follow this time of "deep
and terrible sadness.'·

CLEVELAND (AP) :.... Electric
' Induction ceremonies will .be
· 1 d J' 1 H ndrix B00k
held in New York on Jan. 15.
guttar egen un e
'
er
Hendrix will ent,er the hal!' as
T.
&amp;
the
MGs,
counter.
singer
Johnpart
of The Jimi Hendrix ExperJ'.
Authorities said that the former ny Cash .00 others wtll be inducted
·
student, Gang Lu, ~as angry into the Rock and Roll Hall of enec, a group known for· its J%&lt;is
beca~se hts doctoral dtssertatton Fame in Jan~.
.
psychedelic styl~. Their hits includwasn t ch~sen by a commtttee for
. The 1992 Roctang Ro!UWJ.Qf. ed "Purple Haze" and "Foxy
an acade1111c honor. ·- - - .:- - Fame Museum indu·crees were Lady." He may be tiest.remem. He took the a , 3 ~-cah ber announeed Monday.
bered for his rendition of "The Star
revol_ver to a weekly meenng or the
Artists to be inducted also Spangled Banner" at the Woodph&gt;'Stcs and astr,onomy deparunent . inclode British rock band the Yard- stock Festival in 1969.
.
Fnda~, where he began a rampage birds, rhythm and blues performers
Hendrix was 28 when he died of
t~ whtch he killed five people and
overdose Sept. 18, 1970.
he Is1ey Brot hers, an d bl ues a drug
t
·Shaffer
said Hendrix "redefmed
htmself. .
.
stood up and started shoot- ~:~~~~.s::::,d Dave, and Bobby the role of the elec:tric guitar" and
. mg. ~td Paul Hansen, a ~h
Paul Shaffer, musical director or · that his recordings "sdll sound cut·
s~~e~ttst m the. de~~tment. He "Late Night with David Letter- ting edge." .
·· . ....
dtdn t say anythmg. .
.
man" and the annual induction ecr·
The Yardbirds prod]ICed lhrec of
Lu, 28, shot to death two profes- emony, announced the results of rock music's greatest guitaris~ =
so~ and lhe st~ent whose ~sser- · voting by more than 600 perform· Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck and Jimmy
tattonJast spnng was ,nommated ers, producers, writers, record Page.
· ·
for the aw8J'!I over Lu s. 'Il!en be executives and broadcasters. NomiCash is credited with developing
le~t the meeong_roo!'l and killed a nees wete chosen on the basis of "rockabilly" with .such hits as "I
thrrd professor m liis o~fice. Next their contributions or influence on Walk the Line," "Folsom Prison
he went 10 another butldmg, where . rock music.
Blues" and "A Boy named Sue."
he fatally shot an adm,inistt:ator at
Shaffer said he was ''personally
The Isley .Broth en had their
the 28,000-student untversuy and thrilled'' with the selection of musical origin in a church choir in
wounded her secretary.
BookerT. and the MG's.
Cincinnati.
"I've got to say that Booker T.
c;onstruction is scheduled to
and the MG's were really my inspi- begm next sul)lmer on the Rock
~ ration-when I put urfetller
llana~and-R~Il.Hall-of ·Fam~ ~nd·M~seo-- -. for the 'Late Night with Davtd Let· urn. butldmg, a $65 mtlhon P.roJCCt
Also recognized: Rep. Barbara tennan' show," he said.
destgned by archttect ~.M. Pet. The
Boxer, D-Calif.; Johnnetta Cole,
Selected as early influences on butldtng ts to be completed tn
president of Spelman College in rock music were Elmore Janies and 1994.
AJianta; Washington Mayor Sharon Professor Longhair, Leo Fender,
On Oct. 23, rock hall officials
Prau Dixon; acuess Jodie Foster; developqf of the electric guitar, and an~ounced that Rolling Stone magvideo producer Callie Khouri: New songwriter Doc Pomus were select- azme has d~nated a ~ollectt~n of
York Times columnist Anna edas ndn-perfonning inductees.
memorabtl!a of Jams Jophn, a
Quindlen; Texas Gov. Ann
To be eligible this year, a per- ~k-blues~mgerofthe 1960s. The
Richards; broadcast correspondent form·er must have hat! a record dtsplay wtll be part of the rock
Cokie Roberts; and breast-cancer released (jyring or prior 10 1966.
music museum, even though Joplin
video creator Lilly Tartikoff.
has not been tnducted mto the hall.
A special honor went to Army
Maj. Marie T. Rossi, a Desert
Storm pilot who died in a .heli·
copter accidenL
The women, chosen by a panel
The original version of "Word
By JUDIE GLAVE
of 29 distinguished women and the
to
the
Badd!! ", referring to reports
Associated Press Writer
editors of the magazine, will be
Michael
Jackson lightened his skin,
NEW YORK (AP) - Jermaine
featured in Glamour's December
says:
Jackson hints iri a recording that
issue.
''Once you were made
never made it 10 the stores that his
"You
changed your shade.
superstar
biQther
Jo[ichael
is
RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif.
"WaS
your color wrong?
ashamed
of
being
black,
(AP) -Just call him Dr. Bono.
"Could
not btrn back
New York's WQHT-FM and its
Singer-actor-politician Sonny
"It's
a
known
fact.
Bono picked up another title Mon- Los Angeles companion station
"You
were
too
far gone."
KPWR,FM began playing the
day: doctor in disaster medicine.
The
verse
rcwriuen
became:
Bono received the honorary unreleased version of Jcrmaine
"Once
you
were
made
degree at the fii'St National Disaster Jackson's song "Word to the
"You changed yotir ways."
Conference for helping rescue vic- Badd!!" last weekend. A softened
An
industry source spealcing on
tims of July's bus crash that killed version appears on his new album. condition
of anonymity said the
KPWR program director Rick
six people mPalm Springs.
original
lyrics
deemed too
Bono, mayor of Palm Springs, Cummings said a tape just hard-hilling, so were
Jcrmainc changed
helped carry stretchers after the bus "showed up in an overnight deliv- them.
.
ery
package.·!
honestly
don't
know
ran off a road and down a boulder·
Epic Records .in New York,
who sent il."
--·
strewn hillside.
which
represents Michael Jackson,
Tnc timing seems apropos:
Bono. a Reoublican candidate
refused
to comment Monday.
for U.S . Senate, could not accept Michael Jackson's new single
"'Word
to the Badd!' is a song
the honor in person because he was "Black and White" hom his that comes from my heart and it
attending the dedication of the upcoming· "Dangerous" album doesn't detract from the fact that I
Ronald Reagan Presidential also was apparently leaked to radio love my brother," Jermaine Jack:
stations last weekend. His song is
Library in Simi Valley.
about the irrelevance of skin color. son said'in a statemenL

OLDEST HEART RECIPIENT • The Rev. Earl Oldham, 71,
displays a pulse sensor on his finger as be recovers Monday at
Baylor Medical Center in Dallas after surgery thai made him the
world's oldest heart transplant recipient. Five surgeons removed
Oldham's weak heart on Saturday and replaced it with tbe heart
of a 23-year-old donor. (AP)

Alaskan moose arrives
at Columbus Zoo

tion for other zoo keepers to push
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Cold temperatures that sent other Charlotie into the crntc.
Sending Alaskan animals to
animals indoors was perfectly sutl·
other
parts of the country allows
ed for the newest resident at the
"people
to get a good look at the
NEW YORK (AP) - Glamour
Columbus Zoo.
type
of
animals
we have up here," magazine pronounced Anita Hill
Charlotte, a 6-month-old
Alaskan moose. will join two male Ms. Denney said. "I hope people one of "1991's bright spa~"
The law professor whose sexual
and one female moose at the zoo's don'tthink moose are too ugly.
They're preuy awesome."
harassment allegations nearly cost
North American animal exhibit.
Charloue stands about.4 112 feet Clarence Thomas a scat on the
Charloue, an orphan found near
Anchorage, Alaska, arrived at the high and weighs 200 pounds. When Supreme Court was am8ng 10
zoo Friday, said Dan Hunt, assts- grown, she could reach 6 feet and women the magazine honored
tant curator of mammals. She will 650 pounds, Hunt said. Eventually, Monday. Hill was·praised for ''sacCharlotte is expected 10 be bred.
rificing her privacy to spealc out for
be held in quarantine for 30 days.
The
Alaskan
moose
is
larger
women ...
Charlotte balked when Alaska
than
its
cousin,
the
North
American
The magazine said it chose
Zoo staffers tried to lure her into a
moose,
he
said.
The
Columbus
Zoo
women who were "beacons of
shipping crate for the trip with a
milk bonle, zoo keeper Shirley is believed to be one of the few integrity, humor, guts and grace in
Denney said in Anchorage. The exhibiting Alaskan moose. he said. an often graceless and cold-blooded world."
milk served as enough of a distrac-

·." \

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~-D,6;S

Low 1oalp1 Dtlf J0s.
Tbtil'llllay, 1D081ly cloudy. High
Ia mld 301.
.
.

'

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for retirement. And the sooner, the better.
· Around here,we'll do whateVer it takes to help. So
we're offering The J?ank Ore Retiiemem Guide.
It helps you ~culate how much money you'll
need when you retire, and how much you shoukl be
pu~awaymw. Ph.ts, tim's aro-oonsense explana-

'
you,_

tion of all the investment options to choose from.
For your free copy ofThe Bank Ore Retirement
Guide, visit any Bank One. Or calll-800_;!66-1515.
Either~ we'~ get /3A AIV ~~~
you OOded m the nght Q/VWR ~ Vl!l;;,
d~tion.
. . ~~takes.

"E

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VC!I. 42; .No.130.
Copyrighted 11111

2 S.CIIolll, 12 P8gH 25 - ..
A Uuhltnedla Inc. New~p~~per

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, November 6, 1991

offman,
Martin win·mayor races
FRED L. HOFFMAN .
was elected for his fiftb term
as Middleport mayor.

ED MARTIN, a newcomer to poUilcs, wiU be mayor or
Rutland in 1992.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stall' .
Three of Meigs County's five
villages will have new.mayors in
1992,as the result of Tuesday's
general election.
·
Pomeroy, Rutland, and Syracuse, all elected new mayors while
Middleport re-elected Mayor Fred
Hoffman (I) for another term.
Racine had no candidates Cot
mayor.
In the race for mayor of
Pomeroy, Bruce Reed (R) with 376 ·
votes was the victor. He defeated
Larry D. Wehrung (I) who received
217 votes and Ellen Jane Rought
(I) with 125 votes.
Neither the Pomeroy clerk-treasuret nor the candidates for the two
seats on Pomeroy-Village Council
had opposition .' Brenda Morris (R),
incumbent clerk-treasurer, received

525 votes,.while the council candidates, John W. Blaettnar · (R)
received 348 votes, and Scott Oillon (R) 471 votes.
· In Syracuse, James E. Pape, a
council member in his first term,
was elected mayor by a vote oC 227
to 77 received by Minier V. Fryar,
Jr., the other candidate. Janice
Lawson, clerk-treasurer incumbent,
with no opposition , received 265
votes.
In the rnce for the two seats on
Syracuse Village Council. Bill
Roush with 215 votes and Dennis
R. Wolfe, incumbent, .with 175
votes were the winners. The other
candidates, Jeffery L. Maynard
received 51 votes, and David law- ·
son, ·v2. Incumbent Laurance
Ebersbach was elected to another
term on the Board of Public Affairs

for Syracuse Village. He received
249 votes.
Iri a close race, Ed Martin was
elected mayor of Rutland. He was
given 119 votes to the 106 received
by incumbent Mayor James M.
Fmk. Sandra K. Smith retained the
clerk-treasurer's position for Rutland Village, receiving 126 votes to
the Ill received by her challenger,
Judy A. Denney.
JoAnn Eads with 178 votes and
Victoria Lee Fink with 84 voles
had no opjJosition for the two seats
on Rutland Village Council.
Hoffman was elected for a ftfth
term as mayor of Middleport by a
vote of 695 to 177 received by
psby Marlin, (D). Brian K. Conde
(R) unopposed for clerk-trcasurct;,
received 588 votes. Elected to fill
the IWO scats on Council were.

·'

incumbents, James Clatworthy (R) .
with 557 votes, and William G.
Walters (R) wit~ 397 votes. The
other candidate was Paul Clark (I)
who received 258 votes.
Thomas Anderson (R), also
unopposed, was re-e lected for
another term on the Board of Publie Affairs for Middlepon Village
with a vote of 579.
.
In Racine there were no con- ,, '
tests. Carolyn L. Powell received, .
199 votes in her bid for clcrk-trcasurer. Julian Scott Hill with 213
votes and Henry W. Bentz with
138 votes will fill the two scats on
Racine Village Council, and
incumbents, Ivan C. Powell with
180 votes, and Bobbie E. Roy with
185 votes were re-elected to the
Board or Public Affairs for Racine
r llllge.

Meigs voteryeje~t Carleton levy again

BRUCE " J,
REED,
Pomeroy :Village Council
member for the past 10 years,
was elected mayor of Pomeroy
in'Tuesday's general election.

Jones elected new
Kentucky goyernor

I

.

Pick 4: 3189 .

Cards: 3-H, 8-C,

•

JAMES E. PAPE, who
has serve'd on Syracuse Village
Council for the past three
years, was elected mayor.

UlftlllllWIU/1 IIIII

•

PageS

. Pick 3:582

Jackson family feud

"

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The ~ajor
picks Georgi~
over Floriaa:~- '

mr

'•

Maybe not as far as you think.Accorrling to a recent survey, the average American, at age 55, has saved
up·about $60,000 to use for retirement
That will !P pretty fust in today's dollars. And a
whole lot faster in romonuwS.
What does that rriean for you? Start planning

Ohio ~ottery

'

·:!'fu

-Na·me-s-in-the newsLOS ANGELES (AP) - Kitty
Kelley's publish~ is off the hook,
but the libel lawsuit by Frank Sinatra's lawyer is still on.
U.S. District Judge Stephen
Wilson said Monday that Simon &amp;
Schuster isn't responsible for the
accuracy of Ms. Kelley's book,
"Nancy Reagim: The Unauthorize!l
Biography." But Wilson refused to
dismiss the lawsuiL
The book suggests Sinatra and
Mrs. Reagan had an affair while
she was first lady.
Sinatra lawyer Milton Rudin
sued Ms. Kelley after ~he thanked
him in the foreword along ,with 611
other people. Rudin said he refused
to talk to the author and that her
thank-you implied he had spilled
the beans about Sinatra.
Ms. Kelley's lawyer, Ronald L.
Olson, argued that the book is
about a political figure 1\lld is protecled by the First ArnendmenL

'

ByWALTERR.MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
Sen. Harris Wofford scored a
Democratic upset in a Pennsylvania
race that rehearsed White House
campaign issues, while Republican
businessman Kirk For'dice ousted
Gov. Ray Mabus in Mississippi, in
odd-year elections that raised storm
warnings for incumbents, now and
in 1992.
Democrat Brereton Jones was
elected governor of Kentucky, easily .defeating a veteran GOP congressman caught up in the House
check-bouncing episode.
Jones, a native of Pt. Pleasant,
W. Va., and the-lieutenant gover·
nor, gained 65 perteiu of the vote
to 35 percent for Rep. Carry Hopkins, a seven-1enn GOP congressman. Hopkins had been making
campaign headway with questions
about Jones' personal finances
when he had to admit that he'd
- bounced 32 checks at the House
bahk.
In New Jersey, voters angered
by hefty tax hikes ended Democrnt·
. ic control of their legislature and
elected Republican majorities in
both Senate and Assembly, a
turnaround so total that the GOP
will have majority margins wide
enough to override vetoes.
While voters rejected some of
the biggest names on the ballots in
the scattered elections of 1991, in

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
One county-wide levy was
passed while a second was defeated
b.y the 7,440 voters (54.63 percent
of the the 13 ;619. re~istered) who
turned out to vote m Tuesday's
general election.
Voters approved a-renewal of
the one-half mill levy for five years
for the Meigs Councy Tuberculosis
Clinic by a vote of 4,311 10 2,790.
That levy will generate $92,600 a
year for operation of the tuberculosis office in the Meigs County Multipurpose Building on Mulberry
Heights in Pomeroy.
FQr the fifth time in the past
two years, Meigs County voters
turned down a levy 'for additional

operating funds for Carle ton
SchooVMeigs Industries. The levy
was defea,ted by a vote of 3,680 10
3,353.
Passage of the levy would have
put another $211,470 a year into
the ~eneral operating funds for lhe
program admmistered by the Meigs
County Board of Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities.
' ·
Currently the school and the
adult workshop receive $275,686 a
year in local tax dollars through a
one and one-half mill continuing .
levy which is already in effecL The
remainder of the $1.1 million oper·
ating bud!let comes from other
sources, primarily stale taxes.
Of the other levies on Tuesday's

Washington state they took the
advice of ,Speaker of the House
Thomas S. Foley and voted against
a term limit measure that would
have been tl\e nation's toughest.
'Foley went home to campaign
intensively against the measure that
,would have forced hi!ll a~d the
other seven Washington House
members to retire in 1994. He said ·
it was an uriconstitutional affront to
the voters.
With 56 percent counted early
today, the vote was against term
limits, 53 percent to 47 percent.
None of tuesday's signals was
more striking than the one-sided
victory Wofford won over Conner
Attorney General Dick Thornburgh, converting an appointed
Senate seat into a three-year term
as the successor 10 Republican Sen.
John Heinz, killed in an airplane
crash.
Thornburgh, twice elected governor or Pennsylvania, had been the
pollsters' favorile by as much as 44
percenlage points. Wofford wasn't
even the Democrnts' favorite at the
outset; he was named to the seat six
months ago after other prospects,
thought to have a better chance of ·
holding the seat in the special election, declined.
Wofford turned it around with a
HAPPY WINNER ·Democrat Brereton Jones hugs his moth·
camJ?3i~ in which he pressed ecoer Nedra in his hotel room arter winning the Kentucky race for.
nomtc tssues, urged national health
governor Tuesday night in LqU:Isville. Jones beat Republican
Continued on page 3
Larry Hopkins convincingly. (AP)

$10,000 violin·among items reported missing
Deputies of the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department are investi·
gMing several incidents that
occurred recently.
Ann Barrett, Hutton Hill Road,
Rutland, reponed yesterday that a·
1776 violin valued at $10,000, is
missing from her residence. She
reported she first notice the instru·menl was missing in August.
Wayne Roseberry, Willow
Creek Road, Pomeroy, reponed to
the department that on Sunday
evening someone had entered his
garage and took three lawn mowers. An investigation is continuing.
The department was notified
Monday morning lhat windows at
the Letart. Falls Elementary School
had been broken out over the week-

••

end. 1t was repOrted iwo windows
in the girls' restroom and one
kitchen window were broken.
Sheriff James M.' Soulsby
reports mailboxes were damaged
on Long Hollow Road, Smith
Road, Limberger Ridge Road, and
Roule 681 near Rye Road, over the
weekend.
.Three juveniles will be charged
with damaging twO boxes on Route
681. According to the repon, they
admitted doing this damage but
were not in the area of the other

damage.

.

. These same three individuals
will be charged l"ith crilninal dam·
agin$ as a result of the Saturday
cvenmg damage to a truck owned
by Wes Arbaush that was parked at

Eastern High ~cnooL According 10
the report, the subjects spotted the
vehicle a1 the lot a~d were only
going to soap windows and let atr
out of the tires but a companion
jumped on the hood and tore off a
mirror. Meigs County Juvenile
Officer Carl Hysell is accredited
with getting confessions on this
incident.
•
On Friday evening the depart·
ment was notified that a 1985
Cheveue owned by Dan Lewis,
Rou1e I, Langsville, had the headlights knocked out of the veh icle
while parked at Meigs High
School. A Pomeroy area youth will
be charged in Meigs County Juve·
nile· Coun with the damage to Ibis
vehicle. ·

· Charge.i are being ftled'ln Meigs
County Juvenile Court against a
17-year old Reedsville youth. T~e
youlh is charged with slll!hing tires
on a ear owned by Sally Brown of
Reedsville on Oct. 28. The juvenile
gave an admission to· Investigator
Robcn Bcefle. Mrs. Brown reponcd that al four tires had been
slashed. The juvenile and witnesses
have only implicated th~ulh as
slashing one tire. Investigalicin wilt
continue on this incident.
Angela S. Fisher, The Plains
. was arrested Sunday by Athens
County on a Meiss County Wrurnnt charging passmg a ·bad•check.
Bond was posted for her and she
was released from custody. She is
to appear in Meigs County Court.

ballot in various subdivisions of the
county, all of the renewals passed,
but two for additional monies
failed.
Middleport Village voted to
renew three mills for five y~ ror
current expepses by ~ vote of 436
to 359; Pomeroy village, two mills
for five .years for fire protection by
a vote of 531 to 187: Racine Village, two mills for five years, by a
vote of 190 to 95; Pomeroy Village, I mill for five years for cur·
rent expenses; 367 10 342; and Rut·
land Village, two mills for five
years for current expenses, 136 to
98.
Rutland Township also

approved a renewal of one mill for
five years for fire protection by a
vole of 387 to 196.
Levies for an additional tax
which got the approval of voters
included a Lebonan Township
cemetery levy, one mill for five
years by a vole of 190 to 164; and
Scipio Township, one-half mill for
one year, for fire protection by a
vole of 204 to 194.
.
Defeated by the voters were two
other levies for additional taxesthe Olive Township ecme1ery levy
one 'mill for five years, by a VOte or
24510 219, and Rutland Village for
current expenses, two mills for five
years, by i vole of 124 to 96.

PHILLIS
.
··Dr. William L. Phillis, Assistant
Stale Superintendent
Instruction, was presented a plaque
for his work toward obtaining two grants for the Meigs County
School system and University of Rio Grande at a Tuesday reception at Meigs High School. Southern Local Superintendent Bob
Ord, right, made the presentation, stating thai Phillis "has always
championed ·the cause of public education". Phillis spoke brieny to ·
educators present, stressing lhe importance of "equity and adeqtrncy" in funding in Ohio schools.
.

Fred MacMurray of 'My
Three Sons' dies at 83

By JOHN HORN
AP Entertainment Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Fred
MacMurray, who dispensed falherly wisdom between puffs of his
pipe on Jclcvision' s " My Three
Sons" and played lovable kooks in
a string of Dis'ney movies, has died
at 83.
MacMurray died of pneumonia
Tuesday at St. John's Hospital and
Health Ccn1er in Santa Monica, a
day after being admitted for cancer
trcaunent.
Although light comedy was his
strength, MacMurray played almost
any film role with success, including Western hero, high-society figure and double-dealers of various
stripes. .·
MacMurrray played against type
in 1944 when he starred opposite
Barbara Stanwyek as a crooked
insurance salesman recruited for
murder in Billy Wilder's moody
"Double Indemnicy," ...
·

He worked with Wilder again in
1960, ~laying a philanderering husband tn "The Apartment. " In
"The Caine Mutiny" of 1954, he
played a deceitful Navy lieutenant.
Wilder joked about the character
switch , saying MacMurrny " gives
people the feeling that he's kind to
dogs, children, mothers and widows.''
The good-guy i.magc served
MacMurray well in "My Three
Soils," in which he played widower father Steve Douglas.
The show ran from 1960 to
1972, second only 10 "Ozzie and
Harriet" as network TV's longestrunning situation comedy. It still is
popular in reruns.
He also played good guys in
several Walt Disney films, inclt.KIing 1960's "The Absent·'Minded
Professor," in which he ponrayed
an inventor wbo created a lighterthan-air ~uhstancc called Oubber
Continued 01 Pill' 3

•'
I

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