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                  <text>Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohi_o

Tuesday, November 19,1991

Indiana school has strength in numbers -

CONTEST WINNERS • This group of stu·
dents from Pomeroy Elementary School were
recognized as winners or the school's anti-drug
poster contest at an awards assembly on Monday. Pictured, front row, 1-r, are Principal Deb·
bie Brennan, Heather lfYsell, C.D. Ellis, Jeremy
Drickles, Eric Stumbo, Kelly Canan, Jenny
Clark, Robbie Johnson, Chris Smith, Den Carroll, Nicole Runyan, Kris Jenkins, Barbara Saly-

ers, Brian Klein, and Des Jerfers, representing
Dank One, who assisted at the assembly. Second
row, l·r, are Clay Crow, Iravid Anderson, Wes·
ley Thoene, Ryan Pratt, Lauren Anderson,
Michelle Ramsburg, Andy Sanders, Wayne
Barnhart, Donnie Call, Sonya Powell, Kimberly
Lemley, Marianne Carsey, and Matthew
Williamson.

' .I

I

By JACQUI PODZIUS
Assoc:iated Press Writer
PLAINFIELD, Ind. (AP) - If
students at Plainfield Middle
School don't have anything 10 do
after sehool, it's not because they
didn't make the team. Or the band.
Or the cheerleading squad.
·
Ever since the school opened
three years ago, it's had a no-cut
policy for most sports and music
a~tivities. If you try out, you make
the team -no ifs, ands or cuts.
As a result, about half of·the
school's 800 pupils now participate
in one .of the sports teams, ~ band
or t!te choir, principal Jeay Golds·
berry said.
The only exceptions to the nocut policy are the volleyball and
basketball teams and· the select
choir. But there are intramural
teams for those who don't make the
two sports squads, and the select
choir is part of a 248-member gen- _
eratcnoir.
Cheering everyone on are the 71
girls who make up the cheerleading
squad. Boys are welcome, Golds·
berry said, but none bas signed up.
Similarly, no girls have joined the

football team, although they're eligible.
.
Actually, the cheerleading team
is not one squad, but eight. They
rotate every five weeks between
being pompon girls, cheering on
the team's sidelines and in a cheer·
mg box.
The sc ool's other activities
also have highparticipation rates.
The band has 140 musicians.
The football team has 41 players on
the seventh grade team and 29 on
the eighth grade team. The cross
country team had 47 runners this
season; the swim team, 64.
Goldsberry said the philosophy
behind the no-cut policy is more
than just a desire to shock Plainfield's opponents.
"There are so many schools t)lat
approach sports as a business,''
Goldsberry said. "These students
have needs that need to be met
before we can pressure them with
competition and the need 10 win."
The students have responded
"marvelously" to the program, he
said, even though there is often a

_.Ohio Lottery

wide range of skill levels within a
-~am.
· · ·
.
"It can be bad sometimes," said
Cassidy King, a 14-year-old on the
football, basketball, swimming and
cross country teams. "Like in fOOlball, the coach bas everyone play in
every game for four downs,
. "That's OK, except that maybe
it's a close game with a tight score
and-only a few minutes and it's a
weak pl~r.er's tum to go in. But
even that s not so bad. It's about
having fun."
Leah Kottke; 14, who plays Qn
the volleyball and basketball teams,
said opening activities to all the
pupils "shows the school is trying
to make everyone feel special. We
feel like everyone matters."
.
Students with that altitude are
less likely to fail, education authorities say.
Pupils who are at risk of failing
are often excluded by their peers
from extracurricular actiVities, said
Dennis Jackson, the manager of the
Indiana Deparui.ent of Education's
program for at-risk students.

Merchants to
host parade

NAME: _______________________

The Pomeroy Merchants Asso·
ciation will host the Christmas
parade, "Home For the Holidays"
on Dec. 1 at 2 p.m . during open
house in Pomeroy. Line-up will
begin at 1 p.m. behind the old
Pomeroy Junior High School.
Deadline for entry is Nov. 25 and
further information on the parade
may be obtained by calling Vicki
Ferrell at Buttons and Bows, 9925177.

TYPE OF ENTRY:

Pick 3: 292
Pick 4:1022
Cards: 6-H, 8-C,
Q·D,}S
1.- tonlgtltllls-..

Page7

POSTER WINNERS • These sixth graders at
Pomeroy Elementary School were awarded cash
prizes for their outstanding posters in a recent
contest sponsored by the Meigs County Department of Litter Control. Pictured, 1-r are Sara

Craig (who also won district-wide), Danielle
Grueser, Shannon Jenkins, Amanda Ruscbel,
and Julie Hunnell. Also pictured is Debbie Drennan, Principal.

Board welcomes
newest member
The Woodland Centers, Inc.
Board of Trustees formally recogni zes Joe N. Clark as the newest
addition 10 the board.
A resident of Meigs County for
I I years, Clark is the president of
Clark's Jewelry Inc. located in
Pomeroy and Gallipolis. He is a
pas t President of th e Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce and a
member of the Pomeroy Masonic
Lodge and the Grand Lodge of
Ohio.
Clark resides in Pomeroy with
his wife, Susan. Since joining the
board he has been active on the
Finance and Planning Committees.
The Board of Trustees of Woodland Centers meets on the fourth
Wednesday of each month.

(

rain 80 per~enl.

Vol. 42, No. 140
Copyrighted 1991

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
ter to Williams Street.
Sentinel News Stall'
-ln announcing the grant award,
Middleport Village has been Mayor Fred Hoffman expressed
awarded a $150,000 grant from the appreciation to Sen. Jan Michael
Ohio Department of Development Long and Rep. Mary Abel for their
for _the Betsy Ross special housing support of the project.
.
project.
·. Je.an Trussell; Middleport's
The grant money will be used 10 housing speciali~t. said that she
purchase the old Betsy ·Ross prop- anticipates iln early 1992 demoli. erty on South Fifth Av~,JJ1Ze.Jhe _ tion and clearing of'the land, with
. existing building, and clear the land the first house to be under confor construction of housing.
struction in the spring. She said
The land to be purchased that before the funds can be
extends from Fifth 10 Sixth Streeis, released, however, an environmen·
and -from Manley's Recycling Cen- tal review must be completed.

ADDRESS:----------

PHONE:-------------------

Once the site has been cleared, a
street will be constructed down the
center, utilities will be installed,
and the land will be divided into
eight lots.
According to Mrs. Trussell,
eight three-bedroom modular
homes will be build on the lots by a
private developer. These homes
wiU be sold 10 low-income families
who qualify for a Farmers Home
Administration Rural Housing
Loan, she said, explaining that this
means the .applicants must have an
"on-going dependable income".

t

The project will place special
emphasis on single parent with
dependent children applicants, said
the housing specialist.
The Farmers Home Administra·
tion Rural Housing Loans offer
interest subsidy to low-income
home buyers 10 assist in lowering
housmg payments.
. _Mrs. TrusseD explainedJhat the
Betsy Ross special housing project
will allow the Village of Middleport 10 offer lot grants and down
payment assistance to FmHA
approved applicants. With an aver-

age cost to purchase of approximately $42,000 to $45,()00 per
home, approximately $312,000 in
FmHA Rural Housing Loan funds
will .be a available for funding the
purchases.
She said that the loans will be
for 33 years and that 20 percent of
the approved applicant's gross
income must be applied 10 the loan
•payment. Incomes wiU be re-evalu· ated eaeh year with the amount of
the interest subsidy decreasing as
the income of the home purchaser
increases.

Once the lots have been developed, public notice will be-given so
that restdents may make applica•
tion. Those applying can come
from any pan of the county, Mrs.
Trussell said.
She anticipates that she will
begin taking applications from
interested home buyers who want
to. take adxan.tage of the.Jot grant,
down payment assistance and housing payment subsidy in the spring.
All applications will be processed
through Mrs . Trussell at Middleport ViUage Hall.

Schaad returning to.Marietta

Entries must be submitted to Vicki Ferrell,
parade chairman, at Buttons and Bows, 100 East
Main, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, by Nov. 25;

Meigs County's Economic Middleport, also served for. a time
Development Director, Elizabeth as a Community Development SpeA. Schaad, will be pulling up ciali.st for t~e City of Marietta.
stakes and moving back to Mariet- · Schaad's new office will also be
ta, where she will serve as Gover- located in Marietta.
nor George V. Voinovich's
"Schaad's strong economic
. Regional Economic Development development background and her
Representative for Region II.
extensive knowledge of the region
Schaad will be responsible for will be an asset in her new posi·
facilitating economic growth in tion," Voinovich said. "I'm looking
Athens, Hocking, Meigs, Monroe, forward to working directly with
Morgan, Noble, Perry and Wash- her to make sure that the economic
ingtoncounties.
·
development needs of Ohio's
She will leave her post with the Southeastern
Region
are
Meigs County Chamber of Com- addressed."
merce in early ·December, at a date
"The development department
10 be decided with the chamber's will utilize the regional representaBoand of Directors later this week. tives in a capacity similar to a 'corGovernor Voinovich stated that porate sales force' located near
Schaad's work in Meigs County their customer base," State Devel-will help in her new position.
opment Director Ronald E. Jake"As Executive Director and
'd "lllorki dir 11 'th
.. Eco_i16!ii!C"Deorelopment Director prospective
way w · ....,
. n~ and
ec units
Y waof
compames
of the Meip County .Chamber of govc:mmen~ die regional represenCommerce, Schaad has initiated a . tative will complement our teehnifull range of economic develop· cal assistance team working in
ment activity in the area, requiring Columbus. This process will proextensive community involvement vide immediate access 10 developand leadership," Voinovich said. ment staff to held expedite local
"Her many accomplishments in this . development project!."
program have included developing
The goal of the offices is to
programs of priorities for· short- boost economic development
and-long-range development and throughoUI the state while strengthindustrial site development"
ening public·a11d private partnerSchaad, who currently resides in

ships with the bu5iiiess community.
Regional representatives will help
to marshall state resources to
ensure that.local economic development needs are met.
The Development Department
has created 12 regional offices that
will serve multi-county areas. Each
office will be managed by a representative who is familiar with the
areas that they will serve. The
office will provide outreach assistance to local units of government,
business leader~, elected officials,
chambers of commerce and economic development organizations.
Schaa~·'c ame to Meigs County
from Marietta, after she was hired
by the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce in mid-January of this
year. Schaad's Meigs County
appointment came after an extensive search for 'the chamber's frrst
executive director/economic development director.
While Schaad antiCipates leaving the chamber position in early
December, she reported that she
will probably maintain her Meigs
County residence through the new

year.

.

.

TO BE RAZED • Tills old Betsy Rna buDd·
ing on SOuth Fill!~ SL wblcb bas beeD liD eyesore
in the community for many yean will be razed
in early 1992 and tbe land developed into bous-

ing loti. A crut ol $150,000 bas .been aqrdfd
to tbe ViUate of Middleport by tile Ohio Department or Developmebt for tbe housing project.

Fire ~estroys O~i9 Pallet Co., building

Three local fire dep~rtments
Schaad also anticipates that the
chamber will begin searching for responded to the scene of a fullyinvolved structure fife at the Ohto
her replacement immediately.
Pallet Company on Rock Springs
Road near Pomeroy eatly Wednesday morning.
Two pallet manufacturing buildings were destroyed in the blaze,
which was repo_rted ;~t 1:30 thas
morning. Additionally, a forklift,
truck tools, equipment, and an
undisClosed amount of patle~ ma_tc-

rial were also lost in the fm:. The
company's sawmill was saved.
Ohio Pallet Company is owned
by John Cornett, who was unavailable for commept at press time.
A company spokesperson did
state that the plant was not operat·
ing this morning, and t!'at only a
fracuon of the company s employees were on the job site.
In addition to the three trucks,
squad and 18 firemen from

Pomeroy Fire Depanment, Middleport department sent two trucks
and eight men and Cbester depanment sent three trucks and 12 men.
'· The departments left the scene at
approximately 6:30 f·m this moming.
{\ccording t~ Pomeroy Police
Chaef Danny Zarkle, the cause of
the fire is not known, and the
amount of ·damage has not been
released.

Steelworkers rally outside
RAC·chairman's office

RIDE WITH SANTA • Tbe traditional Santa train rides of tbe
Hocking Valley Scenic Ra:ilwaf in Nelsonville will be beld three
weekends before Christmas begmning Nov. 30-Dec.l.

. , )'jEW_A.ODITION ·Joe_N. Clark, lert, _was recently \\'el~_om~
as a new member by lhe WoodlancfCenters, Inc., Board q_f'
Trustees. Pictured with him is wife, Susan.
'II
LEVELED BY BLAZE ·A rire destroyed
tbe Ohio Pallett Co., on Rock Springs Road
north o.r Pomeroy early Wednesday. Tbe
Pomeroy Fire Depal'tmeat received tbe call

YOUR
'

around i:30 a.m. Tbe Middleport Fire Depart·
ment and Chester Fire Department assisted.
Firemen were on the scene unti16:30 a.m.

wHeELI"!G, W.Va. (AP) Steelworkers mvolved m a yearlong labor dispute at a Jackson
C~unty aluminum plant held a
boJS~erous ~ally m O~ao County,
seeking !hell' ,former JObs and the
end.ofaJudge sgagorder.
"¥ore than 1,700 members of the
Umted Steelworker~ umon have
been out of work sm~e Nov. 1,
1990, when the uniOn _s. contract
will! Ravenswood Alum mum Corp.
exp11ed.
The company replaced the
workers wath non-umon
help,
.

clatmmg the umon workers_were
on strike. The umon clrums 11 was
locked out of the plant.
About 400 St~elw,?rkers and
supporters chanung ~ey,. hey,
·what d~,you say? The umon s here
to stay, turned o~t for the dow~town demonstration Tuesday m
front of the Boury_Center, where
Ravenswo?d Chaarman Emmett
Boyle has hiS headquarters.
The Steelworkers then marched
to the steps of the Ohao County
Cour~o~se to protes~ a gag _order
by CltCutt Judge Callie TsapiS that

prohibits them from distributing
information contained in Boyle's
divorce documents
· Following chains of "Lift the
gag order," Joe Eulinc, a repreientative from the AFL-C!O, _spoke on
behalf of Steelworkers District
Director Jim Bowen. who stood
nearby with a gag in his mouth.
"Judge Tsapis-would rather put
a bullet through the First Amendment than disclose the contents of
that dcicument," Euline said. "We
are not interested in any personal
Cont'n
ed on page 3
··
1 u

.--------:-----._,.Local briefs-----------, Three Meigs races due·
Deem to instruct concert band
fior automati"c •eco unt
.. ,

LAYAWAr FOR CHRISTMAS
FREE CHRISTMAS GIFT WRAPPING
OPEN EVERY FRIDAY Tll8:00 P.M.

Officers elected
Officers were elected at the
recent meeting of the Racine Fire .
Department Ladies Auxiliary.
Officers are Tina Neigler, presi·
dent: Alana Buller, vice presadent:
I.,eanne Fisher, secretary and trea·
surer: and Mary Byer, reporter.
There will be no December
meeting due t the firemen and aux. lliary Christmas pany,

A Multlmedlo Inc. Newapoper

Middleport receives $1~0,000 grant ·for housing p_roject

Alfred area news

The Alfred United Methodi st.
Church.cclcbratcd Thanksgiving on
Sunday with regular services in the
.moming and a. basket dinner at
noon. Rev. Sharon Hausman asked
the blessing before lhe meal.
Doris and Lloyd Dillinge r and
Eloi se and Russe ll Archer fur nished the turkeys. ·
Others present were Sarah Cald•
well, Mallhew Boyles, Marl ene
Donovan, Ni na Robin son, Thelma
and Clarence Henderson, Phili p
and Sharon Boyles, Susan Pullins.
Ric ha rd, Fl orence and Tim
Spencer, Osie Follord, Shelia, Dan,
Kin. Daniclle and Tiffany Spencer,
Kathy, Stacie and Alan Watson,
Pam, Aaron and Sarah Yos t,
Wilma and Lisa Henderson, Mari·
lyn Robin so n, Melvin Tracy ,
Ger trude Robin son and Nellie
Parker, all local; Jackie, Eric, Erin
and Jody Brooks, New Marshfield;
•. Clarcncc .and lris.W.ar.ncr, .Rick,
Cindy, Cassie and Richie Dillinger,
all of Athens; Myrtle Flanders,
Gu ysville; Ka thy, Nicole and Kyle
Essman, The Plains.
Weekend visitors of Marguerite
and Delbert Stearns were their
daughter and family, La uro, Daniel
and Leah Cohen. Akron .

· 2 S.Ctlone, 14 Pogeo ~5 cento

Pomer(!v·Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, November 20, 1991
•

Holiday train
travels along
scenic valley
The traditional Santa Claus train
rides on the Hocking Valley Scenic
Railway at Nelsonville will begin
on Nov. 30 and continue weekends
through Dec. 15.
Special train will feature oldtime passenger cars that glow with
the holiday spirit pulled by a
restored 1916 steam locomotive.
Trains depan frotn the tum-of-thecentury railway depot in Nelsonville which is already extensive:
ly decorated for the holiday season.
During the train ride, passengers
are kept warm and will be treated
· 10 a special narration of Chrisunas
poems, stories and music. There
wiU be a treat for the children and a
visit from Santa.
Stops will be made at Robbins
Crossing, a mid-1800 settler village
that features traditional candle dipping and tree decorating with
strings of popcorn and cranberries.
The train will depart from the
station on weekends at 10 a.m. 12
noon, and 2 p.m. on Nov. 30 and
Dec. I, Dec. 7 and 8, and Dec. 14
and 15.
.
The train rides are operated by a
non-profit, all· volunteer organization.
Each ride is limited and reservations should be made early by call·
ing 513-335-0882, between 10 a.m.
and 4:30p.m. or writing the Hocking Valley Scenic Railway, Santa
Claus Trains, P. 0. Box 427, Nelsonville, Ohio 45764.

.

Tbunday, blgh In 50s.. Cbara&lt;e or ·

.,

107 MILL STREET

MIDDLEPOII'

No, we aren't going to suggest hiding
the cOO:kl:xx:k and putting the credit cards Name
urd:r bckaiXi key. &amp;.tt we will recommn:l
The Bank One Budget Guide. It gives you Address
aclose look at where your~ !!/)eS each rc"-ity;r,cc;;;ou;;;m:;;-y.c.s,::::
at,:-:,z'l"p : - - - - - - - - - - - - tnonth. And shows you ways to save and
Please send me the follcrwing Bank One Guides:
invest mpre of whatyou earn. Calll-800- .
Budget 0 Retirement 0
'166-1515 to order your copy. Or use this
Credit 0 College o

roupon. TheGuideisfreefortheasking.
Just what you'd expect from bankers who
dO whatever it takes.
CI I99l BANCON ECORPORAl JON

··-\

UJI,nt~ tohis' .
•••/.ii~"O;, FDIC

.

•

'I

Dent trial underway.

B4NK.-:'ovE

---------------------------------Mail---------coupon to Bank One
Guides.
P0. Box 195l,Mirion, OH
~JlOl-1953

· Several personnel mauers were handled at a recent meeting of ,
the Southern Local Board of Education held at Southern High
School.
David ~ was hired as the Concert band instructor on a volunteer basis, Henry Lewis was added 10 the substitute teacher tist, and
Kimberly Riffle, Tommy Larie, and Roger Lee Jones were added 10
. ·- ·• {he.cultodian.substitute list. .The bOard approvell.-the ..disability
. retirement of Roberta Maidens, music teacher.
Approval was also granted to Melvin Cremeans to transport his
son, Shawn, to the home of Jennings Beegle for special instruction.
Chapter II funds in the amount of$7,955 were noted.
A resolution was adopted to join the Regicnal CoUDCil of Government Coalition of Rural Appalachian Schools, an organization
which, according to Hill, seeb equity in school fundin~.
The vision service plan was updated and J. W. Didion Insurance
was given the 1992 contract.
Attending wac Denny Evans, president, Scott Wolfe, vice-president; Sue GlliCser, Joseph Thoren, Gary Willford, members. SupL
Bob Ord, Dennie HiD, I!QSurer, and Thomas C. Roseberry, 1992
member-elect to the board.

.,

f

resented by Pomeroy Attorney John R. Lentes, while Meigs County
Assistant Prosecuting Attorney Linda R. Warner represents the
state.

Williams case declared mistrial
A mistrial was declared on Tuesday in the case of Mark_
Williams during jury selection in Meigs County Court.
Williams is accused of assaulting Ron Ash in Pomeroy .on
.. •August 23.· ·· · ,..
·
.· ·
··
·. · · · · ·
According to Williams' attorney, .Charles H. Kmght, Judge
Patrick H. O'Brien declared a mistrial in the case following an
apparently inappropriate remark made by a prospective juror.
A new trial in the misdemeanor case has been set for December
19.

Man pleads to reduced charge
A Columbus man accused of auempted murder pled to a reduced
charge late Tuesday.
William E. Morehouse, 39, was indicted by.' the Mei~s County
Grand Jury and chtuged with the attempted murder of Dtan!l Crib,
also of Columbus, in an incident near Reedsville on July 1.
Morehouse appeared without counsel' before Judge Fred W.
Crow Ill on Tuesday afternoon. ·
Af.ll:l a plea bargain agreement was reached between Morehouse
and Prosecuting Attorney Steven L. Story, Morehouse pled to a
reduced charge of felonious assaul~ an· aggravated second-degree
felony.
Considering a· firearms specification within the-indictment
Continued on page 3

1 •

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stall'
Three races in the Nov. 5 gener- ·
al election are scheduled for automatic recount liS .the.. result oLthe
official count bf the Meigs County
Board of Elections Tuesday after-

noon.

During yesterday's session 40
additional votes were added to earlier totals by virtue of House Bill
237. That bill allows walt-in votes
at the Board of Elections Office on
· Election Day for those who moved
prior ·to Oct. 7, but failed to change
their addresses with the Board of
Elections. Those votes are not
added to the precinct totals,llCCOfd.
ing to law, until the officlal count.
The rerount has been scheduled
. for 1p.m. on Wednesday, Nov. 27.
, According tq Jane Fryinyer,
director of the local Board of
Directors, the state mandates that
when the vote totals have a difference of less thin one-half of one
percent of the total votes cast in the
mvolved ~ct or precincts, they

are automatically scheduled for
recount.
One precinct must be counted
by hand and then run through the
computer. If that !lllllual count and
the C.O!IIPU~r. C,QY!I! maJCh~Oll. the
one precinct, then all remaining
precincts involved in the qu~tion­
able race can be computer counted,
the director e~plained.
The races to undergo the auto·
matic recount are:
Chester Township trustee' where
Victor A. Bahr ftJ;Ci'/Cd 336 votes
and G. Alfred Wolfe, 333 votes:
· Scipio Township Clerk where
BettY J. Bishop ftJ;Cived 193 votes,
and Connie K. Chapman, 194; and
Eastern Local School District
Board of Education where there
was an 11 Vote difference betwCCil
Mike Martin with 70S VOtes and 1.
0. McCoy with 696. S. Ray Kai-r
with 8S4 votes and Ron Eastman
with 840 votes were dcclaled willncn of two of the tine open SQII
on the Board. Winner of the third
seal will be determiiled in lhe 11110matic: ffJCOU'!i·
.

�\

Wednesday, No~mber 20, 1991

'

Commentary
The. Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street '
Pomeroy, Ohio
: DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIG9-MASON AREA

ef'1.JLTMEDIA, INC.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

AMEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association and
the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. Allleuers are subject to trliting and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Long legacy of local funding
of public education under attack
By TAMARA HENRY
AP Education Writer
: WASHINGTON (AP) - The lnlditional method of financing public
1\ducation through local property taxes is being challenged in courtrooms
and state legislatures because of the disparity it produces in dollars and
opponunities for pupils.
- .
' "We can't help kids dream through money, but we can help kids
dream through experiences - and money burs tha~" sars George Towery, principal of Cameron Elementary Schoo! mAiexandria, Va,
.
• Americans lnlditionally have taken pnde m local contrOl and financmg
of public schools. But heavy reliance on local propeny taxes produces fis~al inequities because the tax base is not disaibuted·equally across school
di.s!riclli.
Lawsuits are pending i~ more than 20 states charging fundumental
unfairness in educational opportunity because of economic disparity,
according 10 the Education Commission of the States.
Over the past 2 1/2 years, courlli in Kentucky, Montana, Texas and
New Jersey have declared the stale educational systems unconstitutional
and ordered that spending between affluent and poor districts be equalized.
The battle continues in some of those states.
New Jersey stiU is trying to come up with ways to equalize illi system.
In Montana, a group of poorer school disaiclli has launched a new challen~e to the revamPed financing system.
'Each state is unique, but the major thing is there is a tremendous difference in the quality of education in SOf!le disaiclli relati v~. to oth~r districlli,' ' says Richard G. S,almon, a pubhc finance spectahst at Vtrgmta
Tech. " Kids are dramaucally affected because of where they may
reside."
·
Pro~ny-poor districlli usually have low expenditures per pupil even
with htgh taX rates, while districts with.affluent residenlli and h1gh property values have high expenditures per pupil - even with lower school tax
rates.
'
New Jersey's affluent Princeton area last year raised $8,346 per student, using a tax rate of 67 cents per $100 of asse~sed ~roperty value.
Poorer Camden raised $4,186 per student but taxed tiS restdents at $1.62
per $100.
·
,.
.
The result is dramatic. Between the two New Jersey ctues, the difference in resources amounlli to about $104,000 per classroom of 25 . ~tu­
denlli. Poorer areas have less money for salaries, books, instruction and
oiher resources.
.
· Other examples aboun~.
.
.
.
- In lllinois, $2,100 IS spent per studentm the most tmpovenshed
school district while the wealthiest spends more than $12,000. The state
average per pupil is $4,500.
-The average per-pupil expenditure in Maryland was $5,054 during
1989-90. Yet, Caroline County spent $4,049 per pupil, while Moqtgomery, the state's wealthiest county, spent $6,629.
,
- In Ohio, there is a $2,000 per-pupil difference between the highest
and lowest spending disaiclli.
-Studies show the 100 poorest school districlli in Texas spent about
$3,000 per pupil compared with the $7,QOO.per-pupil expenditure in.the
I00 wealthiest districts.
• Opponents want to change the way schools are financed to eliminate
the geographic inequities. Some suggest shifting away from local propeny
taxes to broader sources such as state income taxes, or a more equal state
redistribution of local property taxes.
The Kentucky legislature provided for new sales and business taxes to
generate $1.3 billion over two years. The new law also calls for wealthier
sehool systems to receive a decreasing share of state money while poorer
systems receive more aid.
The Texas Supreme Court twice unanimously struck down as uncons.titutional the $14 billion-a-year-school finance system. Just as a diStri~ t
c9un judge ruled in Aprilthat .theLegi~lature's school finan~e plan ts
constitutional, the wealthier dtstriCts ftlcd a challenge, clatmmg the
'-'·Robin Hood" school finance law contained an unconstitutional state

· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·
Wednesday, November 20, 1991'.

Pork barrel leads to pricey de.fense stockpile'
WASHINGWN ;_ The national defense stockpile includes -a
cache of jewel beadngs that would
last 84 years in peace time. Most of
. them will never be used. Many are
already obsolete and a substantial
portion of the stockpile cost the
government more than it should
have.
·
Yet the only plant in the United
States that makes jewel bearings
keeps churning them out, and the
Pentagon keeps buying them ,
··despite a recommendation from
Defense Department auditors to
shut down the plant and save $1.4
million a year.
This is " buy American" gone
awry. One of the goals of the
defense stockpile is to have enough
domestic sources of arms and
'equipment to wage a war without
having to buy from foreign sources.
That sometimes means the Pentagon props up costly manufacturing plants and stoGkpiles material
. that will be out of dule before it can
ever be used.
Since 1952, the William Langer
Jewel Bearing Plant in RoDa, N.D.,
has served illi country by producing
bearings for use in everything from
watches to gyr6scopes. The prices-

were from fiwe to 25 times higher
· than foreign· suppliers charged for
the same bearings bought in l~e
Ioili, according to a Pentagon audtt.
But that was the price the Pen~gon
figured it had to pay for remammg
self-sufficient in a crisis.
Last year, auditors for the
Defense Department inspector general found out that Langer wasn't
all American. Since its inception,
the plant has had to rely on foreign
sources for some of illi raw materials, c;lefeating the purpose of having
a completely domestic source of
jewel bearings.
Add to that the fact thai jewel
bearings are giving way to more
modem digital systems, and there
is a strong case to end the Pentagon's long relationship with
Langer.
· That could put 140 people,
many of them American Indians,
out of work, and the North Dakota
congressional delegation isn't
about to let that happen without a
fight. Langer is heavily dependent
on Uncle Sam as a custom(r. The .
plant has seen its sales to comm~r­
cial clienlli drop off, but has conhnued to make bearings at more or
less the·same rate to maintain the

By Jack Anderson ·
and Dale VanAtta .·

various Skills in the plant and feed
the government stockpile,just in
case.
,
The 1990 audit by the inspector tagon memo written in March by
general found that to cover the an assistant defense secretary dis··
costs of this overproduction, the puling all of the findings of the
plant sold its bearings for many audit .. In addition to any political
times the rate that foreign comp~­ pressure the Pentagoq might be
nies were charging for the same feeling, the military brass is flnnly
merchandise. Langer gives the Pen- sold on the concept of an emergen•
tagon a 25 percent discount, but cy stockpily that relies on domestic
that still doesn't beat for eign suppliers. The decision was to ~n(j
prices.
the· auditors back to the drawmg
The auditors said ·if the Pen- board for another time-consuming
tagon bought bearings in large lots study of Langer.
·
from foreign suppliers , it could
Today, nearly a year after the·
save $1.4 million annually. And first audit, the. plant continues to ·
more money could be saved if the overproduce jewel bearings that
Pentagon cut illi appetite for bear- cost more than they are worth. A
ings that it may never need. Langer plant manager refused to
According to the auditors, the gov- ialk to us about the issue. The new
ernment is grossly overstocked. Pentagon audit is due to be released
Some of the supplies ·w,ere used soon and is expected to be a rerun·
during the Persian Gulf War, but of the ftrst audit.
there is stiD no shonage.
CongressionaL investigators
The case for keeping Langer looking into the issue don't a!1yoafloat is,almost indefensible, but cate that the··plant be shut down.
not ·in North Dakota, where mem- altogether, but they agree that there.
bers of Congress have raised a need to be some cost-cutting
stink about the auditors'· recom- changes. But if the past is any
mendation. That stink reached the guide, the pork barrel wiD win out
Pentagon. Our associate Dean and Langer wiD continue to spit out
Boyd has obtained.an internal Pen- - jewel bearings that will never-be
used.
. MEDICAL-CARE CRISIS Aides to President Bush have
warned him that America faces a
health-care crisis he can no 'longer
ignore. It will take a federal solution to avoid a breakdown of the
system. The cost of medical care·
has soared beyond the ability of the·
poor to pay. Last year, the cost'
averaged out to $10,000 for a family of four. And that cost is doubling
every five years. Tha.t's three times
the rate of mflation.
MINI-EDITORIAL - President Bush says he is unruffled by
the polls that show his popularity is
in a nose dive. According to Bush,
he has no .need to worry because
the election is still one year off,
Mr. President, the people are panicked now. They don' t just emerge
every four years to express their
point of view and put you back in
office. You may have another year
to ooas~ but Americans don't Polls
are their way of telling you whaf
they're feeling between elections,
and right now they're reeling the
.need for a change. You can change
1hc course of the nation now; or
they can change presidents next
year.

Millions of people are on the move

There are large rna~ afoot in
the world, and there are small.
Among the latter are. the William
Kennedy Smith tnal. m Palm
Beach, Aa., and the dechne of networlc television. Among the former
are the movements of millions of
people across borders and through
regions in numbers unprecedented
in modern history. Ours has
become a world of emigrants and
immigrants, a. fact that is a statemen! both of Immense change and
chaotic difficultieS.
Because we are so often told
that the United States is a nation of
immigrants, the idea of massive
global migrations does not excite
most of us. At leas~ it does not stir
our passions theseduys, though viiulently anti-immigrant nativism has
asserted itself repeatedly in U.S.
. history. We have recently absorbed
a huge wave of immigrants, partieularly from Latin America and
Asia, with relatively little reaction.
But even as Cubans, Salvadorans,
Mexicans and Indochinese, among
r.~~~~makers recenUy approved a '$1.9 liillion increase in: 3id to many others, have arrived here in
sehools that will fully fund the state's latest fmance-reform plan.
their millions, other places have
absorbed even larger numbers of
foreigners. ·
,
All migration figures are i~precise, ~ince many governments lack
the means or will to conduct accurate counlli. But there is a general
consensus that there at least 100
million people currently living outside the countries of their birth.
Some place the estimate as high as
135 million, some as low as 75 million. All agree that the largest number, some 35 million people, are in

sub-Sahara Arrica, a rcgi~n filled 2010 than are alive now. Abo~t
with nations unable til' handle the 730 mtlhon of them wtll be add1problem adequa~ly.
tions to the labor force. The total
For com pan son! ~her~ a~e labor force m theFtrst World today
roughly 25 to 30 mil !ton tmmt- ts some.585 mtlhon . But economic
grants in the United States and growth ts flat to negauve m Afnca
Canada, 15 to 20 miUion iii West- and spotty in large swatches of
ern Europe, 15 to 20 million in Asia and the Middle East. Too
what is loosely referred to as Asia many people for !OQ few jobs, com(including the Middle East) and bined with easy access to t;~ nssome 4 to 5 million in Australia. portation, will have an inevita~ 1 e
Obviously, the impact is relatively result: m.illions of people clamorin~
higher m some of the other areas · for admmance to posstble JObs m
than it is in North America. For the iridustrialized counaies.
instance, 10 percent of this counNot everyone leaves for purely
try.'s population is foreign born, but economic reasons. Famine and war
the figure in Switzerland is 16 per (which usually accompany each
cent.
other) will propel millions in the
More to the poin~ .teehnological, future as they have propelled milpopulation and political trends lions in the. past. The Gulf War,
pomt to more rather than fewer which took place in a relatively
mass movements of people in the underpoP.ulated area, produced up
years ahead. The Soviet Union's to 10 million refugees. Nor does it
breakup is already a factor and will take much to imagine that China
become more of one as the process might experience a Soviet-type
plays itself out. (Because . of implosion, with many or illi bilhon;
changes within the Soviet Union, ·plus people seeking sanctuary elsemore Soviet Jews have· emigrated · where. The recentpictures of Albato Israel in the past two yearS than nians packed .like sardines aboard
in all past years.) The communica- listing freighters bound for .Italy tion s revolution has brought the and the same Albanians packed
oulliide world to even the mo~t dis- into temporary relocauon camp~
tant, primitive Third World ham - before being pushed ·out or Italylets, and what is seen and heard were markers of comm~ event~..
there irresistibly pulls the younger
Sornethmg approachmg pohucal
and more adventuresome to seek panic is already afoot in many
their fortunes in the glittering cities countries most arfected by the.
of the industrialjzed world.
recent migrato!)' tides. Most West
They are pushed as well as European nauons are rclauvcly
pulled. In a world of 5 billion peo- homogenous entities disinclined by
pie, it is currently projected that 1.5 history and inclination _to accept
to 2 billion more people will be liv- permanentl y large numbers of
ing in !be Third World in the year immigrants. Refugee am\ ''guest

Ho4'!ling Carter JJJ.

worker pohctes casually adopted .
in the past are ~~dergoing . ~ev.iew
and severe reVJSton. In Bntam' s
cro~n colony of lf?ng Kong, the
forcable return of Vtelllalllese boat ·
people has been resumed. At one
time or another, African nations
have resorted to brutal military
force to stem the flow of refugees
from adjacent countries. Only a·'
'few years .ago: there were se~ous :
proposals m thiS country to bwld a
fortified wall along the Mexican·
border.
·· ,.
.'
The truth is that no nation can or
will indermitely tolerate unregulat-·
ed mass immigration. It is a direct&gt;
assault on natjonal sovereignty and•
a threat to the well-being of each
nation's citizens.
Another truth is that the forces
contributing to the movement of ·
large numbers of people arc too
large to be dealt with ptccemeal.. .
Western Europe is groping.to.ward, ·
a unified approach. It ts an Impulse. ,
that should be t~ansf~rrcd to the.
wider forum of the Untted Nauons ·
and made a prio~ity issue of gl,oba!. .
concern. When 11 comes to m1gr~-..·
tioQ, it's a safe bet that the worstts
yet to come, for reasons too ,com- .
plex and powerful for any natton to ·
handle succcss[ully alone.
(C)1991
NEWSPAPER ;
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
·
Hodding Carter lll, former State :
Depanmcnt spokesman and award- ·
winning reporter, editor and publisher, is president or MainStrcct, a :
Washington, D.C.-based televtston :
production company.
:

Now is the time to squeeze China
:
William A. Rusher :
S~retary Baker's pilgrim~e to

•

•

~"~"c
"We didn't us6 to hallf this kind of weather
=

BEFORE we told the American military to get
out of the PIJIIIpplna. "
1,

.

. i

buckeL !aiwan, Hong Kong a.nd und~r various hum~-rights conPeking may not have achteved the relauvcly prosperous counhes venhons; but we buy tt anyway, to
·
much ~lse,_!lut 31 1\II!Sl it served to of m.!linland China's . S!JU~ coast ~~p the Chicoms in a good mood.. _
. .. .
·,
focus attention on ·lhe chief remain- can then be joined in a formidabl~ · Not tha.t their mood. is all that
ing relic of world communism; the economic union, producing good. They' resolutely reject the would undoubted! y move to keep :
grotes~uely misnamed "People's increasingly sophisticated manu- notion of giving the s lightest auton- the sea lanes to and from Taiwan :
Repubhc of China."
factored goods, while northern omy to the people of Tibet, whose open, but Britain (with illi eye ori ,
Richard Nixon left this oulliized China's wheat-based agricultural land they have occupied and whose Hong Kong) and perhafs other .
~(lby on America's·doorstep back economy concentrates on diversify- ·religion they have s.c~med and major trading .panners o Taiwan :
m the duys of the Cold War, when mg and catching up.
plundered. They posiUVely have might knuckle . under anyway, •
there was arguably some merit in
Meanwhile, what benefit do we filli at any suggesbon that Taiwan, doing heavy damage to the island's .
widening the alrea~y huge rift gain by holding hands with, these the . still - unco~quered island vibrant economy.
between Peking and Moscow. Now blood-soaked old tyrants? W1th the provmce of Chiang Kai-shck's · Perhaps even more serious, in ·
that Moscow has 'called it,quits, Cold War over, we probably get Republic of China, might decide to the long run, is the growing evi• :
however, the PRC is simply an more useful information about proclaim itself a sovereign nation dence that·the Commulist Chinese
embarra.ssing anachronism: a China from our intelligence-gather- (not that the government there has are selling nuclear know-how tQ
dinosaur left over from the Age of ing devi.ces in Russi~ !!tan we ,set any intention of doing so, especial- . such unstable and dangerous
Reptiles, waiting to join its ideo- on R~ssta from the suntlar dev1ces ly n?w when illi mainland rival is nations as North Korea and Iran.
As the 21st century approaohes, the ,
logical siblings on the ash-heap of we sun mamtam m Chma.
,
neanng its end).
. history.
• •
·As fl! bade, much of\,what httle
Indeed, it isn't beyond the realm proliferation of nuclear teclutology, '/
The best guess is that that happy Red Chana ~es to manufaoture of possibility that the communists. and with it the ability to consb'UCt
day will come in the next few for sale abroa~ ts the pr~uct of in a spasm of reactionary fury as nuclear weapons, is perhaps the "''
years, when Deng Xiaoping and the slave labor: pnso~ servmg sen- they sense their end approaching, deadliest threat remainin~ in
world !hal deserves, and migltt oih- :.
other swviving gerontoeralli of his ten~es for both pohbcal and .more may threaten Taiwan militarily erwise
hope for, a long m of rela·
depressingly long-lived ~e~eration ordil!ary cnmes. We are tec.hmcally not so much with an in.vasion as
tive
peace.
t
finally get around to ktckmg the ?I forb1dden even to buy thts stuff, with a blockade. ne Uruted States

a'

Weather

~-

...--Local briefs~-:.

Lottery numbers

South-Central Ohio
• .Guest speaker - . . rca copy sho.uld call -992-5472 or
Tonight, rain. Low in !hi: mid. S!llle SC!lator .Jan Micllael Long 992-6917. ·
·
·•
50s. Chance of rain near 100 perwtll speak at the D.A.V: Hli!J, 124
Daneuehedulecf
cent. Thursday, occasional rain.
liuttemut Avenue m Pomeroy, on
There will be a round and High in the upper 50s. Chance of
Monday at 5 p.m. He will give an square dance at the Rutland Ameri- · rain 80 percent
·"
· ··
~ on state an~ county veteran can Legion ·lfall 011 SIIIW'day from
Extended forecast:
fairs. The,pubhc IS welcome.
8 p.m. 10 midnight with music by . Friday tbroagh Sunday:
Hymn.s~g
.
.·
the Country Kin Band. Ray Fitch
Chance of rain each day. Snow
The HiDstde ~apust Church will . WiD be th~caller. ,
also possible north on Sunday .
have a·hymn smg on Friduy ar 7 ·
Highs 50-55 Friday and Saturday
p.m. featuring singefS from the · ~
_ , - .~ ·

f:!e£n!:~v~h%~~c~~

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport,
Ohio
I
.

· __Mei~s announcements. . Page-.2-The Dallr sentinel

..

·-·

Pick 3 Numbers
2-9-2
'(two, nine, two)
Pick 4 Numbers
1..()..2-2
(one, zero, two, two)
Cards ·.

·Contl.nued from paae 1
.
,
against him, MorehOuse could serve 11-18 years in prison. Funller, •
a parole violatian on a past criminal convi!;:tion could also result in
Morehouse seMng the remaitider of the sentence on, that count.
. The fir~s specifiCation carries with it a mant!atory three year
mcarcerabon. '
Judge Crow ordered a victim impact statement and sentencing
wiD take place in December.
·
.
.

6(six)of~
8 (eight) of Clu~

..

Q (queen) of Diamonds
' 3 (three) of Spades

EMS units answer six calls ·

Patrol probes Meig··.s wrecks
.

'

Si:x callS for assistance were answered by unilli of Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services on Tuesday and early on Wednesday.
Tuesday at.12:48 p.m., Racine unit weot to B!lfrlnger Ridge
Road for Lawrence Gleasoncamp. He was taken to SL Joseph Hilspita!. A! 2:20 p.m., Tuppers Plruns unit took John Brewer from
Reedsville to St Joseph. At 3:26 p.m., Pomeroy units went to State
Route 143 for ·a 111010r vehicle accident. Simon Jones and Brady
Gilbert were taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 3:46 p.ni., Tuppers Plains, Syracuse and Olive- Township
unilli went to State Route 681 East for an accident Susan Nutter
was taken 10 St. Joseph and Jolut Hetzer•was treated but not transported. At 11:25 p.m., Middlepon squad went to Bailey Run Road.
Charles Jacks was transported 10 Veterans.
Wednesday atl:33 p.m., Pomeroy, Chester and Middleport unilli
went to Rocksprings Rood at the .Ohio Pallet SawmiU for a struCture
fire.

.

.•

The Faith Full Gospel Chmch in
By. JIM .,.,,..,..MAN
abling. Damage to Gilben's 1990
A "eedsvil~ woman was •·eatLong Bottom will .have a hymn
· ,......,..,
·
"
u·
.
F
.
OVP News Starr
Ford Ranger ivas also listed as ed for injuries sustained in unresmg on riday ai 7 p.m. Pastor
"I:wo area men were treated fol- heavy and disabling.
. 1ated tWCHar accident on S.R. 681
Steve Reed inVItes the public.
lowing a two-vehicle. accident on
Jones was cited by the patrOl for in Olive Township Tuesday ·afterDaneetobebeld ·
.
SR 143 · s I' b
T
h'
failaretocootrol
' The TupF.s Plains VFW Post T~ ~ ury owns- 1P
noon. ,
...
·
No . .9053 will sponsor a dance Fri- ,
Y
'
According to a patrol report,
•
day from 8-11;30 p.m. featuring
Susan o. Nutter, 33, of Reedsville,
music by Rocky Mountain BlueAccording to a report·from the
·.
. ·
,
was ·eastbound on S.R. 681 and
''
grass,
.
· Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
stopped for an eastbound school
Country musle Dight .
. Highway Patrol, Simon Jones Jr.,
bus unloading children. Another
Country music night at the Lot- 60, of Pomeroy was southbound on
, .
eastbound vehicle, driven by John
'
aidge Community Center will be S.R. 143, slid off the right side of
V. Hetzer, 72, of Reedsville, failed
held Satutduy from 7 p.m. to mid- theroBd and then slid hack onto the
to Stop~in time and struck th~ rear
· h
·
·
toad, went ieft of center and collidof Nutter's vehicle.
•
ntg t. Refreshments will be avail- ed head-on with a northbound vehi- .
Nutter was transported by the
able and all bands are welcome.
Syracuse Squad 10 SL Joseph Hos'
cle driven by Brady Gilben Sr., 53,
The Me'1 ·C
S , c·111·
The Public •IS 1·nVl'ted to aaend
- pita! in Parkersburg whe,re she was
·
··
of Cheshire. Both vehicles slid off
~ ounty. emor
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby repons that on Monduy,
War Cry available
,
Center 1s
g the chal
ted d 1 ed
- !rea
The specialt'ssue of the Salva- the east Sl~ of the road and struck zens
an re cas .
Harold
Will reported that his 1977 Chevy Vega had been stolen
'· lenge of President
~e Bush to
Dam•"e
10 the rear ·of Nutter's
Lion Army's War Cry 15
• now be1
'ng an em"-'--'..., ..., , enL. ,'
"6
from
a
residence
on Horse Cave Road.
•
on.e of a."thousan points of 1985 Chevrolet Cavalt'er was ItS' ted
disaibuted m'
ero~. They were · - ·1ones an d G1!ben were
. trans- be
On
his
way
to
die
sheriffs
office
to
file
the
repon,
however,
WiD
•
light" in community involvement as moderate Damage to '"'e 'root
ported
on sale in Middlepon ast week.
.
to Vete!B!'s Memorial Hos.
.
"" •·
found the car sitting on Eagle Ridge Road.
•
Anyone missed who would like pttal by~ Metgs 9&gt;untyEmer- by dedicating a memorial tree of of Hetzer's 1983 Subaru GL was
Jerry Michael of Pomeroy Pike reported on Sunday that somegency Medieal.Semce where they light.
listed~ lighL
.
time during the past week, someone had stolen a.Gallager Fence
were treated and released for minor
The lighted. Christinas tree wiD
Hetzer was cited by the patrOl
Charger from his fann .
•
!Je p'aced OUililde the center where for failure 10 maintain assured clear
Tbe tribes of Gambia were at one injuries sustained in the aceident.
.
.
Damage -to-Jones!.--1987 Dodge- 11 w1ll remam for the hobduy sea- distance.
time ISI!Q!:iated with the West African
empires of Ghana, MaU and Songbay. Ram was listed as heavy and dis · son.
The patrol also investigated a
·
Donations of $5 will be accept-· deer-car accident on U.S. 33 in
David E. Wells of Tuppers Plains is beirig held in the Meigs
ed to dedicate a light on the tree to Bedford Township Tuesday
Co~nty Jail on a felonr. charge of possessing stolen property.
someone special, either living or evening.
According to Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Wells is charged with
•
deceased, and a card with the reeipAccording to the patrol repon,
possessing a McCullough chain saw that was stolen Friduy night in
,
·
ient and the donor's narile will be Tracie R. Hubbard, 23, of SyraWashington Cmmty.
anached to a light.
· cusc, was eastbound on U:S. 33
Soulsby repons that Wells gave a statement to Department
Residents are being encouraged andstruckadeercrossingtheroadInvestigator Robert Beegle, admitting his role in the theft.
.
11
,
to donate towards a light. on the way, Damage to Hubbard's 1985
Soulsby re~ that the investigaton is still underway and that
tree in honor of a relative, friend, Dodge Daytona was listed as modadditional individuals may be charged.
:
neighbor or church member who erate.
By MINDY KEARNS
Craigo. The "Thumbs Up" cam- receives services through the CenOVP News Stall'
paign was initiated in the county ter or who actively participates in
"Mason County has never had a several years ago to obtain a new its many programs. Memorial
donations are also encouraged by
four-lane highway ... Now it will bridge.
.
have two. That's a pretty bridge
Sen. Craigo recapped the earlier the staff.
Proceeds from the tree of light
hack there," Gov. Gaston Caperton days when the campaign begait He
said, pointing from his podium at said a groop of people, led by Jack will go 10 the home-delivered meal .
Tu-Endie-Wei Park to the Shadle Fruth, Becky Stein, and later program and the chore service proBridge, "but I think we need a new Bernie Riddle, had an idea, a gran\. As pointed out, one $5 donaRavenswood Aluminum Corpo- warrant and believed the United · has been going on tor more than 12
tion
·will
provide
either
two
hot
one..."
belief; a goal... He stated they felt
ration (RAC) completed a day-long Steelworkers of America (USW A), months, and the RAC facilities are
meals
or
an
hour
of
a
homemaker's
In less than a minute, Gov. if evel)'one would worlc together, a
closing conference with representa- which is engaged in a labor dispute currently being operated by
Caperton made two historic new bridge wpuld enhance travel- time for a elderly Meigs Countian.
tives from the Occupational Safety with RAC, abused the legal process salaried employees and pennanent
An open house has been and Health Administration (OSHA) ·in seeking the inspection as a tactic replacement worlcers, ·
announcements during his Point ing in the county, and be a blessing
planned for Thursduy, Dec. 5, from following a 53-day inspection of . in that dispute. At that time; RAC
Pleasant visit Tuesday afternoon.
for industrial development
As the permanent replacement
Among the projects Caperton· , The governor has many worth- 4 to 6 p.m. The tree wiD be lighted the reduction plant and fabrication asserted it did not oppose an OSHA workers have become more profi..:
detailed were $2 miUion for design while projects, Craigo continued, at 5:30 p.m. as a pan of the Qbser- plant in Ravenswood, according to inspection based on neutral criteria, cient at their jobs and have contin-·
.
a news release from the company. fairly applied as required by federal ue.d safety training , the injury
work, including both concrete and saying he looks through them and vance.
Donations
may
be
sent
to
the
During this "close out" conference, law.
steel alternatives, to replace Point sees which have the suppon of the
record has continued to improve,
On
June
19,
1991,
RAC and the .release stated. Both the reducSenior
Citizens
Center,
Box
·
7
22,
OSHA reviewed all the possible
Pleasant's Shadle Bridge; an addi- coinmunity. He. said these Mason
tiona! $250,000 for a design t:epon Countians set out gathering suppon l'Qmeroy or brought to the Center. citations against RAC from this OSHA reached an agreement, the tion and fabrication pl'ants have
release stated, a limited inspection dramatically reduced the number of'
for upgrading two miles of S.R. 2 to make anew bridge happen. They Additional information may be in~tion.
of
the facilities was conducted, and injuries since the beginning of the
obtained
by
calling
the
Center
at
'This was a very long, lengthy
from the new bridge north to the got endorseQICI11li from labor, orgaOSHA
withdt:cw its warrant against labor dispu~. the release conclud-'
992-2161.
All
conaibutions
are,
of
inspection - much more in depth
intersection of S.R. 62; $300,000 nizations and office holders.
RAC.
On July 31, 1991, RAC ed.
than any inspection experienced at
for the design work or RL 35 south
Armed with 8,000 signatures, course, tax deductible.
announced
that OSHA requested it
RAC or any other plant ORALCO
near the coast guard station; and Craigb said he and the groop went
$300,000 for the environmental . to Caperton, who looked at Craigo
manages," ~aid Jack Skidmore, cor- be permitted to -conduct a "wall-toporate director of riSk management wall" inspection of the RAC reducimpact study of Rt. 2 5outh, RL 35 and said he would help. "Don't teD
for Ravenswood Aluminum Corpo- tion plant and the flllishing departto the coast .guard station, and the me," the senator said he told the
ration. "Many of the items pointed ment of the fabrication plant, and
Shadle Bridge.
· govemor; "tell Jack Fruth."
·
Design work is scheduled to
"Well, the governor turned
out by OSHA were corrected dur- RAC granted this request. The
begin on the bridge in the spring of around, put his ann around Jack
Three defendanlli were fmed on ' ing the course of the inspection "close-out" conference was the
1992, with construction to follow Fruth, and said, 'We will help you multiple charges when they while the OSHA representatives result of that complete inspection.
"Although we have not yet
as early as 1994 if funds are avail- . with your JIOjec~ '"
appeared in· the coun of Pomeroy were present. Many items raised by
received
official, wrillen notice
able. Department of Highways
Sen. Craigo made plaque pre- Mayor Richard Seyler Tuesday OSHA involve staircases, pennanent ladders, walkways, catwalks, from OSHA, we could receive as
CommissiOner Fred VanKirk told sentations to Jack Fruth, accepted night.
.
The Register following the ceremo- by Joe Ellison, Becky Stein, fanner
Dwayne Qualls, Pomeroy, was landings and platforms, and are many as 275 citations," said Donny that it is anticipate~ the new Chamber of Commerce President, fmed $213 and coslli on a charge of part of the. physical structure of the ald W, Worlledge, president of
bridge will .lie built just above its and Bernie Riddle, present C of C peuy theffat the Beacon Station plant. RAC was built in 1958,' Ravenswood Aluminum Corporapresenti&lt;X;ation.
president
• ·
and $213 and coslli for trespassing before OSHA carne into existence, tion. "However, it must be noted
The governor also noted that
DOH Commissioner VanKirk at the Beaeon Station after repeated and these structural items were that we do lnot believe any or the
engineering worlc is well uncrer:~ expressed his appreciation to warnings, and was given a 30 duy engineered into the facility by the items OSHA mentioned concerning
on replacement of the Salt Cr
Caperton for the pannership he felt jail sentence with 20 duys suspend- previous owners of the RAC planlli. the expanded inspection have
Despite that. we will make struc- resulted in an injury to any RAC
Bridge on Rt. 2 south of Hender- was present with this administra- ed.
son. Now carrying a weight limit, tion, and for prioritizing the state
Monty Riffle, Pomeroy, was tural changes to meet OSHA regu- employee. subcontrac tor or visitor
to the RAC facilities."
the bridge will be replaced if funds road program. He also mentioned fined $43 and costs for failure to lations."
Ravenswood Aluminum CorpoAccording to the release, on
are available in late 1992 or early the state legislature, delegates and maintain assured clear distance,
, managed by ORALCO
ration
May
23
,
1991,
OSHA
inspectors
1993. .
administration in Washington.
$263 and costs for leaving the
Calling Caperton the "governor
VanKirk added Roben Byrd and scene of an accident, and $50 and were refused admiuance to the Management Services; Inc., is
who discovered Mason County," Jay Rockefeller were instrumental coslli for driving_wilhout insurance. RAC facilities because RAC ques- involved in a labor dispute with
Charles Lanham, president of the in helping to get most of the money
Felipe Beach, Bidwell, was tioned the validity of the OSHA USWA Local 5668. That dispute
Mason County Development for the studies.
fined $63 and ·costs for operating
Authority, said Gov. Caperton's
Music was presented during the under suspension and $88 and coslli
continued from page '
announcement was ~rhaps the . ceremony by the Point Pleasant, for consuming alcohol under 21
most significant at 'the Point" Wahama, and,llan~ high school years of age.
details of this divorce case, 'as they Fences,"refcrred to security measince during the -time· the gover: bands. Mandy Steele of the Hannan
Others rmed were Kevin Roach, would have you believe.
sures taken at the plant aft£r permanor's great-great-great-grandfather VICA. Becky Zuspan of the Racine, $48 and coslli, speeding;
"We are not interested in the nent replacement workers were'
Adam Caperton fought in the Bat- Wahama FBLA, and Mike Wears Joseph Riffle, Racine, $63 and secrecy of ~mmel! Boyle's bed- hired.
.
tle of Point Pleasant
of the Point Pleasant FFA led the costs, failure to display a valid reg- room,'' Euline said. "We are inter,The union is seeking return of
Lanham followed by presenting pled~e of allegiante. The invoca- istration; and Randall Kimes, Long ested in the secrecy of his board- the union members to their jells
a "Thumbs Up" plaque to both tion was led by Rev. Steven E. Boltom, $63 and costs, no valid rOOm!'
with full back-pay.
Caperton and State Senator Oshel Dorsey.
registration. ·
Assistant City Solicitor Kevin
Forfeiting bonds were James E. Stryker ordered the marchers to
Wells, Long Bottom, $43, stop sign leave because their parade permit
The Daily Sentinel
· violation; Anna Stines, Letan, W. stated that they could march past
Va., $63, expired registration; Eric the courthouse, not stand in front
(USPS 2!3-180)
Sams,
Reedsville, $63, expired regPubli1hed every af\ernoon , Monday
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER istration; Cynthia Neutzling, Syra- and demonstrate.
through Friday, 111 CourtS&amp;. Pomeroy,
The group , then headed for
Discharges, Nov. 19 - Ralph cuse, $43, assured clear distance;
Ohio by the Ohio Valley Publishing
Wheeling's
Market Plaza singing
Company/MuiUmedia Inc., Pomeroy,
Freeka, Otrald King, Thelma Nth- ,.Trina Lee, Middlepon, $63, squealOhio 45169, P'n. 992-2156. Soc:ond daA
songs
to
the
tune of Chrisunas caren, Ella Reach, Fonda Thomas, and ing tires; and Dusty Tobias, Midpoof.a&amp;e poid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
ols.
One
tune,
called "Deck The
Sarah Wyant.
dlepon,
$63,
traffic
light
violation.
Plant
With
Barbed-Wire
Member: The A11ociat.ed Preas; Inland

an

sen I. rs
accept
challenge
o'

Thefts reported

aced:

P
.
o r n

Wells·-incustody on theft charge

, ·
Mas on COunty to
•
d
g.et new b..I ge

RAC could receive 275 citations as
OSHA inspection comes to a close

Pomeroy
Court news ·

Steelworkers...

Hospital news

122 E. Main St.

'Oh.

Ofily PNn Aaaociation and the Ohio
Ncwapaper A11ociation, National
Advertiamg Repreaentative, Branham

Newapaper Sale.;. 733 Third Aven.ue,
Now YOrl, Now Yurk 10017.
.
POSTMASTER: Send addrcla cha np t.o
The' Da1lr SGntinel ;-111~ Court' ' St .',
Pomeroy, OHio 46769.
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. - By Carrier or Motor Ro\lto '
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No

Mall8uboertpttona

IMido GoUla Counly
, 13 WeokJ ...... ................................... $2LSI
26 W..b ..........................................$43.16
52 WeokJ..............:...........................SII4.76
.
Ovtaldo Ga1lla County
13 WMb ........................................... 23 .40

16 WeokJ ............... ...........................~.IIO
52 Weeta ..........................................$88.40

(614) 992·6632

Stocks
Am Ele !'O.wer ..................30 5/8
~Ashland {)if '. ••. ;•••.~:::: ~~-:.;29 ... ...
AT&amp;.T...: ........................... .36 1/8
Bank One ......................... A3 1/2
Bob Evans ............,...........20 1/2
'Olarmina Sfl9p.................. 20 7/8
CitY Holding:...............;.... l7 .
Federal Mo&amp;ul.................. .16
Goodyoar
47 114
Key Centurion ................... 14 314
Lands' End ........................ 27 1/2
Limited Inc....................... 2S 1/4
Multimedia Inc .................. 20 1/2
IWt Restaurant ..................3/8
Robbins&amp;Myers .........1......3I 114
Shoney's lnc...................... 20 5/8
Star Bank ...........................24 1/2
Wendy lnt'l.........................8 318
Worthington Ind................20 7/8

r&amp;.R ..................

Stock l'fJHII'IJ orr lht 10:30 a.m.
quottl proPillld by BlUNt, Ellis
11nd Lotwl of GllllipoUs.

,,

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Total Health Care ·for Women
.-

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... ... . .

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MAMMOGRAPHY
ULTRASOUND
OB/GYN
992•2188
446·5381

HOLZER CLINIC

.-

WE.~ S!u.H~d ·~,.!~ Per~~tS

THURS. Tangy Pork Chops
$6.25
FRI. Chicken Cordon lieu
$8.95'
Sat. Saucy Shrimp Casserole

$8.95

.... tills .....t1"' DIKI I.
aa.txewtrPIIIII.,IIQitllktf-.,
JniWAI IPP.W,IIIfhW.IIIIIt ....

PUIII's ;
0,.'-*'M.li·I;..._&amp;I... Hw M.H;S..M

~·

�The Daily ~e.,_tinel·

Sports

L

l

W!dnesday, NQvember 20, 1991
.

'

TH~RS., 2·1SJ
~, FRI., 22N·D.·

\

·p~
~

~eorgetown

athleticism stems Redm.en with 106-94 victory · ')1

SeverallOCal spikers play
in District 13 All-Star Game
By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentioel Correspondent
Southern varsitr volleyball
players Marcy Hil and Megan
Wolfe were named to the District
13, flfSt team all-district teiun. In
addition, Hill was named to the
District 13 senior. All-Star team,
where she competed in Logan last
Sunday in the -District 13 AU-Star
Game.
In that game Hill was the "B"
team's leading scorer, as the clubs
were named "A" and "B" rather
than the usualnorih-south combo.
The "B" team won the game
behind HiD's CUI$tanding effon of
10 points, losing the first set 9-15,
then winning three in a·row IS· 13,
15-11, and 15-12 in the best-of-five
series.
Behind Hill's effon was Courtney Snipes of Logan who had nine.
The victorious squad was coacbed
by Alan Swank and Megan Geffel
of Athens and Ron Conner of Nelsonville-Yorli.
.
Erin Mahaffey of Logan tallied
13 points for the .:'A~ squad and

Tandra Adams of Gallia Aca.den1y
had II for the team coached
Sharon Vannoy (Kyger Creek)
Jackie Knight (Gallia Academy).
The participating seniors were
divided into two tO-player squads
regardless of division. In addition
to the All-Star mateh, presentations
were made to the all-district players from throughout the district.
The all-district squad includes
freshmen, sophomores, juniors and
seniors, but because of eligibility,
the all-star match is limited to
seniors.
Hill led Southern in scoring
with 123 ~ints, while Wolfe was
second w1th 87, Hill was 91% in
serving with 190-207 successful
volleys, an 87% spiking percentage, and 95% setting mark. Wolfe
was 129-140 serving for 92 percent, 88% spiking, and 96% in setting. That duo .led SHS to a 9-11
mark, and a third-place fmish in the
SVAC atS-4.
Also playing in that game was
Eastern's Lee Gillilan.

EASTERN CONFERENCE
AIIMUciJMI!Go
- T·W L P&lt;L
• Milllli
.......... 6 2 .750
•• ~ ........ 6 3 .667
• Odaoolo
.......... 5 3 .625
• B,,,.,,, 5 S .lOO
' New Ycllk ...... 4 5 .....
' Wuhinpln ...... 4 7 .364

New!_,

...... 2

7

C•II'IIDIYWGII
......... 7 2 .771
Allonll
........... 5 4 .SS6
Doaoll
........... 5 5 .500
C!eookad
........ 4 4 .500
Mllwa- ....... 5 6 .oi.SS
)ndlaa•
........... • 7 .364
~
.......... 2 9 .182

'.5
1
2
15
3.5
4.S

-

Chioop

l
4
33
...... 3 IS I

Sanlflllle

GB

=

23 75 II

Loo Anploo ... ' 7
Wmpea
.. . 9 I
Calpiy
""''
' 8
Edmonton
... 7 12

In tbe .NBA ...

2
lS
15
3
4
6

~~ :~ ~~

11 66 82
7 54107

Tuesday's !l(()rtS
Datroit 4, OUe~so 1

N.Y. blmdca7, Miruaca4
N.Y. Jlqen4, Vancouvcr3
Loo Anto:la 3, Son I'"' 2. 01'

· TonJ&amp;bt's gliDes
Bm:IM at Buffala, 7:35p.m.
Wuhinatm uNcw Jc:n:ey, 7:35p.m.
.Philadefphia II Pi.tllburgh, 7:)5 p.m.
Toronto at SL Louis, 8:!3 p.m.
N.Y. ltlandm at Wirvtipes, 1:35 p.m.

Thursday's games
Monu..lotQUdtoc, 7:35e.m.

Vanccuverat C.Jauy. 9; ~ p.m.
N.Y. Rtnacn at Los An&amp;cltA, 10:3S

p.m.

WESTERN CONFERENCE

MlclwwiDitlolon
TW L_ PeL
Son .Muno ....... 6 I .857
Houlklrl
......... 1 2 .n1
Ullh
............ S 5 .lOO
Den,.
.......... 4 4 .lOO
llollu
............ • 6 .oiOO
........ 1 7 .125

Transactions

GB

TEE - Namod Richanl Raviu:h prt&amp;idmt
and chief exccutivo o1'6cer.

3.5
5.5

Amttkulla ..o

LA. IAHn
..... 6
Seoa1o
............ 6

3 .667
3 .667

z

-

-

• .600

1.5

. ..........
LA. Cippon .....
Sacnmemo .......
l'II..U
..........

6

S
3
3

6 .4SS
7 .300
8 . .273

I
I

3

4.S

s

!IY:·IICOR~ ..

Now
21 ,acnmen10 11 I
Seolll
• llllillp&gt;n 106
MioonH 11, Vllh 91
-90,11ewYOik79

I.A. Llbn IOt Jllo"'"' 9l

•

.. - . 7:30(&gt;m.
Miami It JlhUadelpiU. 7:30p.m:.

UWut Qdaftllo,-1!30 p.m.
,
Clmlllld ol Clllrlall&lt;, 7:31 p.m.

Sierarn«Mil Allllll, 7:30p.m.

SeollloatDoaoil. 7'30pm.
N• Yadr: atDIUM,I:lO p.m.

-.,,JO,. .. p.m.

~-It s.n An\Onio,l:30 p.m.

Oliclao tt Ool.dM Scl~a, 10:30

ThundaJ'IIIDitl

w,.._.,

NIW Jono7 II a...Ji... 71lt p.m.
Mll-.,t,30p.m.
~ ,, Hollllc:m,l:30
1'olllllld at LA. Cllppon. 10:30 p.m.

,.m.

Vi......... P-DI-

WALES CONFERENCE

N.Y.~

~.

Nt•d- · ...

P1uo1ooqb

.....

Jlloilo4llFllia ....

N.Y. -

.

W L T PILGFGA
ll "4''0"" 30 "16 -$1 • ~·
13 'I I Z7 74 61
11 9 0 Z! 7:1 56
9 I 3 21 '19 10
1"'9 I 17 l3 l2
7 10 2 16 71 10.

-

A-DI..... 15 ' 6. 2 32 74 31

"""'""

,,,

-

973

....... 1 7 4

216161

·-

....... 7 9 2

16l0 S9

~

..... 315 I

II 64 62

7 Sl II

-DI-

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
1'.- ,

o-Il

; C1oio1to

11. LGt11
... Jl
M1
- 1_..

v-

W L T PILGFGA
'"""' 12 I 2 36 II 71
..... 10 I 5 2S II 73
...... I I l 21 65 75
.... 110 1 11 &amp;4 67
...... 514' nll71

Ill"'""

s•,a.
... 1•

eaiChon. rn.n Cal&amp;vy.
TORONTO IILUE lAYS - Ao - .

aiped Ray m.telli., third bdeman, ou\riJht tO $yrtCLIICI o( the Jntemationd
IMaue. .o\nnN100d \hat Reae Ocmalel, ~
lftllilolao, ilu - l l l i - t,tb S)TIcwe ol the Inlematimal Leap and U a

ICCILIII.

.'

l ' , 31 14 sl

Look to Imperial Wallcoverings for style and
quality.Andnow lor very-special savingi! A
wide variety of Imperial wallcoverings from tiny
geometries to large scale norals - are in stock
and on sale.
ERSLAN SCORES - Rki Grande's Mark Erslan (20) gets past

JoCES]l
P..hiltJ

man

t'OI\el',

Stsu Blaine Buuy, pi\.Cher,

and Chuck Cur, outfielder, oulri&amp;ht to
Tidownor oC lht ln\tmaUonaJ 1M au•·
Namcwl R.arad l..andutoy, minor ]CIJUCI
~nd bN•rumlna inlwctor, Tom
ROIDCilleko, ICIDUI; and lim ~c ad·
minbuativa an inant for the minor

lola-.

SAN DIEOO PI\DRES - lllrdtuod
die cc.~~lnCt of Rar Holbert, •hortatop,
from Hi!Jh ' DNett or lht' Catitornla
Loop

-

BMkethaU

~~=tk~~";;.cod

Mop

I-.

pool,'"' thO injwod Us&amp;.
RHi ..... lltm«riao c.lip, ........

-

MINNI!SOTA TIMBI!li'NOLVES Sipd 1JIC Loopy, ..... ., I 11111-ycu

WASHINGTON BULLETS Si&amp;ned Ralph Samp~«~, cenw. Waivccl
Al\ut ltina. f&lt;wwull. Placod y.,. ILmmaado. fCIIWUd. on a. in,iuotd Us&amp;. A.U-

vllOI Lolladflllll Smilh, potd, r..., the
il\jwod lill.

FootbaD

Notlonoi Fool .. ll Lao~~&lt;
CLEVELAND IROIVNS Wll•td ABIIIonr Ji'Jonn"' carnerblt:k,
1nd R1ncfr Klrt, llntb•c ..r. Slantd

bis 12 points during Tuesday night's game at Lyne Center, which
the Tigers woo 106-94 to send the ·Redmen's record to 2-1.

OCAN

'SAT., 23RD

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Largest Healing a.
Cooling Dealer"

FACTORY AUTHORIZED
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1-8Q0·247-8180

•

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APPLIANCES

627 3rd Ave., Gallipolis
· PH. 446·1699
HOURS: 8 A.M.•6 P.M •

The Southern Valley Athletic
Conference announced Monday lhe
basketball preview dates and
matchups for the girls and bOiS
previews.
·
The girls preview will ~ played
on Friday, Nov. 22 at Kyger Creek
High School. Southwestern will
play Southern in the 6:30p.m.
opener. Norlh Gallia will take on
Hannan Trace at 7: IS p.m., and
Kyger Creek will face Oak Hill at 8
p.m., while Eastern and Symmes
Valley will tangle at 8:45p.m. .
The boys preview will be ~layed
on Friday, Nov. 29 at the Umversi- .
ty of Rio Grande's Lyne Center.
The times and school matchups
wiD be the same as in the girls previe)!'. All times are approximate.

•

•

.•

~~

"

'f.

FORTHIS
HUNTING

. . .=--..
:
WHY SHOULD. YOU GET AN 1

•

50% OFF

BOOK PRICES ON
IN-STOCK PATI'ERNS

•Wellem Hemiophere
• Utml Aobley

''

AD.D.ON HEAT PUMP ;

•

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WALLPAPER AND BLIND SHOP
MEMORIAL BRIDGE APPROACH ON GARFIELD AVE.,
PARKERSBURG, WV.

428•1 065

MON. TH.RU FRI. 9-8
SAT. 9-5, SUN. 1·5

..

• F.F. Fridge
• 2 Full Baths

S2Q
QQ.
Q
In Stock Starting Under ·
,
Palm Harbors

$
.

15 gg:s·

• Mini-Blinds

• Toto I

ceiling Fon

Con1/dtr
qUMtlon•·
. the following ana wert to the mOlt Important
.
that will
. help you to. dtttrmiM It the HEAT PUMP 11 right for you:

• SS Storms
• Vault Ceili11g
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~ectric -Kitchen And Laundry Facility

An .,.,... molfltlt lnctwM would N
epproxllftllely $15.00 to $20.00 twtriOI!Itt
(def)endlllfl upon IJzo).

How much ctn I ,..,,ttciHy ••PKt to
ure Ill '*'"llfl collt wlllt a ltNI pump?

~ro~~~~~~~~f

How ,.uclt ctn 1 ltNI pump •••• mt In
coollllfl cotta com,...ed to window elr

Several To Choose From.

collllltiOnerw 1

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From 14x50 to 28x68. We have It all,
from skylights to round tubs.

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614-667-llU
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P. 0 . Boa 339

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Agtln, you ctn .... up to lttlt w111t 1
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tlttt you rroulll ,.,. to nmMrtrwl window
unlit to ecltl~ 1 ,.,., ol comtol1.

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Route 7

614-992-2138

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FRI. 10:00 TO 12:00
SAT. 9:00 TO 9:00

•
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P. 0 Boal26
Pomeroy, OH. 46789

'

"''" more when comperetl to en electric
or LP QH lllmiCt 110111.

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~Ie~~,'and's entert~inment showplace, The Front Rotll Theatre, with seat·
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available at McDonald's or Days
By SCOTT WOLFE
Inn in Athens, at each of the particSentinel Correspondent
Southern varsity boys basketball ipating schools, or by contacting
coach Howie Caldwell has Jim Derrow, Wellston High
announced that his Tornadoes will School, 600 S. Pennsylvania Ave.,
be competing in two holiday clas- .. Wellston OH 45692 at 1-385-2109.
Southern squares off against
sics this season, with the rusi being
·Alexander
at II a.m., while Richthe McDonald's-Day s Inn Prep
mondale-Southeastern
- also on
Classic at Ohio University on Sat·
Soulhem's schedule - plays Lexurday, Dec. 7.
The lineup of teams has been ington, Ky.'s Bryan Station at 9:30
completed for the fourth annual p.m.
Southern will also play,in aoQth·
, evenr, which will be played in
er·
Holiday
Classic when they face
OU's Convocation Center. ,
kent
Wolfe's
Lpgan-Eim squad at
This annual event matches some
the
Ohio
University-Chillicothe
of the best teams in Ohio against
prep powers from a variety of areas branch on I;&gt;ecember 28.
of the Midwest, the South and the
East.
·
GOOD USED
The 1991 event has been
expanded to eight games, featuring
WASHERS, DRYERS,
teams from Maryland, Louisiana
REFRIGERATORS, TYs,
and Kentucky, with games beginnmg at 9:15 a.m . and continuing
GAS &amp;ElEC. RANGES
until aboutll p.m.
Tickets are $5 in advance and
$7 at the gale for the entire day of
baslcetbaU competition. Tickets are

SVAC
basketball
•
preview dates posted

•

guaranteed wnlhoverings

Southern announces dates
for holiday cage tournaments

,/ollolt Coolto, H-mr. Pll&lt;td Don·
nJ PetbiM, wide melnr, on Injured

,_....

imperial

a Georgetowo College player and squares up to the hoop ror two or

HOUSTON ASTROS - Nomcd

T011 Sptnttr lhlrd bue coacll. Alk~
wOven on Jim Codi and Dwayne. Henry,
pilchon:
o, Wielder; and
Jtvier Oni&amp;. au
fmlha pu1p(* of
· ' them ·
'lienal releuel.
IIY1os ANOELES DODOERS Named John Shoemaker manager and
Luii 'Tiw
COidt ol tho Kiuirnmoollod&amp;tn olllte Oull CooaUoauc.
NEW YORK M£l'S - Addc{Julion
Vasqoez. and Joe Vi\ko, pilchen; Btook
ForGyce. ca~er, Tuo Nnuro, infielder,
and Pacridt Howell, outfielder; to lhc 40--

in6oW

In the NHL ...

r-

Mike Blowen &amp;ncl Frank Bolick, infield·
on , to Cdany of \ho Pa ~:ific Cout
Leilpa. P\IKhued \he e«~tncU of Kerry
Woodlon, Jim Newlin and Jeff Nelaon,
pilehm; Jim Campanit and Grq: Ml,

Notional ~a.,,
PLORIDA MA1U.JNS - Nomod Orrin Fr.nan uaoci.al.e cliaooctor« ICVUtinJ.
Nomod a.,. z..w.o, Dejon w-.lohn
c.llobonoy. Bill s.:~touw onciM w,

Pmlandl32,LA. ~ll2

ToaJabt'• pmn

SE!t.TTLE MARINERS - Sent

tr.ap\.

Mll....U.l27, Cw!... l04
llollu 96, lllmer 93

Den....

Baseball
PLAYER REU.TIONS COMMIT-

15
lS

Podllc Ol&gt;lo!Go
aow.a SttWI ....•.• 1
.na

T1gers had 44 ~bounds, Wlth,Allen ~
Bwchett bnngmg ~own 10. .
J
The. Redmen w11l take. theu first ~
road tnp of the season Fnday whenJ'
they m~t the College ofSL Fran- CIS, Johet,lll., m thell~ung roqnd•
·of the Suba~u C!~S~IC at Olivet'
Nazarene Umversny m Kankakee,
Ill. The tournament also features
the host school and Barat College
ofLakeForest,lll.
Box score:
RI~ GRANDE (~4)- )awanza Childs, 4-2-0-14; Lyndell Snyder, 0-1-0-3; Mark Erslan, 5:2·12;
Walter Stephens, 0-1-0-3; ·Brad
Schubert. 2-2-0-10; Matt Powell, 3:
3-2-17; Brett Coreno, 0-1-0-3; Jeff
Brown, 4-1-1 -12; T1m Chrisuan, 40-8; Troy Donaldson, 5-2-12.
TOTALS 27·11· 7·94.
GEORGETOWN (106) Russell Chadwell, 7-4-2-28; Steve
Schureman, 7-0-14; Allen McCowan, 8-2-~22; Allen Burchett, 7-014; Edd1e Johnson, 2-0-4; Paul
Newton, 4-0-8; Mark Tandy, 7-216. TOTALS42·6-4-106.
H~lrtlme score: Georgetown
51, R1o Graode 42.

·

Priced To Please

._..,l:'tJt·eboa rd
~

f~ul Jine for 66.7 perc~nt, The

utes whittling down the gap as Said. ''We just had a liard time with
ter by the Gallia County EMS, posted another IS ~ts to lead a much as possible, thanks in pan to Georgetown's rebounding and·their
where he was admitted and report- scoring rush that p
four other some key three-pointers by fresh- ball penetration."
It was Rio Grande's flfSt regular
ed in stable condition this morning, teammates in double digits for the man ,11;uard Matt Powell, whose 17
according to a hospital spokespe:- g~me . Again, shooting made the points led high scoring from five of season loss since Jan. 19, when the
son.
d1fference as Georgetown ·posted his teammates: Jawanza Childs Redmen fell victim. to Cedarville
When the game resumed, the 6S J?C!Cer\t (26-40) for the period, with 14, Erslan, Brown and Troy 89-86 on the road, and the first loss
NAJA fourth-ranked Tigers w.hlle Rio Grande sank 21 of 44 Donaldson with 12 each, and Brad in Lyne Center since Dec. 4, !990,
Sch~ben with 10.
when Urbana C$e&amp;pi:d with iin 85launched a run that. put them ahead attempts for 47 percent
"I
have
no
complaints
because
74
win.
by nine as Allen McCowan scored
Although the Tigers went ahead
the
effon
was
there.
Our
younger
"IIi
our house, we like to thiDk
14 points and Russell Chadwell by as much as 21 points, the
players did very well," Lawhorn it's tough for us to I9se here,"
had 13 for the half to lead a bal- men spent the remaining 10
Lawhorn s3id. "Since this building
anced scoring effoni~r the visito!S.
went up in 19'69, our record's been
But balance was also the name
good and there have not been a lot
of Rio Grande's plan as Mark
oflosses!'
Elslan, Jeff Brown and Tim ChrisIn addition to the high scoring,
tian chipped in eight points apiece
Brown was again the leader for Rio
to keep the Redmen in contention.
Grande in rebounding, posting nine
For the half, the teams played
of
its 30 for the galile. TI)e Redmen
on nearly equal terms. the Tigers
connected
on 38 of 77 field goal
shooting 52.4 percent (22-42) to
attempts for 49.4 percent, including
Rio Grande's Sl.5 percent (17-33)
· 11-33 from the thre&lt;; for 33 perand each team committing seven
cent. The team was allowed II
turnovers. The visitors held the
attempts at the free throw line, and
advantage on the boards. outracing
made good on seven for 63.6 perthe Redmen 23-IS, but only led
cent.
·
Rio Grande by nine entering the
Georgeiown shot a total of 58 5
second half.
.
percent
from the field (48-82 6-i4
It was then, as Lawhorn
from the three for 42.9 perceni) and
remarked, Georgetown's "athlctinetted four of its six trips toJhe

uansported to Holzer Medical Ceo- cism really huq-us," as Chadwell

: Georgetown (Ky.) used an overpowerin~ physical game against the
· Univemty of Rio Grande men's
,l)asketball team Tuesday at Lyne
:Center, but the Redmen s~gged
·off the threat and stayed. m the
game in spite of a 106-94 loss to
Jim Reid's nationally-ranked
Tigers.
"It was a tough one, but give
Georgetown credit," Redmen
Coach John Lawhorn remarked.
"We had a hard time guarding them
and they read things well. But we
found out a lot about our team the
most important thing being ihey
didn't quit."
'
The intensity from both sides
poured fonh right at the stan as the
teams swapped one- and two-point
leads _throughout most of the first
half.
. The teams were tied at 33 at
4:25 when Georgetown forward
Paul Newton, a 6-7 junior from
Louisville, Ky.,lost his footing and
slammed to the floor, suffering broken ribs and a broken collarbone.
The $ame was delayed for nearly
30 mmutes until Newton could be

The Dally Stntlnti-Pag~

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328

WE'RE ON OLD AT. 33
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November 20, 1

EASTMAN'S
.
.

Your .Co~munity

.

Har-rumph!

Minded-

,.... ,, _ ·'"

.

·

.Resu~ptjon of old rivalrie~ means
regular-season finales for some ·

SUPE.RMARKETS

By Mllj. Amal B. HoOple '
EaR C...IiAo 33, •o.einniu 23
Fearlea llorecllter
su.. +~. s.n r... s.... 31
Egad, friepdi! Here comes ·=··~~~:.21 ·
"Traditional Saturday," the day llo._ 39;-ri,,. thM.isn u
old
grads return to their ,. campuses . •lnciitr.1
Illin~ 21 · Mi&lt;i&gt;is••S•«20 --~'
34, Purdue 21
In droves to cheer on their alma
'I••• 24. Mm ...w 21
.
maters. Many of college· football's :x"'"' 31 ;Minouri 10 .
.
ld ~
'
JUnlu S11~ 20~ •0klalwita ~t~.tc 15
o est oes arc ready to .play each 'Lcllif. "'·w''"" 21 .
.
Other again.
,
Lon- each St. 21' •Cal St.· Fulie.n~ ~ n
. . . .
l.ow.lo~na SUite 28, 'Tubn~ 12
Among th CmaJOr
nvalnes arc: 'Manhil14S.£utTcnnDuccsLI:i t4
·Michigan-Ohio Stale the 8Sth Mi•.m i O~o.)42, •Bon"'CoU ege2l
., TC'n .. · •MUI
• be lwccn lh e. two
' 8.1g
IUI ""I 'Su: ~ !7, ,\'flssillt" pi "&lt;
mceung
•,~ . .··=
,. ....
111 .c , :. . ....,, .,,

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LESS·.

We Have
~ine Of Fnslt .

Butterball ••d
T•••.,••t
Tur••r•Aiso
Available

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We're workin' harder to bring y:Qu a COI~plete
selection of Thanksgiving poultry., hnm and tiXin 's.
You .can always depend on Hard W9rking Low Prices
at Foodland to make your holidays more enjoyable Because You Deserve The Best!!!

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powers {on ABC·TV); ·Washi ng·

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~.,.. CsmUno s.... 31 · .~•&lt;&gt; 1••• '"

011io s.... 21. 'llil:lli

;w ·

·o.- 21 o... .:'.: 10

::=:!3;~ 27

.,,,
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•s.w.em c.I n, IJ(:!A 30

•SynMell,wouv;,.;.u.zi
•Temple 22. Akron 11
Tenncu"' 30. •x"''""'' 21

·r..,. A&amp;M4&lt;, S..U.cm lolcoJiodill :II
•Toledo 24, ,XOMCm lllirltld 7
·T"'" 33.0!\io univ.,~y 17
\;t~ SI.IIC 27, ·~cw Mexico Sll!e 2A
•v1.......: 31 v· · ·
27

xu4~~: 40:.or.!:~C:::
•Wuhingtori ll , WnhlnloonSu~o24
•w·l:I.Cf'lnllll· 21, '-•
20
, o,.,.we~I.Cm

24, ll.rvard 14 ,
Younanownsa~4, , •TowJOnSI.au: l 7

~

~vjJe

""l

r•Htomo....,.

"
'r

c"' y' Q. lJ c

time,
in for
the the
Pac-10;
UCLA.
61st Southern
time, alsoCal:
in I•·-------~~~--------. '
the Pac-10; Tennes~ee-Kentucky ,
.
for the 77th time, in the SEC;
'r' s\'
'
North Carolina-Duke, for their 78th
~~~
.
~" .
time, in the ACC; and Indiana-Pur.·v
V..
due for the 94th time, in the Big
Ten - wilh the Old Oaken Bucket ·
(b ,
. L.
going to the winner.
.
~
~.~t~~u~

~

:..·

~

Yale meets Harvard for lhe 107lh·
~
\.V
time. (The Bulldogs and the Crim,...:;..
son first got together in 1875!)
~
Here •s how the Hoople System
sees lhesc matchups:
Michigan ·has a powerhouse the Wolverines 6ave remained in
everyone's Top 5 all season long.
Ohio Slate's Buckeyes have been
in lhe Top 20 all fall, but lhey have
never challenged for the No. I spot.
In lhis one, toss the records out
- the windbwc-Adding Spice tothe
occasion is the fact that Gary
Moeller, Michigan's coach, is an
Ohio State alumnus.
• , JUNIOR HIGH EA(lLES - Th'e' Eastern
Orystlll HolsiDger and Nicole
Defying the usual logic - and
Junior high volleyball squad recently completed
N . . •b the back row are Amanda ·Milhoan,
despite the brilliance of Michigan's
e fiDe season 1,11der head coach D!Jn JacksOa.
J~a Karr, Beth Bay, Patsy Aeiker and Bran·
Heisman candidate, WR Desmond
·l'lctured in front are (L-R) MaJ&gt;tie Holter,
d1 Reeves. Absent was Jackson.
Howard - your Peerless Prognos •
.
ticator confidently .prediits a·
'
shookin~ 28-24 upset vic:IOry for
With the addition of Eastern, Southern,
the vislling Buckeyes of Ohio
State. Har-llliDJibf
Perfect for work, play or drc•l What'• more it mak
The Washington Huskies will
the perfect jjifltool Bulova Quarlz modele gl;c you d::;.
continue their drive to lhe Pac-10
and date dilplay with accuracy to within 60 10cond1 8
title and the Rose Bowl against
year. II ave a fP.'Cat time, all the time - with Bulova and
Washington Slate. Don't expect the
Carav4!Ue Watchct.
Cougars
to
go
down
easily,though.
' .
: · By SCOIT WOLFE
levy monies provided money for
Southern and Eastern will offi- They ~I ways give the Huskies a
STARnNG AT 1
·: SeDIIDel Correspondent
one new school.
- · ciaUy join the league next·year, but battle. Make it 35-24 Jor Washing·
: Rome wasn't built in a day; but
Should a new school not be it most likely would be the 1993-94 ton.
·
20" OFF ALL IUlOYA &amp; CAUYELLE WITCHES
t6e newly revamped Tri-Valley built, or in the interim, of building school year before they are eligible
The Southern Cal vs. UCLA
C:,Onference "WAS" so to speak, . the school, the G~BOE voted to for all championships and league games are usually bruising llatlles.
prompting one prominent Meigs send all of iiS stpdents to. Kyger recognition. TVC te.llJIIS were Last year, the Trojans nipped the
Cou01y official to say "more was Creek High School as one school. ~eel to schedule games next year Bruins, 45-42, to run their series
~complished today, than we've This has been brought about by wuh Southern and Eastern, howev- lead to 34-19-7. This week, the
atcomplished in the last three severe financial woes, which are er, the two new schools will be Trojans will close out a dismal sea~."
plaguing counties in rural South- playing a mostly independent son (for them) with a 37-30 victoThis of course, was ln reference eastein Ohio, and where consolida- schedule next season.
ry.
m E. M.in- POmeroy
to the addition of long~standing lion has been resurrected.
That fact will basically be bad . . The w~ole state of Ten~ is
f,{ei~s,&lt;lo~.ntY,JIJI!l s.v.~~ rival~.
. One possible'is"avior for the news (or seniors as. well ~s. oth~r sUII buzzm~ a_bout the last-mtnuiC
•
' . ... -..&lt;-f'l'
S!Jutlietg p!,d East!:m. being unaru- s VAC' s ·survival in some .form top 8thietic prospects as no lcagi!l: 1 ,J5-3'4· Vols v1ct6ry over favored
· .:
- .
I "·ll··o·',1 A. e·
a•
$usly accepte4 into the :rri- Val- rpay be th~ J!dditicn of three newly · hon~ can be bestowed upon them. Not~ Dame - in ~outh Bend,
\:,.1 L.i
'y M
lilY Co.nfeierice (TVC) by mem- elected board members in Gallia
Although no desigr~auons have Ind., no l.ess! ~ook for the Vols to •------~-iiiii.-:;..:.;~~----· •
1lir 5choo1Sl
·
County. '
been given to the two football divi- boost theu: senes record to 55·23~9
' A meetinJ! be~ last 'Fllesday at
Meanwhile, .Southern anli East- sions yet, one will include (big over pld nval Kentucky with a 30- r-----~----------~~ :
•
the Ohio UnJVersUy Inn in Athens ' em are now members .of the TVC school division) Belpre, Meigs, 21 triumph. .
'•
among 1epmenta~ves of th~. TVC . 1'/hile other SVA_C foes Symmu Nelsonville-York, Vinton County,
North Carolina and Duke, who
•
#mbers JeSU!ted m the addiuon of Valley and Oat Hill had previously and Wellston . If Gallia County can almost throw passes to each
t'le two Meigs ~ounty Schools as sought to enrer other leagues.
does go to one school, it has unoffi- other from one campus to another,
well as two majOr changes m the ·
The new lfVC will be split into cially been recognized that they are usually weU-matchec!, as mdtLEGAL NOI1CE
·I
league's opelllion.
two divisions for football and com- would flU the other slot in lhis divi- cated by the Tar Heels 39-34-4
•
: Th~ SVAC (South~rn. Valley petition .will be reduced to a single sion, as lhey too would be "with· lead m !herr annual ~ngagements.
••
/WIIeuc Conf~rence) IS likely to meeting ell!;h year between TVC out" a league.
Look for North Carolina to take anNotice is given that The Ohio Bell Tele•••
dtsband after thiS season because of schools rather that the current doliThe other division would other close l_llle. 2~-22.
phone Company has filed an application
antici~ consoli.datio!i of the ble round-robin (two·meetings per include Alexanlfer, Eastern, Federlnd1ana IS havmg. a good year,
••~
four Gall1a County schools tnto one year) play in volleyball boys' and a1 Hocking Miller Southern and whtle the Purdue Boilermakers are
with the Public Utilities Commission of
~two ilchools. Earlier this fall, as girls' basketball baseba'll and soft· Trimble. '
'
'
struggling. Purdue would dearly
i
rpponed by Ga!lipolis Daily 7'ri· ball. Teams. hi&gt;wever, may pl!IY
Officials at Southern and Ea~- love to pull an upset Saturday, but
\
Ohio
(Case
No.9l-798-TP-ACX)
for
author'
~lint, the Galha .County board twice per yeat, but one would be 1 em were both well-pleased with tlie lh,ey just don't have the manpower. . ·
••
reception to the .TVC and indicated Its lhe Hoosiers, 34-27.
.
"!'ted for consolidation to one non-league meeting.
ity
to
institute
one-way
local
calling
plus
!!phOQI regardless of whether or not
that it would be 'good for both
Now. to THE GAME, as my
'
·
· ·· ·
schools and the league. Both beloved Yale- boola-boola.;between the Cheshire Exchange of Ohio
••
schools were faced with the situ a- hosts HaW~. Yaie leads the senes
Bell and the Pomeroy Exchange of GTE
lion of not having a Ieauge 10 par- 57-42-8 but.1t h\IS lost ,lhe last ~o.
ticipate in last summer, when it Now the J?lis will rect!fy that wuh
••
North Incorporated. Should this applicaappeared lhat the SVAC may dis- a resounding 24-14 wm on Saturband.
day. Har-rumph!
.
•
tion be granted, subscribers of The Ohio
,
·
(C)!991 NEWSPAPER EN••
VMH Dolphms win rERPRISE ASSN.
Bell Telephone Company O:teshire Exchange
•

c;sl

R:=:a·lftDI,

.

the

rvc announces changes in league

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Whip

:.~

(

VELVET
SUGAR FREE

aoz.

BOWL

Ice
Cream
VELVET
_
(. Ice (ream
12
Sandwiches a.

Potato
Chips ·

~299

PRINGLES ORIGINAL

Potato
Chips

FOODLAND

2

~ 1;' .:.
Brown 'n'
Serve Rolls . ••
•

•

'

99(

SWEET SUE

~~:s I) ~ 1·:.
.Chicken CANS
I.
Broth
--=-~ FOODLAND
Sour
. .'
Cream · 16 oz.

BBYFL crown

CAN

(
99

.

•

Saturday, Nov.lJ

The Vetenms Memorial Hospital Dolphins defeated the D.O.
Blake Construction Browns in the
Gold.and rain last Tuesday-evening
to claim the 1991 Big Bend Youth
Football League Tournament
Championship. The Dolphins completed the season undefeated.
In the consolation game The
Home National Bank Mustangs
defeated the Pleasers Eagles to
bring home the third place trophy.
Trophies were sponsored by The
Peoples Bank for first place,
McCullough &amp; Riffle Drug Store
sponsored the second place trophy
and The Farmers Bank sponsored
the third place trophy.

"89(

MIKE-SElLS
Yz GA.L

[9J

Air Forc:e29, •Htwaii 21
State 22, Arizont 11
•Mitlut ll, Rice 2A
Baylcr 27. "Tc.xu 2A
•Driliam Youna :IS , U~h 19
Califcmi142, •Stanford 38
Clemson 24 •Scum c;,_&amp;tOUna 2l
..... 'COionOO 35', •IQ;.a State lS·~
•
Comelllll •Pcnntylvania 1•

•Atizm•

I

.

•

.

Suorts briefs

LOS ANGELES (AP)- Magic

Johnson underwent an initial medical evaluation which revealed no
signs or symptoms of AIDS, his
agent said.
LQn Rosen said in a slatement
that Johnson was examined Monday by Dr. Ronald Mitsuyasu in an
outpatient visit to the UCLA Medical Center and, according to Mitsuy~~· was in excellent physical
condtuon.

·HOLIDAY TURKEYS

..

FRESH FROM

liWIS'"TURKIY'FIRMS INC: : TURNING THE CORNER - DolphiD quarterback Matt
\VIIUam1 (7) plckl ap good yardage arouDd left eDd. W!lllams
l!elpecllead tile Veterans Memorial H~ltill Dolphins to a wiD over
dte D.D. B~e COPStruetlon JJI'OWIIS In lbe Big Bend Youth FOot·
llltll Leapt Tournament Champlouhlp.

THANK YOU lETART
TOWNSHIP-VOTERS FOR
YOUR.VOTES AND SUPPORT
iN THE RECENT ELECTION.
;
JOYCE WHITE

•

BIG BEND FOODUND

700 W. MAIN STilET.! PO. .OY, OHIO
992·~191
.
OPEN 7 All-1 I PM Mon. thru Sat.
SUNDAY 8 Al-10 PM
,- ••..:

and WIC Coupons

ORDER,TODAY

'
could call subscribers of the Pomeroy
Exchange at a significant discount over
••
current toll rates, yet their local exchange
•.•
service charges~ould not inc~ase. Any
..•
•
interested subscriber who can show good
cause why this appHcation should not be
'"
granted should file with the Commission a
written statement detailing the reasons
on or before December 18, 1991. Unless the
Commission receives a written statement
to that effect and ari accomPanying request
for oral hearing on such issue, this matter
~
'
will be decided on the basis of the infor~
mation contained in the application and
~
•
.. _ ... th;__ ~~Pp!el!!.~~~al i_!!~~~ma~io~!n~~.}t~o~:· J~- -~~\!~:....., u.-1 . :·~. ~-'--·.­
mltted by applicant. Further information
. may be obtained by contacting the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio, 180 East
Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio 43266-0573.
~

From your favorite grocer, or call the fann
for your fresh dressed holiday turkeys•
Pickup avallaltlt.
MONDAY THIU SIIUIDIY I 1M TIL 6 PM

1HEOHIOBEU
TELEPHONE COMPANY

614~612·7470
Now available: Fresh 1\lrkey Breast, Smoked
1\lrkeya, Smoked Turkey Beat, TUrk8y Jerky.

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-"'

----- .

�•'

'1

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Wedr-~tsday,

Chester gardeners prepare·for
annual Christmas. flower show

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

.Family
Medicine

t&lt;!ovem ber 20, 1991
Page--3

. Pythicm Sisters ·.
conference held

The November meeting of the soldbysilentbids.
Kathryn Mora's paper was
Chester Garden Club mel at the
Members were invited to a "Gardening is good for your
home of Betty Dean. The Garden- reception for Ada !Jolter on Sun- health." Working wilh plants is a
er's
Creed in unison opened the day, November 10 from 2 p.m. to 4 time to be quiet, to recreate and
john C. Wolf, D.O.
meeting.
Edna Wood led devotions p.m. at lhe home of Mr.. and Mrs, restore one's self, she said. Garden·
Associate Professor
with a meditation on "Thankful- Roy Holter. Mrs. Holter IS an bon- ing lifts the spirits and is an outlet
of Family Medicine
ness" and poems "Slow me Down. orary mem~r of Chester Garden · for frusuation. There is a sense of
Lord" and "Let us Give Thanks". , Club.and w1ll be celebrau,ng her satisfaction in the work itself.
Question: Recently, I seem to again, the heanburn will wor~. ·
Roll call was "Bring a work-saving 90th birthday.
There ane many helpful tools avail·
get a bad case of heartburn every
Instead, put gravity to work for gardening tool."
Mrs. Dean reported on the able to let gardeners remain active
Thanksgiving after our big family you. Stand up to allow the stomach
During the business meeting . recent count~ meeung, when class- throughoUt their lifetime.
.
meal. Why is this?
acid to drain from your esophagus. conducted by Mrs. Dean , Vice es were ass1gned for t~e' Metgs
The Thought for the Day was:
Answer: According to folklore, Also, try a glass of water 10 help President, the Treasurer, Twila County Gardqn C,lubs annual "Every year m the U.S., we lose
the first Thanks~iving was held in wash the acid back into lhe stom- . Buckley reported that all due~ . had Chnsunas Flower Show at Royal seven billion tons or top soil, an
1623. Most likely, that was also the ach.
been paid.
·
Oak Reson on N_ovember ~3 and anea the size of ConnecticuL"
day that the first case of ThanksOf course, the best cure is to
Thank-you notes from Linda. 24. Chester Club IS .re~s1ble ·for
Following the program, a work·
giving heartburn occurred. Today, prevent heanburn in the first place. King and Janet Eblin for sunshine en:ry theme decorauo.ns. 'We Wei,; shop was held. 'Christmas angels
both traditions - Thanksgiving Avoid overeating. If you don't cat remembrances were read. Kathryn come Chnstmas w1th a Song. were made to decorate grapevine
and indigestion - live on. ·
as much, the pressure in the stom- Mora will do December Sunshine.
Mem~;Jers volunteered to 1arrange wreaths to bring pleasure to nursHeanburn, indigestion and sour ach is lower and, therefore, you
The Fall regional meeting was the f1ve classes dra~n by the ing home patients. Charlotte Elberstomach are all names used to have less heartburn . You should attended by Pauline Ridenour, Ches~ Club and provJde a doz,en feld, a guest, guided the workshop
describe a heavy, burning sensation also avoid foods that tend to relax Maurita Miller, Jean Frederick and sandWiches and two dozen cooki~ actjvities.
Mrs. ·Dean, assisted by her
under the breastbone. It is boought the esophagus muscle, These Mrs. Dean. Mrs. Ott, the morning for the !unch hour. Mrs. Dean wtll
on by stomach-acid irritation to the include - in addition to pepper- speaker on lllCyeling, advised rins- be prov1de altar nowers at Ch~ter granddaugliter Lisa Stethem,
delicare tissue of the csophagus,the mint - caffeine, alcohol, choco- ing containers 10 keep down the Unued MethodiSt Church dunng se1ved refreshments to II members
"foodpipe" that connects the mouth late, coffee (including the decaf- bees that have been a problem at December.
,
and guest. Pat Holter won the door
with the stomach. The lower end of feinated variety), onions, peppers, recycling centers. She also suggestFor the program, ,Mace! Banton 'prize.
·
the esophagus has a muscular band mustard, orange juice and tomato ed allowing water paint to dry i!l gave the second lesson on "Save
The December meeting will be a
that stays contracted most of the juice. Aspirin can also have this the can and oil paint poured over lhe Earth - Tune _up the Heat". She dinner meeting at ,Gilmore's in
time to keep the stomach conrents effect. Further.. there seems _to be a kitty litter or sawdust until dry _ not¢~~ an esJmlated_4_0 percent Pomeroy,, with program and judg- partigdarly stomach acid - in hnk between c1ganette smoking and .- before packaging.
•
of lhe energy used in the home is ing of gift wrap - religious, secUlar
the stomach and away from the heanburn.
'
A report on the Stern wheeler for heat. If the heating system is and lllCycled.
more delicate lining of the esophaIf chronic heanburn is a prob- Festival Flower Show was given. running inefficiently, 30 to 50 per·
gus. While this band does relax to lem. your doctor might advise you Pat Holter won a'blue and a red rib· · cent percent of the energy it uses is
let food pass into the stomach, it to reduce the size and fat content of : bon, Mrs. Dean a blue.
wasted. Oil furnaces should be
then immediately closes again. The your meals. He or she may also · Each club in the county is asked tuned annually. The savings is
pressure inside· a stomach over- sugges1 a diet plan to hel.P you to bring a decorated Christmas tree about60 gallons of oil per wne-up.
filled with Thanksgiving fare can reduce your weight In what1s con· to the Meigs Museum as a pan of Gas furnaces should be tuned up · The Prec~tqr Beta Beta Chapoverpower this muscle and let sidered ideal for your height and the Christmas display. They will be every two years.
ter, Beta S1gina Phi Sorority,
stomach acid back up into the ~~~
.
~
attend¢
the Catholic Bazaar held
esophagus, and this is what pro- ' Finally, stressplaysapan. Tenrecently
at
Sacred Hean Church.
duces the sensation of heanbum.
s1on, anger and anXIety can all mg_
l'l
..
. .
.
Following
dinner the group conAlthough heanburn is generally ger the release of stomach acid.
The Celebramos Handbell tratllllonal carols of the Chnstmas
ducted
a
short
business meeting at ,
without serious medical implica· Eating a meal while you're upset is Ringers of First Presbyterian season, both sacred and secular.
lions, chronic heanburn can bring almost an open invitation to hean· Church, Parkersburg, W.Va., will· Tbe Celebramos Ringers is a newly the Grace Episcopal Chun:h. Memon other problems. The constant burn.
perfonn Dec. I at 3 p.m. at Trinity fonned 10-member group of high bers attending were Rosie Sisson,
back flow of acid into the esophaIf you are bothered by frequent Church in Pomeroy. The public is school youth and young adults with Jane Walton, Joan Corder, Jean
gus can cause ulcers or other dam- attacks of heanbum, I urge you to invited to aU£nd.
severallears' experience in other Werry , Ann Rupe, Maida Mora,
Nonna Custer. Betty Ohlinger and
age to the sensitive foodpipe.
see your family physician.
The choir, under the direction of choirs o the chun:h.
·
"Family Medicine" is a weekly Jane Irvine, plays a set of 52 chroIrvine; 'director, has been Donna Jones.
Question: What can be done to
Cindy Oliveri presented a pro·
column. To submit questions, write matically tuned handbells, cast in involve with handbells for 12
ucat heanburn?
gram
with tips to make holiday
to
John
C.
Wolf,
D.O.,
Ohio
Unithe
Whirechapel
Foundry
in
Lonyears.
She
has
a
bachelor's
degree
Answer: Conuary to popular
preparations
more enjoyable, gift
versity
College
of
Osteopathic
don
in
1961.
Precision
hand
casting
from
West
Virginia
Univeri~y
an_d
belief, drinking milk or taking a
tdeas
and
.instructions
for maki~g
mint can actually make the condi- Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens, and tuning is unique to the English- a m~ter's de~ from Ohio. Umsmall
table
favors.
made brozo bells, giving them a versity, both m mus1c educau~n.
tioh worse. Milk will soothe the Ohio45701.
Several members plan to aucnd
esophagus as it passes through it to
somewha(differenttone quality She has taught general mu.s1c,
Oml
the
"Contempor~ry Celebration
than American-made instruments.
band, choir and handbell chmr at
the stomach, but it can stimulare
Holiday
Strategle~ for· Busy PeoHandbells are rung singly or in Little Hocking school for 11 years.
stomach acid secretion. If this acid
The name of Reatha Bush, a
ple."
continues to be foiced up into the third grader at Salisbury Elemen- multitudes with each ringer respon· In addition to working with bells at
The Christmas party will be
esophagus, tbe heartburn will be tary, should have appeared on the sible for as few as four or as many school, she h,as taught hand~ell
beld
Dec. 14 at the home of Charworse, not better. Peppermint can honor roll for the rust six weeks at as eight bells and many techniques m~ _and ~ted a bell cholT at
lotle
Elberfeld.
actually cause a relaxation of the the school. Her name ivas uninten- ane employed for effect and interest Oh1o Umvers11y.
muscle that closes off the stomach tionally omitted from a list sent to throughout the concert repertoire.
from the esophagus and, once The Daily Sentinel from the school. · Included in the pmgram will be

Sorority members ·
attend bazaar

Tbe 61st annual disUict convention of DisUict II of the Pythian
Sisters washela recently at the
Rockland Temple No. ()15 at Long
Bottom.
Betty, Young, ·district dep~ly,
conducted the afternoon sess1on.
The flag was presented and Melody
Roberts g;~ve the welcome with
response by Pauline Trickey, past
grand chief. Reports of the temple
were given, the Chaner was draped
.and a memorial service was exemplified.
Remarks were given by Shirley
McAlister, grand chief of Caledo- ·
nia, Jane Bowles, grand junior of
Wilkesville, and Beverly Ham'
mood, past grand chief of
Pataskala.
Other grands visiting included
Vivian Morris, Fredericktown;
Pauline Trickey, Cincinnati; and
Julia Burton, Circleville.
DisUict deputies included Helen
Ann Bishop, St. ·Paris; Jo Simmons, Lowell; Shirley Hall, Circleville; Betty Husk, Beallsville.
Olher Knight of Pythias were Tom
McAlister, past grand chancellor of
Caledonia;· AI Morris, Frederick·
stown; Frank Trickey;-Cincinnati;
Harlan Ballard, grand trustee, and
Richard,Bishop, SL Paris.
.
Following the evening session,
refreshments were served.

.,
;•

. YOUR FRIENDLY KROCER STORE
WILL CLOSE 12 MIDNIGHT WfDNESOAY,
NOVEMBER 27tll
.

OPEN

THANKSGIVING DAY

'·

8:00am-4:00pm

Re-Open Friday, Nov. 29th
see store For Details

.
Handbell Rznaers
toper orm

'tted

Name

CHURCH BAZAAR
SAT., NOV. 23
9 am to 5 PJII
At Salem Center Fire Dept.
Food .served by United
Methodist W11men

''

"614·742-2091
a:
w

~

...
'

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

Springs Better Health Club will
meet Thursday at I p.m . at the
Rock Springs United Methodist
Chun:h.

have a smorgasbord dinner at the
hall on Saturday beginning at 4
p.m. Cost is $5 for adults and $2.50
for children under $2.50. Tbe public is invited to attend.

I

Frozen Young Turkeys

.·-..
..·.

1B·Ct.

·~

·u.s. Grade A f1D-Ibs. And UpJ

'

.' ''
-•

LIMIT 1 WITH ADDITIONAL PURCHASE

. !',

RACINE · The Racine American Legion Post 602 will meet . FAIRPLAIN - The Liberty
WEDNESDAY
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the post Mountaineers will perfonn at the
POMEROY - The Hysell Run home.
Jackson County Jamboree in FairHoliness ChUICh, off Route 124 on
plain, W.Va. on Saturday.
County Road 15, will have revival
ROCK SPRINGS · The MiddleTuesday through Sunday at 7 p.m. port Child Conservation League
LONG BOTTOM • There will
nightly. George Williams, Point will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the be a smorgasbord dinner at the
Rock Chun:h, will be the ~e!. Rock Springs United Methodist Long Bottom Community AssociaPastor Bob Manley invites the p\16- Church. Plans will be made for the tion on Saturday with serving to
Christmas pany. A discussion will begin at S p.m. Cost is S5 for adults
lic.
be held on helping a needy family. and $2.50
.. for children under 12.
POMEROY - A tree top angel Hostesses will be Becky Sreele and
class will be held at the Meigs Tracie O'Dell.
COOLVll.LE - There will be a
County Public Library' in Pomeroy
hunters safety course on Saturday
on Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. There
FRIDAY
and Sunday fmm 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
is a $12 fee and registration is
POMEROY : The Pomeroy at the Coolville Lions Oub Buildreq_uired. Bring orie-half yard white Senior Citizens Dance Club will ing. There is no charge but regisuasaun or cream colored muslin and have a dance Friday from 8-11 p.m. tioq is required. Call Ed Wigal at
two and one-half yards of lace. with music by the Happy ·Hollow 667-6657, Ed Rood at 667-6348 or
Michele Garretson is the instructor. Boys of Athens. The public is Bob Pullins at 667-3831 to regisrer.
. -···- ---.
..
.. invited -to attend. Those atrending
POMEROY . - The Pomeroy bring snacks for the snack table.
SALEM CENTER - A church
Revitalization Committee will meet
bazaar will be held Saturday from 9
Wednesday at Trinity Chun:h at 7
SATURDAY
a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Salem Center
POMEROY - "Martin the Fire Depanment. Food will be
p.m.
I.
Cobler" and "Plymouth Colony" served by the United Methodist
SYRACUSE · Revival at the are this week's childrens' movies Women.
Syracuse Mission Church will be that will be shown at the Meigs
held Wednesday through Sunday County Public Library in Pomemy
LONG BOTTOM - The Mt.
with Pastor Rick Malloy. There on Saturday and Sunday at 2 p.m. Olive Community Church in Long
will be special singing and Pastor and at the Middleport Library on Bottom will have a hrmn sing on
Mite Thompson invites the public. Monday at4:30 p.m.
Saturday at 7 p.m. w1th music by
the "LighthQuse Gospel Singers"
THURSDAY
WILKESVILLE
The from ML Vcmon. Pastor Lawrence
POMEROY - Tbe Meigs Coun- Wilkesville Pythian Sisters will Bush invitea ~,Public.
ty Democratic Executive Committee will meet Thursday at 7:30p.m.
at the Csrpentas Hall in Pomemy.
.
~
·
·

a:

lb.

' ''

'

0

.

.~

..
.,

.

FRONTIER BRAND
17·9-LB. AVG.J WHOLE

Fresh

.Boneless
smoked Hams

Celery
Malt

Pound

$1' '

,,,-

11

RUTI.AND • The Rutland Fire
Department will sponsor its annual

f/J .

QUARTERS

"They don't
jump up and down
when I clip eoupons,

Imperial
Margarine

,,

''
'
~.

1-lb.

but when I take out
the Domino...
.

... I'm a hero. The truth is, I always bake' with '
Domino' Sug2r. ~use it's so pure, it's •
like having recipe insurance. Which makes this
coupon the icing on the calrc."

~, , .

· ---· - ~~~e::=.:;::e~~~··:~;6· ·· "'"w--· ·speciaror die-week·r ~· -

·.

..

,...., \,,
'

'

·~·~

........

__

,....,.,

-

FISH and CHIPS

sreyers
lce.cream

REEDSVlll.E - The Riverview
Garden Club will meet Thursday at
7:30 p.m. at the Reedsville Chun:h
of Christ. A Chrilllllu workshop
will be conduc:ted by Marilyn Hannum and Ruth Anne Balderson.
: 1-fembers are to brinss!fts for
palie!'~ at. Pomeroy N'ursmg and
:.JtebiiiWIIIIOII Center.

.
• :
(

'

ROClC SPRINGS - The Rock
l

·,

M-canon

$1.54

to attend.

•

t

•

. "At 1M 1111 ef fill P-y IIIIR . . . . .:•

~~ -

•r

Pl. 991-2556

~'-

lb. . .

'

"

U.S. Grade A l1o-tbs. And UPJ KROGER

ADOLPH'S DAllY VALUY
POIIIOY, OliO

,,... , __ ,

UGHT ICE MILK OR

p.m.

.TIJPPERS PLAINS - The Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
Auxiliary will hold a special meeting at the post home on Thursday
at 7:30p.m. All members are urged

.. .....

..

Domin&lt;f Sugar.
~e~smo~rob~g

·

cottonelle
Bathroom
Tissue
IHOII

NONRETUfmABLE BOTTLE.
CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI,
CAFFEINE RlEE PEPSI,

Diet Pep__si or
PepsiCDia
Z-Liter

For

Fresh Young Turkeys

,

than what you'~ making:" '
'(

t

... •

•

. . .. . .

. ...

.

" ......

&gt;

I '

it':-

�.•,

Ohio

.
'•

-·

_.

-

By LEE SIEGEL .
AP.Scieoo Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
study ll)at seems to link .childhood
Jeuk.emia to pow~r lines, hair dry- .
ers and black-and-white televisions
also hints. at possible risks from
curling irons, clocks and Video
' games, scientists said Tuesday.
Sponsored by the electric utility
indusuy,_the five-year, $1.7 million
study IS the most comprehensive
yet conducted on the possible but
unproven ltealth risks of electtomagne!ic fields, or EMFs - invisi~le force fi~lds generated by power
hnes •. appliances and everything
electtical.
The study found that children
who live close to high-current
power lines may have twice the
normal one-in-20,000 chance of
gelling leukem.ia. Actual 24-hour
measuremenrs of'EMFs in chil·
dren's homes suggested only a
weak link between leukemia ana
magnetic fields , and no link
between the cancer and electric
fields.
"The c.w•cn,
suppon to the h
esis that electromagnetic fie I increase childhood leukemia risk, but it doesn't
resolve the conttoversy," said Dr.
John Peters, a co-author of the
report and occupational health
director at the University of Southern California.
As for possible cancer risks
posed by appliances, "the main
··

CLEANING CELERY • Celery stuft'ed with
peanut buuer is just one of the itelns students at
Middleport Elementary wiD enjoy during their
Thanksgiving Dinner today (Wednesday). Here,

first grade students, Candice Lee, Brandy Shea
and Angel Stone, along with room mother,
Cindy Smith, clean the celery in preparation.

Scientists _spot mysteri'ous space
object heading toward Earth
at about 2 a.m. or 3 a.m. PST on
By LEE SIEGEL
Dec. 5,.Marsden said Monday by
AP Science Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A phone from Cambridge, Mass.
The only asteroid observed flysmall, mysterious .object is going to
ing
closer to the planet was a 30zoom close to Eanh on Dec. 5, but
astronomers can't tell yet if it 's foot-wide chunk of rock designated
some previous! y unseen kind of 1991BA, which flew within
asleroid or an old spacecraft swing- 106,000 miles of Earth last Jim. 15;
ing past its home planet.
he said. That was less than half the
"We don't know what it' is: It distance between Earth and the
moon, and was considered a "near
just struck me as very curious,"
said astronomer Brian Marsden, miss" by astronomers.
Paul Chodas, an aerospace engidirector of the International Astronomical Union's Central Bureau neer at NASA's Jet Propulsion
for Astronomical Telegrams, a Laboratory in Pasadena, said his
reporting agency for astronomy calculations suggest the object is an
discoveries.
asteroid. But it also could be a
James Scotti, a University of spacecraft, perhaps an upper stage
Arizona scientist, fll'St spotted the from one of the rockets that sent
object Nov. 6. through the universi- manned Apollo spacecraft to the
ry's 36-inch Spacewatch telescope moon from 1968 through 1972.
Some of those rockets were
on 'IGtt Peak in southern Arizona.
The telescope is used to look for intentionally crashed on the moon
asteroids that might smash into the for seismic studies by Apollo lanplanet. Many scientists believe ders, but four flew past the moon,
large, asteroid impacts wiped out escaped Earth's ~vitational pull
the dinosaurs and caused other pre- and staning orbtting the sun, he
histOric mass extinctions on Eanh, said.
Scientists began to suspect the
and. also might ihreaten the planet
object may be a spacecraft beeause
in the future.
This objee1 - with a diameter. . its orbit around the sun is "just a
lillie bit larger and little bit more
estimated at one yard to II yards
- Wllll't hit Earth or the moon on elliptical than Earth's orbit around
its orbit around die suil, but it will ·the sun," Marsden said.
"We haven't seen a natural
pass within 290,000 miles of Earth

•.

LOS ANGELES (AP)- Julia
Robens said she intended to break

'Where have ·you been? ' And he
proceeded to tell me what I was

s~~:ra:~.g:Jte:~,~~hto~:j~;
~~~"!a'::,~: ~::;:y ~~~~!s~~~o~
~J:. ~fore their ballyhooed nup· want thisto happen."

'

'

"I had returned from a ttip to
Arizona intending to tell Kiefer
that I thought it would be best for
both of us not to get married," she
told Bntenainmcnt Weekly in her
ftnt interview since the June split
"But the next time I talked to
, Kiefer, he called me on the tele·
phone,' ' said the actress, who
starred in "Pretty Woman."
"The only thing I said was,

he was the victim of the situation,"
she said.

NEW YORK (AP)- Dustin
Hoffman said his Captain Hook is
Miss Robens, 24, said she was a based in part on conservative
"little surprised that he had said columnist William F. Buckley Jr.
this before I had had a chance to
"He's bright and educated, but
say it, so I said nolhin$. But he was there's something scary there,"
far more nasty about 11 dian I was Hoffman said in the Dec. 8 issue of
going to be." ,
USA Weekend.
In the magazine, which hit
"I know what interested me was
newsstands Monday, Miss Robens the combination of violence and
said Sutherland wasn't "left at the effeteness," Hoffman said of
alw."
Hook, "and Bucldey came to mind
"I feel like Kiefer, for whalever - in a nice way."
'
reasons, tried to make it seem like

=~~~~~===r-=~~~~~==-r=========-r========-1
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice

NOnCE TO CONTRACTORS,
.. . STATE 01' OHIO
..
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTAliON
CalUIIIbua,Ohlo
NovMiber 11,1111
Con- 8alte
No. 11-1061
UNIT PRII:I!CONTRACT
S.r.d propoaola wilt be
racolved althe olllce 01 the
Director ol the ' Ohio
Depertmont of T..,oporta.
don, Columbue, Ohio, unttt
10:00 A.M., Ohio 8hlndanl
nma, Friday, Deoanlber I,
11111or llftpro-ln :
Athant, OatH1, Hooltlng,
llelga, Monroe, Morgan,
Noble, VInton, W.thklgton
Countlaa, Ohio lor 1 ---~--Inti ..uon Alli-33-12.41 on
Un~ 111111 Route N, other vartouo routee - - ·
tlone by lurnlehlng and
lnlllllftl rllled paven~•t

.._,CottY

. "l"" d!lle otl.for corn....
lion of thlt work ihell be 11
111 forth In the bidding
prapoal.'
Each bidder eholl be
-ulred to ftle with hla bid
a·-~cenllletl check .or Mlh~
er'e check for an amount
equal to ftvo per 01111 of hit
bid, but In no event more
'lhon filly thouund dottaro,
orebondfortenr.'c..lof
hie bid, poyeb t to Ihe
Dl-r.
·
Blddora muat apply, on
the proper forma, lor
quelllloallon at IIIII len
prior to till hie ut for
Of*llng btdo In acoordence
with Chtptlr - 1525 Ohio
.Revlaed ,._..._
--.
Plana and apoclftcallono
aN on 1111111 the Department
of Trenaportltlon and lhe
omoe ot 1111 Dlatrlcl Deputy
Director,

•ve

• PROBATE COU-RT OF,
IIEIGS COUNTY, OHIO ·
ESTATE OF
MARION F. EBERSBACH
CASE NO. 26906
OOCKET
· 13 ; PAGE ••a
PI••• publlah In Tha
Dally Send~ lhrH llmeo
prtor 10 daM of lllle:
Ofltrt wilt be rocelv., 11
theofflcooiUndaR.Werner,
113- 12 w .,_ d
1
· -..on Slrac~
Pomeroy, Ohio until Nov.,..
bor 2t, 1t81 •t 10:00 a.m. for
lhtpurohaotollhefollowlng
~oonot property olllerlon
· Ebenboch, d...aad, towll:
A ten Otdomoblo 4 Dr.
Std. Offara mav be rneclt 11
•· 1
•
t. .. t"" of Nle. The Executor reMMo the right to ,.
)oct 1ny ond aH bide.
Uncia Wern~r-Eaaon,

·. · :~;::=;--;:.;., -f:;- :~~:r:;:~·i~ ·. -.- ~;;:~~ ~~~·~t!!J9'P!UJ~

Work l.anllth: Yartouo 1Mt
JERRY WRAY (II) 13,20,27 3TC
or vorloue nihe.
Dtrector of TrtnllpCIIhltlon
P a - Width: Veri•
(111 211, 27, 11111

ihing this study does is raise this
issue. ·It requires more study,' '
Peters said.
·· · ,
Because ther.e are so many
. uncertainties,-."it would be important for parents not to panic about
these results," said Dr. Stephanie
London, ehief author of the study
and a USC assistant professor of
preventive medicine.
Peters endorsed a concept called
"prudent avoidance," which
means retlucing exposure to electromagnetic fields when it is cheap
and easy. Some scientists have suggested avoiding electric blankets,
moving clocks away from beds and
sitting at least arm's length from
computer·screens.
"' London said the strength · of
~:.MFs drops rapidly with distance
from appliances. So standing back ·
from appliances can' reduce any
potential hazard, although that isn't
possible with appliances such as.
electric blankets ah~ hair dryers.
Some electric blanket makers are
now making low,fie(d blankets.
The study's main conclusions,
released and widely publicized in
February, tied increased leukemia
risk to children's proximity to
power lines and their use of hair
dryers and black-and-white televi· .
sion sets.
The final repon, -released Tuesday, also hints children might face
an increased risk of leukemia if
they regularly use electric blankets,

- .- .
- - ..
NOnCE OF PUBUC SALE
The following deacrlbed
Item wilt be ollerid lor pubtio
oaltto,lhehlghoetbklderon
th1 lh'-d d
•
av
ol Dacernbtr
1111111en
o1ctock
a.m.
1871 AMC JEEP 111 1
JIFISNN0 48342
. lillie of lheoecurlty ilated
will b1 •-fd
1 bO
ve
,.. .on lhe
pr..taeo of the City Loan
Flnanclll Strvlcta, tnc., 231
Eaal llaln Strlll, Pomii'Oy,
Ohio 45711 ,
Tormoollllllt:Cathllllller
reaorwtlho rtghl to blclond
lht ~ghl 10 rt)oclany and 11
bldl Prlo 10th del101
• r
•
aalt,
anangernento may be mtde
to lnapect' lhla rnarchandlaa
by callng 114·1H12·2171 bt-the hour1 0 11.00
• a.m.
Rd
(111 52o'OD p.m.
~ •·", """""'ot'~'"'"'"'w'"'w.-...-~v ...

·:.!!!MADS
fUll: W PIIJ
WITH BA•••e
IRUUIN

SANDY'S VIDEO
,.~

Racine, Oh. 45m

THANK YOU BEDFORD
. TOWNSHIP FOR VOTE &amp;
SUPPORT OF MY ELECTION
FOR TRUSTEE
.
ELMER F. BAILEY
Pd. for by Cand., 40063 SA 681, Shade

VERA'S NATURAL
IMAGE
Lori Redman Bailey

ssoo Off Perm Special

20% Off Nexxus Products
OFFERS GOOD
MONDAY, NOV. 11 thru . .
SATURDAY, NOV. 23
PH. 675-773-5937
6 Martin St.
Mason, WV

All

'

25% Off

•

At

''''•

Oscar's Restaurant
Court St.

.

____ ...,.

___

• ,,-

""

~-~.-.

..

;c •·
~

· r~­
··~-

IN.llfE COURT OF
• COIIIION PLEAS OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
PROBATE DIY1810N
IN lliE MATTER OF:
CASE NO. 27233
lliE ESTATE OF MARlliA
COLLEEN YAN IIETER
NOncE OF PUBUCATION
Notlotlt hertbygr-lhal
on !)ctobor 24, 1111, Steven
Ray Yon llltttr, EIIOUIOr of
the 11111e of lllrlha Colleen
Van M-, le~oi215Huber
Vllage Blvd., Apartment A·
124, WMtervltte, Ohio 43081,
llted In lhlt Court ur\cler
Dockat ea.. No. 27233 an
•ulhentlceted copy of Llntrt
of Authority loauad to him by
the Franlttln County Probeta
Couri,F!ankllnCounty,Ohlo.
Notloo lo lurther given lhol
all credtloro of oald HMle
who dtllro 10 111irt their
nino on the ... , ..... of
oald decedent locor.d In lhla
alata ahalt proaent their
clalrne, duly twam to, to lhlo
Court within llx monthnfltr
tiMI fling oiHid lelloroln lhlo
Court, orlhtlr tllkl lion• aha II
, _ "" -eel berrtd
and ..nctled.
Robtrl Buck
Judge
(II) 13,20,27 3TC

·'·

''

' .

section of Los 1\ngeles tbe publishing of ber . · .
autobiography, "One Lifetime is Note Enoup," ~: ·
in which sbe speaks out about her many mar.' . :· ..
rlages and lovers. (A~)

Buckly 0 'Dell guest demonstrator ·_: ,.::.
ments to the membtirs. Janet Theiss
won the door prize.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

.

446 4524

NOllCE TO CONTRACTORS
' : STATE OF OHIO
-. DEPAR111ENT OF
. TRANSPORTAnON
· · Cotumbuo,Ohlo
; November 15, 11H11
ConlriOISaleo
Ur1aal Copy No. 81·1051
uNTT PRICE CONTRACT
.._led propo1111 will be
received al.lhe offlce of lhe
Director ol the Ohio
Department of ·Traneporta.
tlon, Columbue, Ohio, undl
10:00 A.M., Ohio Stand~rd
n.,.., Friday, December 8,
11111 lor lmpro-Min :
Ath111a, GaUlt, Hocking,
Melgo, VInton Counlloa,
Ohio lor Improving Medon
ATH•I3•D.OD on United
SMitl Rou~ IS, other varf.
OUI 1011111 and lecllonl by
performing • boU bonk atudy end curve Inventory.
Pro)oct Length: 0.00 IMI
or 0.00 milt
Work l.anllth: Yllrloua fMI
or verlouo mlleo.
P o - Wlcltll: Yarltl
"Tile cltle Ill lor compltdon qf thll worll ~hell be ••
aet l~rih In the bidding
propooll.'
Each bidder ohell be
requlrtd to lite with hit bid

13 .00 IARIAIIII'M.fiii£ES ~T I SUICA1 ,
&amp;l .OD UMAUI lliKT l\IESIMY ,

-lllllnlll
fi!IMY thl'll TlMSOnl

,ww:ith~lh=e~h:o:s:te
:i:ng~re:f:re~
.,_
- · · :ss2se:rv
- -, -·
··· · ....sh:·:_~~~~~~~~~~~
..

MoT ERs'•

.
1- 'PRESENT
COUPON TO -::jciTOOtnAP•HEiii'--..,
Pr

FOODLAND
POMEROY
BIG BEND
FRI., NOV. 22
10·7
•'
•

• Lool&lt;l Christmas and Black Background In Your Pack • No Extra Charge. - ·

.,., ., ""'

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

There are tll.ree kinds o1 teeth for ' "'

•

•

chewing food: The Incisor~ chop It, tile
canines tear It and lbe rnolai'IIJ'Iad II
up.

'

-' '
''
~

BY D.O. STU 010
REG. $14.95

2 · 6x10
3-5x7
12 • JUMBO WALLETS
16 • H{'LF SIZE WALLETS
• ~lmlll peck per aub)tct - 2 per family.
• Group Picture• $t:oo per subject. Pay when taken.
• We have Christmas Carda.

,· f

,

9S

•

•ve

...•

•
•"

RavludCocle.

'"'

Plane .lnd lflllllllcatlono
aN 011 ftlt In 1111 Dopartrnant
of ' Tranaportatlon and tho
oftloe of the Dlatrlct DopUly
Dlreotor.
Tha Dlreotor - - the
right 10 ......,, •Y and aH

.
'

,,_

NOW

sgss llllill1·
_.

r/!

...

••
ALL AGES
This Year
Give a Family Portrait

but
ftfty lllouNnd dotlaro,
or a bond for 1111
oont ot
hla bid, p•ya&amp;Tio the
DiiiCiOf.
llddera muot opjlly, on
the proper formo, for
quaiiiiMUOft al le11t len
prior to lite dill utlor
opening llldo In •-rdance
with Chepllr 5125 Ohio

.,
'

llldo.

'

JI!RII\' WRAY
Dlnotor of Trlnaporlltlon
(11) 211, 27, 11111

tllliOtlt

I '

u

1

'cou:u::l:~::c:.~ _.:;:~:: :.
of

and

I

Bti 8ines s .services

~=======::r.t========tfr:=========;i;::::::::::::=:;
J&amp;L
SHRUB TREE
•ssm&amp;a. .
FOR SALE
COISI~UCUOJI
INSULATION
TRIM
and
CHRISTMAS REMOVAL
. .twHtMII
•VInyl Siding
•o..nlaei
.
•Repl-ment
TREES
Windows
•c-plitte · ·
•Rooting
•FIREWOOD •.
•lnlulatlon
Step I c,..,
• .........
JQES KEESEE
Bill SLACK
FrM Estltllotn
992·2772 or ·
992-2269
' 742·2097
CJIS-4473

Ohlo,andlnthe'rownelllpol
Oneltato Cole,
hulband
O,.nge,
and bOunded and wife,
tdo Allee
Cooperand
by l1
U.Crlbed u loUowo: ' · ciMd dar.d AprU 3,1147, and
&amp;.
Being In Section No. s, rocordedln8ook15htp111Je
Townohlp No. 4 and Ronge 230 oluld Deed R-d•.
No.12oltheClflioCompony'o
Being .,. oame ,.., ••
Purchat.e In Orange .Town- •~ conveyed to H.A. Cole
ohtp,llelgaCounty,Ohlo,.,._ Lumber' Co., tno.; by Homer
•LIGHT HAUUNG
ginning ot the Sou-el A. and OneiM Cole by deed
OC)rntr olo 5.28 lin tree! of ~ed In Deed BoOk 185
IUSONAILI
. ...
landoiTheOhioYtlleyManiF Poa•21M,IItlgaCountyDMcl
lecturing Colllfllny, 1 oorpo- Rocordt,
HAILEY HliiiNG'S
rallon, dncrlbed In deed
Deed Rtlitenco: Vo,fume
RESIDENCE ·
recorded In Book 111, 11 pege 181, Page 283,11elgo County
283 of lho Deed Recorda .or Deed Recorda.
35975 Fla1w11ds Rd.
lltlgo County, Ohio, t~
P8rcel 4: The folloWing
USED RAILROAD TIES
Po~~~erorr Ohio
South 58" 25' Eaol 244 fMI; reol.HhiM being 'In Stcilon
1-11-80-tfn
118,1
mo.
pd
lhenca
5, Town 4, flange 12, Orange
- "'. ~
North71'3o'Eao12721eot Townohlp, llelgt County,
.. to lhe E;ut.ll.ne of Iandt of Ohio, and bounded and d•
Guy G. and fll.yrtte C. ocrlbed aolollowi:
Boggeoo, tlience North 77.5
Begtnnlnghilhocenterol
leot to tho Soulh line olutd Slli~ Route No. 881, where
5.21 ocre trict, thence Weal tho WHtllnt olthe Chrllllan
47Siutolong the Soulh Une Church Ctmotery lnt..eeM
"Helping You To
ol111d 5.28 tcrttroct to lho theconteroluldShi~Route;
Recover Your
pi- of beginning, oonhlln- thonce-1807.881eotalong
lng 0.95ocrt. Exeepdng and lhtconteroiNidStotoRouta
RWONAILE
lnveslmenl"
,..erving onMixteenlh (11 (to whore the Waol Una of
HAILEY HANING'S
16) olall ollal1d gao undarty- Guy Boggeu' $7.84 aero
lng 11ld pramluo u hereto- form, dftcrlbtd In VoL 188,
.RESIDENCE
lore accepted and raHrvtd pagaiHI ollhe Melgi 'County
RACINE,
OHIO
35975
Flltwnds RL
by pravtouo grantoro.
Deed R-rdo, lnteroeclathe
And being part of tho rMI conlor of •old Shlte Route)
· Pomerarr Olrto
11/20/1••·
eohlhl conveyed by Ecldi lhance oouth 0 dtt1- 22' wool
11- !J,1 mo. pd
Boq_geooloGuy G. and Myrtle 721.9 fMIIIong the uld Well
C. IIOggMa by cfMd daltd Uno; thence .aaulh 88 deg.
·October 21, 1950, and ,. eall'2067.88 feet to lhe een· ·
ED'S
corded In Book 166, at page •• of Shlle Route No. 7;
99 of tho Deed Recorda of thence north 4 deg. 40' Wtll
lltl~unty, Ohio.
80 fMI along the c..,,., ol
Interior Palndng,
.
Rtflrence: Volume NldStoteRoulo,totheoouthFroa EaUmalll
30 r......perlenee.
195, Pogo 719 of the llelga •••• corner of the Ohio Va~
Four lotttra Of
County Deed R..,rdo.
loy Monufacturlng Corp.;
recommondadon, Honeol
1:00 P.M.
Po reel 2: Slluote In the thence North 87 deg. 50' Will
anddep•f 'le,
Townohlp ol Rutland, In lhe 348 leello • lol now owned
, County of Mtlgo and Stole of· by tho Olllo 'Valley Manulao(B-r I I .... . ,
Ohlo:
.:
turing Corp.; thence north 2
I II db)
i
Beginning about eighty deg.10'eeat1251eetwlththe Starting Sept. 22
Call Ed Battin
one roda and,_ Unitt 'tlnaolaaldOhloValleyllonu12 Gouge Factory
COlltctat
oaot from the center o f - lacturlng Corp; lhencaaoulh
1·61.u&amp;7·6474
Choke
Only
Una of Secllon 36, Town 8, 78deg.30'well272foetwflh
mo. pd.
Range 14 of the Ohio Com· lhe line ol 11ld Ohio Volley
9·6·tfn
pany'oPurchootallhonortfl. Monulocturlng Corp.; thence
eaotcornorofJoaephuaCar· north 5I deg. 25' wool 244
WHALEY'S
THE
penter'o land; lh.,.. -th foet wllh thollna olaald Ohio
44 rocla to lhe northwnl Valley llanulacturlng Corp.;
AUTO PlUS
corner ol Grant Romlna'o thence north 1 dog. 45' eaol
Speclallzhig In
land; thence 111170.112 rocla 229.51MI wllh lhellnooiNid
to lho northeoot corner ol company to thooouth line ol Custo11 Fr•• le~air
NEW &amp; USED PAR S
Gronl Romlno'aland· thence · lht Chrlotlen Church lot;
Complete Grooming
FOR All MAKES &amp;
loulh 111 rode end 23 llnka; lhenco wool 336 IMI along
lhonceMotnroclnnd22·11 the oouth line of the Church
MODRS
For All Breeds
2 links IO lhe wool Uno ol lol end lhe aouth line of the
.
9
92-7013
Jomea Cllopman'a land; carnetery to tho oouthwoet
EMILEE MERINAR
or 992·5553
thence north eo rocla to tho corner ol oald cemotory;
Owner &amp; OJ*afer
.center of the roed; lhtnce thence north 0 deg. 38' oaot
01 TOU REE
aoud1 87-112 cltgr- weel18 .265.1 IIIII Iong tho woelllnt
1·100·141-0070
. 614-9f2-6120
roclund I links; theriot north oloald cemetery 10 the r,lace
DAIWIC, o•o
Pomeroy, Ohio
7..112 c~eg,... _, 14 rocfa· ol beginning, conta nlng
7 / 31 /'91 tfn
1-11-!l-1111
thence north 4 rocla 10 th~ 22.38 acrn.
Excepting and raoervlng
centeroflheaaldiiCtlonNo.
FIREWOOD
36; thence - • to the ploco to lhe Iormor Grontor, Edda
of btgiMing,
Boggeot,heredmlnlauatora,
FOR SALE
Deed relerenceo: Volume okoculora,htlroandaHigna,
180, Page 37; and Volume on•olrlllnth (1116) ohll oil
All Hard Wood
234 Pege411 llilgo County and gu lying under. and
For Residential
o..'cr Recorda.
within the premiMa hereby
CUTTING,
Parcti3:Theloltawlngcfe. conveyed, cltveloped, proand Commercial
SKINNING,
ocrlbodprenil- ·lllualtdln duced end removed tho,.
Dump Truck
lho Townthlp ,;, Orang.. lrom,
WRAPPING
Countyoflltlgaand Stott of
SUb)ectlo on oU and gu
Delivery or Pick·
BASHAN RD.,
Ohio and bounded end d• loaM !rom ~ddt Boggeeoto
Up Your Own
acrlbed Mlollowo: Being In B.H.PulnamdaledAprll241h,
RACINE
Section No. s, Townthlp No. 1848, and recorded In Vol.
, Also Splitter
4 .,d Renge No. 12 of the. 41, page 38 ol lho Llaoe
Services Available
Ohio company'a PurchaM, R100raa ol Mtlgo County,
111141111 mo.
end beginning In lht middle Ohio.
Call 992-614~
1M tMO
'of Shltt HlghwaT No. 880, on
SubJect to the right olthe
lhe North tlne 0 Secllon No. Granlora; Guy G. Bogg111
5 44 roda 14-112 ftet Wttl end llyrtle C. Boggen, their
INDEPEN.IIT
rrO.. tho NortiMoat corner of helra .and aollgno, lo conI CAIHT CI.IANEIS
llld Section No. 5; thence alrucl, motntaln, repair a al1
and nil FLOOR CUE
Wool 211 rodo 10.114 rut to .Inch Mwer line lo a run on
the Chrlatlan Church Lot; •aldrealeotote,togelherwllh
•Reasonable fla1eo
INTERIOR • EITEIIOR
thence South Broda; thence lht right ol lngrato and
'
•Ouollty Work
FREE ESTIMATES
Weal 10 rodo; .then&lt;:. Soullr
lor uld Granlora,
•Froe
Ettimateo
Take the pain out of
21·112 rodo; thence Eaal 52 lhelr egonll, uolgno and
•Carpel Hu F111 Dry
rodund2feet·thonceNorth lnvHMo, lo conolru~l malnpainting.
Time '
2·1/2 roda· lh.;,ce ·weotll hllnandropalrtheuldoewer
•High
Glo11 an Ti~
Let
••
do
It
for
you.
rod a; Ih...;. North 27 roclllo Una. ·
.
Floor
Flniah
·VERY RWONAILE
the piece of beginning, conSub)eclto all Mltmonll
.. MillE IIWit
Ownor
Mining 5.26 acroa, more or and hlghwayo of record.
HAVE REFERENCES
It,
1,
lullanrl,
OH.
ltu;exceptlng·thefollowlng
Relarenca Dotdo: Vol.
(614) 915-4110
doacrlbed promiHa con· 188, page 88; and Volume
7.t2-2UI
mo. pd.
veyed to Blaine Hordway by 227, Pogo 409, llelgo County
3·14-'91-lfn
FtonloO. Lomb and bounded Deed Rocorde.
end dncrlbed 11 ronowa:
Parcel 5: Slluoled In tho
Beglnnlng351nl Eliot ollho County of lltlga,ln the SMio
NorthMot comer ol Lot No.3 of Ohio, and In tho Townahlp
lnW.W.McCune'aFirolAdd~ ol Olive, bOunded and d••-----~-----------don to tho VIllage of Tuppara acrlbed lololtowa: Being the 1·
Plalna, Ohio, In tho center of wntern on.holl ollhowoal· t_ _ _ _ __:R.::e::a::.lE:SI:::al:::e:_G:e:n:::e:,ra:l:__ _ __
lhe Tupper• PlolnundAIIred em ono-hollln Froctlon· 32, I"
Road now on plat io Mill SL. Town 4, Range 11 of lho Ohio
the..;. Eull70 feet; thenc~ Company'o PurchtH, and
South 2051eet; !hence Wnl beginning 11 lho. oouthoaol
OFFICE 992·2886
110 teet; ihencoln 1 North· corner of Hid Frocllon No.
weoterly direction to the 32,andrunnlng-llolanda
place of beginning, conhlln- now owned by Line Yin•
lng 114 ol an aero; reurvtng yard (formarly owned by
thorlghllolayandmalnMina Reuben Woboltr); lhonce
drolnoroewerlromthehouu northmenoughtomakeone
now on tho following do- hundrtd ec,..; thence out
acrlbed prernlaoa: Situated to the Fraction line; lhonce
'In Orange Townohlp, Melgo oouth to lhe pMct of beginCounty, Ohio, being In Sao- nlng, containing IWonty·Bvo
205 North Second Ave.
lion No, 5, Townohlp No.4, acrao,moreortna,.ondtylng
Ronge No. 12 and bounded In thaweoternono-halfofroat
MJddl.port, Q!l,
ond deacrtbed 11 followo: ttMie lorrnorly owned by
POIIEROY·Boll Run Ro.od·lf you need rental propertyBeginning In lhe middle ol Lucy Ooborn, ~ltd.
Look no further. Selling on a Iitties Iess than an acre of land
Shlle Highway No.7 Wt~t29
Being the .,.,. reel ••
lsa
1973 Green brier total electric 2 bedroom mobile home
rode 1 fM~ end Soulh 16-1/2 late conveyed unto W. Fred
that has a roam built on the back. Included is a 1 bedroom
rodolrorn the Norlheaal cor· OobornbyHernanG.Oaborn
camper trailer also rentable.
ALL FOR $1 o,soo
ner ol uld SocUon No. 5; and Allot Ooborn, hla wile,
thence Well 11 roda to an by deed daled October I0,
POMEROY-The business world oould be opened to you, it
kon plrf; thence South 8·112 11M12, recorded In Deed Book
you
purchase this mmmercial bulding on Main 511981. It
rode to on Iron pin; thence . No. 217 11 Pogo 88, Dted
has
large
spacious rooms on the lirst Roar and plenty of
Eaatt8rodo;lhonoeNorlh8- Recorda of lltlgo County,
storage spaoo on the seocnd ftoor. Also a new fiJmaoo and
1/2roclotolhepllctofbegln· Ohio.
carpeting.
$30,000
nlng, conhltnlng o.as of an
Deed Raftrtnca: Volume
acre,rnoreorleoo,andbtlng 238,Pogo345,11olgoCounty
OWNER WANTS AN OFFEil-Pomeroy-5 lots with a 2
a part ol the.,,.. prerniHo DeedReoorda,andtheprtyer
story home. Home has 4 badrooms, dining room, and a fiJN
oonveytdbyFtonloO.Lamb, lo to forooioM all lnterool
basement.
Newer gas rurnaoo and a big one car garage.
11 it., to Forr~l A. Ward by owned by you and for coolo.
WAS
$17,900
.
NOW $15,1100
warranty datd of dolellorch
You are required to an17, 1844, end recorded April owerthtcomplalnt within 21
RUTLAND-LIIher Road.Qh, what a beautilul homel This
17, 1844, In Dted Book No. daya Iller tho ftrol publico·
fann
has 104 acres ol beautilullaying land. Apjirox. 30-35
151,pago321, Dted Recorda lion of thlo nollce which will
,.
acres,tiffable,
60-79 acrespastureland, 39XI!O bam and·a "
Of Mtlge County,'Ohto; oiler ·be·publlthedoncu WMllor
24X26 smal bam, and a com crib. But wait the house is so
and ocroNthe ftrot '*•Ina· lhllloonoocutlvtwookoond
roomy with' L·shllll8d living room and dining area. Birch
bove dMcrlbed promlooe ol· thtll lnoluclt the de~ on
cabinets
In the kitchen, 2 baths, 3--4 bedrooms and a
lhilr 10 lho dtlch running which • -nd Nle will be
recreation room In basement. Also has a 33Xt71~round
through the ftrat lbovo do- conducled If no bid Ia aopool.
.
JUST $125,000
ocrlbed preinlaao end era•• copied 11 the ftrol ule. Any
lngShlleHighwayNo. 7or.lo number of parctlo may be
IIIDDLEPORT·IIapte·StrHI·A nice home with 2 badthe rovtnerumlng North and lncludtcl In - eel vert I..
rooma upsllin, .a cute kitchen down wilh a dining room,
Soulh on the ftrat abOve mont. Tht ftrot publication
and
~ loV8ly hVVlg room. It also ails on a great comer
clttorlbed prernloeo, which will bo malla on the 21 de¥ of
SOX tOO lot. Even has a lillie garden lpcl
$21,1100
mtnetltaWntofthehouu Nov., 1881 ond the 21 doyo
on the taatabove cltocrlbed foranowarwlllcommtnceon
IIIDOLEPORT·Lincotn Slrtlt•Lookat the prioe on this 3.....,IMt,lllddralnoroewer that dale.
4 bedroom 211ory home on a nice sweet Has maintenance
10 be laid all dopth ao 11 not ,
In t:all ol your !allure lo
free siding and a otorage builing.
Juot $11,000
to Int.,.,. wllh the Ianning anowororolhorwiM,..pond
or cultivating of tho ftrll atrequlredbytheOhloRuiM
PORTLAND-Big lot-One story home. A cula 5 room 2
above dMcrlbed promlaeo; of Civil P..-durt,luclgment
bedroom home wilh anlo opece lor mora roomt. One C.
and being the uma property· by dalaull will be rencltred
g..ge, level lot, wtl intulai8CI for eoonomictlliving .
oorweyedbyF01111tA. Woril •e-Jnot you lor the rtll.,
OWNER WANTB AN OFFER
Wu 122,800
and Eultl. Ward, hla wife, 1o demanded In lhe comploln~
1
NOW $20,1100
H.A. Colt 'and Ontlto Cole, O.ted 11115/tl
DoTTIE TURNER.t,!lrokar...............................812-51182
by datd daled Auguat 24,
llrry E. llpenoer,
BAEI'DA JEFFEn•••••.•••••.••••...............••..•.•... ee2..sose
1845 ond ~ed In Book
Cltrlt of Count,
OARUNE STEWART..................;....................t82-831S
153, II Paga 117 of Deed
Com Mtlga County
SANDY BUTcttEA ........ _,,, ............................812-1171
Rtoorda or lltlgo County,
mon PIIN Court
Ohlo,IICIIII0.35ocrotherool (11) 20, 27 (12) 4
SHERYL WALTERS....................................._,317.Q421
t
·'1

..........

_

Public Notice
Legol Nolloo
Notice Ia hortbyglven that
U.S. Oolrlo CorpOrltlon hao
flied In •cpllcotlon wllh lhe
Public UlllliM Commlulon
of Oh.lo (C.oe No. 81·1392·
TP·ACE) roqut~llng author·
tty lo lumllh lnlruhltt, long
dlotonce, alternative oper•
lor aervlcea ohltawlde In
Oh!o. Any lntomled peraon,
ftrm, corporollon or entity
who con ohow good ceuao
why lhlt appllcollon lhould
nol be granted ohould ftlo
wllh the Cornmltolon 1 writ·
ten ahlt..ont detailing lhe
r•oon• on or before Decem·
ber 18, IIHI1. Unleu lhe
Com minion rlctlvta 1 wrll·
len ahlternent 10 lhll effect
ond an ooc:ornpanylng re.
quoel lorortlhoerlng on auch
looue, Jhlo molter witt be
decided on the baalt of tho
lnlorrnlllon conlllnerlln lhe
application and thoollldovtll
aubmllled by the appllcont.
Further lnformllion moy be
obhllned by conllollng lhe
Public Ulllltloe Commlulon
of Ohio, 180 Eaal Broad
Street, Columbuo, Ohio
43266-0573.
(11)20
Public Notice
IN lliE COIIIION PLEAS
COURT OF IIEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
Howard Frank, llelga
County Treuuror,
Plalnllll,
Cue No. 80-DLT.OI
va.
Tho Ohio Ytlley lltnufecturing Corporollon, ol ot,
Defendant,
NOnce BY PUBUCAnON
To W.A. OabOrn, and un·
known helra, noxl of kin,
admlnlatraloro, oucceooora,
end ualgna, whoao tul
knownadd,..awooTuppero
Plaine, Ohio 45713; To W.
Fred Oabom,ond unknown
holra,ntllofkln,edmlnlalrt•
lora, and ua!gna,whoao tnt
known eddrMI Wll Toppero
Plolnl, Ohio 45783; To
Audrey Cllevaller, and un·
known htlra, next of kin,
odmlnlalrolora, - - • ·
end oulgna,whoae lui
known oddreoa wu Long
Bollom, Ohio; To Harnen G.
Oaborn, ond unknown htlro,
nail of kin', admlnlllllloro,
aucceuora, ond oulgna,
whoM 1111 known addrtlo
wu Long Bollom, Ohio
45743; To Guy G. Boggan,
and Myrtle C. Boggeoa, and
unknown htlra, nut olkin,
admlnlatralaro, - - •..
and aulant, )IW!Io11 1111
known oddr- to 1111known;
To W.F. Kampf,and unknown
helro,nexlolkln,edrnlnlatr•
tori, IUCCIIIOrl, and a•
who11 1111 known
·Ia unknown; To
Brother• Saw·
ml••· Inc., end 1111known
holro,narlolldn,edmlnlotre•
tcra oucctloort and ••
alg~a whoM ta'ot known .
addrt~launknDwn;youare
hereby no lifted lhll you have
, _ named cr.ttndanlln 1
legoloctlon onUIIed Howard
E. Frank, Melgo County
Trnourer vo. Tha Ohio YaJ.
Joy Manu/o;turlng Corpo,.
tlon, ol tl, Delendanl Thl•
action hu been aallgntd
0111 nu,......IIO-DLT.011nd
lo pending In the court al
Common Pitt• of IIIIa•
County, Pomeroy, Ohlo
45188.
The object of the oomt
ptalnllo to roroot- the d•
hnquanl 1111 Mille · hlx..
egalnollhe,..IMIIII-ted
at·
'Parcel 1: Sltuoted In the
I

~

HILL'S DEER
coniNG

538 Bryon Place
lllcldleporl, Ohio

'BISSELL
BUILDERS

CHRISTMAS
TREES

PAlltiiG

IIIJI"'

'

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
Begins Sfpt. 1S

Day or Night -· ·
NO SUNDAY CALLS

Every Sunday 12 NoOrl

· 4-1&amp;-16-Hn

Factory Guns Only
"'/91/2 ....

I&amp;C EXCAVATING

YOUNG'S

BULLDOZIIG
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING :
Limaotone, Dirt,
Gravel and Coal
Licensed end Bonded
PH . 614-992·5691

CARPENTER SERVICE ·
-R"oom Addltions
- GuMr wortc
-Eitctr~ tncl
-C~cret• wort

--,Roofing

(FREE ESTIMATES I

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

,_,,,Ohio

-·--

11-14-'90 tin

•VINYL SIDING'
.,;LUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
.
INSULATION

A&amp;B
COMPLETE AUTO
·uPHOLmRY

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Convertible Tops,
Clrpets, Headliner $
Seat Covers and
Minor Auto Repair.

••• M-. lult
" Free Ettimetn''

PH. 9119;2101
· or Res. 949-2160 .

MAIN ST,. MASON, .W.VA.

H3M)
773·9560

NO SUNDAY CAUS
3-11-tfo

~11

Owner

C. L. Heating &amp;
Refrigeration
We Sell &amp;S.rvlee
Weather King, Mllltr,
Luxalrt, lnaldar,
Heat Pumps, Furnaces,
Air Condftlonere

........

..... liC.-d.ol

11700 SR 124

tO DAY WARUNn

WAliiiiS-$1DO.,

DIYIS-$69.,

llnl&amp;IUf91S-Stoo.,
IAIIGIS- Goo-Boc.--$125 ., ·
FIUZIH-$115.,
'
1100 OVIIIS-$7t .,

KEN'S APPLIANCE

SERYKE
992·5335 • 915-3561
Acr011 Fr.. l'tt1 llffke
POIIOOY, OliO

Long Bollom, 0111o

11f141'11M.

101!0/'U tfo

FALt FESTIVAL
SPECIAL
20 SESSIONS
For $20.00

CHRISTMAS TREES
FOR SAl£ AT 108

SNOWDEN'S lOT
. . StLIIIWOl
TREu READY

.......

NOV. 21, lftl

Offer Ends Oct. 31

Fr... Crt hlyt ~ c;....,

FOREVER
BRONZE

~

Slo.-.,

0,. 117:1!_~

949-2826

61H42·JU51

11·111-.pt

mo.

MICIOWA E .
OVEJI ·liPAll

Teaford

an

(ouitry

rno. pd,

USED APPUAIIaS .

CLARENCE ATHERTON

1041

ptumbing

-lnttrior • E1ter5ot
P1inting

9-11 -1 mo. pd.

10.23-911

1-

GUN SHOOT

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949·2160

949·2206

LINDA'S
PAINTING

5-11-'10 If~

CUSTOM IIHLT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At._Reasonable itricn"

'.•

.

667-6179

1111411fn

FOR SALE

GROOM
· ROOM

GaUipolis

e-11 ·

· The Dally Sentlnel-P

111111

Daily

Tonight
"The Ritz Band"

Public Nollce

.,

··•··

SUNDAYS

Purchases Between
4-6 p.m.

On Page 10

34· Color Portnilts

, . ..... .

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT

EARLY BIRD BONUS-

·. More Legals

Prof8881onal

...

614·949·2202

New Operator: •

'

Wt have lht new plctura bulton.

~

SNODGUSS
UPHOLSTERY

,•

•,

'"' .... :. · .,,...,.,...".. ~'"''...,_,,..... ·~~··~"&lt;t

. . . . . . . . ... . op-

~

306 Third St,

',

A shon business meeting was
held with devotions by Juanita Will
reading "Save Room ·ln Your
Hean" and "Yesterday's Troubles.•
RoD call was answered by bringing
a favorite fall foliage. Doris
Grueser gave a report on the county
meeting.
Evelyn Hollon gave a repon' on
the Sugar Maple Tree. Sbe stated it·
normaUy grows 120 feet tall and is
considued hard wood. It has tiroad
leaves and winged seeds. People

....._'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

20 VIsits 'For $20.00.

'

1
1
I
I
I

- - - --·-~ ·

.HOLIDAY SPECIAL

•,

tap the trees betWeen February and
April to make syrup. The maple
tree is valued for its heavy strong
pale wood which forms a con·
toared grain that mali:es, beautiful
wood cabinets, interior finishes and
tool bandies. Sbe then read an article, ''Why Do Leaves Change Colors. •
·
Janet Theiss had the arrange·
mcnt of the month using yellow
straw flowers with various dried
herbs in a stone jar accented with
gourds. The meeting adjourned

.. .

BUlLETIN BOARD DEADUNE
·4:30. P. M. bAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

.,

Autumn Harvest ws the theme
used when the Wildwood Garden
Club met at the home of Kathryn
Miller.
Buckly O'Dell, Harris Floral
Shop, was the guest demonstrator.
He made several table centerpieces
that could be used for the holidays.
Upon staning his arrangements he
noted to always usc proper oasis
because it holds water longer and is
easier to insen your flowers inlO. It
will also be marked oasis. The 'centerpiece should be twice as long as
wide.carnations;He started with
baker
fern ,
red
apdles,
·lemon
halves, red and gol oali: leaves,
yellow and bronze mums, ending
wber
ithIhMahoiiii!Y
_podsted. J?ch
~~·
en paructpa
10 m.,.mg
their own red velvet bow with
assistanoe from O'Dell.

. ...... ...

neaday, November 20, 1991

•

ZSA ZSA TELLS ALL • International film
st.r Zsa Zsa Gabor, who llllned aotorlety by
slapping a Beverly Hlils polLee orricer,
aonounc~ Tuesday at her home In the Bel Air

-

BULLETIN BOARD

curling' iron$, electric clocks with .•
dials , video games and electric ·
space heaters, Peters said.
The links between leukell)ia and '
appliance use were statistically sig- .
nificant only for hair dryers and
black-and-white televisions. Peters
said that means the connection
between cancer and other appli''
ances is inconclusive but .requires
more study.
The study was published this
month in the American Journal of
Epidemiology. It compared 232
Los Angeles County children who
got leukemia by age II and 232
who did not, and adjusted the
results to account for other factors
that might raise the risk of cancer.
The study was financed by the
Electric Power Research Institute,
the Palo Alto-based research arm of
the nation's privale·utilities.
Mary Gillespie, a spokeswoman
for die Association of Home Appli·
ance Manufacturers, said the group
couldn't comment on the study ·
" until we see the results."
' A call to the Electronics Industries Association, which represents
television and consumer electronics
manufacturers, wasn ' t returned
immedialely,
Kathy Gilmour, spokeswoman
for the Video Software Dealers
Assoe iation ~ said the group would
be interosted in seeing the study but
"can't comment at all on the validity of it."

object in an orbit so much lilce the
Earth's orbit," Chodas said. "Its
orbit around the sun is very much
~ke a spacecraft's orbit or a rocket
body's orbit that launched one of
these ... lunar spacecraft''
Most man-made space debris
stays in orbit around the Eanh.
Asleroids are chunks of rock
and metal, leftovers from the formation of the solar system. Most
are located in the asteroid belt
between the orbits of Mars and
Jupiter, but some are "near-Earth
asteroids" that fly close to Earth.
The mystery object's orbit is
unlike the orbits of any of the three
known types of near-Easth asteroids, so if it is an asteroid i1
belongs to a new class ·or s~ch
objects, said Chodas and Tom
Gehrels, chief investigator for the
Spacewatch telesoope.
It would be " one of the smallest
asteroids ever discovered, if not the
smallest - if it is an asteroid "
said Steve·Ostro, an astronorner'at
Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
Chodas said the object is orbit·
ing the sun at about 69,000· mph,
somewhat faster than Earth. He
said it is closing in on Earth at ·
2,900 mph. On Tuesday, it was
about 1.2 mil~on miles from Earth.

-_;__-People in the news---

W

Wednesd!lY, November 20, 1991 ' ,
•' I

Study linkin-g power lines and .
.cancer also hints at appliance risk
.·

....

.

.

1;

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

._..__

AU MAliS .
lri111 It Ill Or We
Pldr U,. ·

Jr. Golf Sets
Gra,Wit &amp;
Mt!ol Clllts

ON'S AI'PUANQ
SUYJa , .
992-SUS or

C.SI111fl~

lags,Hea4
(ovws, etc.
Proftsllllal
Engrnilg

915-3561

Acrell ,,.. hot Office
117 •. Stcttol St.

614-985·3961

I'OMIIOY, 11110

!:=====1:'":111:1110.:; ;:~~ ~:::=l':"ta/tto ..
THE BASKET WEAVE

ATTrNnON

Now Ope1 11 Salurdays

FIREWOOD

l1r lht Otrlsllnas Stas01.
Gin a ._dwov11 ltaskar
to that lfl!dal som10111 01
your Gristmos lis!.

SEUERS

Hardwood Slabs
For Sale

Weaving supplies also itt
slotk.
Located on Rocksprings
Rd. in Po meroy, 3 miles
from the Meigs Co. Fairgrounds.

Great Pricel

CAU

OHIO PAUET CO.
992-6461

992-6855

1111511 mo.

•Remodeling and
Home Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•P1intlng
. , fULLY JNSIJI£0
fR££ ESTIMAT£$

lashan Building
- ..EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
Fodory Choke
12 t1atf1t ShoiJun Only
Strictly Eolorcod

•

-..

CEDAI

6:30 P.M.
Starting Stpt. 28

.

9 · 1·91 · 1mo.

pd.

~UN SHOOt.
RACINE
FilE DEPT.

,

9-13-'91-tfn

CONSTIUcnON
992·6641 or
691-6164
;

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

IIRBilfll'-

.tfT"'"''tllrOSitW

AIR CONDmONEIS • HEAT PUMPS ollll
FURNACES FOR MOBILE. &amp; DOUILEWIDE HOle
••

0

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•o•••

••••••••••••••••

BENNETT'S
,

0

•

0

IIATIII &amp;
COQG

Locatld On Soffortl Schoal Ill. 1ff Rt. 141
161.4) 4U-9416 or 1·100-171·1967

..,...,

'

�2-The
A1111 OUIICe me 11! 5

3

Senllnel
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Apal'lment'

KIT

- -·

PORN LOSER

CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlaht
'

. forRtnl

' for Salt

1-fCK.If I KIOII... CllOK
_ JCUPS CAAI(otl&lt;\' If
~~'I'

1HII loron 12111, 2br, '2 ·Ac,
U"llort&gt;&gt;nnlng, -wuhor; I!!Yor,
Rolrlawllor, Stovt, Port Fum.
N,IIG!I-"-Good · Condition! 114.
441.Zm Aftor &amp;p.m.

Unlltlohoil? · ilnoo,. · I I - AI Aaoo And Ulootvt•
Awill V.U. Cin-111. Wille:
llngioo, P.O. lox 104S, 1Ja1.
llpolll, Ohio 41111.

c:

44

32 ~lit Ho111ea

.Announcement•

4

~.ct.neada~, November 20, 1991

November

· Television
Viewing .·
M WID.. NQV. 20 M

mall, .,. lltood1 _t_o
homo In OOIInty, 114-Wil·

i&amp;E. . .
.==~·

mil pupplot, 1:00 Pll, :104'111-

tllf.

2 yr

.

o1c1 ·~ .1o

304-182-241&amp;.

o good homo,

0~. NO, MAAM .. ~E
DIDN'T CHEW IT UP•.

4 c1111 1 munlcolor, 2 bllc~ 1

block a whllo, 301-fi5.31115;
4 fomall, chow/ h..ky, block
pupplao, &amp;14-112-5

ACTUAl.l.'!'. ~E
WROTE I_T!

:r:-... R

1:30. 1il. Ill NIC . . .
(j) .....

~

"You'll •fincJ," 8ald gr. . .

. 'that martY people grumble be-

don::J:.What they
g:::;
· grumble

. . .
• cauae they
_o_r_P_E_M_E_....,
~~..

,...1
'·

~

~;;....;;.1
. . ,..;...1

~~-

- - 4th Avo, Uldd. lopo~J Ohio,
2 room opt, utllkln ,..., 30&lt;1182.Z51f.
'

F"l

AY F T F
1· 1 1 1

I. .
~.

0 IIIII Tin Tin, K-8 Cop Q
I:OilJ)Iftetlr rtn" I
.

I

Ec0 N

2

'I M y p u J I J
. · 1 I I I'.

~~~~IOn~~·-

a lklt ito• ond lonlor Colllo

s~

.1'1 111

. 1:00il: llle 111 • • ·
l1l Vldlo , _ .

a14

0

·j

MHINO

Giveaway

·I,;;..,'1.......1

1;:...;..;5

' ·.__,__.......J.I..-.1...
• ....L.--l."-1

8

chudcle QUOI9d

Complolo lite

flUt.; In 1111 mlaolng worda
you dovMp , _ .., No. 3 bolaw.
'"

• . PRINT NUMBERED LETiERS IN ·
THESE SQUARES

·Dip=aniM ·
OMiwZom~Q

,_l"i

1:31l1)An11J Clrlftllli
7:00(2). W!llll ol
. (J) rDrMm ol .1111111111 ...

6

114-440-41126.
Unfurnlllllld 2 lodroOm Guogo

ue 4141.

Rentals

WI'II 'PIV you to type n•mN &amp;
odd,.,.. lrom homll tao.ao
I"' 100, call t•IIONII-16N

$12hr porm. f.T 1-100-862·211611
lnot.Ucfor Noodod: Have A
Situation
B~o~slnHI
Education, Com~ 12
prohonolvo Oooroo, Sond
Wanted
Rttume To: P.O. lox 213, Oat.llpollll. OH 45&amp;31.
Would Uko ANlco Ploco To Uvo
Lllbonre and malnteMnct mon, With A Roo':,tg To Share
Choroo.114-44
.

&amp;Auction

882-21168

LABORERS
ANO MAitiTENANCE NOW
HIRING, TO $16 . HOU~. 1-aoo.
N2·21168.

LABORERS

And Ualnttntnca Now Hiring,

2 Story 3br Comer Lot In
ChNhlrt, ONo. Excellent Condhlon. i04·1132411511. 1104-1132-

46 Space for Rent

7870, 114-3&amp;7-GMI.
2 !&gt;drm hoUII In Autlond, 1275
month pl.. utllhloo, clopooh ond

Country llobllt Homo Pork.
Route 3S, North of Pomorow.
reflrencu required, 814·H2- Loto1 ~1olo, porto, NIH. Coli
114--·llt71,
7503

Business
Training

14

NOwiiiSouth..ltem

Rttrall1

luolnooo Collogo, Sorlna Vonow
Plw. Coli Todly, eM-441-4317~
Reglsttrttlon IQ0.05.12711 B.

Merchandtse

18 Wanted lo Do
Supervl801'.

bodroom houN, 2211 Joffor·
aon Annue, S300 month.
Roloron. . I Oopooll. 30441752lltll.

3

FuiiUme. Stilt)' negotiable.
Mult hlvt gtntral maintenance,

-rloll, lillllng, olr condhlon-

=-------51
HO h ld

1

USI 0

Goocls

lng experience. Pl1111 tl)l)ly In

-on; SConlc Hlllo Nurllna
Contor., 311 Buckrtdgo Rd. Bid'
Will.

9

Wanted 10 Buy

Junk ..,. ond truckl, olio lng potlo dolly, JID'o Aulo Pllllo
oncl8olvogo, l04-~.
W.,. to buy llondlna tlmbor I
pine, llm loorhl lit-H:I·'IUO
oftorlpm.

Wl ..od To luy: Junll AuiM
With Or Wllho&lt;a ...._
Col
Lltry Llvoly. 111411-t301.

Top -

Plkl: All Old U.S.
Ringe, 811vtr Colno,
Colno. .II.T.I. Coin Shop,
,_ SooondA-Golllpotlo.
Ccilnl, -

Employment Servtces

Help Wanted
lUI~ peanulntl phone or.dorll ~ OIU you. No II•

1188 Ford Etcort, Htlchb•ck.
$6,500;
11183
Cldomobllt

Omogo. ti,OOO; 11183 Oodgo
Dlpl~~ $400; 3 Aero Ploco Of
Lind w1th Houoo And Bom,

~.~?,i:.~11 a.'t::t.e:~. ~
MaiN go.

v.a thtvroltl en~l: complete,

lluUingum Aru Publishing,
lox 1111, ZanNviUt, Ohfa

43102.
011 Coro Contor.
No Ellporlonco No-ry. A Mlu Poult'o
oHonllblo, chlldcon. U.f
Oolly loltry Of $300 For BuyinG Solo,
Uorchondloo. e14-3a5-2082, b ( I o.m. • 1:30 p.m. Agoo :m.to.
3113.
lotoro, '"" ochoal. Drot&gt;-lno
wolcomo. 114 441 8224. NIW InPU tlmo houri/Full limo pay, toni Toddllf Coro, &amp;14-44t-e227.
light IIIMmbly. wan II homo,
De -ltorjng, I YNro
no o•porlonco roqulrod. :na. Will
Exporlonco.e14.448-8021 or 1144M.oo23 111. 217 H.
441-DZ251tovo .....go.

520:1.

lmmodlllo.oponlng lor part41rno
ond coli In fttl!llria uolllonlo.
Clooo lor Ohio llllto Tolling will
lit oft- wkh omploymant,
hllvo tolophono, opply 11
llnlor,EOE
Rocllologlc Tachnotoglll• 1u11tlrno poohlon WMkondo, mid-

=

:i~AgRTdl~~:::.,:' ~

~lbto. Will vtrglnlo Stolt

21

Buslnesa

Opponunlty
INOllCEI
OHIC VALLEY PUBLISHING Co.
....,..,. ..., lhll you 4o buii""' with pooplo you know ond
NOT lo oond monoy tlvough lhl
moll unlll you hovo ln••llgolod
thloftorlng.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rem

l"~i-43~1.

LicOnoo RoalttM4. Contoct
pononnol ol Ploooo,. Vll:lr.o .
. . . . , _ "ttfiii'Y. 1ol00-2:51- HMr"ll 3114-171-4•- • ••
. D:M:t
,... ·
-·-· ·
RIPI011n1111-·
wonlod.
Wloh ;-:Loc=oi-::V:on~dl:-ng-:-Rout-:-o-:F:-or-=-So-lt.
:AYON • AI ...... Col Marilyn to Ordor'l HIVo o Portw? Fund
Will
Soil
All
Or
Po~. Aapool
----1.
Rolllor w/4011.? AVON. Coli Koy, luoiMOO. Abovo Avoroga lnI lhlrloy 114.1112·7180
camtl1-800-8t1 ~2000.
Locol Vondlna Routt For Salt,
Chooplllull Sill Qulcklj. t.aoo. 14•70 whh ••pondo. In Coun1ry.
Vinton aru. Wider, truh t"ld.
$250 I dlpooh. 114.- .

1514313.

Reap The Rewards...
len You Tum To
The Classfieds,
.
Ml The Boun~ Is Yours.!
Now tbat the weather lw coo.led
down, thy 110t •eat tblap up a bll
by clcar.la&amp; )'OUr c'-b, attic er
bue111e1t tf tbele uwaaled Item•
· aad llhertlli111 Jhcaa for ule In

Real Estate

PICKENS FURNITURE
Now/Uood
Ho-hotd lumlohlng. 112 mi.
Jorricho Ad. Pt. Pl-nl, WV,
call 304-171·11&amp;0.
RENT I OWN
Solo l

114-441-3111
Yl'rll Fumlh1n1

e*

31 Homes for Sale
ABSOLUTELY MUST 8ELUI
Aoducod J0 Sol • It
Comor Lal tn ci..:htroory~
E•collonl Condftlon. Ftrlanclng
Avolloblt. 804-132-111511, 104'

132·717'0, 114-~1.

Pa11111lon

Poulbll,

UK

Fruits &amp;

TP c;o

lair 1 Fruh Ftrm, SR M3 1 mila

......

A~e~Dndltlanld

wa1~r1

&amp;

dryoro, -h $100 lnd up, WI
llltnakH. lt. W11hor l
Dry• Shoppo. et4-441.ZI44.
Soctlonol couch. riding mowor.
-riD otandonl plllf!!o boro

Sloropo ondlor "Oitlco lrolltr
1'120' tiiGCI, 4op lrono, 314
oliorry '73-'80 $100

1"'"=·:.......,.._____
::-"711,:

1

Mobllo homo lor ronc, HUD Ot&gt;3 lodroom - · nl Klnoon proVod.- Wll -pt conotnoc·
Dllfl, Galllpollo. Uvlng Room lion - . . 114-44U508 or
Dining Aoom':"tKMchon, Bath' 11.1!!;4~44!!;1!:132!!\~---Conlril Air,
Siding, Cor! ........ 2 c..
rogo. Wllhln 44
Aparlmem
Wolklng Dlolonco Cl Tt. Pool
I 'R nt
Ooll Coot01 And Clinic. Got!
Or e
lltoolill Clly School Olotrtct. 114· 1 I 2 bdrm 1111 In lllddltporl,
245-11112.
Utlllt• ,um,
no pete
'
A·Fromo Ooocl Locollon. Hon· 114-1112-2211.
- Troco Schoolo, Low Ptlco
For lnlonnotlon, Call 111·255:

Army

SurpiUI

•P ,. .

Wilt Gall

Wldo • l

tractart

t'fOJVIi WITH

Mylltlltl People report UFO
slghtlngs In Belgium; an
ambtzz~ lwiPIII millions.
Stereo.
~a: (R)Tile
111111
(2:00)

:

(I) (J) • DlnaNun
Rollblt't pal Spike conVinces

him to behave like a macho
animal. Stereo. 1:;1
fl) (!) Sclaudflc Mlerlcln
F~ A new drug offers
liopl for women with ova~an
cencer. St.reo. Q

Action 2: Tht Beginning tR)

(2:00)

IIJ Munier, 8he w..... c
Ill Clllblltllt 011118(1eXII

1889.

Counlty music stars aro

Sioux Valve Orlndar, 3

,

stereo..liJ
iD MllfiiiC Mtnllon Q
8:00 (2). 0 Night Court Bull IS

eo
I t-IAvt:
F'Pia-105 "THo'.N

ITs EtErT!NEi
MORE

~1.16

DOS FRIENDe .

Fltmln A witness ldantllltl
a teenage graffiti artist as a
spect In murder. Stereo. .

..............
B.(RNEY

::Cot!lplol:==,-:cii'"'Gbll=o"'tlol-m-..-::Soi:-:-:.U:-po;
..;~ ~ • ~ -

::t,Small
boltl. lolurdoy only
p. 304-1711-163:1.
.

Aoollro; Com-, R - • '
tlal lfti.niauaMiltl. lnallldm:
•
PIIOI!bl ~ lloctrlcal. 1nout ·~
•'
Clolmo 'Zio:plld. 114-2N-tl":" •. ;
1
Curtll Homl ............ • I
Yooro ~~~~,.. On 01c1or 1 .
Hoimoa. Room Aoldllol)o, ' '
l'otlldotlon ~ !loall!!t," ' '
Kltclllno And ...... , . . . . . ,
tltn~t•l

A t llnOII\ NoM :Jo
llg Or tmolll114-441o0221. ' '
, ......... ~ And twi- '
lng,I1WM-.1'f.
" ~''

TransportatiOn

••

LUKEY'S BEEN

GONE TWO
SOl.tD WEEKS!!

DHollt/R. . W CII

114-1112·2SitllllJ.

Prompt

R
Ill Nlllh

IHD

Mdv~:

ereo.

l SHORE
MfSS
HIM II

COULD l
ASK A_BI6.
FAVOR OF
YOU?

THANKY,
LDINE.EZY_

::
•1

•

•

·-• AS'l'RO·GRAPH

lit Now Stereo.
121 Colllga a.lklllbiH
Preseeson NIT, tat 1"0\Jnd:
West VIrginia at Kentucky (L)
18 U;rry 'king Li¥11 .
Fllhtr Dcwtlllll

8

•••t.rta•

·W -

Scolch
Plno
CMIImu T,_, Golllpollo
Aroo. M Fill Till. Coli &amp;14-1382411, Aftor 6:30p.m. .

c•

ft

all . ...a:.... Miiidaf·Prldayit .

..'

IIUII Unl Ro,.ll, t y., Old. movtte. CIM 111111 U11. ECH.
For ront· How I lldnt; .,., fum
VInyl lldng, Low - - or unlurn, In M-port, 114.
LOcotod, 111,1110. 114112-1221 oriiiiM304.
FIHIIIohod I SRI......
LR, oot-ln

=71

5.ir'~~\.!:
32 Mobile ttOmt.

forSati

,_,...... ......... '"'" ___ ,. . . ,.. -

EIICiriCII &amp;
Refrigeration

··
.......
J-

~

purpolll!l ather th~ bualneu al1ould youraellln a poeltlon today thll will en- VIRGO (Aug. D-8opL 22) If you are gowork fortunately tor you. Tliay could able another to manlplllate you. Thll Ia lng to kid others today, 118 prepartd to
produce ~II mlllll)' can't buy.
a atrong polllblllty - II you're not be kidded In return. Don'! let Hbe oald
ICOIII'Io (Ool. 24-N!I¥. 22) Partner· careful.
,
that you can dlah II out with tho belt ol
al11pt could be rother taety for you to- , A•t (Minllt 21·Aprtl 11) II you are them but cen't takelt.
day. You might Hnd en Individual you're tlrld. don't get Into complicated bual- LIIRA (Btp1. 23-0CI. Zl) Be ..,,.
ctoaely •!lied with to II!' tar leaa cooper- n- negotlatlona.today. Your thinking . mlndlul of your -8!'POI1dhurtl at · thll
aiiVII·than UIUII. Trying to PilCh up a won't be at Ita shatpest, so walt until time so you don 't plll yourself in a post·
brOken romanco? Tht Astra-Graph you'relrtlllt and rested before onterlng lion where you could begin to ltet flnan·
MatChmaker cen help yov underetlnd the tray.
clal preiiSUrH. Wute not. want ~ot.

::.......

~~~~~..,-mo.IH.

Fumlohod

I loth,

Clton, llo Polo, lloloiiiiOI '

Oopoolt~-~~··

Nlooly . Purnloltod Apoo:tr....,

1br, noll lo Ulnrv, 111tldng,

otnlrll ...... llrt ,..,,.. . .
quhd. IU t41 DIM

·~

'

.....

·~ ·

.....

... ..,. ,,

--- ., ~

-........

-,

..

"t ... ~.

SOOTH

+QI32
'A K 10 5
+AQ6

+ ·AQ

Vulnerable: Neither

Dealer: South

Weal NorII! l!ut
SMII!
Experts hate leaving thinp to , 2 NT
p. .
Pass 3+
chance. They dislike taking finesses,
Pass Pass
Paa
and they prefer not to have to guess a
.•.
suit (but if you count the hand, the
Opening lead: 10 •
paren1 guess will often become a cer·
tainty). Similarly there are certain
suit combinations the expert doesn't
like to see; for example, queen-third
opposite jack-third. II the oppooents
lead the suit, a trick for declarer will
,,
forthc~ming unless they can get a declarer to play spades and CO down.
ruff. B~t •f _declarer IS forced to play The solution is to force the defenders
tbe su1t himself, three lasers are to open up spades.
probabi~.
.
Win Irick one witb lbe club . Today s hand •• from the cha~r draw trutilps. cub tlie lut tliiO
~bout the Ja~oby .Transfer J!ld in trlcks,overtaklngtheq~witbctum1·~K,a,unetan.'gel.esstw 1· II you w;sb to my's king, and dilc:llil tlte dlamoathlx
yourself, cover the. East· from band, not 1 spade. Now play a dl·
1,:
cards and plan tbe play m four amontl to your .t!)e and mt with the
hearts, ~eslleading the club 10. .. :diamond queen. Tbe oppouent wlto
North ~ three-diamond transfer btd . wins the trick will be endpl.ayed If be
showed ft~e hearts. Soutb, w1th a big .returns a minor, you discard tbe . .de · '
heart ht •. Jumped to gam~.
five from dummy and ruff in band. If
There ;s.a rtsk of ooe dlam~d loser :wread be leads a spade, you pLay II«·
and three spade losers. If the diamond pnd band low. In either case, you have
fmesse . works, fine. But tf it I~, ooly two spade losers.
West Will ex1t With a d1amond, leavmg 1
I!WILU

1'

+

aP.

'-----------....1

club .

=-

IE&gt;---

.,

•

The World Almanac Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 lionel lilt at
ntlll
4 Jaho Fonda
movie .
9 Spsnlah gold
12 French yto
13 Lubricated
14 lleko a
germent
t5- COdl
16 Old Sponll~

coins

.17 Heolon
18 Follow
20 Large
ontek&gt;pe
22 Glrlahly
26 lllkt muddy
28 Coal unit
30 Billa au·
34 Baoobalier
35
38
37
38
31

. ...

,t•••,_...

w ...... , ..

Jotl40 Sllort lor
Nathon
41 Pon end42- -billY
~3 Wood Hc1
~6 Unlld•
48 Loft
.
53 Dponlngo
54 PoelrY toot
58 Jazz pla'tr
Kid59 illJIIN

80 llldtcll

IIIIIIAint
61 lltdlcll
IUffil

82 Actr111
Chortotto •
63 lletrlc walght
unlto
64 llaltt Into
lotlhor

Nut to Seat.
Tiny p1rtlcle
Shortly
Glrdan plent
Film dlr.Ctor

DOWN

ldvtct .
4 EeaiAalln
counlry
5 Be ollutlod

&amp;Gum•
7- AYiv

1 sumo
2 Deatror
31ttml of

8 Unouccttllul
Ctr

10:00 (2). IDi Quentum Lllp
Sam is a Bamumesque
rainmaker who brlllll• t!!!flt
to a dry town . Stereo. (jJ
(J) Newa
(I) (I). Civil Wo,.
(Premiere! Two attorneys
specllllaln divorce law.
Stereo. 1,1
(IJ Story Dl Annl Aldlritltovi
Legendary Soviet poe!Aflnl
Akhmatova. (1:00) Stereo.
91
41 Holn RtPHI
·
ae• olfenclers are required to
register with local·potlce.
Sttreo.:,_Q...• .,.

what to do to mal&lt;e the relationship TAURUS (April ZO..Moy 20) It's best to
worl&lt;. Mall $2 plus a long . sell· ad· be In totelagreemenl with your mate todreaaed. stamped envelope lo Match· day belore making an Important decl·
makllt, c/o this rtftllllp&amp;r. P.O. Box slon. II either party Is unhappj with the
91428. Cleveland. OH 44101-3428.
arrangement, this issue could lester lor
BERNICE
yomARIUS (Nov. 23-DK. 21) A a long time.
·
BEDE OSOL Hll·lmpOMd urgency to get things GEMINI (Moy .21..June 20) Delegating a
done today could cause you unneces· crl11cal lalk to others today might not
... aary·compllcaUons.1lelax; it·won'l hurt·"''· lie a good· pbllcy:·'fou're·lll&lt;ely•to be·et· · · T • • ----1111fG!td~
· to leave the Ieos slgnllicanl lor a later ther dlssatlsflad wl1h the results or the
7011 Club WHit Pat •
" ' - • • • • • • • • date.
wawthay want about obtaining them.
.
CAPRICORN (DK. :12-Jon. 11) Guard CANCER (June 21..Ju1J 22) If there Is
RIIIIIIIICMt
•
agatrlst the Inclination to blow thlnga someone you'VIi ' been bending OVIif
10:30 (J).NIA llllketball Chlcego .
Bull II Golden State
out of proportion today _In your dealings backward tryl~g to pleua In the hope
' with lrlonds. Taking ottenae too easily thallhlo Individual Will like you, lt'a time
WIIIIOII (LI
could ceuoe e eeilouo rift.
to stop splnniiiiJ your wtteelo. This per·
Ill CfOOIIIIIIII ChliH
AQUAIIIUI (olen. 20-Feb. 11) It's very son may not be worth the effort.
10:31(1) MOVI!: llld lottjl (PG13)
lmpqrtant today that you al1are 'r8Vfards LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Bot~ your tem·
(2:00)
lalrlywlth lhooe who help you achleVII perandyourlmagecouldbeeldremtly
:00(2)•
(I) (J)e dl
11
your Objectives, be thay material or In· fragile today, ao bo doubly ceretul how
• 0 NIWI
N0¥.21,1111
tangible. II rou don't, you may be aorry. you rliiCI In pubNc to negatiVII
(IJ Nl wale!

.

Avoid a guess
:if possible

+ISS!

keeps.staring at his
girlfriend 's nose. Stereo. C
(I) (J) a Anything lui Low
Hannah Is hoppy to get 1n
Interview with the widow of a
dictator. Stereo. Q ·

I

IEAUTlFUL APARTIIEHTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JICII80N
mms. ut Jlooklon Plkl
from ttl1trno. Wilt to oltoo I

p.,._,, (2:00).

•u

· ta752

1:30(2). IDi Solnfelcl George

.,
::

lime., Wit• Guan~n·

tood.l-7311.

rtqulriNI.

tom betwHn hll love lor his
mother~ for his girlfriend.
Stereo.
(I) (J)
Doogla llowMr,
M.D. On the way to Chlclgo,
llooglt and Vinnie get
stranded In the da811t
St.reo. C
·
·
(IJ 8ubtnirina: steal .......
Iron Man On·bOird film
shows whet It teeta llkl on a
submarine. (1 :00)
•
(IJ PntiKt Educallon: W1llt
You Cell DoC
IJII II. J.lke lnCIIIII

.._.

I

Rorat F.mttr

ltouNIQ...nelghbothOOd kids.

AN ANT, 'lOiRE
A I!!EETLE .

I

a

~lelofl deCides to open the

~

Good, CINn llrow, f2.50 por 111. Lacol ..... _ - -· •.
F..., llllmotat. Col 1- ·:
bait, 114.1112·27110
114.237-G481, doy or nigh!.
A011oro - ..nl Wotor~
ling.
,•'tj

Ke'lln Joins tho soccer team
to ~~ey' re not qultt,rs.

SteriO.

HE:Y, '"IQ.IRe NOr

WATERPROOFING
Unoondklonol Ulotlmo g....,._ ·

Hay&amp;Graln

1:05 (J) MOVIE: Tht Spy Who
Loved Me (PG) (2:301
1:30 (I) (J). Wotldtr YNII

111

BASEMENT

64

0 Ill Btatlllr Jake

1RJ5T 'J 111€ t..NUTIE5

...
.,

Tt pit die Cl111lftcU It .wtrk fer ...,.,... ~ t=.!l.JI.'

..

rr's 1HE 'lrn:&gt; Cb '-taJ

VIlli · .~'

WAT!A WELLS DRILLED: Fool,

2·1R In 11-port. No polo.
PoJ own utlllloo, 8200 por mo.

And, )'01 aa put that Cl1n
cull tt ... ue "' medias
tbe C:lullfteds for lecal prage
lila, ftea ..nee. u• buplaa
Ia your aedl Df lhe ...U.

446-2342
675-1333
992-2156

lntel\'llwld.·(1 :00) Stereo.

-,Ot4-112..1T.J

the ClallfledsP

.,.........

Bur,

IWT

+K?I

+KJ10S
+10987

By Phillip Alder

taCroaaflre
7:31(1) a.nlonlllon

1:00 (2). Ill Uneohed

i!yllom with

d1C1Dd1111 rac:elv!!L dlah

l"r.

1111, trade, e:oo.;.a:oo Wllkdlye,
Sal. dll Noon.

62. wamed lo Buy

~-

a a. a lilt.sterto.

, t14~11 Sllli
now &amp; ulod-

lm~s.

c

l.,.n:~=-1;1

ANP ~l&gt;f

-

' •n

Pter~~lfoollijn BlkiQI_l
1111• ~IE: MIHirtg In

UMd Ill- oqulpmont, Including -

Stereo.

row. 3 pt. hhch no 1111 corn plantor. All•••· cond. 304-273-4211.
Jlm"o Fomo=lpm~ Sit. 31,

clalhlng.

,_...,oo

PIZ'J.A

WEST-

+A1ot

...Willi CltlldiM

. (J) •

Gthl grinder mlactr, Ntw ~l8ncl
7ft. howbln~, Now Holltnd 1 h.
hljblnd, NOW .Hollond 707
lorogo illrvlllor, 2 lllodo. M; a

C..moullaugt ,

lnaulatld dacron
camouna~o~g• cov•ralle 130,
lollhor US Combal BoOtl. Cor·
hill clothing, old u- knlfo
•lor. Som •morvlllo'o .~.!on·
ciJY!IIo WV booldo POll umco,
At. :n it. F~. Sot, Sun.
Pll (OIIIndod houri during
hunllng _ _,_30&lt;1-273-1155. ·

A

:__-PHIII.I:.IP-.

1.le!~eo. TOftlllllt

286 .. 522.

BlrMI AI Third lvtnue. GtJ.

llpollo, Ohio.

+P4

+KJI

7:30 (2). Jtoil!irdrl
(J) Now It Csn ItTold

c-Al,~~ J:

~{)f~f/)

Vegelabtes

--==:.:.:.:.;.--

clblhil:,ag. ~10, 344-lm-7211.

ham• on en acn In the oountry,

2 lodroom, Hony 11an Spoclol, lmmodlalo - · -til
Ownor Occuplod, lmmodltto conlklor Ollllng; - . f i l l
0 .1.0 , 114-441-1121.

58

A

Old, Uko - ; Cluj.·:·.•
Tooll. A1moot IlK In- •~~ :
Buy ENFORCER, Klllo ralo l Old Chivy porto lor 1i51 thno -IM, GuidoOllwo
Or Tr- ~- .. c .
mlco In only 1 toodlna • tQII, 304-175-2lltll.
IIHrld, lf4.441.2308.
• • : .. ~.
OUARANTEEOI Avolloblt ol:
Boum Tn10 Valuo 8to!!!1.n Woll 63
Llvellock
79 Campers&amp;
Main Slroot, Chootor, 1.111
MolorHom11
Rolli Or MIDI? 1J Your Houu?
VETERINARIAN.
luy ENFORCER, KIUo rolo 1 Dr. Bill Cronk, DVU. Largo
miCe In only, . 1 toodlna. onlmol opoclony. 304-11'5-mll. ........ 11 Fl. Comow Todom
Allo Excllltnt CO!IdHionh~~
GUARANTEED! Avollobto ol: 3044175-t65D.
Conlllnod, Vory NIDI,
0.
O'Dell True Valu• Lumber, '634 Cullom Llvtttock Haullna. CAn 114-441-1711.
Elllllloln Stroot, Pomeroy, OH
H1ul To Hlllsboto htel Or LA&gt;
co~l.
Chuck
Wlllomo
RATS OR MICE?
IC311.00rook TRICking. e14.
Serv tce s
In Your HouN? IUJ EHFOA· Trl
CER. Klllo Roll And Mlco In 24-50ill.
Only I FOlding. GUARANTEED! Aqlotorod Politi lloro, 2 Y11ro
Avallabla At: C.ntral Supply, 17 Old, 60 Doyo Tntnlng, 14ft. 81
Home
Court str.li Spring Vallty Slock Trallor, $1.2111; Bli AOHA
Hlf'dware. &amp;29 Jackson Pike; 3 Yoor Old Golding. 14-211- ___
lm..:p:;;.rovt.:::::em:i:::e;.;.nt;.;s;__
Odoll Tnoa Voluo LBA. Vlno 11522.

' Rtla Or Mice? In Your HouH.?

Choir, lh1.10 W•ki
Racllnor, 11.47 W11k, Swtvoo
Rocklr, lUI W111t.Bunk Bod
Complolo tl.41 Willi. 4 Dr-r
c-. 13.21 Wllk; Pootor ltdroom 8uko, 7 po .. tl1.17 Willi.
114-448o0527.
lnclodoo loddlng.Country Plno
2 IR lolololtclrlc.L.I·112 mt. IJom Dlno11o Wllh a.... l ~ Cllllro,
QoHipollo on "'· Rt. Ill tiO.III Woo~OPEN: - y
$250/mo. Dop. l nl. ~·oc1.
Thno lotunllw, ll.m. to lp.m.,
'4414413.
•
Sundlr 12 Noon Till lp.m. 4
MU• Oft Routt 7 on Haute 141,
2 IR, lurnlohod or unlumlollld. lnCont-ry. .
Coblt ovllloblo. looutllul rtvor
vlow In Konouga. laoloro llolillt llmmono hldH·bod: 13&amp;0. 114.
441 .. 301.
Homo Pork. 114-441-1802.
2 or 3 bod- oltctrlc molillt
1111 14•70 2 bedroom mobllt
homo. Rot, I clop. 304-175-71188.
2 IR moblllhomo, Aoloroneo &amp;
do~k~ulrod. Coli oft• 2pm,

~ mm ABarplo...

:t COV/..I&gt;N'T CATCH

Aog. Chlnooo t:hor.Pol pupo,
lolo ol wrlnkolo, 1114-MH111.

:"J;

Financtal

+as

'Q1154

James Mad11011·at Georgia
Tach (L)
taMol;ertllil '
0 Tht Watton•
7:05 (J) Too
for Comfolt

a....

ll.fl-11

Notml

PrtHIIOil NIT, Itt round:

lroc1or I Holttnd
For Solt, Copio:""' Rol. $71. Fonl
round boloro No......, Salt:
lloctllo moblll . "IIIUO Roocal" 3130
Ford 11 hp 1 doulolo volvo, 78 Auto Parts&amp;
rodo twlco. f2
now, ooll tor $13,100.
1720 Fonl2~ ho 4 WI) I
11100. lathroom
l com. loodor $14,000. 130 A loltro
AcctiiOrltS
modo. Bolh $10. 3
11-4133.
8001 tll,400. 141 1501,
.'
For 8olo: F10110r loll Groin· $11,450; mod• U3 12001 4 alumlrum alall. n.a 10" wldl, . •
Fod1 Half Or Wholo. 304-882· $10,800) rnodll Ill 11001 TWo I" - · aood radltl 11101.- ' ~ '
$1\1100. Kooloro Sorvloo Contt&lt; Fho Cllovy. • · 814.111-4123.
·;
26111.
Slott
Rt. 1'. Point Ptoooonl oii&lt;l How 111 ton'-,~! po~o, ono , :;
llapte twin b.d w/mtn,... &amp; Rlploy Rooo, 304-llfl.3lllt.
lon truck
rollolon, .
oprlngo $10. Youth gall clubo Smal mult 111m, ono 101m ot flo« moto, lie. D I R Aulo,_ · .
150. Now TV oiond lto. Elahl work ho,..o. Hompo~lro owo Rip~WY. 3044'1:11·3113 or I· · ·
t,.ck tttrao tape player flo.
. 6;;.14;;.-44..;;&amp;-;;.1..;;151;;;._-.
· __ ::I00;-'-:.:,:;7
111L=-:;:-:-.,-~,-.:...
- :;
NSl Wlttr purllltr1 $110. 3Q4. -.!t_mbo....;..;

Huralng C.ntr hu

BRIDGE

aeo.ag.a. .....

South of Corpllllor, lollow IIIII a-y ·Luw 88111. 304-IJI.
olgno. Opon 8oturdly lom-5pm· ~llolorl:ooi¥. .
Ba1ho, 131.11115 And Up. e14-8887311.
'
11184 Dodgo 0-80, tl,20o, ....
Comrnontorlto bl lour, 23
Farm Supplrcs
booko foriZOO, 614-1111·2001
&amp; Lt vestock
Edwordo bollor, Cololog ttii00111011; Input 3110,000; output
ITU-312,000. No pump. Ooocl
- 1 oond, 11,000. Arklo Sor· 61 Fann Equipment
vii Air Cond unn. llodll 1
ACCOIO, . - pump, $1,000. 4010 JD 011111 $&gt;4,150; Willi
Wllllng....o olr oom-oor · Front 11000 Fonl Dloool Wllh
IYC pump. conlrolt, Plow, Trantport Dlec, ll.llh Hoa,
lonlt. 1500. 011 311 Eldor Block $2,1150. OWnor Will Flnonca. lt~
1800. I - d S
~onom ...
olon, 1400. """' ..., bo vltwod
C111 Building, ~00 vtond St. PI
PINUnt, ~..e?S-11110 ar &amp;75.
2310.
Exlorlor d"!!o 10132 lnct.o,
chllp. 304-110-3312.
Flrowood lor 1olo, Will dollvor..
130 trucklood. $50 coni. Slon
llllllr, Jorry LUOII. e11•25&amp;-1ill0.
FlrtWood, Will Deliver, 114·251-

NEED CHRISTMAS CASH?
Wan From Your Homo SluHing
EnYolopoo.
For
lnlom.
llon!Applk&gt;lllon Send Solf·AddiOiood Slomllod Envllopo To:

POIIMO~

Matters2 :00)
I(JMicQ,..,
Femlly

Apfl• Aoooonoblo Prlcod. fol.

Big O.kat11 · F•nn Home, Bulb
Ori Vour L.ac. S hdroome, 3

$16.00 por hour. 1-800-182·2161:
Mllnten~nce

5651, Muon wv.

C.. Uve-Ceil·ln,

Ill T1IM

·Lot•

hau.ekHpirl,
malntenanc1,
front detk, cOoka,- tf*lptl'l- to

AU. Ylnl 8olto Mull 8o Pold In
Adnnol. DEAOUNE: 2:00 p.m.
tho cloy lleloro till od II to non.
8undly odlllon • 2:00 p.m.
Frldlv: llolldoy odhlon • 2:00
p.m. ......,. .
•. . . .
now hiring, lo tii.OO hr, 1-100-

Public Sale

TOftlllllt

614.25&amp;·1803 11112 R. MFII B..l, And Troll•,
lelare IIP.M.
80 HP,. llorc.f;ruloor, 110 $750;
IBU ""'"PIIIblo Pc, 14- Inch
45 · Furnished
Color SVGA l!on\t"!, 3 112, 5 114
FD-Prlnlor,- Hayoo Mod om
Rooms
Cf Softworo. ~14-441-393a.
Roome for rent· weH or monlh. 11184 Hondo . Accord LX; tiN
Stilling 11 $120/mo. Gollla Holol. Fonl 4x4, P.U. Loodod: 1185
·~11580.
. Chovono Low Ullu; Zonl1h
T.V. With A.MJF.U. Rodlo,
Slooplng roomo wll~ coolclng. C..
tiOO; Kenmare Ulcrow1w, $75.
Aloo troller apaco. All hook•upo. 614-441-6611.
Call aft• 2:00 p.m., 304·773-

'
HOTEL HELP
M•lnlenlinc•, "l$0.1111/mln) or wrlto: PASE·31H,
LOST.Polr wlro tno. .d g-o Houuk11p1rs
vlol,.y of Main. Rowonll Front Duk, Coou, Helpers to 161 S. Uncolnwow, N. Aurora, IL
$12. hr, ponn, F·t t-800-8112· 10542
304·7n-lllll.
211611.
7
Yard Sala
Holol Halp

8

Merchandise

APIIrtf'r'llnl, 322 Third Avt11u1,

yourol

&amp; VICinity

r.:o. ._
~,e-

54 Miscellaneous

114-14&amp;-3liiB,

Found: ImaM *111.-!lko daa.
WHto, lolook - on nomp. Will
oarod lor. Call 114.2N-1400 It

- aalflpous

(J).a-c-

utlllllal, dlpoalt I rafaranctl.

Found: L1rp block I ton thor!·
holrod doG In llorllolcl Avo.
vicinity. can 111

E:Mon£

Smoll t IR. opt. 7 Court Sl.
Kkchln
with otovo •
refrigerator, tl85. mo. plue

Lolt&amp;' Found

ICIAM-Lm ANIWIIS
n·•q
Astern- Maker- Cable- Ethics- BATIERIES
You can discover .many things while out camplr19.
For Instance last week I dtacovered that a ftashlight 1s
a case in which to cany dead BATIERIES.

1;1

··· --.. ...

=•

1.5...... _

·

Maaa ww Cl
C1!1bl'ra11 Olt8llgl XII
I1IUIIc 11ar1 art
llltlrt'IIWid. t1 :00) Stlfeo,
D lp a 11Cintlf
81p0111 Tllllll!!!
D loalelllwa (jJ
.11:30 (IJ Anllttol'l Dwhlftll

Mottllor.

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L' y J

HFAI

HCO

RLZV

F

f'AA ·
M LZ

LYD Z

IYWZ

y

ICVZJ

bf NIA, 1M.

...

MC

ACNZ . '
·I'AYKUz'
AZACKI'L
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "'Tho' only peopto wlio con't tn)Oy middle •
1hooe ""o tliom- out aping tho YI1U"ll·" - Hal Boyte.
Cl 1111

',,
j

POFMFPN,

.,.

20

..

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..

•

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,

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-.:

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•

Wednesday, Nov•inber ~o. 1~9t

page-14-The Daily Sentinel

HANOVER

TOMATO
SAUCE

Kentucky
.. -wallops

..

1

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday

PRICES EFFECTIVE ,Nov. 17 thru Nov. 23, 1991

PageS

Super Lotto:
5-6-7·11·17-39
Kicker:02862S

a1

TOMATO
JUICE

. Vol. 42, No. 141
Copyrlghlod 1991 ·

Chuck
coRN KING -·
Wieners•••••••••

69

12 oz. PKG. · .

HILLSHIRE FARMS SMOKED

:Sausage•••••••••••~.

(

.

New 'Americans -with Disabilities'
law will go into effect January 26

PEAK

PINTO
BEANS
'

2LB. BAG

LB.

ECKRICH

CHICKEN

69(

.$2.19

49( Bologna................~•. $159
Leg Quarters•••••••
10·2218.
4-9(
rUrkeys,,,,,,,,,,.~••LL . ·
. (
10·22
99
Turkeys.......
$149
..

ll

GRADE AFLAVORITE

LBS.

WHITNEY

Pink
Salmon

OPEN HOUSE • Open bouse at tbe Racine
Optometric Clinic, operated by Dr. Melanie A.
Weese, O.D., will be beld Sunday from 2 to 4

Sausage••••••••••••••••••

p.m. and tbe public is Invited to attend. Tbe clin•
1c is located at909 Third Street in Racine.

By BRIAN j . REED
Sentinel News.Staff
The Meigs County Commissioners discussed new anti·discrlm·
ination-policies ana considered
how they will apply to county government when they met in regular
session Wednesday.
Ken Edsel, representing the
CNA consulting f11111 of Columbus,
expounded on the new "Americans
with Disabilities Act". which will
go into effect on January 26, 1992.
According 10 Edsel, this new legislation will force major changes in
the way that county governments
hire their personnel.
Edsel told the board that the
new law addresses handicapped
and disabled accessibility in the
workplace.
·
Edsel recommends that all coon·
ty governments without specific

job· descriptions put such descrip· Township. Ruth C. Rose, doing
lions into place immediately. Those business as Rose's Grocery on
county governments with job Bashan Road , has applied for il
descriptions are being advised to · carry_out beer penniuhrougiLtht\ clleCiflhem against the new legislil· Ohio Department of Liquor.Conlion and revise them if necessary.
trol.
Edsel recommended that those
The commissioners request that
job descriptions include a list of comments or objections to the
"essential functions" for reference application be submitted, in writ·
by any potential employees.
ing, to the commissioners' office
The commissioners agreed to set no laJer than December II. Those
up a meeting between Edsel's fmn letJers will then be forwarded to the
and county officeholders to discuss. ODLC.
•
the· new law. Those officeholders,
A hearing on a request for a·
including the commissioners, could brine permit was held by the board
be held responsible if the new law · yesterday on behalf of R. Gene
is violaJed.
Brasel. No objections were made to
Edsel reponed that similar legis- · the request, which was approved by
lation affecting the private sector the board.
will go into effect in July of 1992:·
In other action, the board reThe board set a hearing for appointed Commissioner Manning
Deqember II on an application for K. Roush to the Buckeye Hills
a new liquor permit in Chester
Continued on page 3

Racine Optometric Clinic
open house scheduled Sunday

14.75 oz.

S149

The !qcine Optometric Clinic, The office is closed on Thursday.
909 Third Street, Racine, will To schedtlle .an .appointment call observe its open house on ·sunday 949-2078.
from 2 to 4 p.m. and the public is
The clinic is operated by Dr.
invited to attend.
Melanie A. Weese, Optometrist.
Services offered at the clinic
· Dr . Weese graduated from
include a large selection frames for _ . Southern High School in 1983. She
men, women and children; all types auended Muskingum College for
of contacts inc~uding tinted 1 ctfspos- her undergraduate training and then
ables, toric, btfocal and ng1d gas received her Doctor of Optometry
permeable; frame repairs ~nd degree from Indiana_University in
adjustments and comprehenstve Bloomington, Ind. m May !990.
eye examiitations.
..
While auend_ing Indiana Uni~ersiBusiness hours at the ciintc are ty, optometnc ciintcal exp~nen~c
Monday, Wednesday and Fnday was gained by working a~clmicsm
from 8:30a.m. to 4:30p.m., Tues- Bloomington, Ind., Tndtanapoiis,
day from 8:30a.m. to 6:30p.m., Ind., Huntington , W.Va., at the
and Saturday from 9 a.m. to noon. Veterans Administration Hospital

moooll

BALLARD'S 1·LB. ROLL or 10 OZ~ LINK"'

2 Section•, 12 Plgtl 2~ cent•
A Multimodlo Inc. NewfPI...r

Pornerov·Middleport, Ohio, ·111ursday, November 21, 1991

Anti-discrimination policy commission topic

46 oz.

$169
Roast ••;••••~Lf -- -·.-

Cloudy tonlghL Friday, p•r!·

ly sunny. High In mid'.60s.

•

STOKELY ·

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Pick 3: 901
Pick 4:0983
Cards: A-H, J-C,

s.D,3-S .

2 SJ

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

BUTIERBALL

•

WVA

290Z.

8AM·10 PM

Ohio Lottery

STOVE TOP

CHICKEN
STUFFING
6 OZ. BOX .

and also at the Indian Health SerAriz.
Dr. Weese ·is a member of the
American Optometric Association
and Ohio Optometric Association.
She currently resides in Racine and
is a member of the Racine First
Baptist Church. In her free time she
~njoys golf, attendin~ loc_al sponmg events and spe11ding bme w1lb
family and friends.
. .
The 1,300 square foot clime was
c_onstructed by K and J ConS!J'UC·
uon of Pomeroy.• under th_e dtree·
uon of Greg Batley and J1m CIIf·
ford. It features a concrete.parkmg
areaand1shandicapaccess1ble.

· vi~c.l:lospital in Whiteriver,

rA:e,...

J.iiiJVA
,ANK/Nt

WE

White House
--Local briefs-____, changing
course

·cHAR MIN

Onions...............~. 2Sc

.
Cheese Slices••• oz. 99
59(
LCirge Eggs........ooz.
2 $1
89(

Bush convicted on bad check charge

Bob Bush of Pomeroy was found guilty bY, a jury earlier this
week on a charge of passing bad checks.
A Meigs County Common Pleas Court jury detennined that Bush
was guilty of writing a check in the amount of $6,877.50 to the
Wheeler-Clevenger Oil Company of Louisa, Ky. in 1989.
According to Meigs County Prosecutor Steven L. Story, who
"tried the case on behalf of the state, Bush wrote the check toward
the purchase of gasoline, operated !he Sunoco Station on West Main
Street in Pomeroy long enough to sell the gasoline he purchased,
and then closed the station.
Authorities have been searching for Bush during the time
between the incident and .his arrest .
. ._ . .
Bush will be sentenced on December 2 by Common Pleas Coun
Judge Fred W. Crow Ill.

I

TOILET TISSUE
4 ROLL PACKAGE

·,

FLAVORITE.IND. WRAP-PED

Band meeting scheduled

12

GRADEA

LIB!RTY GOLD . .

..

P1neapple.....2o oz.
Ultr-a nde..~~....;;~z..•··•.n•
••
•

!

•

•
•

•••

...... .•

FREEZER QUEEN

··

TV Dinners......,.n oz.

5--..

GOLD MEDAL

FLOUR

5LI.79(

GROUND
BEEF

:EMS units answer nine calls
Nine calls for asistance were answered by units of Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services on Wednesday and early Thursday.
At 12:01 p.m. o~ Wednesday, Rutland squad went to PageviUe.
George Deem was taken 10 O'Bleness Memorial Hospital. At 3:34
p.m., Middlepon unit went to Holzer Clinic, Jan Nonis was trans·
Continued on page 3

10 LB. PACKAGE

s.

90

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
White House today changed course
on an order that critics charged
would have had President Bush.

FREE FOR THE HOLIDAYS • No need to
pay parking meters wbile holiday shopping in
Middleport. As a gift from Middleport Village
Council and an enticement to residents to shop

GROUND

:

39

360L

COFFEE
. $ 99 .

0

CHUCK

• MlXY(ELL HOUSE

10 LB. PACKAGE

••

SJ 590.

:

at home, the parking meters have been "freed'~
for the rest of the year. Here Misti Gibbs bags a
meter with that message.

Poll reveals half oifAmericans
Fl:::~~~:i~s~~:.:a~l~~r~~~ . se.e no zmnrovement
next year
'J'
~:~~~~ti~:;r;;:~~e~~~;
11me as he s1gned landmark c1vd

rights legislation.

·

White House legal counsel wrote
for Bush to deliver today was be!ng
completely changed this mormng
after sq~e administration offic1als
raisedobJecuons.
Civil rights activists who also
saw the proposed dtreCllve
Wednesday n1ght sa1d II would
have turned back affmnauvc a~~on
and CIVIl nghts goals by block~ng
any government )lmgrams that gt~e
":O!flen or mmo~bcs preference 10
h!nng or promouon or other pollCies.
The statc~cnt was written for
~ush to dchver today .wh en he
Signed .the hard-fought CIVtl nghts
leg1slauon.

·

.•

NEW YORK (AP) _ About
half of Americans in an Associated
Press poll say they don •1 expect
their family finances to be bcner
nextyeiir than this year.
More than two-thirds say they
think the ecpnomy is getting worse,
and barely 5 percent think it's getting bellcr. These pessim j.stic
expectations add to indications that
the recession hasn't bottomed out,
since consumers have not regained
the confidence they need to spend
more freely .
" You usually see people' s
expectations picking up even when
we ar• sUII10 a recess1on," said
.

Harold Zullow, a research fellow at government to case lhe economic
Columbia University who special- squeeze that is compressing both
izes in economic psychology.
the jobmarke t and innation-adjustFor the poll. ICR Survey ed eam10gs.
Research Group of Media , Pa.,
The most po~ular idea, with 79
interviewed 1,012 adults Fnday percent suppon 10 th.c poll , IS a cut
mghtlhrough Tuesday. News that !" federal ta~cs pa1d by middlethe stock·markct fell Fnday 10 the mcomc Amencans. .Rep. Dan Rosf1fth-largest Dow Jones pomt drop tcnkowsk1 , D-111., I.s push.mg that
ever may have boosted the number approac h on Capnol H111 •. and.
who thmk the economy 1s gelling Democraoc ~residenual .candldale
worse.
.
.
B1ll ~hnton mcluded It m an ccoBut plenty of indicators remam nom1c plan he proposed Wednesthat people arc countin g on the day.
• •
•
•

VMH JOIDS hospttal alhan ce .
Veteran s Memorial Hospital

ton.
The new alliance is non -profi(
ahn ~.s'!P C!v) ~ed by .i ~s bmcmb prs: __
t roug~ a se parate oard of
Alliance of Ohio."
trustees. Through interaction with
The alliance is a network orga- member hospitals and U. S. Health ·
nized to implement clinical and Corp., the alliance will enhance·
other programs for the enrichment health. care
educational
programs !
•
•
of member hospitals, physicians phys1c1an rec_r~Itme~t1 managed'
and patients.
.
care opponumues, clmica! affilia·
Member hospitals will be tions and other needs·while seeking
strengthened while remaining indc· to be cost effective, reduce expenspendent, autonomous entities and es and increase efficiency.
be assisted by each other and U. S.
U. S. Health Corp . is Ohio's
Health Corp. in the accomplish - largest multi-hospital system of its
ment of their individual missions, kind in the country . U. S. Health
goals and objectives.
Corp. oversees the operation of
Other members of the alliance Riverside Methodist Hospitals and
are Samaritan Hospital in Ashland, Grant Medical Center in Colufn.'
Galion Community Hospital in bus, Southern Ohio Medical Center
G•lion, Bluffton Commumty Has- in Portsmouth, Marion Generalpi tal in Bluffton, Shelby Memorial Hospital in Marion, and provides
Hospital in Shelby, Morrow Coon· management services to Hardirt
ty Hospital in Mount Gilead, and Memorial in Kenton and Morrow
Hardin Memorial Hospital in Ken- County in Mount Gilead.

Mi44!~Q!:l. l!Jf!!!.
,iQJll1Jl. .gJJ.i.lty_!JJ1. . 2~.drug. . .charges.,. ~iis~i~£~!~~~1g~i:l~·

-· .......... ,..

·cou~·
•
• •••••
•

There will be an organizational me~ting on Tuesday at 7 p.m. at
the Southern band room 10 discuss the concen band program. All
interested students and parents are urged to attend.

on proposal

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
A Meigs County Common Pleas
Court · convicted a Middlepon
1)'{,0, drug ~~rges on
found guilty in
Judge
W. Crow III's coon on
two counts of trafficking in LSD.
Dent was one of 41 defendants
indicted by the Meigs County
Grand Jury 10 July.
According to Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney Steven L.
Story, the jury in the case deliberat·
ed for only 30 minutes before
returning with a guilty verdict on
both counts.
Dent's defense during the trial
was that he was mistaken about the

identity of Duane Tuttle, who Dent drugs to an actual undercover
believed was a Bureau of Criminal SECO agent Among those who
Investigation agent. Dent' alleged testified at trial ·was an Ohio BCI
that he had met Tuttle while they supervisor, who stated that Tunic
were incarcerated the Gallia Coon· was not, and had never been, a BCI
ty Jail and that Tuule threatened · agent.
Dent with prosecution on other
According to Story the only
drug charge~ i~,he (Dent) .~idn't issue before the jury was whether'
assist Tuttle m undercover drug or not Dent acted knowingly.
sales.
"The defense, in my opinion,
. Accor~ing to Dent, he w~ pro- was a sham and a fraud," Story said
vtded wtth the LSD (whtch he Thursday. "Dent had previously
believed to be something other than testified in another drug trial in
LSD) in ~rder to lure drug ~ealers 1990 that he had not possessed the
mto malung sales to both h1mself drugs on the dates in question. He
and Tuttle,
.
had lied under oath on a previous
·. However, Dent adm\tte~ lhat he occasion and I thinlc that the jury
d1d not check to deterrrune if Tuttle took that into consideration when
was a la.w enforcement agent of they listened to this trumpe·d-up
any kind, and then, in turn, sold the defense."

"It went to show the defendant
that people arc not as stupid as he
believes," Story commented, "and
th,al Meigs County juries will see
that justice is done."
Dent's allomey, John R. Lentes ·
of Pomeroy, was not available for
comment on Thursday.
Dent is the 36th of the 41 drug
indictees to plead guilty or to be
found guilty by juries this year,,
Story said today that he anticipates
that as many as three others will
enter guilty pleas to their drug
charges in the next week, while the
remainder will go to trial before
year's end.
Judge Crow will sentence Dent
on Friday.

,,

'

•

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