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                  <text>Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

PIQt 1G-The Dally Sentinel

RG plans in~tallation of Dorsey for late October

Consider
this ...
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By BriaD J. Reed

Meteor shower ~ .. Sw 'azers
and obser:vant restdents m our
midst got a llal on ·Friday nighL
Avanell Bass and friends on
Liberty Lane in Pomeroy caught
the metea' shower which briefly lit
up the skies around 6:30 p.m., as
did Eastem Eagle fans who auended the game lhere.
I also saw it for a moment in
Athens, and I lhought it appeared
to be green. Others described it as
bluish green, but 81 any rate, it was
a sight to see and I hiJPe that yoq .
caught it, too. It was something to
remember.

Ohio Lottery

Mandi Sheets. student council vice
president, 81 98!!-4402 or Eastern
High School at98S-3329.
In addition to the activities for
students, an alumni reception will
be held in the school's cafeteria
following the game.

Thanks ...The sternwheelers
which visited Pomero_y 1last weekend were a sight to behold. but the
view ·was much better froil) the
river!
I was graleful to ·Captain Lou
Wendell, his wife, Linda, and the
whole "crew" of lhe Rufus B for
allowing me to ride along with
Be Carefui ...Auorney General them during Saturday's races. It's a
Lee Fisher warns us that scam truly beautiful boat, and they
artists are preying on Ohioans in should be proud of her.
the wake of Hurricane Andrew.
They made me feel welcome,
According to Ftsher, con artists ' and the only lhing better than lhe
often use disasters like hurricanes. ride was coming in first in our
to take advantag~ of pe!?ple: The heat! Thanks, guys, and I hope
Consumer Prolecuon Secuon of the .· you •u be back next year!
Attorney General's office reports
Those aboard the Rufus B
that those con artisiB use mislead- enjoyed lhe view, but were espeing advertisements to hook unem- . cially impressed with lhe Meigsplayed job seekers. i\llhough lhe County ·courthouse, which, of
ads may sound inviting, consumc:ts course, provides a handsome ceomay be asked to ~y an advance terpiece for the county seaL
fee in return for JOb leads in lhe
AJihough it's been said before,
area rava_ged by the hurricane.
we should talce a few moments to
Quesbons with consumers about appreciate what we have in our
Hurricane Andrew scams should community. It's always refreshing
contact the office at I (800) 282- to bear visitors comment on what a
0515.
beautiful community we have.
Remember that lhe next time you
Eastern Grads...If you're a for- find yourself talking about one of
mer Eastern High School home- our community's problems. We
comirtg queen, keep Saturday night have much going foc us.
clear on your calendar. As a pan of
The Chamber of Commerce and
tile homecoming celebration !here its dance comlniuee should be conSaturday, homecoming queeps gratulated on its dance cruise
from the past, as well as the aboard the P.A, Denny. It was a
school's first queen, from the 1957 nice idea, and what's a little rain
prom, will be honored 81 half-time among friends, right?
during the EastemiSouthem game.
Any queen who bas not been
Take Care.
nO!ifted by letter is asked to contact

''Rio Gnmcie: Making A Difference For Students And For The
Community" will be lhe theme of
presidential installation activities
scheduled for We October at the
University of Rio Gnpdc and Rio
G11111de Community Colle~.
The insmllation of Dr. I!BITY M.
Doney as Rio Grande's 181h president will highlight four days of
activities that focus attention on the
institution •s commiunent to serve
as an educational, cconoiJiic and
social force within the Appalachian
Community.
''Thfl installation of a president
affords both the institution and the
community it serves the opponunity to get a first-hand account of the
president's plans and goals on -the
future of Rio Grande's educational
aild community mission," said
Roger Williams, president of lhe
University of Rio Grande BIB'd of
Trustees.
''The inStallation also allows the
i!lstitution the opportunity to take
stock of itself and reaffliTII hiStoric
commi~ments, to set a new tone,
and to heighlen its visibility." he
added.
"We view these activities as
important because of Rio Grande's ·
increasing involvement in the total
development of the region," said
Charles Adkins, chairman of lhe
Rio Grande Community College
Board of TrusleeS.
"People want ·r o know what
impact the institution .will have on
their communities, what educational and job-related rc"ities are
available through·
college, and
what forces Rio Grande can marshal to assist In economic development. n be added. 'The installatioll,
with its focus on community service, creales a forum for the discus-

sion of those issuei."
The formal installation ceremony. set far 2:30 y.m .. Oct 30, will
follow a series o edncllioaal symposia llddressing the needs of the
~=·and the future of higher edu·

development to the area.
include lhe Tuesday, Oct: 27, preOn 'rhursday, Oct 29, at 8 p.m., senration of the play "Steel Magnaa plllel of Rio 011111de faculty will lias." a Valley Artists Series ~participate with Dr. Jcan -Nye, duction, as well as a commumty
Chair of the International Center barbecUI: and a special University
far Language 1IIKI Rcsobn:c Devel- · , theatrlcal presentation - both set for
opmentll lhC University of Find- lhe evening of Oct 30.
The ftrst symposium, scheduled lay, in a discussion of the topic,
f~ Wedncad8y, Oct 28. 81 1 p.m., "International Education: An
According to tbe 1990 Ceasus, tbe
will focus on "Econclmic Develop- Imperative for the 21st Cen!~!!r.''
live
largest metropolitan arua in the
ment In Soutbem Ohio." Modenit"The Future Shape of Htgher United
St.ates are New York/New
ed by Nancy HoUister, of the Gov- Education" will be the focus of the
Jersey
/Lon1
ernor's OII'tce in Appalachia this third educational symposium. (18 .1 million); Los Jst.and/Connectlcut
Anaheim·
forum will bring rogether business scheduled for Friday, Oct. 30, at /Riverside (14.5 Angeles/
million); Cbleaao~ government leaden in an apen ·9:30. a.m: Formal installation cere·
/Qary /Lake Counties (8.1 million);
discusston of economic conditions · monies wiD follow 81 Z.:30 p.m.
San Francisco/Oakland/San J~ (6 .3
impacting on the re&amp;ion apd of
Olhcr activities scheduled as million); and, Philadelp~ia/Wilmlng­
ways to brine increased econoinic: part of lhe installation activities ton/Treaton (5.9 mllllon).

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on Saturday evening during tbe Third Annual
Big Bend Sterawbeel
Festival.
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WESTERN STYLE DANCERS • Gerald
Powell's group, The Oblo VaHey Two-Steppen,
danced for a large cri!Wd at tbe Pomeroy levee

By BRIAN J, REED
morning. He was represented in
Sentinel News Starr
court by Athens County Public
A Ravenswood, W.Va. , man Defender Michael Westfall.
appeared
in Meigs County ComAttorney Bob Head for the Ohio
DRENNEN ARRAIGNED '- Fred DreDMD
cou•ls. Abo pictlmd - . !-r, -' I 'ut I'IOitcumonPieas
Court
Wednesday
momPublic
Defender's office was also
of Ravenswood, W.Va., secoad from right, Will
tor Linda
i'I:G~eCator Steve• L. SlorJ',
ing
to
face
the
charges
of
the
1991
present.
but Westfall indicated that
arralped tbls moraine In the kldupplng aad
. Drea-•s IIUUi lief Mike Westrlllllllld Attorney
Meigs
County
murders
of
a
GalHead
would
not serve as co--Coun·
murders ~ 11 Gllllipolls man and his U year-old
Bob Helllllllllle 001 Pliblic Defellder's olflc:e. ·
Iipolis
mim
and
his
son.
sel
during
the
remainder 'of the
sbD ID 1119.1. He entered pleiiS or ianoce1t to aU
(Seatillell'llalo hy Brla• J. Reed)
Fred Drennen, 30, was named in case.
·
an indictment ftled by Meigs CounStory and Assistant Prosecuting
ty Prosecutor Steven L. Story on Attorney Linda R. Warner requestTuesday; "He is charged with four ed bond in the amount of $250,000
counts of aggravated murder, two on each of lhe seven counts.
counts of kidnapping and a count
·In requesting a personal recogof aggravated robbery. The aggra- nizance bond for Drennen, West(all
vated murder counts carry a death commented that the offense took
specifiCBiinn if Drennen is convict- place over a year ago, and that
ed.
since that time, Drennen has
One of lhe juveniles, 17-yearBy J[M FREEMAN
in lhe Gallipolis Municipal Court
According t!i Story, the evi- · remained in Ravenswood, where be
OVP News Stal1'
.
with acting judge D. Dean Evans oid Jerry Matney of Gallipolis, is de nee shows that in· February, is said to be active in community
Three adults and two juveniles presiding.
charged wilh m~ !lftd ~e~ous 1991, Drennen devised a plan to affairs like scouts and litde league.
remain in custody followmg hearTony Ferrell, 19, Gallipolis, was assault in ihe shooung tnctdent. bring Jeff Halley, Sr .. from GalWestfall also said that Drennen .
irtgs Ttiesday afternoon on charges ch8lged with felonious &amp;SsauiL Fer- The olher juvenile, whose name lipolis for the purpose of making a had appeared before Meigs County
steil)ming . ~ a shooting Friday . rell's court-appoinled attomey.- has not been revealed, is charged · drug deal. Drennen's plan was 10 authorities on Thursday in anticipa!lf~moon that left a 48-_yeat-qld
David T. Evans, entered a plea of with felonious assault in ,the inci- rob .Halley of the money after he lion of the indictment against htm,
Gallipolis man dead and his daugh- not guilty on his behalf.
.
arrived in Meigs County, Story and had waited in the courtroom
dent.
for an 8rraignmenL
. ter wounded.
The prosecution alleges !hat
The two juveniles wm ordered 581·
Olley Angel, Mill Creek Road, - Ferrell used a wooden club against returned to detention instead of
~-The plan was apparently sueHe was not talcen into custody
Gallipolis, was shot and killed Olley Angel. Felonious assault is a being released to the custody ot cessful," Story said m a Tuesday or arraigned at the time because lhe
around 4 p.m. Friday on Eastern sccond«gree felony with a maxi- their parents. Pleas bave not been news release, "except lhat Halley · indic';"'ents had not bee~ filed by
. Avenue, Oa!Jipolis, in the parking mum possible penal_ty of 15 years entered pending appointment of brought with him to the transaction Story s office; West{~! S81d. ·
his 12 year-old son, who was murYesterday, Sher!ff James M.
· lot beside the Pizza Hut rcsuwrant. confinement. the acting judge said aaomeys. .
• BiS-clauahtu. Paula Angel, 23, was. · . Ferrell remains in lhe Gallia - Moulton said-the olher youth dered'lllorig with his father." - -.-Seulsb~- satd lh_at hts _dep~~ent
Dn!nnen pleaded innocent to all cannot mcarcemte an mdivJflual tf
wOunded in the incidenL
County Jail in lieu ~ SS.OOO cash was on prob8linn from lbe Gallia
According to a Gallipolis Police bond. A preliminary hearing has County Juvenile Court at the time of the charges against him this
Department spokesperson, the been scheduled for Ibis Friday at of the shooting. He faces WI addi·-ilant ftrst sho~ Mr. Angel in the 1:30 p.m. in the Gllllipolis Munici- tional hearing for probation violaupper torso with a .380 semi-auto- pal Court.
tion.
.
millie handgun and then shot Ms.
Danny Matney, 18, Cheshire,
&amp;rly Tuesday morning, Gallia
Angel in the hlp with the same and David R. Crittenden, 20, County Prosecutor Brent A. Saunweapiln. The weapon was confis- Rittmll"• were both charged with ders presented Moulton with a
cated at lhe scene by an off-duty menacmg and !lggrav8led menac- motion to have lhe two juveniles
police officer, authorities said
ing and are in jail -in lieu of $1,000 bound over to the grand jury as
The victims were talcen by Gal- cash bond ap~. Both pleaded not adults.
lia County Emergency Medical guilty.
Moulton said Tuesday aftenioon
Meanwhile, two juveniles faced the two will be orden:d In undergo
Service to Holzer Medical Center
where Mr. Angel was pronounced a detention hearing in a closed medical and psychologi&lt;;al testing
dead and Ms. Angel was ueated meeting in the Gallia County Jove- and a social hiSIOry examination to
and released.'
nile Court of Judge Thomas Moui- determine if !hey can be tried as
The three adults were arraigned ton.
adults.

Five r.e main in custody
after h~arings Tuesday

Banks loan money to the people
they knpw. That may be presidents, princes,

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becomes one room too small. At
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·Bank One,we always want to be in a position
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tD do "Whatever it takes" to help you

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out the day you need us. Like today maybe. ·
PLAQUE PRESENTED • Geae Rigp, president ~ the Middle~
port-Pomeroy Rotary Club, presented Bernrd Fultz, Pomeroy
~AitOI'IIfY• with a plaque wblcb reada: "'Real Happiness Is Helplag
· •Others' 10/5/9~ presented to Bernard Fultz- Your contlaued
'desire to uphold the precepts· ~ Rotary •d your devotion to help
your fellow man, both Individually ucl through your .profession
qualities you as the Ideal reclpieat of this award. Middleport:'
Pomeroy Rotary Club." · ,
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50% off

Rot&lt;lry observes Ladies Night

closing costs

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1-800-677-4994

BANKEONE ··

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Bo Derek to.star in comedy

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~it
takes.- .
tw.'liONI:.AI'IiiA\NA .\i.l'!A·• HliC.

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!1ft

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1992 BANC ONE CO~PORATIO N S•bjw 10 credi t a roval. The APR on a variabic-ralc crcdll li nc of $20,000 as of Augusl I, 1992 was 8.00%APR ,rhr ~ PR may inc'l:ase or
dcm:osc, no11o cxw:d 25% in Ohio. The unnua/ fcc is S50, t f'oslng costs arc aeproxi matcly SJOO. If your ltnc IS dl.iCOnlrl1ucd In less rhan one year, SJ~5 mdo~mg cosr.s will be charged. Not
valid wirh any other o(fcr. Offer aoplics 10 applications recel\ltd 1hro ugh Novtmber 30, 1992.
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charges have ng't been filed against
him.
.
Westfall said that it · was ~a
bunch of grandstanding" on tile
part of Story to request bond of·a
quarter million dollars on each .
count, in light of Drennen's voluntary appearance last week and this
morning.
;
I udge Fred w. Crow mset cath
bond at $500,000 on 1!11 counts, and
remanded Drennen to the custody
of the sheriffs deparbnent. A tiial
was set forJanuary 4, 1993.
;
The body of the elder Halley
was found a few f!=Ct from old Port-·
land Road in Lebanon Township in
September, 1991, after he had been
reported missing for several
months. Jeff Halley, Jr.'s body was
found in a wooded area near Sellers
Ridge in April. 1992.
. •
"Cons,idering the tremendous
amount of time that elapsed
between the time 'or the disappeai-ance arid lhe discovery of lhe bodies, most cri'mes of this nature
would go unsolved." Story said. "It
is"'lly belief that the persislellt and
combined e(forts of the Meigs
County Sheriff arid prosecutor's
offices and the Ohio Bureau of
Criminal Identification and Investigation."

Meigs Local Bo~rd approves
class
funding for additional
.

be ready when a house in the neighborhood

Ladies night was observed
A special presentabon was made
r~cently by the Middleportto B~rliard Fultz by Gene Riggs,
Pomeroy Rotary Club. .Enlertain- prestdent, m recognition of his
ment was provided by I ennifer · devoted _service to rotary and the
Sheets on lhe piano and singing by commuruty.
Sharon ~~~Y.

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it can stay a little closer to home. And

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2 Sectlona, 12 Pagaa 25 canto
A MuHimecllo Inc. "-apo~per

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, October 14, 1992

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projects in faraWay places. Or if-. its Bank One,

ruscon

PageS

lAw tonlgbt In mld 50s.

Partly &lt;lolldy. Thursday, partly
doudy. Hlgb In mid-70s.

.Drennen pleads
innocent-to murder, ·.
kidnapping charges

a sheik or two. People with grand ·

writer vaclitioning in Mexico.
In her new film, ''California
Dreaming," Derek invileS one of
lhe vacationing men to her hotel
room and into ber bed, but it turns
Out 10 be a setup for TV's "Candid
Camera..''
"It really has been a lot of fun,"
said Derek, who was filming in
on Saturday;

· Pick 3:
584
pick 4:
1584
Buckeye 5:
6-8-14-16-29

Voi. 43, No. 121
Copyllyll1wd 1112

ENTERTAINMENT • JeDDifer
entertained at the keyboard ... ile Sbaroa Hawley provided vocal entertaiament when
the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club recently observed ladies
night.

. TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - Bo
Derek's latest acting job was an .
easy one - sbe pia~ herself.
_
Derek, · who mlde ber mark in
me movie "10," is starring in an
Italian comedy about four men who
leave their wives behind and go on
a YIC8lion in the United States.
In "10," Deret played the
object or desire 10 an aging song-

Pirates stay
alive in NL
_playoffs

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH · a half-time kindtrgarlt.n teacher for
Seatiael News Statr
Rutland._Currently there are 68
Funding for an additional spe- kindergarten students with one
cial education class 81 Meigs I unior . teacher and orte aide, wilh 32 in the
High School was approved 811'ucs- morning class and 36 in the afterday night's meeting of ·me Meigs noon class. Tbe smte requires a 25Local Board of Education held ·at student-to-one-teacher ratio. Carthe Rutland Elementary School.
penter also said that lhe boanl may
· SupL James Carpenter reported have to lOOt IOwan! hiring a panto bo8ld members that lhere are 30 time aide.
special education students in one
During !he meeting the resi&amp;!'Bclass at me junior high school and tions of John Arnon and Mick
that because of the grade ali$n- Childs as football coaches. effecment, SIBle standards are not bemg live 81 the end of the season. were
meL He recommended lhat an llddi- accepted. Tbere was no explanation
tiona! teacher be hired.
given for lhe resignations during
Larry Rupe questioned how it the open meeting of the school
would lie paid for. and Carpenter board.
responded that th~ district will - The resignation of Janet Stiltner
again be "going into the loan as a substitute teacher was acceptfund.~ He said that the district bas ed. and ,medical leave was grated
no choice but 1n meet the standards to Nancy White be$inning Oct 19
of the State Depllrtmeilt of Educa- and goi~her reurement dale on
lion. _· .
·
June l.
member John Hood
Carpenter said th81 so far Ibis voted against the medica1 1eave
has been an unusual year in !hat requeSt. from Sept. 4 to Oct. I, 41 more
Employed by the board were
kids came into the system . He Donald HaD as a substitute bus
described many of the new students · driver, Dan B~ as a substi·
as special education kids coming tute mechanic, Judilh Ganaway on
from surrounding states, even a purchased seryices agreement 1;0
Florida, Texas and Tennessee. tutor a homebound student, CurbS
"They are COOling from everywhere Holliday to tr1111p01t IDOlher handthis year, and that's our problem." icapped student to tbc Athens SB~
said the superintendent
class, and Carol Crow, Jennte
He further said thai now Meigs Dorsey, and Debbie Musser as
Local has one out of ever I 0 stu- junior class adviSon with the supdeniB in special education. "Of lhe plemental contract salar&gt;: to be
2,530 studenta in the district. .252 di-Med among the three lldvuors.
are 1D sjleclal education," ~nter
The board giiDied dock days to
said. He also said IMl testing ts still Donna &lt;;:lark, Sept. 24 ~ a one.
going on with some additional stu- half dock day to Debbte Sebert,
dents who may have to be put in Sept. 15.
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speeial education classes. The
i~ansportattOJ!- of Paul ':'·
superintendenl explained dill stu- Robmson to a pnva~ school 1R
dcnta are aasesaed in many wayr Gallia Counly was discus~ and
and must meet certain criteria set the board ~ • reaolu~ ~by tbc lllte befOI'e being Uligned , ing that providing ~ IS
into a special education program.
iDqnctical and qreemg to pay the
The 'Board 111so approved hiring . par6nts .of the ~tudent ia lieu of

providin~ the service. Tbe amount,
it was rePorted. will be calculated
by the Ohio Department ot Educatioo. .
The board approved the
parent/student and teacher handbook for the 1992-93 school year,
agreed to pay $3,148 in excess cost
for the severe behavior unit in
Athens to which Meigs Local sends
students. That amount represents
the difference between state aid
and the actual rost of providing the
service.
Dale Brickles of Burlingham
met wilh the board lO discuss a
possible tMI~&amp;C in the busing of his
son to Salisbury School. He said
that his son now boards a bus at
6:45 a.m. and does not get home
until 4:30 p.m. His concern was
about the lenglh of his son's day
and he suggested riding another
bus which comes into the ~eha
about a balf-how: later but whte
would reqiiW some allaing in the
rou~ l'llil McElroy, ~lion
director, and Carpenter wtU check
Into poss1"ble solutions to the busing problem.
Nov. 4 was designated by lhe
bo1n1 as an in-service day foc aU
teachers of the disaicL Carpenter
said IMl the meeting will dell with
the effeaive schools proJIIIII and
tbll it will be II no 001!1 to the dislricL Each school will share from
their $5,000 in effective school
funds to pay for the program. As
for the change in the calendar to
accommodate the Effcc ti ve ·
Schools Committee, Randy
Humphreys voted "no."
The superinlendenl announced
tb11 a meeting has been scheduled
~!bat group~ Nov. ~211 which
bllle repons will be gtven _on the
progress of !he f*Ui!!Mil which has
bcm a ~ m pllnning and teacher
.
. Coatiued 011 -A-3

50 Y-EARS PLUS - Tbese members or tbe
Meigs County Farm Bureau were re(:ognized for
memberShips exceedlag 50 years at ibe group's
annual dinner meeting at Eastern Higb Scbool
on Tuesday nlgbt. Tbey are, front, Sylvia Mid-

kilT, Grate Furbee, Daisy Blakeslee, aad C.E •
Blalo;eslee. Back row, J.M. Gaul, Ziba Midkilr,Raymond Furbee, George Holter, Harry Holter:
and MiUie I'!fldklff and Diana Kinder represent-·
ing Bank One, Atheas, N.A.

Eliason
discusses
proposal
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
The position of lhe Meigs Coun. ty Chamber of Commerce with
regard to a new busineSs proposal
from Martech Corporation of llli.nois was outlined when the chamber met in full session yesterday at
Carleton School/Meigs Industries.
Last monlh. Bill Marshall, president of Martech, announced at a
meeting of Middleport Village
Council ~ the company planned
to locate a pac~ng plant in the
Chester area, wlitch was to be 'in
operation by early next year. He
also said that when he _had
approached lh.e chamber of com·
merce about a proposed· garbage
incinerator and had recel ved
. "enthusiasm from Middleport but
no assistance or follow. lhrough"
from the chamber. .
Chamber President Lenny Eliason said that Marshall was
pletely Inaccurate when be stated
thai the Meigs County Chamber of
Commen:e 'dropped the ball'" with
a proposal to locate an industry in
Coatlaaed oa A-3

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GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY • Lettie Mc.Caltl lllld Joha HoDI· •
day were boaored as 50 ,ear memben of the Melp COtUit)' Farm : ·
Bureau on Tuellday nl1bt. Allo pktuftdls Ed Holter, who preaelll· :,
ed their lifts.
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1992

October

Commentary
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Iraqgate shows no signs of going aw~y
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The ·Daily Sentinel
Ill

t:a t llitaeet

P

I OJ, Oldo

wvo•au 10 . . . aawza OJP' !'IE IBIG&amp;-IL'ISOI'f AJUtA

.aoamrrL WINGEIT

Pt¥
PATWBIIfiiiEAD '
A
tP ,. r ICaim
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~IIOEFLICH
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Pag&amp;-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
· Wednesday, October 14, 1992

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General Manager

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LETIERS Of OI'INION . . ftlcume. 'Iboy abould be 1011 than 300
All ieoo:n . . l8llject 111 edilm&amp; md muat be sisncd with name,
.W... ..S 9 I 1., ,
• " No ...gpec! loll2n will be published. Lettm
llbollld beia .... - . 1ti: ... --., -penonalities.

-a

Deadline for publication
__ofelection letters Oct. 28
The Dlily Senti...! w '""""S ieaas rqarding !he Nov. 3 general election. However, iD die iu~ of fairness, no election letters will be
acaped ua 12 ncxm em Wo•-Jay; Ocdier 28.
IJidividuals sl:ould !llldn:a isSues IIIII not personalities.
Lc:acn purdy Wlbsiwg ..... 9 will oot be used.
Lc:acn sl:ould be 300 wools ar less. pRferably ayped. All letters are
subject m cxtiri,. IIIII must be signal wilh name, address and telephone
number: Tclepbooc DQii!hen wi1f not be publisbed. No unsigned letters
will be publisbcd. U:nr:n shoqld be iD good laSle.

WASHINGTON - The traggate scandal has washed across
Washington in waves. Fint cime
the revelations that the ~nl
of Agriculture extended billions or
U.S. IBl&lt;paycr-guarantccd credits 10
Baghdad as part of a pre-Gulf War
effort to !Wince Saddam .into moderation.
Then taxpayers learned that they
were saddled with Saddam' s bad
debts after Iraq invaded Kuwait
and defaulted on $1.9 billion of
Com111odity Credit Corporation
·
loans. .
Congressional ·critics are now
taking aim at the administration's
decision to pay back claims on
these bad loans to banks that participated in lhe ccc prosram. Three
of the nine banks currently receiviltg. U.S . payments are (or were
unul recently) owned in part by
outlaw governments - including
Iraq and Libya.
In total, these three banks.have
collected over $800 million from
the United States since Iraa's brutal
invasion of Kuwait· and they con·
tinue 10 receive money 10 this day.
The Treasury Department's

Office of Foreigit Assets Control,
which is charged with enforcing
Iraqi embargo Statutes, and the
Department of Agriculture main-

Congressional critic$ wonder why,
at t!Je v~ least, lhe Bush adminis~ fatled 10 mount any opposi- .

uon.

By Jack Anderson
and
MichaelBinstein
tain that the payments are legal

because Iraq does not haye a controlling inleresl in lhe banks.

OFAC Director R. Richard
Newcomb told our associate Dean
Boyd: "Each and every instillltion
underwent thorough e1t8111ination to
determine ownership as well as
existing manAgerial influeqce and
control. ... To have ruled otherwise
would ltave been conll'&amp;ly to years
of pt'IICtice iq implementing emhar.
go SIBIUtes ...."
But in a recent letter to Newcomb, Senate Asriculture Chair.man Patrick J. Leahy, D-Vt., pointed out other provisions under lhe
Iraqi sanctions tha,\ he says chalIenge the legality or the payments.

There was· opposition in some
comers of the government. In April
1992, Gale McKenzie, the federal
prosecutor in charge of ihe Banca·
Nazionale del Lavoro, or BNL
case in AtlaniB, wrote her Jusli~
Department superiors a memo afler.
hearing about ~y's complaints
afl?ut the payments. BNL was lhe
pnme bank through which the
United Sta~s originally funneled
backdoor Btd .10 Iraq, and is now
the focus of an intensive federal
criminal investigation.
· The McKenzie memo reads:
''These payments td banks both
owned and administered in pan by
Iraq occuncd long after.we warned
CCC or the Iraqi owllership ... we
~ the tS5t!C of ~ow CCC coul\1
poss•bly. constder, m effect, paying
~ agam for the very U.S. debt on
which Iraq had defaulted." .
McKe~z!e noted t!tat concerns
over Iraq••mterests m the banks
were conveyed to ~ CCC's assis:
tant treasurer. who assured us that

Letters to the editor
I would lk 1J bow wbo
is in cbqe • die Wllile House.
Busll or J - P 'o?
. Atcme time illo+• t • if Dlil
Q,aylc was, mtil be lost iD lhc
spilliDg bee c:llss. Bad! aid come
10 Teus if
-.ta busineis.lt'sapxl pllce IJ -.t.
J llopc IIley ._bela .... in
Tc•u lhaa we uve ia Meiss
Comly.
'
If yoa are drivins up Jacks
RoM. be sun: I I ) - a plmB
..... dull is Ill lbict,.,.. CXJDid pt
bllct laD&amp; ar ill Ibis ~ clast Juns.
I dail+: it's lime 10 IICt back 10 lhc

you.,...,

basic ways of life -and get some
work done in America for a
cbange.

.

llhink it's lime to eleet a new
president and vice president as
lhese suys 'arc not doing a very
good job I:cre on the home front.
Also while electing a new president, why not elect some new
·truStees. So let'~ get lhe dust off
our shoes, and so vote the suckers
out.
Mrs. Freda Jacks
JackS Road,
LangsviUe, OhiQ

It is better now

.

she had written up our concerns, ,
·added her concurrence with our
position and referred the matter to
those responsible for such payment
decisions." Nevert.!teless, McKenzie wrote, the information "was ,·
apparently discounted in reaching ' .
Ibis policy decision ... "
:
Agriculture officials acknowl- : ·
ed$e the McKenzie memo, but · .
mamiBin there was absolutely no ·.:
debate over the decision to pay . ·
back the banks since Treasury
flashed the green light; "Unless
there was some legal ~is for not
making the payments, we were
under contract to do so," a
spokesman told us:
· The Batuain·based Gulf International Bank has received $460.8 ·
million, thC lion's share or the $800
minion. Most or this was paid out · .
while Iraq maintained a 10 percent _
equity ownership in the. institution. · ·
Gulf International insists that Iraq
has never profiled from U.S. payments to the bank. Although Gulf
interllational eliminated Iraq's
stake altogether by April 1992, ·
Sen. Leahy has criticized the pay- · ·
me,nts as violations of the adminis- · iration's own ban on aiding Iraq. ·It's unclear whether the Iraqi or · ~
Libyan governments have benefit· : .
ed from the payments, but Leahy ·
has asked OFAC to investigate
llllega
. olions that loans from .Gulf to
Jordanian trading companies today
may be financing snutll arms shipments to Iraq. Leahy also cited a
shipyard partly owned by Libya
and Iraq which he says ,has
received a loan from Gulf lnteinational.
Accordipg to Leahy, the bottom
line is that "if United SIBtes laXpayer payments to Gulf Interns·
tional Bank helped the banlc make
the loans to the J ordanian-based
companies !hen it would appear
lhat American money is helpin!l to
break the U.N. emb'argo agamst
Iraq."
.
· In the final slfe!Ch of the presidential campaign. these and other
aspects of lraqgate are quickly
snowballing. With the Clinton:
Gore teatiJ now picking up on !he
revelations, President Bush has
been thrown on the defensive on
his conduct of foreign policy. once
considered his strong suit. .
.
Jack Anderson and Michael :
Binstein are syndicated writers ·
for United Feature Syndicate,
· Inc. .

ll's bela .,._
tune in Mom· s pies.
"It's not our problem .,.,... the hole Is on their side."
I rode a borse ud led lhrcc
· I picked up poiBtoes for Mr.
.
,
more frola Anliqaily up river 10 Lon Ill a field JUSl above Racine for
L$rt. down tn die reu,. wbcle Sl J~er day. If you stayed ·and
sM.e wouldll'l JO Oil oo.d, tied bdpCd tum the cranks on the gradlh6se 10 tbc side and •em , er you got2S cenl's more and if you
aaoa Oil up IJ E-., W. VL 1p a didn't get dooe before. 7 p.m. you
Legislation has recently been younger than six years of age, had siBte eligible for a $6 million lead itant women live.
Lead poisoning continues to be ·'
smitlllilir llllllllfiO ,an.,o.
&amp;« ~· I just read where one or introduced in the Ohio Senate and high levels of lead in their blood.
poisoning grant from the federal
a
silent
threat to Ohio's children · ·
:We
dlis sidc G IDWD.IO lbe MsebeJJ players signed a con- lhe Oh~ House of
ntatives
At the present time, the Ohio government to be used for testing
and
it
is
in dire need of a solution. ·
the bac:k yard of lhe Otterbein traCt to play ball for nearly $30 10 help curb the
of lead poi- Department or Health has a limited and data coUecting procedures. .
Ouda wile# a !lane ndc:n 0,. million. I'll bel he can't pick up a soning among hio's children.
The
comprehensive
legislation now :
. Specifically, the legislation
pending
tn
the
General
Assembly is ··
W8 hdtl. At 1be fair 1be ladies G Iller a bit berter than me.
Lead poisoning primarily affects
would require thai children of
a
positive
step
forward
in reducing ···
diD - illd coated dleir favoriJc
Watching television. I heard
children and can lead to
prekindergarten age be periodically the amount of lead poisoning inci- ·
disiL It . . ir'&amp; ', rilJinw -.1- tbem report that Lee Iacoca, youn11
stunttng a child's physical and
tested for lead. Other provisions in
cil ..t aftcc 1be v s, d:ey , . a Chrysler's bead man had received · intellecbJBI development
the bills also call for required test- . dents in Ohio and the tragic conse- · .
10upbowllllllbcCIIdGca:llllllle about $11 million for one year's
The leading cause or lead poi- detection program lhat has turned ing before a child reaches the 7th quences lhat accompany this most. ·
·.
IIIII if ,ou"' s d a dime. (yes a salary. 1 went flying down to soning is the prese.nce oflead- · up 225 cases of lead poilllning out grade. In addition, the bill would serious problem.
As
always,
please
feel
free
to
dime) to 1be duclllllr&amp; woodl:r- Kro8m and asked if I had to pay based paints in houses. It has been of 16,492 children leSled in 1991. allow the SIBle to oversee leadful pts WOIII.d sive yoa a sooct lbe for a loot of bread lhat he estimated that approximately 3 mil· Senate Bi11376 and Senate Bi11383 removal and the licensing ,of lead- call or write me, State Senator Jan
a.,.,.dtbcirfuoll.
• did. Sure enough I do. Think ho'!"' lion Ohio houses built before 1980 we~ introduced 10 greatly expand removal specialists, something that Michael Long, if you have any
You IOOD teamed 10 1eU 'em much be woold help the bread bust· have some lead based paints lhat these programs so that more chil- is absent tn the stiite according to questions or comments. about these . ,.
how IOOd il and ~ would 1ICSS if he P.Ve $10 million to lhe can cause these significant prob- dren will be detected at an early · the Department of Health. Senate or any other issues. My number is
set all ~uffcd up ud s•ve you men thai did the work. He would Iems. According 10 the last avail- sljlge 10 avoid the impacts of lead BiD 383 and 376 would also banish (614) 466-8156, and my address is
. . . . . dip.
sUilltaVe plenty left.
able statistics, it was estimated that poisoning. In addition, the' passage the use of lead-based paint in hous· the SIBtehousc, Columbus, Ohio
'
Bll:k 10 1be dime. My
He did help Chrysler though. He between 3 and 4 million children, of the legislation would make the ing where young children and•preg- 43215.
Ballz pwe_1111: allidld 10 tkop iDio 1alked the sovemment into buying
the c;ollel:lim pllle lftcr Sllllday them out of trouble and putting it
ICIIool - ower. n. p 10 be a oo our backs 10 pay off. Oh well, if .
bi&amp; dtitla widlme 100.1Ml week I be didn't get it. lhe savings and
If Clinton is banged upon for :
It would be best for all if the exaggeration, which he ascribes to even lhat may be too little, too late.
Sll .... il.dleaack'iO!P
fwa loan people would. I'll bet he
liberalism, he will malce his moderCuriously,
it's
probably
more
pieced Jl!e --$1.25 ca:ll ..t ?lilt smiles e~ day at how easy we two principal candidates·, particu, Clinton, is the liberal m;uk of Cain. imponant for "President Cliritim" ate case ·With greater vigor. This
larly President Bush, would just
than for President Bush. Clinton can help lock in positions he will . ·
- •cilk piece., 1be pie si&amp; If IR.
follow my mildly convoluted script
Brooks
Sayre
)'08 pa . . ddsl fuzzJ Slllff 011
defends
against the charge of liber· need to shape his party in the years ·:
Syracuse, Ohio for the rest or Ibis election.
.
Uip, a"*'" - . Tltll's $12 per
alism beuer lhan Bush aaacks on it. of governance to come.
Recall where we were just prior
So,
President
Bush:
If
you
WJIIlt
:
~
pie. Mybrodtns.llllll
l)la for·
making a solid case that he is a
to the ftrst debate: BiD Clinton had
to
cry
to
help
yourself,
help
Clin·
·
"different
Democrat."
I
have
just
Bush is most effective when he
proved himself to be a smart man
ton,
and
help
Amenca,
please
fol·
and a prodigious campaigner. He rubs against the liberal grain. His finished putting together (with low the script
.
had a double-digit lead. Time was answer on AIDS stressed that it is David Gergen) two one-hour PBS
Ben
Wattenberg,
a
senior
feldocumentaries on Amer'ican politiTllin, Rebecca Sayre who married running out for Bush. For those of principally caused by "behav- cal
llelrEdilor
low
.at
the
American
Enterprise
hisu.y since 1960 (9 p.m., Ocl
ioral" factors, and he condemned
For lite l'ai' 27 years I uve Benjamin Thorn, Rebecca Sayre us who believed that there might gay extremists who have gone "to 16 and 23, cheek local listings) . Instit!lte, is author or "The First
belli •• •rt'.. a Sayle GeraJrcy wbo married Jedcdi•'l Darby, and still be more 10 come in this sttange Catholic Mass and thrown con, The evidence seems clear: Clinton Universal NaSion," published by
political year, and that more might
Oil DaYid SayleJ1736-1826) wbo . Moses Sayre who married Nancy
is not a refle•ive liberal, although Tbe Free Press and a syndicated
be
better for the councry, there was doms around."
Hall_.
Grace
M.
Ingles.
bi..... llil ~,._New JerBush's stress on "character" parts of the Democratic Party writer for Newspaper Enterprise
TileR are deseeodants living in only one question on the IBble.
sey ., W• Virplia * - l 1711.
Associatiqa.
This: Could the debates re-open a and "trust" works best when it remain justlhat.
Hill wife . . n
• Pladcr s.,n: ~ lml or coverage who will be sealed
also paints Clinton as a man of the
verdict in Clinton's favor'!
mtaeseed. I have compiled over
(1741-1826).... dte ~.. Writing on Suriday evening; just Left, .which · he was in .his youth.l)uiel Sayte wbo Wiied S.... 1,000 JliiCS and lhere are several
(And· Clinton showed gleaming
Hall, David s~ wbo married wbo bave oot sent family informa- after that first debate,- some small steel when he assailed Bush for
.
He.U.~
Usde, .JoPra 5ay1e ...., - - · tioa ya. December 31 is the final steps have been achieved that may challenging his pab"iotism, which
' '
1\E'I.L
61VE
I)S
~~P.~
ricd Susanaah Ferrell, Rachel d 11ine to send upda!es on fami· well lead to a tighter campaign.
Bush
says
he
did
not
do.)
~ ~~StQ!l,
The bfgsest fact about the
HELl: i'L1i us l~TO
Sayre who married JercJBiali .ljes.
But Bush is still a step away
.
AD
or
Rel&lt;t
yell
I
plan
to
work
debate
was
that
it
was
not
a
bore.
AAO
lie
~T
McDaaiel, ~pbraim Sayte w_bo
A. llE~I~.
puuing forth a full-bodied and
muricd Lydia Fawceu. J,..,..,,h Oil die fu:al pt11es and no changes The opening combat exchange, from
v.IIN.
coherent
anti-liberal
theme.
He
Sayre wbo married Elizabelh . can be made after diJll is underway. about Clinton's overseas anti-war seems 10 think that wlult Americans
experiences, was electric political
Weawr. Boljlmia Sayn: wbo ..-.flif'fll 501k
theater. Ross Perot provided hold most against rec:ent liberaliSm
Ralph
Sayre
ricd Naacy 1ido', ~ Sayre
is
"tax
and
spend."
That
is
only
a
in
drama
.
humor,
always
useful
.
RR1Box92
U'ef US t~ 11-\E
wbo ..ned Mlnba Sal; Sant1l
part of it, and probably not the
How
often
docs
a
1ri-billionaire
Buctltatmn,
W.Va.
26201·9707
Sayre wbo married Beajamia
·
.
t.l\f.SS we·~ IM.
denounce "people with $1,000 biggest part either.
For example, Bush bragged
suits and alligator shoes"? The 4I
event, 6-person, 9-day sequence about the new ciVil rights Jaw, but
might turn out to be a major nation- chose not to note lhat be had been
•J'I19eA• • , ' " al experience, perttaps of !he inten· instrumeniBI in chan·ging earlier
Today is Wcdn lday, Oct. J4, 1be 288tlt day of 1992. There are 78 sity of Thomas-Hill, Iran-contra versions of a Democratic bill that
and Waterpte. That could keep the had been characterized as "quoiB
today'
. - lboJy:
- ~~-~' .
legislation." Interesting: All three
ball in play.
'
"
On Cia.. ~4. 194 ,
M ~ Cttpain a.tes E. "On~ek" Yeager
Neither was George Bush !I candidates fall all over themselves
..
bei - 1be lint JMI-10 fly rasa ?ltlillbe ~of sound as he tested a . bore. He has been portrayed as a endorsing "diversity." (Me too.)
ndltiiOwaeclm c• .,._, ?bcXS.1, over Maroc, Calif.
ninny, and we begin 10 believe it. But a serious conservative should
On iiDI dllc:
.:
But ninnies don't become presi- · remind us that !he biggest threat to
1a 1066. Nonu · .tr Willilm the COI:qurtlll defeated lhc Enslish dent. When Bush reaches !he pub- l:a!moni~us diversity in America is
lic witho:n the filter of the supercil- group p,reference, i.e., "Jlioportion-.
II die Blale dH iii•
alism, ' i.e, "qu~tas," which set
Ia 15116, Miry,~ «Scali. wt111 em lrill in Enalii!C!, accused of ious media, he~s a solid citizen.
diverse Americans against each
Bush
is
slowly
finding
the
risht
4 . 2 Q.eCII
L (Miry - bcbcaded lhe following
track. When he attacks Ointon for othet.
Febiw.l~-1.
· Similarly, Bush offered only
Ia 111W, J&gt;WiBbt D. E' ' wer, 34th pRSident of the United States, saying "America is coming apart
.....-::::to..
-v'
... L:&gt; ........___
llOO,
mush and saccbarine on fue
at the seams," he is on solid
W11 boa1 iii D . ••· Tela
,
() 1HZ b, NEA. Inc.
r'..;alues" question.
it 1912, Uteo .. e aoc.a1t, wllile c:ampei~s for the presidency on ground, substantively and tacticalDEBATE
Bush is a loser· unless he gets
lhe BuD MooiC Iiebi. - sllat ia die cbcst m Milwaukee. Despite the ly. America is the world's most
tougher
on
liberalism,
lind
hy
now
WOII?d. be
wiSh a ...... , II""" h.
.
. successful nation. An4 ~imistic ,

Bill attempts to stop lead poisoning

••iped

Sen.]an M. Long

G,......

Scenario for d.e bate week
Ben Wattenberg

*

Seeks update on descendants

Berry's World

s•

\

-

Today in history
u3.

=ilil,1

m· "'"'•

~

wall.._.

~Man hospitali.zed
~after shooting·
APatriot man is in'.I1IWdccl con4ition this IIIOIIIini at1lolzer Mcxtioal Center after .beins· shot last
ni!lt_~ residence, allegediy by

'

.
•

.

ap~--

.. Acc:ardina 10 lhc Oa1Iia Coun
Sberiff'a ~. Samuel 8_

Hoffman, 49, 43SO State Route
32S, Patriot, was tran~ned 10
liolzer by Oallia County BmeigenF,Y MediCII Service.after bcina shot
..tn the head around midnight. A
small calt"ber luindgun wu coafis.
~ at lhc scene, Sheriff DeMis
R, Salisbury said this morning.

'

The sheriff's department,
Bureau of Criminal Identification
a:id Inveali1ation, Rio Grande
l'olice and lhe GaDia County Prosecutor' I Office were atlhc ICCRO.
The aile sed shooter, Diana
Whaley. 26, 1169 E. Innis St.,
Columbus, wu arrested for felonious assault and is being held in
the Gallill County Jail. The sheriff's department flied a charge of
at?clllpted murder against her Ibis
mornintr through the prosecuting
~y"' s office. Salisbury said, ·

,...._-Area deaths---'

Coatlnued from.l
trainini wilh a grant front the state.
· Board meetings were clianged to
Thursday, Oct. 29, in the board
off:ce,IIICI Wednesday, Nov. 11 •
the Meigs Junior High School.
Treasurer Jane Fry reported
receiving $3,000 on a Martha
Holden Jenninp Grant wriueo by
Kathy Haley and Julie Hubbard of
Pomeroy Elementary for materials,
and S107,083.90 from the Slate
Depatbnent for disadvanlaged stu·
dents.
. Support . of the permarie.nt
tmprovement .levy to be on the
Nov. 3 ballot was urged by lhe
Board. The Rutland principal conduc!cd a !Our of t!'e building pre- .
cedtng the meeung and ~ave a
report on attend!lnce and acovitics.
In executive session the Board
heard a grievance from an employ- ·

ee.

Florence L. Smith, High Street.
Pomeroy, died Tuesday, Oct. 13,
1992, at the Ho!zer Medical Cent«, ()aDipolis
.
.
· She wu a p::ate of Pomeroy
High School and lltlllnlled Western
Coli~ for W0111en in Oxford.
• Miss Smith served three years in
· ~oscow with lhe SIBle Depart·
ment, was executive secretary 10
· ihe chairman of the Federal A via·
Jion Administmtion in WIIShington,
D. C. II!C! was administrative assis·
:lant to Congressman Gwinn of
New York.
' Prior to her retirement she
.;worked for lhe Defense Depart·
ment in Columbus as a computer .

Funerat serv.ices for Terri L.
Spencer, 32, of Galena, who died
Oct 11, 1992, were held Wednes·
day IIIOIIIins at the ~ Brethren
Church in Worthington. The Rev.
James Custer officiated and burial
was in the 'Kingwood Memorial
Part.
· She is survived by her parents,
Rodney- L. and Margaret A.
Spencer, Galena; a biod:er, Jeffrey
S. Spencer, and grandparents,
Madeline McOung, Faye Spencer,
and Perry Carpenter, along with
several Meigs County aunts and
uncles.
'
Friends may contribute in her
memory to Children's HospiiBI,
Columbus, Grace Brethren Church
.t*ol!ram analyst.
~. She has ·served fa- a number of of Warlhington, or the Dystrophic
,.ws as a me!!!be!' and past presi· Epidermolysis ·Bullosa Research
. ·~I o_f the Meiss County Council Association of America. Brooklyn,
N.Y.
.
llll AsinJ· .
; · S.urvtvors include four sisters,
~Ieanor and Carolya Smith of
romeroy, Mrs. Robert {Mildred)
Hiles ill Wessilla, Alaska and Mrs.
Olear (Eihel) Bauer of Tempe, AriVETERANS MEMORIAL
~na; a brother, Eugene R. Smilh
Tuesday Admissilins: None
of The Plains, three nephews and
Tuesday Discharges: Julie
Thompsoil, Levenia Hayman, Adah
l.wo nieces.
A memorial service will be held Brown, Maye Mora, and Jina
AmotL
at a later dale.

ciub lo meet
,
must be done exclusively by the
Past Councilor's Club of child. Pumpkins are to. be brought
Chester COUIICil No. 323, Daugh- to the school between n0011 and 4 ters of America, .will meet .tonight p.m. for judging at ~ Jl·!l'.. Enter·
at 7 p.m. at the lodse hall. Thelma tainment will be ~ throu hWhite and Faye Kirkhart are out the day. Political candidates~
host :I
welcome .
Gllelt preaclaer
Lod&amp;e 1o meet
Rev. Edtlie Buffington, GallipoPomeroy Lodge No. 164 F and
lis. will pRaCh 8l the Naomi Bap- AM will meet Thursday lit 7 p.m.
list Chureh in Pomeroy on Sunday to confer tile MM de.,_ ·
at10:4S L!IL Public invited.
HOID-l!t'l r-·
· Feu ud cornbrud dl6ner
St. Paul United Methodist
There will be a bean and corn· Chun:h, Tuppers Plains, homecombread diDner Bl lhe MaSon Oralie ing will be Suri~ay witll Sunday
School on Saturday from noon to 6 811 hool t 9
worsh • 81 1o
p.m. Cost is $1.25 with drinks,
~.1. a.m.;
tp
.Lm.
,....., or chili' availab"- and ..... ,-in dinner 8112:30 p.m. in
hot _..
"' the church basement. Afternoon
cents. There will be a pump- ·song servic:~ with Narrow Way
ldn dccoratin•• contest for children Smgers,
·
Letart, W.Va., at 2 p.m.
bf lhc bend area in gradeS kinder· Pastor Sharon Hausman invites !he
&amp;anal through sixth. All decorating public.

SlOcks

Milder air to remain
:• A warm front that pushed

!~rousb Ohio overni,hl should

reach the central secuons of the

Stale br. this evening and lhe Lake
~rie sliilreline by Thursday morn,ng.
; Much milder air from the suif
:slates will slide into Ohio behind
'that front. It will hans out tl:tough
Friday, II!C! !hen a sharp change 10
;colder weather is expected for lhe
:weekend. Temperatures arc likely
;to remain in the 40s during the
•weekend. Showers are quite likely
:off Lake Erie in IIOidteast.em Ohio.
: Them is evca some chance.a few
:snow flates could occur,
: The Columbus weather station
• lays the record his~ for Ibis date
!was 86 in 1897. The record low
!was 28 in 1988.
• Sunset tonight will be 6:53 p.m.
•S?lllrise Thursday ,will be 7:42a.m.

The Daily s...dinel
(UIPUI.-,
PUIIIW nery aflemooa, Moaday
.......... l'riclaliO 111 eo.&gt; 8~ p
...,,
Olola :., lbo . Oblo Val9oy h:.iishl"'
~ay/Molllmoollo Joe.:. Pomorey.
Oblo .am, Ph. 882·all56. s.-d cl...,
..-... pM4 at Plon:WI'GJI, Ohio.

-

·'l'lle Aooadoled Piao. and tho

Olrio NawarE,r
"'lllCiotl'"', NoiiCIIIII
~
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tall•o, Brulwn
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8 York
•• 133
t0011.Third Aftnuo,

,.,...'Yillt,

' POI'I'MAS'I1IIll!oDd- ,..._ 10
1'bo Da07_.1aa&amp;lael, Ill Courl 81.,
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llmiOaiPI'IOII L\TD

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•.................... .'..............1.80

.(JBI ........... ~..................................

.PM Yoor......... _ ....................._
IDIOt&amp; OOPY
PFICI

,

ta.M

..uuo

Arotmd the utlon

A THEATER
WITH A CHOICE!

Commoa Pleas
The following divon:es and dis·
solutions ltave been f'tled with the
Gallia County Common Pleas
Court of Judge Donald A. Cox:
Dissolutions . - Deborah J.
Delong, Oliver Road, Gallipolis,
and KeUey L. Delong, N. RosCdale,
Lima; Brian K. Montgomery, Jack·
son Pike, Gallipolis, and Michelle
A. Montgomery, State Roo~ 1~ •
Racine; Lacy M. Wolford, Eagle
Road, Bidwell and Elizabeth R.
Wolford, Eagle Road, Bidwell;
Stephen L. Frush, State Route 218
Gallipolis and Kathy 1( Frush,
Stale Route 218, Galltpolis; Patri·
cia D. Blake, Slate Route 553,
Crown City and JlUll~ M. Blake,
Piney Green Road, Midway Park,
N.C. and RiiB I. Rogers, Fairfield
Lane, Gallipolis and Richard C•
Rogers, Meadpwbrook Drive, Point
Pleasant, W.Va.
Divorces , Sharon A. Foreman,
Allen Drive, Gallipolis and Allen
~ Foreman, Rt. 2 Rayne, La;
Brenda Stover, Rio Grande and
Norman Plumley, Barry Road,
Scottown; Doris D. Nance, ·cemetery Road, Crown City and James
S. Nance, Cemetery Road, Crown
Ciiy; Coimie S. Puckett, Eagle
Road, Bidwell and David D. Puck·
ett, Main Street, JeffcrsoaVille; Ky;
Debbie L. Hancock, Kemper Hill
Road, Gallipolis and Benjamin B.
J!an~ock, Kem1&gt;Ct Hill.Road. Gal- _ CLEVELAND (AP) - There
hpolis;C. Ronnie ~chael, Sec- wer~ lhree tickets sold naming a11·
ond Aven.ue, Gallipolis and Sharon five numbers drawn in Tuesday
L: Carmtchael; ~IBte R~~te 35, night's Buckeye 5 drawing, and
Btdwell and ~ Whtltlngton, 'eaoh wlnaing ticket is worth
S~ Lane, Vmton.and Robert $100,000, the Ohio Lottery said.
Wh:Wngt.On, Rt. 1 Wet;untPka, Ala.
The tickets were sold in
Youngstown, Lorain and Newark.
Pick 3 Numbers
5·84
(five, eight, four)
Am Ele Power.................... 32 5/8 Pick 4 Numbers
1-5-11-4 .
Ashland Oil... .....................25 5!8
(one,
five, eight, four)
AT&amp;T.................................42 1/4
BuckeyeS
Bank One...........................44 518
6-8-14-16-29
Bob Evans ...............,........ .18 3/8
(six, eight, fourteen, sixteen,
Charming Shop..................34 1/4
twenty-nine)
City Holding ..................... .18
De jackpot for today's Super
Federal Moli;ul.................... l6 1/4
Lotto
drawing will be $12 million.
Goodyear T&amp;.R .. ~ ................ 62 118
Key Centurion ................... 19 3/4
Lands End.......................... 27 1(l
Limited Inc....................... 22
EMS unils answer calls
Multimedia Inc .... :: ............22
Units of Meigs County EmerRax Restauran~o ........~ .........1132
gency Services answered the folReliance Electric............... .l6 5!8
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 14 l(l . lowing calls for assistance on Tuesday: 2:04 p.m., Pomeroy unit to
Shoney's Inc.... :................ .17 718
Star Banlc .......................... .30 If}. ' Spring Avenue, Audrey Arnold to
Pleasant Valley Hospital; .2:20
.Wendy Int'I........................l2 58
p.m., Rutland to .Main Street. DarWonhington Ind................ 19 318
IMC
Spangler to Veterans MemoriStock reports are tbe 10:30
al
Hospital;
11:50 p.m.. Middlepon
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
unit
10
Dave
Diles Park for Chris
Ellis and Loewi or GaUipolls.
Rayburn, treated not transported.

:---Meigs announcements.-

P7Tbe Aaloc:laled Pr•

-

Court news · ·

Hospital news

:.

Ia Syracuse at tlleir Tuesday mee?ing. H~re,
Execu(lve Director Steve Beha. leads one of tbe
tours. (Sentinel Pboto by Brian~). Reed) .

Attending were Supt. Carpenter,
Treasurer Fry, and board mCmbers,
Larry l!.upe who presided in the
absence or Robert Barton, presi·
dent, · John Hood, · · !!,andy
Humphreys, and Roger Abbott.

Terri Spencer

J41orence Smith

.

Cold Bl1' movcxtlnto the Pacific
Norlhwest, and.an Arctic air mass
in western Canada promised to
bring even more winery weather.
· The system was expected to
bring snow to Montana and some
accumulation was expected across
the nonhem Plains on Thursday.
Warnings Of freezing temperatures were posted for eastern
Washington through Thursday
morning.
Snow fell in North DakoiB on
Tuesday, reducing visibility to a
quarter-mile. Northern MinnesoiB
also received a Iisht dusting.
The system was expected to
cross lhe Great Lakes today, and
some snow was possible in northem Michigan.

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Tonight, partly 'cloudy. Low in
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Thursday, partly cloudy. High in
the mid-70s.
·
Extended forecast:
Friday lhroqh Sunday:
Friday, mostly cloudy with
showers and possible thunderstonus. Lows in the 50s and highs
65 to 7S.
Saturday, mostly cloudy and .
turnins colder with a chance of
showers. ~ ~ows in lhe mid
and upper~~ only from the
Oppel" 40s 10 the mid S0s.
SUDday, colder with a clJaace or
showers mainly IIOilhcasl Morning
lows in the low and mid 30s. Highs
in the lower to mid 40s.

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ItO E. St.tt St. • At.tll, o•lo

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..i&amp; ~ ta pay tho carri•or .-It a4nJico direct to Tbe
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Meigs .•.

,,'

'•

�The Daily Sent~ei~;-·

Sports
.

.

By ALAN ROBINSON
alreBdy gotten what they wanred .Candiotti, the NL's two flutter- who had only one hit in the series
Win, and the .Pirates will have except get to Game 7," McClenATLANTA (AP) - Tim Wake- moet another prne. ·
.
bailers
Witil Sunday, had two in the inning. exorcised their postseason .demons don said.
fiCid met a Jmuckleballina legend
Th~ B!"'ves ~ot euctly what
And if the Braves thought So did McClendon, who went 3 for from 1990 and 1991. Lose, and ...
bef~ the &amp;~!Me. Tben he went put - they didn t want: a G~e 7• Back Wakefield would rattle and hum 3 and is oow 8 for 11 (. 727) in the
Drabek has lost his last three
and Jll~ ~one. .
,
.
when d_Iey led the IIClleS 2-0 after j 11 st because it was the playoffs, series.
stans,
including his final pre-playThe FJttsburjlh,Pirates rookie easy w1na of S-111ild 13·5, manl they were wrong. Wakefield met
"Barry had the big double itt offs tuneup, but he hasn'tlost four
JmucklebaiJc::r did 11. to the Atlanta Atlanta fans figured there wodi!Jn t Nickro before the game, then went game S, and we got a lot more afrer in a row since early in 1989. His
Braves a~a10, beatlng them 13-4 even be a GameS.
out and pitched like him
that," Don Slaught said. " He had
John Smoltz, has already
Tuesday m the National Lesgue
"We'~ l~~e a bobcat," Gary
"It was a gre11 ho~or to meet · the big hit in this one, and we got a opponent,
beaten the Pirates twice in this
playoffs to set up the second ~arne ~edus wd. You !'&amp;ck a bobcat him," Wakefield said. " When 1 lot more after thal Don't think it series and won Game 7 last year.
7 betweea the two team s mas mto a come~, he et!her fights~ wasgrowingup,'hewasamasrer." was a coincidence."
Unlike last year, there's no John
many seasons.
gets ~reo alive. We ve never Q~J!t
So much so that the Braves
McClendon hasn't had this big a Smiley factor in Game 7, either.
The Braves won last year 4.0 in fightmg all year,. and we weren t erected a statue of Niekro outside series since he once went 5-for·S in
Afrer their 1·0 loss to Atlanta in
!?!ttsburg~. but, unlike a year ago, a~~~ to,DOw."
.
.
.. Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium. a Little Lesgue World Series game Game 6, the Pirates seemed a beatIts -the Pirates - no.t Atlanta. Were 111;11 of Intensive
The way Wakefield's pitcllin11, in William
Pa. ·
• en club. They privately had lillie
~ho h_ave the momentUJII gomg ~an~ger Ju!' Leyland said. they soon might erect one of him
Leyland'\:"talcen some heat for faith in Smiley, and he justified
·IRto this one.
.
We ve been m the oxygen rent a · outside Three Rivers Stadium
sticking with veterali utility players · that Jack of confidence by failing to
' 'We ~ven·~ done inything yet couple of !!ays, ~noW .we're been
And, thanks to Wakefield, ·Barry like McClen~n and Redus despite last the fust inning.
,
... but we ve given ourselves th.~ upgraded:
. ,
Bonds and Uoyd McClendon, the their off years, and he' s been
The
Braves
have
a
huge
amount
94th District
The Pirares dido t knuckle under Pirates have a chance to go back rewarded with big postseasons
chance to play one more game,
of
confidence
that
Smaltz
can
rum
. for the World Series.
, Andy VanSlyke said. "A couple to the ~sure -,and neither did homefrom both. Redus is 7 for 16 (.438). them around, even though they've
State Representative .
of days ago, tha,~· would have · WB!-efield, who s ~ -0 over~Jl
.Just like he did with his double
Still, as Leylaqd said, " Your failed twice to close out the series.
Paid for by the Committeet to Elact
.
agwnst A~anta~ ~-~ m the ~nes in Game 5, Bonds ignited the momentum is only as good as your
looted pretty good.
Frank A. Cremel}lnli, Steven B.
Pirates know it.
Wakefield, the Knuckleball Kid, and 10-1 smce JOmmg the Pirates Pirares with a solo homer to start next pitcher." Their next pitcher is The"We
Chapman, Treas.
haven't done anyth ing yet
the second inning against Tom Doug Drabek, who will pitch again
wasn't as good as he was in beating on July 31. ,
Beforehand, the Braves import· Glavine his first postseason homer. 011 three days' rest in the biggest
Atlanta 3-2 oil a five-hitter in
•
Game 3, but he didn't have to be. ed not one, but two lmuckleballers
•'Bui we Jmew one run woUldn' t game of the season.
He gav~ up four "!"' on nine ~its, to.throw~~~ practice: 318-game be enough," Bonds said.
"Back in spring training, ibis is
but bas•call y put II on auto·pilot wmner Phil Niekro and Bruce Dal
1nstead i 1 was one run after ~game you hope you're pitching
~r the Pirares' eight-run second Canton .. But ther could have another. un'til they led 8.(); Bonds, in October," Drabek said.
IDDIDg.
·
brought 1R Hoyt Wilhelm, too, and
·
"It was the opportunity of a it would have made DO difference.
,I
·.
li{etime," Wakefield said. "I
· No matter hOw much the Braves
·
.
dido 't want to blow il ' '
claim ·that facing a JmucklebaUer
·
He didn:t He allowed a pair of isn't that big a deal, their record
(Continued from Page 4)
the lronmen 'S0-14 tri gain a slice of
290 North Second
homers to David Justice, a solo says otherwise; they'r~ 1-5 this points for what proved to be the theSEOALcrown.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
shot and a two-run homer, but it season against Wakefield and Tom winning points.
·
The Marauders jumped out to a
hardly mattered. Th·e Pirates had ·
'
The game was a bitrer defensive 28-0 lead at the half.and went on to
struggle before 4,515
and was give Jackson its worst loss ever in
the beginning for one of the biggest conference play. Lenny Vari Merer
high school rivalry in the area.
led Meigs with three touchdowns,
~
Melp 14 Logan 8
and Gilkey completed three of six
0
I0
Logan rolled i~to town for town passes for 120 yards including
for the season's fifth contest and touchdown passes of 62 yards to
like the Marauders, were spotting a ' Van Meter, 44 yards to .Swan and
.
·
. ·
·
·
4-0 mark overall and 2-0 in the 29 yards to Mark Tannehill.
Jiy RICK.SCOPPE
less SEC team. The Gamecocks SEOAL.
Meigs rolled to a 50-0 advanCOLUMBIA, S.C. (~) - A have been outscored 1S4-47 head·
Meigs drew first blood when ~e before Jacl&lt;son finally scored
. day after threatening wbat one ing into Saturday's game with No. English scored tran 6:S8left in the · with just over six minutes left in
player said was mutiny, South Car· IS MiSsissippi State at Williams- half giving Meigs a 6-0 lead . the conrest.
olina 's winless football team Brice Stadium.
Logan stormed back and toOk an 8Meigs 28, Nelsonville-York 0
returned tri practice Tuesday afrer
Several players llave threarened 6 advantage at the half when JohnThe Marauders clinched the
an l!ltimatum by coach Sparky to quit. Quarterback Wright son hooked up with Posten on ·a championship by defeating the
Woods.
Mitchell left two weeks ago after touchdown pass on fomth and goal Buckeyes of Nelsonville-York
Every player showed up for losing his starting job.
from the seven. Chuck Kemper before some 3,500 rain-soaked fans
morning meetings with position
''There was DO real finn number blasted in for the extra points givcoaches. Woods told the players you could count,'' linebacker
ing the Chieftains the lead.
in Pomeroy.
' Ben
Meigs jumped out to an ear1y
Monday night that those who Hogan said. "You couldn· t count
Meigs took the se.cond half !2-0 lead in the first period on
didn't no longer would be on the hands. You cou)dn' t look at one , kickoff aild be&amp;an a 10-play, 80- tOuchdown -runs of one and eight .
team.
person and tell how they voted. · yard drive that was capJ?ed off yards from .Yan Meter. Jim Crow
Afrer the meetings, Woods met Peop,le were just hollering things when Van Meter crashed m from added a touchdown in the third
two yards out. Gilkey hit Swan for petiod on a 77-yard interception
for about two minutes with the oul '
The 38-year-old Woods has the extni points and Meigs held a
players to welcome them baclc.
No players quit or were kicked compiled a l5-21l-3 record at South
14-81ead wiih 7:18 left in the third re~~ Meter added the final
off the team, Woods said, adding Carolina since bei~ hired four period.
touchdown with a run in the fourth
that he didn't plan to try to find out years ago after Joe orrison died.
Jim Crow and Swan came up period and quarterback Gilkey
who the revolt's leaders were or Before coming to South Carolina, with interc'eptions in the fourth ,adde&lt;J the extra points to close out
Woods was 38-19-2 in five ·years at pcn'od to ice the victory~
nf
discipline them;
· 1 AA Ap~· s
the scoring. Meigs ended co er"l'm really.not interested in Division •
I8R tale.
Meigs 14, Wellston 6
ence play with a perfect 6.() mark.
going on a witch hunt because of
Hogan and 01 er players said
Fullback Kenny English banged
the fear of locating the wrong per- the South Carolina revolt was led in from the one with 25 second~
Meigs 36, Park: sOuth 0
son,".. he said. "Whll I'm happy by a few upperclassmen upset by a left in the fllst period and added
Meigs ended the season with a
about is ... that the team is bact."
lack of playtng time and bf an arti- another touchdown from six yards 9·1 mark after rolling over Parkers· .
l:JI~i&gt;-P~)',ers .met ·Withoul-the .
in ~l&lt;p,i newspaper .pl which .. out withJ :39left in thelirst half to burg South 36-0.
colitfie.s Monday af~emoon and W~ods bemoaned .the lade of give'Meigf a 12-0 lead over WellMeigs jumped out to a 14-0 lead
vored 62-2A to. ask: Woods to quit, seruors. None of the players would . ston.
·
after one period and never looked
WOLO.TV in Columbia reponed.
identify the ICaders.
· ·
Gilkey dove in for the extra back. Van Meter rushed for 108
Tbe Vote c;ame amid a season.of
''It wasn't like 60 people stood . poinis after the last touchdown giv- yards in 20 carries and three touch·
diSCQnrent for the Gamecocks, who up 11nd t~ey wanted the cq~ch mg the Marauders a 14.() lead at downs to give him 1,013 yards
are O-S in their inaugural year in gone," offensive guard Antotne the half. Perdue scored from two rushing for the year. English and
100% AUSTRALIAN
the Southeasrem Conference. South Rivens said. "A couple guys got yards out in the third period to John Smith added touchdown runs
Carolina has lost nine straight, tipsel I think they realize it was a make it a 14-6 game but Meigs for Meigs;
which is the school's longest losing mistake the way it came oul ... I held on for the victory. Wellston
Two way tackle Perry Kennedy
streak and the longest losing streak bet they wish they could take it all beat the Marauders in every was named the league's most valu·
in Division 1-A.
hack but it's 100 tare."
deparllllent but the most important able player, and Chancey was
South Carolina is the only win'
one the final .sCore. The win gave picked as the league's top coach.
Chancey's crew a 6.() record and 4- Joining Kennedy on the fmt team
0 in the SEOAL
were Van Meter, Gilkey, Tannehill,
· lrontoo li, Meigs 0
Swan 1111d Pat Story. Picked honorTR A D E n S
Ironton rolled into Pomeroy for able mention all-SEOAL were
the Marauders' first homecoming Mik:e Hargraves and Roger Blaclr::.
Transadaons
.Baseball playoffs
game
and knocked the Marauders
BaMbaD
from
the
ranks of the undefeated
AroorkulM... •
CHICAOO WHITE sox.:.Namod
with an 8-0 victory.
Done-..-......
...
The Tigers drove 70 yards in 14
SEAm.B MAIUNEJIS-Pited BW
plays and toOk a 6.() lead when Jeff
PIWDmor,........,.; Don Wirth.,, plldtin&amp; coach; o.e Clinea. hittina coach;
Beasley scored from eight yards
Mlrty Mutiftoa. daird~bl10 c01ch; RUity
ouL David Spears added the games
KuDU, finl·bu• coac:h; Run Niaon,
Amerleaa Leacue
hmch ,_., llld R - Hantoa, bullpen
eighth and fmal points diving in for
cooch.
.
Todly'111,..
the extra points.
,
Ootland (Moen 0.1) 01 T...., (Oiz·
. . . . t-o), 3:07p.m.
The contest was a non-confer-_
Tlluncla7'111...
•
ence encounter. Ironton joined the
OltlazMI at. Tcronto. 1:37 p.m., if neeSEOAL the next season.
.
· Meigs !0, Jacksool4
World Series
The Marauders rebounded by
.
So .......1
traveling
to Jackson and blasting
01 Nalional IMI""o

."

First Meigs football
team to be honored;for title season ·
.
.

August, 47 young men from three
small southeastern Ohio high
schools joined as one. The new
team was named the Meigs
Marsuden. To lead this new ream.
a young Ripley W.Va. n.ativ.e
named C~ Chancey left his jQb
as assistant coach for Marshall
University to become the first
coach for the· new Meias High
School.
·
Many people didn't lmow what
to expect from ·the Marauders as
the r:lrSt game grew closer, with the
most thinking the Marauders would
finish somewhere in the middle of
the pack in the tough SEOAL.
.
The Marauders received a gift
the week before the season open
when all-SEOAL quarterback Rod
Gilkey transferred to maroon and
gold countrr from G. allipolis.
Fintlly the b•g moment ·came on

By DAVE HARRIS
Selldael Correspolldeat
The 1967 Meigs Marauders
football team, the ftrst for Meigs
High School, won the Soutbeasrern
Ohio Athletic League ~hampionship.
'
That team .will be honored
before Friday night's contest
I!Ctween Mei&amp;s and Wellston. A
blic . . will be held at the .
~~Hall Auditorium (the
old Pomeroy High School) beginning 814 p.m.
.
·
Also being honored Friday night
will be the 1950 Pomeroy Panthers.
the lint tearil to play a1 what is now
Jmown as Bob Rolierts Field, the
Meip Maraudels' .home field. The
following stories ~ lhe Marauden' 1967-champiOnship season.
~ty-ftve

years ago this past

Sept 8, when the Meigs Marauden ing and held Flirfield School .for
Wbat happened next Slill have around right end for the elltrl
played their first game before a )Joys to only 59.
'
many die-hard area fans talking.
(SeelM7oaPaae5)
capacity crowd on the Pomeroy
Melp 12, Atbe•l
With the Mllluden needing 10 run
field.
•
Athens opened defense of two out the clock, Meigs put IOJiel)ler a
Melp 20, Waluim1 0
consecutive SEOAL crown by perfect drive, running 15" P.lays.
~OUR
After a scoreless first period, hosting the Marauders.
. When· time 1811 O!JI, Meigs still had
Gilkey hooked up on a 22-yard
Just the weekend bef&lt;n, region- the ball with rust and 10 at the
scoring toss to Bill Swan with - at sportswrirers and sponscasrers Athens 20.
IO:Illeft in the !lalf.
picked the Bulldogs uDailimoU$ly
Van Meter 1IIICCd Meigs in the
Meif's made it a 14-0 game at to win their third straight crown . . contest with 1:17 yards in 27 car·
the ha f when fullback Kenny But someone forgot to tell the ries,,44oflholec:omi1J1inthe(inal
English scored from 22 yards oul Marauders. Athens jumped out to drive. Middle s-d Paty Kennedy
GUkey booked up with Swan for an 8-0 lead but the Marauders and linebacker Pat Story led the
..
.the extra polats. Lenny Van fought back 10 take a 12-8 lead in Mmuder defense, wbile Kennedy
Meter sc:ored the Marauders' the final period on an eight yard kept the Bulldogs pinned up deep
final points in tbe third period on run by van Merer. ·
in their own tarit«y by booming
!"I elpt-yard rua to aive Meigs
But the )lulldogs were not fin. sillpun1Sanaven18Cof.43 yards.
Its first wiD.
· ished as they drove to the Marauder
Melp I, Gallla Academy '
Melp 36, Fairfield 0
. three. Slar haiJbd Mike Goodwin
The Maraudr:n traveled to Gal'! an Meter I~ !he Marauders. to coughed up the ball on a hard hit . ·~~ 10 -ale ~ die Blue Devthe~ second wm m ~· many ~es by Swan bef'!"' Dennis Ault~v- Ils •• the season s fourth game.
rushmjl for 220 yards m 28 cames ered for Me•as at the three with · ~rent Saunders ~ the Blue. Devas Meigs rolled up 320 yards rush- 6:06Jeft in lhe oontest.
ils a. 6.() lead wttb 9:39 left m tbe
fiiSt period when he buUed over
from two yards oul,Bill Jlackett
came up with the first of two outSiane!ing defense plays he turned in
. ..
for the game when he stopped
'
Saunders a foot short on the extra
poilu. .
Hackett, a 127 -pound seaior
came up with his ICcond big play
of the evening when he jumped on
a Gallia Academy fumble at the
'
GAHS 24 in the second period.
Seven plays later English blasted
LOCATED IN
over from four yards out with 1:48
MASON, W.VA.
left in the half. Van Meter scooted ·

IS
HOUSE .READY ,
FOR WINTER?
WE CARRY: ·. , ·
_Insulation for
Pipes, Window
Kits, Heat Tape
and Weather ...
Stripping.

can:.

1967 M arauuers.
·
••·

'.

·Special of the Week!

HAMBURGER

79
WITH FRIES•••••• $1.49
4

...

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY
M ?ROY,

ruas

RUNNING FOR DAYl.IGIIT- Lenny Van Meter
for day· .
ll&amp;bt Ia tbe Melp ·Marauders second game of tbe 1967 season,
wlllcb nAiled bl a 36-0 will over Fairfield School for Boys. Van
Meter rubed for 220 yards ID tbe game en route to a 1,013-yard
seaiOD 1o help Meigs win tbe SEOAL crowa. Van Meter and tbe.

•

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o•o

PI II

ey p

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Pl. 992·2556 ·

rest of the 1967 cbampiODSIIip team wUJ be boaored Friday altbt at
the Wellstoa-Melp pme. Also pictured Is 1:r"rback Rod Gilkey
(10) and fullback Kenay English .on tbe
und behind Gilkey.
(Lenny Vaa Meter photo)
.

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:

Commemoration honors for first game
at Pomeroy field scheduled for Friday~

.

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By DAVE HAIUUS
Seatlael COI'ftlpOIIdent
A plaque commemorating the
fiiSt footballaame played II Bob
ROberts Field in Pomeroy will be
dedicared in ceremonies Friday at
6:45 p.m. at the f~eld. ·
The game, played on Seotember
29, 1950, was apinst the WeUston
Golden Rockets and the Panthers
defeated Wellston 12-0 that
evenin&amp;. It is IIOl by accident that
this year's game is with Wellston
for the ceremopics. Before tbe
~y Field was built, the Panall of their conrests .at

=

. 'lbele were I ,fHT D8id fans for
the prne.llld IDliiY of the fans had

to llllld up IJecanse the steel grand·
SIIDia were IIOl finished. Bleachers
wereiiVIIilable for about half of the
fana in attendance. Also not finished in time for the fiiSt cqnrest
·was a new and most iDodem score-

bolrd.

The ICOI'Cboard, as one booster

was quoted in the Wednesday,
September 27, 1950 edition of. the
TIM
~llllnel, as "slri,:tly big
time
." It cost about $1,250.
The actual dedication of the new
fiCid csme on Nov. 3 against Galtipolis. That pme, played on a rain
soaked field, saw Gallipolis win
19.().

z:'k

·

Pomeroy seored its fllst points
in the conrest when Guy Guinther
hooked up with Don Young on a
77 -yard pass play on a fake punt in
the first _period. Pomeroy closed out
the sconng when captain Don Hun·
nel scored from a yard oul
On Friday tbeJe will be a reception for team members and their
ramily and friends 'starting at 4:00
p.m. in the old Pomeroy Senior
High Auditorium (Pomeroy Cit&gt;:
Hall). The reception will last until
6:30p.m. when the group will head
for the stadium. The public is invited.
.
,
Dr. Harold Brown and the
Meigs Athletic Boosters have been
planning the evening events, which
will also include honoring the 1967
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
champion Meigs Marauders. Dr.
Brown has receiv.ed confirmation
from several of the ICalil members
who are planning. to attend. They
are head coach Herndon Wilkes,
Edward Bowen, Alva Clark, Don
Dailey, Dr. James Fisher, Don
Hunnel, Earl Kesterson, Kenneth
King, Robert Lehew , Donald
Quisenberry, Frank Sisson, Louis
Osborne, Denver Persons, Ted
Scon, Lawrence Stone, Eugene
Willoughby and Donald Youn~ . ·
Three deceased players Will be
represented by family .members.

They include Clinton Faulk:, being
represented by son, Tim .Faulk;
Donald Folmer, represented by son
Donald Folmer Jr.; and Kitrel
Williams,represented by his sisrer.
Mary Alice Samuel.

....

'k

ATTENTION
CANDIDATES

TO ATTEND - Former
Pomeroy Hip SchO!II football
coach Herndoa Wilks Is plaa•
nlag to attend Friday's aigbt'a
activites coJDmemorliting the
nrst footballaame to be played
in Pomeroy. Wilks was the
coach of the 1950 Pomeroy
team that defeated Wellston 120 in the first aame played at
what is now .Bob Roberts Field.

11

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DECISIQN. 92"
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I Yt MILE SOUTH OF TUPPERS PLAINS
ON SliD II. 7

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IntheNHL ...
WALES CONFERENCE
.- .
T
W L T Pto. GFGA

-'""'""'

NowJ.,.y ........ 3 I
""""""'.......... 2 0
2 I
N.Y.IW!pl ..;.. 2 I
. ........_........ I 3
N.Y. JaW.Ien .... 0 2

PIWad.............

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&gt; •

0
2
I
0
0
I

6
:6
5
4
l
I

16
19
16
ll
ll
9

13
14
15
B
17
14

·i

A-IN~ .............. 300
B.................. 2 0 I
Bulfalo....... _.,_.. 2 2 0
_ . ........ _.. I 2 , 1
' aa.... _........,_.. 1 2 0
lla!fool ........._.. 0 4 0

Manit, ronrud,IO • duwr-rou cm.tr~ct.
WASIDNOTON BUUErii-Sipod
Don Mul.ola, forward, 10 • multiyear
WaiWIIIRIIdy-. pud,.,d
Do..t SlnlOI ond Crail UpchUICh, forwarda.
··

6:109

25

5 ll I
4 22 U

3 1317

2 10 11
0 7 ,,.

CAMPB_ELL CONFERENCE
·- t N -

T·,·WLT .... GFGA
T-Bay .... _.. 2 I I 5 14 10
Dllro8. .......~...... 2 I 0
4 ll 10
!diMio«&lt; .......... 2 2 0 4 14 13 '
, QicqO.............. I 1 . 1 3 10 II
St. ........ ......,..... I 3 0
2 9 14
T _ . ............,, 0 2 I
I 10 12

S.JIIootN-

v - .........

3

~ ..............

oo

6 11 1

3 I 0

6. II 12

..... -... 031

1112D

LooAqolol ..... - 3 I 0 . 6 16 13
Saallloio ............. I 2 0
2 I II
W................. I 3 0
2 II 19

I'

~,·~ICOm
l'i!!a......
6,
•5

o--'1. phi' f 'pH• 3
T - Bar 2, St 1.«iio I

~ ... w:
· ·3 ' .
...... .~2,Saa-l

•

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$1.69

lb.

YOIIII."IDIII

••n•m••

BARTLET
PEARS

.IISCOUIIY
••(11161 .

69&lt; LB.

0/0
/G OFF ALL SIZES

RGO paper in stock

..-

•,

~·

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·'•

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PILLSBURY B.unERMILK

DELMONTE

BISCUITS

CRUSHED PINEAPPLE

4 CANS 99&lt; 7.5OZ. .

79c 2ooL

.New &amp; Used Compe~ters

89( 290Z.

· Mlneravllle, OH. 45769
FAX 614-992·3979
HOURS:
Thursday 5:30 PM-9:00 PM
Friday 10:00 AM-9:00 PM
Saturday 10:00 AM-9:00PM
Sunday 1:30 PM-5:30 PM ,

...

......

SJ.39 240L

LIBBY HALVES or SLICES

·42994 St. Rt. 124.
PH. 614-992·6622

..

conAGE CHEESE

"PLUS SYSTEMS"
'

•

BROUGHTON;$

OC70BER SPECIAL

'

I

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N.....a'·+ethiAIIodiUan ~
NEW JERSEY ~iP!O" CluU

AL11NL.1:29 p.m.,ifn__,

·

BOLOGNA

111 Sen•• St,. P•ny

BuketbaU

.

~

ECKRKH

INSUUICE

u

S.day,Od.2J

I

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••
••

DOWNIII CIILIS
MIWIMUSSEI

AL alNL.1:26 p.m., if.....,...,

\

. Grind Prjx IOUniBIIIelll
'·

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'

FrWay,.Oct~ '16th :
9:00 ••·5:00 pll .

brtets · .

Sua..,, Od.lt
ALatNL. 8:29 P·""
.
~y, Od.:lt
NL atAL.1:29 p.m.
W..._.y,Od.Jl
NL atAL,I:26 p.m.
1'laurlcraJ', Od. 22
NL 1t AL. 1:26 p.m., if~

~
A /rr

.
'-

PEARL STREET
RACINE, OHIO
949·2550 . . ·

"""""*' .......

8:29p.m.

..

_WAID CROSS'
SONS

1

-

For More lnforma.tion

3 FAMILY YARD SALE ,

Teull
PILDBRSTADT, Germany
(AP) - Top-seeded 08briela Sabatini of Argentina beat Karin
ICscbYICI!Ik-of Oennany 6-4, 6-2 in
the first round of the Porsche

•
•

ADVERTISING . DEADLINE
OCTOBER 16th
Insertion:· October 23
·Call Dave or P. J~

B1 DAVE HARRIS
trict crown with a team score of Green of Claymont tied for rnedal·
Selltlael.Correspoadent
326, was followed by Meigs and ist honors with 77's. Duckwell
Joba Krawsczyn' s Meigs golf Coehocton. River and Washington. birdied the playoff hole and
team have advanced to the state Court House finished tied for Gilmore posted a par to advance to
tounWDelll. set for Friday and Sal· fourth place with a.score of 335, the stale as indivicblls.
Oltio Stare University's followed by Sheridan (346) ,
Elltremely high w~nds ar the
Coone. .,
.
Waverly (348) and West Musk- Valley Vie\¥ Golf Course in Lan·
Meip, one of 12 leams battling .ingum with a 365.
caster contributed to the high
for lhe Division n title, is making
The top two teams and the top scores for the day. For Meigs,
its fine lrip to the state level. The two individuals on a non-qualifying Adam Krawsczyn and Jason ·Hart
late Plrtet Long qualified for the team advance to the state. Brian led the Marauders with 82's, Jay
lltale . . . individual in 1986.
Ductwell of Hillsboro, Bill Trim- Cremeans added an 83 and John
T1le Marauders tied Coshocton mer of Wubinston Coon House, Bentley and Jay Harris had an 85
ror runaer-up honors with team Eric Gilmore of River and B.J. each.
scoNI of 332, but Meigs won the
riJb&amp;IO advlnce on the fifth score
tielnUIIr wbeit Jay Hsris finished
willa an IS llld the CoshociAlll fifth
- i:lnled an 89. '
.
Cl•ymont., which won &amp;l!e dll.;-_ .

Kakadu

Sco•·eh&lt;)at·((

,
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The Daily Sentinel
Will Publish A
Special Supplement

Meigs golfers to play in D-11 linkfest-Friday

sports

•

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OILSKIN DROVER
COATSSHATS
.

·.I

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rans

South Carolina gridders
.
t'ICe JJOWing
·'
ret urn t prac
Playe·rs' threatened ffiUti'ny

Hardware .~,

"At .... W .f ...

A.

CREMEANS

Pickens

.

The Dally sentinel-Page-S

Pirates stay alive in NLCS by beating Braves 13-4 in Game 6.

Wlcll II lilly, October 14, 1882 .

Before Marauders' game vs. ·lfellston, .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday. October 14, 1992

PEACHES

PRICES GOOD WHILE SUPPLIES LAST
"We Reaerve The Right To Limit Quantities
No Coupons or Minimum Purchase

YOU CAN DO THE BEST AT CROSS'

------

IN RACINE SINCE 1860

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Page 6The Dally Sentinel ·

j

====~~;o;~~1~~~~~----~~~~~==~0=hlo~--------------~~~o:al~ly::~

. Poin.oy Middleport, Ohio

EASTMAN'S ..• Your Community Minded
.
.
. Low Priced Supermarket , .

PEPSI-COLA
PRODUCTS

w. ;;e'ot]D~'l~c~;~~c;

FRESH
·
•

.Red Grapes

aN.f'.'MJf'l':ro'"Wrlnro"G'f."&amp;.T.'""

24 PAK, 12 OZ. CAN

STORE HOURS ·
Mo~tday·~ Sunday

8 AAt-'1 0' PM

PUMPKINS .

298 SECOND ST. ·.
.
POMEROY,· DH.
WE RUERYE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES ·
PRICES. GOOD SUN., OCT. II THRU OCT. 17, 1992

$1''

LB.

UP

COCA-COLA
PRODUCTS

.

'

c

ASSORTED

·'

2 UTER BOntE.

c
USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

$ 79

1
$ 99
R1beye Steak;-~..La. 4
.
$
249
Round Steak............
.
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4
9·
(
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$ 119
Fryer Parts. . . . . . . . . . .La.
·- :f•sh St1cks........................La. .
(
·· Frying Chicken.....-LB. 69
Chuck .Steak. ~. . . .:. . .La.

.·

US~A C,HOICE BONE~ESS BEEF

STOKELY APPLE OR
CHERRY
20·21

oz.
PIE FILLING·

c

_USDA CHOICE BONELES~BEEF BOnOM

l:B.

S~HOONER !QUARES or

WHOLE
1' ' '

·. .

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~ .Pork.Lo1n................La.

OLE SOUTHERN BRAND

.

Sausage Patties_Jia.aox

ZESTA
CRACKERS

.
FOODLAND
1

POUND BOX ·

Cottage Cheese ·

$ 29

··- -

c

s1 ~49
.

.

24 oz.

•

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. DR. PEPPER
or 7-UP

$ · 39

2

PEPSI PRODUCTS

24 PACK 12 OZ. CANS

s

· 12 ack

99

$299

. MI. DEW e
FREE
DIET or REI.

PEPSI COLA

c

BISQUICK .

2UTER

lOmE

69·
$ 89
2 Yo Mllk. . . . . . . . . . . 1
( GROUND
BEEF
Margarine. . . :. . . . . . . . . .1a. ·29
Clorox Bleach.-..
&amp;9 . TVuDinners... JG-12 oz. 99c . s 90
'
59.
(
Pum n. . . . . . . . . . oz. . · Ice
GROUND
Lettuce_. . . . . . . .-..-HEAD
.

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.BRgUGHTON• . .

GAL.

ROYAL SCOn

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VALID
FOODLAND
·. ···~···.
163
·~·······
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10111 10117182

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QTS.

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CANS
·
. FOR

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· CHUCK

I
UMIT3 1
. WITH
I
COUPON I
AND$10 I
ADOITIDNALI
PURCHASE I

LW SERIES I &amp; II

Baseball Cards .

• • • • • • • • • • -• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • il • • I

$ 49

SEE .STORE FOR DETAILS ABOUT MANUFACTURER'S

10 LB. PACKAGE .

'

DOUBLE COUPONS

9o

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Velvet Sherbet

Tomato Soup~

I
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KEMP SQUART. PAIL

Good Only N. Powell'a Sup.- Y1lu
Offer Good Oct. 11 thru Oct. 17, 11192
Umlt 1 Per Cuatomer

Tomato

oz.

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CAMPBELL'S. 10.75

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--GAlLoN

.

SPECIAL COUPON
.

10 LB. PACKAGE

STOKELY

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W. R-rve the Right to Limit q-.ntltl•• • Price• ElfiCIIvll thru Set., Oct. 17, 1882 • USDA Food Slempa •nd WIC Coupone Acceplld • NC!t R11pon•lble for Typogrephlc•l or Plc:torllll Error•.
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Pega 8 Thl Dalty Sentinel ·

Pomeroy-,Middleport, Ohio

· Wednesday, October 14, 1992

Grange names ·
contest winners
Tbe Rock Springs Granf+,!•
. . . lbc Meip Colay
th
oq.blicnt"s oae mill levy 10 be
voted on in lbc Nov. 3 general elecd6n.
.
· ~ Bndors~ment came during a

••
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r Health

Has Your .Hu
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Snowflou

OCTOBER t

t 992

\YIIole or Rib Half

.

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,
.... a....

1••

59

TRIM and
REMOVA,

rll••

v. c·.

U.S. No. I

10

usse
Potatoes

lb.

Bag

...........,.
......... "•IIIII••

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.3 4.1 u •.Can
... ,._ • MASIU lUND

• Velma Rue reported on the
workers for the Stennvbeel Festi-

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Commander
speaks to post

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: Elmer Pickens, Division 4 Commancier of lbc Ei~tb Djstrict membership commmce, was guest
~at the recent meeling of lhc
American Legion Drew Webster
POst 39, Pomeroy, auended by 4S
members and guests.
: Pickens repOrted on mcmbersl(ip 81 the diilrict level and be 1181-.
ed ~ ba been an increase over
the last year. At the local level,
POst 39 .-Is 4211101e members 10
_reach its quoca of 284. All effons
ue. being mlde 10 accomplish this
bX
Day. Four new members were accepted into meml
ship at lhc Qleetmg. •
.
• The Jl08l vOU!d 10 sponsor a
'
sOO.tt troop in addition 10 the boy
scbut troop that it has sponsored for
a number of yoars.
' Plans for .Vccersns Day on Nov.
I ( and the AmeriCan Legion birth, day dinner on Marcll 16 were dis-

Ora~ge
1ular

EXCAVATING

Ju1ce

or Homestyle

!

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PAPU IOWELS • Preprlced-69'

•
•
•·Dr•
Ju .· bo Roll

:veterans

OFFICE 992•2886

·'·&gt;.,.Sugarc,.ek

' The next regular meeting wiD be
htld Tuesday at the post home with
a sirloin tip beef dinner served. All
are urged 10 attend and bring an eligible VCICran.
.

lllcell

Baeon
Onelb.Pkg.

\,•

Scottish Rite
dinner slated

SpagheHI Sauce

the annual MeiiS County Scot-

.

•

Shedd's
Classic.Spread
Crock

~.88'

.,Autumn Pri•• Fall Apple Sale "

'

Quick
Oats·

Apples
4L.aag

~

1

49 ..

~

UIIT 2 ,_ F•llr ......

~

2 $1
18 oz.
Boxes

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IIDOLEPORT - COmer of HuQioy 6 Mopll 811'11111.
atwaya WMtld 1o lve In • nlca """ neighbor• hood? Well, hanl'a your ohanca. A 3 bad1110m, 2 llary
; hcml With 2 bathe. The home haa·bean NDiftlly rwno' deled. II haa a double lot with chain flnk ,.__ W..
541,000,
NOW .....000

''· .

BALL RUN RD. - FARM - t ~ atorv fnlma home with 4 .
badiiiDIIIa, 208.81+ ...,.,, 1011111 tillable, 101111 llncad,·
moot timber. FREE GAS with 8 oil &amp; gaa welo, Lorge
bam .n nloa lhad. 5125,000,

~ POMI!ROY - ·lllaoiiSII'IIII- Abeaulllulllrlck home lhat
• ha 3 INdoiliMII, 111111 living room, lull baNmllll, and 1
~ one car gar.ge, Hu bean INihlv palni!Kf and wallpa' pll'lldln part Of the houN.
,$34,1100.
.

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POMEROY - V&amp;canllot eultable lor mobil~ horne sill,
Hu all utlliliaoavallable. lnunadiata po-lllanl $5,000.

MIDDLEPORT - 2 unit apt. building, Greot Nnlll
· lnvennant Uva In one and rani 1111 olhlr...you'd ba IMng
lor ""I Could be oppoiMily Jcnoc:lilngiS13,000, ..
•
POMEROY -AIIoldabla frat home. Thll caulclballlt~
atory heme with 3 bad1110mo on IWo loll olli0x100 - ·
Very cu!Aiond hot bean w.n molntalnad, S18,100.

~ Have you

'•

POMEROY.,. OH_ID

RACINE - Gorgaoua 2, ato,Y brick home with 3
badrooml, ,CIIJMil &amp; hardWood flooring, 2 ft.N piiCIO,
centr.l lllr. SCMnad porch. Aulhlnllc..aytlngln- and.
auU.Corne.-1 $48,100.

lola ill pollntiel' .nd 23 IICNI olland? MMl 4 badiiiCml.
• ullllte dlah, ~ loot ibovegrouncl pOol. TPC _ , .nd
. a 2 car gar~~~~.
' · ALL FOR SM,I!OO

FOOD CLUB

IIIII " Golde• Delicious, lola..••
or Law IH lollt .

608 EAST MAIN

RACINE • EAGLE RIDGE ROAD - Went a home with

•O•Iltr

th~p~r= 'l.~

992-2259 '

• LANGIIVLLE- C!J. Ref. 10- Approx. 2 IICNI oii&gt;Muli1111 boiiDm lond. Wallr and elacblc ovlilable. OIMI home
.;or mllblle hemlllll.
11,11011

tiSH Rile dinner will be held Tues-

day. at 6:30 p.m. 81 the Mldd1eport
~c Temple. Reacrvalions 1rc
10 be made by Sltunlay with James.
CJatwonhy, 992-3503. Members
will eat free while~- are 10 ~y
$6.:Membefs are mvired to bring ·
thOir wives.
•,
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NOllCE OF E~CTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCElS OF
THE TEN IIU. IJMITAllON

205 North S.COnd Ave.
Middleport, OH
!I!JTLAHD- AapiR t.vel home with an """ r.!Md hill·
~ Wll'l that hoo baaulllul oak ...lnga. Hu 3 bdnna,, • lal;l
bdl. ullty 1110m ond aldlohan loadld with cabiMII. Hu
1 2 car gar~~~~. and llumi!'IUI!' ~ftll- Buy 1.8 and
home lor 145,000 or Home 1M ~ ICN.
t42,000

~=y~"2''
lb.

48oz.199

LIIITt ,_,_.,,.,... Jar

IR 33 - Rlmodalld, 2 atory home Iorge front porch, 3
badrooma, Induciae moat oppiiiiiCia, central olr, deck,
dlt.gon~g~, very apecloual $37.&amp;00.
.

'

. tANGSVILLE- A 1~ llllry heme tha11a on opprox. 31
• ........ II hoe 3 bdrmo., 2 bathe, hMI pump, oncl wood\ bumlr. Soma lenclllllabla. Would be 1 graal ploce lor
1 hunllng.
t47,100

WE snLL NEED U8t1NGBIIF YOU'RE THINION&lt;l OF
SEWNG GIVE US A CAU.I WE'LL DO OUR BEST lO
SERVE YOUR NEEOII ,

.

tEIGIY E. CLELAIG........- ......-·-·-·--·.:. ........111
1RACY BAINAGEA.................................~ .........tll 14•
.JEAN TAlJIIELL....-.............................~..........._

pgblic.

OFFICE..._ ,_,...........- ........- -.............- ....... 811-1:251

.\
.

'

.·

.GUN SHOOT
UCIIE
GUN CLUB
. SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M.
Faclory I'L-L.
12
Ulllll

Public Notice.

Turkey
Breast

Prego

992-3838

'

DEUCA1155_,. • SUCED

Fanlily Size·

..... ,...

Fr• bt.....J 74.2UO

BISSELL &amp; IURKE
COISTRUCTIOI

W•- Hall Colli, Hay,'
Uma, Corn, Qrlln

(61r,"ri\~70

•JiewHOMII

ae;,,....

mo

•Completa .
Reinotltling
Stop &amp; Comptlrt

WILSON'S ARMY
SURPLUS

FREE

unum

985·4473
,667·6179

County "d. 19PNChfork Rd.
992-70113
llon.-Bun. 1 arn-e pm
... ua lor yo• hunlng
and bock to school

2-7·92-tln

FOREVER
BRONZE .

nMdl. ArN'a largeat

11lact1on of mllltory
IU!JIIIIIitemll

~~ TANNING

lashan Rd., IIICiH
Oef1~11

Howard L Wrllesel

lpHIII

ROOFING

UNUMITED TANNING

Gutters
Downspouts·
_Gutter Cleaning
Painting

949~2826 '

2500

5

NEW-REPAIR

A&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168 °
111181"921tfn.

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Llmeatone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
LICENSED oncl BONDED

P.O.IIll 894-Waltw Alley
Rl0Nf1 OHIO
(Jot..!y Ea.. RWp 5Jaall

PH. 614-992·5591

PARTS &amp; SERVKE
Mowers • Chain Saws.
• Weedealers

MICROWAVE OYEN
and YCR REPAIR

12-S,tln

Eejlie)

' 614·949·2804
••
=
!,

"'"

0

•

;

I

·

KEN'S APPtiANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or
985·3561

wane•' Alley

[!]

...

..• ·N· •

AU MAlES
Pick U ·

Bring lila Or We

....."'1

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
.New Homes • VInyl Siding · · ··
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614·949·2101 • 949·2160
., 915·3139
(No Suadar Calls)
2/12192Mn

•
•t

'

'•

"'•" """"'"''"

,~~~ti

,!!]..,

.~

.

"Any Size Available"

PRECISION POST FRAME
. BUILDERS

9 Yeara

104 Beech Street
Experience
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
"Call Ua fat All Your Building Needa ••

COMMERCIAL • RESIDENTIAL
AGRICULTURAL
Livestock Building• - Machine Sheds - Hay
Barns • Carports ·
Garages - Storage Buildings - Roofing •
Windows· Siding
WV Uc. IWV 020343
FREE ESTIMATES

ROBERT BORING
(6141 11112-3541

-

LIMIT 2 Rolls .P er Family Please

,

Quality
Stone C'o.

::.a~~=vi:~:

ow.

oSAND
-DIRT
;u,.ESTONE.

Call614·992·

fiO.ZIN FOODS • 12 oz. Can
.

All H•rdwOCHI;
So••o•etl,
$40,®•1HII
· .. tlellwend.
992·5449

":i-..:.U..

UMIT t ,_,
FIIIIIIIJPie. . .

··-·

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAIITEIAICE

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

lor.,.,..,..... . . -

~

'

Refrcshmencs were served by
Norma Cusrer and Jean Werry.
: The next meeting will be a trip
to the Amish, country oil Oct. 22.
Members are 10 meet at the home
of N~ Custer at 8 a.m.
Attending were Joan Corder,
Jane Walton, Rose Sisson, Shirley
Beegle, Vera Crow, Norma Cusrer,
Cbarloue Elberfeld, Clarice Kraut- .
lei, Velma Rue, Eleanor Thomas, ·
Reva Vaughan, Jean Werry and
Aim Rupe. Marpret Srewan was a

PAINTING
&amp; co.

u.

BOd Hawaii.

'

36t70W._._,

'I_____

\S;Y

P&amp;l IIU-'
t
' " IIIIICI

HAIUG SEIVICE

be'";,; ' .

lb.

• Ms. Torres thanked the group
fcir ~ lhc replacement levy
of the Me1gs County Health
Department and for putting up
posterS in support ofthe levy.
A DOle or-thanks was received
tiQm Beta Sitpna Phi lntemaliona1
for lhc chapler's conlribulion 10 lhe
Inlmwional Disasrer Relief Fund
for members in ·Florida, Louisiana

Bruce Stone, Port Charlotte,
Fla., will be in contert at lbc S1111011
United Methodist Church on
Buhan Road, on SufKIIIr at 11 a.m ..
Putor Kenny Baker mvites the

SPE(;JAL

CALIFORNIA
TANS

YOUNG'S

~rs8llellded.

P-erformance planned

992·7553

$35

1.-1 (P.C.81·1110),

.

.

u ........ .
uru

WICI'S

992·2269

Norma Toms, R.N., presented a
program on health care, diet and
nutrition at the recent meeting of
Precep10r Bela Bela Chaplet, Bela
Sigma Phi Sorority, held at the
parish hall of Grace Episcopal
Church in Pomeroy. Thirlecn mem-

cussed.

.... UMUTO•
l.egol Notloe
=miMIDIIIII are
Nollae to the Pu1111o of No
to lhe . .looiOIIID
One of Ohlo'a FaiiOrila Goopal
IIUIIIY IIIVICI
IVIRY SAT• .
llgnlllaontlm,uta on Enwlo
County Ca111ml1
IIIII
Nolloe
to
._
aloneralllaMing
Rouah,
~hnr·ll
6:30P.a
Tuppara Pl.aln• Church of Christ
~bllo of ReiMM of Funds, Prnldent, In hll olllclll oa,.
State Route 881, Tuppera Plaine
Factory
Choka
Oatablr~:lg!lt2.
padty u prutdant-'"JOIIIU
The
County
eo.
10
IIOOiptlhe
Jurliulallan
ol
12
Gauge
Shot
October 15·17, 7:()0 p.m.
m~aa~o...,., ~· c-ty ... f'MIIII
Strictly Enforced
PO.IOY,OH • .·
Counllouae, l'anilroy, Ohio lOtion Ia brought to tnfolol
1llfN2111n
45711. To All ,....,.,..., I'Mpon.alllhlelln Nllllon 10
DIABETES SUPPORT
Age~ alu, Grilupa and P•• envlror.mtnr.t review, dD
10111 onorabout0alobar30, lion •king ·~ llllllon;ond .
GROUP MEETING
1ttlihelllovaMmeciOOIMity thot th- re8ponolbllllaa·
THURSDAY, OCT. 15
wiU Nquealli I 11ol funda Nlva bMa ..Uallad. lila a. ~
... s - of Ohio, 0. jpl ellact ollhe -'lllaollon
AT7:00 P.M. .
UNLIMITED SES.SIONS
plrtlmlr of ~plllllll Ia upon Ill appoovoL lila
PLEASANT VALLEY
All~·- Vlnllgt.
Ma.... of Seplenrller
:::·~~~~!~of)jtM~:pHauolng
Mllga.
Commlooton. HOSPITAl,
Davetop an
mayCalmly
.... !MIIIook
Gra"'.
Cal• clllll&amp; .
aiHI Oclober
t3-3N) lundllnd "'•Illata will haY• .
COMMUNIT'f. ROOM
511
Dllplly
At
•.
..U.Iad
Ill
...
ponotllllltlea
00
Topic: Updale on Diabetea
unclar the Nadonol Envtro.
QUAUTY
PRM'
SHOP
Speaker: . .
mant Polley Act of 1MI.
2lili Mill Btf1lll
lnVGI- thl
Olllllllllon to the Illata
Frank SchwartZ, M.D.
Ml...
Olilo
or
anouM
on
270
ReiM11
of
Funda:
The
lhalt
Endorineologilt
Alk
Dallail
In
1111
VII.
w
ill
-..•
oblaotlon
10 111
(OIIIMIM Speci!llllt)
Evanlngo
u~~~:;::,1, and •the appooval only If on- of"''
814-742-3020
~~~~
olo
on 213 following olljectlone: (1) me
1111131112
. _ In 1M VII- -.Hicallon Ia not In · lnl
•
of
Pomaray
lit
the
·~lad
by
the
Cartllylng
hi'"""...,,_,.
___
_
laga
••
Public Notice
Public Notice · . County of Mllga. The. tolal · omc. or olhar olftcw altha
LAND FOR
coal wll be $15,000.00.
epptloanl 11pprovwd by 1111
N01'1CE OF ELECTlPH ON llliliiiiCIMi tax of U a~lh tit
Finding ol No Significant Slate or {II) that appllcanll
SALE
TAX L!VY IN EXCEU OF a rail nol a.....Ung 1.1 lmpaot: " Ml ............. envlronm..lllrwlaw-.1
)I!! TEN IIU. LMTA110N mila for uch- dolt. of mlnadlhatouohaNq-tfor lor the proJect . lndloalad
33acres,
NOTICE Ia hlreby ~­ vah·dan. whloh IIIIOUR• to'
of
lunda
Will
not
omlaolon
of
a
required
decf.
L
Rutland Twp.
ihat In pureuanoa of a llfly-1111'11 oa..:.JSO.D) lor conadlula an action otanlfl. alon finding or slip applf.
clollara ol cantlyallaollnglhlquoiTtyof cable to 1M proJect In the •UGHT HAUUNG
Raaolutlon of thl llo!onl of each.- hu
25acres,
Education of ihe lloulhem vlluadon, for twanty-thr• · the human envloonmant an
·
d
envlronllllntll
review
""""
Olive
Twp.
Local School Dlotrlot, (23)YIIfl.
aooordlngty,lhlobavanam~ .... Plllacllon muot
•FIREWOOD
The
Polio
lor
uld
.AIIolna, Ohio, ~ t ld on thl
Timber on both
.,.. dldclacl not to pared •net oubmlltld ln ··~
BILL SLACK
:11th day of Auguot, 1 •. Election wm open at 1:3!) county
prepa111
on
Environmental
-d•n~ with the Nquncf
tnicta.
'lwa will ba aubtnlllad 10 • o'clock A.M. and remain· lmpaal Statement under the .praOidwe (24 .CFR Part 58)
open
unll
T:SO
o'olaok
P.M.
Call
614-667-3484
vall or 1M paopla of uld
Nallonol Environmental hn- · ond may Ill add......, to the
'
aub•vlalon 11 • GMeral of ukl clay: .
or
09
Statement under the Stat..
USED RAILROAD TIES
Elaollon lc be held In lha .By Orar ol lha Board of poet
Nollonol
Envl10nmant11
PolObJactlono
to
the
l'lllea11
Southern Local lahool Elacllona, af llllga County, loy of
of lund on buM othlr thin
!!;~!:I L======~
Dlalrlot of llllga CountY, Ohio.
lila
1'1110111 lor auch 1 tho. . atalad abava Will not '1.
rHenry L Hunllt, Chalr1llan daclolon not to pnp~r~auch ba OOIItldel'lld by ma 11111. _ _ _ _ _...._"'
Ohio, at ... ....,...._
~liNDA'S
D. lmllh, Director
·...,..
or vol'itv':.""'
on thelrd Datod Alta
atot~mtntel'llllollowo:TNI
No
oblectlono
received oltlr·
lepL
4,
1
1Mr,1-. ...
obava PfOiecl• wUt ......,_ Novambar It, 1802 wUI be
,
,
quaetlon oflavytng ..... In (10)14, 11c
public utaty •net not hove oonaldaracl bPh• 111a~o. CARPENTER SERVICE
1~y- ad-M · 11111111. lila Commantaorobjectlonomay
•••••• of the tan mill
'-·~ wUI Ill ahort be IIIII lo Olflca of ~I -Gulllr
Raom AddllloM
Umllalon, lor the betlllt ol - - - - - - - - - .......
........r ..,_..
Work
"Tab,.,.. OaiOI,..IIqJ
Souther• Local lohool
PUbliC Nollce
tarm and wiH Involve 1 mini- Go-nment-Ohlo. Depart• ~lectrloll .,d Plumbing
Dtatrlol for the purJIOM of · - ..;_.;_:.;;.;;,;..;.;..:.;;.;;.;;...,...... mil amount of nol11 and mMt of Dlvllopmant, 77 S. -Rooll
-111 o. '',., r..•
,BONO ISSUE:
duaL lllallrllotur• 1111 not High SlrM~ P.O. Box 1001, ~n..,.:,U6 Ext8r!Or
Cona-.lng, ..............~~.
INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR
lalecl on ma hlatorlcll reg I.. Columbua, Ohio 432ee-o1 01.
Plllndng
· ra~aoclallng, ranovadng 1 NOllCE OF ELECTION .ON tar.
Manning
Routh,
Pruldenl
(FREE
ESnMAlEil
FREE ESIIMATES
lumlohlng, equipping, •o. TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
HAVE
REFIIEII((S
·AnEn.
v
lronm
..
tiiRevlIllig•
County
.
YOUNG
II
othwwlle llnprovlng IOhOol THE lEN MILL IJMITAllON R-d
the
· Commleolonara
..
,
.......
t.v........
NOnCE Ia hlrllly given
•building• and laolllllll,
Caurthouoa; Pomeroy,
992-6215
lhal
In
puiluanoa
of
1
ooqulrlng real · ealala
Ah• 6 p.&amp; 614-915-4180
Ohio 45768
P-.ay, Ohio
lherelar •d Improving 1M RHotudon of the a-d of
clooumen!l
(10) 14,1TC
Q-10-92-lln
Com•l11lonara of lh• ronmentolrevl-oflh•pr'*
TAX LEVY: paying 1M -1 County of llalp, lllalga, - 111d
lui"' 11
P bll Notl
more
·•"
~......;..;u=:.:.c..:.:::;.ce:.:,._
ol the pure h••• of Ohio, paect on the Unci the ... 10111
why - ' ! 1111• 1I "
•
claaoroom
from clay of July, 1 • litera wll mant Ia not -ulrad. The
111
aubntltllcl
to
a
vola
of
--,
·
lllaannuolelaoUonollhl
.
........_ of Nlcl ••llldto".- Envlronmanr.t R~ Ia on Boordoll!l.-.wiHbahlld
Seld tu baing: ., th • .......Ill• II
addl'lla
and Ia II •L·--~olen It 1 GaiMJII Bntlan to
public IUIIIIn•
...., .,_.,.rye
o llloa on
949·2391or
be held In the County of
copy upon Nqlllll lha Melga ·county Fair·
1·100..837·1460
11a1g1 11 the . . . . . , _ II Mot- Cou- c:-1.. groundaonNov.2·1tt2pollo
of va11ng ........ on the lid · II
.,..
-·"•,
will be opan from 5:00p.m. to
Lawn Mowing,
clay of MoVIIIIIMr, 1-, the
-.MIIgaCoilntyCourt- 8:00 p.m. on "''clay of the
1 Card of Thanke
Fertlllzlng;
Weeding,
._....
IIX, In hoUII, Pomeroy, Ohio 45718 •-lon;
quMlion ol _,,ng a
during nonll81 bualn11a
and Seeding .
-of.,...., •IIIMIIIlila lllcllon ohlll be
Shrub and Tree
The family , of
tlon,lorlhebanallol....,_ hoiii'III:30Lm.-4:30p.m.No baltoL Theoelllngofvotn
Trimming
&amp; Removal
(B
·
Icy)
R
--.lurlhafEnvlronmantllravlew
1
d'-b
,_
.
Ch ar I••
un
• County Board of Menial of ouch praloctla propo'ied or .,.....,,. V prox..a 1•
A-Jollo eom...-1
John eon who died
RltiMclltlon
d--~~ prior
... _ not. to ba pannlllad.
,_ EoJJinaJ•
of
Malnten•noa
and
t
o
-·
to....
l'llllclanla ofL -M:S•
FIREWOOD
FOR SALE
September 22, t 882
~
Ra1M11 ol Funds.
CouOnlylio
ah
.__nlc
Operation of Carleton
PubloCo-antoiFu~nty ldlngmam-r p (614)
..28-'IIHin
woulclllka.tot.. •
School and Malga
·-·
·- c.tlftootM, lor at 111111 15
10112112
(1) F•n., Bennett
lndualrlll Worbhop for lng: Aatln-tld agencln, clap balorelha dala of.._
Poet 128 tind th.. Pera(lna with Montal Pn~u::':J:'~"::'ng': Ilona, moy votL
Ladle• Auxlllary; (2)
Rewdlllon and Develop- Invited to •ub•ll wrltt.n
lolambera of the aoclety
_ , DlubiiiiiM.
lor aa--•~--llon muatdeclol'llthairoandldacy
Son a of Amlrlcan
Said tax being an ac1c1County
lor lhll ollloa of Dtroctora of
Squadron
donal tax af 1.1 milia at 1
Commlaalonero, the Sodllji by filing wllh·lha
Wllk 111 (3)
rote nolll!OIIdlng 1.1 111111
MCI'IIIary ol the IOCiely, 1
IIV •:
loruch--.ol¥11Pomeroy, Ohio ...lltlonolgnaclby10ormore
SIZED LIMESTONE
lion, which •-unla
45788. Such oommenta mamlllra ot tho aoataty who
VIllage of Pomeroy;
FOR SALE
(4) U.M. W.A. Local
elghiMn oente (SG.18)
a~ld .:: racalvad ~!_.!le ora r11ldento of Malga·
-one huncll'llol....,. of luuVI
rMI on or_..,,. County, ot le11t 7 daya be,1857·, (&amp;) Realdenla of
30, 1182.
1 ... •-~
I Dl
l 1111oon,f.. ~.
f • eon II nu I,?II October
Stona Wood• Apart· vpaarlodu
. All auch _,.,... oo ora ..,u......on o rectora .
6.637
......
.
Ia hold: Only regularly nom~
' menta and (6) Frlanda
The Polla lor · uld riCIIVId wiA be oonotdaad no..., candldotll who have ;
St. Rt. 7
who aenl carda and Etaollon wiU open 11 1:30 •nd "" County wll not ,.. mat lhe filing Nqull'llftlenta
c•llllin,
flo•,.r• and •harod In o'clock A.M. and I'IIIDIIn quMirllanaoflunclaor181ca ·will beallglblelorlllctlonaa
o1
our
loved
op•
unit
7:30
o'clock
P.M.
•heny
•d:;;.~otS::Ion
on
director.
,
loa.
of uld clay.
I pro
r to
lila ,.,. of olflaa oil he
'one.
By orcMr of the a-d ol the data •
In
P,. retiring dlreclora ahallexpll'll
Your thol!ghlful· Eloollor!a of llllgo County, a.dna _,_ofF·-"-·.......,, andlhltollhedlrect9raelect
&amp; MRURIIGS
Ohio.
Rlilana
-·- - · aNIII begin on the 111 lion521001.LUI .
nail and h1 IP WI.
Henry L Hunllr, Chalr1llan County CommlaaloMro wiU clayoflleoembetoleochyear
....... ow.
11ruttY apprecllltad.
Rl!l D. Stnllh, Director IWiclartake the prolacta d• · or until their ouccaeaol'llal'll
Ell-,aon MlchMI· Dolad Seplllmbar 4, 1 •
ICflbad abava with Commu- etaotad and quallflad.
·
Herb
Sbop
()pea Cor
BULLD0~ 1~ACKHOE
ATTN: Local Croft Shope
ond
TRACIUKIE
WORK
:::=~l:ar:ry~,~~~D~lx~leWL(1:0~)7~,~14~,2:1~,2:e,~4:1c~--~ GrMI
nlttt Development
Block
tlcketo mar
_ , Craftlra
Fund from 1111 Still
of 111 llamberahlp
purchuecl Sugor
Run
AVAILABLE.
Ohio undor nllll I at tho Milia.
EHmlna!l
lhelill...• man
SEPTIC 8YI1EIIS,
~uolng Aal,ol 1174. Malga (10) 14, 21, 2a, 3TC
-buy
wholeule
from
HOllE SITES and
Real Estatg General
Connie.
TRAILER IllES.
LANDCLEARING ·
Estate General
DRIVEWAYS INSTAilED
UMESlONE-TRUCKING
pm
FREE ESTIMATES
.DON SEEVERS

:,:rt.

Por
•1n

Sauerkraut

II

:

Gocglcin.

·

.DifiiWAY

D.l.'s
FARM TOYS

Refrcshmencs were served by
Jim and B.nwa Fry and Francis

gOCSL

•.,. ............. =L
•
Ill SHOOI
UCIIE
IUICLUI

IM'"IOZII

.Public Notice

eo- • eny

will

'

Pubic Notice

p.....,.,.

. Gruescr.
The November meeting
be
open and slideS of ~ lbc churches
in Meigs County will be shown by
Rev. William Nfiddkswartb. The
public is inviiCd.

val.

:CLRSSJAED RDS

4:10 P. &amp; lAY IEFOIE
PUIUCAnOI

•

roceat mcetin_B~ich Jon
Jacobs, Health Depll1IDell1 administec, explained bow lbc levy will
rcj)lace the ·current one miD le~ ·
and bow lhc money gencraled will
be IISCI! 10 provide health services
for Meigs Counlians.
·
Barbara Fry, CWA, r eponed
lhal forms are available for aU the
various contcsiS lhis ~.Ohio Stale Grange bas a new
cookbook for sale and Rock
Springs Grange wiil have them
available soon. ·
William Radfonl reponed on lhe
painting done on d!e building and
!he roof.
"October" was the theme of lhc
program presented. Readings
mcluded "Christopher Columbus
and Columbus, Ohio" by Barbara
Fey; a poem, "Autumn" by Sarah
Caldwell; "A Slice of Life" by JaniU Weber; " Myths of Halloween"
by Helen Blacksron. ,
A pumpkin decorating conacst
was won by Nancy Radford, Janice
Weber, Harold Blackston and
RoDin Radford. AU members partie.ipned
:Barbara Fry gave the ,closing
prayer.
Cards were sent to Agnes
Djxon, Ada Holter and Roy

Sorority meets
..

Read the

-·

,'

JEFF STAATS
(~041 m

-s346

. I

MORRIS
GARAGE DOOR SERVICE

G~~g~ Ooly
Starts Sept•.27

R110ludon of the lloanl ef
'
T1111- of 1M Townahlp ef
w16/lln
Rutlllld,
Ohio,
on ,.
'-:::;::====~
tho 24111 clay
of plllecl
July, 1111,

=

:,'':,!':::;!":'/!:.: TOP TO BOTTOM

':. t

MAINTENANCE
Qlld REPAIR

aubdlvlalon 11 • Genarol

~!=:lp':.~=

"~"''" pt•• of voUng
lhe{eln on the lnl clay ol
Nov••••· • • lh• q 11o11 ol tavylng • tax, In
141,1111 ..... ton ... Imitation, for the be111fll ot
Rullond ToWIIIhlp lor the

•ROofing oSidlng .
oGutten
•Room Additions
~ntorlor

Romodelng.

· ~...... E. t....Ltact 1o..., .-u

purJIOII ol1111fntalnlng IIMI

·T.::-.:xo;:.::~I'IIIJW...
-nl..

(614) 992·2866

d ,.'-====21-='12:·:1:rno:::.

of •• 11111
•tlugiiDC
of .a1111 .a
1!1
not ••...
•Ill lor - h - ..._ of

nlu8lon, whloh -~·- ..

::.-.:O,.."J':a,'r,!,.lor.,'::.
uatlon, lor Iva (I) Yllfl.
.
The Poll• for 11ld
Eleollon wll 0f111J II 1:30
o'clock A.M. Mid r•aln
until 7:30 o'clock P.M.

:f:

:;"1':: of the Baartl of
Elaa!lolll of llllgo County,

.

DJVIDSON'S
~··

PLUMBING
.
.............,
.

......-..
~

;}I"..

31904 IN•I•I
Creek ....
fOri, ...

..,a.::
I 614-992•7144
......
t•

~..,.~Hun

D.IJJ!IIh;E •

Dalld tap limber 4,
{10) 7, 14, 11, . . 41c.

'

,,

tu•lr HI Effkieacy
A.. COI.tlotters, Heat
,..,., fiiiiiCII

&amp;

Now Waler Healers.
Bennetts Mobile Horne
IHis.tloniSdllllld. ~-

&amp; Coollr•e
~.. DIIIa

:c.~ (6141446-9416 •1-..72-5967

�Sentinel
SNAFU® by Bruce llelotllo:

,,

!1Jh

-·._.1"=, .....,
p'

-···

=r-

-~-

..........

,::,=.tie!
.... tM47K..

-~.. DJI.P. 0 . -114
* 'Jn,Ohlo .....
Giveaway

-

To ~ldtrly

-·

•

:-=

H() TIU~

s

f'lij(.£

l~'r

-

roo

-~lpd.IM1•nn

Couple.•,

-leKiplinllde.111f.371.

TIIAT NILY
"llLII

....

S@\\~lA-"ttfS•
CLAY R. POllAN

8-11 -

_ _ _ _..;_....:; ldltod ~y

Rearrange letten • of
0 four
scrambJed words

low lo form lour

I

~mple

'

HIZNET

~ R11lll..

·•

.
-·

I:OO&lt;Ile we (J)e ae
aei!J,.._
(!) . . . by !lee Bell
(!)Square One TV Q

PEANUTS

...

WOII

EVENING

,/""

I

13 If I L L T

1~

RainboW Stereo.

•.

II I

OeFullllauleQ

I SAIJJ ·A DOG ON TV

g ::!':I&amp; Tour

.. AFTER l-IE
EMPTIED THE
. WATER OUT

DOING ALL SORTS OF TRICKS
WIT~
WATER Dt SH ...

Flrwtood To'OIV.•r. 1'14-441-:mc.
.

.

WED., OCT. 14 •

fl'o.O!

;=:~---.....,..- ··

72 Tluck810r a...

•

..

"Ihe Dally ~ntlf!el

Television
Viewing

fLL 5AY!

:r-=r·~~. .
,_

TALK 10 CAIIDY U'iE
, . . . . . . . .. . . .cal
CUWnC...!Iacal'1,11•

4

...

--""'~

--c.····=·
_______
----------,
.......... -- .
=-----..............
------:

•

~,c,:..!!•\.,.

I

Pomeroy Mlcfdleport, Qh~

-~--=- ~· '

?'

~-

BORN LOSER

AIIIOIIor ....

............. IP 111.

bs£111...

: . ::..::rrt1.

..-

'

I

In

u' , .,. . .

!!'T'"-=.wv.
.

n

....................
i!

r '• .:.v·~·..,
--·

1112

3t IIOmlllor Sllle

llunli~J

...

.

.
Weclneada , October 14, 189~.

•

Ohio

8 World Todlty .
0 Rln Tin nn; K·l Cop
' 1:01 (J) Th.... Canepany

1:30C2le I[JI NBC Nawo C
(!) Ed McMahon'l &amp;tal

8ealcl:

CllD &lt;lle ABC Naw1 Q
W - In !lee World It

llf'""' landlego? Stereo:
WSquare One TV r;J

aecu-·c.
e
R-nne Stereo. 1:;1
IDUpCiooe
.

all•
llD

Alii:: Cloon, fur.
n
""·'"
, _ ...... w...
r
paid••,.~. 1111.
'

Lost&amp; Found

Rlok Poo_, Auction ComPinY.
lull limo auct..._r, ~·
l.ool:
vldnftv, beige auction
........
Uo•totd
Lovl-typo puiM, ohouldiir llrop,. toiMI,Ohlo • W•t VIrginia, 304114-Mt-30111.
:.;7n-57116.:.::;::::=,_ _ _ _ __
LAW ENFORCEMENT DEA, U.S.
MARSHALL'S Hlrl!'9- No
Expo- -Nry. FOr Ap9
plication ..
Call 111~
Yard Sale
7
755-81111!,_ Elll. OH165 ll.m. To
Wotldng Major Aptlllanooa, ap.m. 7 uaya.
Color
TY'a
lholriganltan,
F. ....., VCR'o, Mlcrowovoa,
Air Conclhlonora, GuHar Ampa,
Gallipolis
Etc. 114-251-12311.

p_,

-..:on

,...

&amp; VlclnHy

lolaa.-

.

1125.
12165

2

Boctroomo,

Aerrtgerator And

..

trnted Wood

-

Pre-Owned Uobl.. Home, Lllrgt
Stleetlon Low Money DoWn,
Froa Sat:Up And Dollvary. 1-800118N710.

Employmenl Services

1--------Help Wanted

AVON I All Aroaa I Slll~ay
EARN MONEY Raadlna Bookll

8G·2111.

Land

Join AINrlcl'a - - Homo
Cleaning Company. ()pportunhy

For Ad¥11- lnlo J!!onage"*"
li!~:aiiJ. Flollblle Doyllina
Hoon _ , Tllru Frldiy. N

(!), I1J SCienUflc Ame~can

1I ~~;;-~~~~;;;;;;;;
j

bamt, eummw house garage.
:aludlo. hur:llng cabin. ~Y ownar.
Aaant• welcome. Rtducedl Dan
Bilek, 814 388 1:110.

18 Wanted to Do
Altarallona: Sowing l Mandlng,

114-446-4134.

haul -

Call for gooa mop. 1-614·593-

To~g ,

Trimming. TrM RtmOYal,

through October 31
Service I'8IM from $111.85 per month.
lncluct. 180 mlnutw of off1'811k •lr time.
L...lng11¥llllllble from tiS.OO per month.
.

MOI~E

IINFORMATION
AT

e

Trimming. Frao ExllmoiOal a "
3G7U7'Aftar 4p.m.
Exparlancocl Houaakaoplng Will
Clean - a Dr Oltlcoio ly Tho
Job Or Hour, A.aonabla Ratoo.

·-1351L

'

loaa to lha mill luat

aall304-1115-1l57.

In Homo Nuralng C.ro. 114-44671152.
'
Interior extertor palnUng elso
WHh down mobile hom. &amp;
hoUin, 12 Yl"' ••..-rllnca,

,...,tneel, 304-171-tl33.

.

Ml•• PIUia't Day c.,. Centtr 1
Block WHI 01 HMC On Jaokaon

RUTLAND .
MINE SUPPLY

Plkl M.f I Ul. -1:30 P.M. II
Oualhy And Exporionaa lo The

•1 COncem For Yow ChUd'•
Cora. Call Uo For A VloH. lnlant
!Toddtoro 114 411 822'1. p,...

Pipe for Water, Sewage
and Gas
Rutland,. OHa

aood ..,_, graol hur:llng.
!loolad blda to Ill opanod 1Q:OD

Georgoa Portable Sowmlll don't

370l.
.
EIR TREE SERVICE.

&gt;FREE INSTALLAnON• With any phone purchale

151 Socludod aorn Muon Co
(Ambrotela). Marktd I mapptd,

AM, Oct. 28. OWner r...rv.. the
right to rejoct any l all blda.
Coli hll' lnlormallon 304-e'll2711 avonlnga 304-773-4007.
4 Aero Loll For Sola In Pol~ot.
$1,000 -$8"000. 200' Rood Fron·
logo, c.ultily 8l+.J37-8464.
Ona ocra lot S mlln from Pl. Pit
on AI. 2 South, St,50D. 304-8751115.
sEVERAL 7· ACRE PARCELS:
Malgo Counl~, Salam TWp.,
S656i Krw. Remote, btiiUtlful

Drummonda Auto Body 6
Machanlc Worlo. Froa Eatlmatoo.
Noi&lt;ehborhood Ad, IH. 114-446-

II II II II II

~L

choalara

~ool

8224.

47 Wanted to Rent
Largo

'-o

Ani... ..... 1210; ...
....
..........
$1110;
n ala rill II lllllntu etu~llJiilta

.....

to
OH.
...,ury
.
pn~iiift:/, oonr'dlr ,.. 11au11
·-llliple2pa.llrp
In._ or
...... h1110, besl .....

"L.t".i d

ooupl&amp;.
D p 1 t' •
good ...... I 111-

a• • a.-"

. .- •. ,LJch

W--

1545, Athenti.

446...11.

'

Financial
21

Business

HOUSE FOR SALE
BY OWNER
12 Year old raoch type house. 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, 1% car garage
and breezeway, central air and heat
pump, many extras.

-.i!lth

..

~h ... .,.....,~·~~~C8!!180~rle~~·~.:_
4

Cad- -

-.~

63

:Z be*oom home, big yard, nlcl

::.:r

nelghborliood,~.

»-

'VI'RA PURNITUIII ANO

81 .

·--a. '

' "'

Tlonsportd!totl

~htlloi•I'T--1
· Cotloa lnd -

~·~~=~
~:
.
'

~

.

71

!CJna Wood I

COal llova -

Autos lor Sale ·

....- - .
-

~ La 1aron, ISUio,

42 Mobile Homes
for·Rent

ftnj.

.

BARNEY

Home

=--': ;.
tlmll•l Attarw :11

1.:'\'::
MD .,..... '
+

ToolltOr-111WDoN. · , :

4 0.. liMo

Dldi"'CI

~Call-~· Ril.....

Me...,_.

YOU.GOT THAT
AT AN ALL·NitSHT

I TANGLED

CHECKER SAME ?

A PORE
LOSER II

~ Maal•• And
PialloUp And
Gtar,.. ,
CNok Rood, 114o441aM
·

a ~ CA, WAI On R-

lad Lol. ~ To llova In lala
On Land Contraat. 1 • - From
llga..r. 814o441-1401.

E
ma•
....

BookC...HNd-·-

4112.

T-.Iandtw,..
ilo 1
boelclo

llaavy
Clotht~

-rvllloa
Pool D!floa,

loa. -

1111 a.n •••••cod. OnlY Prl.

Sat, Sun -.t:DOPII, ather
doya -IIWTWIU.

.

U.\'IE'I PUIIHI1'UM
Complalo horeeo !we.._, lor ilmllr wllh ahld•n 'Without
HourW: Mon Sd, N. ........_ ......._1114-maMS cloytlrrea or
_......
0322,
I oul tid. 3114101
, . . D:allvory.

DIIMri:
---~.-

-.-doya
-

lloe

I

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

By Pbillip Alder

Wesl Nortb ·East
There are many books about de· Soutb
2t '
2+
Pass
Pass
fense in bridge. Within the pages of all
Pass
2 NT
3 NT
All
pa~
of them yon will find one play discnssed that is still missed by many
Opening lead: Q
players below expert level.
South's sequence described a hal· '-----------.....1
anced hand with 23-24 points.
.
South ducked West's spade-queen
lead and won the second spade with queen. South has · nine tricks: two •
the king. Declarer saw that he had spades, three hearts , two diamonds •
eight top tricks. A 3·3 club break and two clubs. Our only chance is lor :
would produce a ninth t.r ick, but that you to play your diamond king at trick . ~
was against the Odds. Hoping he might two. Tha t kills the diamond suit stone .
make something from the diamonds, dead. If South wins with dummy's ace, .:
South immediately led a diamond to I take the second rou nd with the queen
dummy's 10. East won with the queen and return a spade for one down. If
and fired back a spade. However, de- South ducks your king, hoping you
clarerwon, took a second diamond fi- have the K·Q, and takes a finesse on
nesse and cashed the diamond ace . the second round, he goes two down."
When the king dropped, South claimed
"How would you know to win th&lt;t .
11 ~ricks.
second diamond?" asked West, still •
West was unhappy. "Why didn't you struggling to escape.
·
·:·.
duck the diamond queen ?" he asked
But East reeled him in . "From the,
point-countl would know that the con· .;
East.
As P.G. Wodehouse put il , though tract is unbeata~le if South has three . .
not exactly disgruntled, East was far diamonds."
from gruntled. "If I duck my diamond
© ,.,, MEws..,.• •em-.. AUII.

+

The World Almaaac: 00 Cro~sword
ACROSS

42-

1L

IJ&lt;onl

43~

,,_,
a

4750

Uonll!
..1a-....

sa

~

""

WT55 .....ill

Qlriobooo

.....,

_,

llFDOd ....

~~--

57 lntllblllnl

.. Olhlglllolol'

58-

Olo-'"'
a3 L.otal-

constet-

8 COpltal ol

DOWN

10 CO&lt;don ltU...ohol•
20EJ022 ........ _

g Potpounl

24 TJIII Dl

oo- - :

,_.,2ocl
34tton•::•;::
............

1 ....,

ZUniiDI

J I lew ...

32 ......

31-llloh
37F31Tnloo

40

Llnllor

!13Lat--

15 AclorAidl
11 tE.(.......

21

lMtetlllllf

51 2,001,

ULP14 - - Wlllt

a1

Iloilo_,

14....-·
... _
--·
......
- - 21-·-

5--l.a

IJIIII-

iwlllh

3A-

2C F..ce

4 Spodol

2f -

25Yn - -

IIMI Roll

za-.u

sC:.
aaoo-

or171-

1011a"'olnge, Ill&lt;. lor Mona. .
1114 PcentiM _ , . . 4 oyl,
- . lfr, good ~':'

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

.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

......
a ThoN8
Nllonl WonMidotft
.... ·tlw••a.tt4 411DIII

OcL 11, 111:1

UIIIIIUTI.
1.11110 •AD·•M..i""IOI-1• - ·

BUILDERS

...'

.

87 · Upho!aterr

... ' " ' " .....,.1 t•• ,,,.,.
20 Yr. lx~
C.llll, 614-742·2321

lie iif .. Uph

Ilia~ ~ ~ ...

---14

.!nl trC IO\I1IIr -

27,.... n,. .•' ..

In - . . . . ..-a~ng.
COli
lor ,... . . "

1117/lfe\

IIIMI-. J
-

•

I

•
I

You're Ukaly to achieve your grea1111
eucceaaes In the year - d II limes
when you may f........ ythlng II going
.agaln.t you, The lesiOn to be learned Is
give up.
'
LliiiiA (tept. 21-00( 23) l'ou cen be a
big teolp today 1n irtatructlng • dlaagr...

=~~=":":'.::':~~
what Ia bed. Trying to patcfl up • broken
romance? The Allro-Greph Matchmak·
er can help you underatand what to do

to make the relatiOnship work, Mall S:i
plus a long, Hlf·adilrnaed, stamped
envelope to Matcllmlker, c/o this
newapaper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland,
OH 44101-3428.
SCORPIO (Oct. :M-Niw. 22) It's wry lm"
portent thai you keep your mind riveted
on the resuhs you desire today. This will
help you ovwcome any obit- that
may temporarily Impede your prog..,...
SAGITTAIIIUI. (Nov. 23 Dec. 21)
Someone cooperation you 'now
need can be IWiyed to your c.u.. today - 11 you emphlllze lha facta, not'
the trilla, when you p.....,t your cue.
CAPRICORN (Dec. I:Win. 11) It ~
hoovat you.today 10 tocua your lndultrf·
· oueneu on 1 profttabla -purpoee. Con' centrale your efforts In an .,.. that ·
prciml- malarial returno.
,
AQUARIUS(,_ 20-Peb. 11) You have I
tha leaderaltlp eblllty today to atcompanlonelfwough dlfftcult lltuatlona.
Y04Jif pewa Will recogniZe thll Innate
quality and look to you tor guld-.
PIICI!I (Feb. liD M all . , An oppor·
tunlty of allmlted nature might b e ..,ted to you tllAy by 1 grateful friend .
Thlt lndl\lldual will be lrylng to repay an
·
old favor.

'

.

..

ARIES C.._ 21·April1t) Put your an·
lly1iatl anrtbutesto work tOday so you
don't oVerlOOk adv_,lagealn shua11ons
that aocaped detection by others. The
- • • might 'not be obllloua.
TAUIIUI (April »Mer :Ill) In financial
manors tOday, be fair bu1 ftrm . II your
better judgment wwna that you won'!
be given 81eythlng In return, don't feel
obligated to mike conceaalona.
QQIIN6 (Mer 21"iiune :Ill) Something
you've r«en11y learned from a MQallve
expertence can be applied In a poeltlve
manner today. Your leUon wu not In
vain.
C:AJICIR (.1o1M 21:Julr 22) Keep m~m
about an 11111bltloua undw1aldng you ve
bean contanplatlng. Don't expoee your
Intentions unUI you've had a cflance to
Implement them.· .
.
LEO (.IU!J . .Aug. 22) Be _ . to In·
elude a friend of long lt*ldlng In any
IOclel arrano-t you make loday.
This 11 a relatlonthlp that Ia much too
Important to be Ignored.
VIRGO (Aug. 23 ••,. 22) Although
you're not likely to do thlngaln a ftlllll·
boyantUMnnw loRy, your tiCIIca will
not go unnoticed by others. Your eflec·
11-- will win tteolr reapect.

7 I.OWiiffllr

'·

•
•
•

ftl:'wi
CIYII Wara Mary
and Don ba111e for cuatody of

.

RuibertHn

10:20CD MOVIE: lraakMfllraakMI

(PG}(1:55)
10:30all On .....

...

...•

Ln a 0r11er A
faulty pacemaker causes a
fatal heart anack and a car
accident. Stereo. Q

"'

I

•
•
•

,

Q
1o:oo rn • ·o

Carl. Stereo. C
(!) 11J Campaign lor Cube A
• look at the eftorts of a
powarlul lobbying
organization, the Cuban
American National
Foundation, to bring ClOwn
Fidel Castro. (1 :00)
llD. What About
T_,.,_, Hoat Susan
Rllttan Iaika to auivlvora of
be'llll cancer a!ld gives early
wamlng deteCtio!lllgns.
(1 :001
lit World,.._
liD 780 Club With Pal

•

-'""'

30 Golf pogo

Jamie learns a ,secret about
Paul's relationship With an
old flame . Stereci. Q
CIJD . C1J 8 Leurie HHI A
young patient Is romantically
smitten with Laurie. Stereo.

. ..

- L , 11,000

WI DO

'

• 6·2
+ A K 73

9:30(])8 OIMad About You

-Noo--12.~. :IOCI:aiIOrl - - .... 40 Gallion

7

.AKQ

6

Real Es!&lt;ltc

'

~

-

~--··-,­

or

WIFE-MATE?

Part bile llal*!i. •...
,...boa,
dallwiv.
1o -.·
MT.IO
1...0.

Wltortoad. Wlh
Doulole Orowar ......., -

roadl Co. Rd. 28 and 32.

SHE WAS TH'
TANS/.Eil f1

- - -ICuNwlllnd:
· Ron
=......_Ohio.~-

King

Eastern School District.

WHAT DID
YOU TELL YORE

UP WITH

Tlwu H lnd: In -

...,... ....., f!MIIn

On 2 acree of land.

l:npnwernent Jill's attampts
a1 matchmaking inlerrupt
Tim's aN-male engine party .
Slereo. Q
(!) 11J CW.n Mloolle Crtala:
At lilt artnk The events of
October 1962, when the
Soviet Union a!ld the UnHed
Sletes came to lise edge of
mutual destruction, are
recounted. (1 :00) Stereo. Q
I!J) •
Place Billy
faHs lor a dental student;
Jake is thrown in jail. (R)
Stereo. C
iiJ MOVil: Wrl1e~1 Block'
(2:00) Stereo. C
'
121 Nalhllllle·NOW
Qll Top Rank Boxing
Heavyweight bout: Bruca
Seldon (21 ·2, 17 KOs) vs .
Tony Tubbs (32-4, 20 KOs),
10 rou!lda. from Atiantlc City,
N.J . (L)
a Lanry King Uval
F - 0ow11ng Myatarieo

.,_.

....... """""""*

- an
.....
and IIIW124111
lldlntL - •
d galw.
I7MIG..
-

CllDCIJ8Home

l

lilloNWMMIU;
Dei Oldor •
.....,......_.._,dll•lane,

~--good

--Cool-~­

A5QUTtT.. .

I

11W1M411..!:•nltht~ ·Wllllarpu ...
CUrtll

,.,;; uu
-· 11W4H221.
u,oc~ a YNra, -Dido Oalt.o .. uoo.
.......,..,

WII .
:1urt
-F
,..
..·
. I'IU.
f1t 211Ralad
...
AJt.r I Jl.ll.

AeK .ME: W'o-10
L...OeTE:D IT.

•\

Home
Improvements

.-

I W.Ae·"THINKING

IIAIEMENT
WATERPIIOOPIIIO
.
-"'-L.lllli 1111: II lllrnllhld.
Frao . .- . . . Call t-

$211 Dr

IH;htawDr 4 ..... 1M 141 Cl1i
Plko.
.

I~ G\.AD 'lQ.J DIDN'r

Q.IR F;!W.II.Y5 L.UMSeR
:et.rerNese&gt; 11-J tg30.

Servtces

1!11 $21.~; '
Arid c -

'

Nff ~RAN~11-IER ftX..i,'JOED

Goods

Cha..
ewsQ

(2:15)
8:30 (I) II CIJ 0 Doogle Howoer,
M.D. Doogie's dad wants him
to buy a condo; Vinnie is ·.
abOUt to be uprooted.
Stereo. []
111111 01"8 Mejor Leegue
BallbaH National League
Championship Sarles: East
Division Champion at West
Division Champion (game 7,
it necessaryl (LI (May be
replaced by r~ar
programmlngl :.,J
11:00 1])8 (IJ) S.lnfeld Jerry is
distracted by a woman who
conl!llils a M ' and· run
accident. (R) Stereo. Q

79

• Q83

+Q 10
+A K&gt;4

The textbook·
honor play

Stereo. t;~

Uvntock

.J9632

K 54
+J 9 54

8:05 CD M9VIE: National
.
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unwante.!!,reHglous cult. (R)

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for a member oC an

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lial \1, 5300 mo. pluo dopoait.

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•

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76

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llpolla a Vk:lnhy. Havo rat, 114:

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61 Farm Equlpmenl

1300; ..... 1111

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Trip To -~IN
11-11. Call Pot 1141111111..

l1nd; WDCKJ., piiiUrll 1nd hills.

Ago 114-448- Fumlal:ed ano btd,_;,
.
In town. No DOlo. Rat. I

TrM Trimming ahd Aemo'VII,

742·2656

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englnee£-&lt;lieslgn contest.
Stereo.
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learns about the challenge of
training. (R) Stereo. Q
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35 Lots &amp; Acreage

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sexy teacfle.r's house.
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wanders from home; a cab
~er.ts murqered. Stereo.

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DOnd. Vlnlon. Colonial farm
houaa ...wly 1¥1odaltd. 2 large

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33 Fanns for Sale

Ralao-AndDwnTronopor114-

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a • Famllr 1'111111

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Double.._ Wall, Septic, Founcfa.
tlon &amp; urlvoway, Allin Ono Loan
Pooko_ae, !-OW RaiiJ, Open, Late
Wllh ugmtd Homoa. H14·m·

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EAST

SOUTH

ID PBA Bowling Suncoast

ocros of .land, looatad In nice
nfighborhood, good oond., 814-

$30,DDOIYr. InCome Pottntlal.
Dolalll. 111 105-11112-aDOO, Ex1. y.

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home wf room lxtlnllon, 1.25

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· CIJIIEntar181nmamTonlghl

Old 3 Badrooma, Gray' Vinyl
Siding, HNI Pump, 2 ,Car
Oaroga, 1 112 Both, cny
9oho01a. $$4,100. 814-446-4~50.
For Sal.. 1975 FIHtwood mobile

oompany.1-tl82-41381.

Pomeroy,

•

CAN'T T~UST
A GUY wiTti AN
f:llASf:ll!

(!) The Ja~ ~:;~..:

Ann Drive, Galllpoll1, 3 Ytlrl

'AVON' ALL AREAS! Share your
limo wHh ua. You'll lova tho

Pille In ·-~ Loll Claehaa,

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•

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7:30 (]). 1111 "-rdyl.D

S~fM$

fiN(fflf . ENOU6ti.
BUT .I JUST

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15x12,
Jumlahtd,
central air, eldrtlng, will finance,
liDO, $13111 mon., 814·182·2187,
114-3811-8227.
Looking For ADtal? Conoldar A
3bdnn.,

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7:05 CD Cleverly Hlllbllliea

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totlll 1l1c, under·

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llan - - r S i m · Wlh Dr WHIIoLO llol- Call
"" Qal, 14111, Lalli!~~ Till Sold Larry Uwly..... 311 1303.
OUtl
112Ohio.laland - · Top Pr'- Pold: All Old U.S.
Konoup,
Colna, Gold Rlnaa S - Colno,
Gold Colno. .I I.T.il. Coin Shop,

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BRIDGE

. , Ill I1J MIICNell/1-ehrar

lnal- dollvory, oomplalo aal·
up, aklrtlng 6 atopa. 1-1011-837·

eltlm~t..,

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.wv-. DEADLINE: 2:110 p.m.
the cloy bolora .tha oct Ia to Nn. W.nttd atandlng tlmbar, top

SUndo1 adllion • 2:00 · p.m. pricei pakl, fr•

Fumll!led

Wooded • Novel • Rough • Vandal · HANDLE
Teen to dad, "Belter lind out what's wrong -with lhe
passenger side of the car. Every time I drive with Mom
in the car, she. has to hold onto the HANDLE. "

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Experience should teach us
Ileal It Ia eeiW::ys the unexpeclod that does occur." . Eleanor. - t e l l.
·
·

.

'

•

•

.. •

�. Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Braves and
Blue Jays win
1992 crowns

FamilY. ··
Medjcine .
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of !'amity Medicine
Qaestloa: One· of my friends
said his docror told him lhat it was
healthier for the skin to shave manually ratber than use an elccuic
shaver. I use an electric razor and
get guite a bit of ilritation from it
Wbat's the preferred method?
Aaswer: I could find no medi.cal literature in the · National
Library of Medicine database that
specifically addresses the "best"
way to shave. Shaving just isn't a
current topic of medical research.
Instead, shaving methods and associated problems are more frequently addressed by the shaving BPI?~­
ance indi!SirY as a customer semce
and marketing issue.
· Your question about a preferred
method of shaving is a common
one. one only needs. II! look at .lhe
plethora of advert~tng touung
everylhing from the vutues of new,
improved razor blades and spaceage shaving creantS to lhe benefits
of an electric shaver that "shaves as
close as a blade" to lcnow lhat there
is no clearly superior way to shave.
When a razor blade is us.ed to
shave, the blade rubs against the
surface of the sltin and produces
small nicks and irritation to the
skin as it severs the protruding
hairs. Manufacwrers of razors have
atteml)ted to minimize the risk to
the skin while maximizing the
effectiveness of hair removal.
The old fashioned safety razor
was the fllSt significant innovation
that reduced skin irritation: The
twin-blade razor was the next
major change in shaving technology. This type of razor produces a
s~ghtly closershave but it ~ not
eliminate lhe nsk of skin tmtalion.
Razor manufacturers now
aggressively market their. prernJer
products feawring twin blades that
move independently or dtstort 10
better accommodate the changing
contours of the face, legs, or underarms. These products do minimize
the risk of skin irritation - but
they don't eliminate it

Electric razors CUI hair by allowing the hair to procrude ·through a
supporting mesh and then snip off
lhe projecting hair wilh a passing
blade. This mechanism tends to
leave a somewhat coarser beard
than does a conventional blade
because lhat supporting metal mesh ·
sepanites the blades from the skin.
It would seem that Ibis separation
of lhe blades from the slrin should
prodlice a shave wilh lc8s irritation
to the sltin. Unfortunately, this isn't
always true.
.
Some amelunt of ·skin can protrude through the fme openings of
the razor and get clipped along
with the hair. However, a· more
common form of skin irritation
associated with electric razors is
due to "pluckin$" the hair instead
of actually cutbng !he skin. This
pluclting action occurs as the hair is
grabbed by the electric razor's
bladCs and pulled part way out of
its follicle before it is cui. One .
manufacturer even advertises this
as an advantage of their product
because the hair is "lifted" from its
follicle before it is cut off. T]lis
method does give a closer shave,
but I find it causes more skil! ipita·
lion and I can sum up mY. own personal reaction to this "lift arid cut" ·
system in one word: "Ouch!"
Pre-shave products for electric
shaving, after-shave lotions and
shaving creams with exua lubricants can help reduce skin irritation. I fmd that Williams shaving
mug soap and a Gillette Sensor
razor produce the least irritation to
my face. I'd recommend that you
try several combinations of "blade
razors" and shaving creams. You ·
may find one that works for you
with less irritation than your current electri.c rllzor.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions, write
10 John C. 'Wolf, D.O., . 250
Grosvenor Hall, College of Osteopathic Medicine,.Ohio University,
Athens, 45701. · .

POMEROY - Re.vival at Flatwoods United Methodist Church
will be through Saturday at 1 p.m.
nightly . ~v . Charles Eaton will
preach S day and Monday. Special sing' g Sunday night. River
Valley Boys, Lancaster, will perform Wednesday. Special singing
other nights. Rev. Keith Rader and
members invite lhe public.
RUTLAND - Revival, Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church, Wednesday through Saturday. Pastor Norman Taylor invites the public.
MIDDLEPORT· Middleport
Amateur Garden Club will meet
Wednesday at 1 p.m. at the home
of Marge Fetty on Route 143.
Dreama Braley will demonsuate
malting a basket.
THURSDAY
RACINE - The Racine Ameri- can Legion Post 602 will meet
• Thursday at 7:-30 p.m. a1 the post
home.
ROCK SPRINGS - The Middleport Child Conservation League
will hold its annual Halloween
Party Thursday at .6 p.m . at the
Rock Springs United Methodist
Church.
TUPPERS PLAINS • Tuppers
Plains VFW and Ladies Auxiliary
No. 9053 will meet in joint session
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. wilh_a din-'
ne:r. Mark Malone will be lhe guest
spealcer. All members attend.
MIDDLEPORT • lane! Bolin
will instnict "How 10 Decorate
Wreaths" and a bow malting class
for the Middleport Arts Council,
Thursday, 1 p.m. Cost is $15 111d
·includes all supplies. Call 992·
2675 or 742-2095to register.
•
POMEROY ·. Meigs County
Democratic Executive Committee
will meet Thursday at 7:30p.m. at
- the carpenter's Hall in Pomeroy. .

. '

LAUREL CLIFF • Laurel Cliff
Better Health Club will m41et
Thursday at 6 p.m. at the home of
Iva Powell for an anniversary
potluclc.

lb~

,

.

TUPPERS
.
.,. PLAINS
. -...Don Seev-

10·/b. Bag

Assorted.Pork Chops
F~ESH

Red Delicious Apples

lSOLD IN PKOS. OF 1lJ.10.5·LBS.J

'

PRESS CONFERENCE HELD • Ln'
enl'oreemeat ofllclall from the ll'ea mel with the
pre11 oa Wednesday afternoon to outline the
details of the lavestlgation Into the deaths of a .
· Gallia County 111111 md his llyear-Gid soa. Pi!:·
mred taking qu~stioas from atelevisioa reporter

are, 1-r, Terry Neely, admloistr;ttor for iavesti·
gatlna With the Bureau of Criminal lnvestiga·
lion and Identification; Prosecutor Steven. L.
Story; SberUf James M. Soulsby; and John
·
Perry from BCI.

Stamps

/
/

TUPPERS PLAINS - Hickory
Hills Church of Christ, south of
Tuppers Plains on Route 7, will
present "Growing Together with
God" Friday and Saturday 117 p.m.
and Sunday at 9 a.m. and 1 p.m.
Steve Fuchs, Little Hocking
Church of Christ, will speak Friday. John Kin~. Blackburn Hills
Church of ChriSt in Atliens, will
speak Sunday. Congregational
smging on Sunday a1 2 p.m. with
open house all day. Potluck dinner
at 12:30 p.m. Sunday.

l
I

..'

f

.

i

I

I

PEPSI

Mother of victim says,

.I

'

'I'll never stop missing him'

'•

SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT - A Creative
· Fun Art Class will be offered by
the Middlepon Arts Council with
Shirin Nuggud, instructor, on Sat·
urday from 10-l1:30a.m. Call9922675 to register. The cost is $4:

2 s.cttona, 14 PaDH 25 ....,..
A llultlmedle Inc. -paper

"IN THE DAIRY DEPT."

Kroger orange·Juice
Kroger .

Skim-Milk

U.S. GllADE A
WAMPLEil/LONGAC#lE

Whole
Chicken Fryers
POUnd

Miller sentenced
on
charge

CAFFEINE FREE DIEt PEPSI, MOUNTAIN DEW,

Diet Pepsi or Pepsi ·cola
P,EPPERONI OR

Mama Rosa

Deluxe Pizzas
11R.

lmprovemen·t for the T~ppers
Plain.s-Chester Water District;
drainage work to Broadway and
Logan .Streets in the Village of
Middleport; work on the wastewater treatment plant roc the Tuppers
Plains-Chester Water .District;
reservoir work on Lincoln Heights
for the Village of Pomero111 and
water main work on West Main
Street for the Village of Pomeroy.
The designated five-person
committee, which worked hand-inhand .wilh lhe Board of Commissioners, was named in June to c;arry
out this measure. That committee
consists of Commissioner Rich
Jones, County 'Engineer Phil
Roberts, Paula Thacker. economic
development director and executive
director for the Meigs County
Chamber of CommCICe, Frank Qeland, representing village government. and Gary Dill, president ol
the township trustee association.
The proJects will now be submitted to lhe district to determine
which ones will actually receive
funding. The committee that
ranked the projects has no sar in
whether or not funding wil be
granted.
Jones expressed his sincere
appreciation to the members of the .
committee for their work and dedication devoted to lhe prioritization
process. The committee expressed

1ts displeasure wilh the new way of
ranking for the awarding of Issue II
money and stated all projects submitted were worthy projects.
. In other matters the board
approved a bid, at the recommendation of County Engineer Phil
Roberts, in lhe amount of $16,590
from Wamer Healing and Cooling
of Chester for the healing system at
the county garage.
The -board also approved tbe
transfer of funds within the Liuer
ConUol Department as "'ell as a
transfer of funds from necessary
sources to the public defender ·
account.
Clerk Mary Hobstetter notified
the board of the semi-annual general policy meeting for Buckeye Hills
on Tuesday, Oct. 27 at 6 p.m.; as
well as an invitation to the annual
dinner meeting of the Gallia-Jackson-Meigs Board of Alcohol; Drug
Abuse and Meqtal Health at the
University of Rio Grande on Monday. Oct. 26.
" .
Present a1 the meeting were
Commissioners Richard Iones,
Manning Roush and David
Koblentz, Clerk Mary Hobstetter;
County Engineer Phil Roberts ,..
Frank Cleland and Gary Dili.I'BI!Ia
Thacker, the fifth member of the
committee was unable to attend
due to a meeting in Columli11s.
which she was lltending.

Local shopping·- stressed
by Pomeroy merchants ·
son is employed in the workforce
between the hours of 9 a.m. and S
p.m. that person cannot shop during those hours. .
·· .
The assoctauon voted on tts
Christmas advertising with this
year's theme, "Home Along the
River '92."· Open house will be
held Nov. 29 with a Christmas
parade at 2 p.m. and Santa Claus
will make an appearance !" the
mini-park on Coun Street for visits
from the children immediately following the parade.
The next promotion for the
association will be a Moonlight
Madness Sale on Oct. 31 wiih
extended hours by participating
merchants from 6-10 p.m. A .trickor-treat hour will also be held by
par*ipating merchants from 6:7
p.m. A group adverttsemenl wtll
run in The Daily SentiMI on Oct.
29 wilh all ads to be tl!flled in to
P.J. Harris by Oct. 24.
Mrs. Clark expressed her a~­
ciation to Dianna Lawson, Bobbte
Karr, Becky Anderson and Donna
Nease for their work with the
herbal harvest and country fair in
the mini-park during lhe Big Bend
Sternwheel Festival. She also
acknowledged the successful
efforts of the Sternwheel Festival
Committee and praised them for

their work in preparing for the
.·
event
Members of the association who
would again like to participate in
the Chnstmas tree decorating pro.
ject with Pomeroy Elementary are
encouraged to do so. Even thougb
several of lhc trees from last year
were stolen lhe association feels it
is· a worthwhile project that promoles cooperation between the
school and business districL
Reporting on revitalization,
Mrs. Clark stated she was very
pleased 10 have the support of
Pomeroy village government in the
project. Pomeroy village council
voted to pay $5,000 of the necessary $10,000 to complete the
downtoWI) business plan which will
be completed by Mike Stroth of
SBA Consultants. PomeroY. Mayor
Bruce Reed also agreed, at the
same village council meeting, to
raise the remaining $5,000 through
personal efforts and additional
donations. According to Mrs.
Clark, Stroth will soon begin work
on the plan as the application deadline is February 1993.
"· •
Pomeroy Flower Shop was wei'' ·
corned as a full member. Next regular meeting was announced for
Nov. 11 at 8:30a.m.

·.

Consumer prices· up 0~2
percent in September

12-Pak
12-oz. cans

Gal.

By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Stillr
PriOritization of Meigs County's
Issue II projects was completed at
Wednesday's regular meeting of
the Meigs County Commissioners. .
ThirteCn pro~ w~ approved
by Buckeye Htlls Hoelting Valley
Regional Development District for
consideration of Issue II monies.
Of those 13, five had 10 be rated
locaJiy by a designated committee
and points were received. That
point system is strictly se1 lip
according to guidelines provided
by the districL
The five projects include: 1) a
county paving project in the Texas
and Salem communities in the
amount of $399,131 ; 2) a county
paving project in lhe Beech Grove
area in the aJI)Ount of 836,329; 3)
upgrading of Bailey Run Road in
Silfisbury Township in the amount
of 1,292,176; 4) water line work in ·
the Village of Rutland in the
amount of 3,024,398; and 5) vii;
!age and additions paving in
Chester Township in the amount of
1,088,291. Amounts given for
these projects are overall totals to
complete the project$.
Other projects submitted for
approval mcluded: improvements
to Norlh Second Street in lhe Vii· !age of Middleport; resurfacin$ in
Lebanon and Sutton Townshtps;
• paving in Olive Township; water

Ravenswood Police Department men! Drennen's bond was set at
. By BRIAN J, REED
and
ftre department with uncover- $500,000 on all charges: fo.ur
Seatlnel News Staff
ing
important
evidence. Soulsby counts of aggravated murder wtth
Details of the investipation of
Story
were
unwilling to dis- death penalty s~ifications; two
and
the double homicide wh1ch left a
close
the
type
of
weapon used or counts of kidnappmg and a ~nl
Gallipolis man and his son dead
of aggravated robbery. He remams
and abandoned in Lebanon To\VII- the current location of lhe weapon.
During a Wednesday anaign·- in the Meigs County Jail.
ship were revealed duri~g a press
conference held al m1dday on
Wedilcsday.
Fred Drennen, 30, of
Ravenswood, W.Va., was indiCted
on Monday in the sbooling dealhs
· of 1eff Halley, Sr., 36, and his 12
year-old son ~ Jeff.
A Columl&gt;us woman was was uansported to Holzer by Gallia
Meigs County Sheriff lames M.
Emergency Medical SerSoulsby outlined the year-lon.g charged with attempted murder . County
vice.
·
Wednesday
after
allegedly
shootinvestigation conducted by hts
By JULIE E. DILLON
According to court records,
ing a Patriot man Tuesday night.
~ent and the Ohio Bureau of
Sentinel News Stan
Diana Whaley, 26, 1169 E. Ioois attorney Richard Roderick, GalCnminal Identification and lnvestj·
A
shop-locai
campaign was
gation. Soulsby said that three St., was arraigned Wednesday in lipolis~ entered a plea of not guilty stressed and discussed at Wednes·
areas ih rural Meigs County were the Gampolis Municipal Coun of on Wbaley's behalf. A preliminary day's regular meeting. o.f the
combed in the summer of 1991, Judge Joseph L. cain and remains hearing has been scheduled for Pomeroy Merchants Assocllllon.
based upon anonymous ·calls· jailed in lieu of $50,000 cash bond. Wednesday, October 21, at I p.m.
Susan Clark, president of the
Samuel ,(), Hoffman, 49, 4350 in the Galltpolis Municipal Court.
received by the Gallia County
association,
urged members to ere·
SR 325 was listed in auarded con· · Attempted murder, according to ate an awareness
Sheriff's DepartmenL
of the importanCe
· Soulsby slid thai upon the dis- clition tllis morning 8\ Holzer Medi- · section 2923.02 of the Ohio of shopping locally with their cuscovery of the elder Halley's body cal Center aftet being shot several Revised Code, is a first-degree tomers not only during the Christin an ·area off Old Portland Road m times with ;a small-caliber, semi· felony punishable by a maximum mas season but at all times.
25•years confinemellt. Usc of a
September, 1991, investigation into automatic handgun.
Mrs. Clark stated; '.'lt is vital f'?f
firearm may add another three
According
to
the
Gallia
Colinly
the location of young Jeff Halley's
the
economic growth of our bust·
body was initiated. Soulsbfs Sheriff's Department, Hoffman years confinement.
ness district lhat we, as merchants.
department received an anonymous
work together and enco'!fal!e local
phone call during that stage of the
shopping, that we advertise the ~r·
mvestigalion, reporting tbat the
vices available in the busmess dis·
body was located in the Sellers
aiel and let our customers know
Ri~ Road area near Racine. Fol·
how important their purchases are
towmg a search of that area, the
Her
anger
at
the
murder
of
her
to
the future -of our businesses."
For Carolyn Sue Bu~~ess of
remains of the young boy were Gallipolis, months of waumg are son does not extend to include the She stated "I propose a campaign,
found in April.
over, and a man accused of mur- boy's father, who officials believe slartin$ with each merchant, of
An autopsy report revealed lhat . ~e~~g her 12 year-old son is now bn;&gt;ught the boy to Meigs County supporung a local shopping ~ware­
liolh victims had been killed by IDJill .
on a drug deal.
ness to our emplo~ees! fnen~s.
gunshot wounds to the head and , Twel-k-year-old Jeff Halley and
"Jeffrey probably loved (his families and orgamz~t10n~ wtth
torso. Officials said yesterday that his father, Jeff Halley, Sr., were son) more than anyone," Burge!S which we each are affiliated.
they believe lhe victims v.:ere lcil!e&lt;J shot and abandoried in rural Meigs said. "He would never have done
Citing examples from June's
in the areas where thetr bodtes County in 1991. Their bodies were anything that would hun Jeff. He consumer .survey for Pomeroy's
were later found.
· .
found months later in Lebanon had matured· a lot and was ·getting downtown revitalization Mrs. Clark
Story said earlier lhis week~~ Township: Since lhat time, Burgess his life togedler."
· stated the need for businesses to
be believes lhat the Halleys were m has grieved for her young son
Wben asked of speculation become more flexible with shop·
Meigs County on a drug deal, and while waiting for justice to be about why the indictment of Fred ping hours as those Urnes p~sently
that the elder Halley had his son for served.
Drennen of Ravenswood, W.Va. are not conductve to today s cus·
·
visitation al the time of the shoot·
"When sbmething like this hap- was filed in the midst of the re- tomer. In many instances, if a perings. The boy's mother, Carolyn ~ns, it changes your whole. li~e." election campaigns of Prosecutor
Burgess, was Jeff's custodial par- she said. "I'll never stop mtssmg Steven L. Story and Sheriff Jaines
ent, and was present during yester- him. He was a very special child, M. Souls by, and several months
day's press conferepce. (See relat- · ~Jlways going out of his way to help after heir son's remains were found,
ed srory, this page.)
·
children w.ho were sm1111er or Burgess was cautious.
the weaker t11an he was."
Soulsby
credited
"I'm glad that it's -finally been
done," she said, "but I would have
· liked it better if'il had come QUI six
months ago."
WASHINGTON (AP) - Consumer prices edged up a modest 0.2
percent in September despite
sharply higher prices for fruits ~d
vegetables, the s.overnment satd
r~pe
today.
.
The
Labor
Department
said that
George W. "Bill" Miller of Midthe
September
increase
in
its Con·
dleport was sentenced on a charge
sumer
Price
Index
followed
a OJ
of rape In Meigs County Common
percent
August
rise
and
was
the
Pleas Court on Tuesday.
.
smallest
advance
since
a
barely
. Miller was convicted by a jury
last monlh in the rape of a Polneroy perceptible 0.1 percent increase in
boy, and is charged with rapins a July.
With the September inflation
girl under the IJIC of 13 in another
the gpvemment announc~d
data,
criminal case. That trial is set for
that
44
miflion Amcncans wtll
' November 12.
receive
a
3.0 percent increase in
MiUer was sentenc:ed to a term
of 10 to 25 years in priaon, wilh an their Social Security benefit ~~.
actual incarca-ation of 10 )'ell's, He in 1993, the smallest advance m SIX
was also ordered to pay costs of
prosecution
in the amount of y~e Social Security administra.
VICTIM'$ MOTHER • CaroiJII Sae
u1 Gallipolis Is
$2,000, and coon costs.
· tion said the 3 percent gain, which
lntenlt;;ed by Cl11ack Strldder olWOWK·TV durlaa• pr• coaAn appeal of the conviction is followed a 3.7 percent rise for
feremi'yaterday. Ha: ~2
JefF Hallty, aad bla fatller,
exeected, according to Court 1992, would boost the average
JefF Haliey, Sr., were murdered Ia Melp County, aad aa arrest
Bailiff Paul Gerard, and bond was monthly check by $19 to $653.
1w beea made Ia CODjuiiCtloa wltlt t1te loddeall. (Seatlnel Photo
SCI at $125,000 cash in mlicipation • In other economic news, the
by Brim J, Reed)
governmen t said that wee~Iy
of that appeal.
·

Wo.man, 26, charged.
with attempted murder

we Gladlv
Accept Your
FecJeral F.ood

(

· KANAUGA - Square dancing ·
and clogging at the DAV building, .
8-11 p.m. Music by Country Grass.
Public is welcome.

C!DL

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio; Thursday, October 15, 1992

Details of double homicide are
revealed during press conference

MIDDLEPORT • Hope Baptist
Church of Middleport will have a
church-wide hayride Friday at 6:30
p.m. at the Sonny McClure farm.

POMEROY • Bruce Stone will
perform Saturday at 1 p.m. at the
Laurel C~ff Free Methodist Church
near Pomeroy. Public invited.

022526

Meigs Commission completes
five priority Issue II projects

· FRIDAY
RIPLEY, W.VA.- The Liberty
M011ntaineers will perform Friday
at Skat.eland in Ripley, W.Va.

BASHAN - Weekend services
at Red Brush Church of Christ will
be Saturday II 1 p.m. and SundaL
at 10 a.m. and 6 :J?.m. Den"er Hi! ,
Foster, W.Va., wtll be the speaker.
Public invited.

,..,. 60.

•

RUTLAND • Leading Creek
Conservancy District will hold its
regular meeting Thursday at 7 p.m.
at the offtee. Public invited.

SALEM CENTER • Star
Grange and Star Junior 'Grange,
Halloween wtY and t)Dduck supper, Saturday, 6:30 p.m., at the
grange hall. Costume judging. SOyear Golden Sheaf Certificate presentation and talk by Norma Tor·
res, Meigs County Health Depart·
ment, 7:30 p.m. All m.embers and
guests invited.
·

•Low t..,IPt

Sbowen, t)olldy. Friday biP Ill .
mid 60s. Cb.- ot nla 181 per·

6-ll-21-33-34-38

Veil. 43, No. 122
CoPJI'Ight.d 18ft

ers, gospel preacher, will speak at
the Tuppers Plains church of
Christ, Route 681, Thursday
through Sal!trtlay at 7 p.m. nightly.
Public invited.

TUPPERS PLAINS • Tuppers
Plains VFW Post No. 9053 and
Ladies Auxiliary, round and square
dance, Friday, 8-11:30 p.m. with
CJ. and Country Gentlemen. Public invited.

' '"" Pick
671)4:
3782
Super Loto:

.. '-~ J

•

"SILVER PLATTER"

LONG BOTTOM ~ Revival,
Long ~ottom Uni~ed Methodist
Church, through Fnday, 7:30 p.m.
Norman Butler, evangelist. Special
music. Pastor Seldon Johnson
invites the public.

Pick 3: ·

Page4

Community calendar.
WEDNESDAY .
RUTLAND - Revival, Rutland
Community Church, through Sunday, 1 p.m. Elbert Barrow, speaker.
Rev. Dewey King invites the public.

Ohio Lottery

·,'

,_.-old-·

Bu'l•

I

claims for unemployment benelits
fell for the week ending Oct 3 to
their .lowest level in seven weeks.
The decline of 16,000 li:ft the num·
ber of new Americans filing firS t·
time jobless claims at 383,000.
While it marked the second
suaight weekly decline, analysts
said lhe number of newly laid off
workers still remained at a high
level, underscoring lhe continued
weaknessintheeconomy.
The small 0.2 percent iticrense
in consumer prices left inflation
running 11 an annual rate of just 2.9
percent through the first nine
months o( the year, even better
than last year's 3.1 percent.
.
The good news on inflation,
however, means lhat retirees won't
see big increases in their Social
Security checks. The 3.0 percent
increase is the smallest since
checks were increased just 1.3 per·
cent irt 1987.
Economists said lhe sluggish
·economy was continuing 10 keep

,,

•

•·

inflation in check. With consum~ ,·
demand so weak, producers h~·~·
been unable to force through pnce,
increases.
.
· • '· ·
While a w~ak ~conomy ancL.
good news on m~aoot:~ would ~-..
mally translate mto mterest rate ·
cuts on the pari of t~e Fed~ral.
Reserve, n,tan~ economt~ b.Citeye.
the Fed ~til Sit on the .sidel~ ~­
least unbl a,fter .EIC:CIIOD Day-)R,
order to av01~ cnbctsm,for ~II;
to boost ~dent B~ s eleclion
chanCes wtth a last-1~11nu~ I'IIC eqt. ~
The September ~nau&lt;l!'_ rqtOit
showed another JUmp-IR food
priceS •. which climbc:d 0.4 ~
followt"4 an even b1gger 0.7 ·PII:cent rise m AuJlUSL
· ·, ·.-~· ·;
Analysts blamed sharp ~ '
in fruit and vegetal)le pncea for . .
food gains in both mc;mlhs, After. ·
declining 9.7 percent durinJIIbe
fii'St seven months of the~. fruil.·
and vegetable prices have inmacd
12.1 percent in the past twO'
months.

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