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                  <text>POIMIOV lldcleport, Ohio

Monday, October 28, 1112

---People in the news--_,;.~
LOS ANGJi;LES (AP) - Bill
Cosby told ltudenta 'at Oecidental
Collese that the media wrolf,ly
portrayed lootcn durini the spnng
loll Anaelea riots _, t.a people.
"Wiiat were the riots about?
'What wu the looting about?" the
comedian asked Friday while nicking up an honorary doctorate. 1 '1t's
about 11$ aDd the fact that we have
not followed up on our commit, ment ''
said the looting
him of an incident when
' remi
·he was growing up in a poor pan of
Philadelphia. He and frieitds were
in a crowd that stormed a ·movie
theater after·a rumor of a free
show, be said. "People will steal," Cosby said.
"And i( it's free and tliey have a
chance, they will take."
.
He challenged the students to
fight society's ine4J11ities rather
than just wor1t on tlle1r careers.

c=.

ULTIMATE WEAPON • John Kernan of
Jostens Lear11ing Corp., demonstrates a comput·
er in Washington earlier this mo11th. Kernan's
company recently unveiled a new technology ·
that nearly turns ciiSsr.oom computers Into

color television sets with onscreen aCtors that
speak to and work with students, glvhig teachers
what Kernan calls ''the ultimate weapon." (AP
photo)

Community calendar
Community Calendar Items
appear two days before an event
and the day of that event. Items
must be received well In advance
to IISSure publication In the cal·
endar.

POMEROY • The aimual meet·
ing of the Meigs County· Council
on Aging will be held Tuesday at 1
p.m. at the Senior Center, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy. All members of
the Council are urged to atlelid.

MONDAY
RUTLAND • Rutland Garden
Clu.b will meet Monday at 7:30
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Robert
Kennedy. Hysell Run Road. A~
gram will be presented on perenmals for fall planting and fall cleanup Qf the garden.

MIDDLEPORT • Reservation
deadline is Tuesday for the Meigs
County Golf Coum Annual Dinner
Dance, to be held Sunday at the
Middleport American Legion Hall.
Information from Bob Freed at

REEDSVILLE· Eden United
Brethren Church will hold revival
Monday through Sunday at 7 p.m.
nightly with Rev. Bob Wiseman.
There will be special singing night·

ly.
POMEROY • M~igs County
Veterans Service Commission
meets Monday, 7:30 p.m., in the
Veterans Service Office in
' Pomeroy.
MIDDLEPORT • Meigs County
Mens Fellowship will hold nominations for officers Monday at 7:30
.p.aa. at ·lhe Br,dford Church of
Christ. Public invited.
RACINE - Southern Local
School Board will meet Monday at
7 p.m. at Racine Elementary.
REEDSVILLE • Eastern Local
Chapter No. 448, OAPSE, will
meet Monday at 7:30 p.m., at the
high school

992-2044.
POMEROY - Trinity Church
S~nior Choir is taking ·orders for
homemade vegetable soup and
chicken and noodle soup. The soup
will be made Tuesday and will be
available for pick-up late that afternoon. Orders may be placed by
calling 992-3128 by Monday
evening. The price·is $2 per quarL

Meeting held

Geological society
begins convention
in Cincinnati

MIDDLEPORT • OH I&lt;;AN·
Coin Oub will meet Monday at 7
p.m. at Burkett Barber Shop in
Middleport. Social hour and trad·
(AP) .,- Mem·
ing session at 7 p.m. precede the bersCINCINNATI
of
the
Geological
Society of
meeting. Refreshmen~S- New mem- America Iring their pet projects
bers welcome.
from dinosaurs to radon gas and
from meteorites in Argentina to the
TUESDAY
impact
of road salts on the Great
POMEROY • Drew Webster
American Legiori Auxilia~y Unit Lakes - to their national conventhis week. .
No. 39 will meet Tuesday at 1 p.m. tionAbout
S,OOO geoscientists arc
at the home of Loretta Tiemeyer.
expected at the meeting, which
ends Thursday.
.
.
Among the presentations IS one
by a Miami University' geologist
who says ·he has evidence of the
oldest-known spider web, a fossilized sycamor~ leaf about 4 7.5
million years old.
Larry Codin~ said .he found
the fossil showmg the pont of the
web among specimens taken on an
oil shale slab in Garfield County,
Colo. "Scientists have presumed that
since spiders have been around
about 400 miDion years, they probably have been ~ucing webs,"
Codingtori said. 'But we never had
f of it before."
prooThe group began its convention
Sunday with a aession on groundwater cleanup.
MILLER DIES • Roger
Miller, shown In a 1987 tile
ArizcmuuomeoftheliiOitphytl·
photo died Sunday at Century caDy beautiful U.S. tourilt attrac·
Ci~ ftospital Ia Los Angeles, tiona: tbeGI'IIICI Clnyon of the Colora·
« Tb G
do an lmmenae, vari..COlored flaaure
Ca r. He was ""' e rammy· 2l'i miles lolltl, 4 to 13 mlltl wide at
wlnniDI&amp;In,er-songwrlter, best tbil brim and t,OOO tD l,&amp;oo feet deep;
known for biS 19608 bit ''King of tbe Painted Desert, which atenc11 for
the Road" bad said In Janu!lrY 30 miles atolic u.s: 66; the Petrified
that lie was undergoing rlllllation Fol'tlt; Canyon Diablo, 225 feet deep
treatment for a cancerous tumor and 500 feet wide; anc1 Meteor Crater,
below Ills vocal cords. MIDer won 4 150 feet acrou anc1 570 feet deep,
11 Grammys during the years ,.;bicb was made by a prehistoric

a 'wieiler roast was held at the home
sented to .P at Arnold, Barbara · of Linda Bates.
Maurisha Nelson presented a
Black, Niesel Gerard, Sand~
. .
ning Jackie Hoover, Kay · an, certificate to the group for sponsorDebbie Miller, Sharon Pratt, ar- big her in the walk-a-thon of tile
bara Welsh and Mary Woods, American Heart Associadon.
Decorated sweatshirt• were
. when the Xi Gamma Mu Olapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority hel~ its jtidpd by Gary Bates and prizes
Exemplar Tea at the home of Linda aWIIIled 10 the winner.
Bllbara Welsh presented a cul·
Bates.
. od d tural Pr-oaram on phobias and the
Beth Stivers was mtr ucc
back into lhe g(OUP after several group dilcussed phobias they have.
The next meeting will be Nov. 3
yean ablence.
at the.home of A.Il. Knight.
At another meeting of the group
(

· AS
PROSECUTING
ARORNEY
STEVE ·STORY
HAS:

ss.

.a I
•

'

.-

Vol. 43, No.130
. Copyrlghtod 1882

1. A 131 per cent Jncrsaae In
Pf018CutloMI
2. A 72 ·per cent lnci'IIBH In drunk driving
. pro18CutloMI
3. Pro~eeut.d more drug ca- than at 1ny
time In the hlatory of llelg1 CounttJ
4. In 18f1 aloill, CC!I~ed mors than
$570,000 In delinquent land tiXII. .
s; In 18112 collected the largeat delinquent ux
lol'llcloaurs judgment In Melg• .County
hlltOry for our achooll)'atemal
6. O.btalned the tlrat two death penal:y
lndlctmentl In mors than 50 years In

By C~IlLENE HOEFLICH
. Seatlnel News Staff ·
The Pomeroy-Mason bridge, its
imjl011aDCe to business in the.Bend
area, and the need for looking to
replacement this decade was discussed at Jen!!th at a meeting of
Middlepon Village Council Monday nighL
Mayor Fred Hoffman proposed
that a meetitlg of village councils
from ..Middleport, Pomeroy and
Mason be held to i.nitiate some

action toward securing funding for
a new bridge.
.
Hoffman said that federal funds
are availabfe now for the consttuction of new bridges, but that it will
take local organized effon to capture the attention of legislators and
get some of the federal monies
which have been designated for
infrastructure.
"Every couple of years, the
bridge is closed down for this or
that," said Hoffman, and "some

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs County Planning
Commission continued discussion
on the development of a county
comprehensive plan, which will
011tlinc plans for development in10
the 21st century, at their quarterly
meeting on Monday.
.
The pian will address priorities
toward economic, cultural, and
educational development, as well
as specifiC needs for Infrastructure.
In addition to identifying needs, the
plan will address how those needs
can be accomplished through establishing five-year and ten-year
goals.
.
. Chairman John Lentes named
members to an advisory committee,
which will worlc closely with Vi)ay
Gadde of Buckeye Hills/Hockmg
Valley Regional Development District while the plan is being formu,

PROSECUnNG AnORNn, NOV. 3
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SUMMER'S EVE
DOUCHE
~'fl!Br'
129
WATER

Issue 5 backers
not alarmed by poll

SNICKERS,
MILKYWAY
SNACKSARS
8.1SOZ.

.

GRAVEYARD SCENE ·This is just one spooky sisht tbat visitors or the haunted bouse In Chester will encounter when they
tonr tbe old c•ester Court House on Wednesday, Thursday and
Saturday from 7-10 p.m. Linda Gillilan, Nancy Gard, Kathy Johnson and Gina Taylor are creating tbe haunted bouse which is
offered free ol charge II) visitors.

M&amp;M'S

INSTANT

•••
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RAVE
HAIR CARE

oo 0111.. ars

199

12.320l.

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OR 33 0111..
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TAUIUTCHEN

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HALLO't'(EEN
COSTUMES

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SNACK SIZI; BARS

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•

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DRY IDEA
ROLL-ON

Low, low, prlca on
huntlfwft of yOflr
favottr.llrl!riM

ALMONDJOY
OR MOUNDS .

: · ~=N

!_E,.~579

SOI.IITlOH

1899

.

a dip in lhe road as !hey can.· ·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Elizabeth Wise, sPOkeswoman
Both sides of a product labeling·
law on the Nov. 3 ballOt said Mon- for the opposition Ohio Grocers
day they expect support for the Association, said voters were takmeasure to decline m the final inj! a closer look at the law. She
week before voters decide the sa'1d once the negative-implications
of the law were presented, opposiissue.
The Ohio Citizen Council pro- tion grew.
"At first wben they (Ohio Citiposed Issue S, which would require
warning labels on products contain- zen Action) posed the action, Iiley
ing chemiCals that might cause can- said: 'Don't you want the right to
cer and birth defects. Industries know?' Well, that's not just the
also, would have 10 notify anyone issue at hand - there's la~~g;
exposed 10 release of toxtc chemi- notification and all of the jo""1its
going to cost,·' Wise said.
cals.
·
Statewide polls in !he summer
David Roe, spokesman for .the
showed
support for the issue as
Environmental Defense Fund,
high
as
3-1.
But the gap haa been
which backs the measure, said
narrowing
in
rea:nt
weeks.
Monday that ballot initiatives often
A
University
of
Akron poll
Jose support in the final weeks
released
Monday
showed
more
because of negative advertising.
respondents
opposing
the
issue
''It's completely predictable,"
Roe said. "It's just part of the natu- than supporting it. Fifty-two perral pattern on a popular initiative cent said they would vote against
that has well-financed opposition. die measure, 23 percent favored the
They wait until the end 10 go for · law, and 2S percent were undecidthe paid media and l:fY to ge~_as big ed.

--Local briefs.- - •

•

••

Save on over 1,2QO
Rite P,id Brand Products.
Rite Aid acceP.ts au
manufacturer s coupons.

- Rit~ Aid Pharmacy.
,.. accepts most major
prescription plans.
·W'

three communities.

Council apeed with Hoffman
and suggested that as a first step, he
arrange a meeting with the
Pomeroy and Mason Village Councils to further discuss bridge
replacement. A public meeting
should foDow that, Hoffman said,
in emphasizing that "without an
organized effort, nothing is going
IOhappen."
.
·
Again diacussed at the meeting
was an appreciation dinner for

management of Imperial Electric
and Facemyer Lumber, Middleport's manqfacturing concerns.
Councilman James Clatwortby sug,
gested perhaps Council and the
Middleport Community Associa- .
tion could co-sponsor the appreciation dinner. As a ftrst step, Mayor
Hoffman wiD contact the two companies about the recognition proposal.
Council discussed a village
right-of-way in the Hartinger sub-

division adjacent 10 Lot 12 and the
possibility of selling or vacating a
section near the patio area of
Reuben Collins.
Attending were Mayor Hoff.
man, Clerk-Treasurer Terri Hockman, and Council member$, Dewey
Horton, Clatwortby, Judy Crooks,
Paul Gerard, and Jack Satterfield.
Prayer to open the meeting was
given by the Rev. James Seddon
pastor of First Baptist.
'

Cormilissiotier Richard E. Jones
reported that the commissioners'
offtee had already been in contact
with OOOT regarding the p10posal.
Thacker gave the commission
an update on the activities of tier
agency, reporting that BH/HVRDD
has placed the location and development of an industrial site in
Meigs County aa its top priority.
The identification of that site is
now underway.
.
According to. Thacker, an
"influx" of people interested in
starting small busin~ have contacted her for assistance. She discussed the need for a business plan

and how she is able to assist in the
preparation of lhat plan. She also
reported that the Small Business
Development Center of Athetls has
agreed to offer extension services
for those potential business owners
through the chamber office.
_.
, An effon 10 obtain toll-free local
telephone service between Mason
and New Haven, W.Va., and the
Pomeroy/Middleport
"992"
exchange is underway, with Thacker and Story working with Mason
Mayor George Nichols.
.
The West Virginia Public Utilities Commission has been very
supportive of the PJ'l¥)581, Thacker

said. No dates on public hearings
or other necessary stepS have been
established.
·.
The commission also:
• Welcomed as a new alternate
member, Susan Oliver, executive
direct?r of t_he Meigs County
Council on Aging;
- Approved the financial report ·
from Blakeslee, inciuQing payment
of $857.29 in biDs, and leavms an
unencumbered balance , in theamOQnt of 58~.91;
- Approved the appointment of
Jon Jacobs, Bruce Reed and Paula
Thacker to the commission's IIOIIli·
nating committee. New officers
- will be elected in January, 1993.

. lated.

•

BAUSCH &amp; LOMB

morning we could wake up and the
bridge will be closed."
Hoffman described the bridge as
the "vital link" between Middleport-Pomeroy and Mason and
noted that a survey taken some
time ago showed that 40 pen:ent of
business in Middlepon comes from
Mason County.
Hoffman said that the Route 33
conneCtor between Rock Springs
and the RavensW9Qd bridge moving traff'IC upriver will not help the

County's comprehensive plan •discussed by planners

STEVE· STORY

STANDARD
UGHTBULBS

•

Hoffm.a n proposes new bridge for Bend area

RE·ELECI

:
•

•

•

YOU CANNOT ALTER lHE FACTS. STEVE
STORY IS AGGRESSIVE BUT FAIR•••TOUGH
BUT IMPARnAL STEVE SlORY IS GEmNG
llfE JOB DONE FOR MEIGS ·COUNTY.

238

1 Seellon, 10 Pogea 25 o.ota
A Muld"'edla Inc. Newapaper-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohi.9L Tuesday, October 27,1992
•

Melg1 Countyl

GENERAL ELECTRIC

~299

Pick 4:

•

With Rite
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..
•••• •
DAI. CF, PE OR PEDIATRIC

Low loDJabt near..._
WedDesday, sunny. Hlp In
upper 60s.

8091

ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP)Audrey Hepburn says she's not in
retirement and would make another
movie if the right opponunity came.
along.
·
·
"I'd love it - why not?" .the
film star said Satunlay while picking up 'die George Eastman Award
for Distinguished Contribution to
the Art of Film.
Past recipients include Fred
Astaire, Greta Garbo, Jimmy Stew. art and Lauren Bacall.
Hepburn, who starred In "My
Fair Lady," "Roman Holiday,"
and "Breakfast at Tiffany's,"
stopped making films in 1965
when her oldest son started achonl.
She made' an appearance in
'Stephen
Spielberg's
film
. ·
"Always" in 1989.
"I didn't mate that many
movies, but I was terribly happy
making all of them,". Hepburn
said. "I never rctiitd."
But Hepburn said any film wort
would have to fit into her busy
achedule as a Goodwill Ambaasador for UNICEF. She recently
returned fran a tr_ie to Somalia for
the international children's agency.

ROBITUSS/N

836

seconds 24~20

Trick or Treat

E~;;;;;tbegr~;~ presented
1'bt Exemplar Degree was pre-

Jets.in final
Page4

The Past Councilors Club of
Chester Council No. 323, Daughters of America, met recently at the
lodge hall.
The Lord's Prayer and pledge to
the flag were given in umson. The
pass word was taken. Busines~ was
conducted and Mary Jo-Barnnger
was reported ill.
.
Members present were Joan
Baum, Marcia Keller, Elizabeth
Hayes, Opal Hollon, Lora Damewood Goldie Frederick, Pauline
Ride~our, Ethel - Orr, Sadie
Trussell, Faye Kirkhart, Charlotte
Grant, Betty Roush, Inzy Newell
and Thelma White.
Refreshments were served by
Faye Kirkhart and Thelma White..
Games were conducted.
The next meeting will be at the
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) home of Esther Smidl.
Grand Ole Opry humorist Minnie
Sandy White. and Elsie Folmer Pearl wept whea she saw an
were guests.
advance acree~ing of a cable TV
•

POMEROY • Health Recovery
and Meigs County MADD will
hold an open house Tuesday from
4-8 p.m. 119 Butternut Avenue in
Pomeroy. Refreshmen~ will be
available.
MIDDLEPORT • Midd~port
:PTO will serve a grilled dinner
Tuesday at 6 p.m. prior to the
meeting. Hamburgers or hot dogs ·
will be available. Cost is $3.50 for
adults ·and $3 for-students. Great
Gault and Sandra will present
"Magic on Parade" after the meet·
ing at 7 P-111·
·

to Minnie: Americai'M'
~=~=~
Pearl," will be b
2 lfl-hour lbo
..
w••'•'Hiiiii•tiio•Off_iiiiiii•nlgh-tl.loni.
. Theitt
_ -Nashville.Netwcrt..

special in ber hllli«, her busband

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:

Bills edge

Rite Aid Pharmacy
··
for all y~ur drugstore needs.

300 E. Mal• • Po•eroy, Ohio • 992·25~6

water committee to meet
· A meeting for those interested in helping 10 provide rural water
service to residents in Western Meigs County will be held on
November 12 at 7 p.m. at the Meigs County Chamber of Commen:e
office Eaat Second Street in Pomeroy.
T~nship irustees, water providers and government representatives are asked to attend

Members hip event planned
A ''Membership Round-up" potluck dinner will be hosted by the
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce on Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at
the Middlepon American Legion Annex on MiD Stieet. A Western• style the.me is planned for the evening, designed to introduce
~live mem~ .to ~hamber activities and benl:fits. The public
11 mvited, and admi88101llll free.

Belpre man dies in W.Va. crash
FRIENDLY, W.Va. (AP) ~An Ohio man~ killed w~n his
picltup trnck swerved into the path of an oncommg tractor-trailer on

\Vest Virginia 2, Tyler Countv Sheriff Gary Keller said.
Contlnued1oa page 3

Those committee members will
be: Executive Director Charles
Blakeslee; Bruce Reed, l'!lpresent·
ing the area's financial inSiltutions;
Jon Jacobs of. the Meigs County
Health Department; Don Poole, .
manager of Tuppers PJains.Cbester
Water District, representing utilities and water providers; Paula
Thacker, the county's economic
development director; and repre·
sentatives from the Village of Middleport, the county's most populous municipality, the county com·
missioners, the 'township trustees,
the school systems, the extension
Columbus television statlou Monday. II - 11M
LAST-MINUTE TOUCH UP- U.S. Sen .
agency and the council on aging. first or two planned debates to be telev,sed
Jobn Glenn, 0-0bio, llad Ilia makeup ,toucbed
Through the expertise representstatewide.
(AP)
u
bis
Republicaa
oppo11,eat,
Lt.
Gov.
Mike
up
ed in that com!Dittee, the commisDeWine, awaited tbe start or their !teb@te. at a
sion can can also save some of the
money required in developing the
plan, as a consultant could charged
up to $40,000 in plan preparation,
Lentes said.
Steps included in the plan's
development are an inventory of
natural resources, base maps of
land use a!ld physical features,
depicts Glenn in ail astronaut uni- ing $50,000 of his own money
By ROBERT E. MILLER
demographic, economic and housfonn
and beating a drum ·while a toward the debt, which he did years
Associated Press Writer
ing trends, t:ranspOnation, utilities,
narrator
says he "kee~ on owing ago. But he has acknowled,ged a
COLUMBUS- U.S. Sen. John
historic and recreational resources;
and
owing
and owing.'
mcnl obligation to raise the rest of
community information and plans Glenn and cllallenger Mike
lhe
ad
a
smear
the
money needed to retire the
Glenn
labeled
for physical developments, .which DeWine traded charges of negative
his
career
as
a
Marine
pilot
debt.
against
include land use, zoning and subdi- campaigning 'during their ftrst live
"Mike, I'll say again directly to
televised debate before the Nov. 3 and astronauL He also indicated it
vision regulations.
your
face, your ads lie," Glenn
was
a
slam
against
other
astrona[lts,
Vijay Gadde of BH/HVRDD election.
said.
.
including
Akron
native
Judith
Much of Monday's debate mirestimates that wort on the plan will
After.
the debate, DeWine
Resnick,
whO
was
killed
in
the
begin in the spring, with comple- rored the campaign strategies of
accused
Glenn
of being the aggresexplosion.
Challenger
tion of the plan set for summer, Glenn, a Democrat seeking _his .
sor
on
negative
advertising.
"He's
been
making
fun
of
my
1994. Lentes will serve as the con- fourth six-year tenn, and DeWme,
"That's
what's
so sad about this
military
record.
This
bunny
ad
is
tacl penon for the planning com- a Republican who has been lieuman,
who
really
is
a national hero.
despicable.
Judy
Resnick
gave
her
missiOII, and will worlc ci06Ciy with tenant governor since 1991.
It
just
shows
he
has
been there lao
life
and
he
says
I
should
lighten
DeWine once again hit on
Gadde during the preparation of the
long.
He
wants
to
engage
in this
up,"
Glenn
said
after
the
debate.
Glenn's lingering $3 million debt
plan.
.
acrimonious
debate.
I
want
to talk
DeWine said durinJ the 'llebate
Steven Story reported to the from his 1984 presidential camabout
the
future,"
De
Wine
said.
that
he
has
presented
1ssues
in
the
commission on the activities of the paign.
DeWine said he would be the
And Glenn once more campaign and that his Ills ate not
Soutlieasrem Ohio Regional Piancandidate
most likely to bring
pmonaJ
attacks
against
Glenn.
. ning Commission's Highway denounced DeWine's campaign
He highlighted his
about
change.
"I
respect
what
you
did
as
an
ads - particularly one about the
User's Corruniuee.
accomplishments
as Greene Counastronaut.
I
said
you
were
a
hero
Story rePQI1ed that the State of presidential campaign debt - . as
ty
prosecutor
and
as
a lawmaker.
for
what
you
did,"
DeWine
said.
.
Ohio is focusinf attention on the election )'CI!r lies.
".
B
ut
you
know
.
•
this campaigh
Glenn singled out a DeWone ad ,"Buti don'! think it's ne~ative
development I! corridors, high· is not so much about the paat as it
ways which connect business com- that mimics the Energizier Bunny campaigning to tell the truth. '
Continued on page 3 .
Federal
law
limits
Glenn
to
givbattery
commercials.
The
ad
!D unities. ConstructiOn on the Capital Corridor, which includes the
Ravenswood Bridge ConneciOr and
ilnprovements to U.S. Route 33
from Darwin to Athens, is expected
to begin in 1994, with the firSt segThe latest 'quarter marked the Japan had in the same period.'' But
WASHINGTON (AP) - Ecoment of the project, from Roc.k nomic growth picked up to an fourth best showing of George he added in ·an interview on NBC's
Springs to Five Points. The seven annual r1te of 2. 7 percent in the Bush's presidency and was likely "Today" show, "I want to see it
mile segment from
the quarter ended Sept. 30, the govern- to give the Republican candidate a much more robust.''
Ravenswood Bridfc! will be next in ment said today In the last major boost going into the fliU!l week of · Economist Bruce Steinberg of
line· for constructiOn, altboullh no economic report before Election the campaign.
Merrill Lynch in New Yorlc said'
date bas been set for construction Day.
Bush, campaigning today in Des the third q~ GOP figure proba.
.
on that portion of the projecL
In a surprise to most private Moines, Iowa, haifed the latest bly ov~rstates the health of Ill
In related action, the commis- . forecasters, the Commerce Depart- growth figures and said, ''The economy that saw employment"
sion recommended a rcaOlution to · ment said grtlwth nearly doubled Democrats keep telling us that decline and industrial production
the Meigs County Commissioners, the lackluster l.S percent rate in the everything is going to heU, but they ~te during the perilxJ,
.
asking the Ohio Department of April-June quar1er.
''It just seems that the GOP,
are wrong."
Transportation for a staffed wei·.
Bush predicted shortly before number is out of.sync with reality,
In advance, analysts were
come center and rest area to be ex pectina little chanse from the release of the report that it would ... This cann01. be taken as a sign
constructed near the William S. seeo:C:.?.uarter rste. Instead, the mark six straight quarters of :that the economy is aU of a suddeil
Ritchie Bridge at Ravenswood rate
out or the doldrums," he
y llllldled tbe 2.9 percent growth and said"it shows tbat this
once that segment of tbe corridor llllvance recouled iri the fllSI lhree economy is growing. Very good
projec( is complete.
news .... four times as much as
months of the year.

Glenn, DeWine -trade attacks
·in televised Senate race debate

Nation's economic growth up 2. 7 percent

=--ng

·~

�l
I

Commentary

'

.

TUaaday,~ober27,1992
P~~g._2-The

Dally Bentlnel
P.omeroy-Middleport, Ohio
. TUesday, October 27, 1992

Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio

OHIO Weather

Typical late October weather will continue

Wedae~day, Oet. ZB

Aa:u-Weamere forecut fer

The Daily Sentinel
111 Collrt Stleet

.

Pomeror. Ohio

WiOJ:CO '10 1Hit IIITBitlt8Til OP TD 10108-IIASON .AJUCA

.I'Wt'EiliA.NC.
PAT WHITEHEAD

In I f u l l · s : - · 1 till,
New York's
Voice,.. 1y
inviled one ...
1D came 1D the
Great Hall of Cooper Uaiota where Abntb.n I.incxJin ..SC the
speech that c•n'Cd his bid far the
presidency 10 ca11:11 fin:. I !wve ·
been II many deb I I I llld
--------~:..--­
sions there. IOIIIC fiery, but ~
the.clasbin1 idcai could be lleanL
wbvqsioc:: '"Ca 1 lilleral be piOThia time Democratic Gov. life?"
Toay May, a press aide to
Robcn Cuey r1 Puw)'h • to deliver the speCc:b the D .,._ Cascy,lllld 1IIC: ''We wae.Jcriing
ic Party would not allow llim to ro.w.d 10 peati ia New Ycxt.
make • iu "•wrifird.. co.w,.,._ It's ..
10 we
Casey is a libenl Denu:•a He'- fi&amp;un:d IIJe liMI of liDs dis&amp;:ussioo
created and CXi*"i'ed. for ""'lllk wmdd be 11ifJ11! there IbiD we've.
a program JXIWidinl aucill medi- bla laediO • Pc&amp;lstiVIIiL"
cal services to low-income pn:gAs moderator, I srartecl what
nant women and YOUDJ cbildn:a, _.. bnoe bcca the di•tns*•t by
and he was responsible for the fint poinri•J out that tbis wu an
increase in minimum teal:ber ew:aial 8bout free specb -not
salaries in the 11111: in a quarter of a anly, dsll Of the gc'ue11u.of~
century.
sy1,.;. but a tbll of •JOIIC 111
But Casey failed to pass tbe tbe w!ientt wbo wlllled 10 cbal·.
official Democratic loyalty !lisa of laJ&amp;e him.
Chairman Ron Brown. Casey is
1'bc bonriOJ
..,iii&amp;·poundpro-life, and 1111 he was pged far ina and wbislle-blowins becan.
the entire New York celd:w.ui of Sn~ep ally located • boduides
of the bill
diiroptioll by SfereO
Democratic pluralism.

cti,.,_

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
. Publisher
A sls••!!I;.Publlsher/Conlroller

Democratic governor silenced again

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

J..ETI'EOlS OF OPINION Ire wek:ome. They should be less than 300
words. All !etten ue subject to edilinc and must be signed with name.
lddreu IIIII IOlepbone number. No unsigned leaen will be published. Letters
obould be in good 11$10, llddlessing issues, not personalities.

Clinton denies overcQnfidence,
GOP says race is narrowing

N_at Bentoff

nurCf c:e.er.

*"'

preening array Of hooligans
mlde all SJICCCh excepe their own
inludible They reminded me of dJe
dame•¥ brown shirts breakinl up
Jewish meetings in my youth, but
these wen: howlinl 10ldicrs or the
lefL (There is no difference, of
course, bctvleen right and left wl!en
it 10 si!eacinJ the bearen of
. WICOIIlrortablc ideas.)
Amons the o~ents of any
free exchange of tdeas were ACI"
UP and ~~""ice cidres:
WHAM (Womer-;-"'Iblth Action
Mobilization); and NYU Students
for Choice, among them. None of
these "pro-choice" groups, of
course, gave the audience a choice
tohearCasey.
Alleast 80 percent or the audience wanted a chance to hear
Casey and said so, as best they
could, by applauding his a~mpts
to. get started. But they were no
inatc.h for the specdt muggers.
.
After several tries, Gov. Casey
yielded. •'The Democratic ConvenPion suspended the First Amendment," he· uied to say, "and
tonight you did the same thing."
-

I

By ROBERT E. MILLER
·'
Aaocillted Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Democrat Bill Clinton's campaign lrip to several
wesaem tbll mually support GOP presidential candidates produced .
a warning tbll he should not take bellwether Ohio for granted.
While he was stumping last week In states like Wyoming and Mon11118, AI Tuchr.tJcr, University of Cincinnati poll~r. said, ''The Clinton
UTfLEVOES
1311~ is maJring a mistake. This election is not ovec."
l-IE SUSI'EC.T
Tuchfarbcr whole "OhiO Poll" is commissioned by the university and
ne Cincinnati ·PosE. is in the field with a new one that will be released
WEARE
Tuesday. He said President Bush may be gaining on Clinton, whose lead
K68 AS
.rangedfrom6 ~Ito 17 peiCCIItin other recent surveys.
WElL AS
· fie added, • If I Were the Clinton campaign. Ross Perot wou)d scare me
VOUBLE
10 deaih." He said if Perot's Ohio backers don 'I vote for1um because
A~HT~.
they think he has no chance, he belie.ves most will support Bush.
. However. a random survey turned up mixed opinions.
.
· Marti mgalwlJb,~ofCiinton's Ohio campaign, said he thinks
CliDFco will get the Perot drop-off vote, if it occurs. He said Perot's backers want change "llld not four more years of George Bush."
Longabaqh said he was concerned about the western !rip, 100. especially while Vice President Dan Quayle was campaigning in Ohio on
Wednesday llld Thursday and getting extensive media coverage.
· But he pointed out that CliniOO was 'returning Saturday for a visit 10
Akron, and will be back qain at least once more before tbe election. ''We
are taking nothing fc. gninted," he said.
Mike Curtin. public affairs editor and pollster for The ColumbuS Dis. pall:h, said he believes Clinton is maintaining his lead and possibly
expanding iL
··
"Perot is relatively llaL He may have had a slight increase as a result
of dJe dcblles llld his TV but he is not likely to reach double digits," said
Cunln. The Dispalch's futal,poU will be released Nov. 1. · ,
SOlie Republican Chairman Robert Bennett said the GOP has a poll
showing Clintoa's lead is down to eight percentage ~ints. ~~ pJa&lt;;ed
Perot's lliPP'!n 11 "17 percent and growing." He satd Perot 1s taking .
'fOUN6 BILL c.LitiTClt4 IH W/JS(.t:IH (1969)
. VOiel from Clinlon.
.
'
· Ohio Democratic Chainnan Eugene Branstool disagreed, saying he
thinks Perot hurt Bush in dJe presidential debates. "His aliiCks were
~·" he said He said Clinton has the momentum and most of his suppqrt 'is get!ing ~ well set in concrete."
,
.
· Herb Asbcr, political sciCII(C professor at Ohio State University, said
the p!fly ln power- the RepubliOjfttm • ••qeip ~- . in ·~ the president. Florio js hugely
NEWARK, N.J . (NEA) CliniOO is stiD ahead "but l would not be surprised to see the race narrow. . There are a handful of states tbC - . 10 say bC is naellld more unpopular, but pulls show. that vot- cans.
;'
. .
1 don't think Perot is going to be a big factor."
• !
·
blame
Aorio
and
presi~t
·
·
Their
anger
is
brQad-based.
Not
ers
Bush camp considcss vital One is boprlal of. wiL
Both parties agree that Ohio is a bellwether stare that not only reflects New Jersey, which has givea its
"I naJiy lbint we c. do it," equally for the state. s. ~onom1c only is Bill Clinton now favored to
the mood of dJe country but gives the winner 21 electoml votes, seventh . electoral yotes to the Republican
woes. &lt;;oostantly ~?Dmding voters · win, 'b ut Democrats may well
lliraat prize In the nation. That's why they have been here so often. ·
of Aono also re.~mds them about sweep all important offices
presidential nominee in every elcc· llusli and CliniOO have courted Ohio almost norHII~ since the national tion since 1968. However, as the RobertJ.W~ the awful cond1Uon of the local slatewide.
catventions. Clinton has visited six times and Bush, five. Bush will be in campaign enters its final days.
economy and the need to vote for
GOP Gov. Judd Gregg, scion to
Columbus on Wednesday. In all, the top candidates and their vice presi- things look bad fer dJe GOP in liDs
change.
,
.
the most honored name in New
dpltial ruillllng mates had been in Ohio 22 times, as of Friday.
says ]lnisrewsli. "But in a SlalC
The &lt;;JOP s best hope for New Hampshire Republican politics,
must-win state. .
.
How important is the Gilden tbll we lla¥e not WUJ ia so long, J~rsey IS that Ross Pero~ wtll easily won four terms in CongT!lSS
State to Bush7 GOP National yo. a-i-e 10 wony tbll some· Siphon off eno~gh of the anu-Bush and two as governor. Now he is
--.LII . . .11[Jt'.
vot~ from C)mton to al.low the running for the Senate, and he is in
...... ~
~rl"
Chainnan Rich Bond puts it sim- ......
If Gaqe Bush br:s New Jer- president to slip thr'l!u~h WI!'~ a nar- trouble. Interestingly, a major issue
ply: "I can'tconceiveddlc.praibas become his avoidance of the
dent holding the White House if he sey. it will . . be far l d meffllll row,less-than-a-maJonty wm.
or muaey. By Election Day the
"If Perot gets more than 15 Vietnam draft with help from his
does 'not win New Jersey."
For 25 years after Worl(l W• n, pn:si• • will hive visiled the S1lte (percen!~· --:e've got a g&lt;?od powerfulfather.
.•
Even more amazing perhaps is
,•
hordes of white worting residents ei&amp;Jit times, and the GOP is pour- chance, satd Bush campa1gn
'
that State Rep. Deborah
is
from
New
Y
Oit City and Philadel- ill&amp; in ••,• • funds - mating director Bill Palatucci.
worth it.
·. 1 am ·writing this· letter 10 plead each of Us. The kids
pnmin of feda1ll dollars 10 salve
MANCHESTER • . N_.H. running neck and neck to replace
phia
fled
dJe
crime
ahd
crowdinJ
of
Please remember when you go
witb the people of Meigs County to
Recently, on a lovely lndtan .sum~ Greuas governor on a platform of
these cities for the quiet sull!abs m
rc'al1y coilsid« the Carletoa School to the polls to vote on this issue, northern and southern New Jersey. NewJcncyc=
Despise
poll
mer Oetober. day, •the people of raismg taxes. In a state that does
how would you vote if these \Vere
levy this election.
.. .
what wmries Democnts ltere is New ~psh~ were treated to l!fl not have an income or sales tax - ·
Eventually
this
huge
bloct
became
·renonally, I don't have any your children. Remember what a bedrock GOP base - and the _.., dt'll:pI BlipS a [Jemc).
ex~r_tary stg~t: a Dem~ral!c but sky-high ~roperty taxes cbildn:D !ben:. but I still feel the Jesus said. "Do unto others as you marJln of victory in six strailbt allic Gov. r... Florio far pusNng prestdential.aommee stumpm!lm Arnesen is callmg for a 6 percent
ones there .-e a pert of my respon- would have them do unto you." presidential election•
rhrt p I $2..8 IJiDion ED WIW the staiC. ThiS mrcnsely Republican income tax on people with Incomes
sibility. This great nation was Let's show these kids how much _ But the 1M1C thing is l...atliDJ ~JellS...
SIIIC has always been a place whel;e
above $30,000 to cure a bud,e(
founded 011 the principles of taking we love them and pass ibis levy.
The GOP is p I it« the Florio Democrats ~a'!le - be~ a use Il l imbalance, create public. servtce
in
New
Jersey
that
seems
to
be
Woody Call, Ill
cake of and supjkll'ting one another.
holds the ruwon s first ~mary -. jobs and economic incentives to
Ward Road, Rutland, Ohio happening in GOP siaburbaa ~:::.~~:"a:!~7::';: and
I haw seen the ftgureS and cost of
then .never set foot tn agam. restore the faltering economy, help
strongholds llClOSS the nllion: The
this levy will be very minimal to
· economY. is Issue No. 1, md many Repulllic:an adio ... 'f.V ads Item, Y~ here 11 was: 9'tober, !"'d BJII fund education and reduce propeny
Chnt&lt;?n '!"as bemg recetved by taxes. Her proposal is being ,
social tlls of the city ha•e now
enthusiasf:!C aowds whtle the polls ridiculed by her Republican oppo.
reached the suburbs. Voters are
blaming tbe Republicans, and they A "•wl•d line in tbe Bash stump ~bowed him w1th a small but grow- nent, but polls show that voters are
ltcn:: ''If you're fed up wilh · mg lead.
lookin
' I at the I
d.
· . Roger Abbott and Randy or benefits would come from this are more willing to listen to speech
The economy here is as bad as
g senous Y
.P an an at
Juu
Florio,
doo'tlco
Bill
C1inron
do
Democrats
and
give
them
a
chance.
Humphreys recently spoke at a levy. The children of Meigs Local
d'' •
Through most of Oetober, polls the far Amc:lica. Tiley .-e the anyw~ere in the nation, and the herRobert w....... an is a
meetinl of the Pomeroy PTO. They need dependable bansportation and showed
recessmn has clearly not booomed
-syn tea1
ClintDn
with
a
10
to
12
tas~twius.."
ouL vor.crs are frustrated. and they ed writer for Newspaper Eater·
esplained the need for dJe five mill updated textbpoks - they deserve point lead. This led HUibon County
A n...ber of eqJeris say Ibis
~rmanent improvement levy the best education that can be proare
taking that frustration out on prise Association.
wbicll the Meigs Local School vided. They are the future. Don't Supervisor Robert Janisu:wski, ljlll!cali _ , 8CbaJiy 1w • fi~t: on
Board bas placed on the Nov. 3 forget to vote on Tuesday, Nov. 3.
Frallcis Shrimplin
bldloL
secretary, Pomeroy s~emem
Taxpayer dollars would be used
foc suc:h improvements as buses,
. PocriCioy, Ohio
textbooks, improved restroom
wake up iR lhe morning with your
HARTFORD, CONN..- I grew The bojs and Jir1s of sprin' had occupational therapist. ··
facilities. and dJe like. No salaries .
Fifty
years
ago,
we
belonged
to
"Dearly Beloved" and still feel
bccomethep•t•\&amp;U4Sofwmrer.
up strengthened by four truths that
•
'rambunctiously
."In the Mood.' •
!be
age
of
innocence.
Ethnicity
was
I held to be self-evident- that · Scm. had SIN' t ...d ID certain
a
badge
of
honor
then,
not
a
suit
or
.
That's
not
original.
An even
fon:es
llllllll.
ClllyiDJ
rircs
of
New England, especially CorllltlCii.
armor.
longer
creative
litany
of
song
tides
cut, was God's favoiite creation.
Our
616
names
ran
ihe
nomenwas
included
in
the
payer
by
Karl
that the rest or America was iriliabC'Iatur~
gamut
from
Accarpio,
Bloomquist,
fmnerly
a
big,
robust,
ited by barbarians, t1tat my bcauti- .
.
•
By Th~ A.ssocillted Preis
ful and deeply Christian mother · - - - - - - - - - ' - - Burlte and Chung 10 Vlahopolis, fun-.lovmg )llond, but now 1 baldWile and Yanchinsky.
ing; slimmed-down LudJeran min• Today tS Tuesday, Oct 27, the 30lst day of 1992. Thet:e are 65 days was responsible for my love of.I
lefp in the year.
.
.
ister in Providence, R.I.
Sixteen
of
us
were
black,
and
humanity and that dJe HPHS dasl avoirdupois &amp;r1IIIDd tbeir waists.
Would you believe that
the
city
championship
880-yard
· . Today's Highlight in History: .
of 1942 would always do dJe riPt Othr:n ps ac1¥oal!y n:plicl'ed tbeir
was voted dJe class's
Bloomquist
team
included
an
Irishman.
a
n:lay
On OeL 27, 1787, dJe fli'Sl of the Federalist Papers, a series of essays lhing.
cJ ••+cd" pictures. llill le8a Md
"best
dancer"
over me? "I got a
caiiinJ far lltiftcalion of the United States Coostitution, was published in
A few days ago. Hartford l'llblic soiD lc- • iNa lite swecll6.
black (Juess who) and twO Poles. (I
few
black
votes,"
he kidded me.
1 New York newspaper. The essays, written anonymously by Alexander
High School (the nation's _....,
L. .bcriac Fraacis HCJIPIICr, always knew those Poles could
The
hell
he
did.
"There
were only
Hamilton, Jatnes Mlldison and John Jay, argued in favor of a suong oldest} did 4 again.
tall, midi• bload awla:llol~~ run.)
·
16
of
us,"
I
told
him.
"You
white
Plrimal JO!CfiiiDCDt
In a poll I conduclled It lila' ~ (llalaq ia Gn:et ... Laia). .
Al the reunion, we were a fiesta
On this dale:
'
.
fuys stole rhat election." Karl and !
class reunion, 5~ ptrCent r1 the 145 meW tisltair wi6 a I*' m the of handsbaking, hugging, kissing
were al\d temaln goOd friends.
.(
In 1795, dJe United States and Spain signcct the Treaty of San Lorenzo, returneeS aupported Bill Clinm, left.
and squeezing. It may have been '0
·
Reaching
tbe
twilight
of
our
l
wbich povided for free oavigation of the MiSsissippi River.
·.
31 percelll supported GooiF Bua11.
Oar c:lass's two higb-sc:hool years later, but . sever.al of my
.
affectiOns,
we
haven't
f&lt;qotten
the
. In f8S8, tbe 26th president of dJe United States, TheOdore Roosevelt, 9 pcrcentlliJIPOited R011 Penll IIIII sweedteans. so•ber-•leaed female classmates mer1ted some
79 who have gone on to their final
was born In New York City.
9 peiCCIIt wae lllillte+cidod
Rohld McMaaus ... lllll-llailed, very serious squeezing_ (At 68 and
postgraduate
work.
...
In 1880, on his 22nd birtliday. 'Ibeodort Roosevelt married Alice Lee. .
The male-female aplit wu titiC*Mt . . . . . nrc,. IIC d1 twO sraious operations later, I was
1n
the
meantime,
the
rest of the
In 11104, New York City's fli'Sl rapid trlllSit subway, the JRT, opened.
almost Identical to !bat ia the • ;jed . . . . . . . dllr:e J**"' hjL dcpreslingly harmleas.)
·
HPHS
class
of
1942
continues
10
national polll.
.
In 1914, aurhor·poet Dylan Thomu was born in Swansea, Wales. ·
-..PH[ •hasblaOICrldtc
Many or us served in World
survive and tbrive, P!'Oud of our
"Hey Charlie," llid I ...............
,.
In 1922, the nnt-' celebration of Navy Day took place.
fededl a-n-t's top aeca- W• n, and a few or our number
In 1938, Du Pool announced it hai! coined a name for tts new synthetic Rocco Paolino (wbote f;;aiae tives ad lias beea iowoived in never returned. But carnage still successes, secure in tbe manyyJm: "nylon.''
.
mane dido 'I have a liDJle Jr'IY de; ' .... the S4 biilicm fedaal did not rock the. vestibule of our sp.lendorednesa of our humanity
and blessed with dJe comforts Olutt
In 1947, tbe radio show "You Bet Your Life," starring Groucho Marx, hair), "we alway• ~ a~
serenity.
dJe qing yea can lllill bring.
·
premlcn:d 011 ABC. (II later became a television show on NBC.~
Now.
years
1ar.er,
"Don.,
class." llot:co, now a \Ke-jiieuBill ~'*
.._""' ditJiw:tioM pes 10
Cll1ck Stoae Ia a lfldkated
In .1954, Walt Disney's fnt television proPID!, titled "Disneyland' • dent!lf a !lllicJnal biubt
fira. the oac:e dart-haired Ruth Get Around Much An~ore" ...
·aftu bis yc&amp;+becompleted theme part, prenuered on ABC. · .
was one of dJe IIIIII'ICII
MeOla. wilD ldla hodla JD llld Being IOietber is such 'A Lovely writer for Newlpaper Eaterprlle
In 1967, 2S yean ago. "Exoo '61" closed in M!lntreol .
·
But oh, how .we bad changed. Ph.D. IIIII is a world-reaowoed Way 10 Spend Ill Evenins" !ben AUodatlorl.

Bush may lose tw9 key Eastern states
!he

.

Letters to the editor

The kids are worth a yes vote

Arnesert

are

-bers.

.

=

c.:~ ~Fl?.

Children deserve the best

50 years· later

The class of '42

Today in hstory

'

or

~

.

Chuck Stone

r

....,

so

we

By Tile .Aepdete.t ..._
Typical late-OeiOber weather
was forecut fer Ohio for lbi: next
few days, with daytime temperatures around 60 degrees and
overnight lows in tbe mid-30&amp;.
October is lllll1llally ooe of IR:r
m~nths in Ohio. llld except for a
shght chance of showers ia the
~ laic Wednewlsy. dry WQiber
1s on tap for the next couple of
days.
Wednesday should ~ a mixture of clouds and sunsbme, the
Na~onal Weather Service said.

MICH.

Cuey walked off dJe llaiC u the
shoutas conpandered each other.
An iromc obbligato to the
evening was the presence of an
especially raucous contingent of
rigbleOUs censors - a group &lt;:0!1cerned with the fate of Mumta
Abu-Jamal, who i$ on death row in
Pennsylvania. Convicted of killiilg
a policeman, Jamal has exhaustea
all his direct appeals and his
lawyers are now beginning to try
other avenues. which will include a
habeas corpus petition.
Jamal's trial- his lawyers are
convinced and .I agree - included
egregious violations of due process
on the part of the prosecutor and
the judge. (Also involved . in
Jamal's behalf is Amnesty lntemational.}
'
At Cooper Union, I bad intended to .ask Gov. Casey a n11mber of
constitutional questions concerning
Jamal's conviction and sentencing,
and I had also expected that some
of Jamal's supporterS would have
raised various speciftc points with
the governor. It would have been
the only chance they bad to inform
Casey tn person of the particulars
Qf the case and thereby mar,be
influence him - if all else faded
- to grant clemency.
The shouting and whistling pre·
vented a discussion of Jamal's
case. A few days after the' silencing
of Gov. Casey at Cooper Unton,
Jamal had a visit&lt;¥ in his cell. He is
in solitary confinement. Stripped of
nearly all privileges, he is only
allowed twO hours Jl day outsic!e.his
small cage, and is forbidden radio
or television.
But Jamal had heard of what
happened at Cooper Union and dJe
fact that the screamers had prevented his case from beinJ heard by
Gov. Casey. Jamal's visdor told me
that Jamal was "surprised, displeased, shocked and saddened"
by dJe self-indulgence of his antifree-~h supporters.
.
· Nat Hentoff is a nationally
renowned authority on the First
Amendment and the rest of the Bill
ofRigbiS.
·
Nat Hentotf Is a syadlc:ated
writer for Ne'l'l'lipiper Enterprise
Association.

• ICQ!umbus lsoo I

W.VA .

C1992Ac:cu-Woolher, lnc.

------Weather-'- - - •
Soutb·Cenlral Ohio
'Tonight, mostly clear with the
low near 40. Wednesday, mostly
sunny. High in the upper 60s.
Extended forecast:
Thursday through Saturday:

Thursday, fair. LOws in the mid30s 101 mid-40s. Highs in the 50s.
Friday, a chance of showers. Lows
in the 30s. Highs in dJe 40s. Saturday, fair. Lows around 30. Highs in
the low to mid-40s.

-Meigs announcements-items can be made by calling Gary
. Game place rescheduled
Tonight's (Tuesday) seventh Rea at 1-304-523-3408 or write
grade football·game with WeUston · 733 Seventh Avenue, Huntingtpn,
. will be played at Bob Roberts F'teld W.Va. and pick-up will be
in Pomeroy instead of Middleport .arranged. Donations are unlimited.
There is no fee 10 participate and
as originally scheduled.
!bose donating are encouraged 10
be original. A dinner will be held
Luncheon and sale
The Grace Episcopal Church before the aucti011 and tickets are
Women will hold a rummage sale SSO with 12S 10 be 11111d. The only
on Nov. 2 .and 3 beginning at 9 funding for scouting in Meigs, Gala.m. ·with an Election Day lun- lia and Muon counties comes from
donati011s of Friends of Scouting,
cheon to be served on Nov. 3.
·
MGM Golf Tournament. popcorn
Preaching and sinpng
sales and this event
Faith Full Gospel &lt;;:burch in
Long Bottom will have preaching
Free dothiDg,day
and singing Frjday at 7 p.m. with
Free ciQihing day will be held at
David Dailey and the Dailey Fami- The Salvation Army in Pomeroy on
ly. Pastor Steve Reed inviles the Thursday from 10 a.m. to noon. All
public. Fellowship will follow.
area restdents in need of clothing
are welcome.
Halloween dallce
Card shower planned
There will be a Halloween
A card shower in honor of Ada
dance Friday from 8-11:30 p.m. II
Van
Meter. Beverly, Ohio is
the Reynqlds building In Hockin!l'port. ThOse attending may dress m planned for Mrs. Van Meter's !10th
costume if desired. Public invited. binhday, according to her daughter,
Ronnie wood will be the caller_ Pauline Brewer, Reedsville.
Music will be provi!led by ''Out of
the Blue."
Marriage licenses issued
Marriage licenses have been
Tl'll5tees to meet
issued
in Meigs County PI'Qbate
The Lebanon Township
Court
to
Roger Lee Spaun, 21 ,
Trusrees will meet Friday at 7 p.m.
Racine,
and
Bre)\da Lee Wright,
at the township building.
19, Pomeroy; and to Dennis Ray
.
Church Women United to Carman, 42, Rutland, and Diana
Kay Jarvis, 43, Vin100.
meet
Church Women United will
hold a planning session Friday at Judgment sougllt
A judgment action has been
1:30 p.m. at the Enterprise United
Methodist Church of World Com- filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Chrysler Credit
munity D.ay.
•
Corpotation, Dayton, aJllinst Ivan
PoweU, Pomeroy. in the antOunt of
Sports banquet
The Eastern High School Fall $4,618.10.
Sports Banquet will be held Nov.
19 at 6:30 p.m. in dJe high school
gymnasium to honor football and
volleyball players and cheerleaders.
Am Ele Power....................32 318
The meal will be catered and the
Ashland Oil........~...............26 1/4
cost will be $5 per person. ReserAT&amp;.T.................................4-4
vations may be made by calling
Bank.
One...........................48 3/4
Susie Pullins at 985-4314 by Nov.
Bob
Evans
................. ........19 3/8
13. Payment will be made· at the
Charming
Shop
................. .35 3/4
door. The meal for the athletes,
City Holding ...................... ls
cheerleaders and paijl coaches will
be provided free of charge.
Fedetal M~................... 11 1/8

.Court news

Stocks

Sale planned
The Tri State Area Council
MGM District, Boy Scouts of
America, will hold an auction Dec.
3 at the Gateway Holiday Inn in
Huntington, W.Va. from 6:30-10
p.m. Tu deductible donations of

__ , The Daily Sentinel
(UW81Is.IIO)

hbtiehed enl')' aRemaon, Monday
~ Fridoy, ttl c-1 St. - . , ,
!lhlo b)' tho Ohio Vllley Pablloblftl
Compaay/Maltbnedlo Inc~ Pomeroy,
Ohio 46'11111 Pb. !lll2-211!6. - d d poolale paid 11 Pw.-,, Oblo.
'
y..,ber: Tho ~aled Pn!u, iUid tile
Olllo Nenpo5.•
Notioaol

New•,.,...

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Government loans and ~ts wMh
$5.3 million have been approved
by a legislative panel for hniness
development projects statewide
that include a factocy iJutletmall.
Release of the money- OK'd
Monday by the State Controlling
Board, inade up of six legislators
and headed by a represenlllive of
Gov. George Voinovich.
The panel on Monday also
approved $3.4 milli011 in government-backed loans for ICVeD school
districts unable to borrow money
on their own.
Approval by dJe panel brought
to 15 tbe number of districts forced
to seek state-backed loans in the
new school yea!'. ·
Controllers approved $660,000
in grants and $4,7 million in loans
for nine l?rojects inlended to retain
or create JObs.
•

ea, 7SS Tblrd -

Glenfl, ...

Owllll•• . . . . eo.t7

tS w..u ..........................................

:11

.'Ill

=«&lt;

w-.........................................

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

begin its annual slug shoots on
Sunday at I p.m. Shoots will also
be held Nov. 8, IS, 22 and 29.
Various bench and free hand
sh00 ill be held fl shot
~w(
. ~
slug
matc esbeosbotpen _s1gthets an scopes
wt 0Free-hand
not
m
same
class).
22-rifle
matches will
1so be held .th
.
a
__.... w1 bacvanous prizes of
money, Wio.ey,
on and sausage
to be given away. Awards for second places will be in matches or 2S

r

==========~~~=ts~-~

I

:
:
•
:
:
•·
:

The largest loan of $3 million
went 10 the Dayton-Pboenix Group,
to acquire the General Motors
Machine: Control System p~t and
eqtlipment in Montgomery County.
Dayton-Phoenix manufacturers
electrical equipment for diesel
locomotives.
Controllers approved a
$250,000 grant to Fayette County
to help defray the cost of road
. improvements needed for' develOj!'
ment of an outlet mall at lnteiStale
71 and U.S. 3S.
The Prime Group Inc. or Cbicago is working 011 development of
the shnpping auractio!lthat is
expected to create 200 JObS over
three years.

9tb« projects approved in the

· Ohio Department of Development

pacbg&lt;::
.
-A $50,000 grant to the OhiO
Valley Regional Development

Commission to attract a Si.5 bil- cial propeny to hguse company ·
lion federal uranium enrichment operations.
·
plant at an abandoned government
-A $120,000 loan to A.D.A. :
. facility in Piketon.
Investment Group to build a car :
- A $40,064 grant to Musk- wash in downtown.Cincinnati. ·
•
ingum ·county to help repave two . School loans amoved by con:
county roads leading to The Wilds, uollers ranged from $83,000 for
a center for dJe breeding of endan- the Windham disuict in Portaae ':
gered wild animals;
County to $1.4 million-for Olen··
~rants or. $80,000 10 the city tangy schools in DelaWl!fC County. ~
of Troy and $240,000 to the United
· Other districts and loans
Retail Group, Miami County, to approved were Union , Belmont
build a disttibution center.
County, $272,000; Buckeye, Jeffer-A $396,000 ioan to Progrcs- son, $136,000; Logan Elm, Pick·sive lndusuies of Northwood, away, $267,000; Springfield, Sum·
Wood County,to buy equipment to mit, $538,000; and Vinkln, Vinton,
Increase its production of automo- $621,000.
'
tive pans and assemblies.
. Sen. Robert Ney, R-Barnesville, _
-A $1 million loan to Resource questioned need for the Olentanay
Materials Corp., Fremont, to buy loan. He said the district had higher ,
equipment fer a vinyl-siding manu- per-pupil propeny values and per- _
facturing operation.
sonal income than the other sys-A $115,000 loan to Wilson tems.
Diversified ·Construction, ColumSusan Tavakolian, head of the·
bus, 10
and renovate commer- department's division of schooL ·
· finance, said Olentangy had experienced a rapid enrollment growth;· •
while eight of 10 recent tax levies .
failed.
"They've had levies on the ballot, they just haven't passed," Ms. •
Tavalcolian said.

A THEATER

Physical
Therapy,
We've Got It!
.

The Physical Therapy Department .
at Veterans Memorial Hospital is in ·
full operation Monday through
Friday every week. , ..
Personnel of the departmet)t see a '·
wide variety of injuries originating from numerous sources. In treating
these injuries, personnel have at their disposal a wide range of
eq~pment.
'
Only a written P.rescription from your physician is needed for you

to receive the excellent services of our Physical Therapy Department.
•
•

STilE

IEPIESEIIII~E

He W'.U Repremal Our Vtdueat
Pd. for by the Commit! I liD Elect F,-.11 CiBT ar.,

IIIVIII
.

•
:

t~t;-turion .::::::::::::::::::~~ ~ ~;~~a::o~~~~::rL~~~~~~rs~i~~

lands End..........................30
Limited Inc. ...~ .................. 24 7/8
Multimedia Inc..................27 314
Rax RestauraitL ..................7132
Reliance Electric................l7 1/4
RobbinsAMyers ................ 14
Shoney's.Inc. ,.................... 19 318
718Star Bank ......................31 1/4
Wendy Int'l........................l3 518
Worthington Ind. ,..............22 5/8
Stock r~ports are til~ 10:30
a.m. quotes prol'ided br·Biunt,
Ellis and Loewl o1 Gallipolis.

Ne aablcriptillla by . .n pmallled In
anu wiMn hama •rrllit Hl"'ri11 II

Ill w-..........................................

;

:

EMS units answer calls

l!abtcllbm DOl doolriDIIo ]II)' the - ... ma,y nmll to ad'fOMO dl-llo Tho
DollJ ljotlllool 111 a lbreo, II&amp; or 12
. -~~~ bollo. Croclll will be P..• -

-.c...~;r

Around the nation

--Local briefs-____,

PJIICJ:

.,
btaldo
w-.
....................................!.14
· - . . ...................................... .tl

Warmer weather was forecast in tbe c:cnual 1tates, Oregon and
for the Missouri Valley, while · southern W~c:;.::.•: the 701
lower temperalUres were expected in California,
and northto bait a recud warm spell in inle- em Texas; and in tbe 801 acroa dJe
rior Texas.
South.
Sunny, seasonable weather was
The mercury hit a record 90
predicted from dJe middle Missis- degrees Monday in Monroe, La.
Scllltaed clouds hung over the sippi 'Valley 10 the Great Lakes. Records also fell in San Angelo,
Nonbeut, Nortbwest and South- Ram was forecast in the central Texas, wh.ich reached 91, and
well early lllday.
~ulf Sf:'leS. SIUISbinc was expected Waco, Texas,ll94. ·
.
Sanlhine was expected in the m florida.
The high temperature for tbe
Norlheutlater in the day, with
Highs ioday were f&lt;ncast in the nation Monday wu 94 at Dallas
cool breezes from.northcastern 40s In nortbei'n New England and and WIII:D.

-·

Doil)&lt; ...................................... :.--25 C..ll

11

the ;

..

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,..,..._

ICtOII

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DischariJe&amp;• Nov. 16 • Mrs: '
Bobby Masste and daughter, Mrs.
Randy Scott and SOD, Lida G.-land,:·
Barbara Gatrell, Tammy Klein, ·
Kevin Long, Luther Harvey, Done·
MASS ,BAND.· The jtmlor ~~~ llallllla the Friday night's pme 10 create a masa band 01
Meigs Local Scllool District joiad the award- Ill~ field at llalf-llme. Tbe baud is under the
aid Woody, Susan Alban, Berna- .
dine Eads, Dorothy Crace, Jeffrey ·
wlnnlnl M~lp Hlglt Sdlool Marchi-. Baad at dil'fdion of Toney Dingess.
Cox; Paula Bragg, Kevin Jones;'·
Donald Smith, Dorothy Elills, Bn- :
ContinuecUrompage 1
Lottery
tany Green and Gina I,.arge.
.
Births, ·Nov. ~ • Mr. and Mrs. ·
is about the future: It's about our pen:eno:
ClEVELAND (AI')- HCI\I are
dreams for our children and our
The League of Women Voters Monday night's dhio Lottery James Waullc. son, Wellston; Mr: ·
grandchildren," he said. "We've of Ohio Education sponsored the selections:
, and Mrs. Steven Stewart, daughter,
got to shake things up."
Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. James Rif- ·
debate at dJe studios of WBNS-TV. Pick 3 Numbers
fie, daughter, Syracuse and Mr. anc\·.
Glenn contrasted himself with CBS affiliates across tbe state
8-3-6
DeWine, assening that DeWine picked up dJe IJmodcast, which was
Mrs. Earl Osborne, SOD, Gallipolis
(eight, three, six)
would favor the wealthy.
Ferry, W.Va.
'
aired~ II 11:30 p.m. Monday Pic:k 4 Numbers
"You may not agree with every onWO -lV.
8-0-9-1
position I take or every vote I cast,
but if you send me bact 10 the Senate there's one thing you can be
WITH A CHOICE!
absolutely sure of - I 'll always
Continued from A-1
stand up for Ohio, and I'll stand up
for working families across this
Ethan Marsltaii; 18, of Belpre, Ohio, died Monday at the scene, .
state,·· Glenn said.
KeUersaid
Glenn is facing his strongest
The truck driver, Bruce Knight of Si. Marys, was ueated at Sisc~lenge since he was ftrst elected
tersville Hospital and released, officials said.
in.1974.
· A University of Akron poll
released Monday showed Glenn
with a 10-point lead over DeWinc.
On Monday, units of Meigs EmergenCy Services answered six
Forty-four percent of the responcalls for assistance.
·
dents in the stall:wide telephone
On Monday at 12:28 p.m .. Syracuse unit went IO .Yellowbu5h
survey favored Glenn 10 34 pen:ent
Road. John J;lunnel) was taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital. At 1:58
forDeWine.
·
p.m., Pomeroy untt was sent to Peacock Avenue and took Carl
The results contrasted with the
Roach 10 Holur Medical Center. At 2:26p.m., Rutland squad went
university's Oct 8 poll .in which
to Crouser Road and took Danny Shane to Vetenm MemOrial Hospital. At 2:57 p.m., Porneroy, .. Chester and Middleport units were
Glem led DeWine s&amp; percent to 29
dispatched to a brush ftre 'at the Jeff Ohlinger prnfllllly. At 6:56
p.m~ Middlepllll squad went to Pearl Street Clarence NeweU was
Event begins Sunday
taken to Holzer. At 9:37 p.m., Racine squad went to BuckiOwn
The Ken Amsl!ary Chapter !If
Road. Pauline McCoy was taken 10 Veterans. ·

1'08'l'MA8'l'BR:-- ·~to

..-

North Dakota; the SOs

resa·of the IIOithem 1111e1; the (i()l .•

Veterans Memorial
MONDAY ADMISSIONS ••
Cynthia Smith, Rush, Ky.; Huber(:
Walker, New Haven, W.Va.; and
Melvin Thomton,.Racine.
. ..
MONDAY DISCHARGES- :
Beatrice Williamson.
'

The Daily StaliDel, 1:11 Court St. ,
P6UWiO). OHio 4518D.
IWICIIIPI10N JlATIII
JIFCuolerar MoiGir Flo.t.
One w.t. .............. - .........................1!.80
One M111t11.......................................... .1111
One Yeor....................................- ...NS.IlO
IFI'IGU: COPY

"-. ......
·-

Pennsylvania 10 the New England
COISL

Hospital news

!:"'•lioti,
tall.., Bi'llllwn

New Yurt. N.., Yad&lt; 10017.

The rmlfd-hi&amp;h
. · rtmpel'IIIUre for
this dalll dJe Columbus weather
station wu 81 degrees in 1963
while tbe record low was 20 in
1962. SUIIIel toni~ !Viii be at S:3S
p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at
6:57 L11L

State OK's $5.3 million in business loans, grants

•

MYordoiftl

The Dally Sentinel-Page 3;
•••

Ch1p111111, T-.

s

VETEUNS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
115 East ••orlal Drlwe
Po•roy
992·2104

•

�J

/

Sports

Ohio

The .Daily Sentinel

•

·

Joltin' Joe to receive lifetime
award 41 years after retirement

Tuesday, October 27, 1992
p~

Buffalo edges N.Y. ·Jets 24-20 ·
By lARRY WILNF:R
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
(AP) - The Buffalo Bills actually
were rooting for the New Yoril: Jets
to ~ . It was all about time.
The Jets Obliged, taking a 20-17
lead but leaving 1:SO on the clock.
That was enough, as it always is
when lhese teams meet, for Buffalo ·
to rally. .
"If they were going to score,
I'm flad they scored on the first
time, ' Jim KeUy said after leading
~ Bills 75 yards in seven plays in
the fllllll 1: SO to the winning touch·
down and a 24-20 victory Monday
night. "We didn't have to waste
our timeouts. Overall, everybody
stuck in there."
And the Bills sruck it in the end
zone on a play Kelly basically
made up at the 12-yard line.
"I don't even think we have that
in the playbook," the AFC's leading passer said of his touchdown
pass over the middle to Thurman
Thomas with S1 seconds to go.
' "In the five years I've been
here," added Thomas, who also
rushed for 142 yards, "he's read it
right every time."
In the last five years, the Bills
have read the Jets just right.
They've won 10 in a row against

TOUCH[)OWN!'- Buffalo ~unning back
Kenneth Davis (23) dives over a teammate on his
way into the end z.one in the second quarter of

Modell pleased with Browns' progress
after team stretches winning streak

In the NFL...

P!tilldelphio '"'"' 3 6 2
w...,.,.,......... 3 6 0

·

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

EuMro Dl•ialon
Teun
W L T PeL PFPA
Miuni ................ 6 I 0 .8l7 111125
Buffalo............... l 2 0 .714 190122
~ ....... 4 3 0 511 99132
N.Y. loU ... -........ I 6 0 .1 43 104147
New
0 7 0 .000 10176

&amp;I..........

Adamo Dl..,lon
801\crl................ 6 1 1
Monlloll ............ l 3 2
Ruffolo............... l 3 0
Queboc.. ............. 4 3 I
Hartford !.. .......... 3 6 0
Ottawa ......... ...... I 1 0

c.......J DlvLIJon
WlllernDI•IIlon ·
Denver .......-...... S 3 0 .62.5
KanuaGty ...... 4 4 0 .500
Son~""'""' 3 4 0.429
LA. 1Wdon .,,,_ 3 S 0 .375
Seoale ..............., I 7 0 .Ill

121154

Ill i ZI
104136
122137
Sl !S8

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Eutem Dhll1lon
W L T PtL PFPA

o.uu .................

6 • o .857
Wubinpon........ 5 2 0 .714
P!tilldelphio....... s 2 o .714
N.Y. Oiln11........ 3 4 0 .429
,PhamU .............. 1 6 0 .1 43

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

12
11
9
8
3
2

GFCA
3 ~ 33
3l 29
37 37
32 21

36 24
37 34
33 26
37 42

24 SO
22 47

Wednesday's games
No... Jersey at Hartfard, 7:40p.m.
Butrtla at Toranto,7:40 p.m.
Tampa Bay 11 Mmtra.J, 7:40p.m..
SanJoeeat Oct:roit, 7:40p.m.
Cl!a"Y at Winnipo(, 8:40p.m.
Minnaou 11 BdmaniOfto 9'.40 p.m.

.429 121133
·.286 133119

N.Y. Oian&amp;~ll. Sc.aulc 10

Monday's sc:ore

Bulll!o 24, N.Y. Je~~ 2ll

Next week's aames
Sunday

Green Bay u lleltcat, I p.m.
Houlton at PitUburp, I p.m,
LA. l&amp;ml It Atlanta, 1 p.m.
Miami at N.Y. Jcu, t p.m.

New EnalanclatBuffalo, I p.m.
Tampt Say at New Orle.an&amp;, 1 p.m.

CLEVELAND ot CINCINNATI, .4
p.m.
lndianaPGlilat Stn:Dieao,4 p.m.
Philadelphia at Dallaa, 4 p.m.
San. Franciacoal ~ 4 p.m.
N.Y. Gianlo II Wllllin- .1 p.m.
OPEN DATE: Oenv•, ltlnou Cily,

_,
·-- .

LA. llaldon,-

•CidooF.' p.m.

In the NHI,....

WALES CONFIRENCE

WLT~CPCA

16 49 29
ll 41 Z1

11 36 32
10 32 ' 33

Holalmb.
NEW """"'''"
'fORK METS - Acquire•
Tony FmondO&amp;, .....,_,"""' lhe Son
o;..., Podno r,. Wally Wbildalnt. pildlcr, OJ. Dor.im, OUlficldlr.lftd a playrr tO
bo nimad lour. E.-lho 1!'93 cplicn
m the CCI'Ilr'acl of Flllftllldez. Anncunoed
they will not offer salaey albi1ratioll 1.0
Willie lllllddpb. .......6 """"""'· KOYin
6111. OIIICICldar, ond ~ l - pilcher.
Declined ta uerdse 1hdr option on the
cmtnct ot ](W)Cil, Nunod Brad Sloaa na-tional cn»Khoc:br. JWn Mill« KGU\inJ
aupervUar fOJ Notlh..a CaW'omia, and
Mlrl&lt; Oieper JCGULin............ r,. Indiana, KD~u.dr:J, MidUpl and Ohio.

33 32
31 42

Tonl~ht's games
Pitubur&amp;h at Ottawa, 7:40p.m.
Tamp~~lhy at Quebec, 7:40p.m.
Loa Anselea at N.Y. (alandcn, 7:40
p.m.

.851 216 12.5
.714 117 82

Wolhin-ll, MiMOIOia l3
San Dieao24, nm~21
CLEVEUND 19, New En&amp;Jand 17
·Dallu 21, L.A. Rai4m ll
lndimlpolil 31 , Mi•mi 20
Piwbu.rah '!1 , K1nsu Chy J
OPEN DATE: Atlanta, L. A. R1ma,
New Odean1, San FrancUco.

N.V. . _ ... , 7, 2 I
N.r. ~ .... l 3 I
Now _,. ........ ' • 0

a

COLORADO ROCKJES - Sipc4
Nelson Liriano, infielder, Chril Joan,
...ulddor, 10d Ilona !l;da,aw IIIII Scou

Monday's scores

113 1?7

- - 26, &lt;lNCINNATI 10
Deuoit 31, Tampt Bay 7
Philade1phi• 7, AloenU. 3

PltuburP .......... 7, 0 2

him to

\o otter aa1ary

•

ubltlitian 10 IW..U. N--. pllcftar.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS -An'
IIIIUIICOd IIIey WiiiiiOl olfcr Nilry ul!il4tion to Deve W"uafield lftd Candy Maldcln-ado, c:utf'lddcn . DrdiiiOd to uen::iac: their
~ on lhe c:ordrKU ol01VC Slicb and
Milk Edlhom, pildlcn.

BaskelbaU

N.Y. Ran&amp;m 8, Ptilladelpttia 4
Winnipeg6, Washington 2
SL l..ol.ail 4, San Ja~e I

Sunday's S&lt;ores

1-

41
47
40
38
26
18

mau.-O:~od

two-,... OCilCI'IICt.

26
38
30
30
36
40

Smythe Dl ... lon
Cl!pzy .............. 6 3 o
Loo AnJeleo....... l 3 I
Vanoouwe:r ......... 4 3 J
WinNpea ........... 4 6 0
Edmon..., """"" I 8 I
SanJc.e ............. 1 I 0

Wuhing&amp;m It VIIICOUY~. 10:40 p.m.

QUal" 30. Gn.n Boy 10

-

13
12
10
9
6
2

Nom. DIYlalan
W L T Pll.
MinniiiOla .......... .5 3 1 11
Toi'OIIIO ............. , l 3 I 11
Petrol~................ 5 4 0 10
Tampa Bay ........ 4 4 1
9
• Cbieoao.............. l l I
7
SL Louil ............ 3 6 I
7

Western Dl"lllon
6 1 0
S 2 0
3 4 0
2 S 0

'I'EXAIIANOI!RS - N - 1Cooia
' Kenned1

Tum

167 1;2
136 10S
143 n
150 161

Ctntral DMskln
Minnoo... ........ l 2 0 .714 17312?
Chiflao.............. 4 3 0 .l71 1691ll
Tampo Boy ........ 3 4 0 .429 1361 52
J)ouoiL .... .. ....... . 2 l 0 .286144135
a.- Boy.......... 2 5 0 .2!6 901 51
San FBnciaco ....
New Odtml .. ~··
L.A. Jtamo .........
Allant. •..•. :..... -..

,..,.._T--l•p~.

8 42 49
6 Zl 3l

NatloaaltMa•

"""'""'
'"'""""' l 2 0 .714 179 12ll
Piillburlh .......... s 2 o .714 131 n
clJM!L,\NO ... 4 3 o .m 1111 101
CINCINNA11.... 2 l 0 .216 109 174

Ten

"When Bill (Belichick) told me
that Philcox fractured his thumb 1
couldn't believe it,'' Modell said.
"We had to bring Mike Tomczak
in cold and he hadn't been with us
in training camp. Things did not
look very promising at that point.
But Tomczak has done well for us
!'fld the players seem to be developmg more and cOnfidence in him.''
Modell said the Browns showed
silOS of malurit}' by battling back
from a 17-9 fourth-quarter deficit
to beat the Patriots.
"that's a game we probably
would've lost last year," he said.
"I'm very satisfied with winning
the way we did. When we had that
long pass to Lawyer Tillman on the
firSt p~y of the game, I thooght it
.was gomg to be a blowout.

-

'

NCAA Division
1-AA football poll ·
OVERLAND PARX.. Kan. (AP) - ·
tanu mm. 1992 NCAA Di·
vision 1-M IOCJiboll poll, will\ fUll~ '
..... ;, Pl.... - . - .......... Dol.
2A , tol.ll ~ andlul .... '• ..nnkint;
The top 2.0

1Mt
T"IR
W-L-T l'to. W_..
l. Nmthan.lawa (.4) ..7..().0
sa l
2. Monlloll-- --'-l.f
71
l
3. ldaho ....~ .................6-1.0
73
2
4, MiddloT..... SL ....6-1.0
61
4
S. Nonh011tLouioiw6-W
63
l
6. a ........................7· l.O · 61
6
7. 1ldowoa ...............6-1.0
56
7
I, Samfonl .................6-1.0
52
II
9. Ric!om&lt;»d ...............6-1.0
41
11
10. WllliamAMuy ..6-1.0
41
10
tie. Yaunp~DW~~.St. .....S·l.-0
.tl
13
12. F1orido AolM ........5·~0
35
IS
13. SW Mi.oaui!S.. ....S-3-0
ll
14
2?
II
14. Villlnova ..............S·W
ll. MoN-SI. ........A-3-0
21
16 . E. ~ ..........5·2-0
19
17
17, lldo .... 81.,,.,,,,.6.1.() 151/Z
11. N. c...Jial A&amp;T :6-1.0
15
II
19. E. W........ . ....5•2-0 9 Ill 120
20. M•'* v ......J•l.O ~ I

Buebal

. -7 _.. _.,
A-~
BAL11MOIUI~ -Doclinod

-lbo
...-..,tlw... ' ··' '-

Natlonal 8 t!ket'all Auodllloa
NBA - Fiood Bill
lltaGil
PiltOnr c.w, S1.SOO (or a ft.pl foul
opinot O..;d Wood, San Aa....UO Spun
forwonl, ;, o
&amp;;'.';• ,.. 6cL 22.

J: R

HOUSTO

.

-

S,.po~~docl

v.....,. Mu...U. ponl.lor-...,.. Cor

violaticn lllw.m -...
MJLWAU~EI BUCJtS- Sipc4 .
Jawaaa OlAua, c...,., to • one•yeaJ
WI!_. lao- IIIII Mlchocl
w~~a, rorwan~a. MMta a1tt .. -..
.... IOd s........
IOd Jtevin
W'IIJiDIW ........

n--

SEATTLI! SUPBBSONJCS Wlivod Olvo Oovioo ond T.,_. Lewil.

........

FoolbaD
N.,_,F"'"1ooll'-"'
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS C1aiN4 Cnl&amp;. v• ..,., DOM11Ckl., off
waiwn tram U.liauiGII. oa.=.. Wai*
DooidWillaa.-r.

NBW OIUJIANIIAINTS- Acli"i-

od ViMe Doell.-· r..... i11i....t
AIHn'a. WaivM Cedric Mlck, eoniCfoo

-.

SEATIU! SEAHAWU ..;. Woivod
JMlGb az..., M
. ueiiWI.

.
ol lrlla c-,, pilelwr. from
lOX-

MINNESOTA TWINS - &lt;.'lol01od
Mih MU.tudlu, oaiCII•. oft 'aiv..

F

Th~ University of Rio Grande
Redwomen emerged victorious week, Rio Grande h·anded MOC
volleyball team continued to draw over Elon (S.C.), I 5-8,9-15, 15-12. opponent Urbana a loss of 15·3,
a bead on a berth in the District22 Billina Cooper dominated the 15-9, IS-I to strengthen their grip
Playoffs last week by placing sec- offense with IS kills, Kellina on the conference title.
"We didn't have to do too much
ond in a tournament and defeating COO!I(lr had 14, Hambel netted six
because
Urbana made a lot of
another Mid-Ohio Conference and Chapman supplied four. Billina
errors,
so
we
were able to get some
'val
Cooper
and
Harilbel
each
had
one
n .
of
our
freshmen
into the ihing,"
The Redwornen entered an invi- serving ace, while Billina Cooper
Fields
said.
tational at Milligan College in Ten- had eight digs, Hambel seven, and
In kills, BiUina Cooper again led
nessee Friday, where the team Kellina Cool'(lr six. Lindsey and
with
17 kills, while Hambel had
found itself pressed against some Stephanie McLaughlin each had
eight,
Turner six, Chapman five,
hefty competition. However, Coach five digs,_while Spears 'and ~m_ith
Kellina
Cooper five and Spears
P:J' Fields said the team left a e11ch had four. In bloc~s. B11lma
two.
Lindsey
had two serving aces,
g
account of itself.
C:ooper had seven, Kellma Cooper
while
Billina
Cooper and S~ars
"I don ' t want to take anything s1x, Hambcl three, and Chapman
each
had
one.
s·mith and Bdlina
away from them, but we'd have to· " and Turner had two eac~.
Cool'(lr
were
responsible
for three
beat .teams tougher lhan those to . G1ven C?nly a 20-mmute brC!Ik
digs
each,
while
Ham
bel
had six
get into the nationals," she said. "It before facmg Georgeto~n !lgam,
blocks,
and
Billina
Cooper
and
was a good exl'(lrience to see that the Redwomen were ehmu~a~ed
Chapman
had
four
each;
sort of thing, particularly for our when they fell· 2-lS, 1 ~-15. Bill~na
The Redwomen started this
freshmen. On the whole, I was very Cool'(lr nett~d mne k1lls, Kellma
week
at 29-8 and 10-1 in the conpleased with w)lat they did."
CO&lt;?per had s1x and Chapm~ three,
ference,
and open this week's comRio Grande opened in pool play whlle the Coo~ers and Lmdsey
p(ltition
tonight
at 7 in Lyne Center
against Wofford (S.C.) and handed each had four d•ss. In blocks, the
against
Cenual
State.
lheir opponents losses of 15-8, 8- . Cooper ll!ld Hambel each had rwo.
IS, 15-13. Billina Cooper led the
Ip thea only other match of the
offense foc the Redwomen with 14
. kiUs, while Amy Hambel had five,
Kellina Cooper and Jo Chapman
each had four, Michelle Turner netted three and Deana Smith had two.
Kellina Cooper had three serving aces in the match, with two
Chad Benson, the junior ·from
The Redwomen were idle this
SUJIP.Iied by Billina Cooper. p,{ean- Glenford who has emerged as one past weekend, but are expected to
while, Kristy Lindsey sparked the or the leading distance athletes for rejoin the men thi~ Friday in a
defense with five digs as BiUina the University or Rio Grande home triangular match with
Cooper added four, and Kellina men's cross country team, notched Bluffton and West Virginia Wes- ·
Cooper and Hambet'chipped in another personal accomplishment leyan.
with three. Billina CoqJer Blso had Saturday when he finished fli'St in
six blocks, while Hambel served up the Gettysburg (Pa.) Invitational.
Marauder trio included
four.
. With a time of 25:33, Benson
Milligan was Rio ·Grande's next also set a new course record, help- among tripmakers
victim, falling 16-14, 15-8 as Billi- ing propel the ReQmen to a thirdna Cooper fued in 1S kills, Kellina place finish in the 17-team coml'(lThree memblts of the Meigs
Cooper had nine, Turner had five, tition.
Marauder got f team - Chris
and Hambel and Kellina Cooper
Rio Grande earned 94 points for Knight, Benny Ewing and Reggie
each came up with three. Lindsey the race, which was won by the Pratt - also made the trip to the
again led in digs with five, while University of Maryland with 64. Division II stale golf tournament in
Hi!mbel and the Cooper sisters markers. Bloomsburg University Columbps, where the Marauders
were each credited with four. The finished second wilh 77.
• finished sixth in the state in lheir
Coopers each had seven blocks to
Chris Smith also assisted Rio first ever trip to the finals.
'
four from Turner and three by Grande's chances when he fmished
.Chapman.
fifth in tile race of 194 runners in
The Redwomen then suffered 25:43. Hidemitsu Maeda was 19th Thomas.gets hole-in-one
their fli'St loss of the invitational to in 26:01, followed by Condy
Jim Thomas Sr. of Lincoln Hill
the nationally-ranked Georgetown Richardson, 30th, 26:22; Mark
(Ky.), 7-IS, 9-1.5. Billina Coilper Bennett, 39th, 16:40; Mark in Pomeroy carded his first ever
again led in kills with 12, while McFann, 74th, 27:20; Jeff Roberts, hole-in-one recently at the Meigs
Hambel had six, Smith five, Kelli- JOist, 28:22; Kunihiko Takayama. County Golf Course.
Thomas aced the par 3, I 30 yard
na Cooper four and Chapman two. I 25th, 28:58; and Dan Longcay,
No.
·5 hole with a seven iron.
·Lindsey had a single servin&amp;;: !67th, 31:04.
and eight digs, while Kellilljl
er added six digs, and Billina
A DIRECf LINK TO PORNOGRAPHY
Cooper and Ham bel had four di$S
each. Billina Cooper netted s1x
A study by the North Carolina state police found
blocks.
that 75% of the state's convicted sex offenders had
The team broke out of the pool
with a IS-7,15-7 defeat of Conpornography in their homes.or cars.
verse (S .C.) as Billina Cooper
A study by the National Institute of Mental
jumped in with 17 kills, Kellina
Cooper added nine, Hambel had
Health of "recreational killers" found that most
seven, and Chapman and Lindsey
''feed on pornography.':, ·
·
had two apiece. Hambel, Chapman
and Michelle Spears each had a
Statistics indicate that about 1.2 million chiidren
single serving-ace, while Lindsey
are anually exploited through child pornography and
shored up the defense with eisht
digs. Kellina Cooper supplied six
prostitution.
digs, while Spears and Billina
In 1991 ~e Meigs County Children's Services
Cooper had four each. Kellina
· Cooper had six blocks and Chapreported 406 cases of child abuse. This would
man lhree.
'
include neglect, physical abuse, malnutrition and
Entering the semifinals, the

Rio's Benson first, team third
in 17-squad Gettysburg meet

TODAYI
992·2124

4

Offill

IIUD STICKS

First-place Steelers make Pittsburgh
smile again after Pirates' NLCS loss .

WHY VOTE FOR

JOHN LENTES

~pecitJllntroduetory

Offer/

.....Naif'

[

;

..,.

=.1
..

NEXT· COUNTY
PROSECUTOR?
SOLUTIONS

Meigs harriers head
to D-11 regional meet

these rising numbers, and we take particular note of
this that in 1991 tht:re were 58 cases of sexual allegations reported to Children's Services. That's
OVER - ONE CHll.D SEXUALLY AaUSED A
WEEK!
How many of these 8exual abuse allegations in
Meigs County are related to pornography material?
We' do not know, but according to statistics, aJarge
portion of them could be directly linked to the u$e of
pornographic material.
Pornography does affect all of us regarless· of
what the ~Jser/seller.says.
'Meigs and Middleport · . ,

99
...............
............_
.........
---=···==-·

But it wasn't simply an effort to
stabilize the invitalioll process that
led to the creation la$t January of
the 56-member College Football
Bowl Coalilion.
It emerged from resuucturing
touched off by the Big East Conference (Miami, Syracuse, etc.), the
Atlantic Coast Conference (Florida
State, Clemson, etc.) and Notre
Dame. They had beell shopping for
new bowl&amp;gJCCIIlenis.
To fill the bill; the Federal
Expr~ Orange Bowl, Mobile Cotton Bowl and USF&amp;G Sugar Bowl
joined forces; later the Fiesta Bowl
was added, too. And other bowls
and conferences also jumped into
the picture.
The result is a network of tiers·
that now determines the post-season matchups for conference winners, runners' up and OCher AP poll
leaders.
Doctors pusbina NHL
to require beadaear use
Why should NHL players be
required to wear headgear?
"The use of helmets and visors
serves as an imporlllllt safeguard,"
reminds James Leadingham, presi·
dent of the American Optometric
Association.
His group his joined its Canadian counterpart ill urging the
National Hockey League to require
the use of headgear.
Currently, the NHL allows its
players to toml'(lte without visors
1f they want to; and to compete
without helmets if they sign .a
waiver.
Eye experts say that unduly
in~s, physical risks; puts safety
second to vanity and sends the
WCOJ!Il message to young athletes.
(C)l992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Bonds, Boggs, Santiago among 26
players testing free-agent market

&gt;

CALL US

meanin&amp;less, because an outfJeldel
had to start even SQODet. The·key to
this was knowing the hitter, the
pitcher and the part.
Ex-Cleveland manager Oscar
Via concluded that DiMagio won
more games wilh his glove and arm
than wilh his bal.
The Yankee-outfielder averaged
2 J assisiS per season in his first
,three years in, the major leagues.
During his career, he averaged 13.7
assists per 1S4 games. lri 1936, he
led American League outfielders in
assisrs (22); in 193 7, he led them in
putouts (413); in 1941, he led them
In in double plays .(5); in 1947, he
led them in fielding average (.997).
DiMaggio was also ·known for
his ability to go back on a fly ball.
on Aug. 2, 1939. he made what
might have been the best (:Itch ever
in spacious old Yankee Stadium.
He robbed Detroit slugger Hank
Greenberg of an inside-the-park
home run. With his b~ck to the
plate, DiMag raced out to a spot
next 10 the newly installed monuments on the grass in center freld.
He grabbed the ball just shy of the
s1gn for "461 feet"
Years later, shortstop Phil Riz- .
zuto of the Yankees summed up:
" You got spoiled playing with
DiMaggio in back of you."
.
No more mid-November
scrambling for bowls
What's behind the new College
Football Bowl Coalition?
Thanks to a revamped system of
agreements in major college football, the old mid-November scramble for post-season berths is gone.
The 1992 selection date is Sunday,
Dec. 6 - no earlier than the availability of the final regular season
Associated Press poU.
.

of sportS:
"Where have you gone Joe
DiMiiJio?"
.
•
As a miller of fact, Jne. D. has
Qever "left and gone away." Forge~ those old Simon &amp; Garfunkel
l)'I'ICS. The Yankee Clipper is still
winning awards, long after what
was perhaps the best all-around
baseball career ever.
. Now he is· about to become the
· ~lilt recipi~t or the Rawlings Life:
ume Achievement Award for
F'ICiding Excellellce.
.
This makes up for the fact that
DiMaggio entered the Hall of Fame
without ::ver receiving the prestigious Rawlings Gold Glove
Award. Why not? The Gold Gloves
weren't established until 1957, six
years after he had retired.
The Clipper, who is 77 years
old, wil~ be honored on Thursday,
Nov. 5, m New Yorlc- along with
the 18 winners of the Gold Gloves
for 1992.
• According to old-timers,
DiMaggio was more than just
graceful in the outfield. They said
he always knew exactly what he
was doing. His smoolh way of runJUST OUT OF REACH - The New York
.
ning was enhanced by sound judgond period or Monday oiaht's NHL aame In
Rangers' Tie Doml (l8} ftnds the puck just out
ment and concelllration.
New York's Madison Square Garden, whk:b the
or read! of his stick, as Pblladelpbla's Garry
"The best thing he had - and
Rao11ers WOD 8-4. (AP)
I'll give you a tip - was his
Galley moves in to take coatrol durln1 the lee:·
head," former New Yorlc Yankees
-·
manager Casey Stengel once said.
So DiMaggio. s trademark -l)is
"hurried.grace," as sportswriter
Jimmy Cannon put it - wasn't
only a marter of ~ysical ability or
luck.
By KEN RAPPOPORT
Joal on a bullet from the left circle
It was the eighth straight loss for
Actually, the Great DiMa~gio
NEW YORK (AP) - On a m the second period, but it was · the visiting Sharks; who haven't used to claim that the phrase 'off
night ballyhooing Eric Lindros' hardly enough to help his strug- won since beating Winnipeg on with the crack of the bat" was
debut against the New York glin§ Flyers overcome the Rangers. opening night and have been
Rangers, Mike Gartner shared the
' There~s no question at 19 he's outscored 47-22.
spotlight wilh Maurice Richard.
one of the ·superstars in the
Jets 6, Capitals 2
"I feel privileged to be counted league,'' Rangers captain Mark
Bob Essensa made 21 of his 37
in that group" with Richard, said Messier said of Liddros . "He's saves in the first period and Evseny
Gartner after scoring twice, includ- going to get nothing but better with Davydov and Keith Ttachuk each
ing a milestone goal, to lead the time. Right now be's a threat had two goals1as Widnipeg beat
Rangers past the Philadelphia Fly- everytime he's on the ice.''
· · visiting Washington.
By RONALD BLUM
The Blue Jays decided to pay years to have the right."
ers 8-4 Monday night. ''I think that
In Other games, it was St Louis
Essensa was bombarded in the
NEW
YORK
(AP)
Barry
Eichhorn
a $150,000 bl!yout rather
I just passed a legend.''
Gilben said he didn't envision
4, San Jose I, and Winnipeg 6, fli'StperiodastheCapitalstooka2- Bonds, Mark McGwire and Ruben
than
a
$2
million salary next year, any chance that the outfie~r, who
· Gartner's goals were the S44th Wasliington 2. .
0 lead on goals by Peter Bondra Sierra: are free, and Toronto told
and gave the b)jured Stieb a $1 mil- hit .311 this year with 34 homers
and 54 5th of his career, movin~ ·
Blues 4, Sharks 1
and Paul MacDermid.
World
.Series
hero
Dave
Winfield
lion buyout rather than a $3.5 mil- and 103 RBis, would re-sign with
him past the legendary "Rocket'
Nelson Emerson had a goal and
But Troy Murray sparked the he can be, too.
lion salary. Gillick said he'd like to Pittsburgh.
.
into ninth place on the all-time an assist as StLouis took out some Jets' second-period comeback
Greg
Maddux,
Doug
Drabek,
invite
Stieb
to
spring
training
as
a
"Barry put his house up for
NHLlist.
early-season frustration on the when he scored at at 7:21. Davy- Wade Boggs, Benito Santiago,
"It's prett¥ amazing company,'' woeful Sharks.
dov tied the score two minutes later John Smiley and Chris Bosio were non-roster player, but suggested the sale. That should answer that,"
said Ganner, whose sense of the
The Blues ended a ihree-game and Winnipeg went up 4-2 on among the 26 players to file for 14-year Toronto veteran look else- Gilben said. "Why would Pitts'- .
where. Gillick would like to re-sign burgh wait all this time if Pittsdramatic.upstaged Lindros' first winless stteak (0-2-1) and won for power-play goals by Teemu
free
agency
Monday
as
baseball's
the others.
burRh had an interest in signing
game against the Rangers, the team only the third time overall (3-6-1) Selanne and Davydov at 14:41 and
business
season
began.
There
are
"Usually our style is to do him'?"
'
that lost him in an arbitrator's deci- even though Brett Hull failed to 15:48.
166
players
pote=~
eligible
to
things
face
to
face,''
Gillick
said.
Sietra may wind up re-signing .
sion last spring.
score a goat for the fifth straight
Tkachuk scored twice in the file by the Nov. 8
inc.
·
"Certainly the timing isn't very with Oakland, but he flied for free
Lindros did score a spectacular game and had just one shot on soal. third period.
Just 90 minutes after a tri- good, but we felt with the o~u­ agency 'anyway. His agent, Bob
umphant parade through the streets nity to do thinf~ in person, it s bet- Woolf, has been in contact with
of Toronto and rally inside the Sky· ter than doing 11 over thef):'-e."
Athletics general manager Sandy
Dome, the Blue Jays said they
Players who become
agents Alderson. . ·
wouldn't oller salary arbiUation to don't have to be protected in the
"We'll continue to talk," Woolf
Winfield and Candy Maldonado Nov. 17 expansion drafL Few sign- said
.
and declined to exercise 1993 ings are expected until after the
Several teams didit't wait until
B;t ALAN ROBINSON
Thursday's deadline to offer salary
''I- remember' when people were chop and by dousing Cowher with opeioos oo pitchers Dave Stieb ~ draft. '
Mark Eichhorn. That allows them
"We wanted to protect .our arbitration to 35 potential free
PITTSBURGH (AP) - It's saying the Pittsburgh S teelers Gatorade.
to file for free agency, an early organization down ~low .)vith the agents, players covered by the
nearly November, and the Pitts· wouldn't win two games,'' nose
"We knew he~ be fired up, indication
that teams will take a IS~· and we lhmk we can re- restriction apinst repeat free agen•
burgh Steelers are in the last place tackle Garry Howe said. "But com ins back to Kansas City,''
they expected nearly halfway when we play now, lhe Pitrsburgh rookie safety Darren Perry said. more bottom-line approach to sign h1m,'~ Gillick said of Win- cy within f1ve years. Among the
negotiations this winter.
field.
players whom teams declined tO ·
through the NFL season: first Steelen expect to win.''
"He just. had that loot in his eye.
"It's
a
tough
thing
to
do
an
place.
'
Bonds,
who
is
unlikely
to
rearbitrate
with were Willie RanEven if nObody else does.
Deep down inside, he wanted this
hour-and-a-half
after
celebrating
sign
with
Piusburgh,
put
hiS
house
dolph,
Kevin
Bass and Barry Jones
These new-look, new:generalion
They were 13' 1/2-point under- one reall bad.''
with
50,000
people,"
Blue
Jays
in
Coraopolis,
Pa.,
up
for
sale
on
of the New York Mets and Edwin
Steelers witli the brand-new coach dogs for their season opener in
Whals happening to the SteelNunez of Texas. Jn addition, Baltiare there for the very same ~n Houston but won. They were 81/2- ers has been good for the psyche of · ¥eneral manager Pat Gillick said. Monday.
'It's not very pleasant, I'll tell
"Barry's anxious to stan talk- more said it would not exercise it.i
they were the NFL's dominant point underdogs Sunday night in an entire city. Pittsburgh sports
ing," sa1d Bonds' agent, Dennis $600,000 Option on pitcher Mik~
team in lhe late 1970s: defense.
Kansas City but won. They're of( fans were in a state of near ,depres- you.''
Toronto
wants
its
players
back,
, '
"He's waited almost seven Flanagan.
Gilbert
The Steelers are 5-2 and tied to lheir best start since they were 9- sion after Atlanta's ninth-inning
but
at
lower
prices.
Winfield,
folwith Houston for the AFC Cenual 2 in 1983, and lhey now get to fin- comeback in Game 7 of the NL
lead. And guess who's coming to ish the season by playing six of playoffs; so many called talk shows lowing a 26chomer;--108-RBI seacould have possibly doubled
town Sunday? The Oilers, who lheir last nine in Pittsburgh.
to say they barely slept that night · son,
his
$2.3
million salary m arbitrahave already lost to the Steeters in
"The Steelen just drilled us," that a TV station brought in a
tion,
and
Maldonado, after hitting
Houston.
Chiefs coach Marty Scholten- . spons psychologist to offer coun20
homers,
could have gotten a
"Houston's coming to town, heimer said.
· · '
seling.
large
raise
from
his income of
we're tied for first place and we
With no big-name talents on
He couldn't have prescribed $1,375,000.
.
hol'(l there's a lot of cold weather offense - how many people con- anything better than a 7-0-2 sea"We'll have some discusand snow," Rod Woodson said. sidered Barry Foster a Pro Bowl- son-ol'(lning run by the Penguins
"We've got something to play for caliber back before the season and the Steelers' best start in nearly sions," said Winfield, whose 11thinning double Saturday night gave
1Uid we're all gojng to be excited." SIIWtetl? - and with a defease that adecade.
·
Toronto
a 4-3 victory over Atlanta
The Steelers haven't played Underachieved in 1991, the Steelers
The Steelers' transformation
many meaningful November games . were considered the longest of from the NFL' s sixth-worst defense and the World Series in six .games.
in Pit\SbUrgh since the 1970s, so shots just to make the playoffs. ·
last year to one of the best in 1992
it's no surprise they were talking
Sports briefs
But nobOdy - not even new hasn't just been the new system
about the Oilers almost before coach Bill Cowher and defensive that Cowher and Capers have
they'd left the field foUo'!liRR Sun- coordinator Dom Capers - could installed and the attitude and enlhuBasketball
day night's 27-3 victory in Kansas have expected this.
NEW YORK (AP) - Bill
siasm they've instilled.
·
City.
Through seven games, the SteelPittsburgh had the NFL 's top- Laimbeer of the Detroit Pistons
en have allowed just 77 points, rated pass defense two years ago, was fined $7,500 by Rod Thorn,
tying with Philadelphia for the only to slip to 26th.overall among the ~BA's vice pCCSident for OJ?CC·
NFL low. They've given up just the 28 NFL teams last season; the ations, for a flagrant foul agamst
IWOI CAUSE OF CliME:
three points in their last two games, talent was lhm. but the confidence
David Wood of San Antonio in an . _
1. Drug/Alcohol ABuse
beatinR Cincinnati 20-0 last Mon- wasn'L
exhibition game Thursday night ·
2. Unemployment
The Meigs Marauder cross day and holding Kansas City to a
Now, the Steeler~ don't just and six assists in three games, was
named
NHL
player
of
the
week
for
country team has advanced to Sat- field JOal.
3. Poor Education
think they can win, they think they ·
They permitted just 297 total will win. It's made a huge differ- the second consecutive week.
urday s regional competition in
4. Abusive Family Life
Lancaster with a fourth place finish yards in those .rwo games -118 to ence in a franchise that' has won
.Basketball
in the Division U Southeast District Cincinnati, 179 to Kansas City HOUSTON (AP) - The Houstwo playoff gwnes in the 13 years
meet held at the University of Rio and just 128 net yards passing. since the Steelers last won the ton Rockets suspended guanl VerSOLUTIONS:
Cincmnati's Boomer Esiason, who SuperBowl. ·
Grande.
non Maxwell. for one-game for
1. Earmark money from Prosec:utor's Budget for schooi"
Waverly won with a score of 64, had a 409-yard pme against them
anti-drug/alcohol · programs and affective treat"I'm excited about what's hap- "for violation of team rules."
followed by Piketon with an 86. three years ~. threw for only 86 pening and I hope the fans are, Maxwell will miss tonight's exhibi·
mentldlvttrllon system for addiCts. .
.
Fairland finished in third place yards. The Chiefs' Dave Krieg was . too," Cowher said.
tion game against Datlas in Mexico
2. Actively work, as legal advisor to the Comwith a score of 91, followed by only 9 of 27 for 82 yards and was
City.
mlaslonars/Piannlng Commission, to bring in outside
Meigs with a 126 and Warren intercej!ICd three times.
joba and help local axpantlon.
Local with a 168. Finishing in sixth
3. Fight to equalize funding between rural and waalth'y
The Steelen, who have made
place was Wheelersburg followed
dllllllctl by filing .ult ...... tied.
.
by Portsmouth (7th), Ironton (8th), the playoffs only once since 1984,
4. Rafonn the Juvenile jutllce aystam 10 that schools are
Washington Court House (9th}, haven't played this kind of runp1acu of learning without dllruptlont.
.
Gallia Academy (10th), Rock Hill stuffmg, •n-your-face defense since
s.
Effectively
fight
alcohol
abuse,
texual
abuse
and
(lith), Sheridan (12th}, Jackson the Steel Curtain had three straight
phytlcal abUM of chlkiNn.
·
(13tb). Athens (14th), Minford shutouts and five ov~l in 1976.
6.
Work
to
stop
taenage
pregnancy
and
prosecute ac:tutta
(15th), West Union (16th) and
"We can't be content wilh win·who take acmttlage of minora.
•
Hillsboro (17th).
5.
ning
ballgames,"
linebacker
Greg
7.
Effective
"neighborhood
watch"
program•
fundld
by
Schools t!lat competiting but
Proaec~or's budgel
·
had no team score included Lloyd said. "We've &amp;ot to shut
them
down.
We
w~re
ticked
off
Si..hyS•*Alexander, New Lexington, Northwest, River Valley, South Point when (Kansas City) sot that field
Aihrtsbtra
goal."
and Unioto.
ln•du:
1, o-..
.
For the Marauders, PJ. ChadCowher, the Chiefs' defensive
A+•lalllhih "'
well finished in lith place out of coonlinator the last three ICBSOIIS,
121 runners, and Nathtin Blloy fin- obviously wanted to win badly
ished in 12th. Crockett ROUJh fin- . S!Jnday, 11ain~t his old team and
ished in 30th, followed by Bill hiS old boss. His defense Wlllted it
Toundas (36th), I'Jlillip Edmonds
(37th), Bobby Johnson (66th) and even more, and they celebrated
lfterwardl by tauntin&amp; the Chiefs'
Randall Johnson (1131h).
fa.!JI with their own tomahawk

N.Y. Rangers, Winnipeg, St. Louis
winners in abbreviated NHL slate

other forms of child abuse. We are concerned with

DOMIIO'S lOW

Transactlo118

-~
IIOITOfll

Loion-.

'

meanwhile, snapped a two-game
slide in which their muddled nohuddle scored just I:) points. They
are S-2.
·
The Bills, losers of twO in a row
after a 4-0 start, didn't gel going
offensively until the second quarter. Cary Blanchard's 42-yard field
goal gave New York a 3-0 lead
·after one period.
.
·
Ken Davis dived in from the
two for Buffalo's fust touchdown ·
S4 seconds into the second quarter.
Blanchard made a 40-yarder, but
the Bills took a 14-6 halftime lead
with a 62-yard drive in 43 seconds.
James Lofton scored on a 16-yard
pass from KeUy with 18 seconds to
go in the half.
"This tyl'(l of victory is a big
boost for us," Thomas said. "No
matter what the circumslllllces, the
Jets will play us tough. But we've
· got a lot of character."
Which they showed by scoring
immediately after all but one of
New York's scores. In the third
!l(lriod, the Jets went 84 yards in 10
plays and Pal Chaffey ran in from
the one, making it 14-13. The Bills
came back with Steve Christie's
33-yard field goal.
·
Then the Jers took the lead, only
to leave too much time for Kelly
and his arsenal.

Redwomen
continue
playoff
push
.

. Monday ni11ht's AFC East matcbup against the
host New York Jets lo East Rutherford, N.J.,
which the Bills won 24·20. (AP)
'

CLEVELAND (AP) - Cleve- one game off the pace in the AFC
land Browns president Art ModeU, Central. Who knows what could
encouraged by his team's 19-17 happen this year? It could be a
victory Sunday over the Patriots, wide-open chase. I' m very
says this weekend 's game with pleased."
Cincinnati could be a pivotal one.
Modell stopped short of saying
"It's a big one,' he said Mon- the Browns ·are in the playoff hunt.
day. "ll's a divisional game and Last year, he said that when the
right now we're undefeated in the Browns were 4-4 and took plenty
division with our victory over PillS- of flak for the comment af~r the
burgh. And they showed how tough Browns went 2-6 the rest of the
they are by winning big in Kansas way ..
City."
. "1','? not makinJI any predicModell was obviously a happy uons, Modell sa•d. "I'm just
man after the Browns' come-from- happy about the fact that we've
behind victory over New England, already won four games this year
The victory was the Browns' and last year we won six all year."
Modell said he never expected
third straight and put them above
.500 (4-3) for lhe fast lime since the Browns would be 4-3 after losWeek 31ast seasOh (2·1).
ing quarterbacks Bernie Kosar
"Right now, I couldn't be hap- (ilnlde) and Todd Philcox (thumb)
·
pier," Modell said. "We're only and slipping to 1-3.

New York, which also has fallen
six llrliaht times on Monday nisbt.
three tirnea to Butralo.
"I know they were lucky to get
out of.here alive," Jets raclde Irv
Eatman said. "We kicked their·
butts, but we didn't get more points
than they did.''
They came close, thanks to a
77-yard drive to Brad Baxter's oneyard TD run for the !'ead. Ken
O'Brien replaced injured staner
Browning Nagle (shoulder, arch)
and took the Jets the fmal 55 yards.
ROb Moore d10pped a long pass in
the end zone on which James
Williams· was flagged for interference just before Baxter scored.
"I didn't think they would get
any poin~ lhere, especially after
we sacked Kelly on the fust play,"
Jets safety Lonnie Youn~ said
about tile winning drive. ' We're
pros, like everybody else, and
we've got to make the plays.
"There are all kinds of great
quarterbacks and wide receivers,
and we see them each week. He
took their team and marched ihem
down the field and put pointS on
the board and we came out•.losers
again. ••
'
For the sixth time in seven
games this season . The Bills ,

By HOWARD SINER
Toclay's questions in 4hc world

FREE INSPECTI&lt;&gt;~

SHAVER REPAIR CLINIC

.•3,

(All Bran~s) .

a.

TUESDAY, OCT. 27,4 P.&amp;·7 P.M•

FRUTH PHARMACY

.I

\I
--~---·-·

--

..

'

716 I. Seco•d Awe. • Middle rt, Ohio

VOTE JOHN LENTES

A Competent and Dependable Attorney

FOR A BEITER MEIGS COUNTY

�•

'

By The Bend
.

'

.
~ewis-Manley

'

:m-2044.
'

.
~

POMEROY • Trinity Church
Senior Choir is taking orders for
'homemade vegetable soup and
. ~cken and noodle soup. The seup
; wiD be made Tuesday and will be.
·available for piCk-up late that after·
noon. Orders may be placed by
calling 992-3128 by Monday
evening. 1)le price is $2 per quart. .
POMEROY • Health Recovery
and Meigs County MADD will
.hold an open house Tuesday from
4-8 p.m. 119 Buuemut Avenue in
fomeroy. Refreshments will be
available.

..

• MIDDL.EPORT • Middleport
•PTO will serve a grilled.dinner .
•Tuesday at 6 p.m. prior to the
:meeting. Hamburgers or hot dogs
:win be available. Cost is SJ.SO for
:adults and $3 for students. Great
•Gault and Sandra will present
'"Magic on Parade" after the meeting at 7 p.m.

security, legislative, ·poppy ud
public ,..lations, Mrs. HampiDn.
Mr$. Richards llld Mrl. Hampton spoke on reaolutions coac:eming prOtecting the American 0.,,
POW-MIA, calling on Congrea to
designate Dec. 7 at Pearl Harbor
Day, and prayer in public ICboola
by the delegates auending the 74th
national convention.
Bulk mailings from departm~nt
headquarters were distributed. '
Mls. Richards was elected delegate to the fall conference held in
Athens. Mrs. Bowles was alremate.
Refreshmert~ were served by .·
Mrs. Hampton.
.
Prayer for peace and closing
ceremonies by the president concluded the meeting.
MD. Johnson wiD be hostess for
the November meeting.

Th.e Mei~s
County Scot!lsh Rile Club wlll
hold its quartedy meeting Tuesday
an p.m. at the Middlepon Masonic Temple. Officers will be elecled.
All Scottish Rite Masons inviled. ·
RACINE • Racine Ruritan Oub
will meet Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at
Star Mill Park.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY • The Republican
Executive Committee will meet
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at headquarters, Main Street, Pomeroy. The
Republican Women's Club will
meet there at 7 p.m. Thursday.
CHESTER • There will be a
haunted house at the old Chester
Court House Wednesday, Thursday
and Saturday from 7-10 p.m.
Admission to the house is free of
charge and the ,public is invited.
LONG BOTTOM • Mt. Olive
Community Church, Long Bottom
will have revival, Wednesday
through Saturday at 7 p.m. nightly.
Rev. Lswrence Parsons is the evanfie lin. Pastor Lawrence "Bush
mvites die public.
THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS • Trick-ortreat in Tuppers Plains will be
Thursday from 6-7 p.m. The siren
will sound to begin and end the
hour. The fJTe depanment will be
on hand to assist the trick-or-

ll'eaters.

REEDSVILLE • Eastern Local
School Board will meet ThUrsday
: MIDDLEPORT • Work on sta· at 7 p.m. at Riverview Elementary.
·lions at Sleepy Hollow in prepara:tion for the annual Halloween party CHESTER • Trick or treat in
;'I]Jursday night wiD begin Tuesday Chester wiD be Thursday from 6-7
.,at.S:30 p.m. Volunreers are needed p.m. The siren wiD sound to begin
-tousist with the work.
and end the hour.
~

'

~

.. :Friendly Circle program
· ' Alice GloiJokar presented a pro• : gram based on Genesis at the
· • recent meeting of the Friendly Cir·
: cle of Trinity Church.
! .. She had many readings from
. " Autumn Ideals." She also read an
: article on "October" telling of
many uses of the faUen leaves. One
, pi how crumbled leaves are food
~f91' some insects. ·
• :- An offering was taken and Gay
; Pmin gave the prayer.
.• • Mrs. Perrin presided at the
~g and thanked everyone who
hel{led at the .bazaar and luncheon
Wring the Slemwheel festival.
· • · The flower boxes at the church
will he replanted in the near future.
·Maida Mora and Clarice Krautter
:ue in charge of the boxes.
: . Christmas gifts for senior citi·
·UIJs and shut-ins were discussed.
:!!be Christinas dinner will be Dec.
' H at 6 p.m. along with a gift
l:xcbjlllgc. ·

RACHELLE DAVIS

AnnounCe birth
.
of second child

.

Everyone was reminded to bring
items for the Meigs Cooperative .
Food Pantry. Paper products and
soaps are needed. These are to be
brought to die church the ftrst Sunday of the mooth.
A tape from the National Asso~iation of Congregational Churches
entitled "Congregational Missions"
was shown. The missionaries teach
. people to take care of themselves.
~ome missions are in Greece, Mex·
teo, Hondorus, Nigeria. Phillipines
and many more. Christian htgher
ed~cation.are in Piedmont. Ga., and
Oltvet, Mtch.
Carl Nickles and Ralph Pratt
were added to the prayer line, .
...._ A dessen course was served to
u members and on gueSt, Jeannine
Offutt, at a table decoraled with the
Halloween theme. Favors were
trick-or-treat bags of candy.
Hostesses )Vere Noona LQuise Jew~
en and Peggy Harris.

chile!, a d••gl'ler, Rachellc Rae, on
A11g. 27 at O'Bieness Memorial
Hospillll. ·
· ·
She weighed five pounds and 13
ounces and 'IVliS 19 and one-half
inChes loog.
• Grandparents are Tom and Janice Reu~. Pomeltiy; Raymond and
Frances ReQter, Middleport; Mar·
guerite Km, Dinnin~. AI.; and
BiD and Lucille DaVIS, Middleport.
Mr. and Mn. Davis also have
anothez daughter, ~yan.

Star Grange has
Halloween party

·New club holds charter meeting

:a~ .

le••li••

31904
CreekRo••
..... ltport, o•lo

Winners in the costume judging
held recently at the Star Grange
Halloween party were: age 0-10,
ugliest, Eric Montgomery, prettiest,
Stacey Macomber, most original,
Chelsea Montgomery, funniest,
Emily Ashley; age 10-20 category,
ugliest, Mike Macomber, jlreuiest,
Whitney Ashley; most original
Rachel Ashley, weirdest, Alan L.
Smith, funniest, Ryan Watson,·
adult cate~, ugliest, Alan IJalli·
day, pretttest, Linda MontgOmery,
most original Rick and Ian
Maccxnber, weirdest, Keith Ashley,
. and funniest, Emma Ashley.
Following the costume judging
a poti11ck supper was enjoyed by ·
approximately S4 persons in aueil·
dance.
The evening program be2am
with a presentation of ~O .• v-... ar
golden sheaf certificate to
mood Holliday: He and his ..,;r,,_"' 1
Marilyn, who now reside in
fomia, b11t continue their grugc
membership here and aaend when
they are here visiting his father,
John Holliday, who had received
his 6S-year membership certificate
a couple of m011ths ago.
· Norm.a Torres.~igs County
Health Department, spoke to the
grange on the health levy which is ·
oo the November ballot.
Everyone present then went
through the haunted bouse conduct·
ed by the junior grange members.
Games and activities conclUded.
the evenings ·activities. .

,/!j

Rutial Cildwell will celebrate
her 80th birtildar Friday with a
card shower. c.ds may be sent to
40878 Old Seven Road, ReedsviUe, ·
Ohio4S7n.

Final plans made
The Rutland Fire Department
Ladies Auxiliary met recently to
make final plans for the Rutland
fireman's turkey supper 10 be held
Nov. 19 with ~lng 10 begin ll S
p.m.
Tickets II'C available from any
fir,eman or auxiliary member or
from Rutland 0ep1rt1nent Store.

10/l/92tfl

GUN SHOOT
Public Notice

IULUnl IOAID DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DIY IEFORE
PUILIClnOI
I

U

Dl

Tno prlct hU DHn roc~uc»&lt;~to $68,900 ond
, _ Ononclng al up IO 110% o! pu!CI-.
IUI10Urt moy be ~· ·... quollylng pet'·
son to buy wry ntc1 home on 3~ ac::ra In
Raclno. 4 BA. 3 b-. 2 flllllgOS, rented 1 .
BR opt Property r.cludea ~ .800 sq. ft. 1111111 ·
bldg.
Cd 614·992·71041or

I.

HAUNTED MANOR
OCTOBER 26thru 31
7:00 to 9:00 P.M.
FRENCH ART COLONY
530 Firat Ave. • Gallipolis, Oh.
Admission - $2.00

••eeL

•r:

NOTICE OF ELECT10N ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
lltE TEN MILL UMITATION
NOTICE 11 hereby given .
that In purau1nco of 1
ReeoluUon of the Board ol
,.__ of Ito Townahlp of
lolplo, Pagavlllo Ohio,
peeled oit the 4th lilly ol
Auguot, 18t2 ltoro will be
•uiHnlttecl to • voto of tha
people of Mid aubdlvlalon
at 'a Gen•el Eleotl011 to be
held In tho Townehlp of
lclplo, Ohio, ol tho regular
pi- of voting therein, on
the 3rd day of November,
11112, the queatlon of levy·
log e lox, In tliChl oltht
tan mill llml..tlon tor tho
benefit ol Scipio fowMhlp
for tho purpose of fire

a sheik or two. People with grand

projects in faraway place.s. Or if itS Bank One,
it can stay a little closer to home. And
· be ready when a house in the-neighborhood

:t

..

BankOne,we always want to be in a position
to do "Whatever it takes" to help you

·outihe day you need us. Like today maybe. .

What&amp;rit takes:

'

JW«CM,ATH!Nii NA.IofNrt'FOC

EXCAVATING

AVCTJONJIZR: RICit PEARSON... ·.
OWNERS: H0WARDAr¥DGHACE S'n!RGEON

SON FAMILY
RESTAUUNT
tallr ''" •·•· • taoo P·•·

·

773-5785
TERIIS:Caah orCIIeoll with ID. Out olo.. to buyoramuat

MASON, WV

..
'

'

FREE ESTIMATES

992·3838
I,

~·

, l . . ..... , .. . . . . . . . . , ... , . . ...

TRAILER It~
L.ANDCLEAJI

D

UMEITONE-TIIUCKING

Nal Ruponolble 1or -~~or 11111 or~
u-&gt;11d lnd lldndtd In Ohio, KanllJCl&lt;y, and Well VIrginia lfl6

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HOllE liTES end .

ORIVEWAYSINSt

lwve i -IINtnlllelter of cradll No.Ercoptlonol

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PARTS

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~PAINTING

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•~

"Tab 7H
0.1 01 PIRifllg
· - 1M U1 0./IFw y,.•
INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR
FREE ESTIMAJES
HAYl IIFEIINGS

TJ"He

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..

1oN/

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC. .
New Homes • VInyl Siding
·.
New Garages • Replacement wrndowa·
Room Additions • Roofing
.

He,rb Shop Opea for Foil

CNo S•llllay Calls)
2112192Mrr

endCI'1IIIIIrl
Eliminate tho midcle m..
- buy wholeaele lr0111
Connie.

.

614·949·2101 • 949·2860
or 985·3839

ATTN: Local Crall Shopt

Hlndcralted IWIIII••
wreaths end p.tpourrl
auppllea.
HOURS: 10 em-5 pm
Wed.·Sol tG-11-N

,

m ·: ~

i • .

Ah• 6 p.m. 614-985-4180

52100S.LUI
l•ciH, Ollie

r-er. ow.

BULLDO~!! 1~KHoE
onciTRAiiNtUI: WORK
AVAII.AIL2.
SEPTIC IYSTEIII,

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY

LUNCH

{F...iy~IIMps-1 :

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

CHARLIE'S

AUCTIONEER NOTE: Thl•.it 11uptrc/nn, lop qulilly aucllm.
Don~ min rhlt rinol·

'•

P.O. lea 194 Wt•., .
IA&lt;I3_~

HOUSE FOR.SALE
BY OWNER
12 Year old ranch type hou~e. 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, 1'lz car garage
and breezeway, central air and heat
pump, many extras.
On 2 acres of land.
Eastern School District.
Blacktop roads Co. Rd. 28 and 32.
949-2860, 949-2801 or 985-3839

WI

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•FREE INSTALLATION• Whh any phone purch•e'
through October 31
-•
Service ratee from $111.115 per month.
lncluciM 180 minute• of off-peak air time.
Leealng available from $15.00 per month.
FOR MORE INFORMATION
RIGGS AT

MORRIS
GARAGE DOOR SERVICE
f.'!!!mll TRY OUR lEW ~·

II.!Dmil StEEL INSUUTED II1E
RAISED PANEL GAUGE DOOR .·
INSTALLED PRICES
9x7-$275.00 16•7-$450.00
OPENERS llnALLE~Y. HP-$200.00
With 2 Tranamlttera

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,........==, ,

12·5-tfn

FrH E1tlm11t•

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE .

BANKEONE

o:: •

COHNI~'S

PH. 614·99H591

T-:t:•-•"
~-~~~.: ~: .....

Rnldtntlol &amp; Commercial

949·2826

1-800-677 4994

=

Lawn Mowing,
Fertilizing, Weeding,
and Seeding.
Shrub •nd Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal

25

50%off .
closing costs .

rr

949·2391 or
1·800·837~ 1460

.FARM~~;;

er-.

becomes one room too small.At

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAUliNG; Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal

fU TIII.H
IDIUI. •mel

tl/181'82/lfn.

FIREWOOD FOR SALE

LICENSED end BONDED

PubliC Notice
'
NOTICE OF ELECT10N ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL UIIITATlON
NOTICE 11 hereby given
that In purauence of 1
Reaoludon of tho VIllage
Council of lhe Vlllege of
Racine, Roclne, Ohio,
pe81e&lt;l on lh• lth cloy of
July, 11192thwe wtn be oub·
mlttecllo • vol8 of tho , _
pie of 111d eubdlvlalon at •
General Election to bo held
In the Vlllege of Recine at
the regul• pi- of voting
therein, on· tho 3rd doy ol
November, 1812, lhe qUH·
lion of levying • t.x, In
exceoo ol the"'" mill lnlltalion, lor the benolll ol
Racine VIII"'J• lor tho pur·
p..e ofcurrantupon..o.
Said tax being • r111111Wal
of an uiaUng IIIII ol1 .7 Mill
ala rata notexcaodlng 1.7
mill lor aach 0111 dollar of
vokoatio~ which amoun• to
18Y8niHn cenll ($0.17) lor
ea~h one hundrad dollars of
valuation, lor live (5) poro.
Tha Polio lor aald
Election will open ot6:30
o'ciOc~ A.M. and .remain
open until 7:30 o'clock·P.M.
ohald lilly.
By order of the Board ol
Eloc:tlono of Melga Counly,
Ohio.
Henry L Hun1er, Chal111111n
Ri.. D. Smith, Director
Dated September 4, 1!1112
(10)6,13,20,27,4tc .

949·2168

Factory Choke
12.. Gauge Shot
Strl ctly Enforced
10-12-'112

• •t.:!i

Banks loon money to the people

:·~--------------~-----------

..

6:30P.M.

NEW~REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
.Gutter Cltilnlng
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

HAULING SERVKE
Public Notice
36970WRIIIIIIII
N011CI! OF ELECTION oN and fllllllnfl on Iron p1n at
•SAND -GRAVEL •DIRT
TAX LaVY IN EXCE88 OF S'T.II..,.and-"'alltllron
SIZED LIMESTONE
•LIMESTONE
TtE TEH MILL UIIITA110N pin at1•.11 t.t I!OteldaFOR SALE
NOTICE Ia hereby glvan ..,_ o1211.00 t..tto o reJ1.
al Ill pureuonce of • · lOad ap111e 111 lha grllflklll
Call614·992~
aatlulltn olllelloerd of eciulh-t proputy - 6637
Eduoatlon of the Malgo ancllhaalellngOIIIterlllllof
We Alao Haul Coli, Hay,
IAeollehool Dlatrlol, lllolp County Road Number 21;
St. Rt. 7
Um'e, Corn, Grain
c-ty. Ohio, paned Oft 1lio ·
. dog..... 37 20"
Cheshire, OH.
end Wood
11111 dey el Auguet, 1!1112 w.
grantoN - 1
(614) 992-3470
tl.a wiH be eubmiHod to •
..d 11e ella!1Co'11tZ/1 mo
of lie people of uld
tt~bdlvlllon et • Generol
to 1 protection.
LAND
E......., to bo hlld In lohlge
IPi•*i ~henOM N. 53 Said lox being • r.,ewol
MICROWAVE OVEN
Looal Sohool Dtoblct of 'd•grE. alOng 1 of on ulatlng lox oil!. 111111
SALE
and VCR REPAIR
llllge County, Ohio, at the Ina end
fro p1
at· • rete not exc....ng '.!.
33 acres,
regular ;face• of voting
~ 1 ~ mill lor -h 0110 dollw of
Ill MilES
....,., on tho 3rd day ol lronplnii411M..,.atota11Viiii.iii0n;whlcltanroun•to
lrl11gll Ia Or We
Rutland Twp.
Nco •'•• 1812, tha quea· dletaMOot•74.571eettothe ftvo
lor -h
Plok U!!25 acres,
lion or levying • 11111, In
1n1 0 1 r-.1nn1n11 d
one
of vel·
KEN'S
APPLIANCE
ellle"'" mllllmlt. po
...,.
an con- uollon,lor 011io (1) yeare. ·
Olive Twp.
SERVICE
lion, lor lie benefit of Molga ta~'\!:~
hlg~ Tho Poll a lor aeld
Timber on both
l.octllloheol Dlatrlcllor tli• ..ya end
of r-. Election will open at 6:30
992·5335 or
urpe•e of permonont 0 rd
·
o'clock· A.M. and •-•In
tracts.
C
985·3561
,.4tou•-.
.
o.-.,a....lorlhaobovo opon unUI7:30 o'ciCICk PM.
Call614-667~3484
lcJOOI . , .. . . . . Dfflc•
.~t ,_ ...,.g,llll.
·--........., the
111 1 ohald day.
• · · .,
or 614-667-a:toe
217L ...... It.
..... ..... • 1111.e Ill '•
;~-;.:;. 11r~lclle,: t_ By order of the Board of
POIIIIOY, OliO
nOt au I ding I •II• lor Olaogaw, R.I. 110.1111, deled Elections of Meigs County,
3123192/tfn
- " _ . . _ el valuation, 12-11·77.
Ohio
wllllll
tD lilly • • •
DEED REFERENCE: Vol- Heftry L Hunter, Chairman
(SD.ID), lor ••ch one urne 211, " - ••· Malga ,
Rlla D. 8111111, Dtractor
SHRUB &amp; TREE
hundred clollotra of velu• County Deed 11-a. .
Dilled SepiMIIber 4 11112
lion, lor·IIYII (5) yura.
111e eiiOve •u•llld roa1 (10) 6 13, 20 27 4ko
TRIM and
SMiLLDOZER
The Poll a lor uld eetete 1e ldanUIIed In the
· '
' '
·
Eleotlon wiH open at6:30 -.laofthollalgat-ty
Public Notice
REMOVAL
WOR~
o'clock A.M. and remain Auditor by Percel No. 11DRIVEWAY
011
•LIGHT HAULING .
opon unfll 7:30 o'clock Pit. 00471. '
IIOTICE OF ELECTION ON .
••d
LIMERONE
or Nld doty. .
.
a.ld IMI . . .Ia wee ep- TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
•FIREWOOD
DELIVERY .SERVICE
II)' .,... of the Board of pntlled ot: $4,000.00 T..ma ntE TEN MILL LIMITATION
Elecllenl of Melgo County, of a.Jo: Clah
NOTICE Ia horeb)' given
TROLLEY STATION
SJ!all hzer Work
BILL
SLACK
Ohio.
R•l-teCIInrlolbeiold that In pureuenc• ol 'a
CUFTS
25.00 Per H011r
Henry LHunter, Chairman for leN then -lhl"" of R..etuUOft of tho Boord of
10 ... _ .. St., .....,..,
992·2269
REASOIIBLE
UTES
Al18 D. lmllt, Director tho eppr1118d YIIUO.
Trulleel of tho Townohlp of
.
614-992·2549
Deled 8aplw11ber 4, 1992
Jam• M. Soulaby, Iutton, Ohio, puaed on the
992·7553
USED RAILROAD TIES
CRAFF CLASSES
(10) 1,13, 20, 27, 4tc
Shariff of Melaa 3rd. lilly of Febru1ry, 11112,
POMEROY,
OH.
OcL 211, 6:30 !)m:
Count)', Olilo 11.a will be eubmltfed to •
10/1:WZ
"Lunch Baeket" $14.00
PubliC Notice
(10) 15, 22,11ftd 21, 1102, 3TC vola of the people of allld
Nov. 9, 6:30pm: "Pie
NOTICE OF SALE
eubdfvlolon at 1 General
GUN SHOOT
B•kel" $16.00
Public Notlca
Electl011 to bo hold In tho
SWAGS by Connie:
of an Ordw of
Townllllp of Iutton. et tho
FORKED RUN
Bille
out of lha Cotn·
regular placeo of voting
Nov. 4, 8:30: "Dried
SPORTSMAN
mon PIMa Court of Malge
IN 1liE
lharlllll, on tho 3rd dey of
Material Sw•g"
County, Ohio, IIINaeaeof COMMON PLEAS COURT · No,........, 1812, the qu 10•
All Scales • Vlnlage &amp;
Call the Trolley Station
CLUB
The . . _ ........ lank,
PROBATE DIVISION
for
more
Info.
Colee table
Plalnflll, egelnll Delmer
IEIOI CDUNTYi.OHIO
tlon of lavylng • tu, In
SUNDAYS
11!1261112/1
mo.
Grady, Ill II., Deflndent.. IN THE IIIATTER OF
Sea Display AL..
12:00 Noon
upon 2 s - 1 lhorlln SETTLEMENT OF
OUAUTY PRINT SHOP
rendorad,
C:...No.82- ACCOUNTI
Factory choke 12
8
Public
Sale
255 Mill Street
CV·UO ..
Cowl, I wiU ~TE COURT,
gauge
only
Middleport,
Olllo
oflor lor Nle,.r llelrontdoor MEIGS COUNTY, 0+10
&amp;Auction
Aak For DIIIIM
of lha Court Hou• In Pom"-1118 onc1 vouoh- o1
STARTS
. Ev•l~lll
eroy, Ohio, on lie lOth cloty of tho lofktwlng IIIIMd llduct·OCT. 18th
No-bor, 1112, II 1Q:00 oriM hiiVO boon flied In tho
614-742-3020
1011:1192
o'alock A.ll. the laltowlnO ·Probete Court, Mel go
llndund ..._01!11.10-Wit: County, Olllo, lor approval
lllluallllllrcdana, T- onchatllo•ont. '
TOP TO BOTTOM
2, Range. 1Z. Button T ESTATE NO. 22101 ohlp, lllolgl County, Ohio, Seoond Aooount of I.
MAINnNANCE .
ond being part of Ono Caroon
QuordiM of
HundNd Acre Let number lhe El- of Eether S..lth,
and REPAIR
1201 l!alnll lull)' .... on l_...,,llnt ..........
SATURDAY,
•Roofing •Siding
_..., ..lollowa:
ESTATE No. au a- Final
Bashan Rd., Raci••
CGeiiiiiMIIng ate point In 1nd Dlatrlbutlve Account of
&gt;Gutters
OCTOBER 31, 1992 • 10:00 AM
tho I\OrllmM1- or Mid Lola l.lllrldne, IEDculrtx of
•Room Additions
01t1hr ~~~lal
Soatlon I; lllenol EMt llong Ita Ellela of Uwle H. a.uer,
LOCATED 36 MILES SOUTH OF GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
•Interior Remodeling
UNUMITED TANNING
lle-utllneofNidSeoUon Dno•ad. .
ON ROUTE 7 ANO 6 MILES NORTH OF
3,11211flet-orleeetoe
ESTATE NO. 2070' 5 00
Co1tact Rglterf l Jacks
PROCTORVILLE, OHIO, ON PLEASANT RUN ROAD,
point; lllenollouth along • Second and Final Aocount
Nne llld _..ng ... north or P1ullne H. Alldlll,
RIGHT ALONG ROUTE 7. WATCH FOR SIGNS.
(614) 992·2866
llneofuidOneHundredAolo Gu•dl811 of Eunice lrad(D) 28-'D2·1 mo.
L.etNuinber1201111120..,. field, en lna-petont Por10-2·'112 .
MR. NIO MRS. STURGEON HAVE SOLD THEIR HOME
_ . , 1111 lnd fllllllng lie eon.
.
. . . - _....., proflllltr
ESTATE NQ. 27m- Final
AND ARE MOVING TO FLORIDA.
-~~ 1712..,. more or ond Dletrlbutlve Aaoount of
BISSELL &amp; BURKE
THEY WILL BE SELLING THE FOLLOWING:
.... a total ...._or 2070 Pawl P-all, Exooutrbt of
Blandon house sofa, 2 lealher La-Z-Boy recliners. RCA XL
· CONSTRUCTION
leal 1110re or leN to on Iron the Eotete of Eugene
100 25" color console TV, antique oval table, Victorian parlor
pin In lha grM~Ctr~ee.r prop- Thomoo Gannen, Doa no eel
. •New Ho11111
chair With carved dragons, two cane sided chairs, maple
artyllnunollhe,.lpolntof
EITATE NO. 11101 rocker, corner hutch, antique super tall po,ster bed, rope twist
beQinnfna lor lie land horaiJI SovM!aenth oncl final AIJ.
•G•r:-.tt••
lamp table, triple dresser, mission oak rocker, night stand,
All Hardwood,
dJIDfllai; ._a. 0 d• count of Loulo 1. v..,.._~
•Comp ate
plant stand, ea~y bo~ lamp table, ftoor lamp, Whi~pool
.,._ U' II" E. 111ong lie Ou1nl111 of the Eel818 of
Relnod1ling
Seaso•ed,
granklll Mel prap11tr line, Wllhm Reaw-. and ln-comwash• and dryer, china, dishes, Revereware pans, and
olhercookware, HarmonyHouseaetof silverftatware. blender,
Sto"
&amp;
Co:1are
$40.00 I load
211.71r..ttoMiron
Ill '1a~:~2114D-Finol
Kenmore sawing machine, 2 razors, vintage blacll shaw, new
F EE ESTI
IS
end Dll......m Aooount of
fireplace oaeen, 6 metal 5 ft. shelves, metal cabinet, Toyo
dtlivtNd.
915·4473
Horvey ErleilriM, Exeoutor
keloaene heoter, lew tools, 4 HP J.C. Pen,.Y &amp;elf-propelled
.667·6179
P!!l!!!!i!!!.!.J.!o~l~lh~e~E~e~la~la of Ruth o.
lawn mower. 18 HP Crafllman garden lrBCtor witli decll, B
(614) 992·5449
•peed 44' deck like new, Craftsman lawn sweeper and more.
10112111
·, 3 Announcements
TJIUCK: 1987 Cha&gt;y 10 Custom Delu•e 42,038, auto .• short
bed, cream puff, g11111ge k~~~?l· one owner vehicle.

•••tatlli

'•

vez o:te'

RACINE FIRE
DEPT.
EVERY
SATURDAY

Public Notice

Ertewtn., Doc
IIIXJ- ollha IMI miH limbo
Unlo11 oiiDor.ljpn• ore lion, lor tho benollt ol
filed lharoto, 11 d -oun• Sutton Townahlp lor tho
will be lor hoarlng before purpooe olmalnlo,inlng ond
Mid Court Oft lie 30th lilly oponling....,.ot.IM.
of NoWIIIber, 11112, Ill which
a.ld II!X being • ranewol
lime aald eoeoun .. will be of en uletlng IIIII of .4 mill
OOI!IIIdered end oonll.nue&lt;l el e role not excoedlng .4
lr0111 c111y 1o c1oty until ftnolly mill lor oaoh one dollar of
dlepoeed of.
val•llon, which mnounto to
Any peraon lntoroaled lour conll ($0.04) lor -h
1118)' file wrltlln exeepllono one hundred clollora of vo~
to uld occoun• or to mol- ueU011, lor llvo (5) r•ro.
..,. perllllnlng to tho eliiCuTile Polio lor 11id
· tlon of the truot, not 1181 Election wlli open at 6:30
then ftva ~ prior to the o'clock A.M. and remain
clalil•tlor_,...
unll7:30 o'clock P.M.
RoMit E. Buck, Juc1ga o alld cloty.
·
c:-mon Pte. Court
Ely orclar of tho Board of
Plobllle Dlvlalon Election• of Melga County,
(10) 27, 1:"'111 County, Ohio ~'::;,ry L Hunter, Chlllrmon
Rl18 D. Smith, Director
O.tad September •• 1!1112
Public Notice
(10) 6, 13, 20, 27, 4tc

•:-:a..
•-te

they know. That may be presi~ princes,

Card shower planned

6·14·992·714t

Public NotiCe

Gibbs, ICCrelal)'/lieasurer, and Bill
Tawney. hislorian.
.
Door prizes were donated and
a"warded from Keefers Service
Center, M ol 'R Sales, Mason Auto
214 EAST MAIN
Glass, DK's Farm Toys, Gale
Diehl, New Haven NAPA, State
POMEROY
Farm Insurance, PMI, Quality Print
992·6687
S'!'P., McDooald's of Pomeroy and
Jim s Farm EquipmcnL
The club meets the fmt Satur·.
day of every month at the White
s.... Aueo.
Church Community 4-H Building. 'fnAtance co.,..Wnln
Everyone inrmsled in antique trac·
.. ·
tors is welcome.
r----.l....--;-----.;.;;;.:...::......;_:.;,:.:...:.:...
__________.:;,;__~_;·_
.. _....;_
The newly formecl Mountaineer
Two Cylinder Oub held its charter
meeting ~dy .at the l.elart Commm~ityCenlerinl.etan, W.VL
Members llld guests were wei.·
· ccxned by Vicllll'Wolfe,pesideilc.
After a potluck dinner the char·
tee was pi'esellted by Tcxn Sherry,
North Canton, of the North East
Ohio Two Cylinder Club.
Officers for the clqb Victor
Wolfe, president: Roger Taylor,
ftrsl vice-preiiclent; Ralph Kelvin·
ton, second Vice-president; Denver

ROOFlNG

ri'Jt'.'JIIng

a...,..

w·

announce the birth of lbeir second

MIDDLEP~RT :

· Tho Ocdler meellna ol Cbealltr world ud the lmpalit 011 world
Paulille Ridenour received the
Gilden Club 'lVII held II tbe home 11riculture. Coh1111bus brouaht door prize.
of Edna Wood, assisted by lean planla and animals from the old ·
The Nov... meeting will be at
Frederick.
world • lionel, 11J111, the -'Cm the home ol Bcue Dean. Roll call ·
The Gardeners Q-eed In unlJon of lona-homed catde, 111pr CIIIC, will be a labeled bulb ex~.
was followed by devotions by arapea, wine. The potato, l&amp;ken
Twila Buckley, "Inspirational from the aew world, bad a great
Floweu," concerning a woman impact on~ where it became
who used her talent for growing a basic food. In Germany and RillS&amp;tura'l riDe .,.._. begiDI about
lbe .Wble dllll of
flowers, to turn her yard iniO a
sia it was prized as a crop that 7,toO mila
dea of beauty for all who passed by could be buried in the ground and ·• S&amp;turn, IJinl above Ill equator 111111
to see and to share. The thought, evade the tax collectors. The toma· at.ndlai abaut 11,000 mllel IDto
"A lalent isn't wasled if it makea to, feared as poisonous, peanuts, .,_. 'l1ie diameter of lbe riDe .,.
one person happy." A poeJ!I, squash, pumpkin, com, tobacco, tem Ylllble fJUD Earth Ia ·about
"Pumpkin Pie," completed devo- sweet potato, cocoa, were all scat- · 110,000 m11e1; tile rla&amp;lare eatlmated
to be no llllcter tbllllO mila. ID IJ73, ·
tioos.
·
terecl over the old wodd and often radar
oltlervatlGD lllowed tbe riDI
Program books for the new year became identified with thai·couil· partldel to be larp dlunb of m_atewere distributed. Beuc Dean, pro- try. 1992 is known as the year of rlal ~ftl'aiiDia meier oa a Bide.
'
gram chairman, reviewed the the pwnpkin.
.
club's projects and goals. She
A pumpkin decorating activity
noted that "Save the Earth" would folloWed. Each member painted a
continue to be a club concern, with face on the pumpkin she brought
moothly lessons on what each can for roll call. Judging was by all
do to help save the earth. She members. Pennies were placed in
empJ!asized how varied and l!umet· the pumpkin of their choice. The
I
ous arc the areas of participation.
anistry of Twila Buckley, Eleanor
Mls. Dean, vice-president, coo· Knight and Dorothy Karr received
ducted the business meeting. Holi· the most pamies.
day projects were planned. The fall
The pennies will be added to the
regional meeting was disl:uased as club's fund for Mohican School, to
\VaS the flower show held during help provide a dormitory/dining
Slate Auto's already
. the Big Bend Stemwheel Festival.
hall for the new school facility. A
lowpremiumscanbe
Clarice Krautter is sunshine goal of $25,000 has been set by
redll08d even IT¥ll'e by
chainnan ror October.
Ohio Association of Garden Clubs.
insuring
both your car
. A note of appreciation from ·-Mohican Scliool in the Out•Of·
'and hlime with the S~e
Maye Mora was read.
Doors, began as an experiment in
Cards were signed for several 1961. Over 7,000 Ohio students ani
Auto Companies.
friends who are ill.
registered for 1993. The curriculum
Pat Holter, program chairman, taught by qualifaecl teachers is simiLet us tell you just
~ted "Five Hundred Years of larto 'OAGCNatureStudyCamps.
how riluch your savings
America, 1492-1992." She spoke
A dessert courie was served to
.
canbe~
of the voyage that changed the the members.

··Hown L Wrltesel

PLUM IlliG

.

'

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

Danny and Rboiida Davis

-.
(Alice
Globokar presents
.

.

'

TuMday, October 27, 1992
Page s:

Edna Wood hosts Chester Garden Club . :

Community calendar

; ·MIDDL,!lPORT • Reservation .
deadline is Tuesday for the Meigs
:County Golf Course Annual Dinner
·Dance, to be held Sunday at· the
. Middlepon American Legion Hall.
· Information from Bob Freed at

·
.

'

TUESDAY
REEDSVILLE • Eden United
~rethren Church will hold revival
·through Sunday at 1 p.m. nightly
·with Rev. Bob Wiseman. There
. wiD be special singing nightly.

The Dally Sentinel

•

Unit .
..installs new officers
: Officers were installed at the
. .:recent meeting of the American ·
':Le$ion Lewis-Manley Auxiliary
·Unll 263 held at the home of Lula
liamptoo.
· Officers were installed by Florence Richard, past eighth district
president. Offtcers are Lorreile
Goggins, president; Helen Colmer,
ftrst vice-president; Luella Patterson, second vice-president;
Dorothy Casey, secretary; Edith
Ross, treasurer; Annette Johnson,
chaplain; Tomiko Lewis, sgt.-atllrJIIS; Margaret Bowles, histori8J'!.
; Chairm~n appointed ~ere: Ve~' erans Affau:s, Mrs. Lewts; Amen·
~ canism, Mls. Bowles; children and
. youth, Mrs. Richards; community
service, Mrs. Johnson; auxiliary
emergency fund, Helen Colmer;
, foreign relil(ioos, Mrs. Casey; edu·
cation, Mrs. Patterson; national

'

ItiiBIIHER.W.

SHTERSY' bESIGN

'

Qaallty HI Efflcie•cy
AI' Coaclltloners, Heat
P1mps, Fal'tiiiCes &amp;
Now Water Heaters•
Bennetts Mobile Home
U91SaHarHcHoiRd. ~.

&amp; Cooling

~r,OIIIo :

."(al [6141 44H416 wi-IOO..a72-5967

BP OIL CO.
HOME HEATING OILS
DIESEL FUELS • GASOLINE
We Deliver In•••
Gallia, Meigs, Mason and
Surrounding Counties

1!'800·598·5654
.-ei614·C46·1157
We

Vouchers

�•

Pomeroy Middleport, Qh_~
TUIIdiY,~r27,111Z

Ohio

N.J. R1oi4T

Television
Viewing

TlQ, ,

IGI~V~

71 ..........

The Dally SenU

NA. [ IU.DI~ ~'

tm IJIIelty , - . a.oe~~on~
Col . ."" ...... ·~s.

M TUE., OCT. 27 M

fer .... 1171...,..sad lliObiii
. . _ wl IWIIt ·
slsn. 1.11
-alloM,-Innloe

EVE NINO

- - -

O Rearrange

lettaro o1 iiiO
four Krombled words
low to form four ~rnp..

-d•

QEIBUS

IM47tall.

.... ......... . •,..

...,

(I) • &lt;ll •
oeliJNawa

1:00 &lt;Zl •

ll:fo/111\

I DIRTA

ae

(I).._ .., the ...

.~~One TV.Stereo.

~ Math Learning Hour

gc~ From
dl LAon'a T

WHATEVER .. A.N'(WA,'(, I'M
VOLliNTEERIN6 TO ~ELP YOU
SI'REA.D iHE WORD !

1111 Rln nn.nn, 1&lt;·1 Cop

1.115 w Three'•

Comlionr

llosrch

.

Cllll'lll14-

54 MI1C8IIaneoua
Mlrchancllae

-

56 . Pets for Sale

8:35 (I)

Ill,

.,
""' .....

aek

11

(J) II Married ••• With . '
Children Stereo.
IIi. Jeopanlyl
liD II Star Trek:
Noll

ftllllorie.G111.

trion, ..................... - . .
!dna $100, ...... fliO; .... milo.
lldlio ~· call . , . . _

ChooiiY!Ie " - · 11:11; -""
..,., (t101, tel;
If ...~ .... .,., (110h $100;

Lost&amp; Found

F1nancial

Found: malo block Lol&gt;-lwM
dog, ollvor chobr oi&gt;llir, l'ni looldna lor • intorooiod ,...
~ry/Rt. n .oroo; - . - t o oill-aco. Notlilnll
IIUn ..,. dlvlllon. llorlouo
. to $10 "-·
Yard Sale
7:
Ar ~ Dill* oom!MJ. Frw
tr.lrilng.11t - IODO.

21

....,.,, m

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

HOUS88 for

IHOTICEI

OHIO VAUIY PUeUSHINO CO.

oul-

living-.
Hll Rd,

---~-Solof
.....,.
'rrloo ....,..... ax• 1
:::....'*'!:· at.':.q ~ :::
-

CUPTI .

AND

m:wn~,_.~
.....
._ ............ ......,

Tllnllf' ldQ. NP.II. ·

..... ,...,--gated

.,.,..

,

.._ 11101111- TV 1110..,.:

"

lood ............ -

!!t-~=·~3
Feed
. , . , . -. . . .

-

nut-ID - ·

r:.""'! .. 't::--"-'t:
:.:a. ~·=::
_..,.,. .........
.......

_",*ii! ...
--

• WOU Mve PII01 'I« NC1. drv, IOOIY _ , tJy .... no Poolloor.i
100!1.. - U.ll handling.~
giiO!IInloO.
........
2
wooko
lor
dillv&lt;iiy.
No
~,_!:110

-

111'1.

0111&amp;114 -

'llndlng Route: Local. Wo Ho¥0
Tho N - llochlnoa, Making A
Nice , 11-.ly Cub· lhcoma. 1·
100 851 03Mo

...

~~ IIR . . aaa•ll ..

IMMwiiL......,....

Noll eo...n-111- Homo Unlta,
-~ tiH.eG.
Lollona,
I,..... llanth , paymenll
IDir 10 111.00. Clll tOclor FREE
lEW 0.. C I lag, 1 - - .

...
ohiiM ....
·- .Ce, ....
,
.
.. .......
'JF1111
1171-JII:II.

Lomr:,

AND ~ALONEY
SANP\AIICti~S. AND
YOLJ PIC. I: vJtiJC.tf
YOu vJANT.

SPfC~i.

--==I

!

•

42 lloblll Ho11e1

for Rent

~MOVIE: Fada (PG1.3) (2:00)

Wlnl .. ,... 4........, ~ 1
---.-ZIUIIIIDoo;
,

·~

(2:00)

&lt;IID

(I) D Full House
Jesse protects a secret from
his past 1;1
(l) (!) NoVa Earth's greatest
natural wonder is explored.

',

75 Boats &amp; Motors

:
.forSall
·:
------~~~-----·
-TERI
' . . . . . .IIIIi•. - !'

...,..............
...........

'

' ff

rrs mrAs

IE: Raw Deal (Ri
(2:00)
I!) Murdal, She Wrote J;l
1111 Crook and Chsaa

/16 IT l.lJAS

1111 Young Rlc*li Lou, Hickok
and The Kid take a

~

IDJE.'-1.. .

........., ........

liiiUII,- lpm.

IBPrimiNawaJ;I

8AD10(:)W

OOJ'T
HA~ fi4JJT

'J(XJ

31 Homu' for Sale
......

nt'•

..:r"-lll..rYolor

dangerous criminal to his
execution. S1ereo. 1;1
8:30.&lt;IIG (I) 8 Mangin' With
Mr. ' - ' Mark Is assigned
to coach a group of sullen
cheerfeeders. Stereo. 1;1

1:00 rn •

.MORTY MEEKLE .AND WINTHROP .
eoY! IOW

11013.

--·--oil.
Cklo .. -

-

44

Apanment
torRent

·---

AUCTION I I'URHITURI. a
Ollwo ... Gllllpolo. ...... Uood
-

....

~-~l- ~-

•

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

1 Bad_, -go Aportmone,
Oooraoo Wuhlr • c~ryw, 1110: ~DU'IIC!Mk Rood~ - · Do!1Go1 - .
lloqubM.
111
Ut li'M.o14 ' " 43:12 DoJO; ~~;iiii;;iiii~G;:'Aii
W.zlwa • ~ t100 I~ AU
lold wah Weinntl Clll WUhor
I . IR opor11Mnl II Oolllpallo l~llloppelt- U I -

Call 114-311-

. _ ao-.

7V21o. . I:IOp.81.

Want to:

llalor Full 011 -IIIII llove
11fll; ltondlng Full 011 ltovo
Wllh Tlllk 1n 110; au

=~w~~~~~~~~
1211._,._.,
Oolon Full 011 Tonk

HAI&lt;OLY
WAIT/

1rdnsportutl on

CA~H?!!

dupla,llol

...

Throo bodr-,} both, t.. .
mom, ~ oiO Eat lloln,
Pomeroy; 614·985-4427 after
6:30.

~·

-..._

• ..... ...... Pon.or.
~ r. =n ~':t'".,AniRI.Iql;:,
Howa: li.T.W. 10:10

o1octr1o, ..,. Lm. to 1:00 P.'l!;,lunclor 1:oo
tumlohod, laundry to I :DI p.m.l14 - 21:11:

plla-

lllddloport,

7l&amp;m your eluJter fllto cu.h,
W it the &amp;UYX we~y... fn phone.

no JUJed 'to leoN. four horne.
Plpce mur clg•.ttlecf qd tg"ayl
15 acordt or ~~!-J»•·
3 pgpelJ, ISdfl,_.• 11 l nee.

$11,000; lt4-il2·

32 Mobile Homes
tor sa1e

.

YACCIMATIONI5~

-• e

tel; ·-·-8howwAndl\lb
Qlooi Doln tl:ll, 114-2451112AhriM

8:30 &lt;IID (I) G Coach Luther
reveals his feelings tor
Christine after he has a
trauma. Stereo. 1;1
tO:OO (%). IUl Oatellne NBC The
world of the computer
. underground Is examined.
' Stereo.

BARNEY
WHITI'IIIITAL DE1ICTORS
Ron All- mo tlolond

a_

· LUKEY LOST
TWO DOLLERS

WHO DID

LAST NIGHT!!

IT TO?

HE LOSE

~ o.u1,oi1a, Ohio, ,,..

PAW II YOU GOT

SOME LOW-DOWN,

CHEATIN' CARD

COMPETITION fl

SHARP FROM
TH" FLATLANDS!!

·~· op1o., tolot

--~-toochocil
Two ladroom Homo For Solo: ,Int-.
..... ..........
Nlco Fencod In Doublo Lot. Go~ ot: v.._
I Apia. ... .
llpollo. Colll14·:ml-2112.
eoiii14-IIIJ..mt EON.
Two .....,_, ho.... largo ..... , _ .._
..... t17S. ....
cod-In yonl, 115 Cuotor Strot,
71H8.

Prelident'l Child' CBS
r-£Movle (2:00)
Stereo.
([J Tue ay Nlgh1 Fights (L)
Clll Noahvllle Now
8 Larry King Llval
Father Dowling Myaterlea

-

_,1106-

- ........
. .tZII.
. - .......
• paid,
113
AnllquM
u
jlold. ~~.;.:;.;:~~.,...-

I!Dl. liJ e MO E: 'Till

"'t''U biKE

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

F.,.104475-21a.
3 IR ...... - • . , . _ - 52 Sponlng Goodl
Cllnlo Gl W. Yo. 104-t'll-4481.
RIMinaiiR lllodll!. 1100. Aller
I ~ ............. Iii I:GOMI04 •1111 .•

PIN down EXTRA

=
-

55

Building
Supplies

·ar.

.=!..":'

llklcll, ........ -

'*=

BIAUTU'UL APAIITIIEIITI AT ...........
CillO .lltylr
, _ -$100. •
IUDOIT PRICII AT dN*ION M7L

......•

•. _
, ...

-

ullololro.
Wit•,
......
Cllot1.
Olclol
.. 0 ·7 -H .......
_

Webb. c.lllt4 Ul JIL

,..., ,_

1-------------------3 •. ___________________

2.·------------------~

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

4.
5•.·----~------------________________

~'-Your

·
. .,'Birthday

~

6-----------------7. __~------~-----

'··--~------------­
10._,..
__________,.:.._
'··--------------~-

Oot.21,11t2
Gratetullrlendl you did favors tor In the
put will flnd waya to repay you In the
' y.- llhlld. Tliey will help you ach~
both yow material and -lei goals.
ICOIIIPIO (011. 11-No¥. Zl) Subatantlal
ralurna oould now be In the offing
tlwlka to attorta you've axpendecl on
· - ' - ' thai h - yat to "-&lt; fruit.
Don't be dlacourogad; a big peyoll
' could bl right orouncl thl corMr. IGorPIP, t - t yourMif to 1 blrthdl)' gift.
8ond Ill&lt; ScorPIO"• Al1ro-Graph predle·

4t6-J842

992-2156 'l .
67~1333~~ ......__.~., __ .
;

.

I

tKJ 3
+K84 2

.PHILLIP
ALDER .

WEST

EAST

\'AK983
tQ942

+Q2
\'1072
• 10 8 6 5
+QJ106

+J 9 5
; +9

SOVTH
t ·A 10 8 3
\'QJ 5
tA7
+A 7 5 3

Cruising
until the final

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North
·

By Pblllip Alder

Soutb
West
North
East
The United States Open Team in the
Pass
Pus
NEC World Team Olympiad includee
1 NT
Pass
Pus
five ot the defending champions: Bob
2•
Pass
All pus
Hamman / Bobby WoUf, Jeff Meek- ,
Opening lead: • K
strotb/ Eric Rodwell and Seymo0
Deutsch. The sixth player, Michael
Rosenberg, had replaced the late Jim ~---------------...J
Jacoby.
·
The American team bad no trouble man cashed the diamond ace and then .
in reaching the final. But then they · fin~ dummy's diam9ild jack.
lost to ;i strong French quartet.
When tt won. a club was discarded
The prettiest piece of declarer-play from band on the diamond king. H~ .
in the final was produced by Haminan. man continued with the club king. ·
Against lour spades, West led the West refused to ruff, so Hamman exit· heart king, cashed the heart ace and ed with a trump.
' •
switched to the club nine.
West won, but be bad to return a
Hamman seemed certain to lose red-suit card, conceding a ruff-andfour tricks: one spade, two hearts and discard and allowing declarer to avoid
one club. How did be make one of a club lOSf!r: plus 420 to the USA.
All that lor a IOSII of two internatiOU:.
these losers disappear?
After winning the club switch with al matcbpoints! AI the other table·:
his ace, Hamman cashed the two top West didn't pass over one no-trump.
trumps. He followed by taking the the end, he played in two hearts dou· •
heart queen, discarding
club from bled, going two down lor a 101111 of 500 :
the dummy. Now came the key play. points.
'
' ..
Realizing he needed the trick, Ham· .
© - ,._....,ancu 1 1 1 ··

2+

••

hi··

a

The World Almanac:® Crossword Puzzle .~
ACROU

A....., lo PIIIIDUI Pualle

40 Sefacrac:kll

(at.)

t Move 1111
5 Oparata1
8 Hurry
12 NoO:,roflt
org.
13 Curved
molding·
14 High n0'15 lUnd • • -

42 ~amoledHr

43 Before Wid.

45 Onlon'a
coulin

47~ Trlcklld .
50 Senonlng .

54

Wiele Jhol

liza

55 Part ol ashoe
'57 VIII parlocl

18 Crumbly

ottl. .

Urth
17 Al¥1r Intel

58 ll1p lbbr.
58 ApJIFOXimll•
IJ (2 WdJ.)

18 Tlmo being
20 In n11111 only

60·Small vehicle
81 Anglo-Suon
Iotter
62 lnflet on
(2 Wdl.)
63 two worda of
under·
atandlng

22 Difficult
. 24 Fermented

drink

25- porade
28 P•clflc
territory
30 Em111ld33 A Kannidy
35 Wlpoa out
37 Hoed

2 Center of
lhlold

3 Look OVII
4 Emerge from
an egg
•
5 Oypar m•n
8 AlrlcOII lind
7 lnfamoua Ro-

" DOWN

38 IIOUII, e.g.

1 Baaablller
Nolin-

39 Tr1namlt

(!)~];!
I]) MOVIE: Till Delta Force
(R) (2:50)

&lt;IIG

e

(I)
Going 10
ExtrlmoaA
machete-wielding man
attacks Alex; Cheryl accuses
Delia of stealing. Stereo. E;l
(l) Ualelllng to Amerlco
With ... MoyON C

Robomon

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

~-=:~r~
.,••• II
w ..... I - . m.

\'64

10 700 Club With PSI

IIIII ' luppiJ. Shop Pat
Clr11~ AI llnldl. It~
lomo
DooloL ~UIIo

COollor

11-!"I·H

Ce-••ndthe
Economy EconomiC/election
issues. (1 :00)

Pets for Sale

EITA~~ , J ·•an Pllll
Wllkto.._l
IIIOWIIe. C.. 114 411 IIII. IOH.

NORTH
+K 76 4

· BRIDGE

&lt;.g~= ~rom!Ha: Till

141 112L

'"'l"lNCI.Ifl4.e"/lotlll.

•! .

(I) U-tlllg 1o Alilsrlca
: with Bll MorON 1;1

....... win-

-........
. .... OH
Clouclo
•-... NO
Col -.,..

.:!::':,.:::.

IIJ Raa1011able

Doubll Collusion has Dicky
and Teas on oppos~e sides
of the issue. Stereo: C
&lt;IIG (J) 8 ROMSnrii
AoseaMe ·sees the ghosts Of
Halloween past~esent and
future. S1ereo.
(l) (!) Fronlllna

"' ... 1111.

IIIIDMCf FII'IWOOCI: 114-241-

Reecue: 9t1 .

liD tB M

EEKANDMEEK

11·-·-

Rcill Eslote

!:

21111

ft'ereo .

ti~'ZA'A'Ir

......
all
ittotrlc,
1: •• In flmlly room, 114-

ac....
e

I]) Portrait of Jopan A look
at the individuals in Japan,
which has a society that is
perceived by the West to be
homogenous. (Pt 2 of 2)

;'
lo, oholn.'iGii: ~

.,..

2 1 - I llllnn., I , liZ lloth, 2

Stereo, I;J · ·
(I) II You Bot Your Uta
IIIJIII Wheel of Fortune 1;1
II) IB FamMr Foud
·ID NHL Hockey Los Angeles
. Kings at New York Islanders
(L)
I

Sam becomes an astronomer
who uncovers a government
UFO investigation. Stereo.

'M&amp;U&amp;III--

w

f

(!) Till Jeffonono ~:;~_:
(I) G E-lranent Tonight

oflnt
7:351]) Sanford l Son
8:00 (%)
IIJ OullniUm Leap

1-01_.._ ...

..

'

.......... -..
...........................
_______
......... .
i.~.~~~
...;.~,~~~~jjjj;;j,iifilliiiaiiiaeii:r,

•0...11
.... . ;;:a::.. ...........

111111111

7:051]) hvartr Hillbillies
7:30 (%). II) Jeopardyl_jJ .

... ...... . . , ....... 11M; i

tolllo. ......

VfOLI'I' TAMIINO BEDS

..

£-LfCTION

.

TtiE II tUCTION SPtCIAt. II ?'' ..
vJE StiOw YOIJ
ll&gt;tNTIC.At. TU~I'f( ·'

Uood """"'

.. l'onnaylvonlo

ICon""'"' 30" 1111-Cielnlng
Eleclrlc flanao;Oald, S350 Finn,
11tt11131f.'

/

OL/fl

Com,...,_1And2-,PTO

Avo..-on.OH411t2.

PubliC sale
&amp; Auction

ASF AJovr

~.....,..,_

Liquid
...

•

Stereo.
(!) Oua m Leap Stereo. 1;1
ID,SponaCenter ·
t8 Monertlnl
11!1 Ute Goo• On 1;1

·AND ERNEST

Filii ac.aaoThanBTU1
Now, Uood Looil
Monlho, lnclullo8 CloouloUng 61 Fa.nn Equipment
......... All Rllo¥8 I Oo... Ford- .... 4 ........
. . . 11t ttlli1S.
hog. Clll11 111407'7.
.

•tr.ot•:

.

UNSCRAMBLE FORI
ANSWER
•

liJ • E£:inment Tonight

Sl.pplii·';
&amp; LlVf•sloc,,

a..
IJIIo

Happy .look Tal

I'

Generation

',IIIli

:1111, ....... Of • .._:1204 ...
twlpm.

'rji18IOOCIIoriPIIIt

t .... . . . . . . . , . . .....
CCUiml\' 'I'UIINITUAE

;:r::r.::=e=
... _....
-

• tel;

=
..... -.Holt .............. ....

Rent

t.·~~~~~·

3

,. cc ..... 111111 ,.. do bual-

AtL Yard Iloilo II... h Pold In
. AdYIIICO. DEADUNE: I:DI p.m.
lhe day .,....,. tlw ad le to "'"·
S~ncloy adhlon • 2:00 p.m.
Frtdoy. lloriclor odhiOn • 2:00
p.m. saturcloy.

8"

41

Business
Opponunlty

~-·

•

you develop from step No. 3 below.

·-

of Fortune

t

ra~,.r•. . . , _ , ..... Pal . . . .
..; I.Oaiflilln Q.C.II...... ca. IJiil.

---wlloltlwr

w.._..

..

•
SCJtAM.I.ETS ANSWERS
'·
'.
Domain - Legal ·· Hover • We/nut • ONE of THEM
While silting in the counselors waiting room 1 over·
h~ard one gentleman say} o another, "There are few
thtngs.that can get '!"/ w1fe. upset. 1 feel rather special
I() be ONE of THEM_
r--· -------------........,

stereo.
'
(I) G I
Ed1110n I:;J
(l) (!) MecNoltn ....,..,
NewoHour Q ,_,

..,... .. ,. .=.....,..,. _AleC_
..............
.
...............

Place

•

. czo.rrwII)

19

~ LETTERS

Andr Orirnth

7:00 ~ •

I
1· G

.,. PRINT NUMBFRED

dl Up Clooe
ID Now Zorro

PI ........... ..-_,...,

a:

I

~~!::Cw'="•P
~ landlago? Stereo.
liJe
o•CBSNewo Q
II]) e Ro-nn~ Stereo. 1:;1

Houaeholcl
.Good• .

1:'-u-=r dry•

1:;1 •

8:30 (Z) e 1111 NIC Nowo C
(I) l!d McMshon•o SteT

=.-···

F.entals

I had
a block party
and heard one woman laugh
and tell her husband, "You can
;, always tell the home garden·
• ers. They are the ones who
C R UH 0 G
serve zucchini ··--···,•
8 I ·
I
Complete the chuckle. quoted
1
_J.
. ......1.
by fill ing in the missing words
L ....J.I-.J.--.1.--..L.

H1111mon&lt;1 , Ind. (R)

IBWOIIdTadllr

........ Tot lllnll llolw For W II 101 "'-' To .......

.......1 ....

.r_,.,..L
....,.A_I..,.Y_L....,.....:.!It ·
.
7
6
1 I I 1 :;

f

tiona for the year ahead by ;,aiHng TAURUS iAprfl2iH&amp;.r 20) You're still
$1 .25 plus a long, sell-addressed, in a fortunate trend-· benefits can
stamped envelope to Astro-Graph, c/o be derived from handling tasks and asthis-paper, P.O. Box 91428, Clove· s1gnmen1a effactlvety. Co~llnue to do
land, OH 44101·3428. Be sure to state your best.
GEMINI (Mar 21-.luftll 20) This Is a
yoilr zodiac Sign.
IA?ITTARIUS (Now. 23-Dec. 21) Your good dl)' to enter Into aerlous negotla·
today Ia yoilr ability 10 lunc· tiona, provided both parties are as conbest tlon as a catatrst, gelling others lo ac· cernld about protecting the other's
compllah meaningful objectives. You'll rights 11 they are aboul protec:11ng their
lead, and they'll follow.
own.
CAPIIICORN (Dec. 22..Jan. 11) Your CANCER (.Juno 21-JIIIy 22) Utilize your
matertll 8lljle!:ta continue to look en· talenla today lor trlniformlng som•
couraglng. Once again, you mighi be thing that Ia old lntq -'hlng more
able to lum a proflt through IIOftlll form UMiul and luncllonol. Thlo ..,plies to eiof Indirect ec:11on.
t'* your vocation or your evocation.
AQUARIUS ( ...... ..,.,_ 11) If olrlond . LIO (.luly 21-Ati!J. II) O..olopmenta
of long standing to you tor help coukl occur locll)' lhat will help you
today, be responaive. Ironically, you atrenglllon the bonda bitw . . , you end
might en,d up being the one who Will d&amp;- your lowcl ones. h will be up 10 you to
rive the greates1 benifh from your 1a1 till lnhlallve In flleM llloelatlona.
VIIIQO (Alii. 11-lepl. II) You're on a
gesture.
.
·
PIICII(Feb. 20 MaNII., In order to favorable roll II tllle HmeiO finalize lmbo moaleflec:11ve tocloy, It mlghl be wloo portan1 mottn 10 your tatlefactlon.
to guide 0111ors from behind the · l&lt;oep your prloilt'r In oniW Mel hondle
lnatoad 61 -lng racognltlon, 1e1 them 1he moll lrnportsnt ones ftrat.
thlnllthll your Ida. . . thelre.
........ , ...... 2J.Oot. . , " poolibie, do
.U.S (lleniiii'I-Apll11) Mae an II· not dllogotalntportant "1:'*'11 to
fori tocloy to touch boM with old pall. , subordinates tocll)'. You're
ana who
n·a to your advantage 11 thla lime to II bes1 equipped 10 hlndle t ' - matmaintain alrong relall0111hlpa, OWing lo tara, If It pu1o you under a bH of
-'hlng new tha1'a lllrrlng.
p,_,.,

..

10:30 Clll On ......
1D Outoide the l.lnel All the ·
President's Games

11:00(%). (1) . . ill

.!Ill. o•

(J).

IIJ Howl
ill Hlallt Court Q
liD ello-~ Stereo. E;1

~~~tereo.

e

IB lports Tonight

llca~row and Mre. Klll(l

11:30 (I)Itroet Jultlca
(l) To the
Stereo.

Contro§'
Nlglilllrla

••.k;:;,_-=
(I) •
~

e

Arienlo lt1i Stereo.

Cl
Stereo.

Ql
•

Al'larlil1 .. .

Conlfi

.

.

~-

r.mo.,.._

CtllllftlrCipfter II)PIOfiaiW ........ rr.. cauotalcww bJ
Pill and prM~nt_,
' E-* ...... ln . . Cipftlrlllndlfor~. Todly'ICIIW:H_,.,..,L

• S X

XR

R,

xzax

lloftllyflftll

11:35&lt;Zle

IIJ Tonigflllllow With

s -. 1;1
(I). a-. SteniO. 1;1

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: " Moat of tltl Democrotle Clndldo1es claim thiJ're
middle of 1111 rood. So ore PD1holee." - Bob Orbe'l.
•
• till by NEA; Inc:.

27

�•

'fuesd8Y, OCtober 21, 1912

Pomoroy.-Middleport. OhiO

Tip sheet for community members
asked to house teen-a 'guests' ·
Dear · Aaa Laadera: A while
our teen-age lOll 1111 away
from hQme. Due 10 the pneroeily
of a well-meaning, ltind· hearted
-..pr, his recovay was lielllpo-

baet,

nrily delayed.

VISITS CARLETON • As a part or Fire
Prevention Week, Syracuse firemen and emer·
gency squadmen visited Carleton School. The
students were given the opportunity to look over
the vehicles, listen to the sirens, and learn about
what the volunteer firemen do to help in the

community. Here, left to right, Lt. Eber Pickens,
Jr., ami Fire Chid Jack Peterson, fll'emen, show
John Porter, teacher, and Carleton students,
Gail English and Deidra Carleton, the Syracuse
rescue unit.

Woman's remains believed
to be at least 11 ,600 years ·old
CINCINNATI (AP) ..:. A his age estimate ·would make .the
woman whose remains are believed bones the oldest human skeletal
to be 811east 11,600 years old prob- remains found in the Americas.
ably lived in an Indiail culture that
"There are a number dated ·
hunted big game and processed between 10,000 and 11,000 years
meat, says the geologist who exam- old, but this is the only one over
ined her bones.
, 11,000 years," be said
Curtis R. McKinney, director of ·
An amateur archaeOlogist found
geologic research at the Center for the bones in a sand dune in 1953
American. Archaeology in near Midland, Texas, The bones
Kampsville, .I!J., reported his fihd- are housed at Southern Methodist ·
ings Monday at the Geological University in I;&gt;allas.
.
Society of America's annual meet·
' No artifacts were found w1th the
ing.
remains that could tell how the
f,1cKinney calculated the "Midland woman'.' 'and her society
woman's age using a technique lived, McKinney said. But his ~e
called
alpha sJ!ecttumetry.
He_
said
eslimate
would Jllace the woman&gt;m
·- -......;_....,
____
__
_ _..,.....

Beat of the IJend...
by Bob.fl_oejlich
Dear Aunt Maude and Uncle
E~.

.

Flnally getting around to that
long overdue letter that I've intend·
ed to write for so Ions.
Can you beheve we're
approaching the end of October
already? Time really flies when
you're having fun doesn't it? Of
course, Saturday will be Halloween, Oct. 31, and I surely hope
the ghosts and goblins don't get
you. I haVe 10 get down to Middle·
port between now an&lt;! Sunday to
see the Halloween decorations of
Jon and Amy Perrin. They live in
the ~cond floor apartment at the
home of Velma Rue on Third
Avenue and I'm told their decora•.
lions are outstanding so I won't
want to miss 'em.
· Did you know that Helen Miller
who used to live in the Rutland
area will mark her 95th birthday
this Halloween? She's living at
!68 Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy,
these days. And you certaioly
remember Middleport High
School's beloved English and liter·
ature teacher, Nan Moore. Nan
· will mark her 92nd birthday on Sat·
urday also and loves to hear from
her'former students. Nan still lives
at 1(l0 N. Fourth St., in Middleport.
And it does follow that Nan's twin
sister, Elizabeth Mourning, will
also mark her 92nd on Saturdayshe resides at Overbrook these
days.
As usual, things are busy. busy,
busy with us. Saturday afternoon
we attended a memorial serviee for
our High St. neighbor, Florence
Smith, held at the Middleport Presbyterian Church. As you probably
remember, Florence, after an interesting career in several locations
including Russia, · retired to
Pomeroy about nine years ago.
She built a house across from us
and looked forward to many happy
years in Pomeroy. Her dream was
cut short by illness.
High Street in Pomeroy is quite
a place-dead end with a 10181 of
10 houses and one of the few
remaining brick streets in town.
Just a little stteet where old friends~
meet, you might say. Rutland's
Charlie Barrett says ihat turning
onto High SL is like entering l)isney World. Come to think of it. I
wonder what he means 'by that.
However, resideniJ of the street are
familiar widt deadl. Pleceding Florence from the tiny IDeCit - Ted
Downie, Vida Ihle, Pal and Clara
Lochary, Phyllis and Leslie Pultz
IOd Mlrie Bictunao--all ~
and such good
•
y like a numbel' of other
MeiJS Countians-even you,

nei=

·

the time frame of the Clovis cuiture, which was known to have
used spears to hunt game that
included
mammoths
and
mastodons, he said.
Evidence indicates that the Ciovis spread within 1,000 years to
.inhabit the Great Plains and areas
as far away as Alaska and Florida,
McKinney said. That evidence
includes finely worked spear heads
that had a characteri~ long! fluted
shape with a groQ\Ie mthe m1ddle.
Archaeologists have found evi·
dence that those people built cam{'"
ftres and apparently cuned mest m
pita,
said. They also had
smallMcKinney
settlements.
Michael B. Collins, a research
fellow 81 the Texas Archaeol0$ical
Research Labor8lory at the Umversity of Texas, said McKimey's age
estimate was reasonable, but more
· resean:h is needed 10 axtf'JJDI iL
"We've had claims of human
skeletons ·having been dated at
20,000 ancl 70,000 and other ages
like that based on one line of evi·
dence or another and they end' liP
not being corroborated or being
refuted by later and more advanced
techniques," Collins said.
"There's a lot more to be done to
verify this age determination."
Scientists believe several other
archaeological sites in North Amer·
ica may be as much as 30,000 years
old, but none yielded skeletal
remains. The oldest modem human ·
skeletons .are estimated to be
35,000 years old and have been
discovered in western Europe and
the Middle .East
•

Believinl his story thai he had
been kicbd out, the woman gave
him a safe place tD stay and fed
him for eight days. Meanwllile, we
were sick with worry, not knowing
if he was dead or alive. When the
detective we hired finally tracked
him down and told the woman the
real story, she cooperated and our
son was brought home. We are now •
WOiking at being a family again, and
through counseling, life is getting
beau.
Afttt talking to other parents of
runaways, we realized that our
experience was not uncommon.
Well-meaning people who befriend
runaways do not understand that
they may be hurting rather than
helping. Our parent suppon group
made up the following tip sheet
for corilmlillity members who may
be asked to house teen-age "guests."
' That child may be a runaway if:
I. A friend of your child is
spending the night more frequently
or on imusual nights (such as school
nights). Some runaways rowe nights
from friend to friend It might be
, your tum once a week.
2. A teeli-aget says be or she was
kicked out or abused, but balks wben
you suggest help rrom legitimate
agencies.
3. When you-teU the "guest" you
want to call his or her parents, you
, get excuses such as, "They've gone
out and won't be back until late,"
"Their phone number is unlisted and
I can't give it out, • or "They are
away on vacalion. •
·
4. When an oveniight guest
brings several items of clothing
for a one-night stay and "seutes
in."
If you suspect a.. child is a
runaway, please contact your
nearest poliee station. Aldtough I
am grateful 10 the kind-hearted
WOIIUIII who took our son in, the
pain and anxiety we suffered.during
those eight long days and nights is
· indesc.ribable. Tlliutb for printing
my letter, Ann. This information is
vital. - A HAPPIER HOME NOW
INruLSA ·
DEAR HAPPIER: fm sure you
alerted a great many faders to a
possibility that never occurred to
them. Thanks for opening a lot of
eyes today. I wmdcr if teen-agen
· realize how much pain they cause
when they "disapptar." What you

maybo-we were glued to the ·Ide~
vision set Saturday night 'to watch
Racine's Barbara Chapman take
part in the Ohio Lottery's Cash
Explosion show. She did so well
and might have done even better
had I been 11ble to find my lucky
troll to hold in her behalf during
the show. However, Barbara did
win $22,000 which earned her a
spot to participate in the $200,000
wheel game. Unfortunately, her
luck ran out, but who can sneeze at
$22,000? Barbara did us proud.
I suppose you noted that the
Glenn Miller band entertained in
· Columbus recently.. As I reflect on
that I wonder how that can be pos·
· sible. Glenn Miller died in a plane
crash alniost SO years ago. Unless
those musicians were in diaP.ers
when they were .with the Miller
band, it seems highly unlikely that
ih~ same band members are still
gomll. On the other hand maybe
,
they''ve been "energized". Don't ·
you wonder why they just don't say
NEW ORLEANS (AP)- Fourthe band will play Glenn Miller year-old Eric Boyd died the way so
~angements-that's got to be a
many tenants of the St. Thomas
b1t more accurale.
Housing Project die each year And wasn't that a fmc tribute to from li bullet wound.
e~tertainer Minnie Pearl Mo.nday
"They was shooting all over us
mght? Remember when Mmme and it turned out it was Eric that
visited MeiJIS County durihg the got dead," said 5-year-Old TiwariBraUer Fesuvals? She was 51!Ch a da Royal. "You have to always
down-to-earth, pleasant and fnend- watch for those bad men with
ly individual, offs~;~ge as well as guns."
.
.
on, ":e learned dunng her appear·
In housing projects in New
ance m Pomeroy.
.
Orleans and other big cities chit·
~s I stated I know I'm late in dren have been gunned do~n getung thiS teuer off to you. We the victims of more weapons short
apprecialed the Christmas presents tempers and the drug trade. '
so much. We !oved theieather
. ~ sni~r at a Chicago housing
coats, !he G~cc1 watches and the proJect !tilled a 7-year-old earlier
~500 g1ft ~rtJfiCIIe to ~en was this month a~ the boy walked to
JUSt fan~. ~twas ruce of,you ID school with h1s mother. He was the
send !he gtfls in by a Blue Sttealt third pupil rrom the p~~t's ele·
Cab sJDCe I seemed too busy iO Jel, mentary school to be slain mseven
clear out to. Rock SprinjiB ID piCk mOnths.
them up dunng the yuletide. Actu·
In New York City, tenants of
ally, I did try to call ynce to thank the Red Hook project say they keep
you but the line wu busy and I their children indoors when they
never got back 10 it. I'm sorry I aren't in school.
didn't gel you anything. I did piCk:
"The ltids ltids can't go to the
up a poinsettia for you but was to playground, because the drug deal·
busy to.~ it out to you. Needless ers tell you to move,'' said Edward
to asy, It along gene.
· Negron, the 32-year·old fatber of
At any rate the gifts were two. "It could be one o'clock in
grea1--10 nice ol you to remem!'Cr the afternoon and they could start
me so well. You know that I ve shooting. They don't care if other .
always felt very close to you- people are around." · ·
more like your son than your · · Chicago's mayor. closed four
nephew. You're just my very buildings; lightened security and
favorite aunt and uncle. By the ordered tenants to carry ID cards
way, d!d YOII.JCI.-ound to getting aftertheOcL 13 slaying.
.
YOIJI' wills wnuen7
In New Orleans, the city has
Hopefully, I'll gel out ID lleC you used feclcnl funds since last year to
sometime 10011 or maybe I'll even assign extra patrOl can to IIDIIIC of
phone. Meantime, do keep smil· the city's 10 lederatly funded housang.
· illJ projectl. ''But we need more,
Love, Bob more pab'ols, moril money,'' Sgt.
Gilbert lo!mson said.

Drug free
week edition

lr tlltll .4IIIJ i..tlltdul cobiiM )'DII
clipped '1f"'' dl#' )ldlow wtt1J age?
For a copy t1{ lttr MOll /rt4WIIl/y
·rtqwllal poem~ llltd usays, IQd a
IIC/f-odirUIICd, Wllg, bluiiJUI•Ru
ANN IANDICIII
tllvelope aNl a clr6ck or ~
order for $4.85 (litis iiJciKder
·un.
'l'IIIHIIp II ' _.
postage aNl lliwllillg) to: Gtm~,
c........ s,.... .... .
c/o AM Lllltdtrs, 1'.0. Box 11562,
Clticago,
Ill: 60611-0562. (In
have written might give them
Canada.
sellll
$5.87.)
something to think abouL

Ann

Inside today's
Daily Sentinel .

Loo""'"""

AS
PROSECUTING
AnORNEY . .

VoLa, No.131

Co~IM1182

1. A 131 per cent Increase In
prosecutions!
2. A 72 per cent Increase In drunk driving
prosecutions!
3. Prosecuted more drug-cases than at any
time In the history of Me'lga Countyl
4. In 1991 alone, collected more than
$570,000 In delinquent land taxes. ·
5. In 1992 collected thi largeat delinquent tax
foreclosure Judgment In Meigs County
history for our school systiiiiSI
6. Obtained the first two death penalty
Indictments In more than 50 years In
Meigs County!

Steve Story is a le-loaa resldelt of Meftp
Co.••ty alld a.1972 gra&amp;ate of Melas_HIP.
SdJool. He us ~ked law slice 1979 aiel
served tile people of Meigs Cotlly as
ProsecuH~g Attoney slice Jatary 1989.

STATE BOUND • Tbe Eastern High School'
marehing band concludes its competition season
on Saturday afternoon at Huntingon Vinson
Higlt School, before progressing to the state
marching flllals on November 7. The band took
grand champion laurels last Saturday at Trl. Valley High Sdlont. Pictured are, frontl-r, Field
Commllllder Da- Foley, Vicki Warner, Kristi
Warner, Branilon Buckley and Joey Weeks. Second row I-r. Meredith Crow, Christie Gross·

RE·ElECT

STEVE' STORY

PROSECU~~~~~f!!!~~~~~~.

•Advocates for Effective Public Administration
•American Federation of State, County and Municipal
Employees .
•National Rifle Association
•United Onion of Roofers &amp; Waterproofers &amp; Allied Workers
•Fraternal Order of Police (call Steve Young)
•AFUCIO
•United Steel Workers
eQhio Civil Servant Employees ~ssociatlon
eQhlo Building Construction &amp; Trade
•United Auto Workers
eQhlo Nurses Asasoclatlon
.United Food Commercial Workers
-Executive Council of the Ohio Federation of Teachers
eQhlo Education Association
.United Mine Workers of America
e()l)lo Valley Council of Sheet Metal Workers
•Farm Bureau
•Farmers Union
•Committee for AgrlculturefA.E.P.E.
eCitlzens Against Crime.

POINT PLEAS~. W.Va. (AP) Tuesday.
- A Mason ~ounty school board
It is the first time the state
member says ihe stare had neither Department · of Education has
the right'· nor the reason to remove removed a county school board
him from office, e'veq though he m~mber' for refus in¥ to take the
refused to take required training training, Marocltie S81d. ·
courses.
·
Marockie said the four remaining
"I coulll teach those darim Mason County school board memcourses. I don't have to take them," bers have 45 days to appoint a
said Olston 0. "Nick" Wright of replacement for Wright. If they 'do
Mason. Wright is a fanner teacher not, he will appoint a pew board
and school principal, as well II&amp; a member to serve until the next elecformer director of auendance, .. lion, -he said.
director of transportalion, SUJ?Cr·
Wright said that is unconstituvisor of free text· books, supemsor tiona!.
'
of the hot lunch program, director
"I hate to think the world has
of social services and anendance, goucn ID the place where an apand county school board president.
pointed official can ~lace an elecWright refused several oppor- ted official," he said. 'It's Hitler all
tunities to complete the training, over again."
including a video version sent 10
The Le~islature passed a law in
him at his home, state schools Su- 1990 reqmring all board members
perintendent Hank Marockie said

'

1. .. 1

.,

............................ ...,.......

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - · Presi- showed that the economy grew 2.7 to increase the fuel effiCiency standent Bush today told supporters percent in the third quarter,
dard to require aulllnlllkers to buiid
"It carne out that our economy vehicles that pruvide 81 least 40 to
that the economy is not in a deep
recession and is 1r0proving, and he · is growing ... ye~. people were 45 miles per gallon. The·current
warned that Ohio autoworkers hurting but we are not in a reces- standard is 27.5 miles per galli)D.
would lose their .jobs if Bill Clinton sion. We are }!roWing," be said.
"That will put IDOSt Ohio
He .reminded supporters that the autoworkers out of work,'' Bush
is elected.
He also criticized Clinton for last time the country had a Demo- said.
protesting the Vietnam War while a cratic president and a Democratic
Earlier today in · Lima, Bush
Congress interest rates were at 21 appeared on ABC-TV's "Good
student in Oxford, En~land . .
"You can protest m front of the percent and inflation was at15 perContinued on page 3
White House, but whim you're cent.
."Let's keep our economy grow.abroad stand up for the United
States," Bush told. about 8,000 ing. Let's reduce spending. Let's
people at. the Seagate Convention · reduce taxes : .. The only way they
Center downtown: ''Characrer does (Democrats) can win IS to lie to
people, to tell them we're in a deep
make a difference.''
The Dwight D. Eisenhower
recession,
and we're not.''
Bush noted statistics the governMath
and Science Jrant of
Bush
said
the
Democrats
want
ment released Tuesday which
$4,151.03 was acknowledged wben
tbe Southern Local School Board
met in regular session Monday
evening at the Racine Elementary
School.
.
The board established a position
The jury trial in Meigs County Court set for Thursday has been
for pep band instructor, and voted
canceled. Jurors need not, appear.
to hire Dave Gaul as the junior
high school girls' basketball coach .
Upon inspection, it was decided
that a new roof is needed at the
How would you like to watch a live political debate, modeled
Racine Elemenrary Scliool and that ·
after the presidential encounters?
asbestos (emoval is necessary at
. ,That opportunity will be available on Friday, from 2:4S to 3:20
the Portland school and Southern
p.m., when incumbent Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby and
High.
his Republicap opponent, Paul Gerard meet on stage at Southern
A schedule to stan replacing
High School.
.
text books was established bepnEach candidate will make a three-minute opening statement.
ning with math lxds.
Then, then two will field questions from a panel of Southern Hi$h
The ~ard approved the purSchool students. Bill Lake, high school government teacher, w1U
chase of 400 folding chairs to bo
serve as moderator.
.
used at the junior high and hi&amp;h
While this propam is in preparation for the mock election to be
school.
held at Southern H~ School, several 11f the students ,are old
The next meetin1 will be Nov.
enoup to vote on
lion Day. The faculty feel• that informed
23 818 p.m. at !he hilh school.
.
vllltn llllb men intielllpnt choices, and debates such as this can
Attendina were Scou Wolfe,
lead ID wiser dec:ili0111 in dte votina booth, Lake said.
president; Sue Oruelet, vice-JINii· The public II wek:ome to
the debare. Since only 3S mindent; Joseph Thoren, Tom Rose·
ute~ have been aliOlled for the program, however, anyone attending
beiTy and Denny Evans, members;
should plan to arrive in plenty ol time to be seated.
DeMy Hill, treaiUrer; llld Bobby J.
Ord
, ,....,...u_.....,,._
~·-""'--'-'
!I

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stall'
If fright in the night brin~ you
great delight, then don't m1ss tl)e
haunted hayride along the winding
roads of Sleepy Hollow Thursday
night.
The wooded area adjacent to the
Middleport marina off Page Street
is being converted into a den for
witches, a place where ghosts ~
goblins roam, where the dead nse
from their coffins, Jaws strikes
again, and the headless horseman

rides.
Again this year the third annual
Halloween party is co-sponsored
by Feeney-Benneu P~st 128,
American Legion, and Middleport
Village.
Open to everyone, it is aU free.
The party wuh a bonfire, costume judging, and refreshments
will take place on the hili above the
marina. That's also where the
hayrides will originate. .
The Legion and its Auxiliary
have purchased gallons of cider,

Mock election planned

'

~.·j~ ·~&lt;a, , • •

.aena

.

Haunted hayride set Thursday night ·.

Jury trial canceled

'

•

party co-sponsored by Feeney-Bennett Post 128, ·
American Legion, and Middleport Village will •
be held Thursday evening at the Middleport ·
marina.

--Local briefs-·---.,

tile Commltl11to Elect U.rlt Milone; K. 'h'Oiie, '-uf8r; Rt. 1, Box R, Ironton, Oh. 4M3I

0 .............. ,. .. lf"""' .. f""""····~·'-'~1" I . ... _ . . . ..... IM ~OO ... ~j·&lt;l-1•~'

to complete seven hours of training
in school laws and parliamentary
procedure, said Beth Vorhees, a
depai1ment spokeswoman,
The state agency held a hearing
for Wright on Sept. 28. Mason
County Schools Superintendent
Grant Shephard testified at the
h~ng that Wright had told him he
had no intention of viewing the
trnining tapes, Marocltie said.
"The reason they want me off of
there is because I've been blowing
the whistle on the whole damn
bunch for two years, and they don't
like it," Wright Said.
UP GOES THE SIGN • Bob 'Gilmore, len,
The financial coordinator for the ·
chairman
of Middleport's annual Halloween
Mason County schools, Patty Pyles,
and
his
son, Bilr Gllmo,~, erected the sign
bash,
was suspended last month and is
at
the
entrance
of Sleepy Hollow Tuesday. The
under investigation for alleged em'
bezzlement, according to Assislllnt
Superintendent George Miller.

Bush promises to ·improve economy

'

in ~ew orders was concentrated io
the volatile aircraft industry, at
automobile manufacturers and at
defense plants.
·
Transportation orders fell 8.4
percent to $26 billion. Orders for
military goods dropped 15.7 pe~centto$5.4 billion.
.
Excluding ll'liDsportation, ordeis
w.ould have risen 2.1 percen1.
Excluding defense, orders would
have increased 0.5 percent,
· A 10.2 percent drop was recorded for primary metals such ass~.
It was worst since March 1989.
On the positive side, orders rose
5.6 percent for electrical equipma\t
and 2.3 percent for industrial
machinery.
Orders tor non-defense capital
. goods, a gauge of business invest·
menr-spending, rose 4.1 'percent in
September, making up for a 3.9
percent decline in AugusL

LLoW

•I• ~
w
.

Eisenhower grant
acknowledged

ONE.

Trad Rfna ro ,.., .,., 11sf

nickle, Jennifer Mora, Noelle Pickens, Lisa
Stethem and Angie Chaney. Third row 1-r, are
Ch1J'Iene DaUey, Lauren Youoa, Eric Hollon,
Anna Wotr and·Amber Fortney. Fourth row 1-r,
Ginger Nutter, Julie Brown, Andy Wolf,. Letitia
Holsinger, Jonathan Avis and Heather Well.
Band members not pictured: Judy West, Bill
Baker, James Ewing and Jeanie Cline. (Sentinel
Photo by Brian J, Reed)

state has no right
to remove-him from Maso1J board

THESE FOLKS KNOW MARK MALO"E WILL FIGHT FOR OUR INTERESTS,
THAT'S WHY THEY ENDORSE .AND SUPPORT HIM. PLEASE JOIN THEM IN
SUPPORTING MARK MALONE:

MARK

A lluhlmadla Inc. Hewlplper

WASHINGTON (AP) port his claim the economic recovOrders to U.S. factories for long- ery is accelerating. '
lasting durable goods such as comWith ·only a week left before
puters and cars fell in September Election Day, the Commerce
for the third consecutive month, the Department S81d the GDP grew at a
government said today.
seasonally adjusted annual rate of
It was the farst triple drop since 2. 7 percent during the Julylanuary-March 1991, during the September quarter.
depths of the recession, and it was
But, economists said the susthe fourth decline in five months.
lllined fall in durable goods orders
The Commerce Department sail! _:.~~as a bad sign for the future. It
· orderS feU a seasonally adjusted 0.4 · coiild portend more layoffs at fac·
percent to $118.9 billion last tories_
month. In advance, economists
Underscoring that, the Com, were looking for. orders to increase merce Department said the bacldog
by about that percentage.
of unfilled orders feU for the 13th
· Orders also fell 0.4 percent in consecutive month to $452.6 bilAugust after plunging 2.7 percent lion, the lowest level since Decem·
in July.
·
-ber 1988.
The latest decline ~ted a
That's a sign that factories are
disappointment to President Bush, easily keeping up with the flow of
who on Tuesday latched onto a new orders with their current work,
stronger-than-expected report on force.
the gross domestic product to supMost of the September decline

~."Jl!right says

231 ·W. a-clltnet, Pom•oy,Oh. 457tl

STilE REPitESENTAT.YE

3 Section&amp;, 22 Pagee 21 -.io

Orders for durable ·goods ·
.· are down in September ·

HAS:

•

50..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohl!),. Wednesday, October 28, 1992

STEVE STORY

.

Low tonJcbt near .a

Tbunday, .,llDy.lfl&amp;b Ill mid·

•

FUTURE OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO. THEY KNOW HE'S FOUGHT
TO RETAIN AND EXPAND NEARLY 7,000 JOBS AID PROTECT
~·
OUR COAL ECONOMY.
In this upcoming election, you'll be able to keep moving forward, when you
vote to ~eep a strong voice for Southeastern Ohio in Columbus. OR Tuesday,
November 3rd, send a message to Columbus, just as these folks have don.
Tell them that we want a proven fighter. We want Mar~ ~alone, because
he's on our sidel

Paid lor

Pick 3:
439 '
Pick 4:
6662
BuckeyeS:
10-24-25-27-31

Landers

,..
naa,.
roa
THEY KNOW HE'S BEEN FIGHTING IN COLUMBUS FOR THE

Children
learn·about
death early

Ohio Lottery

JAWS S'I'IUitES AGAIN • Something new for those on tbe
haunted byrlde dlrouall Sleepy Hollow this year will be Jaws
emeral•l frO• LeadiDJ Creek as the wagons move aloa1 the
lhoreUne;
111'1 .,.•• into place in preparation for the third
~DDul Hdoweeu ptU1y to be held Thursday night at the Middle·
port marla oltPaae.Street.
· . -

s-.

dozens of donuts, and plenty of
hotdogs in anticipation of hundreds
of area residents attending.
Twenty-four trophies donated
by Middleport Trophies and Tees
will be awarded to the winners in
the costume judging in categories
of prettiest, ugliest, scariest and
most original in several age groups.
The judging will take pi~J!:e at 6:30
p.m.
Hayrides will begin at 6 p.m:
with the first two wagons to be residents of Overbroolt Centet.
Everyone will be required to
have a ticket to board one of the
wagons. When entering the marina
area, Legionnaire Torn Brewer will
be there to give a ticket to each per.
son. The tickets will be collected
each time a wagon pulls out.
Because of a problem wbere a
few teenagers tried to disrupt the
hayrides last year, a search light ,
will be in used in the wooded area. ·
surrounding the section where the.:
Halloween scenes have been creat·
edL
' ...
Bob Gilmore, chairman, advis-_. '
es that he will be working will!·
Middleport police and that those
trying to disrupt activity or dj) van- , ·
dalism will be prosecuted.
..
The legionnaires are being. •
joined in creating scenes this year
py the Farmers Bank ~f Pomeroy.
and Peoples Bank of Middleport. ..,
The use or sound effects and
blacldights has been made possible.,
by Columbus Southern Power and :·
George Miller who put eloctricity :
in10 a section of Sleepy Hollow.
.
As in I?revious years motorisll •
can pull nght into the marina IRa ,
to park. Norm Van Matre and .
Melvin Cross will be the putini :
assistants on the lot. Middlepoii
ftre equipment will be there willa
equipment and lights. The ftrlllleil:
will rope ()[f the Leading Creek:
shoreline so that youn&amp;SietS cannDc
wander into that area.
l
....
&gt;

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