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Plfl

10--The Deily SenUnel

Ohio searches for new welfare director
ly JOHN CHALFANT
A• cit'"'...._ Writer
COLUMBUS - For die ICCClllll
lime in IWO yean, a nlllionfl seirch
is under way for a new Slale weifan: directOr. Acting qency chief
James. Conrad believes the scan:h
will be better the second time
around.
Conrad was api!Ointcd by Gov.
George Voinovtch last week as
interim director of the Ohio
Department of Human Services. ·
COIIrad will lad 1hc $7 billiOiia-yc* agency until a cqmmitiCC
recommends a successor for former
Dircclll' Tary Wallace. .
Wallace, who resigned under
criticism for hirinJ favoritism,
salaries of adminutrators and
employ« early miremcnt bu)'OUIS,
was himself the product of a
nationll search.
''
Comd, administrator of the
Ohio Bureau of Employment Services who is on loan to 1hc welfare

deparllllent, prcdlctod the

~h

c:ommlace WllUld bi~~e more lnfor-

mation II its di"P""l
" I don ' t know ODHS. I do
know ODES. And I must teD you
now. tlllt iiiCall:h group is aoing to
know a heck of a lot more about
how it opetllll8 and what the key
questions are goinJ. to be as they
search," Conrail said. ·
"To me that's the big' difference. Iesteec! of looting af gcneral'ities,lhey're going to knoW exactly
what type of pcr1011 is needed there
and are going to search for that
type ofpersoll," he said in an interview.
·
·
Jacqueline Romer-"-·"". executive assistant to v~';v'ich for
health alld human services, will
coordinate lhe sean:h for Wallacc's
successor. Voinovich said constituency and advocacy groups will .
be COII8Ulted.
·
Voinovich said in appointing
Conrad last week .there would be

no I'Uib to Jllllre a nl e:tion.
"I dlint IbM we're aoillJ 10 like
OlD' lime, identify key people tbal
sho\Jld be 011 thll screening (:Ommiaeeto Jlllb sure tbll We exh•nst
au of our Jemedies, llld not be satisfiod Ulllil we find that ~ lhat
we aU ~ can get the job done,"
Voinov1~ aaid, at a news conferlast wcet.
e~ said he is aiswning his
temporarr job with no preconceived IIOli01IS, and would not hcsi·
tate to recommend a management
oYIII'haul. ,
"We're going to talk to the peapie, talk to the poups. see how it's
OfJI81IIml, see bow we improve the
org&amp;llization,'' he said.
' ~if it needs to be broken up, ·
needs to be reorpJizcd, we're 8Iso
not going to sit oa our hands,
because as the governor said, it
may like months, and months. We
csaida
.n'. t afford to sit by," Conrad

Co•maalty Caleildlr Items
appear two daJII bdore • event .
.ad lbe day Ill tll!lt eveat. Item
anllllle received weD Ia IIIIVP«
to assure pubUcatlop Ia the cal·
mdar.
MONDAY
POMEROY • First Southern
Baptist Church, revival, through
Friday with Charles Altirnore and
Henry Roe. Lamar O'Bryant, pas·
101', invites the public.
.
MIDDLEPORT - Xi Gamma
Epsilon Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, will meet Mouda atlhe
home of Phyllis Hackett, ~ddle­
port. Preferential tea at 6:30p.m.
RACINE - Racine Board of
Public Affairs will meet at Star
Milll'lKlc Monday.at 10 a.m.

,I
I

Avenue,'Pomeroy.
CHESTER - Chester Elementary PTO will meet Monday at 7
p.m. in the 'school cafeteria. All
parents and teachers welcome.

DARWIN - The Bedford Township Trustees will meet Monday at
7 p.m. at lhe town haD.

RACINE • Racine Elementary
PTO will meet Monday at 7 p.m.
.
.
. CHESHIRE - Women Alive
will meet Monday, 7 p.m. ~y~~er
C_reck Clubhouse. Thanksga_vmg
~- Dar~ Jodon, devouooal
It • • •Cbristmaa all\ demo.

RACINE • American Red Croas
Bloodmobile will be at Southern
High School Tuesday from 10 a.m.
to 2 p.m. Public invited.
POMEROY • Ohio Eta Phi
· Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
will nieet Tuesday at the Senior
Citizens Center in Pomeroy. Dr.
Nick RoblaDI will diiCUSI "Drs.
With a Heart."

POMEROY - DAV &amp;,lid Ladies
Auxiliary will meet Monday at 7.
p.m. at the hall, 124 Butternut

'

'

WEDNESDAy
COOLVILLE • Hunter's safety

MaJIIclpal A~ Ia Sknveport, La., Staa·
day, Mb II J11a7bi1 t1te part Ill Elfll Ia a cable
televlllaa doea-Jitary abottt 1111 Dre 195+55. ~
(AP plloto)
••

Mendel said in an intot-l
By JO~ CHALFANT .
how tlilngs
out," said Dr. vices,''
•
•f:i
Alsol:lated Press Writer
Lawrence Mendel, the deparllllent VICW.
.
.
Correctional MCdical Srslel!lr
COLUMBUS - The state is medical director.
turning to private busineSs to pro-. · Tllcre are clinics at aU 22 of lhe .wiD cover costs 9f patients m loc4
vide niedical cue for hundreds of department' a·other initit~ttions. hospitals, up to $10,000 per inmate;:
prisoners at the TrumbuD Come· Surgery and long-term care are The 11a1e pays for cos11 over thai:!
. amount. .
tiona! Institution, scheduled to provided in central Ohio.
"We're anticipating a fair n~UJ~, ·.
• opcn Tuesday.
·
.,
Correctional Medical Systems
ber
of hospitallzetlou tbal wou14l
Correctional Medical Systems will hire all medical personnel to
run
over that," Mendel said. He:
of SL Louis will provide complete provide 24-hour physician, nursing,
said
several cues i year exceed t!W
mcdical serviceS for inmates under dental,' -qy, and EKG services at
$10,000
level.
.;;
a $928,645 contract through June the prisQn near Warren in northeast
The
state
will
have
to
pay
fc»;
30, 1993.
Ohio. ,
"
The Ohio Department of RebaThe ·collpany also will provide prisoners hospitalized in ColuiiJ:;:
biliiation and Correction said it psychiatric care that otherwise bus, and for all costs associateD
may save $102,000 as a result of would not be available at Tn.mbull with tra1men1 of AIDS or the HIV'
. that causes•sease.
the d'
•'
,..
the arran11ement, primlrily because because of cutbacks in the Ohio vtrUS
Sharron
Kor'negay,
spoteswom~
fewer pnsoners will have to be · De~t of Mental Health.
taken to medical centers in Colurn'We tum over lhe keys to the an for the department, said the~
buS for treatment
medical area and write them a $47.2 million Trumbull Correction..
"It's a pilot project. We want to c~ and say you provide the ICI'- al Institution will' open ·TuesdaY,

i:•

MIDDLEPORT • Jim Oliphant
will conduet a bible study course
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the First
Baptist Church in Middleport.
Everyone welcome.

William LeMaster of Racine
was arraigned by Meigs County
&lt;;ourt Judge Patrick H. O' Brien
!-fonday looming for his aUeged
mvolvement in lhe death of a Galli!! County man and his son in
1991.
.
.
LeMastert 26, was arrested·on
Tbursday evening by authorities in
Lakeland, Fla., and ntumed to
Ohio over the weekend. Auotber
defendant in the case, Fred Dren- .
~en, is awaiting trial and is incarcerated in the Meigs County Jail.
Jobn Perry, an a~ent for the

..

MIDDLEPORT • Middleport
Amateur Garden Club will meet
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the home
of JCIIII Moore. Charles Blakeslee
wiD show slides of past shows by
the club and Middleport Garden
Club.

OhioBureauofCrimmallden~­

cation and Investigation said on
Monday that the two arc being
bouaed in sepuate facilities for
ICCUrity ne8IOII8.
. Bolli p accused of the murders
. C!f~~eme:f L. Halley. 31i. al1d his
~ ~y S.llalley, 12, in 1991.
The· Halleys' bodies were later
foUnd 'in rural Meigs County, and
~ has ~n speculation tha! a
dlvg lnlllacllon was in progress at
the tiJne of their deaths.
LeMaster is charged with two
counts of ~vated murder, and
II yesterday.s hearing, O'Brien set
LeMastcr'i bond at $SOO,OOO cash
!l" each ftrst de~ felony count,
m acconlance With the recommendalion made by Assistant Prosecut·
ing Attorney Unda Warner.
Gallipolis Attorney William

RUTLAND- Leading Creek
Conservancy District offices will
be closed Wednesday in observance ofVercrans Day.

replace Leno with youag-aitdience else," he said. "!love to create
magnet David Letterman, whose characters around me. I don't know
"Late Night" show follows why. Maybe it means that I ought
Lena's. ..
to go to a psycboloaisL ••
NBC conflfll\ed Leno's version, , Hopkins portrays the vampire
calling the New Yorker report slayer Van Hclsing in. the soon-to"ilonsense.'' 1V Guide reported. . be-released honor film "Bram
Leno said his ratings among the Stoker's Dracula.·. ~
18-to-30 age group were up about
m a 11111anen1.
10 r,:rcent.
·
PITTSBURGH (AP) - Billy
Mitchell and Murphy arc
'As for David Letterman Ray Cyrus told concen-goers he
expected to wed in March. The breathing down my bac"k, well, would visit a 4-year-old transplant
baby, their second, was named David is the best," he said. "We patient. but fatiaue. bad weather
after jazZ lrumpela' Miles Davis.
were friends going into the rinf• · and ovencas obligations prevented
~ir daughter, Bria, is 3 years
and we'll be friends going ouL t him from ~aldng the trip, Cyrus'
old. ·
David ever did take over the show, manager Slid
I'd wait a month, call, and. say,
Cyrus on Thursday invited the
RADNOR, Pa. (AP) 'Hey, can I be a ..........
~~..., '"
crowd in South D-A
· ·
......... Ind., to JOm
"Tonight Show" host1ay Leno
him in visiting Charlie Fourstar
has denied rumon that NBC has
LOS ANGELES (AP) threaJA:ned to ftne him if the show Anthony Hopkins, winner of an
does POOrly in the ratinj!S sweeps.
Academy Award for his ~yal
"Word of honor, its not true,'; of a cannibalistic killer in 'Silence
Plans for the Rutland Elemen- · ·
Leno said in an interview published of the Lambs," has a kiw-tcy defitary
faD carnival were discussed at
in the Nov. 14 issue of 1V Guide. nition or his craft.
,
"Yes, I feel like I have a sword
"It's weird, it's simple and it's a lhe recent PTO mcctina. The carni·
hangina over my head, but I'm the job,",he said in an interview to air val will be Nov. 14 from !1·8 p.m.
OI)C who's gone to NBC to say I'd
Tuesday on the syndicated TV with ~ al1d prizes.
quit if I began to do poorly, not the show, "A Current Affair.'.'
K1m Willford presided at the
other wa II'OIIIId."
While downplaying the art of meeting durina which ofticers
The l:iew Yorker magazine actinJ!. Hopkin I\, stressed tllat he reports were given. ·
reported last week that if ratings loves IL
It was 8IIIIOUIICed that orders for
don't improve, !he ncrwork plans to
"I can always be somebody jackets and t·shins an: to be turned

ENGLEWOOD, NJ. (AP)Eddie Murphy and fl&amp;ncce Nicole
Mirchell are the new parents of a 7•
pound. 7-ounce baby boy.
.
Mitchell gave birth Saturday
morning to Miles Mi\CheD Murphy
at Enalewood Hospital, said the
. act«'s publicist, Terrie Williams.
. "Love~• aU righl," M!lfPhy said

I.

'

Economic .Development Office to which operates the 992 exchange
The. Betsy Ross housing project
secaire the toO-tree service between ·also controls the' 773 exchange and was discussed and progress on
Meigs County and the 773 is expected to approve the request building the eight houses on tne
exchange in Mason.
block noted. Council granted a 20
on behalf of C&amp;P.
It was earlier reported by
It is anticipatetlthat hearings foot easement.to C~Iuf.llbl!s SouthNichols that the C&amp;P Telephone before the Public Utilities Commis- em Power whach will be mstaUing
Co. which provides service to the sion of Ohio wiD begin before t1ui underground electrical wires.
773 exchange in Mason has already end of the r,ear, Hoffnum said.
Council members Judy Crooks
approved the toll-free service to the
Counctl extended a vote of and Dewey Honon were appointed
992 exchange which serves thanks to residents for support of to the Ftremen's Dependency
Pomeroy and Middleport. GTE the fare levy in the Nov. 3 election. Board. The second re@ding was

LeMaster's bond set at $1 million
on two coun.ts.of aggravated murder

---People in the news---

!

-·

County maD aad his aoa. Boad was set at
LEMASTER RETURNED • Accused mur·
$5001000 on each or two counts. Pictured wltll
derer WIUiam "BWJ'' LeMaster D, 26, In white
LiMaster as be Is take• to -Is arralgameat
sblrt and dark pa1ts, was returued to Oblo over
the weekend and arralaned Monday before · bearln1 lll'e Sberirr James M. Soulllby, left, aad .
Deputy Ralph 1'ru8seD aad Jabn Perry, ID qent
Melp County Court Judge Patrick H. O'Brien.
with the Ohio BCI. (Sentinel PboCo br Brian J.
He was arrested Ia Laikelaad, Fla., for his
alleged Involvement In the murders or a Gallla . Reed)
Eachus was appointed to represent
LeMaster on behalf of the public
defender's office due to a conflict
on the part of Public Defender
Charles H. ~ij!hL Knig~t and .!Jis
' '

assistant, Christopher Tenoglia,
represented a potential witness in
Drennen's case, MichcDe Drennen, .
in obtaining an im'munity grant in
exchange for testimony, creating a
·.

Clinton's new Democratic
party reaching out to business
LIITLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) President-elect Clinton's caD to big
business for help on an economic
sttate'y is designed to show his
commabnent to crossing Partr lines
and ·offering a different kmd or
government, aides say.
. A planned economic summit,
which will feature economists,
labor representatives and academics, also is aimed at rallying
the American public behind whateVer economic: plan Clinton comes
up with before he takes it to
Congress, a senior aide said Mon.dsy.
'
'

Rutland PTO makes
plans for carnival

'

Clinton ran his campaign as a
"new kind of Democrat" and
pledged to cross patty lines to
solici( advice for solving America's
problems. Clinton 's outreach to
business leaders is part or that
effon, aides said. •
"I think Clinton is demonstrut•
ing that he wants to be in tune with
the business community," said
Sandra
Shaber, an economist at the
Thanksgivin~.
WEFA"Group,
a Philadelphia fore·
"Wfiat he s trying to do is show
casting
farm.
"This
summit doesn't
he's in touch and he wants to get a
sound
like
some
Democratic
brllin
sense of the scope of the problem,••
communications director George trust, some inner circle of technocrats. This is reaching out to the
Stcphanopoulos said.
country."

"He's buyin' into the country
before he buys mto Congress. He
wants to get the people behind
him," said the aide, wbo spoke
only on condition of anonymity.
. Clinton has not made any spepfic pl!IDS to meet with congressional leadets. On Monday his
aides said he would hold an economic summit sometime after

m soon.

Portraill will be sold Dec. 3, ~
al1d 5 as a fundraiser for the PTO.
Times will be 6-10 p.m. on Dec. 3
who is accused of robbin&amp; the 1omb and 4 llld aU day Dec. S. Pictures
of Jesus of Nazareth, 11ea11ng the will be liken 11 the fire bouae.
body, and, in conspiracy wlt!t
The tbhd
presented a
Joseph of Arilllllhea, Mary Mag- program
Day and
'dalen, and other, perpetuatin&amp; the won the room count
memberstory-of the resurrection. '!'bough- ship drivo.-The claas
the events and characters under refrellunents.
.
. consideration ·are ancient, the scene
New ofticen are ICim WiUford,
is set in a modem American court- prcs_ident; T~my Searlea, vlce· room.
preaident; Katie Oilmoro,IIOCretary:
David Keller, asiOCiate prole.- Vlcb Perrell, treasuftl'.
sor of communications and ,directol'
Members were urged to collect
of lhestre activities, is directi1111he "McBucks" from MCDonald's in
play.
Pomeroy.

•

White to portray 'Pilate'
Robin White, son of Robert and
Dove White, Coolville, is a mem. ber of the cast in "The Vigil,"
which wiD be staged at Ohib ValIcy CoUege Nov. 13 and 14.
·
White . will portray the role of
Pilate in lhe play.
A junior music major, White
plaai&amp; to gnlduatc in 1993. While at
OVC, he has been a member of the
Kappa Social Club and the

Cborale. ·

The Vigil, a courtroom drama
by I Mislu Fodor; enacts the. trial

or the gardener of Gethsemane;

'

Alfred. UMC hosts party

'

I

The Alfred United Methodist
Rev. Shwon Hauiman spoke of
Church recently hosted a Hal- God's loving care, 1111na pumpkins
Ioween party with SO people in as an illuatration. Sharon Boyles
detldance.
.
JUC.SSCI.d 1hc amount of candy com
Pri1.ca were IJYCII 10 thole 1· 10: m the jar.
.
preulclt, 1easlca Boylca; ugliest, ' Everyone enjoyed refrealmients
Tiffany SJICnce~; most orlginf!I, of hot dogs, donuta, cate, cookies,
Tylel Bid; IIJIIIIie8t. Megan AVIS. · cider llld other aoft drinks.
In the 11 -100: prettiest, Doris
Wcetend gue111 of Marilyn and
I&gt;111inF: nglita, Micbael O'Niil; Wilbur Roblnton ~ Leann Fick,
moat orlfinal, ~baron lfausm~; Columbus; and Larry Ritchie,
10d fuMiell. Kirt,Spencer. Nellie CaldweD.
l'llkcr Willi Shakespeare wircll.

'

'

Treatment
plants subject
to hearing
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) The Ohio Supreme Court ruled
today that public hearings must be
held on permit applications for two
treatment plants that would discharge waste into Blacldick Creek
in Franklin County.
The unanimous decision
involved wastewater treatment
operations of Lionmark Development Partners and the Jefferson
Water and Sewer D'istrict that
would serve 890 househOlds in Jefferson Township. ·
Justice A. William Sweeney
wrote the court decision.
It also said the director of the
Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency also must cOjiSider altema·
tives, including a connection 10 the
Columbus wastewater tteatinent
system .

Meigs Cou;:r Common Pleas
Court JudgeR
W. Crow ill has
announced that his office, as weD
us all o1hcr courthouse offiCeS, will
be closed Wodnesday, Nov. II, in
observance of the Veterans Day
holiday. Judge Crow asked that all
of Meigs Countl join in a proper
remembrance o the sacrifices or
those fellow citizens who ierled in
the various branches of the U. S.
militarY·
.
·
The Common Pleas Court, as
weD as au other courtboule offices.
will be opcn for business during
normal hours on Thursday.

.

Jennifer Sheets spOke on The
Livina Will at whea the Meigs
County Women'• Fellow¥Jp mot
recendy with 2!1 mem~ present
at the Dexler Church of €~~riaL
Devotlonl by Janice Petty
and Xadlta Stump
solo.
Katlartn lohnaon plellded It the

_,a

meeiint-

conflict in the LeMaster case.
The case will now go before tile
Meigs County Grand Jury, as
statute prohibits LeMaster from
entering a plea in O'Brien's court.

Courthouse to close

· Sheets addresses
fellowship members ·

1 Secllan, 10 , . . 25 011111
A liluhlm .... Inc. tic uu PII*

.Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio,· Tuesday, November 1o, 1992

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Seatilld New~ Stair
A reaototion of support for tollfree telephone service between
Mela• 111d Mason Counties was
paUed by Middlepo~ Village
~il ar Monday naght's meeting
at VIllage haD.
I
Mayor Fred Hoffman noted the
efforts of Mason Maror George
Nichols ~nd the Mctgs County

New prison tests private medical carej.
..
see
work

MIDDLEPORT · Royal Ambasssdor Recognition night, Wednes·
dar, 7 p.m., Hope Baptist Church,
Middleport.

Low tonight In high 40s.
Wednesday, rain. High In mid·
60s.

Middleport Council supports toll-free service proposal
FILMING ELVIS DOCUMENTARY · 'liN,
played by actor Kevbt MUll, walla past • pwp
or IICI'eamina lit~ u be IOH ap lite 1teJi!1 or the

RACINE - Racine American
Legion Post 602 will ha~~e a cornbread and bean soup dinner
PORTLAND • Portland Ele- Wednesday from IIOCIIIO .4:30p.m.
mentary PTO will nicet Tuesday, 7 Public invited. The post wiD visit
p.m., at the school. Everyone Wei· . Portland Elementary at 10:30 a.m.
come.
and Letart Elementary at I p.m.

TUPPERS PLAINS • Olive
Oranac Mem~ VFW POst No.
90S3 and Auxiliary will sponsor
lhe fourth annual Voice of DemocI'I!CY eontcst Monday at 7:30 p.m.
Public invited.

Vot.a, No.140
CGJI¥rlght.ot 11182

course, Wednesday, Friday, Nov.
18 and 20,6:30-9:30 p.m. and Nov.
21 and 22 from '10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at
lhe CoolvUle Uons Oub. To register, IX for further information, caD
Bob Pullins, 667-3831, .Ed Rood,
667-6348 or Ed Wigal. 667-6657.

TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT ~ Women's
POMEROY- Veterans Day proMiss~· Union will meet Tues- gram, Meigs County Courthouse,
d ay,· 6: 3 p.m., Hope Bap t'IS 1 Wednesday. All veterans and the
Church, Middleport.
public invited. ·
HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Senior Citizens, blood
pressure clinic, Tuesday, 10 a.m. to
noon. Meeting will follow and officcrs wiD be electioh. Thanksgiving
potluck will be held also, AU memben urged to attend.

PageS

•

Community calendar

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:
727
Pick 4:
6697

49ers
topple ·
Falcons-

Tltese.

alld a queen, •~a&amp;, prlaee and prlneea will be
crowned. laterested nnclldatellft asked to COD·
tact tbt T.I. advisor at their schools· before
Wedaaday. Pictured are, 1-r, Jason Hudloa,
Mary Staltll, Brld1et Powell, Stepunle Sarre,
Becky Moore, altd Sherrie Stover.

Soatllern
DANCE COMMITTEE •
Hlllt Sc:llool lbldntll In
Ill the Teeti
IUeltull D•ct O...tiee. T•e aaaaal daace
wiD be uW Prtday
to 11 p,ta. T J. 111
dl'lll·he CII'IIDiUIIIoa wllklt promotes pCIIIItlve
lll'eltlle ellokel. A.ll tltree Ill tbe couaty'a bllh
~ebooll are lnlted Jo partklpate ~· tbe claace,

•••ben

.

ne De:~~ter Chutc:h of Christ
celelnled ita bomecotniaJ Sunday.
· The IICllt me 11m, will 'be Dec. 3
at Hemlock Grove.
Refreshmentlwere served.

rn. e

'

Jl

I

Oftlclhl count set.
The Meigs Countr Board of
Elections will hold us official
count of ballots cast durin1 tbe
General EloctioR on Saturdatkat U
a.m. at the·board offtee on hariic Street.

given to an ordinance declaring as
excess property al1d authcrizing for
sale a small section of Hartinger
subdivision adjacent to Lot 12
owned by Reuben Collins.
Duriag the meeting it was voted
to fare parking meters beginning
the dsy after Thanksgiving through
the end of the 1992.
The mayor·s ·report showed
receipts of$2,691.49.
.
According to the police·report

there were 66 arreSIS made during
the month of October, and three
accidents investigated. Merchant
police coDections was $96, padting
meter collections, $S92, and parking tickets wrilll'p, 370.
The October
report showed
that Middleport responded to a
total of 80 calls during 1hc month.
That figure included 12 fire and
rescue calls.

rue

Natural gas costs
rising for winter
COLUMBUS (AP) - Residen-_
tia1 customers of most natural ps
:ompanies"in the state are facmg
higher monthly bills as the winter
heating season begins, Ohio Consumers' Counsel WiUiam Spratley
said today.
"Ohio's average residential
household monthly gas biDs, which
have hovered near record lows for
the past five years, have 11one up
$9, or almost 10 percent, Stnce last
November,'~ Spradey said.
A surve:r- of the state's eight
llqcst utilibes showed the average
household, using 20.000 cubic feet
of natural gas per month, paid
$110.72 monthly as of Nov. 7.
. An ay~ge bill as of Nov. 7,
1991, was$101.05.
·
Although average monthly bills
rose 9.6 percent from last year,
Spratley said customers of some
individual companies saw more
dtamatic boosts.
Da)'IOII Power &amp;t Light gas bills .
an: 28.S pcm:nt higher than a year
ago, while Cincinnati Gas &amp;t Electric went up , 17.5 percent. Bills
from Columbia Gas of Ohio were
up 14.1 per:enL
"What brings these averages
down in p1rticular is East Ohio
Gas, which is one or our largest gas
companies, serving Clevelarid,
Akron, Canton, Youngstown, and
their rates basically stayed flat,
down almost 1 percent," Spratley
said at a news conference.
· Much of the increase was ttaced
10 higher prices that local disttibu·
lion companies pay suppliers for
natural gas. Those costs are passed

directly through to consumers with·
· out having to apply to the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio.
Prices increased because of supply and demand, mole use of gas .
for generating elcctricity, inters tare
pipeline rate increases, and an
expecteil colder winter than in
recent years.
Spratley said bills also went up
because of increases in base rates
approved by the PUCO for some
companies, including Cincinnati
Gas &amp; Electric and Dayton Power
&amp;Light
Since January 1991, CG&amp;E was
j!:ranted a $39 million base rate
mcrease, and DP&amp;L a boost of
SIP million. CG&amp;E now is ~­
ing an additional $36.1 million rate
· increase for gas euslllmcrs.
The highest monthly bill of
$134.96 was listed for National
Gas &amp;t Oil, a company that operates
in east-central, and southeastern
Ohio. The total was-18.6 percent
higher than Ias't year.
Other companies, current
monthly average, and the percent·
age increase:
· -River Gas, $117.90, down 1.6
percent
-Columbia Gas of Oklo,
$117.62, up 14.1 perc:eat.
-Ohio Gas-Defiance, $112.16,
up 2.7 percent.
-Dayton . Power &amp; Light,
$106.49, up 28.5 pen:enL
-Cincinnati .Gas &amp; Electric ;
$105.48, up 17.5 percent
-West Ohio Gas, $98.20, up
2.3 percent. .
- East Ohio Gas, $92.94, down
0.8 percent.

Board OKs $2.1
billion for schools
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The sllte Conttollina Board has
authorized the release of $2.1 billion for Ohio's public schools.
The money represents the state's
share of school operating coSts for
the fiscal year ending 1une 30, and
is not an increase - just a lump
sum pa)!l!ent to cut Mil tape, offi·
cials Sllld Monday.
For years ; the Department of
Education has been required to get
the board's approval of monthly,
subsidies, and more recendy, twice
a month. ·
Stratford Sbields, board presi·
dent, said that under the new system, deparunent offacials wiD Collie
back in January and June for any
adjustments needed to keep the
total in line with legislative appropriations.
•
Rep. Robert Netzley, R-Laura,
asked if the lump sum could lead to
schools bonowing against next
month's subsidy to deal with cash
now problems. He was assured by
depiartment officials that it would
noL
.
Shields said the change had
nothing to do with the state's fmanclal problems IX tile possibility that
education could be hit if spending
cuts an: needed to eliminale a projected $300.miUion budget defaciL
At an otherwise routine meetIng, the board approved a department request for $1.1 million in
loans from the Vocational School
Building Assistance Fund for projects in Greene .and Wa~e coun.
ties.

The board authorized the
Department of Alcohol and Drug
Addictio~ Services to award
$674,939 1n grants for drug outreach services in Cleveland and
Dayton. The programs an: designed
to reach intravenous users and
mothers who can get on-site child
care when they recei~~e treanncnt.
1n other' action, the board:
- QK'd a $3!5 ,000 contract
between lhe Departmen! of Administrative Services and the Sierra
Environmental Group, Blacklick
Ohio, for asbestos removal fro~
the Statehouse llll part of a rcstorationprojccL
- Released $400,000 from a
Department of Development
account for highway impro~~ements
in Archbold and in German Township, as a result of an expansion of
the furniture maker Sauder Wood- .
woatingCo.
- Released $500,000 for the:
Ohio Steel Futures Program for ,lhe:
Department of Development to·
fund 19 steel-related training pro.'
grams, and $100,000 from the "
Business Development Account to :
assist the Glidden Co., Huron in :
the construction of an on-;ite ·
sewage treatment plant
-Permitted the Department of
Human Service• to enter into a
$139,836 COIIIIICt with the NatiOII·
al Assault Preveation Center
Columbus, to train teachers of
courses that alen deaf and other
special-~ students about sexual
and olher typeS of abuse, and how
toreponiL

�Tuelday, November 1o, 111112

Comme11tary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Coart Stnet
PomerGJ', Ohio

.

DBVO'I'ItD TO 11IB II'C'I'ERaTII OJ' Tlllt IRIGS-IiA!WN ,AREA

ROBERI' L WINGE'IT .
PubUsher
PAT Wlfi'IEittAD
Assistant Publishe.r/ControUer

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETIERS OF OPINION are weiCQme. They sbould be less tban 300
words. All leuers an subject to editing and. 'must be signed witb name,
addrels llld telepbooe D!llllber. No unaigoed leuen will be published. Lcuen
sbould be 1n good taste, addre"ing issues, not penonalities.

.

'

.

Letters to the editor
System works!
On Tilesday, Nov. 3rd, I voted,

bul was calle4 out of town for an
unscheduled appointment 10 see my
attorney and a 'visit to my twin
brOiher. Upon arriving home, I was
advised via telephone by a friend us

of tbe results·of lbe 'election. I
guess lbe sySICIII docs world
James B. Scott
1S14 Nye Ave.,
Pomeroy, Ohio

.Contributes to project
William Haptonstall, manager
of the Sears Roebuck store in.Mid·
dlepon contributecj to the breast·
feeding project of the Meigs Coun·
ty Women's Infant and Children's
Program (WIC) at the Meigs County Health DepartmenL
.
WIC is collecting breastfeeding
aids to be used in the education

sessions and Sears was good
enough 10 help us ouL We appreci·
ate all lbose who support die ser·
vices provided by the Health
Depanment.
Elaine Matheny
.
BreastfeediDB Specialist
Meigs County Health Department
Pomeroy, Ohio

Page 2- Tht DaJiysentlfler

In.January 1987, agen18. of .the
Immigration and Naturahzauon
. Service, ICCOI!Ipanied by members
of lbe FBI arreatechight Palestini·
an aliens~ one Kenyan woman
in Los Angeles Some of the arrests
were at .dawn: with Juns drawn.
One of those taken mto custody
Jatci- that day, a llludent; was llauled
away in 'ibe middle of an e11:am.
Another Khadec Hamide who II¥
been in' 1he United States since
. 1971 was due ro get his citizeDship
~theweetheWIIa•esaed.
Shackled hand and foot, the
"terrorists'' - ·as lbe INS called
· them - were char$ed with associ·
ating with an orgaruzation. the Popular F. ront for die_ Liberation of
Palestine, that advocates the "doe,
trines of world communism ."
. Under the language of the McCilr·
ran-Walter .Act at the time, this
kind of advocacy was reason for
deportation proceedings. At ftrst,
the prisoners were denied bail as
risks to natiOnal security.
The FBI had conducted a
len~y investigation of these " ter·
ronsts." One FBI agent .had moved
into an apartment next door to
Khader Hamide and his wife. Julie

. Mungal, to get the subversive
goods on lhosC two
The .result? In tCstimon befi
the Senate Comm1'ttce · Y1 . ~
m ntelh·

By N.at Hen#o!lf
~·
gence in 1987, FBI Director
William Webster said: "The indi·
viduals whO were ani:stecJ in CaJi.
fornia had not been found 10 haw
en~a$ed themselves in terroristic
acUv1ties." They were arrested,
Webster continued, "because lbey
are alleJed to be members of 1
worldwide communist organiza·
u·on. ... 1n ...
· paru·cu1ar case, 1·f
udS
lbese individuals bad been Uniled
States citizens, there would not
have been a basis for lbeir arresL"
American citizens, lbe director
of the FBI·aclcnowledged, have the
First Amendment right to advocate
ideas, even those prop&amp;""'~'~~ by lbe
Popular Front for lbe L~on of
Palestine. (The people .arrested, it
~ be noted, bad denied membership in lbe PFLP.)
But there was "evidence" of
their link to that organization,
.
· ·

:I
I

· I would like 10 say, I think the
village of Pomeroy is ver1' fortunate to have Police Officer Jim
Stacy working for the Pomeroy
Police DepanmenL
I realize most people in the village do not know Officer Stacy
because he works while they sleep,
but if they ever need him, they can
depcpd on him being there fast. and
not only is he fast 10 respond 10 a
call, but~ is OI)C of the most kind
. and COIISlderalc men I've ever had
the privileclge of meeting.
I know Officer Stacy has a "lie
love for law enfm:ement, because
God knows he isn't getting rich
working fa the village.
Offu:er Stacy will go that extra
mile 10 help anyone, and I want to
Tl

rO

ters h ave had
. th err' say

Meigs Countians have had their
say at the polls on election day and
have added some new faces in
county government.
As Americans, we can enjoy the
privilege of excercising our choice
and that's the way it should be.
. It is appropriate, however, that
we recognize the efforts of Commissoner Rich Jones during his
terms as county commissioner
which will end in January.
The county commission as a
group has lbe tremendous responsi·
bility of running the government of
the county. This· includes, among
other things, managing lbe fmances •
of the county so us to provide for
the officers of county govemmeiu,
for the protection and services 10
the people of the county, for maintenance and improvement of IOIIds
and highways, and most imponantly 10 accomplish all of this within a

Today in history
By Tile AIIOCiated Pre.
is Tuesday, Nov. 10, the 315tlt day of 1992. There are 51 days
left m the year.
Today's Highlight in His!.~!&gt;':
On Nov. 10, 1871, journalist and explorer Henry M. Stanley located
missing Scottish lillaionary David UvingSIOIIC in cenllal Africa. Stan!
delivered his now-famous greeling: "Dr. Livingsrone I presume'/" ~
which Livingstone replied: "Yes, and I feel thankful 'that I am here to
wek:ome you.·~
On this date:
In 1483, Manin Luther, the leader of lbe Protestant Refonnation was
born in Eislcben, Oemiany.
'
. In 1775, lhe U.S. Marines wm orginized under authority of lite Conti· ·
nenlll Co!lgras.
.
In I917, 41 tuffragiJU were ~sted in front of the White HOUIC.
In 1919, the Amcncan Leg.on held il8 flf'St national convention m·
Minnelpolit.
.
.
•
~oday

' "

''

~~-w::r~t ~ f~
tmm~ts
·
oeaong w .d
01 9

c~mmu • !D or _oth~ such pernl·

~:'~~~cal rc~· ~r gx&gt;
15

e
ave rce speec fig
here. Under the new..stalute, depor·

terronStacavuy. Not engagmg m
spreading Ideas, but actually
involved in terrorism.
!he Justice DeJll!rllll~nt - the
ulnmale proseeuror m this case has no~ allowed .the.new law to
les.scn 1ts determination to prove
that these two defenclants are " terrorists."·In rilaklng a case that IIley
· have "engaged in terrorist activity," the Justice Department is
inteiPlC.:!"J.,the new law 80 broadly
as tore
iL
Now underway before Immigration Judge Bruce Einhorn in Los
. Angel~. this will Pfllbably be as the defendants' co-counsel
David Cole notes - "the last
McCarthy-era deportation trial
solely for advocacy of ideas."
Bven lbough 1be charges are supposedly based on alleged actual ter·
rorism, Hamide and Shehadeh are
on trial for what they think. .
The Justice Department has
declared that it can deport Hamide
and Shehadeh solely for "provid·
ing material auppon to a terrorist
organization, WJibout more." That
is, without any more " proor• of
their "engaging in temlnstic activ·

FOR $1 MILLION ?

Final days ofBush's 'just lie' .campaign
which ran in states where exports change that would have great
form a valuable pan of the econo- impact on lbe middle class. Clinron
m_y, said: ''the Washington Post supports neither position, but it
has called Bill Clinton protection· became a staple of GOP phone
iSL" This stumped the Post. which banks in the final days of the cam. had already endorsed Ointon, so it paign.
asked the Bush camp for its source. · Bush himself was not above
lying 10 a national audience. On the
Wagm~n Here was the reply.
In 1985 lbe Post, in an editorial, Friday before the election, CNN's
called a ponion of a pending bill Larry King asked him about new
radio commercials that ran on a protectionisL Clinton, as governor • Irangate revelations that showed
state or regional basis in lbe main of Aitansas llllJlllQrled a portion of that he was at a key meeting in
the bill that woUld have kept textile February 1986 while he has mainbattleground states.
jobs
in the United States. There- tain¢ he did noi realize that anns
These commercials bad a com·
-mon theme - that a given Clinton fore, if he supported a pcrtion of a were being traded for hostages
plan would cost the local economy bill, a poi1ion of which the Post bad until he was briefed by the Tower
dearly. One, airing in Soulb DakO- called protectionist, the campaign Commission in December 1986.
His response: He never said' he
ta, said ''Clinton-Gore radical was justified in saying the newspaper
bad
called
the
governor
protec·
did
not know about arms going 10
· environmental taxes would drive
Iran,
just that he did not know that
tioniSL
up our annual utility bills $438."
In
the
final
days
of
the
camlbe
money
from the sale was going
Others said that Clinton 's·proposals
paign,
Republican
operatives
were
to
the
Contras.
That is a outri$ht
for "carbon taxea•• would "dnat·
furiously
spreading
rumors
lbat
falSehood.
Bush
has always mam·
en 200,000 jobs in Illinois,"
Clinton
intended
10
raise
taxes
not
tained
that
he
knew
nothing about
"would threaten 24,000 jobs in
·
arms
for
hOStages
and
repeatecj that
on
peo.
p
le
with
incomes
above
Maryland," "would cost 19,000
$200,000
but
assets
''valued
at
denial.dozens
of
times
during this
Ohio auto workers their jobs" ill'
more
·than
$200,000."
An
offshoot
campaJgn.
"would threaten 13,000 jobs right
this was that he planned to lower
R~bert Wagman Is a syndleathere in Maine." It all depended on of
the
inherilance tax threshold from ed writer ror Newspaper Enterwhich state they ran in.
Clinton, however, never the current $600,000 to $200,000, a prise Association.
endorsed any of these ideas.
Another tactic wa 10 eire highly
questionable partisan studies. In
another seriet of ads, the Bush
campaign said: "What Bill Clinton
calls chanje, South Dakota (Ohio,
Michigan, etc.) workers can call
cutbacks and layoffs. A congres·
'
sional study says his economic
Over lbe past few years lbe cost avoid lbe price increase.
plans could put 3,400 (10,000,
An additional program will be
12,000, etc.) peOple out of worlc." of a college education has consis·
tently
risen.
The
expenses
involved
made
available to the public in
The study was prepared by the
have
placed
a
tremendous
burden
December,
entitled the Ohio ColRepublican staff of lbe Joint Ecoon
families
sending
their
childn:n
nomic Committee and is a totally
partisan campaign document of through school. In an attempc_ to
assist families in paying for higher
extremely dubious meriL
education
the State has created a
Another tactic was to make
long
term
planninJI program lege Savings Bond Propam. The
char~es based on spurious logic.
through
the
Ohio
Tu1tion Trust Program will encourage mvesanent
For mstance, one series of ads,
Authorily {OTTA) to enable fami- through lbe purchase of tax-free,
lies to purchase tuition credits State of Ohio bonds. The State is
before lbe student attends school.
beginning to increase the availabiliAt lbe JX'CSCIIt time, the primary · ty of such bonds 10 Ohio families
progran1 administered by the Ohio
to help pay for tuition or arry other
Tuition Trust Aulbority is the Pre· costs such as room and bolrd and
paid Tuition Prol!rani. The Pro· . books. To receive more infonna·
gram pennits families 10 purchase tion on upcoming bond issuances
400 tlildon credits per child. Bach you may contact the Ohio Tuition
credit entitles lbe beneficiary fP an :rrust Authority at 1-8()().589-6882.
amount equal 10 one pen:ent of the
When considering that four
tuition for a fulltime student dwing: years at an average Ohio public
an academic year. One hundred college will. cost an estimated
Credil8 will provide ror 100 percent $S7 ,350 in the year 2010 it
of one year's tuition at any of becomes increasingly imponant
Ohio's public universities or tech· that parenta look at lbe options
nical and community collegea. available to help case lbe bulden of
Simply put, lite Program allows for paying for higlier edtK'ation In ~
you to PI)' for future college at Cullin:.
today's tu1tion rates. This invest·
As always, please feel free 10
!Dent program. ~voids the expec:rcd call or write me, S"rc ,Senator Jan ·
~ ln tulllO!l.and !h? ~tof Michael Long, if you have any
mflalion. In addiuo~, n. 1s rmpor· questions or commenl8 about these
tant 10 note that a pnce IIICte8IC m or any other Issues My numN.• 1$
"I klncla miss the pol/Ileal experts telling mil
tuition aedits will be in effect on (614) 466-81S6 and my ~ is
wflat I think."
January 1, 1993. Enrolling in l!'c the Statehouse' Columbua Oh'o
program by. December 241b will 43215.
'
' 1
110 one will remember, they said. If
you win, no.one will.care.
That is exactly what the Bush
campaign did in a massive series of

Robert J.

Berry's World

Ohio expands tuition
investment programs

Sen.Jan M. Long ·

rise Wednesday at 7:13 a.m.
ArouDd tile utloll
. Warm, humid lir dumped rain
ovtr Tew lbe Mississippi Valley
and lbe Midwest ewly IOday. Rain
a1ao fell in Minnesota and puu of
lbe Soulheut..
A cold front was expected to
bring 1110w to the northern P1ains
and northern Minnesota today.
·end.
Snow also was forecast in the
The record high on this date in mouluains of Arizona, Wyoming
Columbus was 71 in 1949. The Utah andCobado.
· '
record low was 19 in 1957.
Showers and lbunderstorms
Sunset klnight at 5:19p.m. Sun, · drenched south Flocida on Monday
.
- ··
evening. More than 1 1/2 inches

IToledo I sao I

IMansfield Iss• I•
• lcolumbusl57"

I

The Dally sentinel

Peg• 3

will continue through ~ Thursday

By Tile A.uc:ilted Preu
There will be periocis of rain
tonight, wi1b lows II'OUIId SO. The
rain will continue Wednesday as
tem.r;awes reach the SOs.
cold front over lbe plains
states will not move clear of Ohio
until late Thursday or Friday More
cold lir from Canada will ~ its
way back iDto Ohio over lbe week·

•

.
;..... lace if u· • - ' " - tallCI) ~ - " P
,
IS ~"'":"
that ~m1J!11!1ts .~ engag':"g !n

This interpretation of aiding terrorism can, says David Cole,
"make deportable any SUPJlOrter of
any g(OIIp that has comm1Ued one
or more violent acts, even if the
support is directed only to the
group's lawful humanitarian activi·
ties. ... The INS could depon any
immigrant who donated money for
medjcal supplies to the Kurdish
rebels in Iraq, raised money for
Nelson Mandela's speaking tour
·last summer, or respon4ed 10 Oliv·
· er North 'li pleas 10 raise money for
the Contras...
Attorney Gener81 William Bm
can still - before he leaves his
beleaguered post - bring a spirit
of justice to his department by
dropping lbe charges' in this case
and finally interring the ghost of
the McCarran-Walrcr AcL
Nat Hentoff is a nationally ·
renowned authority on lbe First
Amendment and the rest of the Bill
of Rights.
Nat Hentorr Is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
•, 'liOCiatlon.

WJIILD YOIJ 61VE UP
TELEVI)~ FoREVER

I was not huning, I just hadn't
got any. The teach~r whispered
somelbing in Watega Miller's ear. .
A little conference took place in the
cloak room. There was a flurry.
Then Watega ·reached into the
Valentine Box and started pulling
out valentines. I got one from about
everybodf in the room . As I .
remember 11 at the time I squirmed
a little and laughed up my sleeve.
Watega taught me somethingthe human heart is big. It is a big
as this mass of pmiOplasm we call
humanity. Watega in this last 70
years has turned out to be Uncle
Sam. He isn't going to see you sit·
ling there without some kifld of a
valentine. We are going to have a
.big valentine party and Bill Clinton
WASHINGTON (NEA)- In
is going to pull one out for you.
the
frantic fmal days of Campai~
Gayle Price
'92, a staple of George Bush s
stump spcoch became his cry that a
liar should 110( be eleeled presidenL
He meant Bill Clinton, but juclging
lbe
standards of the Bush campaign
thnk him for going that extra mile
over
its last days, the final result
for me Wednesday morning.
.
was
fitting.
Over its final days the
I was able 10 go to college and
Bush
campaip
resorted to Oat-out
know that OffiCCl Stacy would take
care of my problem for me. He is ~~:J· and it did SC? in a very calcu·
manner.
very efficient and professional
In late September, when poll
when he has w be.
I want w thank his wife, Cathy, numbers showed Bush so far
also. She is a great person, and I behind that it looked like he might
can say with all sincerilf that my DOl carry a single state except Utah,
life bas been greatly ennched just a call went out from Bush-Quayle
by having the pleasure to know Mr. headquarten 10 Britain's Conservaand Mrs. Stacy. Many people who live Party. In April, lbe Conservaread this will think I am coming on tives and Prime Minister John
strong, but you just don't under- Major came from far behind in lbe
stand how many extra miles he has final weds of lbe campaign to hold
gone. for me and that is what being onto a Parliamentary majority .
How did you do it? the Busha good police officer is all abouL
Quaylelniotrustasked.
Barbara Stahl
In rCsponse, Conservative Party
!'omeroy, Ohio
political opcnUives jumped on the
Concord &amp; a quick trip to Wash.ington. They inciiide'li campaign
balanced county budget.
head Marie Fulbrook, deputy
Rich Jones has worked tirelessly research director Julian Lewis and
toward the accomplishment of all party director general Sir John
these goals. Those of us who knOw t..:y. They spent several days with
Rieh well, know that he has n:pre· . top-level Bush·Quayle campaign
sentcd our county 10 the best of his officials, slcetcbing out how they
ability at variws meelillis tls'ough· would engineer a Bush comeback.
out the state, spending days and · According to sources who
evenings speaking out for whal he attended the meetings, the British
considered best for Meip ~unty stratC4&gt;' was simple: Go completely
whether it meant savmg jobs, negattve in the campaign's final
~dding services, or capital ~.groundThe
only way to make up as
Improvements.
m~
as Bush had 10, they
Many buildings and improve· sal~, was 10 m.ake the electorate
menl8 in lbe county stand as monu· · afraid of Bill C~~ton.
.,
ments resulting from the effortS of . How 10 .do 1!· He~ the Bnush
Rich Jones and the Other eornmls- conservatives ~dv1ce shocked
sionen.
· some who heard !l. In the l~t 10
Thanks, Rich, for a job well !laYs ~f the camJl!Ugn. they advised,
done, and now let us get behind lbe 'Just be about CliniOn. If you lose,
new county offiCials and help lbem
keep Meigs County on the move.
Jim and Eleanor Thomas
148 Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy.

Village very fortunate

which baS indeed
itted
.
comm
cerlain acts ~?f ler!Orism. ~ defen·
danu had m ~ posms1011 - not
&amp;un• - ·but magazines, including
the PFLP's Democratic .Palestine.
~them wae artie~~ calling for: an
~t Palestinian llate. It IS a
PFLJ&gt; VJew, 'f"hich is also held by
some Israel!• as a way to keep.
Israel a Jew1sh state. The defen~ts had distributed these magazmes. The publications were legal
, and could be found in the Library
of Congress.
·
Bventually, the chat'ges of being
handmaidens of wlirld communism
were dropped against most of lbe
defen~ts
who. !h.e.n had to dea
. I
only With technicali
ir .
ucs C?~g
the V1S11S. But~ n:mamm~ two
- Khader H~m1de aJ!d M1chel
SIJe~ad~b . - .were sull o~ the·
IN~s ~ty li~ for deponation.
eanw le,, m 1.990, .Congress
amend~ the lmm•~~uon laws,
removmg the prov1s1ons of the

.

ity."

Nothing has really changed
When I was in the 6th grade our
teacher IOid us that there were 120
million people in the United States.
Now there 1!1 240 million. She told
us to brush our teeth and boil an
egg for five minutes before we ate
iL
What has really changed since
1922? People haven'L We are the .
some old human race-same old
motives and drives ..
· The 6th grade had a valentine
party and that was my ftrSt year 10
that citf school where I had rew
close fnends. Everybody put their
valentinea in a big box. A girl by
name of Watega Miller, she said
she bad lived in OkJahoma, seemed
to be the queen. She reached into
the box and joyfully started passing
out valentines by calling out a
name. It was all over and I bad not
got a single valentine.

Rai~

OHIO Weather

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, November 10,1112

The last of the McCarthy-style trials

I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

f I ·
·
·
.
e ~ at Ve!"' B*h m a 11x-hour and the northern Plains; 40s in
.pen~ encliJ!g • 8 p.m. EST.
m~t of New England, lhe cennl .
L1ght ram and 1110w fell over Plains and IIIOil Of lhe Northwe~t;
parts of Minnesota, North Dakclta 50.. in lbe Midw~, Great Lakes
and $oulb Dakota, anll rain was reg.on and the PacifiC Northwest
IC8Uaed from .north-unllal Tellllll coaaline; 60s in lbe !\"*rhians,
to Qltbem ~ "
the mid-Atlantic COli ~ - '

Snow fell all day over ~..,, Alaska. IIIII lbe mountains of
south-untral Alaska. S!fODg tllun·
derslmltS over Y~tal m lite after.
noon producecj wtnd gusts to 70
m~ hs'toda
,
. the
.
. II
. Ywere •lftCust m .
30s 10 Maine, the cenllal Rockies

most of California; 70s in IIIOil rl
1be Southeast, ~cxas and lbe S~
weat; and 80s m soulb Texas and
south Flocida.
The high for lbe nation MOIM!ty
was 85 degrees II Miami, Fla., and
at~ Tew towns: Alice, Corpus
Christi and McAllen.

Fired officer says he laughed at antics of partner
roiLoffice!thlirM
WAUKEE 'tAP) - A They saidl{orierak Sinthasom·
Said Balcerzak l'lllllbled apartment.
.
po
.as a .result of an . phone, 14, was incoherent and in his descripdon of lbe situation.
The photos show Sinthasom·
Gabrish

.ce
encounDahmettersaid~he~ killer Jeffrey
.
, ~d not laugh at the

W. VA.

lr&gt;C.

Weather
South-Central Ohio
Tonight, rain likely, mainly late.
Low around SO. Chance of rain is
60 percenL Wednesday, rain'. High
55-60. Chance ofrain IS 80 pen:enl
Thursday throuJIUat~~rday:.

~__;,_Area
~ary

Thursday, rain likely. Lows in
tl.e 40s and highs in 50s. Friday,
colder with a chance of rain or
snow. Lows in the 30s and highs in
the upper 30s and 40s. Saturday. ·
chance of snow. Lows in the 20s
and highs in the 30s.

deaths ......·- -

Gardner

E. Radford, Carroll, Charl.es
"Dick"
Radford, Piketon, Paul E.
Mary Jane Gardner, 79 of Irwin,
Radford,
Knoxville, Tenn., James
died Sunday, Nov. 8, 1992 at the
W.
Radford,
Sarasota, Fla.; a broth;
Woodstock Care Center.
'
er,
Emmet
Wyatt Radford,
Born on June 16, 1913 in MadiPomeroy;
a
sister,
Helen Rich of
son County, she
1be daughter
Caldwell;
seven
8f11!1dchildren
and
of the late William and Susan
seven~-~·
McQuiniff )~ailey.
Besides his parents, he was pre·
She is survived by five sons and
ceded
in dealb by his firsi wife,
daughtcrs·ln·Iaw. Jerry and s~
Naomi
Donaldson Radford, on
Pullins of Dublin, Bill and Linda
9, 1974; his second
November
Pullins,of Pomeroy, Bob and Sandy
wife,
Frances
Patton Root Radford,
Pullins of Columbus, Karl and June
on
Febru11ry
6, 1982; a sjster,
Pullins of Woodstock, and Paul and
Dorothy
Croy
and a brother,
Mary Pullins of Waverly; 20
Homer
Radford.
grandchildren, and 27 great grandFuneral services will be on
children.
Thursday
at 2 p.m. at Rock Springs
· Besides her PBICnts she was pre.
United
Methodist
Church, where
Ceded in death by bet ftrst husband,
·
the
body
will
lie
in
state an hour
~aymond Pullins, and her second
to
the
service.
Rev. Keith
prior
husband, Alexander Gardner; four
Rader
will
officiate.
Burial
will be
Sisters, Sue McQuiniff, Margaret
in
Rock
Springs
Cemetery.
Butz, Annabell Bennett, and Alice
Friends may call at the Cox
Struhard,,
Funeral
Home, 101 Main Street in
Funeral services will be hdd at
Beaver
on
Wednesday from 4 to 9
10 a.m. Wednesilay iu-lbe· Skill·"
p.m.
In
lieu
of flowers, memorial
man-McDonald Funeral Home,
contributions
may be made 10 Rock
·Mechanicsburg. the Rev. Lamar
Springs
United
Methodist Church.
•O'Bryant will officia!C and burial
. will be in Paint Township Ceme·
tery at London.
.-·

was

Emily Pickens
· Emily Irene Pickens, 82, of
:state Route I24, Pomeroy, died
' Monday, Nov. 9, 1992, at~ Holz~er Medical Center.
' Born on May 12, 1910 at Rut·
IJand, she was the daughter of th"
late Sherman Shoemaker and Bina
'Haley Shoemaker. She was a
•housewife and. a member of the
Bradford Church of Christ.
She is survived by her husband,
·samuel S: G. Pickens, Pomeroy;
•six daughters, Lois I. Goodwin of
!Cross Lanes, W. Va.; Lena P.
:wood of Scott Depot, W. Va.,
'Tressa F. Snowden of Celina, HaJ.
-lie A. Willard of The Plains;
:sharon K. Brown of Zanesville,
'and Cathy E. Pickens of La
·Vergne·, Tenn .; a son, S. Larry
Pickens of Pomeroy; five sisters,
_Dorothy Willison of New Lexing·
. t!JII, Nora Pace of Corning, Patsy
Derr of Coshocton. Julia Hammond
of New Lexington, and Jean John·
son of Granbury, TeXIS; 18 grand·
children, and 11 great-grandcbil·
dren.
'
· Besides her parents, she' was
preceded in death by a brother,
S.herman Shoemaker, two sisters,
Genevieve Chase and · Clara
McCalla, and a son, Lewis Allen
Pickens.
, Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at 1 p.m. at lbe Ewing
Funeral Home. Derek Stump will
officiate and burial will be m the
Robinson Cemetery. Friends may
caU at the funeral home Tuesday
(today) from 7 .to 9 p.m.

· Rev. W. C. Radford

;. Rev. Waid C. Radford, 97, of
Church Street in Beaver, formerly
.of Rock Springs, died on Sunday
morning, November 8, 1992 at
·Pleasant Hill Manor In Pikelal.
· '· He was born on August 21, ·
1895 in Rock Springs, son of the
)ate John Emmet and Flora Schar·
fer Radford. He bad served wilb
·!he West Ohio Conference, United
.Methodist Church for 66 years, in
i he Eureka circuit and Central
.('\venue United Methodist Church
, m Albens. Uneoln Avenue Unircd
Metbodist Church in Pleasantville,
Piketon United Methodist Church,
8,nd Emmanuel United Methodist
Church in Beaver. He - a man·
her of Eureka Masonic Lodge of
Oallia Counlf and charter member
of Beaver L1ons Club. He wis 1
'member of lbe bolnl of Pike Com·
In unity ,ll(lspital. He aaended Ohio '·
;University and Ohio Wesleyan
University.
· Surviving are·four sons: Thomas

Leo Young, Sr. -

Leo F. Young, Sr., 90, of RL I,
Letart, died Monday, Nov. 9, 1992,
at his home.
.He was a carpenter and . coal
miner.
Born OcL 2, 1902, in Mason, he
was a son of tb&amp;.late Peter Young
and Benna (Jdfhlm) Young. He
was also preceded in death by his
wife, Ora Dove Young, who died in
1983, a son, Leo F. "Sonny" Young,
Jr., five brothers and four sisters.·
Survivor! include two sons and
daughters'in-law, Lewis R, and
Naomi Young of Letart, James P.
and Judy Young of Letart; two
daughters and sons-in-law, Mary K.
and Hugh B. ShiOet of Columbus.
Ohio, and Leora J. and Leonard E.
Krebs of Point Pleasant; I9
grandchildren,
32
great·
grandchildren,
three
. step
grandchildren, five step great·
grandchildren, and two great-great·
grandchildren.
·
The f11neral will be Wednesday, I
p.m., at the Foglesong Funeral
Home with lbe Rev. George Hos·
char officiating. Burial will be in
the Beech Grove Cemetery,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Friends may call at the funeral
home today (Tuesday) 610 9 p.m.

Crash kills
one, closes
Spence Bridge
COVINGTON, Ky. (AP) - A
fiery collision between a tractor·
trailer rig and a pickup truCk early
today left on~ person dead an4
closed a heavily traveled bridge
ovtr the,Qhio River for rush hour. ·
Southbound lanes of the Brent
Spence Bridge that carries Inter·
state 75 over the river remained
cbied late thb morning. lnipcctors
were c:hecking ihe bridae for dam·
age.
.
Police Sgt: Gary. Lynn dl lbe
driver of the pickup truck was
killed. His ideolky ·was not Immediately available. Lyrui said police
were DOl ~what canted lbe acci·

deiiL

The rig's load of cardboard
caught ftre, forcing authoritieS to
close tile span. Triffic backed up
for miles behind lbe accident, and
motorists were forced to use lbe
,olber river brillges to get to wort.

ph~t of a L~ouan boy Dabmer
claimed was his !'omo!C!'uallover.
Joseph Gabnsh te~ufied Mo.n·
~y at a fue and Police COIIIII\IS·
Sl~ hearing that he was laughing
at his panner, John Bl!lcerzak, who
seemed to be struggling to find a
w_ay to report the encounter to a
dispatcher, ,
'f!le officers bad responded 10 a
cal11.n May 1991 of a nake;d ~!~ale
outside an apartmen~ butld10g .

.Dahmer convinced them the boy He said. BalCerzak's struggle and
was actually an adult homosexual fac:ial e~ made him laugh.
lover who simply drank too much
Oabnsh said he also laughed
and wandered on10 the street.
when Balccnak IOid his dispatcher
After Dahmer was arresled two that his partner needed to get
months later, he $Bid he killed lbe "deloused" 11 lite station. He leSti·
boy later that nighL
fled he lbought it was funny that
' 'The, ah, intoxicated Asian Balcerzak would say deloused
naked male was returned to his rather than cleaned up
sober boyfriend
. i!nd, ah, we'n: 10.8
The commission Monday
(back in service)," Balcerzak said releaSed thn:c phoiOs Dahmer took
in an audio tape of the conversation of Sinthasompbone before the offi· ·
with the dispatcher. ·
cers found the boy outside the
·

Bankruptcy protection may be
solutuion for rural school district
pupil district, about 80 miles south- .
Keller said the district probably
west of Toledo, said they don't will a~ lbe award. But lhe dis·
have the rest of lbe money.
trict will wait for a decision from
Voters on Tuesday rejected a Common Pleas Judge J David
bond issue 10 pay for )he award. It Webb on a modon 10 reduce iL
would have mcreascd property
The board of education will be
taxes in the district for 25 years. updated on lbe situation Monday.
Taxes on a $50,000 home would The board has asked lawyers for
have climbed about $100 a year. advice on the possibility of seeking
said county Auditor Wayne bankruptcy court protection, an
Lotbamar.
option opened to Ohio schools in
" I dido 't expect it to have a real April. .
soli&lt;\ chance of passing. The issue
Under lbe law, a school district
bas been a v~ difficult one ... 10 can seek bankroptcy coun protce·
work through,' Keller said.
lion from credirors only as a result
of a siruation over which it had no
control. Under coon protection, lbe
school district woulcf have to work
out a payment plan with a judge.
Buchman, .a construction work·
er, was headed to Covington, Ky.,
A meeting for those interested in providing rural water se~:Vice w
with his wife,' Joharlna, and two
· areas in Bedford, Salisbury, Salem, Scipio, Columbia, and Rutland
sons. He was going south on U.S.
Townships will be held on Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Meigs County
127, when a school bus emerged
Chamber of Commerce offiCe. All elected officials and the public
from an intersection. His car slid
are invited 10 attend.
under the side of the bus, crushing
the roof.
The driver said she obeyed a
stop sign but didn't see Bucbman's
· t.{eigs Emergcilcy Services units answered 10 calb for~
car. She was cited for failing to
on Monday and early today.
·
.yield the right-of-way.
On Monday at 10:40 a.m., Syracuse squad went w Karr Slreel
Mrs. Suchman and the children
for Marcia Karr, who wa taken 10 VeteranS Memorial Hospital,
were injured but recovered. Buch·
.At 2:0S p.m., Rutland unit went to New Lima ROBd and took
man's neck was broken. ·
Florence Barrett to Vetenn. At 3:30p.m., Rutland unit toolt Bar·
Buchman lives alone in his
rett from Veterans to Holzer Medical Center, At 3:31 p.m.,
home. He and his wife separated
Pomeroy unit went to MOchanic Street for an electrical fire at the
last year as a result of the stress of
Baxter residence. At 3:51 p.m., Middleport unit was sent to Oliver
lbe ordeal, said Craig Rodl, Buch·
Street for William McNillis, who was taken 10 Veterans. At 4::26·
man's lawyer.
p.m.; Racine squad went to Rowe Road for Bill Morris. He was
taken 10 Veterans.
On Tuesday at 12:34 a.m., Pomeroy squad was sent 10 Condor
Sb'eet for George Kauff, who was taken 10 Veterans. At 12:48 a.m.,
Rutland squad was sent to Price-Strong Road. Gilben Fitzwater was
transported to Holzer. At 1:04 a.m., Rutland squad responded to
CLEVELAND (AP) - Here are
Hysell Run ROBd. Dwight Hysell was taken to Holzer. At 9:18a.m.,
Monday
night •s Ohio Lottery
Middleport squad wem 10 Overbrook Center for Alice Walsh and
selections:
toolt her to Veterans.
Pick 3 Numbers
7-2-7
(seven, two, seven)
Plek 4 Numbers
6-6-9-7
Prices from The Producers Live(six, six, nine, seven)
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) stock Association:
Direct livestock prices and reed
Cattle: steady 10 .75 higher. ·
at selected buying points
,Slaughter
steers: choice 68.00·
by ,the Ohio Department of Agn·
75.00;
select.63.00.
70.25.
culture:
•
Slaughter
heifel$:
choice 68.00.
Barrows and gilts: mostly 1.00
Am Ele Power....................31 1/8
74.00;
select
57.00.75.00.
·
higher; demalld good.
Ashland Oil ........................24 7!8
Cows: steady 10 3.00 lower; all
U.S. 1·2, 230·200 lbs., country
AT&amp;T.................................44 5/8
points, 39.00-40.00, a few 40.50; cows 52.00 and down.
Bank One...........................48 5/8
Bulls: no trend; all bulls 52.SO
plants 40.00-41.00, a few 41.SO.
Bob Evans ......................... 19 1(2
U.S. 1·3, 230·260 lbs., country and down.
Channing Shop..................36 1/4
Veal calves: points, 37.50.39.00.
City Holding ...................... l8 1(2
Sheep and lambs: steadr: choice
U.S. 1-2, 210-230 lbs., country
Federal MQKul... ................. l61/4
wools 46.00-S4.50; chmce clips
points, 36.50.38.00.
Goodyear
T&amp;R .................. 69 3/4
Receipts Monday 7,700. Esti- 49.25-56.50; feeder lambs 20.00.
Key
Centurion
...................20 3/4
28.00; old sheep 8.00.35.00.
mated receipts Tuesday 7,500.
Lands End ..........................29 7/8
Limited Inc....................... 23 3/8
Multimedia Inc ...... ............27 1/4
Rax ReslauranL ................. ll/32
A special meeting of VFW Post
Reliance Electric................ l6 1/8
Free Clotblilg Day
No. 9053, Tuppers Plains, will he
Robbins&amp;Myers ................15
Reedsville Church of Christ will held Thursday at 7 p.m. to
Shoney's Jnc......................22 5/8
hold a free clothing day on Thurs· announce results of a fun4-raising
Sw Bank ........................... 36 1/4
day from noon 10 3 p;m.
projecL All tickets are to be turned
Wendy lnt'L ...................... 13 1/8
in that night. Public invited .
Worthington Ind.... ;........... 23 1/4
Dance planned
Refreshments will be served. The
Stock reports are the 10:30
There will be .a round ·and regular meeting will he held at 7:30
a.m.
quotes provided by Blunt,
square dance at the' Rutland Ameri· p.m.
FJiis
and
Loewi of Gallipolis.
can Legion Hall Saturday from 8
p.m. 10 midnight Music will be by
Lod&amp;e to meet
CJ and the Country Gentlemen.
Shade River Lodge No. 453 F
Public invited.
and AM will meet Thursday at 7:30
p.m. at the lodge ball in Chester.
Youth rally
Officers will be elecled. All m~
There will be a )'OI!th rally at the masons inv ited. Refreshments
Syracuse Nazarene CbUICh on Fri· served.
day at 7 p.m. for all youth aaes. 12·
2~. Greg Cundiff will bo lbe speak·
Fruitorden
cr. Refreshments will be served
The FFA Chapter at Eastern
after lbe meeting.
High Schon! is now taking orders
for Christmas fruit· including
Chrisllllal dlaaer
.
oranges, grapefruit, apples and
The FOE Ladies Auxili.-y No. pears. Orders will be taken for the
2111 will hole) a Christmas dinner next two weeks. Orders may be
party Dec. 1. A deposit of$5 is due placed by calling the school al· 985·
by Nov. 20 by contacting the auxil· 3329.
iary secretary.
Bazaar planlled
AA to meet
The Salem Center United
The Pomeroy Group of AA will Methodist Church will hold a
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the· bazaar Saturday at the ftre house
JTPA offiCe in Pomeroy. Call992· from 9 LID. to 6 p.m. Food wiD be
S763 for information.
available and there will be a bake
and cnfi sale. Public invited.

PAULDING, Ohio (AP) Officials of a rural school district
say lbey have. no idea where they
are going 10 get $4.1 million to pay
off a motorist who was paralyzed
· in an accident with ·a school bus.
· "We're still trying 10 fi&amp;ure out.
what we're going 10 do," Superintendeill Steve Keller said Friday.
A jury three months qo award·
ed $5.1 million to Donald Buch·
mali, 29, of, Paulding, who was
injured in May 1989.
·
Wayne Trace bad $1 million in
insurance. Officials of the 1,352-

Rural water meeting set

EMS units answer calls

Lottery results

Livestock report

-=

Stocks

phone posing, with his hands
·behind his head and wearing anly
black b~ briefs. Two of lbe pic·
tures show him standing • one
lying on a CQuch.
The pictures were presented
during the appeal heanng by the
of!Jcers' attorneys.
The ftred offiCers have pleaded
guilty to viohiting a departme.nt
rule by failing 10 conduct an adequate investigation of lbe i111:ident
!~vo~ving Dahmer. The commis·
SIOn IS to decide wllcther 10 ~
the firings by Police Chief Phi11p
Arreola or assess a lesser penalty.
Gabrish testified Monday that
he and Balcerzak' could have cited
Sinthasomphone for underage
drinking. But Gabrish said their
priority was to get him to a safe
place, and in their minds, Dalma's
a,partment was a safe place at the
ume.
Dahmer confessed 10 killing 17
young men and boys after he was
arrested. He was convicted of 15
deaths in lbe Milwaukee area and
one near Akron, Ohio. l'rolcculorS
said they did not have enou&amp;h evi·
dence 10 charge him in a 16di death
in the·Milwaukee area.

School board
rejects Bible ban
•

BROOKLYN CENTER, Minn.
(AP) - A school board unani·
mousllo:jected a bid to ban the
Bible
its public schools.
.
An atheist, Gene Kasmar, filed a
petition in July asking the school
district to remove the Bible on lite
grounds tl!at it is lull of obscene
and offensive passages.
The school board in BI'OQ!dyn
Center, a Minneapolis · suburb}
announced lbe ~lt of its ron call
Monday night, to a cheering crowd.
During tlie meeting, a legal
expen for the Rev. Pat Robertson
made a case for lbe Bible after fly.
inJ in from :Virginia at the last .
mmute. And, in lbe spirit of Jllllicensorship, lbe leadership or lbe
Minnesota Atheists lined up ftnnly
against Kasmar and for keeping lbe
Bible on school shdves.
Jay Setulow, chief counsel for
the Robertson-backed American
Center for Law and Justice in Virginia Beach, tole! lhe board lbat
·coun decisions have consistently
held that the Bible "is wonhy of
studr for i.u liten.y and historic
qualtties."
"These students here today
have not only the desin: to see lbe
Bible in the school library, lbey
have a constitutional right," he
said.
'
Kasmar, 55, reiterated his view
that the Bible is a filthy text of
questionable historical value.
.After the mte, Kasm.- said the
board "caved in to communitX
pressure ~ religious prejudice. '
But he Slld he bad no plans to pn:ss
the issue funher.
Assistant Superintendent of
Schools Dennis Morrow has said
Bibles are used in schools for
learning purposes. Without reftrring to biblical sources, it is nearly
impossible to explain IDJ!lcs in at
hisrory or entire themes m humani~
ties courses, Morrow silid.

Meigs announcements

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.

•

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�.

LOOKING FOR ROOM • Chka1o Balls'
Michael Jordaa, left, looks for a way aroaad
around Iadiaaa Pacers' 1uard Renle Miller
(31) during the s«9nd quarter Moaday niKht Ia

Cllicalo. Jordaa had 24 polats Ia the 11ame to
help ltad the Bulls to a 10i-97 win over the pac·
ers.(AP)

Bulls edg~ Pacers 102-97
in only NBA encounte_r
.I
I

. CHICAGO (AP) Back
spasms didn't stop Michael Joolan
from performing his late-game
Supennan show.
Jordan, hObbled by the injury all
day, scored 10 points in a 12-0
game-ending run in the r~ three
minutes as lhe Chicago Bulls beat
the Indiana Pacers 102-97 in the
NBA 's.only game Monday night
"MicliaciJordan lifted hill game
another notch," Bulls coach Phil
Jackson said.
Pacers CQaeh Bob Hill said Jor- ·
dan "hit hi's shots and found the
open man.- t was tough to double·
team him. The only problem was
we sbouldn 't have let him drive
down the middle. The guy is in
another aunosphere."
"I ~USI asserted myself a liide
m&lt;re,' said Jordan, who felt bac.k
pain Monday morning after pmctice. "I wasn't thinking about my

back. I had it (back piin) before,
but this time it's on the left side.
It's just a matter of getting treat·
ment"
A basket by Reggie Miller, a
frele throw from Vern Fleming and
Sam Mitchell's three-point play
wilh 6:20 left gave the Pacers a 91·
84 advantage.
Indiana maintained lhat margin
at 97 ·90 with 3:11 left before a
dunk by Jonlan, an 18-footjumper
by B.J. Armsb'ong and a bank shot
by Jordan with 1:28 remaining
closed the Bulls to 97-96.
Then Mitchell grabbed a missed
Indiana shot that appeared 10 graze
off the rim wilh l:061cfL He called
timeout, but officials said the ball .
did not IOuch the rim, and gave the
Pacers only two secoods 10 shoot
instead of a new 24 seconds.
The Bulls gained possession
after Detlef Schrempf's rushed

shot, and Jordan hit ·a 12-footer
with Sl seconds left for a 98-97
lead.
Jordan then was fouled by
Schrcmpf with 19 seconds to go
while making a reverse layup. He
convened tile free throw for a 11)1·
97 advantage, and be added anodw
free throw wilb seven seconds lcfL
Jordan bad 24 points and 12
assists, Scottie Pippen finished
with 21 poiniS and 13 rebounds and Horace Grant had 16 points and 11
rebounds for the Bulls, who lost
100-99 to Atlanta in their home
opener on Saturday night.
"I thought we were 11 liUie lax
and-we needed 1 wakeup cill,"
·Pippen said. We needed to take
control of this game like we did at
thecnd."
.
The Pacers were led by
Schrcmpf with 19 points and Miller
with 17.

the juniq vlniay sqUid for ihe last
eight matches. Blackwell led the
team wilh a 95'1 serving pereentage.
The junion on the team included first year player Liaa Fackler,
Lee HCIIdonoa, Sarah Pullins IIIII
Ginger Hokomb. Factler wu the
. defensive specialist on the team.
Pullins led the liCIIil wilh 66 assists,
Hendcrsoa led the team with 38
:~:~·. nd was sec.o nd ~ith 37

4-15, lS·l2
·MeiaJ defeated Miller 15-S, 71.5, IS-12
·
Meip _lost 10 Trimble lS--4, 9IS, 9-15
Meigs defeated Wellstoo 15-9,
1!1--4
Meigs defeated Somllern 15·2,
JS-10
·
Meigs lost 10 Belpre 14·16, 8·
15
,
Meigs lost to Nelaonville-York
U·lS,l3·15
.
The lone senior on the team was
Meigs c!efeated Eastern 9-15,
first team All-District Yvette 1.5·8, 15·9
Young. Young was tied for second
Meigs 1os1 to Vintorl County 6on the team with a 91'1 serving IS, 15·10, S·1S
pereentage and had a ream high 78
Meigs lost 10 Alexander 15-4,
kills. Yvette will play in the Dis· 13-IS, 9-15
trict 13 All Star game on Novem·
Meigs defeated Fedezal Hocking
ber 18 at Soutbcm High School at 7-IS, 15·8, IS-10
·
3:00. .
.
Meigs ll&gt;st to Miller 4-lS, ISW11h the Marauders losing only 13 7·15
.
oae senim: and a 20-0 junior varsity
'Meigs lost to Trimble 14-16,
team on the way up, Meigs should . IS-13,12· 15
·
be at ,lhe top of the TVC volleyl!all
Meigs lost 10 Wellston 15-6, 12·
race. m yeam to. come. A RIC!'P of IS, 9-lS
!he ~um.or vars1ty season wi!l be
Meigs defeated Southern 1S·2,
cornmg m the near future.
15-1
Meigs lost to Belpre 9-IS, 141992 Meigs MaraUder Volley- 16
ball Results
Meigs lost 10 NelosnviJie.York
Meigs defeated Vinton County 7-15, 14-16
13-IS, 16-14,15·10 ·
SECTIONAL TOURNA·
Meigs defeated Alexander IS· MENTS
9,15·7
Meigs losiiO•Jackson 0-IS, 4• · Meigs defeated Federal Hocking IS
1S--4,1S·8
Overall record 10·11 TVC
'- Meigs tlefeilted Eastern IS-7, I'CCOR1 6-10

1992 MEIGS MARAUDER VOLLEYBALL
TEAM • The 1992 Melfa Marauder yoJJeybaU
team ftnlsbed with a 10· 1 mark oa the year and
6-10 in the TVC. Team memllen pletared In the

row

COLUMBUS, .Ohio (AP) It's that way e.very year they play
John
Cooper
said
Monday
it
.
"Except for the four games we doesn't get any easier for tile Ohio us," €ooper said.
Cooper
said
he
and
his
team arc
play each other, I'm pulling foi' State team or its coach.
still
"fighting
for
our
life."
him to do well and play in the
fiflh·year Ohio State coach
A rumor was reported-by two
league for a long time,'' Mark said.- saidThe
the Buckeyes still have their Columbus ~o stilllons Friday that
"We've always been a close fami· backs to the wall despite a 7 ·2
ly. We've always been each other's record, a tie for second place in lhe Cooper was calling a news confer·
ence later that morning 10 resign 10
biggest fans."
·
Big Ten Conference and being all take over as head coach al
They used 10 play against each but assured of a spot in the Florida
Arkansas at the end of the season.
other in a gym in Enid, where their Citrus Bowl.
The
reports also said Kansas coach
father, Deany ,-is the •coach at
And
he
said
even
lhough
be
is
Glen
Mason, a former Ohio State
Phillips University.
just nine games into a new four· player and assistant coach, would
"We bad t&gt;lc:my of bloody noses year contract, he still' must keep
succeed Cooper.
•
.
going at cacli other," Mark said. winning 10 keep his job.
.
Cooper
criticized
those
reports
This was when Mark was a college
"We're not there yet," he said. after Satllrday's 17.0 victory over
star and Brent was in high school.
"We
could be 7--4."
Minnesota. Speaking with a group
Mark would usually team up
The
Buc!ceyes
play
lit
Indiana
of
reporten Monday, he said the .
with his father in lWO·On·IWO (5-4) Saturday before fmishin'g up
media
should meet standards of
g&amp;mes against Brent and the middle lhe Big Ten season at home against
ethics.
brother, Matt, who is now in busl·
NoJ Michigan.
"This is why I'm so upset with
ness in Olattanooga.
,
Last
week,
btdiana
was
shut
out
what's
happened," he said. "I
"At times it ~ot pretty heated." J4cO by an Iowa team that had
.have
not
talked to one person ...
recalled ·Brent , 'My, dad, even in
about
any
position.''
given
up
65
points
In
its
P!l!vious
his mid-SOs, would still dive for the
two
games.
But
Cooper
S81d
it
was
is the rresident of.lhe
Cooper
ball."
foolish to look past the Hoosiers American Footbal Coaches Asaoand 10 the annual showdown with ciation.
lhe Buckeyes' rivals 10 the north.
"I was thiilking about it corning
over
here and in my position with
"We've got to cxpectlheir best
the
coaches'
associauon, we have
Cincinnati l\foeller also bas won shot. We have got to get ready for
an
ethics
committee.''
he said. "If
the
best
football
Indiana
can
play.
seven state championships. · ·
The poll title was lhe fourth in
lhe last five years for St Ignatius,
which rolled 10 a 1~ record.
· Fostoria, which like SL Ignatius,
Lake Catholic and Newark
Calholic, also won a championshiP.
on lhe r~eld last December, hasn 1
lost a game in the last two seasons.
PITTSBURGH (AP) - The derailed momentum generated in
schedule ~s
the bani part is over upsets of Kansas City lltd Houslon;
for the Pi
Steelen, who arc the Steelen (6-3) talked like they
6-3 despite p aylng only three can't wait 10 return 10 Buffalo.
"I'd like to p,lay these guys
home games all season. ·
w.a
again in January, ' Anderson S81d.
They've
got
five
home
games
in
NewOdeula
7 2 0 .7'11171117
their lasi seven. A one-game lead "We would mac::h rather play them
s.a Pmdro 1 2 0 ,171%11 152
in the AFC Central Division. at home, in PiUSburgh, but I know
"'-- 3 6 0 .3331"141
l.\a. 3 6 0 .3:DI63tl3
Opponents include ne'er-do-wells I'd like to P.laY them again."
"I'd hke to have one more
like Detroit (2-7), who visits Tluee
CIMiad24.-14
Y/, DIINil3
Rivers Stadium on Synday, and
New Yaot 11ot&lt;o 21. a.- a.1 1
Seatde (1·8).
l'bll I '4 l 'o 31 t... A o p . 10
•
.
Piece of cake, right?
Milmi 21.1nctt J alit 0
· "We're playing SOftie non-play·
V
m· 35, T~q~~., 1
-~31,Niw&amp;pndl4
off ttams now, but we need to keep
Doo&lt;-77,NewYodlr.il6
focusing on what we have to 'do,','
-211,t,ol~-t4
kicker Gary Anderson said. "On
BWrolo:ll,~
X..!Jtytf.Soa
. 14
paper, these games arc euier, but Wo+...... t~•
you still have to play the ball game.
c: ·?it, ·
M~oc=o
. ,"None of these games will be
--~41,-3
....., ...... u
that the Steelers
C'
c'•N.wYcDIIIi,l p&amp;
Dolroll•F I P,lp.m.
arc Without Eric ORen, llteir huge
···~ t,....
Icy&amp;'
tight end who was suspe11ded Mon·
PR 2\!I aa.-..,..........
day for violating the NFL 'a syb·
ll8llce abuae policy. He Clll't return
until tho linal week of the IIOUOII.
~
One Dlaco you'd think the Steel·
~-==-:~~/;:.
en wouldn't WBDIIO rewrn Is Buf·
Doloqo•T- h,4 p.&amp;
falo, where tbey'Je ~ lllncc 1980.
- 011-.•la to L,4p.m.
--·t...~ .............
The
Steelcn' tlueo-pme wimting
NewYaotOiooii•Dolww.l,..._
streak
ended Sundat with a 28-20 ·
- . N... ll
loss to the diviiion·leatllna Bills.
Still,
even
. - t~fter that lou

t_o.,

somebody gets out or line and_doe$_
something, they're called before
the ethics corniDlaee.
"Why you people don't have
that in your JXOfe5SIOII bothers me.
For people to just stan unfounded
rumors ...:. 'a source said. Ibis' or
'my inside info said that' To me,
lhat' s. wrong for lhat kind of stuff
to~."

Indiana has P.W"en to be one or
lhe most unpredictable teams In the
Big Ten. The Hoosiers have not
given up a touchdown in three of
th.eir victories, but Michigan State
scored 42 points and Kentucky 37
against them.
.
In Cooper's four meetings With
Indiana, the Hoosiers have held
their own. They beat the Buckeyes
41-7 in 1988,1ost3S-31 in.l989,
played 10 a 27·27 tie In 1990 and
feU short 20-161ast season.
.
Indiana must win at least one of
its last two games for a winning
season and a shot at a bowl trip. By
winning lheir last two games, the
Hoosiers could rmisb sccond in the '
conference.
The game, which stariS at 3:36 ·
p.m: EST, Will be televised region· ,
ally by ABC.
·

Pittsburgh Steelers have schedule
advantage; Green is suspended

Score boa ,. (1

-

_,.,_

chance to coach against (the
Bills)" offensive coordinator Ron
Erhardt said.
,
"I think we'll ~ them apia,'' ·
wide receiver Charles Davenport
said.
.
This ia usually the time of the
season when the last thing the
Sleelers arc thinking about is where
they' ll be spending January.

.....

~--~- .

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

cost us all the things: that w~
worked for. It was not easy to 11t

on.''

mb"'C" Cooturnovers

FORCES TURNOVER • Sa• Praaclsc:o
49en' DO• Grima (29) kDocb tile HI ' from AtlaDta FakGM' Alldre ~ (10) ·~

Bengals drop Brennan,

CALL
TODAY . ·
992·2124

~ially_now

Those two losses cost the 49ers
a spot m tne pl~offs at a time
when they were
• 1g as wcll ai
any do In the
The Falcona
rubbed it in as Glanville proclaimed his team chamt:• of
California. Atlanta also
Los
Angeles twice ind San Diego llld
Oakland once each.
But Young said the victory alao
reflected a determination born of ·
humiliation last week - a 24·14
loss 8l Phoenix.
' 'I think the team took last wciet
very personally. We went down
there and laid an egg," he said:
"We've worked hard for this
record. I think we were really
intent on playing a game like we ·
didtods ,"
The Z9er defense spent mueh of .
lhe night in a deep zone lhat shut
down the Falcons' big play offense.
The longest pass completions
Atlanta could muster were a pair of
18-yarders 10 Rison and Haynes.
"We bad some guys open, we
just dido 'I get them the ball, cr we
got them the ball and we left it on
the ~und or interceptions,'' said
Toll1ver. ' 'Those things kiU you.''

5

9•99

Sept. 27, be was lent to ~ to
uadergo substance-abuse ICIUng.
One week lal&amp;!r, he was OldcJed to
go to a residential rehabilitation

dq!c...... -program.the decision waslltlde

I'BL

"He's the one wilh real physiall
~B·~== ~~u-mhisl!"agr.r
M1&amp;&lt;&gt;
•vwu
• ...,.
shot
IOsbowiL''
It is ~y his last sbot. Rembert has a loog -a of off-field
problems. He begaD the yar as a
starter. He ..,..,.. seven r-Cs for
77 yanls and was the am's Ieiding receiver duou&amp;h the first two

Once

10

keep Rembert, the fifth receiver
spot came down to Brennan and
Jeff Query. Query was picked up
off waivers after being released by
Hooston four weeks qo.
"9nt'Y bas cxcdlent speed and
J,ood qu1ckness," Brown said.
'We want 10 work him in out rolll•
tion II10ie. HC could be productive
well into the future
.. if be's
. . -heJe."

Big Bend tourney
starts Thursday

pnes.

But before the Minnesota game

BEREA, Oiiio (AP) - Bill ·
Belicbiclt sees no point in worrying
· about a problem before it exists.
When injured Bernie Kosar renuns to practice - possibly this
week - a decision will have to be
made. When InJured Todd Philcox
renuns 10 practice- ~ly this
week - a decision Will have to be
made.
But for today, Mike Tomczak is
the Cleveland Browns' starting
quarterback, and Belichick will
leave it at tbaL ,
"There's no .sense in talking
about him (Philcox). There's no
sense in talking about Bernie,"'
Belicbick said Monclay. "ThQse .
guys aren't playing quarterback
right now. Once they get out there
and ~ playing, then you can at
least start evaluating tliem."
There seems little doubt that
Kosar will regain his starting job as
soon as he's able to play. He has a
better arm than Tomczak, reads
defenses heltel' than almost anyone,
and bas helped Cleveland 10 three
AFC championship games since

1985.
Under Tomcuk, howevu, the
Browns law.- 4-2. In ~·s
tWo starts this ,_-, dtey wen: 0-2.
Wilh l'llill:m, 11tey wen: 1.0.
Kosar bas not played siDce the
second game of tile KIIDII, wben
his ankle was brokea as be was
sacked in the secoad quarter
against Miami. Kosar. thinking it
was only a sprain. stayed in the
pne and nearly Jlllied tlle Bmwns
to vickJry. They lost on DID Mlri·
no's toocbdowa pass with seven
seconds left.
Philcox lOOk over the liClll week
8nd threw dm:c IOIIcldrwD mam
to Eric Mealf~'
~s win
over the Los
Jlaidns. But
Pbilcox broke is thumb in tbe
S_I¥IIC, fon:ing the Browas to lllnliD
Tomczak, who bad been hastily
signed as a baclmp two days afler
Kosar was burt.
Since getting shut 0111 by Dell·
ver in his lint stan, T«WMDk bas
led the Browns to four wills in tile
last five games, including Sunday's
24-14 upset of the Houston Oilers.

By Dave Harris
The Big Bend Youth Focitball
tournament will get under way
Tbunda~:: at Bob Roberta
F'JCid in
•
'lbc first game will~
p.m. when the Veteran1
·
Hospital Dolphins tan~ With the
D.O. Blake Construcuon Brvwns.
The second game will begin at 7:30
and that will put the Home Nalional Bank Mustangs against the
McDonalds Eagles
.
The winners will square off on
Sunday afternoon for the cltampionship at 3:30, while the IOial will
meet in the consolltion 'game at 2.
Those games will alao be played at
Bob Roberts F'ICid.
The tourney bracket will be
printed in Wednesday's ~tinel.

Lebanon results
LEBANON, Ohio (AP) - Uly
Albus, driven by Jack Franklin,
came on late to win Monday
night's pacing feature at Lebanon
Raceway.
The 3-year-old ·won by one
lenath and paid $30.89, $1 UiO and
S6.M.-Take It Off finisbctl~ •..
rctuming '$32 and $7.80 and thirdplace Sifent Crisly Jllld $5.20.
The daily double combination d
6-7 retwntd $19.40.
A crowd of 1',680 wagered
$168,665.
.

Michigan needs win to clinch Big Ten title
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) Nearly a week after the IRSidaUial
election had been dC£ided, Mic:hi·

Pablilholl not')' allenlooa, Moaday ·
~ FrioiOJ,ltt c-t 81., PwwiGJ,
Ohio by lloo Oblo VlllleJ PublialliOf
CompaayfMaltimedia lac., PawiuJ,
Ohio 415111!11 I'll. 11111--1111!1. •pDit.p JIU!I•t Paa nQJ, Ohio.

w.-.

'1'111 ~t.trr-,..,. tho
Oblo Now,..por
Nollaul
,W.orlloiD( Bo-tatiYo, Bruham
Nowo,.,.. llal•, 733 Tblnl _._...,
Now Yort, Nlw \1ft10017. ·

""--a-.

· Tba Daii1__Sonllael, Ill CIN1'1 St.,
P
GJ,OHio45'HII •
. ltlBICID'TION tlATU

..

-~---

Olio Wook. ................................ ......... l .81l
Olio Matlh.......................................... .ll&gt;
Olio ~.................................. - ..1188-m

IIIMOUICOn
PIIJCII

Doll)'........................................._ .~~~ C..to
~ not clooirirc to pay tho -.~.
or ..., nmn Ill 14•- - t o Tbo

---

Dalll' Sonllllol ... a lhne, o1a or ts .
- l b - - Cndlt will bo I I - -

.111111 ......

No owltocrlpliooo by

2 MEDIUM PAN PIZZAS

With 1 lteml

It WU the IUDbers pale."
Remben, a tbird·year player
from WCil V'qinia, JeCelltly oomplcled lOur weeb of NfL.mandat.
ed trcaanent for alcollol
cy.
The Bengals see Rembert as a
player with p-cat potential who
never has lived up 10 it He's biggrz, fasta- and SIIUDJICC tbtm Brat-

Kosar may return
to drills this ·week

1'011'1l1Ml'BR:--..._ lo

••ar

.._.,.
_.....,.t

s..

CINCINNATI (AP) -The
Cincinnati Bengals have waived
wide receiver Brian Brennan to
create a roster opening for Reggie
Rembert, who is returning 10 the
team from alcohol rehabilitation.
Coach Dave Shula said Monday
it was lOugh 10 part with Brenaan,
30, a Plan B free agent obtained
from Cleveland on May 13 after
spending eight seasons with the
Browns.
"It was a very difficult deci~
sion," Shula said. "Brian con·
tributed every way he could to the
success we've bad Ibis year. Some. body had 10 go, unfonunately ;"
Brennan had 11 carches for 166
yards and one touchdown with the
Bent:als.
.ri was a little surprised," 'hesaid. "I knew Reggie was coming
back and they had to ~ a move.

front
laelude (l·r): Lisa Faekler,IM Hea·
derson, Sarah PulliDs ud Bille Butcher. Back
row: BObble Butcher, Glqer Holcomb, YYette
Young, Erica Roblt, ud Vaoeaa Compstoa.

Top AP teams don't rebuild, they just reload .
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Calholic's ninth since 1971.
The champions of lhe 1992 AssociAll of that came about despite
ated Press state high school foot- the departure of head coach J.D.
ball poll are ~rime examples of Graham, who led Newark Catholic
teams that don t rebuild after great to its record-tying se-.enth state
title last December before taking
years. They definitely reload.
Three teams defended their over as Ohio State-'s recruiting
1991 poll tides wid th_e other-two coordinator. Jeff Buchanan guided
winners weren't exacdy strangers NC 10 a poll title in his rat year as
to the top spot in balloting
head coach.
aooounced Monday ..
Newark CatholiC in Division V,
Akron Manchester in Division IV
and Fostoria in Division II all succe5sfully defended their poll titles.
Cleveland St. Ignatius in DiviNational ll'oodlaU Lnpe
sion I and Mentor Lake Catholic in
BJTIMAlo\Clli_ _ ,_
Division Ill both won poll crowns
AU111MoiST
two years ago. And after missing
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
out on the No.I spot last year, each
EMt
W L T ht.rPPA
redeemed itself by going on to take
Buffolo
.... 7 2 D .7'112311&lt;19
playoff titles.
Miunl
.... 7 2 D .T11:DDt51
So the names should sound
lndionopolil -- 4 s 0 ...... 99116
familiar.
~~onol --- ~ ~ : ~::g;
Manchester needed the most
C..tnl
6 3 0 .66'1119125
help to repeal The Panlhers balely
~
·- 5 4 0 .S561411..S
got by Akron Coventry 8.0. Mean.. 5 4 0 .556213161
... 4 5 0 .444110212
CinciaMII
while, lql-ranked Warren Kemedy
w.a
lost to Poland Seminary 21·20 to
n...... 6 3 D .66'11411'!0
~tuuu CJty
• ·5 4 o .S56Ui!ll42
fall from lhe ranks or the unbeaten
Stnlllooo
• 4 5 0 A441il4152
and drop 10 fo!lfth in the eighth and
LAlli&amp;n ·. 3 6 0 .S33t32161
final poll.
·
Scou1o
...... I I 0 .Ill 561'14
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
The poll c!Jampionship was the
East
eighlh for Newark catholic, which
W L T hi. I'I'PA
has captured tides in 1968, 1973,
Dolloa
..... I i 0 .IIIDU21
197S, 1978 ud 1984 wllilo in
Nsf \b '• .. 6 3 0 .66'7114101
Wllhlollon . 6 3 0 M7"'l:la
Class A, and in 1987. 1991 and
N.Y. Ofin11 .. 5 4 0 -"t:llll175
; 1992 in Division V.
._..
--- 3 6 0 .JDifJIIO!
Ctolnl
:·
The Oreen Wave wHI be making ·
Mi1 au
- 7 2 0 .771)141114
its 17th appearance in the 21 years
•• 4 5 0 .A442mD4
Cblclao
a.- a.,
3 6 D .S:DI:IIlft
of the Ohio High School Athletic
3 6 0 .3:13164210
Association's state tournament
Doaoil
2 7 0 .222161119
when it . . on Danville Friday.
-1bc unbeaten sea11111 was Newark

ball team by giving the b8ll away."
Atlutta fell to 3-6.
Tho AdaDtaJlalconl Were gener"Whenever you can tum the
oils ltoiiJ 10 1
Franciaco ICilll 1lall mu llld sive i110 our offense,
with IOIIldltina 10
, giving the thtll'a .-Jly points on the board,"
49ta the ball six
fumbles said 49er linebacker Bill
or
Mllllday nighL .
Romanows!d, wbo started it by
·The 4
turned the
leCOVcrillg Keith Jones' fumble on
into 24 points Ia a 41· 3 victory tile Atlanra 48 to end the Faleons'
whidl completed their Jevenge fer rlflt possession.
a pair d losses to the Falcons last
· Nine plays later, Steve Young
year. The second of those losses JJBPed 12 yards 10 Odessa Turner
came on. Billy. JJ1oe 'tolliver'a 44· . i'orthe49ers'linlscorc.
yard, "IWI Mary" pus 10 Michael
Don Oriffig stopped Atlanta's
Haynes wilh IICCOIId to play.
second drive by intercepting To!·
The 49ta (7·2} made sure tbc2e liver's pas$ for Andre Rison, but
.would be DO last-second surprises the Falcons defense held. .
in 1992. 'Iboy whipped Atlan" 56McGruder's recovery of a Riooo
· 17 three weeks ago on the-West fumble at the Falcon 42 led to
Coast.
. M~ COfer's secorid field goal, a
"When I came in here it was 32-yerder, and Amp Lee's recovery
definitely emphasized to me that of Deion Sanders fumble on lhe
· we got to win these 'ames," ensuing kickoff set up Tom Ralhexplained 49er defens1ve back man's 2-yard touchdown run.·
Michael McGruder, who recovered · San Francisco couldn't take
one of three Falcon fumbles. advantage, of an Eric Davis interMcGruder'played for Miami last ception, but after Merton Hanks
season.
· picked off another Tolliver-for"We made it occupational sui- Rison pass at the Atlanta 25,
cide," said Falcons coach Jerry Young hit1erry Rice with a 19Gianville, whose team outpassed yard scoring pass.
.
San Francisco 24S yards to 151,
The rewnge motive helped push
got more total yards, 304 to 303, the ball in.
.
and more fint downs, 20 to 15.
"I think last year kiDd or really
"You just:can'l beat a good foot: stuck with us," Youl)g said. "It
A'll.ANI'A (AP) -II wun'ta

JOOd ni&amp;ht for genetOiity.

add Rembert to roster

Cleveland Cavs take on
Cooper_
says
_it
won't
get
any~ easier
Bullets at Coliseum·tonight
CLEVELAND (AP) -Fate has was in e bridal party aiid sang at
determined that the Price brothers the weddin~.
Brent saul, "I grew up watching
of Enid, Okla., will do baale in an
Mark
play. I was in the seventh
NBA game tonighL
when
he started at Georgia
grade
Mark Price, 28, is the Cleveland
Tech,
To
be
going on the court
Cavaliers' All-Star point guard.
him
will
be.a little sttange.
against
Brent Price, 23, is a rookie point
"At
the
same
time, it's a job
guard with ibe Washington Bullets.
have
10
do
the
best you can.
you
The teams play at t6e Coliseum,
He's
just.
anolher
opponenL
After
in Richfield, Ohio.
we
can
be
brothers
the
game,
"I'lllrcal hi1JI like anybody else
I'm playing against," Mark Price again."
They got IOgether Monday' night
said. '.'I'm sure if he's out there
against me he 'II come at me as· after the Bullets' plane arriv¢ in
hard as he can. I gotta be ready for Cleveland.
As Mark pointed out, there is
it. I don 'I know what to expect.
not much chance the two will be on
We'D have to see what happens.
"But I'm looking forward to the court at the same time for long.
just Seeing him m&lt;re than anything Mark is an established player,
else. We don't see each other that while Brent, a second-round Bul·
much anym_orc."
lets' draft pick laSt spring, is back·
They haven't met since Brent's up to Michael Adams~ He has
wedding if) Enid on Aug. 8. Mark played 30 minutes in two games,
making 5 of 9 shots.

Pea• 5

49ers ·take adv~ntage· of ·
turnovers in 41-3-win

Meigs vol'e ball teani finishes year
10-11 overall and 6-10 in loop play
B7 Da•e JWril
The Moip Marauder volleyball
team had a successful seaooo fill·
ishlng with a 10.11 milk llld 6-10
ln the Tri-Valley Confaenco. ·. Coach Rlclt Ash and the Lady
Maraudcn fiOided very youna team
with only one senior. The JCit of
the roster c0118iatod of sill aophomores, llld four junion. Included
· in the undadaaman wae two first
yearplayen.
Meigs jumped out to a S-0
record including a tiRC aet victOry
on the road over secdODal champ!·
·on Miller. After running their
record to 7·2;'the youab of tile LfldY
Marauders began to show and
Meigs dropped 10 of their lait 14
.contests. In those losses, six came
at lhe bands of teams that advanced
10 district competition. Meigs then
drew SEOAL champion and state
ranked Jackson in the sectionals,
falling to the lronwomen 0·1S, 415.
The sophomores on the· roster
included Bobbie Butcher and Billie
Butcher, first year player Vanessa
Compston, Amber Blackwell, Erica
RobicandMcll8aaCiifford.
Bobbie Butcher was second on
the team with 22 aces and third
with 42 kills. Twin sister Billie
despite missing seven.maldlea due
10 surgery was lied for second on
the team with 91% serVing percent·
age. Compston was second on the
team with 46 kills. Blackwell,
Robie and Clifford CB!Ile up from

The Dally Sentinel

llddleport, Ohio

l'Uelday, November 10 -1 112

lllddleporio Ohio

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gan football coac11 Gari Moeller
was still talking IIIJod tJ0111:
- Moeller's Wolvenne football
sqUid (11-0-1, 6-0 Bia Tea).mo~
. up 10 No. 3 in The .As•• · t 1 PR:ss
poll tbis wect after top-ranked
Washington fell to .Arizona.
Wbili: tile HWjee' bl bNped
Michipil's im-'iall' ,.m... il
may have bmt the Wohaincs' sbol
at a natioaal title. Micltipn now
needs No. 1 Miami ud No. 2
AlabaDta to 1o1e to ba9C a ""''islic
shot at the nail•lll CIVWIL
Some ClltJCIU tbeori:r.ed that if
the Wolvennes bad defcaled an
nnbealen 11111 tap-raltlacd Wllllilll·
ton ICilll in tile Rose Bowl, they
could. bave lelpfloacd to tile top
slot.
"Asfw_lllidbeloie.,wehaveto,,
"''o1,
COUDI 011 ...... we c:a t COIIIl
Moeller aid
a his weekly
news c:onfaea:e • 1epn11e1s of
whlll v
)IIIIJ., if we'Je
4 ill
f,_..:!•::n,gh 10 ·tt "1 I'

.,._.,r.
the

r::.

.,._

to be

10

""' '

jj

mad of lllis root~~-

· Michi&amp;an Clll clinch a
in
the Role Bowl and • ~Bi&amp;
Ten title with a vic10ry ~y
over lllittoia (5-4, 2- 3). The
WolveriiiCI clole the t • with
theirs..:.~:~
finaiD ••it• Ohio
_ . _ ........_
Moeller Uled the WashioJIOn
Cllllltlllo 10 illta• tho ~
with lootball's camal systan of
det&amp;mmi'lla D'li•lll c:llaiDpioll.
"It's lid that when a College
~--

-·

football tam loses me pme, sud·
den1y they're not that lood any
more " Moeller said. ' II puts a
kiDd of pressure on the kids that
says if you lose one game, you
can't be national champs. That's
11ot riahL"

HANGS ON • Calaary Flames' Joe
Nleuwendyk falls to tbe ~e as he hup oa to
Moatreal's Jea•·Jaqaes l)alpeaalt'a stick dur·

Tampa Bay surprises ~angers 5-l .
B CHRIS SHERIDAN
yAP Sports Writer
Mario Lemieux leads the NlD..
In lOIIIs scored. No surprisC tbc2e.
-nms Kontos is secOnd. There's
our shocker. ·
Y Kontos, a joumc}'lllan forWard
who never scored more lhan eight
oa1s in a season, recorded his 151h
16th oa1s Monda night as the
Tampa B~y Lightning ~urprised the
N York Rangers S·l
ein other games. M~ntrcal be'at
CBiguy 5-2 and Toronto defeated
Ottawa 3-1. "All I've ever asked
•
hance
1a " ·d Kon
~J::had 27~·.,:!In 1M
NHL games with the Rangers,
Pittsburgh and Los Angeles before
signing wilh Tampa Bay as a free
agent in July.
''This is a fresh start for me,
sort of a new life."
. KontoS' awakening as a point·
producer is the main reason the
Lighming is 7·8·2, easily the beat
record among the three cxpansioo
teams that have joined the league
over the past two years.

:00

f:,

"Chris has always been a player
with touch around the net, and
maybe he's just never bad a chanCe .
to use it, •• Lightning coach Terry
Crisp said.
·
The Rangers (9·S·2), who
haven't been shut out since a 2.0
loss 10 Montreal on Dec. 17, 1989.
~ilcd Pat Jablonski's bid for hill
frrst career shutout when Darren
Turcoue acorcd with 3:30 left in
the third period.
·
Jablonski finished with 32
saves.
Roman Hamrlik, Rob Zamuner
and Mikael Andersson also scored
a$ainst Rangers goalie Mike
R1chter, who was hampered by a
groin injury he sustained during the
team's skills competition Sunday
afternoon.
Maple Leal'l J, Seuton 1
At Ottawa, the ·Senators lost
again, making it33 days since they
won their only game in the season
DPMike Foligno scored a pair of
power-play goals and 1oe Sacco
also scored as Toronto (8·5-2) took

o_ver f'trst place in the Norris Divi·
Slon.
.
• The steady ~~of~1e ToroniO n.eunm~ Felix Potvm
and the c;rrauc shootllli d the Senaton kept Ot!awa scoreless through
the r~t pel'_lod. Toron10 esca~
the periOd w11h a 1.0 lead on Folig·
no's po~J.Iay goal at 18:2S• .
.'J'!Ic. s came oat wi_th more
sp1nt m the second penod a!ld
-~up a three_·goal lead. Foli'·
no slid a_ shot I!elu~d Ottawa goalie
Peter S1dork1ewtcz on another
Toronto power play at 9:36, and
SJ~~;CD converted a neat ~th
pass from Doug Gilmour at 18:3i.

Veterans Day
. 1992

Marshall will field
softball team in 1994

While that may sound like a
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
vote for a post-season tournament. - Marshall UniVC:~W:O begill
Moeller hedged on that idea.
ficldinJ a Wlltllen's
team in
"I don't think it would ever 1994,usathletic director aid.
work," he said. "You'd need at
Manball, which offers tennis,
least four te~M~ts and probably eight v~lloyball, bl!skelbllll, cross counThen, you've m~de your season try indoor track and clutdoor lnlCk
thai much longer.
fo; women, diOpped softball as 1
Moeller also cited the 1980 sport in 1980.
·
Michigan team, which lost two
The decision will fulfill a
early-season games but went on 10 requirement shoul!lthe school
w1n the Rose Bowl, as 111 ~~ choose to swilch from NCAA Divi·
of how the best teams at the ..... "' lion 1-AA to I·A. Lee Moon said
the season mi&amp;ht not_even make a ~·
·--·-"'field.
DiVISion I•A ICboola must have
,.,..._,_.
•
•
.. he
·
"It's 'rcslly not
ngbt,
con· seven men •s 111• seven women •s
· eluded. "If I drop a Iootblll game vanily sports. Mlnball will have
this season, I still know that I've that
after addina 10ftball, .
ot
-""
football
team.
No
one
·
Moon
·
1
1 ~ life undefeated."
"Softball is a high-JXOrde sport
goes
in the tri·~tate ~ lltd _hopefully
Notes: Inside linCbacker J;?ave 'f'O will be able 10 llllr8Ct Jlllh-qual·
Dobrdf is out for the~ With a 11y ~ ad;tletea from the area 10
knee injwy. Steve Mornson and parll~!Palc ID our softball proBobby Powers will 11811 Saturday ~:.__Moonball1sS:.ted
lh
· "''"""·
......
near sou •
IPiDSt
uwouu- ... SIIIUI'IIay'a
The kiclt·
.
olf is act for noon EST.
JIIDC ern
_ ~~tioneasumof
ao~will
will be televised nationally by
'""
ABC. ... Midtlpn will likely set an help Marshall balance lu sports
NC.AA sing1e·ICIIOn atten~ce CCJI!allt: between ~.and men,
record Saturday. The Wolvenncs ~ t1 . . NCAA pnonty. Moon
- ' a crowd of at least 104,81110 aid.
.
. .
111e1t the record_lbey_tt:A_!n 198S.
Marshall will renovate Its mtra;

m:J

'

IDI first period NHL actloD Monday In Moatre·
al. (AP)

.

mural' softball r10ld for use by the
varsity team, Moon said. A coach
probably will be hired by mid·
February, be said.
Other Southern Conference
schools lhat play sofiball arc Geor·
gia Southern, Furman and Ten·
nessce-CbattanoogL Marshall ~Yill
play lhem for the conference Utle
and compete against achools from
across the country in a SO-game
schedule beginning in the spring of
1994, Mooit said.
.
Last year, Marshall C?J&gt;Cned a
$30 tua1l
milllon ·u
football stad1um that
e'lell
y WI Kat 30,ooo peep1e,
also a I·A Jequircmenl

r-":"::o:::=:~~~==~-.

UCPD ll.llrl'
CIUICI l''a.AI
I - II.

....
Creamed btlltld chicken,
ham, llomentlde noodiM. DlnMra •rt at M 30 P. M
a.m.., Cll'llfta, tleh pond,

•= . .

...Ugloua ll!doiM &amp; bakecf

81111*-

•

c.rr,-out Mol¥7'+.._

Attlrodance p"-e _,%
hour lltMlng at 1 P.M.

On Veterans Day, November
II , America honors all who
served in its armed forces ___..27
million living Americans who
· served and sacrificed on behalf
of our nation's ideals and
freedom. They deserve our
grateful recognition. Let them
know that you remember. Take
• part in your community's
Veterans Day celebration.
(Published as a public service
message by this newspaper 011 bi!hiJif
of' the Vererans D&lt;ly NatiOIIJll
Commirree. )

�-. .

•

1\JIIcllly,

NcMmtMr 10,1112

MEIGS COUNTY DELINQUENT LAND TAX NOTICE
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M7.1t.

CHimR TOIUII.

LETART TOWI.IP
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01-411111.000, Gllllort, 1.1WA out or 71A 1.711A, of 20.10A IW Part I SA, - · $151.10.
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Aoyoltr 1.111-.11114
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._. 1H (MO) N Pllrt
~n H. tr. 87-14, loot. 7· . ONOtt4.0110,
Balloy, Port of NW 1/4 Ell. Colli!
.,....., 271.50 ......
14 E PAT of Rlvor .7SA, .71 Brion K. 8oot 1-.101 I of U2A. 4.12-. tll.70.
- . , S12.10.
Ad 21 a 27 Comlllned, .15
11.00011.000, Hyooll,
. . . . ,u,ooo, CloHII,
IINIOitD.OOO, CoiiiUn,
llor Polrlola, 1.7,
01·00411.101, lotor, loot. 7 N Port or I 112A In
R dtiiDt Deln. S. 51 II Rondolph L, Lot 31 Old
..... Pert of IIA E or Rei Portlond, S24.2t.
Rodney 1!. 1/or .luolo II;;; -lid. of W Uno or NW t/4,
117-10141.000, Collmon, Frat T4NA11W20AOUI
I.IIA,I.II-, .....13.
1.Gil o.t of 12.01A 1.01 A.,
="-~Lot 10 Old •.11A 1!11. 1.Zt2A 11.711A,
11.0ti14.DOO..~..__IIoynlrd
tM-.ML71.
11.711-,SI"N.tt.
c:.IIC11 PM.t.::-8.7,Lot
· • 1012...000 Clonch,
' R 11 L liar Dlllro ~. II, ,_ 07-10142.000, Collmon,
01-00011.001, Borloor, loot. 7 Cool
USA In
Ronclolph L, Lot 24 Old Duane F. 1/01 Cryolol F~ Soot. 7 1.21A, 1.25 acroo,
lool.l(...,l'eltorlt~E
e4 M tA, Out ollt.IIA, 1A, Portlond, ••Ill.
tOGA lot 1114 IE COl••NA $47.11.
07-GOIQ.OOO, CollMan, out or LOOA, .IM, . N - ,
11-GOI71.CIIia, llcDanlol,
t.I0--.-'1·
• Jlll7. . , ...t ..... AMdolph L., Lot 21 Old M7.01.
~ J. 1/or ~- II., I.
................ "11 Rout.
Porllond, •10.21.
01-00077.000, Borllw, t, Soot. 1 I PT of._.. I
H4l Pert of 115, .22A, .22
E-, ,.,_1/or Undo, loot 15 N ol Rd. Outoi14.11A, .33A,
07o00211.000,
Kellryn, I. 24, Soot. 24 Pt Ell. ·lA 1!11. tA &amp;. 15A .aa--.11.11.
-.11-·
• 10111.000. Honoley, t.OOA, 1.00- Sll.41.
I.~~~~-. 1214.11.
tf.CIOII4.001, Pain tor,
. ...... D., ........ ~(MO)
ONI0227.000, Fl•lng,
1.000, Bullington, Ylotor RoiRI.o, R.t4, T.l, I . 1,
11W Mf of tiOA IW 114 &amp;
v.lme Etol o·o lllohool E. E. o/o W.lt Bullington, loot. 11111141.1111111A, 3M
. c..t of lOA, 27A, 27.00
IIOfpo, 1.1, Soot. i"l Soot ,tt .lOA, .10 eoro, - , 122.11.
8klo or 70A &amp;. tiiiiA I
11.00721.000, Portlow,
II DNOI.OOO, Hunt, Earl 11.71AA71110M,II7.11.
0LN1 'IOWif.IP
~olin, S. 27, Lot Soo~ 27
.............. Key,ltZ.
07-CI0221.000, Fl.,.lng,
EASTERN 1..80
Moor llld. oi .W 112 l'elt of
11, loot. 12·11 Bog Ill NW 'lllmo Etol o/o llloll•l
011 DDIII.OOO. Conrod, 1M 1!11. 112 lllnorola 7.41A,
c:.r. of 812 5001x400/o flo!lort IIOfpo, 8. t, loot. I • Halon, Lot IIIICCI ond TOR. 7.41- $14.11.
X7IG'WX400' N to NW, lido, II.IOA, .t i.IO _.., Add., D4.t7.
11.00711.000, Portlow,
UIIA, 1M 110M, S11Ut.
Ma.l7.
Ofi.Otlti.OOO Conrod, ~olin, 1.27, Lot looL 27
moGOICM.OOO. Hunt, Earl
07..00221.000, Fl•lng, Halon, Lot 1 11~ 1 TOR. Moor llld. of W 112 Port of
RTIIMrd 1/or GIOndO Key, YoiMo Etol o/o lllollool Add., m,a
1.71A Ex. 1/Z lllnorole
R.tl U;,8Jf• 112 11 R12
L I, loot. IN ot..oot48.000, Eullanb, 2.IM, ua-. M.17. .
SW Ul
IIW EXI.71A
11.00 ...... :::·-:L~~~~a~~t Jc:r:..~~;.~ ::~o;7
Nl c:.r. l!x 70A Ex lOA,
UIA..UI~Itl.lt. __
tllr oo,MU4.
. . . lllcl. 1!11. 112 .._ ...
~
07·00411.000, HoMIIn
01..oo110.000, Eubonb, UOA, U0 - · S12.11.
11-411111.000~ Prloo, LJn..
Noraon D., a. 11·• Soot. Rot= ond L llw Pnlah A.,
11.11 HE PT or W ZIA &amp;. Soot t1 IE COl•.•70A, .70 . . I.D, Lot - · 21 Noor .
14, .IIA, · .11 eoro,
lllcl. S 112 H ol Rd. I.IM,
Cool to.IIA, 10.15 - · ~ St.tt.
ltiM.
.
011
OOM4.000,
Hoodloy,
1.11
110M,I27UI.
J nit,
11·011141.000, Prloo,
07·00412.000, HIMIIn, Aohrt, loot 2t Trl In· NE
Woyno, I~J1 Lot
Olllr
- 1/or Cheryl AM, Nor&amp;M D.,I.II;Sool.21 COl of loot 2t UOA, 1.50
- . ..... II Froo. 24 .1M w. End or 70A Lol Ex. Coal
llt.GII.
·
W
Skle of - NW
of t.t4A, .11A, .11 ..... 1.71A, 1.71110M, S18.17.
oMIIIIOOO, Hot&amp;or,
1.00-,Put.
I AI
11_oll~7.0C!~ RumiiiN F.
07·00411.000, HoMIIn, *ayno o/o ~. 8. O'Brlon,
• • ]1741000,
N011MD D., I. 21_., leot. bio. loot 24 I! 112 of IW ....
Soot. II N Pert
I I . . . OUr Hey 1/01 21·21 NW Comer E. Cool
t/4
Ell.
20A
NW
Ex
4.00A,
of
21111
2A,
2.00 - · ·
=:.,1 AM. ........ 21 UIA,UI-11.14.
""
aru,SILII
...._
,_MAlA of tAM, AlA,
01-00IIt.ooo, Howell,
11.01011.000, Snowdon,
07o004~
llldldll,
. ..,.. ••• o/o . . . HolT, Howonl ~ I I. tiA out of Aolllort L, UO, Lot looL 10
. . . . . . . . . llolntyr~1 I. 22, Soo~ D NW
.IIA ...... Pt of TrL lR Out NW Port t I.MA, 11.14
c.o~ NW PRT of F-. 24 of 1 . 17 t/2 A, t2A, 12.00 of 1••A liW t/4 .tiA, ;11 Aoroo,f74.15.
................54.
-.....
,
11-41tn.ooo,
-..1.77.
..
• 00170.000, Pohlln,
01-00171.000, llyoro, AloiiMd N., l.t, SooL I
07o00041 002, Aowo, p ...
D 1 ~llorArinl,
lt11W, T.2N, I.M, loot. Kollllllflf • • toot t1 of llutolllor Acid 11, .42A, .42
R.tl, U. M,loot4 T2, Aft
R11W TIN (1. .1171) W 17A lrl NW Cor of 10A 1120 --. •tUIL
·
tAoutof. COl. of IUIA,
l.IOA.uo--. .._.
tt·01zOo.ooo~ w~
t~!~r.:'
0uc
of
2o.rmA,
lb. .1~ I.SOA, 2.10
..otfN.OO!t IMdert, Alollanl N., 8.1, SooL 1
...,. ... .,.., ....... leot
Acid ....42A, .42
- : : ; . ,............ UI.
2t HIIIII of 4tA I til Ell. --. 14.17.
1.14-tl, ..... 14-tl (1121,
7.711A, lb. 7.MIA I DJI:t,
11..ot20t.OOO,
W-,
.. c:.r. lb. Cell II.IOA.
Alollortl !_t.1 •
SooL t
oe.ottst.OOO IMdoro, ll11tahlor- fll, AlA, .41
. . .-'"·71.
• INI4.000, Poolor,
11111111 AllaR ito; Rllu Jo ..., 14.17.·
p I J£ l i a r - - Ani!,
F. . leot II T4 All !x.
11·01111.000, Wolo,
R.tt.TA....,....,.u
111-olo 7.111A, 7.111 lllollln L llor l!llil"y, IT t1
lttl o.t., . .
-,-.a. .
On N IJII!L lOA ol I PRT
IIMt-.000, ...... l!t· lb. -lb. .1M, 71.11111,
vln It llor .,..... .... loot 7 U I - , tall.t1.
..ol117.... Tart![r, ....
111111) 111 Ia. Ada. of Ill
RUTLAND VII .al
r.ort D. II« T.pno ~ SA,
...
lldi
N
Prt
111
...
RdL,
IEGI LID
..... 4011tofl . . of4A
•tAG.
lloOOtot.OOO.
Fetty,
- • Lillo , .• 114, .1M,
111-0i440.001, 'l:atWT · llolloniL _M~a.t4oll,looL
Roaor A. .,.., lllolla. . 14-tl c-1 Lot 1; .01A, .ot
OWtt2S.OIO,
T~lt'
21
T4 Att &lt;lilt of 24.74~ ~ 14.11.
flollort D. a/or 1.)'- •

.'!! f!·

--42.

....

....r

-.saaua.

r....

..........

ao.oo-

•••

-MLII.

........

.Aoll ort

,_

.

Aolllort=

=r· .

........
r:l.
Fr•.

-.77.

·

~:"';,~~

...,.,._.I.

....

........"...

..

.

w.
eon.

'·

w-.

.... ......

.kJ...

ua-.

COf,,.................

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

(

••o•

u,

uiiHred.

.

m.tta..tt--.11.04.

!::'•

.

_.......

......

-·t:U:S.

..

.

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

ii44.

-

a.

~~~~·::,;

.......

*

414

*

---

t:o.':r." ..

7

De'!:':'~~~n;:

..........

"L:i

011
.Corp.,

~••• P

~uno

Lolllllort
M.M.

t4-00tlt.OOO, AI 1poah,
Eugono F. 1/or ~ctr. Soot
24 (100:127) IO'x71' W SL
Ad. 17 PI ot .14A .07A, .07
-.11.11.
14·00211.1100 Doortor,
Honr)' ~r. 1/or Potty o/o
Polly TIIOIRpootl, loot I
(140) I of WIIW DR I Pert
of .IIA .tiA, .11 _.,

111.41.

IAioOOIOO.OOO, Doorfor,

lt.lly Jr• .,.,...., Am""
Potty noapoon, Soot I
(1411) I Pllrt of tit A lht

Clloltor Rood .1M,........
.1CIJ.AJI.
I
I
14.01411.000, Forrr,
Dowld A.. Soo1 I IMCit On
" " - Ad. In t7 llldonl,

....

t4e00114.000, ....._
MuM, liMa L11111 ,1111111111
11M L lloor.on, lOIII I
1411) .... t04' l.ollg w of
I fit A til .OIA, ••
.... tl.
14.01417.010, Hook,
IIlollool A. 11or su-o.
loot aa (MGI iold on I! Lillo
41.11A, 41.11 ooroo,
1111&amp;·
t •·00111.000, Hyooll,
llro!ldo M., loot Froo 24 11

;_..._.,._1

:,•~

.....·......

iW

•co•ortPT57,~.

if::'
:..::.::11~

81

':'1r"'"

=

ll.ll,.;

1Mt4ti.OOO, v.......
t7.oooll 000, Noo1 Gory
L80nord Loo, Lot II
1/or,...;
. . . . Lot Soot.
Coolport HI II' Front,
II(MitNoorllld.oniUM
SIU2.
.
11·01011.000, Wloo, loA, 10.00 ,._,111M. •
Donny .roo aiDt Arldl• .To, AI~=~A.n.,"::,"::
loot II .IIA N of P... 12, Lollloot. :12 (140) I PT
ltr•t I. of Rd. .ItA of IW 1/4 Ex 11 114A
. 12N.ot.
.
South; ti.H7tA, 11.11
1'01 ROt VILLAGE
M1ut
IIEIGI IMJ
17-ootiii.OOO.
Wilt, Kon
tl.ott04.1100, Bollord,
.,.,
10111111~
..
14-tl Lot
Devld A. 1/or KAI L, Lot IMI.14 tiOtllldao'N.
4111!11.. 1/1,1141.11.
20.11-.ranu
ll.ott 0•.1100, Bollard,
Dovld A. ator KAI L., Lot .Corlllon
tloottlt.OOO.
t
,
Soct.
411 Colfnlo• to AHaot Tr1. tOI Moortno.
ltarain
.ItA,
.2t
lx, 1111, . ..,.,
--.111.11.
........- . Clolond,
T11oMeo C. 1/or Lo1o ~~ Lot
tf.OOOI7.000, Bokori! Er·
.• t F. 1/or PhJIIIe ·• lt.
of .,1~=
t .... 1101:1100,
d, ttW, T.aM, 8.11, ~ •.11
TlloMoo c. 1/or Lolo ~Lot 11H RtlW I.OIIA A • • IMI
4141ubdhr. Lot 1414 of Lot of 11.711A. LOIIA, 1.01
1411 E of lugor Au• - . . . .tt.
, ......7.001, •odtord,
1Ht 111.000. fatly, Hor· K.rlll .,.., Dollro ~ It llw.
UN, tiOA Lot 111• AIIW
old W. 1101, Lot 77 b. •
T2H 2.1141A Out of UtA
c. .....
tNt Ill 000. Felty, Hor· 2.1t41A, 1.11 ooroo,
oldAun,W, 1101, Lot 10 Hoyloro 114G.It.
tMOtii.OOO, Cornollon,
-tl.otll7.000. Folly, IW- ,_.. A. o/o ~moo A.
old w. 11o1, Lot 41 1 "-' of C&amp;nolloll,tt ~.a.. tl.2t.~ 1.;tatt,
loot. tt Tl "' •• ... ••
Lol41, aM.
.
t.ootii.OO!J ca.artono - . a111 M.
tl-00141.001, Dovle,
E....... It ta, T. t Lcil41 T.
t It11 •'x100' I P.-t lult. WIIH• D• .1/at Cor•l
100A Loiiii5.1421A out
1;121 M
lt.IIA I.MIIA, 1.54 - ·

1l

~::L~::-Ex.c.:~

2M &amp;. tA &amp;. U7A Ex.

1SIJA 4.717A, 4.71 - - .
-~lAc. WUGE
IOUTIERN L8D
11-00tlt.ooo, Glloon,
lllnuot, 11, 111112.
11-10110.000, Glloon,

~::,~t~QII

•t

.......,
oon,
• •uol E. ator llartNn G.,
17 tl7, ......1•
. . fl-00111.000..!_ .Gho11t,
•• aol E.llor-. ~

.· ·

-~aT
~.~r=-·
too. ~ llonuol
• • ·a ••••
E. 1/or lorll~~ra

4121CM0'.

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

'!;

Meip DeUnquent
Taxes lrO!n,... I)
.ceonlnuoJ

P~llc Notice

?

••1.41.

1221.oO.... ""' -

Inch_._.,

-loin,....
ooou...,
••••11• ••••rtni.
11 ·,

:

GJIOI••

•

LINDA'S
PAINnNG
&amp;

''*
u.""

-r.&amp;:, IH

-111

co.

O.t Ofl'rla1r..l

Ao••-llonclo

BISSELL

_,.h
°,.."!!.,

BURKE

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

,

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

•FREE INSTALLATION• Wlth ony phone purchtiJrough October 31
Sorvlco r-lrom $19.95 per month.
lncludoo 180 mlntltoo of oll-pook air time.
Leoslng avollable from $15.00 per month.
FOR MORE INFORMATION

INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR
FRII ISDMATIS
HAVE RIFIRIIKIS
.ltfora 6 p.111. Laavo Mos10go
Allor 6p... 614-985-4110

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

GUN SHOOT
RACINE FIRE

614:949·2101 949·2860
or 915·3139

DE~T.

I

EVERY
SATURDAY
6:30P.M.

Clio Sundar Calls)

2112192/lfn

Choke
12 Gauge Shot
Strictly Enforced
Factory

Deer Heads ....................*19000
Turkeys............ ~ ..............'17500

FOREVER
BRONZE

.
5400
F..IS h•••••••••••••••••••••••••
per Inch
•

TANNING

Call (304) 895-3386
after 5 p.m.

lash•n ••·• Raciile
Oett~tr

'

GRAY'S TAXIDERMY

10.12·'i2

'

.

.

lpHial

UNUMITED TANNING

2500

5

ROOFING

WB DO
AND ·EVEmHING UNDERNEAtH
GARAGES • ADDinONS • SIDING

949·2826

TROMM BUILDERS
•j Qu•lify bsuretl Co•frtfttor•

20 Yr. b:p.

Call AI, 614:742·2321
1117/lfn

MORRIS
GARAGE DOOR SERVICE
l':'3mMI TRY OUR NEW
ll!lllmil STEEL INSULATED
RAISED PANEL GARAGE DOOR

992·3838

•w•

I

11 ,,. r..•

w...,

!:...t:a.:r,'

.

Aulhodzod Aeon~

TOTALLY AUToMOTIVE PERFORMANcE

EXCAVATING

GUN SHOOT
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN

IISlAllED PRICES
ta7-$ ~75.00 16K7-S450.00
OPENERS IISllllED-Y. HP-$200.00

CLUB

SUNDAYS
12:00 Noon

·

With 2 Tran1mlttera

Witlt Purclran of

Factory choke 12
gauge only

Door.Pius Ope•er

STARTS

ra.u

:.IIC:IIIOII.

°

1 1 10

Bli.LETI'\ IHl\RD

w•

kkU~

at::iuot

IULUniiiOMD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUILICAnON

~~ ·

:,~lttlng ~·
Tho..

I ,100 ....
Tho prll:o _ _ _ .....

-~~~. •"*Gcl~to-cl..-

--be~faf~....
to- woy '*"' - ... 311-111
Aaii. 48R,3bllhi,2""QI,..-cf1

JAMIE II• .

BR lfll. P~- 4,100 eq. ft. tonn

Aren't you purty

.

CIII1H82-7104 fof

Now that you're

301
GUESS WHO?

HEART TO HEART MEETING
THURS., NOV. 12 • 7 p.m.
·

Speoker: Stevo Burri•
Topic: Experleno.o of • H1art·.
Traneplant Reciplont
675-4340,~.405

lntaroated ·In
ploooo oond
ATTN.: Gor... Bay Doore
Now Hovan Vol. Fire
DepL Inc.
P.O. Box 805
Now Hovon, wv. 25265
Tho Now Hovan Volunloor
Flro Doportmont Ina.
rooorvoo lho right to rojeot
aiy or lllllldo .
· Jolf Aueooll, Bocral&amp;y
Now Hovan Vol. Fir•
.
Dtpllnc.
(11) •• 10, 11, liD .

r.--

.

11;:=======~

r

YOUNG'S

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING
Qunohlng
• ••T'
•

;a·,. .
31904 .......
Cretk
Middleport Oltle

lo••

9~

'

61~9~71«

1

Ill

;=~~::::51

~lOll

MOTHERS AT HOME
ChrlltmU IMomel

Wt

FREE

1:00 P.M.

fllllllnl lncoflle ltwt
~'IPI going when

Eooy work trom

YOUNQ PEOPLE

Do you Mid 1 8blrt
. lnlh?

home. No CMh ot.t
up. Stolt o t - Md

11 yro and up. Ea-n •
rnuoll• you wont, fuM
or part 11- hom your

Chrlltmu money

lnvootnwn, bo your
own booo,- II
you'ro 11111 o otudont.
Thlo le lncomo thot
koopo golllgO'IWI
whon you cton'L

you'll M - MW to
worry tlboUt

&lt;sf:iam~u

Gallia, Meigs, Mason and
Surrounding Counties

1·100.141·0070

RACINE GUN
CLUB ·
GUN
SHOOTS
SUNDAYS

hm·12pmMd
.I
·10

HOME HEATING OILS
DIESEL FUELS • GASOLINES

1·800·598·5654
or 614•446·1157

992·7013 or
992·5553

992:6215

CO~

BP OIL
We Deliver In.••

Fra1111
NEW&amp; USED
All MAKES &amp; MODELS

P-.y,OW.

Factory 12
Gauge Choke
1012Q/'8211 mo.

II

'

••

·CELLULAR

TOYS

":;:C

St. Rt. 7 ·
Chesltin,

AREWOOD FOR SALE

_,oro,

=--1~Exoept 10' E.

1• 00111 ,000 , Qllo¥,
lion HI E. 1/or Borlllalo
Gone, IITrl. w 1'.-totll'
F - N. I W 12.01.
1YRACUIIi VIU.AIIe
,
IOUTIERN LID
10·00017 ooo c = .
• '
:;;..=:-.~I I tlll!x
10.00171.010, Du=
~~~~~l,o A., 110 t
tl
PCLIIIWell .. ,l l
Vo. t4W71.m .ztA, .11
..., lt.ll.
20·00171.010; Dur!!z
jorlo A., 211 tOGA lb. t4A to IL lly. UaA,
4.11-,120.t1.
IO·OOIIO.ODO, Dtret
(Conlnuod on p • 7) · :.

,!l;e61~-912.5591

6637

R - I l l • Commoiclll
.FreoEIIIIMIOO

1 \':.!!'t

,;.;

llldg.

- Shrub and Tree

Trimming &amp; Removal

__.;_,,

.'!tt

0.••

r•rlntl

c.

I

SIZED LIMESTONE
· FOR SALE
CQII 614·992~

Fertilizing, Weocllng,
' end Soedlng.

v.

llerjorlo A., Lot 210 100A
_ . . 110.11
Ell. ZTA"' SL lly. 7 1A"' S,OOt to 1,000 I 141•- por
. ~ 1.72A, 1.72 - .
M01111i S11.11.
·1101.42.
1,001 to tO.OOO 08llono _
. zo.o0111.000, Loioondor,
periiiOIIIh *11.41
lloiJ ~~ .2 M Til. a.t. II 10,001 to 11,000 08llono _
. _ . _ IL .IIA, .:SI aoro,
por monll azua
11.14.
11,001 .. 20,000 gollono ao-ooaiz.ooo. Loioondor, . ... month 117.21
Rolph D. 1/01 liMy .lonloe, 20,001 to 25,000 gollono14, 117.11.
por month 141.11
ao.ooaia.ooo, Loioonclor, AI . _ ~000 . . .no _ por
Rolph D. 1/01 11ary •loo,
MOIIIIi $41.11 p1uo .11 por
tl, •17.11.
1,000 gollono. Flot , ... _
• 20-40148.000,
non·olltrrod prtv... wollo
por month
Auolon a/or
Ill
ol
II!C. I. In lio - t liot
ono w - ••..,. IOfYoo
moro lion clollioollo,
o.o amorolol Of lnduetrlel
unit, lio .rn1111- IIIU of
l7.10 por ••::,:,: unit, 01
tho • rllrM
raoll 11
wllloliovllf r. lho orootor
ohol apply. Whore no wotor
111- . oro llielollocl 011 a
~- woll ond IIOfVIoo 1o
,....
provldod to - • lion ono
Aoba1
domoollo,
oomm~~rolol 01
. L., 10
ln«Mtrlol uillt, tho t11it
Mt.V.
of · l12.45 por illo•tll por
10-«1427.000, Wlllo, lloJ&gt;. unit, ohol opplt. A·,...,.....
ort 0. ~r. a/01 .......... L, -~ 1 or a _
_
-t1 Ex. Cool ...... lll.27.
,_.,., • ...........,. by
(tt) 10, ?to
thor Tll:ioflea-d
1
of Tru- .,,....... AfWro
ohold 'Jill J1L
Public Notice
IEC. UL Thol VJiago of
lllcldlo,...t rooorvoo . tho
,ORDIWICE NO. 111N2 rlglllt to roqulro tho
100 • Fix
M
••••••••nt of wotor
••atoJ ~ onc1
dllv.rod to ony promllooiR
Cliagoo For llnltroiy . . . . ouoll 0 m•-lhol rotoo lor
I!; at &amp;and.......
...... oorvloo con bo
Dlapnol F . , llwwloo d 1 -•··-'......_ _ _..
ForTIIo-or
. uma-..--.,·
·...tor roocllng, In which
lldcl.... ...._~· - 1 tho lor •••111
Dhlo, Polnlllllliollfo
001 •• 011 ............ tho ~
.._--.
001 for..~;;...,
Bo II ordlllnod br the roBIIII"IIoole.Likaoirl-.Counoll of llo VJJJogo of lot •
ol -·•
IIIJ I part • totlow8:
- ·upon 11011110 on to
Soo. 1. THAT WtEAEAI, =~~_!lofTruolllo':_!!
Rio VHiago of llldlflapart
..,_.
·hoe hwowtoro odoptoJ ol!ol liwo le rtglit to lnolol
__,_,_
at lilo - • • opprovod
1
;;;:;:.:,a.:.:'~
Motorii;-dovloo lor tho
oon1oo, onc1 Hid - a n d -urornont of ,. • pumped lrom . . . Of otlior
o • orgoo · n• od t 0 .. 0 oourooo f.:U"" unlo 1M
•••t J, ond
•-~ of
...
• WIJEREAI, 11 1e --.011 ·,_,.
.... of Publlo
Allolro tho right to rood tho
r1 1 ory oncl 2111 I IIIIa II motor ond portodl=
oolololah
and .....,.. 1M
o1
.
....,1 tor oonltooy 2,•t•• ond
Tllo lorooolna oh.,...
· - p 11ol bella 1 ooruloolo •• MlliiiRunl .,_
not
11o rondaod to oold Vllago llllllll1luni ohir- ond le
ontl Ito lnliollllfonla ond VIII
.-.th ._~
011 nurYM 0 r,...t
ollior u-•· wlllah wiH
ond
le obllgllod
to lnoriOil
pro"'- oullllllonl ,._..,.. t
ho
- atony 111M
oluuld
to ,., t11o oporat1ng and Rio ,.,.1M00 of lio ....,.11111
!llllnlonoRDo
ol
~ ~ ...,...
Ito aon11orr - ... ore• 10"4 •t - - •• r I
and eo:::•· ,::r;.:••l dlopoool looiiiU.o provo
loclltloo,
lo
lor lnoulllolont to pop Uio
poymont of tho prlnolpal opaalng ond . . . . , . _
ond Jn-t oii24S,OOO.OO lxponooo ond Jlio dolll
o1 Flrotllollg... 1ow11111 ..,....,u~of ·liollondo
lye- Uid lowogo Ole·
:..,.o~a:!
poool F801AUoo lmprov.. or exlono ona to a old
Monl
olh . , . - .
IEC. IV. lhoulcl 1110 11111
Vlllaao loollod for tho
purpooo of
port of for_,
rondarod by
llo Coot o oono.truoUng llo oor.lta 11 1101,.-n
1
olldf •luandMIIalllllig ond oowage dlopoul
Hid.,....._
foollltloo not 11o po1c1 wllliln
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT ._ ,__ 0 PONIItY of 10%
ORDAINED BY TtE Counllllllna iah
1
oil of tho VAiaoo of 0
lllongbllol •loll 11111
11
lllkkloi...... ...,_ Cou""',
no
Olllo. .-" _ , .
...,. Pold wllhln oblty clop, the
lEt. I, THAT In oon· Wllgo n lll'lfOO tho rlglit to
noollon wllh 11= ..truollon ·out oil t h o - aorvloo to
of ufonolono 01td lm· oold C:::lo"" wliloli Moll
PfOU
anfo to.,, osa 1 f.:=on:W:~':." .:!IJ:'.:'.~
. , . _ ... tollowlntl lllioll
-·
111 tho ratoo ollorgod
of ltO.OO and .,,._, If
Monllllr lily lho Vltlago of oold .,. lo not pold within
.... le---'
Clerk
le liorollly
lllddloport, 0 h Ia Ior .to.--~011
clrootod to
oorvlooo r.,..rod lily lla
_:'"tho -doll
· ~ 11
oonll&amp;y
-•••
optan
to
•-•·r
nquont
,_,.._
d lh
pluo tho ponoiU• to "tho•
In
Ito ,_lh__..-to an
or County · Auditor lor
; ; - ' llooocl
ooAooUon oo Uid ot 111o
llon-ro11, 11
upon _ . . _ t11ot olhor tuoo
rn ngo:
ond oooou01onto oro
0- to 2,000 gollono - por eoloollcl.

Stone Co.

Lawn MOwing,

IE C.
Tho owner of Tllroug~~ · -noll 11111111:
prlvoto proporty which lo
$2J.07 por monlh
Hnlod Of 1111¥ lio oorvod by Th~ .Ono Md ono-hall
lio 80nlllalf - ... oydMII
111-.: 131.42 per
clopoool foolltloo by plpoo
"""'"'
_ _ ..., wllllllld .,.._ Through two lnoll 11111111:
ond loollltloo to oonvey
por IIIOiill.
unitary - · lhorolr01n
rough lhroo lnoh _...,
....... well. ... ......
•tOUI
month
...... ,..~ ....... -:~: Through
Inch _ . . .,
tho Ylllllgo lor Ill II
J!.,~~~~
- ... lo Hid I P ,.._,. - tnUn n~-•
leolllloo from allkf , , . _
1241.011 por monlh
ond leoiiiUu from uld
IE C. II. All lolllo lor ·lho
~looo.
aloovo oorvloo ahall bo
IEC. VL ....... top,_ rondariOCI monlhly on lho
oro •lolowe:
'
llrot Joy ol-h tNilh or •
R&amp;C EXCAVATING
41noh - .. UUII- 1221.00 ooon lhorealtor oa lo
BULLDOZING
llnoh -.u116il- 1100.00 ...........,,Cillo lor lho
PONDS
.
llnoll-o uUon -1100 oo ..,.... ,.
clurlng tho
StoPTIC
SYSTEMS
.
IEC. VH. A now top le praoollng monlh. BIHolhue
LAND
CLEARING
horolly •linocl lo 1oo Uio ronclorocl oro payoblo on or
WATER a SEWER ·
lnolollollon o r - oonr1oo llloforo tho oxplroUon olton
LINES
on • llno whore nono (10) doyo from tho dolo
BASEMENTS &amp; ·
formerly oxlotod ond wllloh rondorod. PoylliOIIfo alter
HOME SITES
roqul,. tho lnetolloUon of llo oxplraUon of ton (10)
HAULING: Ume•lone;
nowllnoo frorn 11=- a
dor• aro · oubloct to o
Dirt, Gl8vel and Coal
111111n to 0 looola n . 1101 penalty of ton ,.. cent
..._.....
oJ
(10%) ollho omcunt of lhe
_,,_,, ...,
bill, lout In no lnotonoe ahlll
. oorvlce from. lho
m- ..ld ponolty 11o r.oo Ulan
· 12·~·tfn
moln.
olxty- oonfo ($0.67).
IEC. VIII. Thot ......
IEC. 111. Eooh ueor of
oh•a• eholl 1111 • 71 por villa- wator IOfYice who
monlh tor 0om1- onc1111
...
por MDIIII! tor 1u111w
clooo not -n .rool ootato
IEC. I'" -~
ey. 1 ~- oholl mako a d-•11 to
..,,,..,,.,...on,_
-.-lllolli lubwoy ond Dunlnoo oocuro tho poy..ont for
oowaao oorvloo ollall 111o • - aavloo •lollowe:
modo monWy b~ tho A11ldont 115.00
p
rty
1w
AodoiiiWit $to.OO
rope
ownor,
·Hoptonalol.
:.~:!s:f:' $to.DO
tiE C. X. ~Y otlior moono Cor/Wuh: 1221.00 .
of •-••• dlopooal Ia La ...
horollly declared to llo o
llli -.1: 122100
.
~ltod•
.ond 1.• thoreloro ::·w~·~::.!:
... - _,.,
IEC. XI. Thot oH ordln· to tho dopooltor. Upon lho
tormlnlltlon of wotor oorvloo
oncoo, or peltl lloroot,, In auch amo,..t ollllo ....._It
oonllhit horowllh, lncl-ng
-..Ordln- No. 110, ocloptoJ oo lo n-•••IJ ohall bo
~no ·7, 1N7, 1111, ond 111 applloJtolllowetorbllond
liorollly ropoalod.
lho bllonco ~umod to lho
IE C. XII. Thlo Orcllnonoo uoor.
ohlll toko olloot ond 11o In
SEC. IV: Thoro oholl bo
lor• from ond oltor lho chor... 101 on lnotoiiiUon
AI~Scalea • Ylnlllge &amp;
oorlloot dolo provlclod by olo- top •lolowa:
'-". .
n.r-rou~ •--h
._.
Collclable
Po•od llo t21h d., of .
s..
Dltplly AL
Oolobar, 1112.
Ono
1400.00
a~ 11~ ..._...._._ ....~ Two lnchm-: 1100.00
OUAUTY PRINT SHOP
...,_,, -· .........,.,, ..,_.
255 Mill Streot
Dewov Horton Four lnali m-.: S700.00
Prooldonto( Council Six lnoh m - · SIOO 00
Miclcl-rt,
Ohio
·
.:
Aok For Doll•
(11) 10, tiD
A now top lo narabt
, . dot.ln~d,.,. t9 b, ,,, tho
Evon!. ..
614-742-3020
lnolololkin o f · - OMYico
1011H2
Public Notlc;a
on a llno whoro nono
loriOOIIy oxlo..., oncl which
ORDINANCE 110.1217-12
roquJr• tho lnofolollon of
M o.••-to Fix~
IJnoo frOfft llo wetor
and Cll.... FOI- ·
moln ond lllolnololloUon of
a.
--v1oo In Th• W'-..- oI
• mellll and ...
lldclap all, Ohio.
In o location not l01mertr
BULLDO~LBACKHOE
Bo It ordolnod by lho oorvod lily water aorvloo
and TRAC11110E WORK
AVAILABLE •
Council of II• Vlllogo of from 111o Hid
rooln.
SEPTIC BYI1EM8,
llldclaport • totlowo:
IEC. v. Thol In lho ovont
HOME SITES ond
loo.t. Thollllo .......... llaloorvlooled~lnuoJ
TRAILER IllES,
ohllbolllondNoliortJod •• provided heroin, o
LAHDCLEARING
1110111111)' by tho Y!llato of
ahargo of t,on dolloro
DRIVEWAYS INSTALlED
lldclaport,Oiiloforwollr (StO.OO) ohllll bo m. . lly
UMESTONE-TR.UCKING
lwnlolioJ by lho VII• of tho Vlllogo lor r•torlnt
FREE ESTIMATES
Ill' ort toltllnhlbltonlo HrVIoo. llervlco ollall nollio
ond;,.,.,- thorool:
rootorod until tho lull
METERED BeRVICE
-unt ollho dollnquoncy
FOI llo Flnl 2,000 golono le polcllndudlng tho ohlrgo
por 11101111 01 ...., llln. etoloJ olllovo.
oliorgota.U.
IEC. VI. Thle Ordinance
&amp;
For tho 1111111 1,000 golono oholl tolto ofloct ond lio In
por monlh: 10.27 per 100 loroo from ond 1111or Jlio
. CONSTRUCTION
gollono.
••lloer dolo provlclod by
•New Hoines
FOI tho 1111111 10,000 glllono low.
por
monlh: $0.22 por too
P. .od lhe 12lli d., of
•Garages
gollono
•Complete
For tho 1111111 15,000 glllono ~~:::="J!.-:rzJb.mon, Clerk
Remodtling
. por monlh: ID.21 por too
Dowoy Horton
1 •~•
Prooldontol Council
Stop &amp; Comp•re
AI..,;, 10,000 gollono por (11) 10, tic
FTIEE ESTIMA'rES
111011111: 10.18 por 100 - - - - - - - - - - 985·4473
:Aono
Public Notice
.......... CHARGE FOR
667·6179
IETEAED IEAYICE
~
INVJT·•·noN
TO BID ON
Througll · o........, lnali
o•n~GE a•v DOORS
••••ro:
por Monlh
~
Ao
Th-.-. tlv--"--- ~-h
Tho
Now Hovon
Volunloor ..___.....,.........__ __
:..-,
.. -·•.
""' Flro Department lno. will .111
rh',.;;jjh ..,
lnoh .-Jvo ooolod bldo lor lour "'ICROWIVE OVEN
m-·· $11 •_• __ """'"' l . ;(4oi) rau~o od 12x12 alumnum
and Ill
VCRIIAIIS
REPliR
......I"'
boy dooro wllh
oponor motor• and Crock.
lrlnJ It To Or Wo
Tho doOf1l
111o oold • Ia.
5
Happy Ad I
Thoao who havo any
KEN'S IPP IlNCE
quootiOf!l con call lhe New
Havon Flro DepL at (304) .
· SIIVICE
112
bo rocOIVOCI by
992•5335 Or
12:00 P.ll. Novombor 16,
915·3561
1112. Bldo w111·11o oponoJ at
Ofllca
7:00 ·p.m. November 16,

(0

Quality

949·2391 or
1·800·137·1460

1MIIIZ

PUbUc Notice

PubliC Notice

-...
-u"'•"""'"".ao~---2,00t I,OOO 1 hno _ por

. KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINtENANCE

(614) H2·5449

USED RAILROAD
R• 1!11.
1111.711. .
1f.OOt24.000, .lollnoon
...... H. a/Of Cllodp 1!.,
T.,..,
11 . . (1oo.att) Lot114HaDAcld, . . . .
llld on N UH b. .11A
1f.Oi2M.OOO, Ollllngor,
t.tiA, t.ttllll!-....
. ...... Lot 411, ..12..
.21 -o;.
' 14o0011t.OOO, rw.r. .....
t4o01111.000, Ollllngor,
tl-00117.000, Dur•!t
ll~nollla, 1!111 IIIII Hoilln s. ...... Lot tl2 llrlp 71'
Tortor, Lot 147 U•dlvtllad W. SIJo a 11' I of Lo~ MaioM A., 8.10, hot. H N
End Ex. Cool IIA, 11.00
. '
11-01211.000, Oldobr,
M411tz.- KoTTor. .....
11o00101.000,
Eva no,
•rflllllo, IIIII e/o . . . . L •1no. Lot tao Ex. Trt.
KIMIIorly L. a E,_,'
122.11.
.
.
~ 117 t: CIIA, 1,. .
11.01211.000, 91dokor, ~nlo L Jr., a. .a. ~ a
t4 00110.000, ...,••• lloxlne, Lit tlf• Only, z.rrA of ACL Owl of tA E.
.
End &amp;. Cool 2.171, 2.17"
Glen .,.., . . L., IMt 21
ta.ooan.ooo, Oldokor,
(1121 F II Atl. NE &lt;:or of
Tllomooil Lol ·zoe D. AdJ. 1 11·10471.000, Grod_x
IOAAI4,MIDN,-OI.
Dol.1., II« ZIITml E., !!;
14-01101.000 ... _ . . : ; 111111 End, M.D2.
11o0011t.OOO,
Oldokor,
12,
T.
2,
a, loot.llttt T.t
c:.rt E. • lilly e/o I!~ -a TlloMa LoiiOI E. PAT ol I! l!nd I.1.171A
of I.IIA
No-...."'!'.:..loot I (Mit NE
1.171~ l S I - , $71.15. .,
COl ofW 1..: M A 0 F 8urv N 111 k ti'N Prt,S14.10.
tlo01101.000, Poroono,.
11·00111.000; .G rooo,
I,
6101
Vlolot
E.
Rolph
T. I Gino A., L tl-1~
Fronldln
t4o00111.00t, Old"f:r
.lllflwv. loot 24, 1JN, A ;nr Lolllllulll. 12 111 Ex. .41A .tooL 12-tl NW COl. oil 112
toll)'., lill.ll.
of IW 1/ot ond llld. of N 111
1.774iA o.t of IIOA, . . 41.
1....1107.000 Porklno, Ill IE 1/4 21.01A, IL~
t4-01174.000, Pugh, Cloro
..... leot 10 (tONOI) ... Ja 1.., Lol 14,
rp.M.
.
!
11·00114.000..! Grooo)
Pe!1nY lurv .&amp;. lofo U7A · tlo00111.000, Porklno,
,.,_ W. a1Dt ~- L, ut Rolph T. l Gino II., 8. t2·11;
161 . . . . .07.
Cui!M"'~, · I 14·01110.000, So ott, 212·17 t.OIA Port of lull. Soot. 11-11 NE ~o_! IE 114 •!.
Evelyn t/.ot ll1llooo, Soo 21 411 'Ill. Cool t.OIA, t.OI NE t/4 I .I CR. 18.111A'i .
IL10-S1tU1 • . \
IMCII .lOA Right of Woy ol ...........
tloOOtlt.OOO, Perklne,
to-00117.1!00, Gruooor;
talA NW Prt .IOA,. .IO -o.
...... W 1/or ..ludllll L, Lot BwlrBW 1/or lllrlllo, Lolli
11.11.
l
· -_
••• .....
at42.7L Ho~,...r,•·
14·0112t .ODD, Soott, - t 7 •.t........
_
,.., lull.
11o00101000
.,., lhl=o,lool21 Cell .IU, .11--. •ti.IO.
IAnY 1101 N.noY, 1 t, Sooti
II! ol NW t/4 IIA,
~:;,~~"L!t l i t COl. 1!11. .1SA liOA Lo1
-.St41.aa.
14-0tiM.OOO, lpro-, 421 woiia AAid. lull. tl, 11211 l.taA, 1.11 .....
...
~ 1/01 Ernootlno, ... 811.40. .
tl-00741.000, Powora,
11o00117.000, Hughoo,I (140) T2 All S Ptt of 7A
Nl! Pri of I of , _ Clloo llollllrt F. llflf ~ A., Lo1 Peny, S. 11, looL 11 (MCI)
421lulll. 't7 S271.to.
No!lrllcl. o1 NE 114 Ex. Cool
..............1.
tlo0111i.OOO, I t o = 2A 0111 or tO.IOA LIOA,
oori, WIIIMI R ·1101
1.10-. tra II.
·.1
11·0001t.OOOW . ~onoa,
I (MOl Prt of USA
I! of Lotlll·17 .t7Aiuiii.41U/4
NE 1141A, 1.10 ooro, lull 11.174, 11.17 ..,., ~:':!:t.J.i~\~ k~=:
S1s.i1,
•
tl-01174.000, Stump, COl. 2.1t71A of 11.11t7A
14-01421.000, Stewart,
Audr llor Aa••ll'•leot :M , _ 1101 CaroiRoeo, Lot 2.1t71A, 2.12 f.oroo,
RtaW T7N t.OIA, t.OI $122.01
1747.10.
1Mt77t Goo, Yon llow
11·00722.~ .lonoo,
ADNo M72.14. .
14='01410.100, ltollort, l.aOIIord ~ Lot t Ptonti WIIIIMI II~ I • ..., looL 251
NE COl. of loot. 125 5.144A';~
Roior Loo 1/or UnCio AdJ.. 11/a 1! .... M.71. ·
tt.ot772.000. Yon 11ow 1.14-SZ,Ioua. ·
Carrofl, .... 11 (140) 2.10A
11·00221.000, Klrloy"~
of N Prt E of Ad of IU2A .._... ~ Lo1 12 Ptonti
UOA, uo-. 1337.11.
=~I 1/:S' W IIIIo, z'7:"1~aLlo~·~~~ =~
t4o0tl17.000. v.ncaonoy,
11·01111.000, VIning, Clulo 12 100xtoo Lo(Ot
A11D11 L, loot aa IMO) NE
oi8W 114 1.00A, 1.00..,., Greg L Lot H SUit. 11 Iii 1111 2. 122 to
&gt;•
112 of SUII. 11 luli 10,
1f.01211.000, llorllflty.:
1M 11.
-,Key, It 12W, T.IN, I lOA&gt;·
~
•1ooo
WIU
~-·1
Lot t204 T.2N R.12W S.OOA
1
~ a- lllorlel
· ' .too.,
' ,_
Eclloln
Lot Out of 111.17A I""•
•......, s.~
- ·
~.
~
·....~.
• ; .. ·~
217· llrltl Ill Wklo ·Book
loot tl Moor llld NW 114 lA,
Loi2D,•1.4CI.
t ..OOMt.ooo, Pareonoj..
1
a.ooeo-. 141011
ll.otllt.ooo, Will, tort · E~ • F r - . I. a, ...~,
11o00271.a,
Harglo,
EdwlrL I lllorlo' ~-. Lot :S E End &amp; C:O.I 2A, 2.oll"&gt;
~A. .,., Linda ~. 11
211 Mit ...
- . tl2.57.
"'
T7 Rtl 7I.ICIA or tOSIOA
1t·Oti71100 YCIIIIIJio
ll.oot15.010, Powon,.
llld I on I Uno &amp; lOA
F onk a p,; . ' L0 t 211 ...,., F. 1/or llllrlloNL 8. a•'
r
noo,
looL i W111 of I 112
71.11A, 7i.11' ooroo,
..... 1-111·1, 1142.10.
40.00- S¥1.74.
••
S1111.711.
ti·OOUt.OOO,
You.
tf.OIOII.OOO,
A
....
oftl.:
·
1a.D042G.OOO, lloOonold,
E. .lolllt Eal, Lot C1 ttl In COl. Honnon D. ator Eloralon L"'
Dovld E. aiDt Yolvlo, Seot II 1/ot Doltlo L,
t Free
City lor lltroot, Lot 15 1!11. Cool, 110.10.
:• .
IE of N IOOA Ell. 14 Yo1n 11 TIN R.t iW W Pt 11.q7A
ICIPIO
TOWNSHIP
11-01027.000,
AodMallfl
Coal, 2.10 110M, S:St0.17.
ol .11.l7A 11.07A, 11.07
IIEIGI 1..80
Honnon D. l'01 Eloralon L,o:
. tlo00041.000i Puokon,
15.&amp;. Cool,
Fronk, Soo 33 AD 8trlll
'IDDI.EPORT VIU.AGE
17.00117.001, Allhaun, Lot1..
:!' ; .
01021•oo\'O.AIO.odmo.~
IIEIQI 1..80
llwvln 1/or Bonnlo, R.14,
·
eon o1 1oo aa, Running
70.0 Ad 2.21A, :Ut - .
11·01114.010, Bentz, T.7, I. II, s.L II R7· A14 Honnon D. 1/or loonon! 1.;~
.,..
110.41.
....... II. 1/01 Allllono, Lol on N LJM or SooL a.oeA, Lo1 rr 1!11. Cool, 122.11
Out of II.OIA, a.OIIA, 1.01
11-0101t.OOO, Aod••ni:
11o00041.000, Puokoll, 415'011 s 8klo, SUI.
Honnon D. ator EIIB10111 I..;;
Fronk, Soo II I Pert ol NW
11·01151.010, Bentz, - , $114.74.
1/4 a IW t/4 Ex. Cool , _ II. &amp;!at Allllono, Lol
17.00147.000, lorloy, U.:~C:,':i~osz.ea.R
·::
1.7DA of • tOIA I.IIOtA, 41, 1154.71.
Cllaloo ·~ 1/or Donno
•
• •
owe,.
:uaot-,11.00.
11·01117.000, Blollo, Foyo, It 14, T. 7, S. 21, Lot ~
..'i:.w;·~~· AAdoln F.;~·
tao00047 .1100, Puokoll, ,.,.., Lol111 ~font. Soo-21 (040) T.7 R.14 Unci.
•
Fr.... Soot U IW 1/4 a M$1.....
112 lnL In Cool I 0111 111ft. COl. Ell. 5112A I UOA, UO,
-.M11.4t.
,...,
llrltl N 121.701tA, 121.7011
11·015..&gt;000, Bloke, 71A,71. . -.*21.51
4
--.111114
JO)'OO A., Lot tl4 Lower
. . : : : : : 1/or
llo00041.C(IO, Puokott, """' ..112'! . . . . . . . . .
Fr.... Sootl . . . . NW
lloOCMII.OOI, EUio, Oron tlo2t, U It ·1 ..21 of Soo. l.t,loot. t I . . . 7A In U l
1/4 110A, 110.00 ...... L. a/Of Pill)' L, Lot 11 1S.2110.1A In IT. ·tlo21 Ex. COl. 1!11.1111A 8 UOA, :S.IO
- • ••a 2.11 .... ' 110M,........
'"b
S114.7L
Horto• I Boowortll AdJ., ••
_ . . . , .....,,., 1
1..00127.000' II.........
"-1
..
500....
.
1lo00041.000, Puokoll, S41.01.
17·01071.000, Elllln, T - r I. 1/01 Will- B.Jq
Frtnt, 1oo aa Moor NW c:.r
f1·· 00I27.010, Glbllo,
I"'
of IW t/4 W of Rd lA, 1.00 llollllrt B. II« Judllh Am, Qorold 8. a/Of Uncle, 8. 11 Lot 71, 174.11.
Lollloot.
11
IW
COl
Ex.
1A
11-00070.00,
ltu,goon;
~
.I t11, .y, t, 1.21, Soot. II T t
11·00101.000, loott, A tl 4.111A, 4.11 eoro, :~~:~A,
~~~
L, ~
S.uol 1/or Borlnlo a-. Mt.IZ.
l7·00071.00t,
Elllln,
11.o0071.00,
llurtoollf41
• 33 I Prt of NW 114 114 a
11·00121.000, Glllloy,
IW t14 Ell. Cool t II ItA of Alollonl D. a/Of Koron K., Gorold a, a1Dt Undo, It 14 ~ E. 1/01 Toni 1:., Lot~
1.711A t.IIIIA, t.ll21 Lot (41) . . . 21x41' w EIICI, T. 7, 8. I, Fri. T7, At4, N "1~-otr:n.OOO,~ .. ~~~
. . . of TWP RD 251 2.011U
· - · - ,.,.
-.a1,011.a.
M.7i.
Out of ti.OOA, 2.011A, z;07 IJ 1/01 Folfl, 8. ta.a, SooL
11·00710.001, Toytor,
, ...... 000. Koull, Corl 110M,
Stt.IO.
12.. "- PT of NE 114 Ell. Ill~
Floni E. e1o Ra hrt a.1.a, llor llllrloy; Lot 100 • 101
t7·00141.000,
HoMon,
NW
.I!X. 1ZA Ex. 41.HA, "
hot tH I Uno of II! 114 1A Off N lklo of 2.1ZA Lot
Gory
D.
1/w
Coroll
E.,
8.
UU,
1.11 -,171.11.
7A, 7.00- Stl7.at.
1011A,1. . - . . .t24.. . aa. u aa 1.417A or 11.71A
1..00011.010, WooJon,
11·00701.000, Wololl'
tlo01101 000, 81!1111o....,
C. of NW 114 of IW Wllll.n. A. 1/or' Oro ~A
T - ..... ,._ loolotr Vlrglnlo, Lot 11 llollon tot
. tl4of . . . ll,.-zt.aa.
of,_w•wtcatle,e.ttW ~$1~1.
~~~~~~
......
I I of Loi111A, 1. . - ,
11.ot417.010, 'fa m !..":! .,!!-4001f~
UIIIA, 1.01--. _,.. •·
Lu•ad Loo, Lot 17 41' utr
111,. E 1/ll!x
tf.Oill2 000, Wollo, lloJI.
E Skle or Lot 1710' on 1nc1 II

m e

$40.00 a load

BILL SlACK
992·2269
llloo A.

All Har4waod,

s........,

•FIRE~OOD

II

FOR SALE

CUAII "Willi
ClASSIID ADS .•.' .
I

•LIGHT HAULING

n... -.. . . . .

Dono!low;

-~?

TREE
IRIM and
REIIOYAL

ORANCE TOM•IP
IAI1IRN 1..80

·

Glallty HI Efflcle,KY
Ak' ColcltlaHn, Heat

homo. No COlli

PltllpS. F11111K11 &amp;

Now Wat• Heattn•
Bennetts Mobile Home Hei~t__ti~1g
1391S.Hor4~1.. .
Gal!lpoi~OIH

::12

."(II (614)446-9416 or

(114) 37Ht63

H00..72-5967

t-12 •ml .-10 pm
L

'·

�10,1812

Ohio

BORN

;
4

,.

. . . ___,,,_..ft

lOw

. ____ ....... =.:.....-=,.._To--

w .........

f14-t4f.2411.

11!11.

il- · , .._

.,_,-.uw-.c.
...-- ...,_,.lluor
L'IS, 21000,
-..
....

Tllom-

··-·
-

.....

Miaod PftbuN puDDiol. Aloo
have lltlor of mllocf haglo pup.
Dleo, appro• 4 wko old, 304-812·

Rentals

One male and one Mmall kitten,
304-475-11215.

I DIDN' T GET
SICK ON T~E BUS

-.,..... --· =·

Plwlniulll ~~o~~ron·
~

5I

.......-·---

=·~-rJ~

. - Clwll

, .,._c~oyo.

1.1ercnar:J1se

.

- · ..
90 .......
., ""'
lour
ocramblod
worcll
b.
10 form lour ~mploo wordo.

. .ISle Slle CII• e e
a e o ...
911 ...........
~
a.wss-=
•

R..... 1 5 - Kytllf. UIIUIIN

l¥allable.l14~·

~~CIII2klti-304-

:!485.

·

N1hftor 4:00 Pll.

old tloj, fM.llla-2114.
Colllo mind -

111

WMIId
....
. . To
I •
11-W. Cll I ' l l d ---\100
... ....
Ill. 12.
304511-

4KI4t-C.1 1114o441o41U.

ptlllll

.

lf7 Wlnlld 10 Alnl

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

GIVIIW8Y

Television

.;w-..
.........I~

-~~

7114.

....,

Pomeroy Md:l ; .... ~

1992

•'

I

WE S~OULD 60 ON
MORE FIELD TRIPS ..

LIKE MAYBE ONCE
EVER'( TEN YEARS ..

M· ODAN

After his first visit to ihe diet
clinic my friend came straiGht
: home and started eating. "l'm
starved," he mumbled, "all
r=-R"'",:~A. ~T~O:-::-D-:1:--'they talk -·;· is ....!"

I' I I F

. . .......... IIHI C:.. Q
fl:a c:.....

. .I(J) 11

.

.... ...

ue~Ze o ..:

'. •'. '1 1

"a W

9l i!ISSP

1. I

f9
1

Two frH kltlona, ~~-.

•

•
•

e

Complete the chuckle quated
bv fillirig in the missing WOtdl
,you develop from step No. 3 below.

I' I' I
I, I I I I Irs I I I I . I
SCIIAM-I.ETS ANSWER$
,._.,
DMde ~ f,.fouse - Joint • JOCOS6 • SECOND
Durina any sports· season the biggest and most lreq;Jent white lie told by husband's is, "The games almost
over, dear, I'll be there in a St;:COND."

WI!Af DO YOU M£.11~
If WOI.l'T DO RIGHH

•

-~-------, •'··

r

BRIDGE

.

--:::;,.-.-,,
1-

.::.~'8(~

:r-9 n..t~olg

.,

FRANK AND ERNEST

Wort&lt;lng llojor Applloncoo,
TY'o
R~Ofl,
Calor

ono -.ely wwwng lnlorootod

Etc. 114-256-1231.

In IIIII lno- lor lho
Holldop. ball Col CIN Ol
Point Plononl Raglolor, 200
lloln Ill, Point PloMant, WV

Good - d II'OidmiH.

WliCI.

F-!0'"'

VCR'o, Mlcivwovoo,
Alr """"Hionoro, Ouhar Ampo,
114-

..·

PfOFEfSIOI'IAL.
/ l'lfLP.

.......

Nal'flmk, Alclno, OH. 114-t4t2210.
2 bedroom. low twenty"a, no
.land conlroclo, 114:lll!lo3!111.

Oa-.
I

Bedrooma, Modem Hou.e,

AC, Socurly Alarm.
210111. llolil,.lll. Pllllonl. Fer

.... .,

ew-.~--152.

12XID Put fumlohod. aiD.OO

o.r.

llonl:h. ........... ...., ....,.
~- $100.
1 ........

cloon,
~-:...... locol doiiN!y,

114-441 0127.

Wortl boola. 111

-·n
•-.g..
!l--.X:.......

m
m..... 1WI. a
. . _ illllliJ' is ..... t@!ltg

IM

CoiM,I!.Gold Ringe. Silver Colna,
Qoold Coin&amp; II.T.S. Coin ShGp,
151 Socand A - . Qolllpollo.

I~

• =, ---o
·DI*-a.at
(IIIIIDJ CHill

al~

GO

Pr&lt;E.s':U&lt;ED

Wln1od 10 buy: ~ding
mowers. C.l t ....,,. 5 p.m.,
Mon. ·SaL ~M-2~~4~-1410.

..,---- 1.,..
....
..., .•.
..... ...... _...
,.a..

'

:-ws

-y.

Serv1crs

EARN

110 lUCKS
CHRISTMAS
So11Avon. tl4-444--.

lie- N - CorilllcOlo ·or A

·-··~"­

_

. . . . . . . .,

=: . . .

0

1£.1

''Y

L~

_..

·- - r
. . __.!!

,.,._,Qol.

.._,_r,_llt- - - OIIIN. ConliOt Tho
lolnllllklll

-

Hollr IUdgo 141711,
2 k j owua. AJC.

1111 Sllyllnl

.. lllc,

........
........
=~-...,..rng,

flll&lt;I11Cial

2 l e d - Gaool Condlllonl

f14.oMW2t7.
~,.vld1W

I~MIIOel.

-- -

....

1orm

I

~n.~
,_ ..'::t.~onllll. ~ llllolonoy Aroocl- Fumlohod,

llil c:.un~y 1.a0o1 ac-. no
....... l.anel. ~~. Ohio
48Ul.
-~- For Al&gt;p'
S'W)IIINowllllber:Z0.1112.

==ao:=~
.
or COon- To ...,..
Clle'*'l - - AI Tho

Furn~Med

..-11I7HIM.

_._ A Lollor Of ,.,.
Dlloollon And RoiiUOIII TollaloOot

---

21

U..... P.W. 114 4tlllll.

............. 3 ""'- • loth,
C1N11, 110 11o4a. II 1 ocw •
D1pM1 A tun.l. ~1111.

=~~\9
......

=·:..=:t.:
"'
:
'
--.-.a.,
......

...

~=

....ora.

ltllddload. F,_

. . . 0111._-nlt IIOH.

Bustneu

Eleclrlcal &amp;
Refrigeration

,. . . ---=

do-....

OHIO VALLIY Pllalll,_ CO.

~....

_..ft,.....r::::t

NOTIOHild......,l
nl UlliN JOU hoVIi
tho_.,.
.

.,

1151

,..,

......... llool-. .-.
.._..,..,
.....,. Unn

tho
od

-

-.4 ...
.... 010,--.....,.,
-a.owa

'

111ea1

85 General Hauling

G

'Your
'Birthday

(

I

I

!"5'end

'

•

.

•• • 0. . . .
·
,
•
i

i

n•we we m • e

····~~~
=
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==- 9..-

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--

7

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:
..

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(a)1H2 by NEA , Inc.

- - - CELEBRITY ci'PtiiR .. r

~CipNro;:

.'

. j

paw . . .,.....,... llbwtt,...._.,...,,..lndPf*IMI.

- -.... --""'-·,_.._x_c.

eon- ,

n-Sept.

er.,

i\0 (1:111

UliECittll--

the year ahead by mailing $1.25 plus a and loses are a poasibilily loday where
long, sell-addressed, stamped enve- your linanclal Interests are concerned.
10"' to Aslro-Graph, c/o lhls newspa. Don'l let poor judgmenl negate .t he
per, P.O. Box 91428, CleVeland . OH positive.
.
BERNICE
Be
sure
10
slate
your
zodi·
GEMINIIMIIJ
21..June
20)
ll's
....,tiel
44101-3428.
BEDEOSOL ac sfgn. .
· today to distinguish behueen when it is
SAGmARIU8 ( - . ZS.Dec. 21) You proper lo 8SHrt yourself and when you
might Ignore wlse counsel today. be- should back on. If you gel your signals
~-lliiii•••••• cause II comes lrom someone you diS· l'l)lxad , It could make you look bad.
•
like, and accept the advice ol a friend CANCER (ololne 21"""" II) Uouei!Y.
whose judgment Ia q..allonable.
you're good at k-'ng lhings ...,.,
CAPRICORN (DoC. II.,.,, 11) 11 you lhat are told to you In conlldence. How·
fall to carefully outline your Intentions ever, you might be a trilla loose-lipped
loday, you could be very busy yet have . today ~nd apt to reveal lhi'\11* you
Utile to &amp;how lor your aHOrls. Be protl· shouldn t
clent , hot just acllve.
LEO (oluiJ 21-Aug. 22) Thera's a chance
AQUARIUS (J- 20-Fob. 11) You might you'll be very prudent loclay In ....S
be templed today to once again loot · where you have lillie lo gain.
No•· 11.. 1112
late by lrytng lo do oomethlng you falle&lt;f' ly, you mlghl be a bll foolish In lliluoat prevle)usly. Try to protlt ,lrom your · tiona that ®Uid coat you plenly.
,
Two ,relevant changes In your llleslyle mlstakealnsteed of repeating them.
VIRGO (A~.
II) Self-lntor·
are posslblllllooln the year ahead. Even • PISCES (Fib. 20-Match :Ill) In dealing eats mustn I become so lmportanl tothough you mlghl not lnlliate ellher one • wllh loVIId o.- today, your way of do- day that you're wllllng to l a k e both .&amp;ould work oul lo your ulllmat~ • lng lhl~gs might be superior, bul there's · wlllch you'd be onnbarraood to tllk
advantage.
. a possibility you could handle mailers In about later. To be on llle ale ·
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221 Be 'carelul a way thal will lose thalr support. ,·
maintain your ueual high stUdarde.
In money mailers today, both In manag. ARIES (Merch 21·April It) Be careful UIRA (Sept. 21-0ct. Zl) Advice wouot·
lng your own resources or ·in alluatlons how you conduct youroelltoday, espe. f• olhon today lhallt ~aMCI on kno.lwllere you're hendllng funds ror anolh· clally when making tuggeatlona to oth·
edgtlgaln8)11rom oxpenence will bo el·
Each cOuld be periloua. Scorpio, ers. While your lntenll~no may be good, fectlve and helplul. If you
WOU
.!real yourself to a birthday glh. Send tor your presenlation could be ollenalve.
know something you don t, hOWIM!r,
Scorpio' s Astro-Graph predlcllons lor . TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Both gains . the oppoolle could be true.

1

OppOrtunity
INOTlCEI
naa . . . . . tblt rou

-CIIIItt

__
=
. . . ....

o.n.,

3' , - . . .......

ASTRO-GRAPH

tlftCIIIon. lnl-lod lndlvlclullll

=9

lllatii.._ S

m:....s rn
(I:GIJ

....... ...

beth.

adVOCIII

&amp;~•· ---

IIR

To

olrellel
8 Coneumer

1 Exparll
2 No

....
• 51111 Fiiww:iiKO dllldl
...,..., • . ' z..S

. ma-ToTokoThoAddllonol
N1 r

. : ...

6 Property
7 Exclamation

DOWW

.....- -PIIis

~ToPrOcllooNurolnaln

C!Ctiuo.-tiuo~ooo~rk

(Lat.)

S DIIIcll1flalling

S •lllall. . c.-d

3 8rltllt
4 Allanta team
s .sullry .

61 You were

~.::.:;.:, a 7

Tfto Slelo Of Oftlo, And MI-

()omplolo SCheel NUfOO Coro

Norway

llillll5'

asrtralller

- a:S=Q
...........

............. Coni-

. . .

1224.
Troo topping • trllllmlng •••
lollmaloo, -

eo CitY In

m• • ..,..

PAW'S SOUND ASLEEP
AN' HIS PIPE'S
STILL LITtl

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

5tl Collge dig.

m-

LOOK AT THAT!!

1271.
11M,_., DIY C... Contlr I
·-Wool 01 HIIC On olockoon
Pika .... • AJI. ..,so P.JI. "
Fomolo aomponlon wbh minimal OUolfty And E_..,_ II'Tho
11 eao-m For Y- Chlld'o
Cl... dullao lor oldotly. - · Con. Col Uo .... A '1111. lnlllnl
wllll~lo. nagollllo 1....., or noc~&amp;~~~r~ 114 ue IZZ7. p,...
...
• ..... llwcervU.. uae.
chulna llohool Ate 114,;-441..
1141317 oftor 5 p.m.

......

Diac:e(abbr.)

581'•11¥11

UAII I' +In

. . - -• 'E . . .
gileiE ; ' •

Lady to CIN tor In ni)l homo,
bod pollon1 ........... 114:t4f.

54 Sapereble
5I Colly
571n the 11mo

p clnU

M--..,..._
···-·
D

clellgnlng

53 Ben-

23 ..........

o..s.........

i1tfu;

...
I

421ced44 Natural color
46Dr••
41 ProVIill

al 3
...
2.1 I IMH

~:~~me ••c-a ~•

Eaoy World Elcollonl Payl U.
ooml&gt;lo P - AI HomO. CoN
Toll Froo, 1-I00-417-45N, Ell.
:tl3.

. ...... A School Nurwo: _AP'
allcMio Hold A Valid 0111o

18

ave

rtlatl¥1

17 Mia

iioo:g

palf- SIII=Q

en

39 Chirp
41 Hone'•

IIIIIIJ
.....
..,.11.. .

.a-.-.u.s
•
:- a

-

Alalkl)
38 Pertaining to

15 C

•• s a -

-7111'Abr 4p.m.

37- Sal (qH

M ~(ca.b.

......... .

,. .wear

Gilllla County Local loh a1111

13 S'llltJ'. ,.

at

,~._..

FOR

EARN MONEY Roodlng Boabl
$30,00CiiYr. Income Polonllol.
Dotolla. (1) IOWIZoiiOOO, Ell. Y·
10111.

•

2f tl:.~­

HAN&lt;S-URS~

lmprovemtitts

llobviiBina In illy Clly
SchOol Dlalrtcl. -nc01
Anlllltll. 114 t41 1114.

12. 1dr011-

g

1-

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rwn·~~~~·"'
•n·

f.J

g

mm
r ••D
e eae
......

WITH "Tl"EtR

Home

81

••

EVERYBODY
c.t::JNe 10IN:

Norlll
Pass

boat

5 CI ;pad'

k*

~~~~~- ­

WHY DOES

IIR TREE SIAYICI. 1'~"11·
~ Trwllomanl,
.h~lllorlllouH.......,_ T.-rnii. Froo Eatlmaleol I

old,

=

.we • e

Weo1

Tile World Almanac&lt;~ Cros.,;ord Puzzl~.~

..

. .IJI• •
0 2 TI ._...,is.

Sooolll

'•,

j

g
ueme • •s a ,.. c 7 ......... .

Business

.•,._.......
.,......1....

.

. . . . . . 7 5 F2
Olas•SL ~ -

18 Wanted to Do
Aftonllono: -..g I Mondlng,

requlrod;

ID

is a lot of psychology in

.,

I+
3+
' .'
liiCJSn a&amp; playing. It is the primary 4 +
Pass ~ +
Pua
w:lly there are no ·cllild prodi· · ~ t
Pass Pass
Paa
..
ps illl lil"idle, and wby computen will
•
·;.
play; the game as well .as
Opening lead: A
.•
+-i..
\o
'lbOj(SI deal occurred duriQg the '--...,.-----...,---- . . . o:,
1!Q1C World Team Olympiad. It fea hnd a1peat battle between two top round with d\miiiiy's diamiind 10.
JlaJu s:. Zia M.alunood from Pakistan, was hoping to lose just two trumpJ
..a MidleF Perron, a Frenchman wbo tricks. However, under the heart ace,1
::
ao llis way to wiMing the gold Zia dropped the queen.
The situation bad changed. U the;
...rd.
Affft East's limit raise of three queen were an honest card, declarer·•
•s I ·• sbowinl about 1l points an!!: could play two rounds of trumps. Lat.;;
r.. b Uiijl8, Perron, silting South, bad er be could enter dummy witb a club&gt;
• awhard bid. His solutiOD was four to the ace and take the "marked" fl:-j
1p11tils.. 'Fhis unusual cue-bid showed a nesse against East's beart 10. Howe'ob
sb1l-c two-suiter, wllicb bad to be er, Pert'OII undentood the psychology;
-.a and' diamonds when be re- of Zia. He did cootinue with t,.P.
rounds of diamonds. But wben ·be re:.
_ . five clubs to five diam011ds.
Zia. as be is 1mown to everyone, led &amp;allied the lead, Perron didn't entei;
k
lpldle· ace. Perron ruffed and tbe clummy, b.e just cubed the beaft
' • lbe heart ace. He planned to king. Tbe fall of West's 10 bad beei\
cww«; 'lritb · the kiDg and, if the foreseen.
'1
IWI.U I &amp;Ill&amp;.
.-a ltadllrt dropped, to ruff the third

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lho doy bolono tho od Ia lo run.
Sunday odHion • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. llondoy odftlon • 2:00
p.m. Saturday.

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PIIEliiOU8 SOLUTION: " Mind1 aro like parachutes; they only !unction
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Lord Dewar.
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The Daily Sentine1

Veterans
Day

TueSday, November 10, 189l
.

'

Consider this ...

Ohio Lottery

Plgl

.'
1~

Pick 4:
Buckeye 5:
2·12-15-16-31

1992

comblt this problan," stated Johil:
R. Hall, director.
';
The video includes tJuee differ;:;
ent vipttes and stops at critieal.
decision-matins points 10 allow~
students to discuss what they've,
just - and how they would half.'::
die the situations. The progiD 'also•
includes activities for tllG s!Udents l
and aRIIOUrCC Jist
leather. :
. for tllG
.

Low tonight In 50s. Thursday,

rain. High In mld-60!.

•
VoL a, No. 141
Capyulglned 1112

2 Secllono 14 P•• 2 6 A llulllmedia lno. Ne• poper

-· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, November 11, 1992

Meig~

Chamber elects
new board members
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Stair

KERRY VISITS WALL· Sea ~ Bob Kerry,
D·Neb., a Vietnam veteran, pauses before tbe
wall or names at the Vietnam Memorial

Wednesday moraing. The wall's.JOtb aaa.lversaryls being observed tbis Veterans Day. (AP)
.

Veterans reminded to record ·
discharges at courthouse,

Community calendar

By BRIAN J. REED
Seatloel News Stair
Max Cale, Meigs County veter·
ans' service officer, and Recorder
· Emmogene Hamilton have jQined
together on Veterans Day to
remind local' veterans 10 record
their discharges.
· · Ac~ording tel Hamilion, veter·
ans' diSC:hatges are not recor.!ied
automatically by the armed Sbr·
vices, and it is the responsibility of
the veteran 10 have his or her dis·
charge recorded.
This serves several purposes.
Discharges are required when vet·
erans apply for VA benefits, social
security and veteran-relsted hospitalization. Furthermore, a certified
copy of a discharge serves the same
purpose as an original as long as
the original has been recorded,
Hamilton said. In such 1 case,
recording the discharge serves as
protection in case of a fii'C or other
loss.
"Reprdless of how long veterans have had their D.D. 214 velerans discharges, they should have,
them recorded if they've never
done so," Hamilton said. "If the
original is burned, desUoyed or
losi, a certified copy from this
office is as good as the original.
The clischarges are recorded free of
charge, so ihcrc's-really no reason
. not to have lhe discharge recorded
for safety's sate."
·
Hamilton also said lhat veterans
who recently mo~ed. to Meigs

Co••••lty Calntlar Items Wednesda~ 7 p.m. at the home
. Charles Blakeslee
appear two daJI heron ID evmt of Jean
ud the clay of tllat neat. Ilellll ' will show llides of past shows liy
. - " rei:clnd well Ia I l l - lbe club and Mlclcl1epon Garden
·
to u •• plblleab ia 1M cal· Club. ·
eadar.
RUTLAND • Leading Creek
Conservancy District offfccs will
TUESDAY
POMEROY • Fint Southern be closed Wednesday in obser·
Baptist Church, revival, through vance of Veterans Day.
.
.
Friday with Charles Altimore and
CHESTER • Past Councilors
Henry Roe. Lamar O'Bryant, pas.
Club of Chester Council No. 323,
tor, invicealhe public.
Daughters of America, will meet
on
Wednesday evening at 7 p.m., at
MIDDLEPORT • Women's
MiJs1onatY Union will meet Tues- the home or Esther Smith. The coday, 6:30 p.m., Hope Baptist hosteSs is EDa Osborne,

ChlilCh. Middleport

THURSDAY .
POMEROY
; Connie Smith will
PORTLAND • Portland Ele·
.
perform
Thunday
at 7:30 p.m. at
mentarY PTO wiD meet Tuesday, 7
Meigs
High
School.
The concert is
p.m., at the school. Everyone weisponsored
by
the
Meigs Band
cane,
BOOSiaS.
DARWIN • The Bedfoi'd Tll'im·
POMEROY • A meeting for
&amp;hip Trustees will meet Monday at
those
interested in helping to pro·
7 p.m. I! the town hall.
vide rural water service to the reli·
RACINI! • American Red Cross dents of Western Meigs County
Bloodmobile will be at Southern will be held Thursday at 7 p.ln. at
Hilh School Tuesday from 10 a.m. the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce Office on East Second
to 2 p.m. Public invited.
Street in Pom~roy. Townahip
POMEROY • Ohio Eta Phi trustees, water proViders and JoY·
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority emment represe~ves are invtltd.
wiD meet Tuesday It 7 p.m. 81 the
POMEROY • Sacred Heart
Sellior Citizens Center in Pomaoy.
Dr. Nick Robinson will discuss Catholic Church, Pomeroy; will
have its fall bar.aar Thursday. Din·
"Drs. With a Heart."
ner will begin at 5 p.m. and consist
RACINE • A meeting for all of cream baked Chicken or ham,
people interested in playing in a noodles, mashed potatoes and
Southern-Eastern alumni game will gravy, green beans, hot rolls,
be held Tuesday at 6 p.m. in South· choice of cole slaw. apple sauce or
pickled beets. Cost is $5 for adults
eriJ High School cafeteria.
and $2.SO for·children 12 and
under. Dessert included.
WEDNESDAY
COOLVIllE · Hunter's safety
ROCK SPRINGS • Rock
course, Wednesday, Friday, Nov.
18 and 20,6:30-9:30 p.m. and Nov. Springs Grange will hold an open
21 and 22 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at meeting Thursday at the grange
the Coolville Lions Club. To regis- hall at 8 p.m. Rev. William Mid·
ter, or for funbcr information, can dleswarth will show slides or
Bob Pullins, 667·3831, Ed Rood, churches in Meigs County. Public
invited. Refreshments will be
667-6348 or Ed Wigal, 667-6657.
served.
POMEROY· Veterans Day proMIDDLEPORT • Meigs Local
gram, Meigs County CoUrthouse,
Wednesday, All veterans and the OAPSE will meet ThurSday at 7
p.m. at Meigs Junior High SchOol
public inviltd.
10 Middleport.
MIDDLEPORT • Royal Ambas·
sador Recognition night, Wednes- - RUTLAND • Star Garden Club
day, 7 p.m., Hope Baptist Church, will meet Thursday at I p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Juanita Radetin.
Middleport
Each member is to bring a ThanksRACINE • Racine American giving arrangemenL
Legion Post 6lt2 will have a combread and bean soup 'dinner
A lieU ofa year .
Wednesday from noon 10 4:30p.m.
year 1969 wu quite a busy one,
Public invited. The post will visit as The
arguably
11101t tui'bulent de·
Portland Elementary at 10:30 a.m. cade In UnitedtheStalel
blltory came to
and Letart Elementary at I p.m.
a cla~e. Some hllbllchtl: The espand'
eel four-party VIetnam peace talkl be·
MIDDLEPORT • Jim Oliphant gan on Jan. 18, but U.S. force~ peaked
will conduct a bible study course at MS,OOO In April. Aati'OIIlUt NeU A.
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the First ·Armstronc. comn\aader of the Apollo
Baptist Church in Middleport. million, became the flrlt man to IM!t
foot on lbe moon on Jaly 20. Allcl anti·
Everyone welcome. ·
Vietnam
War demonltratiOIII
reached their __.. In America; lOme
·MIDDLEPORT • Middleport 250,000 marched. in Wuhinaton. nc.,
'Amateur Garden Club will meet on Nov. ~.

164

1347

Racine elementary students view ODLC program

Hoola. -the~ HiJ?PO. 1 noon pink JOII If which waa tQeQcOuriJe . choi~es ; I for look for the best
hippo bOlted an mtemctive v1deo studeau to think before makin&amp; choice, and A for act on the choice
•
program. sponsored by the Ohio decilionl- .,.UCularly diOie con- you've made.
By Briall J. Reed
Department or Liquor Control at cerninJ alcoliol and other drugs.
National swislics show lhat half
, the Racine Elementary School The vtdeo illua.tratea the steps of the students in srades seven ·
recently.
involved in decillon-matins. through 12 drink alcoholic beverJerry and Ellen Roush, members Hoola Ia an acronym for those qea. and that five percent of them
Gr, at Hoaor••• Loeal boaters fa~te" Oaldey Collins, SI8IC sen· of the local chapter of Mother's aeps; H !or bow do you feel about · beaan drinking at age ei&amp;ht )or
Dottie Turner and Jimmy Cain 110r, County AudiiOI' Gordon Cald· Against Drunk Drivins (MADD) the ldlillion, 0 for obtlln lhe faets, younger. Hoola is tllG Department
were among the first pleasure well, a Democrat, who defeated were present for the program, the 0 for options, consider all your of Liquor ,Conuol'a tciof to help
boaeers to uavel throub the new Wayne Gibbons of Middleport; and
Gallipolis Locks and Dam last inc11mbent Republican collimis·
month. According to Dottie, the sioners Robert Clark and Charles
privilege came as a reault of aniv- Karr, Sr. They defeated Dems Ken·
mg at the locks at the crack of neth Hager and Paul Simon,
dawn and patiently waiting with respectively.
.several othen. Businessman Jay
Richard Nixon and Michigan
Hall had a boatlOid of people, 37 Governor Gl!orge Romney had
all together, and Turner indicated emerged as the GOP frontrunnen
lhat the wait was worth the honor . for the presidential election in
of being among the firSt tO enjoy · 1968. Other possibilities: Califot-.
the histMc occasion.
nia's Governor-elect Ronald Rea·
gan, New Yort Gove~r .Nelson
McBucks .for EdiiCIItloa ... the A. Rockefeller lllil. yes, OhiO Gov·
program which allows customen at CI'IIOl' James Rhodes. The Republi·
McDonald's in Pomeroy to help cans saw "I good shoe" at defeating
their favorite school groups, has President Lyndon Johnson, who
been a terrific success, according to lalcr, of~. QPted not to run for
Sandee Mills, who owns and opei. re-election. ·
ates the restaurant along with her
OhiQ Univenity President Verhusband, Roscoe.
non R. Alden was about to wind up
Since September, 30,000 a 14-day tour of South VietNam.
McB ucts have been distributed, after promising lhat OU .would try
adding up to $1,5(XHor the partici- to expand its educational efforts
pating clubs and organizations. thete.
·
Five cents for every ·dollar span is
Southern High School and East·
given per $3 minimum purchase. eni Jtigh School were cited with 14
McBucks will then be converted minimum standarcls violations by
into cash at lhe end of the program, the state. Southern's shortcomings
November 20.
· ·
included limited materials on the
A list of partici,Paling schools elementary level, inadequacies in
.
and school groups IS posted in lhe the guidance deplrtrnent and execsSTUDENTS OF THE WEEK • Tbe followlalltadeiits were
restaurant, and some schools have . sive leaehcr turnover.
selected as studeats of the week for die m011tb of October. Tbll
begun to decorate the restaurant
A&amp;P advertbed its gift certifi·
honor is acbieved tbroup aadeialc uceDe-.IIDCI llllpro•••t
with poslers, indicating their partie- cates as "the Jl111£tical gift that's
in
behavior. L·r, Sabrlu Sllltb, sdeace; Micbel Lei~.':
ipation.
practically perfect".
alaebra;
Robin Dollobue, Ohio lliltory; aad Libby Klq,
On the comics page, "Carnival" ·
history.
Historic beadllaes... from this showed us a wanan addressing bet
week in 1966 reflected election husband with surprise: "You mean
news (what else?),
'
LBJ wants ME PERSONALLY 10
Clarence Miller was the lOth cut down on my spending? You're
District's new congressman after putting me on!"
his defeat of incumbent Democrat
--Waller H. Moeller bX 4,400 votes.
Tate care.
Othei winners were •Meigs County

Pick 3:

Two new members were named
Tuesday night 10 the Meip County
Chamber of Commerce Board of
Directors. The nominations were
approved by the chamber's general
membenhip at its regular meeting
on Tuesday nighL
'
Elected as new at-large mem·
bers wac Horace KmT of Pomeroy
and Gary "Denny" Evans, Racine.
Other members of the board were
reafrm'ned for the upcoming year.
The terms of two board memben,
Charles Kitchen and Lenny Eliason, wiD expire after the new year.
Executive Director Paula Thacker reported that the Small Business
Development Cen1er in Athens has
begun providing exlension services
to prospective business owners in
Meigs County through the chamber
office. and that in the fust visit,
nine appointments were made.
During those visits, the SBDC
assists those interested in starting
· new businesses with J!I'CPID'IIiQII of
· a business plan, seumg up book·
keeping systems and other procedures necessary 10 successful new
business ventures. The ~~~­
live visits Meigs County bi-weekly,
and appointments can be made
through Kathy Adlcins at the cham·

bet office, 992-5005.
Haven, W.Va. exchan~es has been
According 1Q Thacker, many of sent to the Public Uulitics Com-

those who have expressed an interest in opening new businesses are
displaced coal minen.
· Thacker stated that a meeting
will be held this week with water
providers and local governments in
an effort to provide rural water service to townships. in Western
Meigs County. A large number of
homes in Salem, Scipio, Bedford,
Rutland and Salisbury Townships
are without rural water service.
Thacker said. The 1P'oup will also
discuss the possibihty of developing a _plan between Tuppers
PlainS/Chester Water District and
Leading Creek Conservancy District to provide mutual' backup service, when needed.
Thacker said that she is wcxldng
closely with Buckeye HillS/Hock·
ing Valley Regional Development
District on providing water service
to the site .of the new Meigs Motel
on Slate Route 7 near Big Wbeel.
TP,C will provide water to the sile,
but water line must be installed
under U.S. Route 33, since their
service stops at Meigs High
School.
A petition containing 300 signatures in support of extended area
lelephone service between the 992
exchange and the Mason and !"'ew

mission of Ohio, and Thscter said
that she expects the hearing process
will begin in about 30 days. The
Public ·Service Commission of
West Virginia has already
approved the requesL
Thacker shared Information
received at a recent meeting or the
Ohio Development Association
regarding businesses in small communities. She said that many large
corporations are beginning to COil·
sider moving operations to small
communities, and Thacker indicated that the chamber should investigate this trend in its attempt to
auract industry into lhe county. The
O.D.A. said that those small communities should be within 50 miles
of a metropolitan area.
.
Mary Powell, chairman of 'the
mcmbenhip committee reported
that the recent " Membership
Round-up" was a success, resultil)g
in three new chamber members 10 ·
date. and .several other prospective
members.
·
John·Rice of Tuppen Plains was ·
introduced·as a new chamber mem•
ber. GueSis introduced were COlin;:
ty Commissioner-elect Jaqet
Howard and Ada Scott.
·:.:
The meeting was hosted by Fied'
Goebel at the Tuppen Plains VFW.

Trumka wins third term
'

· Richatd Trumkl won a thir.d
straight five-r- term as Jresident
of the United Mine WOlters union
on the strength of people . who
should not have been given a vote,
his opponent said.
Trumlca was leading challenger
Karl Kaftan Tuesday with a vote of
35,116· 9,651, with 529 of the
union's 622 locals reporting, said
international teller Marty Hudson.

.

.

Even Trumta's home local in
Nemacolin, Pa., has no active miners.
Kafton had said · Trumta's

.

"give-bact contiacts and sweet·
heart agreements have sent this
union into a tailspin." Some of
those voting Tuesday agreed,
·

The union's 15.0,000 retirees
outnumber working members by
more than 2·10-1. And although he
is a pensioner himself, Kaftan said
it was wrontr to let the union be
"ilominated'"by
retirees.
VETERANS REMINDED • Melp Couaty Recorder Emmo·
'
'I
have
a
problem
with the man
a:eae Hplstelli ~= aow 11;-., as Em11oa:ene Hamilton, left,
who
may
not
have
been
working
and VeteraDS
Ollk:er Mair: Cale, are remiadlaa velerans
for
20
years
voting
for
someone
he
that they ••oald •ave tbelr dlscbar1e doeumeata recorded ia
docsn
•
t
even
know,"
he
said.
In
Hamilton's olf'.ce. Tlie service is provided free or ~barie aad profact,
Kafton
won
an
active
local·
, iec:ts tile doeumeat IIi a . of c1Mt11e or 1os11.
Local 1810 at Powhatan No. 6
County from outside the sllite or the documenL The recording pro- Mine, in Alledonia, Ohio - by a
county can have tbeir discharges cess can be done while the veteran vote of 213 -24, President ~
Vucelich said.
re-recorded in thG interest of con- waits.
Trumlca said Kaftan's statement
venience.
Calc said that veterans who no
·was
ironic and unfair.
~!!!'!!
The recorder' s office never longer have their discharges can
"I
think
it's
tragic
that
he
would
holds the original discharge, so vet- apply for a replacement through the
erans always have possession of Velerans Service Office, located on seek 10 deny the people who built
this union ... ihe right 10 vote," he
Mulberry Avenue in Pomeroy. · said. "We're winning it on the
veter~ns
~~~~~xen!:,11~~~~:· retired vote, the active vote, the
laid-off vote and the disabled vote.
the veteran nothing.
The U.S. Department of VeterTwice eac• year America remembers veteraas: Me•orial
"I think it's an overwhelming
FLAG DISPLAYED· Rev. William Middleswarth, a member
ans Affairs now offers a 1011-free
Day and Veterns Day. These are rlcbtful days of trlbale to
or
tlie
Lloas Clull, wu out eariJ Wedaetclay moraiiiJ (Veterans
mandate
for
our
team,"
said
Trum·
number that can be used throughthose who pve tlielr Dves, aad to tbose who served America.
Day)
dlsplaylns
tbe A•erlcaa na1 throughout Pomeroy. Special
out the United Slates and its pos- lea, 43, who has held the union's
For tliose or as at the.Departmnt ot Veten• All'alrs (VA),
services
were
abo
held tbrouahout the coanly by various posts or
sessions. By calling I (800) 827· top post for 10 years, a stay in
we remember nterans "year-rood" as we respoad to Presi·
American
Lqloa.
the
1000, velerans can be connected to office second only to the 1919deat Llacoln's call to ~'care ror blm wbo sball baYe ,horae tile
1960 tenure of the legendarY. John
their nearest regional office.
·
battle, aad ror bla widow, and liil orpha."·
L.
Lewis. ;'We're really graufted."
Veteru~:f- realadl us every tblrd pe,_ bi America Is a
Kafton, 67, of West Virginia,
veleraa or
ves a vetenu service. Yoa •ay be a veteran or
also
complained that the election ·,
yo• spouse, Uade Harry or Au at Slllly may be, 1 ad&amp;bbor,
yow dodor, realtor, vocer, baaker, barber, uyoae. ~er
!&gt;aJIOIS
lis~ Trumka and his slste y
m large pnnt at the top and Kafton
tliey are, wberever, wbeaever, however tbey served, t•ey are
~ey·Be~nctt f&gt;?st 128 of m,c ter for the event and indicated lhat
Five bus drivers' certificates a~d his running mates in small
America's 27 mUIIon veterau: Mea aad WOIIta (4.4 per cent
were issued at Tuesday night' s PfU.'! at~ boaom..
Amencan Legion, Middleport, will a dance, featuring Ron Hayes of
are womea) who. were drafted, who volunteered who 1t1 ted In
meeting of -the Meigs County . . I !hlnk ,the desigD of the ballot celebrate Veter.ans D~y .on McArthur, will conclude the
tbe Guard aad the Reaerva--4aactlve aad pa federal duty, socb
Board of Education.
· iS JUSUficsuon to pro!est the elec· Wednesday evemng, begmmng evening's festivities.
u tboae Ia tbe Penlan Gulr-d tho&amp;e who cbole •Ditary serReceiving tbe certificales were lion to the (U.S.) Labor Depart· with a dinner at 6:30p.m. accordvice to their euuatry ua career.
Cathy Barringer, Tom Dorst, Patsy ment," he said. " The internaUonal ing to POst Commander Jerrr Haw·
In carlnc for an estlnuited 1,254,000 veterilas Iii OJilo, tbe VA
Prater, Donna Bentley, and Clifford tellers who are ruming the election · ley.
distributed $1.3 biDioa Ia J.llacal Year 1991; $729 •llio- weat
arc supP,Orting the incumbent ...
Robert L. McCarty, past depart·
Brent Manley. ·
~ly ·t o vetenns llld tbeir beneficiaries 11 -~ Pd
Appropnations for ·the adult Absurd. '
. .. .
ment commander and past alternate
peliloil, $1G.9 •101011 for reldjustmeat aad voca;;JI.bm.
basic education program and the
Hudaon, who,~d he IS :indepe~- nationai .American Legion ex-comtatlon .benefits, and $7U mUlloa ror iniiii'Mce and Indemnity
. paymeats.
.
safety belt program which is being dent of Trumlca s campatgn, satd mitteeman, will be the featured
discontinued were revised. Satur· t1!e ballot "is iden~ 10 ~w it's speaker for the program,
· AI wars become more dlltaat billory, tile rav. viJIIe llld
McCarty is a me111ber of Marenday will be · the. last day when ~•storlcally been destgned when
more recent wan cbaap tlie prollle l'or IDedlcal Pd -pnmotorists charged with not using "'!depondents ~ Kaftan are run- go American Legion Post 110 near
satory care VA prt1Yides •ea lad womea vetei'UII.
their seat belts can see the movie In rung.
·
· Marion. He served as state comCare ror Oblo vetenu dur:I' FY 1991 by ftYe VA l'ldltla
.Trumta, a third-generation mander durin!! the 1986-1 987 ·
lieu ofa fine.
Included lnpatlfat care to 30,
veterau; ambulatGry care to
The board approved a contraCt mmer and attorney, ~ UJlOili)()Sed legion year. He 1s a U.S. Army vet·
791,000 aad aunliia bome care to 2,700. VA 1peat more tbaa
with the Southeastern.Qhio Special in 1987 and was remstalled by eran and served in the lith Air$15 miUion ror fac:Wty coaatructlon and more tbaa $451 mDIIoa'
Educational Re~esource acclamation. But Kaftan gave him borne division during the Korean
ror medical servkes Uld adllllalstrative cCJits.
Center for early c ·
supervi- a fi1ht. hatnmering at sore spOts Conflict
Ia addllloa, VA caaraateed 4,970 bome Joaas wortb
such as the decline in union memMcc'arty served the legion
sor
serviceS.
$354,804,600. .
.
benhlp
under
~
.
offiCes
at the post, couilty and dis.·
Next
meeting
was
set
for
S
p.m.
Tliere were 600 latermeats Ia Daytoli Natloul CfiDetery
In
l981,
the
unton
clatmed
10
trict
levels,
and was department
on
Dec.
8.
Attending
were
Oris
Veterau DaJ, a reiiJader tliat A•erka Ia Na•ber Oae,
have
160,000
memben.
Now,
the
assistant
sergeant-at-arms
in 1982·
Smith,
Bill
Quickel,
Harold
Lcbse,
,
tbaalklto ber YeterUL
UMW
bouta
only
abou.t
60,000
1983.
Bob
Burdette,
Jeff
Harris.
board
Submitted by Clrl L. Headei'SOII, Director c•1ca10 Of'lke of
Jay Ellis, P.ast eighth disulct
memben, and 1o1m Riebel. supet· ~~g memben, including about
!'Jibllc Atraln Departllleat of Vetenu Affairs , .
J,300 10. Kenlileky.. . .
commander w•D serve .as toastmasintendenL

. . -------"!--------------.....;...
Remember all
today!

Five bus drivers
receive certifcates

Just One Of The so-Million Americans
Who Invests In U.S. Savings Bon~.

•

Lloyd Mokler isn't afraid of a hard day's work. But when it comes to investing, he buys U.S. Savings
Bonds - the safe and easy way tQ earn competitive Interest rates with a guaranteecl minimum return.
That's why millions of Americans use Bonds to save.for
. ..
. •
the future. To find out how U.S. Savings Bonds can make
'f · • • Savings
0 ·
your future a little easier, calll 800 4 OS BOND, or write
.
to Box USTN, U.S. Savings Bonds, Washington, DC 20~.
,
. MakingAmericani&gt;rearmA~ty

US

Bo ds

I

A public Wrvlte of thh new•papr;r ·

.

.

P·OS1· 128 WI•11 ceJebral e.

D
•
•
eteranS ay thiS evening

T

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