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·ZESTA
CRACKER
1 POUND
c

STORE HOURS
Mo11day thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY. OH.
WE RESERVE IHE RIGIT TO LIMIT QUIIInTIES
PRICES GOOD SUN., IOV. a ·rHRU NOV. 14, 1992

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•
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.$ 159

LlnLE DEBBIE

RESURFACING • l•ue 2 money hu beta
at 'II'OI'k Ia Rlelae this week. Tbe resurracln&amp; by
tbe Mayle Construction Co. or Bartlett completes blacktopplag most or the streets of the

SNACK
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KEMPS

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Three killed
on way home
from school

69

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paved.

WASHINGTON (Al') - The watched in mild, cloudy weather as as he entered the grounds, some
Vietnam Veterans Memorial, the Mayor David Dinkins walked veterans told him "Welcome
black granite wall with the names along Fifth Avenue behind a home" and others said, "Bring
of nearly 60,000 dead and missing, Marine Corps color guard to take 'em home," referring to uncertain~
drew a president, a vice president- part in a wreath-laying ceremony. ty about the fate of some of the
missing .
elect and the nation's largest Veter- Farther back in the procession
.. Martin Merjave, prestQent of the
"We ·are determined to get the
ans Day crowd.
'
·
Turnouts elsewhere around the ·New York POW-MIA Awareness truth," said Gore.
Artist Maya Lin, who designed
country Wednesday varied sharply, Coalition, wore symbolic wrist
from the thousands who lined Pitts- shackles and chains to dramatize the black, V-shaped wall of names,
burgh streets for that city's 73rd the issue of Americans still unac- told the crowd, ' '! may be the
author, but I would like to remain
annual Veterans Day parade to the counted for in Indochina.
At the Vietnam Memorial here, fairly silent. This wall is designed
mere handfuls of spec\3tors along ·
15 blocks of Fifth Avehue in New Vice President-elect Gore said that for you."
York City for the American Legion
In Pittsburgh, thousands lined
the streets to watch a parade that
parade.
The National Park Police esti·
included 35 marching bands, a man
mated that 30,000 people jammed
dressed as Uncle Sam and an
artillery unit used in the Gulf War.
the Veterans Memorial and spilled
In Northampton, Mass., the
over onto the surrounding Mall
parade had a less traditional feahere to see wreaths laid, hear the
ture. Two women carrying a sign
names of Vietnam dead and missreading,
"Gay and Lesbian Vetering read aloud and listen to speech·
COAL GROVE, Ohio (AP) es by Vice President-elect AI Gore Three teen-agers coming home ans" joined other veterans in
and others.
from school were killed when their marching through downtown as
Gore expressed appreciation to car smashed into a IJ'ee off a state hundreds watched.
''I would like to see this country
President Bush, who had made a highway in Lawrence County
surprise midnight visit to the authorities said.
' no longer deprived of the skills and
Memorial some hours earlier with
Killed in the accident Wednes- loyalty of gay jlcople who wish to
his wife, Barbara. and took pan in day )'lere Robert !son, 18, and John serve," said Kay Marian Raymond,
the reading of names.
M. Crabtree, 16, both of Coal protesting exclusion of gays and
The ceremonies, held in a per- Grove, and Rena Stacy, 17, of Iron- lesbians from the military.
sistent and occasionally heavy rain, ton, the State Hi~hway Patrol said
Later Wednesday, President
marked the lOth anniversary of the
!son was drivtnjlthe cai in rainy Bush signed a measure authorizing
memorial.
cqndrtrons when 11 went off. Ohio $40 million in each of the next
But in Wausau, Wis., only a 243 about five miles east of this three years to set up counseling
small crowd gathered at the court- southern Ohio community and facililies for homeless veterans.
house for a ceremony honoring vet-· crashed into a tree, the patrol said.
Meanwhile, President-elect
crans.
•
They were students at Lawrence Clinton t.old a crow4 in the rotunda
"There aren'tthat many that County Joint Vocational School. of the Arkansas state Capitol at Litcongregate anymore," said Mil· Crabtree was president of the stu- tle Rock, "This Is a Veterans' Day
·
dred Schulta of Rothschild, Wis., a dent activities council, said Ron unlike any other for me."
World War II Army nurse. "We Blair, assistant superintendent
"Today I come here with spe•
don'tlolow what it's like."
Blair said counselors and mem- cia! responsibilities," Clinton said.
John Courtion, county veterans' bers of a crisis intervention team
He said that as commander-inservice officer, said the Gulf War would be at the school today to chief he would see that the nation
gave America "a resurgence of help students cope with the deaths . has a well-trained and mobile milipatriotism" but "unfortunately, of their classmates.
!B'Y ev~ as he cuts defense spendthat wanes rather rapidly."
Coal Grove is about three miles mg.
In New York, too, only handfuls south of Ironton along the Ohio
River.
·

•

ams........LB.

'

viUap, M•yor Frimk Clelaad advises. Of tbe
$56,000 total project cost, $4!1,900 was Ia laue 2
monies. Here 11 seetloa of·Sixtb Street Is being

Vietnam ·Wall .highlight .of
Veterans Day ceremonies

12 PAK

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2 Sectlone, 12 PaiJM zs
A Multimedia Inc. Ne !paper

Meigs School Boafd·
modifies dress code

••

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r

Leg Quarlers___,__~~.3 9
FRESH _PORK BUn

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... Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thu,.day, November 12, 1992

MIRACLE

Chuck.Roast._. La.
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Vol. 43, No.142
Copyright.~ 18t2

•

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By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff ·
The dress code at Meigs High
School was modified by the Meigs
Local Board of Education at Tues.
day nig · 's meeting held at the
Meigs nio igh School.
St dents at the high School will
now pennitted to wear shorts all
¥1M'·r long instead of just the first
and last grading period of the
school year.
Nathan . Baloy and Randall
Johnston, junior class president,
spoke on behalf of a delegation of
students at the meeting. They presented petitions signed not only by
stu&lt;!ents but several staff members
who found no objection to shorts of
, an ·appropriate length. Two of the
students showed what they termed
appropriate attire for the classroom,
a girl in dark shorts with matching
tights, and a boy in just above the
knee jeans.
Members of the Meigs Athletic
Boosters made up a second delegation at the board meeting a! though
their discussion about the athletic
program was handled in executive
session.
Also handled in executive session was the suspension of a sec·
ond grader at Pomeroy Elementary
School. The board upheld the suspension which was made by the

principal, Debbie Haptonstail, 'on
the recommendation of the teacher.
Suspensions require "time-out"
periods of two or three hours after
school at the high school. .
.
Juanita Lambert, a bus driver,
spoke to the board about a fifth
grade student who has been j:Oing
on band trips and to compeutions
presumably as an assistant to the
musicians . She said that during
games l!Rd competitions, the stu·
dent has been gelling back on the
bus and playing with the radios and
other equipment and could cause
some damage. The board asked
Supt. James Carpenter to check
in!O'lhe mal!er.
Hired at the meeting was Todd
Johnson as a half-time kinderganen
teacher effective Nov. 16. Emma•
line Pratt was employed as a substi• ·
tute teacher, but Sandra Cobb and
D. Michael Mullen, both recom·
mended by the superintendent,
were not hired as substitute teach·
ers. The vote on Cobb and Mullen
was "yes" by Larry Rupe and Bob
Barton, and "no" by Randy
Humphreys, Roger Abbott, and
John Hood.
The board also rejected the recommendation of Supl Carpenter to
employ Andy White as a substitute
bus driver for the 1992-93 school·
year.

Delma Karr was hired as a pan.
tiine cook to be assigned to Middleport, with Hood, Barton and
Rupe voting in favor, Abbott voted
no and Humphreys abstaining. The
resignation of Lisa Miller from the
substitute teacher list was accepted.
Esther Black was granted a dock
day for Oct 30, and continuation of
the service contract of E. C. Babbert, Inc. for the high school
sewage system was approved.
The Board extended thanks to
the levy committee and to the VOl·
ers of Meigs Local who supported
the pennanent improvements levy. ·
Bruce Wilson, Junior High pnncipal, took board members on a
(our of the building prior to the
meeting. He reponed on the school
in open session noting that there
are 399 students and 27 staff members. This incJudes two developmental handicapped class, two
learning disabled classes, an OW A·
vocational u~it with 16 students,
chapter readrng and math classes
for students who need extra help in
those subjects.
.
He said that for the last grade
period, 81 students made the honor
roll and 112 had perfect attendance.
Wilson talked about incentives to
improve attendance, of an academic assembly planned for this week
and of a birthday recognition pro:
gram.

Statehouse architect backs
change in building control
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The architect responsible for the
$88 million Statehouse renovation
says a bill consolidating the build·
ing's management may not go far
enough.
Robert Loversidge Jr., vice pres·
ident of Schooley Caldwell Associ·
ates, told the Senate Ways and
Means Committee Tuesday the
measure should also ensure that the
restoration will be preserved.
Loversidge recalled that the
Civil War-era Statehouse, a
National Historic Landmark con·
sidered an excellent example of
Greek Revival architecture, origi·
nally had S3 rooms.
Now the building has 317
rooms, after decades of ill-advised
remodeling, he said.
"The current restoration proJecl
will correct the physical problems
of the Statehouse," Loversidge
said.
"How quickly might this work
be destroyed if, one-by-one, seem·
ingly minor changes are begun?
~emember the 317 rooms? They
were not inserted in one large project, but in many, many small
ones," he said.
Loversidgc supports the bill,
sponsored by Sen. Richard Finan,
R-Cincinnati, but said it should be

ground parkrng garage from the
· strengthened.
"I think the spirit of the rest.ora· Ohio Department of Administrative
tion and the quality of workman- Services and other agencies to an
ship need to be mentioned and the advisory panel.
Operation and maintenance of ·
law should encourage proper maintenance of the improvements," he the buildings and grounds would be
handed to the e_xisting Capitol
said.
Finan's measure would transfer · Square Review and Advisory ·
cont.rol of the Statehouse, adjacent Board, made up of four le!lislators
Senate. Building and the under- and five gubernatorial apporntees.
Restoration of the Senate Build·
ing and construction of an atrium
linking with the Statehouse arc
nearing completion. Work on the
Statehouse begins in January.
Loversidge said the bill should
contain specific regulations abou~
WASHINGTON (AP)- The physical changes to the structure
number of Americans filing new after restoration.
claims for jobless benefits fell by
"Further, I believe that S.B. 381
5,000 in late October to the lowest should require the board to retain .
level in more than two years, the the services of an exp·erienccd
government reported today.
restoration architect, so that it can
The Labor Department said receive proper advice and counsel'
first-time applicauons for unem - regarding user requests, mainteployment insurance totaled 355,000 nance problems and the ongoing
during the week ended Oct. 31, . life of the building," he said.
down from 360,000 during the pre·
Finan said the bill had the sup·
vious week.
port of legislative leaders and Gov.
It was the lowest since claims George Voinovich.
totaled 354,000 during the week"! can't emphasize· enough the
ended Aug. 4, 1990, at the begin- urgency," he said, referring to
ning of the recession. Claims had
reached a recession high of plans to move senators into the ·
530,000 during the week ended ·Senate Building, formerly known
as the Annex, next March:
March 23, 1991.
...:--ir'T-...,

Weekly jobless
claims down

,.---Local briefs----.
.B&amp;E investigated

Ice Cream........saT. PAIL

· Randy Johns, State Route 124 in Racine filed ·a report with the
Meigs County Sheriff's Office that last month, someone entered his
residence (the old Olin Boothe farm) and stole cash.
·
According to Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Johns withheld filing
the repor~, thinking. that he might find out who stole the money.
Invesugauon rs contmumg.

CLOROX

Morgan arrested, charged .

•s
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SWISS

GOLD MEDAL

89'
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SQ.

ENY.

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CUIB ·

TOILET TISSUE .
12 ROLL
$299 PIG.

Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported Thursday that
James I. Morgan, Jr., Albany, was cited to Meigs County Coun yesterday on a charge of operating a n\otor vehicle while under financial responsibility suspension.
He will appear in Meigs County Court next week.

,..;-----~1.::.=---=
Willi llEAOI ONLY

DDE DETERGENT

6

5 99 1360!.

EMS units answer calls

10 .LB. PACKAGE

Five calls for assistance were answered on We&lt;!nesday by units
of Meigs Emergency Services. ·
.
At4:04 p.m., Syracuse unit went to Bashan Road and took Cindr
Mayes to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 5:19p.m., Syracuse untt
went to State Route •24 for Don Rca. He was taken to Veterans. At
6:39 p.m., Racine squad was sent to Canter Road for Christie ·
Mitchell. She ·was taken to Ve~erans. At 9:14 p.m ., Pomeroy unit
~k Mary Lang from Locust Street to V~terans. At ll :3S p,m.,
Middleport squad went to Cole Street. Chns Rayburn was taken to
Veterans.
·

90
"'

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VETERANS HONORED • Drew Webller P01t ot the American Legloa oreanlzed thll trlb•te to America•• vetti'IDI, beld ·on .
Wednescllly morning Ia front
the Melp Cou•ty Courlbouse
Post Co~mander Jobu Weeb presided over tbe service. Otbe;

or

groups p•rtlclpltlnl Jaclut!td tbe Amerle1a Lepoa Ia Raelae,
Rutland IDd Middleport, fuppen Plains VFW, Amwta, the Dis·
abled Amerleaa Veter•• and tbe Amerleaa Lealon Auxiliary
(Sentinel Photo by Brian J, Reed)
'

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�·.

~•• November 12, 1812

•

:c ommentary

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather
Friday, Nov.l3

Page 2-The Dally sentinel

Po~y--Middleport, OhiO
Thursday, November 12, 1~

By The Associated Press
Heavy rains are possible across
Ohio today . Heavy downpours
could produce a rapid rise in
streams and poor dramage areas.
Ohioans living near waterways and
flood prone areas should keep up to date on the latest weather infonnation and possible warnings.
The heaviest rain will spread
throughout western Ohio and then
move to eastern Ohio during the
afternoon.
Temperatures today will be

Accu·Weathete forec:aat for
MICH.

.

'

. The Daily Sentinel
'

The victims' fiahts movement
continues to gain momenblm. On
.
Po.mero,., Ohio
El~tion. Day, 'voters in Illinois,
DEVOJ'BD TO THB JIIITitltJI8T8 OJ' THE MEIGS-MASON ARBA
Mtssour1, Kansas, Colorado and
•
New
Mexic'! approyed_amend.
ments t~ ~ell' cons.utuuons !"at
.
accord VICtims of cnmes the "f!ht
to be both Jllt:leDI and heard durmg
coun J."1 &lt;eedmp.
ROBE:RT L. WINGEIT
. ~hts guarantee seems almost
PubUsher
mc1¥n111L Many of II!' assume that
the mterestsoof vtc.ums. &amp;!e ad~quately
tqxcantcd m cnminal trl·
CHARLENE
HOEFLICH
PAT WIUTEHEAD
als.
But
nothing cou,Id ~ f~rl;h~r
General Manager
Asslsa..nt Publlsber/ControUer
. !fot!t the truth.: ~ s _cnmm~
Justice S)'1tcm ~ !filed decidedly m
LETI'ERS OF OPINION ore welcome. They should he less than 300
favor_ o~ the cruninal as opposed to
wonts. All lett&lt;n ore subject to editing and must he signed with name,
.
the v•cum. . .
address lOCI t&lt;lephoDe number. No unsicoed letters will be published. L&lt;tters
When a cruninal case enters the
should be in good tut&lt;, llldreuing issues, uot personalities.
syste~, ~e government supplants
the vtchm, who becomes httle
more than a witness and has no
legal standing. Victims are frequently ~xcluded from courtrOOm
proceedmgs: and prosecutors are
under no legal obligation to consult
with them before striking a plea'.
bar~ain agreement.
'
By The Associated Press
'I
wasn't
at
the
hearing.
I
. Following are excerpts from recent editorials on national issues in
: 11ewspapm across the swe.
·.Akroa Be.acon JOIII'IIIII, Nov. 8:
· .. Well, it has come down to wine and oilseeds, and the French govern• ment seems willina .to lOis away six years of negotiations over intemaJ.iQIIal tnlde rules to proiCc:t irs mefficient but politically powerful fann
interests.
Perhaps the Busli administration could have done more to cajole the
French. That's doubtful. Tbe administration's decision last week to slap
tariffs on Frellch wine and other goods may, at last, jolt France into seeing
that its interests, too, are served by freer trade.
Now the French government Slllldlalone, defiant and dim. The Euro· pean Community is considering retaliatory moves. International trade
officials are scwryin•to prevent a dcsaucti\oe trade war.
EIJII1I""n• would aerve dlemselves if they preSsed France to concede
- to do, in effect. what's best fcJ' t!Je French. Unfortunately, iii the won-derland of world lnldc, politics and economics can become so tangled that
·it can be ~ to ICiC the path to greater prosperity. In stepping toward
·expanded bade, you can slip on oilseeds and WJne.
·'file Collllllbus Dispakh, New. 8:
The day after the election, the kinder, gentler George Bush appeared, a
man prepared to tum over the scepter with grace.
, Lislen to what die president had to say to a crowd of admirers at the
·white House: "Let's fmish this job with style. Let's get the job done,
conpelllle fuUy with the new administration. The government goes on, as
· well it should, and we .will suppon the new president and give him every
.chance to lead this country into greater heights."
"' ' That is class.
Ironically, perhaps, the relative calm after decades of world tensions
Sc:rved Ollly 10 focus attention on domestic affairs, especiaUy the economy. The towering ruitional debt, pushed upward with each annual deficit,
•and the liiiCerlllin future that many wage earners face both serve to fuel a

.
.

~ Excerpts

from other
·::O
hio
newspapers
.

der, is that in all but a handful of
states victims' rights are covered
by statutory rather than constitutionallaw.
. Thus, in states without OOIISiitul«onal amen~ments, victims have
no recourse If peninent laws are '
not_ followed to the letter. Meanwhtle, the rights of criminals are
·.· sc"!l'u!o_usly observed throughout
horrible tragedy at her rural Indiana the J~!&amp;i )lnJCCSS. •
home that was further aggravated
Thts tmbalan~e owes, in large
by her indifferent treatment by the pan, to our consuwtional tradition.
criminal justice system, Spencer !he Pounding Fathers .thought it
helped establish the Protect the 1mponant to provide cenain protecInnocent Victims Advocate Poun- liOns for those charged with aimidation.
.
. , . . nat offenses. Thus,
of the fii'St
. Spencer s!!D _sel!s muc,h ·~JUSUc_e IO_amendmenrs to the U.S.·Consti·
m the way v•cums and thcll' fam1- . .tunon have to do with the rights of
lies are treated. She notes that, even ·the accused.
.
with the progress of the victims'
When the Founders ratified the
rights movement .o ver the past Bill of Ri,hts, they hardly could
decade; the families of victims nor- have imagmed that.. two ~es
!f'ally are not attending lrials. That later, one of evety etght C!~ of
ts because defense attorneys con- the Republic w
. ould be VICtimized
trive legalistic ·excuses to exclude . by crime year by year. Or that more
victims or their families, she says.
Americans would be IIIUl'dcred in a .·
The reason that defense attor- given year than were slain by the
neys can get away with, well, mur- RedCO'"' during die eotire~uwasn't at the sentencing,". says
Betty Jane Spencer, who survt~ed a
m~ murder attempt that claimed
the lives of her four sons. After the

Joseph Perki..ns

nve

•

:-Rational anxiety.

tl9o

It is satisfying to see Bush prepare to give up the stage with the kind of
that more carefully reflects the common decency and comfortable
· style that were ~ly his.
;:the Ciociuali · Nov.':
.
. A quaint bit of gpvemment censorship fell by the wayside in a Denver
:--coon. the other day. A federal district judge struck down die 1930s-vin:: tage ban on stating alcohol content on beer labels. .
·
-; ~ About time. The argument for that nanny-knows-best ·prohibition &gt; that brew1:15 would engage ~n "strength wars" if they could advertise
·: alcohol content. rings hollow in this sobriety-conscious age. More like·~ Jy; beer sellers would pitch light products rather than brag about especial• •Iy intoxicating drafts.
. : One final oddity: The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms is
·;considering an appeal. May the higher courts rebuff any such move and
~ consolidate this modest advance for the consumer's right to know.
;:

-:grace

!Letters to the editor
Will be around 'for a long time'

i

.

:dence

------.--·

:have

.

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I

I Toledo I 40' I

tiooary War. Had they foreseen
this. they very well might have
incl:Wed at least one amendment
settina 'forth the rights of victims.
Maybe it is time that them~
Congress do what the Foundmg
Falhen neglected to do: Balance
the conatinational rights of crime
victims with those of the accused.
We need a national standard that
ensures equal treatment under i~
Jaw. Offenders iii criminal cases
ought not to be favored at the
expense of victims.
The simplest way to strike this
balance is· to modify the Sixth
Amendment. This amendment,
which addresses the judicial pro- ·
cess specifies the right of the
accuSed to counsel, to an impartial
jury and to confront witnesses A
sentence could be added at the ~nd
of the Sixth, declaring that the victim in every criminal prosecupon
shall have the right to be present
and to be heard at all critical stages ·
of judicial proceedings
· This was the lan~e ~ested
a decade ~0 by a Jresi!lential task
force on cnme vicums.lrs proposal
to amend the federal constitution
did not get very far then, but with
the frowing strength of the victims rights movement throughout
the country, perhaps at last such an
amendment can get a hearing in
Congi-ess.
As to those who look askance at
any proposed constitutional
changes, they might consider the
words of Thomas Je{ferson: "I 811)
not an advocate for frequent ·
changes in laws and ~nstitutions,
but laws and institutions must go
hand in hand with the progress of
the human mind."
'
It cenainly would be progteSS to
give America's 35 million crime
victims the same standing under
the law that is now enjoyed by
criminal offenders. A constitutional
amendment affording basic vic·
tims' rights is the way to make this
happen.
Joseph Perkins is a Columnist
for T'-e Sao Die&amp;o Unioo·Tri·
bune, and syndkaled ~Iter for
Newspaper Enterprise Auocia·
lion.
·

IND.

·""'

In the wee hours of the morning

ber a time when treatment went
after Bill Clinton's election, a only to the wealthy are now elderly
National PUblic Radio reporter · and worried about what the future
commented that voters had · will wreak on our bodies and savdemanded change, although just
•
what kind ·Of change they dido 'I
know.
Wrong, too-much-coffee-and·
too-little-sleep breath. I think most
of us who voted for change have a ings. Those of us too young for that
thoroughly fleshed-&lt;&gt;ut ponrait of know working-class people today
the kind of change we want. We who are ineligiille for public assis·
don't all want the same changes, tance, working at jobs with no henbut we do aU fit into several major efits at wages too low to enable
categories.
them to buy health insurance. With
Some-of us want a simple philo- more and more of us falling into
sophical change in the people ·those cracks. what choice do we
directing the country: an atmo- have than to ask for change? It's
sphere of inclusion rather than become a mauer of life Of death.
exclusion, where the personal life
we want to be able to help our
choices of people of aU· races, reli- children through college, but even
gions, creeds and gender are safe. the upper-middle class is 'finding
We believe the Constitution guar- that increasingly hanlto do. In the
antees it, and that it was crafted 1980s, the coUege-educated, upperexpressly in resr.&gt;nse to intoler- middle echelon saw the greatest
ance. We dido I see ourselves decrease in wages and increase in
includcd in this year's Republican taxes and unemployment.
We want jobs with living wages
Convention.
We want to be able to afford for our children after college,
health care and health ' insurance. instead of the minimtun-wage posiThose of us old enough to remem- lions many of them are having to

Sarah Overstreet

Joseph Spear
would do whatever it took to win,

and he tried it all. '

2. In his Machiavellian efforts to
prevail, Bush revealed his essentially elitist, cynical self. In 1988,
he won by defiling !tis opponent's
character, and he attempted the
same in 1992. Indeed, wrote
columnist Michael Kinsley, "this
Democratic victory is sweet
revenge on George Bush for the
loathso[lle, dishonest and empty
campail!" that won him the White
House.
.
I wiU go even further: The Bush
campaign was sick. Challenging
Bill Clinton's patriotism was dis·
gusting. Trying to paint h_im as .
godless was putrid. Suggesung he
was some son of communist sympathizer was repulsive. Probi~ his
mother's passport files was odious.
Deprecating Clinton and his .run- ·
ning mate AI Gore as "bozos" was
beneath contempt.
3. Bush IIIJd his buddies cheap~ the ~y of politics. What
11 the - n g , flOW, of such words
as hypocrisy and dccci&amp; IIIII cquiv.:
oeaticin lllCf expediency? Who wUI
ever merit the epithet "lmlgant
jerk" now that John Sunuau 1w
defined the tcnn? Whellodprs am
be labeled "cooked boob" after
Richard Darman's masterpieces

CINCINNATI (AP) - A union declined to discuss specific terms
representing some 6,000 Kroger of the seulement, but said the union
Co. grocery workers in 59 area accepted a bonus payment plan
slOres has accepted a new contract, instead of pay raises.
averting a strike that would have
"We think it represents a combegun this morning.
promise for both l'arties. We feel
Workers · on Wednesday It's a step forward m our attempt to
approved the contract 2,048 10 596. contain our overall costs of doing
The two-year agreement was business while continuing to pro- .
reached early Wednesday follow- vide Kroger employees here wnh a
ing 39 hours of continuous negotia· pay and benefits package that's
lions.
among the best in the food indusSECOND PLACE ·The Meigs County EMS team second
'.'This was a hold-your-own · try," Bernish said.
place In the annual Ohio Association or Emergency Medical Sercontract," said Steve Culler, secre- · The union had wanted a threevices Competition. Pictured are team members, l·r, Gene Lyons,
taty-ttcasurer of Local 1099 of the year contract that would give work·
John Holman and Alana Holman, Racine squal;l, and Pam ImboUnited Food and Commercial ers making $8.75 an hour an
Workers Union.
increase to $10 an hour. It wanted
den, Pomeroy squad.
"We thought maybe it was thase making $11.13 an hourto get
to be a alot
going
pany wanted
lotworse.
out ofThe
this comcon- Sl2anhour.
"In an overall sense. the main _ _ _ _ _.;_
·
·
tract, and we were able to hold featitre is a provision that provides
Support group to meel
ner. Dinner is at 7 p.m. with meetwhat we had. And none of our full- · for lump sum payments in lieu of
The
.AJzheimers
Support
Group
ing
10 follow at 8 p.m.
timers lost any.benefits."
pay ·increases," Bern ish said.
will
meet
Wednesday
from
1-3
Kroger spokesman Paul Bernish "Those lump sum payments range
Genealogical Society to meet
from $100 over two years to p.m. at the multi-purpose building
at
the
Senior
Citizens
Center.
The
Meigs County Genealogical
$1,000 over two years, based on a
Society
wiU meet Sunday at 2 p.m.
person's houri y pay."
Gospel
concert
at
the
Meigs
County Museum in
The contract also requires
Lucille Martin
There
will
be
a
gospel
concert
Pomeroy.
Guest
speakers will be
Kroger to pay 14.9 percent more
Lucille Phyllis Martin, 81, of into a union fund for health and Nov. 22 at 2 p.m. at the Freewill Mary Bowman, Ohio Stale
11031 Green Chapel Road in John- other benefits in the coming year, Baptist Church in Rutland featuring Genealogical Society President,
swwn, fonnerly of Meigs County, the uni9n said. The following year, The Kevin Spencer Family and and Pat Green, district trustee. Pubdied on Saturday. November 7. it will contribute only what's nec - Reflections Trio. Pastor Paul Tay- lic invited.
1992 at the OhiO Eastern Star essary to maintain a four-month lor invites the public.
Home in Mount Vernon, where she reserve balance.
Refuse advisory
Legion to meet _
had been a resident since April,
Racine
Sanitation Services will
The regular meeting of Drew
The union had asked for increas1991.
.
not
pick
up leaves bagged as
es of 14.9 percent in the ftrst year Webster Post No. 39, American
She was born on August 19, and 12 percent in each of the ·next Legion, will be held Tuesday. This refuse. Residents ar:e also advised
1911 in Plum Run, W.Va., daugh- two years.
will be the Thanksgiving Day Din- not to place tires, oil, batteries or
ter of the late Oak and Campsey
any other hazardous materials in
The contract retains the Sunday ·
(Wagner) Rice. She was a member pay ofl 112 times the hourly rate,
their refuse.
of die Baptist Church in Johnstown the union said. Kroger had proand Racine Chapter 134, Order of posed replacing that pay with a$!Water advisory
Racine
Village Board of Public·
·Eastern Star.
an-hour premium.
Am Ele Power....................31
She is survived by two daugh·
Affairs
cautions
village water conThe contract does not offer
Ashland Oil........................25
ters: Mrs. Charles (Betty) Salser, employee buyouts, the union said.
sumers
to
conserve
011 water usage
AJ'&amp;:T................................ .45 S/8
Johnstown, and Mrs. Frank {loon) Local 1099 had opposed Kroger's
for the next two weeks. Repairs are
Bank One...........................48 3/8
being done on aerator and water
Carney, Lancaster, Pa.; a foster proposal to buy out 350 employees
Bob Evans .........................19 3/4
may be somewhat murky at times.
. daughter, Marilyn Williamson, with one-time payments of up to
Charming Shop.................. 37 1/8
Vienna, Va.; seven grandchild!'en, $14,000.
City Holding ......................I8 112
Racine Council to meet
and 14 ~t-grandchildnen._ ·
Meat cutters, clerks, baggers
Federal
MoKUI
...................
.I6
1/4
Racine Village Council will
Bestdes her parents, she wps
Goodyear -r&amp;R ..................69 7/8
and
stockers
repre~ented
by
the
meet
in recessed session Monday at
preceded in death by her husband,
Key Centurion ...................21 1/4
union
had
prepared
to
picket
51
7
p.m.
at Star Mill Park.
Pearl Martin.
Lands
End.......................... 24 3/4
s10res
in
southwest
Ohio,
seven
in
Funeral services were held on
Limited Inc ................... .... 24
Eastern Craft Fair
Tuesday, with burial in Green Hill northern Kentucky and one in
Multimedia Inc ..................27 112
Ind.
Entertainment at Saturday's
Cemetery in Johnstown. Arrange- Lawrenceburg,
~.
RaX RestauranL ................. ll/32
craft fair at Eastern High School
ments were under the direction of
Reliance Electric............... .I8
sponsored by the Eastern Band
Flowers-Snyder Funeral Home in
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 15
'Boosters will include performances
Mount Vernon.
Shoney's Inc... ~ .............;....23 3/8
by the seventh grade band at 10
Star Bank ........................... 33 3/8
a.m ., the concert band at II a.m.,
Wendy Jot' I................ ....... .13 1/2
the marching band at 11:30 a.m.,
.
.
The Daily Se.ntioel
Worthington Ind ......... .......23 5/8
the crafters' .auction at I :30 p.m., ·
CLEVELAND
(AP)
The
CVII'IIIa..)
Stock reports are the 10:30 and the Ruffles and Flourishes
holders of two Ohio Super Lotto
Pllblilbed 1nry afteneon, MoD. .,
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt, Twirling Group under the direction
tickets will split a $20 million jack· ~rnu,,tueams~ P
.,,
Ellis and Loewi of Gallipolis.
of April Hudson at 3:30p.m.
Ohio J tbo Obio VolloJ hJiitoldq
pot. Both tickers show aU six num·
Comp::/i/111111.1-a t ..ii
•
bers
picked
in
Wednesday
night's
0b1o
Ill Pb. -.21111.
po1tapi ;;id al PliWO), Olllo.
.
Ohio Lottery drawing.
When
the
winning
tickets
are
~~~,. Ana d1W Phil, aDd. &amp;be
validated, each will result in
Oblo K:!""'C Aoloolaltoa, Ka-1
$384,615 a year for 26 years,
~=.-;;&amp;&amp;"''a.K-~
, 788 Thl..t ........
before
taxes, or a di!JCOUDted lumpNew
,N,...'IIIIt10017. ·
sum payment of $4,490,298•
POII'I'IWrt'D= .......... ..._ ..
The lottery said the winning
T11o DaD&amp;t-l.lnol, Ill coon Ill.,
tickets were purchased in Barber·
I'WMo;. .. 41.,.,
.
1011 and Columbus.
~MIA-r.
.,Caa:lw ....... ..... '
The Super Lotto jackpot will
()ae. w... .........................................:::··
hold
$4 mllll'on for Saturday
.
Ciao-.. ......-.......................... .Ill
night's drawing.
Oao'1oor............ _.................,_.... . . .
.
IINGLI 001'1'
Here arc Wednesday night's
l'aiCII
Ohio
Lottery selections:
Do1J7.........................................- ..16 c...
Super Lotto
B I honottloolriOIIocCGTI·
19-25-29-37-41-46
.
.. ..., nmlt Ia aoltaioo
le Tbo
(nineteen,
twenty-five,
twenty·
S.llnol . . . Ulno, oil .. 12
_ Cn4R will
· nine. thirty-seven, forty-one, forty.....
six)
·
.
11o • r i p - by mall pormUiod Ia
Kkker
'
anU when home earrilr •-"" t.
0-8-8-3-5-7
...uablo.
(zero, eight, eight; three, five, .
seven) ,
Pkk3Numben
8-4-5
- - . ......................................... .'Ill .
Os' ' ' ..... eo-t;r
(eight, fQur, five)
11W-..........................................
Pkk 4 Numben ·
............. ~................................. .ao
Pd. for by Rlchllld E. JOMI
- -..........................................
.40
1-7-2-0
(one, seven, two, zero)

Area death

Stocks

Two winners will ·
split ohio ja~kpot

Pot"'"'·

THANKS
Sincere Thanks To Each of You Who

Today in history

'

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS .
-None.
.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
- George Cundiff.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, Nov. 10 • Mrs.
Donald Schartiger and daughter,
Merissa S!!yder, 'Jordan Martin,
Mrs. Bradley Jeffers and daughter,
Mildred Hysell, Eileen Brewer, · ,
Joyce McDaniel , Anna Watkins,
Archa McNeely, Virginia Swisher,
Emma Ward, Whitley Mayo, Marshal Gillum, Chelsi Leach. and
Jewell Halley.
.
Births, Nov. 10 - Mr. and Mrs.
Gary Hagen, a son, WellslOn. Mr.
and Mrs. Roben Holley, a daugh·
ter, Vinton. ·
:

Meigs EMS
team finishes
second

c

have set the Standard? Whai is the
fraction of the rCa! cost. He broke
meaning of "flip-flop" now that precedent by keeping his political
we've seen oltl Read-My·Lips in spokesman, Marlin Fitzwater on
action?
th~ fublic l?ayroll, as well as' his
4. At bottom, George :bush is a ch1e campa~gn guru, James Baker.
fraud. He was born 10 wealth but
6. When all else failed, he fell
pretended to be a commoner. The back on the tried lind true gimmick
porlt rinds, the truck driving, the of press bashing. "The press has
country music, the pathetic been the worst ever," he would
attempts at down-home patois say. And: "Annoy ~ media. Re.aU pmntto.his phoniness. His eva- elect George Bush ." And the
sion of state taxes by claiming C&lt;?w'ds screamed and shoved and
intent to reside eventually in tax- SJIII at repcners,
.free Texas on a lot the size of a ten"
I really don't think the media
nis court suggest he is an arrant lost _the election for you, George.
liar.
Buttf we did, we deserve some sort
5. Bush brazenly billed the tax- of awanl.
·
·
payers for a good portion of his · Do they give prizes for taking
campaign by flying everywhere in out the trash?
·
the presidential jet, using the pub-. · Joseph Spear is 1 syndicated
lie's commu~ications equipment writer for Nempaper Enlerpriae
and reimbursing the Treasury a' Auodatlon.

••

some of tbe bank employees wbo worked In tbe
concession· booth. They are, front, Iris Payne
and Pt&amp;IY Cremeans. Back row, 1-r, Donna
Knapp, Donna Schmoll, Ed Dunt, Jeff Gilkey,
Edna Householder, Vicki Hortma•, Dottle
Musser, and Joan~~e Wll~ms. Bub said that
lbe success of the festival depends on continued
community support and business sponsorship.

DONATION MADE. The Farmers Bank
and Savlnp CIDpally baa made a $!100 coutri·
bution to the Bll Bend Sternwheel Committee,
pari or an onaolna sponsorship of the Bla Be.nd
Sternwheel Festival Tbe latest cbeck represents
proceeds trom· the bank's food concesstOD dur.
in&amp; lhe festival. Making lhe contribution to
Committee President Larry Banks, far right, are

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services was one of 23 teams
that competed in Cincinnati on
October 30 and 3 I at the anpu~l
Ohio Association of Emergency
Medical Services Competition
Conference.
the Meigs team entered the
Basic Life Suppon Competition
and the CPR and driving competition, Meigs placed six in the BPS
and was fust runner-up in CPR and
driving.
.
Columbus Fire Competition
teams placed flfSt and third to win
the state championship in this event
and won the state championship in
BLS and auto extraction.

·Mei·gs announcements

settle for. We don't believe our rome up with something effective.
kids should have to be the fust genThe remedies he proposed ·when
eration of Americans who cannot his campaign was faltering were so
hope to equal their parents' eco- ainorphous and weak they couldn't
nomic scale, much less better iL
inspire much confidence in anyone
' We want an equitable tax scale. who cared. What help will it give
In the last 20 years, lalles 'for the troubled Schools.to give tax vouchmiddle- and lower-class worker ers to parents who can simply send
have stayed the same or increased, their kids to a safer one?
while many of the country's
We want an end to the welfare
wealthiest folks have enjoyed dra- system as it has stood, and an end
malic cuis.
to eligibility scales that mnke it
We want our leaders to set about more profitable to stay on public
finding causes and trying solutions assistance than work, to maintain
for some of the problems we face: single-parent households than for
generation after generation of chil- both parents to live together. We
dren reared in poverty, where the want Jli'08Illlll8 that force able-bodchances of getting out of the slums ied people into the work force, into
and succeeding decrease with each training and jobs that enable them
successive generation; astronomi- to beuer themselves and society.
cal teen-age pregnancy rates, moth·
We don't know what kind of
ers too young and ill-prepared to change we want? · How could we
nurture; ~hildren being shot and not?
killed on their way to elementary
And here's one more piece of
school.
change we know about exactly: If
What we got from President these administrators are as unsucBush was the feeling that these cessful as past ones on these points,
problems are so complex that one they'll be the next change.
best 1101 be too impulsive on decidSarah Onrslgreetls a syndling a Course of action - it might · cated writer for Newspaper
talce a presidential tenn or two to Enterprise Asaodatlon.

I .

CUIQ2Accu-Woollll&lt;, lnc.

Union accepts new
Kroger contract

·

By The Assoc.laled Press
· Today is Thursday, Nov. 12, the 317th day of 1992. There are 49 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
·
Fifty years ago, on Nov. 12, 1942, the naval Battle of Guadalcanai
~gan. Although both sides suffered heavy losses, the Ameriams won a
major victory over the I!1Jl811ese, whose forces on Guadalcanal were left
vinually isol!de«L
.
·
On this date:
. .
In 1815, American suffragist Slizabeth Cady Stanton was born in
Johnstown. N.Y.
.
In 1920, bnseba!J got ita tint "cw" as Judge KeneSaw Mountain Landis was elected commissioner of the American and Nationll ~
In 1921, repreaenlllives of nine Jillions gathered in the nstion's CIPital
for the stan of lhe Wuhington Conference for Limitation of Armameiits.
In 1927, Josef Stalin became the undisputed ruler of the Soviet Union
as Leon TI'QIIky wu expelled from the Communist Party.
'

Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy

Saturday through Monday:
Saturday, flurries likely northeast with squalls also possible.
Partly cloudy elsewhere with a
chance of flurries. Lows in the 20s.
Highs in the 30s. Sunday, fai r.
Lows 15-25. Highs in upper 20s to
mid-30s. Monday, fair. Lows in the
20s. Highs in the 30s.

South-Central Obio ·
Tonight, windy and colder. Rain
ending early, then partly cloudy.
Low 35-40. Chance of rain is 80
percent. Friday, variable cloudiness, lirisk and cold with scattered
flurries. High around 40, Chance of
snow is so·percent
Extended forecast:

Finally, we bid George Bush .adieu
That brings us to the real
answer: The 'one thing George
Bush utterly and wholly believes in
is winning elections. He said he

unseasonably warm with highs sectiOIIS late tonight and Friday,
ranging from the upper 50s in especially over the nonheastern
·
northwest Ohio to the mid 60s over counties.
southeast Ohio.
·
· The Colu111bus weather smtion
A cold front over the western says the record high for this date
Great Lakes will begin to move was 74 in 1879. The record low
east this afternoon and sweep the was 16 in 1911.
warm air and rain out of the state
Sunset tonight will be 5:18p.m.
by early tonight
Sunrise Friday will be 7:1S a.rn.
Replacing the warm moist air
Around the nation
Rain fell across much of the
will be blustery cold winds from
the northwest. Friday, temperatures East today as a broad cold front
will be mostly in the 30s. Snow .moved through the region. Behind
flurries will develop over some it.. cold air pushed into the nation's

_ _ _ _.......,.._weather------

We know the changes that we want

;~ ,Dear Editor: .
· the law as it applies to their situa·
~ ,
..
tion, as have Steve, George and
.- • As the investigator for the Linda. Like I stated before, we
:~ Meigs County Prosecutor's Office can't fabricate evidence.
. :: for the past 10 months, ! ·have had
Our office was termed as "inept
·: the privilege or working with and incompetent" by the newly
:· County Prosecutor, Steve Story, elected prosecutor. For the sake of
·: and Sheriff Jim Soulsby and hts the good people of Meigs County.
:; deputies.
Mr. Lentes, I hope your ads in the
·, _ The ~·crew" at the prosecutor's Sentinel don't come back to haunt
qffice; .Steve Story, George you. I' ve kept copies and I'll be
; McCarthy, and Linda Warner are around for a long time.
: as .good, if not beuer, than any
Michael R. Canan.
: group of attorne~s I ~ve had the
34047 BaD Run Road,
! pteasurc of workmg wtth over the
Pomeroy, Ohio45769
, years. After 18 ye.s as a Colum·
~ bus Police Officer working with
• the Franklin County Prosecutor's
i Office and with die United States
Somewhere .it is written that the
• Attorney's Office, I've come to
politically defeated should be
: realize that the ~le I've worked
allowed to depart quietly, dignity.
: with since' movmg here are a rare
The election is over for Novem- intact, applauded if not praised for
~ breed. They take cases presented
their duteous secvice and bravery in
i by Ioca1 agencies that are unread- ber 3, 1992 as is the primary for battle. Well. I am going to break
~ able. incoherent·and more often this year. Many posters were that rule. I was thrilled to see
; tban not, incomplete, yet they liter- placed for the purpose of political George Bush and company get
ally decipher the statements, advertising.
in the polls, and I intend
Codified OrdiiiiiiiCC, Racine Vii· olobbc:red
~ repOrts, and complaints and proseto
cheer
their
parting until my
-. cute the cases with outstanding lage, 925.16 states: No posters, throat is raw. I have a half dozen
sheets, or pictures of a political major and minor reasons for feel: results. I applaud theiR!
• During the recent political cam- nature or any fonn of advertising ing this way:
: paign, we all read •and heard all the material shall be affixed to any
I. In a profession where a gallon
' rhetoric and mud slinging, plus the trees, shrubbery, or wwer poles of principle is considered a full
within the corporation limits of the tank, George Bush runs on empty.
~ letters to the editor submitted by
· individ.uals concerning events.~t Village of Racine without first He is, in the words of New York
: have occlUJ'ed during Steve StOry's obtaining a permit from the Times columnist Anthony Lewis,
• position as Meigs County Prosecu· Mayor's Offlc~.
"a man without a core." He once
'
Ordinance 925.161 states:AII beslobbered
• tor. .
Ferdinand Maicos
· Law enforcement investigates papers or posters, as related to with fulsome praise of the dicta; the crime, builds a solid case, then 925.16 must be removed within 30 tor's "adherence to democratic
: presents it for prosecution. If the days after date of event for which principles.'' He truckled to Chinese
· case lackS the basics; who, what, notice wu intended.
In order to guarintee the punctu- tyrants who murdered/ro-demoe: where. when and how, then how
racy demonsli'IIIOI'S an sent ernis:can anyone expect that case to al removal of the siJns, ~~ne Vii- . sanes
to lick their boots. He posed
•:Come 10 an acceptable conclusion? !age requires a deposit of $2S to . for photographs
with Syria's Harez
:The Meigs County Prosecutor's guarantee such removal in 30 days .Assad, identified
by the State
:Office, and the Meigs County Sher- which $25 is returned if signs are Department as a succorer
of terror• iff s Department, do 1101 fabric:ate removed in 30 days.
ists.
H_e
"!"~
so
little
respect
for the
Many signS from the pimary as
!physical evidence, ~tdical eviConsutu~~
that
he
proposed
sill
or state~~~Cnrs to gain indict- well as the general election are in changes m 11.
' IDCIJIS or convictioni. If there is lit- place as yet and many have not
Yfbat. does George Bush really ·
' de or no evidence, what 1re we to . appl\ed for permits and paid tile
~heve
m? Country, family, reli:Cio? As the County Prosecutor, rcqutred security fee for taking gion? Yes,
but wnh such scant
•Steve can only act on facts, not them down.·
respect
that
he
would often exploit
In event all of the ])OSters are 1101
:J'UIIIDIS. gueases, opinions at specu, liken
them
for
po
.litical
advantage. He
down by the 30 days after the
•lation
.
pancleted
to
the
right
wing. He pan:: 1 will not speak to specific general election, the owners of . dered to fundamentalists. He railed
:~. but several oeptive anic:les thole remaining wiJI be submiaed a against Ronald Reagan's "voodoo
•ind Ieaen to the edilllr fall into this statement in accordance with the · economics" until he wanted to join
:~IIXY. Regarding lheae caaes, I ordinance '
Prank Cleland, the Reaaan team, whereupon he
penonally tallied with family
· Mayor was suddenly "for Mr. Reagan ·'fnembers IJ!ld attempted to explain
blindly."

Some political
signs still up

•

Victims' rights making headway

111 Court Street

The O.lly Sentinel hge 3

=
_....

bo"""-

---=·5.to

......
-..
"w-.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. . . . . . . . . . . . ........
E...
.............................................

I

I ,.

Voted For lile·On November 3rd.
Your Trust and Support During -My
nme As A Commissioner Is Deeply
Appreciated and Will Long Be
Remembered.
·
Congratulations and Every
Good Wish to Our New
Collllllissioner Janet Howard.

RICHARD E. JONES

•-----'-

Banquet Nov: 18
The Meigs Athletic Boosters fall
sports banquet will be held
Wednesday, Nov. 18, in the Meigs
High School cafeteria, 6:30 p.m. It
will be a po~uck dinner with everything to be furnished except
desserts and vegetables. Those
attending are asked to take two
covered dishes.
COLONY THEATRE
TOIICIIIT

KURT RUIIEU, MARTIN SHOAT

CAPTAIN RON PO 13
STAATINOFRlOAY
LARRY DRAKE IN
DR. GIGGLES R
SHOW TillES '
FRI., SAT., SUN. 7:30, t::JO
- . THRU THURS.
ONE EVENING SHOW 1:30
ADMISSION 11.50

-23

PHARMACY
TOPICS
BY YOUR
SWISHER LOHSE
PHARMACISTS
"Kangaroolng• I• ~lng p-ure bllbiM grow •nd bond w11,:.
their parent• Ill BrlgliMI Mel WoJMn'a Hoepltal '" Boaton. Tiny·
Jnf•nta, allll -heel to monhore lllld oxygen tubing, epend long,
houra reatlng on thw (Mirente' ch..-, lying •kin to akin. Both of
them benallt.
••••
Ly11111 Dia- vaccine ttata are ~ to alllrt 110on. Doctora
.t Y•l• Unlnralty augge81 the dl•-• could 1111 eradicated In
time.
0
••••
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th• fl'llmlngh•rn (MuHehUMtll) Hlahh .Siudy 1u9gMII. The
Bo•ton Untv.ralty atudy h• folloWed the community a helllth for

40y•ra.

• • •.

'

Popular halogW~ light buiH gin oft more uhr•vlol.t light lhlln
ethera, the Nilw Eliglllnd Jour1111l ·of Medicine warn•. Thle can
danlllge eye~~ If one_,.. too clole- within 1&amp;cm.- ~the lamp.

•••••

•

o.tlclencr of folata, • B vn.mln, baa bMn Unked to the formllllon
of precanc:eroua cervical dyepllllla lealona. Multivitamin• - .or
planty of broccoli, freah fruh and IMfy vegetablal - offer
protection.
••••
When your doctor r.com~ vbmlna and eupplemeni., you'U .
.,.nabla m. ..
llka the nt. Mllcllon thal'a

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t :Ohmtoltoo.m.

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�November 12, 1182

•

Veterans return, but new look
to dominate ·Redwomen game-

Jordan wins tilt in
:~;
OT with three~pointer _~:

A new look and a different~ philosophy," Smalley added: "I world of District 22 Division f llld
of playin&amp; philoeophy lie tbe lllidO- think thev enjoy what we'Je domg, Mid-Obio Confcrenc;o ~ctblll,
marki of the University of kio l1ld if we can la:OIIlpliBII what we Smalley feels confident the RedGrande women's blsketblll - t to do, we'll have some high- women can crnerge u winnen in .
as it looks toward the 1992-93 - - scoring games. On the down side. both orplli1.atiDnJ. For the Jut II\'·
son that commences Satunlay with there will be 1 lot of turnOvers, but eral seasons, the tesm has enleRd
a road trip to the Universit}l of that's the JKice you pay for 1i'ansi- the dislrict ~· and shared
Findlay.
lion."
•
ihe 1990-9 MOC championship
Both are the result of a new
While the Joss of Barnitz with Tiffm. At 2S-7 last ICIUOII for
CDOCh helming the ream's rom-s, whom Smalley COIChed at Wam:n second place in the district and
and the addition or aeveral new Local Hlp Scbool and now a grad, conference ( 11-3), the Rcdwomcn
pc:rscnnel to the IIDks. Dave Small- uate •mllent It Marshall UniVCISi- had one of the most successful
ey assumed the CCliCbintl duties rex ty- accounts for an ""~ge of IS campaigns in tlic program's hiBto.
the Redwomen 1ut !IIIIMIIIr follOw- points and eight rebound$ to Rio ry.
· · ing the depilrtllre of Doug Ponte, ·Grande's game, Smalley is confi- · "You have to feel it's in your ·
. who beca111e men 'a basketball dent the alack wil.l be taken up by ~h because we h8ve' five playen
coath at Marieaa Colle&amp;o.
hia now~ of playet$.
who came back from lut seuon
Smalley wasted little tim. in · With no aenion aboard, leader- and came back hungry," Smalley
filling the slots on the team left ship dulles ran to three of his four noted. "They know what it's like to .
vacant by the graduation of Ann junion - veteran guards Gena be in the race, and with lhrcc of the •
REDWOMEN HUNT nn.E- 'l'lle Ualftr·
Sowers ud Stacey Rlaer; I'
left,
Barnitz,
lhe departure of Kathy Norris (S-3, Kingsto"' and returning players having been here .
Mua&amp;er Carteaa C • , llelld
Dave
slty of Rio Graude wo•e• •a butellaall tea a
Snyder,
who
has returned as Ihis Michelle Crouse , of (5-6, the season before last. they have
SJUIIey,
Menllta
Bier'
,
IMi
.._lltla,
Amy
starlll illl hu•t for llle coufereac:e alld 4111trk:t
assistant
coach,
and the u..fer's of McAnllur), and seasoned forward Jhc leadership skills and know what
Reyuolds, Trk:la Conl-c::Cuale Gudorf,
title Saturday It FIDdiay•.Members Ill tile .._
several
players
from last year's Stephanie Gudorf (S-9, SL Marys). to expect.
AD&amp;Ie
Creii811CI
A....,_t
Kallay
Snyder.
Include, seated, froiD left, Geua Narrll, Str•011 · ·
.,uad.
New to the team are J.uniors Lori · "We have an opportunity in
Miller, Ginger Smltb, Michelle Crou!HI, Kim
-.
•,&amp;A
be.._,_
"I'm very exc1.... to · -.... at Hamillon (6-0, Gallipolis) and Gin- £root of us to be s11011g contenders
Rio and in this position," Smalley, ger Smith· (5-9, Botkins), each of for the MOC championship," he
a 1982 Rio Orandc gradulte, laid. whom notcllcd competitive records added. "If we can. survive the
"What makes the transition so with their high school teams. meatiest portion of the conference
points .... ·ALABAMA 17-14.
oamo·disaster ... BOSTON COL- smooth is Wodting with a Yf1Y pro- Hamilton transferied to Rio Grande schedule,
By RICK WARNER
we sho11id be all right.
LEOB24-l7.
.
Cessio~
group
of
youns
ladies,
from
LaSalle
University
this
year
play our lut five MOC games
1 AP Football Wri~r . . .
Solllll Carollua (plus Ui) at No. and I can't say enough about the after · a two-year career with We
Bilek in September, MiSSISSIPPI THURSDAY
at
home,
·and that's a tremendoUs
11 Florida
.
support staff. Everything going into LaSalle's NCAA division team , advantage for us." .
State coach Jackie Sherrill had a No. 4 Texas A&amp;M (mlaus 10 Ill)
Gamecoets bave won four this scasoo has been following the while Smith has been a track alb·
bull castrated in front of his players . at Houston
slraiaht
after 0-.5 S111t ... FLORIDA game plan."
Aggies have won 18 straight
1etc for Bob Willey's Redwomen
UNIVERSITY OF RIO GRANDE
to get them psyched up for the
1992·!13 Women's Bolltelball S'loedlllt
Smalley came to Rio Grande •program
Texas game. State upset the regular-season games ... TEXAS 27-1".
No. U Georal1 (minus 8) at following ~ seasons as an assisThe iopbomore lineup includes
Longhorns 28-10, so there's no · A&amp;M 34-17.
Da1c Oppgpgl
2lml !Ia
A!lbm'll
tant women's coach at Morehead . two niiUrDCeS, Tricia Collins (6-0, Nov.
telling what Sherrill will do to get SATURDAY
A
14 · Fmdlly
2:00
Oldest
rivahy
in
the
deep
South
State University. The experience, Carlisle) and Kim Sowers (5-4, Nov. 11 WUbcrforce
H
7:00
his No. 16 Bulldogs ready for sec- Temple (plus 42) at No. 1 Mlainl
...
-GEORGIA
28-24.
Nov. 20 Bcvo Fnac:ii ·Culic
1:30
H
his
days
as
a
high
Frankfort),
and
a
pair
of
new
faces
supported
by
Hurricanes
27-0
in
November
ond-ranked Alabama.
u.t, Sllaa, Mlll•.,., Rio~)l::JO
No. 13 Colorado (ullnus 3) at No. school coach and assistant to the -Angie Cress (S-8, London), whQ (A!Molivatioo ~dn't be a prob- over last eight seasons ... MJAMI lOKH
Nov. 21 Bcvo Francil Qauic
1:30
.
men's program at Bowling Green was also a runner at Rio Gran~ in
7:00
lem Ibis weekend. What does con- 48-0.
Baute for second place in Big Stale University, have prompted her ftnt year, and-Shannon Miller Nov. 24 Wilminltm
H
7:00
cern Sherrill is Alabama's defense, lllluois (plus 27) 1t No. 3 Mkbl2:00 . H
Nov.
28
Notte
Dame
eight
...
KANSAS
31-30.
·
him to dcift a new kind of plan for '(S-5, Caldwell), a transfer from Dec. 01 c.no..l Stot.
which leads the country in every gan
7;QI)
H
(plus
16
1/2)
at
No.
14
Duke
the Redwomen game.
;
Glenville S• College. ·
Wolverines
clinch
Rose
Bowl
' Doc. 04 Lake Eric ·
$:30
A
major statistical cstcpy.
N~car~luaSt.
·
A
2:00
"Our basic philosophy • on · Highlighting the fresbman ranJcs Do:. OS Nooe Oomo
State must face that defense berth ... MICIDGAN 35-7.
H
S:lS
Wolftllck bas aDowed only four offense will be transition," he said. is Sta:cy Ritter (S-5, Sidney), with Doc. 08 W.Va. State
without star quarterback Sleepy Tulane (plus 41) at No. 5 Florida
2:00
A
Doc:. 12 Midway
TDs in rut five games ... N.C. ST. "We started out the year working Amy· Reynolds (6-1, Gallipolis) Do:.
,
Robinson, who suffered a seaJOn- St.
S:30
H
16 Palrm""' Sute
2:00
A
on basic fulidamentals, and have and Mcrriua Blevins (5-10, Huber Dec. l9 ~
Seminoles have WDI1 32 of last 31-10.
ending knee injury against Florida
Mlry't: H.S.
on Oct. 1. Sherrill has tried three • 35 home games ... FLORIDA ST. No. 11 W&amp;llalngtOD St. (plus 8) at · since elevated to the offensive and Heiahts) adding strength in their Do:, 21 OSL
ML S..lcoeplt
7:00
A
No. 15 Stuford
I
defensive plays. De~nsively, we re~tive roleS.
quarterbacks sineo then, but none 51•7,
Jaa. ~ •Walsh'
7:00
A
Glyn Milburn averaging 179 all.5:00
A
'We've been blessed wit,h a Jan. 09 •Shawn• S~
has been CDIISistent.
or.~fn;,!'· (plus 34) at No. 6 purpose yards ... STANFORD 31- have the personnel who ean play
Jan. 12 •Ohio Duninian
7:00
A
W
a
man-to-man
and
mix
it
up
a
liute.
healthy
group
of
players,
and
nght
Junior Greg Plump completed
/on, 16 'Ttlfin
2:00
A
Huskies still have inside track to 21.
Some may call transition run and now they're tired oflooking at each lart. 19 •ulbanl
· only 2 of 11 passes and threw three
S:U
H
19 Olllo St. (minus 6 111) at gun, but there is a structure to it, other m intrasquad practice. Jan. 21 Malone
7«1
H
interceptions liist week against Rose Bowl ... WASmNGTON 45- No.
Incliaua
·
Jan. 23 •CodaMDe-H.S.O.y
5:1:5
H
7.
and
our
kids
like
lhat.
'
They're
ready
to
get
out
on
lhe
Arkansas. His backup is freshman
Jan.
26
•Mt
Vemon
Naurrac
7:00
A
Hoosiers snap Buckeyes' four"Of counc, any lime change is floor aftd meet somebody. We have Jon. 21 'Cotiuvillo
Rodney Hudson, who has played in No. 7 Nebraaka (mluus ll) at
7:(1)
A
game wianing streak ... INDIANA introduced it's scary. but we have a vtry good inside game with Lori Jan. 30 *wwh-AllmlftiOamo S:lS H
Iowa St.
one game.
02 •shawnoe s,.tc
5:00
H
.
Cyclones haven't beaten 17-16.
come to some agreement about our and Tricia, and very good defense. Feb.
Despite their quarterback probFeb. 04 •ML. Vemon Nuuaui
7:00
H
particularly on the three-point shot, Feb. 06 •Ohio Dominican·Panm'• Day 2:00 H
lenl, the Bulldogs think they can Huskers since 1977 ... NEBRAS- . No. 13 Te. .essee (minus 3) at .
Memphis St.
.
Gena; Stephanie, Michelle and Fob. 09 "'"tlfin·Smiodloy
7:00
H
upset Alabama at. Scou Field, KA ·52-10.
Fob. .13 •um.na
2:00
A
vs.
Tigers
...
TEN-.
Vols
13-0
No.
2l
Penn
St.
(plus
10)
at
No.
8
Shannon
can
certainly
knock
it
where they are 4-0 this year. S•
Feb.l6 Molooc
5:15
A
NESSEE
27-23;
down."
Notre
Dame
has outscOred opponents 110-22 in
Fob. 20,22,24 Div.l Playdlo
TBA TBA
Cubs' Maddux wins ·
Cold!.: DI.Ve Sm.ney
While admitting he's new to the
Patcmo 8-4 YS. Irish ... NOTRE No. 14 Hawaii (plus 4) at San
those pmes.
•-Moe a.m.
DJeao St.
NL Cy Young Award
Th1s pme will be intense. An DAME24-14.
Rainbows
can
clinch
WAC
title
Alabama victory would send the No. !I Arizona (plus 2 112) at No.
with win over Aztecs ... SAN
Tide to the first SEC championship 18 Soutl!ern Cal
NEW YORK (AP) - Even
Wildcat•' highest ranking since DIEGO ST. 28-21.
game, while il State win would
before he won the Cy Young
Last week: 14-3 (straight); 9-8 Award, Greg Maddux was CDIISidkeep alive its slim hopes for a 1983 ... ARIZONA 17-14.
1. Must want to mdt• excelent !110M)' (spread).
No. 10 8)1M Ill (MDI 4) at No.
league Iitle.
Cied a pretty comlllete packag"~
·
Season:
144-41
(straight);
83-82
unHmlted Income potentiall
The Tide is favored by 10 1/2 17 BOIItoD Callege
He can pitch, lie's a Gold Glove
(spread)_.
Eagles rebound from Notre
fielder and can handle the bat.
Now, after winning the award
2. Must want a permarMint Job with
Wednesda-y as the National
an aggr4tSSive orgonlzoiiQri.
League's best pitcher by a wide
margin over Tom Glavine, he'll
3. Must desire advancement.
LAS VEGAS {AP) - Al any opponent who stands 6-foot-5 and round by unheralded Bert Cooper. find out exactly how much l!e 's
news conference involving heavy- who weighed in officially Wednes- Holyfield stopped Cooper in the worth.
weight champion Evander Holy- day at235 pounds.
seventh round.
4. Open Floor· Sell Both New and Pre-Owned
Maddux filed for free agency
Holyfield, 6·2 If}., weighed 205.
field, the subject of retirement
Should Holyfield win the 12- after going 20-11 with a 2.18 ERA
"This fight is good because rounder, his next fight would be for the Chicago Cubs. Though .all
almost always comes up.
5. Must have professional attitude and •
people ~lize this guy has a chance against another young; strong · major_league rosters are frozen
· It was so this week.
appeaanc.,
"This is my last fight," Holy- Lo win," the champion said. "This opponent- Lennox Li:wis, who unul after next Tuesday's expanfield said, pausing for effect "This fight gives me c~ibility. "
stopped Razor Ruddock in !he sec- sion draft, Maddux is already getHolyfield .was a 3-2 favorite ond round of. what was billed as a ting cslls.
ear"
6. Must be willing to leam and
Y Should he) beat Riddick Bowe
against Bowe. He was a much big- title elimination match Oct. 31 al
'
· follow InstructionS.
Friday night, the 30-year-old Holy- ger favorite in his first three London. ·
field alinost certainly would contin- defenses, fights for ·Which he
Holyfield has no one to blame
, JF YOU AilE INTEilESTED APPLY TO
ue flghting.
received at least as much criticism but himself for repor1ers asking
"I want 10 fight some young
as praise.
him if each fight IS his last. He
P-11
contenders," he said. "That's
Two of the wins were decisions brought up the subject of retireC/O POINT PLEASANT REGISTER
what's keeping me here. IL's some: against George Foreman and Larry ment not long after he won the title
200 MAIN STREET
thin~, to beat a guy just as good as
Holmes, two former champions on a third-round knockout of James
POINT PLEASANT, WV 25550
••
you.
who are in their early 40s. The "Buster" Douglas OcL 25, 1990.
In Bowe, Holyfield will be other was a tough match in which
Such talk annoyed Holyfield's
meeting an unbeaten 25-year-old he was knocked down in the third trainer, George Benton, becausc·hc
considered it just tallc, buL !he kind
of ta11c that is dangerous to a fighter's pysche.
Benton was a middleweight
contender who fought from 194970 and had a 61-13-1 record, with
36 knockouts.
"I fought for 21 years and I just
couldn't stop," the 59-year-old
Benton said a couple of weeks ago,
"I loved iL
"I told Evander, 'If you want 10
GREG MADDUX
retire, quit now.'

fgt::

•'

asked.

NEW REDMEN EDmON - Tile D!ll-93 edltioD or the Unl·
verslty of Rio Graacle men's basketball team opeDI the new season ·
Friday. Sealed, from left, are Head Coach Jobu Lawbom, Larry
CaudUI, JIIIOil Curtis; Kyle Sc:broer, Jack Morgan, Lyndell Say-

No.16 Bulldogs eye upset win over Tide

'

. I

der, Jawauza Childs, Sail Stover, Walter Slepbeu ud 11181111J:tr
Matt Webb; staiilluc. from left, are Aa+tan~ Coac:b Jeff Lallham,
LaMout H1rrls, Jeff Browil, Cll1d HO!Iae_••• Erli: Burris, Tim
Cbrlstlu, Troy D011ald1011, Breet Coreao, Matt Powell and Asslstant Coach Earl Thol!las.

.

Redmen brace ·for coQtpetitive season
.

.

Faced with increasingly stiff
competition within District 22's
Division I and the Mid-Ohio Conference, the University of Rio
Grande men's basketball team has
geared itself for a tough year on
and off the road.
But with the return of four
seniors, a promising transfer and
some . ea~er new talent, John
Lawhorn 1s comfortable with the
prospects for his team as he enters
.his 13th season with the Redrilen

~- worlc elhic is verY good,

although Jhc question this year is,
how good we will be.at the point,"
Lawhorn remarked. "However, we
are better defensively than at any
lime last year. And I enjoy the
business-like way they come in
every day to practice, because they
work very hard."
The Redmen were 22-10 and 9S.Jor third place in the MOC last
seasO!!, and c;&gt;pen the 1992-9~ campaig'l Friday ·against St.'Mary's
CoUege, San Antonio, Texas, in the
opening round of the Georgetown
(Ky.) Classic.
While Jhc loss of last year's cocaptains Brad Schubert and Mark
Erslan, both experts oo three-point
shooting, will have its impact on
this year's team, Lawhorn feels forlunate in the return of seniors Jeff
Brown (6-5, Newark) and Troy

New Knoxville), based on his con- schedule is the best one played by a
tinual improvement over the past Rio Grande team since Bevo Frantwo seasons, is also expected to cis' second year. We have to be
play a big part in the Redmen ready to play evel}' night. Our condefense.
· fcrenc;o is anybody's. and any team
Joining them will be sopho- lhll goes 4-3 oo the road could win
mores Larry Caudill (6-4, Beaver), the dtampionship. In fact. probably
Brett Coreno (6-5, North Olmsted). ·an 11-3 record could win it outJason Curtis (6-3, Akron), Matt right."
In addition to .the Georgetowq
PoweU (6-5, Barnesville) and Walter Stephens (6-3, Akron). In addi- lrip, Rio Grande will play in three
tion to M~. the fii'Sl-year rosier more tournaments before opening
include&amp; Enc Burris (6·7, Logan), · its conference race. On tap will be
Chad Hodges (6-7, Crawfordsville, the Bevo Francis Classic, the
Ind.) and Sam Stover (6-4, New Catawba (N.C.) 7-Up Classic and
the Muslcingum College Classic.
London).
Lawhorn, who bas compiled a And while the schedule includes a
293-113 record at Rio Grande, number of familiar faces in and out
expects to continue the team's of district play, such as Wilmingtrademark high-pressure game, ton, Findlay and,Cenual State, the
with effective work on the inside Re4men have added Mercyhurst
backed by a strong defense.
College. Erie, Pa.• to the list.
"The only difference is, this
The Rcdmen will play 18 conclub won't shoot as many threes," tests in their 31-game schedule on
he said. "If it's there, fme, they' U the road, but have boosted their
take their shot, but I Jhink they'll remaining 13 home meetings with
tend to throw it inside more.•
I 0 straight to be played at Lyne
While competition, panicularly Center throughout January.
in the MOC, has been lllllgher over
1Jalvenlly ol Rio Crande
199:Z.l99J Reclme:n Baablblll Schedule
the season; Lawhorn has maintained a conservative outlook on ·
Rio Grande's prospeets. The rea- llill
son, he explained, is that the bal- Nov. 13:14 Gocq«own CoUea• TBA A
a nee of all teams has become
a...;. lKr-l
.......
,..,.
as
ra:h season has passed.
Nov. 2D.2l Brto Pnncil a...ic&amp; 9 p.m.
u
&amp;&amp;(JUo.$1.--S~a!!t,t.kMIIII:r A.Piknillc)
"We'd benet be very Capable at Nov, 24 W•tYIJiinja StotoCollqeJ,lC) A
what we're doing," he said. "Our Nov. 30 WmtYUJinio w..~oyan 7:30 A

Donaldson (6-8, Sebring), who had
joined Schubert and Erslan for the
last few seasons in boosting the
team's penchant for high scoring. ·
Donaldson was nationally
ranked for field goal percentage
last year and also led the team in
reboupding, while he and Brown
were e'len in per-game scoring
average. Brown was also second on
the team in rebounding average,
while Tim Christian (6-8, Columbus) and Lyndell Snyder (5-10,
Canal Winchester) will be counted
on for effective backup.
Rounding out the list of seniors
will he LaMont Harris, a 6-4 forward from Newark who transferte;d
to Rio Grande from West Liberty
State College. While Harris has
. been out of the college basketball
scene for some time, he has adapted to the Rio Grande system well,
Lawhorn said, and learned some
effective sldlls last summer playing
in the Worthington municipal
league:
Junior Jawanza Childs (5-11,
Columbus), who exited from the
starling lineu~;&gt; early last season due
to a knee inJury, is back to lend
support at the point. and is expected to be joined there by Jack Morgan (5-8, Barberton), a freshman
and one of the five recruits
Lawhorn brought in this year.
Junior guard Kyle Schroer (6-0,

Dec. 4,5 Cato,.bo ~olleac 7·"PC!uoic(NC)7-9 A

•'

Eastern names 'Athletes of the Month'

Hollyfield says 'this -is my last fight'

Junior Pat Newland and sophomore Charlie Bissell were selected
as Eastern's male Co-Athletes of
the Month, while senior Stephanie
OtiO claimed the female award.
Both Newland and Bissell
excelled on the football team of
Coach Dave Barr during Lhis past
season, and were equally impressive during the final five games.
One such game was a 29-0 victory
over Hannan, WV.
Newland is the son of Dennis
and Helen Newland of Tuppers
Plains. He. was a runnin11 back and
kick-off return spcciahsl for the
Eagles Jhis past season, where he
reLurned several 'kick-offs for
Louchdowns of70·plus yards. New-

-

. land was also a talented receiver.
Club.
Stephanie Otto is the daughter
Newland has played football
of
Ron
and Joyce Hill of Pomeroy.
three years and has been a member
She
was recently chosen to the
of the boys' varsity basketball and
District
13 All-Star team and All·
baseball teams for two years. He is
District
team in volleyball. She
also a class officer, two-year memwas
a
top
front-line player for
bcr of student council, and a VarsiCoach
Don
Jackson's Eagles,
ty "E" Club member.
where
she
led
the team in spiking
Bissell is the son of Robert and
Sally Bissell of Rt. 248, Long Bot- and kills.
Olio is the senior class Vicetom, Ohio.
Charlie w~s a running back and . President, a four-year varsity basdefensive specialist for this year's kclball sLartcr, a three-year member
football team. He also was a key of the volieyballteam, a member of
sludent council, and three-year
Larget of quarterback Chad Savoy.
Bissell has played football for member of the Varsity "E" Club.
Otto was also recent! y chosen as
two years, and varsily baseball and
basketball one year each . He is the Eastern High homec01;ning
also a member of the Varsity "E" queen for 1992.

(Rjo. " " ' .... , _ . , . . . . -

Dec. 10 Wiln)Uoaton Coli...
7:30
Dec. 12 wa1Jh Collcae•
7:00
Dec.l3 DykoCollcp
3:00
Dac:. 1S Ccntnl State. Uni venity 7:30
Pee. 22.23 Muohiapam College Qulic 6 &amp;I
(M.J.-, Rio. Olhd. Mlllkln&amp;wnJIAl
Jan. OS ~)flunt College
8:00
Jan. 09 Shawnoc S\llc Univcnity• 7:30
Jan.12 OhioDorninicanCoUcge.• 7:30

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Jan.14 Univenityo!FillcDay
Jan. 16 Tiffin 1/ni-itr"
/an, 19 Ud&gt;onallnivmity'

7:30
1:30
1:30

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Jan. 20
Jan. 23

Wilbr:rf'an:c Univcnity

7:30
7:30

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1:30

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Jan. 26

Mt. VanonNazua'leColiege--7:30 H

Jan. 30
Feb. 03
Feb. 06
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1:30
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OIUo lltmi!Uqn Colloge' 1:30
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7:30

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STEPHANIE O'f't:O

Otto.to play 1•0

,,

.-

District 13 outing "'

Houston also won at home for ,
By Scott Wolfe
its flrst vihory of lhe scasoo when
Eastern's Stephanie Ouo was •
Vernon Maxwell scored 24 of his selected lD the DIStrict 13 AU-Star ..
30 points in Lhe second half against volleyball team, and was selected ·
Atlanta.
to. play jn the senior All-SLar game
Maxwell scored seven points, which will be played this Sunday,
during a 9-0 nm lhat extended the November 15 at 1 p.m . al Southern
Rockets' 83-77 lead to 92-77,
High School in Racine.
:
Hakeem Olajuwon had 26
Otto is the daughter of Ron and •
points and 17 rebOunds.
· Joyce Hill of Pomeroy.
~
The Hawks, held to five points
Otto was a lop front line player
in the final 6:39, were led by for Coach Don Jackson's Eastern
Dominique Wilkins with 21 points. Eagles this past season, leading the .,
Cellks 109, Hornets 99
team in spiking and kill's,
Boston won at Charlotte when
Ollo joins Meigs Countians. .
the Celtics' bench players Megan Wolfe and Christi Maidens
outscored the Hornets' reserves 46- of Southern as Division IV All29, led by backup forward Kevin Stars.
Gamble's 23 points.
Southern will host the game in
Charlotte, which trailed by as Charles W. Hayman gymnasium
many as 18 points, rallied after the for the first time ever.
Celtics took an 116-73 lead into the
The team will be coached by·
· final quarter. Kendall Gill scored Oak Hill'sRichard Hamil !On.

,
'

·.

MONTREAL {AP) -·Felipe
Alou, who managed Montrellto I
· second-place finlsb in the NL Bast,
agreed to a two-year COIIIiiCt with
. the Expos. Tho 57 -year-old Alou
replaced Tom Runnella DO May 22
and led Montreal to a 87-75 finish.
BASKETBAI,L
NBW YORK (AP) - Magic
JobnJon, the most valuable pi.yer

'""~.,,.,..,..;w;-,..;-..w-~.=«'-"'"'"~"""''''··

CHARLIE BISSELL

STEPHANIE OTIO

he announced Nov. 2 that he was
retiring for a second time as a
member of the Los Angeles Ulkers
because he has the AID'S virus.
.
Last season, Johnson came out
· of retirement and led the West to a
153-113 victory over the East in
Orlando, Fla.

CALL
TODAY

992·2124

'"

CUSTOMER
KEEPS
REBATE

•

.-.:·•»"""~''''' "''"'""'~'·" ,.,_,.,.,

GUARANTEED BEST BUY IN AMERICA! .

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199.3 FORD RANGER
.,

.-·...•
•.
~.

TO CHOOSE fROM •••
HURRY fOR THE lEST SELECTION
PUCE YOUR ORDER TODAYI
(J 5}

•-•
'•
~

·',.

'•
•
••
•••

t

'•
~

2 MEDIUM PAN PIZZAS
With 1 Item!

,,
'I

A

~:kets 101, Hawks 82

They got no clOser, however, 11 Boston's Reggie Lewis, Dec :
Brown and Joe Kleine hit consecu- live baskets for a 101-891Cad.
xavier McDaniel led the Celtics: :
with 25 points. .
: '!.
Paten 12.0, 7Mrl 114
.
= :·
Indiana woo at home f« Its lint ..,:
victory in three games, beatinll ::·
winless Philadelphia behind 32 " .·
points from DeUce Sc:hrempf and ~28 by Reggie Miller.
. :The Pacers trailed 71-65 at half- •
time despite 22 points by ~­
Schremp£, who finished with 13
rebounds and also conYaled 16 of
17 free throws for the game.
· The 76en slill led 75-67 with
10:29 lert in the third quarter
before Indiana scored 17 of the
next 20 points, includin' seven by
Miller, who scored 19 m the accondhalf. ·
Jeff Hornacek Jed the Sixera
with 24 points.
Butks ll4, Maveritks 116
Milwaukee won at · Dallas .
behind Blue Edwards' career-hit ,
31 points, keeping the Maveri
.
winless.
:
Dallas used a I04 fOIJI!!I-q~a- :
ter run, capped by Doug Sm1th ·s· layup, to trail just l13-108 with' :
1:40 remaining. But Edwards' ~ ­
layup with l:32left started a bunt· ~.
thatgavetheBucksa 120-111·mar- ·
gin.
·
Dere.k Harper scored 21 points
for Jhc.Mavericks.
·

'•

i

in last season's NBA All-Star
briefs~ Game, is one of six former MVPs
on this year's fan ballot - and
BASEBALL
then again, he's noL
·
SCOTISDAi.E, Ariz. {AP) .Johnson
will
not
play
in
the
Owners didn't come up with a con- ·
sensus about reopening their col- · game, and any votes he gets will
leclive bargaining ~ment with not be tabulated, the ~r,ue said.
He was placed on the · ot before
the players, making 11 increasingly
unlikely there will be a lockout
noxt spring. ·
·
No vote was scheduled as owners concluded their two-day special ·
meeting. Milwaukee owner Bud
Selig, chairman of the ruling executive ciJuncil, said a decision may
not be made until the end of the
winter meetings, two days before
the Dec. 11 deatlline fot: reopening
die agreement.
·

992·5627

A

I

"He thought I was going to the
)eft like last time, but I went right,
had a clear dribble and then made
it," Jordan said.
Elsewhere in the NB~. it was
Boston I09, Charlotte 99; Indiana
120, Philadelphia 114; Milwaukee
124·, Dallas 116; Houston 101,
Atlanta 82; and the Los Arfgeles'
Clippers 109, Sacramento 101.
What impressed Detroit coach
Ron Rothstein about Jordan was
how )le shook off a double-tea!ll
and got clear for the pass.
"He made a great move 10 catch
the ball," Rothstein said. "We
should have done more to prevent
Jhc catch.''
"You either make it or you miss
it," Jordan said. "' It's not the end
of the world. It's still early in the
season. But I have confidence in
my shoL"
Isiah Thomas led Detroit with
32 points, while Dumars scored 22.
Clippers 109, Kings 101
Los Angeles won its fmt game
in four tries and handed Sac~n­
to its first defeat, building a 24point lead and then holding on at
the LA Sports Arena .
Danny Manning had 21 points,
· 15 rebounds and nine assists for Jhc
Clippers.
Reserve sw ingman Walt
Williams helped the KinjlS rally In
Jhc fourt!J quarter with e1ght of his
24 points. But Sacramento got~!&gt;
closer than 107-101 on a 3-poutt
shot by Jim Lcs with 28 seconds to

OVER
INVOICE
-Sports

Mlddlepor~

A

Latry Johnson's layup with 6:45 :
left brought the HomeiS to 95-89. -·

.. '.'

.
PAT NEWLAND

219 I. Second

7:30

H
A
A

Fob.l6 c.daMlloColl'l..
1:30
A
Feb. 20 ML Vcmon NuumcCoUeao-7:30 A

'""""""'

GREAT SELECTION
OF CHRISTMAS
GIFT IDEAS· IN
'MEN'S AND
WOMEN'S
CLOTHING
BAHR CLOTHIERS
ill ::IC • o,..
-•·••••
......

10 points in the founh period, and" ~

By Tbe Associated Pres&amp;
Michael Jordan missed a routine
shot that coijld have won the game
in regulation. In overtime he JJI8de
up for it with something speetacuJar- even for Michael Jordan.
Thirty feet from the basket. with
Chicago trailing by a point in overtime, Jordan swished a 3-point basket It the buzzer 10 beat the Detroit
Pistons 9l!-96 Wednesday night.
Joe Dumars hit an 18-footer to
give Jhc Pistons a·96-95 lead with
4.0 seconds left, then tried to blanket Jordan after he took a pass from
BiD Cartwright.
Jordan, who finished with 37
points, said he tried the same move
on Dumars that didn't work at the
end or ~egulation.
''wluit can you say?" Dumars

. !
'

'

9~99

5

••

••
•

•~
~
f

�•

•
Pomeroy Mddleport, Ohio

•

Thu,.clay, November 12, 1912

1182
•

'

Football '92!
Catch All The
Excitement!

·Support These
Fine Area
Businesses!

•

...

FURNITURE, JEWELRY
and RADIO SHACK

..••

by Bob Hoeflich

•

p;

slap.. '!-ii hll• Ill.•
immsmt.
recoavmr: s ots were Bed ord
To-sllip, SS; Columbia, six;
23; ~ IS; Olive, 49;
.Ow.l!ge, S4; Rutland, 77; Salem,
34; Scjpiio 38. Thirty-two pmms
,..., reside !Muicfr of Meigs CounIJ JqiOI"Ied 10 lbe Heallh Depart·
..,.. 111 Jatc advanllge of the flu
sllol JIIDPUL

'"'*""

'

992-6669
253 IIOIIH SECOND
. MIDDLEPORt 01.0

106 N. 2nd, Mid.apart

--

line you in lhe past wanlied to
ltelp provide som
. c help for the
omdapiivileged for the Christmas
bolida1 season, but there didn "I
-lllbeaplan io fOllow?
·
. Well, employees of Veterans
u t••iad Hospital ~ inviting you
10 llelp wilh their program of pro·
Yidillc ftJod for lbe UlldcrJ)rivileged
dlis :rar and you can do this by
.. .,;., your donations into the
IM:6jX•IIobby where they will be
latm by lbe Women's Auxiliary.
Do be s.e. 10 inc.lude your name
IIQDc .w ilb any donations so they
willie dikiWledged.
Tltis IUits the third year that
CIAploJCCS of the hospital have
u •h led a food program for the
liulilrot
• Tbe fir$t yea wa'i
1919 Wllea 130 food items were
1:1' K In 1990, e111ployees COD·
lnllaled 300 items and last year
Clllployces !!~ted 700 items 10
kip die needy.
'tky'D be glacf to have your
lteJp iD Bilking this the best year
yd. Tile emplOyees carry out the
l*IIP- ia conjunction with their
u
~ IOcommunity service.

I

'

For.AD Your Prescription and
Sundry Needs See Us"

Stop

Favorite..._.. Bn•n•e•
PLAY THE
OHIO LO I I ERY HERE!

VALLEY . LUMBER
555 PAll ST.
MIDDLEPOU, 0110
992-6611

I

• Sat., Nov. 14-

Col~ges-

Dlv. 1·A
Aluon
Youngstown
24
Alabama
28 '-MissiSsippi State
t6
24
Northern Illinois
23
28 'Rice..
.
2t
·Boston College
30
Syracuse
28
'Bowling G~een
· 3t
Ball State
18
=:::avoung
24 • Ai~ Force
14
22 'Arizona State
21
Central MiclliQan
28 • Wesl8m MIChigan
2t
Clemson
28 • Maoyland
23
"ColoradoState
29
OhioU.
12
• East Carolina
34
6
Arkansas State
• Aorilla
29
South Carolina
16
• Florida State
38
6
\ulane
Geoogia
27 'Auburn
13
• Geoogia Tech
24
2t
Wake Fo~est
·Iowa
20
30
Northwestern
'Kansas
27
23
Colorado ·
Kentucky
17
26 ·Cincinnati
louiSvile
20
25 'l'itts~urgh
·~iami
45
Temple
3
•utami,O
27
t2
Kent State
"Miclligan
40
IUinois
7
• Mi . - '
Louisiana Tech
15
28
24
t7
Kansas State
,_aska
38
'IOWa State
9
• Nevada· Reno
21
Utah State
20
• New Mexico
33
Texas·EI Paso
26
' New Mexico State
31
Cal State Fullerton
19
• North Carolina State 34
Duke
20
"Nob"eDame
Penn State
34
28
Ohio State
33 •lr:diana
27
Oklahoma
27 • Oklahoma State
20
31
"Oregon
U.C.l.A.
2t
27
Putdue
28 • MichiQan State
Haw81i
24
26
• San D~o State
31 • Pacilic
27
San JOse State
·Southern California
Arizona
24
29
"Stanlard
28
Washin~ton State
24
Tennessee
34 • Memphos State
27
s·.M.U.
34
"Texas
10
Texas A&amp; M
34 • Houston
2t
. 21
Texas Tech
33 'T.C.U.
Eastern Michigan
·T30
8
Wyoming
"Utah
24
22
17
VandelbiH
29 • Navy
• lfuginla Tech
Southern Mississippi 17
23
• Washington
42
OrOiJon State
0
Wesl Virpinia
25 • Rutgeos
21
·wisconsm
27
Minnesota
17
. . Mala&lt; Collegeo- Dlv. 1·AA

·=.

·=?

DOWNING CHILDS .
·MULLEN MUSSEl
·INSURANCE
111 East Second Street
PomeroyI Ohio

• 'Rt''

30
26
27

hiln Stalt

• Betr.una--coot.man
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• Cilldtl

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·-·-..........
.,.,...

c-eo...

Easlarn-Ktnluclly

• RDricla A &amp; ..
.

• .Jact.soft Slate
lafayede

·-..............
. u •••••

38

27

• AU&amp;Iin Pt11y
Boilt 51att

24

• TennaUH.Challanooga

.....

Sam Houslon
Morehead Stale
Holllra
S .F. AUSI In
Ahodt laland

•
·y.....,

26

36
31

Minnesola · Dululh
Wntern llinoi&amp;
Nicholts Sllte
~11'1fatd

35

South carolina Slate

• SouthamU.
Souttwfn Ula~

·-...

SW MiSSOUri

• Tenne.....-Marlln

• Chattellon Soulhtrn

23

Tex11 Southern

• lctatlo Slatt

2$

• SWTexu
fettMssee&amp;a tt

• Wnlem Cwolina
Wftlem ICeNut:lly
• W...m&amp;Maty

.,.

' Indiana Sla1t
North Te•u
• U...-ray Slale

28
30
37

L-

FO&lt;dham

"27 .,_
"'

EUITenne....
• EUiem llinol•

34

ftll BOB

· 11AtTOIS and

'

• Colgale
Morgsn Slale
Monrana Slale
• SE Missouri
Prai1ie View
' Bid-nell
Oelewart Slate
Tenne s~ett Tech

..
".."
..

.."
10

y,.,

35
37

• NollhMn Iowa
• NWLoYsaNr
• Pennsrh'artlar

•

GraNting

41

• Norlt...-n Arilona

......

.

' Ridwnond

28

• NE l.Owisial\l
New Hampshire

NORTH SECOND AYE.
MIDDLEPORTI OHIO

27 •

"

• lltNI:u.
• Uiddla -r.nnass.ee

992-3322

·c~

34
27
4.
21
24
36

.,_Stale

........

30

30

: a...e1"'m

Queen

",.

• Brown

14
19

14
24

V.N.I.
'Boalon U.

."

fUIW18A

Dairtt

Nottoll
JaiMI l.iadllon

31

........

• Holy

Miuiu~i Valley
North CarOlina A &amp; T

27

• Alillbllm.a Slate

• EasN:m WISIIing1on

992-2342

'H )ItO

u:Jor

BOB HARMON FORECAST
Other Games - East

7
10
12
21
24

16

27

18

"16

9

0
16

20

10
16
24

••

20
8
20
12
15
21
17
7

'

21
22

17

20

15
7

ID
22

,.15

28

Albany, N.V.

• Alle-glwnr
• AmeriQJn lnlemalional

• C.W. Posl
• tolbr

' COI'Iblnd

Ollawt•• IJalley

•
•
•
•

Franklin I Marshall
Hamilton
Indiana U., Pa.
lll'laca
lebanon Valley
lycoming
Middlebury
Millersville
Moravian

-'"

' ShippenstM.Hg
Slippery Roc~
• SusqUIIhanna
Tr.,nlon
' Wesl Chesler Slale
William Paterson
Wfce&amp;ter Tech

""""
23
26
"31

' 51. Luuenc.
Eatlham

. .....

30

26
28
23
27
20
20
28
27
30

""
"21

38

Sp&lt;l::l~l·

Anra

~

Soutn.rn Connecticut

• Widener
• Gtnylbura
·Bal. .

' Clarion
Waahlnglon 1 JeUerson
• Juniata
• Wilkaa

lutts
Edinboro
Muhll,.,.rg ·
• Montclair
Calilornla Stale. Pa.
' Loci!. HaYen
ftlbrlght

' Ramapo
Eaat Shoudsburg
' Central Connechcul
' Plyn'loulh

Other Games- Midwest
22
29

' ftnderson
' ft&amp;hland
' A:::uslana , lll.
• 8a el
Benedicllnf'
Carle ion
' Oeliance
Eaat Texas
• Ferris
G1and \'alley
• Hastings
• Hillsdale
John CarrOll
' Millikin

2J

27

"33
20

42

"30
33

28
28
30
28

t.tiSsourl wes.em
• Musking um
NE Miasouri
• N.tlna&amp;ila-Omaha
North Dakota Slate
Northern Stale
NW Minou1i
'Onawa
Pitt $burg
' Ouincy
' Saginaw \'alley
SE Oklahoma
Southwestern , Kan .
SW MirYI&amp;sola Slat e
• Wabash
Wayne State , Neb.
Wast Tens
' William Jewell
' Wlllenberg

33

33

"
"2721
,
27

27

...,
21

25
28

...
29
23

Taylor
Nor1hern Michigan
Whealon
Misaouri Valley
• Central MeltlodiSC
Gualavua Adolphus
Wooster
·Cameron
Sl. Jo11pl'l"l'
• Valparaiso
COlorado Colege
Wayne Stale . t.tleh .

· :f~~~~~Waii&amp; Sf
• Washburn
Mariena
' Misaouri-Rol6a
Soulh Oakola U.
'Norlh Oa~ola U.
Wioor"llr Stale
• SW Baptist
Bethany, kan
' Central Missouri
Cul'l8r·Siocklon
Buller
Easl Central Oklahoma
• Kansas Wesleyan
St . Francis. Ill.
DePauw
' Iowa Wesleya n
' Panhandle
Evangel
Ohio Wull!lyan

Other Games - South &amp; Southwesl

'
•
•
•

Alabama-Birmingham
Arkansa; Tech
Arkansas-Monticello
Bridoowator. va.
C.-son-Newman
Catawba
Cent~e

'Clark

"'"

' EmOI'y &amp; Henry
Farettev~t.

' Fori \Iaiiey
• Frowtburg
' Gardr.,·~ebb
GeOI'glltown, l&lt;y.
' CliW~vil le
' Hampd~tn - Sydney
• Hamplon
' Harding
• Jacklonville Slale
Lambulll
• Mittsapa
' Mississippi College
New Haven
Savannah Slale
Sewanet
Tennessee Wesleyan
Texas A &amp; I
• Union . l&lt;y
' ValdoSCa
• WaShing ton &amp; Leo
• WeSI Geotgia
West Llberly
' West Virginia Slate
• Winslo n-Salem
' WOIIorel

31
28
22
30
24
24
27
35

"20

35

36
41

""
26

3J

"2149
34

27

30

""

33
28

"

29
30
27

..

22
27
29

"

• Clinch Va lley
• Ouachita
Henderson
DavidsOn
PleSb)"taria,-.
Lenolr-Rhyne
' Rhode&amp;
MDfehouaa
' Winga1v
Maryville'
• Newberry
Albany, Ga.
Me1hodisl
Mars Hill
• Campbelllivi!le
Weal Vi'tnia Tech
Randolp Uacon
Norlh Caroline Central
Soul hem Artensas
Kantudly Stall
• Cumberland . Ky.
Trinily. lex
Della Slate
' Slleptlerd
Milas
• Ktntu~y Wesleyan
' Cumberland. Tenn.
• Angelo Stale
Tuscul~o+m

Nor1h Alabama
Geotge1own
Lana
·Fairmont
Concord
llvlngstona

Bowie

Other Games- Far West
•
•
'
•
•

Cal Lulheran
Ca l Davia
Cal State sacramento
C&lt;Horado Mines
Eastern Nftw Mo11ico
Humboldt
La\'arne
Menlo Parlt
Nonhem Colorado
Porlllfld Stale

""
.,

.

29
23
25

"2821

' Wllinllr
• Cal Statt Hayward
' Cal Stall NOf"lhridge
• New MexiCo Hlotllands
Cenlral Oklahoma
Cal Slate Chlco
'Cle~emont

Azusa
Soulh Dakota S1a1e
Cal Poly

' Reclland&amp;

31

Occide~~lal

·Sonoma
' Sl. Marya, Calli.

"

San Francisco Stal e
Sanla Clara

28

",
.28
",
"
""
25
"19
21
"
""
27
22

0

..

22

.

CHES1EI, OHIO
985-3301 or 985-3303

Peoples

Bonk
3 COIIYEIIIEIII LOCAIIOIS
MEMBER FDIC
~ICOtiiD STREET JACKSON AVE.
5th mEET
Mateoi,W.Va.

773-5514

PI. Pita Mini,

w. '"·"- ........

675-1121

112-2136

SALES

SERVICE - PARTS

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
I

'
O..Stw,
OW.

"",.
7

20

"66
10

12

'

PoNroy; Ohio

. 992-3671

WARNER .
HEATING ·
AND

COOLING

7

20

"•

28
21
19

"

20 .
10
20
27

"
"
20

SALES • SERVICE

INSTALLATION
Furnac11
AJr (o!Mit.._.,

Hiah El.ficitacy
ln•gy fawing_H1at Pump1

ltpairs All Mak•

Heat Pump
' · XL 1200
Super Efficiency

985-4222

,

~lu ~~ots are poplllar wi..
s!Wor c111uas who awe kala
l!hat they, most or lhe lilnc,. are

hel~Mci,p c_,. Dtpat

X

of Health RCallly catial - its
program 10 give n. sllots 10 die
public. Jackie Rilclelaaad lias
co!Dpilcd an in.eraaii!J list to
proVe the ~m. Oaly ..u
child received a Oa Sllol wltile
seven b e - lhe 11F5 of ll:ftll
anc1 11_ Bi- s11o1s. nae
were 5II bet- die ~ of II
and 24 gi- Bill -a.q bctwom
the.,.af!llS-a44. Aslk.
got lllipu 10 did die Oa sHIS
givea. "111m: .ae 114 p a betwCCD4S -a S9. Betwua die
qcs ofQI ...... Ci'J, 316 ......
received n. sbols lila tile ......
meot -r 4:16 bctwoa:a tile 1FS Ill
70 IIIII 79. llctwcw die 3111=1 1!180
and 19, 136 per.- wen: gi·lihotsandlhere - n llllla
90
and 97. BydoeW11J,Ikn:-jlat
one97·,car~

16

And wllcre did ..esc peo~e
come from? Aaud" 1• Jattie•s
report, 423 or the lOlal 1.147
rcccivinJ shots live in S•li.....,.
Towosb1p; 231 n:sicle in SUUOD
TownShip; 10~ in o r T--

21

"20
21

"27"
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20
23
20
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,
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6
21
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17
3
22

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"177

IAWUNGS-COATS ·

F,isher FISHII
Funeral
Hom.e
• OwRtr/Operator
I~UCE

.DDUPOIT

991-514 I

17

·CROWS

21

"

18
27
24
7
21
2J

10

Family Restaurant

992: 5432

Pomeroy, Ohio

9

17

""
16

23

21
3
20
17

.... ,2

18
12
23

.,

21
••KANSAS Cli'Y-..23
It's '-11iae yean liDce lbe R!"dKKn• have met the Qalda, We'd be mon: exdttd If K. C. badn't deloDall:d againal

PiaaiJuqb line neb liD IIIII tile 'Sidu lladD't claDe llkowile apinst N.Y.
{M-.J)
"MIAML-...34 IVFFAL0-....31
.
.
llai fnllla37·10 lmiiringbythe Dolpbillllix wccb ago. Sloa: lben both teamS have bad
lllelr 1»~"1, but Miami ... aolhcr '91 Buft"alo
10 pay back.

A_ workshop, "Holiday Happiness was a feature of the November meeting of Chester Garden
Club at the home of Belle Lou
Dean. Holiday favors for local
nunln4 homes were made by memben wt.dl Edna Wood, chalnnan of
lbe
proJCCL

. Mace! Barton _!liscussed "Growmg lfllr:dY Bulbs_. She noled tulips,
da(fod,ls, hyacmth·and lilies are
examples of true bulbs. Crocus is a
conn. Bulbs and ~S· are living
s~ 8J!d reqwre careful han·
dhng even m the dormant sta~e.
Bulbs slJou!d be planted from nudun~ the soil free~. Daf.
~ lls·reqwre a longer period for
root development and are best
plan led early in .the planting sea·
son. A sandy loam, well-drairied, is
necessary_. Raised beds provide
good dramage. Work the soil
twelve inches &lt;!eep . Plant in a
clump or masses lind water well if
soil is dry at planting time. Lilies
prefer flower heads in lbe sun but a
cool root environment. A year·
round mulch works well. Remov.e
faded blooms and mainlain foliage
for six weeks for good bulb growth
and rebloom the followln~ season.
· The "Save the Earth • lesson,
"llome on the Range" was by Edna
Wood. She reported that America's
refrigerators consume 77 percent of
the nations 10ta1 electric. Washing
machines use about 14 percent of
the water consumed at home. Using
wann and cold water cyc.les save
electtic power. Raising the settings
of air conditioners by six percent
saves the energy equivalent of
190,000 barrels of oil everyday.
The hint for November: Be sure
that all aerosols and liquids are
moved from the garden shed before

=

~~ ~eatber: Transfer any fer·
lilizen m boxes to metal or plastic
containers as the cardboard may
deteriorate over the winter
Devotions by Jean F~ederiCk
included a •verse and prose on
Thanksgiving from Ideals. The
meeting opened with lbe Garden·
er's Creed and roll call was an
exchange of labeled blilbs.
Maida Mora presided and
reported on the fall county meeting
.and the plans for the Christmas
flower show on Nov. 21 and 22.
Members volunleered to provide
arrangements for the five classes
rbquiteil of the club and also to
take food for ·the lunch hour
Eleanor Knight and Edna Wood

•

Middleport's well-tnown Mrs.
C.lfdlat (.Je.r) F"!Jhcr iJ an oulpa·
liall• die Mayo Oinie and will be
acc:c:fi.ia&amp; II" Mtmeott for the next six
•ecb: Sbe undoubtedly will
your c.ds IIIII prayers.
ne -.ldress
is in care of Best
Soktier's Field, 401 s.
6 .. St.,. Rochester; Minnesota. ·
SS902. ll:oow you join me in
wisbiJI&amp; her well

will serve on the placement com·
·aee
ml Jea"n Frederick and Pauline
Rideno
ur artended the fall regional
meelinj! and gave a report.
Twlla Buckley decorated the
tables for the fann bureau and band
booster banquets. Maurita Miller
provided altar flowers at the
Chester Uniled Methodist Church
iii October. Maida Mora and
Clarice Krautter did seasonal plant·
ing of ihe outdo!lr planters at Trini·
ty Church in Pomeroy.
.
Notes of appreciation were
h df
1

:Ontf'Mhre;';2;t!:J ~8 ~';.&gt;';J

Maye Mora. Mrs. Miller is sun·
shine chainnan in November. A

birthday card was signed for Ada
Holter, an ·honorary member, and
the sick in the community were
noled. •
Mrs . Dean and Sheila Curtis
jud&amp;ed a Halloween flower show
by Open Gate Garden Club at Bob
l!vans Craft Bam. Mrs. Dean and
Pal Holler 18Ught classes on flower .
irranglng at the county meetings ·
this summer.
:
Mrs. Dean served a salad course •
to 12 members and guest, Judy:
Mora. Maida Mora received the
door prize.
In December, the club and :
gnesiS will ''Celebrate the Season" :with dinner at Gilmore's in ·
P01noroy. There will be a program :
and gift wrap judging.
• ·

---Names in the news---:
SAN ANTONJO (AP)- A jury Tuesday. "I hope he collects every
· East Los Angeles house the size o(
ordered Zsa Zsa Gapor to pay $3 nickel from Mrs. Gabor."
a one-car garage.
million for breaking a contract to
Ms. Gabor's manager, Cal Ross.
mingle with regular folk at a said his client probably wi!l appeal.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - · Loren·
celebrity "fantasy week," and the
zo
Lamas has r;ven up his "Falcon
judge said he hopes lhe plaintiff
ST . PAUL. Minn. (AP) Crest"
yuppie look and let his hair
•'collects every nickel.''
Edward James Olmos, who has grow down to his shoulders.
Chief U.S. District Judge Lucius tried to inspire other Hispanics
He says his late father. actor
Bunion acc used the actress of with his success, says kids are
Fernando
Lamas, would have:
lhumbing her nose at the judicial lhcmsclves role models.
"gone
nuts."
system by not appearing at lhe trial
"Just look around you,'' the star
'•He would have said, 'Lorenzo,:
or having a lawyer present
of "Miami Vice" and the movie why you wear your hair so long?
Businessman Len Safu had sued "Stand and Deliver•• told students
Ms. Gabor for not honoring an at Humboldt High School on Tues· You look like Veronica Lake,"' he
$11,000 contracl to appear at a day. "There ls always someone · said in an interview on television's
1991 "fantasy week" ' for tourists looking at you who is trying to fig· "A Current Affair" while promot-:
ing his new role on the syndicaled·
in San Antonio.
u~e out their life."
series
'·Renegade."
·
Safu said Ms. Gabor was never
The students applauded his tcsti·
paid. But when she fai led to show, many on his own lifestyle choices:
Safir had to refund money to.guests " I don't drink, I don't smoke and 1
who had paid $7,500 each.
don 't do drugs."
James Brown, "The Godfather ot
"I'm glad you returned a verdict
He told the students he started Soul." was born In Pulaski Teoo iD
•
., .
of S3 million," . Bunton told jurors life with his family of seven in an 1928.

D

""'*'"

w-.

w.

And some of us are taking
. . _ . . of the pleasant weather

10 gtt tbc outside ChriSimliS lighiS
ia place. Good thinking. And
-fllusjiSI keep smiling 'cause
-·oe DOl gonna do dJat.
..,. ·

FINAL WEEK!

··CELEBRATIOM··

O~~N A~ DAY

~aturoay, 9am·~ ~m

Fonner Racine resident to peform
in Walt Disney's Magic Kingdom

14

WASIIINGTON;

•

ANDERSON'S

"

ON PRO FORECAST

'

in the size you need
at a price you 'II Nkt.

"12

Tbe Falallls, a diffaeut team siDce finishing 10-6Jut year, have lost four sbaisht 10 lbe CardiDals daling back 10
1986. Jlbomix Ia rigbl where It~ last year, but it's atlanta's tum.
CIBCAGO..- .....lll •• TAMPA BAY.-......11
.llllbeirfirstiDIIIcllup a mtb ago, Jim Harbaugh tbrew for 304 yards and lbe Bean won 31-14. 1be bucs .-e down.i f
1101 0111, in 1be NFC Central, while Chicago needs to keep up with MIDDCSOCa.
.
••DALLAS-.....30 L. A. · JtAMS.--..21
Tben:'s no closer rivalry in lbe NFL tban lbe Cowboys and Rams. Eacb bas won eigbt of their 16 regular-season
games and fOlD' of their eight playoff games. Dallas will go up by one.
·
••DENVER--..l4 N.Y. GIANTS ......-.23
Tbe Bnu:us lllld GiaotJ haven't butted beads ilnce 1989, and Denver hasn't won sillce 1980. New York bas been
wildly i»Qmsisteol, and lbat wm't work against lbe Broncos at Mile High.
••INDIANAPOLIS..-....ZO NEW ENGLAND.-......16
~last week's bWJe with Miami, this Is lbe game in wbicb lbe Colts am't afrord 10 case up if lbey have playoff
hopes ~ against just lbe kind f&gt;f team tbaliovites euing up.
"L. A; RAJDERS......-27 SEA'ITLE..---14
·Though no Oai: was C(OIIfusing lbeir spotty offeoac with the Raiden of old, L. A. bad no trouble with the Scallawb
four weeks ago, wionlog 1~. Seattle allows no signs of making this ooe closer.
.
••MINNESOTA---..28 ROVSTON-... -27
Tbe inlaalllfereoa: pme of lbe wedt, between teamS lbat have~~ only five dmes in 1'8 yean; thi: Vildngs lead 3·
2. Both have productive offenses lllld solid defenses. We could go eltba" way.
**N.Y. JETS...-...23 CINCINNATL-......17
.
SeaiORtlite t11eae two teams an: having m8ke for great. ootblng·to-lo&amp;e games -like lbe Jets' stunning defeat of
MiiiDi two w=b ago. CIDcilmad bas won twO straight from New York.
PIIILADFLftiiA.....-..33
*-GREEN BAY....-.1li
Last~ the Eagles beat lbe Padctn easily, 20-3, and once again lbe tea1111 an: beaded in opposite ditecliom. G.B.
sana points with great dilfk:ulty, aod Pbilly pva ~ up reluttandy.
I ISBVRGR.......-24 DETROIT...- ....10
TbeS~Ce~en llelllbel.ions 23-3 the Jut time lbey ~~.a·m 1989. Pilllburgb wtn bounce baclt.afta" hard gimes witb
HOUIICII and Buffalo,
doeall't need 11101ber tougbla
Dallal.
. but Detroit
(
. after
.
SAN DIEGO.-~
**CLEVELAND..- ...U
ll'a DOl IIlii this game's too dole to call, it's jlllt 11111 it mates ua JaVOIII!' nRc of tbla pair's last &amp;ix pmes have
aoue into ovenimc, IDcJudlna Cleveland'• 30-2A ll'ln last year.
·
..SAN FRANCISCO
31
NEW Oil EANS--.....29
Ill Sq44 +berllle49en forced five lllniovallllllllelcl otrthe Salata 16-10. Sill FlllldBCO Ul mon: revenge In stii'C
for tile re.. lhllt~U ill NFC Weat title away Jut aea·oo. ·

'111cBUiailum

·.,

10

••PI

JfTIHL •.. - --

·

ho

We nthe
Strta you want

17

.U

Baum
Lumber

rP ,.

DISCOVER WHY ·
PEOPLE SAY,
·
.

17

na sua.• *ATLANTA-..
. ••d •••••,
-•o-v.IBIII,
1111
PHOENIX..- .....20

IIDIIG IOWEIS

•., UJ~,,
fJis I ··

10

Chester Garden Club discusses bulbs

Beat of the Bend...

••

Prescription
Shop

INGELS

Ohio

Frhlay Mltht an4 Sun4ay Sp•alall

BIKED PORK CHOP AND
DRESSING
, SALAD, ROLL ••d
CHOICE OF POtAtO

$525

W"Jilt doe 1992 Ow'
•
less llwltwo .._... away, die
f9lks at Walt DislleJ Wodd ill
Florida~~eba~ ......cpaeror
yet anot1a .:miiJie • ._ •
theMcicKiagc\w
·
The ~ IIGapow will feature suclll!olidaJ pwdKt•• as
"Chrisnas Tzee Up~~~
monies: "Miss Mitlaic's
Christmas,• ." 'Spwtl&amp;c Clai 4
Spccw1••" • c:asde sltow. "'I'
'l'J on Pnade•-., be ldcoi:scd 0..:..
25, ~- ' I'L Ji&amp;lll
BeD's
and F XJ a tile Sty Fi:ea '''
~ruce_ Wol!e• • r-~J . of
~willbe •,
. 1_. ;; I
m several of tlte5e prodac;IIOBS
llu1Mpl!ll ~ldidaf£..
.
Wolfe will be d•oa•a m. die
"Fantuy oa. Parade- da,.uae
~ _as a nwc;a~ d
~' -;d
~111 be perf~ aa IIIII • !'~
hght' parade,
.
Spec:uoMapc:.
"Fantasr oa Paade- will CJPC11 ia

a.·
Pruduclions, Wolfe also
pafasas in "SurpriJe Celebration

l'lola•as a calypao c!ancer as well
asiaothcrsliowS in the llingdom.

Reedsville UMW
elect '93 officers

• Officers for tbe coming year
wue announced when the
Rc:edsYillc: United Melhodist
Wo•c:a met with Mrs. Frances
Read for the October meeting. .
Ollicas wi1I be lbe same as Jut
.:r-: Mrs. Nina Boston, president;
MQ,.Naney Buckley, vice-presidad; Mn. l&gt;iane Jones secretary·
-a Mrs. Gl.rys Thorn~.
u. Pm&amp;ram leader will be Mrs.
Gace Weber.
·
Opeaing prayer was by Mrs.
Dllnl. Mrs. Weber led the
&amp;w•• t . on "Prayer That's Spe·
cifi1:....
~p.:,c-wilb~.; '-~~ ~
MIS. Boston, presided at the
-spear
h•• ss aec:ling. There were 22
Jli
• 5 • 9 _, II p.a. ·; IJ. sllat-ia calls reponed and cards
In ·addirioe 10 1ais mlcs ill die wac siprd for sc-m friends.
Tile ~· voted. to buy a new
=-i!ii~the church and noled

paracle:a:_;ca.

FJi&amp;l!l

treasur:

'f'.

-"'•""ere played and prizes

~--dtd.
. Refiesllmc:nts using the Hal·

---Mrs.

dleme were served to those
Pwl Osborn, Mrs.
s-ty. COwdely, Mrs. Pearl Baker
-a Mrs.. Lilliln Piclrens.
'l1lc c:lusiug prayer was givcn by
Mrs.. Thomas. The November
li. wilt be witb Mrs.~-

loao

m

'

Gardeners meet
The Riverview Garden Club

rec:ea~:.,ajoye~ a me~l at the

Betsy

· Oub m Marietta dut·
·
Prayu was offered by Maxine
Wllitehead, president. New pro·
cr- boob were given out by
Fraac:es Reed, vice-president.
Auadia&amp; were Paulino Myers,
Nola Y-&amp; Mu.iae Whitehead,
Opal Hrris. Uaaaa Grossnickle,
Nucy Wac:llter, Grace Weber,
G~ n-u. FraQces Reed,
Dokns Fraak, Janet Connolly,
Ella Osbane.,. Marilya Hannum

iDe the Ouufln meeting.

JOSIAH JIA.YMAN

Second birthday
Jorillt , _ lilt)
od 1lil IGOwl liiolltdaJ

-~·-

•
A

I

I

. ._

ly.

~­

ltk'jwh.,
• ~· • •
A "Did 1Wc:l'" 6cae- carrial • ..t mte. ioe a
cltips

llldA~;:'!.:;;
11, J -

Jill

•

•

... ..

Ill...,_

Jca u.,..
'
ll.r:a.t

and S.uieJ Wells; Melia• aad
Jas~• Morris, T-•Y ...
Claniiii]Jkr CowderJ. Vicki,
" - ' · .... I, Jeme ... Oana
~;tG' ta,Aialla-aad

.· '"'l:di.! ;~·~ ......

. ....... ..
,BiD-aJaa
Simas, MtzsiiiU 1 • Ha.

LIVING ROOM SUITES

DINING ROOM SUITES

Early American 2 pc .. in.lltk:olor sb"lpe_.~- ······-~~·····'799 ...'599... 1469
COUntry 2 pe. -blueln.un prlnL ••.••••• ·-·····--·-··----'1199 ...'899... '649
Early American Sofa/Recliner. o•k trlm._ •.,...•..•• } I099 .. !999... '729
Tradl11onal2 pc. -gtMNmeuvelor•L •.. - .• -·-·-··-·----···-'999

S98

Early American 2 pc. · n-u lll ~or• I ~nL •••..........•.••• -.'799 ...'599... '499
Pasltlllowtrs
detaled

Country 2 pc.. blue chtck print....................................... '999 ... 't&gt;99 ... 1499
Country 3 pc. Chalse-Recllner·SOfa·Lovt-Recllner. '2699 •. '2199... '1599

beaUI~!J~

atop a da inty,

genuine

Trad.lpc. ftecUnerSola.Chalr·Lovmat belgtstJip• ....'1799 ...11399... '1188

porcelain box.
Basket weave

Country 3 pc. . blutlrnm• clllc:k. oaM trirn..~ ......... .... 11S99 ...'1299... '1 088

style mirrors the
eJ:pensive bok-

Trod. CUrved sectional Reclining Ends .•••••...'1199 •. 't299.:'999
Cont. "L Shape" Sectlonal ·••..,l!" ,.,,•.........'1199 ...'899.•• '699

a·lilles so:a ;n fine
;ewerry stores.
Use for linv
treasures or as
., actenl piece.

Tradl11onal3 pc. - 01~ trim 2 C410r Cho'"-~-- .. · ···----!1 699 .!1 299... sggg
Early American 3 pc. -nyton t1o111 prtnL ... --·-····-··11795 .. .'1295 ... '999
Cont. 3 pc .. beiQI ~auede took" 0111 trlm.•• - ......... - ..•.• '2195 •..'1588... '975

5Pc. Colonial Suila .,,. , " ...................................'1099 .•ryiS•. '679
5Pc. Bassell Cherry Sulle .,.,., .........,...........~299 ...~99.. '749

7

pe. Country Oak -~able 1 Baplr!Oit btc:ll ehllr•-~~----'569 ...'..29. .• '379

7pc. SOlid Meple Sel·iob•l '""''-·····-·····--~099 .•'84t .. '679
7 pc. Otk o~ Maple Sets-&lt;t"•'" ·'''""'··-··----•99 ..'539... '429
7pc. SOlid Wood Peel. Table ·• low'"""'"·-~099 ...'799 ... '659
7 pc. Country Oak-a 111- blcllsplndtdiii~Zd&amp;llble_rrggg --'591- '549
Hutch · Open Front ·,..,_, ·cro-~·-·······-'699 ...'499 ... '289
9pc. Cont. Oak SuHe
·lmiM tlbll • 6 challt · hulctv'brJtfel _____~- '2191 ·- '1699_, *1299

..."' ""'...

i

--

Swivel Rocker · brown or bkre-~-------------'259 •.•1169. .• '129

Claremonl Swivel Rocker ...,. •• ,..... - ..........'331 ...'249... '199
jNationBI 2-Way Recliner -ctrole• of Colors." .......... ".....'22t ...'179•• 1139
TWIN saE
Pc. Pine Finish Suite .... .....,...,~Mtj-JW .,m,.lll·irr.ht•L'699 ...'549 ... '469
Recliner·. mul~ llrlpt..................... .. ~... -.'299 ...t219•. 1189
Serta Gentle Touch·-·---··--······ ..-· ............... .1171 .• 1t1D u.IIC...•. '79
1
(4 POeCO"tAim... oo·Bitcl:Sule•·•"-'"'""d '-•~'89!1 ...'649 ... 529
ICalinaP!lorRoclu!riRecliner ·""'"""·········-·····'349, ..'279. .• '239
Imperial Hotei/Motei. •••• - -····-··~--··---···--···--· -'18D .,. '129 !.1-. IIC .•••• '88
Pc. Oak Finish Suite :;;.."·mlrror·rirl'.•~tN httd ._ ..•.....rm ...1499-. '399
Rocker!Recllner - blut/lni!OndoL ...................1469 ... '379 ... 1319
Ther·l·Pedlc Evening ShadoWl--·------------•tw .• '139 tl. tJC •••• sgg
1
Pc. Pine Finish Sutte . ..,,... ,,vuw-c hHI-p~ntl hu6•.•.'599 .• t:l99... 349
IFlexs1HII Rocker/Recliner .cMI•" 1'"'"·········-··..'572 ... ~19 ... '339
Slrtl Ultr. Fi'm ........... - ... ·- ···-~··-·········-·· ..'2N•• '17t u . ,o:. •• 1129
6 PC. Nostalgic Oak . doordrmtN l•ncl lncludtd ..'2799 ...12299.. . 51599 IFltxstHII RockarfRecli~r -bltoeJbiue prli'IL..••.••- ...'722 ...'529 ... '399
FUll SIZE
6 PC:. Solid Cherry •t.-~ cteutt&lt;hnt on chu l..... - 52999 .. .'2499... 51999
Imperial HoteVMo1eL ..•••.......••.•,........................~-''" -·· •m u . I'C . ... '98
ICatnar&gt;~~rWall Recline~·""' ••"'···-·-·····-····"" ...~211... 1349
6 Pc. Colonial Oak .......... .... ... 11111.,_, _,..._!'2199 ...'2m ... 51688
Slrtl Gentle Flrm:......................................i:l3t .. •m u. PC. .... 1129
ICatniPIH!r Rocker/Recliner ·mMivt llbric...................'469 ...'379... '299
4 Pc. Bassett Oak - lrl~ drunrlmlrror-chnl·ht•d....... 1299 ... '899... 1699 ICatnap;:H!r SwlveVGlkleriRecllner . muld color .........'St9 ... 429... '379
Serta Extra Flrm................ - .••••...•__.. ............. '211 ... '21t u. ~ ... •179

BEDDING

Pc.

Cont. Black . rrir~or fronls·lncludttltaMd ............ ..'l399 ... '999 ... 5788

-

1

1

Serta Supet' Flrnt---··-··..····-···----·· - -·····-·'42'-- '3tt f._O . I'C •• ••• '219
QUEENSIZ£

sena Gentle Touch.----··-·-----·--~-----·~' .• ':m.-r ·-· 1299

~:::::::::::::::::::::;::::===:::
CURIOS &amp; GUN CABINETS

Ther·A.·Ped1c Saveretgn, ___.:, ••_, ____,__ ~----- -..'57t.- '429 •r .... 1329
Seoll Extll Finn...••••. - ... ··--- ··- ·--···-·-'" •. ~""'··· 1449

Chtrry 8 Gun . doubll door lockt. 2drMI' slor~g&amp; .. - •..'59!1 •..'479...

serta Ptrttct S1tej:ler PlftOw Soll.-.---··..·--..~-·~-····'70.~ '5!19 Sf.T-... '499

. ...........
-~ . '469
Oak 11 Gun · etchedgt11• door~- diet Mad.•----··-----'699
Octagon Front Curio. z,,y~n aflnllhfl· tdoo,t-ltght.'2B9 ...'239... '199

APPLIANCES

. ""
""

... -""1
w

'399
Oak 10 Gun~ ..... ..,,,.. h.-.•.• ••..•••. - .'73!1 ,.'599... 1519

Brealolronl CUrio-......, Olm·•1"wldo...•.•.••...•••'995 • .'729... '599

GibSon 14CU. ft ..Ffost·frte·lo·. doon·wtlhl orelmoncf..'619 .."!519... '469
Kelvlnalor 18cu.n.-Toftoo ..... .-_.,.,,;,..,.'699...~!19... 1539

Console l Mirror · o•ll·2 cloor;D11&amp;0ie-WIII mluor ______'429 ...':149... '299

Ktitvlnator 18 cu. n..

Cherry Corner Curio-nklpfk&gt;l· 2cloar•· p1Glmenttop.~.'799 ... '649.. '549
light Otk cu~lo-31·- .,.,.,.......lr( •.•••••.•.'4211 ..•~!9-. '2~
Oak Comer Curio - curvtellront · :1: dcort - i~IM~-----'419 ... '399-. '339

Gibson 18.6 cu. ft.

~ iY!tlltl ctntlll'ttf" alltl¥eL.-...'799 •..'699. .. 1589

- 3lellon1111.._.1tJ.tronL.----··tm ...'639. ..

JS69

Light Oak Curio-om""' go,.· llghl· 1"'"'"·---~•. '289 ... ~19.. 188
1

ENTERTAINMENT CENTERS
Gibson 19.0cu. fl .. " " ......t.~•-··.,099 . .1899... '799
8. ACCESSORIES
Prtmltr 36" Gas Range ..... ,....,-~·· ""''········~•• . ...'&lt;99 ... '44!1 -I

.........
Ull

WI

_.,....

Mlytag 30" Ell&lt;:..................................~99 ...'521... '439

Pint Flnlth Clblnet. so· • .._.,."""'~··- ······ ·· ·-- '369 •..'249... 1199

-a.llt~Pd!rDI.

G~ 30' Elec.· 2·1"1f" .._

Naturll Oak Cabinet. c:Hitn, louwltftd •lkii'IG doarl..-.1179 •..I'J39... '289

1k Kit meetitll will be Nov.
19 at die RecdsYifle Church of
Cltrill. A Clliiaw 1Kirbbop will
be ltelt . . Beay Bogs directing
lk jiiUjec:L J' ben are to brin&amp;
f"mJV food ucl also lifts for
jM XI ill die. Pomeroy
--"R,
,..__ Nunlng

GibSon 30" Elec.

~

wtn.cloclo.•••~71 .....99... '399

·E-"""':·..~~"'"'"'""··-'139 .

.'561..:'449

Mlytag Elec. Dryer · .,• .Ill! """'"-·---··---'459 .•1411.• '399
Mlyllg AUto. Waaller ' .,,. " ·' ""'·-·-·--·-·····'1211 ..'411.. '469
MlytagBuln-lnDiahwoahlf.,., ___.,.,... 'tfi ...'S211••• 1469
Glbaon Auto. Wuller -3 .,..,11!W.,.....,__'411 ••'4211... '399
G1baon Elec. Drylr .... ...,••: __________..•~ ..'361... '319

Medium Oak ~blnet . glen

door, edj. tMiw.• •······-····--'519 ..•'-129... '379

Selid Oak Tope Clblnel· glm '"'' "'"'' "' doon.-.'369 ...'289... '249
Blankll ~hill , ..., 1'"""' .. ••*···-·-···-··········-~19 .. .'249...'219
Lit Pint Cedar Chnl ...,""'"~"'""'·--····.:.....'1!1 • .'3119•.. '329
Plow Secretory Ball: •101&gt; id· """" ....,...••••.••'29 ...'229... '189
Oak FlnBh O.k • .u- wldt, 4llftl.tt1Wtft, "'' top ..........'»t ...'281.., '229

,

an..

1lte Sat
•
•!lim be&amp;iDI
. . . . jactla ol ... Maec:l and TupiDorhBalaA 1 -c.m1,s.c.,

............. Atlaotll: Oeeu...
IHIIIillllllfli.

'

Chair . o1klcant bluevllvtL.: •.'249 ...~19... *139

Swing Rocker . .,,,. ,,, "''············-·-·-····'299 .. .'239... '199
IQueenAnne Wing t:hallfs . Cl1olctol CoiOf•········--·- '269 .. .'199... '169
LH·60YRocker/Rectlner. 'eoo~Cho1.,...•..••..........~39 ...'3211... '279
La·Z·Boy Chaise RockoriRtcllner. '""' 1•"'' ·····-'SU ...~211... '369

TELEVISIONS

-- un

w•

.-..wn

ZenHh 20" Remolt. Clble "~ ·wwOgretn ubjnet. •..•'419 ...'369_. '299
zentth 20" Remole -cablt rttd¥ -blad cablnet ______.,29 ... '379-.'329
Zentth 20" Remote - ttelmelnltor·sttrto.~--- ·-·----···--'479_ ..."'29... '369

Zenllh 25" Remole · ,... ,..,.,....,~,---·--······~99 • .'S2!L 1489
Zenilh 27" Remole .... - .'""'·····-·--····--'659 .. .'569•. 1529
Zenith 25" Remote- con~e~t•••IO-rKJrnanllar. ____ ~.....'699 ...'621 ... '569

Kelvinator 20.6cu.ft. ·• ;M~~Mr ............a••..t.on!l4t .•'741.• '619

Oak Clblnet, QI~S doors . drawtr, p~u-ou1 W tf...... ,_~69 ...1379 ... '299
!Jak Cabinet . s.t• t.ll, aprlng hinges, dr•••---···-··--·····'639 ...'499•.. '429

,~.

.........

3pc. Olk Drpp Ltaf Table &amp;2Chalos..•.......... '289 •.'220... '179
5pc. C0111toy Oak Table wiLeaf ~- ""'--·· '3811 ••'329.. '269
5pc. WhHt/Moplt Se1-.....- . •. - " •.......'809..'699.• '549
5 pc. Chrome Set -glen lap llbM/4 Otut 'lltttl cllllr..- '419 ..."J39... '269
5pc. Cherry Sel · ... ""..,,..,. "'' """·-·--'539 .•~ ..... '359

TradJUonal3 pc•. f"I'I!JIIkololottkWim •. ~---·····-··-·-··-'1699 __ .11299... '999

Kttvlnator 30" •llfodMn-ellc.-bllcli fronl-cbck &amp; tlmlr}679 ... '599... '479
KelvNtor 40~ Ellc. · clot:ki•'!*·'•tte alarega.._______'16g ...'681... 1589

_. • •n••** ~....

IALf

'

.. !799.• 1

Loveseats . sStylft To G~~ocu.....................as.9-699 • VtJUICtJtJJc~... 1299

-- 1111

,.

Zentth 27" Aemott·catliOIHin..:rttnplogrem-•tltiO ._'789 ·-'699 ... 11659
Zentth 27" Remote -contoll•v•t.nl-•~~No-olke~blntL}I99 _ '?99... 11699

tennh 27" Remote ...,,...,.,.. ....vco """ --~099 ...'171•• '829

SOFA SLEEPERS

... ...... --..
...
~

T~adHional Full Size ~or• ''"' -··--··-···········-~99 ...'53!L 1449

Conlernporory auetn Sill -"'" ;oc....,.....•.- ..'8211 ...'841... '499
LI-Z·Boy OUttn Sl,. ·- " ' '"''-·····---'1111 • .'..... '699
Colonial QUeenSID-blueprt~tr~n~tm•.• --."----"-'IM9 ...'721ri. '591
Pillow Arm OUttn Sill...,. ""'···---········'799 ..'511., '488
Li-Z·Boy Outtn Slzo.-"" ... """"-··-..·--'MI .•'799•. 'SI8

�::::1

The

Sentinel

.:~Awards

Ohio

presented to Tuppers Plains students

·'
•' ~

An fiSSembly to obServe lhe end
of the nine weeks was I'C(:Cndy held
at Tuppers Plains Elementary
School. Several parents. Dr. Janis
Schmoll, John Redovian from the
University of Rio Gtande, and John
Costanza, Meigs County elemen•,.
tary supervisor, attended.
.
All teachers presented the stu·
•
dent of the month, a citizenship
'•
award,
and perfect attendance. Stu·
i
dents of the month for October
.'
were: Kindergarten I, Darren Scarbrough, K2, Morgan Weber; first
grade, Jessica Boyles; second
grade, Carrie Wiggins; third,
..,•
Bradley Brannon; fou.rth , Josh
Kehl; fifth, Meghan Avis; and
sixth, Stephanie Evans.
,•
C!tizens~ip awards were pre·
sented to Eric Koffel, kindergarten
I; Mark Guess, K2; Chrissie Gre·
'
.'
gory. ftrst grade; Danielle Thomas,
second; Tiffany Kidder, third; Joey
.'
Marcinl\o, fourth; Kirt Spencer and
STUDENTS HONORED • THse students were recendy retog·
Leah Sanders, fifth; Jessica Bran. nized as studenta of the month at Tuppus Plains Elementary.
They are Klnder1arten 1, Darren Scarbrough, K:Z, Morgu
non, sixth.
' Weber; first grade, Jessica Boyles; second grade, Carrie Wlggtas;
Others receiving awards were
. :' third, Bradley Brannon; fourth, Josh Kebl; nn•, Meghan ·Avis;
Chapter I reading: Tiffany Spencer,
•'..· .·and sixth, Stephanie Evans.
Jon Grueser, Stacy Grueser, and
Jason Stevens.
Attendance and additional
•
•
awards were presented to: Kinder·
garten: Erik Koffel, Jaime Reel,
'.
Sarah Yost, Lucas Grueser, Mark
'
':' •. · Community Caleodar items.
.
.
Guess, Jesse Harris, Brent Hensley,
6564 or 992-7733 to reg~ster.
Morgan Weber, Chris Connolly,
appear two days before an event
. Adam Dillard, Darren Scarbrough,
SYRACUSE. Youth rally~ the Tyler Winebrenner, Courtney
• and the day or that event. Items
• must be received well ia advance Syracuse Nazarene ChiD'Ch, Fnday, Jones, Jennifer Hayman, Dusty
: to assure publicatioo In the cal· 7 p.m., for ~11 yo~th ages 12-23. Murphy, Aaron Gillilan, Megan
: endar.
Greg Cund1ff will be speaker. Adams, Bryan Minear, Jessica
Refreshments served.
Kehl and Br&lt;ttany BllllleU.
THURSDAY
First grade: Jessica Boyles,
.
• . POMEROY • First Southern
. idder; Nick
POMEROY • Meigs County Nathan Grubb, Ryan K
:· 'Baptist Church, revival, through Democratic Party, Jl!llluck victory
' Friday with Charles Altimore and dinner, Friday, 6:30p.m., Mei$S
· Henry Roe. Lamar 0 'Bryant. pas· County Senior Citizens Center 10
• -tor, invites the public.
Pomeroy. Public invited. Bring a
covered dish: Meat and beverages
COOL VJLLE • Hunter's safety will be provided. Admission is
: , course. Wednesday. Friday. Nov. free.
; 18 and 20, 6:30-9:3(&gt; p.m. and Nov.
.
'
LONG BOTTOM • Faith Full
• 2 I and 22 from I0 a.m. to 5 p.m. at
Coolville Lions Club. To regis- Gospel Church in Long Bottom
: tei', or for further information, call . wiU hold a hymn sing Friday at 7
• Bob Pullins, 667-3831·, Ed Rood, p.m. Pastor Steve Reed invites lhe
public. Fellowship will follow.
: ·-667-6348 or Ed Wigal, 667-6657.

'..

•

.
.
.

Community ·calendar

Weeks, Chrissie Gregory, 1on
Grueser, Kevin Marcinko, Cody.
Bartram, Katie Robertson, Jason
Coleman, Andrew Upton and
Hailee Cline.
· ·
Second grade: Ashley Boyles,
Travis Willford, Thomas Simmons.
Tyler Simmons, Chris Griffin ,
· Deirdre McCartney.
Third grade: Janet Ollaway', Sta·
cie Watson, Jared Marcinko ,
Tiffany Spencer, Patricia Shields,
Kim!lerly Marcinko, Tiffan~ Kidder, Jake.Householder, Jimnue Put·
man, Billie Jo Welsh; Elaine Put·
man, Darlene Connolly, and
Bradley Bl'8111)on. ·
·
Fourth grade: Wes Shafer, Gary
Vierling, Matt Grubb, Kevin
Keaton, Dustin Marcinko, Travis
Adams, Joey Marcinko, and Josh
Kchl.
Fifth grade: Meghan Avis, Crystal Be,nnett, Matt Boyles, Carrie
Sheets, Amanda Wheeler, Matt
Bissell, Molly Heines, Sheena
Gilmore, Steven Weeks, Amanda
Upton, Leah Sanders, Matt Cald·
well, Kirt Speneer, Kim Godwin,
and Jeremy Gillilan.
Sixth grade: Jessica Brannon,
Stephanie Evans, Jason Stevens,
Dustin Grossnickle, . Tommy
Coram, Sari Putman, Greg Burke,
J.T. White; Lacy Bunting, Heather
Rll(:khold and Sarah Householdel.

RAVENSWOOD ~
D.l.'s
IIYA HIU
FARM TOYS
•• a....

; . POMEROY • A meeting for
: those interested in helping to pro• vide rural water service to the resi·
:. dents of Western Meigs County
will be held Thursday at 7 p.m. at
, the Meigs County Chamber of
Commeri:e Office on East Secood
Street in Pomeroy. Township
trustees, water providers and lJOV·
emment representatives are invited.

. SATURDAY
LETART FALLS · Letsn Falls
PTO fall festival will be Salurday.
Turkey and ham dinnec will beg111
at 5 p.m. Cost is $3.50 for adults
and $2 for children and free for
childftlllllldcr -ae two. Cake decorating and pie baking contests with
all entries to be at the school by 11
a.m. Saturday.
'

LINDSAY AND DARIN TEAFORD

• Ad. fttiWe .... _...;., rour ad niDI . . . l:te pnpaid
• llMii'N ~-~for ad. paid Ia ad.aDCe.
• F,.. A.-, Ci..O.war aod Foaad oulo aadw!S wonlo will loo

Brothers celebrate birthdays
The fltSt and founh birthdays of
Lindsay and Darin Teaford were
celebrated recently with a pany at
the home of the.ir ~ts; Dale and
Linda Teaford, Racine,
The themes of "Baby's First
Birthday" and "10~ DalmatiQns"
were 'carried out with cake and ice
cream and other refreshments being
served.
Attending were twin brothers,
Dale and Derek Teliford, grandpar·
ents, Larry and Phyllis O'Brien and
Dale and Wanda Teaford, great·
grandparents, Bob and Florence

ru3da,............ ·
• Prin ad 1w aD aapllol i......,

noUy, Lisa, Patty and AiHirea Pape.
Cbris and Randy Tackett.
Sending cards and gifts were
Carol Pape, Dennis and Ellie
Teaford, Kelly Rizer, Kcnda
Campbell, Rod and Margie Grimm,
Rick, Jeri, Phillip, Jennifer and
Dawn Harris and grest·_grandpar·
ents, Rex and Mary O'Bnen.

o(

••Le

• A cJa.lllocl ad......_t placed 111 tl&amp;o CioWpolio IJ.ily
1'..U.... (acept Cluoillad ~7· a..- Card or Lop!.
Notio11) wlllaloo ap~il1 tho Polnl Plouaat
oad
lho Dally S..U.ol, nachl"ff oftr 1e,000 bo~

a....,_

Words
1
15
15
3
6
15
10
15
Monthly 15

,.

Rdlllfr: wt IU~ ynu KJr wul. ·

. POMEROY • Meigs County
: Commissioners will meet Friday at
•. 10 a.m.

..·" .

' ; • MIDDLEPORT • Cerlmic irce
•• f9p IJIIel, Middleport Arts Council,
· .· Friday 11111 Nov. 20, 6!30 p.m. Cost
"it ·$12 and includes all material.
Jully Dixon, inslnleto.r.· C.U 992·

Cpn~ umer

pay~

sales 1u.
Void where prohibited. tued
or rc~tric ~d . Mail 10: CMS
DEPT. 12999. I Fawcett

'

(';o'h '"'ll&lt;'

985 G &lt;n
843-l'ortload
247-letar&amp; F.U.
949-Radae
742-Rutlaad
667-{:out.IDe

Over 15 Words

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

$ .42
$ .60
$.05/day

8

97=:
......... ....
8ZifF

·I 5.00 mtr's obol0

9

~.
Your coal aher rWate

SEPTIC SYSTEMS

LAND C:LEARINQ

WATER&amp;. SEWER

LINES
.
BASEMENTS &amp;. . ·.-

Sf!1alllozer Work
25.00 Per lour
REASOIAILE RATES

. HOME SITES
HAULING: Limestone,,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal ·

POMEROY, Oil.

PH. 614·992·5 591

liCENSEr ond BONOED

992·7553

12·5-tfn

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
. CONSTRUCTION
••whmes

u.,.

aj: llltl

.........
lllllli IIi

Prien good wilh
•~change

11-llolp ..........
II- Sll•tloaa 'IVaatad

EXCAVATING

l~IMunDCe

14-- Jluo'- T...W.,
t:&gt;- Sehoola a I .......ioa
16- Radio, TV a CB Repair
17- Mlacolta-ua

18- Waated To Do

a Cram
a Fertiliser

per gal.

RACINE FIRE
DEPT.
EVERY
SATURDAY
6:30P.M.
Factory Choke
·12 Gauge Shot
Strictly Enforced

992·3838

10-12·'112

GUN SHOOT
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
SUNDAYS
12:00 Noon

Quality
Stone Co•.

·siZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call 614·992"'

Factory,choke 12
gauge only

. 6637
St. Rt. 7 ·

STARTS

nesllire, OH.

Terry end D~nna
lletthewa
and
1; Amber would llu to
: ' thank ContlnuHy of
Care, GreG &amp;. Miry
Ann, Bron Williams,
who ••• our own
priYilte aldler.
To all -the paople
who 8ent flower•,
card• and 1topp•d
by to help. The
Added Touch, D•b
lncl l,.oteUI, a big
thankl. Brandl
than b.
· · Jody Gum, thinks
for bllng there. Freel
Hoffman, thllnkl for
~mblr's wheelchair
ramp, . Tracy, Lee,
Phil, Steve, D1nlelle
thanks for getting
' Amber out anct
bllng good friends.
LJ. thankl-for being
, In Columbu1 when
: WI ftlw yo"' slater
5
; home. Larry Mitch
' for •II the thlnga
·' you have clone end
' for juat being there·
: (and ·• special
· thlnkl to "!hY" tam, lly,
th1 Steve
, Manderson fllmlly.)
Amblr Is out of Iter
wheelchair and 'she
geta her pins out
. this month.
: · 11'1 been • long I
monthe, but we
'
made
It, thanks to
our friends end ,
"my" fMIIIy.
Donnli M th.lwa !
,

I

2!?
....
2!?
1111111'1

-crllt
llfllll'l

1~?.a.n
1111
01

'-'
I

•

-·1
it.
WIIIIPJ

.... .
' "

OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK.
llort lloura: 1:30 o.m. to I p.m. MOndoy ~h Frtdly,
1:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. B.turclrt, Mid I 1.m. ta 5 p.m. aun.y

-

GAWPOUS

20t1Upperlllverll011d
......:1101
Nou•:,..11,tta.

I

t .

CIC
.Iii

1

hom•. No enh .tart.
up, Start It once 1nd·
you'll nevw have to
wonyabout

All H•rdwood,
S.••••ed,

C~•money

lgllnllncometllal
kMpl going when

,.

delivered.

you Cln't.
. (114)8711-6153
111m ·12 pm 11'111
· •pm·10pm

(614) 992·5449

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

hoa-...-lor

10/12112

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

PRICE REDI,JCEDI

Tho prtc.
to SN,900 Md
............. up .. ol
moy bo
quollylng pot·
oanlo buy vtfY on 3)\ocno In

""""*"

MICROWAVE OVEN
.anti VCR IIEPliR
AU MillS
lrlBI It I• Or W.
PkkU~

•LIGHT AAUJ.,ING • KEN'S APPLIANCE
"FIREWOOD

-.4BR,3-,2-,-.cl1
BR opt. P-'!f lnc*ldoo 4.800 oq. ft. 1...
bldg.
Col 114-982·7104 for Allot

BILL SLACK
992·2269
•

USED RAILROAD liES

OF CASH
IS BETTER

SERVICE

GARAGE-FUL
OF STUFF

F&amp;A TREE

._....

11!1

IIIIEUL IIIVICI

ClASSIIII ADS ! .'
wanled

RACINE GUN

CLUB
GUN
SHOOTS
SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M.
Factory 12
Gauge Choke
10128/'8211

OVERBROOK CENTER

Ron!
WendI

F.-nillv 6 Frlet11dall

when you don'L
(614) 3'78-6153

614·992·7144

•12and 6-10

GRAY'S TAXIDERMY
Deer Heads....................'19000
Turkeys .•..•.......•..........•..•1 175~
Fish .........................1400 per Inch ,
Call (304) 895-3386

after 5 p.m.

WE DO

ROOFING

AND ·EYERnHING UNDERNEATH
IARAGIS e ADDitiONS • SIDIMI .

TROMM BUILD~RS
.., O••lifr b111,.rl Coatr1ctor•
Call AI, 614·742·2321
1117/lln

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

1·800·598·5654
or 614·446·1157

w.

Vouchers

lcreos fro• hit Oflce
217L kco.. St•
POMIIOY, OliO

ClAttiFIED ADl
flU THE

HOUSE IMRflGWiftC?
CUAN wWilli I '

Happy
Grandma VII

k..... golngeven

992·5335 or
985·3561

THANA

Happy 23rd
Birthday,

. Creekload
Middleport, Ollio

4-4·92-thl

·AHANDFUL

11

31904 .......

MOTHERS AT HOME
Chrlltmu lneOmel
Eaar work from

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

C&amp;rd Of Thanks

'.
-h---------..

;a~

GUN SHOOT

$40.00 • load '
:; 1

D¥~.flnli

20 Yr. Exp.

"""

In life?

18 yra 1nd up. Earn lie
much u you want, filii
or part time from yOllr
home. No caah ·
lnveat.mant, 1M your
own boae,.even If
you're atill a atudenl
Thla Ia lnc11m11 that

21121921\fn

-1 1\\111-

12--Pt. .biOflaHeaU.,
83-- E~maY&amp;tinl
. M- Electrieal a Refrip~·tlo~
85- General Haulin1
86- Mobile .Home Re~ir
87- Uphobtery

Do yOU need I

(No Sundar Colis)

FREE ESTIMA.TES

c.....,

YOUNG

DAVIDSON'S
PLUM liNG

614·949·2801 • 949·2160 .
or 915·3839

UMESTONE- TRUCKING

41- Ho- for Lm
''"-- T ....L. for Sale
41,- Mol.lle Il-ea lor Roal
.t 4 Wll'a
4ll- F.... for RMoto~ycleo
- AJ&gt;ara-t for S..&amp; , 75- Bo.ta a -Mo&amp;on for Sale
4$- Funi&amp;load a Au10 Parto a Aoc-rieol
for R••
~ ... Ropolr
47- .......... 10 - ·
Equl-1 '

51- s,..u., Cooola
53-Aau.p.
54- Mlac. Merobaadlae
55- Buildi"ff Supplioa

FOR SALE

COMMERClAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

TRAILER liTES,
LAJiiDCLEARING;
DRIVEWAYS INSTALlED

1:1\111'

,

AREW~OD

New Homes • VInyl Siding ·
New Garages • Replacement WTndows
Room Additions • Roofing
.

HOME BITES ond

,\ I I I I " I I II 1,

- -·

R-laiA-1

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

BULLDOZER,BACKHOE

I I I i\ I "l I 'I 'I II· :-.
32- Mobile Home~ for Sale~
33- Far., for Sale
34--- Bu._
i ...., Build~p
164-...: H.a•
35-LocaaAc,....
1~- S,...J
36- Real Ea1ate Waated

· and Seeding.
·Shrub and TTrlmmlng • Removal

2·7·92·tln

For Sale or Tra.-

-.s_

1-Cardlol
1-laM.-y
3-- Aaao.ac •••·
4-CI-way
5Ada
6- 1:-t aed Fouod
7- 1:-taadFo....d
1- r..lol;. sat. a
AuclioD
9-- 'IVaaiaoiiO Buy

------------Filii

PONDS

985·4473
667·6179

a

$.30

:------1

1 /~1(

S4U9 Sill prict

I&amp;( EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

•Garages
•Complete
Remodtling .
.Stop &amp; Compare

Peca for Salo ,
Millic:aiiDitruaeatl
Fruica V...taht..

$ .20

RateS are !Or consecutive runs, broken up days will be
chaJS"d for each day as separate ads.

7],153-2073

'
I

:Rate

Drive, Del Rio. TX 7HK40

SYRACUSE • The Asbury
United Methodist Church in Syra.
cuae will have a bazaar Saturday in
the church basement with crafts
vegetable soup, pies and baked
goods.

HENDERSON, W.Va. • Square
dancing and c~o$£ing at the Hendmon CommtDIIty Building from
S:Il p.m, .
.

588-"-• .
24i-RioGnaolo
2~.,•• ow.
64S-Anlola Dlat.
379-Walaul

675-Pt. Pt......
458-Leuo
576-Apple c....
· 773-Maaoa
882-New D••en
895-Letart
937-Butrolo

992-tltoldlepor&amp;l
Pomeroy

1111131112

CHARLIE'S
SMALL DOZER
wou ·

Lawn Mowing.

FrNE8tlnwiM

. 114-7424020

SEPTIC SYSTEMS,

I
I

.

;' ~

Evonlnp

•nciTRACKHOE WORK .
. AVAILABLE.

GET RESUI.TS • I'ASTt

'

. LOTI'RIDGE ~ Counlcy music
mght at the Loltridge Community
Center will be Saturday from 7
p.m. to midnight. All bands are
welcome. Refreshments will be
aVIillble. Public mviiCd.

w,.

I

~

•
;
RIPLEY, W.V.A.· • Liberty
• Mountaineers will perform Friday
; at·Skateland in Ripley, W.Va.

446-(;alllpnl!a
3674';

•The Area's ·Number I
Marketplace

SAVE $.75 I
onanySTI"OiiTratmmt I

.......

For More Information

flEE ESTIMiiES

Days

.

29

GaDia County Metca Cot~~~ly M1110n Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

RATES

or

t

llldcloport, Ohio
Aak For Doll•

DRIVEWAY WORK
aad UMEROIIE
IIELMRY SERVICE

l;la.aified pagea COller ihe
follpuling telephone eschongea,.,

lor ....... llrot.L.r ad._;, poper). CaD loefoN2oOOp .•.
.Lor of10r publicodo&amp;&amp; 10 .Ue corroetloa
• A.di ..._,
paid lD .dYaace an:
Card of 'l'luu&amp;..
Bappr A.I a M-oriaa
Yard Sal.

...............
""" ..,. ...

You""''
aMer rebate

1:00 P·lll· Monday
1:00 pm. Tue!day
\:00 p.m. Wedne!day
\00 p.m. Thunday
1:00 p.m. Friday

a
.n

::_

•
FRIDAY
: ·. POMEROY • Meigs County
React will meet Friday at 7 p.m. at
the Meigs County Public Library.

,

• ~-It oot ..._u.le lor onon of~flnldar (chock

Birthdays observed

.

.•

lo cloublo prioo olOd ...,

• 1 paia&gt;IIM type oat, ....t

DAY BEPORE PUBLICATION
· 1:00 p.m..Salurday

Tuooday Paper
Wedneoday Papor
Thund.y Paper
Friday Poper
.,Sunday Poper

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES

.·

POMEROY ·• The Pomeroy . POMEROY · Pomeroy Senior
Group of A.A will meet ThurSday at · Citizens Dance Club will sponsor a
7 p.m. at the JTPA office in dance Saturday from 8·11 p.m.
Pomeroy.
Call 992-5763 for infor· with music by Smokey Mountain
.
; : mauon.
DrifterS. Arthur Connan! will be
,. . .
the caller. Bring snacks for the
'· · TUPPERS PLAINS • A special snack table. Public invited
• meeting of VFW Post No. 9053,
: . Tuppers Plains, will be held ThiD'S·
RUTLAND • Round and square
; day at 7 P:~· to ~ounce res~lta of dance, Saturday, 8 p.m. to mid·
,. a fund-ra1smg P~JCCI. ~ll llckets night, Rutland American Legion
: ~ are to be turned m that rughL Pub- Hall. Music by CJ and the Country
·: lie invited. Refreshments will be · · Gendemen. Public invjted.
;·. served. The regular meeting wiU be
• · held at 7:30p.m.
POMEROY • Mei~s County
•
Board
of Elections w1ll hold its
•
;: . CHESTER • Shade River Lodge official count of ballocs cast during
···' No. 453 F and AM will meet the general election on Saturday at
;·· Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the lodge I I a.m. at the board office',
• hall iri Chester. Officers will be Mechanic Street
: elected. All master masons invited.
: RefresbJt!CIIts served. •
SALEM CENTER • The Salem
Center United Methodist Church
POMEROY • Benefit for Bill will hold a bazaar Saturday at the
Wani at the Meigs County Seniors fire ho11se from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
••~enter, 5 p.m. Food, live music Food will be available and there
:• )lcluding country, bluegrass, clas- will be a bate and craft sale. Public
.; 'Sic, and gospel. No admission. For invited.
;. "more information call 367..()2()4.

COPY DEADI,JNE
Mondoy Pol!er

MoN. thru FBI, 8A.M,·5P,M. - SAT.B-12

...... _.
IIIIIIPII-

POMEROY • Sacred Heart
POMEROY • Gospel music
• Catholic Church, Pomeroy. will concen feaiuring Shammah will be
: , have its fall bazaar Thursday. Din- at the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
• ner will begin at 5 p.m. and consist Church, Laurel Cliff Road,
of cream baked chicken or ham, Pomeroy. on Saturday at 7 p.m.
• noOdles, mashed potatoes and Public invited.
: gravy, green beans, hot rolls,
:; choice of cole slaw, awle sauce or
REEDSVILLE • Fifth annual
:· pickled beets. Cost is $5 for adults Eastern High School craft show,
.; and $2.50 for children "12 and Saturday 9 a.m . to 4 p.m., spon.
: ' under. Dessert included.
sored by band boosters. Call 985•'••
423 I for infoonation.
•: : ROCK SPRINGS • Rock
· :· Sprin~s Grange will hold an open
F.AIRPLAIN, W.VA. ·Liberty
\! meetmg Thursday at the grange Mountaineers will perform S~~~Ur·
:: hall at 8 p.m. Rev. William Mid· day at the Jackson County .Jam:- dleswarth will show slides of boree in Fairplain, W.Va.
'
.; churches in Meigs County. Public
; . invited. Refreshments will be
:: served.
MIDDLEPORT • Slate painting
class, Middleport Arts Council,
;: MIDDLEPORT • Meigs Local Saturday. noon to 2 p.m. Kathryn
-: OAPSE will meet Thursday at 7 Meadows, instructor. Cost is $15
: · p.m. at Meigs Junior High School and includes aU supplies. Call 992: · in Middleport
2242 or 992-7733 to register.

Y_.Oida

.C.ll 304-273-3721

Call 992-2156

:·· :.lie

TUPPERS PLAINS • Tuppers
Plains VFW 9053 Ladies Auxiliary
will have a round and square dance
on Friday from 8 to 11 :30 p.m.
Music by Happy Hollow Boys.

Fertllztng, Weeding,

All Agee Welcome

SttDitpiiYAl.
QUAUTY PRINT SHOP
266 Mill Street

Spec•tc•nw

.

POMEROY • Connie Smith will
•
; perform Thursday at 7:30p.m. at
: Meigs High School. The C()IICCtt is
· . sponsored by the Meigs Band
Hoosiers.
·

949·2391or
1·100·137·1460'

PO..POM,
tu•UIG,
UTOI TWIIUH

Ann Mash entertained recently
with a birthda
. . y dinner ~or
the birth!lays of her. gran u ter,
Christie, age 16, and Bob, of
·,
Adams.
.
Others attending were Jim S.C. Guests were Bob, Tammie,
Latltudeisreckonedbythenumber
of degrees north or south of the equa- O'Brien, Raymood Adams, Joshua Bobby, Christie, Susie Wayne and
tor,artimaginarycircleontheeartb's and Chelsea Pape, Meriss~ son, Jesse, Mrs. Sharline Johnson
surface everywhere equidistant be- Teaford, Lori Sayre, Lori, Dustin and Samantha and Dwight Cui·
tween the two poles.
and Cameron Brinager, Zach Con· !urns.

The record low temperature in the
United States was -80 degrees . at
~7~~t Creek, Alaska, on Jan. 23,

Coltclabll .

AD Sc11M • Vlnllgt •

.

To place an ad

IEVIII'S LAWN
MAIIIRIIAIICE

Has Part-Time 7:00 to 3:00 and
3:00·11 :00 Openings for
State Teated Nurse's Aides,
Salary based on experience.
For MOre Information
Contact .Karla Hunter. \
992-6472

a.Giity HI EHldettcy
Air C..cltiolers, Heal
P1mps, f•t'ICl(es &amp;
Now Water Heaters.
Bennetts Mobile Home

&amp; Cooling

1391SaKDl'dSdtooiR.. ~~s,Oiolo·
.. .'CiiJ (614)446-9416. I-I00-172-S96l

MORRIS
GARAGE DOOR SERVICE
r.'li!D m OUR IIEW .
IBWil11 STEEL IIISULAnD
RAISED PINEL GAUGE DOOR

.

. IISTAWD PRICES
· 9x7•$275.00 16x7-$450.00
OPEIEU IISTAWI-Ya IP-$200.00 . ..
With 2 Tntnamlbrs ·

PurcHse of
lectlnFIII

.(.
' 992-6215
Pa••I'IJ, OW.

Door Pin Opeaer

.._

�-

'

..

November 1 1112
Autoa tor 8lle

32 MM!IeHllmu

torllll

3 Annaunclmlnll

WEU.., I GilT
IT 1-QE
~.
OIOM'T t ~

...... u.. ____ Te

....

,....
1• 'loldl ,...&lt;»ffli
lbt.11141,111.11...,
__
.. • _,.,.; Unlolor Co. IIIII III-

.

,- e. MliiUWrrnr_.., ~ Television

(IU'......IfiiE····

_ _ __;,.....;;

lHU, NOY. 12

·~-

0 four
R.arronge ~Hera of
Jcrombled words

Viewing
•

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TIIAT lOY ~fila
PIIILII p~

•

loy
the

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be-

low 10 form four s1mple wordJ.

• .

I

.-·.

£

•

~~=~~~f,:i;c

'•..'

I

'

1

••

I

Man to trooper: "It's a good
thing 1 wasn't driving a com··
pany car. They frown on
.
.
.
.
•
speeding.' The trooper re·
,.....~~---....:.., plied, "The company 1work for
1
0 0 0

f._,..,
u ..;S;.._;.Y'TR:..:.....:Or-.~
Is 1. 1 1 &gt;_~.

·

r-.Tl~~r'TEI_F-rl~1-';,1"''-ll 0~~m~1e"
•

_

_

_

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...

the chuckle quoted

. ..

by fi ll ing in t he missing words

_

I....J.-L.....L..J~..._...t yo'u deve lop from step No. 3 below.

·•

•

Help Wanted

18 . Wanted to Do
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Either • Usual • Liner • Mitten • TRUTH

Will tie ...., hou·;t's ring,
MJ rfll Dl•f, lw..-7111.

r.1ecn:rd

41

Hot1111

tor Renl

--- ....,

HounhDid

51

The outgoing mayor of my hometown attended a
political rally . He
. said it was Iough being a politician
because half your reputation is .ruined by lies and the
other half is ruined by the TRUTH!

.....
n .... =-:.:

se

'

Pf

S'

Stole Patrol oftlcel Thur. .ffL
t-1 Don't mt.olhlo onot

-·=-.. . .

PHILLIP

F•rm Supplr.",
:-. Lrvcstack

61 Farm Equlpmlnt

Halnl,...
VacatiOM Glurlntttd

·-AIIYMF-.,._lha 1- lha =-·
....,.
llollled--.
--on
Pomeroy,

Middleport
I VlclnHy

~

-ICO.

..
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d

•

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11-Y ond opp'

- -dly,l:.,.,...:oapm.

O.T.R.

IUnlljJ,IM-JIINIII.

-

~ 100 ...
home
,...._
2117. ····~~­

a...,. .... ,... "' -hi..

111.7to ll&lt;ody - · 71
SW,. Run Ad,
~aniiT . .haalgn;

.,.,J

lion

at pllno

Real Estate

MVIoe.

IM,Ohlo.
~

UDIF

1111t!ta5 Ptr
011

COUFITTIJ

n a •
'

•

.,.,

~

1

..........
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11IN

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Ill

---7-Zbothl,
10 pond, I r't.a hra

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1n,....-.
t-----ap.

' - ...... 10W7W210.

,
114 ... tiM.

2 - 1 ~J._!._k.
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7

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7171

•

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aldo!lr·~
.,
I

ltlblbtnce
4 Not .. lllllny
I Acquire

- - . - . . ....

12From·-Z
13 Slngar Dalla

•• 1111

GIL till;

Serv1ces

SIIPIJIII •

Tr,lll s po 1ta t ron

81

·~

•

'

1 4 - - Iota .
15 Corroded
alata

AND WHe-1 I CO

I'M A TEI&lt;RIIlii.C VtORRIEI&lt;.
I WeRRY AU.. 11-E' TIME .

17LMp

MANASE 10 510P
'WORRYING- ...

Home

entalope

11 Thoughlt

• 21 Many oz.
23 One or moro
24 Enmlnad
28 Tannll playar
Artllur32 Boxer lluhlmmad=
33 Pllrtalning to
chtwn
34 Twofold
35 Plpallna
· 37 Enfold
31 Flr11rm

IIASEIIEHT

71 AI doe for Sale

-11tL-

Oa JOU ro!" howa
torlho ........,., ...

WATEAPAQQFINQ

-~­
Laoal - - tumlohod.

tao,

FeM. I door, U:llllnl
m=~,

IN.

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Homllmproul

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....., tllirML ROQftl*derane.
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C... CoT Uo For A - · lnTonl
noddlln an '" n ,,..
cln a11111 l8ohool Age 114-441-

wl

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.... ,,. . . . . . . . In 'ddnl.. Till lolpt5ll!tg • trllllming

- Aooa 1 .... 10. 114....,.IOZL
IARH

~~

-

food

54 Poor aound
quality
58 Offspring

60 Own (Scot.)
61 EaploaiYa
(abbr.)
62 OvtriCI
63 ~antle tap

DOWN
8 Ultle

1 Clothing
2 Noodle caae
3 Bowlldared
4 Dllk for
throwing
5 Pottle
contracUon

7 Curly letter
8 Lacquer
lngradlanl
9 Greon plum
10 Spl~t lanip
11 Heraldic
CfOIHI

.

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,·

plu...... ....... ... ·'

r:'.'l!a':.~

ac

......_._

1 . .-. . .
a1. •
7 .

.,

18 TollY.
20 Group ol hro22 Showered In ·'
winter
23
.
.:

~·

24 Marqull cle .. :·
25- oodl
26 Puerto27 Or~a of
hearing
21 Carolacl
30Tort.....,'e
riYal--....

-andiiiTar_.,,_ ,·

for Sale

... Avon. 114 Ul 1311

-.up And DollvorY. 01 fW

011,

32 Mobile Homu

1'011

43AHIIt
4,5 Long llah
46 Chope down
4g Blblcal
mountain
53 Conaumed

~.

Dovlo la;!!tng llaclllna And

lAw 0... Pllymi~ Na Claolng
Coole. Na Pa7ilta. 1C* APR. can
1.0 - 1110 Aak F.: lllkl

.

40 Tropical tree
41 Hormone

-Clio-.. . . , . ..

lad....,., .Z
....... l..aoatiC( On z Acio .....

.

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TaalllgOr-11--. . ,,.

Rutllllll. OH: 4 '

U •

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And lellt&amp; ,._
llniiii_.Riw
,,...tall

.::::

If West follows to the second heart; ,
cash the A·K of spades and lad the -;
heart two, hoping East started with ~
three trumps.
'
·
, ®-.--•rca • -

51 Tied (lhoH)

18 Nlpa

Improvements

iiiial

Eut

owners' org.

,1 Jtllytlka

..,.,.......,._.eor,.
Bulldtng

Norl~

011e11~ away.

·

ACROSS

a

55

West

.,,

.

"I

By Plilllip Alder

'
The World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle ..,•..

76

II

111111

'

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: West ·

~·

-•Uaoo?

~

..
"
. _r..
....

+A

You have 10 tricks if ODly you can
get to the spade queen. Probably your
first thought i.s to hope that West has
diamond ace, but is that likely?
PW'bel-eare East's points for his one-

otart, ohoT - . , . _
......... - - . ....,. All I ""'::::.."'!...
pad cona, tt,OOO. :10W714Gl11•
:---111211 ,
,_ CITIAFN I'ED KEF,
=lt.antha11M. . -

Think
the unthinkable

!rum here?

........,. 1,1011 ':·

dlllan, I -

+A K

'KQ I09862
. .J 5 3

1

1111
iiiiO • -·
l1,110AIIer4P.II.I-11110.

1111 ....,

••

SOUTH

Sooth

Motorcyclea

wl •
•,
- . Cllt11-Q71111f

tA96

Hugh Kelsey ~ one .of the best ·
t+
Pass
1+
writers. In his books, he mixes 4 •
Pass
Pass
PIIS!I
~
on which the "normal" is some·
·,.,
times right and sometimes wrong.
Opening lead: K
·&lt;
You, the reader, have to decide which
• :~
·which.
1r·'--- -- - - - - -- ..J ••'•
.,
Kelsey's latest mini quiz book , "Test ,
'•
Your Card Play 6" (published by Gol, ..)
lancz and available for $8.95 from Tbe spade response?
· .;;
Bridge World,. 39 West 94th Stree~ 1 Perhaps West has queen doubletoD ,;
New York, NY 10025), COJitains nine 1in diamonds, but a better line i.s iD try.·,:
defensive and 27 declarer-play prob- ·to endplay East. You should ruff the ',.
lems that will challenge anyone below : club queen with the heart six. Next . ·
expert level. Today's deal is the sixth cash one top trump. Here West dis- "'
in the book. Is it "normal" or not?
. cards a club. Take one mo.re top trump
West leads the club king against a~d then unblock the A·K of spades. co\
your four-heart contract. You win Ftnally, ext! wtlh the heart two. East :::,
with the ace and play the heart king. · must elther lead a spade into dummy:~.,
West wins with the ace and continues ' Q-10 tenace or play a dlaiiiOIId, al~,":.
with the club queen, East discarding ing you to score a trick with dummy's: ·
the spade two. How should you play king. You get two tricks back (OJ' the· .

/

ALLEYOOP

Wll
For
Will • •
Car - Truck
r.deln. c.IIIM Ul 0140. ·

aae. ....

+J9762
,7&amp;43

+

Cool:

.., .....
Hollar-.

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'' DONAHu~ "1 / : '

.

'

114 111 ........:,. p.M.

~--.--.a171.

:1:,.-.,:-:.~

lo-llni -

~~~ lldl $11\
or POJ&amp;Of ._ii ~

11 . Help wanted

N~Y..T ON

AII/AI-.,

I II ' ' In .Hw . . d • I 11 1 , _ l:ioiP, Pilat.
1110; 1 lloltloln ........
~

52 SpOrting Goode

18 Wanted to Do

Emplo ymen t Serv rcc s

•

IN A vi/IY.

---·~-IU,.A77

Training ·

hao'pp

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GOOD UED APPI" ••
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_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ $1 .25 plus a long , self·addraaoed ,
stamped envelope to Astro-Graph, c/o
'this newspaper, P.O. Bo• 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428. Be sure to siale
your zodiac sign.
BERNICE
SAGITTARIUS (Now. 21-Dec. 21)
BEDEOSOL Something
that worked oul rather wall
lor a friend mlghl not work out lor you
- If you try lo rapllcale your pal's tac·
Ilea and procedures. Think tor yourself,
don 't be a copycat.
•
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-.IMI. 11) Trying
loo hard to be your own penon today .
could haVe Its drawbacks. If ,~ t.
moving In one direction,· as!&lt; ·you,..!
why you're motivated to 'do the
oppoalte.
, AQUARIUI (.IM: 2IOrFeb. 111 In ordor
. to be productive today wheno tul&lt;' are
· Now. 13, 1112
, CDn!)efned, IDIIOW prectlcltl pocadl.res.
You could do better than ul!lal In the.i Don't a1tempt to do In one s t e p . year ahead In your material ilflalrl
thing thai COUld tllce -al.
·
wall aa In your eoc:lalllte. However, you PlaCJ!I (Fell. 20 M1rctt •1 Stidl to
must be careful to maintain a harmon!· I managing your own ilflalrs today u
ous balance the two.
r best you can, Instead of butting In end ·
~ORPIO (Oct.-· 21) Be modeot j trying to run . things lor others. You'll
today regarding your recent accom- 1have your hands lull dOing a good job

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lng the lnftuences'll&lt;&gt;vernlng you In the standard lodty, 10 be l!lre to taka ada- - ·
year ahead. Send lor Scorpio's Astro- quate time to carefully think eacllotap through Graph predictions today by mailing ; lhrough When dealing with critical · . the dloe.
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Rea.der questions legitimacy Gardeners tour Long Bottom home
of 'physical psychotherapists
Dear Au Llladen: I just saw
a TV show about two women
who operate similar businesses.
They call themselves ~physical
psycbotherapists.'
What lhey do is act.OUt fantasies
with their clieniSt both male and
female. For example, if a man
desires to have sex with a celebrity.
a neighbor, a co-worker or the
spouse of a friend but doesn' have
the cciurage to apprvach her. the
physical psychothempist will act
out his fantasy with him.
This presumably relieves the
client's slrCSS, and it is all very
professional. There are no pmonal
entanglements and no guilt. It is
viewed as 'a visit to the docLOr."
The fee is $100 for a half hour.
Both "doctors" pay llll\CS on their
income, and lhe government recognizes lhcit business as legal.
·
Tell me, Ann, when did they
legalize prostitution .in die United
SlateS? •• S.I.
DEAR S.L: The only place in the
United States where prostitution is
legal is in Nevada.
Since it is a well-known fact
that sex does relieve stress, it could
be argued that these "physical
psychotherapists' are ~onning a·
useful service lind not harming

is the bad eating habits that got them
where lhey are. Please, Aan, wake
up America. If people learn to eat
right and exercise, they will see a
huge difference. •• HONOLULU
OBSERVER
DEAR HONOLULU: You have
made some exceUent points about
fast-food restaurants, high.fat diets
and insufficient exercise. People
need to pay a lot m&lt;n attention to
an of the above, but there's more to
it than tbaL
Noi all ov~t people pig out
and fail to exercise. Metabolism bas
a great deal to do with whelher a
person ~ fat or thin. Genelics is the
wild card in the game, and it is
played more often dtan you think.
So how about a liule less self.
righteousness and a little more
compassion for those who are
fighungrbeBauleoftheBulge?
People need to stop loolciilg at
fashion magazine models as the
standard and pay more attention to
the fringe benefits of eating healthy
and staying in shape. They will look
betler, feel better lind live longer.
Gem of die Day: You have passed :
the true test of maturiJy when
keeping a secret gives you more
satisfaction dtan passing it along.

Ann
Landers

anyone. Aad now, since AIDS has
been addej!IO die sex scene, maybe
we should reconsider legalizing
prostitution and mandate govern·
ment inspec:tion
30 days. Wbile
I am 1101 recommending it, it COUld
be a way to go,
Dear Ann Landers: I live in
Hawaii and just returned from my
f&amp;rSt trip to die mainland. I could not
believe all those TV comlllCII:ials on
how to lose weighL
Instead of spending so much
money on quick weight-loss
schemes, why don't people get seri·
ous about nutrition? On almost every
comer in Southern California, there
is a fast-food restaurant, a donut
shop or a hot dog place. Most
Americans seem to live on foods
that are high in fat and sugar,
artificially Oavored and colcred, and
either microwavable or carry-outs
from the deli.
Forget to save some of your
To top it off, there are anorexics favorile Ann Landers colu11111s?
and bUlimics woo do notn!alizc that "Nuggets and Doozits" is the
slarVing dlemselves only slows down /UI.fWer. &amp;lid a self-at/dressed, long,
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes in their metabolism. and that lhe body . busiMss-siu tllvtlopt and a check
Pomeroy will be ~onducting a wiD then by to store as much fat as or mt111zy ortkr for $S (lhis illciUdes
bowl-a-thon during the week of possible to compensate.
poslage and handling) lo: Nuggets, •
Friday for St. Jude Children's
I have no sympathy for overweight c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562,
Research Hospital. Mrs. Pat Carson people who say it's all a matt« of Chicago, 111. 60611-0562. (In
has volunteered to coordinate the genes. The only thing they inheiited CaiiDii4, send $6.)
"Bowl-For-Life" campaign.
AI SL Jude. scientists and physi·
cians work side-by-side seeking not
only better means of ueaunent, but
also. the cause, cure and prevention
of catastrOphic disea- in children.
WRANGlER
CHIC
LEVI'S
All information ~ at SL Jude
is shared freely with other hospitals
JORDACHE
nXAS
BUCK
and instiDIIions the world over.
CHIPPEWA
JERZEE'S
LEE
SpcinSOJ forms are now avail·
able at Pomeroy Bowling Lanes.
WHARTT
TONY LAMA
-KEY
· Further information may be ,
obtained by contacting Mrs. Carson
RED WING
SUNSn BLUE
HANG nN

every

The October meeting of the
Wildwood Garden Club was an
outing touring die Jand~raped yard
and log home of Eddie and Sharon
Hupp, Hupp's Landscaping and
Lawn ServiCe, Long Botlilm. Mr. and Mrs. Hupp described
their many shrubs, flowers and
trees designed around a goldfish .
pond with an arched bridge walk·
way. A patio overlooked hillside
landscapmg, ail orchard and a large
scenic pond. Hupp noted to plartt
shrubs so that the colors blend
together especially the fall foliage.
They !ben treated everyone to large
·

1

Ohio Lottery

•

Orlando routs
Washington
in NBA tilt

apples that two were ~nough for
Evelyn Hollon had die IIIOIIIhly •
.one pie.
report on Butternut squash. It is • '
' The club then !raveled to the bard-shelled fruit and stores well :
home of Sonya Wolfe for a tun· for winter usc. It is delicious
chcon.
steamed or baked and it also makes 1
A short business meeting was good pies. It is a great source of :
presided over by Ktihryn Miller. fiber, toO. Buaemut types are more •
Doris Gruescr had devotions read· rcsisrant 10 squash borers than any :
!,nl "'Yhen Winter Comes," and other types.
.
,
;
. Blcssmgs on All Our Days." For
For the arrangement of tl)e •
roll call e~eryonc was to bring a month, Peggy MOQO'e used yellow I
d~onlled pumpkin. Mrs. Gruescr mums and marigolds in a pumpkin.
Jave a report on die county .meet·
The meeting adjoprncd with
mg and noted die annual Chrislrnas members ancl guests, Mary.Pugh .,
Oower show will be held ~v. 21 and Edith Sisson, admiring the •
and 22 at Carleton School m Syra- view of lhe river valley.
cuse.
,

Pick 3:

142
Pick 4:
6573

Page4

Community Thanksgiving service. set
'

Pbins for the annual .community
Thanksgi vinJ service were made
when the Meigs County Ministerial
Association met Wednesday at the
Racine Pentcco$tal Assembly.
The services will be held on
Tuesday, Nov. 24, at 7:30p.m. at
Trinity Congregational Church in
Pomeroy, with the Rev. Deron .
Newman of Syracuse as die speaker,
Holiday activities were dis·
cussed and will include SUPPOrt of

the Meigs Cooperative Parish
Christmas food diStribution project
with contributions of food, money,
and voliJ!Iteen.
. ·
Reports were fiven on the
monthly ministers visits to the
Buckeye Youth Center in Colum·
bus to sec Meigs County youth
confined there; This has been an
ongoing project for the {liSt year. ·
Programs for mccungs which
are held on the second Wednesday
of each month were discussed. The

Pomeroy United Meihodist Church •
wil\. host the December meeting. A :
Christmas luncheon with husbands :
and wives as guestS is planned.
·•
Officers are the Re.v. Roland '
Wildman, Trinity Church, presi· ,
dent; the Rev. Fr. Walter Heines,
Sacred Heart Church, vice .presi- ;
dent and program leader; the Reli. i
Glen
McClung,
Pomero~ :
Nazarene, treasurer; and To!l\ ;
Gates, Nazarene Church, Racine, .
secrel&amp;r)'.
·

VoL 43, No. 143
Copyrighted 1992

.

RAI..EIGH, N.C . (AP) -John
Lllwsoo, a British adventurer, made
hia firll trip to .~ Caroliau in
1700. He wrote 1 book about it in
1709 called "A New Voyage 10

Am38&amp;•
SX/25

Ohio · ~an

killed .by falling
tree limb in wind storm

til

Lawson was later appointed
Surveyor General of North Caroli·
na and supervised settlement of
New Bern, N.C. Here, in 1711, he
was seized by hostile Tuscarora
Indians.
They put him to death by fire
torture - a procedure Lawson had
graphically described in his book.

By The Associated Press

WIND DAMAGE - Kevin Desmond, lert,
and Butch Gravett Wlllk along what used to be
t~ east lower wall of Gravett's Marine in New-

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Reg, lt.t5 1&lt;13·398

RAVENSWOOD,W.Va.(AP)· ·
Ravenswood Aluminum Corp. and
die United Steelworkers union,
which fought hiuerly during a 19·
month labor dispute, are now joining bands in a bid to regain lost
business, of6cials said.
The union urged breweries and
other CI1SIOfJim to stop bu,ing
"scab aluminum" in the heat o the
diSpute, which began in November ·
1990 when union members' three·
year conlracts 1111 ouL
The dispute was settled last June,
but not before violence, court batUes and hard · feelings bct.ween
company officials, 1,700 union
members and about 1,000 replace·
mcnt workers.
Beet manufacturers Slrah's and
Anheuser-Busch did take their
business elsewhere, but now

port, Ky., Thursday night. No one WIIS Injured
as ,high wiads blew out both the east and west
walls or lbe buildinK. (AP)

.Ravenswood Aluminum waniS it.

baCk.

uwhen the war's over, itts over,"
union member Joe Chapman said
Wednesday.
Ravenswood
and
the
Steelworkers are phoning, writing
and meeting with former cusLOmers
to recoup business. The success or
the canipaign will not be known un'
til year's end, said Ravenswood
spokesman Pat Gallagher.
"'We're in the time frame now
where those (conlriCIS) are being
negotiated," Gallagher said. He
said many conlracts for beveragecan aluminum run on a calendaryear basis.
"We arc workin' very bard 10 reobtain those. That s probably all I
can say now, .. he said.
Gallagher would not, say how

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' Charges of gross sexual imposi lion are expected to be filed
against a 32-year-old Middleport man today.
· Meigs County Assistant Prosecutor Linda Warner said that
charges will be flied in either Meigs County Court or on a bill of
infonnation in Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
·
According to a reJl!ll1 from Middleport Police Caftain Bruce
Sllfift. the alleged incidcl1t involves a four·yCif-.old Jir . Swift said
thalThe Meigs County Children's Services bas been mvolved in the
·investigation along with Middleport police and personnel from the
Continued oa page 3

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schools and colleges fn the 19931995 slate budget
Many counties and regional
transit systems piggyback taxes on
the sr.ate sales taX. For example, the
lOW rate in Cuyahoga County is 7
perctnL
A tax referendum would let
Voinovich and slate legislators off
the political hook by leuing vo1ers
decide the question, the newspaper
said:
.
Voinovich won't act without a
vote and won't ask for more money
unless scliools and colleges implement refonns said Michael Daw•
son. the Voin~vich adminislralion 's
.

--Local briefs-----.

..

Wilt 0¥11' . . . IDOIIOIII

CLEVELAND (AP) - Gov.
Geor$e Voinovich may ask voters
to ra•se Ohio's sal~s. tax from 5
percent to 6 percent m order to provide another $800 mHiion a year
for education, according to a pub·
lished report todsy.
·
The decision hinges on legisla·
live leaders and reportS Voinovich
expeciS to receive next month from
a study of Ohio's educalion needs,
The Plain Dealer reported.
The state .must erase a projected
$300. million budge~ _deficit before
June 30, but the addiuonal sal~ taX ·
revenues would not be apphed to
the red ink, the newspaper report·
ed. The money would go solely for

clock--

_..____ _

Charges expected to be filed today
'

tree limb and at
100,000
homes.and businesses lost power
when a sLOrm with winds up to 70
mph swept across Ohio.
.
Thursday's storm also dumped
as much as 2 inches of rain in some
areas, overflowing creeks and
rivers. No major property damage
or evacuations were reported.
Flood warnings were in effect
today in northwest, central and
north-central Ohio.
Wind speeds had dropped 10 10
to 20 mph today. T~:mperatures
were in the 30s about 25 degrees
colder than o~ Thursday, 1he
National Weather Service said.
Lows tonight were forecast in the
20s.
Harris Perkins, 77, of
Zanesville, was killed while driving on U.S . 22 in Muskingum

many conttacts were lost, but said
it was "a significant portion of our
business...
Ravenswood is suuggling be·
cause of a slow economy and a glut
in the aluminum market
In a Nov. 4 leuer to employees,
company
President
William
Hampshire · praised workers for
puUing 10gethcr 10 solve .the company's problems. but said the
forecast (or 1993 was gloomy.
"Until we see improvement, we
will be maintaining a very conser·
vative approach and clo~ly con·
trolling all cost elements," .
Hampshire said.
· Ravenswood lost nearly $26 mil·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
lion in 1991.
Senate committee accepted a
The company employs about revised budget bill that may lead to
2,000 workers, including about higher electricity rates in Ohio, but
1,625 Steelworkers.
sponsors say the increase would be
minimal.
The bill originally imposed a fee
on ulilitics and other air polluters to
help make up a $4.6 million cut in
the Ohio Environmental Protecuon
Agency's budget.
But on Thursday. the Senate
Finance Committee took under
study an amendment letting coal·
spokesman.
"The governor has had discus- burning utilities affected by the bill
sions wilh a number of people pass the $8-per-ton emissions fee
'
atiouf a number of options. I want on to cusLOmers.
The
EI?A
said
the
fee
would
to make this clear: No decisions
have been finalized ... And the gov· generate about $5.1 million a year.
Sen. Richard Finan, R-Cincinernor won't support anything that
nati,
who offered the amendment,
isn't put to a vote of the people,"
said
the
cost to most utility cus·
Dawson said. ·
tomers
would
be "minuscule." He·
This fiscal year's total appropri·
ation for the Ohio Department of said the utilities have the right to
Education and Ohio Board of recover costs mandated by the LegRegents was about $6.71 billion, so islature.
Roger Dyer, spokesman for
an $800 million boost would repre·
sent an increaSe of less than 12 per- Columbus Southern Power Co .,
said the fees would cost his compa·
cent.
1
Legislators could submi,t th~ taX ny $140,000 a year. He said it
hike to voters as a consutuuonal would likely cost residential cusamendment, or because of a sectioo tomers pennies, but big induslrial
already in the state constit~tion, customers may have.LO pay thoucould simply pass a tax h1ke to sands of dollars more a month.
The committee is reviewing
benefit schools, contingent on voter
what has become an omnibus bill
approval.
·
Should legislato,rs balk at e~en the Senate is scheduled 10 vote ~m
asking a tax qucsuon, Vomov1ch next week as lawmakers return
could propose a 6allot issue, from a campaign recess. They're
bypassing the legislature, by gath· scheduled to adjourn in December.
The bill makes a(jjustments in
ering 34 7,76S voter signatures.
Through a spokesman, the legis· the budget enacted last summer for
lature's top Democrat, House the biennium that slllrtcd July 1. II
Speaker Vern Riffe; D-Wheelers· does not' lnvol ve current talks
burg, said Thursday . nobody h~d aniong leaders on a projected, $300
discussed a sales-taX mcrcase wuh million deficit for the fiscal year
ending June 30.
him.

8-1•11 may
• her
mean hIg
eie·ctric rates

Newspaper says Voinovich
considers higher sales tax

PILLOW TOP.

tamers by 8 a.m. today: he said.
Crews worked to resLOre power
through the windshield of hi,s car, to about 10,000 Payton Power and
Srate·High~ay Patrol Trooper Creg Light Co. customers. spokesman
Bryce Nickel said. About 75Q cusMaxwell S31d.
Perkins' wife, Eleanor, 75, was tomers in Huber Heights and
Englewood north of Dayton
not in)ured, the palrOI said. .
Wmd gusiS were 61 mph m the remained without nower this mornarea at. the time, the weather ser- ing.
In central Ol!io, some 25,000
v1cc sa1d.
.
customers
were without power,
The Anderson Ferry. wh1ch
said
Banie
Brandt,
spokesman for
transpo~ts passcnger.s across _the
Columbus
Soulhern
Power Co.
Oh10 R1ver from Cmcmnat1 to
This
morning
about
350
remai~
norlhern Kentucky, was stranded
without
power,
he
said.
•
arter winds caused a rope to break:
The
stonn
knocked
out
power
at
Ferry owner ~~I A~derson sAtd
a
Columbus
city
water
plant,
whK:h
the boat was amvmg m Kentucky
when a rope connecting the ferry in turn slopped water pumps aild
and its push boat broke about 5 service in some suburbs and ~
p.m. The two vessels drifted 600 of Columbus for about 90 minutes,
feet lO shallow water. Ferry passen· said Jackie England, Water Di~­
gers were put ashore in Constance, sion spokeswoman.
"We're sort of lucky that the
Ky ., until the ferry could be
offices
were closed" downtown
maneuvered back to shore. No one
when
waler
stopped Oowing, Engwas injured,
'
land
said.
·
"I knew it was bad when the
Some
40,000
customers
of
barge hand crossed himself," sail
passenger Jennifer Camar of · Cleveland Electric Illuminating Co.
lost service, said spokesman Frartk
Cleveland.
Hayes.
About 4,000 customers
In Newport, Ky ., high winds
were
without
power this morning.
ripped open a wall at Gravett's
At
least
6,000
customers of
Marine Sales &amp; Services.
Buckeye
Rural
Electric
CooperaThe winds downed trees and
tive
in
southeastern
Ohio
lost
power lines across Ohio, sheriffs
power,
said
operations
manager
and utility officials said. By 1his
morning power had been restored Eddy Reece. By this morning
power had been restored to aU but
to all but aboul 5,200 users.
About 18,000 homes and busi- 100 users.
The weather service said 2 inchnesses in southwest Ohio and
es
of rain fell in the Day10n arcs
northern Kentucky lost power, said
while
Cleveland received I 1/2
Marshall Hacker, a spokesman for
inches.
Most other areas received
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Elec1ric Co.
an
inch
of
rain or less.
Power had been restored to all cusCounty about 8 p.m. The wind

::;:;::= =;;.:;;:;::;;;;:.:;;;:=::::::___ -· -J~·mtan ··w~~· -lc:illl~l~y ·a-falling -·· sn~pped off a.tree limb that broke

RAC, unionjoinforces
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OPEN 9 am-5 pm Mon. thru sat.
Except Friday Open Until 8:00 P.M.

Carolina.··

I

Several hundred Meigs County but by 1 a.m. all service had been Most of the power has now been
residents experienced power out- · restored, Ernie S ission, Pomeroy reSLOred.
·
ages Thursday night due to the manager, reported.
The windstorms hit in south:
Columbus Southern 'Power's wes1ern Lawrence County about 6
severe windstorms which hit the
Clarence
Robson, line supervisor, p.m. Thursday evening and then
area.
All three companies, Ohio said that Danville was hit hard with tracked north and east through the
Power, Columbus Southern Power, aboul 100 customers in that com- company's five service areas laking
and Buckeye Rural Electric. Coop· munity being without service for down lines in atlenst21 areas, said
erative, Inc., had outages but all about six hours. The first reportS of Reece. Consu111ers should continue
reported that most consumers had outages came about 6:15 . All to call in ourages to help pinpoint
their service restored early this power was restored about .! a.m., the damage, he said.
·
morning. Much of the line damage Robson said.
All Buckeye line personnel were
Buckeye Rural Electric had on duty from early evening throug~
resulted from falling trees, it was
widespread
power ourages in their much of the night and contract
reponed.
Winds were clocked by the service area. Gallia, Jackson, Vin- crews were also called in to help
Meigs County Emergency Medical ton, Meigs and Alhens Counties, restore service and repair damage
SerVice at. their height at 51 miles affecting an estimated 5,000 !O to lines and P?les.
· :
6,000 consumers.
per hour.
Reece S31d B.uckeye has initiat:
That is a "conservalive" esti- ed a ver~ .aggressive right-of-way
About 80 RuUand and Syracuse
mate,
according to the coopera- hne cleanng program this past year
customers served by Ohio Power
were wilhout service for several live's operations manager. Eddy which probably reduced the num;
hours. Outages began about 8 p.m. Reece, who said a full assessment her and size of ourages during lhe
was not possible until this morning. Thursday night stonn.
·

CASE
LaCROSS
GUESS (Sweatshirts)

Colonist's end

.

~

Storm leaves several
hundred Meigs area
residents without power:

DAN'S

.ROCKPORT

'

...,•

2 Sectlono, 14 Peg•• 25 cenlt
A Mulllmodlo Inc. N-peper ·

_, Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, November 13,1992

Bowl-a-thon set

at 992-6681.

. Low lolll!!bt ... 20L Saturday,
SDOW nurrles. High Ia 3Go:

DONATION MADE • GTE North has made a $1,500 contrl,
bution to the Meigs County Chamber or Commerce, to be used
toward economic development work. Chamber board member
Ernie Sisson, right, accepted the check..from Neal Krumme,
Athens/Pomeroy Supervisor for GTE. (Sentinel Photo by David
Harris)

'
I

•

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