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                  <text>Page-.1 0-The Daily Sentinel

•

1\Jeaday, November 5, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

U. of Iowa students,
Rock hall names inductees
profs gather to share grief
By GREG SMITH ·
Associated Press Wrlt~r
IOWA. CITY, Iowa (AP) _
Universily of Iowa studen~s and
· · professors came together today to
share their grief over the shootin's
of five coll!lllgues. The school s
president told the hushed gathering
it was time 10 "begin the long and
difficult process of healing."
·
Classes were canceled and the
university community was invited
the student union to try to sort out
. emotions taised by ·the killings Friday by a disgruntled former graduate student. More than 200 staff
members and students came.
"We cannot make sense of
this," university President Hunter
Rawlings told the .group .."We are
out of our depth. Last Friday, the
. universicy was senselessly diminished."
.
He said the healing process
would follow this time of "deep
and terrible sadness.'·

CLEVELAND (AP) :.... Electric
' Induction ceremonies will .be
· 1 d J' 1 H ndrix B00k
held in New York on Jan. 15.
guttar egen un e
'
er
Hendrix will ent,er the hal!' as
T.
&amp;
the
MGs,
counter.
singer
Johnpart
of The Jimi Hendrix ExperJ'.
Authorities said that the former ny Cash .00 others wtll be inducted
·
student, Gang Lu, ~as angry into the Rock and Roll Hall of enec, a group known for· its J%&lt;is
beca~se hts doctoral dtssertatton Fame in Jan~.
.
psychedelic styl~. Their hits includwasn t ch~sen by a commtttee for
. The 1992 Roctang Ro!UWJ.Qf. ed "Purple Haze" and "Foxy
an acade1111c honor. ·- - - .:- - Fame Museum indu·crees were Lady." He may be tiest.remem. He took the a , 3 ~-cah ber announeed Monday.
bered for his rendition of "The Star
revol_ver to a weekly meenng or the
Artists to be inducted also Spangled Banner" at the Woodph&gt;'Stcs and astr,onomy deparunent . inclode British rock band the Yard- stock Festival in 1969.
.
Fnda~, where he began a rampage birds, rhythm and blues performers
Hendrix was 28 when he died of
t~ whtch he killed five people and
overdose Sept. 18, 1970.
he Is1ey Brot hers, an d bl ues a drug
t
·Shaffer
said Hendrix "redefmed
htmself. .
.
stood up and started shoot- ~:~~~~.s::::,d Dave, and Bobby the role of the elec:tric guitar" and
. mg. ~td Paul Hansen, a ~h
Paul Shaffer, musical director or · that his recordings "sdll sound cut·
s~~e~ttst m the. de~~tment. He "Late Night with David Letter- ting edge." .
·· . ....
dtdn t say anythmg. .
.
man" and the annual induction ecr·
The Yardbirds prod]ICed lhrec of
Lu, 28, shot to death two profes- emony, announced the results of rock music's greatest guitaris~ =
so~ and lhe st~ent whose ~sser- · voting by more than 600 perform· Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck and Jimmy
tattonJast spnng was ,nommated ers, producers, writers, record Page.
· ·
for the aw8J'!I over Lu s. 'Il!en be executives and broadcasters. NomiCash is credited with developing
le~t the meeong_roo!'l and killed a nees wete chosen on the basis of "rockabilly" with .such hits as "I
thrrd professor m liis o~fice. Next their contributions or influence on Walk the Line," "Folsom Prison
he went 10 another butldmg, where . rock music.
Blues" and "A Boy named Sue."
he fatally shot an adm,inistt:ator at
Shaffer said he was ''personally
The Isley .Broth en had their
the 28,000-student untversuy and thrilled'' with the selection of musical origin in a church choir in
wounded her secretary.
BookerT. and the MG's.
Cincinnati.
"I've got to say that Booker T.
c;onstruction is scheduled to
and the MG's were really my inspi- begm next sul)lmer on the Rock
~ ration-when I put urfetller
llana~and-R~Il.Hall-of ·Fam~ ~nd·M~seo-- -. for the 'Late Night with Davtd Let· urn. butldmg, a $65 mtlhon P.roJCCt
Also recognized: Rep. Barbara tennan' show," he said.
destgned by archttect ~.M. Pet. The
Boxer, D-Calif.; Johnnetta Cole,
Selected as early influences on butldtng ts to be completed tn
president of Spelman College in rock music were Elmore Janies and 1994.
AJianta; Washington Mayor Sharon Professor Longhair, Leo Fender,
On Oct. 23, rock hall officials
Prau Dixon; acuess Jodie Foster; developqf of the electric guitar, and an~ounced that Rolling Stone magvideo producer Callie Khouri: New songwriter Doc Pomus were select- azme has d~nated a ~ollectt~n of
York Times columnist Anna edas ndn-perfonning inductees.
memorabtl!a of Jams Jophn, a
Quindlen; Texas Gov. Ann
To be eligible this year, a per- ~k-blues~mgerofthe 1960s. The
Richards; broadcast correspondent form·er must have hat! a record dtsplay wtll be part of the rock
Cokie Roberts; and breast-cancer released (jyring or prior 10 1966.
music museum, even though Joplin
video creator Lilly Tartikoff.
has not been tnducted mto the hall.
A special honor went to Army
Maj. Marie T. Rossi, a Desert
Storm pilot who died in a .heli·
copter accidenL
The women, chosen by a panel
The original version of "Word
By JUDIE GLAVE
of 29 distinguished women and the
to
the
Badd!! ", referring to reports
Associated Press Writer
editors of the magazine, will be
Michael
Jackson lightened his skin,
NEW YORK (AP) - Jermaine
featured in Glamour's December
says:
Jackson hints iri a recording that
issue.
''Once you were made
never made it 10 the stores that his
"You
changed your shade.
superstar
biQther
Jo[ichael
is
RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif.
"WaS
your color wrong?
ashamed
of
being
black,
(AP) -Just call him Dr. Bono.
"Could
not btrn back
New York's WQHT-FM and its
Singer-actor-politician Sonny
"It's
a
known
fact.
Bono picked up another title Mon- Los Angeles companion station
"You
were
too
far gone."
KPWR,FM began playing the
day: doctor in disaster medicine.
The
verse
rcwriuen
became:
Bono received the honorary unreleased version of Jcrmaine
"Once
you
were
made
degree at the fii'St National Disaster Jackson's song "Word to the
"You changed yotir ways."
Conference for helping rescue vic- Badd!!" last weekend. A softened
An
industry source spealcing on
tims of July's bus crash that killed version appears on his new album. condition
of anonymity said the
KPWR program director Rick
six people mPalm Springs.
original
lyrics
deemed too
Bono, mayor of Palm Springs, Cummings said a tape just hard-hilling, so were
Jcrmainc changed
helped carry stretchers after the bus "showed up in an overnight deliv- them.
.
ery
package.·!
honestly
don't
know
ran off a road and down a boulder·
Epic Records .in New York,
who sent il."
--·
strewn hillside.
which
represents Michael Jackson,
Tnc timing seems apropos:
Bono. a Reoublican candidate
refused
to comment Monday.
for U.S . Senate, could not accept Michael Jackson's new single
"'Word
to the Badd!' is a song
the honor in person because he was "Black and White" hom his that comes from my heart and it
attending the dedication of the upcoming· "Dangerous" album doesn't detract from the fact that I
Ronald Reagan Presidential also was apparently leaked to radio love my brother," Jermaine Jack:
stations last weekend. His song is
Library in Simi Valley.
about the irrelevance of skin color. son said'in a statemenL

OLDEST HEART RECIPIENT • The Rev. Earl Oldham, 71,
displays a pulse sensor on his finger as be recovers Monday at
Baylor Medical Center in Dallas after surgery thai made him the
world's oldest heart transplant recipient. Five surgeons removed
Oldham's weak heart on Saturday and replaced it with tbe heart
of a 23-year-old donor. (AP)

Alaskan moose arrives
at Columbus Zoo

tion for other zoo keepers to push
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Cold temperatures that sent other Charlotie into the crntc.
Sending Alaskan animals to
animals indoors was perfectly sutl·
other
parts of the country allows
ed for the newest resident at the
"people
to get a good look at the
NEW YORK (AP) - Glamour
Columbus Zoo.
type
of
animals
we have up here," magazine pronounced Anita Hill
Charlotte, a 6-month-old
Alaskan moose. will join two male Ms. Denney said. "I hope people one of "1991's bright spa~"
The law professor whose sexual
and one female moose at the zoo's don'tthink moose are too ugly.
They're preuy awesome."
harassment allegations nearly cost
North American animal exhibit.
Charloue stands about.4 112 feet Clarence Thomas a scat on the
Charloue, an orphan found near
Anchorage, Alaska, arrived at the high and weighs 200 pounds. When Supreme Court was am8ng 10
zoo Friday, said Dan Hunt, assts- grown, she could reach 6 feet and women the magazine honored
tant curator of mammals. She will 650 pounds, Hunt said. Eventually, Monday. Hill was·praised for ''sacCharlotte is expected 10 be bred.
rificing her privacy to spealc out for
be held in quarantine for 30 days.
The
Alaskan
moose
is
larger
women ...
Charlotte balked when Alaska
than
its
cousin,
the
North
American
The magazine said it chose
Zoo staffers tried to lure her into a
moose,
he
said.
The
Columbus
Zoo
women who were "beacons of
shipping crate for the trip with a
milk bonle, zoo keeper Shirley is believed to be one of the few integrity, humor, guts and grace in
Denney said in Anchorage. The exhibiting Alaskan moose. he said. an often graceless and cold-blooded world."
milk served as enough of a distrac-

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~-D,6;S

Low 1oalp1 Dtlf J0s.
Tbtil'llllay, 1D081ly cloudy. High
Ia mld 301.
.
.

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for retirement. And the sooner, the better.
· Around here,we'll do whateVer it takes to help. So
we're offering The J?ank Ore Retiiemem Guide.
It helps you ~culate how much money you'll
need when you retire, and how much you shoukl be
pu~awaymw. Ph.ts, tim's aro-oonsense explana-

'
you,_

tion of all the investment options to choose from.
For your free copy ofThe Bank Ore Retirement
Guide, visit any Bank One. Or calll-800_;!66-1515.
Either~ we'~ get /3A AIV ~~~
you OOded m the nght Q/VWR ~ Vl!l;;,
d~tion.
. . ~~takes.

"E

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VC!I. 42; .No.130.
Copyrighted 11111

2 S.CIIolll, 12 P8gH 25 - ..
A Uuhltnedla Inc. New~p~~per

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, November 6, 1991

offman,
Martin win·mayor races
FRED L. HOFFMAN .
was elected for his fiftb term
as Middleport mayor.

ED MARTIN, a newcomer to poUilcs, wiU be mayor or
Rutland in 1992.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stall' .
Three of Meigs County's five
villages will have new.mayors in
1992,as the result of Tuesday's
general election.
·
Pomeroy, Rutland, and Syracuse, all elected new mayors while
Middleport re-elected Mayor Fred
Hoffman (I) for another term.
Racine had no candidates Cot
mayor.
In the race for mayor of
Pomeroy, Bruce Reed (R) with 376 ·
votes was the victor. He defeated
Larry D. Wehrung (I) who received
217 votes and Ellen Jane Rought
(I) with 125 votes.
Neither the Pomeroy clerk-treasuret nor the candidates for the two
seats on Pomeroy-Village Council
had opposition .' Brenda Morris (R),
incumbent clerk-treasurer, received

525 votes,.while the council candidates, John W. Blaettnar · (R)
received 348 votes, and Scott Oillon (R) 471 votes.
· In Syracuse, James E. Pape, a
council member in his first term,
was elected mayor by a vote oC 227
to 77 received by Minier V. Fryar,
Jr., the other candidate. Janice
Lawson, clerk-treasurer incumbent,
with no opposition , received 265
votes.
In the rnce for the two seats on
Syracuse Village Council. Bill
Roush with 215 votes and Dennis
R. Wolfe, incumbent, .with 175
votes were the winners. The other
candidates, Jeffery L. Maynard
received 51 votes, and David law- ·
son, ·v2. Incumbent Laurance
Ebersbach was elected to another
term on the Board of Public Affairs

for Syracuse Village. He received
249 votes.
Iri a close race, Ed Martin was
elected mayor of Rutland. He was
given 119 votes to the 106 received
by incumbent Mayor James M.
Fmk. Sandra K. Smith retained the
clerk-treasurer's position for Rutland Village, receiving 126 votes to
the Ill received by her challenger,
Judy A. Denney.
JoAnn Eads with 178 votes and
Victoria Lee Fink with 84 voles
had no opjJosition for the two seats
on Rutland Village Council.
Hoffman was elected for a ftfth
term as mayor of Middleport by a
vote of 695 to 177 received by
psby Marlin, (D). Brian K. Conde
(R) unopposed for clerk-trcasurct;,
received 588 votes. Elected to fill
the IWO scats on Council were.

·'

incumbents, James Clatworthy (R) .
with 557 votes, and William G.
Walters (R) wit~ 397 votes. The
other candidate was Paul Clark (I)
who received 258 votes.
Thomas Anderson (R), also
unopposed, was re-e lected for
another term on the Board of Publie Affairs for Middlepon Village
with a vote of 579.
.
In Racine there were no con- ,, '
tests. Carolyn L. Powell received, .
199 votes in her bid for clcrk-trcasurer. Julian Scott Hill with 213
votes and Henry W. Bentz with
138 votes will fill the two scats on
Racine Village Council, and
incumbents, Ivan C. Powell with
180 votes, and Bobbie E. Roy with
185 votes were re-elected to the
Board or Public Affairs for Racine
r llllge.

Meigs voteryeje~t Carleton levy again

BRUCE " J,
REED,
Pomeroy :Village Council
member for the past 10 years,
was elected mayor of Pomeroy
in'Tuesday's general election.

Jones elected new
Kentucky goyernor

I

.

Pick 4: 3189 .

Cards: 3-H, 8-C,

•

JAMES E. PAPE, who
has serve'd on Syracuse Village
Council for the past three
years, was elected mayor.

UlftlllllWIU/1 IIIII

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PageS

. Pick 3:582

Jackson family feud

"

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The ~ajor
picks Georgi~
over Floriaa:~- '

mr

'•

Maybe not as far as you think.Accorrling to a recent survey, the average American, at age 55, has saved
up·about $60,000 to use for retirement
That will !P pretty fust in today's dollars. And a
whole lot faster in romonuwS.
What does that rriean for you? Start planning

Ohio ~ottery

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·:!'fu

-Na·me-s-in-the newsLOS ANGELES (AP) - Kitty
Kelley's publish~ is off the hook,
but the libel lawsuit by Frank Sinatra's lawyer is still on.
U.S. District Judge Stephen
Wilson said Monday that Simon &amp;
Schuster isn't responsible for the
accuracy of Ms. Kelley's book,
"Nancy Reagim: The Unauthorize!l
Biography." But Wilson refused to
dismiss the lawsuiL
The book suggests Sinatra and
Mrs. Reagan had an affair while
she was first lady.
Sinatra lawyer Milton Rudin
sued Ms. Kelley after ~he thanked
him in the foreword along ,with 611
other people. Rudin said he refused
to talk to the author and that her
thank-you implied he had spilled
the beans about Sinatra.
Ms. Kelley's lawyer, Ronald L.
Olson, argued that the book is
about a political figure 1\lld is protecled by the First ArnendmenL

'

ByWALTERR.MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
Sen. Harris Wofford scored a
Democratic upset in a Pennsylvania
race that rehearsed White House
campaign issues, while Republican
businessman Kirk For'dice ousted
Gov. Ray Mabus in Mississippi, in
odd-year elections that raised storm
warnings for incumbents, now and
in 1992.
Democrat Brereton Jones was
elected governor of Kentucky, easily .defeating a veteran GOP congressman caught up in the House
check-bouncing episode.
Jones, a native of Pt. Pleasant,
W. Va., and the-lieutenant gover·
nor, gained 65 perteiu of the vote
to 35 percent for Rep. Carry Hopkins, a seven-1enn GOP congressman. Hopkins had been making
campaign headway with questions
about Jones' personal finances
when he had to admit that he'd
- bounced 32 checks at the House
bahk.
In New Jersey, voters angered
by hefty tax hikes ended Democrnt·
. ic control of their legislature and
elected Republican majorities in
both Senate and Assembly, a
turnaround so total that the GOP
will have majority margins wide
enough to override vetoes.
While voters rejected some of
the biggest names on the ballots in
the scattered elections of 1991, in

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
One county-wide levy was
passed while a second was defeated
b.y the 7,440 voters (54.63 percent
of the the 13 ;619. re~istered) who
turned out to vote m Tuesday's
general election.
Voters approved a-renewal of
the one-half mill levy for five years
for the Meigs Councy Tuberculosis
Clinic by a vote of 4,311 10 2,790.
That levy will generate $92,600 a
year for operation of the tuberculosis office in the Meigs County Multipurpose Building on Mulberry
Heights in Pomeroy.
FQr the fifth time in the past
two years, Meigs County voters
turned down a levy 'for additional

operating funds for Carle ton
SchooVMeigs Industries. The levy
was defea,ted by a vote of 3,680 10
3,353.
Passage of the levy would have
put another $211,470 a year into
the ~eneral operating funds for lhe
program admmistered by the Meigs
County Board of Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities.
' ·
Currently the school and the
adult workshop receive $275,686 a
year in local tax dollars through a
one and one-half mill continuing .
levy which is already in effecL The
remainder of the $1.1 million oper·
ating bud!let comes from other
sources, primarily stale taxes.
Of the other levies on Tuesday's

Washington state they took the
advice of ,Speaker of the House
Thomas S. Foley and voted against
a term limit measure that would
have been tl\e nation's toughest.
'Foley went home to campaign
intensively against the measure that
,would have forced hi!ll a~d the
other seven Washington House
members to retire in 1994. He said ·
it was an uriconstitutional affront to
the voters.
With 56 percent counted early
today, the vote was against term
limits, 53 percent to 47 percent.
None of tuesday's signals was
more striking than the one-sided
victory Wofford won over Conner
Attorney General Dick Thornburgh, converting an appointed
Senate seat into a three-year term
as the successor 10 Republican Sen.
John Heinz, killed in an airplane
crash.
Thornburgh, twice elected governor or Pennsylvania, had been the
pollsters' favorile by as much as 44
percenlage points. Wofford wasn't
even the Democrnts' favorite at the
outset; he was named to the seat six
months ago after other prospects,
thought to have a better chance of ·
holding the seat in the special election, declined.
Wofford turned it around with a
HAPPY WINNER ·Democrat Brereton Jones hugs his moth·
camJ?3i~ in which he pressed ecoer Nedra in his hotel room arter winning the Kentucky race for.
nomtc tssues, urged national health
governor Tuesday night in LqU:Isville. Jones beat Republican
Continued on page 3
Larry Hopkins convincingly. (AP)

$10,000 violin·among items reported missing
Deputies of the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department are investi·
gMing several incidents that
occurred recently.
Ann Barrett, Hutton Hill Road,
Rutland, reponed yesterday that a·
1776 violin valued at $10,000, is
missing from her residence. She
reported she first notice the instru·menl was missing in August.
Wayne Roseberry, Willow
Creek Road, Pomeroy, reponed to
the department that on Sunday
evening someone had entered his
garage and took three lawn mowers. An investigation is continuing.
The department was notified
Monday morning lhat windows at
the Letart. Falls Elementary School
had been broken out over the week-

••

end. 1t was repOrted iwo windows
in the girls' restroom and one
kitchen window were broken.
Sheriff James M.' Soulsby
reports mailboxes were damaged
on Long Hollow Road, Smith
Road, Limberger Ridge Road, and
Roule 681 near Rye Road, over the
weekend.
.Three juveniles will be charged
with damaging twO boxes on Route
681. According to the repon, they
admitted doing this damage but
were not in the area of the other

damage.

.

. These same three individuals
will be charged l"ith crilninal dam·
agin$ as a result of the Saturday
cvenmg damage to a truck owned
by Wes Arbaush that was parked at

Eastern High ~cnooL According 10
the report, the subjects spotted the
vehicle a1 the lot a~d were only
going to soap windows and let atr
out of the tires but a companion
jumped on the hood and tore off a
mirror. Meigs County Juvenile
Officer Carl Hysell is accredited
with getting confessions on this
incident.
•
On Friday evening the depart·
ment was notified that a 1985
Cheveue owned by Dan Lewis,
Rou1e I, Langsville, had the headlights knocked out of the veh icle
while parked at Meigs High
School. A Pomeroy area youth will
be charged in Meigs County Juve·
nile· Coun with the damage to Ibis
vehicle. ·

· Charge.i are being ftled'ln Meigs
County Juvenile Court against a
17-year old Reedsville youth. T~e
youlh is charged with slll!hing tires
on a ear owned by Sally Brown of
Reedsville on Oct. 28. The juvenile
gave an admission to· Investigator
Robcn Bcefle. Mrs. Brown reponcd that al four tires had been
slashed. The juvenile and witnesses
have only implicated th~ulh as
slashing one tire. Investigalicin wilt
continue on this incident.
Angela S. Fisher, The Plains
. was arrested Sunday by Athens
County on a Meiss County Wrurnnt charging passmg a ·bad•check.
Bond was posted for her and she
was released from custody. She is
to appear in Meigs County Court.

ballot in various subdivisions of the
county, all of the renewals passed,
but two for additional monies
failed.
Middleport Village voted to
renew three mills for five y~ ror
current expepses by ~ vote of 436
to 359; Pomeroy village, two mills
for five .years for fire protection by
a vote of 531 to 187: Racine Village, two mills for five years, by a
vote of 190 to 95; Pomeroy Village, I mill for five years for cur·
rent expenses; 367 10 342; and Rut·
land Village, two mills for five
years for current expenses, 136 to
98.
Rutland Township also

approved a renewal of one mill for
five years for fire protection by a
vole of 387 to 196.
Levies for an additional tax
which got the approval of voters
included a Lebonan Township
cemetery levy, one mill for five
years by a vole of 190 to 164; and
Scipio Township, one-half mill for
one year, for fire protection by a
vole of 204 to 194.
.
Defeated by the voters were two
other levies for additional taxesthe Olive Township ecme1ery levy
one 'mill for five years, by a VOte or
24510 219, and Rutland Village for
current expenses, two mills for five
years, by i vole of 124 to 96.

PHILLIS
.
··Dr. William L. Phillis, Assistant
Stale Superintendent
Instruction, was presented a plaque
for his work toward obtaining two grants for the Meigs County
School system and University of Rio Grande at a Tuesday reception at Meigs High School. Southern Local Superintendent Bob
Ord, right, made the presentation, stating thai Phillis "has always
championed ·the cause of public education". Phillis spoke brieny to ·
educators present, stressing lhe importance of "equity and adeqtrncy" in funding in Ohio schools.
.

Fred MacMurray of 'My
Three Sons' dies at 83

By JOHN HORN
AP Entertainment Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Fred
MacMurray, who dispensed falherly wisdom between puffs of his
pipe on Jclcvision' s " My Three
Sons" and played lovable kooks in
a string of Dis'ney movies, has died
at 83.
MacMurray died of pneumonia
Tuesday at St. John's Hospital and
Health Ccn1er in Santa Monica, a
day after being admitted for cancer
trcaunent.
Although light comedy was his
strength, MacMurray played almost
any film role with success, including Western hero, high-society figure and double-dealers of various
stripes. .·
MacMurrray played against type
in 1944 when he starred opposite
Barbara Stanwyek as a crooked
insurance salesman recruited for
murder in Billy Wilder's moody
"Double Indemnicy," ...
·

He worked with Wilder again in
1960, ~laying a philanderering husband tn "The Apartment. " In
"The Caine Mutiny" of 1954, he
played a deceitful Navy lieutenant.
Wilder joked about the character
switch , saying MacMurrny " gives
people the feeling that he's kind to
dogs, children, mothers and widows.''
The good-guy i.magc served
MacMurray well in "My Three
Soils," in which he played widower father Steve Douglas.
The show ran from 1960 to
1972, second only 10 "Ozzie and
Harriet" as network TV's longestrunning situation comedy. It still is
popular in reruns.
He also played good guys in
several Walt Disney films, inclt.KIing 1960's "The Absent·'Minded
Professor," in which he ponrayed
an inventor wbo created a lighterthan-air ~uhstancc called Oubber
Continued 01 Pill' 3

•'
I

,

�.:Commentary

Wednesday, November 6,1991

·. Pagt!-2-The Dally Senunei
• Pomeroy-Mid~leport, Ohio , .
W~dnesday,J~ov~mbEir 6, 1991

•
'

.

'

Deng, a survivor, pushed his way to ihe top .

The Daily Sentinel

BEUING - The reclusive ruler' of China, Deng Xiaoping, may be
87 but he is still as tough as a wal.
Pomeroy, Ohio
nut, unstinting in his. belief that the
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGs-MASON AREA
Chinese Communist Party wijl not
give an inch to democracy.
The diminutive Deng, whose 4~MULTIMEDIA, INC.
. foot, t l -inch frame ·does not allow
· him to sit in many chairs with his
feet on the floor, is China 's ultiROBERT L. WINGEIT
•
mate survivor. l:le has been purged
Publisher
three different times in his political
career,
suffering imprisonm ent,
PATWffiTEHEAD
CHARLENE HOEFLICH : internal exile
and hardships for his
Assistant Publisher/Controller
General Manager
family., In his mind, he didn't go
through all that to see the party topAMEMBER of The A,ssciciated Press, Inland Daily Press Association and . pled by upstart pro-democracy
the American Newspaper ,Publisher Association.
types.
Deng is a complex character
LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome.'niey should be less than 300
who
has refused to write his own
words long. Allleners are subject to editing and must be signed with·name,
memoirs
. Information· about his
address and telephone number. No unsigned leners will be published. Letters
~ earlY. life is sketchy. We have
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.
pieced tOgether a profile using Chi.nese and American sources and
L.----------~~-~~~------...1
- ~several top-secret Central lntelli. .. - .. ..__ · ·
gence Agency documents on,Peng,.
Ill Court Street

l

I

'Exc·erpts from. o.ther
.Ohl·o newspapers·. '

Initsclassifiedreports,theCIA
paints
Deng as a man with a hunger
for power, a single-minded man
who is "often abrasive" in his
dealings with others. "Deng has a
well-deserved reputation as an efficient administrator, but he does not
By The Associated Press
seem to possess (the late) Zhou
Following are excerpts of editorials published recenlly by Ohio news- Ental's talents for conciliation and
papers:
com promise," says one CIA
THE REPOSITORY. Canton, Oct. 30: Momentum for a tax cut is
growing as lhe economy continues to send mixed signals and the worry
; . , index of taxpayers rises. But a tax cut is not a panacea. Without a spend• -ing reduction, a cutback in taxes would increase lhe size of the deficit - a
: :monster that already is casting a huge shadow over lhe nation's ccono• my ...
· · What,pcople arc worried about is the possibility that ... after decades of
• deficit spending, the nation is beginning to pay the price.. .
:
A taX cut accompanied by corresponding spending cuts can help in the
: short term by boosting recovery. and over the long haul by pointing the
direction for soundofiscal management
But a taX cut by itself should not even be considered, for it would only
add to the nation's problems.

By Jack Atillerson·-

report.
.
-~
from him during meetings-(Deng .
According to the CIA, Deng was hard of hearing) so he could
"still bears the political sears" of not hear Mao's instructions. .
being purge&lt;t and reviled-during the
During Mao's insane deca\le,
Cultural Revolution of Mao Deng was removed from party without political reforms, China
Zedong. .
leadership and paraded around Bei- has remained a backward, underdeHis father was a prosperous jing in a j~ep with ·a dunce cap . veioped nation that has produced
landlord who had four wives in pulled over his ears While the radi- not. one Nobel· laureate in science
succession and 13 child(en. At 16, cal Red Guards je~red. He was . or literature.
1 . .
Deng went with a select group of imprisoned il) solitacy confinement
Dang w~&gt;n't allow political
.boys on a scholarship ;o study in for two year,1 andl~en banished reform. • He unqueHIOn4bly .
France. There he befriended Zhou with , his family lo a southern approved lhe massacr~ of students
Enlai, who was the editor of a Chi- province where ; itt 65, he was in Tiananmen Square m 1989. His
nese communist periodical, "Red ·. assigned nianual labor in a tractor latcst ·pronouncements to the party
Light"
factory and served meals in a arc contained in secret directives
Deng went on to study in ·school mess hall.
·
that followed the· overthrow of the
Moscow before returning to China
Deng might have accepted that Communist .Party i n Moscow i_n
in 1927 to fight with the commu- · as the price one pays·for being tern- August. Deng has urged pany-I~dnists in a civil war thiu ·continued porarily out of favor ·if his family ers to show "tranquility ·outside,
for 22.years until the communists had not been hurt too.'One biOiher repression within," and "hide
under Mao took over China in was ptirged from his job as deputy one's capacities and bide one's
t949. Mao had mixed feelings mayor of Chungking. Another time," to "strengthen oneself,"
about Deng. He told Soviet Premier brother was so hounded the Red
In other words, retrench and
Nikita Khrushchev that Deng was ~~~~~l~~~~~~~~-..-·~.~~~:!::,&amp;~'~c~up-~anythin!:-;IIH~le-~
the onlyoneof !lis comraoe5 worth f
was either re.ormers.
r
.
anything. One CIA report says Mao
or pushed by the
SECRET PROLIFERATION often called Deng "a man of Red
from his'fourth·floor The nightmare that haunts our
extraordinary POlitical insight'' ·
dorm window and paralyzed for national leaders may become realiBut Deng had ideas of his own · life because he was refused mcdi- ty. Intelligence reports warn that
and tried to push M~o to decentral- cal treatment. . ,
'soviet hardliners are passing on
izc the economy. Mao didn't like
Mao brought Deng back from nuclear technology to North Korea
the rhetoric, but he mostly didn't exile in 1973, and since 1977, and perhaps other governments
like being treated poorly by Deng. Dcng has been China's friendly to the communist cause.
Mao complained to friends that "paramount leader." He has insti- There is a dan¥er tltai they may
Deng treated him like a "dead luted economic .reforms that have' smuggle sophisticated nuclear
ancestor" and would sit far away 2reatlv improved China's lot. But weaponry to these governments.
More than 30,000 missiles with
nuclear warheads still remain in the
wreckage of the Soviet Union.
Control of thiS awesome nuclear
arsenal is the most perilous remnant of the great Soviet military
machine.
.
MINI-EDITORIAL - The
Defense Department has come to
the enlightened conclusion that
homosexuals are no more likely to
betiay their country's secrets to the
enemy than are heterosexuals. The
ridiculous theory that gays arc
national security risks is part of the
rationale for the Pentagon policy
against gay soldiers. But the Pentagon, ~ven with its new enlightenment, isn't chan¥1ng that pohcy.
Without the secunty-risk argument,
the Pentagon is oow basing its policy on vague notions of "discipline,
good order and morale." In other
words, military men in tbe showers
don't want to worry about someone
eyeing them. This phobia about gay
prC!Iators is as ludicrous as the phobia about gay spies.
Copyright, 1991, United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.
· ·

and Dale Van Atta

SCIOJL SUPPLI~S

• THE BEACON JOURNAL, Akron, Oct 31: Timmy's coveted genes
• arc the undoing of his domestic comfort, and just when he seems to have
: made a go of the conjugal life, too.
• The Cleveland Metroparks Zoo insists on playing match-maker for
four, female gorillas in waiting at the Bronx Zoo, and aren't even fazed by
protesting Timmy suporters and the fact that, like everyone else these
days, Timmy has a lawyer who is threatening to sue.
Poor Timmy; the path of true love never does run smoothly, not even
• (or gorillas, apparently.
..

THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER, Oct. 31: Most Americans believe in
So most were inclined to believe Sen. Edward Kennedy the
: ;pther day when he promised to confront " faults in lhe conduct of my pri• ·vatc life.'' Most Americans, though, arc also aware of the phenomenon of
: recantations that last only until the next election- or the next temptation.
They arc willing to wait and see about Senator Kennedy...
·
·
Whatever the circumstances, Senator Kennedy .remains a man of
immense magnetism and talent, which he has been willing to jeopardize
for a lifestyle that is l!ll embarrassment to himself, his family, his con-.
stituency and the nation.
·
All of them hope he has chosen at last to mend his ways. Only he has
the ability to do so.
:~ .repentance.

THE TIMES RECORDER, Zanesville, Oct. 31: Welfare assistance is
another social program which is good in theory, but plagued by methods
found to get around the system to collect fradulently or more than would
be a reasonable entillement. ·
The people who genuinely need help until they get on their feet arc
hurt by lhe peopl~ who take advantage of the system. It is hard to understand how welfare assistance can continue from generation to generation
without question ...
In the last six months a push in nine counties to clean up welfare rolls
has saved the state $178,444. Eleven more counties, including Muskingum, are targeted for inspection this year ...
What we need is not a token push every few years toward cleaning up
the welfare system. What we really need is a constant and fair monitoring
• of the system.
• • Our aim is not to deprive needy people of interim help or to take bene-·
. : fits away from !hose with disabilities. Our goals arc to encourage the state
: to continue regular montioring and to emphasize self-esteem and dignity
· through job training and work in place of welfare checks to generation
•through generation.
•
''
: THE LIMA NEWS, Oct 31: The Bush administration should not nor' ,malize relations with Vietnam until Hanoi meets two conditions. First, it
·;·must provide as full an accounting as possible of the 2,273 Americ;an ser: viceman still listed as missing in Southeast Asia. Second, it must commit
·:itself to lhe successful conclusion of the Cambodian peace process.
• Both points were underscored in Paris by Secretary of State James
:Baker when he met last week with Vietnamese J'oreign Minister Nguyen .
•·~anh Cam. These conditions should be emphasized in coming months as
. 'both countries explore the possibility of resuming economic and diplo."inatic contacts.
·
• . Before Washington extends diplomatic recognition to the Hanoi
• regime, the emotionally charged POW-MIA issue must be laid to rest ...
.: The policies of the Khmer Rouge resulted in the slaughter of more than
1 million Cambodians from 1975 to 1978. Because the United Nations is
;not likely to intervene militarily to keep the peace if fighting breaks out
:Ugain, the responsiblity for maintaining order falls heavily on Cambodia's
neighbors, especially China and Vietnam. Thus, Vietnam's support is cru• (:ial to the success of this fragile- ~nd risky- agreement.

:Letters to the editor
Parents have a right to know

..,• Would you want to now if your

,daughter were going to have an
abortion? .
• The results of a lack of parental
·J nvolvemeht can be tragic. Just as
.'the parents of Dawn Ravenell of
~New York. Dawn died from abor:~on-related complications at age
13. Her parents never even new she.
was pregnijnt until she lay in the
hospital 'with irreversible brain
'&lt;damage. They were not notified
:until it was too late to do anything
'to help their daughter.
: Or as the parents of Sandra
· leaiser of Missouri.
· : SaQdra committed suicide at
4ge 14 shorlly after her abortion.
:Although she had been hospitalized
·three times for psychialric disorder,
-!he abortionist never knew this.
Sandra's mother never had the
'Opportunity to tell him.
·
. ParenL'l, like the Ravenells and
'Ihe Kaisers, and like you, have the
iight to know. In poll after poll,
'
'

•

Americans overwhelmingly support this right-a New York Times
poll found 83 percent of Americans
believe that at least one parent
should be informed before a girl
under 18 years ·Of age has an abortion,
· Data from Slates that have enacted parental notification and consent
statutes indicated that 'such laws
contribute lo a marked
DECREASE in the number of both
teen abortions and teen pregnancies. It appears that parental notification has encouraged responsible
sexual behavior among teenagers.
Please write to your congressmen and senators and urge them to
vote for the amendment to Title X
requiring the notification of a parent before an abortion is performed
on a teen-aged girl.
Denise Bonecutter
3216Howard Avenue,
Point Pleasant, WV 25550 6756621

,,

It's time to handle nation's energy crisis
There has always been considerable complaint about Washington's
apparent inability or unwillingness
to practice long-range planning; to
promulgate legislation and policy
that looks toward our country's
long-term needs. The ac tions of
Congress and the executive branch
alway s seem to deal with the
immediate, with the problems of
the hour rather than with the anticipated problems of the future.
There are various explanations
for this crisis form of management.
Perhaps the most salient is the difficulty in gaining a consensus for
action . With 535 members of
Congress, with a new administration every four years, with the
b~oad disparity of political philosophy that often exists within the
Congress and between the legislative and executive branches of government, it is often difficult, if not
impossible, to reach agreement on
what course of action to' pursue.
Everyone seems to have their own
agenda, everyone seems to be
marching to their own drummer.
This inability to focus on the
long-term needs of our nation is
particular! y apparent in the area of
energy. For the last 20 years we

How~to

have' been sitting on a virtual powder keg. To paraphrase an old
Roman saying, we have been fid-.
dling while our country's and the
world' s finite oil resources burn.
One would have thought thill the
oil embargoes of the seventies
would have been sufficient to get
us to change our short-term outlook. One would have likewise
thought our recent experience in
the Persian Gulf would have refocused our attention on our vulnerability to a cut off of much needed
oil supplies.
It has been projected that by the
year 2010, 70 percent of the oil we
bum will be imported. At present
the United States consumes
approximately 17 million barrels
per day, over 25 percent of the
world's total consumption.
While U.S. consumption has
increased some 14 percent since
1983, dol1festic production,
because of !he generally low price
we as Americans have to pay for
imported oil, has dropped sharply.
In 1990 thQ U.S . was importing
over 40 percent of its oil. Obviously, if we are going to reverse the
current trends of increased oil consumption and increased depen-

Cong. Clarence E. Miller

dencc on foreign sources of sup'p!y,
we as a Congress and we as a country have to cut to the chase. We
have to siQp talking about the probtern and start doin g something
about. the problem.
Th11 is not to suggest that for
the last 20 years we have been.
totally indifferent to this concern.
We as a ·people clearly have
become more .energy conscious.
We have become more sensitive to
fuel efficiency, to fuel switching
and to steps we can take to protect
ourselves from an unexpected cutoff of oil supplies.
By establishing such facilities
as the strategic petroleum reserve
which currently contains-some 568
million barrels of crude oil, roughly
a 90 day emergency supply in case
of criSIS, we have, to a degree,
insulated ourselves from tbe threat
of a sudden cutoff of imported oil.
Ciearly, however, more needs to be
done.
·
This brings me to the point of
this column. In the coming weeks,
Congress will be given the opportunity to set the country on a more
prudent energy course; one which
should carry us well into the next .

~ntury and one which should permit us to more meaningfully
address lhe economic and national
security risks we now face.
The bill, entitled the National
Encrg,r S~urity Act of . '?~'·· is a
combmauon of energy tntt1auves.
It speaks to energy conservation,
enhanced energy effic1ency, alter~ative fu_els, domestic oil product10n, envli'Onmental protceuon, and
collectively and most importantly,
reducing our dependence tin foreign sources.of supply. While the
bill and the ~olicy it advances is
not pcrfe~t. tt ts a far cry better
than anytlung ~e have now.
If the .btiits. to become la:v.
however, tt1s gomg to h~ve to Cll·
cum vent a t~rcatened fthbuster m
the Senate by a handful of members who contend 11}1s legtS!auon 1s
too productton onented and not
sufficiently sensitive to the environmcnts surrounding prQduction
sites.
,
Personally, I feel the bill offers
a sound balance to both concern~.
and I, for one, fully support thiS
much needed measure, I hope the
majority of my colleagues feel likewise.
·

name your group in the
90's
B
hS

Need help ch~sing a name ·for
your new business, club, athletic
team? Want to be sure your logo,
leuerhead or mascot will be inoffensive to all peoples everywhere?
Having trouble picking out a politically correct costume for your next
party?
•
Call us at I-555-PCNONOS .
We have a list of two dozen
"isms" to be avoided. We have a
· computer
bank of over half a million words in 503 languages and
2,976 dialects ·that might hurt the
feelings of somebody somewhere
in the world. That number is 1-555PCNONOS.
This public service announce·ment Is brought to you by the
National Clearinghouse for Politically Correct Names , Words,
Objects, Materials, Things and
Miscellaneous Stuff.
Tom: Hello, is lhis the Clearinghouse for Politically Correct stuff?
PC PoHceperson: Yes how may
I help you?
'
Tom : We're starting a badminton league here in Bay City and
we want to call our team the Barracudas. Any problem?
PCP: A definite no-no. Barracuda is a word often applied to

aggressive womyn. Stay away from
tt. .
, .
ptck: Hello, I m m charge of !he
offtce Halloween pany and we ve
got some people who want to come
dressed as rocks. Your advtcc,
please.
.
PCP! Oh heavens, no! Ma~ng
fun of r~cks off~nds gcotog1sts,
petrologiSts and Jewelers. Not to
mention the use of the word in refercnce to serota, whic_h would .co~sutute. verbal scXJSm 1f you satd 11.
Weanng the costume would be
visual sexism and might create a
hostile environment that would
offend reasonable womyn. Stay
aw~~ from roe~s.
. .
Han)': Yo, Peers, th1s tS J:iarry.
do'lln tn Houston. I work IR an
S&amp;L,see,andwewant.tonameour
softball_ team the Runnmg Dogs of
Capttahsm. Any problem?
PCP: Forget it,llarry. Animals
are the equivalent o~ h,uma.ns and
should not be turned mto objects &gt;Of
ridi~ul.e. This constitutes
specteSISm. Dogs are ~ople,too, ·
you know. Why don t you call
yourselves the Asteroids? A. little
play on .the Houston Astras, get it?
No, wall a mm~te, my computer
says that Astero1ds would offend

garden&lt;&gt;rs who grow asters, the
descendapts of John Jaco~ Astor
and the citizens of Astona. Ore.
Keep trying, Harry, and call us
back.
.
Andrea: 1 represent the Commlt·
tee to Restore Decency to Our
National Parks and I want to complain about Grand Teton National
Park. We all know what that means
in French, and it's d'amned
demeaning.
.
PCP: Yes, we've been uymg to
get a new name for years. How
would men like it if they were
called Grande Balle? We'll call the
National Parle Service again tomorrow.
Joe: I'm calling about this
Native American protest against
the names of professional sports
teams. They don't !Ike it because
Atlanta's team is the called the
Braves. They didn't like it when
the fans did the Seminole chant.
They did,n't•like the Tomahawk
chop . Even Jimmx Carter, Mt.
Human Rights, sailtlndians were
being portrayed positively and no
offense should be taken·. Where
will it end?
•
PCP: Joe, you must be sensitive
to their view. American tndian

]OS

Y , ep

pear

leaders say.,thcy have been reduced
to mascotS, that they are being portrayed as cartoon figures, that their
sacred symbols are being desecrated.
Joe : I can understand their
objection to the Washington "Redskins ." That sounds racist. But
Braves? Chiefs? That sounds
noble.
PCP: You must remember that
the Politically Correct allow the
victim to define the trespass.
Joe: Well, tell Ted Turner he
can call his baseball team the
Atlanta Spears. Anytime he wants.
No protests.
PCP: You really should get with
the program, Joseph , Can I send
you a manual? Joe? Joe?
Ellen: Hi, I'm Ellen in East
Hampton. We've searched and
scarthed for a name for our volley- ·
ball team and we can't find anything that doesn't offend somebody. So we're thinking of calling
ourselves the XXs. The East
Hampton XXs. Any problem?
,.
PCP: Sorry, Ellen. That Wlluld
offend a Mexican beer.

Pomerqy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Stnti~-Page 3

r--Local briefs-----. Abbott, Hood and Humphreys cop~ Meigs
Tuppers Plains to host chamber
will
school boardbOardseats; other win"'ers announced .
. Roger Hawk of Hawk's 76 and Fred Goebel
host the general .
membership meeting of the Meigs County Chambet of Commerce
on Tuesday, November 12 at6:30 p.m. The meeting will be held at
the VFW f{all in Tuppers Plains. _ _
_
_~ ~
John RedOvum, Grants Coordinator for the Meigs County School
System will speak about recent grants to the system, totaling
$300,000. Reservations are required and may be made through Pam
Newell at the chamber office (992-5005). ·

Leafpick-up dates set
Leaf pickup dates have been set for residents within the Village
of Pomeroy. . .
· ·
. . .· .
.
Pickup in Precinc.t I will ~e November 18, m1'recmct 2 on
November 19th and Precinct 3 on November 20.
Residents ·should have their leaves bagged and at the-the cqrb for ·
pickup.
•

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
seats in al.llhree local school
Sentinel News Stall' ~ - districts. ·· ..-- ·.
~ - Tuesday's general election in
In the Meigs Local School DisMetgs County saw races for school , l!'ict there was a10 candidate race
• 'T'
.l
.
' ·'
Voters in each of Meigs Coun- Wilma Jean Vineyard; 57 (I);
ty's 12 townships elected a town- ORANGE: trustee - Robert
ship trustee and clerk when they · Marcinko, 184, WilHam Sherman
went to the polls on Tuesday.
Henderson, 8 7, Toirr Dorst, 30 ;
The results of yesterday's town- clerk;. Patricia Lynn Calaway, 179,
ship races are ~ follows, with the Susan K. PullinS; 121 (I).
largest vote getter being lhe wiimer
RUTLAND: trustee - Charles
('T' denotes the incumbent, where E. Rife, 271, Ernest Lambert, 169,
applicable): BEDFORD: trustee • Steven Morris, 123; clerk· Opal L.
Elmer F. Bailey, 260 (I); clerk· Dyer, 2185. (I);.SALEM: trustee·
Barbara J, Gruescr, 245 (I); John F. Colwell, 133 (I); clerk CHESTER: trustee · Victor A. Bonnie G. Scott, 130 (0; SALISBahr, 336, 0. Alfred Wolfe, 331 BURY: trustee - Harold - W.
(I); clerk · Karen R. Smith, 534 (I); Brinker, 913 (I), Bernard D.
COLUMBIA: trustee ' Gay F. Gilkey, 694, Nathan P. Biggs, 467;
Johnson, 113 (I), Truman L. Grim, clerk. Richard Bailey, 1,518; SCI98, Carroll Woodgerd, 71; clerk· PIO: trustee- Randy Butcher, 195,

' WlnnefS
'
. ·d
OWnS h lp
annOUnCe

for the three seats to be filled, The
top-vote geuers·who-won-the threeseats, according to .. the unoffic!al
count, wae Roger A. Abbott w1th
1,382 votes, John P. Hood, with
1;315, and Randy Humphreys with
1,3!3.
.
Other candidates and their vote
counts were Paul M. McElroy, Jr1
1,089; Gary A. Phillips, 1,081;
Ric~ard W. Vaughan, 836; Robert
·. F. Snowden, 833; Iva M. Sisson, ·

~~~essrr~ 8dJ~~~~c~~~

inCu!llbent, with 3,162 votes ~
elected to fill !wo seats on.tbe··
Me1gs _County &amp;ani of Edt.-.,...
Me1g5 Counuans 11so YOied on
school board candidates for the
Alexander School J?istrict in
Athens County. R. Lulie Cornwell
received 145 votes and. Willlrd
Love, 132, for the full tenn&amp;,llltl
69
f Clwles H.
1 votes wae cast or
Mansfield for the unexpir~ tmn "
eriding ,Dec. 31, 1993. ·
: ·,

Pomeroy Court

bents were Vaughan, Snowden and
Tracy Stewan, Rio Grande; was
,Werry.
fined $44 and costs Oli a speed~g . ·
• Clifford Thomas Roseberry with charge when she appeared in lhe
644 votes and Joseph E. Thoren, court of Pomeroy Mayor Richerd
· The amount demanded iri a judgm~nt suit filed by Sw Bank,
Jr.; with 631 won the two seats on Seyler Tuesday night
.
N.A. of lrollton was incorreclly reponed in The Daily Sentinel. on
the Southern Local School Board.
Forfeiting bonds in th~ CQ¥rt •
October 25. ·The case, filed in Meigs Common Pleas Court agamst
Votes going to other candidates ' wereCharlesEUis,Pomeroy,$313,
Ernest Lee Cross of Pomeroy, was in the amount of $5,187.19.
were Carmen J. Manuel, 279; Joan destruction of P.O¢rty; Titll HenManuel, 320; Leah Rose, 493, and dricks, Middleport, $48, speeding; ·
.L
• ti'O tO
Thomas E. Weaver, 447.
Paula King, Pomeroy, $43, ~ ,
aSSOCJa
Elected to ftll three seats onth~distllnce:..,.Dale...-Bin.J. -"-""
,l'here will be an Of$a~l!ational meeting of the Meigs Co~~'Yr-+-cG;.;I~
or~ia'-'H'""ur.t~to;';Q';;-;2;';;'3';;-2t;F.;
LE;;;B~AN
:-.:"'Oi'\iO
N; ~.Donald Weav~,l.09-(I),Raymo~d-·E~al Board of Education Po~eroy, s48, speeding; Resina ,
· -!--soap BOxDeiby Assoemtton at 7:30p.m. on TbUfs(Jjiy at iJieJili([.
trustee • Lawrence Hayman, 189, R. Cottenll, 102, clerk - Con.nte were S. Ray Karr, incumbent, with Eakins, Pomeroy, $47, ~ng:
dleport Village Hall.
·
·
·
·'
·
Harry W. Richard, 173 (I); clerk · Kay Chapman, 194, Betty J. Blsh- 854 votes, Ron Eastman with 840, Lindsey Peterson, Boardman, $45, •
Officers must be elected and the flanning for the 1992 Soap Box
Dorothy A. · Roseberry, 309 (I); op, 192 (I); SUTTON: trustee - and Mike Martin with 704 . The speeding; ~nd . John Berent.,
Derby. mtist soon get underway.. AI persons_ in_terested in assisting
LET ART: trustee • Christopher Delbert A. S~tth , 722 (0. RaJ~ J. other candidate, 1 . O. McCoy,
now Doylestown, $47, speeding.
with this year's derby ·or becommg an assoe1.auon member, officer
Wolfe, 196, David W. Fox, 61, Harden, 301, trustee (unexp1rcd serving on the board was given
--:.
orcommittcemembershouldattendthismeeung.
Harry C. Hill, 118 (I); clerk· term endmg 12/31/93)- Grover
votes.
'
695
Jeffrey Charles Harris, with
Joyce White , 228 (I), Vicki L. Salser, Jr .•. 4~4, J~es Ca~nahan,
SPRING VAlll¥ C,NIM~
Wheeler, 132; OLIVE: trustee • 2_56 (l), Wilham Btll Harns, 239, 3 606 votes and Oris L. Smith
announc~_ments
446 4\14
Randall Boston, 284, Rick Bar- Jtmmy w. Deem, 149; clerk- Paul •
'
'
ringer,
127;
clerk
•
Kaleen
Hays.
Moore,
88
(1).
Flame Fellowship
VFW Auxil!ary ..
The Flame Fellowship Chapter
The I:adtes Auxd1ary of Tup- man, 217, Paula Jane Fitch, 184,
will meet Tuesday at the Faith Full p~rs Plams VFW .Post No. 9053
Continued rrom page 1
Gospel Church 10 Long Bottom. wtU meet Thu~y at 7:30p.m.
Continued from page 1
that enabled his Model T to fly. ·
Hazel Life, Little Hocking, will be Country mus1c mg~l
. ,
the speaker. The public is invited to
. Country Mus1.c Ntght at the LOt- insurance, demanded emergency burgh's behalf. So did Vice PresiOther Disney roles included the
attend.
trtdge Commumty Center wtll .be
sequel
"Son of,Fiubbcr," "The
Hymn sing
held Saturday from 7 p.m. to mtd· extension of unemployment bene- dent Dan Quayle.
Shaggy
Dof and "The Happiest
The Faith Full Gospel Church in night. All ban~s are welcome and fits and cast himself as the outsider
Millionaire. '
·.
effect the challenger for the
Long Bottom will have a hymn refre.sh~n~ w1ll be ava1lable. The -in
job he was trying to hold.
.
s,ing on Friday at 7 p.m . Pastor public IS mvtted to ~uend.
Five were fined and five others
In his campaign finale, he said
Steve Reed invites the public.
Ham and t~rkey d~ner
.
he tried to set a bonfire "to send a forfeited.bonds in the court of MidWeekend services
The Racme PTe;&gt; tS sponsormg a message
Washington that we dleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tucs- ·
Weekend services at the Red ham and turkey dinner on Sunday don't needtoanother
•
satisfied day night
•
Brush Church or Christ will be held . at. South¢!1' H1gh School. Servmg with the way things person
Fine~· ·were Shane M. En~lc ,
'
Saturday at 7 p.m. and Sunday at Wtll begtn at 11:30 a.m .. Craft a wildfire instead. are." He found Middleport, $10 and costs, exptrcd
10 a.m. and 6 p.m. Denver Hill, tables, at $5 each, are ava1lable.
With 95 percent of the Pennsyl- registration; Tina L. Kauff, MiddleFoster, W.Va. will be the speaker. Call Cathy Clark at 949-2221 or vania
copnted early. today, port, $10 fine only, expired regisThe public is invited to auend.
Mary ~n Shoults-at-949-2993 for Woffordvote
•
had
1,765,029 or 55 per- tration; William E. Armstrong,
·
mforrnauon.
cent or the vote, Thornburgh Pomeroy, $25 and costs, misconduct in an emergency; Robert J.
1,420,552 or 45 percent.
•;
788 NORTH SECOND
MIDDLEPORT
" ...The clear loser was President Fife, Langsville, $10 fine only ,
•
unsafe
vehicle;
David
P.
Smith,
Bush," said Sen. George Mitchell
992·2178
Middleport, $425 and costs and
of
Maine, the majority leader.
Units of the Meigs County· Department went to Vance Road at
Bush made two Pennsylvania three days in jail, physical contrOl
Emergency Medical Service 8:39p.m. for a tree f11e.
campaign
appearances in Thorn- of a motor vehicle while under the
At 11:44 p.m. the Racine unit
responded to eight calls for assisinfluence of alcohol or drugs, and
tance on Tuesday and early responded to Bashan Road for
COUPON~
$50
and costs, FRA (insurance)
.
Wednesd!ly morning.
. Blanche Biggs.
suspension.
This morning (Wednesday) at
On Tuesday at 11:27 a.m. the
Forfeiting bonds were Willie 0 .
Soulh·Central Ohio
Rutland unit was called to Meigs 12:56 a.m. the Pomeroy Fire
Collins, Ridgeway, $460 bond on
Tonight, mostly cloudy with a
Mine No. 2 for Cecil Keifer who Deparunent responded to a brush
will .. 11¥11 i1 Ma101/Gtllia Cou1ties .Y
was transported to Holzer Medical fire on Bear Wallow Ridge. The slight 'chance of snow late. Low physical control of a motor vehicle 1
under the influence of alcoBEllONE HEARING AID CEIIJER.
·department was oon the scene until around 30. Chance of snow is 30 while
Center.
percent. Thursday, mo$tlr cloudy hoi or drugs; Michael S. Ohlinger, :
The Rolland Fire Department, at 2:14a.m.
IN Dr. Jack101 lilt's Office
The Middleport unit, at 4:47 with a chance of snow, mai~ly in New Haven, W. Va., $210, driving •
r·
I :57 p.m.. responded to a brush ftre
under
suspension,
and
$60,
expired
•
• 1 ·
'
the
morning.
High
35-40.
Chance
went
to
Chestnut
Street
for
a.m.,
at the O'Brien property on Hysell
registration; Junior J. McGuire, •
110 Mec II CStreet, PoMerty
Run Road. The department was on Arlana Quick Y:hO was transported of precipitation is 40 percent.
Gallipolis, $55, speeding: Michael :
Friday, November 8 - 9:00·12:00
Extended forecast:
to Holzer, and at 5:10a.m. the
the scene unti14:44 p.m.
~
Pierce, Middleport, $60, no opera- •
Friday
through
Sunday:
Pomeroy
unit
was
called
to
Nyc
At6: 19 p.m. the Middleport unit
BEllONE HEARING AID CENJER
Continued Unseasonably cold tor's license, and s210 on driving •
was called to Page Street for Mabel Avenue for Rena McDaniel who
•
1312 Eastern Avenue, GalliPolis ·
Walburn who was taken to Holzer. was taken to Veterans Memorial through the weekend. Fair on Fri- under. suspension; Lester R. : ,_ 1
McCoy, Clifton, W.Va., $52 bond, .-·· ,
614-446·1744,.
day, A chance of snow Saturday speeding.
The Salem Township Fire Hospital.
·
•
1
and Sunday. Highs 25-35 Friday
Wednesday, November , .- 9:00·4:00
~
and ·the 30s Saturday and Sunday.
Lows from the mid-teens to midospJta news
: C•ll ro11 Frtt 1-100.634-5265 for •• lliMI•II ~,..,... ,; :
20s Friday and mostly in the 20s on
:
'1111 IIIII Wlmt fill ~ 1 licHIIIIIHrllllil Specillist
•
Burial will be in Greenwood the weekend. ·
Blanche Biggs
VETERANS MEMORIAL
1 Anyone who haa troutill hearing or.underallndlng converutlon 1
TUESDAY ~DMISSIONS • 1 talnvhed to have a FREE hearing test to- H thfs problem can 1 ·
Blanche K. Biggs, 70, of Elm Cemetery iri Racine.
Marriage
license
issued
Friends
may
call
at
the
funeral
Lee
Bing, Pomeroy; Gertrude · • ba hllped. Bring this coupon with you for your FREE HEARING :
Street in Racine, died on Tuesday,
home
after
3
p.m.
until
9
p.m.'
on
Neece,
Middleport.
e TEST, 1 $75.00 value.
.
.
November 5, 1991 at her residence
1
A
marriage
license
has
been
Thursday.
TUESDAY
DISCHARGES·
•
UIIWA·UAW·WORKERSCOIIPENSATIONFUND
following an extended illness.
1
1
issued in Meigs County Probate None
ARMCO, AND ALL OTHER INSURANCE PROVIDERS
.1
She was bom on July 4, 1921 in
.
I
WALK~NS WELCOME
·
,1
Court to Ronald Ray Cremeans, 36,
Sutton Township, the daughter of
'
Tuppers Plains, and Deanna Faye
the late Pearl and Addie Decker Hattie Louise Swisher
Coats,
26, Pomeroy.
Biggs.
She worked as a custodian for
Hattie Louise Swisher, 64, of
· the Southern Local School District vinton, Ohio, died Tuesday, Nov .
and was a member of OAPSE 5, 1991, in Holzer Medical Center,
11453.
~ Gallipolis, Ohio.
Am Ele Power ................. .30 318
Surviving are two daughters,
Born Nov. 6, 1926, in
Ashland Oi1 ...................... 28 3/4
Mrs. Tom (Sandra "Susie') McKay McArthur, she was the daughter of AT&amp;T.. ..............................38 1/4
of Long Bottom, and -Mrs. Rick the late George and Florence MarBank One ..........................45 3/4
(Mary) Terry of Marysville; four tin Sumpter. She was preceded in
Bob Evans ....................... .19 1/8
grandchildren, Thomas 0. McKay death by her husband Raymond
Charming Shop..................20 318
III, James C. McKay, Christina Swisherlr. May 5,1991.
City Holding ................;.... l61/2
Terry and Melanie Terry; and
. She is survived by two sons,
Federal Mogul... ................ l5 718
numenous.friends.
Barry of Vinton and Harry ofFiori - GoodyearT&amp;R ................. .51318
1
HOLIDAY INN - CLEVELAND-MAYFIELD
Besides her parents, she was da; three· daughters, .D9nna LamKey. Centurion .................. .14 1/2
preceded in death by her stepfather, bert of Vinton, Linda Swisher of
Lands' End ........................ 20 718
DECEMBER 28-29, 1991
Edward Banon: a brother, Dayton Vinton and Nancy Fcartbworth of
Limited Inc.........,............. 23 1/8
Cleveland's entertainment sbowplaee, The Front' Row Theatre, with seatBiggs; and a sister, Addie Mae Cplumbus .
Multimedia Inc .................. 23
ing "in the round" and a slowly revolving stage (so there are no "bad"
Brown.
Also surviving are 10 grandchiiRax Restaurani ., ................ 1/4
seats).
Funeral services will be held on dren and four great-grandchildren.
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 35 1/2
Friday at I p.m.. at Ewing Funeral
Services will be held Friday, II
Shoney's Inc ...................... 18 7/8
Home with Rev. Charles Norris. a.m., at the McCoy-Moore Funeral
Star Bank ...........................26 1/4
$102.00 • per peraonl'doubll occupancy
Home in Vinton with the Rev .
Wendy Int'l.. ................... .... 8 5/8
Included In the above "per pereon• package prlees are:
The Daily Sentinel
Marvin Sallee officiating. Burial
Worthington Ind ................ 19 5/8
·Lodgln~ lithe Holiday Inn: Cleveland-Mayflald (only two blocks from The Front Row
will be in the Pine Grove Cemetery
Theatre
Stock reports are tht 10:30 a.m.
(VSPSit!-980)
in
Vinton.
•Room ax &amp; Bllggage Handling RIT
·
quotes proy/ded by Blunt, Ellis
Publiahed every aRernoon, Monday
Friends may call at the funeral
•Group Walcomt Reception at Holst
lhrout!h Friday, 1U Court St. Pomoroy,
and Loew/ ofGa/fipolis.
Ohio by the Ohio Valley Publiehlng
•Pre-Show Dinner In Prlvalt Banquet Room ·
home Thursday from 2-4 p.m. and
Company/Multimedia lne., Pomeroy,
7-9
p.m.
·
.
.Quaranlltd
Slating to Your Cholet of Parformances
Ohio 457891 Ph, 992·2156. Socond &lt;Ia..
·Full
Breakfast
11 Hotel
pcalappa14aiP""'""')',Ohio.
•Aillltxta &amp; Gratutlles
Member: The Aooocialed Preu Inland
•3-6 hour Eacorttd C~ Tour (Nonh COaat Tours)
Daily rr.. Alo«iation and tho Ohio
•
Toure to Lake COunty 1
Newapaper Aaaociation, NaLional
i
Prealdent Garflllcl'a Homa
AdYertiainl Reprnentative, Branham
. Kirtland Te~ll
Newlpapot' Sai..J. !33 Thlnl Avcnua,
;j
. Now YOrlt, NewYunt 10017.
Ntnll Whltnty Store Mu11um
ReMIYitlona Due Novombtr 211,19111.
POSTMASTER: Send addnoo chanp Jo
l.Mve
Fonnera Btnk Plrldng Lotati:OO A.M.
The Daily Sent1nel. 111 Court St .,
Pom&lt;I'O)', OHio 411~.
.
FOR MORE·INFORIIATION CALL JOANNE WIWAMS 892·2136

Correction

Deruy

.

n

..

meet

.

Meigs

Fred...

JOnes,,,

Middleport Court

WE SHIP ·PACKAGES
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Uriits respond to eight calls

•••••••••••••••••••••

Weather

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••
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--Area deaths--

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The Farmers Banll Travel Clull
Is-Pleased To Announee
.
·Fabulous Rolida, Trip
THE FRONT-ROW-THEATRE .

See, Kenny Rogers!

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~

122 E. Main St•
Pomeroy, Oh.
(614) 992·6632

'

WEDNESDAY: Lasagna ·
THURSDAY: Baked Steak
•FRIDAY: Buttermlk Pecan'Chicken
·SATURDAY: Roast Beef Loin w/Sauer Kraut
Iring This Ad llld Get 10" Discount
ALSO.FEATURING: Prhl a•,..eBQ Rack of R.s, Broiled
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814-882-2131

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• P. 0. Box 339

Tupp•s Plains, OH. 45713
6l4-667-3161

�.. .

~

'
Wednesday, November 6, 1991

4

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .

Har-rumph!

PUSHING OFF • Detroit Pistons' Darrell
Walker, left, pushes off of Charlotte Hornets'
Dell Curry, right, as he bursts down court for a

layup in the first half of Tuesday night's game at
The Palace in Auburn Hills, Mich. The Pistons
won, 117-93. (AP)

Knicks wallop Bucks 113-85
in home .opener,; Cavs romp .
By DICK BRINSTER
AP Sports Writer
After flopping on the road the
Ne w York Kpicks polished their
ac t and opened on Broadway to
rnve reviews from coach Pat Riley.
"After what happened over the
wcciend, they' were commiued to
come home and have a great home
opener, and they did it," Riley said
after the Knicks whip)lCd the Milwaukee Bucks 113-SS Tuesday
night.
Returning to the bench after an
absence of one season, Riley
watched the Knicks lose twi ce to
recent expanionists Miami an_d
Orlando. And for a while, 1t
see med that the Bucks might
upstage him in his debut at Madison Square Garden.
With the Knicksleadingjust 4241 at halftime, the director changed
the script.
·
"We changed defen$CS at halft im~. going to a pressure defense,"
he said of the strategy that resulted
in eight Milwaukee turnovers in the
third period.
Leading the way for the Knicks
was Mark Jackson, who got 14 of
his 16 points, five assists and three
steals as New York outscored. Milwaukee 40-13 in the third period.
Elsewhere in the NBA, it was
Phihldelphia 107, Washington 106;
Athinta 98, Utah 94; Detroit 117,
Charlotte 93; Boston 93, Miami 89; ·
Golden State 'tiS, Chicago 110;.
Cleveland 112, Dallas 101; Houston 106, Portland 99; Indiana Ill,
Phoenix !OS; Seattle 98, Sacramento fl:7· Denver 97, San Antonio 96;
and' the Los Angeles CliliJ)Crs 114,
the 'Los Angeles Lakers 109 in
oveltime.
XavierMcDaniel,acquiredfrom
Phoenix just before training camp
" staried had 28 por.m and 13
rebounds , and Patrick. Ewing
scoicd 24 points for the Kmcks. .
Oale Ellis and Jay Humphnes

had 14 points each for Milwaukee.
Clippers 114, Lakers 109 OT
Loy Vau ght scored six of his
career-high 20 points in overtime.
· g score.d 22
.Danny Mann1n
pomts for the Clippers, mcludmg a
basket that forced overtime at 102102. Sedale Threatt led the Lakers
w1th 2~ po mts and James Worth y
added 22.
NuggeJS 97, Spurs 96
Reggie Williams' layup with 6.7
seconds left capped Denver's ~-0
run_.an~ a rally from a 14-pomt
defiCit I~ the final4:47. .
W1lhams had 24 pomts and
rookie Dikembe Mutombo 21
pomts and 13 rebounds. Antome
. Carr led the Spurs with 23 points.
Warriors 118, Bulls1 10
Chris Mullin scored 38 points
and led a 20-2 fourth-quart er
charge.
The Bulls fell to 1-2, despite 40
· points from Michael Jordan.
Sarunas Marciulionis added J-8
points for Golden State, while
Scottie Pippen had 26 for the Bulls.
Rockets 106, Trail Blazers 99
Vernon Max well scored 24
points, including the go-ahead basket with 1:17 to play.
Hake em Olaj uwon led th e
Rockets with 27 points and 20
rebounds, and Otis Thorpe added
16 points ·and 17 rebounds. Clyde
Drexler had 18 points to lead Portland.
Celtics 93, Heat 89
Free throws kept Miami in the
game, then beat lhe Heat as Boston
made six straight in 1he final 63
seconds.
Miami, hitting just 39 percen t
from the floor, made 30 of 36 free
throws.
Larry Bird mi ssed 14 of 20
shots and committe~ . fi ve
turnovers, but scored 20 points for
B~ston. Reggie_Lewis had 25
pomts for the Celocs.
1

• tore -'·
P-OSt -season t b· OWI piC
· f USing
•
''
gets more con

Mia mi's Bimbo Coles had a
career-high 16 points for the Heat.
Cavaliers 112, Mavericks 101
Larry Nance scored 13 of his 29
·
· the .ourt
r
h quarter.
pomts !-"
Cra 1g Ehlo added 22 points and
Brad Daugherty scored 20 and had
12 rebounds for Cleveland. Dallas,
led by Rolando Blackma n' s 23
points, is winless in three starts.
Pacers Ill, Suns lOS
Chuck Person scored seven of
his 12 points in a 69-sccond span
early in the fourth quarter.
Indiana's Reggie MilleA scored
34 points, incl~ding 12 in the final
7:29ofthe thirdquarter.
Dan Majerle had 25 points for
Phoenix.
SuperSonics 98, Kings 87
Gary Payton and Derrick
McKey keyed a 16-4 second-half
burst as Seat~e beat Sacramento.
McKey scored 20 points and
Payton 18. Mitch Richmond, playing his first game for the Kings
since being acquired from Golden
State, scored 18 points.
Hawks 98, Jazz 94
Blair Rasmussen hit shoLs from
both comers in the final 1:42 and
Dominique Wilkins scored nine of
his 25 points in the final6 minuLes
as Atlanta rallied.
Rookie Stacey Augmon added
18 points for the Hawks and Travis
Mays had IS. Karl Malone led the
Jazz with 23 points.
Pistons 117, Hornets 93
Mark Aguirre scored 22 points
off the bench and Bill Laimbccr led
a decisive second-half surge.
Laimbeer scored nine of his 16
points as the Pistons opened the
second half with a 20-6 surge.
Kendall Gill and Kenny Gauison led Charlotte with 15 points
each.
76ers 107, Bulle Is 106
Hersey Hawkins had 21 points
and scored the game-winning basket wi Lh 5.7 seconds left.
Charles Barkley scored 33
points and grabbed 19rcbounds for
Philade lphia.
Michael Adams had 33 points
and ISassis;s forWashington .

major bowls in the alliance - the
By RICK WARNER
Orange,
Cotton and Fiesta.
AP Football Writer
"I would love to sec it happen,"
The most confusing bowl picture in years just got more confus- Holmes said Tuesday. "That way,
ing.
. we could wait until the season is
An II th-hour proposal to start over and ·end up with four very
the new bowl alliance this year good ·matchups instead of just one
instead of ne xt could shake up or two. It would be very good for
posiSCason football and all college
evetyone's postseason plans.
football fans." '
~ickey Holmes, exec~tive
Bowl bids are scheduled to go
director of the Sugar Bowl , S31d he
out
Nov. 17, one day after No. I
favors·the idea and plans to discuss
Continued on page 5
it with the heads of three other

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Saturday 9 a.m.-12 p.m.

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POMEROY, OHIO

.PH. 992-2556

~~

-~~

='S:r..

BOYS AND STUDENTS

"Blacks can make it in America, but they have to work doubly
hard," King said. " Is there a double standard in this country? Yes.
Is there racism in this country?
Yes."
He called Spinelli a "frustrated
FBI agent. Here's a guy who is
incompetent. He's dreaming.·:.
Spinelli investigated King while
he was with the FBI, which ne left
in 1985 to become inspector general for the State of New York. King
was indicted on federal income tax
charges but acquitted on all counts.
' King served tim e on state
manslaughter charges in Ohio. He
since has been granted a full pardon in that case.
"They're rehashing news of 10,
20, 30 years ago and bringing it up
like it was a current affair, and I'm

JEANS &amp; DENIM JACKETS
OO/
GIRLS JEANS........."....................
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1

18.In other long-whiskered rival- have
Notre
Dame .and
'UIIh21,NewMoxico1l
a showdow
n ofPenn
theirState
own :~=~·li""".U:~
ries, the coilfercnce-leading Wash- ,coming up Nov. 16. The Irish will w......,..!I,•SOIIlhanCal:!4
·s·ngtthon H,!!~~ifes thget itth,on_ wi\h ,have to,.~ aTt full strength toBgCet :~:::ti~.~"S:: i~
ou ern ""' or e 64 time m · past- tougn ennessee (on N - Yaiel7, •ccmoU14
the Pacific-10; Brigham Young and TY) Saturday, and they will do so. •-Hom•Wyoming tangle for .the 62nd.tirne
·
.
Continuedfrom page 4
• " - - - - - -- : " - - - : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Aorida State plays No.2 Miami in ,be hard to convince everyone in the Dame if the No. 5 Irish defeat TenTallahassee, But if alliance mem- alliance to wait until the season nesscc and Penn State. The Hurribers can work out a eontin~en cy ends before the bowl pairings are canes have extra incentive to play
plan based on what happens m key · set.
·
Notre Dame because the Irish cut
late-season games such as OklaMiami, for instance, is worried off their an·nual series after last
homa-Nebraska on Nov . 29 and that it might end up in a less desir- year's game,
Flori~a State-Florida on Nov. 30, able New Year's bowl if it loses to
Notre Dame athletic director
major bowl pairings may not .be set · Florida State and doesn't have a Dick Rosenthal said he needed to
until the end of the month.
guaranteed spot in the Orange, Cot- hear ·more about the alliance pro"With so many terrific. games ton or sugar bowls.
· jlosal before taking a stand.
happening after the 11,th, this
That could leave Miami with a
seems to be the perfect year to put difficult choice. Would the Hurrithe alliance in place," said Steve canes go to the Fiesta Bowl. an
Hatchell, executive director of t.he alliance member, or the Block·
Orange Bowl.
buster, a non-alliance bowl which
John Junker, executive dirc:ctor co111petes with the Orange in South . FOOTBALL
of the Fiesta Bowl, had a m1xcd Florida? Despite its alliance ties,
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) reaction to the proposal.
Miami would probably opt for the Auburn coach Pat Dye's attorney,
"I'd be quite surprised if so Blockbuster because it would give Sam Franklin, accused former
many details could be worked out the Hurricanes ·a chance ·to play on - defensive back Eric Ramsey and
in such a shon amount of time," he their home iurf. 1
his lawrer of creating ·a " media
said.
"If the coalition doesn' t come mirage' by releasing portions of
The athletic d~ectors of Florida together this year, then we have to sccre~y recorded tapes, and called
State and M1am1 md1cated thelf do what's best for the University of on them to release all the tapes to
schools might' go along with the Miami," Maggard said. "And that the NCAA.
1
plan. Both schools _will be members could mean any bowl, including the
Franklin said Ramsey's aitor-

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''I' m crazy, but I'm not that
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King said HBO, the cable tclevisio~ network, was ~hind the ailegau?ns 9n the t~leviSI_on program
and~~ the magazme arucle.
. King Staged man[; boxmg _shows
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" We' re team players," said
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The following were recent winners at the Vinton County Raceway.
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We owe ourfreedom
to you -- the fine men
and women who've
seroed our country with
bravery and pride.

ney,the
Donald
Walkins,ofis the
undennining
effectiveness
NCAA
investigation by releasing some of
the-tapes rather than all of them.
Watkins has released two batches of tapes, which allegedly indicate that Ramsey received illegal
payments from an Auburn 'booster
and assistant coaches, to the Birmingham News and said he'll release
a final batch of tapes that contain
GOnversations between Dye and
Ramsey within two weeks.

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a 15-7 margin in a scoreless third •
period.
.
.
•~
Steve Duchesne added a g~l :
and an assist for the Ayers, while ~..:
Brett Hull scored two gOals forSt :-:"
- Lows andBren_dan Shanahan had-a. ~
goal and an ass1st
-::
CaDucks 2, Jets 2
. ,
_,
De~
R ben Dull: scored '
.
enseman o
. . 0- _. ·
h1s first goal of the season m a 2. : :
shot Vancouver thlfd penod, giVIng • '
the qtnucks a tie with the Jets,_
-:
Dlflc made a del! move aro~nd • ":
Jets goalie Rd: Tabaracc1 to )liCk; ::
the far corner at 13:35 on a n1ght••
,the fans cam~ to app!aud t)Je Nf!L_: .::
.debut of Sov1e1 rook1e Pavel ~ure '"·
· with _the canucks. Bure didn't' dis· ;::-:
appomt as he made several spectacular_nnk-lenglh dill!hcs, only to be •
dcm¢4 QY Tabaracc1.
. --::
Geoff Counnall scored the other: ·: ·
Vancouver goal on a fmt-penod ; :
power play. . • -~
For Winnipeg , Troy Murray:_-;",
· and : ,•
sc9red inthe second penod
rookieLuc1anoBorsatomtheth1rd;. :
bot)l on power plays.
•. •

i!o..m,

years trying to bring down black

·

Pittsburgh,·Boston b-attle to tie

By KEN RAPPOPORT
. COmeback from a three-goal deficit.
·
·
AP
Hockey
Writer
Boston trailed ·5-2 rili&lt;\way
By Maj. Amos B. Hoople
·
the Western Athletic Confer- 35-24. And Penn State will polish
The Pittsburgh Penguins stan a through the second period, but
Peerless PrognOiitklltor · . enee; aild_ Michigan's Wolverines off Maryland, 24-10. Har-rumph!
three-game road trip in Winnipeg scored twice in a span of 1:51 durEgad, frieilds! Look fot an up! go up agamst Northwestern for the
tC)l991 NEWSPAPER EN- on Friday. The way things are ing a two-man advantage that
. heaval in the Southeastern Confer- 66th time in the Big Ten.
TERPRISE ASSN.
going these days, they're happy -to spanned two _penods and was C_!ln'
c encc this weekend. A.orida ·tangles
Washlngtonirthecl_ass ofthe · ~
get out of town.
.
. onued by ~ P!ltsburgh beoch peilalwith arch-rival Georgia (on ESPN) Pac-10. However. hosr Southern
Thursday, Nov. 7
Admittedly d,istracted by the ty.
.
. .
.
in a clash of SEC pqwers in "neu- Cal proved- in a narrow, 24·20 T01uAAM36,'T.. uo.a.u.n31
h
The B
th
ed
12 52
tral" Jackson.ville, "'• And highly loss 10. Notre Dame_ that the Tro·
Saturday, ''ot.
impending sale of the team, t. e
,rums en .o •11 at :
•""
" 9
Penguins continued to play poorly of the third on Ruz1cka s e1ghth of
J,"egarded Alabal!ui' invades "Death jans are also capable of playing_ 'Air Fo.&lt;o31, """' 31
at home with a 5-5 tie 3flipst the the season and third of the game,
VSalleyT.: · the home of the Louisiana tO!l·ni;ltch football. Iii a contest ~;J: ~;~:"Mi,~~~ 24
Boston Bruins Tuesday mght. This all of~ assists by·Andy Brickley.
tate Jgers.
much closer than· most expect, 'ArizlNSlu22.0nptiS
time, tl)e defending Stanley Cup
Bnckley also scored as the Bru. Expect surpises during the· 70th Washington will' win, 31-24.
"*"""25, 'TeuoTech2Z
.. champions blew a three-goal lead.
ins rebounded from Monday's 6-4
meeting between the AoridaC.IOrs
Cpach LaVell Edwards'.BYU ' :~~~~U::S:.':f"' 20
''We're glad to gel on the road loss to the New Yoddslanders.
and Georgia's Bulldogs, who hold Cougars are back oo schedule and a.....
30, -r....ple24
and away from the distractions," North 'Stars,3, Red Wings i
a commaiiding'44,23-2 lead in the sitting, pr~tt~ atop · the WAC, · ;?,C 1~:l:.:"! 14
said Kevin Stevens after the PenDave· Gagnefs second goal of
series.
~
Wtomtng .s Cowboys won '1 be .co~.....,~·~'"'' Sllte2t
guins slumped to 1--4-2 in their last --- the game' broke a tie with 5:32 to
Long known for its tailgating ~~ endstQ styop Q,B Ty Dailetm er and &amp;::::'~~.,;::~ 14
seven home games.
play, boosting the North Stars over
festivities , the Florida-Georgia .ne . 8 U WJ11 prev , 49-14.
llllb22.0W""F-t7
The Penguins sa_id they were the Red Wings.
showdown will 1)11 especially memNorthwestern shocked the Big Boa Cotolino.ll, ·-~ Miu. 20
distracted by the controversey surGagner was standing in front of
arable this year. Notoil!y have the Ten two weeks ago by defeating
~~:~s21
rounding the pro)IPsed sale of the the Detroit net when Milc:e Craig's
-Jacksonville police_ordered a highly rated Illinois, I Z: ll . But p,....- 49, 'Pocific 31 .
team 10 mvestors fioward Baldwin shot deflected off his skate and past
crackdown on partying in the park- don'tlook for anythin~ like that 10 · . ~~0:..~ 25 28
and Morris Belzberg, which was on Tim Cheveldae. Gagner's first
ing lot, but the rejuvenated 'Dawgs happen .when the Wildcats visit llunid21, oBroim if..
the agenda to.l"'. vo.ted upon today goal, on the po
· wer play, gave the
A
Arbo
t
tak
M'h
'·
•Howoiiiiiii'EP17
·::'1'
. on an upset !II
' theta
h.ave des1gns
s nn
r o e Ol) 1c tgan. Hoi en..·2..8..u.u 13
by the NHL's Board of Governors . .1 No~ Stars a 2-llead in the second
dium. .
With WR D~smond Howard ce- · ~-wtwo34
Tuesday night·at the Igloo, fans penod.
Look for Georgia's freshman menling his grip on the 1991 Heis· lllinail%7, •PoN.. t6
twi ce aimed a d~risive chant at · The goals were indicative of the
· QB , Eric Zeier, to outshine Flori- man Trophy, the Wolverines will ;!::~J::iO~r.........,,-=-=
s....=:28_ _ _ _"'
Ba;;ol.dwin, who reporte!fu' has dis- game as a w~ol~; as the Red Wings
~da'.s..Shane_Matthe.ws.-Make-it-rack:-up-their--!.9th-llOIIseculive-win--KonJu-$1ote28;•towa·su,.-ts
cus~d selling some of the team's · outshot . Mmnesota 33-20 bu I
Georgia over Aorida, 35-25. Har-. over Nor_tliwesrern, 35-IO._ ·
~;; ;~~
top Players - including Paul Cof- couldn' t beat North Star goalie Jon
14
rumphl
Lookmg ahead to then monu- 'Miomi(FioJ 311. w..,vupu. u
fey _ if the sale is approved. Other Casey.
14
· Cenainly, the Alabama Crimson mental sbowdOWil with" Miami (on MW.l(Ohioj%7, •w..... !.£ohipn
fans displayed banners 'opposing Flyers 4, Blues 3
10
Tide .will be hoping our perspica- Nov. )6), the Aorida State Semi- ~~.f.i.:'.'":;.""""'
·
the sale, with one referring to BaldRick Tpcchet scored twice in the
cious prediction oh Bulldo$ victo- · noles will tune up with a 38-21 tri- ~t'*C 42..~~ . . . 14
win and Belzberg as the " killer first period as the Flyers grabbed a
ry comes true. The Tide will be a umph over South Carolina.
~ ~~·
B's."
three-goal lead and hung on to beaI
strong contender to host the Sugar
Miami's Hurricanes will be OltioSto.. 21,'~t4
In other NHL games, it was the Blues. ·
· Bowl if it whips LSU and Aorida shooting for their 43rd straight win ~~ :=•~o
Minnesota 3, Detroit 2; PhiladclSt. Louis trailed 4-1 at 13:01 of
falls to Georgia.
·
at home as they host West Virginia •PilllboJal!:ti.lba&amp;&lt;a2A
•
phia 4. SL Louis 3; and Vancouver the first period and made a bid fo r·
While LSU is improving, the in the venerable Orange Bowl. Mi- . ::0':'9"·~'"'"t.,.: 14
2, wmrupeg 2.
its eighth comeback to e1ther oc or
Tigers don't have enough to stop ami has too many guns for the •s.noi.aoSIIle28.C41ondos~~•3
Vladimir Ruzicka's third goal of · win but couldn't get enoug h
the Crimson visitors in Baton Mountaineers and it will win hand- SonJ-SL26,'CaiSL·I'IlllauMI 10
the game completed Boston's chances on Ron Hextall. The Flyc rs
. 1t. to 'B ama,
. 22 - t'Iy, 34-18.
'SIInfmt:!4,UCLA21
Rouge, La. G1ve
'Tillodot7,BaUSulOIO
outshotthe Blues 45-25, includin g

;:Special of the Week!

NEW YORK (AP) --:- Boxing
promoter Don K:ing-says allegations that he has ties to or¥anized
crime are the vendetta of a JOurnal·
ist and the fantasies of a former ·
FBI agent.
.
"People are trying to assassinate my business life," King said
Tuesday at a news conference.
.
The allegations were made on
the show "Frontline," reported by
Jack Newfield, which was to be
shown on PBS Tuesday night, and
in a Sports Illustrated story last
week by Joseph Spinelli, the former FBI agent, as told ·to writer
William Nack.
"Let me categorically deny any
.association with the mob," said
King, who once ran a numbers
~game in Cleveland and served four
years for manslaughter.
He said Newfield, a veteran
inv,esti:gative reporter with the New
and

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-5

~~~~~~----~------~--~~~~~~--~--~------~~~~~~~ -

Wednesday, November 6,1991

King denies
allegations

success. ' •

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Ohio

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November

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question implies that the doctor
purposely tricked your .husband
mto having an unnecess.ary and
expensive test I'm sure that isn't
true, What you experienced was a
failure in communication, not a
purposeful act 10 .frighten you and
your husband with intent to drain
your family budget.
We doctors don't have a way 10
foretell the future.
Therefore, when a pati ent's
symptoms suggest the possibility of
several conditions that have different treatments and different longterm outcomes, it is necessary 10
order tests to identify the particular
illness that is producing the sympIOms. The results in your husband's
case were good.
Irritable bowel. syndrome is
quite common, as you suggested,
and docs not have risk of disability
or premature .death associated with
it. Rejoice! You would have felt
differently about the .need for the
examination and its cost if cancer
of the colon, ulCerative colitfs, or
another condition with serious
impli¢ations had been diagnosed.
His doctor failed to sufficiently
explain his reasoning for having
your
husband
undergo
colonoscopy, but that doesn't mean
the test was inappropriate.
You mentioned the $1,300 cost
as a concern, and I agree. Health
care has become increasingly
expensive in our country. In fact,
we spt!nd a greater percentage oi
our gross national product on
hcallh care than any olheJ country.,
Our high level of expendituie in the
health-care market has bought us
the best health care in the world.
But all is not rosy . We can do
many "high tech" things like magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and
colonoscopy, bu1 we can't provide
these complicated services 10 all
that could benefit from them.
Your husband's case reminds
me of one of these procedures that
involves another way of examining
individuals for colon cancer. It's
called sigmoidolcopy and is rec ommended for all individuals over
50 years of age. But it is estimated
thai if all the doctors that arc
trained to do sigmoidoscopy did

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Oltr I
""" Ollef gooa Ol'l!y II'I IM u J A Thill•
CI\IM' 101m mov 1101 N NeriOniCOirt
'liP'~.

Ol'le

l'oouMflojd

~

~y

o o b'f'low,,..,_allowU
- - · - ....-~--I
....
Call: o o
........... Ollor""".,z'- I

··----------------·
I

t

I ,

15 LB.

79

lAG

,klt~lo

VVW"·

.,

RUSSET
POTATOES

I

~

.

"

\j "

-

lr----------------------;_-----------I
I
I

IW&lt;u~ACTUIIER COUPOH

'

I.

EXPIRES 12/3-'1

1
8WLL8 _--.: 'l
When you buy ONE 64 oz. or larger Pn. LJquid ~; you get I
IONE
10 • bar~ Brillo. FilE {up to • valuel

·I

pt~~~e clleciU 11111111r.

~....:.:..:::::=-1

- read · · as the taxpayers - ·
picks up their bills through Medicaid. ·
'
. . Government-subsidized health
insurance isn't the answer. The .
Medicare and Medicaid. programs
show. that government programs
require too many administrators.
The administrative salaries ea~ up a .
large share of the money thlit .
should be used for the recipients of
the programs. So what al'e we to
do? For the time being, I'd recommend that all of us be cost-con·
scious consumers. Ask about price
when your doctor requests special
tests. Ask ·if there are more costeffective alternatives. It's your
money and,~our health. Get enough
mformaUO)!J from your doctor to
make an informed decision.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. T9J ubmit questions, write
to John C.tyolf, D.O., Ohio Uni·
vcrsity Cllllegc of Oslcopathic
Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
Ohio 45701. .
..

•

C~e•• &amp; Greta O.loas....3fo~ S1.00

JACOB SELLERS ·

.$ 99

2 LITER
BOnlE

-.. ·

25 LB.
BAG

Fooclland Macaroni &amp; Geese.",_ 4/$ I

I
I
I
I
I

FLOUR

redMmabte ollkHe.

1 I. ltlt
Moll your OfiOIJ'IO! eo1n rtQtster rtcelpt wtm
price .,ou l)(l ld ci!Cied.

~

·~/j·
·~.!

I·--------~
OfFICIAl MANUFACTURER'S REFUND CEI!TIFICATE I

I

1

Theodore Cremeans •. 84, of
Cooks Gap Hill, Pomeroy, i~ a sur·
.gical patient at the Cabel-Huntington Hospital in Htmtingtlm, W.Va.
His room number is 4362:"' · •

Top Frost ·*Natu
Turkey
II

HUDSON CREAM

RC COLA

1LB.

~~j

Clean your carpets

Ca tvd.' show··er .

solo, Eric arid Chelsea Montgame.ry in.clogging, ,the SU!r JuniOr .
Grange Chorus, Patu Dyer in adult
· recitation. Whimey an(! Rachel
Ashier competed in vocal duct .
Rachc also competed in piano solo
and insb'WIIental solo.
.
" Those in· Star Grange-Chorus
were Eric Montgomery, Chelsea
Montgomery, Chris Midkiff, Emily
Ashley, Rachel Ashley and Whil·
ney Ashley. Lin(!a Montgomery is
the Star Grange Junior Leader. She
traveled. with the junior gningcrs
along With Me1gs County Deputy
Junior Mastcr·Opal Dyer.
Star Junior Grange aeccpiS chi!dren from ages 5-14 ~~ members
and meets on the fu:st Saturday of '
each month.
--~"

'$

DIET RilE or

SALTINE
CRACKERS
.
~ ·~·.

.

Rachael Ashley, daughter or
KS eith and Emma Ashhiy; Rock
p~mgs , competed recently in the
Oh10 S.tate Grange talcnt.finals at
the Oh1o State Fair. She was eligi·
blc·due to h.er place finish at the
district contest last June in Albany.
She competed in J h.e ·Junjor
Grange vocal solo competition for
age 10 through L4. Her vocal solo
was entitled "I Met Jesus."
Also competing at the state fair.
were Whnncy Ashley in piano

GAL.
CTNS. ·

F.OODLAND

PRICE

.

Special services will be held at
the Rejoicing Life Church on Fti·
· day;SaturdayandSunday. ,
Billy Joe Grandstaff will be the
guest speaker. He auended the
Rockford School of Theology in
Illinois and has pioiJClered several
churches. In 1985 he became the ·
State Evangelist of the Church of ·
God in West Virginia. He is the
author of 57 books and is the
founder of "A Sword and Shield
Release" Publishing Hous~ •.and
"E-Z ·Books," a company wh'ich
publishes books for other ministers.
. Services will be. held at 7 p.m.
on Friday and SaJUrday and at 10
a.rn. on Sunday. Michael Pangio,
pastor, invites the public.

. Question: My husband just had ' n!¥hing but this procedure, mily 20
a colonoscopy that showed he has percent of ·those over· 50 could be
irritable.bowel syndi'ome. I thiilk it e~aminfd., We can dQ some amaz·
1s unconscionable that his doctor ing things that wer.e unheard.of just
ordered this $1 ,300 test' to fmd out a few years ago, but we can't prohe has a condition that some ilay is vide these services for.eve.ryone.
only second to the common cold in
The end result is that we t:ation
its prevalence. DOn,.t you lhlnlc ihat health care as we always have Jlnd
the doctor knew the stress of hav- . always will. Currently, we ration
ing the exam, and having to pay for based on the ability 10 pay, but that ·
1t, would only make his condition leaves out a significant portion of
worse?
·
t~e population. The so-called
· · Answer: I ·can uriderstimd your ".working poor" ..:.. who arc fre·
C?ncem about paying for an expen-, quently uninsured or undcrinsured
S1ve test. I haven't found money - are at greatest disadvantage.
growing on any trees in my neigh- They can only afford a very miniborhood, and I doubt that you have mal
of health care. Those
incomes arc a little
either -lmd I'll 'have more to say ' wilh the

Nestle Quick.-•••32 oz. con $2.99

REGULAR

-

.

FamilY. .· .·

••
•••
•••
••

Foodlcin'd Vegetables

••

Special services Ashley wins state.fair talent

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

m.J

•CORN •PEAS tGRIIN IIAMS
•POTIIOIS .•CARROTS •MIIID ·

•
••
••
••
••
•••
••
•

-

Umlt 0• with SI0.00 AclclltiMII Purchase

···· -

First birthday
Jacob Tyler Sellers celebrated
his first birthday recently with his
father, Larry Sellers Jr'., at the
borne of his grandmother in Port·
land.
A race car theme was carried
out
Attending were his parents,
Catina Wolfe and Larry Sellers Jr.,
grandparents, Larry and Agnes
Sellers, great grandmother, Ruth
Sellers.
Others attending were Judy Sellers, Sharon and Steven. Smi1h,
Stacy and Brittany Black, Cheryl
Sellers, Ruth Ann and Kasey Sellers.
Sending gifts we1e Ann Sellers
and Fred Engle and their son,
Michael and Carl Wolfe, grandfather.

Dinner slated
There will be a Veterans Day
Dinner on Sunday at the Middleport Legion Annex at noon for the
post, unit and invited guests. A
hymn sing will begin at I p.m. the
Narrow Way Singers of Letart,
W.va. The hymn sing is open to
the puBlic.

•No Preservatives
No Additives
Flash Frozen

10 lb.
And
Up '

Umil I rl!r Family' With 110
Additional Purchase

elb.

{cxdudins item-. prohibited by law}

Minute Maid

Betty Brown

Maxwell House

Orange Juice

White Bread

~~gr

3lJ1

~~~399

Ql

'

•

RCCola,
Diet
Rile, Sunkist,
ANN Root Beer
t2 Pack

12 oz. Cam

199
.

�~·

~

TUPPERS PLAINS · The Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
and Ladies Auxiliary will sponsor
the "Voice of Democracy" contest
' . on Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the
. .• post home in Tuppers Plains. The
. public is invited to attend and fur, -ther information may be obtained
:·'by calling Mary Bryant at 985:: .3376:
'

..· -.

• •
THURSDAY
· : .: RACINE • The Racine Ameri:-: can Legion Post No. 602 will meet
; ' :Thursday at 7:30p.m. at the post
• , home.

The Rutland Garden Club met
recently at the home of Pearl Canad ·
ayShe gave devotions by reading
"lndian Summer" and "Laughter is
the Best Medicine."
A note 'of thanks was read from
Overbrook Nursing Gentet-for the
fall flower arrangements furnished
there. Dorothy Woodard had made
the arrangement.
Aletter was read giving the cost ·
of Ameriflora tiCkets. Corrcspondence w.as read concerning.a AAA
trip next summer to Ameriflora. ·
Pearl Canaday gave a report on
the Sternwh.eel Flower Show."
Pauline Atkins won the "Best of
Show" award.
Eva Robson reported on the

'.

•

I

Wednesday, November 6, 1991 ·...

board meeting held.' at Chester that superior onRtitiand,Clubcombined
she attended with Pauline Atkins. .
show, the Chnstmas.flower show
Dorothy Woodar~ reported on and the, Meigs County Fair flower
the county meeting at· Pomeroy· show.
·
.
Schedules for the Christmas flower ·
Eva Robson, Pa.uliJ!e. Aikins and
show were distributed and classes Dorothy Woodard furn1shed nov.:·
for each garden club_were chosen. ers for churches and oth.cr organ1·
~Each Glub is~ to furmsh-two-~ozen ~·--zaUOns;'-~· . - ·~ ---·. ~.~-tcookies and one dozen ;mndwtches. .
New off1cers were mstalled by
Karen Wehrung was t~stalled at Eva Robson. She used the her_b
new county co~tact cha~rman. Eva mstallatmn • Pauhne Atkms,-prest·
Robson •. Paultne Atlctqs, Pearl dent~ sage; Dorothy Woodard, vtce
Canaday, Dorothy Woodard, Stella prcs1dent, thyme; Margaret Hello
Atkins and Marqja Denison attend- Weber, tre!il;urcr, apple mint; Marcd.
cia Denison, secretary; rosemary. ·
Pauline Atkins reported on the
For the program Stella Atkins
OAGC regional meeting. The Rut- had an article ·on "welcoming
land club received several awards wreaths." ·
.
including a superior .on program . Dorothy Woodard presented an
book; superior in publicity book; article on "The Not So Lonely

ADVEimSED ITRI POUCY • eicn of lhtJI aaveniHCJ items is requirea to b. reaclily available ror sale •n each Krootr Store,

-

.

NOV. t, 1•1

- --.-

..,.--

'-

·

·

. '

-· ·

-~

.

,

·

. . ·

'Sentinel it not rnpontiblt for enon efte.r firtV.d&amp;¥. fCh.c:k

m••

tor errors fir" dl'l' 1'd runt 6n p1Pfr).

Ca0 Mfore 2 !00 t) .m.

_.., afl•llubMa•tift 'to
cou.tcd~n.
·~ tt,tl: mutt bt peld In llh'tnct lrt ·
. 'cerd ot Thenk•
"""" 'Ad•

,

Y•d s~.

· · ·.. '"", Memo;1;m·

.

WIH 1110 ap,e• In the Pt; Ple•anl A. . . ter end t.h• GeUt·
poltt, Deity, T~""-"'·
reechlng.o¥tr , 1.000
.ho
. m.,.
. .·
.
. I .

, ·· .

0 ·,

• . • • • • • _,• • • • • • • •

-

MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPlR .
WEDNESDAY PAPER

. ,-11 •00 A.M. .SATURDAY
- 2c00 P.M. MONDAY
- 2c00 P.McTUESDAY
- 2c0.0 'P.M. WEDNESDAY
- 2c00 PM ~IWRSDAY·

THUA,IDAY ·PAPER

-2:00P.M . ~AlDAY

SUNDAY PAPER

.

_

-•.

-~-~- ·-·

. ....~.... &amp;
SHOW
SENIOR CENTER
POMEROY

· RATES ·
Rate

Wordi
. T6

' 16

Monthly

'

TREASURESCRAFTSHOW
..

'

&amp;SALE
SAT., NOV. 9, 10·6
SUN., NOV. 10, 1·5.
Na~onal Guard Armory
Rt. 62 N., Pt. Pleasant ·

·.

15

' .4.0Q

o,.r 15 Wordt .
•
.20

•e.oo

.30

.9.00

.u

. ,

. .05/doy

. .

~-

~~I C
I
ArooCode814

Molgo County
AreoCoOe814

992- Middlepo't
. Pomeroy
111-Ch..tt&gt;t
381-Yinton
Z41-fUo Oreildl 843-Pvrtllnd '
211-Gu'tln Dist. 247-Le1tr1 foils
e•3-~i-ebia Dilt . 14:1-Racin•
742 - Rutlend
379-Walnat

' -.ti-OIIIipolil

317-Chwhi"·

M••on Co , WV
A•ooCode 304 .

e7e-Pt . P11111nt
468-Loon
678 - AS)SIIt Grove
713 - M.. on

182-Ntw Haven
195-llllfl

937-Buttllo

Real Estate Gene"'l

OPEN HOUSE

. MAIN n., RUTLAND, OHIO
hsi.. Rutlaad Bottle Gas Office
'NOVEMBER 10,

2:00 P.M.-4_:DO P.M.

1

.,

")

....

POMEROY • The Pomeroy
Senior Citizens Dance Club will
sponsor a dance on Friday from 811 o.m. with music by the Happy
· Hollow Boys of Athens. The public
· is invited and those auendmg bnng
·snacks for the snack table.
'

' ,,

..

.

3 BR, central air, double car garage,
woodburnln~

flrepl-.ce, total electric••

WL 614·742-2330

MIDDLEPORT · Special ser-

~ices will be held at Rejoicing Life

Church in Middleport on Friday
: and Saturday at 7 p.m. and on Sun: day atlO a.m. Billy Joe. Grandstaff
·• )I' ill be the guest speaker. Pastor
- Michael Pangio invites the public.

Estate Genenll

PLACES TO GO TRAVEL
Welcomes AmerlcaWest
Airlines Nonstop flights to
Phoenix $218
Las Vegas $21 B
Boston $158
Washington $118
Plus low lares to California
and other Western cities
CALL TODAY
1-800-872-2292

ROCK s·PRINGS · The Pomona
Grange officers will meet Friday at
7 p.m. at the Rock Springs Grange
, - Hall.

lb.

u.s. Grade A ChlckenT¥Son/Hollv Farms

· · Whole·Fryers · ·
,

·

Fryers lb . . . 59C

•

VINYl REPLACE,.,ENT WINDOW
·w e.wm Not Be Undersold :

.*Sav,e to 50%-o.n Fuel BIUs •
*Increase the Value of Your Home
*Call for
·

.Turkeys
PoUnd
'

U.S. GOV'T G/IAOED CHOICE
GRAIN FED BEEF

Boneless---

WHITE. WHEAT OR ONION

PH. 949-2101
or Its. 949·2860
---Doy or Night~- ·NO SUNDAY CAUS

DOZER and
BACKHOE
WORK
('614)
696-1

GOLD RIDGE·DOUBLE WIDE ONLY•A deal toO goad to
be true. A 24x48 Patriot mobile '-m lhat h,a 3 bedlllOm~.
two full balhs, a family room, and ivlng room. Al110 at this
lOw priQII """"'wil pay $1,000 -lird the cost of moving.
.
.
$11,100

VERY IICEI Brick &amp; fllll!la Aandl Style Home with 5
riloms, 3 bedrooma, full basement. 26 ~ 14 altjlched
garage, fireplaQIJ, central air. ASKING $59,900
EXCEPTIONAL! Splitlevei-lrame conslrUclion, 9 rooms,
5 bedrooms, 2 bitha, dec:l&lt;, woodbumer, storage building,
basement &amp; f"''cing plus 1 car garage on .45 acre lot
ASKING $69,'500
~

MtOOLEPORT-HudiGII Str-. This to a nloa 2 be«oom
houltwithadelachad garage, Ylnylsldng, linda MWroof.
A WIY neat place.
FOR ONLY$18,000 .

-·
.F/lOZEN

FIH)ZEN DE$SEIIT,
FATFREE0/1

NO/VIlETUflf.IABL£ SOmE,
CAFFEINE F11fE DIET PEPSI
CAFFEINE FREE PEPSI, '

ore Ida ,. sea/test Real Diet PtR.sl or
Prench Fries , Ice cream · Pepsrcola ·
5olll.'J.i-c.l~Dn

,,. ,,.

MlOOLEPORT·Powell lllrHI·Prime land, prime area.
What-could you allk for. 4.52 acres ol~tly lotland
lhat could be ull8d for residential or possible comeric:al. ·
'
$23,100

:1-L/ttr

REEDIVILLE.co. RO.Ili-Approx, 45 ac:re1 of nloelaylng
·land. Apf10x. 2 Dill tillable, 10 IICI8I pasiUre, 35 acnn
dmblr. w-and e1ec:tr1c available.
121,000 ·

'

./

POSSiBLE MONEY MAKER~ This listing has the potential lot 3 apartment units, hme constntctlon, gas space
haaing and a.50+ x 100 parking lot. Agood investm8fll
pi'Opl11y for O!'l~ $29,500 ... :Make An Offerl

NEED A SMALL eUSINESS BUILDING? Want to start
your own bulineu In Langsl'ile? 11'1 a nloa building on
approx. 111C181ol. Has walllr, sewage, and restroom. Buit
lo IIIIo regulations.
$30,000.

·'

mo

REEDIVILLE·liiiiEDIATE POSSESSION! 1 floor block
home w~h 2 bedrooms. 1 cargarege, rear screened porch,
outbuilding. ASKING $21,000

DOmE TURNER. Broller...............................812·5e82
IAS.DA JEFFEAs.:.................................."'''IIN058

'

WE NEED USTlNOSIMERESTAATES ARE REALLY
GOOD ANO PROPERTY IS IIOVlNG...lF YOU HAVE
EVER CONSIDERED IIEWNG OR BU\'lNG NOW IS
THETIMETO DO 111 GIVE US ACALL WE'RE HERETO
· SERVEYOUl
'
'
HINRY E.·CLELAND..........................~..............It2..18t
TRACY BAINAGEA..........................................tU-2A•

J l!!:au11ttJa&amp;ELL ............................................ tM..2110
'"""
JO
HILL...........................................................-.IliUM
OFFICE............. ~..;.,,...........................................IIJ-2251

DARLifE ITEWART......:....•••..•.•·;•••••••..........•.HH315

I

SA 12A 1987 Fom111 Park f.tlbile Home, sliuallld on 1.10·
IICI8 3 becloma, lnaudes 111011 fltmlst!ings, additional
lalluret 11111a 17x62 garage wilh OQmpreasor and 2- tS
x 52 carpotll. ASKING $32,500 Make An Qffet.

. IAJeY BUTcttER...........................................tt2•5371
.,.ERYL WALTERiooooooooHOOIUOUIOOIIUIOOI IIIOOOooouo387•0421

..

'

TV ·VCR· StOfeo
Boom Box· C.D. Player
Scanner • Ty-rller
Cordleu Phone •
Microwave· Rodar
Detector

Home
· Entertainment
Center . ·

992·3524

Conve.rtlble Tops,
Carpets, Heacmoer &amp;
Seat Covers.and
Auto Repair.
!WON. W, VA.

Spldil.... Ill &lt;
Cult_,,..
....
NEW &amp; USID PAI\'5
fOUUIWES&amp;
MODElS .. .

GUN SHOQl.
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

lashan Bulldina

S.t. 28
Choko

.....

OllOilfl&amp; "
1-IG0-141-0170 '

1-(304)

773-9560

~- -~

Mill!! 1

7/31/'t1 tin

Till-COUNTY
RECYCUNG

·AnENnON

~lhonkYau

FIREWOOD
SEUERS •

25•
per ul(lJ:I\. lmlt)
For CINn pry Aluminum
Cona
WHkOniy
11hru 7

Hardwood Slabs

· For Sale
Great Price!
CALL

OHIO PAiiET co.
992-6461 .
.

MICIOWA E
OVEN ·REPAII
AU. MAliS ._.

Iring H .. Or We
Pldc U,. ,

UN'S APPLIANCE
SElVIG
992·5335 or

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LANO CLEARING
WATER.
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS.
HOME SITES

915-3561

ROOFING .
N~

Painting ·
FREE ESTIMATES

~

. .,

JAZZ CLASSES
AGES 3 and UP ·

THE DANCE
COMPANY
-992_·62&amp;9_
GUN SHOOT
FORKED RUN

SPORTSMAN

•VInyl Siding

·Ripllctment

Wlildowa
•Roofing

•lntulatlon
JAMES KEESEE
992·2772or
742·2097

CONSTIUCIION

....w ......

•&amp;·····
...........
l(a pl1t1

+••

Step &amp; Ce

FrJD Esticillfes

531 Bryon Place
Middleport, Ohio

915-4471
667·6179

, 1114/lfn

5-31·10 tfo

EXCAVATING
BULLDOZER and
BACKHOE WORK,

HOME SITES,

LANDSCAPING
WATER 111d SEWER
UNES

liUCXING lVAIWI!

USED.APPU•as

fOHYWUUJm
WASIIIII-$100 "
~~~-$tt "'
.
.
.,_IIATOIS-$fll"
l.utm-...a.c.-$12~"'
FIIIUIS-$125 "'
..., CMIIS-$rt "

KEN'S APPLIANCE:
SERYK£ _

FREE ESTIMATES

992~3838 -

992-5335 ~ • ti5•SS61 -

l&lt;tMa f - l'wt·Offlu-

POMIIOY, 0110

IIIDIPEIIDEJI1' ·
CAIPET CIIA.IS
allll nil FLOOI CUI

1Dia011t tin

- ·· . -- -- - -. · - -

•Reasonable Rate,s

oQu~l
.
ork
•F
· ateo

Begins Sept. 15
htry Suitclay 12 N-

11. I, lltland. OH.

CLUB
Factory Guns Only

·-

'"191/2 .;..

Annou nee rne nl,

GROOM
·ROOM
Complete Grooming

for All Brttds

1·614-667-8474

Ownar I Operotor

nio.

IISSDl&amp;I•D

INSULATION

•Cor
11 Fait Dry
Tirlll '
•High Glou on Tit.
Floor Finioh
• MilE lEWIS, Ownor

EMILEE MERINAR

111111

J&amp;L

9-6-1 mo.

caW'EJ:1tt1n
colltcl at

8/1181/1 mo. Dd.

9-6-lfn

Plllft~
lntwlor Poind .

,.....

949-2168

3/6/90/tfn

BALLET, TAP &amp;

-REPAIR

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning

1171. s.c..l St.

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS
Starting Sept. 22

1·1·11· 1f!\o. '

Howcril L Writllel

IULLDOZ.G

AcrOu p,_ Peat OHico

12 Gauge Foctory
Choke Only

FraeEoUmo
30r•r•••
· ca.
Four t-ool
.-commoncladon. Honnt
lncl dopan~blo.

1

992·7011
or 992-5553

I'OIIIIOY, 01110

BILl SLACK
992-2269

ST. RT. 7-Tuppera PlalnH.ookonceandlookno m01ell
lhis 3--4 bed-oom home. Ladea,you hl¥810 Millie kitchen
in lhls one. 1111 ilqulpped and has a skylight....it ~take
your breath rNIIJ'f. ev.IY room has bien completely •
done. It hat 2 baths and a detached 2 car gnga.
ALL FOR SII,IOO

•,

' ·•

'

"At leasonablt Pric11"

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD
•

141,100

)

HOMES &amp; GARAGES

REMOVAL

1.4NGSVILLE·Look at this niQII 1 &amp;tor( homa that &amp;ita on
approx. 31IICIIII. It has 3 bedtaomo, 2 balhs, heat pt.mp,
and woodbumer. Soma of the land Ia tillable, plush WOIIfcf
be a great place forhunting.llhaaadugwall, pfuuapring.

·Dole Bananas

CUSTOM IIIILT

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and

8«.

Golden Ripe

· BISSELL
.BUILDERS

992-6648 or
698-6864
;

... f!1lddleport, Q,H

AUTO PAm ;

912711 mo.

CEDAR
CONSTIUCnON

205 North Second Ave.

fO(tory Authorizlll Repair

Pomeroy

· ~Roofing

Pound

nmtis :~

H.!.C.

•Remodeling and
Homo Repairs

Eng/Ish Roast

Hair Spray

·lbS.·

992-62

Strictly

OFFICE 992·2886

suave·

GALLIPOLIS • South Central -€haptcr of American Diabetes
· ••. ·Association meet at the Woodland
. :.Centers, 9:30a.m.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

na-.

IN THE DELJ-PASTIIY SHOPPE

EXTRA HOLD AEIIOSOL 011
EXTRA HOLD NON·AE/IOSOL'

' LETART FALLS • The fall fes·
" t1val of the Letart Fa11s ·Elementary
· "pTO will be held Saturday begin·ning at 5 p.m. Cost is $2.50 for
~&gt;adults and $2 for children. _There
. - ~-will be a craft store, entcnatnment
• ~.and games. The public is invited.

!FREE ESTIMATES!

FREE ESTIMATES

gge ,,,,

LETART· The Narrow Way
Singers of Letart, W.Va. will be in
gospel concert on Saturday at 7
p.m. at the Laurel Cliff Free
. ·:Methodist Church in Pomeroy.
: :Pastor Bill Williams invites th,e...
.public.

- .R..flot
,-lntorlot • Exllrlot
Polnt1ng

FULLY INSURED

.Butterball-

- - RUTLAND • The.Rutland PTO
Fall Festival will be held Saturday
trom 6-9 ·p.m. at the elementary
schooL There will be food, games,
prizes, a country store with cr~ft
and gift items. Door pnzes wtll
.also be awarpcd.

-Eitctricel ond ,._1111
-Concrete wortt

•Siding

U.S. GIIADE A FIIOZEN
11CI-LBS. AND UPJ

...

· .~I!Hm Addlllono
-Outtar 'Work

~tn•tinn

Real Estate General

RENT·TO.OWN

IIAME lUND PIODUClS

•Painting

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

'

.~ATS~INSUlATOR8 . ·

·.EVUY
SAT. fiiGHr
6:30P.M.

u.s. craae A TY$oniHoiiY Farms cut-up Fryers or 9·Piece Cut·UP

POINT PLEASANT - The
Handmade Holiday Treasurers VII
Craft Show· and Sale will be held
Saturday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
·and Sunday from I to 5 p.m. at the
Point P.leasan.tNationaLGuard ·--·-~· ,--·~
Armory.

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'

BOB JONES
EXCAVATING

Festiv~l

of Lights Tour
December 8-9
$157 per person
See the Oak Ridge
Boys/Marie Osmond
perform their Christmas
Show, plus alot of
sightseeing and shopping.
Enjoy 3 meals Included.
Only 10 seats left Res.
deadline is Friday
PLACES TO GO TRAVEL
1-800-872-2292

MO.UIIOMI

' Locilt.d On SGflOI'II Schoel ..,. off lt. 141 ;
. (6141446-,4161··-172·5967
.
.

887-Coolv~l•

~

1-800-872·2292

Classified paf{es.con.yl e
jollo~;t•ing lelephonP eXC~Uitf{('S ...
- • • ·ouny

Festival of Lights Tour
November 29
$55 per person
See the Mansion
Museum,
lnt'l Winterfest/Laser Light
show, enjoy dinner at
Wilson Lodge.
HURRY! only 9 seats left
PtACES
TO GO-TRAVEL
----------

,o • • • • •_ ~ - • .•

: BEN·
NEn's· ..COOUfiG
,1I,.G ·'
·· • ,

A .... . ,,, tor con•cutlve rurtt. bro lltn up diVI wltl bech•etd
fnr eer:h rhw •• ..._,,rete edl.
'

HANDMADE HOLIDAY ·

•••

up

·~.·

I

0

·

·-'co1Y tifliOi'INE~ . - DA~ IE;Ol\E PUI(iCATION •

.is.992-6484.

. , '

'

•A · cl~e~il;,d a.tt1iMm.,i placid in Thl Diily~Senlil'!lllt•·
·-cepf- ciMiifted, dltpl-v.. Busii'IMI Ca~_d and lagll notlet~l ·

. .·. -·· .. •..

POMEROY - The Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, D.A.R.,
will meet Friday at 1:30 p.m. at the
Grace Episcopal Church.
"Tragedies of Illiteracy" will be the
program topic. Leesa Murphey will
·be the guest speaker. .

POMEROY • SM card show
·sponsored by Me1gs Local Band
-~oosters from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at
Meigs Local High School. Admis- .
sion .so cents. Dealer table~ SIO.
For information call Toney Dmgess
at
304·675or 992· 7141.
.
\ .. ~ .

•1 point lnety.,. only u•d . '

..

. POMEROY - The Meigs County Senior Center will sponsor its
sixth annual·arts and crafts show on
Friday frorri 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. _A
wide variety of crafts wtll be avrulable. Sandwiches and pie will be
available from noon to 6 p.m. The
public is invited to auend.

•
'
•
·
,
·

.

•P,iae ahd for ~· eapl'let. lalltt:ti .. do~~~ sui~ of •• eon

FRIDAl PAPER

FRIDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS · • The·
• Ladies Auxiliary of the Tuppers
Plains Fire Depanmeni will sponsor its annual smorgasbord style
turkey and ham dinner on Saturday
beginning at 4:30 p.m. Cost IS $5
for adults and $2.50 for children.

. HENDERSON, W.Va. • Square
• !lancing and clogging from 8-.11
-:.·p.m. at the Hcnder'son Commumty
·-; Building. Mustc by Stone)! Creek.
_ Everyone welcome.

., '

•free edt - · 01Wttwly a,-,d' F.ound Ids under 1 5.word•'will be
run -3 dJrl at no ch•oe.
.
_·

All Veterans interested in
starting an.AMVETS .
Servi&lt;:e Organ1zation
please.get in touch with
• Bob Smith atSminy·s in
.· Pomeroy. ' . ·
There will be a meeting
~ · to elect officers on-the "- ~
1Oth of Nov. The number·
•,

MIDDLEPORT - There will be
an organizational meeting ·of the
Meigs County Soap ·Box Derby
ASSociation at 7;30 p.m. on Thursday at the Middlepon Village HalL
Officers must be elected and the
planning for the 1992 Soap Box
Derby must soon get underway.
Anyone interested in assistinjl with
thi s year's derby or becommg an
association member. officer or
commiuec member should attend
\he meeting.

"

·

'Ad1 outtide Meige, Gillie CJf' Melon cauntl• m.u1t 1:1~ pre·

.

.

; CHESHIRE · The Gallia-Meigs
(:ommunity Action Agency will
hold a free clothing day on Thursday
· · high school building in Cheshire.

.

I'OLICIES

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLD TO OEAL.fRS.
~

:(LOSED SUNDAY ...

•/:!~. 1 .10 ~~c~~ tOr-~dl ptld:ln ,~end _:..;,..

:
•
•.
•

SATURDAY
REEDSVILLE · The Fourth
: Annual Eastern High School craft
: show will ~ held SatUrday from 9
: a.m. to 3 p.m. at the high school.

8 U1. until NOON SATURDAY
.

The

Business ·Servic

MONDAY thru FRIDAY 1. A.M. tci SP.M. ·

4:30 P. &amp; DAY BEFORE ,

'

'

· lO PLACE AN AO CAU ,92·2156

BULUnN. IOIRD DIADUNE

·THE KROGER. QO. ITEM$ AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, NOV. 3, THROUGH SATURDAY,

POmerov

Ohio ·

BLLLETIN BO.\RD

'Tiny Bubbles' ·

COPYRIG~T 1~1

I .

Wednesday; November 6, 1991

Marigol.d" sta~ing'madgold afc PTO will llave fall·festival Satilr;
most easily culuvated.and 8l'l) asat- day at ihe School beginning at 5
isfactory annbal. The Spanish.greW . p.m. There will .be.a dimer; 'gl!mes, ·
them and ·placed them at the altar · . a craft shop; lloor priies and ·enterof the Virsin Mary, hence the name · talnment The dinner· cost will ~
Mary Gold. martgold.
$3:50 for adulls and $2
chil·
. . Margaret Parsons had the hint. ~[.=~~ The.;.fub}ic ·is 'jn..:.;..·~o:_~"crying fl6w-erfinthe 'microwave... a...,nu. . , ,
.
staling a microwave enables you to
instantly dry flowers that would
ordinarily take weeks.
·
Eva Robson. had a display of
HONOLULU (AP) - Tourists
wreaths she had made. She dis- won:t find HaWaii's best-known
cuSsed the different materials from crooner, Don. Ho, at the Hilton
which they .were made and•differ- Hawaiian Village Dome anymore,
ent bases for them.
Ho, 61, said he is moving his
~oorothy Woodard closed the show to the smaller Hula Hut on ·
meeting by reading an autumn Beach walk, four blocks away, to
poem from Ideals.
reduce his overhead. He plans to
open there Dec. 22. .. · · ·
'

t.Cipt u "'!CII~IIy_ not_
l d_ln tj1ll ild.__t!_ we oct n,I_(I_"O~I ~I ~n. advi(IJtld.ltJ!n. ¥WI! will otfer you your. cl)oice of 1 ~~lblt
ilam, .wMn lfti!ltH, reflleling)IM 11me IIVInQI Of ~ ratnc~ which w.ll enttl~ ~u to P.y«:hiH the ldvfl'l'- ittm at
"~~!!!!!!. ~ within_30 days. Only one vendor c~n wll,l be ac:cepied 21' 11em_!)~UI~cn!!!!-!!!!·'------

r

F~~!L~~~!~~~~~~!e~~~ry·
a

Rutla·nd Garden Club installs new officers . ·.

.
WEDNESDAY
· · . · . PORTLAND - Revival services
· at the Portland First ChW'Ch of the
Nazarene will be held through Sunday at 7 p.m. nightly. Jan ~nd
Kathy will perform . Jim
Heckathron will b~ the evangelist.
I

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio.

'

j

.

. 614-9112-6820

FALl FESFIVAl
SPECIA£
20 SESSIONS
for $20.00
Offer Ends Oct. 31

FOREVER
BROilI
949·2826

. 11141 mo.

3 Announcements
"Froo Sl"ffo -In, l'otwiOI
Ads, Wrtto To J.S.O. P.O.' lox
184, ..... lion, Ohio ........

Aboolutoty

no ._,. · or

1-ltlt\g on 111o HoN!IIIui-

HIIIIft&gt;P!I1J on I - l k 11o1.,
Hontlng RoOII lld.LI Codor Hoi'
- R d. Wt-pt
t1o
Ylolo!OIS. Harold D. • lolly

R-11.

h...:=.., •

--will . ,. No

,

lng •

Prttldj 1151 ,,.

tho R

No Troopollllna • 11o1 lloo!lonolblo 101' sceltla 1lll on ~

FOR SALE
All Hard Wood
.For Residential
and Commercial

Dump Truck
btllvery or Pick·

Up Your Own
Also Splitter
Services Avallabla
C811992·61

•VINYL SIDING
o.(LUMINUM SI{)ING
•ILOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

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

"F'" Ellllmlt"'"

P1L 949·2101
· or IlL 949·2160
NQ SUNDAY

llodgoollnn,- . . Aatod.
'
Unotllllllotl? . _ AIM
Blnelt• All Aato ~ U:..l'flw
Awlll You. C'anlltlonllol. Wfittt:
lllntlooJ... ~.0, ... 1041, 'OoJ.
Upotlo, UI1ICI QQI.
.

4

Glveeway

FlnploM .._, ..... 11':1044~

. .....

Fno~lw

••

K..-. .......

~•

-~

noodt npotr, 114-MIIM

.

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•

Page-104

n .. l:lv Sentinel

The

Pomeroy.,...;.Middleport, Ohio

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Giveaway

44

white, would mt kea nlee· pet tor

45

5 month old blt ck 1nd tan malt
2

Found· A tlutfy cram

St-,
Dopooll,

colo~

•r.n , ma'-,

monlhs, 614·992·1764
gham 1r11

Irish nt11r dog, 8 yr old m1 ...
SR14 3
near Htrrlaonvllle. ·

housopol, 114-992&gt;5920
LOST·Angus holt.r, 830 lbo. on
Road, 304-875-11113.
LOSf.Whlto
malo

Shltzu,

3br, 2 Story Whh B - t ,
Gorogt In Toillin, $350/mo, PIUI

answert to name of,Splke. can

304..!95-3998.

.
l.ost: Med. size whit., ahort·
halrod docl. Mill Crook put golf
courso. 811-245-11071.

7

-or

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WED.. NOV. I

•

~NINO

•

Moving Silt. C.ntenary Town
. houst, Frld1y &amp; S1turday.
N9v1mbtr 8th &amp; 9th. From 9-5.
Household good1, hDfnt Inter·

lor, clothH. Etc . Priced to Mil.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

dlloill Colt
~r;;il,itM: For Solo: Ntw CNoVtt Ultd) Wam•llv .t:
Dooroi! P......ng, Sill: 321&lt;110, ·-)302.
$110 och; 3 Lorge Tobocc'&gt; dlacou"n1o On ·
·
Pr... BoxM, 141 Eech. I~ -ur
1212, Ev1nlnp • W.Unda.
. ·&amp;
Old Comoro Coldoro: Willing 58
Fruits
~:-:-:-:-::---:---:--ITo Soli Koy&amp;t- 110 AutomatiC
tabl ·
Full llzo bod. Springe &amp; mo~ Projoctor, 40 Yoore Old, 110.
_e ge
es
condMiori. 114-388- ::61-:4-'4-::18,...17.23:::3-'.
Roto Or Mlco? In Your _ , ~ R......bro Prlcod. Ftl·
ltr t FruK Filrm, SA 143 1 ml~
Goo cook &amp;toVI $75. 114-258· Buy ENFORCER, Kill Nil a South of Corponl•, lollow ·
1434.
mlco In only 1 -lno, olgno. Opon Saturdoy -.&amp;pm
GUARANTEED! Avlliobll ol:
GOOD USED APPUANCES Boum TRIO Volu. 810(!,,11 WHI
Walhli,., drylrt, l'ltrlgen1tor1, Mlln Strati, Che...,, utt
ror~~~oo.
Sklggo Appllon,.o,
Farm Suppltes
Uppor Rlvor Ra. Btoldl Stone Roto Or Mlcl? In Your - ?
&amp; Livestock
Cro&amp;t Mottl. Colll14-44tl-7398; Buy ENFORCER; Klllo rllo &amp;
mice In only 1 t.dlng,
LAYNE'S
FURNITURE
GUARANTEED!
11: ~~~s~~~~~!::
Cornpl&amp;ta
honio
tumlohlngo. O'Doll
TRIO VoluoAvollobll
Lurnbor, 134
61 Farm
Houro: Moo-Sot, t-5. 114-4411- Extt fllln - · "-"'~• OH
032,2, 3 mllll out BulaYIIII Rd.
Froo Dollvory.
·
RATS OR MICE?
In Your Houto? luy ENFOIIMovlng Sole: Whol'o loH: plono, CER. Kitto Rtll w · Mlcl In
picnic ·table, 8 drowor cllt&amp;t. Only 1 Fltdlno. GUARANTEED!
814-448o4G21.
Avollobto At: Control SuPPlY, 17
Court Stroot; Sprlno · "Valloy 1
PICKENS FURNITURE
tt. ...,. "typo buth hot. •••·
Hordworo, 11211 JackoOn Pika,· oond.l300.
304olllllo3430.
.
Nlw/Uitd
NouHhold fumilhlng. t/2 mi. Ocloll Truo V.lut LBR, Vlna
Jorricho Rd. Pl. PIIIIIRI, WV, StrM1 At Third Avtnuo, Oo~ lllhl grlndltmllor,- Hotllnd
coti304-871J.145D.
;!llpoi::::I~~·,;:Oh::l:::o•:..__ _ _ __ 711. hOybt"'!, Hotloncl ' ft.
hoyblnil, .... Hotllncl 707
Portoblo opt. llzo wooh• l Rocondltlonad Wllhoro &amp; ~ horv.tor, 2 hoodo. AC 2
•••• "14 ... · dryoro,. oocll $100 oncl up. Wo row, 3 pt. h~C:h no Ull eom bllndryor, •
- • ~r-•.
Hrvlco oil mokto. Tho Wo- &amp; tor. Alluc. oond.,11)4-175-4:!11.
AEN'120WN
DryorS~oppo, l14'440~944.
114-44t1-3151
Jlin'a Fonn ~~-..,)A. 31,
Vl'ro Fumhuro
Luxmon
R·1030
Sttroo
0111
I IM... M777i
Solo l Choir, $11.10 WNkil· R-lvor, 30 WaUl ilor ChonnoJ.
Roctlnor, 15.47 W•lc, Swlv Eacollont
Conclllon,
flw trtctotl • lrn,-o.
- · - Buy,
Rocker, 13.63 Wtolt.Bunk Bod 0.8.0., 114 441 41831 AI• 7p.m. Wldtlit~ trodl, f:00-5:00 Wllluloyt,
Comploto $8.41 Willi, 4 Drowor Sol of ~lu&amp;top ooiiN a ond Sol .lttl Noon.
Chill, 13.21 Wllk; Po&amp;tor Bod- lobi
nd
~IH In bo
room Suho, 1 po., $11.17 W11ic,
oo. rs ,_ M
xoo,
Flf!IUOOR 21s Trtc1or
lncludoo Soddlno.Country Plno ~ht sm, 1111 1300 114-1112- to HP, lt,IIIL.., lnlomotlonal,
210
" 1tt.Si 100 I"'f''l, Uvt Power,
DinaHo With Baneh &amp; 4 Cholro, ...:.;.:.......:·- - - - -- - &amp;3,210;
34D lntwnottor.l $2,310.
$10.11 Woolt.OPEN : Monday
Rldlna Lolllt- 11
owner .Wilt Flnonco, • Thru Saturdoy, ll.m. to ep.m.1 Horu Pow~,! Yotro Old, ij!O. 11122.
Sunctoy 12 Noon Till 5p.m. • Con 114-44o-zn3.
Ford trootor a Hottand
llllto orr Routa 7 On Routo 141,
In Conlenory.
w~ d1e nro-. PI fold, ,_,.. boltro Novtmbor Salt:
SWAIN
II- 94•
:1130 Ford 45 hp 1 double 111lvo,
AUCTION l FURNITURE. 12 Surp(uo Amy Co-'llugo $13,1100. 1720 Ford 24 hll4 WD •
Olivo St., Ooillpolll- Now 1 UHd clothing, 1-talocl · dtcron loodlt f14,000. 130 R Boloro
tumnun, htltera, Wwtem 1 camoufl•~· awnla $30, 11001 $1,400•. MocW M8 8501,
work booto.l14-44tl-3fll.
itothor us Coml!li .· cor- f!0~ modtl . U3 12001 .
Ultd Rolricllrotor, Sldo B• Sldo,. dhort clotSahl~ old ·Hm1t 'llnlfo
K=-ISI
CO-, ll"ot Point; 'JO' Inch .;:~~. ~
6tr':.~
Rt. l1j Polnl PiouorUn~
EIICirlc Rongo Copper, Hot· Rt. 21 N. Fri,'Sot, Sun, ,_..:00 _RI:.;ptoy..:..,R-ooa,..;;;.:I0;.;...4;.;III.;.Willl=.;.·_
oolnl; Wathlr And "-- Whht PM (oxt..rod •··- durt- 1
OE; Ml&lt;rowovo wi.t;'~l. Allin hunting--~~~ 63
Llvestook
Good Condlllonll~22.
1111 2
VI'RA FURNITURE•
.~~
progt T
~Horoo ~ Nlek)

IHouM on Aoulh Lint In

=· -

·v

=
· -. , . . . . , , . , . . . . . . . . , . , - - ,

w...

Mt•

Sno-

=

.;.,

1/.:

U'IING ROOII:
lola a Chi~,
114-44tl-l15l
Rtcllntr, $141.00J
Swivel Hockor, &amp;H.OO; CoHool
Encl Toblto, llt.OO Sot.DINING
ROOM: Tobie With 4 Podded
$1111.00~

&amp;':::.;

11
=-kh!n211~1 , MJ,Ic~-~
SOl; Clok 1'-, ~2112 WHh 1

=
'=t=.
~~-~~~~~-~~~·~ 1:: ~·::tlloom,

52 Sporting Goods
Browno Footboll Tlckoto, Proflr
Sootlno, All Qomo, 1-2281,
IJ4.251-121l

~W~~ir 0:,0:,
1210. fu.w
.

t114t111

72

Ex1. 94, _I'M-

While •lnJIIf!ltt!l' t~m; brown
tollltl; J!UmiM llovo;
,_ fM:I'IIung lnf• . dooro;
llum. ohUIIItl; lroo olond; linfill' HWina rnochlno; I ft . ortlfl.
Clot Chrtilmoo troo. 304-8754004.
WHITI'IIIETAL DETECTORS
Ron Altt.on 1210 Socond

A¥1Rut, OoHipollo, Ohio, f14441-1331.
.

55·

Building
Suppllls

atpoa, ....
"
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Untolo,
Cloildo
toro, Hlo Clrondt, 0H CIA Wlnft4:MUI21.

54
DRIVERS
· Elm To $510 Wk, -II Pock·
~~~te, Co. Cor.
Orlvtll oro yool pold :IOJ I

ml~? n.ii lo whlll wo poy. Uvo
fold ond unfold poy, lrovtl tx·

. for Sale

SO Down On Pre-Owned -~
Homoo. All You Poy to Tox And
Tltlt F- With App,.,vad CrodK.
CoU Elooo Home Ctnttr At: 114m-1m.

odvoneo. Loll modll •
qulpmonl. tofiiY ond otr\'lte
12x&amp;O Amhurl1 how• lrallar,
owordl , IIS'IIo
loodo, CNA will care tor
In my to1al electric, 2 BR, *'ov•,·
Mol« i'orocllcol ,_,.,., ovll~ horne or youra, call
2·7t11 rearkleralor, aome new carpet.
$3600. 614·367·7267.
oblo. 401K pen with compony
rntllhlng up to f t of poy. MUOI E a R TREI 81RVICI. TGIIItlng ,
. . . . , . , _ . ...,lfllrood Trimmlno, Troo Rtrnovll, HOdge 1111 . 14170 C~m•on Ill tom, 3
BR, 2 full bttho, 111n1tn tub1 un·
vorlfloblo ""'*"nco llld 1 yoor Trimming, Froo llotlmotool lf4· derplnnlng,
waSher 1 aryer
............ pulling ... typo 31J.715T.
'trolllro.- .,-e&amp;N E - bporttncod horne • bull-• ~~p:.· moo. 814-441.01101 of.
Truoklno ~d Adklr., :104- cluner, hive itfwwiCM, 3Q4.. 1 -::::-'-=-~--~-182·10111, 1 H2ilo7l02.
171-23a
1fxl Wlndtor, 14x70, 2 BR,
,
_
P·•·••·
.
_
d
14i 4 bodroorn odcf.on.IJ4.245. DIIIVIRS
1 on't 5330.
,.....,... -~- __,II,
Elm lo N&amp;Owlt. ti!MU pockoao houl your 1oat to tho milt lu&amp;t
1~ CIII:J04.17S-1l5l
,1110 Rodnlln 14170, B&amp;th l 112
Houtc~~I'J:
Rtooonoblo Toto! Eloctric, 112,100. lt4-:J'Ii.
EARN MONEY -..a lloobl rotto. 1
lrlyllmo.
2430, IJ4.143o2757.
1247
.po,OI»'yr. , _ PotonUII.
1112 14lll2, 2 or 3 bod·
DoloHt. !t) - - b1 . .Y· Ukt To Hovt Y- in&gt;nln~Dono -roomo modoto,
2 lull bllhl
10111.
.
'
In A - · Cftln Pilot? I lit thing~ root, vinyl lldllig, iii/
And Wo WIH Tolk Altoul h. I ,.mna. 2d R20 willa,_ ~
Eooy Wortd bctlllnl Poyl lt- Hovo
RtttNne-. 114-38W713. lnclud"od $17,19'7.00. Coo 1
.
oamblt Prod- At · Coli
Toll Froo, 1-11-150, lEal. lllto Poulo't Doy Coro cantor. 72H045.
31J,
8111, ollordoblo, ohlldcore. 11-F
REBATE REBATE!
f o.m. • 1::10 P.rtt. Aoo• 2llo10. Up To $1,000 - . , On llttaro, oft« . . - . Drop-lno Lot M - AI . _ H.,. c.n.
walaame. 1111.1224. New •• ,.,,. Or... 8111ctlon NowMre
toni Todcllor Con, f14.44U227.
EIH But El- H- Conlor. 1·
~51'10.
•
Prlvolo
Duly
Nll'linaiRN
,pllllt

.,-lud

•Wrlel.

:t.':lb................
.

Rlfllet Cll AVIH~bft,

112t.

114.....1..

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

3 .._ Fumlohad Aportmonl
Hill Milt Eul Of PortOf,
Rt.J64, $271/mo. I14-38W113.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 631 Joebon Pika
11om $112/mo. Walk to ohotl &amp;
movloo. Coi11J4.441.388. EOH.
Eiflcloney Aportmont UPololrt,
Quill, Wol Kopt, Nletly Fur·
nlohod, Corpollid, All Ulllllloo
Fumtthad, Air Condtttonlno,
114-44tl-2102.
·F• rent· New 1 bdrm 1pl, fum
or unlllm, In Mldc8oporl, 114182-1225 or 11112-1304.
Fumlol-.ocl 3 Roomt &amp; Both,
Clltn, No
Ro-. •
Dopooll Roq
114-4411-1519.
Nlooiy F . . - Apor1mlnl,
1br, next to Llfnry, porting,
-trol hoot, o~1 .r:o1Winco roqulrod. 114-44U-.
Fumloholl E~, $1Wtno •
Ullllltl Pold, Shoni Both, 1107
- . . ! Avo, Oolllpollt, lf4.441.
4411 Aft• 7p.m.
G,..._ living. 1 ond 2 bod· ·
, _ opo~monto It .. Vllloge
Minor
ond
R-

on

=-

I

. '·

how many pec)ple we
allovtld ta ftt 0!'1 a buB.•

q::&gt;

.' ~

'.

' "

.

~

.~

..

'

•

&gt;

'.

SCRAM-lUS ANSWIIIS
H•S
- Crush - Berth - YOU are RIGHT

....

"

·

ForiJ uh; 1987 Olic Plck~p~~~ 2 a.gloo $25 oocll. :104111
Elcollont Condlllonl 1
3430.
,
2351.
3 CFA Hlmallyon KKtont,
4 eompl&amp;tt otorm w l - lllfh StiOoo., 114-HMal
tcroont, IR 12"121", $10 - · ·~~ 304-4711-451'1.
llttg'!l~' - old,
&amp;tlrtod 10 ""'· - · 304-8758 _h. Store pootta~ H"'-' 11114.
•·bod, llkt ....
. 114-3tl772tll
AKC
rogilltiH
-uro
870 Dtor Sto~.~ 11wn utllhy
trollor.l14-448-31w.
Connon 31 liM, AEI~ 110
MM Llrw, Eactlkrnt
neilton.
Spood Ugh, ls.A, ~
Zoom Loni PIUI · c -. . .
o.B.o., 114 he 4131 Aft• 7p.rt:J.
Boby bod, moltrooo, chonolno
tlblo, rww dlopor bog. 1 1415 • .

In Uld# F.!DI\ Ohio. 1 •nd

~ ,.=-.J:::...

...,.--'"""--~-,~.. Chavy S-10, •utomallc, 4

School
Clo,;$

alonJ.!&amp;" Tlrel, Aluminum Alma,
lt4-•,..28&amp;2,
2237.

~~1 •nt
~no

J:-5"'

-\'11~

1-.

nory -onr.
Ponnoll,

T101my

'""

"""

-·

~;::;:1 ,, . ·11-r.
"ft-&lt;AV~.)

73 Vans &amp; 4 wo·s
11711 Ford Club Wagon Phone

' ALLEY OOP

~.

1180 QMC 350, Auto, Air, $1,500.

814-388-i521. .

7:35 (J) ~ • Son
8:00 (%) • i1J UniiOived .
Myt*IH in Las Vages,
pollcl IlliCit for fraudulent
shoppers. Steroo. E;J
CIJ. (J) • Dlnouura The (ob
wizard assigns Robbie the
IHellme l2P of lree pYsher.

I!]).

l=:*cnet~ ·

::74::::-:~M.;.;o:-:;,to~rc,;;;y~c:..::le:.:s:..._.,...

Cl1erlle
VIII Counlty
mualc stars become objects
of praettcal Jokea perpetrated
by Charllt ChaN. (1 :00)

1981 Suz.uk.l 4 cyl mototcrcle,

runo good, $375, 614~47-4292 ·

Sterto.

, . . . (PQ) (2:30)
.
1:30 (I) (J). Wonder YNro

2tlt3

transml11lon. 304-175-3406.

&amp;

Sterto. C...

(!) Edgt _t;l

(f) Apj)IIIChlln lltpor1
Ill)

BUT

1117 a.., Non: lllgh rnlltoga

noedl ~Good lrlnlfiO!I•;

,.,..,,
lion - ·
Motion

For ..... lnlot•

--.aM2, Aak
.

till llulolt ~: Loodtd,
...000. f14.441o0m.
1Ntl Oldl CUIIoto ' .........
aaod ""'!!!:1 elton, lunrool,
~~~ fi,IMI ·ml~.- tlrot.

. -.-,....
l

i

MOVIE: Murdtrout VIIIDn
(2:00) Steroo. C
• Nealtvllle NOW Stereo.
ID LPIT lowllng From

Dtnvar (L)

....

Clltt o "&gt;e~ow

BARNEY

lncl~o~dlng;

ME AN' BOSSY-'WOULO LIKE TO
TRY OUT A' NEW MILK PAIL

DADBIJRN

FEMALE

(!)Ned

SHOPPERS//

«)

roam1, put up vinyl

1r1ller lklrtlng. 614a

Hoi. 7, 1111

Your prolll motive might be stronger
than usual in the year ahead. II will serve
aa a motivating Ioree !hal will urge you
t o - eddltlonal ways to enhance your
Income.
SCORPIO (Del. :14-Nov. 221 You're
bolh ambltlouo and Ingeniously lmagl· ·
native loday, and thlf could prove to be
a profitable combination. Personal
galno are otrong probabilities. Trying to
patch up a broken romance? The " stroGraph Matchmaker can help you under·
stand what to do _Ia make the relation·

'"'

Upholstery

;;__;;.:;.;;.:.;;;;;..:.;;~-

Mowroy'o Upltolotortno -lc·
lng lrl ooiiOty ltll 21 ~-~· Tilt
boot In lumllurs up~ololoring .
Call 304-615-4154 tor lret ••

/lmotn.

''

-~

Ridenour Ettclrlcll, 304-871·
1711.

87

1 Sacred 1ong
5 Mischievous
child
·
8 Photo IIIII
(II. I
12 Part olthe
tYI
13 12, Roman
14 Authol Jaan
M.15 Advonturouo
dlld
16 Retrlaerote
17 Woody planl
18 Safely ogcy.
19 Erpoolng to
air
21 Compan
point
23 Thai g)~
24 Sumrntr
hOUII
29 lllddlt
Eootornora
33 -Goh
Sacrol
34 Clrculor lenl
38 Arid

Dlollncllve air
Anecdote
Gypoy man
LIIVII OUt
Milk ougar
Hatten
Cry of
surprllt
49 Ancient
lntllunttnl
54 Southwell· •
ern lndl1n1
58 Employ
59 Black brtld
60- lltcklnrldgt
61 Slop- -!
62 Author
Fltrttlng
63 Slulfld ohlrt
84 ToiTV
85 Printer'•
mtiiUrll
66 Male children

'.
'

ance that will be mutually beneliclal. It
will be with someone older or more ex·

results.

perlenced 1than yourself.

.

CAPRICORN (Oec:. 22· Jin. 18) You'll
operate very .ellll!'llvely today - 11 you
are able 10 lree ypurselllrom outside lnlluences. Do things the way y&lt;JU lhlnk
they should be done.
AQUARIUS (Jell. 20-F"'- 11) RtiiiZa·
lion ol your expectations Is likely toclay;
you 're a pragmallc visionary, not lull a
wlahlul thinker . The former succeeds,
lhe laller falls.
,
PIICEB (Fob. 20-llarclt 20) You have
some~nlng. extra going tor you tOday
thai separates . you from .lhe "illsorans." If you uae It constructively, we
will see you In lhe winner's circle.
ARIEl (lOrch 21-Apr111t) Make an ef·
Iori to seek knowledge today thai will
be of practical use In helping you better
your lila. It's within your grasp.
..
; ll
·~

,
"'

TAURUS CAprii20-Mty 20) Tnere ts at·
ways an element of risk involved when·
ever we contemplate making changes.
However. the odds against you are min·
lmat today ,
GEMINI CMay 21-.June 20) Conditions
are favorable today for forming an alli-

CANCER (June· 21· JUIJ 22) Vou might
have to work a trllle harder than usual
today, but your rewards will be proportionate to the efforts you expend , Don't
let tough uslgnmtflll .lntimldate you .
LEO (July 23-Atrg. 221 An enterprise
you are pttltlef11iy conlllderlng could
have the possibilities you envision .
However, atlhlatlme, a bit more wort&lt; Is
required.
VIIIOO (Atlg. 23-Bept. 22) II you don't
go and Iaiit on more than you can com·
lortably manage tOday, your probablll·
lies lor flnollzlng mailers to your salll·
fiCtion ere \iery gOod.
LI8RA (Sept. Z3-0ct. 221 You can Ignite
the lntert~~l ol others today In ·on Issue
about which you feel sl•ongly. Take
your measege directly lo those Who are
'
essenll.llo your plans.
~

Pass

Opening lead:

+10

,.
amond and two clubs.
However, when the hearts split 4-2,
you need three club tncks. The right •
play depends on the standard of your : :
opponent. II _East would always win •
the queen With the ktng, you should
' lead the club mne to the queen. But
against an opponent who will realize
that hts only chance ts to duck the
k1ng, the percentage play is to lead
low to dummy's eight, hoping that .
West has the 10 and East the king (or,
1'. Ea~l has the club 10, that tbe club ·
k1ng IS doubleton).
H the layout _is as shown and East
ducks h1s c_lub ~1ng, you lead the queen
for a wlnmng finesse .
.
(i) '"''· ,... . ..,.. EtrTEttONH • • .._

9 Coamon.ut ...... ·:·

Mont and
3 Engage , aa

. - Gagar)n · • ·
t
·
10
H....,...r part ~-¥ ~ e••r•
11 Dtllanor- . •
· 4 Swimming
Cllalnl
5 Corn Uly
20 Cry of
6 Rodent•
triumph
7 Docko
22 lltlltod
8 Hoadwur
24 Hi or bye
ITIIktrt
•
25 Egg cell
26 Actrosi Gan
27 Chtp
. •
28 Relating to
' '
tlntt
30 Olaircran
31 Sit'1 lib~ngs
32 Orntmtnlal
patlorn
35 - .,.,,
38 Sporta figure
40 Sgt.
v-+--+-t--1 43 Occupy a
chair
'IT+--4--1 45 Heavy
sounds
-+--4--1 47 Macabre
49 Unit of
Illumination · ...
50 Math term
51 Saad

.

DOWN
1 Author Victor

2 Actor

w

(!) Nlgfll Court Stereo. 1:;1

(!) Ntwlwti1Cit
A - Hal Stereo.

R•

i ~.:;:....£.

covering

52 Actor O'NIII
53 Wanta (11.1
'
558oginner
56 Emerald lola . • ·
57 Iondo under
weight
' •

Wllh
VIH COuntry

Cltalllt
music lllr1 become ob(ecta

'

ol prectlcal jOkea pe.poa ated
by Charllt Chlae. (1 :00)

Sterto.

~pom

11:30 (I)

':t:IS

(!)A

....

ToniQ!!!

Ill ........." I;J
'I DthnH

. Manllor

-.

'I WE G

:

EJR

(I) MOVII: ... I ialh (2:0Uj

11:11(2). iiJ TOftlahiSho'!l
Sttrto.

•lllldlo

(I)Chltral:;l
12:00 (J)
II Stereo.

ID.Lo¥11 Cot-11011

iiJ , . lquelil•

'

CELEBRITY CIPHER

'&lt;

Celebf'Uy Cipher l:f'tPIOQrMtl .,. ~ ffom QUOlltiOnl l))' ~ people, p..t ltldpreMnl.
Eacfl lttt« M'l,IM ClpiW ltlftdl tor lnOihtr. TOO.y'l CW: A equ./J D.

IE~~.

QNa_.!~
TlriiiiMno.

..

·~

Oilftar (R) (2:00)

a

\

'

11:oo&lt;Il•
&lt;ll• a a •
· iiJ Norwa
sh ip work. Mail $2 piYs a lOng , self•
addressed . stamped envelope to
Matchmaker, c /o this newspaper, P.O.
Box 914 28, Cleveland, OH 44101·3428.
8AGinARIU8 (Nov. 23-0ec:. 211 Try IO
be a bit more IWerllve than usual today. without being" arrogant or brash,
whe re your sell-Interests are con·
cerned . Initiative produces desirable

East
Pass
Pass

· 37
39
41
42
44
46
48

m

Will build pa11o cove,., dtcka,

llectriciln.

ACROSS

10:30 Qll Crook and Chase
D llll1nl1 WPA World
Championship, semifinals
from Laa Vegas
10:35 (I) MOVIE: Hkllt Plainl

;

"Norlll
2t

Pass
Pass

The World Almanac®Crossword Puzzle

Robertton

ASTRO-GRAPH

•

•

0 700 Club With Pill

BERNICE
BED)': OSOL

Uctnlld

.

(!) Glut Pttrlonnanceo
Dltnce Illuminates rellgiOUa
ferver In amall·town America .

...

tKJ 10
tK62

.....

The second bridg~ magazine 'ptlblished i_ndependently in England-is International Popular JVjdge Monthly.
It costs 140 annually , including transatlantic airmail (212-866-5860).
The magazine is aimed at the upper
echelons, but there is a monthly declare r-play quiz, with prizes, for the
less expert player. Today's hand is
from this competition. To test yoursell, cover the East-West cards and
plan the play in three no-trump, West
leading tl!e spade 10.
South decided his hand was worth a
three-no-trump rebid because of his
suit and excellent controls.
·
Also he was influenced by his-lack of
interest in finding a major-suit fit.
There are seven top lricks, but you
don't have time to play on diamonds.
The right play is to slart by cashing
the three top hearts. U they br,eak 3-3,
you guarantee your contract by leading a club to dummy's queen . You will
collect two spades, four hearts, one di-

8J·H-C
a war1c1 ...wr

2321. CALL COLLECT

•to 1

Vplnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

By Pblllip Alder

Stereo.

Room addl!lona. t iding, rOofing, ·
vinyl replacement windows,
carpentry by AI Tromm, 614·742·

tH432

.SOUTH
tAK
.AKQ
tA8 5 42
tA93

Another magazine
from England

(f) Edge C
~ 0) •ll Houri Stereo.

EVANS, JACKSON, OH. loiOOo
537-1528.
Ron'o TV slrvtco, opoclollzlng
In Zanlth 1110 Hrvk::lna mott
othtr brtnda. HauM Cilia, also
aom1 appliance repalra. WV
304-578·2318 Ohio 814-1411-2454.

Muter

Klnt uvet

Sisler Steve learns Dowling
Ia th9 next target of a priest
killer. (R) Stereo. E;J
8:30 (%) • i1J Stlnr.tcl A
restaurant lOses business
wh9n Jerry gives th8 owner
adv~. Stereo. 1:;1
10:00 w• IIJ Quantum I.Hp
Sam lupe Into a research
chimp w!l9 Is threatened.
Stereo. ljJ
.

Aeration Motora, repaired. New
&amp; ro-bulh molcro In otock, RON

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration
Rttldontlol or comrnarclol
wiring, new HrYiol ar r.pelra.

Lllny

D Flllhtr Dowling r.tr.tynatetetrl4iella

Bit Or Smollll~oll.o225.
JET
.

z

2 II d,_ Full loth, LA
LR, Kllol!on, Loto Colllnoto,

.

a

!"""'

bodroorn lurnlthod opt, ooma
wJih Ulll=~t ..........
dopooll
' 30WI24111.

WRITTEON A

D• Jake and th8

F a - Jake accidentally
kills a teenage boy. Steroo.

COL.JPL.ECF L.EiTERS'Jd
• ~I&lt; AI!II!IY'ABOUT HIM.

1182 eo ...... rod, 12,000. 304171-7723.
11M
Ctlleo GT, $1100.
f14 Ue.i7tlhflor 4pm.
till Iuick Rlvloro, oU Ollllono,
31,000 mltto. 114-441-4110 olltr
tp.m.

Wayne's

Kevin 11 attracted to
and the IHIIngs
are mutual. Steroo. C.
&lt;D Mlnllc Mlnlllon ljJ
t.0o (%). IIJ Nlgfll ~ Dan 1
plana a bachelor pert; for
BuM, but.th8 revelers end up
stranded. Steroo. C
(I) (J) • 'FilM Aifttt (PI 2
o12)' AIC MlniHriet (2:00)
gl~lrilrtd.

Pluft!blng, Ellctrleal. lnturance
Ctolmo Accop(ad. l14-258·1811.
Curti• Home lmproveman11:

1171 Monto Cotto, 310 Engln.,
1100, :104-77W109.
1m Chrntor~. 310 ong,
114-itl:l.ft51304-875-H51.
1110 ,Chryolor Cordolto LS, 11eyt, oulomltle, nlcl cor, tolling
.,.,. 080, no ruol. 114-1411'

•

Dar.tA-nEvento
8PrlmeHewl
D 110 tlrotMr Jake
1:01 (I) MOVIE: Yau Only Live

1m Ford rabullt motor tnd

lmprovementt.

.

Stareo. •Iii

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

EAST

WEST

tiOUS
~ .JH 3
tQt
. t107 s

... W)lb Cltllthn

Ma

~-=lire

Sunroof.

Campers

Ton)ght

Qllla a Stltr Stereo.
ID Major LHgue Baltblll

4 Wholt
Air Con·

79

(L)

(!) I!) lloitvlval Spedltlo 1:;1
1111 D • lroolllyn Bridge
Alan a_nd Katie arrange lor
their limlllee to meet 11 a
reataurant. Staroo. C
MOVIE: A fllifUI of
Octlln C2:00)
I

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
1989 Cojun Bo• Boot, 11 112 Ft.
Flbo'!llo.. flO HP Mlrlnor Ap.
pror. 12 HQurs On MotOf, Ukt
Naw, $8,750 Or Beat Otflr, 304·
878-2040.

PHILLIP
ALDER

I1(2).WIIMI
ot Fortune 1:;1
Ftimlly Feud

THEY'W SPOTTW
US,OSC... , HURRV
ITUPF •

Plumbing &amp;
Heating
Corto(o PIUOiblng
FoUrth ond Plno
Golllpotlo, Ohio
114-4411-3188

•

S"tarto.

fNOUGH

AClJVf GOLf• • .

010, ln4.3fl·mG.

And

Botho, $31,HS And Up. I~ Floh To•• MIS ~-11.1 Avo.

A.,.._,.

(;_'

''

614-112·11162
1m F.d nn, 351 eng. $600.
304-8711-31171.

(11

, ,. -4' F~TA.rrrroPif; . .. Bur

-

GMC Huvy Holt 1121on pickup.
ANIOMbty prlcod. 304..!82·

11a

F - tiff eomoro l-211, 2,1100 tc1uol
SaH ' popplr. fiiO. eon - . mlllo, window . otlek!', buMd
nlnga a -ndt.l14.aa-1J1S. ~llkl naw) $13,oo0, IJ4.
AKC fl!glottiH -nlono.
Colm Tome~ P - . Hod 1MI · llplrll 4 Cyllndtr, Good
fll!lptL Hloh lllioogt, 1100,
Shott, W..nutL 304-flWIA.

Drogon•Jncl
Coltory -ldii-·
Big Dokoto Fonn Home, Built S
t - ond IIOIIIoyln

a

AJ f)O&amp;Top,;, yoli'~L LiA~N TO l&gt;iAI. WITH APVf~fi'T'(
· ~;;A~t-oN::.-/ fflVJ'r,ATIO('I, $ETIACJc.f ANP EVi'N
'

fi\~JiGb/

whtol drive, very good condt-·
Uon, low mllooge, 304-875-3433.
or 6711o7t09.
·
1986 Ford Bronco Black, Fully
Loodocl, Automotlc Tronomlo-

76

:l:nrnent

Bulls at Bolton

·

. '

t763
"tQJ 84

i f~.t.,~:::.."IT'cL
Caltlca

Auto, 351 Wlndaor, $6,000. 614-

'.

U-4-11

•a s 4 2

7:05 (J) Too CloM lor Comforl
7 30
'

204
=.1111
7.0.==--:-::=--::o:---..;Ford F~D, 4 Whool Drive,
3814821.

NORTH
tQJ

ID

1981 Ford Bronco, 8 Cylinder, 4
Speed, Rune Good, NHd•
Somo Body Worll u,ooo Milos,
14,300 or Boot error, 304-578-

l"od

Schnluzar pupploo,

Ori Your Lot. I Bedroomt, 3 IU 4•3144aftW'7pJn. ·
7311.

IIJ

--::-,.M_ot..,.o_r_H.,:o.,..m.;.;e;..::S_ _
::
-•·
.,..
1973 Wlnnoblgo 318 tng, looko
Attonllon: Dolry. .n And For· and runt goOd, (niOd to 1111)
- . , Allofdobto Hoolh In- obo, 114-912·11145
turonco For Tho Sail Emptoyad, "1=
m-=Fo- r-,.
d -m
-o-to-r .,.h-om
- ,- .-23
- ft-.,
WVA And Ohio, 114-141'NASE, 18,168 octuol mllot, 6 new
Anyllmo.
Mlcholln tlroo, lully contolnod,
Boby plgolor olio, 1-1~017.
cond., roody to. go, 18500,
14·9411-2038
Bill Cro~VU. #;~_• onlmit
-lolly, -175·
•
Services
Cu&amp;tom Llvlltock Houllng. Con
Houl To Hlllolloro Salol Or L.oco=. Chuck
Wlllloma
Trl - .·Trueklng. 114- 81
Home
Improvements
64 Hay &amp; Grein
BASEMEN'!
WATERPROOFING
Groin Storsge A111lloble .181 Por Unconditional
llfetlma ;uaran.
B~J Morgon Formo, R1. 35, tH. Local reterenc• tumlthtd.
Wilt flrginlo, 304-837-2018.
FrH eatlmaiH. Call colt.ct 1a
Hoy: .Round &amp; Small blltl. 614·237~88. doy or night.
Salurdoy only plclwp. 304-175- Rogers l•••m~nt Wa1erproollng.
1132.
Complata Mobllo Homo SII·Upa
Roralraj Comrnerical,· R•lden.:
Transportation

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

•'

•

.

Aplltftllnteln 1119chcart. FIWII
$1tl. CIIIIJ4.112·TIIt 1011. ·

""··=•nta· •v.,.

\.

'

!
~- Q~-~~~~----~

Trucks for Sale

$4&amp;0, 114-247-42i2

l

' '

Yaare Experience On Older I
NFtwlr Hornet. Room Addlllona,
oundotlon Work, Rool)ng
,
Kltchono And BothL Froo .,.; ·•
lhnt1Hf Rtferencn, No Job To

liSt J.D. llodtl 8, Complotoly
Ro~uiH ,Biodt Porto, Hy-

8 Acroe Abovol- oon, Will
Vlriglnt., 11,100. Survoyod .... lltlrlatl* Wlh lor"'"
~ft· DR, t400/nlo. ·-11-1013
porltriOI And Rttwoncn. 814' Right Of Woy, :rD4-87WIM.
• 1 p.m. Rod..,, 111, No
UIH41.
Po
ta.
BulldlnglotiJ«ro onot up, TP •
Will Do bollvlfl11no In my homa C w&amp;tor, Eoot•n llloltro Co.,
c.nploliy F~ rnobllo
onytlma. t~'lllll.
quortor mill SR 7, 114-111-MM
homo, 1 - . . _ town - ·
F.M.H.A. 112 Aore Lott Flnonclng ~o'&amp;
rlvor. No ......
114Whl Do
AYiillble.
114
4tl
1112.
llpo-~• -• or 114441~ ..... .,.......
lldrooa'n
Fumllhed
Florldo Property lor Mit, ncolo 0nl
In PotN Pluotnt
Wilt ~ ptonil lotMM In my lent, beach aru, lot •nd mobile
hornt: M por hill hour. Mon• • homo. For dotlilo col 1-tOHlfo Vfry ~~J.EIIro Nlcll No Poto:
:104-171-MUU.
,
Frt. tt+216-1714.
8612
Will BobJtM In Mr Homo, Ju&amp;t
011 110, On _ , . , Pika, Ex·

"=

..:::..

r

"

.....

....;:..N...::O...;D::....;:.E..:.N:,.T,:......-=1~--: ~.epiii\:IC-p'~.,.-,lgly,h~·k,·o
6 • I, 17 . I
v _.. - ...
_..,
1
by filling In tilt mtJiino -d•
I.......I~._,,L.....,..I.L.....I.L.....,..I.I.-.J
you develop from sttp No. 3 bo'iow.

rollor'~Gndoldr.:"itro..:~'::
S3,111;
10 n.u. Troln...., 114-- •••2.

~\oo; C:,ni'L.:tn;

Bow
Bocl
Cholro,
II21.00.BEDROOU: Po&amp;ttt Bad·
room Suht (5 po.), $341.00; 4
Drswor Chool, 944.115; Bunk
Bod, $229· Complola Full 11oft
!'11 $106./lo Sit; 7 po. Codlr
..._.. Buill, $8iii.OO.OPEN:
Mondoy Tlwu S&amp;turdly, to.m. to
lp.rn., Sundoy 12 Noon Till
5tt.m., 4 MillO on Roulo 7 On
l!outo 141 In Conlonory.

c::

fi•'iao!

Btock, brlclt. -

32 Moblle.Homes

..• •'

I

roq-

Wanted to Do
19u Ply,....h Qroncl Fury,
$1,IIOO. 114-25Nlo,.
B~mtno In ~own Homo,
Any Tlmo, f.ny
, O.op lno
Aro Wolooml, Will xportencod,
Uvo In Conloriuy Anro, 114-4410433.

t-Il J

z;..;.;.j...:.:...A

RIGHTI'"

:&amp;•

18

-

. '

laat word In an argument, lry saying,

Choohlro, 2 or 3 Br, 1 both, lolol
oloctrle. $321 mo. r.u• -·dip.
614-317- oftor .
About EligibilitY Requlromtn1o, BulinMI. Above Average In·
Syrscu•, Dip 1200, $200
Alii For HOrne a-. .
oomalt.aoo.atl-2000.
Rick Pe1rson Auction Comp.~ny,
month pluo - · rot rofull lime auctlonMt, complete MIINintRCI: Knowladgo of L.ocol Vondlng Rout1 For Salo, qulrod, no poto,IJ4.1112-32tl
air
condHTonlng, Choopl Mutt Sill Quickly. 1.10tJo
aucllon 11rvlce. Llctnlld Ohio, hutlng,
Throo lldrwm Roncll With 112
tloelriCol nocoeury. E•poot- 155-1313.
We ~t VIrginia, 304·773-5785.
.
wHh HWigt lrNimonl t&gt;llnt
Aero Lown, - Homo, I~ Exeo~
holpful. Rolily to: Bor CI.A091 Looking for manf..:t couples lonl CondHion, Stcurftr. DottotH
9 · wanted to Buy
clo OolllpoQo Dolly Trlbuno, 125 over 30 with poeltiYI attitudes And Rtloro- Requ rod. 304Thlnl
Want to buy &amp;tondlng timber &amp; 45831. Avtnuo, Golllpollo, OH 1nd 1 goal In 1111. If you're tired 87WTJit, 304-182·36H.
of woi'klng ror eom•one till
plno; Tim B•rho 61'4-992-7880
after 6pm.
Moture1 dopondoblo boltytlltor and woulcf lllca to go Into buai- 42 Mobile Homes
RHI f&lt;&gt;r yourtllf, 614·1112·2157
In my home, lrrtgular (wllllroln)
for Rent
Want to · buy uatd electric wanlla
houro.
Roloronctt
o
mu&amp;t.
304. lreadmlll &amp; laying hena. 614-388- 175-7212.
WOLFE TANNING BEDS. Com- 12180, 3 f1!1. out 50, 2 BR, wotor
9354.
mercllii-Home
UnHt.
From po!d..~'!'"· ·Rtf, &amp; Dopooh.
Ezperllncl Nu 11 ary. A
Wantad lo buy, Stondlng tlmbtr, No
1111.00.
Lampo,
Lollono,
Ace
... ~~~ 44la1QU,
Dolly Solory Of $300 For Buying
Bob Wllllam1 &amp; Sona 614-992· Mon:hondltl. IJ4.~2Q82, Elf, 1011ot. MonthlY Po~nlo Low 14x70 ol -trle on prlnlo lot.
5449.
Aa 111.00 Coil T~ FREE.NEW $250.00 pluo Ulllhln. HUD Ap.
3883.
.
Color Cotalog. 1
22U282.
proved. 304-f75-t088.
Wanted To Buy: Junk Aut01 PHOTO TRIMMERS: Wlthlno to
Whri Or Wlthctul lloloro. Coli Ito~ lmmodlotoly. No 11p. 23 Professional
14170 wHh IIPIRdo. In County
Lorry Uvtly. I14-38B-11303.
VInton .,.., Water1 lrllh paldr
-11ry. Elrn up to fltO per
Services
$250· &amp; dtpooH. t14-388-9881,
trlminlng
pholovropho.
1·
Wonted To Buy: Jilnk Auloo,
-336-8005.
.
114-~-- ·
Strop 1114ol 114-441.aot3, After
Do You Nood Somoona To Ctoan
2p.m.
Pomtroy ~AL JOBS fit~ Yow llornt Or· ontco, Run Er· 117'1 Schull, 2 bodroorn, oil
No oxp. nttdad. For rondlo For You,, TyDo Lttltro Or electriC, twnlahed, 304-f1Sa
Tqp Pr- Pold; All OkLU.S. $14.110/hr.
.
.
txom-oncl ollltilcltlon loto1 _olll Rtportt: -Oo~Helfth lnaurtnce 3401.
COino, Gold Ringo, llllvw Colno, 1·211-lll"1"17-1Cipm
7aoyl.
Billing,
Notarizo
Poporo•
Hon
A
Gold Colno. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
crpwn O.llv• Helium tllllona? 1911 14170 2 bedroom mobtlo
151 Sacond Avonue, Gollpollo.
POSrTIOII AVAILABLE: Vlcllmo II 8o, Contact: Gl~ F~doy Sor· home. rw•ranc., plua dapDIJt,
Aul&amp;tlftCI , euo.· llonogor. vlcto, Mocklt Rlckord Ltnndor, 304-17S.N81.
Wontocl: Cld prwworlubo rodloo, Provide
Direct Btrvlcl To Vlc&gt;o owner, 304-182-3710.
old rodlo pona, old rodlo lim•
Of Ylollnal. IMhtlar'e In
2 bedroom ltlllor,
- · ' ....
catalog•. Ricllal: mutt t.n Soclol Worll, Rlltlod Fllld Or
fumllhod.
Rot.roRCtl,
Aloo,
boon ouln bolore 11112. Any Equlvolonl Erpttlonoo. Eo·
trolttr
tpoco.
North Rt. 1 Loculi
Real Estate
condhlon. ChuaU. Phone :104- porlonco Wootdna With eRood on rlgltl, Pl. PH. 304-175182~220. Big monoy for oomo tlonotly Dlolurltoil Populotlon.
IOM
.
madill.
SoRCI R.....,. To Sondri McFifo
2
BR'T
portlY
lumllhod on 881.
lind. Woodllnd. Conlon, 3011 31 Homes for Sale
304-8 U701orl14-44ilo2133.
VInton
Plu,
Gotllpollo,
OH
Employment Services 45831. EDE.
ABSOWTELY MUST SELLII 2 BR, Ioiii tloctrtc 1 112 milo
Roducad To Soli: 2 Story 3br
POSITION AVAILABLE: Vlcllmo Comtr Lot In Choohlro, Ohio. from Ooillpolil on ih. 888. Dip.
114-4411-3413. '
Aul&amp;tonct S!totlollot. R t - Excellent Condition. Fln~nclng &amp; "'·
11 Help Wanted
tlbll Far Thl D1111l~mani:G 11ft. Avolloblo. 1104-132. .5P, 1104' 2br Mobllt Homo F. Rant, 114-litton And -volon
448-0m, 114-44ti-778B.
S310111AY PROCESSING
PHONE ORDERS! PEOPLE or Tho Vlctlmo Of Vlolonoo 132·7110, ·-~~2br
UniUmlthod, 12150 On
P r -. ~ LPCC, Or L18W
CALL YOU.
Wit~ Rlltlod uporlouoo Profor.
Goor;to Crook Rood, Dolllpollo, .
NQ EXPf:'~~:~fSSARY. rod. Elporlonco W~WIIh
Ro~ lncl Dopotlt R•
Ematlonolly Dloturltod
utaqulrod, 114-448-43tli, 304-1711o
2330.
.
lion And Eiporllncl Or Trs nino
AVON • All or....1 • Coli Morilyn In Cornmunhy !lrgonlzotlono.
S BR mobllo homo, Bob
Sand R....,. To Soi\dro McFor·
Wuvor 304-182·..,.5.
McCormick Rd.IJ4.4.41.-.
lind, W-Ind Conlor, :1011
4-H •-illo ogonl potltlon VIRion PIU, Golllpollo, OH
For - . - 1 2·BR trollor In
B.S. requlrod. I..Oodorlhlp oiid 41131.101.
Horllord, WV1 $150 tlluo utliHioo,
c;ommunlcaUon lklll1 IIHRUII.
dopooll rtqU!rod.I04-IIM104 : ·
con1ac1 Mila• CaDplnilw b· R:!an1 ..1 middle• lt4f Ia
tenolon(l82.fnl) lor lnlonno- H n . U g h l - - •
Mcbllo ~!on* lor rent or 1111,
tlon. An Equol Opporlunhy oomponlorloltlp. :11)4.131.2431.
col1114-h2-1100
Employer.
WaNod motlvolod oolooporoon,
A DIMy SoilrY Of 1100 For 821,00-IU,OOO 1o1yw, lrotntna
Buytno Morcfiondloo. Buyer pntvldod, ""'*""'" profwrodj B~ek Homo In Riel IOCitlon 11
Noodod. No Ex..,..nce Nl- lind reaumo 1o DillY Sontlno~ Golllpollo Farry, · Wilt T..r
PO 801 721B Pornoroy, OH Subdhtltlon, 3 bedrooms, · 2
oory. IJ4.:JM.20112, ExUII3.
41711
botho, DR, K, LR, Iorge lomlly
AUSTRAUA WANTS YOU
room.
Coun•y to Brolloro. 44
Apartment
Eic.llenl
Ply,
Btnltlll, Work lor lldo~y lody In hot Shown. by oppolnlmont only.
home, '-neroy .,..,, flfwlnCI 304-175-2029.
Tronoporlltlon,
4~llll
for Rent
Ext. 51'1 . llo.m.•10p.m. Toll roq, 114-tiZ-mT
2 BR homo In Rio Grondo. 1 &amp; 2 bdnn opt In M,_port,
Rtfundld.
Work 11om homo SID por 100 Within wolklno dl&amp;tonco ol col· Ulllllto Fum, dtp roq, n0 polo,
AVON I All Aleat I Shl~oy -ring moll. ln-tlon logo. $250/mo. pluo utllhlot. 114-1112-2211.
lind otornp to K.B. Enlorarltot Mu&amp;t tlgn ltoao. 814-898-4011.
Spooro, 304-871-142t.
P.O. 801 11117..JMW~r:-• NJ
Btl Port Of A140 llllon AV.or 07201,
Phont 201·
,
OWN YOUR OWN NICE HOME
COmpony - h And Nutrtonor
FOR $1,100 Full Prlcl. Govern·
lnduolry, No bpttlloWIO 12
mtnt Agencloo Now Llquldotlng.
Situation
oory. CompoftV Wllt Troln, Col
1·805-564-1!00 Ex1. H09118 FOr
.... Crewtord, 114 311 ti04 Cell
wanted
lmmldl1t1 Aaalllance.
Evanlnot '1-IOp.m.
bporttncod Hoopllol Aldo 3Houn lor Salt: Dtmogod by
CABLE TV JOBI
ovoltablo
lor homo nurotno tift. tiro. Con bo Non It Athlon• WV.
No ExpttlooiOI Noc-ry.
$15,000. 304-571·2368, m-.m.
$1l!o.tlout. F.lnbmollon Col IJ4.387·7123.
or 578-22311.
1-1100-731'8212 Ext. 11152· I o.m.
14
lluHI Unh Rontll, 1 Ytor Old.
To I p.m., ?Doye. $12.11~•VInyl Slcl~, Low Malnltrwnce,
Controlly L.itcotad, $59,100. 614441-8518.

8

." -,'
.' ....
•· .

!

r.!::========r=========:~ cyl,
1il14lnt,mlllonal2ton
truck, "
opcr, 2 opd ull, runo'good,

======::!!!II'

I

-

UNOREN

..--------were

Sunday
I

INOUCEI
,
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
rocolnmondo lh&amp;t you do buol·
nou with pocplo you know and
NOT lo ttnd money llvough the
nt~ll u,.ll you hive lnvestrgated
tho ollorlng.
Loco! Voncllng Routt For Sale.
Will Boll All Or Pon. Ropool

I

-..1..--J.L-J.
. ....;.J.--.1. • visor

j

$3000, 114-IM9-2t100

72

'

low to fonit lour ~"'!'lo -.11.

1..

Int., nNde tender 1nd wM1 ,

• ,., DJ ~Int.

_,.._

...;,r,..:L..:I

6ACK OUR TEST PAPERS
TOPAV...

- ~·

,,

- 1~- E-. :;r:. . ;R;. . I-~ :1 ~~

T~E T~ACHER IS ~ANDING

II·~

~

0 four
Raorrango l,t1trs ol tilt
~~:rambled words be-

~j/::...:1

0
0
•

Equipment
for Rent

p.m.

__.;.;;,;._;:;.,:= NIH

1l·

. 1·

=

PIULII

_

-~

Fiero GT, i~Qntllc 1987, 1-cyl,
lltp, 5t).k mllto moroon, graY. '

Financial

'

304-175-

4

Help Wanted

'

304-871-3971.
Eocort GT 15,800. 814·

lor

~'-"• Requlrod,

11

I

4 . 1004;

'

TU'INILJ

PB,IIr, AIIW'M cuu"'' will sell

COuntry llobtlo Hcimo Pork,
Rooto 33, North of Pomeroy.
Loll, rtnllil, porto, NIH. Coli
614-H2·11179.
' .

Yard Sale ~

GallipoliS
&amp; VIcinity
ALL Yard Saln Mu&amp;t Bt Pold In
Advanco. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.
tha day btloro tho od lo to run.

.

en:

46 Space for Rent

Huffmar:t Farm, Plalna Vtii4JY

¥

. ,

1m Ford Muotano
Loodocl,
t~- $1100 or boil offor. Jock·
.... Ohio. 1-ICINT.I-4788;
19110 Chivy_Conll•, Aulo., PS,

suo-.Golltamonth.
Hottl.

11

•

Television·
Viewing

1m Comaro, U .. Mint COndlllon, I.Oodod, T·Topt, Aulo, Air,
Crultl, Tll~ AMIFM Co-lo, ,
36,~ llllto, 1 OW 7'~ ~!,_00q,

1-95110.
2 BR houtl. Rot.• Dip. 304o· St•plno rooma wHh cooklno.
I'IUII2.
Aloo lrolor · -· All hook-upo
Coli lftlf 2:00 p.m., 304·7735651, U11on WY.
.

6Burlin-

~a •

Autqslor Sil•

Nlg,I14.44U711, I 1

Roomolor ront •

Stortlr~~~ol

6, 1991

6,1991

, I

Fumlshed
Rooms

HI~Kon­

zle ~ ldge Ad, 614-841-

cat, brown

11

I

448-43110..

Lost~ Found

dog, contact Ellgo

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Modem 2 BR ojllrtmont. 114-

child. 614-446-3318.

6

Wednesd&amp;y, November

Apartment
for Rent

Long halrod flmalo cat: black &amp;

Wednesday, November

HZEP

s

sc

ZILM

FVIGEO
NOMEGM

EJR
UVCIN

' ...

~

.

•••

Ao•u

NEA. !nc.

....

...,

.

HBEJB

GVOJ .MO
U'
WMEOG."
I ~ M
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Get the . IDOls on your side and you can be
etectld to anything." - Frank Dane.
Cl tG91

..

08

6

'

'

.-

"
-----:---''-"'......---'-------:-~.-~..-, ~-....:...- ' ..... ~:

!•·"""
I

�.

.•

"

'

Page-12"'-The Dally Sentinel

Novembe.r

MAXWELl HOUSE
MASTER.BLEND
.

Ohio L;ottery

.

Qfrlando, ...
Golden State
·stay unbeaten

'OF.FE·E
'

STORE HOURS

34,S"OZ.

Monday thru Sunday
8AM·IO PM

$379

Pick 3: 727 '
Pick 4:9035
.Cards~ Q;Jf, K-C,
. 8-D,3-S

Super Lotto:

PageS

Low IOitlgbtln mkl::iOs.

,,

Frljlay, mostly dqudy. High In
mid 30s.

4-13-18-284245
Kicker:04~~81

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

PRICES EFFECTIVE~ Nov. 3thr~ Nov; 9, 1991

SNACK
..

· ~AKES

•
Vol. 42, No. 131

Copyrighted 1991

2 Sections, 14 Pages 25 cento
- A-Mu,ltlmedia Inc: Newspaper-

Pomeroy-Mid~l~port, Ohio, ThuJsday, November 7, 199L

•'

c f'- - ~1- Anderson 's of,E~awaMed~DBS-.·oontraet
__

.

s·369

USDA CHOICE BEEF

DUNCAN HINES
· · ~ . ·16.5 oz.

T·Bo·ne Steak
BUCKET BEEF
$249
Cubed Steak•••••
CRISPY SERVE
$129
Bacon••••••••••••••·•••L.. . .
eeeeLB.

.CAKE
FROSTING

'

ll.

.

L.

$549
'

49(
Turkeys•••••••••••••••••L.. . ·
10·22
99(
SWIFT BUTTERBALL

.

.. .29 OZ. CAN

2 1
GROUND
.BEEF

or GOLD DEucrous

10 LB. PACKAGE

Apples•••••••••••

s.

3 LB.

s
.2.%·Milk•••••••••GA~ON
· BROUGHTON'S

79

1

SHEDD'S

County Crock•••••.. ,~.

s_1.49

.(
TV.Dtnners•••••• 99
Mac~ &amp;Cheese~.7," oz.
$ :9t
Tomato Juice•••••••••"oz. 69&lt;· Ice ~ream •••••••s111.r.a . 2 ·
BANQUET• .·

FLAVORITE

. .

.

KEMP'S

.ST~KELY

CAKE MIXE\

: l&amp;-ltS OZ.

.

3/ 2

SUGAR
5 Ll. BAG

s1''

:

.

·

. ·

GALA TOf,ELS
ROll

10·120Z..

2/1v•
,_.,. s.,.r

lin. 9, IHI

·69(

4 ROLL .

·

90

13

ASSORTED

.

~

~~ HANOVER

. SAUCE

LBS.

DUNCAN HINES

.

TOMATO ·

Turkeys•••••••••••••~~. ·

•

PR()nnt:T:

$129

.PORK
·CHOPS
10 LB. PACKAGE

$1590

commissioners for the county .
home. Those trans(ers w~re .all
approved into '\he department's
supplies account.
The purchase of a new copier
was appro:vcd for Meigs County
Court at yesterday's meeting. The
lowest price quollltion was received
by the office from Superior Office
Service of Huntington in the
amount of $2,719. That quollltion,
for a Canon copier, also allowed

for a $200 trade-in on me dcpanmem's old machine.
In connection with the copier
purchase, the board approved transfers into the department's equip'
ment accoun~ enabling the court to
buy the copier. ·
In add.ition to Robert and Hobstetter, those auending were Ted
Warner and David Spencer of the
.highway department, and Commissioners Richard E. Jones, David
Koblcntz and Manning K. Roush.

House gets second prop(Jsal
despite Washington defeat

24 PACK 12 OZ. CANS

'

GRADE AFLAVORITE 10·22 LB.

County Engineer Philip Roberts.
The bids, for a diesel tandem dump
truck and a pickup truck, will be
opened on November 27.
Travel for Meigs County
Recorder Emmogene Holstein
Congo was approved yesterday .
Congo will attend .the Ohio
Recorder's Association Conference
in Columbus.
$1,250 in in!erdepartmental
transfers were approved by the

99(
.~

Steaks /Roasts •••L.~

'

Niple, recommended to the corh ·
The board received no bids on
missionernhat Anderson's be the !flephone, dalll and communiawarded the contract on the basis cations syst~m for the building, and
of its low bid and references pro· Clerk Mary Hobsteuer was autho·
vided, and the commissioners rizcd yesterday to re·advertise for
approved the bid award to Ander· those bids, with the bid award to
son's by a unanimous roll call vote. Lake place on December 4.
Anderson's bid on the project
Other business
was $116,633.59, while the second
The board approved the adverbidder, Superior Office Service of tisement for bids on two trucks for
Huntington, W.Va. submitted a bid the Meigs County Highway
in the amount of $122,700.
Department, upon the requast of

$ 69 . .PEPSI ~ COLA

ECKRICH . .

FRESH PORK BUTT .

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff. .
The Meigs County Commts·
sioners .awarded a Pomeroy firm a
contract for nearly $117,000 to fur·
nish the new Deparllilent of Human
Services building in Middleport
when the board met Ol) Wednesday.
Anderson's in Pomeroy , Inc.
was the low bidder of two firms
submitting bids for the project. The
project architect, Burgess and

BANNERS GO UP • You may think it's a
bil early to begin thinking about Christmas but
it will be here before you know it. These banners
were purchased by the Pomeroy Merchan.rs

Association and will line Main Street in the business district. Bill Slack was securing tbe banners
to poles on Wednesday and should soon have the
job. completed.
.

Legislators propose tougher DUI standard
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A.
legislator who wants a tougher
drunken driving law said her pro·
posal is not aimed at social drinkers
but those whose functions are
impaired behind the wheel.
Sen. Betty .Montgomery, R-Per·
rysburg, sai&lt;l she will introduce
legislation to lower the blood alco·
hoi level at which a motorist is presumed to be drunk from the current
0.10 percent to 0.08 percent.
Ms. Montg~mery said an aver·
age-size pers n would need four
drinks in 40· inutes-to,reachthc
0.08·jjcrccntlevel.
\ "We know those things can
change according to the size of the
person, and what their metabolism ·
is, and whether they're tired, or
whether they've eaten, or a lot of
thin~s," she said.
' But a drink every 10 minutes,

that's reall y sockfng it down.
We're not talking about the sociill
drinker. We're talking about, at
0.08, a significant impairment and
significant drinking," Ms. Montgomery said.
She and Rep. Jon Myers, RLancastcr, said Wednesday that
they will offer cpmpanion bills in
the Senate and House to lower the
s~te 's legal standard for intoxica- ·
tion.
The legislators said they believe
the 0.08 peJ1:ent level would bcuer
·reflect the point at which a driver's
ability is impaired.
.
Myers said some drunken driving opponents would prefer an ·
even lower standard.
"We mink this will help send
the message that if you arc an
impaired driver you should not get
behind the wheel," Myers said.

Myers said tests conducted by
the Slllte Highway PatrOl on 2,827
drivers arrested for drunken driving
in 1990 produced results ranging
from zero to 0.09 percent. or those
motorists, 949 had been involved in
crashes before their arrest.
Alcohol concentration may be
measured by blood tests or through
tests of breath, urine or saliva.
The proposal was endorsed by
the patrol and Mothers Against
Drunk Driving.
Ms. Montgomery said the lower
limit would produce more convic·
tions.
" I thi.nk we can only say there
will be a demonstrable number of
cases that we have not been able to
proSecute successfully an&lt;l a significant proportion that we can,idemi:
fy if we can get this passed," she
said.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Senate President Stanley Aronoff
says the defeat a Washington sllltc
ballotlproposalto limit the tenns of
public-officials gives little insight
as to·hoW such an issue would fare
in Ohio.
He commented Wedne sday
amid signs that a similar statewide
ballot issue is gaining support in
Ohio.
For the second week in a row, a
House member offered a constitutional amendment to limit terms of
St:lte lawmakers and other elected
officials.
Speaker Vern Riffe, D-Wheclersburg, promised hearings.
.. Aronoff, who opposes term lim·
its, said the Washington proposal
faced unusual circumstances. He
sai·d it would have would have
applied retroactively, in ·contrast· to
those in Ohio that, so far, would
only affect future officeholders.
For U.S. House Speaker Tom
Foley and Washington's seven
other veteran congressmen, it
would have incant forced retirement in 1994.
· Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, said voters did not want their slllte to lose r
clout in Congress ' 'and be reduced
to second-class sllltus.' '
The measure was defeated 54
percent to 46 percent. Some polls
had indicated that nearly three of
four voters nationwide favored the
concept of term limits,
Aronoff pointed out that voters
on Tuesday approved a plan to
limit terms of Cincinnati City
Council members. But he saii:J they
sent mixed signals because they
also approved a competing proposal prohibiting tenn limits.
Although both issues passed, the
term·limits proposal apparently
will become Jaw because it got
more votes : Aronoff predicted ,
however, that rnis imerpretation by
city officials will be challenged in
court.
Rep. Larry Manahan, R-Defiance, discounted any significant
impact in Ohio from the Washing·
tOn VOle.
He offered.. &amp;n amendll) Cnt
restricting the tenure of slllte !zgis·
lators and statewide officials to 12
consecutive years, cxc'ept the gov-

Next inove to spur the ecomony up to Bush
WASHINGTON (AP) - Now
that the Federal Reserve has
pushed a key interest rate to its
lowest level in nearly two deqdes,
President Bush is left facing (he
question of what to do next to jolt a
slumbering economy back to life.
· Despite the strOng opposition of
some of Bush's top advisers, many
private ccono'l!ists are bettin~ the
president will.end up endorsmg:a
major lllx cut btllthey.expect wtll
win quick congressional approval
early next year. ·
Their reasoning is that with
growing voter uneasiness about
economic weakness, Bush and
other political candidates next year
will have to be seen as doing
everyt!ling possible to spur eco·
nomic growth. ·
. So far, the administration's
main answer to the 1990-91 recession has been to jawbone the Fed to
rcduceilitcrest mtes.
The central bank came through
with another round of ·cuts on
Wednesday, slashing ,he discount
mle t.o 4.5 jjcrcent, its lowest level
,since !anuary 1973, and reducing
the Fed · s. target for the federal
funds mte tQ 4.75 percent.
Since the· recession began in

July 1990, the Fed has cut the dis- They're hurting out mere."
firm, said he bcpeved Bush would
count rate, me interest it charges on
Bush said he was prepared to soon come forward with a major
loans to member banks, five times work with Congress "to come up · tax cut proposal that would include
and reduced the funds rate, the wirn something new" to encourage a reduction in Secial Security payint.erest that banks charge each economic growth.
rolllllxcs or an expansion of perother for overnight loans, 13 times.
While the president didn't speci· son a! income lllx credits for the
But debt-burdened consumers fy what he meant, White House ·'middle class. ·
and shaky banks thus far have budget director Richard Darmao
David Jones, an economist at
failed to respond as they normally said earlier this week that the Aubrey G. Lans1on &amp; Co., said he
·do to rate cu!S! With monetary poli· administration might be willing to expeciS a major lllx cut early next
cy hamstnmg, the clamor is grow- rethink its position on tax cuts next year.
ing for the govemmcnlto switch to · year ''if the economy is still sput·
"The administration so far has
ta:» cuts as a way to stimulate the tcring."
relied too much o~ the Fed to get
economy.
Housing and Urban Develop- the economy movmg. Some form
Bush 's own Cabinet has been ment Secretary Jack Kemp, ono of of lllx cuts will have to !le Ulkcn,"
deeply divided on the issue. Until those inside the administration who Jones said.
recently the president appeared to has been urging a quick tax cut, Survivors are still
be siding with those who have suggested the outlines of such a
h·
l ti
argued that il broad-based lllX CUt proposal might include COUpling a SeQrC zng Or re Q VeS
isn't needed because the economy cut in the capital gains tax rates,
ORMOC, Philippines (AP) would re&lt;~over without it.
. something.that Bush already sup- Thousands of numbed survivors
However, the president gave a ports, with a c.ul.in Social Security wandered Ormoc's muddy streets
hint thai he may at.leas,t be .rocon- Rayroll taxes, an idea being pushed today, searching for relatives not
sidering th'al position following ~y_(llany Democrats.
seen since huge walls .of mud and
Tuesday's election results in which
Kemp has been lobbying along water came crashing down on the
Democrat Harris Wofford scored with Commerce Secrclllry Robert coastal city from denuded moun·
an· upset Senate election victory in Mosbacher for tax cuts. They have tains,
·
Pennsylvania by hammering away faced opposition from Darman ,
Two days afier the tropical
at Rep~blican failures to dClll with Treasury Secretary Nicholas Bmdy storm"induced destruction, the air
the recession.
and .Michael B
. os~in , the presi- in the I.eyte island city ~ed with
Asked about the Pennsylvania · dent's chtef economtc advtser.
the stench of death. Bodies of the
vote, Bush said, "when the cconoJohn M. .A\IJertine•. who head.s a victims were still iying on the mudmy is slow, people are concerned. .Washmgton econo~1c consulung caked streets and in gullies.

fi

"

emor, whose limit of eight consec- dence in slllte government.
utive years would remain.
His measures would restrict
A sim.ilar proposal was intro- campaign fund·raising, change
duced in the House last week by .Ohio's primary clectionJrom May
Rep. Ronald Molt!, D.Parma. , to September, and ban candidacies
Manahan's proposal accompa- by incumbents for other offices
nied three bills in a package he said whi1e in the middle of four· year
is needed to restore public confi. terms, unless they resign.

Voinovich's cabinet takes
voluntary drug tests
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Members of Gov . George
Voinovich's Cabinet have been
asked to take voluntary urine tests
to provide leadership on the issue
of drugs in lhe workplace, officials
said. "
.
" I took my test today," Ohio
Department of Transportation
Dircc10r Jerry Wray said Wednesday. "If we're in leadership, we
should be role models."
Nancy Chiles, director of the
Ohio Department of Commerce,
said she supported the testing and
would like to sec aU employees in
her agency volunteer for such tests.
"I want everyone to say we
believe in a drug.frce workplace
and we're drug-free," she said.
Only Cabinet members arc
being tested for drugs. The admin·
istration wants to extend the
screening to other state employees.
The issue is likely to emerge in
negotiations with state employee
unions.
Lt. Gov. Michael De Wine, who
has joined the governor in being
tested, said the voluntary tests to
demonstrate their commitment to
oppose illegal drug usc in the
workplace.

.

"The governor· felt the' Cabinet
should lead by example and should
. set the example for other state
employees," said DcWine, who
directs anti-drug programs in the
administration.
Drug Lesting of Cabinet mem- .
bcrs is pan of the governor's comprehensive drug policy for state'
government and eventually may
require slllte government applicants
to pass a drug-screening test before
being hired.
DeWine declined to comment
on how far the administration
wants to extend employee drug
screening. He said pre-employment
tests would compose the bulk of
the drug screening planned,
although current employees could. ·
be tested if drug usc was suspected.
The current state government
drug policy, issued during the
administration of Gov. Richard
Celeste, prohibits the sale or usc of
illegal drugs at work. There is no
drug testing provision.
The Slllte's current contract with
the Ohio Civil Service Employees
Association, the largest state
employee union, allows drug test·
ing on a for-cause basis but random
testing is prohibited.

Key Interest Rates

.

Tho Federal Rooerve lowered Ita key bank lending rate from 5.0.poroonlto
. A.5.%,.on ..tt~,yearJo.w.:Jh•t promptld maJor banka_to lol((trJhofr prlmo .
lending rate to 7.5%. Thal'.s tho rate bonkers use to e~leulate a range of
consumer and business tolna, such aa student lo~ns, home equity loans
and some typos of car loons.

Discount Rate
Interest the Federal Reserve charges commercial banks for loans.
%

7

6 H+J.t+l'!'l

1986

.

t987

1988

Prime Rate
The rale banks historically charge
their best customers. Chari shows
gene~allndusuy rate.

%

1989

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