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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.

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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

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$549
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Turkeys•••••••••••••••••L.. . ·
10·22
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2 1
GROUND
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or GOLD DEucrous

10 LB. PACKAGE

Apples•••••••••••

s.

3 LB.

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

79

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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 ·
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FLAVORITE

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KEMP'S

.ST~KELY

CAKE MIXE\

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$129

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·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(
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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.

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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

�.·

Commentary

Peg~-The Dally

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The Daily Sentinel

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111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
. ·DEVOTED TO THE INTEIUSTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

'·

~MlAJIMEDIA, INC.
ROBERT·L. WINGE1T
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

AMEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association 111d
llle American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They.should be less lllan 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and mull be signed with name,
address an~ telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be m good taste, addressing issues, not personatilies.
.
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Sentinel
Pomeroy.......,.lddleport, Ohio ·
Thursday, November 7, 1119'1 ; ·
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Despite talk Bush is in
peril, sky hasn't fallen yet
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON - Not long ago, Democrats were lamenting a shortage of 1992 challengers, President Bush was supposed to be the invincible
man and triumphs abroad were strengthening the Republicans' standing at
home.
That's changed.
But the political sky has not fallen on the White House, despite an
alarmist look there and a claim from Democrats that the president is in reelection peril.
While Bush's early advantage has diminished, it hasn't been reversed.
The president has not been overtaken, only shown to be potentially vulnerable - in the right circumstances, to the right challenger, on the right
issues. It is a combination that has eluded Democratic nominees in all but
one of the last six presidential elections.
There's a full campaign year to go, the Democrats have to come up
with a nominee from a field of six, or perhaps seven if New Y.ork Gov.
Mario Cuomo should ever decide to run.
, · ''I'll be facing a tough fight," Bush said Wednesday. " All of these
people that ,arc candiaates are tough and nobody's going to be taking anything for granted."
The president and his political aides have said that' before. Lately, they
qc t as though they believe it. The economy isn't on the rebcund of Bush's
ilJmmenime forecasts, and the voters arc angry and taking it out on the
people in power.
• It all came together in Pennsylvania, in the landslide Senate upset of a
Bush Republican with star billing and Whitc.Housc help by a Democrat
~Y ho ran on issues and themes the party hopes will register nationally
against Bush next year.
·
·
: "This was really a test race," said Ronald H. Brown, the Democratic
~ational chairman. " ... And yes, George Bush is in trouble, and he should
be, bec~usc he's got no solution for the economic problems in America."
: Former Attorney General Dick Thornburgh, the Pennsylvania loser,
said the race had indeed taken on national proportions because it ."became
referendum on largef'issues," especially economic concerns. But he
sltid it would be oversimplification to call it a vote against Bush when
people really were voting against the status quo.
: That didn't follow party lines- in New Jersey, Republicans took over
a:Democratic legislature; Mississippi broke with ltistory and elected a
GOP governor, ousting a DemocraL
·
; And Pennsylvania winner Harris Wofford had a warning for his own
r:any, saying that the Democrats need to broaden their programs, "not
remain a pany focused to a considerable extent on the very poor .... "
: Furthermore, Democrats have not seuled on their own solutions to the
economic slump. Their leaders agree on middle-class tax relief, but not on
specific terms. They want health care and health insurance reform, but
'l'ith no consensus on what to do about it.
•· ·
• Bush said he'll have a health care plan, although he did not say when.
He also offered to work with Congress "to come up with something
11ew" in a pac~agc to spur economic growth . He used to insist that it
wouldn't be necessary.
.
; But the president said he reads the message behind Wofford's Pennsylvania surprise- "they're hurting out there, they're concerned about their
l~velihood ....
: "So listen ... we'll go the extra mile and we'll try even harder," Bush
s~ id at a crack-of-dawn news conference before nying to Rome for a
NATO summit.
: Bush put off a 10-day trip to Asia and Australia to stay home and \Cnd
to domestic problems, but he said it was crazy to call that u symptom of
While House panic over the political situation. He said it was because
Gongress might still be in session and "all kinds of crazy things can happen with this crowd .... " The trip was called off before the Pennsylvania

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By Joseph Spear

Is there no -stalling to the ad rush?

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.today in history

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•·••
•::By The Associaled Press
:,;:Today is 'fltW"Sday, Nov. 7, the 3llth day of 1991. There an: 54 days
'~ft in the year.
• , Today's Highlight in History:
:·• On Nov. 7, 1917, Russia's Bolshevik Revolution took place as forces
lild by Vladimir llyich Lenin ovenhrew the provisional govemmenr of
l(lexander Kercnsky.
.
VOn this date:
.
•:: In 1874,.the Republican Party was symbolized as an elephant in a cartlloo drawn by Thomas Nast in'Halper's Weekly.
:·: In 1885, the uanscontinenlal Canadian Pacific Railway was completed
)s the last spike was driven at CraigeUachie.
,
•'1In 1916, 75 years ago, Republican Jeannette Rankin of Montana
~amc the fust woman elected to Congress.
j:; In 1918, durin~ World War I, an erroneous repon from the United
P.)'ess that an anmstice had been signed set off celebrations across the
~n~.
.
tl. In !929, the Museum of Modem An in New York City opened to the
p~blic for the fust time.
.
,·• In 1940, the Tacilma Narrows Bridge in Washington slate collapsed
~loring a windsrorm which sent the 2,800-foot center span crashing into
P.IJget Sound:
·
1:• In 1944, President Franklin D. Roosevell won a fourth term in office,
~eating _Thomas E. Dewey. · •
.
1•· In 1962. Richard M. Nixon, havinalost CalifOQiia 's gubemaiOrial race,
litld what he called his "lul press conference,'' telling reporters, "You
!fOn 't have Nixon 10 kick around anymore."
·
:• In 1962, rormer fiJSI!ady Eleanor Roosevelt died in New York City.
•!' In 1967, Carl SIOices was elected the f111t black mayor of BJmajor city
4 Cleveland, Ohio.
!l•In 1967, PresidenrJollnson signed a bill establishing the Corporation
·
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.Public Broadcl•!ing.
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. I'm not one who minds much
when tclcmarkc~rs call, as long as
the tclcmarkctcr ts an actual human
and unless lL os som'COnc from the
department-store cham that ca ll s
about every two weeks wanting me
to buy insuran ce to protect the
crcdtl card ot so charotably tssucd
me.
. Once in a while. a tclemai'kct~r
wtll have an offer I m mtcrcsted on
- about as often ~s I ha~c a yen
for stewed beets, Ill admot, but ot
ha.ppens- and I usually empathize
woth the person on the other end.
During my freshman ~car in college I was an Olan Mtlls telcmarketer for the seven days it took
Olan and me to discover that one
week with zero family portrait
packages sold docs not a tclcmar-.
ketc~ make.
I vc learned to carry and rc~d
two or three neWSJl!lpe!S a day. ~tth
~even or .etghr sltck adverusmg
tnsens trymg to fall out of each of
them: ! can completely shut out a
~lcvtsoon .commerctal and use that
ume to thmk about, somethmg else,
and btllbotlrds don I usually bother
me anymore unless I can sec them
from my own house.
.
I $et around the c~cesstve commercoals on most radoo stauons by
lis,tenin,g to cassette tapes while I
dnve .. l m so savvy to allthc.cnve·

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--.------

IToleilo I 32° I

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lope tricks .that 1 can sort out junk
mall from st~ff I want to. open
almost as qutck ·as I can fltp tl
toward the trash can. In rac;,t. I was
begmnmg to thmk 1 could successfully negotiate any mine field of
un~olicitcd advcitising unscathed.
Then .I went to the bathroom .
Perhaps tf I hadn't been at the most
unentertaining se~inar sine~ the
· Suzanne Somers Sttcom Fesuval I
could ~ave stood ~L. ~ut for !Wo
hours I d been gulpmg oced tea and
sucking in deep breaths of air to
stay awake, when the tea did me a
bigger favor and insisted I exit the
seminar room or explode:
..
I have to go to the bathroom!
Yes! And I can probably get away
withstayingoutofhereafullFIVE
MINUTES!
There I was, finally away from
Monotone Man a~d lookmg forward to ~ve free mmutes to star~ at
a soo.thmg gray d~or and thmk
about what! was gomg to do when
I got out of that seminar, if I sur·
vived iL I closed the stall door.
Ack! Instead ~f sea·nuff. gr~y,
there were adverusements covcnng
the entire inside of the door: ~or
fitness ce~ters, half extenstons, doct
plans, arttficoai fingernails, cellular
phones, rental cars.• realtors and
restaurants. And· in the, one olace I
thought I could always count on to

..

...
.;

·

Sarah Overstreet

make the world go away!
Is nothing sacred? Once they've
wormed their way into pur bath· the White House?
Marketing professionals of the ·
room stalls, what's next? The toilet
lids? The paper? The bouoms of world, we anc on advertising overload. Take your signs down from
our shoes?
Any kook can come up ~ith the our bathroom doors before you lose
next place to sell advertismg, and if us altogether.
he put s the right spin on it · it
·should be a piece of cake. Chu~ch
tithing down a liLLie? Forget about
·r
S Or
trying to coerce members into signing those liLLie pledge cards ' just .
take "Life is fragile, handle' with
prayer" off the magnetic sign in
front and put up "For the perfect
after-church brunch, Faye's Family
Fiesta at Walnut and Main."
PTA tired of having bake sales
and bazaars to raiso money? Take
the. alphabet off the top of lhe
blackboards And sell the space to
Toys R Us and Lillie Debbie
Cakes. Have a nice-looking car but
trouble making the payments? Sell
the door space for magnetic signs·
"I keep my shine at Yc Oldc Bath~
'n' Waxc, 2229 N. Main."
' And why stop there? We could
reduce the national debt by selling
th~ roofs and sides of federal build·
ings. Can you imagine how much
money we could get by putting
'' Visit Sea World" or " Make a "COU~~NS. EH?LolnilfiD.,_Ofyou,
rush for the border ... Taco Bell!"
or...
1
1
on the Washington Monument or

Be ry' W ld

IMarstield I ao• I•

You

The Dally SentiMi-PIIJI ~

cold bl~st on way to Ohio ·
7

By Tb~ Assoclat~ Press .
Lures most pl;ICes remamm~t below
Sktes wtll be cleanng tomght freezmg.
.
. ..
.and cold~r atr will wash down . Most of the snp.':"flll.l acttvHy
across Oht~, forccasf:Crs satd. The wf~S to11nd early IOntght~ .but .somc
mercurywtll plunge mto ·the teens snow squalls ~ere posstble tn the
m the northwest,and 20s elsewhere. northeast overnt~bt.
. And the Nl\~Onal W~~ef Ser. The ne~L fatr weather system ·
vtce .srud the \vmtry co~diuons will wtll be buildmg over Oh10 on Fn' contmue onFnday With tempera- . day. a~d Wt!I shut. off anyfluny
actlYlty sttll gomg on tn the
extreme north~L
, ·
The recotd high tempaature for
~.
CLEVELAND (AP) - Tho•'"
were no tickets sold naming
numbers selected in

•

By Jack Anderson ,
and Dale Vizn Atta

.
The 'process' needs some up(l.ating

A~other

.

MICH.

'

wASHINGTON -Dan Quayle become to Israeli security.
· to get out of hand. Bush ·may have
has a .fan club and the president of
Israeli sources and U.S. intelli- been targeted for some dirty tricks
it is Yitzhak Shamir.
gencc sources in Washingwn have by clements within the Israeli spy
The Israeli prime minister is told us that Shamir's bile is at an · service, Mossad - . Jieople who aim
down on George Bush and now all time high when it comes to to please Shamir just as cowboys in they can't get him dirty, arid can't
believes that Quayle is Israel's best ·Bush because of the peace confer- the Central Intelligence Agency get him to change his mind, they
friend in the U.S. government. The ence in Madrid.
aim to please their bosses, even if tt might get him, period."
vice president has been an ardent
In Shamir's vi~w, Israel has ·Iii- means violence;
By Oct. 17, Ostrovsky had
suppOrter of Israel since he served .tlc to grun by talkmg to the ~·
Before Bush left for Madri&lt;l, the pieced together enough informatipn ·
on the Senate Armed Services They will only say what Shamtr Secret Service received a rep·ort to believe that the idea of an liSsasCommiuee where he-- came to-- doesn't want to.hear ~ that.-they -thai extremists in Mossad·might·be sination..jilot agarnst Bush was
believe that Israel was an irreplace- want their land back . He wants plouing Bush's assassination. The' more than just speculation, so he
able strategic ally in the Middle peace with his neighbors, but repon came indirectly from Victor tipped off a former U.S. congress- ·
East. Quayle be!teved then, and thinks he can get it by force, not by Ostrovsky, a Canadian-born Israeli man. who flew 10 Canada to talk to.
still believes today, that what is conceding any land. He is even who was a Massad agent for four him. Ostrov.sky claims he came
good for Israel is good for the Unit- more convinced of' that .since the years. Ostrovsky portrayed Massad iJ nder heavy surveillance - h_e
ed States.
Persian G~lf War, v.iben Arab mili, as an amoral, out-of-control spy ·thinks by Mossad - while he was
In the last few years, Quayle has tary might was shown to be impo- service in his book "By Way of dealing with the congressman. The
Deception." Israel tried to S10P surveillance stopped when both of
spoken sympathetically to several tent.
Jewish groups, but has always been
Shamir would not have gone to publication of the book by saying it them complained to local police.
careful not to cross Bush. Instead, the peace talks if Bush and Secre- would damage national security.
Then the former congressman, who
he
has
been
used
by
Bush
as
the
:s
j~~~~-#*~tae~~~~~~~~~~~
sugarcoatmg to cxpliiTilthcjllcsi;:tacts
agcn- to Washington and spelled out
dcnt's policies to Jewish groups.
marHv,bv hol,ding up
billion in cy may have been stoking th e Ostrovsky's theory to the Secret
The strategy has worked LOQ
to guarantee Shamir "October Surprise" theory to Service_ ·
.
well. Quayle is a hero of the con- would a good boy.
embarrass Bush by suggesti~g that
Our sources said that the Secret
scrvative Shamir government.
Behind Bush's back, but not so he knew about an alleged deal Service..
instead of dismissing the
Meanwhile, Shamir's disgust over quietly that Bush doesn't hear between Iran and Ronald Reagan to report out
of hand, is taking it
Bush has spilled over onto the front abcut it, Shamir has .been engaging hold American hostages until after · " quite seriously."
·
pages of Israeli newspapers where in vicious name-calling. And when Reagan was elected in 1980. Ostro·
INTERFERENCE
Extrem·
Bush is rid ic uled as "President the name-calling reaches the level vsky knows how t~c extremists in ists on all sides tried to- disrupt
the
Am-Bush," a reference to the that it has in Israel, you can expect Mossad think, and he believes they . Middle East peace ta~ last week.
threat Shamir feels Bush has renegades in the Israeli government arc capable of killing Bu.sh: "If The Iranian-backed Hezbollah, or
Party of God, is reorganizing its
====~~~~
terrorist network. The Islamic
Jihad, or Holy War, is also planning a new wave of terrorism. They·
reportedly worked together to try to
sabotage the conference. For exam·
plc, Palestinians were behind the
killing of two Israeli settlers before.
the talks opened. Their presumed.
objective was to an1agonizc Israel ·
and stand in the way of an agree-:
mcnt.
MINI-EDITORIAL - Term limitations for members of'
Congress arc picking up support, ·
but the idea is a sledgehammer:
taken to a job that :nccds wscalpel. ·
Sure, it's tough to uproot an
entrenched incumbent, but there are better ways of doing it than
. depriving the voters of their right to
re-elect that person if they want,
and depriving that ·person of their
right to serve. The answer is in
reforming Congress from within by
res\fucturing committ~c assignments so the power os spread
around, .and by reforming campaign spending laws so voters arc
not blinded by the candidate with
the most money.
.
:

1·"

Accu-Weather'" forceas1lor daytime conditions ·~d

'

I am testing your patience, I nomination ol Roocn llork (who They work ror you. They can jolly
know, by asking you w read even deserved rejection). Then came well do it in the opc'n, where you
one more piece about the "pro- Bush and Thomas (w·ho didn't cankccpancyeon thcm .4
cess," but as a professional Opin' deserve it).
Do away with life tenure for Still, it sounds like delayed disaster
ton Person, I cannot resist offering
Now come presidents, pols and judges. Another hideous idea. The tome.
a few more deeply pondered and pundits with baskets of ideas on Founding Fathers insulated the ·
Term limits for legislators. Yes,
superbly reasoned thoughts.
hqw to restore harmony to the pr{J- judiciary for a (cason: To keep it yes, a quadrillion Limes yes. Do
I can save a few readers the · cess. The Spear Foundation..has· above 'politics. For proof of their away with the elite ruling class that
trouble right now. If by "process," studied them and offers this'ghi· • wisdom, keep your eve on Clarence . now runs Congress and you will do
you think I mean what rendering ance on a few:
Thomas, who will surprise every- away with slavish dependency on
plants do to-tows, turn immediately
The Secrecy Solution. Gcor c one with his independent attitude. special interests, thus putting the
to the funnies : If by "process," Bush, ex-CIA chief, said all the And remember you read it here public inter.est at the top of the priyou think I mean what photo labs 1 talk of pubic hair on Coke cans was first- in July, in case you want to ority list once again. A beucr "prodo to film, go buy a People maga- too much for .him and he suggested took it up.
cess" will surely follow.
Quicl&lt;ie hearings. This scheme,
zinc. But if by " process," you future sessions be held in secret.
· Consultation between executive
know that I am referrin'g to how the Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga., chairman touted by Sen. Herbert Kohl, D-· and legislature. This may be the
Senate Judiciary Committee, rabid of the highly secretive Armed Ser- Wis., among others, calls for hear- most workable solution of all. Presideologues and various interest vices Committee said much the ings within three or four days of a idents used to distribute lists of
.groups make mincemeat of same. "Now we have seen the con- nomination . The th eory is that potential judicial candidates to SenSupreme Court nominees, you arc sequences of fulfilling the momcn- administration handlers wouldn ' t ate leaders and solicit advice on
in the right place.
tary desire to accommodate the have time to polish the nominee who might pass muster with relaThe Clarence Thomas confirma- public's 'right to know,"' he and special interest zealots tive case. The r.roblem with the
Lion hearings brought to a boil an wailed.
·wouldn't have time to devour him idea is that pro-lifers would hate i~
odious brew that has been steeping · This is an abominable notion or her. The first post-confirmation pro-choiccrs would hate it, pornog~~sg~~ocrats fiavc been claiming for m~nths that Bush is a president since
Richard Nixon defied the that authoritative people often tum discovery of a speed ily approved raphers would hate it, religious fun,W.ithout a domestic agenda. When he vetoed an emergency extension of
doctrme
of comoty that had gUtded to when the democratic pr~Jcess justice's cocaine habit would kill damentalists would hate it, the
)il]employment benefits, they said he was willing lO spend moncr on for·
rclauo~s
between t~c Whote House gets a liLLie messy : Hide it, doli't let this cure-all in a second.
. kopky left.woul.d hate i~ the extra.
cjj;n ef!l~rgencies but wouldn't h elp Americans. Lately, they vc been
and
Holl-and
tncd
m-vam
to
stuff
the
pubti·
c
·pl!fticipate:
This
Cur:
·
No
'candldatc.up.pearanccs:·until
chromosome right would hate it.
~!)nplammg abou~hos travels abroad.
- · , · · ·
·
two controversial nominees down mudgeon's advice: Tell them to put 1925, nominees didn 't even appear
Maybe that's what's wrung with
• :• '' ... They get under your skin..... " Bush has acknowledged.
:·•: Even so, and despite a slump in the public opinion polls, Bush still the Senate's throat. Then came it where the sun don 't shine. lt'.s before the Senate, and it didn't the procc~s. We have been !cuing
Ronald Reagan and his ill-fated your government. You pay for it. become a regular thing until 1959. .fanatics run the show.
·
~qlds the highest job approval ratings ·of any president in"30 years at this
jltlinl in a ftrst term.
!;;:"I don'tlive and die by the polls," he said. "Thus I will refrain from
h:.inting out that we 'rc not doing too bad in those polls."

I

Friday, Nov. 8

.

.

, Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather

Israel!s Shamirchas n-o great love-fo·r Bu.sh

'

.

Thursaay, November 7, 1991

Lottery numbers

this ,date ~t the Columbus weather ·
statton was 78 degrees in 1938.
Therecordlowwas20in !971.
- . Sunnsc this mor)ling ·was at
7:07a.m. Sunset will be at 5:23
p.m.
Around the nation
,
Snow fCll on pans of the Plallis,
R'?clocs and MtdwesttOday and
ram da!llpencd the South and Pactfic Not1)1west while tile Southwest
warm temperatures and

generally fair skies.
·,
A slow-moving cold rron1:
btoug.ht chilly tempe(llUre.S io the '
East Coasdrom New England
the mid-A tlantic states, but the : ·
weather was dry and most of the •
northern coast enjoyed clear skies. :
Snow fell today 00 Cincinnati, :
Detroit, Denver and SL Louis and ·
was forecast for Illinois Indiana '
and the Great Lakes regioli. · :
·
:

10:

•

'

Super LOtto drawing

lion a1 stake so Saturday 's jackpot
will be $24 million, the Ohio Lottery said.
.
..
Here are Wednesday night's
winning numbers:
·
Super [;'otto ·
4-13-18-28-42-45
. (four, thiftccn. eighteen, twent)'eigh~ fony-two, fony-fivc)
Kicker

W. VA.

. Showers T-stonns Rain
Vis

Flurdes

Snow

Ice

Sunny . Pt. Cloudy

Assoeiat~d Press GraphicsNet

C1991

(zero, four, two, two, eight, one) ·
Pick 3 Numbers ·
7-2-1
. (seven, two, seven)
Pick 4 Numbers .
9-0-3-5
(nine, zero, three, five)

CJ~udy

Accu-Wt~!her,

Inc.

.--Local briefs--:----.
EMS units answer 9 calls

Meigs' County Emergency Medical Services answered nine caDs
for assistance on Wednesday and early on Thursday:
.
·
At 9:25 a.m, Syracuse squad went urWest State Route 681.
Ruby Miller was taken to St. Joseph HospitaL At 10:15 a.m., Middlepon squad went to Race Street for Bobby White. He WaS taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 1.2:20 p.m.; Middleport squad went to Pearl and General
Hartinger Parkway for William Stewan. He was taken to Pleasant
Valley Hospital. At 5:13 p.m. , Pomeroy unit went to West Main
Street for Bill Van Meter, who (efuse,d treatment. At 5:Z7 p.m.,
Racine squad went to DeWitt's Run Road. Elmo Pierce was taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 8:36p.m., Middleport squad
went to Palmer and Seventh Sb'ect for a leaf ftre at the Dwight Wallace residence.
On Thursday at 4:28 a.m., Middlepon unit went to Overbrook
Center for Wilma McMillan. She was transported 10 Vcterailsi. At
5:20 a.m., Rutland unit went to Carpenter Hill Road for Edward
Maksimzalc, who was taken to Holzer Medical Center. At 5:48a.m ..
Ruuand unit went to Main-Street. Beulah G~te was transported to Holzer.

Cards
Q (queen) of Hearts
K (king) of Clubs
8 (eight) of Diamonds
3 (three) of Spades

License granted

1

Marriage licenses have been
granted in Meigs County Probate
Court to James Everett Pauley, 69,
of Middleport, and Shirley Mae
Rudder, 48, Middleport; and
Edward Ben Starcher, 22, of West
Columbia, W.Va., and Michelle
Sue Zirkle, 22, of Middlepon.

manager at City Loan, is Fred Creed, District '
Manager for City Loan. Others pictured are
employees of tbe Pomeroy ofToce, Marcy Thomp- ·
son, Elaine Byer and Mike Ingram.

Hospital news

Weather

Turkey and ham dinner
The Racine PTO will have a
ham and turkey dinner on Sunday
Roger E. Watson of Coolville was arrested on Wednesday night
at Southern High School with servby the Athens County Sheriff's Department on old fines.
ing to begin at 11:30 a.m. Cost is
According to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, his .
$3.75 for adults and $2.75 for childeputies picked Watson up at the county line and returned him to
dren. Craft tables, at $5 each, are
· 'lab! Call c th Clark 949
Pomeroy, where he was lodged In the Meigs County Jail due to
avat e.
a Y
at
•
inability to pay the $401.50 owed. The old ftncs resulted from a
2221 or Mary Ann Shoults at 9492993 for information_
1989 traffoc case.
DA v to meet
The Disabled American Veter, A il'
ill
John Hunnell of High Street in Pomeroy reponed to the Mctgs
ans and Lad
· tes ux l3fY w meet
County Sheriff's Department that sometime within the last. twQ
Monday 81 7 p.m. at the hall, 124
weeks someone entered a house that he owns in Antiquity and
Butternut Avenue in Pomeroy.
Rascals to meet
·
rcmov~ the copper plumbing.
' ,
Hunnell reponed that two refrigcrntors were also taken from the
The second meeting of the Rascals 4-H Club "!ill be held Saturday
residence. Investigation will continue.
at 5 p.m. at the home of' advisor
Donna Smith. All members arc
encouraged to attend. New memare welcome.
·
Dale Beiuel and Arthur Edwards bers
Delphia Davis
Pomeroy
PTO
to
meet
officiating. Burial will be in PutThe Pomeroy Elementary PTO
Delphia Crystal Landis Davis, nam .Cemetery.
will
meet Monday at 1 p.m. in the
83 , of 500 Masonic Park Road in
Friend~_ may call at lite funeral
Marietta, died on Tuesday, Novem- home froni 4' p·.m. on Thursday school gym. Debbie Brennan ' will
ber 5, 1991 at Marietta Memorial until the Lime of serviqe.
- be the speaker. Sixth grades will
have the program. The public is
Hospital.
,
invited to attend.
She was born on February 27, Hattie Louise Swisher
Revival ·
1908 at Nokesville, Va., to the late
Revival at the Calvary Pilgrim
Ernest and Anna Wood Landis. She
Hattie Louise sw·isher, 64, of
Chapel,
Route 143, Pomeroy, will
spent her ~a rly life there, and Vinton, died Tuesday, Nov. 5,
worked as a practical nurse. She 1991 , in Holzer Medical Center, be held Tuesday through Nov. 17
at 7:30p.m. nighOy. David Walker,
later lived in Cincinnati. She was Gallipolis, Ohio.
emplo yed b~ the Ramada Inn,
Born Nov. 6, 1926, in Rockwood, Tenn., will be the evanLafayeuc Hotel and Marietta Con· McArthur, she was the ~Ler of gelist Special singing. Rev. Victor
valcsccnt Center.
the late George and Flor~ Mar- Roush invites the public.
Riverview PTO · ·
Mrs. Davis is sprvivcd by her tin Sumpter;
.
The Riverview PTO will meet
husband, Rev. George Davis, with
She was preceded in death by
whom she served in many United her husband, Raymond Swisher Jr.,
Methodist pastorates through the May 5, 1991.
years, including the Rutland United
She is survived by: two sons,
Methodist Church.
Harry of Vinton and Jerry of AoriI
.
Mr. and Mrs. Davis also served da; three daughters, Donna Lamas administrative assistants for the ben of Vinton, Linda Swisher of HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, Nov. 6 - Lillie
Washin gton County Children's Vinton; and Nancy Fcv.herolf of
Brown,
Dancey Brumfield, Myruc
Home.
Columbus: 10 grandchtl.drcn and
Bumctt;
Ronna Craycraft, Heather
She was a member of the ehrist four great-grandchildren.
··
Dixon,
Arnold Higginbotham,
United Methodist Church and RutServices will be held Friday at
Timothy
Hill, Tosha Landakcr,
land Chapter of the Order of East- II a.m. at the McCoy-Moore
Joyoc
Leavey,
Keith Nance,
em Star.
.
Funeral Home· In Vinron with the
Michelle
Sheets,
Phyllis
Wright.
Besides her husband , Mrs. Rev. Marvin Sallee officiating.
Birth,s,
Nov.
6
Mr.
and Mrs.
Davis is survived by a sister, Opal Burial will be in the Pine Grove
Roben
Deleon,
a
son,
Middleport.
Hayn es of Mechanicsville, Va .. Cemetery in Vinton.
and a number of nieces and
Friends may call at the funeral Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hill, a daughter,
nephews.
home Thursday from 2-4 p.m. and Racine.
She was preceded in death by 7:9p.m .
fi vc brothers and'a sister.
'
Funeral services will be held at
2:30 p.m. on Friday at McClureSchaefer Funeral Home in Marietta, with Rev. Karl Kumpf, .Rev .

Watson arrested on old fines

Hunnel reports theft

AWARD RECEIVED • City Loan in
Pomeroy has received an award for its increase
and growth in business in the Lancaster District.
Presenting the award to Bob Miller, center,

.

Area deaths

Hospital news

,

Monday at 6:30p.m. at the school.
Open house will be .observed and
there will be a short program presented by grade~ · l-4. Babysitting
and a movie will be provided.
Holter reception
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Holter will
hold a reception at their home Sunday in honor of the 90th birthday of
his mother, Mrs. Ada Holler: Hours
of the reception are from 2 to 4
p.m. and all frieltds and relatives
are invited. The Holters reside on
. Ro te 7
F' P .
u near tve om15 .
Rep.liere Tuesday
, A representative from congressman Clarence Miller's office will
conduct an open door session from
II a.m·. to I p.m. in the Meigs
County Courthouse, Pll)neroy,
Wednesday.
Anyone with questions conccrn·ing the Federal Government and its
operation is invited to stop by to
dtscuss them with the representative.

Veterans Memorial - - ·
Soutb·Ceniral Obio.
.
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
Tonight, mostly cloudy with a - Rena McDaniel, Pomeroy ;
chance of snow flurries ll!' sprinkles Kathryn Evans, Pomeroy: Robert
early. Low in the mid-20s. Chance Lee White, Middlepon.
of precipitation is 40 percent. FriWEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
day, becoming mostly sunny. Cold. - Otis Casto, Walter Baker, and
High in the mid-30s. ,
. James Leamond.
Extended for~ast: :
Saturday through Monday:
The Daily Sentinel
Fair on Saturday with highs
(tJSPS 21S-MOI
from the mid-30s to mid-40s. Lows
Publis
hed
every af\ernoon,' Monday
from the mid-teens to mid-20s. A through Friday,
l U Coon&amp;. l'nm&lt;m&gt;y,
chance of rain showers Sunday and Ohio by Lhc Ohio Volley PUbtilhlng
Monday. Highs Sunday and Mon- Company/Multimedia Inc., POIIIONy,
45769, Ph. 992-2Ui&amp;. 8oroRd da•
day in the 40s. Lows mosu y in the Ohio
pmtago paid., Pornerar, Otria.
•
30s .
Member: The AIIOC:iated Pre., Inland

Daily Prete Aus»clation aad

SPRING VAllH CINEMA
446 4514

'- '

th~

.Ohio

Ncw1p1pcr A11oeiation, National'
Advcrtillng Ropresen&amp;ative, Branham
Ncwapapcr Salca, ?33 Third Avetuac,
New YOrk, New YOrk-10()17,

I'OSTMASTCRoSend addrcu chonGW 10
The Daily Scnlinel, lll CourL St,

Pomeroy, OHio 45769 .

·

SUBSCBIPflON RATES

By Carrier or Motor Route ·
OnoWcck................. .......................... ll.60
One Monlh .............. ...•.....•.......•.........M.96
One Yt!ar.......... ................. ..- .. - -.. $83.20

SrNGLECOPY

PRICE
Oaily.........................................-.25 Ccnl.l
Subecribcnl not. dcairi~ 10 pay \he unicr may remit in advance din:ct t.o Tha
Qa\lipoli• Daily Tribuno on a 3.6 or 12 '
monlh buiA, Credit will be given tal"'"icr

Stocks

each week.

Am ElePower ................. .31118
Ashland Oil ......................29 1/4
AT&amp;T............................... .381{2
Bank One ..........................46 1/4
Bob Evans ........ ., .. ., .......... 191(2
Charming Shop.................. 20 318
City Holding ..................... 161(2
Federal Mogul... ................ l6 1{2
GoodyearT&amp;R ..................521(2
Key Centurion ................... 14 1(2
Lands' End ............. ,..........21
Limited Inc ....................... 25
Multimedia Inc .................. 22 3/4
Rax Restaurant .................. l/4
Robbins&amp;Mycrs ...............35 1(2
Shoney 's Inc...................... 19
Star Bank ~..........................25 3/4
Wendy Int'l.. ....................... 8 3/4
Worthington Ind ................20 3/4

No aubacriptiona by mail pcrmit.l.c!d in
arcaa where home carrier aervi~ ia
availa ble.

Mall SubfterlptioM
Inside Galli a County
26 Wcck.!l ,,.,,,,n, ... ,,,,,,,.,,, ,,,,.,,.,. ,$43,J6

52 Wcckl ................. ......................... $84.76

OuUidc Galli a Counly

13 Woclta .......................................... $23.40 • ·
26 Wcckl ..................... ., ................... w..so
52 Wcel&lt;J .......................................... $88.40

Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided by Blunt, Ellis
and Loewl of GallipoUs.

Sign up begins
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rugged nugget and diamond ring. Come see these in
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Sensible prices I'IIOde pos$lble by QIOUP ~
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Sign-up for the Home Energy
Assistance Program is in progress
and applications may be secured at
several places including the Senior
Citizens Center. HEAP is a federally funded program to help low
income individuals with household
utility bills.
The Center is open Monday
through Friday from 8 a.m. to 4
p.m. and a staff member is avail·
able to assist seniors with filling
out the forms.
To be eligible, household
income must not exceed $9,930 for
one person and $13,320 for two for
the year. Income guidelines for
more than two persons may be
obtained by calling the Center at
992-2161.
A representative from the Senior
Center will be at the Long Bottom
Community Center on Tuesday and
at the Harrisonville Senior Center
on Nov. 19 from II a.m. to 1:30
p.m. to assist residents in filling out
applications or to answer questions
concerning the HEAP progrnm.

1

~

20%

~I

..

(

...,

®

�I
· - ·· -- .l - - ----·- · - - .•.. '-- --···· ·-- · -- ·

manager) Bob Watson threw ftrst balloting by the Baseball Writers
"I'm not an ideal flrsi baseman.
baseman's .glove at me and all of a Association of America. Bagwell I don't hit for much power and I'm
sudden I'm running all over the got 23 of a possible 24 fitst-place sm&lt;J}l. Bul I'll tell you, !,love play. place learning the position," .Bag- votes, fmishing with 118 points.
ing lhere," Bagwell said. _ ~
well said. -- ~·
· Merced, who hi.l .275 with 10 ' Bagwell's .294 average was sec"I'd love to play titst base the homers and SO RBis; received 53 ond to Craig Biggio on the Astros
rest of my life."
.
.
points. He was followed by St. and his 163 hits were second· to
Bagwell led NL rooktes watha Louis outfielder Ray Lankford.wtth center fielder Steve Finley's 170.
.294 average, 163 hits; 15 home 28 points. Atlanta first baseman His 82 RB!s also were a team high
runs, 26 doubles and 82 RB!s. ·
Brian
. 'Hunter was .fourth with seven · and he hit one of the longest home
Pittsburgh first baseman ,Orlan- points.
runs of the season.
do Merced was a distant second in
"I ne.ver thought I' d do that
On May 5 at Piusburgh'·s Three
well,"
said
Bagwell,
who
moved
Rivers
Stadium, Bagwell hit a ball
...
from Double A to the !fliljor five rows deep into the upper d~ck
leagues . "I got luc~y. I got a in left field - an estimated 456
chance to play, and that was the feet.
main t)ling. Af!er you get the
.:.'!don't know~wJull happened
chance, you've got to do well. .
on that," Bagwell said. "I was
"It's something that's tough to changing what I did all season,
appreciate right now. I'm sure by making adjustments:" ·
·
tomotrow. after I talk with my p,ar·
The Astros obtained Bagwell
NEW YORK (AP) - At pre - more or less hold an open and even
it will Seem pretty special. '
from the Red Sox on Aug. 31,
cisely 4 p,m. Houston time, Chuck tryout at sc~ond b~se between ents,
Although hec' d-been a third 1990, ror reliever -Larry Andersen,
·Knoblauch's telephone rang.
(Nelson) Liriano and Knoblau~h. baseman lhroughout his min~r who left Boston to sign as a free
"As soon as he said his name, I and whoever had the better spnng league career in the Boston organt· agent with San Diego . Bagwell
knew wbat he was calling for ," would make the club," Twins gen- zation, Bagwell adjusted to hts new played for Boston's Double A team
Knoblauch said. "My heart was eral manager Andy MacPhail said role quickly l\lld improved his htt· at New Britain in 1990 and earned
definitely racing,"
Tuesday. " We had de~ ided~ no~ to ling after a slow start.
_ .~ -Eastern League M.\IR.honors. __
The person at the other end of arbitrarily send him back to Tnple
"He handles first base as well
the telephone was Jack Lang of the A and held the position open. "as anyone we've had over th~re,."
Baseball Writers Association of
Knoblauch hit .388 in 20 spring general manager Bill Wood satd.
America, and h~ called Tuesday. to games, going 26-for-67 with six "When we got Jeff, we knew he
tell Knoblauch he had been chosc·n RB!s, He tmpressed the Twms was a top prospect and rated well
American League Rookie of the enough that Liriano was released offensively."
,
1
Year.
.
six days before the season started.
By the end of the.season, hew~
"Luckily I was with a winning
"Goi~ g to spring training, I had getting rave revtews for hts
team, did some th ings well and had no plan to leave but on the flight to defense, too.
a consistent year," Knoblau~h said. Oakland to open the season,"
''There's been a ·lot of people say- Knoblauch said.
·
in g I was going to get it, but I
He made a quick impression,
didn't feel like it until I got the going 25-for-75 ·on April with nine
call."
RB!s. He wound up at .281 with 24
Knoblauch, a second baseman doubles, six triples. 50 RBis and 25
Buy One D/R lor $9.99
who made the jump from Class AA steals in 30 tries.
10 the majors and helped spark the
•'At times, you question yourMinnesota Twins to a World Series self whether you belong," said
victory, received 26 of 28 first- Knoblauch. "But Kirby Puckett
place votes. Toronto pitcher Juan
b" h 1 Pu. k
d ChT
11
Guzman and Detroit oulfielder Milt was a tg e p- c eu an
Davis and Kent Hrbek. They said,
&amp;
Cuyler split the other two first - 'They wouldn't have you here if .
place votes.
you didn't belong.'
.
Knoblauch got two second"When you have a superstar
place votes and finished with 136 like Kirby Puckett saying that to
points in the 5-3-1 voting system. you, you have 10 believe it. "
Guzman got 20 seconds and three
Knoblauch's hot bat continued
M£MORIALIRIDGE APPIOACH ON
third-place votes, finishing second in the postseason. He was 7-for-20. ,
~GARFIELD AYL, PAIKIISIURG
with 68 points. Cuyler gol two sec- · wi th three RBis against Toronto in
Mon.·Fri. 9·8;
and-place votes-and 11 thirds and · the playoffs, then went 8-for-26
was third with 22 points.
with two RBls against Atlanta in
Sat. 9·5:30
Sun. 1·5
" It's the same like the World the World Series. He set a rookie
428·1065
Series. It won't sink in for awhile," postseason record with 15 hits.
JEFF BAGWELL
Knoblauch said.
Knoblauch was drafted by the
Twins in the first round in June
1989 after making second-team
All-America at shortstop in his
junior year at Texas A&amp;M. He hit
.286 in 51 games at Kenosha of the
Midwest League and .364 in I 8
HOY. 8 UNTIL NOV. 16
games at Visalia of the California
League.
The following year, he was proOFF IN THE
moted to Orlando of the Southern
League and hit .289 wi th two
homers and 53 RBls, That earned
him an invitation to spring training
as a non-roster player.
" Our feeling was that we would

Knoblauch named AL
Rookie of the.Year

,.

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·~·.Ji

Scoreboard

WALLPAPER AND
BLIND SHOP

a 12-0 deficit and defeated AlexanIn Monday's edition of The
der 14-12.
Daily Sentinel, one Southern player
In the evenings second game the was mistakenly identified. Jeremy
Dolphins rolled over the Gallipolis Hill caught a fme pass of 31 yards,
Raiders 40-8.
.
the biggest catch of the night for
Wednesday evening the Home the Tornadoes, who garnered 105
National Bank Mustangs were to yards in the air. Southern Iqst the
play New Straitsville, no details of -(arne 70-6.
that game were available. .

: Early Wednesday Mixed
October 23, 1991

I

LARGE SELECTION
VINYL PREPASTED

Correction

::• Local bowling

I

~:~!11 FREE!

·Youth football results

By The Associated Press
well this early;" Warriors coac~ Portland 93; the Los Angeles Clip- Spurs 119, Trail Blaien 93
Quick, name the NBA 's two Don Nelson said, "We're trying 10 pers Ill, Phoenix 87; and SacraSean ElliO!.t scored 28 points
unbeatenle&amp;rns.
get 10 the level where we're a good . menta 112. Indiana 102.
. . and David Robi01on 2S as San
It's .not tbc Chicag.o Bulls, _ team : Righ't now we're just an
, ChrisMulliri.bad 32 poiots and · AntQnio W01) at ho~ al~Qi!ist.P!l!t• .
Boston Celtics, Liis Angeles Lak- average team kicking atound. "
Tim Hardaway 28 for the Golden land: ' .
'.
·
. . 1,
ers or Ponland Trail Blazers, none . Orlando is winning by dominat- State, while rookie Billy Owens,
Kevin Duckworth scored 20 ·
_of whom bave winning records and mg the.opPQsition in the third quar- acquired in a trade for Mitch Rich- points for Portland, which ~ ·.
'are a combined (i-9.
ter. Agamst the Bullets, they won . mond last week, had ,16 points on only 38 pereent,of its shots for the.
· Give up?
. ·
. . the thitd ~riod 33-13, with,Dennis 7-for-10 shooting in 27 minutes, game and was ou~cored ~~-19 iii;,.
The Gol.den State Warriors are Scott sconng one more pomt than intruding all of the fourth quarter.
the fourth auancr.
4-0 with three road victories and the entire Washington output in the
Jeff Grayer led the Bucks with a Bulls 132; Celtics 113
,•
the ·Orlando Magic, a third-year quaner.
career-high 27 points, and Dale
Michael Jordan scored 33 of his ·
' expansion !Cam. are 3-0. ·
Washing'ton hit 33 oL91 shots Ellis added 20.
44 -points in a middle-perio,d,A·, ,
The Warriors, off to their best' and was outrebounded .54-42 in' the Magic lOS, Bulle15 88
shooting spree. ·
•'' ,•
start since ·moving to the West thitd quarter, when Orlando turned
Terry Catledse had 24 points
Going over the 40-point rna*.,
Coast from Philadelphia 30 years a seven-point halftime lead into an an4 14 rebounds for Orlando, and for the third consecutive gam~. Jort1~
ago,.won at Milw~ukee-for the first 87-60 rout. ·
-~
~-his 18 first-half points-led the dan scored 18 points as the Bulls
time in 10 games with a 120-1 \4
.Elsewhere in the NBA, it was Magic to a 5447 lead before Scott outscored the Celtics 34-20 in thj&gt;1
deci ~ion Wednesday night. The 9hicago 132, Boston 113; Philadel- took over iri the decisive thitd quar- second Jleriod for a 63-58 halftime.,
advantage. He added 15 in the third:
Magic won at home, whipping phia 107, New Jersey ,105; Char- ter, si:oring 14 of his 19 points.
Washin~ton 105-88.
lotte 114, Atlanta 104; Dallas 97,
Michael Adams led the Bullets period as Chicago broke the gall!!!•,
.. "I didn't expect us to play this- Minnesota 94; · San~Antonio J 19, ~ with 23 points.
open,
.. ..
Larry Bird topped the Celti~~ ··
with 30 points.
, ._.,
Kings 112, Pacers 102 .
··
Ri'chmond scored 35 points ip ·
his second game with 'Sacramento.~
and the Kings w,ithstood Indiana;~,
fourth,quarter rally.
, ,,
The Kings led 98-85 with 7:5~.,
left in the game before the Pacers
pulled' within four with a 9-0 TUfl:·•
But the Pacers got no closer.
,. ~
,
GOING UP - Charlotte Hornets guard .Rex Chapman, left, goes
Chuck
Person
scored
25
poiniS,,•
up past Atlanta Hawks center Jon Koncali, right, for a lay-up duri~g
including five 3-point baskets, an_~ ,
the first quarter of their NBA game at the Charlotte Coliseum tn
Michael Williams added 21 [Qf
Charlotte, N.C., Wednesday night. Charlotte defeated the Hawks,
indiana, which turned the ball over:
114·104. (AP LaserPhoto)
28 times.
-·'
Clippers lll, Suns 87
.•
At Los Angeles , the Clippers
opened a 30-p(lint lead in the sey~ .
'
and quancr.
,
.
Seatlh
,,,,,, 1 2 .33l 2 lfl
Olden
Polynice
scored
2~
National Basketball
Portllnd
.......... l 3 .250
3
,'}
·!
points, Ron Harper 21 and Gat)',
Wcdnesday 11 Games
· Association
Chiugo 132, B01 t0!'\ 113
Grant had 14 assists.
, .
Philadelphia 107, New Jeney 105
Tom
Chambers
had
15
points,
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Orlando 105, Wastungtnn 88
,
Allanllt Division
r
for the Suns. whose 35 points in the2
Charlene 114, Ad~niA 104
W L
Ptl. GO
Ootllas 97, MiMCsou. 94
first
hal( was three less than Los
Orlando
3 0 \.000 ..,...
Golden State 1.20, Milwa~ee 114
B~lon
.......... 2 ' 2 .S OO I 1/2
Angeles'
first-quarter,totaL
,•
San Anwnio 119, Portland 93
Philadclphia ....,.. 't 2 .500 1 1!2
LA Clippers Il l , Phomix 87
Hornets
114,
Hawks
104
'·
Wuhina100 ,., , '1 2 ,SOO 1 l(l
· Sammcmo t 12. lndiana 102
At
Charlotte,
Kendall
Gil~
. Miami
.......... I
I .500 I 1/2
Thursday 's Gllmtl
NeW Jene~ ....... I 1 .500 I 1/2
scored 'a career-high l30 points a6,
Orlando 11 New YoD: , 7:30p.m.
GOIN" IN- Gary Roberts, left, of the Cal- Hockey League game in Hartford Wednesday.
New YOJt.
....... I 2 .333
2
Miami 11 New Je!lt.y, 7:30 p.m.
the Hornets won for the fust time
C(nlnl Ol.,.lslon
gary Flames shoots the puck over fallen Hart- Zarley Zalapski of Hartford, right, watches.
· Clevcland at Ho~ton, 8:30p.m.
Detroit
2 1 .667
infourgamcs.
.:.. :
Minnesota a~Dcn¥er, 9 p.m.
ford Whalers goalie Kay Whitmore for a goal in Calgary defeated Hartford 3-2. (AP Laser Photo)
Ch.icago
2 2 .500 112
Seattle at UtUi, 9:30 p.m.
Muggsy Bogues gave ChariO\te:
I~;~dian•
.......... 2 2 .500 1!1
the first period of the Whalers-Flames National
Frlday'1 Gam•
Milwaukee · ...... 2 2 .500 112
the-lead for good -with an 18-fook
Atlanta at llOiton, 7-:30 p.m.
'Atlama
...... ..... 1 2 .333
I
Golden Su.tc at Ptilladelphia, 7:3Q p.m.
jumper with 8:08 remaining.
.,
Cleveland
........ I 2 .333
I
Milwaukee at Charlotte, 8 p.m.
Dominique
Wilkins
scored
~
J·:
Charlotle
......... I 3 .250 I 1/2
OaUas at QUcaco, 8:30p.m.
WESTERN CONFERE~CE
points
for
Atlanta.
Cle¥eland al S11 n Antoruo, 8:30p.m.
Midwest Division
LA Lakers at Phoenil, 9:10p.m.
76ers 107, NelS lOS
,1 ,
W L Pel. GO
Indiana at Ponla nd. 10 p.m.
San. Antonio ...... 3 I .i50 By
KEN
RAPPOPORT
At
Ph
iladelphia,
Charlc.s.
month,
were
blanked
on
all
seven
sidelined
Clark
for
10
games
last
Denver 11 LA Oippen, 10:30 p.m.
Denver
·~· ·""' 2 1 .667 112
AP Hockey Writer
Barkley had 25 points and 2~•.
of their power-play chances.
month.
Houston . ......... 2 l .667 1{2
You really have to hand it to the Flames 3, Whalers 2
Uuh
........:... 1 2 .333 1 lfl
Wednesday's
Power-play goals by Clark and rebounds and scored the 76crs' la_st.;
OiUu
......... .. I 3 .250
2
Mqntreal Canadiens. That's just
Sports Transactions
Doug Gilmour's goal 45 sec- . Dave Ellet~ a shan-handed goal by four points in the final 17 seconds
Minnesou.
.... ... 0 2 .000
2
~
what their opponents have bein'g onds into the third period broke a Dave Hannan and an even-sttcngth against New Jersey.
By The A~sociated Press
.
Pa.:tnc Dl.,.lslon
,
Golden Su.tc ....... 4 0 1.000 BASEBALL
The
Nets
led
!04-103
befor~
doing these~ys.
tie.
goal by Claude Loiselle helped
Amerltan Uaaue
LA ClippcB ,,,, 3 1 .?SO
1
"Right
now
,
they
'
re
making
Gilmour's
goal
spoiled
HartToronto to its second win in a row Barkley's layup with 17 second~
MILWAUKEE
BREWERSNamed
~
22 .500.2 .
Urian
Small
director
of
baseball
tdminis·
everyone look bad, and tonight we ford 's comeback from a two-goal and spoiled a three-goal night by remaining. He added two free
Sacramento
2 2 .SOO
2
trttian.
LA Lakcn
1 2 .333 2 ll'l
throws ·with 2.9 seconds left for .a•
joined the list, •' New York Rangers deficit on goals by Geoff Sanders- Minnesota's Brian Bellows.
107-104 edge.
,·
coach Roger Neilson said Wednes- son and Mark Hunter. Robert Oilers S, Islanders 3
Hersey Hawkins had 24 points
day night after a 4-1 loss to the _ Reichel and Gary Roberts scored' in
Vince Damphousse broke out of
NHL 's hottest team,
the first period for Calgary, but the a slump with two goals during a for Philadelphia, while Derrick
The Canadiens had thing s in Flames' offense stalled in the sec- four-goal Edmonton outburst in the Col,eman had 29 points for Ney;.
Jersey.
,, ,
control from start to finish as they ond as they got just seven shots on second peried.
Mavericks
97,
Timberwolves
94
,
won theit ninth straight game and net.
Esa Tildcancn had a pair of goals
Rolando
Blackman,
his
status
in
built their amazing lead in the Maple Leafs 4, North Stars 3
and an assist for the Oilers, and
Adams Division to 13 points over
Wendel Clark scored a power- Pctr Klima had a goal and two doubt after spraining his right hand,
Hartford just five weeks into the play goal before reinjuring his left assists. Goaltender Peter lng won scored 22 points as Dallas won at
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP)- In dent for production. ·
season. ·
·
,
knee.
. his ftrst regular-season game as an Minnesota.
the corporate world, secretaries ·
Truskoski 's pay remained the
Even more amazing, the CanadiDerek
Harper
led
Dallas
with
2li
Maple Leaf captain s!lained Oiler, stopping 28 shots.
may be treated like their bosses' samc, ~ut she received a tower job ens (13-3-1) have allowed just 24 hisThe
knee
when hit along the boards
Derek King scored two goals for points on 11-for-13 shooting. The
-a1tcr egos, but Elaine Truskoski classification that limited future goals in 17 games, a 1.41 average. in the second
. Tiillbetwolves got 14 points from
period. A partially NewYork. .
decided enough was enough when raises and loo.kcd bad on her Vancouver is second best at a dis- tor n lig ament in the same knee
reserve Doug West.
she was demoted along with her resume, she said. She said she was tam 2.71 .
boss.
later assigned to a lower-ranking
"We have to credit not only our
Truskoski sued ESPN, claiming executive after Connal's job was defense and goaltending," said
the sports cable network discrimi- eliminated.
Canadiens coach Pat Bums, "but
nated against her when it moved
Truskoski complained to per- our entire team. Everybody works
her into a lower job classification sonnet The result, she said , was on the little things, especially when
six years ago, then fired her after that she was banished to an isolated we have the lead. This is why we
she complained.
office attached to the garage and don't givcupthelead."
" I can sec if the board of direc- given little to do.
.
Elsewhere in the NHL, it was
tors sat down and said, 'We really
She said ESPN fired her in 1987 Calgary 3, Hartford 2; Toronto 4,
think slfe'd be utilized better in after giving her 30 days 1o find Minnesota 3, and Edmonton 5, the
another position,"' she said. " But anot her job at the network by New York Islanders 3.
this is different because I'm auto- applying ,for a posted opening.
Patrick Roy stopped 32 shots
matically demoted because someTruskoski .filed a com~laint with and Stephan Lebeau scored two
one else is. What if he embezzled the Connecucut Commtsst~n on .· goals for the Canadiens, who arc
money and got sent to jail? Would Human Rtghts and Opponum~es a three victories short of the franI get scm to jail too?" ·
few months later. The commission chise record of 12 consecutive wins ·
'
.
Truskoski claimed in a federal rccomme!lded ESPN reinstate her set from Jan. 6to Feb. 3, 1968.
lawsuit that it was ESPN policy to wtth $57, 000 m back pay; tt
Eric Desjardins and Guy Carctemo_te ~ecretaries with thcicboss- refused. · - ----- · -bonneau also scored for the Cima·es and that s~ch a policy is sex disTruskoski then filed a class- di cns who have outscored the
crimination because all the net- ac tion Iaw su,it on behalf of all opposition 36-8 during their winwork's secretaries were women. · ESPN ·secrctartes.
ning streak.
'
She is seeking reinstatement and
In May, ,she dropped the classThe Rangers, whose only goal
at least $100,000 in back pay and action part of her laws ull after carne from Tony Amante, had won
legal fees. No trial date. has been ESPN agreed - wllhout admttung six in a row and eight of nine prior
set.
it had such a pohcy- not to hnk to Wednesday night's loss at MadiESPN spokesman Michael classification of secretaries to that son Square Garden , Soltys denied the network had such of their bosses.
The Rangers, who h~d beaten
· a policy but conceded that TruskMthe Canadicns 2• I in Montreal last
ki and another secretary were
demoted with their bosses. He said
Truskoski was fired only after
refusing three lower-level jobs. He
refused to say whether ESPN' had
any male secretaries.
1Y. Mile South of Tup'-'rs Plains
In court papers seeking the lawOn State Route 7 (LOOk for Sign)
suit's dismi ssal, ESPN likened
Truskoski to a spoiled child who I
~
667·6092
"expected 10 be pampered and
We Buy and Ttade Baseball,
sheltered from the hard-edged busiFootball, Basketball and Hockey
ness world."
The National Organization for
Cards and Comics.
Women and 9 to 5, an advocacy
• 1991 Baseball , Basketball Wax.
group for working women, ha•e
Packs
protested Truskoski 's firi~g. 9 to 5
REMEMBER ... YOU, THE CUSTOMER~ RICEIYULlfiCTOIYIIIIRS IIID IIICEIIIVIS!
received nearly 100 stmtlar complaints in the last year.
I
, ,
The relationship between bosses
We Have Memorabilia,
and secretaries is "still an owner· ~~
Autographed Balls, Bats,
ship Icind of thing," said Susan P.
and
Koniak, who teaches business
ethics and manag'emenl at Yale
University. "You get to pick your
SIGN UP FOR OUR WElKLY DRAWINGS NOW
own deslc, and rou gel 10 pick yotlr
I
THRU CHRISTMAS.
own secletary.'
'
WINNERS: NOV. 2·Dalt Reckhlcl of Rettlsvllle
Truskoski, 44, was a homemak·
SPECIAL OF THE WEEK
.
cr and mother of two who went
bade 10 school to sharpen her secreBox of 36 JIIK• Desert Starm VIctory Se,tes
•
tarial skills before landing a job
$II.OOYALUE0NLY$7.5Q
· ·
with ESPN In 1982. By 1985, she
was ex~cutive secretary to Allan
'1'111.:... ............
Canna!, chief opera~ng ~ffi&lt;;Cr.
........ IIWIIII.nil
III It•.
Eagle
During a reorgantzauon m 1985
- a year after Capital Cities-ABC ·
OPEN MONDIY·SITUIDIY 10 A.M.·6 RM.
Inc. bought Bristol-based ESPN .
CALL
667·6092 FOR SPECIAL APPOINTMENT.
Canna! was demoted to vice presi-

'

WAlLPAPER ·
SPECTACULAR

DRESSES
SWEATERS
PANTS
JACKETS
COATS &amp;CAPES
SKIRTS

The

·Golden State, Orlando remain ~~:nbeated

a

HOUSTON (AP) - Jeff Bagwell made the most of his second
chance with the Houston Astros.
When he failed to unseat thitd
baseman Ken Caminiti in spring
training, the Astros moved Bagwell
to first base, and he capped !:lis
rookie season Wednesday as the
National League Rookie of the
Year.
" I thought 1 was going back to
Triple A, but (assistaM general

By,RUSTY MILLER
AP Sports Writer
Ric~ Trefzger hi!$.speotlbe lil!it month on the sidelines, but he returned
to the field last week.
' Mentor Lake Catholic's players ~'ere stunned Friday at practice when
coach John Gibbons summoned Trefzger, a senior quarterb~ck. Trefzgcr,
who underwent season-ending knee surgery a month ago, hobbled onto
the field for what Gibbons culled a special play he wanted to practice.
" Everyone was whispering, 'Trcfzgcr. Trefzger. Trcfzger. He's going
to play him! ' Gibbons recalled.
.
. On Saturday, against Villa Angela-St. Joseph, Trefzger called the fust
play in the huddle and stepped back in .shotgun situation. But fullback
Marty Loncar took a short snap and ran nme yards wtth the ball. Trefzger,
who was not touched on the play, left the field.to an ovation, the final one
of'his highschool C3J'cer.
__
.
. .
Elsewhere, the Minnesota Twins aren't the only team that have gone
from worst to first this season. In Northwest Ohio alone, there have been
several remarkable turnarounds. Ecton went from J-9 to 9-1, Lima
Shawnee from 0-'10 to 7-3, Bloomdale Elmwood was 2-8 last year and
had to raise funds to even play football this season, yet finished 9- L
Mount Blanchard Riverdale was 8-2 after going 3-7 last season. Bellevue
we nt from 3:11o 8-2, Bowling Greeiilrom 4•6to"7-3 and Holland Springfield from 5-5 to 9-1 and a playoff berth,
The stars were out over the weekend: Chillicothe Huntington's Chad
Lytle ran for 312 yards on is carries, scored si~ touchdowns and also
caught three passes !01"_117 yards. 1:1e also kiclc~ six ex!la-]lQints 31ld
passe&lt;! for a two-pomt conversiOn. He scored 26 touchdowns (179 pomts)
and ca ught 58 passes for 1,067 yards this season; he didn't even play football last year as a junior.
.
.
. Campbell Memorial 's Karlin Adams rushed for a school-record 309
yards and scored three touchdowns- despite missing the second quarter
with a deep ~l\Sh in his left hand -in a :n -28 victory over Struthers;
Marion Elgin s Doug Hesson (191 yards) anq Enc Clark (138) combmed
f0'r 329 yards rushing and 32 points in a 40-12 victory over Sparta Htghhlnd· Cardington-Lincoln quarterback Mark Morns, who ts also a 4.0 student set school records for passing in a game (278 yards). a season
(1,3Z7) and career (2,246 yards), along with marks for touchdown passes
in a season (16) and a career (28); .
.
Andy Bish of Bloomdale Elmwood scored four touchdowns as the
Royals completed their first unbeaten season with a 54-0 victory over
Northwood; 'Dola Hardin Notthem's Lane Good was great, carrymg 44
times for 247 yards, giving him 712 yards in his last three games. to lock
up the Blanchard Valley Conference rushing title; Hamler Pa!lick Hcn~y·s
Craig Stevens carried 32 times for 240 yards and thr&lt;:C touchdowns m a
33-7 win over Evergreen; Findlay's Aaron Gralak fimshed the year wtth
57 catches for a school-record 849 yards.
Beachwood quancrback Tony Britt completed 17 of 26 passes for 451
yards and five touchdowns in a 45-41 vit:tory over Aurora. "People there
said it was the greatest high school game they had ever seen," said
Beachwood coach Dave Sedmak. Scouts for Kent State University offered
· Brill a scholarship on the spot. .
.
·
,
.
. Youngstown Chaney completed its best season (9-1) smce 1974 wtth a
30-6 victory over Warren Howland; Hubbard won tts first league champt·
onship oJ any kind in 25 years with a 6-2 win over Newton Falls to clatm
a share of the Trumbull Athletic Conference title; there arc only seven
teams in the Mahoning Valley Conference, but three arc playoff bound:
Warren Kennedy, Campbell Memorial and Girard.
.
.
Kai Walker almostsingle-harrdcdly led Columbus Lmdcn McKmle~ to
a 62-27 victory over Columbus Northland Fnday. He completed 9 of 11
passes for 290 yards and three touchdowns, ran four times for 104 yards
and two touchdowns, returned t:ovo interc~ptions Ill yards, brought a punt
back 12 yards and in his spare ~me, ~d stx solo taekles and etght asststs.
. Linden led 35-21 with a minute left in the fim half, but Walker threwa
40-yard touchdown pass to Darryle Prentiss, intercepted a pass and
roturned it 61 yards and, two plays later, threw a 4-yard touchdown pass
to'Wesley Russell with three seconds remaining for a ~9-2Jlcad. ,
,
· The victory gave Linden the CttY. Lcotgue Blue DlVlSlOn champ10nsht~,
The Panthers will play Eastmoor m thctr ftrst Columbus ctty championship game since 1977.
·
Finally, when things are going bad ...
: Youngstown Wilson's Mike Gordon completed a 10-yard 10uchdown
pas's to Dave Dyson with 32 se~onds l~ft fo r a 28-26 le ad over
Youngstown East. Wilson was scckmg tts fust vtctory of the year after
nine losses.
,
•' But wouldn't you know it, East's Charles Perdue returned the ktckoff
62 yards for a ,touchdown and a 32-28 East victory.

'tony's Carryout
46
ty{ikc Sells
39
Sharnmys Carryout 38
Banks ConstruCtion 37
liackeus Roofing
32
JIOOICrs Bowlers
24
Hjsh Series •
'·l
,
Terry Seidenabel-5~8·
!: Marlene Wilson-4 75
;: Bub Stivers-532
•: Debi Hensley--4'72
Hl11h Game •
·
:
Terry Seidenabel-212
• Marlene Wilson-217
• Terry Seidenabel-203
•• · Pat Carson-209

Ohio

Bagwell of Houston NL Rook;e of the Year.

f.)hio Sportlight

iEAM '

--

Thursday, November 7, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

PJ!_ge-4-The Daily Sentinel

In , Big Bend Youth Football
League action last Sunday, the
Blake Construction Browns did
what no other team has been able
1&lt;} do all season against the Vctcra~s Memorial Hospital Dolphins
and that was score.
:·The Dolphins had held their
oJJi&gt;onents out of the end zone all
sooson , but the Browns were able ·
t ~ score 24 points. But the Dolp~in s offens~ was in high gear in
rOlling up 64 ,points of their own
arjd coasled to a 64-24 win.
•The second game was a barn
burner as the Pleascrs Eagles
scpred late in the contest and converted the two point extra points to
post a 8-6 win over the Home
N~tional Bank Mustangs.
•In tournament 'action .this past
Ttiesday evening qt_W~h!!J)la H)giL
S&lt;U\ool the Browns came back from
,•

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· Offer
·Good
Through
November
1

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145 N. Secttnd Ave.

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I

'"'flage 6 The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, November 7, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

t Support These
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THE BOB HARMON FORECAST
Sat., Nov. 9 - Major Colleges • Dlv. 1·A
• Air Force
23
Army
Alabama
34 'L.S.U.
~ - -'-Arizona-Slate
21
er&amp;gon
• Auburn
27
SW Louisiana
Boston College
23 • Temple
• Bow~ng. Green
27
Kent Slale
• Brigham Young
30
Wyoming
California
40 • Oregqn State
Clemson
-26 • North Carolina
Colorado
38 • Oklahoma Slale
Duke
20 • Wake Forest
East Carolina
24 • South'n Mississippi
Eastern Michigan
24 • Ohio u .
Florida
28
Georgia
• Florida State
34
Sou In Carolina
Fresno Stale
30 • Pacific
• Georgia Tech
31
Furman
IIUnois
27 • PurdJo
• Iowa
28
Indiana
Kansas Slate
23 • Iowa Slale
• Memphis Slate
26
Louis.; lie
• Miami, FL
38
West Virginia
Miami, OH
24
• Weslem Michigan
• Michigan
33 . Nonhweslem
Middle TaMassee
24
'Cincinnati
Netnska
31. ' Kansas
• New Mexico Slate
28
Long Beach Stale
• Nonn CaroUna Stale 26
Virgtnia
• Notre Dame
27
Tennessee
Ohio Sletll
27 • Mlnneso1a
Oklahoma
30 • Missouri
PaM Slatll
34
Maryland
• PittSbUrgh
28
Rutgers
Rice
30 'S.M:U .
• San Diego Slala
28
Colorado Stale
• San Joee Slate
40
FuiiOJton Slale
Texas
28 ' Houslon
Texas A &amp;M (Nov. 7) 27 • T.C.U.
• Texas Tech
2t
Mensas
Texas-EI Paso
24 • Hawaii
• Toledo
2t
Ball Stale
• Tulane
22
Navy
U.C.LA.
27
'Stanford
• Utah
30
New Mexico
Utah Slate
20 • Nevada-Las Vegas
• Vanderbill
26
Kenlud&lt;y
• Virginia Tech
40
Atuon
Washington
34 • Soutllem Calilomia
• Washington Stale
24
Arizona
• Wisconsin
24
Michigan Slale
Major CollogH • Dlv. l·AA
Alabama Stall

• Alcor"

• ~chian Stale
• lou S1111

• lotton u.

Ctnttal Florkla
Dar1mout~

OtiMNrt
Eatttfn llinol1
Eutem Kentuckw
• Eaatttn Wuhington
Florida 41 M
HlrYard
Hoi, Crott
• Howard
Idaho
J.,... Wadilun
• Lllayettt
•
•
•
"

L"'~h

Loulil1na Ttch
W. .h&amp;M
Mat.:tu.rMIII
McNMM
UorehHd Stilt

IWwad•Rtno

1 • Nlcholla Stilt
" NOt1h Clrotlnt A &amp; T
Notthlulttn
• Notthlm Iowa
Princeton

' Sam 1-fol.IIIOtl
Sou.. Cuollna SIM
• SW Mltlourl
" SW T....
TtnnetiH Ttdl
TtM.·Ctlana.nooga
• TIMH. . . Uattlil
• T1111 Southtrn
Troy
• V.M'.I .
• VillAnova
•.Wilber Slatt
Wtlaern 11111011

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NORTH SECOND AYE.
MIDDLEPORTI~ OHIO

VIII

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. taS-3301

nationlil championship game in six
years by offering $3 million per
team, even though the Rose,
Orange and Sugar bOwls pay more.
,
The bowl would be able .to offer
; half again as much as the $2 mil• lion it paid Louisville and Alabama
·this year because its television contrae.l gives it the revenue ·from TV
comliiC)rcials if one of the participants is ranked No. 1.
The size or the windf~ll isn't
• known yet, exequtive.director John
Junker S31d Wednesday. ·
''We won't know exactly until
· things tlnfold;-probablyin~the next
two weeks," he added. "In the
past we paid $3 million per team
for the championship, and it would
be hard for us to imagine getting·a
championship for much less than
that."
•
Bowl bids will be announced

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• lthiCI

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Evangel
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26
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23

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· Heat Pump

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' Bric:lcltwaltf, VA
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•'WASIJINOTOJL.;.US ATLANTA...
17
In last m~~llngilt 19, Falcoas 119M 24 poitts 112111-to held 27-20 ha~ lead .. Slns, nakherfy, rallied behind Ql Mark
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''2·6491

••
••

How to,.,.,

S'OREWIDE SAVINGS

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21
7
13

''DliMR--23 L A.IAIDU5..-21
In 111ollll gam1 of '91 season, Ialders em. back lfrom 51-31oss to lilin '90 AK title game, 47-17 opening loss to Oilers Ito nip
lr-16-13 .. IIIII to homeilaadins Denver.
·
DlTROit..
26 '"TAMPUAY-13
lio111, playing at home 111111 off to best 11«1 in 11 ynars, rvuted luasi1weeks ago, 313, Barry Sanders scoring three TDs, rushing lor
160 yards .. Detroit laveitd agoln.
'
''HOIISTON--.27 DALW--.20
Banle ofTeGS has been pla,wd only 61ines sintt 1971, Dalanrinllng lovr .. ill '!!, Diers' Tony Zendejas kkked lour FGs, Houston
lnakita 10-10 halltia .. to win 25-17.
.KANSAS CllY-:..21 "'LA. RAMS...-13
Chiefs, Rams realngularSIDSell strangers, meefi~~g31ines IIIII ywars, LA. willing ag
K.t's stingy def111111 alowed 98 poln~
1111 g11n15, lanlglvlng up 22 JllrJIIml.
"'MIAMI
20 NlW ENGLAND"--17
.
Dolphias110itd 17 oltheir 20 points it 2nd ..... 1o llaat Pats II lktoll~rmat..-vp In F11xbort 20-10 .. Mimi QB D111 Morino pa!!ed
'VI
lor 224 vonls. twe lOs • Dofplls 'lliugain. ·
·
"NEW ORWNs.:__26 WI FRANOSC0.-24
In opening Monday nillr in '90, Malk Coldkbd F61n filal9~~e~nds glvitg 49ers 13·12 win .. in exact tumarovnd at SIIISOn'send,
Sailts' llortotl Aide"" kkklil PG to wiii3-IO.
'
NEW YORI GIANTS...20 "PIIOENIX....-10
Giants wan 6th It lliW aver Canis in ..tt October, lith In last 13 meetings, 20-9.. lllodney Hampton led Giani! witlttareer·high
137 ll!nls Mhilli .. N.Y. Oflit, livl d$.
.
.
"NEW YOII.I'IS-231NDIANAPOUs...,_7
'
Jets lianded Colts lth - t los of '91 1111101 thr11 . . . . llllllillapols 17-6 . 4th stra~ht gam~ lor Colts withoul TO .. N.Y.,
.
lliani Mftlila lar AK East m•-up.
sumE _._f4 "SAN DIEG0-17
11tatwDa.fjls!MIIIb•, Ql DmlrillllaililiS 'talis1120-hil .. except loreharprs, AKWestin 'll'f tight4·team

· lllnJ ii ..MitiiSOTA

a

21

13
17

West Virginia each received $3 beating Miami 14-10.
· _- ·:
mlllion when they played forthe
Florida Swe alhletic dirett01 .
national title in the _1989 Fiesta Bob Gom . acltno_wledged that
· B.o~l. Notre Dame beat West Vir- money and loca~10~ favo~ th~
gm1~ 34-21 to claim the champi- , O~ge Bowlm MiamLbutll!d the
onsh1p.
Semmoles have good memones &lt;f
Two years earlier, Penn State the Fiesta Bowl, w~ Iiiey dcfeu. topped the post-bowl poll s after ed ~ebtaska 31-28m 1988 and4C, .
·
t7 m 1990.
~
·I
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••

In the Fairmont games, Zempter .
had 10 kiDs, twll serving aces and a
block solo, and Cooper, a sophomore from Jackson, contributed
eight kills, six digs and a block.
Spears recorded five kiDs and five
d1gs, Sharp had five digs, a block
and t-wo serving ·aces, Neff two
kills and block. and Wray tWO
kiDs and four digs.
·
The district playoffs, commencing Friday at lhe College or Mount
St. Joseph, will include the following teams in order of seed: Mount
St. Joseph, 32-2; Rio Grande; Tiffin, 30-8; Mount Vemon Nazarene,
28-11; Walsh, 22-9; Lake Erie, 29·
16: Findlay•. 16.12; and Cedarville,
26-21.
'
The Redwomen will play the
first game at 8 a.m. Frida~ against
Findlay. Should they wm, they
m&lt;:et the l"inner of the Tiffin-Lake
Erie contest at noon Saturday. If a
victory results, the Redwomen will
advance to the championship game
at 6 p.m. Saturday. _

22

-- IUFFAJ.li==27 ..GilfNUY~--17 B'ils have-lhree of 4meetilgs since 1974 ,. in last llllkiHp in '88, iuiiUJ scoitd TO in every quarter, its delei!W lorcln,g lour
-.
·
1111110¥11'1, ~x sadcs In 21.0 ~u1011. .
,
'"CINONHAn-24 PlmiiiiGIL-23
'
Bengak looking lor7,. might win- SliMs alw -pi11111'in in '90 _C'IIIIJ on~ gave up FG in first makh-up, winning 27-3 .:
!IIOIIdmory, delusin, 16-12.
''O.MWIII..-.21 PIIIIADlLPIIIL.-20
lr-llolil 30-11 series lead 0111lilgles, willillg 13 of IIIII 16 _three yean ago, lrm QB D111 Strode threw twe TD passes, defe~~~e
lllislnl95111b,l-·nilgl9-3.
.

"". r..• ...,1101111 UeJiast M

Wesleyan; tlie West
Virgmia conference champion,
Teresa Zempter and Billina Cooper
dominated the offense with 20 kills
apiece. Zempter and Cooper also
had three block solos and four digs
each. Zemprer posted three serving
aces and Cooper had one.
Tiffany Neff recorded two kills
and seven digs, while Robin Sharp
was credited with two kills, two
s,erving aces and eight digs.
MicheDe Spears had a pair of serv·
ing aces and led the defense with
nine digs, and Andrea Hedges had
a serving ace.
Zempter, a senior from Minford,
netted 10 kiDs, a serving ace, two
digs and two -blocks against A·B,
while Cooper hall seven kills and
two serving aces. Spears notched
two kills , a serving ace and two
digs. and Sharp netted four digs.
Neff came up with two serving
aces, two blocks and four digs.
while Cooper contributed ~ive digs.
Shelley Wray h~d two serving aces
for Rio Grande.
·

992-5141

PRO FORECAS'

FOR SUNDAY AND MONDAY, NOVEMBER I 0 AND 11

A~ainst

R

,.

13

Preabrttfia.n
La.mbulh
' W..t VIrginia Tech
• Walh ln;ton 1 L..
Mtlhodiat
• Harding
' Llvlngslon ·
• Mars Hil

dropped.its sponsonbip in Feb111;
ary.
·
: .
. .
"We would like to get 11 done,
but we're .not forced to do so
be_cause w~ have a g_oud, stropg
base on t1c_lcet sales and w1th
NBC," he $31d.
Junker sa1d Notre Dame and

~

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•

•

•

•
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'
•
•
•
~

•

•

.•

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•

21

• Entary a Henrr

Cloromont

Super Efficiency

II
20

1" N..,._r,

• Oocidtntal

41
24

I&amp;

In anticipation oflts pOstseason,
the University of R10 Grande vol. leybllll ream complete,d its ~egu~ar
: season Tuesday with tliree v1ctones
over WVIAC teams in a quadran: gular match-at Parkersburg -Com: munity College.
The Redwomen defeated West
• Virginia Wesleyan, 15-4, 7-15, 15•'6; Alderson-Broaddus, 15·0, 15-0;
: ,and Fairmont State, 15-3, 15-11 .
&gt; The Redwomen were scheduled
· to compete in a tournament last
: weekend at the University of
: Charleston, but the invitational was
• cancelled due to health concerns
: over the smoke from forest fires in
• the Mountain State.
.
: "We ended the season on a good
: note," Redwomen Coach Patsy
· Fields noted as the team went to
: 38-8 overall. "We played well, got
' some of our confidence back, and I
· think having the-weekend off did
; us some good. It was a team effort
by everyone and that's what we'll
: need when we enter the playoffs."
'•

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Alkanau Tech

28

24

10
7

22

1

he said.
. .
.
Junker said the additional
money fo~ a Iitle matchup would
come from adverti~ing revenue.
. The contract wnh NBC, reached
ftve years ago and , extended
through 1995, has a provision
which gives the bOwl-ownership of
eight commercial spots during !he
telecast of a me involving a No.
1 team. Eacli spot could sell for
$250,000. .
·
NBC emphasized , that the
money :.voull! not come directly
fro~ the network: . , _ .
· NBC enthustaSI!cally supports
the• Fie~la Bowl's eq~!!S~!l'_!l!fllit ·
the hauolfaJ c6amptpnsHlp game,
but cannot and will not pursue that
sort of contest in a fiscally irresponsible manner," the network
said.
. ·.'
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Junker sa1d hts bowl hopes to
get a title sponsor to repl~ce
Sunkist Growers~ _Inc. , wh1ch

seas1JJ1's__
· finale; enter postseason on Friday

10

Wil'lgall

Huld:loldl

~·IIi

13

81. Francia, •

27

3D

7

~

"7

Othor GamH- For Woot

Cal Poly
• Cai·Oavil
• Chico State 1
• E111ern New Mealco
LiVt rnt

...

24

21
20

• Bowrie
• Trln~r. TlC
Alabama A &amp; M
W.t VIrginia Stall
" ·VAidoela

,

14

17

28
20
22

~

PoiMroy, Ohie

COOLING

22
7

Worrll Brown

EMI Texu
• Tarle!oft

the

AND

8
10
21
7

Otnl&amp;on

21
21
2.&amp;
2.&amp;

VI

18

Other Gamoa • South &amp; Southwell

• Alban,, GA
" Angelo Stall
Arkanut-Yonllceito
• Catson·Niwl'l'lln
' CllaWb-11
• Ctnltal Arklntat
Ctrttrll Connectlc:ut
Centre
o Ct.ari
' Concord
Delli Statt
Eton
Ferrum
• Ga.rdntr·Wibb
• O.orgetown, KY
GtanviMt
Guilford
• HafT11dtn·Swdney
Henderson
Jicktonvlllt Stall
Ltnoir·Rhyne
' Livlngllont
Mi'-•
MIIIIIPI
' Ouar;Ma

ha

Stria you want
in the size you need
at a price you'll like.

8
21
10
17

NW OklahQml

Wt

H.ATING

14
10
21
20

MePhtrlon

.

WARNER

7

St. Thotnll
Hiram
• DaytOn
Concordia, WI
• Bethel, KS
Soultl Dakota 91. .
• Winona Stilt
CapHII
r' SW-OklatloJN.
• Mornlnplde
• NlbraakaoOmtha
' Doant

·

992-3671

8

CUI~·Siockton

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Nov. 17, the day afrerNo. 1 Florida
Stare and No.2 Miami play in Tallahassee. If both win this Weekend,
the Fiesta Bowl would try to invite
the winner of their..intrastare clash
to face flfth-ranke4Notre Dame.
The Orange Bowl; which pays
$4.2 million per team, is interested
in luring the Florida State· Miami
winner for a possible championsl)ip
game against the Big Eig~i champ.
The Rose Bo'l/1 pays $6 million
to the champions. of~ Pacific 10
and Big Te~ conferences., whi~h
are coliJt_mlt!ed· to _playmg ,1n
Pasadena, Calif.
·- ·
,
Tile Sugar Bo)vl, which pits !he
-Southeastern eonftzence chlunplon against an at-large team, pays
$3.25 million to eac~ team.
Without a championship game,
the Fiesta should be able. to pay
each team between $2 million and
$2.3 million, Junker said.
"It could escalate from .there,"

~ __
Redwome1J_swe~Jl1oesin

ANDERSON'S

•'

NW WIIIOUII

'

...,. I I

rr~

20
20 .

Concardll. NE
Milaoutl WHtllln
• Bturrton
• Panhll'ldlt

• Wuhbum
Felfli

24
21
28

13

' Tabor

4g
24

n

,.

gllll'

DISCOVER WHY .
PEOPLE SAY,
·
. - ~:of

10
17
20
14
7
10
21
14
13
20

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l.lutlllnbltt

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The Dally Sentinel PIIQI 7:

.: Fiesta Bowl·hopes to .have.third title game in six years

Football '91'! ·
Catch All The
Excitement!

Fine Area
Businesses!

-

Po_meroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, November 7, 1991

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Thursday, November 7, 1991

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By The Bend

.,'(l

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The Daily .Sentinel

• Ca•ol Burnell
• Kiefer Sulhll!land

Page-8

by Bob Hoeflich
•

If you feel like you're sitting on
a keg or powder' you're probably
, one of many of us experiencing the
, . same feeling.
' piJ~~u~~~r~e;~~~:ems~~eb~h~s~
._ days.
:.
In Killeen, Texas, 22 people
·• were gunned down and 23 others
: injured as they simply tried to have
lunch. ln low a City, Ia. , five persons. were killed because th ey
allegedly committed an academic
slight. In Oakland, Calif., dam ages
went into the billions and some I2
people ai·ed-asraging.fire swepT the
area destroying the homes and life. time mementos of residen!S.
~: ;. Now if the se thin gs are n' t
· : ~.nough to make you feel a bit
· uneasy, think a bit about our ccon.- amy. It's in terrible condition and
. it's like the weather-everybody
; talks about it, but no one does any: thin~ about it. We hear of suggest; ed Jump start solution s betng
: offered in Washington, D. C., but
: nothing happens. How about more
, taxes on middle class Americans' that seems like par for the course.
: After all there are only 2,000
· homes of such Americans going on
. the auc tion block every day
E:.::.oocause they can't meet the mort...~ 3lage pa ymcnts.
Remember when you used to
!':'; 'w oicc some little complaint about
(:- Jhcgood old U.S. of A. and some:: one wou ld rcton:
,.-; "11 you don't like it, why don't
00:: you go to Russia?"
Well, 1 can tell you why you
t~ aon ' t want to go to Russia . The
~ shelves of Russian stores arc bare;
\, people arc fighting to get a loaf of
~· tiread; Russian money has been
·" devalued-again-and people have
:- returned to old-fashioned bartering
~ in an attempt to meet their needs.
G However, those conditions in
;;: Russia shouldn't make you so sat,.. isfied with this country that you

t::·

C:.

close your eyes to all the
comings of yow Washington officials.
·
And about Washington, it seems
that there arc some Americans 'fhO
. would like to clear it out and start
over. Shucks, that don't seem like
too bad a plan to me. Would it be
difficult to replace most of THAT
·talent? There has been the suggestion to limit the terms of members
of Congress. Those opposed to the
suggestion contend that the voters
have the power to change the per·
sonnel making up Congress when
l ney vote. True, they do havecthatpower- but it never seems to happen. Like it or not, the incumbent
has the edge. They say also that
voting power is the key because if
Congressmen were etccted for limitcd terms then they would feel free
to take any actions they pleased
.without any threat from voters. A
fri end of mine hearing that arg umcnt commented:
"What the hay? They do what
:hey want anyway".
I believe she's got a point there.
And, of course, we both know it
probably will take another Civil
War to get legislation in effect to
limit Congressional terms of office
unless the limitation is for 25 years
of more. Why do I fe el that
Congress members aren't going to
stay over lute at night to pass legislmion to limit their terms of office?
They just do th at to increase their
sularics.
By the way, those were really
gc nuinc snow Oakes that you spot·
tell here on Monday as the cold
snap set in firmly. What a switch
from a week ago when temperatures were in the balmy seventies.
As thai blast of cold hit did it occur
10 you just for' a second how good
it is that you don't have to live on
the strcc!S-the warmth of homewhat a good reason to keep smiling.

Holzer Clinic
OB department
offers Epidural
Anesthesia
Ask Dreama Wimdling about
the advantages of Epidural Anes·
thesia for childbirth and yqu will
find it is the best of both worlds.
Mrs. Wandling gave birtl! to her
flfSt child, Terah, on October 9 at
Holzer Medical Center. She and
her husband, Terry, reside in the
Point Pleasan~ W.Va;-area:Wandling was the first
p~di~~~ at Holzer Clinic and Holzer
;i::i~~ Center to benefit from
t
Anesthesia for pain coninchildbirth.

PROUD PAPA· Proudly holding little Terah
is her father, Terry Wandling, as he sits next to
her mother, Dreama, with OR Nurse Manager
Peggy Caudill (r), and Carolyn Ke)·es, R.N.,

....

]f irst birthday

TOPS, KOPS
name wmners

.

.. .

·Rich ·siegel, Wcstc.rville, Inter· serving the.planet and setting more
national District Governor of reach-out goals.' The Governor is
Rotary, spoke recently .to the Mid· setting a goal of planting 100,000
dleport-Pomcroy Rotary Club on trees next.spring as the goal for this
the theme of "Look Beyond Our- district in 1992.
selves." Other guests were Mrs.
Many projects were outlined as
Siegel, Mrs. Richard W. Vaughan carried out by-district clubs includand Mack 0. Ellis of Athens. ing serving coffee at rest -stops,
Richard Vaughan presided at the assisting senior citizens with needmeeting.
. ed chores, serving meals to the
In his talk, Siegel outlined some
homeless and more scholarships.
of the goals of Rotary including Siegel complimented the local club
incneasing membership, moving the on its project of assisting crippled
Polio-Plus program forward, ore-

staff nurse on 08, who assisted in this first
epidural delivery at the Holzer. Medical Center.
The Wand lings are residents of Pt. Pleasant,
W.Va.

this new service. Caudill calls
Dr. Montrie Chaksupa who Epidural Anesthesia "The top
delivered the baby says, "Epidurals option for pain relief during labor
will now allow mothers the most and delivery." Stanley is a Certified
rewarding childbirth experience. Registered Nurse Anesthetist.
Mrs. Wll!ldling and Terah both did CRNA's are anesthesia specialists
quite welL"
· who administer more than half of
Graham Stanley, .chief of Anes- the 26 million anesthetics given 'to
thcs1a at the Clime and Peggy U.S. patien!S annually.
Caudill, RN, Nurse Manager of the· · · · ..
OB Department at the Medical
Center arc equally positive about
YY t

As heaa or the 10 member
Anesthesia Depanment at Holzer,
he adds, "No anesthesia is perfect,
but with Holzer's quality physicians, anesthetists, nurses and support staff, an Epidural offers the
best chance for a safe and pleasant
delivery
Dreama Wandling would agree.
.

Holiday strategies program
scheduled November 19
Arc you looking for ways to cut
do.wn on stress and responsibilities
and increase the enjoyment of the
holidays this year? If the answer is
yes, plan to attend one of the educational programs sponsored by the
Meigs County Cooperative Extension Service on Tuesday and Nov.
19.
The focus for the Tuesday program will be time-saving meal
planning and preparation ideas
using the microwave oven. Ideas
for short cu!S on traditional recipes,
quick and easy nutritjous meals
will be shared. The program will be
presented by Cindy Oliveri, County
Extension Agent, Home Economics/4-H, and is scheduled for
10 a.m. to noon at the Senior Citi·
zcns Center on Mulberry Hcigh1s.
Preregistration deadline for this
program is Fiiday.
· The program on Nov . I 9 will
featured presentations by five home
economists and program assistants
from Southeast Ohio. They will
share ideas on 'building family
strengths, reducing stress, holiday

Church UTomen Un't
1ed'' ffiee t

Craft show set
The Fourth Annual Eastern
High School Craft Show, sponsored by the Eastern Band Boosters, will be held Saturday at the
high school from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Entertainment throughout the
day will be provided by the concert
band at 9 a. m., the seventh grade
hand at 9:30 a.m., and the march·
ing band atlO a.m.
At 12:30 p.m. the chorus, consisting of members from all three
elementary schools in the district •
Chester, Tuppecs Plain s and
Reedsville -will perform. The
fourth grade will perform first followed by the fifth and sixth grade.
At I :30 p.m. an auction will be
held with crafters donating items.
JOSIAH HAYMAN
All proceeds will be useft for the
band.
At 2 p.m. a performance by
::::, Josiah James Hayman celcbrat- Twirlers on Parade, a pom-pom
::: id his first birthday recently at the group, will be presented.
The public is invited to attend
"-. ~orne of his parents· in Long Botthis
event.
· tom.
'&lt; A "Mickey Mouse" theme was
:: carried out and cake, icc cream,
•chips and drinks were served.
: Attending were his parents,
•
·:James and Melinda Hayman, pater~·na l grandparcn!S, James and Jean
Judy Laudcrmilt was the best
·=Hayman, and maternal grandpar;•cms, Frank and Shirley Wells.
.. weekly Joser and Calista Searls the
~ ; Also attending were Melissa and best monthly loser at the recent
_·. ~ Joshua Morris, Tammy 1t~d meeting of Ohio TOPS Club No.
I
r'Christopher Cowdery, Frank1e, 570,
Linnic
Aleshire
was
the
best
:~rittany , A.I. and Marty Tolliver,
"Elavid and Brandle Wells, Dmna KOPS loser.
Club meetings arc held every
:·and Andrew Bissel' and Judy Hall.
:.;:- Sending gifts were paternal Tuesday with weigh-in at '1 p.m.
::areat grand~arents Bill and Jean and meeting at6 p.m.
·•Simms, Merritt Island, Fla.

.

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The Dally Sentlnei-P

national organization. It was also
announced tbat annual dues are.
now $32 . The president also
appointed a nominating comlllitlee
pending acceptanCe.
·
Guests in attendance were Mrs.
Jolin Kauff, r~geni of the Col. ·
C!)arles Lewis Chapter, D.A.R .,
Point Pleasant, and Mrs. Margaret
Parker, president of the Meigs

·News·briefs

County Pioneer and HisJprical ·_
Society.
The next meeting will be Nov.
21 at the Meigs CO!llllY Museum in
Pomeroy. The speaker will be Mrs.
N w h..
M
d
· an · as mgton oore, a cscen·
dant of the brother of Geor-ge
Washington . She will speak on
General Washington and his fami~

. nere are three kinds of teeth
for chewing food : The incisors
chop it, the canjnes tear it ahd the
molars grind it up.
. ·
An otolaryngologist tre•!S.ai Imen!S of the nose, throat ahd ears.
Tbe (irst Je.mal.e. pictured Jln
'U.S. paper. currency was..Matl_ha
Washmgton, wh\l appear.ed on s.be
1886 Sl bill.
. r'

Upfroou f4shiotl footwco~r t!rar's a step 4hcad it! comfort. C01rnie
CllllomW4/k m4kes i1 possible by-combirringfon&lt;~!d Slyling wi1!r
u·clmolllgy 's ircwtst ad~Jallces in comfim. Come i" todar and
m· t!re Ctl tirc Cus(ot11H :1/k colleaioll .

.

,(

CUSTOMWALK'
\

BY CONNIE~ ·

NEW ARRIVAL • Dreama Wandling holds her baby daughter,
Terah, as Obstetrician Dr. Montrie Chaksupa (left) and Chief
Anesthetist Graham Stanley look on. Mrs. Wandling's delivery
was the firs! at Holzer Clinic and Holzer Medical Center to utilize
Epidural Anesthesia.

Absolute separation
The 1962 case of Engel vs. the prayer was non-denominational
Vitale is one of the S uprcmc and pupils who so desired could be
Court's landmark decisions . The excused from reciting it, because
court ruled that public school offi. such official state sanction of relicials could not require pupils to gious utterances was an unconstitu·
recite a state-composed prayer at tiona! attempt to establish religion .
the Start of each school day, even if

The Church Women United in
Variou~ women taking pan were
Meigs County met recentl y for Florence Richards, Doris Grucscr,
their World Community Day at the Mac Young, Mary Kautz, Faye
Minersville United Methodi st Wallace, Lulu Hampton, Rachael
Church. The theme was "Jubilee is Downie, Beulah McComas, Helen
Jus~ce" and Edith Sisson presided.
Maag and Edith Sisson. Glenna
Dues from the churches were Rummell was the organist. Marie
paid and blanket certificates were Rca distributed programs at the
·sold.
door and R
Gruescr and_Mary
Rae Reynolds, key woman from
the
.
the church, was the leader of the
program and Florence Ric~ards
sang a solo, "Go Down Moses"
with the group joining in the chorus. Other songs sung were "Lead
On 0 King Eternal" and "Weave."
The service was planned like a
tapestry with the warp being the
biblical message of Jubilee, the
weft being the voices of the wornens' experiences, and the overlay
the specific actions taken for
Jubilee.
.
Mrs. Reynolds had a sim ulatcd
tapestry made of paper. Each
woman went forward and touched
it.

children and adul!S. This program
is available to any needing it by
contacting local club officers.
The Governor encowaged attendance at the Rotary International
meeting to be held in Florida in
June, at district conference in
Westerville on May 28·31 and at a
special meeting in Columbus on
Dec. 6 when the International President will speak.
·
Siegel challenged the Middleport-Pomeroy Rot;lry Club to come
up with a least one new project for
the 1992 year.
The women of the Heath United
Methodist Church served a dinner.

Chapman Shoes·
POMEROY'S QUAliTY SHOE STORE

food safety and creative ideas for
gift giving and festive foods. Participants will make two projcc!S to
take home \Vith them. This program
will also be held at the Senior Citizens Center from 10 a.m. to noon.
Registration deadline is Nov. 18.
The cost for .each of these pro·
grams is $3 which includes handouts, samplings and a take home
project. To reserve a place in the
class, call the Meigs County E~ten­
sion Office at 992-6696. Class size
is limited and the program is open
to 1he public.

Golden Rule
members meet

RIP
VOTERS!
THANKS FOR YOUR
INFLUENCE AND SUPPORT.
CHRISTOPHER WOLFE

The Golden Rule Sunday
School Class of the First Baptis}
Church of Middlepon met recently
at the home of John and Glenna
JEREMY ASH
Riebel.
Devotions were gi vcn by John
Riebel using Psalm 105 and I
Chronicles 16, as well as a readmg
from the Upper Room.
Mr. and Mrs. james A. Ash,
The November meeting will be
at the Walburn residence and the Pomeroy, announce the binh of a
December meeting will be at the son, Jeremy Alan on Sept. 3 at
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Klocs residence.
He weighed eight pounds and
Sandwiches and potato chips, .
five
ounces and was 21 inches
icc tea and soft drinks were served
long.
followed by a dessert smorgasbord
with members -bringing-a-dessert.- - 0thor children include Jamie
Attending were R.ev. lame~ and Gale, Sheen._Lee Ann and Ryan.
Grandparents arc Clyda and
Sharon Seddon, Dale and Marjorie
Walburn, Manning and June Kloes, Herman Michael, Pomeroy; Guy
Coke Ambrose, Sis VanMeter, Bing, Middleport; and Carl and
Lawrence Eblin, John and Glenna Shirley Gibson, Albany.
Great grandparents arc Bonnie
Riebel. •
Conde
and Florence Baer, Mid4]c·
Proceeds from an auction will
port
go to the church building fund.

New arrival

Paid lor by lhe c.ndldato, 48580 Blind Hollow Ad., Aoclne, Ohio 4Snt

INGElS-- FURNIIURE &amp; JEWElRY

'

.

$2.17 sale puce
·Sl .50 m1!'S reb;m

27

1
......

't'~l COlli

Jfter rebate
Limit 2

II: liD

•

1Card
show set
..
~November 10
~

·Credit Terms
•Over Stocked Items
•Factory Specials

~; The Meigs Athletic Boosters
~will sponsor a baseball card show
~tin Sunday, November lOth at the
~eigs Junior High School. Their
;'will be door prizes to be given
~1tway through out the day. The
$hOw runs' from II a.m . until 5

•Lay-A-Ways Welcome
•Fantastic Savings
•Lowest Prices of the Year

FRIDAY, NOV. 8th
9:00 A.M.-5. P.M.
SATURDAY, NOV. 9th
9:00 A.M.·2 P.M.
106 N. 2ND AVE.

992·2635

;D.)n.
'
}.•

1-800-426-5581

•

THANK YOU.

Ro•ert S. Marcinko
P.O.IoJ 187, Tupper~ Plllnt, 011. 41713

. 0
3
.....

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

'

3·~$ ·

FREE DELIVERY
CHRISTMAS
·LAYAWAYS

"TWO DAYS ONLY"

1

vour CQst

·'

FUUTIME
SERVICE
DEPT:

tJmi116

..........

... Ill' ·

The Boss said "Inventory is around the corner....
Don't count them- SELL THEM"!
D.RfiGIICS IPPLIIICES
FUIIPIIIE
JEWELIY'

ZENITH
FISHER
MEMOREX
REALISTIC

AMANA

SCHWEIGER
WHITE·
LANE
WESTINGHOUSE PILLIOD
MAGIC CHEF
SPRING AIR
HOOVER

GEM·ART
STUCKY DIAMONDS
PULSAR
14K GOLD

l

OPEN
SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
StoooiiOu,.: 1:30 a.m. to I p.m. - , - g i l Fltdor.
1:00 o.m. to 7 p.m. an.n1oy, ond I o.m. to 5 p.m. Soondly

GALUPOUS
•

.,

~~::~~
' ........ 13 ' , . ,

I.

•,

'

•

ltHllMI WARRAMIY

ana• rebate

I

I

Fro;II

1 89 sa~ puce
1 50pe1p1ugm ,,.,,.

1

~J

Wish to Express My Gratitude to
&gt;the Voters of Orange Township for .
~ Their Support In the Nov. 5th
Election and I Am Extremely
Grateful to Those Senior Citizens
Who Put Forth Their EHort and All
Who Expressed Their light to Vote.

I

_Rotary g~overnor .SJleaks tD_members

-~~!~~~~:t:~~~::;s!~~;

d
through a tiny tube called
a catheter, placed in the small of
the back just outside the spinal
canal. Advantages of the Epidural
are that it allows most women to
fully participate in the binh experience (retaining the ability to move
and to feel both touch and pressure)
while relieving most, if not all, of
the pain of labor as well as delivery. The procedure is considered
quite safe for mother and baby.
Certain medical restrictions
apply to the use of Epidwal Anesthcsia. The expectant mother's
highly skilled Obstetrician and
Anesthetist at Holzer will answer
all questions and make final determinations .
Wandling says, "'nce the prop·
er dosage was determined, abso·
lutely .no pain was experienced. It
was the most positive binh experience. possible. '· was able to enjoy
holding Terah nght after the delivcry.

.. .

- ·-··

·-~-·

SAR celebrates 55th annivers~ry

The 55th anniversary banl)uet of
Ewings Chapter, Sons of the Amer;
ican Revolution, was held recently
.
at
the Sportsman in Athens.
MONTANA
Keith Ashle~ presided and State
Representative
Mary Abel was the
• Brool&lt;a Shields
guest ~cr.
_ • _ ..
• TOm Brotcaw
• Michael Kilalon
Rep. Abel spoke on cum:nt top• Tom McGuane
ics in the legisla~. She highlight•Waller Haas
ed current budgetary problems
•
Grusin
causing decreased funding in the
Ohio Historical Society. She said
there is currently a gmup appointed
to work on the bicentennial of .the
State of Ohio but that things were
still in the preliminary stages.
- ' She pointed out ~ current pro·
pbsal in th_e legislature to set up a
comprehensh:e
historical program
Bridp.-~
for
Ohio.
Questions
were asked
• Peter Fonda
concerning
the
change
in Ohio law
• D&lt;!nnis Quaid
eMegRyan
that eliminated required fencing
It Russell Chalham
• -Ted Turner
and care of public cemeteries.
•Jane Fonda
The chapter presented Abel with
. • GloM Close
a
Victorian
1\flgel wall hanging.
WYOMING
The lifememliership fee was
~~~;;::;:;;-;...--.i..----------AP:Ca:i~ raised due to an increase by the
. 1oo'i&lt;m

. . . • EdWard J. DeBartolo

Thursday, November 7, 1991

:t

100 ll'iiOI

-..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

----.,..........-..-

Celebritle:~ 111 Mont;Jrl: 1

·"'

__ ... .

't

.,•

I
••

)I

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�Pa_g e--10-The Da1ty Senllflei

RACINE • The Racine Amcrican Legion Post No. 602 will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the post
home.
MIDDLEPORT - There will be
an organizational meeting of the
M(:igs 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 assisting with
this year's derby or becoming. an
association member, officc'r or
commiuce member should auend
the meeting.

MIDDLEPORT - S11ecial services will be held at Rejoicing Life
Church in Middleport on Friday
and Saturday at 7 p.m. and on Sunday aLIO .a.m. Billy Joe Grands1aff
·
will be the guest speaker. Pastor
FRIDAY
Michael
Pangio invites the public.
TUPPERS PLAINS · The
Ladies Auxiliary of the Tuppers
LONG BOTTOM - The Faith
Plains Fire Department will sponsor its.. a~nual smorgasbord style Full Gospel Church in Long Botturkey and.. ham dinner on Saturday Lorn will have a hymn sing on Fribeginning at 4:30 p.m. Cost is $5 day at 7 p.m. Pastor Steve Reed
invites the public.
for adults and $2.50 for children.

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Ladies Auxiliary-of TupPc:rs Plains
VFW Post No . 9053 will meet
Thursday at7:30 p.m. ·

POMEROY · The Meigs Coun·
ty Senior Center will sponsor its
sixth annual arts and crafts show on

. . Thursday, November 7, 1891 ~·
•.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
LOTTRIDOE · Country music
night at l)le LOLltidgc Community
Center wiU be held Satilrday from
7 p.m. 10 midnight ~efreshments
will be available and all bands arc ·
welcome.

a.m. to p.m.
Post No. 9053
Ladies Auxilwide variety of crafts will be avail- iary on Friday. Music will be by
able. Sandwiches and. pie will be "C.J. and the Country Gentlemen."
available from noon to 6 p.m. The The public is invited to attend.
public is invited' to auend.
SATURDAY
POMEROY • The Return
REEDSVILLE • The Fourth
Jonathan Meigs Chapter; D.A.R., Annual Eastern High School craft
will meet Friday at 1:30 p.m. at the show will be held SaiUI'day from 9
Grace Episcopal
Church. a.m. to 3 p.m. at the high school.
"Tragedies of Illiteracy" will be the
program topic. Leesa Murphey will
POINT PLEASANT - The
Handmade Holiday Treasurers VII
be the guest speaker.
Craft Show and Sale will be held
POMEROY - The Pomeroy Saturday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Senior Citizens Dance Club will and Sunday {rom 1 to 5 p.m. at the
sponsor a dance on Friday from 8- Point Pleasant National Guard
11 p.m . wil)l music by the Happy Armory.
Hollow Boys of Athens. The public
is invited and those.attending bring
RUTLAND - The Rutland PTO
snacks for the snack ~able.
Fall Festival will be held SaiUI'day
from 6-9 p.m. at the elementary
ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs school. There wiU be food. games.
County Grange officers will meet prizes, a country store with craft
Friday at 7 p.m. at the Rock and gift items. Door prizes will
also be awarded.
Springs Grange Hall.
·

PORTLAND • Revival services
at the Portland First Church of the
Nazarene will be held through Sunday at 7 p:m. nightly. Jan and
Kathy will perform. Jim
Heckathron will be the evangelist

'

.

TIJPPERS PLAINS - There will
be a round and square dance sponsored by the Tuppers Plains VFW

CHESTER • The Ken Amsbury
Chapter of the lzaak Wallon
League will host a slug shoot on .
Sunday at I p.m. at the clubhouse
ncar Chester. Prizes include meat
and money. Free !land and bench
rest ~vents for scopes and rifles.

BASHAN - Weekend services
at the Red Brush Church of Christ
RACINE - Racine Baptist
on Bashan Road wiD be held Satur- ; · Church will hold revival Sunday
day at 7 p.m. and Sundar. atlO a.m. through Nov. 17 at 7 p.m. nightly.
and 6 p.m. Denver Htll, Foster, Speakers include Earl Shuler,
W.Va., will be the speaker. The Charles Norris, Rick Harris. Steve
public is invited to attend. .
Deaver invitcs the public. .Special

PTO will be held Saturday begi~ ­
ning at 5 p.m. Cost is $2.50 for
adults and $2 for children. There
will be a craft s10re, entertainment
and games. The public is invited.

L~e book "The Tragic Dynasty" by
John. D, Bergam!m at the reccm
mccung of the Mtddlepon Literary
Club held at the home of Mrs.
. George Hacke~ Jr. .
The book ts· a htstory of the
Romanovs who, according Mrs.
Owen, fust came to power in 1613.
The ablest of them were Peter the
Great and an obscure princess from
Gcrt;nany, Cath~rine the Great.
Theu accomphshments were
undone and they were murdered.
~en the deaths. of Nicholas 11 and
wtfe, Alexandra,
and , children
.

latlllftl!q'
:
,:JJ
:.::,
........_,_ -

.

laada:r, Nowmber o, J:991

M~mbers of the Riverview Gar-

1 ........ , ....~

den Club recently visitcd Tour Creations Unlimited at Guysville
where interesting crafts and
antiques were displaycdo Refreshments of tea and cookies were
served.
After the craft shop tour, the

..

~~~~7~~~ve~~~~~~~':f~e~

SAN FRANCISCO (AP)- Pop
music star George Michael is
donating pan of the proeeeds from
Members auending were Mary his upcoming single 10 charities
Alice Bise. Belly Boggs, Janet including two San Francisco AIDS
ConnoUy, Delores Frank, Margaret agencies.
Grossnickle, Phyllis Larkins, Ella
The single, "Don't Let the Sun
Osborne, Frances Reed. Gladys· Go Down on Me," is a remake of
Thomas, Nancy Wachter, Grace the classic song originally rocorded
Weber, Maxine Whitehead, Janice
Elton
·

1-.•

'

•'

The San F~ancisco AIDS Foundation and Project Open Hand will
receive pan of the royalties.
''We are extremely appreciative
of Mr. Michael's donauon to help
in the cause of fighting AIDS " Pat
Christen of the AIDS Foundation
and Steve Burns of Project Open
Hand said a statement.

•Chiolity Woill. · ' •Fr.. Eotlmetea
•Corpet Hu ·Foat Drv
· Time •
•High Glou on
· Flo-or Finiah
MillE tiWIS, ow...

Hardwood Slabs '
For SQie
Great Price!

CAll
OHIO PAU.ET CO.
992

----·

•Portsiders
•Hush Puppies
•Naturalizers
•D Myers
•Converse

,REPAIR

EXCAVATING

AUIAUS .
lrln1 It In Or We
Pick Up•.

110111
949·2126

lEN'S APPLIANCE

FrHEaUmallt
30 r•ra .,....,...,...
Fourl-aol
recommllldollon. Honeat
lndd~blt. .

LANDSCAPING

SEIYICE

WATER 111d SEWER
.
LINES
TRUCIIING AVAilAill
FREE ESTIMATES

992·5335 or
Yl~t·;t~i01

llliUIP I iiiie 11•r
., l•!fl)
Call Ed Battin
collect at
1·614-667-6474

THE DANCE
COMPANY 992-6289

Starting Sept. 22
12 Gauge Factory

9 - ~· 1

~.

,,

·:FrH EttlmiiH"
PH. 949-2101
· or lis. 949·2160

.,

.

...

...... . .-tiillt

..

RENT·TO..OWN
NAME IIAIID PIODICfl

fa(lory Aulhoriztd ~lplir
TV· VCR ·Stereo
Boom Bo} • C.O. Player
Scanner ~ Typewriter
Cordleaa Phone·
Microwave· Radar
Detector

Home

Entertainment

Center
H.E.C.

USED RAILROAD TIES

mo.

'

BISSELL ·
SIDING CO.

REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD
•
BILl SLACK
992-2269

AGES 3 and UP

SUNDAYS

•VINYL SIDING' · . o •. ,
. •ALUMINUM-Sfl)iNG
•BLOWN IN
'INSULATION

SHRUB a·TREE . ·
TRIM and

BALLET, TAP &amp;
JAZZ CLASSES

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M.

,' , ' l

99HS24

PomHay

6-12·80-lfn

9&lt;2711

J&amp;L

INSULATION
•VInyl Siding
·Replacement
Windows
·Roofing
•Insulation
JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 or

• The Area's· Number 1 Marketplace
RATES

- . 742·2097

538 Bryan Place
Middleport, Ohio

JUST THINK •••
THERE'S ONLY ·41ll [ID
MORE SHOPPING DAYS

A ••• .,. for con•cutNe runt. broktn up d rv 1 will be Qh.,ged
ri.w 11 MPifate ldl .

:~•·c~ 1.&amp;0 discount lor 1d1 paid in 1dv1nee
"free ads - Giveewaw tnd Found tds under 15 words will be
run l d~Sit no ch•ge.
"Pti~ ot 1d for ell eapittlleneu i• double price of ld cost

aft• publicltion to mllke correc1lan.
1hlt must bt ~Nid in adv1nce are
Clfd or Th111kt
Htppy Adt
In Memoritm
Ylfd Stl"

992·6254

441 - Gtllipoli•

.·.....

3&amp;7 - Ch•hire
311 - VInlon
z•e-~ l o Grtnde
258 - Guyan
143 - At~bl•

371 - Wtlnot

CHRISTMAS CLUB NOW
AND RECEIVE A
FREE GIFT!

Din
Oist

Aru Code 614
992 - Middltport

Pom•ov
981-C hnll•
143- Ponltnd
247-lellrt Ftlls
9t9 - fheine
742 - Rutltnd

576 - Applt Grove
773 - M.. on
882 - NIW t'i1VII1

Get Recuffc Fast
'

...•.

NI .OARD DEADUNE4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLiclrloN

. ,I

72 - TrucNt for Sale
73- Vens &amp; 4 WO ' s

74 - MoloreyciM
75-Rottl &amp; Motor• for Stlt

78-Auto

31 - Homn tor Sele

.'

ARTS &amp; CRAFTS SHOW
SENIOR CENTER
POMEROY
FRIDAY., NOV. 8
10-6 P.M.

•

HANDMADE HOLIDAY
TREASURES CRAFT SHOW
&amp; SALE
SAT., NOV. 9, 10·6
SUN .• NOV. 10, 1·5
Nallonal Guard Armory
Rt. 62 N.. Pt. Pleasa~t

HURRY •••
1992 CHRISTMAS CLUBS .
HAVE ALREADY BEGUN!

-•
~

K l

PEOPLES

. I
~

NEW HAVEN
882·2135
MEMBER F.O.I.C.

Sermes
81 · · tiom•lmpto.... menu

82 - Piumblng • Hucing
83-Eac .,ttlno
8,.- EI.ctrictl &amp; A•ffig•ation
81 - Gener•l H1uling
86- Mobile Homt Repal'
87-Upholtttt'Y

· 46 - Furnished Room•
4t- Spsce for fhn1
47- Wintecl.to Rent
48 - Equipment lor A tnt
41 - Far Le11 e ..

Public Notice

.

N~~geA~~~:~M~~Ts

LIABILITIES ACQUISITION
Notice Ia hereby given thai
The
Bonking
and
TruolPeoples
Company,
Marlollo,
Ohio hao mode oppllcstlon
to the Fed•ral Oopoalt lnour•
•nee Corporallon, Washing·
lon, D.C., 20429, lor lis writ·
llotls ond auume the llabllltlttto pay depoalla ollh•
Middleport, Ohio Bronch ol
The Central Truot Componr,,
N.A., Clnclnnall, Ohio. It a
contomplolld that 111 olthit
olllcea of lho above named
bonk, will continue to bo
operatid 11 branchea ol Tho
Peoplea Bonking ond Truot
Company.
This notloe lo oubllohod
purtuont to Stctlon 18(c) ol
tho Fodere! Depooll lnsur·
once Act.
Any parson wlohlng to
comment on this application
moy llle hlslher commontoln

,.

'I

_ _ ....__ _ _

,.

,_

GUN SHOOT

CONSTRUCTION

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN

•New Homes
•Garog11
•Complete
lemodellng
Stop I Compare
Fr" Estl.. ates

DOZER and
BACKHOE
WORK
(614) .696·1

CLUB
Begins Sept. 1S

985-4473
667-6179

Every Sunday 12 Noon
Factory Guns Only

·'BISSELL
BUILDERS

Howard L. Writesel

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters ·

•Remodeling and
Home Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting
FULLY INSURED

AUTO PARTS
·Spedall1int1 in
CustoM Fr- llsMir
NEW &amp; USEO PAllS
FOR AU MAlES &amp;
MODflS
992-7013
or 992-5553
OR TOU fiB
1-100-141..0070
Dlt- OliO

7t JI /'tl ...

9/9/91/2 me.

ROOFING

"~

Rtasonablt Prices"
PH. 949·2101

Downspouts

1••~ EXCAVATING
BULLDOZIJIIG
PONDS
SEPTIC S·YSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER l!t
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAULINGDirt.
:
Umestone.
Gravel and Coal
Ucenoad and Bonded

992-6648 or
698-6864

949-2168

PH. 6

Now Jn. ·
:$toek/l
AIR CONDmONERS • HEAT PUMPS and
FURNACES FOR MOBILE &amp; DOUILEWIDE HOMES
•

•

0

0

•

•

•

•

•

•

••••

0

CARPENTER SERVKE · ;
- NOOII'I Addltlont
.,
- Qunerworta
-Eioctrlcel ond Plumblftg

- Conqrttt wort

•

•

•

•

•

•

BENNETT's

•

•

•

..

•

•

•

•

•••••

MOBILE HOME
HEAnNG &amp;
COOLING

LocGted On ·Safford Schoolld. afllt. 141

• • •

-.

- ~ooftng

- lrn"lof • Exwior
Pointing

[FREE ESTIMATES!

CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION

FREE ESTIMATES

NO SUNDAY

YOUNG'S

FREE ESTIMATES

Gutter Cleaning
. Painting

or Its. 949-2160
Day or Night · ·

•

I

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215'"·

..

'om•oy, Ohio

..,....

' --:--,-.:.::,!:::.!;.::::!J
II·14-'90 lfn

•'

Announcemenls

~~----------- ~·

3 Announcements
...
"7,;5i;7,;~~;;;
.•
:FrM Sln;le lultolln, " " • • :

Ado.

Wrllo To

J.S.O. P.O. lox

•

1M, Mt111Uon, Ohio 44MI. ..

.,

Abtolutoly no -Ina or •

trnpaulng on the Hlrali Au. ..
1111 pro~ on ,...,_ Ad
Hon;lng Rock Ad., A Cedar Hoi! ·• •
low Ad. WI wll ,. 1 ute ··;:
vloltlors. Harokf 0 . &amp; Btltr ~ ~

..

~

AUIIIII.

l'::=:;===~lt= (61_41 4U,_9J 16..ar L·ll~.o~l17.2~5.9-6.i

writing wllh the Regional Ir
Dltector ol lhe Federal Depoalllnsuranee Corporation
at Its Regional Olltce, 30
South Wacker Drive, Suite
Jl
3100,Chleago, llllnola, 60606. INTEIIOI • EITEIIOR
II any peroon deolreo to
proteol tho granting ol thlo
FREE ESTIMATES
application, ouch peroon hu Takl tht pain out of
a rl~htlo do ao II the proteot
p1lntlng.
~re~~r ~~h N~:e:::~·~:: Lit lit do It for rou.
1991.
VERY IWOUILE
The non·conlldentlol porHAVE IEFEIENCE$
tlons ol the application are
.(6141 915 •4110 .
on Hie In tho Regional Office
aapartollhapubllcfllamaln·
ltJ.23-91 1 ""·pd.
lalned by the Corporation.
Thialllela available lor pubm~COUNTY
lic lnopectlon during regular
RECYCLING
bu1lneu hours.
Slyo Thonk You
October 7, 1991
by p~ylng
The Paopleo Banking end 25° por lb (200 lb. limit}
Trust Company For Clean Dry Aluminum .
Marietta, Ohio
Con•
1 Week Only'
The Central Trust
Company, N.A.
Nov. 1 thru 7
Cincinnati, Ohio
Tri.COunty la opon
(10) 10, 17, 24,31;
g om-8 pm 7 doya 1 WHk
(11) 7, 14, 6lc
buying 111 non•fii10UI
Locatod on
Pomeroy bypenat
Jet. ol Rio. 7 &amp; 143
Ph. 882·5t14

LINDA'$
p••INTING

ATS INSULATOR®
VINYL REPLA(EMENT WINDOW
We Will Not Be Undersold ··
•save up to 50% on Fuel Bills
*Increase the Value of Your Home
•can for Free Estimates

742·2328

Giveaway
~9~~~~~~~~:6~.-::~.

4

Block AKC "iJ. Coekor

.. .

....... ·..:·
Sponlel •
.•.
...·-

with pa~rs. 304-171-1113.

"'•

Bilek Waln.-o, 814-448-QIO.

rnell.._

~

FIREWOOD '·
FOR SALE
All Hard Wood
For Residential
and Com.merclal
Dump Truck
Delivery or Pick·
Up Your OWn
..Also Splitter
Servlcea Available
can 992-614'
0-1'7'tMO

I

·--------------·----- ______,___.~LL._

&amp; BURKE

9/ 9/ 9111 .... pd.

. l;tiffldl

.I

·r

A~c•sori•

78 - Ctmp ing hu1pmtnt

41-Hou•ealor Atnt
•2 - Mobile Momn for R111n1
43 - fl•m• tor Rtnt

All Veterans interested in
starting an AMVETS
Service Orga~lzation
please get in touch with
Bob Smith at Smitty's in
Pomeroy.
Thera will be a meeting
to elect officers on the
1Oth of Nov. The number
Is 992-6484.

J

•

6.

79-Cimpeu Ill Mo1or Homn

1 Card of Thanks

·'

P~rtt

77 -- Auto Rep1i1 4

· 32- Mobil t Momn for Stle
33- Fsrms for Sal~
34-Buain•• Buitd1ngs
35 - lott &amp; Aer11ge
3fi - Rul E1t1t1 Wekted

1en coneent lo 1cqulre aome

...... .

Ftn ~iler

71 - AutosforStlt

22-r.lon., 10 Lotn
23-Prot•tioall S•vic..

--:--;::=========:::----1

t

$1, $2, AND $3 CHRISTMAS CLUBS
ARE AI .SO AVAILABLE

·----------·--------------~------~--~---

21 - Butin•t Opportunity

Public Notice

(Qu.antlties are limited, so don't delay!)

SUbltnal Pollllr IO&lt; Early Wllillrlwll 0&lt; Foliltt 10 COftllltlo ciJ.

6&amp;- Sted &amp;

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

.~ .

Ajestfur tQJlchjor 110ur holfda11 entertaining! ·

773-5514

62 - Wtnttd to Buy
63 - Lillesrock
64 - Htv a Grtin

Transporl alion

667- Coolvi!le

BOB JONES ·
EXCAVATING

81 -F trm Equipment

18 - Wtnltd To Do

895- Ltttrt
937 - 8utfllo

'

POINI: PLEASANT
675·112} I

11 - Htlg Wtntld
12 - Situttion Wanttd
13-lnturtnce
1•- Busin•• Trtinino
1 5 - School• lo lnstruetion
1f- Atdio. TV l CB Aeptil
1 7 - MitcellaJ'.Out

Aree Coda 304 .

CHRISTMAS COASTER SET
WIIH CURRIER AND IVES DESIGN

MASON

Fm11 Suppl1r. s
&amp; L1ves1ock

Sr.rv1cr. s

M11onCo : WV
175- Pt PIHIInt
468- Loon

54-Mite. Merchandise
55-Bu~ding Suppli•
56-Ptlt for St111
S7-Mutic811nttrumtnlt
58 - Fr\liU&amp; Vtg-•bl•
~9-For S.tle or Tt~de

Emplt1y111 ent

44- Aptnment tor Rent

3 POUND COOKIE TIN
WIIH SANTACLAUSD
..;_ES
_ IG_N__

OR

9- Witlt.cl io luy

Classified pa~es .corer the
fol/ou,in/{ relephonp exchanges ...
ANICOdl814

53-Anltqutt

8 - Publie 5•1•111 Auc1ion

DAV BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 11 :00 A .M. SATURDAY
~ HOP M. MONDAY
- 2 :00P.M . TUESDAY
- 2 :00P.M . WEDNESDAY
- 2:00P.M . THUASOAY
- 2 ·00 P.M . FRIOAV

Mtig• County

51-Houtehald Goads
12 -l port.,t Ooodt

• G- Lo.st ln'd Found
1 - ·V1rd Sale (paid in ldvtncel

A clt~tifitd •dv.niMm~nl plactd in Tht Dlily Senlintl It•·
ctpt - ciMaifild ditpl.,. , Bulin•• ~trd tnd leg II not icttl
will tlto IPP•Itf In lhe Pt . Pl•••nt "•git.. t 1nd thl Galli·
~I~,,Ot~Y 1rJtN,np. IWtchtng over 11.000 homn .

G1lli1 County

Mcrchanrl1se

1 -Card ot Thtnkt
2-ln Memory
3-Annoucemenls
4 - GiYIIWIV
5 - Hippy Ads

u11d
fSM'Itinellt not respon1ible for enorsafttJ firtt ·dav . (Check
for enortlirat d.-tad runs In PIPM) . Ctll b1fore 2 :()0 p m

OPEN A
$5, $10', OR $20

POMEilOY

Allfl uu fi i.P. ITII!Ill s

•.1 point line type onty

Cbrlltmaa come~ earner evel')' year! Plan ahead by opentng
.four 1992 Christmas Club at Peoples Bank today.
Simply make 49 weekly payments and we'll make the final
payment for you ... It's a great way to aavel

HOOD FAMILY SHOES

11114/tfn

Monlhly

(1992)

LADIES, liEN'S AND CHILDREN'S

lnW~c&gt;r Pointing,

BULLDOZER 1nd
BACKHOE WORK,
HOME SITES,

•

LARGE GROUP OF

-sao/,

.

,..

1N.t..-.

....

UNTIL CHRISTMAS!

TENNIS SlOES
orr ·

FOIIVD

11nlo.
.

·•·"
.•.

-25-% OFF STOREWIDE

.·',.

Offer Ends Oct. 31

II. I, lutlallll, OH.

•
.• ·

-

210 EAST MAIN

aMI 1IU fLOOI CA.
oRNIOnoble flltu

Chokt

STOP IN HOOD FAMILY SHOES AND JOIN IN THE
SALE-A·BRATIOR

•Red Wing Work Shoes
•La Crosse
•Fiorsheim
•Nurse Mates
•Kangaroos
•K-Swiss

FIREWOOD ·
- SELLERS .

l

fAU
·. SPECIAl
20 SESSIONS
For $20.00

CAIPIT

Pop muszc star tomake donation

year books were distributed by
Maxme Whtlehcad, vtce president

•

SALE·A·BRATION
--

Lcry of their.daughter, Anastasia.
The dctober meeting of the
The Romanovs left as their legacy
the greatest social teVQlution in his- Willing Workers Class of the.
tory and a record of grandeur, hor- ' Enterprise United Methodisl
Church was held at the home of
ror and intrigue.
Mrs, Carl Horky, vice president, Frances CarleLOn:· ~ ·Scripture reading was from the
conducted the meeting as she weicorned the members and guests, book of Mauhew and the hostess
Sister Fidellis BcU and-Rev. Grace conducted the program with several
readings by members • Delores
Kee.
Will,
Sara Dill; Phyllis Spencer,
Roll call was answered with
Agnes
Dixon, Dol Clark, Dot Long
members and guests naming a Rusand
guest,
Jean Seidenabel. Sursian literary or musical pc:rsonality:
The hostess served hghl ~fresh- · prise visitors were Beulal\ Utter_,
back and Freda•' Lieving from
ments.
Glouster, former members.
Delores·Will gave a report on
county-council.
- ·
Plans were made for the an.nual
Christmas bazaar to be held in
Young. Kila Young and Ruth Ann Pomeroy on Dec. 6.
Balderson.
· ··
· ·
The meeting adjourned with
The November meeting will be prayer by Sara Dill who also won
a craft workshop on Nov. 21. nt the the door pf!ze. .
. _
Reedsville Church of Christ. McmOther members attending were
hers arc to bring gifts for the Ruby Frick, Helen Davis, Ann Car·
Pomeroy Nursing and Rchnbilita- swell and Mary Srarcher.
tion Center. Also, each member is
H
d ·
_ 10 bring fing:rer~food~~to:!L~he~::ti~~lhejh;0;~mit~e~m;::a:::e~p~t:_
e _::w:as~se::_rv:_:e:d..'b~y-·

The

.

·Business Services

annual bazaar

Riverview gardeners take tour

H90D FAMILY SHOES
~

. Mrs. Richard Owen reviewed - OCCUI)'Cd leaving behind the mys-

GALLIPOLIS - Modem Woodmen Camp 7230 will have a luncheon on Sunday from 12:30 to
2:30p.m. at Dale's Smorgasbord. .
Cost is $2 per person with children · ...
age nine under free.
·'

POMEROY • The Meigs Vocal
Music Dcpanment will present iiS
annual fall conccn on Sunday at 2
p.m. at Meigs High School. Students in vocal rnusic, grades 7-12,
will be participating. Admission is
free and the public is invited 10
attcnd.

LET ART FALLS ·The fall fcs·

Literary club holds meeting Plans made for

music by Kangs Harmony QuatiCL,
Southern Hiii ,Gospel, Many Shon
and LuAnn While, Kyger Valley
Quartet, God's LiLLie Lambs, Liv·
ing Word and Failh Harmony ·-·
Boys.

.
SuNDAY
.
POINT PLEASANT· The quur·
t@rly meeting of the Sons and
Daughters of Pioneer River Men,
Ohio and Kanawha River Branch,
will be held Sunday at the Mason
County Library in Point Pleasant,
W.Ya. John.Hartford wiliLpr1:scnt.a- -!video "Banjo Fiddler and River
Boats." Jerry Sutphin will have
available his book, "Sternwhcclcrs
on the Great Kanawha River." The
public is invited to attend.

ti val of the Letart Falls Elementary

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
.

lilijr'lJ~iiiiiri~

• POMEROY • "Silver Fox and
Sam Davenp_on" is the title of this
week's chtldrens movie at the
Mei,gs County Public Library in
Pomeroy on Saturday and Sunday
at _2 p.m. The librar)' inJ'.om«oy
and in Middleport will be closed
Monday in observance of Veterans
Day.

LETART- The ]'Iarrow Way
Singers of Letart, W.Va. will be in
gospel concert on Saturday at 7
p.m. al the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church. in Pomeroy.
Pastor Bill Williams invites the
public.

November7

.

=.:-:=:-::-::-,;.;,;,;..;.,=~Lott Aduft lllocll Loll. flor.

l!!i. EYorgroen
.,...

l.OIT·WIIho

sn_,
lo 104... . _ .

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __c...

---·-··-------·~·---·---··-- .....·~----·---"·
I'

'

'

AIM. • -

.....

......

of ...... o.11

·. •
~

·~·

�7

Pomeroy-Mid&lt;jleport, Ohio

SNAFU® by Bruce Rea llie

Ya rd Sale

·-

&lt;

Page-1 2 - · The Dally Sentinel

41

Houses tor Rllnt

46

Space for Rent

Thursday, November

71

KIT ' N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

3/r.d;...... wl1h garage, $a0. Coumiy Mobllo Homo Pa1k,
month.
relareh~•
&amp; daposll; RoU1e 33, N011h ol Po...,..,,
304
__
,
Loll, rtl'lflll, pant, ...... c.u

tho day before ttle ad Ia to run.
p.m. Saturday.

Garage

Yard

Sale :

lloln1

Friday,

November 8th, 8:00-4 :00, Saturda y, Novembe r llth , 8:00..12:00,

l ots , Turn
Drive, Ltf1

On
On

Green bri er.

Ladys

Jeans.~.

Friday And

llrga
window
N;
unit,
baNboud hut, · carpttld.
Walhar; dryer hook-41p. 1m111
ltorage bulldlhg. large yard.
$3401ino.,
plu•
•uUIItl11.
Allerane~~~ end MCwhy deDOiit
required: No lnalde Pt's:-AYala;
abl• Die. t .304-675-'1851i1 or 875-

Swea ters, Mise,

~a turday

10·? 1st

Tra iler On Pat riot Road, Ort

Rt.ns.

Movln ~ Sal &amp;. Centenary Town

'housi, Friday &amp; · Saturday.
November 8th &amp; 9th. From 9-5.

lor, clothes. Etc. Prlcld to Mil.

IHOUII on Rouah l.lna In
Ch11hlrt. 2 or 3 Br, 1 blth. tolal
electric:. $325 mo. ph.ll IIC. dap.
014-3&amp;7-0305 aflar 5.

"Congratulations! OK, you can croak now."

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

+---------.,..--------..j.

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
11.111 tlme IUc:tionHr, complete

ouctlon " " leo, Llconsed Ohio,

11

Wu t VIrgin ia, 304·773-5785 .

-

-

Help Wanted
- --'--

-----23 •
Professional
Services

----

----- ~-~
---- Mainttnance:- Kncwlldgll 0 1 -cUStom Butclltrtng, e- days- a
heating,
air
conditioning, w11k. Catlla, Hog .. Dtar, »4·

9

Wanted to Buy

Want to buy llandlng tlnibtr &amp;
pine, Tim Btarha 614-892·7880

aft e r 6pm.

Wanl to buy ustd tltctric
treadmill &amp; l1ylng htns. 614-388-

9354.

Wanted to buy, Stand ing tlmbtr,

Bob Williams &amp; Sons 614-9925449.

Buy: Junk Autoa
With Or Wilhout Motota. Call
Wanted To

Larry Li vely. 614-388-9303 .

Wanted To Suy : JLmk Autoa,

Scrap Metal 614-441.0013, After

2p.m.

Top Prlcu Paid: All Old U.S.
Coins, Gold Rings, Sllvtr Coins,
Gold Coin s, M.T.S. Coin Shop,

151 Second Avenue, Gallipolis.

Employment Services
11

Help wanted
$3 5()/0AY PROCESSING
PHONE ORDERSI PEOPLE
CALL YOU,
NO EXPER IENCE NECESSARY,
1·800-255-0242.

POSSIBLYMAKE $400 WEEKLY

Stuffing Ennlopts At Homt.
Rush

$'1.00

Salt-Addr..sed

Stamped Envolopt No.tO To:
O&amp;A Suppllas, P.O. Box 1443,

Fairborn, OH 45324.
AVON • All areas, Call Marilyn
Waav ar 304-882-2645.

A Cally Salary Of $300 For
Buying Marchand/sa. BLi)'lr
Neadad. No Ex parlt nea Ntcasllry. 614-365-2082, Ext3883.

AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU

ExceUen1
Pay,
· Btntfltt,
Transportati on,
407-292-4'7117,
Ext. 571. 9a.m.·1Dp.m. Toll
Ratundld.
AVON I All Aroat 1 Shlrlay
Spea rs, 304-67$-1429.

oloe1r1Cal nocosoary, Exponanco 882-2353,

with Nwa ge trulment . plant
helpful. Reply to: Box CLA096,
clo Gallipolis Daily Tribune, 825
Tlllrd Avenue, Galllpollt , OH

Do You Ntld Someone To Cl11n

Your Homa Or Ofllca1 Run Errand• For You, Typt Llttars ·Or
A•ports Do H11lth Insurance
45€131.
Billing, Notarize Papers"- Hava A
Maturt1 dependabl' babyaltllr Clown Dtllver Helium a1Uone?
wantea In my home, Irregular It So, Contact: Girl Fr.lday Str·
hours. Ralerencll' 1 mutt. 304- vlc11, Mackla Alckard t:..vendtr,
675-7262.
Ownll', 304-882-3750.
No Experience Neceasary. A
Dally Salary 01 $300 For Buying
Real Eslate
Merchandlsa. 614-365-2082, Ext.
3883,

PHOTO TRIMMERS: Wishing lo

17

1625.

3Hause tor Sate: Damaged by
lire. Can ba nan at Ashton, 'NV.
$15 ,000. 304-576·2388, 675-3178,
orS~-2233 .

Box 1110, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.

Conatrucllon-Ntw Project: rtlocata, ..varal opanlngs, 1-800-

882-2967

DRIVERS
Ea(n To $550 Wk, Small Pack·
Da ll ~te ry,

age

Aalocata, Co. Car.

1·10o-124·2030.

Drlvarw, al! . you paid 30,: a
mila? Thlt It what we pay. Uvt
load and unl01d pay, lra\111 I X·
penH advance. Lata model •
qulpmtnt, ulety and ttrvlct
awards, 115% pallttlzed loads,
MaJor Mtclletl Ins urance lVIII·
ablt . 401 K pan with company
matehlng up to 2% of pay. Must
_hav t~3-year s_ov_t r_.the road
verlfla blt n parltnu and 1 yaar
l llptrlanca pulli ng va n lypt
trallara.Piaua call C&amp;N Ev1n1
Tn,.klng ~, )loyd Adkins, 304-

562·1065, 1....,-821-7102,
DRIVERS
l:am to $550 wk. Small p.aektga

Call Elsea Home c.nter At: 614n2·1220.

Ml" Paula's Day Care C.nler.
Sar., 1Hotd1bl1, childcart . M·F
6 a.m. • 5:30 p.m. Agas 2'14r-10. 12x60 Amhurtt houtt trailer,
Beton, tfter school. Drop-Ins total tlectrlc , 2 BR, ltova
welcome. 814-446-8224. New ln· rtgrlgarator, some new carpet:
lent Toddler Care, &amp;1~46-6227. $3600. 614-~7-7267.
Privata
Duly
Nursing/AN 1911 Schult, 2 IMdroom, all
Atlarenctt Avallabll, 814-441· tltculc, furnlthad, 31)4..875-

14x70 all electric on privata tol.

$25(),00 pluo U1llniM, HUD Apo
proved, 30U75-40118,
14x70 with axpando. In County
VInton 11'11•• Wattr, 1r11h paid.
$250 I dspwh. 814-388-0688,
614-388-,_.1.
1988 14x70 2 bedroom nioblll
home, ret.rancn, plus d1po1ll,

304-678-7181.
-·
2 bedroom lralllr, atwtr 1 waler
tumthed. Rafe/'lncll1 Aleo
tralltrlpace. North lit. 1 Loculi
Road on right, Pt.· Pit. 304-675·
1078

1br un... ml- Aj&gt;ar11110n1 On
181 Avtnue, All Utll~lll In-

cluded, Deposit And Atfsrence
Roqul10d, 114-441-4361, 304-

2 IR IDt. above Holzw Clinic,
Point Pl-111, WV, 304-475-

4481,
2 IR opl, lot' ron1, plorgr011nd,
fully carpeted doll lo stor•
and ochoolo. t.o.H., ell u111Min

peld except ellctrlc. Batie rtnt
$111 por monlh. 30WS:Io371e,

2 ~~&amp;·- opl,_3:22 Third Ave.
3"1 or ~1i03 tilfore
p.m.

e1

3 Room Fumllhld Apanment 1
HaH IIIIo EUI 01 POnor, On

hom $1112/mo. Walk to ehop &amp;

Will Babytlt In My Homa, Just
Ort 160, On Bultvlllt Pika, Ex·
parttnce And Reflrtncn. 614·448-2846.

::,9~79::-:1::
4,:::70:-;:C::;~..,
:c:-o-:So
n :-71o-m-:;3 pllf:e Kitchin, Full CarDtt, lnSR , 2 full baths, garden tub Un-derplnning, -· Wllhll' &amp;- ciry•r
hook-up. $7500. 614~41-(1909 at-

Eaay Workl Ellctllent Pay! A•

21

Business
OpportunHy

:Nl

Don't Rl1k Current Income. Am·
bilious.? Llka People? Suppl..
mant Earning• Or Billed LOcal Florida Prr;~p~rty for Mil, excal·
Or A~al Butlneu. Choice Jenl, b11c~ ar11, lot 1nd mobile
Ot 2 tmlnar • T~ S..llone. homt. For details caii1-4Q1.136.
8!30 P.M. Or 1:00 P.M. 11111181 At 5812
Gallipolis Holiday lnn1 Aegl attr:

Phon• 1-100-333-1116. l.Hvt

Rentals

•N1me, Phone I, S111lon I , By

1'V11.

·

~Loc
-a:1 ,
V.-nd-,l,ng
..-=
Roui
_,.•...,
Fo- r-=s'"a,...
lo.

Will Stll All Or Ptrt. Repeat
Bualneu. Above Avtl'llga lncomei1-ION81-2000
·
Locll Vandlng Aout1 For Sill,

d ( Ilk )
,.
ChNpl IIU111 Sell Qulcklr. 1-81)0.
F'"" he."
w•n 1• m ar , 114• 155~313
1112·2022
;c;;:_,.:..;.;,;.
· ,---:--:---:LookiiiQ lot married coupiH
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT IS o"' Ill whh poolllve ankudH
HIRING, $11,000 • tn.OOOJYr. 1• end a Q0a1 In nte, If you'ro Urod

105-664-eiOO Elf. Gt:186l For
lmmldlltt Retpon...
GALLIPOLIS JOBS Not Adver·
tllld In N1wspapar. All Ty pal ,
iiiCOf!IOI· 24 Hour Rocordlng. 1·
100-288-2241.
K

For rant· Ntw 1 bdnn apt, tum
or unlurn. In Mkldltport, 614-

of wMing lor tonteont ....
and wo~cf.l ike to ~ lnlo busf.
n... for yourulf, 114·7112·2'157
(wl llll'lln)

0w'=OI.F::';:E:=,;TA:;N::;N;:;INO
:::;:-:;IE09
=:-.-:C:om
-.

41

Houses for Rent

~3brnz c:=-IAI~
7170,1--.
4111, -

Minor

tnd

AIVII'IIdl

Api!,rnentl In Middleport, From
1111. CaiiiM-112·7111. EOH,
In Mlddlopoll, Ohio, 1 and 2
badroorn tumllhed lpt, tome
with Ullllllll ptld, ral..-ance tnd

dapoolt raqulnd, :J04.18Z~581.
llodom 2 , BR aportmont 11444$-03110,
N.W 2 Bod"""" Full Beih, LG

Stock! Mollohln Clrptlt, 614·

':l

·Ac-

-

·11· 7
' w'Affl~YT
' !W

Topaz, 304.e75-

441.0:131,

p.m., Sunday 1:00 to 6:00 p.m.

814-912·2521.

Aabulll ~., Bladal. Patte, kyltar

tl'lllltr. 814-44648M.

Connon 35 MU, AEIP~ With &amp;0
MM Lan1, Elclillent I.OOIMIIIIon,
Spe~d
Ugh, 156-A, 1D0-200
Zoom Len1, Ph.11 Ca11, $250,
O,B,O., e14..,e.4131 Ansr 7p,m,
Baby bad, mattriU, chllnglna
tabla, new diaper big. 614-l4S:.

M1$.

Big Oakola Farm Homt, Bulh
On Your Lot. 5 Bedrooms, 3
Baths, $3ll,lillil5 And Up. ·14·118&amp;-

45

. Furnished
Rooms

Aoom1 for rent • wtllc or month.

T A C ~C I L

I

57

Musical

56

Pets for Sale

Groom and Supply 'Shap-Pel
Grooming. All brlldt, ltylle.
lama Pit Food Dialer. Julie

pedt:attl · &amp; amtllilltri Srnokt
gllll lland. ·814-448-1321.

5B

3430,
3

CFA

Hlm1layan

$15Qoo,, 514-192·2201

Klnena,

Ap~ll- AIUOMtM Prad. Fe!tsrs Fruh Farm, SR 143 1 mile
Sou1h of ea,...ar, lollow

slgns.Openlltu'*yllm-lprn

61 farm Equipment

6 fl. pull. type bt.tsh ~ uc.
c:ond. $300. 304~N-3430.

Gthl grlnclar mixer, Ntw Holllncl
711. hayblnd NeW Holilnd I lt.

hayblnd,

New Holland 707

forag~ hiTYIIttr, 2 hNdl!. A.C 2
row, 3 pl. hitch no till com plan·
ter. AU axe. cond. 304 ..71-4215.

Jim's Fann Equlprnent1 .SA. 35,
Wotl Galllpollo, $14 ...1-1777;
Wldltellc:llon naw I ueld firm
tractort I lmplamants. Buy,
1111, trade, 1:00.1:00 wNkdayt,
Sot. 1111 Noon.

PRINT NUMIIEREO LETTERS IN

THESE

$3,250; 340 lntarnatlonal $2.350.
Owner Will Flnanct, 614·28&amp;-

For ·tala, lndultrlal vll'llcal
horizontal band uw, 2·yrt old:
uMd very llt111. Firewood, wUI
accept HEAP vouchln. 11WQ.
•• 3

nHdlo $10; En1or1alnrrMJro ...,.
1or $20; Eorly Amortcan
llorol couch, choir
cond., $22S; boiU1 M solid
wood, mlirortd ~calli

"'I""""'"

qu11n elu wtterbld 111 1400,
paid MOO, ltlll under warranty.

304-175-7151 or 1171-4144,

AKC R"'lltll'td

Pomer~ni1n1

Ca ~rn Terrltrt!' Poodln, Hail
ShOll , Wormaa. 301-t75-2193.
CFA Hlmtlayan kitten a, I . wQ
old, rNdy In 2 wkl, health
guarantlld, 114-61l8.. 051J

'I

'

•.

1 - - - - - - - ,~ r----'------,

!

BRIDG~

or 175-7tOiil.

461

lroncolcBiac~

1186 Fold

7:01(1) Too CloM tor~
7:30 (J). aJ J1 PI dvl C

CJl Now h can .. toil

' :FRANK AND

II

Fully

114471-28112.

&amp;

OMC H11vy Hair 112 ton,g~:;·
Rta1onably priced.
•

tlil80 GMC 250,

loader $14,000. 130 R Baler•
6001 $8,400, llodol 148 - ·
so,45Qi moc111 ass 12001
$10,110o; modo! 155 11001
$11,1i100. K111tra Strvlcl Center

Slolo 111. 81, Poln1 PINHn1 oiid
Rlploy Roao, J04.181-W4,

63

614-311-1521.

tng.

• Oft ltlgo Slar80.

AIM It fexu Chrillian (LI
Ql PllatwNa••
!Ill T1111'1111y Dog
1:01 (I) MOVIE: K~'a HtiMa
(PQI (3:110) '

..

Campera &amp; : _.'
Motor Homes

1:30(J). ~!lei om Warlcl

s -. '

11JT.1 Wl""""'go 311 ang, 1nd ,...,, aoOd, (Mid 1o ul~
obo,

IDle
'a Cllu Drexon
,_,ughtl II I driVIr'l ICI

114.W}-~5

lniiNCIOI'.S,.,... C
• Amarlcln Mulllc"lhop
Stereo. '
!Ill Yau Allltcllor H
1:011 C2l • D
earca ~
Caltlcl alar Kevin McHale le
~ng &lt;Jown 11141 tube. Stereo.

1977 Ford motor home, b f\,
18,181 lc:lutl ml~l, I new

Black Chi-Angu1 Club Catv•
Ang.. 'And Chi,Anguo
Black Buill. R11110n1bly PriCed.
Sta1a Run Farmt, Jacklon,
Ohio. 614·21W315,

Mli&gt;holln
'""·
1u11r
-·
aood
cond.,
r.ady
to go, MSOO,
114·14f.2031
.

Bu1choring hoga. Call :104-175-

304-875-1584,

Custom LJvntoclil Hauling. Cln
Haul To HUIIboro 81111 Or Lo-

For Sala: 1m Prowler Camper~·
SIHptl I Elleollonl. Cond11101\1
814-388 18ao.
· - .. ~ .. ·

.

D Colltae , _ . Tena

.rif:Jt

79

1807 ev.nfnga.

guilty

tr~namlaalon. 304-67W4~. ~

Attention: Dairym~n And Fir·
mere, Affordable H..lth In·
sur1nc1 For The hit Employed,

~luo

s::.,':i£ Homer
IHII
lb&lt; hurting
Uta'llolli1QI. S11no.8
u-.•wn~~e

convlcll.
!Ill• T11e

Auto Parts&amp;
Accessories
1liln Ford l'lbulft R'IOior .end

For lite- rack1 I pinion .tor
Oldtmobllo, 1$0, 114-lliZ·l'iM·

Bill Clink, DVM. l.lr;t 1nlmal
tpeclalty. 30W75·7721.

Tap Capl A dnver
11m1 1 ahotVUn .,., olllcer:
1 11Atllr00ptr l1ce1

7li

10 Holllaln bull calv~1 • 1-7
WHkl ot lgl. 11300 all. :KM-tiTS-

WVA And Ohio, 114-441-NASE,
AnJ1Imo,
Baby pigs for salt, 814-849-2017.

a;;Gf~W~

$100.

01 CIZ

parts. 304-175-1817.

5150,

rt
(I) • Fll: The ulllortM A IIndmark lrlgedy
lhtt c:l\lngod 111e mathodl of
11141 FBI !Ldrlll!lltizld.
Stereo .•,!,llr..,IIVI
Cl) (!) IIJIIIttl Caroline's
tOITOI'Ipr dlatr:!iher
bOlt li ua. (Pt 6 ol6)
111
Trllll orR
0'- Kovoca (1111 1 ·
aurpriH~rlhday peny,
Stereo. 'II
.
illl•llliii1J-. 10210
The kids -11e wllh
morta111y 1nd reflect on !heir

Services

a•

Hay &amp; Grain

64

:::=--::-:~:-:::::::-:=
Hay: Round I Small b11111. 81
S.lu•dor onlr pickup. :104-178·
1832.

Hom11
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Transportation

Unconditional lltellme gUir'lr'ttH. locll rafnncM fumiahed.

:=·R~=; J;J..,.

nUmatta. Call eollact 1·
614-237.()488, dar or night
Rogtre Bailment Wattrproollng. 1
•
Compfo1o Uobh- Soi.Upo,
Fr11

71

Autos for Sale

1963 Plymouth Vtlitnt, slant I,
&amp;4,000 aciUII mll11 1 plut elllra

parts car,

mo. Flbor~ 1op.

per lltl lmllll, trw:k

.I

tt.

1810 AnJ11me,
1817 Ford LTD, &amp;14-0112·1'482
11171 Codlllac El Dorodo. Good
Condl11on, lluol Solll S7110, Or
Botl Oflor. IM-25&amp;4271,
11171 Chryslor Cotdobl, 310 ang,
614-892·2155 304-8754155,
1980 Clvrolo• Cordobo LS, i-

- . Pan II (R) (2:00)
Siereo.
Storao. .
u..r

Rtpalrt; Comrn.lcll, AetldtrtUat lmpro¥1111W1tl. lndudlng:
Plumbing, Elactricll. lniiUrtnct

Movtd: Mull Sell: Magic: Chtl
G11
Stove
$120,
O.E.
Ratrlgarator, S,so, Bath White,
Good Cond"lonll14-441-0121.

Rogl11orod Gr111 Done pupploo:
maiM I ftrn~lll , ,..dJ to go
now $15(), 30W71l-,.U,
VETERINARIAN Or, Bill Cr.,.k1
DVJI,
Largo
AnlmaJ
Spoc~nr.304.Sl'l-7721,
,

81

4

lftll' 4pm.

.

1985 Buick Alvlerl, 111 optlont,
31,000 mllll. 6M-441-4180 attar

&amp;p.m.

lmprvv11111Nr. ,
Ytart Exparlanca On Okllr 61
Newer Hom11. Room Addtllona;r

TATER AIN'T OVERLY

FOND OF SQUASH,
PARSON

Foundallon

Work, Roolir!ll.'
Khchent And Bathe. FI'M Eir'
tlmattsl Raterancn, No Job Tb:
_B.:
Ig_Or_Sm_s_u_l1:;1«
; -41_.o225=:.:·__;
JET
"
Aeration Motort, raptiM. New·

' " ' Oodgo

Dor1ono.

Good

Trtnem~

~W~rllll

fteno

sz,...,.

Ill', h4-IIW2SI.

1 N I - $1100; 11111 Hor1oon
tiJOO; 1tll Turtern, tow mll11,
S1500i .'.1117 Horizon $11100. 304175-2....

Musical
Instruments
1181 Nlntn Pulalr NX, rtdlgrty
GUITAR LESSONSII Prlva10 In· ln1erlor, 1&amp;,000 mll~ 1 dltiora.

51

ttrucllon.

Umltld

opanlngt.

=

t lcll dama~, _rtpalraDII, tt,ooo,

84

or

1718.

87

.

Upholstery

114-1411-2100, Npm
,
'
1117 Chevy : hlah
-.y'l
Upholoiortng
- o ~lr, Good lron
• !nllrl_, ..... ,..... Tho
11on car. I100, •rormoN lnlor• 1liil
In "'m~u.. o)lllololoring.
m.~Uon Cal 114-441-234~ Aile Cali 104471-4114 lot 11M .,.
lor Pout
tll'llltll.

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

Vulnerable: Bolh
Dealer: South

There are Lwo magazines published
down under. The bigger is Australian
Bridge, a .bimoothly which costs Ul
aMually (212-866-58&amp;0): Each-issue. is
at leut 88' pages long, and there is
10methlng lor everyone.
While you are drinking your breaklast coffee (or pre-prandial cocktail),
cover the South and East cards. Yon.
as Wesl, lead the heart jack against
three no-trump: lour, two, king. De. clarer lhen leads the spade seven. How
do you defend?
Opposite the wide· range no-trump
opening, which enjoys considerable
popularity among club players in Australia, North used a transfer bid Ia
show live spadesaod then made an ill;
vitatio1ial two-no-trump rebid. South.
with a near·muimum and only a
had an automatic
no-trump.
Most club players will shoot in with
the spade king at trick two, afrai~ that
if they duck, deelarer will next lead a
spade to the ace, and they will never
colleet a spade trick. But is that likely

Sut.ll

Well

I NT'
2•
3 NT

·Pass
Pass
Pass

Norlh
2'
2 NT
Pass

•ts-ts·poinu - -

Ea51

Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening lead: ' J

1-----------..J
trump usually would' deny his having
three spades. And if Soulh had ace
doubleton in spades. he would have
played the ·ace and another spade; be
would nol have led a low one immedi·
ately, blocking the suil.
·
If West ducks this trick, and East
does likewise, the defenders kill the
spade suit and defeat the conlract. If
either defender wins the fi rst spade
·trick, the suit lives and deelarer col·

lects an overtrick.
If an opponent is lryin g to establish
a suit. hold up your winner(s) as long
as possible .
@ 11t1, NEWSPAPER ENTEAPtii.E AS$N.

here? No. South's raise to three no-

Ill

.

ACROSS

covering
31 Old T111am1nt book
33 NogtUvo
1n1wer
35 Gato1~1 kin
37 Tameat
41 Flour-d.. 42 VIrginia
willow
43 52, Roman
44 CUng

1 F11hlon
dollgntr
Donn• - .
'li Phi Beta 1111tdlclnar
root
13 Higher
14 Linen
15 Optnlng (ol
plpt, o.g.)
16

_

~:.0::
17 Ro~.. allor
19 s~:lr

:~ ~~::.1.

winding

50 ::;.~~~~caHr
Involved
(2 wda.)
.

20 SllloiiOI
22 Root

OOWN

Slar80.
1 Cltllll

2 Armedlllo
3Famt

4 Export flyer
5 Storyle lllng
6 Be1ween
Colo. and Mo.
7 High note
8 Kind ol min·

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

i n excellen1 chance ol being lulflllep In
lhe rear ahead , H o -, 1hl• mlghl
happen In ways that won't follow your
~· blueprint

:lA--.

ICOAPIO (OC1,
22) Olsap·
PQinlment 11 likely 1oday - II you ••·
ptct: more from an arrangement than
condl11ona warrant. VIew manera w~h a
crlllcal aye; don '11e1 your expecta11ona
r\iri rampant Ga1 a lump ~n llle br un·
dsrOiandlng 111e_ lnlluences go-nlng

eral deposit
9 Tea
10 Don' t nist
12 Sac
13 More
inebrlaled

18 Horse doctor,
tor short
21 Poetic foot
22 Former proY·
ince of India
25 Large peaks
27 More

drenched
31 Rlgh1 (sl.l
32 Put
34 Color

.

35 Mild cigar
36 Cowbor , e .g,
38 Birthmarks

f~~-TimtU..

You In the year ahead. Send lor Scar- - work Is concerqed.
pia's Aslro-Graph predlc11ons 1oday by TAURUS (Apiii20-May .20) Taking 1118
mailing S 1.25 plus a long, sell·&amp;d· word ol someone you koow only caeualdressed. stamped envelope to Altro- ly regarding a risky financial expendl·
Graph, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box ture c ould coat you today.
91428, Cleveland, OH 441D1-3428, Be GEMINI (Mar 21-.lune 20) Your lamlly
sure to state yQur zodiac s6gn.
will exp~ you to1 honor any promises
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dtc. 21) Your · you make1oday. ll you Inwardly !eel you
personality, good looks and charm are c'an't comply, don't make commitments
admirable asse1o, but 111ey're nol ap1 ro in 1118 tlral pr.ce.
be enough 10 gel you by 1oday. You'll · CANCER (June 21-.luly 22) Strlva1o be
have to work for what you want.
forthright In your converaatlona wUh
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jtn. 11) There's o1ners loday. ll rhoH rou ouoc1e1e wtlh
a very lhln line be1ween lhlnklng pool· 1hlnk you are ex-e11ng or llbblng,
11vely end wlshlully 1hlnklng. II you 're your Image will be lmpl!red,
not carelul, you mlgh1 dwollln 1he Ia Her LEO (.IIIIJ 21-Aug. 22) Owing 10 rour In·
1oday.
difference, 1,_. 11 a poaolblll1y 1oday
AQUARIUS (.lin. 20-Feb. 11) Be carelul 1ha1 you won'1 mike tne moat ol ,our
In rour commerclallnvolvamen1a1oday; oppor1unl11eo, -ll!ly thoee 1ha1ert
rou mlgh1, be mora lmpresaod by 1he ol a tangible or Jlnanclal nt11ft.
siZzle !han by 111e o1aak. BaM your ludg· VIRGO (A... alopL 22) lmport.,1
ments on reallatlc evaluations.
• endelvort mutt be guided b~ your own
PISCES (Feb. 20-lllarch 20) A well· ln· hand 1odll)', Hthll)''re delegttod Ia o1h·
1en11oned lrllnd you may go 10 lor ad· era, lhe r&lt;11u111 won't be what you oxvice 10day Is likely 10 tell rou whal you'd peel or desire.
like 10 hear lna1ead of rend&amp;rlqG a frank LI8RA (hpl, 22-0ct. 22) Be cooperooplnlon.
live and reuonable In your 11111"'""
ARIEl (March 21-Aprll11) Be mlndlul shlpa wllh otlier1 10dll)', bu1, 11 of eonslble heallh hablls 1oday, .be-. thing 1110 be lhered, don't lelve Hup Ia
cauM rou mlghl have Ia reallt atrong aomeone 11M 10 d411ilnnlne 1he 111ze ol
temptations to overindulge In 10me your piece o1 the actk»n.
manner. Also, be dlaclplined where

.,

.

The Woild Almanac Crossword Puzzle

romance• 11r11n tnd lrlel to
win polntl wllh Joe. Stereo.

Stereo,

II'T!portant hOpes and expectatton&amp; have

M•r Ucanled -riolan',
AI-r Eiactrlcal, 304-871;

'KQ 5
t AK6 2
.AJ 10 5

·By Plllllp Alder

0(1111lllon

to murder.

(J).....

Nov.1,1tl1

oomntlfellt

Australian Bridge
magazine

10:00 (J) • iiJ L.A. Law A doctor
·
ram&lt;Ma a patlen1's oplaan
lnd UMfJ' to lnvoll1a drug.

'

wiling,--.. AllkMnl'-1

., 3

mari~nag~. 8tereo.Q

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

·soc Tu

.
Dltlctlve Pollee officer John
llunnel conductea reid on a

Now ~.Is-.

· S.nrooJ,_PI, PI, Air
Condl11onlng,
01 8&amp;11 01-

tQI087
+Q 9 1

tK 8 3 Z

~ (JJ·-·

Will build patio COVII'I, decks..
tcrllnld room1, pul up Ylnyt
' ~s:' t11111• Ulrtlng. tM-

11ru1t, bra~..!!'!'!l PSIPB,
G.C. $2411, ........... o.

tJ4

t:ao (J) • aJ Wlng1 A mllllonlllre · -·

&amp; re-built molon In ltock. RON'

1H5 Chivy Celebrity, naw tll'llt 1

Concl-.

r

lorgery lnd I

Curtis Homa

82

' 32

&lt;

51 FraiJranl rool
-1~-j~~::;:::. :J:-=::~1,..-~I·-24·()vron·dlnk:~.- 52
DrolL _ . __

_CI~mdccapled..&amp;M,211•1111.

EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1.-·
537·11521.
"
cy!, automatic:, nita car, ... Ina Ron'• TV Service, !lpiCilllzJnJ:
$1100 oao, no ruol. 614-MII' In Zonl1h olso HrVIcing .....
2013 .
othtr brandl. HouM 01111, 1110•
tome tpplltnc. Nptllrt. ,. W.'l"
11181 Clmaro l-21, 2,900 ICIUal 304-871-2311
Ohio 114-446-:14~
mllaa, window •lick!!£ build
ohNI, (llka neW! $13,,.0, 614- Room add-., eldlng, roofing;'
241&gt;4881
vinyl rapllclmlftt Mndcrwa,
by AI Tranrn 1 114-'M2·
1iB1 eam.....4U1o, v.e, AC, 1111 ctrpentry
2328. CALL COLL£C'T

11~ 1oliJ: C.llca GT, ttsoo.

EAST
. AS!2

a-

22ft. Monitor Fu111 S.lr Contained Camping Tralltr, AJC, I
Awning, Ell:ceftant CQndltlonl

cal~.
Chuck
WUtiamt
T1l oc38,00rook Trucldng. 1142 -6011,

-

hal' ptycNc ~t dlngor lurl1s

Auto, ~lr, $1,100.

67 to 72 Chevroltl Ulld

Livestock

(RI"(2:00)

(JJ(JJ.ProalCNIA
ltmoul IU1hor II Wlrned by

1978 FOrd Club W•gon Pttons
814-192·ilt82

1971. Ford van, 3!1
304-875-3871,

.WEST
i .. K 6
'Jl0976

Wlllll ol , _ Q

• le 1 Stor Slar80.
DIIPN'I lpniiWoek
QIICrOMtn
7:311 (JJ lanlanl • Son
1:00 (J). aJ Colbr Show Clll
lnd hla neiGhbor tccompony
on allekt 11ip . Stereo.
IIIOV11: High Plaint
.

- ·Vao

For nle.~, AKC B11gl1 pups. 304-

;.,....,,IUd

II \

Trlnlinlls lon, ,.. Tl,.., Aluminum Almt,
Loaded, Automat

PHILLIP
ALDER

,

~~~Tonight
~~ ...Wlth ChlldNft

·

Ford II'ICtor I N• Hollend
round blllrs Ncwambtr Sale:
31i130 FOJd 45 hp 1 doubla nlve,

$13,500. 1720 Fold 24 hp 4 WD '

NORTH
U·&gt;ll
.QJ 10 9 8
'A 8 4
·• 9 5 3

1185 Ford F..ao, 4 Whlll Drt.,.,
Auto, 311 Wlndlor, $6,000 . .,._
388-8521.
1111 Ctttvy 8-10, automltlc, 4
whael drtwe1,_~!_'Y aooc:l condlUon, low m....ya, fo4-&amp;75-3433

:;;;;:-;:::;-':::-:;:-= -:::::-

1868 Ford Falrlant, 2 Door,
Runa Good, $800 Rrm. 614-441-

BM1 1he holldor Noh. For
delallo caM •lno1Ndor .loft
Wam.W. o1 Crlmlnal Rocordo
-1•1 oludtnl
1110 •ach. 3 Largo To-. 814 4~302, .,....
Pr111 loxn, $41 Etch. •'14-446- d'-coume on guitar ecce.
1:p2, Evtnlngal WIHtndt.
-rooru
'
For 81J1: New (Nivlr Ulld)
Dooll,~ Pro-ilong, llu: 32110,

-

= •

• •.. 1- · 304-67S·
1t82 .rlO y""•
3731 ·
'
11" Chlvrolel ·sltvll'ldo ]up..
lize PU, 308, V~ auto. 1rtna.,
PIIPI, air~ overd
new 6 &amp;IX
Ur, ~·::.: •&amp;ll~tl~14~11~1.xc.
· • .., '

6522,

AKC Dalmlllon pups, only 2
malllltft, $200, 6M..fii8-2716

AKC
~lllertd
miniature
Schnauzar pupl)l•. Fama111.
Stn • pepper. t150. Call mor·
nlnga I Wllllenda. 114-258-1313.

•I

1
:::,:,~m.,:,::2440
7.':·:-:---:-=~

Mini Dachs hunds: r11~y to go,
111 thotl.&amp;. wormed. To atlect
hom11 only. Call 614-245-5533,
IIIVS mtg. tf nee.

8202.

SQIJ~RES

Neuron -Amaze - Rebel -Tendon - ONE MORE .
AI a driver lor the ci1y bus company 1 asked my
supervisor how many people we were aHowed to fit on
a bus. He replied laughingly, "ONE MORE."

2237.
.
llo-y- F.,uooil- 201 Tlactot'- - - - -- - - - 60 HP, s:a,Hs· 584 lnt•~lootl, 73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
$8,1115; 100 Fold, llvo Power, ·
·

~~~~opper 11~~~

81184.

""llncllr,
, Ovlldrlvt With
~•
T:_ptt, $\1 • Or Bnt Offll',

":h

AKC Cockll' Spanllf pupplea.
Shots &amp; wormed. 5100. 304-5~
2223,

AKC femtll Bllglt, 13 mo. old,
ttartld to . run. $50.· 304-&amp;75-

V-8

Aroundup'GOO'd

Truck, 304-875-I 584 ,
1182 '.~V-150, Pickup, 6

&amp;

Vegetables

Wobb. Coli 1-.0231, 1-80!).
352.0231.

2 hagl• $25 N Ch. 304-895-

Fruftl

1t81 F 50 F rd . Pick

Alrlto,.,;,~lc, ~

Flrawood lor 1111. Will dalher.
$30 truckload. $50 cord. 814-

675-3512,

.·,

1111., - o find• and wl\ool,
$3000, 114-141-2100

895-lllr,

Commodort 121 Complete
Computsr Sylltm, ,$800; 2SIInch
Plonnr Color T.V., $800, 304-

'~"klo

50-k

Ml'scellaneous

Firewood for 111a. 114-371i1-2176.

black wlnlar drns coats, slza ,_
10, UO tach. 304-175-5381.

tho

qooted
. 1·-.1..-.1..-~...L.__
L....J
by fiillng In the ni'isslng wards
yo'u d..,.lop lrom Olep No. 3 below.

Apf»&gt;W!I, N~ _oawr. P•vmt nt. 1·

Concr.te &amp;. plutlc Nptle tanks,
Ron Evans Enttrpriaae, Jackt on, 0!-lt.aoo.a31-t528.

7311.

.~~-:rr:::;.wNie

l--,r-.,,r--r-..:,15F-rr;--i e Complolo

Al/TOIIOIILES. BAD CREDIT
OK, 111-81 llodlllo. Guaron1sed

'I

'

I I

82 Buick Algal. Good cqrnclltiOn.
e14-241-1116J.
.
.

,, •..:'

C11pboald Pal Or-lng And
801rdlng Kanntl, Formar Yttl·
nary Attlltant 1 Ownar Ttmmy
Pennoll, 614-371J.2'731,
crut11, AM+M cttlltte ana
Ongonwynd Cattery Pertlln, mol'l, 11500, 114-182..737 or S.p11o Tonk Pumoingjto Gaillo
Slamt11 tnd Hlml layan kittena. 114-m3041
Co, ROH EVANS ENTER~RiSES,
·814-446--3844 atttr 7 p.m.
Jeckoon, Oli 1~37-tW,
11181 Splrll ·4 ~llndor, Good
Flth Tank, 2413 J1ckaon Ava.
Da~o
Sorvk:e,
Poln1 PINH n1, 304-875-2063, ~~ar,i14~mo.INg•. 1800, Qao.gH
Croll&lt; Rd, P&amp;l1o, eyptull Une Tropical lit h, birds,
1182 ClrMro, rid, 12,000. 304- pllot, p~kup, &amp;lUI doll...,: 114amall animals and auppUu.
44f.0294,
'
175-1723,

For Salt: "ConHII I.Y., WOrkl,
picture not 1hlrp, 120; Nice oa.
dar ltereo In ceblnll, nlldl

•m

AN'{ QUESTIONS?

F0 N

'&lt;E5, MA1AM .. I .
~AVE AQUESTION

rtnty. 814-446~160 lfllf' 8 p.rJ!.

II

Flrawood, WUI Dlllvar, 814·25&amp;-

home, 1 mi'- below tow~ over•
looking rlvtr, No Polo, CA. 114-

~AVE

1liltl WUI ES-2101 all options,
11,000 mllll, balance of war-

-

~

Gu cock ltova 175. 6t4-256- $125, 614· 92·2567
. .
1434.
Rats Or Mice? In Your Houu?
GOOO USED APPLIANCES Buy ENFORCER, Klllo rolt l
mice In only 1 toodlng,
Wuhart, drytrt, rtlrlg•ators, GUARANTEED! Avallablt at:
rtngn. Skagg1 Appllancea, eaum True Value StOfe, 11 Wast
Upper Rlvar Rd. · Bnldt Stone M 1 51 11 Ch
OH
Crtll Mottl. CaJ1.814-441-731i18.
a n ro ' ester, •
·
Rats Or Mice? In Your HouH?
· LAYNE'S RJRNITURE
Buy ENFORCER Kills ra1o a
Compltta homt tumlthlngt. mice In only' 1 fltdln
Houra: Mon-Sat, 1-1. 814-446· GUARANTEED! Available 8~;
0322, 3-mllu -out Bulavllie Ad. -o ·oalr Trul ValUe Lum btr 634
1
Frtt Dill very.
East Main Str11t, Pomaroy, 0H
Moving Sale: What't lth: plano,
RATS OR MICE?
picnic tablt, !I driWar chest. In Your Housa? Bur ENFOR·
114-446-4629.
CER. Kill s Rat• And Mice In
PICKENS RJRNITURE
Onl\1 Faodlng, GUARANTEED!
Ntw!Usld
Avalable At: Central Supply, 17
HouNhold furnishing. 112 mi . Cou11 Street; Spring Valley
Jerrlcho Ad. pt. Plauant, wv, Hardware, 529 Jackson Plkl;
cell 304-t7S·1450.
Odell True Valut LBR, VIne·
Straat At Third Avenue, Gtl~
Partible apt. alzt waahtr &amp; II polio, Ohio,
dryer, $250, 614-441-3231,
Lullman
A·1030
Stereo
Aocal ver, 30 Wana Per Channel,
RENT20WN
614-44e-3151
Excellent · Coilditlon,
$100
Yrr1 Fumt1Ur1
O.B.O., 614-446-4B31 Aller 7p.m.
Solo a Choir; 111.10 W•k:
Recliner, $1.47 WHk, SWivel Sat of glasstop cof111 &amp;. end
Rocker, $3.83 WNk.Bunk Bod lablll. IJrand ntw still In boxes,
Complet• $8.41 WMk, 4 Drawer boughl $575, •~I $300 814-992.
Ch011, $3.28 Waok; Poator Bed· 280~
room Suite, 7 pc., $18.67 Wtek, Sink &amp; c:ounter tgp. L and
·ln&lt;l- Boddlng,Coumry Plno· tl blat, bathtub, truck topper,
Dlnltte With Bench I 4 Chalrt,
f10.N WHk.OPEN: Mond1y small ch ildren 's organ, chain
Thru Saturday, tl.m. to 8p.m., saw, Kenmor• washsr, Gravely
Sund1y 12 Noon Till 6p.m. 4 trlctor, carpal. 30+&amp;76-2302.
Mll11 OH RoUit 7 On AaUia 141,
In Ctntanary.
~~J'ls~~-· $25 load,
SWAIN
Army camouflaugt
AUCTION a RJRNITURE, 62 Surplus
clothing, ln.ullled dacron
Oliva st., Qolllpollo. Now a Uud camoufituge cov1111U1 . J30,
fumkurt, htaterw, Wtltem • INthlr US Combll Booll. Car·
Work boOII. 114-441-31511.
hlrt clothing, old timer knlle
du.llr. Sa.m "Somlrvllla's .1.~""'
VI'RA RJRNITURE
drvllle WV boelda POll unlu,
114-440-3151
UVINQ ROOM: Solo l Chair, Rt 21 No Fri, 5111, Sun, noon-1:00
t1•.oo: Rtcllnor, $14i,OO; Pll (ntmdld houre during
SWivel Rocker, Sllt,OO; CoHN a hunting INHnJ. 304-273-565.5.
End Tabla, 189.00 Soi.DINING IJHd 11'xT flbtrgliH garage
ROOM: Table W11h 4 Paddod do«, $78. J04.1J5.57M,
Chalre, $141,DO·'a Coun1ry Pi no
Dlnttt• With ench And 3 UHd 111ellllo aqulpman1, InCholro~, $211!1.00; Ua1chlng 2 cluding wholl tylt11'11 wtth
Door "~ch $3411· Or 1588.00 dlcodars, rtcelnr~ dlah &amp;
S.1; Ook Table, 4ZXI2 With a dacodar, &amp;14-&amp;92.fl173
Bow
BtcK
Chairs,
1821.00.BEDROOM: Poator Bod· WATER WELLS DR ILLED: Fao1,
room Sutta (5 pc.), l3411.00; 4 Prompl Strvlce, W11ar GuaranDr1w.r Chut, S-44.95; Bunk tlld. 614-886-7311.
Bed, S2:N;_Comple1e Full Uon Whlelch1lr, W1lktr, Crutchn, 2
S.1 1 $1011.w Sol ; 7 pc, Codor Can.., Vary Good Condition
Boo,_, lu"'· $81III.OO,OPEN: $250, 114-441&gt;3222 Ext 84, 61tl
Mondly Thru Slturday, ta.m. to 311l·:ID&gt;I.
8p.m., Sunday 12 Noon- Till
S.,.m., 4 111111 Oft Route 7 On Whlla vlnyt • ldlng a. trim; brown
lout• 14t In Cantanary.
soHitt; wood burning stove;
ntw pre-hung lntarlor ' doort;
alum. thuttors; trtt ttand; sin·
52 Sporting Goods
gar Hwlng mtchln•; 8 ft. ar1111·
Anill'icln Anna PK22 L.A. c:lal Chrlttma1 tr11. 304-675Dol.lbll Action Auto Pistol, New 4004.
In Bo¥, $150, lncludu Holsllr,
114 446 86~7. ·
55
_Building
Browne Footbell Tlckata, Prefer
Supplies
Slating, All Gama, 614-446-2289,
.11::4-;:Z5a-::;,121::::;7.:..- - - - - Block. brick. IIWtr Jllpa:s. win·
dOWI , llnllll, IIC. Claudl Win·
Antiques
53
~~~:m~~ GJondo, OH eon 814·

LA, Kitchin, loti Clblneta,

2 bclnn 1n AuUolld,
mont11 plue ~lll11oe, clopoolt end
,. ........ r.qulred, ..........

2 lledr- tzao llon1h, Plue
Utlnu.., All~r~nce And -o.--~~
304.e78-1211,
' ........

&lt;.,.JL..,.-1:::::--::::::::"""'-&lt;&gt;'

l . e.m. 1o e p.m. Mon ..sat 114• 54
441·1111t, 121 3rd. Avo, Gal·

Sto" R-1or W11h Bar Adloin DR, 1400/mo, 114-245-1053
After I p.m. flodnay, 511, No
Polo.
Comploli)' Fumlahocl mobllo

·

7101

-~

DO WE

::·
~ppllance, . ~~-- :ood I~~o~'"~,·~r~w~'~"'~·.•n~.c: ====:r~;;;;:;;~~ lip,
:::-~-=·~187, e-cyl,
Ulld apptllneet, T.V. a. Open r
mll11, muoon, gray

258·11110,

2 ltdJOOWlt eo...n~ Moun, S1or11!1Q &amp;1 $120/nlo, Gall~ Holol,
mwolllllotM Unlle. From • - · Rolrlaeralor, ...., 114 UJ·ISIO.
' Dapool1, IM'Zif.1711. .
Hair S1yilol: Would You Uke To $1•.ao. lain~ Lolloftt,
S t - ,..,.. wHh -ng.
Joln Our 51&amp;11? Shear Pleu~n .,..,.
"'-'"o Low 2 lA - · AIL I Dot&gt;. 304- Aloo.1rolltr · All hooi&lt;-upo.
Hair Slylllltl· 114 Ul 4142.
AI $18,00 Cal
FREE NEW 17W!A.
Coil oftor 2:00 p.m., 304·773'
Color Ca111oo. 1
221.em.
56St, Milton WY.

1

lli Ouleldo Carpo1: 13.99 ·•
.... ; Kl1chan Carpo1, S7; VInyl
f4,1111, Solo On All Corj&gt;o1 In

304-8754871.

w•

Sell Motlvatld, Willing To Le•m
•-·
1 dF
And WI I h To BI rw\iogn zt 01
Your Performance? We Will
Ttai: h You To Bl A Memblr Of
Our Team. RllpoMibllltiH Ineludf Admlnlstralivt func:tlon
In A eonturMr Flnandal S.r·
vk:H OHict Whh One 01 The
Ludare In Tht Financial Strvlcll Industry. II You Hav• Ex·
Ollllnt Admlnltt,.tiva Skllll
And Top Notch Phona 9111111
PIHH Clll, Jon Clay, AI 614441~201 For lmmedlale Con·
tldWIUon.

parpet 1112 $50 I Upl Salt On

tulatld1 Ellctrlc Htai, AC, 4 compllta ltorm windows with
Dopoe11 Raqulrod, 114&gt;44fo01SI. - ICr"nl, fit 52"J:29", $10 -llch.

0112-8225 or 112·5304,
Fuml- 3 Roomo l Be1h,
Clean, No Pll., Raftrence &amp;
DepOoh Raqulrod.l14&gt;44 ..151i.
REBATE REBATE!
Nicol)' Fumllllled Apor1moll1,
Up To $1,000 ~batt on Stilet 1br1 nard to Ubrary, ptrklng,
Lot Models At Elua Horns C.n- cenll'lll htlt, alr ~':,1111'1nca ,._
1
ter. Gr111 Stlactlon NowtMre qulrod, 114-44&amp;.0l&gt;ll.
Else But El111 Homt Center. 1·
800.S81-5TIO.
Fumlthld ~lcl•ncy, 1115/mo.
U111Hin Pal , Sharo Bath, &amp;07
Second AY
lllpolle, 11•-4-4135 LOts &amp; Acreage
4411 Aft• 7p. ~
8 Acrn Above Htndtrlon,
Vlriginla, $5,100. Survtyad GrKioue living. 1 and 2 bedroom IPirtmtntl at VIllage
R l g~1 01 Wor, 304-571-28M,

INOllCEI
OTA tractor,.,l'llllar drlvWI ·~ OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO,
pllctntl. Mull have good drfrtlng r'KOfda, llat Nd txptfitnce, rtcommandt lhlt you do bull·
llablti WOJt hitlory, and 3 yurt n... with ptopla you knowt and
NOT to und money llvaugn the
vtrlabll traelor lralllr IX· mall
until you have lnvntfgatld
pertince. ADDIIcanll mult Pill the offlrlng.
Building lotl 1t·acrt and up, TP l
·
1011 arid rood loti, 1011-221C water, Ellltrn Malgt Co.,
S OPPORTUNITY $
q~ar11r milt SR 7, 614-i85-151i14
rt nit E p1
Men, Women, Or Coupln. Bat·
Equtl
po u Y m oytr. t" Your Flnanc:ltl · Pothlon. F.M.H.A. 112 Acrt Lots Financing
Non -Sm lng &amp;. Drug Frtt EnAvailablt . 614-441·85111Z.

C~ 1k

"'"~
"
, ..

Household
Goods

EHicloncr Apor1motl1 Uoolal10,
6pm
::
"::
r ;;
-;:;.:-;---::-=-=--==- Quilt, Wal Kepi, N'~tly Fur· 8 h. Sura paoltabla, $50. H~
anytime. 614--«6·7651.
1979 Windsor, 141101 2 BR, nllhedii\ Corpolod, All U111nl,. l·bld, IIIII new. $300. 614-367·
badroom add-on. 114-245; Fuml lid, Air Condhlonlng, 7267,
Will Do HoutiCIIInlng, 8 Ytars 14x14
114-441-2&amp;02.
5330.
Experlsnct.614-4464028 or 814·
870 Dur Slayer; &amp; lawn utility
441-o2251NVI miiNgl.

mf lloleury

~)
,

Will Do babysitting In my home

1018i.

~
vironment Ar1 Your EnargtUc,

-51

I

Arn:R ~ ...

Television
Viewing .
THU.a NOV. 1 I

wao Chow CaYII'-, A,.o,, PS,
PI, lit, Afi.FII CIIHftl, wlllelll
tor poyoW. :IOHII-3m. ,

Merchandise

movloo. Coiii1«48.ZS58, EOH, Fork Lin; 11i18T uMC Plck.Up, All
Exctlllnt ConcUt(onl 814-446Downtown Modem, 1br, Com- 23!51,

3406,

sat.rn\IMC.

19110 Ford Eacor1 GT $6,800."114·
441'11731.
. .
.'

111.614, S271lmo. 114-liH113.
54 Miscellaneous
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
Mercmndlse
BUDOET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 831 Jackson Pika 1851 J.D. Moclll B, Comololelr

16:5,

Financial

Products AI Homa. call

1~20821 441-1055,

1o1M~

:

~~~~
~~..~lzoOH~~~f.I~~~~~Me~r~
c~
m n~d~ls~e~~·l ~~~
~n~~~ru~m:e~nt~s===-1 '12--lruckS-fl!rcSale
,-;.:::~fo!!:r:!;R~e~nt~::::::j Fuill
bOil. ~'""• &amp;-ma1•
·
-.12x&amp;O,
·~
•••
Kanwoocl
oinpllller l ..- . , 3 rnl. out 588,2 BR, water 1rtll, new con It Ion, 814-y ~-• -~•
112 1on 1NC' 302,
8 anJ'O tum ,.,. F-~
··
R
t
l Do • 11331
p
tl
11
h
hal
,
a
..
-,a
,._.wer,
"'u
...
ld
1
:• ' ....-mo. e .
potll.
.
ra e_ca l new w c r, tabll, BOll 1101 IJMIIIirt with ltlndlrd, ~:-2882

32 Mobile Homes

New 11i192 14x12, 2 or 3 bidmodels, 2 full blltt1,
Will glva plano lltaons In my •room•
hlnglt roof, vinyl aiding, A21
. 820-2030
home. S4 per ha!l hour. Mon. • ceiling,
:b&amp; R20 wallt, 1~
EARN MONEY Re ading Books! Fri. 614-ZSI-0704,
lncludad $17,lillill00. Clll 1
$30,000Jfr. Income Potential.
729-4045,
Dttalle. I) 80S.i62-8000 Ext. Y·

Toll F111t, 1-800467-85115, Ext,
313,
Edwardl Transportation nHd1

Equipment
•. for Rent

2·Apto Pomo!OJ, 4&lt;-, 1.0.1h
unlurnlshad, on Buntrnut Ave,
614-.11112-5101
for Sale
2·BR In Ulddlopor1, No po1o,
Llka To Have You r Ironing Done
In' A Nut, Cl11n Pltce? Call Mt $0 Down On Pr.OWnad Mobile P•w own Ulllillll, $20D per mo. Buy or atll. Rl~rlne Antlquee,
And W1 Will Talk About II. I Homtt. All You Pay It Til And O.PDIIt.IAtf-.tnce~ raqulr.d. 1124 E. Mtln Stnll, Pamaroy.
Hours: M.T.W. 10:00 1.m. to &amp;:DO
Have Aeferenc11. 614-381·8713. Til It Ft" With Approved Credit. 614-082·238'1 di)'L

HouKiunlng:
Reasonable
l'lltll. 614-448-8247 anytime.

dell vary, ralocatt, co. car, 1-BOb-

Amb~

42 Mobile Homes

~ TiltS&amp; SESS!otl$

1181i1 Clrntro, R.S., Mint. ~Ondl·
lion, Loodad, T·Topt, Aulo, Air,
Cruise, Tilt, AUM CIIHita,
35,231 MllaO, 1. 0:.'\"~ 1 ~!,.~.
Ntg., 814-441-rntl,
i.'¥ · 110 Fard Muatlng en: Ldldtd,
1~~ $1100 or boit oi!Or. JockeOn, ·uhlo. 1-800-873-4768.
~·

tit

175-2330,
Mul11 Unit Atntal, 1 VIII' Old.
VInyl Siding, Low MalnttMnca, z bedroom tumlthtd apl1 111
Centrally Located, S51i1,900. 814· u111Hioo pole!, 1300 mon1h,
446-8568.
-oy, 114-0112-1831, 114-MlJ.
2521·
Nice 4 room, btth, baument In

206·736-7000 Ext , 1594Ni,
18 Wanted to Do
Bt A Pal1 Of A $40 Billion A Year
PlymoUih Gr1nd Fury, 'u c . cond., nice ftncad blck
Company Haalth And NU1rlonal 1985
'Jard, ull l!ly building. 304-4175Indus try, No Experlenca Nat l l· $1,500. 814-25H704.
tary. Company Will Tl'llin, Call E &amp; R TREE SERVICE, Toppln9, 3030 or 875-3431.
Ma. Crawford, 614-~9004 Call Trimming, Traa Removal, Hedge
Rental proptny: 3 BA 11.111
Ennlnga.7·10p.m.
Trimming. FrH ~tlm1taal 614· basement, In city limits. Pr1cac:1
to 1111. 814-245-5027.
Case Min1ger, ACCESS To 367·7m
Human RttoUrctJ Development Exparianetd home &amp;. bualnut
Inc., Mutt Have A Commiltmant CIIIMr, hiVI rtllrtl'oCU, 304· Vsry nice, ntwar 3-BR Ralrteh,
brick front, carpon 1J2 bl•
To WOI'IIIng With Ctllldrtn With 175-2383
men!, oak har~ lloon, 7P10
Emotional "Problema, Bachal«l
3-ml from
Holur
Dtgrel And Exptrlt nte Prafar· Gaorg11 Portabll Slwmlll don'1 acres
SA
180
uklng
,..c[ Must Haiti Valid Drivers houl your loat 10 1ho mill ju~ Hos p ftal,
$34,500, ca/1614-~2-272&amp;.
License, Send Resume And Ltt· call 304-e7S·1l57.
tar Of lnttrell To: ACCESS, P.O.

SrrocuH, _Dop~ $200, $200
month piiJI ..wegt, rat ,..
. qulrM, no PIIS. 614-ill2-3211

lmmlldlately. No exp. 31 Homes tor Sale
ntcllsary. Eam up to $110 per ABSOUITELY MUST SELLU
day, trlmmlf_'IQ photographs. 1· Reduced To Sell: 2 Story 3br
8011-3:16-8005,
Corner LOI In Ch11hlrt, Ohio. 2 BA 1 ptrtly fumlahld on 588 .
Excalltnt Condition. Financing 304-175-5708 or 614-448-2 133.
Pom1roy POSTAL JOBS $11.78- Available.
ti04-932-89Si, Q04=S14.90Jhr. No np. nlldld. For 932-7670,
614·367-064i,
.
2 BR, total 'eltctrlc 1 1f2 mill
exam and application lnto.1 call
1·215-967-1537 7am·10pm 7aayt. 3 acrn r.lut callar hou11, drll- flom Galllpollo on At 588, Dop,
wei , dug wtll, 2 oUI- &amp; ret. required. 114-446-3413.
R11ponslblt mktdla age lady to lad
bulldingl,
giTigt, mostly llvsl,
2br Moblls Home For Rtnt, 814live-ln. Light houu worK I
good hunting, comer Gunvllls &amp; 446..0722, 81Wtl-n88.
companlonthlp. 304-937-2435.
Trlbblt Road, 7 mlln from bowl2br Unfumlthld, 12x50 On
Wantld motivated Ulllperaon, Ing IIIey, At. 62. 304-755--"TZVO.
-o-aao Cr""' Rood, Gallipolis,
526,00-$52,000 11t yur, tl'lllnlng
provided txperlence prefll'rtcf. 3 Bedroom House, 118 Klneon Relerlnct And Dlpoelt A•
sand reiume to Dally Stntlnal Drl v• , Gatlipolle. Living Room, qulrod, 114-441-4368, 304-675PO Box 721B Pomeroy OH Dining Aoo'!'1 Kitchin, Bath, 2330.
45761i1
'
Ctntral Alr.L vinyl Siding, Car·
pettd. 2 car Gar~~. Within 3 BR moblll homt, Bob
Work lrom home $60 per tOO ' _w:11klng Dllttnce 01 The Pool.- llcCarm~k Rd. 1&gt;4-141-85811.
preparlng mlil. lnformtllon Golf ColrH And Clinic. Gal·
t'lll(,tmlll Z·BR tr1ll1r In
stnd st1mp lo K.S. Enterprta11 llpolla City Sc:,hool District. 814- For
Har11Qfd, wv, $15() o1uo u111111oe,
P.O. Box 5157-JMW, Hlllolda, NJ _24~5~·5,-152
;;'-, -;~,.,-,.--,..---, depoalt requlrtd ..-.-88Z·25KM
07205. Phon• 201·70U290. '
Brick Home In nlct location at
Gallipolis Forry, W011 Terry Mobile hom" for rant or 1111,
12
Situation
Subdivision, 3 bldroom1, 2 call 614-H2·5800
baths, DR, K, LA, lerge tamily Two 2br MobUt HomH, Dapoah
Wanted
roo m. Cour1tsy to Broklre. And Rlfll'lnCN Atqulrtd. Call
Experlerteed Hospital Aldt Shown by 1ppolntm1nt only. Altar 2p.m. 814-441.0527.
available lor home nursing care. 304-675·2029.
614-367-7123.
2 BR homt In Rio Grande. 44
Apartment
Within walking distance ol col·
14
tor Rent
Business
lege. $250/mo. plus utlliUu.
Musl sign least . 814-618~011.
1
•
2
bdrm
•01 In Mlddlopor1,
Training
U!.IIH.. Fum, dtp raq, no patl 1
OWN YOUR OWN NICE HOME
Rttrtln
NowiiiSouthaaltam FOR $1,600 Full Prlct. Govam· 114-0112·2218,
Butlnen College, Spring Vtllty men1 Aiencl11 Now Llquldttl[t~~. 1·bdrm opl In Ulcldlopoll, ..
Plaza. C.ll Today, 81~-4367!1 1·805-5 4.fl500 Ext. HONI For u111Hieo tum, momh, 114Atgllltrllion lii).05..1274B.
lmmtdlata Aaelatanca.
Mi-2217.

11art

Miscellaneous
BARTEN 0 E R5 ICA SINO Btat The Smoke: Pure air, cltan
WORKERS / DECK
•)'Items lVIII·
HANOS!Hostessts,
Etc. walarbllltratlon
ablt.
ulara
~- 614-448·
Positions Aboard Cruise Ships .

SJOOf$900 Wkly. . FrH Wol'td
Travel. No Ex p. N~eeuary. 1-

48 .

4144.

Household a oods, home Inter·

8

304.e71-11827,

Buioll Roaal: loadail,

~-~.~1032.

Loa Spittler . For Rant. Evans
Mcilort,
114 441 IP2,
"ory' . •. BR I LRI OR I k11c'-d
f-f
wtlh dlthwllhlt' I lllove no
rohlg.,.1or. 1 belh. Colllnglano,

185 Graanbrlo r Ori\le , 7110 MILe

Past Odd
Brentwood

WV,

·Yifl!rtgl.
For Rtnl: Galllpollt Ft"1
acroet from Bull School. Two

1991.

BORN LOSER

cor~•h cloln, .... root,
h ,200, 11,uuu "'ltlt, new tlrtt.

ntwlr

Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday edltlon • 2:00

November

Autos for Sale

1111

3br, 2 llory With Blllmenl 1
Ga~a In Town, 1350/mo. Plus ~ Mobile Home Lot:, CIOII
DIP,oilt, Rtflrwnc:11 Required, To Rl. 11, ~nlY Wtter,
Anllabla,
Blcurtty . Ughle:
11~7.
Prlvale. 114-245-aaaa.
4 BR, 1 ·:112~th 1 _ c:entrtl gu
hMI,
remodllld. AVII'- ·
able Doc, 11. S32~mo. 1 mo. - - - - - - - - ucurtty clapotlt. 1921 North

ALL Yard Sales Must Be Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.

1991

..,000. 114-441-0'7f1.
•
1181 ·Oldt Cut&amp;lll SupreMe,

·-·111'/1, .

Ga ll ipolis
&amp; VIcinity

7,

Cl)l'mant-FNm
•• ~ ... (1 :001
(J) UnCier Fire Thll program
rec:tMIII mljOr 1IIWI
1torle1, locuelng on 1ha
starlet bohlnd th8 holdHnea,
rn a.uamiiU blend with
IC1UIII0011Q8 ollhe eventl.

39 Strainar

40 Chemical
meaaure

45 Yale sludent ·
46 legal matte r

48 Bulllight
cheer

(0:301
Ill D . - Landing

Sumner blttlel· wlta 10 abtlln
lhl rlgllta 10 1ht 1(diJ ~

ii.FJ

!Ill 7GG Clul1 W1th Pit
Flab 11011
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Page-14-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-:Middleport, Ohio

Cincinnati area voters approve term limi,ts,
CINCINNATI (AP) - Voters
approved a term limit proposal that
could force retirement of four vet·
eran City C_ouncil members, but
opponents said they may challenge
the amendment in coon.
With 99 percent of lhe ballots
counted Tuesday, -the proposal to
limit council members to four consecutive two-year terms was
approved 53,104 to 36,576, or 59.2
percent to 40.8 percent, according
to _unofficial figures from the
Hamilton County Board of Elections.
The proposal was championed
by Nick Vehr, ·a ·Republican
appointed to council last year.
Democratic members called it a
blatant effort to oust pemocrats

who have been on council a number of years.
The first to be affected would be
Peter Strauss, David Mann and
John Mirliseiia - Democrats who
were ~lected to a fourth term but
now are ineligible to run in 1993
- and independent Guy Gucken·
berger.
"It makes no sense," said

Strauss. "!guess the whole world's
a beer commercial now - why ask

Guy,' and at the same time; they
were saying, 'We want tenn hm1ta·
tion, "' Guckenberger said. "I just
don· t l!llJ!ers!afl4 it." .
Timothy Burke, chainnan of the
Cincinnati Democratic Committee,
questioned the legality of the
amendment to the city's charter.
"There's going to be a hard
look at challenging the legality of

-an amendment that is retroactive lOth.
and effects people who are already
He was the only incumbent not
in office," Burke said. "They are re-elected. Roxanne Qualls, a con·
already on council and should be sumer activist who heads the Ohio·
exempt.''
Citizen Action office in Cincinnati,
Although Vehr's tenn limit plan edged him out.
was approved, his campaign for his
Voters also passed a competing
first full term failed. The top nine proposal by Mann that would allow
vote-getters among the 26 candidates were elected; Vehr carne in

an unlimited number of terms. That
vote was 47,591, or 55.8 percent, to
37,674, or44.2 percent.
· Although 'both issues won
majority approval, the _city's top
legal officer sa1d the 1ssue.that
received the highest vote total
would take effect. ·

Ohio Lottery

N().l2 Texas
A&amp;Mromps .

· Pick 3: 278
Pick 4:7192

Cards: K·H, A-C,
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Page 4 ·

Clear tonight Low In 20s.

Sunny Satvrday.

•

~ why?"

Guckenberger, who has served
on council since 1971, also would
be forced to sit out four years
before he would be eligible to run
again.
"All during the campaign, pea·
pie were telling me, 'We love }IOU,

at

BERKtiNI . . ,·
.

'

RECLINER SALE·

Ylcquisltions

Vol. 42, No. 132

Copyrighted 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, November 8, 1991

Holiday Sale!

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~~--~----------t

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
ings Co. iii Pomeroy.
· ty; Barbara McKinniss for her conSentinel News Staff
He spoke of his father's success tributions as a volunteer, of WellTwelve individuals from South· in the banking business, of his ston; Eric Miller of Saw Miller, _
eastern Ohio communities credited community service to the youth of Inc. a logging industry which has
· with contributing significantly to the county, of his dedication to the made significant contribution to the
the economic growth and develop· development of lhe Meigs Library economic growth of Logan and
ment in their respective communi· where he was a long-time member, Hocking Co.
tics were honored Thursday night and of his church and family con·
Mary Davis,' Nelsonville, for
by the Southeastern Ohio Region al ccrns and devotion . Other family ctintributions to the social and ceoCouncil.
members, including the honoree's nomic development of Nelsonville
The 23rd annual SEORC ban- two other sons, Tom and Paul, and publication of "Nelsonville in
··quet honoring the 1991 "Persons of were introduced.
Picture"; Dale Neal, Raben Willis
the Year" was held at the Ohio
"Person of the Year" honored and Lloyd White, Jackson Coumy
University Inn in Athens. Carl Dal- from Gallia _County was Charles I. Commissioners for their leadership
bcrg, active with the Council for Atkins, Jr., chief executive office in economic development; J;d
many years, introduced the hon- and president of the Holzer Mcdi· Wolfe and Steve McGill of Nico
orees, and P.omeroy. Attorney cal Center.
Fibers, Inc. of Shawnee for their
Bernard Fultz was master of cere·
Ron McDade in his intreduction economic boost to the area through
monies for the presentations.
of Atkins, described him as a lead· the business, and for donqting and
From Meigs County the honoree cr not only jn health care services developing a community park.
was the late Theodore T_ Reed, Jr. but in community service through
Emmett Conway, Sr., of Vinton
His wife, Nancy, accepted the the numerous organizations in County for his r.cscarch,-job dcvel·
plaque after his sorr;-Bruce, spoke . which he is involved. ·
opmcnt and community leadership;
on the business, civic and commu·
Atkins was nominated for the Dr. Clive C. Veri, Scioto County,
nity contributions of his father.
award by the Gallipolis Chamber for h1s development of and contriBruce Reed who serves on the of Commerce.
bution to Shawnee State UniversiSoutheastern Ohio Re~ional Coun·
Other honorees were Thomas J. ty; and B. T. Grover, JL, Athens
cil as a Meigs County s rcprcsenta· Bellville, of the Bellville Mining for his leadership in bank develop:
tive, related his father 's accom- -c o .. for economic development in ment an~ contributions to cduca·
plishments during his 29 years as Lawrence County: Pat Clark for tion through work at Ohio Univerpresident and chief exccuuve offt· Bristol Village. the retirement com· sity.
ccr of the Farmers Bank and Sav- munity in Waverly for Pike Coun·

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~cquisitions
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MEIGS COUNTY'S PERSON OF THE
YEAR • A plaque in recognition of community
contributions to Theodore T. Reed, Jr., posthu·
mously named as Meigs County's Person -or the
Year for 1991, was accepted at Thursday night's
banquet of the Southeastern Ohio Regional

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SALE PRICED
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Council heid at the Ohio University Inn.
Bernard Fultz, left, master of ceremonies made
the presentation to Mrs. Reed following remarks
on the recipient's accomplishments and a per·
sonal tribute by his son, Bruce Reed, right.

Bush foresees brighter economy

'Addison man dies in blaze
An Addison man died Thursday
night as the result of a fire that also
destroyed his one-story frame
horne on Blazer Road.
Floyd Blazer, 75, was found
dead in the living room of the
home where he resided alone,
according to Gallipolis Volunteer
Fire Depanment firefighters.
Gallia County Coroner Dr.
Edward Berldch said Friday morning that the cause of death was list·
cd as incineration.

101 GEHlS
19 OlAMON CLUSlER

.

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honored by SEORC

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Thursday, November 7; 1991

A ftre department repon listed a
defective Oue) rt,' ~ wood stove as
the probable cause·of the-fire7-Fire-fightcrs said that Blazer's lied was
~ct up in the living room next to Lhc
stove.
According to the report, the fire
was called in by phone at 8:4 7 p.m.
and the fire department arrived on
the scene at 9 p.m. Crews remained
on scene until about 12:28 a.' m. Fri·
day.

ROME (AP)- President Bush session at the Vatican with the Democrats say those tax cuts will
The 28 firefighters who predicted today that lower interest pope. Bush was leaving Rome for benefit principally the very
responded to the blaze used 12,500 . rates would soon " kick in and The Hague, where he was meeting wealthy.
gallons-of-wate~ in putting ouHhe , -&amp;ti!"lllale..lh~ econQIIl;Y •..:..~id--willi.Jeade~uropean GamBush said.,nis adminiscration- fire.
he d cons1der a tax cut tf 11 could munity. •
wants to complete an emergency
The report indicated that th'e be accomplished without increas·
Bush said the NATO talks had food aid deal with th'e Soviet
house, with an estimated value of ing. deficit.
been a " landmark event" that rcaf· Union, but it' s being held up by
$30,000, was totally destroyed in
At a news conference after firmed the alliance as the "guaran· problems in gltarantecing the credthe fire. A 1974 AMC station mcehng w1th fore1gn leaders, Bush tor of the security and the stability its involved.
wagon was also destroyed.
said he":~ "not interested in high- of Europe."
Bush also said he thinks his
Funeral arrangements arc being er taxes, rcfemng to Democratic
The president spoke onc .day administration will have a proposal
handled by Waugh-Halley-Wood proposals wh1ch would ra1se taxes after the chairman of the House's· to overhaul the nation's health
Funeral Home in Gallipolis.
on the natio~·s wealthiest taxiX'yers tax-writing committee, Rep. Dan insurance system before the 1992
:-vhtlc prov1d~ng cuts for m1ddlc- Rostenkowski, proposed a tax cut cl~!i~ns ..
mcome Amencans.
for the middle class that would be
I d hke to have a comprehenBush said he would take a look financed in in part by levying new sive health care plan that I can
at the DemQS;ratic proposals-to cut taxes on the-well-to-do. -- - ·- vigiorously take to the American
" I'd love to be in a position to people,'_' Bus~ said.
totally provisional," she said. "It taxes to bring an end to the stub·
pledge to every American, whatevThe ISSue !S. ex~ted to be one
takes much more th~ two days to born recessiOn .
Bush
also
expressed
sadness
at
er
a
tax
cut
"
Bush
said.
But
he
of
the
most VISible m the prcs•denamve at any conclusiOn that is of
professional basketball star Magic said " I don't want to do that when tial and congressional campaigns
any value."
Johnson's stunning announccmem 1 don't sec how 1 can do that and next year. Sen. Harris Wofford, Don Thursday _that he is positive for keep it within the budget."
Pa., _scored _an upset victory in a
Bu sh is firmly on record in spec1al. clccuon ~Tuesday after a
the AIDS v1.~us ,and will rct1r.~
1mmedwtely. He sa hero to me,
fa vor of a cut in capital gains taxes campa1gn based tn large measure
sa1d Bush.
- the levied on investment profits on a call for nationwide health
The news conference came after - to stimulate I he econom y. insurance.
the close of NATO meetings and a

Max-well -body arrives ill-Jerusalem -·
JERUSALEM (AP) - The
body of British publishing magnate
_.Ro_bert Maxwell was flown to
Jerusalem today for burial, but
questions re'mained about his death.
His widow cast doubt on an autopsy concluding he died of a heart
attack.
Maxwell's body arrived on a
private jet from the Canary Islands,
a Spanish island group off the
Moroccan coast where the 68-yearold Jewish publisher's body was
found Tuesday after disappearing
from his yacht.
His widow, Elisabeth_Maxwcll,
left the plane with her head down,
wearing dark glasses. and reporters
were kept away.
She was accompanied by her
eldest son, Philip, who will deliver

part of the eulogy at his father's
funeral Sjj~day, according to the
lsraelt d'ihly Maanv, m wh1ch
Maxwell hada,majority share.
The coffin was covered by a
wh1 te Jewish prayer shawl with
black stripes. Maxwell ran a troubled S2 billion media empire that
included New York's Daily News,
London's Daily Mirror and other
British tabloids.
Spanish authorities have
auributed Maxwell's death to bean
failure.
By KATIE CROW
But before leaving Las Palmas
Sentinel
Cor.respondent
in the _ Canary- lslands, Mrs .
Max well suggested the .autop~y
Syracuse Village Council com·
mended Mayor Ebcr Pickens for
performed on the publisher could
his many years of service to the vii·
not be regarded as the fjnal word
on his cause of death.
~ !age when the council met in rcgu·
lar session on Thursday. Mayor
"Unfortunately, the autopsy is
Pickens, who chose not to seck re·
election in Tuesday's General Elcc·
tion , has served the village since
1972.
He was elected to the village
council in 1972, and was appointed
Meigs County Common Pleas Coun Judge Fred W. Crow Ill has
to the mayor's office in 1978, a
announced that his office, as well as other counhouse offices, will
position that he has held since that
be closed on Monday in observance of Veterans Day.
time, making 19 years of service to
All offices will re-open for business on Tuesday at 8:30a.m.
the village.
Other business
In other business, council gave a
Three Gallla County officeholders have been named in a Meigs
third and final reading to a gas rate
ordinance, which increases gas
County Common Pleas Court judgment suit.
.
rates a total of nine percent over a
Landis K. Wandling of Gallipolis has filed a $2,030,000 lawsuit
two-year
period.
against Frank A. Crcmearts, Gallia County Sheriff Dennis R. Salisbury, Chief Deputy Carlos P. Wood and Common Pleas Judge DonCouncil also gave three read·
ings, under emergency measure, to
ald Andrew Cox, alleging that the four lOOk illegal possession of a
mobile office trailer located in Meigs County.
.
an ordinance permitting Lhc State
That trailer, according to the complaint; is valued at S10,000.
of Ohio to maintain signs and to
take necessary snow and icc con·
trol measures on State Route 124 in
A Meigs County man was taken to the hospitlll after allegedly
Syracuse ..
being beaten in an incident on Thursday noght.
Mayor Pickens advised that the
According to Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Tom Stobartll was
fire department is presently in the
taken to a pany on Sharon Hollow Road by two friends. When he
process of seeking prices for a
got out of the vehicle, another person approached him and started
smoke ejector, anqthat the depan·
beating him. ,
ment has applied through the Ohio
Stoban reported that he was kicked in the head&gt; and ribs•several
Department of Natural R:csourccs
tim'es. He was taken by private car to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
for a 50/50 grant for the purchase
Names of the assailants arc being withheld until charges arc
of fire masks.
filed.
It was reported that a slip on
Bridgeman Street near the Jim Hill
residence has been repaired. Hriw·
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports that26 ~ear old
.ever, additional limestone is needDavid Shannon Browning has been returned from the Vtrgm1a State
ed for the area.
Pcl(a) Institution to face a Meig§. County indictment.
Attending the meeting were :
According to Soulsby, that ~ndictmcnt stems from a February,
council members Jack Williams ,
199P breaking and entering.
.
Kenny Buckley, Dennis Wolfe, Jim
Browning, who gives his address as Beckley, W.Va., IS expected
Pape, and Katie Crow, Mayor Ebcr
·
Continued on page 3
Pickens, and Clerk/Treasurer Janicc Lawson. ,
·

,.....---Local briefs-__,
Courthouse to close Monday

Man .files suit in Meigs Court

Meigs man beaten in incident

West Virginian to be arraigned

Council
•
prazses
Pickens

,. , ~Smith criticizes prosecutor at rape
trialjl{dge restricts ·access to jurors
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla .
(AP) - -William Kennedy Smith
criticized the prosecutor at his rape
trial for calling a potential juror
" borderline incompetent," saying
he considered the lawyer incompetent.
Smi th, speaking with reporters
dur ing a break in jury selecti o_n
Thursday , also ridiculed prosecutor
Moira Lasch' s complaints th at
defense lawyers had begun to refer
to him as Will Smith in court rather
than William or Willie.
"My name is Jerry Rivers,-" he
quipped. TV host Geraldo Rivera
has been accused of using the name
in his youth to mask his Hispanic
~critage; Rivera denies it.
Today, lawyers were to begin
their second week of intervi ewing
potential jurors. The 31-year-old
nephew of Sen. Ted Kennedy has
pleaded innocent to charges of rap·
ing a 30-ycar-old at his family 's
Palm Beach estate last March.
Judge Mary Lupo allowed tcle·
vison coverage of the selection pro·
cess to continue but went to greater
lengths to shield potential jurors'

identiti es from reporters. Smith's
defense wanted cameras barred. .
The judge took action after jury
candidate Florence Orbach's salty
answers to questions about th e
Kcnnedys on Tuesday rocked the
courtroom with laughter- and
cuptured the attention of reporters.
Ms, Lasch described Mrs.
Orbac h, 78, as "borderline incom·
petcnt" and asked that Ms. Lupo
di smi ss her from the jury pool,
which the judge did Wednesday.
Smith, a medical school gradu·
ate, said he 's worked with senior
cilizens in ho spitals and found
"anybody of any age can be
incompetent."
"The way I feel today --- I'd say
Moira is.walking proof of it," he
said .
As he left the courthouse later
Thursday, Smith tried to walk
quickly past reporters and joked
that his lunchtime comment had
been off the record.
"My mother told me not to say
anything bad about anybody, so if
she finds out I said that I'll get in
trouble," he said.
.

Ms. Lasch, meanwhile, told Ms.
Lupo that while defense attcrney
Roy Black has complained that
publi city is threatening Smith ' s·
right to a fair trial, "he 's doins
everything he can to pander to it."
" Mr. Black and his entourage
have press conferences at noon and
at night," she said.
Ms. Lupo, in allowing the covcragc to continue, began refraining
from calling potential jurors by
· name and removed pages with their
names on th em before releasing
questionnaires they had filled out.
. Th,e judge said she took the
uction after Mrs. Orbach called her
Wednesday to complain she wa-s
be sieged by media calls from
around the country and was offered
" a gift" by the tabloid television
show HardCopr.
Hard Copy 1ssued ,o statement
Thursday, saying it requested an
interview with Mrs. Orbach but
that she declined.
"At no time did Hard Copy
offer money, gifts or anr othe'r
incentive to Mrs. Orbach," 1t said.
.

Western allies affirm U. S.leadership ·
ROME (AP) - Western allies
today affirmed U.S . leadership of
NATO and urged strong central
control of Soviet nuclear weapons.
At a watershed summi~ they built a
framework for a "stable and last·
ing peace."
Heralding a new era in the 42·
year-old North Atlantic Treaty
Organization, President Bush and
the leaders of the IS other NATO
nations reached out to the Soviet

Union and other old adversaries in Soviet-trained military forces and'
Eastern Europe with the promise of converting defense plants into
" a new era of pannership."
civilian uses.
Today's closing sess1on offered
The summit closed by reafnrm.
closer ties with NATO- but not ing the traditional U.S. participamembership- for the members of tion in NATO. "Our alli1nce
_the now disbanded Warsaw Pact which provides the essential,
and the newly independent Baltic Atlantic link as demonstrated by
states of Lithuania, Estonia and the' significant presence of Nonh
Latvia.
American forces in Ewope, retains
The closer ties could provide its enduring value," a closing lillie' ·
Wes.tcrn expertise in controlling mcnt said.

trans:

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