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The
Daily
Sentinel
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By TlieBend

Pag~1o

~:

Ann
Landers

.we

Receives honor

"That translates into about
Ms. Darrah-Steck said public
1,200 homeless family members and private funding has p.rovided •
- more than $110,000 for the centers,
and a lot of children," she said.
. . More .l.hil.n J~o y~ar~ ago, but it will cost $150,000 a year to
Action for Children and the Com- operate them. About 70 pei'Cent of -.
munity' Shelter Board develo~ a that ;unoum will poy the salaries of
plan for providing child care for lhe four staff members.
homeless.
''We had hoped to open centers ·
in five shelters, butJ:m.happy .that
we have two going," Ms. Bennett
said. "From there, we can work on
expanding.':
Action for Children is a nonThe Tuppers Plains VFW Post
profit group·that provides referrals
No,
9053 Ladies Auxiliary will
for parents and consultation for
have a bake sale and flea market on
day-care centers.
Saturday
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at
The two centers for homeless
the
post
home
in Tuppers P!ai,ns. . .
youngsters will be licensed to serve
Tables
may
be rented for crafts
22 children each .
and beans and cornbread will be
served.-·
All donations and money will be
u~cd to buy gifts for veterans at the
Chillicothe Hospital.
The Rejoicing Life Christian
School has announced ·its honor · - - - - - - - - - - roll for the most recent grading
Abs~iute separation
period.
KINDERGARTEN· Timothy
1962 case of Engel vs. Vitale is
Leamond, Brandon Williams, and oneThe
of the Supreme Court's landmark
Jeremy Yeauger; FIRST GRADE • decisions. The court ruled that public
Cassie Braun, Jillian Cochran, and school officials could not require puJoshua Eagle; THIRD GRADE • pils to recite a state-composed prayer
Chasidi Biggs, Erin Harris, Isaiah at the start of each school clay, even if
Kebler, Rose Schrock; FOURTH the prayer was non-denominational
GRADE • Joseph McCall; .FIFrH anil pupils who so desired could be exGRADE • Rachel Forbes, Jacque cused from reciting It, because such
official state sanction of religious ut·
H~ll. Rachel Pangio ; SIXTH
GRADE • Tara Davis and Aaron terances was an unconstitutional attempt to establish religion.
Pangia.

__Cards:

PageS

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. Bake.sale.,flg_a__
market slated
'

Low tonight ln mld-JOs.
Wednesday, sunny. HIRb In mid·
. SOs. .
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--· Vol. 42; No. 134
Copyrighted 1991
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POMEROY • The Ohio Eta Phi
POMEROY . A ceramic lighted
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, winter scene class will be offered at
will observe its Preferential Tea on the Meigs County Public Library in
Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at the home Pomeroy on Wednesday at 10 a.m.
of Susan Clark. Members bring a The cost is $13.50 and is payable
potluck dish. Park and ri.de at the upon registration.
Pomeroy Fire Station at 6: 15 p.m.
MONDAY
POMEROY • The Meigs Local
RACINE • Racine Baptist
RACINE · Racine Lodge No. Chapter I parent meeting will be
Church will hold revival through 461 F and AM will hold a regular held Wednesday at 6 p.m. at SalisSunday at 7 p.m. nigh~y. Speakers mi}Cling on Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. bury Elementary. An overview of
include Earl Shuler, Charlds Norris, with work in the M.M. deg ree. the Chapter I program will be given
Rick Harris. Steve Deaver invites Election of officers will also be by Wendy Halar, director. Everythe public. Special music by Kings held. All members arc urged to one IS welcome.
Harmony Quartet, Southern Hill attend.
MIDDLEPORT . The MiddleGospel, Marty Short and LuAnn
White ,. Kyger Valley Quartet,
port
Literary Club will meet
POMEROY · Revival at the
God's Little Lambs, Living Word Calvary Pilgrim Chapel, Route Wednesday at I :30 p.m. ~~ the
and Faith Harmony Boys.
143 , Pomeroy will be held Tuesday home of Mrs. Wilson Carpenter.
through Nov. 17 at7:30 p:m. night·
SHADE • Bedford Township ly . Dana Walker, Rockwood,
Trustees meet at the town hall at 7 Tenn .. will be the evangelist. There
p.m. on Monday for the regular will be special si nging nightly .
monthly session.
Rev. Victor Roush invites the public.
POMEROY • The Disabled
American Veterans and Ladies
MIDDLEPORT - The MiddleAuxiliary will meet Monday at 1 port Elemen tary PTO will meet
p.m. at the hall, 124 Butternut Tuesday at? p.m. Steve Dixon will
Avenue in Pomeroy.
be the speaker. The topic of discussion will be "Drugs Arc An IlluPOMEROY • The Pomeroy Ele- sion.'' All p_arents are urged to
mentary PTO will meet Monday at attend.
1 p.m. in the school gym. Debbie
Brennan will be the speaker. Sixth
TUPPERS PLA INS • The
grades will have the program. The Meigs County Chamber of Com public is invited to auend.
merce will meet Tuesday at 6:30
p.m. at the VFW Hall in Tuppers
REEDSVILLE · The Riverview Plains . The meeting is hosted by
PTO will meet Monday at 6:30 Roger Hawk of Hawk's 76 and
p.m. at the school. Open house will Fred Goebel. John Redovian,
be observed and there will be a grants coordinator for the Meigs
shon program presented by grades County School System, will be the
1-4. Babysitting and a movie will gues t speaker. Make rese rvati ons
be providC!l.
by calling 992-5005.
POMEROY • A five-week ham
radio class will begin Monday at
6:30 p.m. in Pomeroy. For further
information call 992-6857 after 5
p.m. Money ror books mu st be
turned in at the meeting.

LONG BOnOM - The Flame
Fellowship Chapter will meet
Tuesday at lhe Faith Full Gospel
Church in Lo'ng Bottom. Hazel
Life, Little Hocking, will be the
speaker. The public is invited to
attend.

REEDS.VILLE · The Eastern
Athletic Boosters will nieet MonWEDNESDAY
day at lhe high school cafeteria at
POMEROY • The Pomeroy
7:30 p.m. Everyone is urged to Merchants Association will meet
attend.
Wednesday at noon in the conference room at Bank One. All memTUESDAY
bers arc urged to attend.

f

Maerker retires

Julie Randolph , member of
Lead' Tcachcl'$, rave a talk on that
program at the recen t meeting of
Alpha Omicron Chapter, Delta
Kappa Gamma, held at the Racine
United Mclhodist Church. She was
introduced by Carolyn Snowden,
chairman of the research committee.
Ms . Randolph stated Lead
Teachers is a three-year program of
.work on matb and science teaching
which is sponsored by tl)e National
Science Foundation, Ohio Department of Education, Ohio Univcrsil¥ and loCal schools. Teachers participating must make a three-year
commitment in learning and planning . Their math studies have
included problem solving, number
sense, data collection and hands-on,
malcrials.
Lee Lee of the music committee
introduced the soloist, Jennifer
Walker, Racine first grader. Ms.
Walker's songs included "Let
There Be Peace on Earth," "l)o Re
Me,'' "God Bless America;" and

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W. Dean Scholl, left, wao; the guesi speaker
at a Veterans .Day service held on MQnday at the
Meigs County Courthouse in Pomeroy. Scholl, a
past-National Executive Committ~eman for the
Ohio American Legion, stated that the purpose
or observing Veterans Day is best described with
the phrase, "Born of war but dedicated to
peace." We are not here to gloriry war, but to
detest it, like those who have lost loved ones
detest it," Scholl said. "However, we must not
conruse war with the warrior." Scholl' continued
his speech by encouraging his feilow veterans to
become involved in the community and in veterans organizations. Operation Dessert Storm was
not rorgotten in yesterday's observance, with

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Study shows 30,000 Ohio veterans homeless in past year
.
'
COLlJMBus, ·Ohio (AP)- A sur.v.i;al of tho~· wh'o have put mo~tly to national fi~ding;. But
new study shows that up to 30,000 ·their lives on the line for our coun- Faith indicated they apply proporOhio veterans are among 500,000 try," Faith said.
tionately in Ohio.
nationwide who were homeless at
He said that on Oct. I, General
Among lhe findings:
some poin~ in the laS\ year.
.
Assistance for many veterans was ,
-'About'80 percent of homeless

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less lhan a year.
_:Most are unemployed but
have held jobs i~ the past year.
-Many suffer from §.tress that
leads to drug or alcohol abuse.
-Federal programs for the
homeles·s receive 0.10 perc ent of
the budget of the Department of
Vcte!Jill~ Affairs.

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AMutllmedla Inc. Newspaper ·

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Drew Webster Post'Commander John Weeks
commending .the leadership and personnel who .
served in t he Guir War. "We won the war
because or brilliant generalship and 'Made in
America' technology," Weeks said. Members or
the D~ew ' Webster ~ost #39 American Legion
orgamzed the serv1ce, although members or
Feeney Benn1ett Post #128 or Middleport, Racine
Post #602 and Tuppers Plains VFW also participated (below). Other speakers included Frank
Vaug_han, Wh!J introduced Scholl, and Mary
MartiD of Drew Webster Post's Auxiliary. Marlin quoted f•·om the poem,· In Flander's Field.
"Let each of us remember the high price paid
ror the freedom we each enjoy and that we take
ror granted eaeh day," Martin said.

,

GRADE · Joseph Brown, Matthew
Grubb, Kevin Keaton, Joshua Kehl,
Wesley Shafer, Danielle Spencer,
overall; FOURTH GRADE •
Megan Avis, Matthew Bissell,
Matthew Caldwell, Jeremy
Gillilan, Steven Weeks, overall;
Matthew Boyles, Leah 53l)ders and
Carrie Sheets, academic; FIFTH
GRADE • Jessica Bartram, Jessica
Brannon, Stephanie Evans, }Qshua
Hager, Sarah Householder, Heather
Roc_khold, Ali~ha . Rojas, J.T.
Wh•te, Ann W1ggms, overall;
Tommy Coram, Sari Putman, and
Steven Whulock, acad~m1c;
SIXTH GRADE • B11lcna
Buchanan, Christopher Buchanan,
Michelle Caldwell, Jeremy Kchl,
Jocy Wccks, overall.

•

Pomeroy-Mltldleport, O·hlo, Tuesday, November 12, 1991

..---Vete.r(ins Day observed MondaY---

RLCS honor roll

Eastern Local School District Kelli Bailey, Stefani Bearhs, Billc:e
recently announced its honor rolls Pooler, all A's; Bmndon Buckley
for the first six-week grading peri- and Samuel Pulver, overall; Jamie
ed.
Drake,acfldcmic.
Honor roll students at Chester
Recognized at Riverview Ele·
Elementary School were: THIRD mentary School were: THIRD
GRADE· Juli Bailey, Justin Brew- GRADE . Amber Baker, Chris
er, Kristen Chevalier, Josh Clark, Barringer, Brandon Browning ,
Cinda Clifford, Wes Crow, Brandy Bridget Browning, Amber Church,
Smith, overall; John Cooke and Jeffrey Circle, Nathan Marcinko,
Josh lhle, aca~emic~FOURTH -· Chrissy Smith, Donnie Smith,
GRADE· Molly Heines, all A's; · overall; Renee Barringer, Jessica
Joshua Broderick and J~hua Will, Boso, and Kelly Koffel, academic;
overall; Jessica Grueser, Chris FOURTH GRADE. Jason Barber
Krawsczyn, Jessica Pore, Lea~ and Cassie Rose,.academic:..EIElHWell, academic; FIFI'H GRADE· GRADE • Christa Circle, overall:
Valerie KarT and Aaron Will, over. and Heath Proffitt, academic.
all; Beau Bailey and Jessica MarThose students on the honor roll
cum, academic; SIXTH GRADE • at Tuppers Plains were: THIRD

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Eastern Local announces honor rolls
Community Calendar items
appear two days berOie an event
and the day or that event. Hems
must be received well in advance
to assure publication in the calendar.

3-C,

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first homeless day -care-centers

COLUMBUS (AP)- ' Chil·
drcn's advocates aren't sure how
ANN LANDERS
many 'children
homeless in cen"1181, Los An1elea
-tral
Ohio,.,buh
said
.the. growing
'llm!OSyn&lt;I-·Md
Creators Syndlcale.''
number of such youngsters dictates
./'
a need for a place they can go for
daytime care.
·
Members of the Columbu s
YWCA staff said tl!ey plan to open
husband insists that tny mother will the state.'s.first centers for homeless
i:onfu5e our child 6Y. s~!iing ·or children next month.
singing to him in German. Is he
Diane Darrah-Stock, resource
right or wrong? •• SERIOUS specialist for lhe. project,.said chil- ·
DISAGREEMENT IN ILLINOIS
dren arc the fastest growing segDEAR SERIOUS: He's wrong. . ment of the homeless population.
Children ·who grow up in bilingual
The two centers will be housed
families do not become confused. in two shelters for the homeless
Speaking in two langu·ages is and will .provide day care for chilnatural for lhem. In today's world, dren who are 6 years old or
the child who is bilingual or younger, she said.
"Ideally, this will allow parents
trilingual has a big advantage.
· to be out iob hunting or looking Tor
Encourage it.
Gem of the Day: People worry housing,' Ms. Darrah-Stock said.
Diane Bennett, executive direcabout two things these days .. one
ior
of Action for Children, said a
is that things may never get back to
nonnal, the otlicr tr that they are !990 report estimated that her
agency had served 400 homeless
already nonnal.
Is life passing you by? Want to · families in Columbus in the first
improve your social skills? Write for six months of 1989.
Ann Landers' new booklet, ''How ro
'
Make Friends and Stop Being
Lonely." Send a self-addressed, long,
business-size envelope and a check
Jed Hariung, son of Mr. and
or money order for $4.15 (this Mrs. Edgar Jay Hartung, Cleveincludes postage and handling) to: land, a junior at Ohio University,
Friends, c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box was honored reeendy for his work
11562, Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (In in the engineering program. He was
CaMda, send $5.05.)
ode of five students to receive this
honor.

Pick 3:336
Pick
1

·Vikings

____Th~- cour~~sy fl}les ofb_lincJv~s~os_ ·- Columbus__YWCA ~o~o,_~~s~~-'.:::_s____;,__~
Dear Ann Landtrs: A while back help.
you printed a leuer from a blind . 6. Don't avoid words like "sec." I
woman describing how difficult it use them, too. I'm always glad to
can be when strangers approach her. sec you.
I read something in a brochure
1. Please don 't talk about the
reccn~y by lhe National Federation
"wonderful com pensations" of
of the Blind and thought your blindness. My seose of s·meU, touch
readers might find .. it informative. I and hearing didn't improve · when
hope you agree. · · FOLSOM, I became blind. I rely on them
CAUF.
inore and therefore may get more ·
DEAR FOLSOM: I do, indeed. information through !hose senses,
Thanks for sending it on.
butlhat's'all.
. 8. If I'm your house guest, sltow
The Couii.esy Rules
me lhe balhroom, closet, cfiesser,
of Blindness
window and the light switch. I like
Whc.n you meet me. don't be ill •1 to know whether the lights are on,
ease. It will help bolh of us if you so please tell me.
remember these simple poinL~ of
9. I'll discuss blindness with you
courtesy:
and answer all your questions if
I. I'm an ordinary person, just you're curious, but it's an old story
blind. You don't nero to raise your to me. I have as many other intervoice or address me a' if I were a ests as you do.
child. Don't ask my spouse if I want
10. Don't think of me as just "a
"cream in the coffee" .. ask me.
blind person." I'm just aperson who
2. I m4y usc a long white cane or happens to be blind.
dog guide to walk independently, or
In all 50 states tl1c law requires
I may ask to take you r arm. Let me drivers to yield the right of way
decide. And please don't grab my when they sec my white cane. Only
arm. Let me take yours. I'll ICcep' a the blind may carry white canes. You
half-step behind to anticipate curbs sec more bHnd persons today
and steps.
,
walking alone, not because there
3. I want to know who's in the are more of us, but because more of
room with me. Speak to me when us have learned to make our own
you enter. And please introduce me way. ,1
to the others. Include the children
Dear Ann Landers: My husband
and tell me if there's a cat or dog.
and I have a difference of opinion
4. A partially opened door to a regarding lhe upbringing of our 13room, cabinet or car can be a hazard month,old child. Here's the problem:
to me. Please be considerate.
My mother, who temporarily live,s
5. I have no trOuble wilh ordinary with us, was born in Germany but
table skills and can man~e with no speaks impeccable English. My

Ohio Lottety ·

Bears
defeat

Monday, November 11 , 1991

B··.·.o. n·u. ses.,·fr.ae·. ·. _.
parkiQg top
council agenda
~

By CHARLF.NE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Starr
Christmas bonuses for employecs and free parking for holiday
shoppers were among the topics
discussed by Middleport Village
Council at Monday night's meeting.
Coun&amp;il gave a first reading to
an ordinance Qn Christmas bonuses-$300 for full-time employees
and $150 for part-time employees
who have been working for ihe vii · lage· at least six months prior to
Dec. 15.
It was reponed lhat the parking
meters will be "freed" Saturday for
the remainder of !991.
Mayor Fred Hoffman reported
that the annual Christmas parade
has been scheduled by the Middle· port Community Association for
Monday, Dec. 2, at 6 p.m. Bob
Gilmore will be the parade chairman.
Dewey Honon and Judy Crooks
were appointed to the Volunteer
Firefighters Dependency Board. It
was announced that-the annual
honorary ftremen's dinner has been
set for 6 p.m. on Dec. 5 at the firehouse.

Mayor's report for October
showed receipts of $4,005.
Halloween activities in the village were discussed with lhe mayor
commending Gilmore and other
volunteers who assisted in staging·
the party at the marina area. It was
noted that there were some probferns in the village over Halloween~
and that eggs had been thrown at
· some residences and vehicles.
Ways to contrOl such activity next
year were discussed.
Mayor Hoffman expressed
appreciation for support of the
· three mill levy renewal in the geoera! election. He noted that Don
Vaughan, Middlepon scout master,
had asked for suggestions as to a
community improvement project
for the scouts.
_ ..
Work at Hartinger.Park on the
ball diamonds and the covering of
the mini-golf course were noted.
Attending were Mayor Hoff.
man, Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck,
and co un cil members, Horton ,
James Clatworthy, Crooks, Paul
Gcrard,-Wiltiam· Waltets, and-Jack
Satterfield . Prayer to open the
meeting was given by AI Hanson,
pastor of the Middlepon Church of
Christ.

·Parades, ceremonies.
m.ark Veteralt-s-.Pay

J.!l!LCS_ll!Date wao; mcluded m a reduced f~m about-$1J(kc-$-100·:n......,et.erans are high school graduates.
By The Associated Press
report released Monday by the month while they lost some of the11
-About 50 percent served in
Berkcle.y, Calif. , contains the
Thousands marched in parades names of 1,864 local soldiers who
National Coalition for the Home- medical benefits.
.abe Vietnam War.
or gathered at veterans hospitals, died in baWcs dating from World .
less.
The new state budget also cuts
-Most have been homeless for
Director Bill Faitb said the all of about 130,000 program recipold soldiers' homes, the Vietnam War I. It was the brainchild of
report shows the number of home- icnts, exeept for the disabled, to a
Memorial in Washington and else- Country Joe McDonald, the Navy
less ·veterans is .growing in Ohio maximum six monlhs of benefits a r----=-where as America honored its vetemn turned anti-war activist and
and elsewhere, including rural year.
heroes of wars past at Veterans folk singer.
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areas.
'
Many veterans will be cut off in
Day celebrations.
Using computer terminals availNeilher the state nor the federal April and will have to fend for
President Bush, who vi sited able at 10 locations, people may
Arlington National Cemetery in look up the names of loved ones or
government is adequately dealing themselves in soup kitchens and
No injuries were repotted, but a Racine woman's car suffered
Virginia on Mo.nday to place a type in their own thoughts &lt;in war.
wit!) veterans' needs, Faith said.
shelters, Faith said.
moderate daq&gt;age following a ont~-car accident on S.R. 124 in Rut·
wreath at th e Tomb of the ·· "We know tbat it will provide
''In fact, the recent state budget
. The General Assistance program
land
Township
Monday
afternoon
.
Unknowns, said America's victory solace and some form of closure
cuts. in the General Assistance pro- extends help mostly to individuals
According
..
to
a
report
from
lhe
Gallia-Meigs
Post
of
the
State
in
the Persian Gulf War had rekin- for many people who have friends
gram will simply make matters who do not qualify for other assisHighway
Patrol,
Sh,aron
S.
Pierce.
,
36,
was
westbound
on
S.R.
124,
died
a patriotism that was "good and relatives on the list," McDonworse for many of Ohio 's veter- tance, such as families that get Aid
ans,'' he said.
.
to Dependent Children.
Continued on page 3
forthe nation 's soul.".
· ,
ald said.
'
Faith and several members of
State offices were closed MenIn
New
York
City, 97 soldiers
Later, at a mcmonal scmcc at
an adjacent amphitheater, Bush who survived the Japanesc attack
veterans' organizations met with day. No one was available for comsaid: " On Ibis cold autumn day in on Pearl Habor were presented
reporters as communities through- menton the repon.
0
l
this hallowed place of honor, we medals, and soldiers from all wars
out the state held parades and other
Faith said the federal govern·
.
.
gather
to convey our nauon's grau- were honored with a parade.
events honoring veterans.
ment has only one program in
A
Middleport
man
was
entered
the
State
Str~l
res1dence
tude
for
those who risked their
"These gestures ~annot r.e~Iace Ohio. It is designed to help homeAmong those attending the
arraigned
on
a
felony
count
of
lhrough
a
~ust
floor
wmdow.
.
lives
for
the
land, the people and medal ceremony was Carol Ferdecent JObs and JOb trammg , less veterans suffering from mental
aggravated burglary on Monday, . Accord,tng to Story •. mvesuga- the ideals they loved."
affordable housing, access to treat- illness or substance abuse.
reira, whose father, Ensign
Elsewhere, the nation honored Theodore Nowosacki, was killed
ment. programs and public assi~The study, "Heroes Today, and other charges"are expected to !ton by the Pomeroy Pollee Depart·
ment has revealed that Sanford, its soldiers with spccchcs, awards when the battleship USS Arizona
tancc suffic1ent to meet the baste Homeless Tomorrow," was li"_l)ted be flled today.
Thomas E. Sanford, 38, is also ongmally from Henrietta , New ceremonies and even a computer- was destroyed by Japanese warexpected to be charged in connec- York,, ma.y be wanted on a parole izcd memorial .
planes Dec. 7, 194 I:
tion with the alleged rape of two v1olatton m New York.
The co mputer, unveiled in
Con tinued on page 3
teenaged girls in Pomeroy early on
Sunday morning. ·
.
As of March 31, t991
Sanford, 3~. was 41raigned in ,
Meigs County Court on Monday
Period of service for CL!rrent population
before Judge Patrick H. O'Brien.
He
is currently charged wilh aggraWorld War I
vated burglary, a felony of the f11st
Total Living Veterans in Ohio. 1,263.400
degree. .
- 3,100
While no rape charges were
filed
against Sanford on Monday,
World War II
Meigs County PrOsecuting Attor-~
ney Steven L. Story stated Monday
· afternoon that he anticipates such
charges being flled today, when the
Meigs County Courlhouse re-opens
following
the Veterans Day holiKorean Conflict
day. At press time on Tuesday, no
rape charge had been filed.
Sanford is being held in the
180,4001
~~~ei:gs County Jail, with,Judge
rien having set bond at
$100,000 cash. A preliminary hearVietnam Era·
in~ on Sanford's case was set for
Fnday .
. 3S2,100
According to ·a report frof!l the
Pomeroy Police Department, San••
ford was taken into custOdy at
Other"
approximately 4 a.m. on Sunday
morning after authorities were DOll·'
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fied
of the alleged rapes. Police
329,100
(
officials from Middleport and
Pomeroy were at the scene, as was
'l
.j
'Includes all veterans who served between August 5, 1964 and
.,
Meigs County Assistant Proseeut·
May 7, 1975.
ing Attorney Geor~e McCarthy. '
"'l~cludes all peacetime veterans who served post-Vietnam Era,
The alleged v1ctims, aged 13
between the Korean Conflict and Vietnam Era, and other peacetime.
and 14, were treated at Veterans
.
Memorial Hospital. One was transREMEMBERING VETERANS • Frank
Legion members, Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts
ported there by Pomeroy squad,
AmbrOfie, Burralo, N.Y., a World War ll veter·
marked veterans' graves with more than 6;000
'
while the other was taken by ·pri.an and '!'ember or local American Legion Post
nags prior to a memorial servl~e at the cemeSOURCE: U.!l.• Department of Veterans Affairs
vate vehicle.
·665; plants a nag In,the veterans section of Fortery. (AP)
It is believed that Sanford
,est Lawn Cemetery Monday morning. American
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Local briefs

Patrol probes one-car wreck

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E xpect more charges t be fil ed

Ohio Veteran .Population

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TueSday, November 12, 1991

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

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111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio _
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~Ml.A.Tt'EOIA.INC.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assislant Publisher/Conlroller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

AMEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Associa1ion.and ·
~eAn_t~ric!ID N~~~~r_l~ublisher As ~ciation.

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______ _ --~uayle- has-quietly ·e·sJablis h~d

LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less lhan 300
words long. Allleuers are subject 10 editing and must be signed wilh name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Leuers
should be in good taste. addressing issues, not przsonalities.

Letters to editor
Appreciates sup port

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My name is Sharon Hein Baker.
Back in 1979 my son, Tracy Hein,
had a kidney Jransplant after having had several other surgeries. The
people of Meigs County were giv·
ing and supportive both spiritually
and financially . I don't know what
we would have done without the
support of the wonderful people of
this county.
Now I come to you for that kind
of support for a very dear friend of
my family, Francis Thompson. He
lives on Ski Run Road in Coolville.
The ground that the Tuppers Plains
VFW building is setung on was.
donated by .him. He. underwent a
heart tran splant a few years ago.
He recently suffered a hean ·altack,
and has a number of other compli·
cations. He has been in and out of
the OSU Hospital several times
since the ttansplant. His wife has
had to miss a lot of work to Jake
him back and forth to the hospi!al
for lab work, tests, and stays. Their
fi nanctal obligations are tremendous.
1f your church can find it to

Washington. They hate ·Bush and
love Quayle. ·
'
But Quayle has not simply carried water one way. He has
reversed his role and become the
conse rvatives' advocate inside the
White House. At his Thursday lun·
cheons with the presi'd,ent, Quayle
pleads the conservative cause.
That has put him in a position to
tap imo conservative money and
has made him the leading fund·
raiser for the· Republican Party.
That is why it would Jake a major
nose dive in Bush's popula&lt;ity·for
him to drop Quayle as a !U~!!!!lg_
mate, beforif lli'e-T992Clection.
T!te money flows into Quayle
with slfings attacheq. Few ~ig con·
tribmors donate to 1beir favorite
polilicians out of a sense of public
dul)l and palriotism. They want a
return on their investment. And it
has become common in both par·
ties to grant federal blessings for
campaign contributions, or more
bluntly -to Jrade favors for cash.
Bush has established a special
vch.icle for Quayle to use to help
big corporate contributors. It is the

WASHINGTON - Most politi·
cal pundits .have dismissed Dan
Quayle as a lightweight. If the truth
be told, there have peen times
when he could have used a bigger
mouth or a smaller foot. But not
lately.
The handling of Quayle bas
been so masterful that he has been
guilty of nary a slip in recent
months. The pundits have greatly
underestimated what a vice presi·
dent can do when he ~as time on
his hands, instructions to keep a.
low profile and plenty of political
savvy.

"have a heart" and make a donation
to this cause , please drop your
check in the mail made out to Fran·,
cis or Mary Thompson.
I recently moved to Aorida, but
still keep a lillie house in Racine to
come to for visits; I have here now
for a brief visit. These peop)e arc
very dear to me and I would like to
get their need out to As many as I
can, and help in anyway that I can
in the short time I am here. So you
can mail your check to me and I
will get all donations to them.
Don't forget to send the name of
your church and name of the per·
son to whom to send lhe thank you
notes. Or call me and I will arrange
to pick up checks or do whatever is
necessary. If yon want more infor·
mation, feel free to call me. Thank
you so very much and may God
bless you all.
Signed,

himself as Georg,~ Bush's MVP,
Most Valuable Politician. He came
imo office carrying the credentials
to become Bush' s intermediary
with the Republican right wing. He
has stroked ruffled feathers and
explained the president's policies
to hard-line conservatives. On one
conservative issue, Israel, Quayle
has done such a good job mending
fences .with the ri~htthat, as we
repoltcd recently, the Israelis con·
sidcr,,him to be their best friend in .

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By Jack Anderson .

and Dale. ran Atta :\

IND.

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-----Weather----Soulh-Central Ohio
Tonight, becoming partly
cloudy. Low 30-35. Wednesday,
mostly sunny and warmer. High
55-60. . .
Extended forecast

Continued from page I
ran off the right side of the road and struck·a ditch.
.
Damage to the front, front-left and .front-right of Pierce's 1990
Ford LTD was listed on the report as moderate.
Although no citations were issued, the responding trooper listed
unsafe speed as the cootributing factor in the accident.

No one hurt in accident
Randall Werry, Racine, has been cited for failure to yield the
right of way in an accident which occurred late Saturday afternoon
on West Main Street in Pomeroy.
According to Pomeroy Police, Werry pulled from a parking
place into the right side of a 1978 Ford 1ruck operated by Mark
Gilmore, Cheshire. Gilmore was traveling north on Main Street.
There was moderate damage to the front ·panel and door of the
truck. Werry's 1981 Chevrolet was heavily damage on the driver's
side, door and front end.
·
Neither driver was injured.

EMS units answer 8 calls
Eight calls for assislance have been answered by units of Meigs
County Emergency Medical Seivices on Monday.
·
On Monday at 9:01 a.m., Syracuse unit went to Second and
Apple Streets for Raymond Coole. Cook was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 10:42 a.m., Middleport squad went to North
Front SlfeeL Genevieve Demosky was taken to Veterans. At 11:02
a.m., Rutland squad responded to Main Slfeet and took Mary E.
Workman to Veterans. ,
,
At 1:29 p.m., Racine squad went to Pearl Slreet for Jamie Ter·
zoppulus wbo was Jaken to Veterans. At 2:47 p.m., Pomeroy f11e
department responded to Laurel C_liff R?Bd for a sto.ve r~c at the
Eblin residence. At 4:55 p.m., Racme umt went to Mile Hill Road.
Hazel Combs was Jaken to Veterans. At 5:20 p.m., Middleport
squad went to Page Street and took Guy Priddy to Pleasant Valley
Hospital. At II: 12 p.m., Pomeroy ftre department and squad went
to State Route 7 and U.S. Route 33 for a motor vehicle accident.
Greg Satterfield was Jaken to Veterans.

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Mabel Brandeberry
Mabel Brandeberry. 91 , of
Coolville, died on Monday after·
noon, November II, 1991, at her
residence following an e~tended
illness.
Born in Coolville, she was the.
daughler of the late Samuel and
Hope Walden. She was a member
of the Ireland Congregational
Church for many years.
She is survived by a son,
Willard (Esther) Brandeberry, of
Coolville; a son-in-law, David
Richmond, of Athens; two sisters,
Annie Walden and Dora Loclchart,
both of Coolville; two sisters-in·
law; six grandchildren; eight great·
grandchildren; and several nieces
and nephews.
She was preceded in death by
her husband, Orville Brandeberry;
four brothers: Ray, Lawrence, John

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of Child Support will wort with the ,
employer to deduct child support
payments from that individual's
wages.
More than 7,000 of the pOtential
intercepts involve cases in which the ,
unpaid child support exceeds j
$20,000. This action by the Federal, ., l
Slate and Countr Government wiU · ·
hopefully assist m the collection of ·~ i
tbese delinquenl child support pay· • ;
ments.
As always, please feel free to call . 1
or write me, State Senator I an Mi- ·• !
chael Long, if you have any ques· · l
tionsorcornmentsabouttheseCI'any '·'
other issues My IIUmber is (614)· ' :
466-8156. and my address is the :· :
Statehouse, Columbus Ohio, 43215. ': ~

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213-IM!O)
Published every at't.ernoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Co\lrt SL., Pomeroy,
Ohio by the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company/Multimedia Inc., Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769 Ph. 992-2U56. Sclcond c:lau
poatqe pold aLP""""')', Ohio.

l

Member. The A11ocial.ed Prell, Inland
Daily Prell Alaoi!latiop and tho Ohio
Newipaper A11ociation., National
AdYerUtiRI Repre~entative 1 Branham
New1paper Salc1.l ?33 Third Avcnuo,
Now YOrk, New YvrK 10011.

POSTMASTER: Send addr&lt;ol cha ngco \D
Tho Daily ScmUnel, 111 Courl St.,
PomcTOy, 0Hio45169.

J

Last year, a State Highway Palfol investigated allegations of abuse aJ)d l
By JAMES HANNAH
·
failure
to report abuse. The allegations resulted in the indlcfment of sever· . ,. :
Associaled Press Writer
a!
cuqent
and fanner employees.
;
. DAYTON - .TheOhio Veterans Children's Home, rocked by allegaAmong those indicted was D. f.:eory Huff, who was rcmo~ed as super· ~ ~
tions of abuse that resulted in multiple indictments; has a new captain at
intendent last February. Huff was mdtcted on charges of fruhng to report •1
the helm whO" says the home will endure because the state needs it.
"I sec the home surviving beca(fse I'm 'thoropg61'fcoovinced that there the abuse or neglect of children. He has pleaded·innoccnt, and his trial is ·' )
.
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are kids out there in the child-care system in Ohio that need residential pending.
The indicJments brought fears that the stale might close the home.
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placement,"'f.lid Ramon Priestino, who took over as superintendent last
A report by the state legislature's Office of Education Oversight rec· .. •
month.
)'\
ommended
that the state seize the home and halt admissions because of :
Priestino satd the 122-year-old Xenia home has been hurt by publicity
deficiencies
there. A Jask.force fonned by Gov. Gco(ge Voinovich recom- :
stemming from the allegations and by a budge! pinch that has resulted in
mended
that
the home remain open but be reorganized.
.: :
worker layoffs at the facility.
·
State
Sen.
Merle
Grace
Keams,
R·Springfield,
who
served
on
the
Jask
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"I think the biggesl challenge is to heal some wounds," he said.
force,
said
she
believes
the
home
has
a
role
to
play
and
that
she
is
opti·
.)
· Tbe state·fundecl home was founded after the Civil War as a place for
.
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the orphans of soldiers and sailors. Over the years, it accepted ITOubled mistic about its future.
"I think it would lend itself well to some of the areas that arc not being ' :
youngsters referred by the courts, agencies and parents. About 150 chi!· .
served for tho kids," she said.
'
drcn live at the home.

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CaUipolil Daily Tribune on a 3.6 or 12
month bMi1. Credit will bo siven eanior
Clth week.
No •ublcripliolll by mail permitted tn
area• whore home carrier 1ervice i•
IYailablc.
Mall S.bocrtolloM
l•ldo Galli• County ·
t3 Weoko. ......... ...................... .........$21.114

26 Wootca................ ......................... W. ~6
52 Wootca......................................... .$84. 6

O..toido GaUla Count)'
13 W«&gt;ltl .................................. ........t23.40

26 Weetca.... .................................... .$-111.60

112 Woojoo.......................................... $88.40

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, Nov. II· Maywood
Boggs, Eugene Carrington. Alisha
Dedman. Velvie Dewitt, Eric. Har·
rison Linda Jones. Ralph Pierce,
Janis'Piantz, Enna Roush, Felicia
Sexton, Mrs. Jess Vaughn and son,
and Patricia Wood.
Births, Nov. 11 • Mr. and Mrs.
Densil Osborne, a son, Henderson.
W.Va

Parades...
Conlinued rrom page I
Born five monlhs after her
father's death, Ms. Ferreira said
she is planning her first visit to
Pearl Harbor next month for ceremonies marking the 50th anniver·
_ sary of the auack.
- "I've always put it off for emo·
tional reasons." she said. "I wasn't
ready."
·
· In Washington. D.C., thousands
turned out for a ceremony in which
eight names were added to the
granite blocks of the Vietnam
Memorial, bringing the num~?er ~f
Americans known· to have died m
the war to 58,183.

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and Kenneth .Walden; a daughter,
Ruth Richmond; and a great-grand·
daughter, Tiffany.
Funeral services will be held at
1 p.m. on Friday at White-Blower
Funeral Home in Coolville wiih
Rev. Charles Buck officiating.
Burial will be in the Ireland Ceme·
tery.
Friends may call the funeral
home from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. and 7
p.m. to 9 p.m. on Thursday.

Romie Fisher
Ramie (R. 0.) Fisher, 92, of
Route I, Coolville, died at his residence Monday, Nov. 11, 1991.
Born in Rome County, W. Va.,
he was the son of the late William
and Maggie Slaats Fisher. He was
retired from Viscoe Company and
was a member of the Vienna W~YS·
ley,an United M~thodist Church.
He is survived by two sons, Paul
Fisher of Route ·I, Coolville, ·and
Harold Fisher of Little Hocking;
three grandsons, and a sister,
DOrothy Riggs of Arizona. Besides
his parents he was preceded in
death by his wife, Martha Monroe
Fisher, three brothen and lwo sis·
ters.
.
Funeral services will be. held
Wednesday at \ p.m. at the White·
Ethridge Funeral Horne in Belpre,
with the Rev. Ken Johnson offiCial·
in g. Burial will be' in Evergrpen
North Cemetery, Parkersburg, W.
Va.
Friends ·may call at the funeral
after 2 p.m. today. Th~ family will
receive friends from 2 lO 4 and 7 to
9 p.m. this evening.
.
.

WilHam Hoback

William S. (Bill) Hoback, 39, of
41296 Stale Route 124, Racine,
died Monday, Nov. II, 1991, at
University HOSJ?,ital, Columbus,
foUowing a brief illness.
Born on May 15, 1952, al
Mason, W. Va.. he was the son of
William H. Hoback and Joyce E.
Codner Hoback of Rllcine.
He was employed as a mec~iv
in the Southern Local School· Dis·
trict and servl:d as president of that
chapter of th~ Ohio Association of
Public School Employees.
He was a member of the Racine
Pentecostal Church and the Racine

Masonic Lodge.
In addition to his parents,"he is
survived by his wife, Nancy
Spencer Hoback. Racine; four sons,
John Bill, Aaron Steven and Troy
David Hoback, and Brent DeCosse;
three sisters, Janice Joyce Davis of
Albany, Nancy Ellen Johnston of
Selaw,ik, Alaska; Candy Carol
Scaggs, Beaver; one niece and sev·
era! nephews.
Funeral 'services will be held at
the Fisher Funeral Home Friday at
1 p.m. The Rev. Roger Grace will
officiate and burial will be in the
Greenwood Cemetery , Racine.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Wednesday from 7 to 9 p.m.
and Thursday from 2 to 4 and 7 to
9 p.m. Masonic services will be
· held at6:30 p.m. Thursday.

John Tracy

John R. Trncy, 34, of 29 Rock
Slreet in Coojville, died on Man·
day afternoon, November 11, 1991
at Grant Medical Center in Colum·
bus'following an extended illness.
He was born in Holden. W.Va.,
the son of Julian and Rebecca
Lowe Tracy of Guysville. He was
the manager of the Belpre BP Sta·
lion.
Surviving, in addition to his par·
cnts, are his wife, Kathy McCoy
Tracy; two daughters, Jennifer
Tracy and Miranda Tracy, both at
home; one brother, David Tracy 9f
Guysville; a . sister, Barbara
Wheaton of Butler; and his mother·
in-law, Dixie McCoy of Coolville.
Funeral services will be Thurs·
day at II a.m. at White-Blower
Funeral Home in Coolville with
Rev. Gary Kendall and Chaplain

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Researchers: New coal-fired turbine
could reduce
utilities'.
pollutants·
.

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP)
~ For years, power plants
equipped with combustion turbines
spun by hot~~ have been limit·
ed to fuels like natural gas and otl
becail~ of coal's griuy and corro·
sive character.
But researchers say they've
found a way to burn coal without
damaging a turbine's fast-spinning
blades and reduce smog-fanning
poUutants at the same time.
The new method, developed by
the U.S. Department ofEne~y and
the Allison Gas Turbine Division
of General -Motors Corp., squirts
water and pulverized coal no wider
than a..hUII\l)D hair through special,
high-pressure turbines.
"The problem with burning''coal ·
has been that you have a lot of
impurities," Paul Micheli, a project
manager at the energy department's
Morgantown Energy Technology
C&lt;;nter, said Monday.
."Some cause health problems,
others destroy turbine blades,''
Micheli said. "It's like being a
doctor. We've got a lot of sick
(power) plants out there and we're
trying to IOllke them weD."
Allison recently ran the first
successful test of a turbine fueled
by ground coal and water during an
experiment at its Indianapolis
plant, Micbeli said.
The test was part of a costshared eonlraet between the energy
department and Allison, which is
paying $7.6 million of the project's
$38.8 million tab.
Earlier attempts had been foiled
by tiny specks of ash and corrosive

Stocks
Am Ele Power ..................31 318
Ashland Oil ......................30
AT&amp;T............................... .38 3/8
Bank One ..........................47
Bob Evans ........................ 19 718
Channing Shop..................21 318
City Holding .................... .16 1/2
Federal MoguL... ............... 16 7/8
Goodyear T&amp;R .................. 50 7(8
Key Centurion ................... 14 1/4
Lands' End ........................23
Limited Inc ....................... 25 1/4

Multimedia Inc ..................22 1/4
Rax Restaurant ..................l/4
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 35 518
Shoney's Inc ..... .................20 1/4
Star Bank ........·................... 26 1/4
Wendy Int'l......................... 8 7/8
Worthington Ind................22 1/8
Srock rep611s are lhel0:30 a.m.
quote~ Pf11Yidtd by Blunt, Ellis
and Loewl ofGallipolis.

gases that erodiid turbine blades or
plugged filters and tiny passages.
"It was so bad that the tests had
to be stopped after 15 minutes in
some cases,'' Micheli said.
Allison researchers detected no
damage to rurbine blades during itS
tests,Micbelisaid.
"This is something that works
now and not sbmething way off in
the future," said Peter Tramm,
director of technology and research
for A!Uson.
Tramm said the company, a
major supplier of gas turbines for
commercial aircraft, helicopters
and utilities, is planning tests next
year that will use dry, pulverized
coal. .
"We think we can cut the processing costs quite a bit that way,"
Tramm sai(i. ''We plan to eliminate
the water and also use coal that
isn't ground up as fine."
Allison used a tluee-stage pro·
cess in its most recent tests.
In the flfSt step, specks of coal
were burned in a chamber heated to
3,000 degrees in a limited amount
of air. Tbe coal was only partially
burned during the step and did not
fonn polluting nitrOus oxide.
Tbe heated coal gases were then
doused with water to lower the
teinperature to about 1,700 degrees
and solidify coal ash that was
removed before it hit the turbine.
· The cleaned particles were then
reheated in a third zone and forced

COUrt neWS
Marriage licenses granted
·
Marriage licenses have been
granted in Meigs County Probate
Court to Phillip Jay Richmond, 20,
Langsville, and Calhy Ann Lambert, 19, also of Langsville; and to
Timothy Wayne Sloan, 23, and
Melanie Ann Tripp, 22, both of
Pomeroy.
Dissolutions, divorces pro·
cessed
An action for dissolution of
marriage has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by
David ~;&amp;; Athens, and Beverly
Ramey, S
. .
A divorce action has been filed
by Kelly R. Vance, Middleport,
against Michael T. Vance,
Pomeroy.
A dissolution has been granted
to William Patrick Rizer and
Kathryn Nell Rizer.
Divorces have been granted in
the court to Betty Jean Moore from
Raymond L. Moore; to Shirley
Mae Kerns from John Kerns; and
to Arlene K. Barnes from James F.
Barnes.

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More talks slated
at Piketon plant
PIKETON, Ohio (AP)
Another round of contract tallcs in
the five-month saike at a uranium
enrichment J!lant has been scbed·
uled by federal mediators.
Negotiations wiD be held today,
Wednesday and Thursday in Otillicothe.
A union representing 1,055
employees of t~e Portsmouth
Gaseous Diffusion Plant went on
strike June II . Among the issues ·
are seniority. overtime and safety.
The National Labor Relations
Board issued an unfair labor prac·
tice complaint Oct 31 against Mat· ·
tin Marietla Energy Systems Inc.,
which operates the plant for the
U.S. Department of Energy.
The board ruled that the compa.
ny failed to bargain in good faith
and engaged in unfair labor practices. The union charge was filed :
SepL 17.
The board scheduled a bearing
on the allegations Feb. 26 in
Portsmouth before an NLRB
administrative law judge.
•
Local 3-689 of the Oil, Chemi·
cal and Atomic Workers union
accused the company or unfairly
demanding that the union agree to a
contract provision that any orders
issued by the Energy Department
would supersede the contracL
The union also accused the
company of not providing informa- .
tion on employee training and
insurance costs necessary for the
conlfact negotiations.

dessert dish.
Revival
Meeting
The Pomeroy Church of the
The Ostomy Association will
Nazarene will have revival
Wednesday through Sunday al 7 meet Sunday at 1:30 p.m. in the
p.m. nightly. Sunday services are at Pleasant Valley Hospital Commu·
10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. Rev . nity Room . A potluck dinner will
William and Catherine Hill will be be held and the public is invited to
the evangelists. Pastor Glen auend.
12-slep meellng
McClung invites the public.
A 12-step AA meeting will
Cburcb baZ8llr
Sacred Heart Catholic Church begin Sunday at 7 p.m. at the JTPA
will have its annual bazaar on office, 117 West Second Street in
Thursday. Available will be cream Pomeroy.
AA meeling
baked chicken and homemade noo·
The Pomeroy group of Alco·
dies. Dinner begins at 4:30p.m.
There will be craft stands, a fish holies Anonymous will meet '
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the JTPA
pond and religious articles.
ofnce,
117 West Second Street in
Sorority to meet
Pomeroy.
The Preceptor Bela Beta Chap·
Revival ·.
~
ter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, :.viii
Revival
at
the
Hysell
Run Holi·
meet Thursday at the parish house
of 1he Grace Episcopal Church in ness Church, off Route 124 on
Pomeroy at 7:30p.m. Eleanor County Road IS, will be held Nov.
Thomas and Reva Vaughan are 19·24 at 7 p.m. nightly . George
hostesses. Gindy Oliveri will pre· Williams, Point Rock Oturch, will
sent a 'program on "Holiday Plan· be the speaker. Pastor Bob Manley
ning." Members will meet at 5:30 invites the public.
Lodxe to meet
p.m. at the Sacred Heart Catholic
The
Shade River Lodge No .
Chwth for dinner.
453,
F
&amp;
AM, Chester, will meet
Fall sports banquet
Thursday
at
7:30 p.m. at the lodge
The fall sports banquet at South·
hall.
All
master
masons are invited
em High School will be held Sun·
day at I p.m. in the Southern High to attend. Election of orncers will
School gymnasium. All parents are be held . Refreshments will be
urged to bring a vegetable and served in the form of the group's
annual oyster stew dinner.

Tom Evaiis officiating. Burial will
.
.
be in Torch Cemetery.
OAPSE to meet
.
Friends· may call at the funeral
OAPSE Locallll7 Will hold a
hollle1'ro!n 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.'and ·1 - meetingoo-Mon~y. Nov~berlS.· ·
p.m. to 9 P:m. on Wednesday.
~~txl\:m . at Metgs Juntor H•gh

DOROTHY A.ROSEIERRY
.

thro~gh the turbine's spinning
blades."
Tests indicated emissions from
the system are about the same as
natural gas, currently the cleanest
burning fossil fuel. Even lower levels of nitrous oxide are possible
when the technology is combined'
with natural gas systems, Micheli
said.
.
Allison has offered the special
turbine systems to natural gas-Hred
plants in California, which ~ the
most stringent nitrous oxide stan·
dards in the nation.
Micheli said the system is cspe·
cially ·well suited for cogenerauon•
plants, where both heat and elcetric
power arc produced simultaneous·
ly. The 4-megawatt turbine used in
the tests is large enough to power
and heat a large shopping mall.
During the remaining three
years of its contract with the energy
dcpartmen~ Allison will focus on ..
developing efficient ways to
remove sulfur and ash from the
coal and a better delivery system,
Micheli said.

_Meigs announcements-

.. THANK YOUI
.
For you.r .support in the recent
election.
'

•

feU atllarnburg, N.Y.
Forecasters called for tempera· 1ra1 California llld Ficri4a: llld 1¥
West Virginia got up to 4 inches turcs in the 40s in the Great Lakes 80s in the Southwestern des 11.
of slushy soow in the southern.and region and New England; the 50s . High tempellll!fC for lhe nation
central pari of the state. Ice in the centtal Atlantic states and Monday was 89 degrees in Califor·
snapped utility lines, knocking out Northwest; the 60s in much of the nia at Death Valley, 'Glendale.
power and telephone service to Midwest and SOuth; the 70s in cen· Monrovia and Palm Springs.
thousands. ·

,.,. far lly ...........
JOMI Ytley leU K, belli, OW.

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are
1he Ohio Lottery drawing selections made Monday night
Pick 3 Numbers
3-3-6
(three. three. six)
Pick 4 Numbers
1-6-2-1
(one, six, two, one)
Cards
5 (five) ofHeans
3 (three)ofClubs
Q (queen) ofDiamonds
J (jack) of Spades

- --

----

WE'LL
OVERLOOK
YOUR FIRST
ACCIDENT

When yO.. quolily •• • pNierrld
rilk for Stete Auto Companila'
apeciat Mldollot Auto Polley, 'lOUr
rattt won't oo up whh your firlt
ICCident.
Unliko olmllar potlcloa thai roqulre
thrM y•n of policy ow-llolp,
tho Mldollot ollowa the exemption
tmmedlololy.
Tho Mldellot ....,.nl ..o the oldor.
nt.r driver w~h oubotontilll roht

reductions end broad« cover-..
Roto rlductlono begin •• •rty ••
ogo Z&amp; .,d ,,. portlculllrly ottroo.
tlve lor tho 41 to 84 yeor olcl .
If you h..,. o oole driving record,
... jutt how tow your cer lnMW.,co Pf'lmlum con be wHh. the
Mldelllt Auto Polley from Stet41
AYlo lnaur1nce Compt~nlea.
Colt ua obout thla cor lnaoronco
~l!!'I'UGJ\ f!&gt;l"tlf.l dn...o.

ROGAN

TO THE LEBANON TOWNSHIP VOTERS

,,

t
.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By CaJTier or Molor Route
One Wcek. ............................. ............ .$1.60
One MonLh ......................................... $6.95
One Year.................................. - .....183.20
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Daily...................... ................... ~ •. .25 Cenll
Subarribcn nol dairing to pay lho cani·
cr m~y nmil in advance direct to Tho

'

... t '

Veterans Memorial
MONDAY ADMISSIONS •
Emma Chapman, Syracuse; James
Arthur, Portland; and Karen Jones,
Middleport.
·
.
MONDAY DISCHARGES ·
James Pauley, Clarence Wickline,
and Gertrude Bass. ·

-------Area deaths----

f
·
·
d
h
•1
d
t
•.,ax .re on s tOr c I suppor ~-S_en_._J_a_n_M_.L_o_n_g_.:

New superintendent charting course for children's home

Hospital news

r----Local briefs... --...,

William A. Rusher .
possibly be (consistent wi.th the
point of the commercial) except
white? The charge of " racism,"
once again, is really intended to
foreclose any serious discussion of
the subject.
Conservatives have tended to let
the liberals get away with this ban
because they have been winning
presidential elections anyway .. No
decent person enjoys discussing
matters that have a racial aspect,
even when lhcy are legitimate
issues that demand to be debated.
But too many important subjects
arc being ruled undiscussiblc. It's
high ·time we made up our minds
that we are not going to let the lib·
erals get away with their phony
"racism" charge any longer. For
sJarters, the Horton and Helms ads
mu st be defended firmly and
proudly, and beyond that we·must
prepare to deal candidly with the
whole range of subjects in which
race plays a part.

I I

i)

T

.-

"'
•I

I

-

By The Assoc:lated Press
Ohioans can expect a return to
nonnal fall weather for lite rest of
this week.
The National Weather Service
said high tempc;ratures will be in
the 50-60 range. Sunny skies are
forecast for WecJnesday and Thurs·
day, with rain likely on Friday and
Saturday.
Tbe clouds wiU start moving oul
of Ohio tonight, but sbme snowfall
activity could linger in the north·
,!. '
east. Lows wiU be 25-35.
The record high temperature for
Columbus sa•
this date at' the Columbus we8ther
station was 74 degrees in 1879.
Tbe record low was 16 in 19J.l.
Sunrise this morning was at
7:13a.m. Sunset will be at 5:18
p.m,
Around the nation
W. VA .
Snow fell in Maine early today
as a stonn front moved into Cana·
da. ·
A front moving east was expeCt·
ed to dump min and snow from the .
central Great Lakes to ·the northern
. . .. .
Ohio Valley.
Forecasters called for rain in
Northwest stales, northern-New
Mexico and the Rio Grande Valley.
The low pressure system that
swept up the Atlantic coast Mon·
day brought rain to much of New
Thursday throuxb Saturday:
Fair on Thursday. A chance of York and soow to the western and
showers Friday and Saturday. cenJral parts of the state. Six inches
Highs 50-60 Thursday and 45-55
Friday and Saturday. Lows 35-45.

IMansfield I 51 • I•

L

Feels underclassmen deserve more credit

By The Associated Press
Today is Tuesday, Nov. 12, the 316th day of 1991. There are 49 days
left' mthe year
Today's Highlight in History:
On Nov. 12, 1920, baseball gm its first "czar" as Judge Kenesaw
Mounlain Landis was elected commissioner of t1te American and National
Leagues.
On this date: .
In 1815, ,American suffragist Elizabeth Cady Stanton was born in
Johnstown, N.Y.
.
In 1889, De Will Wallace, who, with his wife. Lila ·Bell Acheson,
founded "Reader's Digest," was born in SL Paul, Minn.
.
In 1921, rcpresenlatives of nine nations gathered in the nation's capital
for the start of the Washington Conference fot Limitation of. Armaments.
In !927, Josef StaUn bocame the undisputed ruler of the Soviet Union
as Leoit Trotslcy was expelled from the Communist Party. ·

IToledo I sa• I

•,

What's r~cist in toug.h political ads? "

Today in.history

fcrccast

MICH.

Council on Competitiveness, and
not much happens in federal rcgu·
u
latory agencies without the rules
·being routed past Quayle and his
. ~
council to make sure American his administration, that he let the '
business isn't hamstrung.
counlfy fall into a prolonged reces· t ·
The council was a natural for sian.
,i
Quayle. He kept pestering Bus.h
But even if the economy should
with comnlaint~ from industrv that still be stumbling in 1992, Bush ;
government bureaucrats, were re· will have· one advanlage over the '
regulating the industries that Democrats. The recession will dry '
Ronald Reagan had deregulated. So · up Democratic coffers before it
Bush authorized Quayle as' the puts a dent inRepublican walle';i.
head of the council to ride herd on Rank-and-file Democrats won I
the r~gulators.
•
· have the money ,to. conlribute to ,
Quayle has used his new powe~ their party. Thanks m large pan to !;
to obtain regulatory· relief fqr vari' Quayle, the Republicans should be ;
ous industries and industria l ·' able_to o~l-spend the Democrats, . ;
tycoons, and to make sure regula·
Quayle hasn't done .all of this ~
tors remember that someone is out of the goodness of hts heart an~ ,
breathing down their necks.
loyalty to·the Pru:tY and lhe pres~-·~
Big bo~lness loves the council denL He expects his party's nomt·
almos1 as much as they love nation to the presidency in 1996.
Quayle, and they will respond with He has used .his key to the corpo··
even more campaign contributions rate campaign cheSts JO· help ~w·
to give the Republicans an edge erful Republicans who are runmng
next year. Bush needs all the help for office. He has also flown
he can get. He is ttying despermely around the country to stump for
to stimulate the economy and elim- them.
inate the primary complaint against
This has given Quayle a pocket
full of IOUs that he expects to cash
in 1996.
RECOUPING - Despite the ,
much-touted collapse of commu·
nism hardliners in the Sovie't
Unio~ are not yet ·ready to say die.
They were born and·raised in the ·~
Communist Party bureaucracy and :
won't easily let it go. Those hard· ~
liners are reportedly preparing for l
another coup, convinced !hat the 1
timing will be on their side in the :
second round. Intelligence reports :
warn that the hardliners will wait •
for food stocks and fuel supplies to
diminish. This will lead to a cold, 1
bitter winter for most Russians. l
The hardliners believe the best time ~
to strike will be in the spring when :
the people have had enough of l
poverty and promises:
MINI-EDITORIAL -The new
Reagan Library in Simi Valley, l
Calif., includes a small Iran-conlfa 1
display with a footnote that the l
president took "full responsibili· '
ty" for the affair. We must have
missed that press conference. We
recall Reagan saying he didn't
know, didn ' t remember.- wasn ' t
•
told or didn't understand. History ,
may show that that' s what "full !
responsibility".,amounted to in the :
Reagan adminislfation.
..
•I

,....- ,...,.Meigs Countians wam to rccy·
clc ... Meigs
Coumy
is
recycling .... both of our local pri·
vate recycling operations are doing
a fine job, but they need help in the
area of markets to buy what they
are recycling.
How's this for a judicious anal- the f11st quolation was authored by . the ban as stated means that certain
In the past two years, our pro· ysis of the Willie Horton ad in the Bill Buckley, and tbe second by Pat matters in which race happens to be
gram has recycled over 2,000 1988 presidential campaign?
Buchanan? If so, you'd have been incidentally involved cannot be dis·
major household appliances from
" The one serious question in wrong.,.
cussed at all.
the county. If and when the Solid this is whether the Bush cam ·
The first is Jaken from an cdito·
That was the case with the
Waste Management Plan for the paign's attacks on the furlough pro· ri al in that hotbed of liberalism, Willie Horton ad. As Matthews
six-county district is ratified and gram that freed Willie Horton, sen· The Washington Post, under date went on to point out in his column,
put into operation, funds are target · tenccd to life·without-parole, are of Oct. 25, 1988. And the second is "The issue was not Willie Horton
cd to' heavily support extensive an appeal to ra~ism .... To begin from a column wriuen just last but Michael Dukakis" - specifi·
recycling efforts. Plans call for 15 with, the Bush campaign wasn't the spring by Christopher ¥atthcws, cally, Dukakis' woozy liberal symdrop-off stations, seven curbside first to raise the furlough issue the loyal Democrat who was the • pathy for prisoners, which was typ·
programs, and three process ing against Gov. Dukakis; Sen. Albert top aide to fanner House Speaker 1cal of his altitude on many sub·
facilities.
Gore was, in an April 1988 debate Tip O' Neill and now heads the iccts. That is what the liberals have
The Meigs Counly Litter Con· in New York .... (l)hc facts are that Washington bureau of the San· been ttying to cover up ever since,
trol Program receives excellent Massachusetts is the ooly slate that Francisco Examiner.
using the happensJancc that Horton
support from township trustees, furloughed prisoners sentenced to
I have set forth the above quota· is black as an excuse for demand·
county, village and slate officials life without parole, and that for II tions because a good many conscr- ing that the whole subjeq be
and agencies, schools~ businesses. years Mr. Dukakis supported· that vatives are showing signs of dropped, on pain of accusations of
youth groups, and many other orga· policy and resisted attempts to end knuckling under to a campaign the " racism."
nizations and individuals. Together it. It may or may not be relevant to liberals h~ve begun ·\\f~gi~g recent·
The same is true of the much·
we can make a difference....)hanks · slfess that, but-it isn't racist.'·' ·
ly: tfie aiiempCIO label as "racisf," execrated Jesse Helms ad charging'
to all who are a part of this effort.
In the words-of another cogent and hence as totally unusable in our 1hat his opponent favored giving
Signed,
· commenlary on the issue:
national political dialogue, any jobs to blacks, even if this meant
Meigs County Liller Conttol
" Was the furlough issue rele· argum ent that puts one or more rejecting better-qualified white
Kenny .Wiggins vant? Yes. Did the Willie Horton American blaGks in an unfavorable applicants. Surely this is a lcgiti·
episode occur? Yes. Was his case a. light.
_
.
·mate issue; and If a T.V. ad on that
fair target in a campaign meant to
·,
To be sure, to do such a thing issue dramatizes it by showing a
Dear Editor:
with the thought in mind • Good test candidates' values? Certainly." for the purpose of defaming all pair of hands tearing up a rejection
Would you have guessed ihat blacks would indeed be racist. But slip, what color can those hands
job guys! but its over, we don 't
"Good job guys! We owe a lot need you anymore?
of credit to our seniors." Words
Well, coach, I'd like to be there
~
often read in the paper this year
after a Southern High School foot·
or heart could handle it. Will you
ball game.
Late and delinquent child support refunds used to cover accumulated ag~ncics (CSEAs). The CSEAs then
Owe, well they've been paid tell the seniors they did a fine job
notifythcStateDcJ?8rl"'entofHuman
back for their fine efforts and you and then hand out SVAC awards or . payments areaconlinual problem for unpaid child suppof!. .
vice
versa?
_
Throw
a
couple
exira
.
many
Ohioians.
Last
week,
the
Ohio
or·
the
potenttl\l
mtercepts,
Services
of mdtviduals who are at
know the old saying about pay·
121
,028
cases
represent
more
than
least
three
months behind in child
pieces
of
chicken
on
the
seniors
DeparunentofHumanServ,icestook
backs. An entire high school career
of working thl;ir tails off and final· plates·, per hap~ that JY) Il.S.iU)s(y . step~ that could belp to deal with this S769 million in unpaid·child·support··- support payments.
Iy when the dust has settled, not a them and they'll forget about the cuqentdilemmathatfacesthousands · in Ohio. The re!llaining cases were
More than 93,300 intertepts in·
one of them received an SVAC hurt and pain. It might take 30 or of Ohio children each year. Accord· forwarded to Ohio from other slates. valve children who, whilenotreceiv·
40 years, bpi what the heck, they'll ing to the Ohio Department of Hu· In 1991, more than$21.5 million was .ing their child support, are receiving
award.
Five underclassmen received soon be graduates, and realistically man Services Office of'Child Sup· collected from 34,376 refund inter· Aid to Families with Dependent
port Enforcement, more than 122.500 cepts. Federal officials had also ap· Children. More than 29,200 of the
them and I wish not to discredit they are of no more benefit to you.
I sincerely don 'I intend any dis- people in Ohio could lose their fed· proved 101,200 potential intercepts intercepts involve families notrethem. All five of them were excel·
lent players. However, I challenge respect to any football player, fan, cral and state income tax refunds' in for 1991. The figures for potential ceiving public 3S$istance.
the dectsion making and I'm sure or family . I love you all and 1992bccausetheyarebehindinchild 1992 intercepts reflect a 16 percent
According to the Ohio ·Depart·
·
support payments. Federal officials. increase over the number on 1991 ment of Human Services, tbe tax
many other football fans and par· enjoyed the friendship.
Good Job! : Ronnie, Shane, ~enliy notified the Ohio Depart· ' refunds, and a II percent increase in intercepts are then credited toward
ents do also.
mentofHumanServicesthat 122,567. tbe amount,of unpaid support.
Tbe underclassmen will be back Jamie, Todd and Kevin.
unpaid child support. In the event
federal income tax refunds had been
next year for another fine season,
The collection of unpaid child that a tax inlercept is the f11st indica·
Larry D. Circle -- approved for intercept in 1992. The support payments is initiated in the tion that a person who owes child
peihaps with ' more recognition or
Raci~e. Ohio
state will intercept state tax refunds county child support enforcement support is earning income, the Office
will they ~ Ill: .P.ul .l).ut to pasture
on those individuals as well, with the

~~~~1.~~~~~~~~~~~q~~~~~

Aeeu-Wealh~

l

Sets record straight
On behalf of the Meigs County
Litter Conlfol Program, we would
· like to Jake issue and set the record
slfaight regarding some sJatements
made by a candidate during the
recent election. '
·
In reference to the statement
"trash cleanup along township
roads is very important", thus far in
1991, our collection crew under the
supervisor of Roger Holman, has
cleaned 1,176 miles of township,
country, state and Appalachian
roadways, and have picked up
6,196 large bags of 1rash. In addi·
tion; they have cleaned 28 illegal
dumpsiles, and because of litter
enforcement, 21 other sites have
been cleaned by offenders and
property owners. Since the pro·
gram began a few years ago, we
have cleaned a total of 5,798 miles
of roadways, picked up 26,498
bags of trash , and 275 illegal
dumpsitcs have been eliminated.
This has taken place in all 12 town·
ships.
Regarding the other statement,
"recycling wiJI be a major issue in
the future" ... recycling is here now.

Wednesday, Nov. 13

l

Sharon Baker
General.Delivery
Racine, Ohio 45771
'phone 949·2804.

Normal fall weather expect~d - rest of week :

01110 Wt;cltl H;r

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio -\
Tuesday, November 12, 1991 •

Quayle proving to ·be valuabl'e to Bush

The Dally Sentlnei-Pji!QI 3

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

. Page-2-The Dally 8entlne!J
1,_,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SPRING VAilfY CINfMA
~4n

4114

$.),00 IMIAII Mlltlllll SA~r l ~l .
$1.00 MMAIII lllflf M:SM' ,

NOU

1-M

FIIDU tlln.l TNJISOAU

~mER

~

Iuuuce Servicu

214 EAST MAipt

POMEROY
992-1187

.IJ .........

.......... c.........

�.. -... .

Four Eagles, two Tornadoes
.make ali-SVAC football team
•

Southern Valley Athletic Con: ference champion Oak Hill landed
• six of its players - seniors Chad
. ·Jones, Allen and Bill Potter, and
.Steve Radabaugh; and juniors
Brook and Ryan Morgan -on the
firs t team of this year's alkoofercncc football team.
'
Runner-up Sym,mes Valley was
reprcsemed on tbe first team by
seniors Chris Copley, Chris Gates
and Eric Wall, and juniors Mark
Edm unds aod Jamie Keams.
Also making the first team
·were:
Eastern - Tim Bissell, Jeff
Durst, Terry McGuire and Mike

Smith
North Gallia - Scott Oiler,
Charles Peck aod Casey Staton
Southern - Nick Adams and
Russell Singleton
,
Kyger Creel! - Seniors Jeff
Birchfaeld aod l"'iil Bradbury
·
Southwestern - Tom Lambert
Hannan Trace - Roger Warren.
Top offensive player - Bill
Potter, Oak Hill
Top defensive player - Mark
Edmunds, Symmes VaDey
Coach or tbe year - Merrill
Triplet~ Symmes Valley
Receiving honorable mention

ByEDSTYCH
Associated Press Writer
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -~ The
Chicago Bears went back to the
basics on third down - and there
was almost no stopping them.
Using short passes a~d up-themiddle runs - along with .some
Minnesota miscues - the Bears
converted seven of 13 third downs
and one fourth down en route to
their best offensive performance of
the year aod a 34-17 victory over
the Vikings Monday night
The victory, their first at the
Mettodome in four years, gives the
Bears (8·2) a two-game lead over
Detroit in their quest for their sev-

Oak Hill - Bill Bell, Clnis
Simpson and Chris Stalnaker
Symmes Valley -Jeremy Catalogna, Andy ·Lester and Josh

Mann

·

Eastero - Steve Barnell, Mike
Newland and Dari Short
,
Nortb Gallia - Bradd Schultz,
Brent Skidmore aod Darin Smith
Southern - Jeremy Dill,
Michael Evaos and Kyle Wickline
Kyger Creek - .Scott Newell,
Man Rhodes and Dave Wellmao
Southweste!'ll - Tim Conwell,
Willy Gilbert aod Kevin Staten
Hannan Trace -Jason Butler,
Rick Dillon and Shane Wells

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1118 Dally sentinel

PIG• 5

·.Chicago downs·Minnesota
34-17 in NFC Central bout

Tuesday, Nove!llbe~ 12, 1991
Page-4

·

.

Tuesday, Novemben2, 1991

The.Daily ·Sentinel

:Sports

~'

-

enth NFC Central title •in the last
eight seasons.
"If there's one thing that Coach
Dilka stresses, its winning the division games, aod our goal is to win
them all," said Chicago quarterback Jim Harbljugh,
·
With five games left for the
Vikings (5-6) , head coach Jerry
Burns all but cilnceded the division
title to the Bears.
To a ·player and a coach, ~redit
for Chicago's clutch, third-down
success was given to Mike Ditka's
decision to use tried-and-true plays
instead of the new plays usually
added to attack the weakness of
thatweek's opponent.

"They were all plays that .we've .
run the last two years," Harbaugh
said. "They gave me a chance to
have a little more input on the
third,down plays, and the ones that
they were calling tonight were !he
ones ·that I was reaDy the most confortable with. Aod I felt so confi·
dent every time that one of them
came in that I knew I w~ going· to
hit it...
.
With the Vikings' help, the
Bears· converted six· third- or
fourtb-down situations on their flrSt
two drives to take a 14-71ead. ·
The Bears kept their first drive
alive with two third-down conver·
sions
.-. .. .- .
·~

JEFF DURST

NICK ADAMS

GOLF AWARDS - The following golfers
won awards during Monday evenings sports
banquet. P·ictured from left to right in the front
row . are: Tim Peterson· Coaches Award, Phil
Ho~atter-First Team All . TVC, Adam
Krawsczyn-First team AU TVC, TVC Most

Valuable Golfer and Parker Long·Rodd Harr·
sion Memorial Golfer of the Year, Second row:
John Bentley-Second Team All TVC, Jay Har·
ris-First Team All TVC, and Jason Hart·First
Team-All TVC.

CROSS COUNTRY AWARDS- Receiving
·cross country Awards at Monday night's sports
banquet were (front ,row, L·R) Allison Gannaway-Coaches Award and All TVC Academic
Team, Heather Franckowiak-Second team All
TVC, Elizabeth Downie-Second Team All TVC,
Elizabeth Downie- Second Team All TVC, Tara

Gerlach-All TVC Academic T~am. Second Row:
Bill Toundas-Coaches Team, Nathan BaloyFirst Team All TVC, Chris Stoan·Second Team
All TVC, David Swanson-Second Team·All TVC
· and Phillip Edmonds·Mosllmproved Runner.
N&lt;!t Pictured-Katrina Turner and.Joe McElroy·
All TVC Academic Te.am.

~ASTE.81·
TERRY McGUIRE

RUSSELL SINGLETON

MIKE SMITH

Redwomen volleyball team finishes
.second in district; players win honors
The University of Rio Grande could possibfy play," Red women 7-15, 15-3, avenging a regular sea·
volleyball team ended its season as Coach Patsy Field commented'. son loss to the Storm two weeks
' ·
runnerup of District 22 when it fell "There's no way I can be disap· ago.
The
effort
saw
Cooper,
a
sophoto the College of Mount St. Joseph, pointed with that."
The Redwomen forged their more from Jackson, pour in 28
2-15, 12·15, 15·5, 9-15 in the
championship game of the district way into the title game, the farthest kills, two serving aces and 10 digs,
Rio G!liDde has ever traveled in the as Zempter notched 27 kills, six
playoffs Saturday.
"I felt we played as well as we dislrict postseason, after defeating serving aces, 18 digs and seven
Player, All TVC Academic Team, Chrissy
VOLLEYBALL AWARDS- Members of
the University of Findlay on Friday blocks. In addition, Sharp .had
Weaver-All TVC, All TVC Academic Team,
the Meigs Marauder volleyball team that won
and
knocking off a competitive seven kills, 10 digs and five blocks,
Kim Hanning-All TVC, and Misty Butcher-~11
awards at Monday night's sports banquet were
Lake
Erie team on Saturday in the ·while Spears contributed five kills
TVC Academic Team.
(L·R) Tricia Baer-Ail TVC, TVC Most Valuable
semifinals at Mount St. Joseph. and 20 digs. Neff pumped in four
kills, two serving aces and eight
The Rio ladies' record is 40-9.
digs,
and Hedges had a pair of
Tbe championship tilt saw Terc·
serving
aces and eight digs.
.
sa Zempter, a senior from Minford,
Following
the
game,
district
and
post 22 kills, 10 digs and nine
The annual Meigs High School Phil · Hovauer and Adam wins in the last two years,
block solos against the Mountie MOC coaches awarded postseason
fall sports banquet, sponsored by Krawsczyn (first team) , Adam
All conference performers on
Lions. Teammate Billina Cooper honor.s, which saw Zempter share
the Meigs Athletic Boosters, was Krawsczyn, a freshman, was the team include Hanning, Weaver
had 18 kills, three serving aces and the MOC Player of the Year honheld Monday evening at the Meigs named the TVC's most valuable and Baer. Baer was voted· the
seven digs; Michelle Spears added ors . Cooper and Sharp, senior
~. 'High School cafeteria.
golfer. He was also presented the TVC's most valuable player.
six kills, three serving aces and !3 from Tarlton, Ohio, were named to
••.;. Master of ceremonies for the Parker Long-Rod Harrison Memo·
Hea~ Coach Jim Oliphant and
digs; Robin Sharp netted two kills the conference first team, while
:": 'evening was Athletic Boosters rial Golf Award for the team 's assistant coach Mike Kennedy pre- .
and five digs; Tiffaoy Neff retard-' Spears, a junior from St. Paris,
: : president Jim Soulsby. Following most valuable golfer, and Tim sented awards to the cross country
ed two kills and seven digs; and received honorable mention from
' .. the invocation by Jim Oliphaot, the Peterson was presented the Coach· teams. Members of the girls team
Aodrea Hedge's notched seven digs the MOC. Zempter, Cooper and
;.;:· coaches inlroduced players from es Award.
include Heather Franckowaik, Eliz·
to comple~t the Rcdwomcn effort.
Sharp were also named All-Dis:: :their respective teams.
Reserve volleyball coach Dale abeth Downie, Katrina Turner.
"Mount St. Joseph was just sim- trict. The Redwomcn arc champi-: :. John Krawsczyn introduced Harrison introduced m~mbers .or April Hudson, Allison Ganaway,
ply the better team, but our kids ons ofthcMOCatll-1.
"'"·members of the reserve golf team the reserve team that finished w•th Missy Sisson and Tara Gerlach .
never quit. That's why they were
"Every one of them deserved
~· · that finished with a 4-3 record. a 14·4 record. Team members
Members of the boys's cross coun·
such a fun team to coach," Fields it," Fields said of the honorees as
:•: Team members include Tyler include Ambe! Blackwell, Bobbie" try tCiun 'include Phillip Edmonds, , q~,t-•
remarked.
her eight-year record at Rio Grande
~ : Wolfe, Jason Taylor, Scqtt Whit- Butcher, Btlhe Butcher, Mehssa
David Swanson Bobby Johnson,
In the earlier competition, Find- went to 221-99. "This is the best
BILLINA
COOPER
• latch, Aaron Drummer, Richie Clifford, Lee Henderson, Ginger P.J . Chadwell, ieremy Heck, Joe
lay folded under a 23-kill attack by team I've ever coached. On ski lls
·•• Gilkey, Tr11,vis Grate, Ben Ewing, Hol~omb •. Mandy Jones , Sara McElroy, Bill Toundas, Nathan
Zempter, who also had nine digs. and dedication, they were the best."
;. : Jcrrod Douglas, and Reggie Pratt.
Pullms, Eryca Rob1e, Eddena R~s- Baloy and Chris Sloan. The boys
·Cooper was credited with 12 kills,
=•; Coach Krawsczyn then intra- sell, Jackie Swartz and JeSSica team was TVC runner-up, finished
three serving aces, eight digs aod a
"duced members of the Tri-Valley Cochran. The reserve team has third in the district and was the
pair of blocks, while Sharp had
~~ · Conference champion golf team. posted a 12;10 record the last four Warren Local Invitational Champiseven kills aod two blocks. Spears
Basketball
· ~ The team finished with a perfect ycars.
ons
rcctlrded three serving aces, 10 digs
PHILADELPHIA
(AP)
, .• 42-0 record in the TVC and won
Rick Ash introduced members
First team All · TVC awards
and two blocks.
Charles
Barkley
plans
to wear
·~ · their second consecutive TVC of the Tri· Valley Conference
went to Baloy while second-team
Lake Erie, considered a·much Magic Johnson's magic number on
~ · :crown . The team was 46-0 overall champion volleyball team. Team
all-TVC awards went to Heather
improved team over the last few his Philadelphia 76ers jersey this
•.. ·and was the sectional runner-ups. members include Kim Hanning, Franckowiak Elizabeth Downie
seasons, gave the Redwomen a season as a tribute to his friend.
: :ream members include Phil Hovat- Chrissy Weaver, Misty Butcher, Chris Sloan ~d David Swanson:
hard time of it, but Rio Grande
Barkley said he wants 10 switch
:. tcr. Tim Peterson, l ohn Bentley, Tricia Baer, Carrie Bartels, Yvette The most improved runner award
emerged victorious, 16-14, '16-14, his number from 34 to 32 to honor
;. Jay Cremeans, Jason Hart, Chris Young, Nikki Meier and 'Chrissy went to Edmonds. Ganaway and
Johnson, the superstar Los Aogeles
·. • Knight, Adam Krawsczyn aod Jay Taylor. The team was the TVC Toundas received the Coaches
Lakers gtiard who retired Thursday
"
.
•· ·nams.
champs for the second year in a Award, while Swanson and Baloy
after
12 seasons because he is
; ::• All· TVC performers included row, they posted a 20-2 record and received awards for fmishing in the
The
annual
Eastern
High
School
infected
with the AIDS virus.
~:Sentley and Cremeans (second a 15-t TVC record. The Lady top seven in the districL
Athletic
Banquet
will
be
held
Magic's
number, however, has
;i!;eam), aod Jason Han, Jay Harris, Marauders posted 35 consecutive
Kathy Doidge named members
Thursday-at 6:30 p.m. in the hi~h been retired in Philadelphia. No. 32
of the checrleading squads. The
school gymnasium. Honored will was retired to honor 76ers great
varsity squad Megan Bartels,
be the junior and senior high foot· Billy Cunningham, a player for 12
Danielle Crow, Kelly Doidge,
ball aod volleyball players, and the seasons and a coach for two.
Danielle Gray, Lorean Oiler, Kyla
cheerleaders. Those attending are Barkley said he already had CunSellers, Micbelle Young and Abby
ROBIN SHARP
to take three food dishes. Bever· ningham 's permission and the
Blake, Reserve cheerleaders
ages and table service will be pro· team's approval to m·ake the
included Crystal Donohue, Tracey
switch.
·- v1ded.
Fife, Dawn Hockmao, Cassie Hubbard and Melissa Pooler.
.
1()-()-0
3-0.0 43·31 -0 OB Weldon has returned
Coaches Bill Ross and Dennis
B-().0
2 2·0.0 33-:11-1 Won 5 oflast6 vs. FSU
Booth introduced members of the
reserve
rOOtball team, they include
B-().0
2 2·0.0 43·27·2 13·1vs. Beavers since '75
Bryan Hoffmao, Jim Pullins, Adam
8·1-0 1,311 4 2·1·0 44·29·1 Grbac No. I QB in nation
Wyatt, Eric Wagner, Brett New8+0
6 4·1·0 47·24·0 I .-n from lsi SEC title
some, Chad Duncan, Matt Craddock, David Felly, Brent Smith ,
8+0 1,167 7 1+0 36-37·0 Slluloutolmajorbowl
~~'
~~~
t-1
~
Ryan Dodson , Jared Hill, Matt
(0'
~8-1-0 1,090 S · 2·1·0 35-28·0 6-1 vs. Memphis St
Clark, Jeff Tracey, Cory Seymour,
8·2·0 1,044 9 1·1·0 45-38-0 Saccai'SU'sNo.1 passer
Walt Williams, Chad Deskins, Joe
·
Barrett, Shannon Statts and Ben
1
ro,,
8+0 1,018 10 3+0 38-31·2 19731aslloso10Calll
Fackler. ,
6-2·0 933 13 4-2·0 45-22·0 Won7s~overOieMiss
Head coach Mike Staus and
7+1 · 883 11 1-1-1 38-33·2 C.Jones29ol sand6TD's assistant cor Daryl Owens intro·
Nebraska
..
. ., .
~ .
, •. , duced mer. cs or,me.4-6 ·Meigs
"Notoe'Oanie ·8'2'0 878 5' 1-2·0 "45-36-1 7·7·1VI. Penn State
Marauder ~Jotball team. They
7·1·0 867 12 1-0.0 34-28-1 Twowinsk&gt;&lt;CononBowl
include Jere!Dy Phalin, Frank
13rexasA&amp;M
Blak~, Robby Wyall, Kevin Muss·
14 East Carolina 8+0 63e ta 2·0.0 40-35-2 ,H~tranklng everl
er, Mike Welsh, Tom Cremeans,
•
8-1-t 631 15 2-o.o 34-23.0 ae Cameron 101 ycls-2TD'o
(See BANQUET on PageS)
TERESA ZEMPTER
15 Clemson
r • • • • •• • •• •• • • • • • • • •• · ~·6 •
1
8·2·1 830 14 1+1 38-32·3 Fake FG • alivo in Big 8
•CARPET (lEANING: CARPET CLEANING :
SOFA •d •
18oo~orac~o
1-2·0 516 17 2-t·O45-32·0 t3·2VI. BCinSyracuae
: . SPECIAL
:
SPECIAL . 1
. CHAIR
:
1
'
2
ROOMS
s
ANY
5
AREAS
:
7·2·0 ol83 20 0.~·0 31..C2·0 23·1VI. Okla. St. Iince '87
7-2·0 ~ 19 0.2·0 32·27·3 1-2·1 last4 vs. Indiana
I
• Ct'tMllffto/tl :I
e 1/M/tl II
e 1/M/tl s
I
I
I
7-2·0 375 21 2·1 ·0 37·31 -3 Won6ot7vo.Te&gt;al'rech
1
ldlllhl-~...........
I (SoctionalaAreE&gt;trtl I
t"""""-~-Coooilo2.to-•a ..•t
,
7-2·1 349 24 1·1-1 38-39-t Welsh 4·5VJ. Va, Tech
••••..-•••••••••~••••••A••••••••••••
8-3·0 167
nmnmaaa.
0.3·0 48-38-2 Won 7 altar 0.3 otarl
Brigham Young 7·3-0 140
, SIJIER
Q6 18 2·2·0 33-28-4 Hat Oukulnce 1880
N. carolina St. 7-2·0
8-3·0 59
2·1·0 37·33-1 Macl&lt;ovlc ().3 VI. Michigan

FOOTBALL AWARDS- Winning foqtball
awards at the sports banquet Monday evening
were (front row, L·R) Shawn Hawley-First
Team All TVC, Most Valuable Reciever, Jeremy
Phalin-First Team All TVC, Olfensvie Player of
the Year and Offensive Back or the Year. Sec·
ond row (1-r): Frank Blake-First Team All TVC,

MHs sports banquet ... ..:.&lt;C.:.:.on.;;_tin.;;_ue.;;_df...;.rom_P_;;.::ag:...,e4._)- - - - -

Meigs athletes honored at banquet

Mike Cremeans, Heath Hudson,
Matt Haynes, Bill Harless, Jake
Kennedy, Scott Peterson, Jeremy
Rupe, Robert Yonker, Brian Smith,
Chuck Maijl, Steve Woods, Steve
Swatzel, Shawn Hawley, Kevin
Lam ben, Chris Hall, Daony Lewis
and manager Mick Barr.
First team all·TVC awards went
to Phalin, Hawley and Blake. Blake
was named the TVC's Co-Defensive Player of the Year. Second·
team all· TVC awards went to
Lewis and Musser. Coaches awards
went to Phalin for most valuable

a

.

I

I

Monlte.ll

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

Hanford
Bootat

9 1
.,., S S
Miami
.... S S
NcwEnp•tod
3 7
lndiarl•polis
I 9

21111,.,;

'

.

AP

.... "'"' c.nlltt, ... Ill,.,__ .....

.

0
0
0
0
0

.900301 2l1

country, Turner, Ganaway, Gerlach
and McElroy. Cheerleaders were
Danielle Crow, Kelly Doidge,
Lorcan Oiler and Michelle Young.
All-Academic members of the foot·
ball team include Blake, Wyatt and
Lambert.
Fi sher also pointed out that
already this year the Marauders
ha"e three conference most valu·
able players in Krawsczyn, Baer
and Blake.
Oliphant c.losed the evening
with the benediction.

"""'""'

.500 180 2(17
JOOIJS 195
.I 00 &amp;9 230

,W L
.... .. 8 7
Detrott
........ 9 I
SLl.o.•is
6 1
Minncaou.
7 8
Toronto
5 11

:mm

2 8 0 .200171221

Wuhington

26 70 47
2.0 70 SS
20 6S 64

18 57 62

p.m.

Chicaao 34, Minne~or.a 17

Nexl week's acllon

1\'atlonal l..etRue
COLORADO ROCKIES - f"•m cd
Jimmy Lcmr, Ty Cos low and Edward

. Orlando
Miami
Bostoo
Washington
New Jersey

Minnolo&amp;aaL Groen Bal_, t p.m.

N'w YOO. Jet&amp; II New Eng!Uid,l p.m.
Bay 11Atlant.l, t p.m.
WaahinatonatPilllbuiJh, l p.m.
Phomil. at San Fn.ncitro," p.m.
t.o. Anpla Rams at Dcuolt, 4 p.m.
Dallas at New Veri: Oianu,4 p.m.
New ()dew at San Diqo, 4 p.m.
Seattle at LosAnph:a Raidert, 4 p.m.
Clenldd alllou.slon, I p.m.

Tampt~

lleU'Oi.t

Chicaao
Adanl.l
Milw1ukee

....... 3

2 .600

3
2
2

2 .600
2 .500
4 .333
4 .333
3 .250

...... 2
....... I

Cenlral Division
4 I .800
4 l .667
3 · 2 .600

4
Indian•
....·...... 2
CleVeland
1
Charlotw

I

3 .571
S .286
" .ZOO
S .167

Agreed Lo Lcnns whh Dill Wegman , pilc h·

S.. nta scoulin&amp;l\lpcrYisors.

CD

.5 .
.l
I

2
2
2

.5
I
I

3
3

lS

Monday, Nov.18
Buffalo at Miami, 9 p.m.

Basketball
National B1ukctb1ll Auocl11ioa
CHI CAGO DULLS - Signed Scou
WiUimlS fllfwud·ccmcr:

CLEVELAND CA VALIERSActh••ted M1tk Price, auard. from th e
InJur ed lilt. Plated Jimmy Oliver,
&amp;uard, on the Injured llsl.
HOUSTON ROCKETS - W1 i~cd
Kennard Winchcstcr, gua rd·fotward. Ac·
tivllcd Carlllc.m:u, forward, ftcrn the in·
jured list.
~
MIAMI HEAT - Sianed Miloa
Babic, forward .
PIUL\DELPIIJA 76ERS - ActiVIt·
00 M•nute Bol, e~nler, from the injured
l.iJL Placed Kenny P1yne, fotward, on lhc
injured U5t.

There aren't any you can see. You can'ttell from out,

ward appearance who is infected with HIV. So be sure you know
how to determine your risk. Adocumentary about living with
HIV called "Absolutely Positive" wiJI be televised on June 18,
1991. Check your local listings. For more infor·
mation on HIV, calll-800-342-AIDS.

Foolbnll

WESTERN CONFERENCE

In the NHL ...

Mldwut Dlwltlon
w L Ptt.
HoultOn
4 I .BOO
S&amp;Jt AniOI'Iio ...... 4 I .HOO

·Tttm

· WALESCONFERENCE
Ptlrlck Dlvblon
fgm
W L T PU:.CF.GA
Wubina&lt;on ... 13 4 0 26 85 S2
NY R"'i.,.
12 6 I 2S 6S 56
N~,; Jeooo)' .,, 10 7 0 20 6! 49
Pit....... ""' 7 7 3 17 6! 67
Philtdolj&gt;ltlo • .... 6 7 I tl 44 43
N.Y. W..dm . 4 10 2 10 S6 71

Dmv•
Vtolt

,......... 3 2 .600
............ 3 3 .500

Dallaa

........... J

Min'ncatu

....... l

4 .200
S .167

P1tlnt Dlvl1l0n

Golden Sta~ ....... S

·I

Baseball
Amcrlun Lcaa.uc
MI LWAUKEE ·DRE.WERS

In the NBA ...

New York

Sunday, Now. l7
Chicaao at lndilnapoliJ, 1 p.m .
Clndnnatlat Philadelphia, 1 p.m.
Denver It X..n1u Cily, t p.m.

Transactions

cr, on 1 multiyear coru.racL

Atl1nUc Division
Tum .
W L PH.
Philldelphia .... ... 4 2 .667

• 1'-r..i ~' ...# ..

i'

I .833

./
- •

Bocton at PhocrW.. 9;30 p.m.

Wuh:\nston at N.Y. Rangers, 7:35
p.m.
£dmon1on at PitLiburgh, 7:35 p.m.

EASTERN CONFEREriCE

Monday's score

"" r-,

DcltOit 11 MianU, 7:30p.m.
Chie~go 11Ch~rlone. 7:30p.m.
New York at Indian•. 7:30p.m.
Washinston at Minne10ta, 8 p.m.
L.A. Clippers 11 San Anton io, &amp;:30

Wednesday 's games

Wuter n Dl~lslon
New Orlean•
9 1 0 .900208 100
AUanta
..... S !! 0 .SOOJ7622l
S111Francileo
" 6 0 .400204145
3 7 0.300171235
L.A. R.ams .

r

Uu.h I t New Jmey, 7:30p.m.
Philadelphia IL Orlando. 7:30p.m .

6 48 91

Quebec tl Hartfcrd, 7:3J'p.m.
,
Pt\i.hdelph.itat New J~I'IC)', 7:35p.m.·..,
Torontou MiMuotJ. 8:05 p.m.
Detroit 11 C.lgary, 9:35 p.m.
Buffalo at S•n Jose, IOJS p.,m.
Loa Angele1 u V1ncouvcr , 10:35
p.m.

CC!nlral Division
i 2 0 .800181 iSS
...... 6 4 0 .600 196214
.. S 6 0 .4SSI99JI6
MizulcaOI.I
.. 2 i 0 .200150178
Greon Bay
2 8 0 .200123212
Tampa Bay

s11tr

Wednesday's games

15 SS 71

Tonight's games ·

Chlc:a-o
llcuotl

•

3 .400
4 .333

Tonight's ~ames ·

Winnipeg 6., Lo&amp; AngclCJ"2
Washington 4, MOOlrCII 2
N.Y. R•n&amp;cn 3, PiLI$blll'gh 1

Dh•lilon
W L T Pd. PF PA
. \0 0 0 1.000 320 I2S
6 4 0 .60021 0 203

Dallu
PhUtdelphi• .. S S 0 .SOOI6S !53
N.Y. Giani.J .. S · 5 0 .500159174
"" 4 7 0 .364136225
PhOCl'lil

$9 5 """bfhs $59 """bfhs:

.soo
.soo

New Jcn;c~ at New York, 7:30p.m.
Orlando al Wuhinaton. 7:30p.m.
Charloue at Atlant.l, 7:30p.m.
Milwaukee al Cle•dand, 7:30p.m.
Detroit at O!icaao. 8 p.m.
110\laton at Dillla, 8:30p.m.
Dcnvu at Portl111d, 10 p.m.
Phoen.i11t OoldM State, 10:30 p.m.
B01ton at Sacramauo, I0:30p.m.

Monday's scores

Eut~m

Tum

T Pl.l. CF CA
4 20 70 66
1 19 71 00
5 17 S7 66
I IS SO SS
2 12 48 63

Sm)·thc Division
Vancouver
... 12 4 2
C•lg1ry
9 6·2
Los Angele. ... 8 S 4
Winnipeg
.... 7 7 4
Edrnonl01'1
... 6 9 3
SanJ01c
...... 3 15 0

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

I •

3
3

.s

LS
2
2
l5
3

Utah I 06, StcRmento 90
L.A. Clirren; J()S, lnd.iana 97

Norris Division

Tum
Cll.ia$o

Western DI ¥LIIon

~· ; g

2 .714
2 .600

Monday's scores

CAMPBELL CONFEREKCE

.... 7 3 0 .700192159
Denver ·
7 3 0 .700207136
Kar\111 City
San Dicso

Sacramento

'S
3
3
3
2
...... 2

Philadelphia IOl. Mihrt'aukoo 99

H

L.A.IWden
Seaule.

L.A. Ctippm ....
Seattle
...........
Phooni.x
Portland
..........
L.A.. LU.cn .....

~ 00203185

Central Dl¥blon
.,. 8 2 0 .800270144
4 ' 0 A00187204
Cleveland
... 4 6 0 .400202211
Pluaburgh
. I 9 t ,100160195
Clndnna~

"- Get it to~
·
frOm Stanley Steamer®
!
• • • ••• ••• • •

24

~-

W L T Pel. PF PA

Buffalo
N.Y. Iou

..... 1451 297033
762164749
S74 145456
591113652
...... 3111
7476S

Bufflio

Eadem Dh·blon

Turn

The One Year
\,l~" Clean C'~,.
Guarantee.

:$44

Adona Division

In the NFL ...

Fete Thursilay

THANK·YOU TO THE VOTERS OF
THE SOUTHERN LOCAL SCHOOL
DISTRICT FOR YOUR
CONFIDENCE AND SUPPORT
·cLIFFORD "Tom".ROSEBERRY

offensive back and most valuable
offensive piarer, Hawley (most
valuable rece1vcr), Lewis (most
valuable offensive lineman), Crc- .
means (most valuable defensive
lineman) , and the most valuable
defensive back and the defensive
player of the year award went to
Blake.
Assistant pr.incipal and athletic
director Gordon Fisher introduced
members of the all·TVC Academic
Teams. In volleyball they were
'Weaver, Butcher aod Baer. Jn cross

Scoreboard

--Sports briefs-

&lt;

Most Valuable TVC Defensive Player, All TVC
Academic Team, I\tost Valuable Defensive Back,
Danny Lewis-Second Team All· TVC, Mike Cre·
means-Most Valuable Defensive Lineman. Not
pictured were Robby Wyatt-All TVC Academic_
Team, and Kevin Musser-Second Team All
TVC.

en
I

U
3

3.S

Natlont l Footbtll LUAUC
1\EW El'\O LAND PATRIOTS W1ivcd Scan F011er, wide receiver.

NEW ORLEANS SAINTS W1!vcd Scott Ron, linebacker. Si1111cd
Cedric Smith, running back . Move&lt;! ~\il·
ion M1ck , comCJblck, and Dobby Mcn:e.

Nnniha back, from injurud f'Cicrvc to tho
pmtife squ1d. Wt ivcd Anon Emrmnucl,
runn ina back ; •nd Hayward lhyn c•,
JUard, from lhc practice ~qu•d.

H1V is the virus that causes AIDS.
•
&lt;

•

CDC
,,. ,.., ... ...,..,..,....

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Public Health ServKl•
Ctnten lor DiMtM C0111rtll

�By The Bend
".•

The Daily Sentinel

enter houses and a junkyanl where
there were even greater challenges
: As the hour grows long, here in awaiting him.
:videoland, we find our musical ·
He finds out that he has dozed
;prpgram .proceeding with t~e off ·when the sleep meter ran out
•melodic sounds of Don and Ph1l, . and now he is fighting against
:me Everly Brothers. here we find monsters and even worse than what
;them in their reunion concert at he was facing earlier. Suddenly,
;Royal Alben Hall in England.
there is an even deadlier peril as
: , The year is 1983 - September haunting music begins playing:
•23; to be exact - and the next 65 ONE, TWO, FREDDIE'S COM:minutes of our program is' a warm ING FOR YOU ...
;and ·loving reminder of one of the
Will he escape the clutches of
·best-loved duos of the golden age Freddie Kruger and his razor
'of rock. Starting out with claws? Can he beat the menacing
; "Ciaudeue" and finishing with "Let monsters that await him? Can our
: It Be Me", "The Everly Brothers hero survive the horror in the high
:ReUIIion Concer1" is a triumphant school? Get" Nightmare on Elm
• return for these two stars and Street" and play It to find out.
: stands as proof that time does not
Now; get ready for another
: always tarnish talent. 19 of their thrilling and hilarious adventure in
r most treasured songs, such as another town named Springfield as
"Cathy's Clown", "Dream", "Bird we get ready to join The Simpsons
, Dog" and, of course, "Wake Up, and that bad boy himself,
~ Little Susie", makes this cone en a Bartholomew J. Simpson in "Bart
: masterpiece of melodic memories vs. The Space Mutants". In our last
,•that will leave you hungry for episode, Ban realized that nobody
•mere.
else could sec the space mutants
~ .' Wasn'tlhat precious, all you lis- but him, when he put his X-Ray
heners in Videoland? Now let us glasses on. Learning about their
move ahead to more contemporary plans to build a super weapon, Bart
.. music as we enjoy an odyssey into decided to foil their evil scheme .
: tflci documentary "Women in Rock"
Finding that nobody believes
: , ,which shows the evolution of him, he set out with a can of orange
' w·omen performers in the rock spray paint and began disguising
1
music world and how the demands plastic purple objects. But the
of a male-dominated society made aliens had begun takmg people
the climb especially difficult for over and Bart was in for the fight
! them. A well-done mix of inter- of his young life.
' views and videos," Women in
We ·find Bart facing the bully
:Rock" is a treat for rock historians Nelson as he races on his skate: and fans as weU. We see how it all board trying to dodge the alien
began i~ its most humble begiry- monsters waiting for him . He
nings w1lh Brenda Lee and Jams jumps and Nelson races past him
Jpplin up until today with Madonna but he tinds that he has landed on
;.aoo Lone Justice.
one of the aliens.
The film is fascinating, though
Will Ban survive or will the evil
for those who only want videos it space mutants succeed in their plan
pni@ihl be a trifle h.ro to sit through. to rule. the world. Can Ban find all
s:iil takes you into the back- of the purple objects before they
~~~~~ of~ some of the greatest tal- do? Will Maggie ever quit sucking
~
time.
on her pacifier? Tunc in to the nex t
, as our music ~rogram chapter of "Bart vs. The Space
we hope you w1ll stick Mutants", or better yet, get the
~~~d for another exciting episode game and try it yourself.
Niglllmare on Elm Streel'',
Now, as we get ready to sign off
video game.
for another day, let us thank A
In our last episode, our intrepid Vision Entertainment for the excelwas trying to stop the sinister lent "Everly Brothers Reunion
freddie Kruger from terrorizing the Concert" and "Women in Rock" .
Fhildrl:n of Springfield through And many thanks to Acclaim UN
dreams. The hero knew the for two fun games that combine
way to defeat Kruger was to horror and humor with challenge
&amp;lither up his scattered bones and after challenge. I couldn't do it
them to the graveyard to be without them and hope you will
·u~t~O, but after fighting snakes give them a try.
bats he found that he had to

Two Meigs County students'
were preliminary round winners in
Ohio University's 45th Annual
American HiStory Contest.
They were David !hie, of 46156
Morning Star, Racine, a student at
Southern High School, and Robby
· Wyatt, 427 Lincoln Street, Middleport, a student at Meigs High
School.
The final round in the contest
~ill be held on Dec. 5 on lhe
A.then_s.campus with the first place
winner to receive a four-year full
· tuition Ohio University scholarship
· and $100.
.
More than 16,000 students in
440 Ohio high schools took the
preliminary multiple choice examination at their local schools in
October.
·
In the preliminary round, Jason
Bumbico from Bishop Rosecrans
Higli School in Zanesville was the

!

1

REVIVAL • Rev. WIDiaiD and Catherine H!ll, former pastors of
the Circleville Churc,l! oU!te Nazarene, will be conducting a
revival at the Pomet'oy Cbur~h of the Nazarene beginning .
Wednesday and contlniJinJ through Sunday. Services are at 7 p.m.
nightly witb Sunday semces at 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m••Til.e Hills
will be preacbbig and singing. Pastor Glen McClung invites the
public.

I

Community Caleudar items
appear two days before an event ·
and I!Je day of !bat event. lte"'s
must be received weU in advance
to assure publication in lhe cal·
endar.

ence room at Bank One. All members are urged to attend.
·

EDWARD WELLS

top scorer, answering 75 out of 80
questions cotrec~y. l:le will receive
the Carl Gustavson Boo~ Award;,
named in honor of an Ohio Unive~­
sity Distinguished Professor Ementus of History.
.
In addition to the top scorer,
lhoS~: eligible for the final ~un~·s
three.question essay exammauon
include the higbest scorer in J;.ach
of Ohio's 88 counties, arid all
county scores in the 99th percentile
of scores for all entrants, or lh~:~sec­
ond and third highest scorer from
each county if ranked in the 95th
percentil'
.
.
The 1991 ·sccond-pnze wt.nner
will receive a one-year $1,250
Ohio University scholarship a.nd
$75. Third through seventh pnze
winners will receive $1,000 scholarships with $50 in cash prizes for
third through fifth places and $40
for sixth and seventh places. E1ghth
through 10 prize winn.e~s will
receive $1,000 scholarships .and$35.
Outstanding high school awards
of $200 and $100 will go to the two
schools with the largest number of
winners in the two rounds.
Participants will be notified by
Jan. 15, 1992 of the results of their
essay examinations. The contest is
sponsored by Ohio University's
College of Arts and Sciences, the
Department of History, and the
Admissions office, and is directed
by Professor of History Marvin .
Fletcher.

Days

•

6
10

Monthly

2-- ln Mtmory

tor errp~s f ir1t dliy ad . runt In PIDir) . Call b ~fore 2 :00 p m

9 - Warutd JO Buy

"A classified advertisemern placed in The Dilily Senttntl ~ •• ·
cept - cltssified displey , Bu1in•s Ca.rd and legal notices)
will at1o appear in the Pt. Ple•tint Register and the Galli ·
polis Daily Tribune. reaching owr ,S,Opo homn
1 112 13,14 16 16 17 18 -

the

446 - Galtipolis
367 - Cheshire
388- Vmton

992 - M iddleport
Pomeroy

675 - Pt PteiSant

985 - Chnter
843 - Po ruand

576 773 882 896 937 -

Oist

379 - WalniJt

458 - L•on

247-Letart Fells
949 - Reclne
742 - Rutland

Merchants to
host parade

·

Apple Gro\18
M.. on
New Haven
latlrl
Bullllo

7 3 - Va ns &amp; 4 WD ' s
74 - Motorcycles
75 - Boats &amp; Motors for Sale

Homn for Slit
Mabile Homes for Sale
Farms for "Sale
Businen Buitdings
lou &amp; Acreage
Rul Estate Wanted

76 - Auto Parts 6 Acceuor ies
77 -· Auto Repair
78 - Camping EQuipment
79 - Campeu &amp; Motor Homes

Serv ices
Heacin~

83 - EIICWiting
84- Eiectrieal &amp;

~tetri9er1tion

,
Public Notice

Public Notice

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT, PROBATE
DIVISION MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO IN THE MAmR
OF SETTLEMENT
·

PROBATE COURT,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Ac:counto end vouchero
olthelollowlng nomed fldu·
cilrlft hevo boon flied In the
ProblteCoun,MotgoCounty,
Ohio, lor epprovelend oetll•
mont:
ESTATE NO. 24882-Finll
end DlatrlbuUvo Account
Dovld G. Smlth,.Executrlx
tho Eatole of Violet Smith,

MHS BAND BOOSTERS
BEAN DINN!;R
Thursday, Nov. 14, 4:30-7:30
$3.5G-12 &amp; Under $2.50
dessert &amp;'drink. High School Cafeteria. ·

SACRED HEART CHURCH
BAZAAR NOV. 14.
Creamed baked chicken,
homemade noodles.
Dinner starts 4:30.
Games, crafts, fish pond,
religious articles. Attendance
prizes every 1'/, hour startmg
at 6 P.M.

Peraon.

on

ESTATE NO. 26827 ·Anal
end OlatrlbuUve
of

------J§[£
. .B~l

'I

·-

-·

992-3838 .

919/tl/2 ~ -

I&amp;C
BUUDOZING
PO NOS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
· HAULING:
Limestone, Dirt.
Gravel and Coal
licensed and Bonded

PH . 614-992-559
9·H -1 mo.

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE
All Hard Wood
For Residential
and Commercial
Dump Truck
Delivery or PickUp Your Own
Also Splitter
Services ·Available
Call 992-61~~...0

BISSELL &amp; IUID

..... "- ....
.._....-oor-· ·;·
CONSTIUCDO"~

·

eGarap1

i&lt; •
. i;

ec:omplote

,,,

Stop &amp; eo-......~

l\

FrH Estl~11 .•. ~

,

us-•4n ·.• ~r
667-6179 "'

.

5-31-'90 ""

GROOM
'ROOM
Complete Grooming
For All Breeds

. 614-91J2-6820
Pomeroy,

YOUNG'S

TRIM and
REMOVAL

CARPENT£R SERVICE ·
-

•LIGHT H~ULING

•FIREWOOD
•

WAlltDS-SlOO"
, ":
DIYII-S69 .,
RlfiiGRlTOIS-S 100 ., .

ROom Addltlon1
Gutter work
Eieetricll and Plumbing
Concrete wu{tl

UNGE!-IIoo-Boc.-$12S '!f :

- Roofing

nmm-sns ., . '·•._

- Interior bterklr
Painting

IICIO OYIIIS-Sit "

a

BILL SLACK
992-2269

SERVKE

.,
Acrou F,.,. ht1 Dffir1!1.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

USED RAILROAD TIES
tl-12-90-tfn

' .

liEN'S APPLIANCE ''

(FREE ESTIMATES)

992.ms ...

992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
1H4-'90 tin

m-u' r

POMOOY, OliO '

'I

10/30119 II

. .

A&amp;B
COMPLETE AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

wlllbeforhee~ng

USED APPUANOS.•
tO D,AY WAIUim ~,'

~

MICIOWA E
OVEN IEPAII

•VINYL
•ALUM INUM SlptNG •
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION .

AU MADS
lrlftl It In Or We
Plctrllp.

Convertible Tops,
carpets, Headliner &amp;

seat Covers and

KEN'S APPLIANCE

Minor Auto Repair.
MAIN ST, MASON, W.VA.
1-(3041

SEIVICE
992-5335 or
985-3561

Aaoso Fr- Pest Office
117 E. S.C... St.

773-9560
9/9191 1 mo. pd.

PO•IIOY, DIID

316/9G/Ifo

CHECK THE
N•wf•·

POMEROY - 3 BR, LR,
DR, porcheo, lg. garoge.
Low, Jaw 30'a. Meke
offer.

·s,~m

AIR CONDmONERS - HEAT PIJI'I'IS and
FURNACES FOR MOBILE &amp; DOUBLEWIDE
0

*

0

o

o

o

o

o

o

o

o

o

o

0

0

o

0

0

0

I

0

0

o

o

0

o

0

0

0

I

0

0

0

0

MOilLE HOME ·

HEADNG I
COOUNG

Located On Safford Schotl ld. eff lt. 1•1
..

1•1•1 '"·9•1• or 1·100·172·S96l

- ..... ·-

O.R. NURSE DAY
OPERTING ROOM
TOURS &amp; OPEN HOUSE
Pleasant Valley Hospital
' Wednesday, Nov. 13

Want to:
PIN do~ EXTRA

CA~H?!!

Big Kids &amp; Baby Class for
children becoming
Big Brothers &amp; Big Sisters
Tuesday. Nov. 12, 7:30
PVH Downstairs Cont. Room
67(;-4340, Ext. 230 to Register

Tum your clutter into cash, .
_"SeU i( the .m u w~y••• by phone,
no need to leave your home•
Place your cla.~sified ad todqy!
'
.
15 words or less, 3 days,
3 papers,$6.00

9'-6~

\•

Every Sundoy 12 N11011 1
Factory Guns OnlY''

BENNETT'S

_JI) •~~;~.·~· ., • ' . ,

SEARS

Begins
Sept.- I. SJ
.
__.. "1.

9-6-tln

llw B.·.. t l11 Ht ·.tl I .. 1.11• ·

•o•

WE SHIP PACKAGES
VIA UPS

12 Gauge Factory
Choke Only

Jock W. Cars ey, Realtor

-----1

~1(-R ·,~·:.~
·

HOME SITES,"
. LANDSCAPING
WATER end SEWER
UNES
1RU(KING AVAIWLE
FREE ESTIMATES '

SHRUB &amp; TREE

Andrew, Deceased.
.Urileaa exception•
Hied thereto, uld oceounl(ll

~ ~1HtJ'iMUnL F.i
·

~~\n~~~~~~~~~;:~Ol~3Q

.

Owner &amp; Operator

DIABETES SUPPORT GROUP
.
MEETING .
Thursday, Nov. 14, 7 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
CommunHy Room
"Surviving the Holidays"

~ockless principal doesn't

r

CAIPEJ ClEANEIS
anti TILE FlOOI CARE
•Reasonable Rates
•Quality Work ·
•Free Estimates
•Carpel Has Fast Dry
· Time '
•High Gloso on Til,o
Floor Finish
MIKE LEWIS, Owntr
R1. l, Ru1lancl, OH.
742·2451
3-14-'91-tfn

EMILEE MERINAR

Court on the 16th
December, 1991, at whllch I
time aald accounll
conaldered
end •nl
c~r·~~::~ 1
Deceeaecl.
from day to day
ESTATE NO. 26860· Final dlopi&gt;ud of.
and OlatrlbuUve Account ol
Any peroon lnteretled
Gill Ohllngher, Executrix ol may file wrlnen exception•
the Eotolo ol Anno M. Obltz, to aald account• or lo mal·
Deceeaed.
toro perlllnlng to the execuESTATE NO. 26827-· Anel llon ot the trull, not 1111 thlln
end DlllribuUvo Account ol live dayo prior to the dale oel
Donie Boggeu, Admlnlatro· lor hearing.
trix olthe Eatete of Denlord
Robert E. Buck
0. Oouglu, Deceaaed.
PROBATE JUDGE
ESTATE NO. 27006 ·Final
Common Pleu Ccull,
end Dlalrlbullve Account of
Problto Division
Bemord V. Fultz, AdmlniaMelgo County, Ohio
trotor of tho &amp;tote of Char· November 12, 1991

Dinner includes: Cornbread, slaw,

SPORTSMAN. :rn.
CLUB

BACKHOE WORK, .

11

85 - Ge ntfal Hau lin g
86 -- Mobile Hom e Repair
87 · Upholstery

49 - For le.u.e ..,

OF ACCOUNlS,

GUN SHOOT;,

EXCAVATING . ·FORKED RUN::;
BULLDOZER and

GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS
Stcuting Sept. 22

81 · ·Homelmprovemenu
82 - Piumbing &amp;

.

ion

l

71 - Autos for S1le
72 - Trucks for Sal e

48 - Egu lpment for Rent

Relatives visit

~~s~v~!~~!:a~ng a stand

Transportation

45 - Furnished Rooms
46 - Spece tor Rent
47-Wented.to Rent

BUlLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P•.M.' DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

698-61
. ..
'

CLUB

11/14/tfn

INDEPENDENT

41 - Houses fOf Rent

BULLETIN BOARD

992-66 •• - .....

66- Seed &amp; Fertaizer

l;fifijlll

Get Ruulft Fut

OIJOU IIIE ·
1-100-1.1-0870
DAIW., OliO

7 / 31 /' 911fn

64- Hay &amp; Grain

Real Eslale
31 32 33 34 35 36 -

Bryan Place
Middleport, Ohio
539

6:1 - Firm Equ ipment

CEDAI

RA(INE GUN

JAMES KEESEE
99N772or
742·2097

62 '"""'Winted to Buy
63 - l ivestock '

FUUY

FREE ESTIMATES

992-7013
or 992·5553

.

•Vinyl Siding
·Raplacemant
,. "Windows
•Roollng
•lnsulallon

Building SupphM
Pets for Sale
"'1uPcall"nttrumtnts
Fru itl &amp; Vegflabl•
59 - For S11e or Trade ,

I USED
FOR All MAlES I
MODElS

OHIO PlLLET .CO.

'INSULATION·

&amp; Liveslock

21 - Busilieu Opportuni~y
22 - ~oney to Loan
23 - Prof••iona! Ser~J I Cts

•

Guest speaker named

i

'"
•

64 - Misc. Merchandllt

'

Situahan Wanted
lnsuran ce
Busines• Training
Schooll &amp; Instruction
Radio, TV L CB Repair
Miscellaneou 1
W•nted To Do

9-13·'9Hfn

Home Rtpiii't
•Roofing,_ ,_ ;..,·~···I

il .

CALL

J&amp;L

Fm n StiJllllles

42 - Mobile MomM for Rent
43-Farmt for Ra rft
44- Aplrtment for Rent

Card shower

•Ids

Help Wanted

.

-

· 56 56 57 58 -

SP.rvu:r.s

OAV BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 1LOO A.M. SATURDAY
- HO P.M . MONDAY
- 2:00P.M . TUESDAY
. - 2:00P.M . WEDNESDAY
- 2:00P.M . THUASOAY
- 2 ·00 P.M . FRIDAY

Mason Co ., WV
Area Code 304

·

Ernpluyrn P. nl

follou·inf{ telephom.' exchang:es ...

Ar~bia

5~ :- Antiques

5 - Happy Adl __
6-Lost snd Found
7 - Yard Sate (paid 1n advance)
8 - Public Sat a &amp; Auction

'Ads· that muit be paid in advance are
Card of Th.-.ks
Happy Ads
In Memoriam'
Y•d Sales

643 -

· 62- Sport~g Good1

'

4 - Giviawav

dav after o.ub.liclition to mtke correction ·•

Me•g• County
Area Code 614

Strictly Enforiod

51 ~ Houlehold Good•

•·

3-Annoucements

' Sentinel is not responsible fo r errorsafte1 firsfd., . !Check

G1ilh C ou ntv
Area Co df 614

f•ctMY ·Choke ·
12 Ga11• Shots~• Onlf

Mer chandi se

1 - Card of Thtn~l

'Price of ad for all capital lllttett ''double price of ad cost .
'7 point line tvpe only used. ·

pa({e.~ .corer

.42
.eo
.05/ doy
---

A11110 u11 ce menls

run 3 di\'S at nO ch•ge.

245- Rio Grande
256- Guvan Ois t

19.00
·•1a.oo
t1 .30/ doy

AUTO PAm

Far Sole
Gr,at !!rice!

6:30P.M.
Starting ~t. 2•

.JO

-~ fnrur.hrt~t~~a l. •paratead t . --

e:eft,te l 50 discount for tdl Plid in tdvance
'Free ads - Giveaway and Found ads und• 15 words will be

Classified

U.OO

.•Remodeling end

Hardwood Slabs

SAJ. NIGII1'

Rat• are tor con11cutive runt. broken ugdfYswill bt ch~rged

Meigs,. Qallia or Mason countiM must be prt·

COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPEA
TUESDAY PAP,ER
W~DNESOAY PAPER
TIIURSOAY PAPEA
FRIDA'( PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

15
15
15
. 16

Ices

FIREWOOD
SEUERf

Bashan 8ulldlng ·
EVElY

Rote
Oveo 15 Words
t4.00
.
.20

16

3

y

••

A

· RACINE ._ .
FIRE .DEPT. '

S

Wordi-

1

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

Birthday celebration

Ladies Ch;cle
plans tour

GUN SHOOt.
RA

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MOI~DAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.

The Dally sentinel Page 7

usiness

• The Area's Numbe~ 1 Marketplace

667 - Coolville

POMEROY - A ceramic lighted
ThQ Pomeroy Merchants Assowinter scene class will be offered at
ciation
will host the Christmas
the Meigs County Public Library in
POMEROY - Edward Wells, parade, "Home For the Holidays"
Pomeroy on Wednesday at 10 a.m. Pomeroy, was honored recently
Dec. I at 2 p.m. Line-up will
TUESDAY
The cost is $13.50 and is payable with a surprise binhday party in on
begin
at I p.m. behind the old
RACINE - Racine Baptist upon registration.
observance
of
his
75th
birthday.
Pomeroy
Junior High School. 1
Church will hold revival through
The
event,
hosted
by
his
wife,
.
Deadline
for
entry is Nov. 25 and
Sunday at 7 p.m. nightly. Speakers
POMEROY- The Meigs ~ocal Mildred, and daughters, Jane further information on the parade
htclude Earl Shuler, Charles Norris, Chapter I parent mccung w11l be Mitchell and Rueua Crow was
Rick Harris. Steve Deaver invites held Wednesday at 6 p.m. at.Salis•-ryheld at the home of ~ueua and Bob may be obtained by calling Vicki
the public. Special music by Kings bury Elementary. An oyerv1e~ of Crow, Syracuse. Gifts were pre- Ferrell at Buttons and Bows, 992Harmony Quartet, SouLhern Hill the Chapter I prog~ will be g1ven sen ted to the honored guest and 5117.
Gospel, Marty Short and LuAnn by 'Yendy Halar, director. Every- cake, ice cream, nuts and mints
White, Kyger Vallef Quartet, one 1s welcome.
were served to the 40 guests attendGod's Little Lambs, Ltving Word
ing.
.
and Faith Harmony Boys.
MIDDLEPORT • The. MiddleAt the party were Hartwell and
Beulah Grate, Rutland, is a
port Literary Club will meet Marie Curd, Marvin R. Marchael
patient
at Holzer Medical Center.
POMEROY - The Ohio Eta Phi Wednesday at I :30 p.m. at the
of
Texas,
Freeman
and
Lee
Enoch,
Cards
may
be sent to her ar Room
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, home of Mrs. Wilson Carpenter.
Nathan
and
Bette
Biggs,
Bob
and
420,
Holzer
Medical Center, Galwill observe its Preferential Tea on Mrs. Sibley Slack will review "A ·
Esther
Harden,
Walter
and
Mary
lipolis,
Ohio
45631.
Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at• the ~orne Generation of Leaves" and Mrs.
of•Susan Clark. Members bnng a Betsy Horky will review "Water Grueser, Darla, Amber and
potluck dish. Park and ride at the Babies." The roll call is a~ eminent Autumn Thomas, Dude and Sarah
Gibbs; Pam, Meredith, Wes and
Victorian.
A Thanksgiving dinner was Pomeroy Fire Station at6: 15 p.m.
Carrie Crow, Bob and Katie Crow,
enjoyed by members of the Faith
Rev. Eddie Buffington of GalFloyd and Dink Mitchell, Henry
Full Gospel Ladies Circle. when · RACINE - Racine Lodge No.
RUTLAND - A Thanksgiving and Kathleen Wells, Nettie and lipolis will be the guest speaker at
they. met recently at the home of. 4.61 F and AM wUI hold a regular program will be presented at the Willard Boyer, Dortha Ncutzling, Naomi Baptist Church in Pomeroy
-Sandy Cowdery. 'Hostesses were meeting on Tuesday at 7:~0 p.m. Rutland Church of Christ on
at 10:45 a.m. on Sunday. The pubSandy Cowdery and Dolly Reed with work in the M.M. degree . Wednesday. A carry-in dinner will Jane, Danny, Cara and Mau lic is invited.
and the blessing W'as asked by Election of officers will also be begin at 6p.m, with program at 7 Mitchell, Mildred Wells, Lori and
held. All members are urged to p.in. to include the Southern Hills · Robby Crow, Christi and KCllie
Mary Folmer.
Vivian Humphrey presided at aucnd.
Gospel singers. The public is invit- Colllns-;-Ructlll and Roberr Crow.
the meeting and stated "the secret
ed to attend.
Coagreuloaal paaets
'
to your success is the secret to your
POMEROY - Revival at the
prayer life." Eleanor Lawson led Calvary Pilgrim Chapel, Route
POMEROY - The Meigs CounIn Congress, the group of represenMr. and Mrs. Roben Bailey Sr.
143, Pomeroy will be held Tuesday ty MiniSterial Association .will
the group in pmyer.
tatives
of senators assigned to considDevotions were given by Mrs. through Nov. 17 at 7:30p.m. night- meet Wednesday ot9:30 a.m. at the have -returned from a vacation in er legislation
in a specific area - for
Cowdery "Being Ever Thankful'." ly . Dana Walker, Rockwood, Trinity Congregation.al Church. Florida visiting relatives and places example, foreign relations - is a .
Each member told of something Tenn., will be the evangelist. There Nancy Yoacham, Mc1gs County of interest.
committee. BiLls must be approved by
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith committee before they can be consid·
they were thankful for.
will be special singing nightly. Department of Human Services,
. There were 58 shut-i n calls Rev. Victor Roush invites the pub- Children Services, will be the guest retumed"l'htlrsday after spending a ered by the lull chamber. Subeommltreponed and cards were sent to the lic.
speaker. Rev. William Mid- few days with Mr. and Mrs. Daniel lees are divisions of lull committees.
Bradley Jordan "BJ." Robinson, sick.
dlcswarth will have devotion s. Worley and family, Daniels, W.Va. Joint committees include members of
of Brad and Serena Robinson,
Roben Reeves, Chester, was a both houses. Conference committees
A trip to the Meigs County
MIDDLEPORT • The Middle- Plans for the Community Thanks~ntly celebrated his first binh· Infirmary is planned for bee. 2
port Elementary PTO will meet giving Service will be discussed. Wednesday visitor of Dorothy also include representatives and sena- .
day ~ilh a party at the Middlepon with gifts taken and Christmas car- Tuesday at'7 p.m. Steve Dixon will All Meigs ·County ministers arc Reeves.
tors but are appointed specifically to
reach a compromise on a.specific bill.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Leslie
Frank
,
oling.
be the speaker. The topic of discus- invited to attend.
Select
committees are temporary, or
A clown theme was carried out
Sarah
and
Matthew
were
reccn
L
The next meeting will be held sion will be "Drugs Arc An Illuare named to deal with a specific
e decorations with clown cake with a gift exchange and a Christ- sion." All parents are urged to
visitors
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Eugene
CHESTER - The Past Counissue.
refreshments.
mas buffet for the Ladies Circle.
attend.
cilors Club of Chester Council No. Haning and Ronald.
} Attending and sending gifts
Attending were Vivian
323, Daughters of America, will
-were Brad and Serena Robinson, Humphrey, Mary Alice Bisc, DebTUPPERS PLAINS - The meet Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the
Q!Over and Elsie White, Woodrow bie Dailey, Mary Folmer, JoAnn Meigs County Chamber of Com - lodge hall. Faye Kirkhart and ThelMembers of t•e Administrative Cou~ed for t•e Roo•e·Jacksn
liltney, Mike Still, Jeff, Sonia, Dailey, Eleanor Lawson, Kathy merce will meet Tuesday at 6:30 ma White arc hostesses. Members
hrista, Jeffrey and Tyler Circle, Black, Rnse Reed, Judy Hall, Mary p.m. at the VFW Hall in Tuppers bring Thanksgiving poems LQ read.
Tec••kal &lt;••ter wiD be recelvlag sealed
01 a mod1lar
an, Sheila, Kirt, Danielle and Greer, Kate Evans and Sandy, Plains. The mecpng is hosted by Bring or wear something pertaining
w.h. t.. specHkatloasllsted ..low. Tile last day ••, •ils wll be
iltany Spencer, V!nce, Synthia. Mary. Dailey, Ada VanMeter, Roger Hawk of Hawk's 76 and to Thanksgiving.
and Joshua Robinson, Terri and Audra Ruckman, Su sie Cowdery, Fred Goebel. John Redovian,
accepted wll be 12:00 1001 oa November 19, 1991. Bils will be
.(nlhoit~ Sinnett. Rochelle Robin- Dianne and Lynn White, Tammy
grants coordinator for the Meigs
THURSDAY
opined at 1:00 p.m. on lhat date.
,
sP.n,' Willie Robinons and Unique Cowdery and Virginia, Dolly Reed County School System, will be the
ROCK SPRINGS - Rock
.Jtliies.
.
MODULAR HOUSE- 26'x52'
and Sandy Cowdery.
guest speaker. Make reservations Springs Grange will meet on
One (10 Ranch Style Houoe (211'152')
by calling 992-5005.
Thu,rsday at 8 p.m. at the Grange
1,352 •quare feet
Hall.
3 bedrooms, 1 and Y. betho
LONG BOTTOM - The Flame
Andoiaen Wlndawo, Ooubto hung
Fellowship Chapter will meet
REEDSVILLE - The Eastern
lnoulellon: R·33 Ceiling; R·20 Wolle
Tuesday at the Faith Full Gospel Fall Sports Banquet will be held
Church in Long Bottom. Hazel Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the high
Life, Little Hocking, 'will be the school for junior and senior high
speaker. The public is invited to football , volleyball and cheerlead;;,.
BEOOOOt.l
;1Q:Tai+uENr::1uHcOIN=II=G=R:::.OOI.Il
attend.
ing.
Bring
three
covered
dishes.
._ High school Principal Chuck
Lantlroche does believe in wcarDrinks and table service furnished.
ta~droche has never gotten cold ing a tie and a jacket to work each
t2' X 11'.8' . ~lf\..
\,
.._
II' ' ,.•
PORTLAND - The Portland
1eer for taking a stand on going day. And his shuts are always nice·
Elementary PTO will meet TuesJcless.
ly pressed.
POMEROY - The Meigs High
. '-.,
day
at 7 p.m. at the school.
e dido 't wear socks to his
When he was a teacher and prin·
tbcr's wedding. He didn't wear cipal in Vermont, '_' you _cou)d
.
"' : .· ·
. . WEDNESDAY ·
·to 7:10 ·p:m : co~ns ·s3 :50Tor ' ... ... •...
• ··... B....EOR
_ .... ,.. ,.. "" B'EOR
_
·to his job interview with the judgii'li'godd winter'by'tlie humber
POMEROY
The
Pomeroy
adults
and
$2.50
for
children
under
'
Old Saybrook school board. And of times I wore socks," he said.
stiU doesn't wear socks, to work "There were some six-or seven- Merchants Association will meet 12. The public is invited.
12· :&lt; ts·-e·
~ "
8 111
ahyplace else.
sock winters. Then there were Wednesday at noon in the confer12' X
~' People ·ask, 'Don't your feet some 15- or 20-sock winters."
er get cold?' Well, no, which is ' But winters in Connecticut have
i~teteSting because my hands do," been "a piece of cak~,'{ he said.
MODULAR HOUSE
Jtt· Landrcche
said.
All have been no-sock winters.
puts Topsiders on his
26' X 52'
feel each morning. He docsn 't
Gator er croc?
S.le will be caah In hend with no werrenty, Implied or othorwlao.
r e · tbe feel of socks in the tan
... . d!Jck shoes.
Minimum bid on houee lo $29,000.00 peyable' wllh)n thirty (30) days. A
The maJor difference between a!U·
dopoelt of S500.00 will be required br the auccetatul bidder on tho dey
Students at Old Saybrook High 1ators ancl crocodiles iJ the IIDOIIl The
bide ere ·opened. HouH must be ra!"'vod from Cantor proporty no liter
hool take their sockless principal crocodile baa a 1on1, tapered anou~ ·
1hen
thirty (30) deya from aaceptonce of the bid. The C111ter roaervoa the
i stride. But his dress bas raised a which narrowssbarply from the eyes
right
to rtject eny or all bide end to welvo anr formelld11 In bidding.
r, .ll)'CbJOwS among parents.. .
to the end' of Ill noee. The alllaator'a
"
Conlee!
tho Tochnlcel Cantor lor epaoHicallono. (Phone 372·7335 or t27·
snout is rounded. It II almoet u bi'OIId
1,.!.'Palenls say, 'What are you hs.788 NORTH SECOND
MIDDLEPORT
42ttl.
Tha
moduler II located on .., Centlf proporty ond 1111y be Vfowed
tening to him for'/ He doesn't wear at the end of the noee u ll II at the
Mondey
,
t
hrough
Frldoy from 8::10 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
992·2178
socks," said Jen Beaulieu, ' stu- eyes.

1

Ohio

Classi ie

OU history contest
heads into final round

By Jeff HUieary

..

·

, Tuesday, November 121 1991

TUesday, November 12,1991
Page-6

Video views-•

..

'

2

Public Nollce

In Memory

-

In Loving Memory
of CLAUDE OLIN
REI'rMIRE, our
eloved husband
and falher who
passed away ten
years ago on
November 13, 1981.
, Sadly missed by
wlflt, kl ds, and
. relatives

' Call our office for paid in advance rat e•!

' NOTICE •
Notto.lohorebyglventhot
theunclorolgned flied In Caao
No. ..... eppllootlon to tho
Ccmmon
Court, p,..,.
beto Divlolon of Uelge
County, Ohio, lor on ardor to
chlnge Iter nemo to Llrolne
stoone-NoWaomo.
Bold epp...llon will bo
heard In Nld Court, II 1:00
p.m., on lllo 13th dey of December, 1111, 11 tho Meigs
CountyCouiiHauH, Probole
Dlvlalon, Pomeroy, Ohio.
(11) 121TC

Pt••

I

1

9.

~3.

10

4.

12.
13.
14
15

5

6.

7.
8
.

11.

t marvest ABargain...
Reap The Rewards...
When You Turn To
The Classfieds,
Ml The Bonn~ Is Yours!
Now that the weather has cooled
down, why not heat things up a bl{
by dearing your dosets, attic or
basement or those unwanted items
and advertising them for sale in.
the ClassifledsP
And, you can put that extra
cash to ROOd·use by checking
the Classlfleds for local garage
sales, Rea markets and bargains
In your neck of the woods.
To put the Ctasalfletb to work far you,
call our ad-vlson, Monday-friday at

992-2156

~~'1J

ED'S
PAl miG

Interior Pelndng,
FreeEatlmalel
30 yeera experience.
Fourteuera of
recommtndotlon. Honest
ond deptndlble.

.,...,,.

~·-'

3 .......,

Call Ed Battin
collect at
1-614·667-6474
11/611 mo. pd.

'BISSELL
BUILDERS ~: :
CUSTOM IUILT ':
HOMES &amp; GARAGES. •
"At ltasenoblt Prien",

&lt;

PH. 949.2101
~
or l11. 949·2860·,
Day ar Night · ·•··

NO SUNDAY CALLs·_' ;
. 4-l&amp;-16-11 .

ATS INSULATOR® ::'
VINYL REPLACEMENT WIN
We Will Not Be Undersold .
•save up to 50% on Fuel Bills
•Increase the Value of Your Home·
•can for Free Estimates
-

742·2328
LINDA'S

FAIL FESTIVAl
SPECIAl

PAINTING
INTERIOR • EITEIIOI

20 SESSIONS :·

Toke tilt Pll• "' If
Pll•tllllo .
Lit .. It lor yoe.
YEIY IWOUill
NAVE IEFEIIICIS

For $20.00 ;

. FREE ESTIMATES

•o

(6141915.... 110
10.23-81 1

pd.

Otter Ends Oct. 31

FOIIID

110111 '
949-2126

1141

�. ....

"'

·- ,,

Page

8

The .Dally Sentinel

SNAFU® by

Announcements
1\.. •

3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Br~ce

Beatlie

21

NOTICE • No huntlog or
trespassing on thl Lewia finn
at Gallipolfa F•ry. AI previous
permits art void.
Slncen~

Artl

Slngloo All Agoo And UIIIIYIU

Awalt You. ·c-onftdtntlaL . WrH1:

Slngloo, P.O. Box 1043,
llpolis,·Ohlo 45631.

4

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

42

Business
Opportunity

Mobile Homes
for Rent·.
C.ndy ond Snooko Vending Mo- 14x70 Ill tlttlrlc Dn priVItl lot.
chlnll. EJtvtil unltl, nlnt 1210.00 ptuo utiiRIM. HUD Apo ·
ptocod. Soiling .mochlnoo, proved. a04-1711-40U.
locatlona, and iilveritory. Bnt
ofllr OVI&lt; $1,000. Coli 304-1175· 2 bedroom 1rllltr, - . orotor
fumlahed. A...,.ncll, Aa.o
1788.
troller opaco. North At. 1 Locuot
Rood on right, Pt. PR. 304o871·
1078
.
23 Professional

Announcements

Un1Uached?

Tuesday, November

Go~

Seivlces
Cullom Butchering,. e daye a
wltk. Cattle, Hoga, Deer, 3Q4.

Giveaway

882-2313.

2 smoll bllgl.., 304o8"15-2492.
3 Cushion Couch, Ookl, BtaCk.
614-446-0626.

Television
Viewing

Transportation

I. •.

71

Autos (or Sale

•

"Chrlllmu Spaclol', 1184
Clmaro mint cond, A.-1
-honlcol, now ·tlfel($1000 '
wonh at tlrM &amp; wheals), priced
nghl "moo, 114-11411-2021 _
1m Dcldgo 300, 304-8711·1212.
1111

2-BR ·trollor In . count,Y, $17i
monthly__i!!!J!. dot&gt;~~~H, utiiRIII,
,.,.,_ roqulrtcl, 114-t411-2133

~ncoln

For Rent, 114441-0722, 814-4415-7788.

IUE.. NOV. 12

I

low to form lour

•

•*"''

(J) Qolf Grand Slam lrOm
Kaual IAgoona, Hawlll (~)
(l) 111tJa.!! One Telnlll1n

Stereo. C

(J) Mlllt IAin*tg .._

··. g~:=s
WHAT DO 't'OU .

GNU TOIIIJ

I

'

lo&lt;:,, ,

taWIIIIdT0 Aln T1n Tllt1 K-t Cop Q

1:30aJU NIC Newa

~

A

(J) •Amellaa~
%J.cthe~ er

(l) Wid

e

OUpCioae

·

ONewZonVQ

®t Dream o111Mnrile
(I) lnalde

1::"

Gallipolis .
"&amp;VICinity

BARTENDERSICASIN.O

";";";-:;--7::-:--:7.~:-::~:-1 W 0 R K E R S / D E C K

ALL Vard Sala• Must Ia P•ld In
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
lh~ day boloro thlod lo to run.
S~o~nday edition • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. llondoy edlllon • 2:00
p.m. Saturday.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
H...td Gorogo SolO, Rt. 2,
North, Eckaril Chapel Road,
Wtdnltdoy, Thurldly, 8 tAl 5.
Coate, tWII..,_, crallt. 1paea
hutar,
woodbwner,
m1.1ch
moro, 304o87H524.
Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vlcl~lty
AI) Yord Sol.. Mull It Pold In
Advonco, Dlldllno: 1:00pm tho
doy boloro tho od 11 lo run,
Su~doy edlllon· 1:00pm Frldoy,
Mondor edition 10:00o.m.
Sa&amp;urdly.

t.arv• moving
-·
glau-top
table, 21111;
rafrlgtrtlor,
QII~O¥t,hospHalbtdl,houea

fiol~

homo (lg. ond om.~ clothing lnllrit, chlldr.n adult,
1112 E. 'lllln Sl; Pomthly, OH,
114-9115-4227

8 .

Public Sale
&amp; Auctton

Rick Pooroon Auction COmpany,
full lime auctlonttr, complete
auetlon 11rvlca. LlcanHd Ohio,
w..t Vlrglnla, 3CM·7n-1715.

9

Wanted to Buy

Junk ca,. and lruckl, 1M Mtl-

lng pano dolly, JID'o Auto Porto

and Sllvap, 3~TJ'S.I341.

Wol]l to bUY 111ndlng Umber I
pln11 Tim Burht IM-192·7110
aftertpm.
Wonted to flu7, 811ndlng limber,
· Bob Wlllllmo I Sono 5f4.1182·
5449.
W.nltd To Buy: Junk Auloo
With Or WlthO&lt;II Moton. Coli
L,rf.y Llvoly. 114-311-1303.
Wal\ttd To Buy: Junk Auloo,
scrop llolol 814-441.(1g13, ~~~~~
2p.m.
Top PrlcH Pold: All Old U.S.
Colno, Gold Ring~ Sllvor Colno,
Gold Colno. II.T.o. Coin Shop,
151 ~Avenue, Gallipolis.

HANOSJHott ..... ,
Etc.
Pasltlons Abolrd CNIH Ships.
$3001$1100 Wkly. frH World
Travel. No Exp. Nec11nry. 1·
208_·738-_70
_ oo_E.:.xt_._15_94~N.:.9:....__
~
Computer Optratlons, after·
noon •hiH, 2-ipm, programming
helpful, ruoond to Camp.
Oplr11ttr,
PO
Box 160,
Rovonowood, WV 21184

==''=,...-,===o-o--=

No Eaporlonco Ntc.... ry. A
Dolly Solory 01 $300 For Buying
MorehlndiH. 814-385-2082, EJf.
3813.
PHOTO TRIMMERS: Wlohlng to
ltart lmmtcUattiJ. No exp,
n.casNry. Earn up to $110 per
day, trimming phalographl. 1·

CONSTRUCTION
Naw Projact: Ralacala Savar11 100-331-8005.
'
:O:!:pa:::n:::.lng:;•::_·:,._I-B00:;;,-182.::::;·,::211i:::_l_ _
Pomeroy POSTAL JOBS $11.711CONSTRUCTION
New Projtct: R~ocalt Severt! $14.80o11r. No oxp. nlldtd: For
exam end eppllcatlon lnfo.1 call
Opanlngo, 1-BOOa2·211i7.
1·2111-lli7-15377om·10pm7aoyo.
DRIVERS
Rupanolblo middle •go ltdy to
Earn To $550 Wk, Smlll Pock· llvo•n.
Light hou11 work &amp;
agt Otll.,.ry, Relocate, Co. Car. oompanlonllllp.
304-1137-2435.
1-100-824-2030.
SOCIII
Worker
EARN MONEY Aoodlng Bookll
CWnaral Hol pltal has •
$30,000/r'· Income Pottntlal. Jackaon
Iullllmo opening lor 1 llconltd
Dtlollo. 11 805-1162-0 Ext Y· toelal
worker with a maalers
10189.
degrH. Pr.vloua hDapltal a1·
perltnc. preftrrad. Qualllled
appUeanltubmlt mum. to Plf'•
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT IS sonnal, P.O. Box 720 Rlplty ,
HIRING. $18,000 • $721i0001Yr. 1· WV 25271 E.O.E.
101114 1100 Ext. G 811 For
lmmtdllll R11pon11.
Tho Mtlgo Loco! School Dlllrlct
Ia c1.1rrent1y · Mlklng apFuif.Tlml Non-smoking Siller pllcotlono bom conlllid opo
Nllded Forloddltr. Anachment pllcenta tor a Junior High
PirMtlng Backgraund Preflt'· ' School ChltriNder Advleor for
rod. Golnpollo A"roo. Send Lot· tho 1991·82 ochool y11r. Apo
11&lt;1 To: CLA Box llf7, Golllpollo t&gt;llconto mull hold • volld Ohio
Dollv'Trlbo~ 1 125Thlrd Avonuo, luchlnt conHicoll ond lor
Gotllpollt, ""458t1.
coochlng polltlono, mull moot
Gollo Mol- Communby •-tlon cortlllcollon roqulfe...,.t ol
.Ohio lor opano madlclno ond
Agency ,_, • pon·llmt tom-. CPR. Portono lntoroottd ohould
1!01111 lob opening In Molgo oontoct Jim Corpontor, Sulllrin"""niJ lor on outroochllntou london~ Molgl l.ocil Scnoolo,
workor. Tnpo to out altho oru PO lox 272 320 E M1I St
mtdlcol lociN1111 oro ,.....,rod 1 OiJ0
· n .,
only thou wllh 1-bll, rol~ ::;;:~07:;•;.;;;:::7,·;:;:;;--=:;:;:;:obit lronoporlollon I nlld URQENTLY NEED DEPENdn""" llcon11 lllould oppty. DABLE PERSON to W«k
Ta. poahlon IIH calla tor ofnir Whhout aupttvillon tor Texaa
Intake ~utlte ln thl otnce oil co. In Muon IrA. We train.
moklng good moth or bookk11po Wrl1o T.l. Olcklroon, Proo.,
Ina oklllo proltmrl. High ochool SWEP~ Box 1161005, Ft.
td"ucotlon or 14julnlonl ,.. Wonh, T• 78t51.
qulrod. Tho lndlvlduol mull
ha'ttl elncer1 conc.m tor the Wanlad motiYitH ur.par10n,
tconomlcolly diAdvonlogod 1 m,CIOo$52,000 111 ytor, lrolnlng
lbllhy to work llflctlvlly wtth fi'Ovidtd, oxporltnco prolorrod,
them ~ eaentlal. Also ••· und rBiume to Dally SanUnal
DeMnce In tec1tr11 program• PO Bo1 72i8 Pomeroy, OH
Including
outruch
· and ~4S::76.;:9:..,:.·-,..,-.,.-,._,......,.....,.tron.,..,.tlon oro bonollclol. Work lor lldlrty lodv In hor
Since tht poallion Ia temporary homa, Pomeroy 1 ra 1 , 2: ra_flrtn·
a patl•tlmt, no ln1uranc1 CM req &amp;14-H2·2237
btnolhl 110 IVIIIIblt. Apo :-:;.'7-':'-':....:.::...:.=:'::---:-::
pllcollono will bo "occopttd Work from homo $60 por 100
through tho • - of buolnou proparlng moll. lnlormollon
on NOvomblr tl, lfi1, 11 tho 11nd llomp to K.S. Enllrt&gt;rllu
Ohio Buruu ol Emotoymonf• P.O. Box 5157-JIIW, Hllloklt, NJ
somc: ... 41 Olivo St. C.lllpollo. 07205,
201·701-1280.
WI oro on oquol ?Dpor1unlty
.mploy~r.
I·
14
Business
Training

1-:,_.,-,.,--,-:-- - --

p-

---

jrJ!' rt/11/ll!t(tr;..}in lf/J!I!t(lfj...

Rotroln
NowiiiSoulhllotom
Buoln... Collogo, Spnng Vllloy
Plw. Coli Todly, 114-441-431711
Roglllorlllon 191J.05-12l'IB.

18

Want to:
PIN down EXTRA

CA6li?!!

Wanted to Do

Will ' Bobyolt In My Homo
Anr.lmo.
Rodnoy
Aru.
Re erencae Available. Clll 814-245-6817.
E I R TREE SERVICE. Toooing,
Trimming, TrM Removtl, ked~
Trimming. FrM Eltlmallll 8f4.
367·715T.
Qoorgoo Ponoblo Sowmlll don1
houl= logo to tho mi'll lull
coli
76·1h7.
.
Mloo Poulo"o Doy C.ro Contor.
Solo, offordobll, chlldcoro. M·F
8 o.m. • 5:30 p.m. Agoo 2~10.
, 8tfol'l, after .choot Drop-Ina
Wt~0~ . 6~4. N.wl~

Turn your clutier into cash,
Srl1 it the easy way... by phone,
no need. to le~ve your home.
Place you.r classjfied ad today!
15 words or less, 3 days,
3 pagers,$6.00
CGu our office for paid in ad•anr:e rateil

1

9. ________~

2 . ___________ 10 . _________1

3.

11 •. ______;,____

4.

. "12._,.______

5.
6.
7.

•
8._________

'

13.·....-------1
14. ________ 1
15. ______ 1

font Toddlot Coro, 114-4415-1227.
Molhor of ono. will do blbyllll·
ling In my homo 11 Fro111rt Bot·
tom/Mitt~ not fir from Hannan
School. Exctlltnt rtltrenc.e,
ony houro, 304-1113-1037.
Will Do Houoocltlnlng, 5 Yuro
Eaportonco.&amp;14-44H021 or 814·
441-o225111n -11go.
Will Tob Coro 01 Tho PI Or El·
dilly In Tholr Homo, Ex·
por!Onotd. Coli - - 2.

Ftnancial
21

BuSIIIIBS

Opponunlty
INO!lCI!I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
IIOOftlmlndt lhal you do boll·
-with_.. you -~.·nd
lind
mall to
until
you In- td
thlollwlng.
.

NOT -·=hi

1WI Sahun, 2 bodraom, oil
altctrlc, furnished, 304-6753406.
1873 1h?O All Electric, 3br, New.

Undorplnnlng,
Waodbumtr,
Doelc/S1op, $4,000.614-2415-11050,
114·381·11734.
.
.

19711 14x70 Crlmoon Sollm, 3
BR, 2 full batha, liflrden tub, un·
dorplnnlng, woihor 1 dryor
hook... p. $71500. 614-4.,.011011 .~
tor 8pm.
19t2· Fllrmonl 1417'0, ).bdrm,
mull sllllmmedlally, 1..S00-4467871, ook lor I rondo or Todd
2·bdrm moblla home on a 1.81
acrt lot, hllty tuml8hed. new
carpet,
wuhtrf
dry1r/ ratrl
stove/ AC, In
Roclno OH,
2·2t31, ~

newilnCM

REBATE AEBATEI
Up To $1,000 Rtbtll On Soloct
Lot M - AIIEIIIII Homo Con·
tor. Grill SIIKtlon - ·
ElM lui El- Homo Conlor. 1·

800-61111-mo.

Storagt andlor OHiCa tralllr
8'x20'; 11500, 4lp trana, 3/4

chorry '73-'10 $100

33

Fanns for Sate

&amp;6 acrt1, firm

1918 or 458-1715.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

256-IN7.

Furnished ·
Building loiiHcro ond up, TP I 45·
C water, Ealttrn Mtlat Co.,
Rooms
quarter mila SA~ 114-tiS-3514
For Soli by Ownor: 2 cny loti, Rooms for rant ·week or morwh.
remodeltd 3 bedroom home, Stirling II 1120/mo. 011111 Holol.
large out bl~, convanienl k&gt;ca· ·114
411 esao.
tlon, 1 block from North Point
Element•ry and City Rtcl'lltlon S l - raomo wnh -.ng.
Complax. 304-875-3271 lor ap- AlootroTitt - · AN hook""po.
polnlmtnt.
can afttr 2:00 p.m., 304·7'735651, Ma~ WV.
.

Rentals
41

46

Houses fcrr Rent

2 Story 3br Comor Lot In
Chollllrt,. Ohio. Excollont Con·
dHion. 804-1132-el59, 904·032·
1670, 614·3G7-o849.
'
2 bdrm houu In Aullond, $275
month plutlllllllloo, dlpooh ond
rtflrences ,.qulrtd, 614-992·
7503
2 Bedroom $200 Month In
Mason. Piua Utllhlls, Rafarence
·And DopooR, 304-e715-12116.
2 BR houH. Aol. I Dop. 3046715-5112.
2 or 3 BR whh llliYo,.wood b~r·
nlr; carpettd baMment, city
ochoolo. &amp;32S mo., $100 dop.
614·245-5114,
3 btdroom unfumlthld houl1,
509 2nd Stroot, Now Ho¥1n, 3046715-348t.
3br In Evorgroon, 4 1111.. N. 01
Holzor/ m!lmo Pluo So:~tl
Dtpoot. 8t4-4411-11U, 11
68U
3br SICIIonol Homo In City, 1
Bloc~ From Ohio Rlvor Piw1
114-4411-2003, Bllw•n 3 Ana
6p.m.
5 BR house In downtown Gil•
llpolll, $300 mo. 114-448.(1144 or
441-7802.
F6r Ronl: Golllpollo Forry
ICIOU from 8Nit School. tw0
11ary, 4 BA, LA, DR, ldlehln
Wllh dllhwllhlr i ltOYI no
ro~lgorotor. 1 both. Coiling lono,
large window NJ unit,
boooboord hoot, corpoltd,
Wuhar, dryer hook-up. small
otorogo bolldlng, lorgo rord.
$340/mo.,
ptuo
utllltiH.
Rtfarenete anciMCurlty daDo8lt
roqulrtd. No lnlldo polo. Avol~
obit Doe. t 30WIII-7151 or 17114144.
on Rouoh Lint · 111
Chllhlro. 2 or S Br, 1 both, lo4ll
oloctrlc. 1331 mo. pluo llf'· dip.
114-317-oJO!IIftlr I.
Llrgo 2 8tory Homo, 4 Jltd.
roomo, 2 112 eotho, Parlor Aroa.
1400/mo. ~ o.-11,
Rtloron- V.L. mnh, A.E. 814441-1101,1

.

'

s,,.... 112 doublo, 2 bdml, no

":.:r'·1324-.
1114

Prlvale Pay Phone RDula.
Prlcad Right Mull Soli. 1 221~~ .

Mu.. bam

good, Hunting oru, 304-458-

_.!..!'!.,

plul ulllllloo, Ph.

Throo Bod,_. Ronch Wllh 112
kro Lown Now Homo, In E_,.
lent Condillon, Slcurnr, Dopooh
And RlltrlfiOII .Roqu rod. 3041715-17l11, 304-112·3199.
.

Space for Rent

Country ll!&gt;blll Homo Pork,
Route 33, North of Pon!lroy.
Loll.._rontoll, parll, 11111. Coli
114-..-•·llll'll.

48

Equipment
for Rent

Loa Spllttar For Atnl. Evan•

Molon, 114 141 1582.

Merchandise
5I

Household

GOOds
1;30'1 Sally couch &amp; chair,
$2110, 814-t41-2202
C.rpot 9x12 $50 I Upl Soil On
All Dutllldt C.rpot: 13.119 I
$4,H i Kitchin C.rpat, $7i VInYl
14.119. Solo On All Corpll fn
Stockl Mollohon c.-10 8~
448·7444.

·- •

Chorry dining lobiO I I chllro, 2
rro. old. noo.114-441-11111.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complott homo lumi~I~J:·
Houra: Man-Sal, ..a. I
0322, 3 mlltl out Bull•llll Rd.
F111 Dttlvory.
Moving Solei Hl¥1 Lon: Picnic
Tobie, Pllno W.ohor A!ld Drvor;
5 Drowor Cl,iOi Rototllllr, &amp;14441-4529.
Moving Solo: Whlt'l loft: plono,
picnic toblo, 5 drowor chill.
114 441 4131.
•
PICKENS FURNriURE
NIWJ\Iotd
Houllhold lumlohlng. 112 mi.
Jorrlcho Rd. Pl. Ptu11nt, WV,
coll304-876·1450.
AENT20WN
114-4414158
Yl'ro Fumlturo
Solo I ChoJ!. $11.10 Wllllj
Roc-.
81.'11-ILIUIIl
WMIJ. -lod
·
Rockor, 13.11
Complllt &amp;1.41 Willi. 4 Chtol, WI Willi; Pallor lodroom sun~. pc .. $11.17 W11k,
lnoiiHIII ~.Counlry Plno
Dlnlllt WHh
I 4 Chlllro,
$1G.II Wlllt.OPEN: · llonclor
ThN Solurdor, lo.m. to lp.m.,
SUndly 12 N- Till lp.m. •
Mil• 011 Routo 7 On AoiJto 141,
In C.niiNUJ.
I WAIN
AUCTION I FURNn"URE. 12
Olin St., Qolllpollt. Now I . _
fumlturt, htattfl, Wltttm I
Worlt booto. 114-441-:1151.

-h

r

Alllnllon BUll- OWnoro Ar)d
Emptor••: Allordoblo Hulh
lnouronco For Tho Sill·
Emi&gt;1071d, WV I ON. 614-441NASE Anytlmo.
Big Dtkoto Form HOftii, . Buln
Ori Your Lal. 5 Bldraam., 3
Botflo. auu And Up. •~
7311.
Fl,..ood for 1111, all hlrdwood,
H•p
clollvor,
llorlll oc:c:opted,
Rondolph, -will
lt4-1815-3587
oftorlpm

56

.__h

SUPPOSE 'rOIJ AND I HA\IE A Ull\.E

~

Chuok
Wllllomo
• - Tl'l - .·'Truoldng. 114lloalllortd Point lloro, I Y•rw
Olol 10 ~ ~ 14ft
aoc11 Trollor, St.2118;
:.:" Old - . . ;. ~-

.,.ADIIA

64

Hay &amp; Grain

I:HIY=:-::Aou--:'nd~I:-:S~mo"'t'"'l"'bo"'l-oo.
Solurdly only pickup. 304-876·
1m.

I

TALK, GeNER~! I'VE SOMETHING
I WANT TO RUN BY 'IOU!

CD Wllntaa to Survival

FI'IIIMCI Roger IWibtt' CIS

TIIIICIILMovlt (PG) (2:15)
Stereo. L,11
9:00 I]) • 0 Law a Order
Saverallratemlty boys are
acculed of replna_a temale ·
atutlllnt. Ste:§:. 'IJ
(l) Frontl(ne
e R - n Roseanne
and Dan lace being bounced
lrorn:s:
· nge. tPt 2 of 2)
Stereo.
-·

(J)

BUT

J.NY.

r CClL.JLD ~ FOR

OI&lt;AY, BUT

A N IGe I&lt;COT" 8!:ER
CREAM FIZZ.

L.EA'ONAoe .. .

LOr L..IKE:

rru... TAeTEA
~.

TELL HER I'LL
BE THAR IN TWO
SHAKES••IIH··

AUNT LOWEEZY!!
ELVINEY WANTS
YOU OUT AT THE
GOSSIP FENCE !!

TWO SQUEEZES I

(!) Nlnllt""lMUII Report of
the s-tllrtet'of 8..Amerlca's rOle In the Middle

ur

p

. . _.. _Upholottrlng oorvlc·
lng I~ OCMinlY or• 21 Jll!l. Tho
bHI In IUniRuro upholllonng.
Coli 30U7~114 lor ~- ..
II mot...

i

.. '.'
'

NORTH

ASTRO-GRAPH
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

rl

,,

'

'

ld- you gel In the year ahead lor ways
to make additional money should not
be trealed lightly. They'll have potential,
bull! !hey ore not utilized. they'll count
for nothing.
SCORPIO (Ool. 24-Hov. 22) Oon't be
lndiHereru to lhe suggestions of others
In your cclmmerclal dealings today. By
the same Ioken, do not discount your
own b~ghl ldeao, beCauH they might

be superior. Sccrplo•.treal yourself to a
birthday gilt. Send lor Scorpio 's AstrqGraph predictions lor the year ahead by
mailing $t.25 plus a long, sell-addressed , stamped envelope to AstroGraph, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box
91428, Cleveland, OH 44t01-3-428. Be
sure to stale your zodiac sign.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. D-Ille. 21) It 's
best not to use an Intermediary today to
pass on crlticalinlorm8tlon lo another .•
If you have something Important to say,
use dlrec1 llneJOI communication.
CAPRICOR"' (Doc. . 22....n. 11) Frequently, lips given to us by olhar8 on
ways to make or save money are unrell·
able. However. loday you mlghl receive
some Inside Information !hat's worthy
of further ln&gt;'tlltlgatlon.
AQUARIUS (JilL 211-Feb. 1t) Your
words carry a lot of Weight today wilh
those who both lrual and r - 1 you.
You're the one who can awoken lhe tn·
thuSiasm In a friend who's been down In
the dumps lately.
. PISCES (Feb. IOoMarclt 20) An lmpor·
tanl objec11ve can be achieved today II you lake lhlnga one llep al a time. Be
sura you're on solid fooling beloro mlklng each move.
ARIEl (Match 21·Aprtl It) Yciu might
have an opportunity today to filCh a
lrllftd how to do somelhlng th1t. has

been successful lor you. You're a good
Instructor, and lhe knowi&lt;Kige yoo lm·
pan will prove moat helpful.
TAURUS (April 20-MeJ 20) To be suc·
cassful today, you don'l have to be
bolder or stronger than your competl·
tors, just smarter. ~el them usa !heir
muacles'; you uoe your mind.
GEMINI (MIJ 21-.IUM 20) Keep an
open mind today, because someone
yoo'lr be InVOlved wlih might have bel·
tar idlll than you do lor advancing a
mutual lnter11t.
CANCER (.Iuiie 21-.IIIIJ 22) Be reasonable aboul the llze of relurna you ex·
pect tor your allo~a today. What you do
will be ll:lcnowledged tn small ways, not
-..rlty on a grand acale.
LEO (Jutr 23-Aug. 22) You'll be an as·
Itt at aocill gathlrlnga loday; yoo will
know how to put olharo 11eua and get
them to tllk about them-. Your
tecllcll will make you popular, too.
VIRGO (A~g. D-11111- 22) Thoughtfulnest tOWifd th- you love will be
deeply IPPreclMed today. h wil be the
Httle lhlnga you do lor thorn that lhow
you have their lntarwtl at helrt.
LJIIIA· (lepl. D-Oot. :D) You could
have tho pr-lktlaloday tor working
on tndHvora Ihat require creaHYity and
lmiQinaHon. Be ue to u11 your - • •
In 110m1 oonltrucllve manner.

0 700 C!ub Wltl1 Pat
Rollertlon
10:30 (l) Dnct I Ylll for I
Ufotlmt The lives ol five
women Who are aHacted In
dlf!erent ways by Qrellt
cancer ara followed. Hosts:
J1111 Pauley, Phyllcla
Raahad. (0:30)
.
Cloak •nd Clt!IM
0 Splllt ol AelvtnWN

+7

tAKQ8S

EAST
tJ73
,94
tA 86 5
+7643

The match between Control, tbe spy
representing goodness
niceness, and Kaos, the spy cartel
Ifor evil. was into the lbird rubber, witb
Ip~~':s~~~-was
~:~~
On the
second deal,
in lour
bearts.
North, Siegfried, opened one club;
1::;:;~~~Le:a:ds~ide, responded one heart;
Iand
Smart, Agent 86, silting
West, overcalled two diamonds. At
this
Siegfried made a splinter
four diamonds, describing heart
support with a singleton or void india·
moods. Harry Hoo, the Hawaiian detective, doubled to show his diamond
length in case Max wished to sacrifice
in live diamonds. But Leadside's lourheart rebid ended the auction.
Max led the diamond king, and Hoo
stopped lo consider the defensive pros·
peels. His lour low clubs suggested
that that suit would run lor declarer.
U tbe defertdeno had a trvinP' trielt:
coming, it wasn't"coing to run away.
But il they had no trump winner, they
had to take three spade tricks immedi·
to defeat the contract.
was clear that be should overtake
diamond kine with the ace and
lswitcl1 to a spade - but which one?
normal lead from J -7-3 would be
three, but Hoo 'saw that this

SOUTH .
+K961
'QJIO!Z

t941

+to

· Vulnerable: North-&amp;luth
Dealer: North
Soot~

Wtst

Nor"

Eu1

I'

2t

·I+
It

llbl.

4' .

Pass

.Pass

Pass

Cll

· ONewo·

wouldn't be good enough unl~ ~!':-;
had three automatic spade wmners.. •
SOlidi wotdcl plaJ low llld oveoltzal!! 1et discards on dummy's clubs.
: :.
Hoo did better: At trick two, he. ~
switched to the spade jack. Now Lel!d·; '
side bad to lose the first lour tricks. ·.:
. "Tbat was a strange switch yo.J"&lt;
made there, Hoo," said Smart. "I was-;:
always told to lead low from an unsup- ·•
ported honor:
"'Amazin'."
- -

..
The World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle : ~~
ACROSS

Answer to Pretiout Puule

wise
38 Charges .
40 Store evenl
41 VIew
42 Zodiac
symbol
46 Much lo•ed
48 Wa•y· ·
paHerntd
Iabrie
49 Slightest
52 Domestic es·
tabllsllmtnt
53 Ono ot two
part a
54 Member ol
the clergy
55 Simltar
compound
56 Go furtively

1 Tiny Insect
6 Ripe
12 Vocation
13 Louisiana
French
14 Prisoner
15 Stretched
(the neckl
16 Eggs on
17 Chinese Idol
18 Eye infection
19 Word to call
attonllon
20 Needle case
24 Chief
26 Religious
poem
27 12, Roman
30 High t.D.
soclely
32 Total
33 Chic, In the

DOWN

6 Thoraal7 Slips up
8 Ronlo
9- Choney
10 Bullfight
cheer
11 Unite
12 Russian

t Forget-2 To whom-

'60s
34 Of lhea-

- concem
3 Crown
4 Catches
5 Sooner than

35 Express
36 - - tolho

· planes

2t So•iet news
agency
22 Hawaiian
food fish
23 Typo of play·
lng marble
25 In the center

of

.

beVIrllll

. 47 Anclonl Ito~
tan family

Q

· ~· .AIIril Hlf(

-!.B_AINittc, .•

s-.

conle1t
49 2,001 ,
Roman
50 Down
goddess
51 -Grinde
. 52 Monied wom-

liJMacGyvwQ

~~reo.

e 1po111 Tonlgh!
11:30 (J) Kallll c

1D lloldeltown 'IJ
(l) Adam

Tlmt~ , _ Tlmt

•

an'• Utle

linlt1l

Q
I(J)z.:r:::'i-.
• 'UIHI Angel' Crime
Stlrlil.

.-~~~~~an

e Motllflltt

ID MDVII: Tltt lto-

CELEBRITY CIPHER

C'A6eOrity apw Cl. S:l C wua . . CI'MIId fi'Cittl qi!MIIa M irJ llmOul ptOfltl.-plllrond ED .._ln.._clptllr._,.forlftOtMI', Todly't alui.' J
,

·w

RAG XU
FP~EP

IIPP

O'TMie(2:00)

11:11(11. 0 Tontglti-

T E

I P M M W E

II W I L

EAAM

~ ~.·

TE

ZXTJ

I L P

· · ·:

PIVfiiiiDTllll (2:35)

..

•

. ... ,.. ..

..

,.
•'
-· '•'

M P I

Sttreo.

.
(I) a-t Sllreo. Q
12:00 I]) MOVII: Tltt

-

R I W IP

(

-' •'•'

U A II M • '
I A H P 8 I
I I A E I .
• ••
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Poolry lftdOIIII I ltltt of verblt IUif!OMIOn. K ' '
Ia tangullQI at 111 moot beiJulllng, otducll.. and lluolve." - Mark StriiMI. _ ~ :

i:

I

IJ

• •

~ .J;
·- -..
: ::

17 Actress
Jones
19 Speeds

26 Call to lhe
phone
27 Dec. holiday
28 Hawkeye
Slate
29 Sacred Image
3t Cut
37 Buy back
39 Watt bracket
~~Typo of
....-+--1-~ " butterfly
43 Cowboy's
topo
44 Tartar
45 Pub

w• 111 l121•

(J) Nlgh1 Court
' (l) Nlwawah

Pass

Opening lead: t K

a

11~1ll•

11-tz.tl

t8H
'AK76

taWorld

.

ery

Harry Hoo
ignores the book

East following Desert Storm,
Ita role In Europe and Its 1
global leaderohlp role are
apotllghted . (1:~ Stereo.
«»•Hun:Ji

Nov.13, 1191

:-~~U:-:-ho-lst_...___

e

Ama!llng Gornto Rusaia
1D:OOI])e 0 Flrot- Wll1t
Marte 8ltllver Arlanlo Hal,
Patrick Swayze, former Mill
-'rnerlca Marilyn Van Darblir,
hOCkey player David OYinn .
(1 :00) Stereo. Q
(J) Newt
(J) MOVIE: Ptny Muon
R-1(2:00)
(I) ()). H-'ronl JeH
oilers to marry Ginger alter
she saya 8he Is pregnant.
Stereo. C

.BARNEY

114-44

1111.

a

i

Plumbing
Follllh ond Plno
Gonlpol~s:•

Rllldlnllll ., commorolol
wiring, or ropalro.
llolllr UCinltd lltoldclln.
Rlclonour EIICirlc:ol, 304-876-

Heavyweight boul: Larry
Holrnea va. TBA (~)
Nallhvlll Now Stereo.
Lltrry King l,lvel
0 Fathar Oowllng Myllerteo
Father Dowling and Sister
Steve Investigate a rocl&lt;
sw'a deatll. (R) Stereo. Q
9:30
Coech A man Hayden
barely knows dies and leaves
him hla entire e1tate. Stereo.

(J) •

.

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

C

(!)F

iiJ Tueldly Night Flglt1a

C.~or·o

64

Q

1:4511J) 1121• MOVIE; 'WhO

WIII bulld polio covoro, clocko/
roomo, put up vlny1
oldlng or, trollor lklnlng. 614245-1152.
'
Plumbing&amp;
Heating

..

PIDLLIP
ALDER

w• Mamec~...WIII1 Cttllclren
Gl Wlteel o f , _ Q

Michal'

Rapairli Commerlcal, Rnldm·

82

--.

. a Ellltdtllon Ell1ll

tlal lmprovamante. Including;
Plumbing , Eltctrlcal. Insurance
Clolmo kcopltd. 114·211·1111.
C1.1rtil Home lmprovtmlnlt:
y..,. ExporllncO On Oldot •
Newer tiOI'Mt. Room Additions,
F...,..lon Work, Roofing,
Khchono And litho. Fill Eollmollll Ro,.,._, No Job To
Big Or Smollll~-0225.
Ron'• TV Sorvlco, opoc:lollllna
In z.nnh olio ...tclng moSl
othor brondo. Nou11 colfo, oloo
oorno opptlonoo ropalro. WV
304-471-23N Olllo 114-4411-2454.
Room tddnlono, oldlng, roofing,
""" ,.,..._ windoWi,
c o - br.Af ·Tromm, 114-1112·
232"1. CAU"COLLECT
Dom
Sow·Voo
Sorvlco,
o-gn CrHic Ad. Porto, o~po
==kup, ond dlllvory. 514-

H-

•
011=
11'117'~ .-.....

- · "'IIIII

OOP

Ome
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lltttimt gulran111. Local rtf~~encu furnished.
Fr11 Hllmotn. Coli oolloct 1·
614-237-0468, doy or night.
Rog•rs B11ement Waterproofing.
tomplete Wobllt Home Slt..Upe,

Stereo. Q

Cullin Nat'l Team at Ohio
Stahl (L)
(l) (!) Nov• Tho succaaaion
of airborne speed roc:oida
atnc:e 1908. Stereo. C
(II. Full HOIIH BeCky
gives birth lo lwins ·on
filth birthday .
Stereo.
!II 1121 Atecue: 111 A
skydiver"s parachute won'l
open when hla cargo chute
lalla. Stereo. C
(!]). MOVtE:"Twtnt (PGI
(2:00)
0 Mullltr, Sht Wnlhl Q
Qll On Slqt Stereo.
8 PrlmtNIWI
CD 111n nn nn, K·t Cop Q
1:30 at Church s- lhltllln

H

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

. ,,,

BRIDGE

(I) College BelltllbiH

318 tng, looks
end runt Qood, (nted to Mil)

81

'
8Manertlne
0 The Walton•
7:30 I]). 0 Jtoplnlyl
(I) Now n C.n lie Toil
(I) E-lnmlnl T"""'ht

9; a

1m Winnebago

.

.

e

I IXlN'T W4NT

Services

TOidgltt

decalhl,hla, Jim Thorpe, Bob
Mathias, Bruce Jenner, Daley
Thompaon and Christian
Sc!1anck are profiled. .
Clollllnl
1:00 Ill • 0 In the Heat of the
Nlgh1 Bubba IS distracted by
kllioro trying to
wllneaa. Stereo,
(J) MOVIE: Child' PIIJ (RI
(2:001
.

..

Campers &amp;
Motor-Homes

·--------61 Fann Equipment

Nell

H - It

0 Tho Olymplal! Great

FOrd lruck rebuilt motor

oba, 114..tD"2-l445
19M RUT Mobllo Homo, 12165, 2
bdrm, gaa, Surs air condlllonor, $4800, 614-11411-2361

-y

'*'•

79

..-,

Forgot - Joust • Niece -Weeder - GETS DONE
Our daily meetings to discuss ollice productivity took ·
up a lot of time. Our boss stormed, 'We'll continue
these meetings until I find out why nothing GETS
DONE I"
• •- r- • .

D. Family F.ud
at It 1 Sllr Sttreo.

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Farm Supplies
&amp; L1vestock

dvvlll.
- ...n:totiil IIOclt,
·,_ock
- - -Ntullng, Con
.
AI. :11 H.wv
Prl, -... llln,
Co11aott
:,.lng(OII=• ~ Hlul To "Wobo,. Or l.i&gt;o

-

~~~~~~iu_r=:_-==t~

New·gat lankl, body paf11, ont
ten tNCk whtelt, radJalora,
11- moto ole. D I R Auto,
Rlploy, wY. 304-372·3933 or 1·
800o273-e58.1.

VCR, 21" Color TV, 121 Corn·
modoro Computor will 1111 or
trod• lor pickup truck, 304-f7153512.

s..-

.78.

~

J(frWIOIJ

~-

c

!I

and tranamlulon. 304-875-3406.

For Sale
or Trade

-1

Ultd
·
·
Ultd lorgo llpUIIy T aoplo&lt;
.1800.114 m - .
Uoocl ...... ..,tp
Inctudlt!l wholo irll.. With
d111irroL_ ~ dloh a
1m
WATER WILLS DRILLED: Fut,
Prornpl Btrtloo, Wotor Qumntlld, 8....-mt

1m

API""!- R•oonobio Priced. fit·
tar 1 Fruit Farm, SA 143 1 mMI
South ol C.rpontor, lottow
olgno. Opon Soturdly &amp;om·Spm

••lect

c.r:

76

Frutts &amp;
Vegetables

~&amp;.,
MacGYvtr c
a 8por1ICanttr

•
I

lhlpl.l2000.

59

·.

il)

Pets for Sale
:::-~:--:---=--::-:.,"Muii.S.. Boxor Pupo•, whllo, 1DBD CamarD, A.S., Mini Condl·
town ond brlndlt, coli o14-1182· lion,
Loodtd, T·Topa, Auto, Air,
5883
Crulae, Till, AMfFM Cl ..tllt,
Qraom ond SUpply Shop Pot · 35,231 Mlln, 1 OwJWr, $9;000,
a.,..,lng. All brolclo, otrlto. Neg., 814-446-e751, 614-4415-78;4.
lomo Pot Food Diller. Julio
Ford Eacort GT, $5800.
Webb. Col 814-448.(1231, .1-800' ·1980
1988 Buick Rogol, IOided,
352.0231.
$6000. 114-441.0731.
2 AKC Roglllored Fomolt Chow
Chow, 12 W11kl Old, Rod, $75 87 Dodge Chorgor, good wpo,
Each; 114-251-144l
13500, &amp;14-37i-21M or &amp;14-4411AKC Chin- pugo Polllngno, 8414.
Cockor Soonlllo, illchlllundo,
304-671-2107. ttll 11:00 pm.
72 Tlucks for Sale
AKC bOCkOr Sponlol pupploo.
Shoto &amp; wormed. $100. 304-5711- 1963 Chovy 1~on truck, body
2223.
- · mochonlcol good ohopa,
:7.'::C.::-:--.-----/Icyl, 4-lpatd, w/1 lll111 llroo,
AKC Dolmatlon pu_g:. on~ 2 $450, 814-1182·7034
molu loll, $200, 814 11&amp;-271
11170 Ford 4x4, 360, Big 4 Spatd
AKC
rogllltrod mlnlotwo Tron. .lulon
Runo Good,
Sc_hnouzor pupflill, Fornoloo. Rough Body, SilO;. 614-44W158.
Son
tl50. CoR mot• GMC 'fi modtl ton 112 dump
nlngoI I poppor.
wllkondo.114-258-1t13.
1111Ck. Excollonl mochonlcol
Cllpboord Pt1 Grooming And
31J4.876•1548.
Boordlng Konnoi~ _ Formor VII~
nary Atslslanl, uwner Tammy
73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
Pennell, 614-371-273i.
Dolmotlon puppl11, 1150 ooch. 11185 Dodgo Corovon. Loodtd.
304.g37-2929.
Excollinl condlllon. 814-44110
~4313aller Spm.
rogonwynd -nory Porolon,
S~~~.=~d H~moloyon klltono. 1117 Ford Aoro Stor, XL, Air, PW,
1 ~-4 '"" 1 p.m.
PL, AMIFM C.oolllo, Low
Fish Tonk, 2413 Jockoon Avo. Mllugo, Vory Good Condhlon,
Point PINunt, 304-1'75-20I 3, Bookl For 18,900, Mult 5•11:
lull lint Troplcol ftohl blrdo, $5,1100. 614-38a.go32. '
--•
1 nd auppln.
tma 11 ..vmala
1987 Ford AtrO.tar XLT Van, I
R-lllortd Cocklr s-nlot Cyllndi!J Automotlc, 4 Copo
pu 1 ko Wormed 1 ;t;.,.1 tolno'o &lt;Ohllro, AMII'M C.llllto,
&amp;:'l"38a-g'
;'62:
·
· EIICironlc lnol, PS, PI, Tin,
Cruioo, AI~ ~ow Tlru, $4,200,
S.moredMoiiPup,AKCRoglo- Coiii14-44....116Ahor5p.m.
le!*l With Pl&lt;lgr11, All Stlolo
And Poparolncludtd, 8250. 614- 1968 Plymouth Vorogor LE, PS,
446~7720.
PB, PW, I way power Hal,
- r door 10ckl1 olr, IIR,
Siblrlln Huaky Pu,. PurtbNd. crulaa, inUnlty IGuna ayatam, 7
Block 1 Whho With Bluo Eyoo, pou. v-e, 104K Hlway mlloo.
$150
Each.
114-2111-2411, $6895. 114-448-8143 lhtr 5pm
Anyllmo.
·
-d•r•·

For Solo: l 'x12' Aug. Woohlblo. 4010 JD 011111 $4,&amp;110; Wldo
Ukl Ntw, 114-441-0118.
, Fhlnt 5000 Ford DIIOII With
For Soil: Now (Niver Uotd) Plow, Tronoport Dloc, Bull! Hog,
DooroJ· Pr....ng, Sill: 32180, 12,1so. 0wnor wn1 Flnonco. 814$80 aoch. 3 Lorgo Tobocco 26U522.
Pr......... 145 Eich. l14-441- Jlm'o Form Equlpmont _SR. 35,
1
1272, Evonlngo I W.Oklndo.
Wool Glllllr.::·llo. 814o+oii-1Jl77;
Wide
on
new
&amp;
ultd
firm
01111 top kitchen toblo wHh 4
wlckar back chairs, $75. 3(M.. IIICIOII I lmpltmonlo. luf,
1111, trade, l :..a:oo ••days,
1711-1272.
Sot. 1111 Noon.
Moved: Boll: lbgla Cluol llolll)' Forguoon 215 TriiCior
Gu
810YI
$120
G.E .
50 HP, 15,118!11=·114 lntornotlonol,
Alfllaor1llor, ""· a~ WhHo, $e,tl:); &amp;00 ORI, Uv• Power,
GoodCondhlonll14-441-0121.
$3,2110; 340 lntornotlonol 12,350.
Pntbllly w~l Iron 11ovo Ownor Will Flnonco, 114-2811.
ar.llqUI, goad condlllon, $10, all 8522.
stow. wa1 1111, Nit NO, 114Ford troctor I Now Holond
11111-elllll
""'nd btllro No-btr Solo·
mo Ford 45 11p 1 double ..,..;
Roll Or MICI? In Your
Buy ENFORCER, Klllo 1111 &amp; $11,110;. 1120 Ford 24 hD 4 WD I
miCI In oniJ 1 loodlna, $14,- uo A Btloro
GUARANTEED! AVIIIIbll ol: 11,400. lloclol .... uo.
Btum Truo V.luo Stor:!1,11 Wilt "450· 813 1200!1
Mlln 81-. Chi-.....
$10,iNi6; 151 170011
$1~1100. K111on Strvlco Contor
· ·Alto Or Mlco? In Your HouN?
'to~ Point 1'111111r1 onil
Buy ENFORCER, Klllo roto I Slllo
Ripley
, 304-11111-38114.
miCI In only 1 llldlng,
GUARANTEED! Anlllbll ol: S3
O'Dell T1u1 Volut Lumllof, 834 :::-:=l:;;IV.;.,8:-iBI;,;oc~k:;.,...~,.,.
Eall lloln Skill, Pomoray, ON
11 month old lllltlon, light
RATS OR MICE?
llucklllln,
,_
blick
In Your - ? euy ENFOR· - · · · hlllw brake only,
CER. Klllo Rill And Mlco In &amp;400, 1-11-2318
Only 1 Fotdlna. GUARANTEED!
Anlllblo
AI::_Control ....,..,,
•·-·~· 17. Attention
Dol,.,... Hllnh
And For·
~--moro: A-1111
In- · 811011; . Spring V loy ouronco For Tho Soii-Emploz;.
HlrdWoro, at JocbOn Pllto; wv 1 ON. 114-441'N
,
Odlll · Truo Vllut LBR, Vlno Anytl _ _
Sttlll AI Third A - 011llpolll, Ohio.
• ..... plgo lor oill, 114-9fl-m7.
Dok, Ash And Hick· Ill Cnnk. DYII. Lorge onlmll
"'Y· Flrwwaod Dtllvored1 $60, .........,., *-t"ll-7721.
Plck.Up Lold, Don Wougn, 114441 H41.
,
Bilek ChhlngiJI Club Cllv11
PI• Anguo And Chl..tnguo
SUrptuo Army C.moullougo lflck lulll.
PriCtd.
clothlnt. lnoullltd docron 1t111 Aun Finne, JlicUon,
.
DIIIIDU~ CanniJI t30. Ohio. 114 211 1311
lllthlr
ua
Combll
·
flirt olo4hlna. old kn11o
old Pollod
rn ...._..... ..,._ RapiiCitMIII Hlltwl, IH'tidlng

-...r. ..

:.:t.r:

«».
Olltetllloti

1917 Ct.vy Novo : high mileage,
nHC11 rep~lr. Good transport•·
tlon car. $1,500. For mort lnfor·
motion Coli 614-446-2342, Ask
lor Poul.
1987 Tompo, 4 Door, 304-11153873.
1988 Dodgl Omnl 4 llvlindlr,
Automotlo, 39,000 Mlloa,:$2,000
For Solo or Trodo, 814-~58-1270.

I .I I . I I I

SCRAM-t.iTS ANSWERS

Ill CurNnt Allllr ~

1110, Rio Grondo, ON Coli 6142411-112t
.

58

Jl.,.

..

1

!dhlon

~.c:lt;J"c.(I).C.

Flrowaod lor ull. 514-lli-2176.

PRINI NUMBERED LETTERS IN
'THESE SQU.~RES

f) u~~~~~:S~~E LETTERS

7:001Jl• !II WhH( o1 FOIIune

Block, brick, _., olpoo, win·

....

.

~RI&amp;r~~Q~

do•, Untlle, etc. Clludt Win·

words.

(J) Vldlo Power

EXCUSE?

Building
Supplies

~mplo

DNewa

Town oar, eome

WI-I~.T'S '(OU~

55

'

I:OCi I]). Cll Cll. Ill 1D.

MEAN,'(OU'RE NOT
601N6 TO SC~OOL?

County AppfiiJ191 Inc. Good
ulld opplloncoo, T.\t. Hlo. Open
8 o.m. to I p.m. Mon ..SII. &amp;f4.
44 .. Apartment
4411-1&amp;9!_1 • 627 3rd. An. Gil·
for Rent
llpcillo, ""
1 &amp; 2 bdrm apt In Mkldlaport, For . Sate: Bunk Bide, Stove,
UtllitH Fum, clap rtq, no pete, And Lampo, 114-1411-11151.
814-992·2218.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
1obdrm opt In Mlddloport, oil Walhan, dryn, relrlglrat. .,
utllltllo lurn, 8250 month, 114- rongn. Sklggo Aol&gt;lllncoo,
149·2211.
Uppor Rlvor Ra. Buldt Stono
2 BR opt. obovo Hol,.r Clinic, Croll Molll. Colll14-445-73811.
Point PINNnl, WY. 304o87!1VI'R' FURN~ 'RE
~
"•
4498.
114-4411-:1158
2·Aplo Pomorvy, ~~oom, 1-bolh I,IVING ROOM: Soli I Choir,
unlurnlohod, on Buttornul Avo, $1119.00~ Roollnor, $149.GO;
SwiVII Hackl&lt;, ht.OO; Coff.. 1
81 • - 2 5 ~ 8
~- • End Tobin, 1111.00 Soi.DININO
2-IR I~ Mlddltpon. No polo. ROOM: Tobit With 4 Podded
Poy own .utllltllo, $200 por mo. . Ch
. olro, $141.00; eo
_. untry Plno
Dopooii/Rtltroncu roqulrod. Dlnotlo With Btnch And 3
114-992·2311 dlyo. ·
Chllro1• $2911.00; llotchlng 2
Door Hitch $341: Or 1581.00
3 Room Fumlohtd Apartmonl, Sot; O.k Toblo1 42x62 With 1
Milo Eoll 01 · Portor, on Bow
Boco
Chlllro,
.554, $276/mo. l14·381-11163.
$12I.OO.eEDROOM: Pallor Bod5 roomolboth, uootolro, prlvolo room Sullo (I pc.l, S34t.OO; 4
ontronco, lower Moln Sl. Ulllltln Drowor Chill, 144.11; Bunk
paid. $350. month. 304-e715-1111 Bod, 1221;.Com !&gt;lilt Filii Mon
ovonlngo.
Stl 1 $101.w Sot; 7 pc. Coclor
1 Boaraom Sullo, 18ft.OO.OPEN:
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT Mondoy T1vu Soturcloy, lo.m. to
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON 8p.m., SUndoy 12 Noon Till
ESTATES, 531 Jockoon Plko i!fl.m., 4 Mlltl on Routt 7 On
from $192/mo. Wolk to ohop I ROIIIII411n Ctntonory.
movloo. Coll&amp;14-441·2568. EOH. W.lhor Sole: Holpolnl Wuhlr,
Downtown Modorn, tb&lt;, c-·
h7l • .....
-•r Woo ••
•-• G.E ·
plato KRchon, Full Corpat, In- CutHMnd111Y ~
••
fiSOh~',
0 1 5 Cut-·~-~.~G-E
ouloled, Eloctnc Hill, AC, ~ T~!!
Dopooltlloqulrod.814-445-013•. - •1 ••~;
oo ·~ · ·
For rent· New 1 bdrm IPI, rum Wtentr Wu, IN, Now 110i
or unfurn, In Ulddiaport, 814- 0 E. "'--- I A . - . . . _ &amp;
tm-5225orm-6304.
· ~·- · ll6;-•-·FIOII
H;
Rolrlglrl!or,
~Fumlohtd 3 Roomo 1 Both, Froo, 2 Door, lYu $1110, Citln, No Ptt1 Rtflrtnct 6 $125; Aat';t~· lfroat
Dopooh R~ulrod. 114-MII-1511• Froo, 11111·
2 Yurw
~
Old, Ukt MN, ~WH $285,
f'llcoly Fumlohod Apanmont, Cut To $1118· U
F-,
(1br, noll to Ubrory, porklng, eAII Sold lh GlallntiOI,
- central hilt, alrL~Itranct , .
111 Appt._, Uppr~r
qulrod.814-446-o....
• 7, Blono. Croll
FumlsMd Effk:lency, $115/mo. Motll, 114-4411-73111.
UtllhiH Pold, Shoro lolh, 507 53
Antiques
Socond Avo, Golllpollo, 514-446- ~-......::,;:.:,~:;:::.,...,-Buy or 0111. Rt..lno Anllq-,
441Uhor 7p.m.
1124 E. llaln Sl-, Pomoray.
Groclouollvlng. 1 ond 2 bod· Hou MTW 1000 m.l0 I:GO
room apartiMnt. at VIllar.
ra: ' ' • · : L
•
Monor
ond
Rlvorol o r:e:'J:/1:00 to 8:00 p.m.
A.partmentala Middleport. From
$1118. Coll614-m-7717. EOH.
54 MiscellaneoUS
In Mlddloporl, Ohio. 1 ond 2
Merchandise
bldroom lumlohod opt, wllh utUIUn pold, roloronco ond t9• Zonllh color l-Ion. Ex·
dopooh roqulrod, 304a2o258e.
ctlllnl con&lt;ltlon. $124. 080.
Complotly Fumlohod · mobllo Wllltrtdo. I14-441-Ga3 onytlmo.
home, 1 mile IMktw town over·
J.D. llodtl ·s, Complotoly
looking nvor. No Polt, CA. 114- 1951
Robuln
llodo Porll, Hyotor
448.0338.
.
Fork uh; 11187 OMC Plck·Up, All
Smoll 1 BA. opt. 7 Court 81. Excdlnl Condition! 114-4411Kitchen
with
~ovt
&amp; 2351.
ro~lal!ator, $115. mo. pluo
utllhTu. dopooR I ,.,.,....,_ 21 Gillon Aquorlum Comploto,
$80; 22 Collbor Plolol, $4D, 114114-441-4928.

.

0 four
Roorran;. lo...u of tiJo
teramblod -dl bo-

1

!VINING

~ rust, Immaculate,
fant mtchanlcat condition,
$1100, 114-9o!ll-2104
11171 Ponlloc Grond Prix, V.a ; ·
ruha, no ~y ru'Jt, S550;1f74
350 P.l. Englno, oil now parto, '
.chromo onglno kit, bored .30 .
"""· 2110 + hp. $700. 114-448- '
8313. ·

2br llobllo -

Real Estate

The Dally

12, 1991

I

-

r

-

---:·

�•
f

'
•· ·' Pomeroy-Middleport,
Ohio •

· . Pag~10-The Dally Sentinel

~

Parents hang up on 900 num~·ers
· Dear A,nn Landers: My most
recent phone bill contained some
unpleasant surprises -- four calls 10
900 numbe~s. The charges were
'$4.99; $24, $25 and $36. I am
·outraged and disgusted.
Our 14-year-old son admitted
to making two calls to numbers
intended for adults only. He had the
numbers written .on a piece of
paper, with several other numbers.
....-The $24 call lasted just long enough
for him to hear that rates were $4 a
minute. The $4.99 call was a
fraction of a minute. The $36 and
$25 calls were not related to my son's
sexual curiosity. He had made one
call for information, and the other
for advice.
When I shared my story with other
parents, heads were nodding. These
lines · prey on the curiosity and
immaturity &lt;?f youngsters. My son
never would have called if he had
known how much it was going to
cost
Ann, please infonn parents that if
they want to do something about this
problem, they should call the phone
company and block 900 numbers
before their kids get curiO(\S. If they
have a 900 number problem which
cannot be solved through the phone
company. they can file a complaint
with the Infonnal Complaints &amp;
Public Inquiries Branch, Federal
Communications Commission,
2025 M St., N.W., Room 6202,
Washington, D.C. 20554. Make it
clear that the FCC doesn't block
numbers. It only handles complaints.
Thanks for providing your own

special brand of mass communica- ·
ti
d y do
·
on ou et. ou an amazmg job.
-- S..L., LAKEWOOD, CALIF.
DEAR LAKEWOOD: Your
letter provides me with yet another
opportunity 10 remind parents to call
the telephone company and block
900 numbers now, before they get a
bill that knocks their socks off.
Parents should make it clear that
these calls are extremely expensive
and should not be placed from the
home phone and especiaUy no~ when
visiting relatives or friends. Period.
Dear Ann Landers: Last year I
gave birth to our fiiSt child, a son.
My husband and 1named him Parker
Thomas Smith (not his real name).
Parker i.!&gt; my father's and brother's
. middle name and Thomas is my
husband's fiiSI name. My .father was
honored when we named his fii'St
grandchild after him . Sadly, Parker
Thomas died the day after his
birth.
We are now expecting our second
son. We IQve the name Parker and'
would like to name this child Parker
Edward Smith.
Would it be morbid to give this
child the same frrst name? 1 don't
want to take anything away from
our firstborn, but I do want the
family name Parker 10 continue since
it has been in the family for many
years. Would this be difficult to
explain to our second son when he
is or an age to be told that he had a
bl'lllher before him? Would it make
him feel like second choice 1at.et on?
There could never be a replactment ror the Parker Thomas we

By DANIEL Q.I{ANEY
AP Science Writer
AN~IM, Calif._ (AP) :._ For
the fmt ume, a med\cal treatment
has been shown 1~ slOp the develop~ent of congesuve hean fa• lure,
a ~·~overy ~hat could b~nef1t I
mll_hon Amencans, accordmg to a
maJor study released Monday· .
Researchers found _that a vanety
of dru_gs called ACE mh•b•tors can
, prevent - at leas~ .temporanly the Start ofheart frulure symptoms
10 people With damaged hearts. .
Last August, the same team d~s· ~losed t!W the treatment_can s•gmftcantly Improve thesurnval of peapi~ who ~dy s~ffer from h~t
frulure, a _m_aJOr kill~r that aff11cts
about2 milbon Amencans.
Now, the latest results show that
the same med•cme can f?restaU the
de~elopment ~fheart failure 10 the
eslll!laled I million jJCOple who are
at ~•$h nsk of _the disease_because
of IOJ~ 10 _their left _ventncles, the
heart s mam pumpmg chamber.
Such damage commonly _results
from heart attacks, chrome h1gh
~lood pressure and bean mflammauo~: amdng other causes.
The key •ssue IS. Can we pre-

lftl. 1M Aqelel

/.
loved so much, but we are having a
real problem thinlcing clearly about
naming this second son. We have
considered other names, but they
have no family meaning. I cannot
get lhe name Parker out of. my
mind. What do you advise? ••
QUANDARY IN TEGA CAY, S.C.
. DEAR TEGA CAY: There is no
reason you shouldn't give your
second child the same name as
your firstborn who died; Your
father would be thrilled and
obvious! y, you love the name, so
go ahead and do it.
Gem of the Day {Credit WilfRay,
Mjlple Ridge, B.C.): Everyone has
five senses -- touch, lasle, smell,
sight and hearing. Successful people
have two more -- horse and
common. "' ·
Do you have questions about sex.
but no one to talk to? Ann Lilndlrs'
booklet, "Sex and the Teen-Ager,"
is frank and to the point. Send a
self-addressed, long, business-size
envelope and a check or money
_order for $3.65 (this includes
postage and handling) to: Teens,
c/o Ann lAnders, P.O. Box l1562,
Chicago. Ill. 60611-0562. (In
Canada, send $4.45.)

held Dec. 6 at the Zion Church at
6:30 p.m. The meat and drinks will
be furnished .
The group will meet Nov. 26 at
10 a.m. to prepare cheer baskets
and also to prepare decorations for
the Christmas dinner.
The president passed around a
paper for the 1991 hostess list. The
next meeting will be Jan. 2 at the
home of Marge Purtell with the
Bible word "new" and the progmm
will be a showing of each member's Christmas season.
Announcement was made of
some craft classes at Wal Man in
Ripley, W.Va.
For the program each one shared

months of pregnancy had lower
blood pressures.
Gillman presented details of the
children's study at the annual scientific meeting of the American
Heart Association, which began
Monday with more than 26,000
doctors, scientists and other professionals.
·
The study was based on a
review of the eating habits of 79
boys and girls who were 3 to 5
years old. Researchers found that
for each 100 milligrams of calcium
consumed by the youngsters in
every 1,000 calories, their systolic
blood pressures were lower by two
millimeters of mercury.
They found no change in diastolic pressures but said that was
probably because those are harder
to measure in children. Systolic
pressure - the higher number in
blood pressure readings - is the
pressure in .aneries when the heart
contracts. Diastolic is the pressure
between heanbeats.
Dr. David A. McCarron of Oregon Health Sciences University ~
who discovered the link between
blood pressure and calcium about a
decade ago, called the new work
"a fascinating observation."
He said the latest work SURRests
that youngst~rs who consume l'ecommended amounts of cal~ium
early in life may improve their
chances of avoiding high blood

pressure in adulthood.
Dairy products are the chief
~e of calcium.
· An eight-ounce glass of low-fat
or skim milk has about 300 milligrams of calcium, and a cup of
yogurt contains 300 to 400 mil·
ligrams.
The children in the study averaged 511 miUigrams of calcium for
every I,000 calories. They typically consumed about I ,500 calories
daily.
Their systolic blood pressures
ranged from 69 to 108 and averaged 92.
The study was based on eating
records of the child compiled on 12
days.over a one-year period.
"It's a sna~hot of one point in
time," ~Gillman. "I view these
resultS' as preliminary but e cit-

Pick 3: 289 ,
Pick 4:6121

Cards: .K-ll, 8-C,

10-D,J-S

•

en lne
Vol. 42, , No. 135
Copyylghled 1991

ing."

Many doctors now routinely
recommend that adults with high
blood pressure boost their consumption of calcium. Why it might
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
help, however, is still unclear.
condominium association gave an
The latest study is part of the undisclosed settlement to a woman
Framingham Children's Study, who was threatened with a fine for
started four years ago. It is made of kissin~ her boyfriend goodnight in
up third- and fourth-generation her driveway.
.
descendents of the members of the
"I hope that my story encouroriginal Framingham Heart Study, ages others to stand up f_or their
a landmark work that identified ' rights," Helen Garrett, 52, said
many Of the factors that are now Moqday after receiving the check
widely recognized as important
causes of hean disease.

Pamela Newell, Lenny Eliason, and Chamber
Executive Director E6zabetb Schaad. The meeting was beld at the Tuppers Plains VFW Post.
Frederick Goebel and Roger Hawk were hosls.

Jobs program for food stamp

recipients' called a failure .

from the Townsquare Owners appeared on the public bulletin
Association.
board warning her to desist from
Ms. Garren sued the homeown- "kissing and doing bad things for
ers association in what amounted to over one hour." · .
a case of mistaken identity. ·
The case received national
In May, she briefly kissed a attention when Ms. Garren hired a
friend goodnight after he dropped lawyer, saying she had ~n subher off in the d.riveway of her Santa . jeered to humiliating remarks such
Ana condominium complex.
as "marathon kisser" and ••hOt
The next month, a notice lips."

•

Gallipolis woman killed in
early morning-car wreck

By JIM FREEMAN
OVP News Staff
A Gallipolis woman was killed
in a one-car crash on Mill Creek
Road in Gallipolis Wednesday
morning.
Connie S. Condee, 21, of Court
Street, Gallipolis, died of multiple
rib fractures, crushed chest and
intenlal head injuries, according to
Dr. Edward Berkich, GaUia County
Coroner.
According to reports from the
Gallipolis Police Department, a
1976 Oldsmobile Cutlass, ·belonging 10 Jerry Kackley, 26, of Davis,
W.Va., .was going around a right
tum, went ofr tlie road on the left
side and back across the road to the
right side, struck a tree and overturned.

a

One officer commented that
Condee was partially ejected from
the car and was pinned under the
roof and the door. A Gallia County
Emergency Medical Service
spokesman said that neither
Candee nor Kackley were wearing
safety belts.
Several aspects of the wreck
remain a mystery and are still
under investigation. For instance,
police are still not certain w)lo was
driving the automobile. In addition,
police do not yet know if alcohol
was a factor in the accident.
Law enforcement and rescue
personnel responded to the scene
after ·. being called at around 3:50
a.m.
The Gallia County Emergency
Medical Squad sent two squads and

one r~ue unit to the scene of the
accident.
The rescue squad used the Jaws
of Life to remove Kackley from the
car. It took 27 minutes to free
Kackley, who was unconscious
when the EMS arrived at the scene,
according to an EMS spokesman.
Kackley was transported to
Holzer Medical Center by the EMS
and was 'later transported to St.
Mary's Hospital in Huntington. As
of this morning, hospital spokespeople were unavailable to comment on his condition.
Condee was removed from the
.scene of the accident by the
Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral
Home. The Willis Funeral Home in
Gallipolis will be handling the
funeral arrangements.
·

FDA advisory group hearing
testimony on silicone-gel implants
By DEBORAH MF.SCE
immune reactions and cancer.
in{ermediate choices that involve
Associated Press Writer
Plastic surgeons and many of lening at least some implants
GAITHERSBURG, Md . (AP) their patients, meanwhile, argue remain on the market while safety
- A Food and Drug Administra- that the psychological benefit of the and efficacy studies continue.
tion advisory panel is trying to implants far outweighs the risks. Under either of these choices, the
.determine ,whet.ber ~sil.icoo e, g.el The risks are small.-and - most~y FDA could allow them to·remain
breast implants, which have been minor, and the possibility of seri- "if there is a public health need for
used·for nearly 30 years, are safe ous disonlm is rem~. th~y say.
continued availability," said
enough to remain on the maflcet. ·
At the1r meeung 10 th1s Wash- Joseph LeVIt, an official at the· The advisory commitiee was in~tton suburb, members of the FDA's Center for Devices and
:beginning a three-day meeting with panel will evaluate the data submit- · · Radiological Health.
·
testimony today from more than ted by implant manufacturers on
100 consumer groups, physicians Wednesday and Thursday and
Plastic surgeons and many of
and women on both sides of the make a recommendation to ihe their
CQIIICnd that the bene-.
Issue - those whose implants FDA. The panel's recommenda- fits of~nts
silicone-gel implants far out· ·
caused illness and disability, and tions are not binding but are usual- weigh the risks.
oihers for whom they proved a ly followed by the agency. The
·great benefit.
.
FDA has said it will decide what to
''There are substantial health
More than 2 million women do by Jan. 6.
benefits for aU patients, whether for
have had the implants, but critics
The FDA has four choices for reconstrilction (after masteCtomy)
say they should be banned because action, the most extreme among or cosmetic (breast enlargement),"
of risks of infection, hardening of them being to find the implants said Dr. Dennis Lynch, a Temple,
surrounding breast tissue, false. unsafe and take them off the mar· Texas, plastic surgeon .and an offimll!lmop-aphy results and silicone keL It also could declare them safe cial of the American Society of .
ieakage. Questions also have been and keep them available.
Plastic and Reco-nstructive Sur- .
raised 'about long,term dangers of
More likely are either of two geons.

•

'

WEDNESDAY FATALITY- A Gallipolis
woman was kiUed Wednesday Ill an early moralog Cllr wreck. Connie S. Condee, 21, was kUled
wben a 1976 Oldsmobile, belonging to Jerry
Kackley, 26, of Davis, W.Va~, went out or control

'

I

Redovi~n said that leiters have

been mailed to those students and
their parents, inviting them to par- .
ticipate,
'
·
According to Redovian, targeting these students could drasu'cally
affect the future of Meigs County.
"We have to do something,"
Redovian said. "If we don 'tthey
(the at-risk students) are not going
to do anything but cost the taxpay· ers money in the long run."
·
The community will also be ·
asked to participate in the PEDL
program, Redovian said last night.
Community members are being
sought to act as "mentors" to students in need of adult role models,
and Redovian stated that he would
be going to other community
groups to seck these mentors.
Second grant larger
The second grant to come into
Meigs County will bring $250,000
per year into the county, and Redovian said last night that the grant
will probably be renewed for three
more years.
Called the Rural Development
Grant, this grant is also a cooperalive effort between the coijnty
board and URG. 'Ilu'ough the grant,
each school building in the county
will receive grant money for the
purpose of improving teaching

techniques.
,
18 Urban Development Grants
are now in place statewide. but
Redovian told the chamber that
Meigs County is the first rural
· to rece1ve
· gr;tnt momesc
·
community
for this purpose. It will be used
here in conjunction with "Effective:
Schools", a statewide program.
This program will be especially:
beneficial 10 teachers interested in:
pursuing graduate studies, as URG
will offer free graduate courses foe
60 Meigs County teachers.
Other business
Elizabeth Schaad, Chambei
exeCutive director, spoke briefly tq:
members about "Take Charge", a
community development progran(
that concluded in Jate-Octobcr,calling ita "tremendous suCl;CSS". : ·
Schaad also announced that :(
kick-off ceremony for the "Partnersin E.tnc•tion" program was set foi.
December s. That program teams;
schools with busi~csses, and isbeing organized by the chamber. :
In other business, the cha'mber
voted to increaedues for business~
es [Of 1992 and welcomed MeDon-:
aid's as a new member of thechamber.
·
Roger .Hawk of Hawk's 76 Sta-:
tion were hosts in Tuppers Plainsand Frederick Goebel.
.;

Gov. Voinovich expected
to sign Gateway tax break

AN EYE FOR AN EYE • Singer Elton John, left, and B~llish
Prime Minister John Major cbeck out tbe latest hit in eye-wear
outside No. 10 Downing St. during the launch or "Give the Girt of
. Sight" in London Monday. The appeal aims to collect qld and
spare eye-glasses and to restore, and distribute them to Third
World countries where one in three people need glasses. (AP)

Woman wrongfully charged with kissing wins settlement

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News StaJT .
· "It's the greatest thing to happen
to schools in Meigs County since
their inception."
' In-District Grant Coordinator
John Redovian used those words 10
describe two new grants received
by the coun1y's schools when he
spoke 10 the full membership of the
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce Tuesday nighL The chamber
met in regular session at lhe Tuppcrs Plains VFW Post.
The first gnmt, named the Post·
seeon~ Education Development
Lab, (P DL) brings $50,000 into
the county system per year. Redovian stated last night that those
funds could come into lhe county
for the next eight or nine years,
provided that the program is sue· cessfully executed.
That grant will be used to fund a
county-wide intervention program
for at-risk 9th graders. According
to Redovian, the program (a joint
effort lietween the Meigs County
Board of Education and the University of Rio Grande) is directed
at 9th graders who have college
potential but who may not be work·
ing at a capacity level.
One-hundred and fifty students
within the county have been targeted for lhe program at Ibis time, and

By JENNIFER DIXON
people a year. A record 23.6 mil - "so that we might have a more
AP Farm Writer
lion Americans now receive food constructive program."
. WASHINGTON .- ~ major stamps.
,
.
Leahy, chairman of the commitJOb-trammg prpgr~ des1gned to
T_h~ department s Cathennc
tee, says the job training effort has
get food stamp_ rCCIJ!Ients off wei- . B'erum srud t)Je plll'(lOSe of the pro- been,a failure, declaring, "The
fll(C h;IS turned mto linJe·more tharr· 'g~am, cre~ieif ~~~~the''l9~5 -ra:Ym"·- Emp16yri'ient and Training Program
a JOb·seareh effort for poorly edu· bill, was to prov1de trammg and is neither.'' '
cated people with few ~~alifica- education for peop_Ie who arc on
Aides _said Leahy, p -Vt,
uons, .a.ccor~ing to admm•strators · food stamps. ~.t ~n reahty, she planned to mttoduce lcg1slauon th1s
COL!JMBUS, Ohio (AP) (AP)
and cnucs alike.
acknowledged, 11 s really more week to limit the number of people
Gov. George Voinovich is
More than a half-biUion dollars like assistance in job search, look- the program seeks 10 reach .:.... on
expected
to sign a bill that provides
has be~n spent, but that averages in$ for jobs, writing resumes," she the theory !hat that would mean
a
major
tax
break for Cleveland's
out to JUSt $135 per ~on for the satd. . .
.
.
more resources for each participroposed
new.
$350 million Gatehuge number of people 10volvedBerum, ass1stant secretary for pant. Leahy said the federal govway
spons
complex.
too little, Democratic critics say, food and &lt;:onsumer services, said ernment and states have spent
After about an hour of debate
for reallf\lining.
she has been working with states about $580 million since the proTuesday,
the House reversed its
The Agriculture Department . and the Senate Agriculture Com- gram began in 1988.
earlier
opposition
to the Senateprogram reaches about I million mittee for the better pan of the year
passed proposal and sent it to the
governor on a 65-31 vote. The

\

BOSTON (AP) - It's been
three years since newsman John
Hart helped launch the "World
Monitor" television show, and
now he's reportedly ready to "go

•

School grants are topid
of Chamber ~eaker ·

GRANTS DESCRIBED - John Redovlan,
standing, spoke to the run membership or the
Meigs County Chamber or Commerce 'Fuesday
night about two granls recently received by the
Meigs County Schools. Also pictured are, 1-r,

news writing and ethics once a
week.''
·
Officially, the 59-year-old journalist is on vacation from Bostonbased Monitor Television Inc.,
owned by the Christian Science
Publishing Society.
"It is our hope that he will
return to the program, but at the
present time he's on vacation,"
said network president Netty Douglass.

•

'

,•

off by the pond and write a book."
The former NBC and CBS correspondent left his bosses a note
saying "I don't believe there's
anything more I can do," the
Washington Post reported Monday.
The Boston Globe's Sunday
magazine quoted Han as saying he
was thinking about getting out of
television news to "go off by the
pond and write a book. Grow a
beard, buy a dog. Maybe teach

•.

2 Sections, 14 Pages25 cen11:
A Mulllmodla .Inc. Newspoper.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, November 13, 1991

the news

NEW YORK (AP) - Comedian Jackie Mason, whose latest
Broadway show incluaes a sketch
·about crime-victimized New Yorkers, is giving a benefit for the families of police officers killed in
action.
''I consider this one of the most
neglected forms of charity,"
Mason said in today's New York
Times. "We give so much for
AIDS, for cancer, for the heart
fund, but the plight of widows and
orphans_,of cops is never dramatized. I can think of no r,eater hero
than the New York cop. '
Tonight's benefit at Madison
Square Garden also features the
Lionel llampton orchestra and the
Drifters. ·
·
Mason has starred in two solo
shows on Broadway and the shortlived television series "Chicken
Soup."
·

Ctell' toalgbL l.mr Deer 40.
Thursday, cloudy. HlgiiiD mld·
~-

Page7 ·

ized was 36 percent lower in those
taking the drug.
"This is good news," commented Dr. Eugene Braunwald of
Brigham and Women's·Hospital in
Boston. •'When doctors have
patients with heart disease who
have a high chance of going ioto'
heart failure, thev should Rive hi2h
consideration to using ACE
inhibitors before overt failure
occurs."
The latest study is the first
large-scale research· to show that
any treatment can prevent the
devt-lopment- of- hea."'t- failure;--Braunwald is conducting a similar
study that is limited. to people
whose hcan damage results solely
from heart attacks.
The latest study was restricted to
people who had significant damage
to their heart muscle. As a result,
no more than 35 percent of the ·
blood was pumped out of thir
hearts with each beat.
Each year, heart failure is the
primary cause of 40,000 deaths,
and it contributes to 230,000 others. It is the leading reason why
people over age 65 are hospitalized.

LONDON (AP) - Pop star
Elton John and Prime Minister
'
their vacation with words, pictures, John Major have focused their
articles, cards and mementos. They sights on a campaign to collect eyefor needy people in Latin
told about a .cabin trip to Licking glasses
America.
County, going to Amish country, a
· John, who has often entenained
homecoming to Tazewell, Va., a
his
fans in outlandish pairs of glitzy
one day trip to Zanesville IG museglasses,
launched the appeal Monums, family visits, going to.Charday
with
the bespectacled prime
lottesviUe, Va., WiUiamsburg, Va.,
minister
outside
Major's Downing
and Virginia Beach, touring the
Biltmore House in AshviUe, N.C., Street office.
The drive is organized by Lions
and one had anended the Miss
Clubs
International and sponsored
America pageant in Atlantic City to
by
Lenscmfters,
which makes eyelend support to her great niece,
glas~s.
Miss Ohio.
Three years ago, a pair of the
Those attending were Ida Mursinger-pianist-composer's
eyephy, Peggy Bole, Lucile Allen,
glasses
with
blue
and
yellow
lenses
Hazel Stanley, Dorothy Reeves,
Marjorie Punell, Ginny Wyatt and sold foi'$5,400 at auction. John's
hits include "Yellow Brick Road"
Evelyn Thoma.
and "Rocket Man."

Children who consume calcium
have-lower blood pressures
By DANIEL Q. HANEY
AP Science Writer
ANAHEIM. Calif. (AP) Youngsters who consume plenty of
calcium, largely by drinkmg milk,
have significantly lower blood
pressure and may be warding off
heart trouble later in life, a new-·
study suggests.
· Although researchers have
found a tentative link between calcium intake and blood pressure in
grownups, the· new research is the
first to show that pre-school chil·dren seem to keep their blood pressure down by consuming milk and
other calcium-rich food.
. The research found that for each
glass of milk - or similar serving
of calcium - they regularly consumCI) each day, youngsters' systolic blood pressure was four points
lower.
. Children who have higher than
.usual blood pressure early in life
often go on to.develop hypertension in adulthood.
"We were surprised to see such
a strong relationship in kids," said
'nr. Matthew W. Gillman of Boston
University. "If this is confmed, it
could be one way to prevent the
appearance of hypertension" later
in life.
·
Another rec'ent study found that
the newborn babies of mothers who
consumed sufficient amounts of
calcium during their last three

vent people from getting heart failure? We fo~nd an approximately
37 percent reduction .in thC' development of heart f~ilure" among .
those wtlo took ACEcinhibitors;said Dr. Salim Yusuf of the Nationa1 Hean, Lung and Blood Institute.
The five-year study was condue ted on 4,228 people at83 hospitals in the United State's; Canada
and Belgium. Yusuf presented inc
results at the annual meeting of the
American Heart Association.
Half of the people in the .study
took enalapril, one form of ACE
inhibitor, while the rest got place- bos. The study's findings included:
- Among those gelling the
ACE inhibitors, 436 developed
heart failure, compari¥1 with 638 in
the comparison group.
_ Taking ACE inhibitors
reduced the heart attack rate by 23
percent.
- There wcie 247 deaths from
heart disease in those taking the
drugs and 282 deaths in the comparison group. This difference,
though encouraging, was considered not quite large enough to be
statistically meaningful.
_ The risk of being hospital;

Ohio Lottery

Hoople likes
Florida State
over Miami ;

Names in

Program features vacation mementos
The Circle of Helping Hands
met recently at the home of
Kathryn Johnson.
•
Lucile Allen presided at the
meeting and members responded to
roll call with a Bible verse using
the word "share."
Kathryn Johnson had devotions
using an article ''Traveling Strange
Places." She stated people need to
know where they are going and
avoid the paths of bitterness, wasting time, worrying and thinking
evil offriends.
Repons were given about the
Meigs County Womens Fellowship, the recent cabin trip and the
coming womens retreat.
The Christmas dinner will be

Tuesday, November_12; 1991

Study: drug treatment stops
development of heartfailure

Ann Landers
ANN LANDERS
,..,..
10

.

and overturned, plnnlna Com1d~ ancllernea~b.
Some details or tbe bicldent are still under lnvesliption. Here, members or tbe Gallla County
Emergency Medical Squad work In tbe rain to
extract Condee from tbe wreckage.

measure had been rejected by the
House31-62onSept.26. :
- -·
Voinovich, a fonner Cleveland
mayor, lobbied for the proposal he
says will give a major economic
boost to downtown Cleveland.
In other action Tuesday , the
House passed a bill requiring doctors, dentists and other health care
professionals who performed invasive procedures, such as surgery, to

notify their patients if they have
tested positive for the AIDS virus.
Patients would have to provi_de
the same infonnation 10 their doc·
tors or other health care ·providers
under the proposal that went to the
Senate 96-1.
By a vote of 85-12, the House
also forwarded 10 the Senate a bill
requiring health insurers to offer
Continued on page 3

Celina couple ,.---Local briefs-----.
.
plans meeting Thursday
claims jackpot Rutland
public meeting to clarify several unresolved issues concerning

. DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - A
Celina ·couple says iheY. put a lottery ticket wonh S24 milhon on ice
to keep it safe until they could cash
it in.
Lois McNeilan said Tuesday
that she and her.husband, Carl, discovered they had the winning ticket
Sunday.
But since the Ohio Lottery
offices and the bank where they
have a safety deposit box were
closed for the Veterans Day holiday, they found the next best hiding place - their freezer.
' A bank person advised us to
do that," she said.
The McNeilans validated their
winning ticket Tuesday at the
regional lottery office in Dayton.
Mrs. MeNeilan, 49, has worked
at the Huffy Corp. bicycle plant in
Celina.Jor .the past 26 years. Her
husband, 58, is retired.
The couple will recci ve
$706,1'53 a year for the next 26
years after taxes.
· "I don't ihink it's even hit,"
said Carl McNeilan. " It's going to
take time.''
Mrs. MeNeilan said the couple,
who have sons aged 26 and 28, will
use the money to buy a new car and
remodel their home. Sbe said they
probably won't move away from
the area.
The winning number was
included in $3 wonh of computer- '
selected Auto Lono tickets Mrs.
McNeilan bought Friday evening at
the Kohn Newsstand in Celina. She
said the couple buys tickets there
regularly.
"
On Sunday, they stopped bacl:
at the newsstand and were IOld that
the winning ticket had been sold in
Celina. But instead of going home
to 'check the numbers, they couple
went 10 visit friends in SL Marys.
Wpen they returned home later
that day, they diJcovered they had
the winning numbers.
"I IICreallled, and I started running through the house," Mrs.
McNeilan recalled.

. A

the $2.2 million waste water· collection and sewage treatment system under construction in RuUand will be held at 7 p.m. Thursday at
the Rutland Civic Center.
Sandy Smilh, project manager, encourages everyone coming
oniO the system to be at the meeting.
She said that officials froin the engineering and contracting
firms will be av3.ilable to answer questions and that a demonstration
on the workings of the grinder pump will be given.
·

Board OKs additional funding
Modification of the multi-handicapPed program and 'Adult Basic
Education budget and appropriations to·include some additional
funding was discussed and approved at a meet~ng o_f the Meigs
County Board of Educatton meeung Tuesday mght m the board ·
room.
The board also approved a course or study for the nursing assistant program in the vocational program at Meigs High School, lhe
bus driver certification of William Capehart, Eastern Local SchoOl
District.
A report on the recent state evaluation and fall enrollment was
given by John Riebel, Sr., superintendent. The treasurer's report
was presented and bills were approved for paymenL .
·
Attending were Harold Roush, president, Bill Quickel vice president, Oris Smith, Bob Burdette and Harold Lohse, board members,
and Riebel.

Bearhs, Shaffer injured in wreck
Two Pomeroy women were taken to the hospital following a
two-car accident on U.S. Route 33 late Tuesday.
According to a report from the Meigs County Sherifrs Departmen~ Anne M. Bearhs of Pomeroy was southbound on tJ.S. Route
33 in a 1988 Pontiac when sbe collided with a 1979 Chevrolet driven by Lula Shaffer of Pomeroy, who turned left into the southbound
lane to enter Long Hollow ~oad.
.
Both drivers were taken to Veterans Memorial Hospilal for treatment by Pomeroy squad.
Shaffer will be cited for no valid driver's license and failure 10
yield.

Sixth jamboree stated Saturday
The sixth· ailnual Coal Miner's Jamboree to raise money for the
Children's Services programs of Jackson, Athens, Gallia, Meigs and
Vinton Counties in Meigs County, and Mason County in West Virginia, wiD be held at Meigs High School gymnasium on Satwday at
7p.m.
A variety of entenainment will be presented including Silver
Wings of Oak Hill, Rarely llerd of Albany, Country Blend of
Racine, Middle Branch, and l'oint Blank. Blue grass, rock: and roll,
easy listening, and gospel will be included on the program.
Admission is $5 for adull.! and $2.50 for children. Refreshments
Continued on page .3
"

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