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'
•· ·' 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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.~· commentary

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Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, November ~3, 1991

·"

The Daily Sentinel

..

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohlo

.·

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS ()JI' THE MEJG8-MASON AREA

.,MULTIMEDIA, INC.
ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher

.... '

PATWHITEHEAD t:
Assistant Publisher/Controller

..

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

. '.'
•

AMEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association and
' ' ' the American Newspaper Publisher Association.

..

LEITERS OF OPINION are welcom&lt;:. They should be less than 300
words long. Allleners are subject to editing and must be signed with nome,
' address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will he published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.
·
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.

"

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· ·.~-----------....1

: :l&gt;e~ple may vote against
:·:congress, but not their rep.
''

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
· · . WASHINGTON -When it's a question of voting against Congress
·.and the political establishment, term:lif!~it measures are hard to stop.
When it gets personal and mvolves lciclcing out the local congressman,
"limits can be losers.
.
•.. In Washington, the first state to defeat a term-limit ~roposition, the
measure rejected in the Nov. 5 elecuon fit the latter descnpuon. And that
sacrificed a major 'advantage the term-limits lobbr had elsewhere: tt led
the voters to look at the people who would be pumshed, not only at a dis"· tant, unpopular government.
·
.. . . Pushed to make that choice, people tend to slick with the congressman
· 'they've got. That's why more than· 96 percent of House members who
sought new terms in 1990 got them, desptte an anll-mcumbent mood
r JOward Congress as a \)'hole.
·
.
. .
. :The term-limits movement can offer a vehtcle for those confltctmg
;·~nliments, a way to vo~ no on Congress even while voting to re-elect a
,; member of Congress. ·
;
·
•::. House Speaker Thorms S. F?ley, D-Wash., who went home to take a
lead role in the campa1gn agamst term hmtts, srud such. measures are
. designed "to capture dissalisfaclion·w.ith the other person's incumbent,. ''
. not necessarily with a voter's own representative.
.
:· • The limits that won in 1990 all fit that formula because they' re all
· .prospective, applying six or eveJ112 years from now against officials who
·' may or may not befamiliar faces.
.
·
· · That wasn't the case with the measure Washington voters turned down
by a 54-46 percent margin, upsetting public opinion ~lis that had showed
suppon running at two-thirds or. more, a margin in hne with national surveys on the issue.
,
.
•
It looked like the measure's sponsors ran the term limit bandwagon
~ over their own feet by drafting a measure more drastic than they could

'

BIA lets Indian schools crumble , ...
WASHINGTON- Today, as
they (lo every weekday, 200 children of the Puyallup Tribe will
crowd into the Chief Leschi School
in Tacoma, Wash. - a massive
five-story building that the Bureau
of Indian Affairs has been warned
could collapse in an earthquake or .
even high winds.
The 50-year-old school ignores
a handful of building 'codes. It is an
unsound mishmash of concrete,
rubble, clay tiles, plaster and
bricks. Diagonal cracks from water
and past earthquakes mark the corners of the building. Several walls
are visibly bowed.
In March, a. consulting firm
warned the tribe that "large sections of brick could fall off at any
time." The tribe asked the BIA to
put a fence around the building so
children mingling around the
school at least couldn't stand close
enough to be inJured by the falling
debris. But nothmg has been done.
Last month, another building
consultant reponed that the school
does not meet minimum wind or
eanhquake standards. If an earthquake rattled Tacoma, the consul-

tant said, "it is our opinion that
major damage to the existing
school would resulL" Still, nothing
has been done. ·
Sen. 1Brock Adams, D-Wash.,
has asked the BIA to "take immediate steps" to move the children
to another school. The BIA says it
is doing its best.to find another
building, but its best is marginal.
BIA officials appeare(l surprised'
when Adams told them late last
month that the
the tribe asked
for "immediately" seven months
ago has not been delivered.
Obliviousness is standard operating procedure for the BIA. The
a$ency raretr does anythin~
"unmediately,' especially when 11
comes to repairing its wobbly
schools. As a BIA spokesman told
us, ''Too many of them are old and
not built for schooling children.''
The Chief Leschi School began
life in 1941 as a hospital. Then it
was used as a facility for juvenile
delinquents before it was convened
to a high schooVmiddle school
complex and tribal government
offices for the Puyallups.
The Interiot Department's

renee

';j;,.e Washingion vote was on retroactive term.limits, applying to time
rakelidy served in elective office, sUite or congressiOnal.
.
·.. ·. It would have prevented all eight Washington House members from
. Rjnning a~n in t994, after one more term. Foley and hts House col;'!'*gues· satd that W!&gt;Uid ·have crippled the sUite's delegation to Congress
United Slates to George .... Unit- electorate; by promising to be more·
-~ile other states, wi'/t rival int.erests, ~ept ~e~ seni?~ty.8J!d clout .
ed SUites to George.... was a mes- attentive to the needs of middle '
· That argument concenttaled on Califomta, m anu-lim1t advertisements . sage that blared loudly and clellfly America, Harris Wofford touched a
·.'in~t said a Washington delegation 'stripped of congressional seniority · from 'the voting booth this past lot
·of hot buttons. It would be wise
:ivouldn't be able to defend the water .resources of t,he Nonhwest against election day. To pui it in Star Trek for George Bush to be more atten· the giant to the southf
·
terms, the President was beamed up tive to these concerns between now
• . Corigressiorull remr•limits in Colorado, the only stare to ap~roxe them,
(and· no doubt steamed up) by the and next November.
. wouldn't be effective until 2002 if they withstand the inev11able coun
final, tally in the nation s only
In that Harris Wofford was able
··~ftallenge. Oklahoma and Clllifomia adopted limits at the slate level; in all
~ajor panisan race of national sigto
position himself as the chalthree stares, the clock started running when the. measures were enacted,
ntfi~ance.
lenger;
as the outsider fighting an
regardless of seniority accumulated earlier.
·
ihe fact that a former high uphill battle·against a highly visible
Califomia's legislative term limits were upheld by the slate Supreme
standing member of the President s Administtation insider, his message
~urt on OcL 9. That ·measure gave legislators a maxim\tm,of eight more
one of his key inner circle was viewed by many as a liarom~­
Cyt;lfS, beginrung last.Jan. I. It also sets a two-term limit on statewide elec- cabinet,
advisers, was resoundingly rejected ter of national opiruon.
.·
" tG&gt;e office.
' at the polls, can't help but·have a
Whether
that
assessment
1s
.., '•'Stare-imposed limits on congressional tenure haven't been 'tested. The
major impact on the manner in
~S~reme Coun will have to decide whether they fit the Cpnstitutlon , which the Presideat condwcts the accurate is a matter of debate, but
in poliiics pe1ception often
!-which sets citizenshiP., age - 25 for the House, 30 for the Senate - and
affairs of government between now becomes more important than reali~ re$idency·as the qualifications for Congress.
·
and next Fall.
'
ty. One could almost as com :.1 · Foley and other Washington opponents Uied to get the term-limit iniTo
last Tuesday's U.S. Sen- pellingly make the argument that
aifulive stricken from the ballot as unconslitulional, but the Slate Supreme ate elecuon in Pennsylvania was a
~Court ruled against them. ·
.
· · national referendum on the Bush Harris Wofford s successful cwn~ •. -House lawyers have filed an advisory brief on a projected Florida Administration, however, would be paign for the U.S'. Senate was pan
of the continuing nationaltcndency
;or.crJn.Jimit measure, contending it is unconstitutional. A California Repuba bit of an overslatemen~ but clear- to •throw the rascals out."
~an. Rep. Christoplt,er Cox, tried to bar such ·briefs 'in the fulure, but his
1y, some alarms were sounded that
When one looks beyond Pennresolution was rejected, 265-160.
the President would be wise not to sylvania 's borders to election
Foley said the Washington outcome showed that the voters are not in a ignore.
returns from other states, one
blind rage, ready to punish incumbents with term Umits whenever they get
By soundly defeating George quickly sees that this "out with the
the chance.
..
·
Bush's close friend and political
He sai~ it bro~~ht down "!hi~ _son .of flying high ~urnplion that every ally, Harris Wofford sent the Bush · old and in with the new" apprqach
term-limit tmuauve or proposmon tn the country IS unbeatable ... the Administration a wake up call. By to government appears to be gaining steam. Such was the mood of
wave of the fulure."
.
focusing as he did on issues of New Jef.sey, Virginia and MissisThat will be put to a broader test in 1992, when term-limit advocates major concern to the American
sippi voters
as they. radically
.
. .
hope tb put the issue to votes ip at least 15 states.

inspector general was lipped off to
possible BIA deathtraP schools last
spring and investigated the backlog
of maintenance problems. The
report, obtained by our associate
Jim Lynch, concluded that despire
the fact the BIA spends' $70 million.
a year reoairine ,its buildines. the
agency has "failed to correct the
life-threatening safety deficiencies,,
code violalions and hazardous
health conditions existing in
Bureau schools, dormitories and
other buildings."
·
The re,Port cited a pattern of
buck-passmg that shows little hope ·
ol" reform. Examples of hazards
include:
- The Teec Nos Pos School in
Arizona, which is "imminently
hazardous" because it has no ftre
doors, fire protection or working
ftre alarm system;
- The Many Farms High
School in Arizona, where the
inspectors found that the ·boys' dormitory roof leaked, windows were
broken, light fixtures were dead
and restrooms were unsanitary with
corroded and broken toilets;
- The San lldelfonso Day

sar

Today In History

School· in New Mexico where the
main classrooms are in an adobe
structure· builr in the 1920s. One
wall of the building was found to
be . cra~lted and in danger of collapsing into a clas~m.
The BIA spokesman conceded
that repairs have bee~ ~!ayed in
the past because of the warped
system we have on how rep~ fire
done." But he blamed that system
on red tape created by Congress
and said the BIA was streamlining
it to speed response time. .
.
STOPPING NORTH KOREA
- 'The United States is arranging
behind the scenes to bring intense
international pressu·re on~North
Korea to halt its nuclear program
and allow United Nations irjspections. The Soviet Central government has joined in trying to put the
pressure on the Koreans, but they
are resisting. As we have reported
recently, North Korea has new
allies among the hardliners in the
Soviet Union who are trying to slip
nuclear technology out of Russia
and into Nonh Korea. One intelligence report warns that North
*area-could become-a-nuclear
power in another year.
' MINI-EDITORIAL - You
can't always count on your friends
in Washington. Rqi. Harley Staggers. D-W. Va., found that (lut ·
when he threw in with the National
Rifle Association. Staggers has
been a big NRA supporter and
thought he could call in the favor
when he needed help. The Washington Post recently reported that
he thought wrong. The 1990 Census means a.redrawing of con~s­
sional districts in West Virgmia,
and Stag$ers wanted the NRA to
suppon h1m when he lobbied with
slate authorities to save his district
from beilJg carved up. Instead, the
NRA went to bat for o.ther West
Virginia ·congressmen who had
been equally gung-ho about gun
issues. Next time Staggers should
get somethin~ in writina because
the gentlemen's agree'!'ent isn't
what it used to be on Cap1tol Htll.

IND.

B1

•I Columb~sl' sa• I

•

•
W.VA.;

~

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Showers T·storms Rain Flurri..

alcd

!

Snow

'
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Pr.
Cloudy
Cloudy

Sunny

VIS Associated Press Gr11phicsNet

Ct991 Accu-Weather,.lnc:.

_....;.______ Weather
South-Central Ohio
Tonight, mostly clear with a low
around 40. Thursday, p~y cloudy
and unseasonably warm with a
high in the mid-60s.
Extended forecast:

·

Friday through Sunday:
A chance of showers Friday and
early Saturday. Otherwise fair.
Highs 55-65 Friday, 50-60 Satlll'day and4S-50 Sunday. Lows in the
40s Friday and the 30s Saturday
and Sunday --·

LOca l b'rle
, •.~S·
·

· Continued from page I

•••

will be sold.
Th~ jamboree is only one of several events sponsored by the eoal
miners to raise money for children. The annual visit of Santa 10 the
Meigs Mines at Chrisunas time to give toys to disadvantaged children is a highlight of the miners' remembrance program.
Last year approximately $16,000 was raised through the jamboree, a golf tournament, other fund raisers, and a checkoff from
minets' checks. The program is a joint effon of the United Mine
Workers
. and Southern Ohio' Coal.

Parade-entry deadline Nov. 25
The Pomeroy Merchants Association will host the Christmas
parade, "Home For the Holidays" on Dec. 1 at 2 p.m. during open
· house in Pomeroy. Line-up will begin at I p.m. behind the old
Pomeroy Junior High School. Deadline for entry is Nov. 25 and further information Ol) the parade. may be obtained by calling Vicki
Ferrell at Buttons and Bows, 992-5177.

Tarp theft investigated

In my judgment•. the surprising
defeat of the Washington State
term limitation effort was an aberration. As hard as some incumbents
wish, term limitations and the "out
with the old and in with the new"
approach to government isn't going
to go away; and that message, as
much as any, was what this year's
election returns were all aboat.

Key Centurion announces earni'(lgs

PUbliahed every allcrnpon, Monday
throug h Friday, lll Court St.., Pomeroy,
Ohio by the Ohio Valley Publishing
In~ .,

Pomeroy,

Hospital news

PRICE

SubKI'ibun not de~ir;ng Lo pay tho earri-.
cr may remit in advance dirt!(L t.o The
~ 3.6 or ,12
g~ven earner

Galllpolia patty 'I'ribu,nc on

month buie. Credit Wlll bo
eac h wect. •
;No IUbtcriptlons by mah pcrmlUcd in
an:a• where home carrier 1ervico i1
available.
Mall SutMcriptloM ·
In1lda Galll1 Coanty
•13 Weoko......................... ......... .......$21 .84
26 Woeu .........................................$43 .16

l

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(--.-- ...

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Mountain Qluegrass. The public it;;
Harrisonville seniors to meet
:
The Harrisonville Senior Citi - invited to attend.
·· ~
zens will meet Tuesday at the town Dance to be beld
There will be a round ari&amp;
house. Officers will be elected and
a potluck Thanksgiving dinner will Square dance at the Rutland Amcri '
begin at noon . All members are can Legion Hall on Saturday front
8 p.m. to midnight with Jl)IISiC·IIy,;
urged to attend.
the Country Kin Band. 'Ray Fi~h~
VFWmeeting
• •
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post will be the caller.
Special
meeting
•
'•
No. 9053 will meet Thursday at
The
Olive
Township
Trustee(
·
7:30 p.m. at the post home.
will
have
a
special
meeting
orr
Dance to be held
The Tuppeis Plains VFW Post .Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at ·tile
No. 9053 and Auxiliary will spon- ReedsviUe Fire Hou~ f()f the' pursor a dance on Friday from 8 to pose of appointing a clerll:.
II :30 p.m. with music by Rocky

__ Middleport Court_~
Seven were fmed ina two others
forfeited bonds in the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday nighL
Fined were Graden K. Elam,
Vinton, $15 and costs, speeding;
Linda K. Mills, Pomeroy, ,$10 and
costs, expire4 registration; Lisa M.
Pierce, Middleport, $10 and costs,
fic titious registration; Jeffrey L.

Pomeroy Court
Six forfeited bonds when they
failed to appear in th e court of
Pomeroy Mayor Ri chard Seyler
Tuesday night.
.
Forfeiting bonds were Allee
Parsons, Conway, S.C. $45, speeding, and $63, driving under susJ)Cnsion ; Sharon Haufman, Racme,
$45, speeding; Leonard Van Meter,
Pomeroy, $63, disorderly conduct;
Gerald Pullins. Sr., Pomeroy, $50,
speeding; Abra Lynn Ohlinger,
Leon, W. Va., $63, expired registration; Jo A. Smithem, Langsville,
$46! speeding;. Randall. T. Werry,
Racmc, $43, frulure to yteld.

Rose, Point Pleasant, W. Va., $10
and costs, expired registration;
Bonnie. L. Roush, Middleport, $10
and co.sts, expired registration;
Jimmy. Harris, Middleport, $SO 8iJd
costs and five days in jail, crimin&amp;l
trespasSiJ18, and $25 and COlis, dii·
ordcrl~ manner; Sam McCloud,
Middlepon, SSO and costs and five
days, criminal trespassing, and $25
and costs, disorderly roamer.
Forfeiting bonds were George J.
Neigler, Racine, $52, speeding; and
Gloria J. Scali, Athens, $60, running a stop sign.
·

SPRING VAllfY CINEMA
446 4514

.

$J.OO UIIOIIN MJII[(S SA~Y I SIJBIT 1 •

,

u.ao IAIY.IN .,.,. T\.IESI»Y .
IIGU

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Nov. 12- Reda
Fowler, Carolyn Green, Mary
Howard , Judy Jones, Edward
Miller, Reta Montcastle , Drew
Rottgen, Michael Shong and
Richard Young.
Birtbs Nov. 8 - Mr. and Mrs.
Carlos Standling, son, Gallipolis.

Pick 3 Numbers
2-8-9
(two, eight, nine)
Pick 4 Numbers
. '6-1 -2·1

·-M

,.

-~

.

{six, one, two, one)
Cards
K (kingl of Hearts
8 (eight) of E:lubs
10 (ten) of Diamonds
J Uack) of Spades

122 E. Main St.

Hawto,.,.

Pomeroy,-Oh.
(614) 992-6632
WEDNESDAY: Spag.ettlw/Meat Sauce
THURSDAY: Salmol Patties .
FRIDAY: Gldte1 w/Yr.t .d M1sltroom Sauce
SATURDAY: Beef Kallahs
lri•t Tills ld ••• Get I"' Discoult
AlSO FEATURING: Prime R., IIQ Rack If Rlh, .roled Alaskan
Pollack, htp..frW luttetfly Shrltlp 1ncl St...s.
OPEN TUES. fHRU FRI. 11-7; WID. &amp; ~ 5·1
' "" FRI~ 5·9; SAT. 5·9 . ..!

weo8.~.~~~~. ~~~~~~.~ ~~.~~.~?:. .

13
823 .40
26 w..u ........................................... ~ .IIO
62 Woeu ................................ ..........$88.40

'

--Meigs announcements __

Veterans Memorial
TUESDAY ADMISSIO NS .
Anna Hart, Rutland, and Alice
Welsh, Middlepon.
TUESDAy DISCHARGES .
None.

52 Wovu.: ............................... ......... $84 .76

.'

:m

Lottery numbers

Hyou want 10 take it !!aS}' when you
retire, you'd better do some legwork right

•, .,

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3 , .,

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---~-- ---------- --- ----J·----------------- ---Name

now. A good place IOStan is-The Bank One ..,...,.- - -- -- - - -- - - Retirement Guide. It will help you figure Address
rutjustlmrmuch~)OO'llnefrl. Plus. City,County,State . Zip

. it has all kinds ofsuggestions about inve,stinents. furtlmatel~ )W don't have 10 invest
anything.togetit. Call HID·iti6-l51510
onleryourcopy. Orusethiscoupon. The
Guide is free. Just what you'd expect from
bankers who do whatever it takes.
Q

·r •
'

A Pomeroy woman's truck received moderate damage in a deerrelated accident Tuesday morning on S.R. 7 m SaliSbury Townshtp.
According to a repon from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, Debra S. Borin¥· 24, of Pomeroy was nonhbound
on S.R. 7 when a deer collided with her 1973 OMC 15.
.
The deer was killed and the Ohio Department of Transportatton
was advised.

Member; The Auociated Preas Inland
Daily. Preaa AaflOCiation and the Ohio
New1pa,eer Allociation, National
Adverli11ng Represent.ative, Branham
New1paper Sale1, 733 Third Avonue,
New YOrk, Now YOrk 10017.

Daily................................ ............. 25 Conti

Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy, died
Tuesday, Nov. 12, 1991 at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Born on Sept. 29, 1921 at
Spencer, W. Va. , she was the
daughter or William Vandale of
Grantsville, W. Va., and the late
Iva Mayhan Vandale. Mrs. Sisson
was a housewife and a Methodist.
Besides her father, she is survived by her ·husband, Ralph M.
Sisson, Pomeroy ; two sisters,
Helen Sauvage, Syracuse and
Delori s \'andale, Georgia; two
brothers,JeffVaiulale, Spencer, W.
Va., and Fred Vandale, Delaware; a
nephew, Karl Sauvage, Mason, W.
Va., and five stepsons and one
stepdaughter.
In addition to her mother, she
was preceded in death by two
brothers, Delbert and Jack Vandale.
Funeral services will be held at
the Ewing Funeral Home at 1 p.m.
on Friday. Burial will be in Meigs
Memory Gardens. Friends may call
at the funeral home from 7 to 9
p.m. on Wednesday, 2to4 and 7 to
9 p.m. Thursday, and Friday morning.
·
In lieu of flowers donations may
be made to the American· Heart
Association and the Diabetes Foundation.

Deer-truck accident probed

Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2lft«&lt;. Second clau
~tage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

JldSTMASTER: Send addrcu eha ngca Lo
The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St..,
Pomeroy, OHio 45769.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Routo
One Wock ...... ......... ............................ l1.60
One Monlh ..... ...... .............................. $6.95
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SINGLE COPY

Tbe place of funeral services for
William S. Hoback have been
changed. Services will be held at
Racine United Methodist Church
on Friday at I p.m. with Rev .
Roger Grace officiating.
Friends may call on Wednesday
from 7 p.m . to 9 p.m. and on
Thursday from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. and
7 p.m . .to 9 p.m. at Fisher Funeral
Home in Middlepon.
Masonic services will be held
on Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the
funeral home.

Pearl E. Sisson , 70, 43791

l:::::::=:::====:;-------;-::;:;~
(USPS 213·960)

William Hoback

. Pearl Sisson

CHARLESTON, W.Va. - Key Centurion Bancshares, Inc.
announced third-quarter net income of .$7.6 million during the period, which ended Sept•. 30.
.
. .
This represents an Increase of S.6%, compared WI~ $7:2 million
from the same period· last year. The per-share eanungs Increased
3.3% to $.31, compared with $.30 in the same quarter of 1990.
All told, earnings for the year so far totaled $23.1 million, an
increase of 4.1% over the $22.2 million earned in the same ninemonth period last year.
.
..
.
.
The results take into account the addiUOn of Spectrum Fmanc1al
Corporation in a merger completed Jan. 31. and of Southern
Bankshares, Inc. in an April30 merger.
Key Centurion has 54 bank subsidiaries in West Virginil\·and
Kentucky, including Citizens National Bank of Point PleasanL

The Daily Sentinel

_ _ Area deaths __

Rosalind Bigley Schmidt Miller,
88, died Sunday, Nov. 10 1991 10
Cincinnati.
.
Sbe was the wife of the late Fred
L. Schmidt and the late Marlin E.
Miller, and the sister of Evelyn
Kean. Several surviving relatives
including Phillip Bearhs reside in
Meigs County.
There will be no visitation .
Graveside services will be held at
the Spring Grove Cemetery in
.Cincinnati where funeral arrangements are .being handled by the
Thomas Memorial Funeral Home.

EMS units answer I 0 calls

CompanyfMuUimedia

day ..s high pressure moves in:
Trmperatures will be cooler with
h1ghs in the 40s. ·
The record high remperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 74 degrees in 1955.
The record low was 14 in 1911.

Gov. Voinovich ...

Rosalind Miller

Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports that his department is investigating the theft of four tarps from a trailer that was
parked over the weekend at the U.S. Route 33 roadside rest.
Richard Bowen of Ball Run Road, repor\ed that the tarps were
black, ranging in size from 12 feet by 16 feet til 12 feet by 45 feet.
Anyone with information about the tarps is asked to contact
Bowen or the department.

~

Sunrise this morning was at .
7: 14 a,m. S.unset 'will be at S:.l7
p.m.
Arllund the utlon
Low clouds and fog huns over
much of the Northc.I!St this morning while Pacific wintb crossing
.. .
the Rockies bropght wanner weather tQ the Plains.
·
•
More snow was expected in
nonhem New England as the sromr
.
..
.
system tha~ moved through th~
By M..tRGARET CALDWELL
ing development on the city's east victims were found inside the region on TueS1!3y continued ·into
Associated 'J&gt;rns·Writer
side:
·
. .
· smolderin~ fuselage.
·
Canada
, •.
The fl1ght plan indicated the
COLUMBUS _.: The pilOt of a
T~e Identities of the victims
'Bright; sunny skies were fo~­
~w·in-engin(!· aiqitane cut ppwer to a were 'not released, pending nolifi- plane left Charleston, S.C. · ·
cast foi the Southeast, and cool,
failing engine ju.st mjoptes before c~lion of their families. The comweather was expected in the NOflh~
the plane crashed in a cotnfield and pany said today it had no informa•
west with snow in the mountains: '.
'ex,ploded ; a Federal Avia(ion lion~on~mingthecrash .
.
The forecast called for rain
Administration. sp,okesman said • . Th~ .P!Jot call~ Port Colurnb~s
the upper Rio Grande Valle,y,
Am El~ P~wer ..: ...............31 112
today · All five people alioard were International AU')lort about su
southern New Melli co and parts -of
Ashland Oil .... ................. .30
kiUed: .
·
miles from the airpon to report a
Arizona. Little precipitation w.as
AT&amp;T ............................... .38 118
·. The 1973 Cessria 340~ owned by P.tOblem with the _right engine, said
expected east of the Rockies. · ·
Bank One ........................:.47
Chenoweth Construction Co. of Mo~t Edelstem, an FAA
After more than 600 ~lows
Bob Evans ........................20
Fenton Mich crashed and burst spokesman in Chicago.
in the past two weeks, only one
Charming Shop... ...............21 7/8
into fl~mes T~esda,y about 8:33
J:le said the pilot t_urned off the
record low was reported Tu~y
City Holding ..................... l6112
p.m . in the field about two miles engmeabout three miles later; and
- 44 degrees in Hollywood, Fla.
Federal Mogul...................l6 3/4
east of Pon Columbus International the plane crashed.
Temperatures today weJe
Goodyear
T&amp;R ..................49 5/8 expected
Aiipon. The !:rash OCI(urted abOut
· Fr~li~.County Sheriffs Chief ·
to remain in the 30.s jn
one-quarter mile fnim a ·new hous. Deputy Michael Creamer srud the · Key Centurion ...................14 1/4
Maine and northe'l'n New Hamp·
Lands' End ........................ 23 3/4
shire and northern Vermont; the
Limited Inc....................... 26 5/8 .40s elsewhere in NCI\' England 8nd
continuedfrompaget
Multimedia Inc..................21112
in the northern Plains and .the
Rax Restaurant ..................3/16
policies that inclt~de screeqing of bill extending for two years a temNorthwest; the SOs in the midRobbins&amp;Myers ......... ....... 37
Atlantic states, the Great Lakes ·
wo~en 3S or older for breast and porary "certificate of need" law.
Shoney's Inc ...................... 20 1/4 region and the central Plains; the
That statute, which otherwise
cerv1cal cancer,
Star Bank ........ .. .................25 112 60s in the Southeast, Northem Calwould
expire Friday, enables the
That measur~ was sent to the
Wendy lnt'l.........................9
ifornia and much of the Southwest;
Senate, along w1th another House state to monitor costly expansions
Wonhington Ind................ 21 112
the 70s in Florida and central Calibtll,_ p~ssed _95-1, that ~xpa~ds or'hospitals and oth~r medical
Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
fornia; and the 80s in the South,
Med1ea1d .to mclude the m!Cns1ve facilities, as well as equ1pment pur- quotes provided by Blunt, Ellis
western deserts and Miami.
care requtred to. save the hves of chases that can add to the spiraling
and Loewi ofGa//ipoUs.
The high temperature for ·tbe
medically fragile children.
cost of health care.
nation
Tuesday was 92 degrees at
The Senate was in recess. except
Sy a vote o~ 81-14, the House
Palm
Springs,
Calif.
·
approved Senate amendments and for a skeleton session and some
sent to Voinovj~h an emergency committee meetings.
, Nauonal Weather Service srud, Fnday might see some rain.
.
Some clouds will linger tonight
with lows 35-40.
· Dry weather is forecast for Sun· · ..

Stocks

Units of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services answered
10 calls for assistance on Tuesday and early on Wednesday.
-~ At 11:57 a.m., Syracuse urfit·went to Second Street. Velma
Windland was takeR to Vet~ Memorial Hospital.
.
At 3 p.m., Middleport unit went to Overbrook Center. Marie
Berry was-taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital. At 4:29p.m., Syracuse
squad went to Bridgeman Street for Jean Hall, who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center. At 5:05 p.m., Pomeroy unit went to Hobson . Russe.ll Meadows was taken to Veterans. At 5:39 p.m.,
Pomeroy unit went to Pomeroy Pike. Pearl Sisson was taken to Veterans. At 5:45 p.m., Tuppers Plains unit went to Eden Ridge Road.
Louella Nutter was transported to Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital. At 6:43 p.m., Pomeroy unit went to an aitto accident on U.S.
Route 33. Lula Shaffer and Anne Bearhs were taken to Veterans. At
7:47 p.m., Syracuse unit went to Meigs Stadium for Brian Nutter,.
who was taken to Veterans. At9:28 p.m., Middlepon squad went to
Overbrook Center for Alice Walsh, and transponed her to Veterans.
On Wednesday at 1:28 a.m., Rutland units went to New Lima
Road for ~ smoke odor. Virginia McClelland was treated but not
transported.
•

By Martin Schram

'

cli~b into the 60s ~c~: d~y. the

~

ers of New Jersey voiced a
resounding "no" to the new taxes
that had been imposed to pay for
these programs .
Though the march toward term
limitations suffered a detour when
traveling through the State of
Washington, it should be pointed
out that it fared well in most other
jurisdictions where it was an issue.
The U.S. House of Representatives has only one Speaker, and
when that Speaker chose to .make
himself an issue in his home state's
ballot initiative by frightening the
electorare into believing that they
would lose their considerable clout
in the nation's capital , the voters
responded.

a history of implacable pronouncements, thus moving forward toward
this ultimate solution:
THE WEST BANK - This will
eventually be a demilitarized land down ,on Israelis living below .. The
governed through Palestinian free flow of water from the Heights
autonomy. One sensible formula- to the people of Israel and Jordan
tion would tie this West. Bank land must be guaranteed.
to Jordan in a confederation of
THE GAZA STRIP - This
sorts. Jews may ·live there, if they impoverished, non-strategic piece
wish, retaining !~eli citizenship. of land never was, and will never
International ·enforcement of the become, the obstacle to peace.
demilitarized nature of the land is Israel will withdraw its forces;
essential to Israeli security; Israel, Oazlt will be autonomously govafter all, will once again be pinched erned by its residents. ·
to a perilous width of just 10 miles
JERUSALEM - This is the
at its narrowest point between the toughest of all problems; there is
Mediterranean Sea and the western no satisfying solution. Only when
edge of this West Bank territory. all other ISSues ane resolved will the
Israel's able deputy foreign minis- fate of this holy city be decided. It
ter, Benjwnin Netanyahu, recalled will become an international city:
in Madrid that he and his fellow Israel will govern West Jerusalem,
soldiers trained by running across · the capital of its country; East
the entire width of their nalion Jerusalem will be governed by
in one hour. "A country that is 10 Arabs, all with international guarmile• wide cannot ·be secure, can- , antee.
nor defend itself, cannot defend the
That Is the end point that all ·
peace," he said; surely every Arab must know lies far ahead. Meangeneral understands the logic of while, progress in Madrid is
thaL
marked in many small ways.
THE GOLAN HEIGHTS Israel's Netanyahu noted one, each
The identity of the governing time he took his seat across from
authority administering this land . the Palestinians. "I look 'at them
isn't crucial; the identity of the mil- and they look at me - and someitary controlling the land is. A per- times a familiar nod passes," he
manent international peacekeeping said.
force must assure that Syrian forces
So began the backtrackin~ . ­
can never again occupy the the great, essential step forwar\1 on
Heights, can n~ver again ram rerror the path to peace.

The Dally Senti net · Page, 3

Five.- d.ie in Columbus plane crash

~

r- - - -

.Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

By The Associated Press .
Fair skies and warm ,temperatures wUI arriv~ in Obio on Thurs;'day aiid probably :V&gt;'lll.sta)..'with us
· at least !hrough'Saturday, forecasters said. ·.
·
. Temperatures' are expected· to

IMansfield I s1•!•

•

•

·. Fair skies, warm tem.peratures ·due Thursday

l.Tole". a. I 59•! ·

By]ack An~erson
and Dale VanAtta •

Madrid's miracle: backtrack to peace

By Tbe Associated Press •
They faced each other across the booty - President Bush's prize for
Today is Wednesday, November 13th, the 317th day of 1991. There
Utble,
staring but not yet recogniz- winning the Persian Gulf War, after
are 48 days left in the year.
·
ing, enemies for decades or perhaps forging an ad hoc alliance of feudToday's Highlight in History:
centuries,
depending on how they ing Arabs (tenurist,promoting, radOn November 13th, 1789, Ben.illmin Franklin wrote.a letter to a friend in
choose
to
measure their animosi- ical Syria and h~u~ty-rich, archwhich he said, " In this world nothing can be said to be certain, except
ties. u
'
conservative Saud1 Arabia) and a
death and taxes."
lt ·was, at last, the beginning of Utcit ally (Israel) to reject Saddam
On this date:
·
Hus_sein's manifest destiny. Bush
In 177S, during the American Revolution, U.S. forces captured Mon- the end·.
The Miracle of Madrid was and Secretary of Slate James Baker
treal.
.
t
In 1839, abolitionists gathered in Warsaw, New York, .or a c_pnven- · never a promise of quick peace; it worked tirelessly an~. let it be said,
was a miracle just because it was brilliantly to do what a number of
tio~. during which they nominated James G. Birney, a former slaveholder,
happening. A Bibleful of enemies us on the outside had been pressing
for president.
was
convened by ·two superpower our noses to the window of upporIn 1909, ZSO m.iners lost their lives in a ftre and explosion at the St.
leaders;
and all attending pretended tunity and clamoring be done. They
Paul Mine at Cherry,lll.
.
not
to
notice
that one superpower seized this moment of non-hostiliIn 1927,'ihe Holland Tunnel- the first underwater tunnel for vehiculeader
was
no
longer representing a ty, and prodded ancient.enemies to
lar uaffic -opened to the public, providing access between New York superpower nor,
for that matter, sit at one table and talk about one
City and New Jersey beneath the Hudson River.
was
he
the
real
leader
back home. subjecc Peace.
In 1937. NBC formed the ftrst full-sized symphony orchestra exclu- Not noticing some realities,
while
This was destined to be a consively for radio broadcasting.
.
.
.
.
officially
noticing
(and
diplomatiference
th-1 would have to back. In J~. the WaiJ P1~ney_ movte "FanlaSta" bad Jts .wodd premtcre at
cally
recogniZing)
others
was,
'
a
fter
.
ll'llCk
toward
peace. Deep down, all
New York's Broadway Theater.
all,
what
the
Miracle
of
Madrid
panics
came
to the table recognizIn 1942, President Franklin D. Rooseveh signed a measure lowering was about.
mg
that
the
ultimate
solution was
the minimum draft age from 21 to 18.
This
conference
was
Bush's
essentially clear. Now we'll see if
In 19S6, the U.S. Supreme Court slruck down laws calling for racial
these enemies can back away from
1
.·. segregation on public buses.
,
In 1969, in a speech in Des 'Moines, Iowa, Vice Prestdent Spiro T.
Agnew accused network television news departrrients of bias and disiOrtion and urged viewers to lodbe complaints.
Ten y~ ago: The crew of the orbiting space shuttle "Columbia" was
orb~~ ~~·i~s ago, the .S. space probe "Mariner Nine" went into ordered to cut the mission ·shon because of a malfunctioning fuel cell.
Five years ago: President Reagan publicly acknowled~ed that the U.S.
In 1974 Karen Silkwood, a technician and union activist at the Kerr- had sent "defensive weapons and spare pans" to Iran m an attempt to
McGee. Ci:n.m,n plutonium plant near Crescent, Okla., was killed in a improve rdalions, but denied that the shipments were pan of a deal atmed
car crash..
··
at freeing hostages in Lebanon.
•
In 1979 former California Governor Ronald Reagan announced in
One year ago: Secrewy of State James A. Baker lii told reporters in
New York his candidacy for the Republican presidential nomination.
Hamilton, Bermuda, the Persian Gulf crisis threatened world recession
In i98S some 23-thousand residents of Armero, Colombia, died when and the loss of American jobs. Members of Confess demanded a larger
a gigantic ~udslide, triggered by the Nevado del Ruii volcano, buried the role in U.S. Gulf policy following President Bush s decision to send more
U.S. IJOOps to the region;
,
city. •

r

•

•

Cong. Clarence E. Miller

'

a

...

-,--,----___;'-----=::_--------~-­

altered the makeup ol their state
governments.
·
Clearly, the mood of the American electorate is one of concern,
one of displeasure, and one of
impatience. Dissatisfied with the
~ce of economic recovery, dissatIsfied.:with the 'Course and cost of
many of our country s social programs, the American voter is
demanding change. Unfonunately,
the message they send with their
election day deci sions is often
muddled.
·
On the one hand, as in Pennsylvania, they voted for the candidate
who promised to make such issues
as national health' insurance and
government s~onsored economic
slimulalion leg1slative priorities.
On the other hand, in the neighboring SUite of New Jersey, the voters emphatically rejected the policies and programs of liberal Governor James Florio that were
designed to specifically address
such concerns. By defeating just
about every Slate assembly member
who had earlier supponed Governor Florio on these issues, the vot•

,,

·Thursd~y, Nov.,14

A·seri'es of conclusions can be reached

'

..

,Wednesday, Nover'nbel'13, 1'991

1991 MNCONECORPOAATJON

'

•

Please send me rre following Bank One Guides:
Bud,get [J

Retirement 0

-

Creditrr College o

BANKHONE
Mlateluit
takes:
Mtmbtr FDI C.

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

MailooupontoBankQrteGuides,P.O.Boxl953,Marlon,Ott133m-1953 .

•

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�.

c~:,

•.

1 ,·

- . i~---- ............ -. ···*·· -··-······ ·-· - · . ·--- --··

"'

- ·--- ··-:-- ·· . · - - - - ·----~·-· ·- .. -- - ···, ... ; ;- ., .• , •.• ·. ·,· •·

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.(' ~

Wednesday, November 13, 1991

The . D~ily . Sentinel ,

Sports

By Tbe ASscicialed Press
When,the Chicago Bulls last
saw Detroit,.the PisiOns wallced o(f
the floo.r without a_fight
Not this time.
The bitter rivalry blew up again
Tuesday night when Horace Grant
and Bill Laimbeer tangled under
the basket. That led to lsiah
Thomas shoving Scottie Pippen,
.who responded by saying he would
not play in the Olympics if Thomas
was added 10 the team. . ·
"It's always advertised as a
war," MichaelJ ordan said after
Chicago won 110·93 at home.
Elsewhere, it .was more calm.
Boston ,~t Sacramento 126-103,
Houston downed Dallas 98-92,
Portland trounced Denver 120-82,
Orlando beat Washington 95-82,
New York qefeated New Jersey 9896, Golden State topped Phoenix
119-116, Atlanta beat Charlotte
118-100 and Cleveland defeated
Milwaukee 119-113.
The Bulls and Pistons had not
seen each other since last season's
playoffs, which Chicago swept in
four games on its way 10 the NBA
championship. In the final game at
Auburn Hills, Mich., Thomas,
Laimbeer and several other Pistons
walked off the court in the last
minute.
This time, the Pistons and Bulls
stayed out of trouble for the first
half. Then, in the midst of Chica·
go's 12-0 bUJSt to start the second
half, Grant collided with Laimbeer
on a layup .
As Grant fell over, Laimbeer

Ninth Bevo Francis
Classic
.
•

TVC's Most Valuable Golfer, and the Parker
Long-Rodd Harrison Memorial Golfer of the
Year Award), John Bentley (second-team aU·
TVC), Jay Harris (first-team aii-TVC) and
Jason Hart (first,team ali·TVC).
·

.·

'
College b,asketball action gets will also serve as the official sea· under the direction of second-year
coach Cliff Jackson, whose 1990·
underway this week at a number of son starters for the teams involved.
Hanover enters with a 19-13 fin· 91 team went 2-25. His probable
schools, and the Universitr of Rio
Grande will be no exception as it ish from 1990-91, which allowed · ·starters against the Red women.
opens ·men's and women's play in the Panthers to enter the District 21 include Anne Blaney (5·7, senior)
earnest with the ninth Bevo Francis playoffs, where they were eliminat· and Rhon.lla McCormick (5-6,
Classic this Friday and Saturday.
ed by Franklin College in the open· senior) at guard. followed by Kim
The 10urnameni is named in ing round. Hanover is coached by Cook . (5·8, sophomore) and
honor of Clarence "Bevo" Francis, Dr. Michael Beitzel, now in his Genean Jones (S-9, .freshman) as
Rio Grande's best-known basket· fourth year with a 53-41 record.
the forwards. The center will be
ball athlete, who in the course of a . The Redmen had a pfevious ·Jennifer Akers (5·10, Cre$hman). '
two-year (1952·54) career set association with Hanover when
As for the other teams, Findlay
national scoring records that stand they met on the floor of the Musk.- ·was 13-14 last season, the sixth for
to this day.
·
ingum College tournament in its coach, Sheryl Neff, whose
The IOUmament begins with. the November 1988. Rio Grande record went to 99·1 02. Notre
women's division at 1:30 p.m. Fri: emerged with a 67·55 win.
Dame located in South Euclid, was
day as the University cf Findlay
DQemen was J5-15last year, but 7-14 for its mentor, Debby Ghc:Zzi,
faces Nol!'e Dame .College of Ohio. also had a postseason when it who enters her second year leading
The Rio Grande Redwomen play d f ed P
p k (P ) · h
the Blue Falcons at 19·24.
e eat
omt ar. a. m l e
Of the three, the Redwomcn will
host to West Virginia State CoUege opener
of the District 18 playoffs
at3:30 p.m. .
and then feU 10 SL Vincent (Pa.) in face only Notte Dame again during
Men's action starts at 7 p.m . the semifinals. Coach Don Silveri the season.
when Hanover College (Ind.) con- takes a 34-29 record into his third •
Hall or Fame Inductee
fronts Daemen College, Amherst, year with the Warrio!:$.
One of the weekend's activities
N.Y., foUowed by the Rio Grande
Women's competition
focuses on a reception and banquet
Redmen versus George Brown Col·
The Redwomen ope"ned their Saturday to mark the induction of
lege of Toronto, Canada, at 9 p.m . . new season Tuesday at Wilberforce 1977 graduate Harvey A. Brown as
The Redwomen will play Satur· University and will be one up on the 55th member of Rio Grande's
h
·
Athletic Hall of Fame. The recep·
day at 7 p.m. and the Redmen at 9 · F · •
pday s opponents, w 0 begm tion, to be held in the Student Ceop.m. The other women's game will their
1991·92 campaign with the
be played at I :30 p.m. and the 10urnament
tcr, begins at 5 p.m. and wiU be fol·
men's at3:30 p.m.
· · · ed h·
lowed by the banquet at 5:30.
Coach Doug Foote IRIUat
IS
Brown, who resides in Bidwell
Season opener
fourth season with the Rio ladies at
Friday's contest will be the sea- 40·22, and his probable starting and is a substitute. teacher in lhe
son opener for the Redmen, the lineup includes his co-captains, Gallia County Local Schools,
defending NAIA District 22 and Ann Barnitz (5·11, senior) at center served as co-captain of the Redmen
· Mid-Ohio Conference champions, and Katby Snyder ,(5·10, seniort ac ttack team and is the only. runner in
whose viciOries last season includ- forward. The other forward slot the history of District 22 to be its
ed the championship of their own will be filled by Stephanie Gudorf champion in the 100, 200 and 400
tournament. The team the Rio men (5·9, sophomore), while Gena Nor· meter dashes. Brown holds school
beat, Malone, was the club it even· ris (5-2, sophomore) and Mindy records in those events.
tually defeated for the district Montgomery (5·6, junior) arc the
Admission to the games is $3
crown lasl March.
guards. .
for adults and $1 for high school
Coach John Lawhorn will kick
The WVS Yellow Jackets arc students and younger children. Rio
off his 12th season at Rio Grande
Grande students, faculty and staff
with a probable starting lineup of
are admitted free with !D.
Jawanza Childs (5·11, sophomore) -Sports briefs;ar point guard ana Mark Erslan (6·
·'
F Thursday
"FootbaU
2, senior) at the other guard. Jeff
The annual Eastern High School
BOSTON (AP)- Hopes of
Brown (6·5, junior) and Brad Schil· keeping the New England Patrioi,S Athletic Banquet will be held
bert (6-3, senior) wiU be at forward ownership dispute out of court Thursday at 6:3Q p.m. in the high
and Troy Donaldson (6·8, junior) failed when a bank sued co-owners school gymnasium. Honored will
repeats as the center.
Victor Kiam and Fran Murray.
be the junior and senior high foot·
Their opponent entered competiThe suit wasn't viewed as a ball and volleyball players, and the
tion this week at 1-2 within the major impediment to an agreem~nt cheerleaders. Those attl:nding are
Canadian league before playing between majority owner Kiam and to take three food dishes. Bever·
Fanshawe College on Wednesday. , Munay, reached the previous night, a~es and table service will be proGeorge Brown was 6-10 last sea- that they would delay resolution of VIded.
.
son and is now under the steward· the matter until after the NFL seaship of first-year coach Miles Sosa, son.
,
who had been the Huskies' assis·
Their conflict centered on a protant coach for six years.
vision in the ownership contract
Sosa said his probable swters which allowed Munay to get out of
would include Kevin Taylor (6·3, . it by demanding $38 million from
senior) and Rod Zylstra (6-0, Kiam three years after it was
junior) at forward, with Jason Wil· entered into in October 1988. If
son (6-3, freshman) at the post. Kiam didn't pay, Murray, who
Ill Second St., Pomeroy
Andre Lofters (5-10, freshman) owns 49 percent of the team, would
YOUR INDEPENDENT
will serve aS one guard, while tbe get the franchise and sell it.
coach had not decided on the
AGENTS SERVING
Murray, who is seeking an NFL
remaining wing player prior 10 the .expansion franchise in St. Louis,
MEIGS COUNTY
Fanshawe game.
fust agreed 10 extend the deadline
The other men's game Friday until last Monday.
SINCE 1868

Zalapski ·and B·rad Shaw also
scored.
Owen Nolan scored twice for
Quebec.
Red Wings S, Flames 4 (QT)
Ray Sheppard scored his third
goal of the game at 3:36 of overtime.
Jimmy Carson, who had a goal
and four assists for Detroit brouRht
the puck up ice after .Calgary
defenseman Gary Suter gave it up
deep in his own end. Carson passed
to Shepp;ud, who put the ·puck in
the net by deking out Flames goal·
tender Mite yemon.

•

ll.i.&amp;!Jt

I

sailed through a crowd and
between goalie Ron Tugnutt's legs.
John Cullen and Rob Brown
scored on power plays and Zarley
(See NHL on Page 5)

THANK YOU CHESTER
TOWNSHIP VOTERS FOR YOUR
·VOTES "AND SU.P.PORT JN.THE
RECINJ ElECTION.
KAREN R. SMITH

·-·:Earlier in the day, Casey ended
&lt;eY·ItiUer salary battle with the NOrih
Sws by signing a new multimillion-dollar contract. Casey, who
was in his option year, signed a
four-year. $3.8 million contt:act fol·
lowing lengthy negotiations that at
om~ point saw him show up just
before the opening faceoff of the
Stars' Nov. 2 game against Chicago- earning a benching.
In other NHL games, it was
New Jersey 5, Philadelphia 2; Hart·
ford 5, Quebec 4; Detroit 5, Cal·
gary 4 in overtime; Buffalo 7, San
Jose I, and Vancouver 8, Los
.c\'o"
Aqgeles 2. · · ,..
·l'·
"•·~,.
·Casey started the game in a
goOd frame of mind, and it ~or bet- .
tcr when the North Stars Jumped
oft to 3-0 lead. Casey set up one of
the goals himself. After gloving
Bob Rouse's shot at the right post,
ca,ey spoued Stewan Gavin
br¢aking up the middle. Gavin took
· Cd'SC)"s pass, broke in alone and
bcii! Grant Fuhr wirh 11 wrist shot
fot'a.2·0 lead.
llrian Propp and Mi'ke Craig
r·············~·-······r···········
ea~b s~ored two goals and Mike
:CARPET
CLEANING: CARPET CLEANING .: . SOFA .I :
M~ano .and Ulf Dahlen also
-scored fqr the North Stars.
I
SPECIAL ' . : .; SPECIAL
I
CHAIR
:
1
1
DevOs.5, Flyers 2
:
2ROOMS .. 1 '
ANY5AREAS
•
I'
'
I
Claude Vilgrain had two goals
and an assist
0
I
t/•/11 :
•
t/rl/11 I
• t/JI/11 1
. Claude Lemieux, who also had
I
AohU ... 1W, .... ~..
I
.
I
1
two. assists, ·broke a 2-2 tie with a
I.-,.I_C..,Us2.101orlll •• d
I
(Stcliof&gt;MAniEDB) I
................ t •••••• ~ ••••••••••••
po~er-~lay ~ a! 4:45 of the~­
on6 penod. ~ilgram, who scored m
1·100·325·5136
the 'first period, and Peter Stastny
then foUowed with insUJ'liiiCCI goals
.992·6711
in the tbird period for the Devils.
, Wbillers 5, Nordiques 4
ST!IL£Y
STEBIIBR.
When we say wt cltan ~.WI mNn It
Marc Bergevin scored with 5:29
left 'as ihe Whalers survived blow-

2 .661
2 .667
PbiWiclpltio ... .•. 4 2 .667
MWN
2 .2 500
....... 4

····-r-··

801ton

3

WuiJ!nllon, ...... 2
New Jersey ....... I

4 .429

S .216

4 .200

Central Dlvlllon
S 2 .714
4 2 .667

Chicago
Atlanta

Omvit
Milwaukc:c

4

...... 4
Clenland
:Z
Wiml
2
Charlotte ......... 1

The One Year
Clean
Guarantee.
co,.

'o,

Get itto.
"
from ,Stanley Steemer®
!

·•44 '-"'"'. s95 '-..... •st

'-"'"':

• ••• ....., .................... 1111:

,

2 .667
4 .SOO
4 .333

s .286

6 .143

W L Pe!L

HOUiwn
......... S
San AntMio ...... 4

Danvcr

3

uw.

3
Minnesota . ....... J

o.u..

.Pedi&lt;ltrician
'

.

s

1

1
15

lS
lS

.S
.5
l.S
2.5
3
4

1 .833

1 .800
3 .500
3

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4 .200
6 .143

.s

2

2

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4.S

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2 .714

I

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2.600
3 .571
4 .429
3 .400

2
2
3
3

S .2&amp;6

4

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3

•......... 4
3
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Tuesday's scores
New Yori98.Ncw Jeney 96
Odmdo 9S, Wulringtm 82

Allanta IU,Oaarlotte 100
Ctneland 119, Milw'IUket 113
Chicaao 1\0, Detroit 93
HOUitm 98, Dallla92
Ooldc:n Su~e 119, Phoenix 116
B01ttr1 12:6, Sacnmerno 103
Ponland 120, Denver 82

T

. , Tonight's eames
UW. 11Now Ioney;'7:30p.m.
1'11111'1~" .. Qdando, 7:30p.m.
DlboitatMiarni. 7t30p.m.

Chkaa.o It Ouutouc. 7:30p.m.

~ewfc:d.atlndiana, 7:30p.m .

'

Waahin&amp;ton at MiMeaota , 8 p.m.
L.A. CHppel"' at San Antonio, 8:30

p.m.

.
Bm~ at Phoenix, 9:30p.m.

•

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CANOE' COMMAND -lntstructor Dave CbadweD (far right)
looks on while giving Bc!vice as youngsters ~atbew King and Al~on
Rose (center) get their chance to command a canoe for the rll'st t1me
during National Hunting and Fishing Day, held recently. By the
expressio1,1s on:·tbeir faces, one can tell that tbey are having a great
time,
·

Two more goals by Donald
Audette and LaFontaine's first
multi-goal game of the seasqn
helped the Sabres win their second
straight road game. ,
Canucks 8, Kings 2
The Canucks scored four goals
in 98 seconds of the second period.
Sergio Momessa, rookie Pavel
Bure, Petr Nedved and Trevor Lin·
den connected in rapid succession.
Momesso and Bure led the
Canucks with two goals each.
For the Kings, Wayne Gretzky
scored in the fust period and Mike
Donnelly in !he third.

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Pit!lbur&amp;h ..... 7 7 3
Philldcfplllo .. .. 6 I I
N.Y. It!anden . 4 10 2

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17 65 67·
13 ·46 43
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N.Y. blandon It Now lcncy, 7:35
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Edmonton at Philadelphia, 7:3S p.m.

To:-on10 1t OUcaao. _8:3S p.m..

Winnipea atSL Lwia, 8:35p.m.

GOOD/'iEAR
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Dla;vit 11 San J010, 10:35 p.m.

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Hutf«d

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II S2

Honan

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:13

Transactions

Norril Dlvlllon
W L T Po. GFGA
...... .. 10 1. I

21 76 64

874

2l)7066

is

8 1

17 57

7

17 57 66
12 48 70

Minnt.&amp;Ota
SL Louia

......

Toronto

...... 5 12 2

s

Vancoover
C•lpty
l..oc Angeles
Winnipeg
&amp;lmontm

Smythe DlviJion
... 13 4 2
9 7 2
... 8 6 4
.... 7 7 4
:.. 6 9 3

Sanlooe

......

l 16 0

2i 73 49
20 74 60
20 67 12

18 S7 62
JS 55 71
6 49100

Tuesday's srores
Hartford 5, Quebec 4
New JerseyS, Philtdelph.ia 2
Minnesota 7, Toronto d

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hH "0M11f""" _ ,
lti.A«HIIIU- TIO

THANK YOU VOTERS AND
THOSE WHO SUPPORTED ME IN
MY CAMPAIGN FOR
SCHOOL BOARD.
PAUL McELROY

LITilllt.llt

I ~~~~~
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BALTIMORE ORIOLES - A!V"'d
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·cAMPBELL CONFERENCE

1324

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The quick, easy

,

Thursday's rames

Thank you for your support In my .campaign for 11-ustee.

•·•'•

durability

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P1BS/80/R 13
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for strength and

S!2£

Edmooton It Pittibwgh. 7:35 p.m.

WALES CONFERENCE

Team
O.U.h
Chic1ao

WI«T!WAU

p.m.

In the NHL...
Tetun

• Pclyester cord body
forta smooth ride

Tonl&amp;ht's 211111es

..,.'
..
·.

The Family of professionals

Celtics 126, Kinp 103
Larry Bird .scored 20 points and
Boston beat Sacramento for the
11 tb straight time since Feb, 11,
1986.
Mitch Richmond and Lionel
Simmons each scored 23 points in
Sacramento's fourth coqsecutive
toss.
·Warriors 119, Suns 116
Golden State nearly blew a 26point lead in the second quarter and
' held off Phoenix to improve the
NBA's best record to 6·1. .
Tim Hardaway scored 33 points,
including four straight foul s))ots in
the last 14 seconds.
Jeff Hornacek scored 31 points
in tbe Suns' third consecutive loss.
Kuicks 98, Nets 96

Paid for by the C.ndldata, 31218 SR 143, PotlllrO)';Oitlo

r

Magic 95, Bullm 82
Dennis SCott and Nick Anderson each scored 24 points.
Orlando neva trailed after tak·
ing a 17-161ead.
Michael Adams had 30 points
and 10 assists foi Washington,
which shot only 34 percent.
Hawks 118, Hornets 100
Dominique Wilkins scored 25
points and roolri.e Stacey Augmon .
bad 17 as Atlanta never trailed. ',
Rookie Larry Johnson led the:.
ijornets with 19 points and 14:,
·rebounds~
, !•~
••

W111Unaton at N.f. Ranaen, 7:35

CD

L.A. Cippen .... 5

Ponlond

No matter what they're called,
here's how to call them.

· Xavier McDaniel finished with
28 poinllllld Ewing 24.
.
· "

.

p.m.

Buff.to
Q,.obot:

Oolden Sllle ....... 6

. Phocni.x
L.A. Loke!l
Sacramento

urgeen

~~

Deooot 5, Col,!uy •. or
Buffalo 7, Sut J01e I
VanCOJver 8, 1M An&amp;clta 2

Atlanta at Stcramctlto. 10:30 p.m.

-

Patine Dlvlllon

Physician
I

Sl\lfl.

4

Orlinda

Team

ECIAL

ter.

L.A. LUers at Golden Sttle, 10:30

GB

WESTERN CONFERENCE

5· P

.

Suttle at Cltvdlnd, 7:31p.m.
L.A. Oippcn: alO.U11, 8:30p.m.

Mldw•t Dlvblon

co'

I

Atlantle Dh1tlotl
W L PoL

Tum
New Yod:

night. Pictured from left to rigbi are Lorena
Oiler, Kelly Dodge, Danielle Crow and Michelle
Young.

ing a two-goal third-period lead.
Doug Smail scored a shorthanded goal 4:38 into the third period to
l\ll the score. But Bergevin scored
as his slap shot from the right point

Vernon MaxweU's28points.
·Patrick Ewing and John $181'ks with l:331eft and tile Knicks ahead
The Rockets are .5r1 (or ihe . blocked late layups and New York 96·93, and Starks stOpped Mookic
foutth ti111e in fr1111chise history. beat Nell( Jersey, ,
'
Bliiylock with 42 seconds remain·
Dallas is 1-6, the second-worst start .
Ewing rejected Kenny
Anderson
ing.
·
.
in team bisto,Y.
·
Rolando Blacbnon had 30 for
the Mavericks.
Civallers 119, Bucks 113
Mark Price, playing for the fust
time in almost a year, made his fust
three shots .and sparked Cleveland
in its home opener.
· l-Ie played 15 minutes and had
11 pointsandfourassists.
.
Brad Daugherty scored 25
points for the Cavaliers~ . ·. ·
·
Milwaukee trailed by 26,points
. in the second halfbefore rallying
behind Dale Ellis, who scored 17
of his 31 points in the founh qnar- ·

'. Thursday's &amp;•mes

EASTERN CONFERENCE

~innesota,

;: By KEN RAPPOPORT
•:
AP Hockey Wriler
:Jon Casey signed a new con·
traCt, then looked like a million
dollars on the ice.
:"My mind was more at ease,
af\tll was able to concentrate on
the game ," the Minnesota goal·
teiider said after making 23 saves
anSI assisting on a goal 10 lead the
North Stars to a 7-0 victory over
the Toron10 Maple Leafs Tuesday

Doug Gilmour had scored two
quick goals late in the third period,
one on the power play;to put Calgary ahead 4-3. But a Calgary
bench penalty for too many men on
the ice gave the Red Wings one last
chantc witll'an extta man tli tie the
score, and they did. Sheppard got
his secoild goal of the night with 35
seconds remaining to force over·
timo.
Sabres 7, Sharks 1
Pat LaFontaine scored his eighth
career hat trick and Tom Draper
saved 41 of 42 shots in his first

' In theNBA ...

INSURANCE

New Jersey, Detroit
~mong NHL victors Tuesday night

leg-whipped him. They came up
scrapping and each drew technical
fouls. Thomas also was tagged with
a techpical for4!hoving Pippen.
"He's a cheap-stiot artist," Pippen said of Thomas; "I should
have expected it, but I wasn'tlook·
ingfor it."
Thomas admitted shovin~ Pip·
pen from behind, and said; ' I saw
Scottie run down the court and I
pushed him out of the way."
Whatever, P.ippeli1 wasn't
pleased ..Pippen, who has been
selected for the. Olympic team,
even declared: "If lsiab plays, I
won'tplay,"
·
. .
Thomas was not among the tust
10 players picked for the team.
There are at least two spots left,
pending a decision by' Magic Jobn·
son on whether 10 patticipate. .
Jordan scored 20 points and Pip·
pen had 16 for the Bu)ls. Dennis
Rodman had 20 for the PisiOns and
Thomas scored 15, all in the fust
half.
Trail Blazers l:ZO, Nuggets 8Z
. After the start of the game in
Portland was delayed 70 minutes
because of a problem with moisture
on the court, the Trail Blazers
mopped up the floor with Denver.
Portland played the best defensive half in team history in building
a 63·26 halftime lead.
Teny Porter scored nine of his
15 .points as the Blazers took a 30·
16lead after the fust quarter.
Rockets 98, Mavericks 92
Houston matched its best start
ever, winning in Dallas behind

Scoreboal'·d

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

.

·~

NHL action ... _:&lt;C_o_nu_·nu_ed:-fro_m-=::Pa-=-ge_:4)~~---:-~--....,..-----

eie

ALL ACADE~IC CHEERLEADERS 1 hese cheerleaders received all·TVC academic
awards at the annual sports banquet Monday

. The Dally Sentlnei-Page-6.

Chicago, Cleveland among NBA winners Thesday night

Wednesday, November 13, 19!!,1
Page-4

. GOLF AWARDS - Tbe following golfers
. won awards during Monday evenings fall sports
; banquet. Pictured from left to right in the front
· row are Tim Peterson (Coaches Award) and Phil
: Hovatter (first team ali·TVC).In the second row
: are (L-R) Adam "rawsczyn (first team ali-TVC,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I 1\'0.ul.~ ILlf..~,to take this opportunity to let you know what
a pleasure.lt was getting out to speak with the dtizens on
.issues)hat ~oncern .YO!! and listeniJI&amp; .tQ yotlJ i~eat l!l!d.
needs. Along the way, I was given the unique opportunity
to speak with some old friends and I met some wonderful
"' · ·
people.
I would .like .to personally thank all the people on my committee who put in a lot or time and walked many miles on
~Y behalf.
·The most Important i$SIIe, however, Is that the people of
Salisbury Thwnship receive the best avallable'representa·
tlon. I am confident that Butch Brinker will fulfill those

needs.
Warmest regards,
Bernard D. Gilkey
1'1111 for by tha 01nclldlll, 3110 Aah St., lllddlepott, Oltlo
.

-..

- - ~-- ---·-M· - ·~

---· . . .

'

�.

.

.

~age

~The

Ohio

Dally Sentinel

'S

EAS

Wedneaday, November 13, 1991,

If

Pomeroy-M1aa1epon, un1o

i[Wedneiday, November 13, 1991

Your Community Minded

•

Your Party··T ray
Headquarters
We have a wide 8880rtnieat of

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A

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

'I

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retta takes to the aii it is i!Sually to look too rosy for Notre Dame.
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M»Quippi su~&lt; :w. •w.w.. Su~&lt; 22 ·
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· h QB M trer
' can throw, F.ordh
c&amp;lif...U.3l Ariz.on&lt;Su.,
l2
•NcolnuU
49.lowosu.,l4
. '
. game-breakmg
. am sta 1warts won •,t be '•eenuo~Mldolp.,
W
.
Mictupoll
•NOIIh
C...U.•
li. Soulh C...Iin•lS
31
·: • Egad .friends! This is it! Here . Thomas Kevin Williams and Ho- too, even though Notre Dame ISba- smgmg " It's a long way to Tipper·
•a....., 24, Mo,.u;., 13
1\onh Cuolino su.. 31, •DW&lt;e21
'Comes Showdown Saturday! Col· . race CoPeland. Williams is also a sically a ground -o riented team. ·ruy, it's a long way to go.... " But· :~,.:· ~· ~20 M .
~O:~ii~~"' 24
~ege football's big attractions this terrotonpuntretums.
. With RB s Jerom e Bettis, Tony they might be humming, ''It's a •t:..d.hc~Iund.i:i ,...., 21
.~.2;~.s".. l'
!weekend are Florida State vs. Mia·
Nevertheless the .Florida State Brooks and Rodney Culver lo hand long !rip to l-imerick.... " Yes, Lim· •o.....,.th 3l. Brown 14 ·
•r,Hduc21. ~chigon s.o,. 22
42
' ;m•m
' ' T.all ahassee, Fl a.,. and. Penn Semmoles
'
'II'
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Mi
I
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er'
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Ken!U&lt;ky
20
' R"'gon
28. Tomo
lo21
w1 stay atop every· o to,. rer ony nee pass
u
tc , r an , tS w .e~e e ·ru·
'Flnw su,. 3a,M»mi(Fl•.)3 l
S
oo&lt;h&lt;mCot2S,
'AmonaZ7
.State. vs. Notre Dame m "Happy one's Ust with a hard-fought 38·3 1 of the ume.
saders and the Rams WID play theu ·~su~e49,Col su~e-Fulle•c:j iO
sun!oro 21 . •WubU.iJO&lt;I su"' 21
:Valley," home of the Nitlaliy Li, victory over the Hu(l'icanes. Hak·
Notre Dame is anxious to win P~triot Leagu~ !13'"e. Holy Cross, :Geo!Jio Th ~':;~;"'""'"' 37
~~=~~o~Mi:~~1i28
'ODS
kaffl
thiS one to make up for last year, with one of !Is fm cstte.am s m · •Goorp Teeb 33,WueFon.t20
"fem 28 r.... a.n.Jon 14
: What' s at stake? Plenty. How
N"tre Dame stands 7· 7·I when it thought it had th e game years, will roll on toward the
:!h":~.1 ~·s-•• 1""s'' 727
"f"" A.i.M38,!'-obnn• 21
v Penn Slate- agam~t
· '
' e,. 21 •7, Th e Ins
' h 1eague crown WI'th a 42
·
~·"'-·
'" '" Ute14
"~'•"•
Louu,Wel7
good are these matchups7 They ' re against
Pater- won at ha'Ifum
. , 14 VIctory.
'ijo1yCrou 4Uonlh•m
•ucLAll3Lo..aon
Z4
•great
no however the Irish are JUSt 4· 7. wound up on the shon end of a 24· Har-rumph!
Hou1101149, 'Rice 35
•u&gt;n.v27,Ne• t-1..,,. su~e 2I
.
. the .PSU-M1am•
.
. , Addto'thatthefactthattheNitlany
'
. '
•
21 tally. The H,oope
1 hu~c' h IS' ''"
low
olS;'Northweolelll
:zl
Utoh 30 •lJI'EP23
. ·'•, The v1ctor
m
~"'t
Saturday,Nov.16
'K&gt;nouSu~e
23,Milsouri21
•v;,g;ni,r
..h ,Emcuolina 2o
'clash (on ABC·TV) will have a real Lions ""'ned up their offense this Notre Dame Will pull th1s .one out,
Ahbomoll , •M.,.pha s~"' 11
' Laf•Y""' 21, Cotgo~&lt; I2
woilii')gum "·21
'O&gt;qon su.. 1
4
lshot at the,n~uona
. 1 l1'ue..Thel
-cth
dS
t
31
24
.
r
b
.
'
battle
Kaff
'Annyi9Akrollll
L&lt;ltigh
~
'Bucknell
l4
W
isconsU.IS
'Min"'
. . oser year, w1 sttong-~rme .acca a
- , a ter a rutstng
·
"B•ylor 2i,TexuTedl l:S
MU:mi (Shi!') zs. ·x~~ State 21
Y•le , ·P~cei.On ''" I)
36
till figures to get a spot m one of the controls. So things m1ght not kaffl
·
Bowu.8 a- 24, •Bill su~e·l7
Mi•tu•'" 34, •nlinoa 24
l' l·Home
~e~m 31
'•the major bowl -games on New
:Year's Day.
·
COPYRIGHT 011111 · 11iE KIIOGEFI CO. ITeMS ANO PRICES GOOO SUNOAY. NOV. 10, 11iROUGH SATIJADAY.
' The winnei of the Notre Dame· Ill IOB!Ia- l!lolool-llli*
-io-IDOO....,_IOI_in-~S!On.
NOV. 11, 1"1 Pomeroy
·~
·
~
•
·
.;..ln...,ld.'lf
wie10
runcu
ot
an
acttertillld
ltlm,·w.
wt11
Offtryou
'
t
liur
CftOICI
~
·~
~ Penn State game ~ particUlarly if
illni,WNIC 'ttl nAHII'IIM . . . JalMQI«IrMiUIIIICitwneatiWII~yauiOpwcn-tneacl•••ultlm•
. W£ AESER\11! 11iE.AIGHT TO UMIT OUANTTTlES. NONE SOUl TO DEALERS.
it's the Irish - will have a crack at IM ..... u . . . ~··- Onty OM YlnCIOI" c:oupon Will til
pwMIIIG.
the national championship, too.
'Even if it lo~. Penn·State will, as
'·usual, draw a major bowl bid. Um;,kumph!
.
: Seldom do we see such coach·
. ·
'·ing genius in two games on the
.
.
·
:.same day.
&lt; Florida State's Bobby ·Bowden,
&gt;who has averaged over eight wins a
;- season for 25 years, faces t~e
;: youthful Dennis Ericlcson, ':"ho! m
.,: nine·plus seasons, IS averagmg JUSt
:- slig6tly less. .
. •. .
·, l'enn Slate's Joe P~tern9 •s D•·
&gt;vision !·A's winninge,t coach, and
·:he possesses a .784 winning per:; centa~e over 25 years. N~tre
&gt;Dame s Lou Holtz counters w1th a
·, .667 winning percentage ,in 21
·, years. Jove!
&gt; In addition to the coaches, four
'
'
...
'I J
·, of college football's finest quarter·
.,
&gt;backs will be displaying their
'
·:wares. In regard· to passing effi·
:: ciency, Notre Dame's Rick Miter is
·: one of the highest-rate4 QBs in the
&lt;country , while Florida State ' s
:; Casey Weldon, a strong !leisman
:• candidate, is close on h1s heels.
' Tony Sacca of Penn ·state and.!&gt;fia·
mi's Gino Torretta aren't far be·
hind, either.
,
What can you expect Saturday?
Weldon of FSU has a great receiver
in E;ric Turral, and super runners in
· Edgar Bennett and Amp Lee. Per·
haps the Seminoles' most impor·
tant weapon, though, is DB Terrell
Buckley, who has a nose for the
ball - and the end zone,
Miami's one-back offense, led
by FB Stephen McGuire, has
· pounded most defenses. When Tor·

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:Johnson still ·
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:. BOSTON (AP) - Magic John·
: son is· keeping al.ive his U.S.
·, Olympic basketball hopes, and
: · committee picking the team is in
:: hurry to Une up a possible replace·

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:
If Johnson decides not to
·: the panel probably would
:. slot next April, Dave Gavitt,
:: dent of USA Basketball, said TnP••· •
·. day.
. . . .
:· Johnson left for a vacation soon
&lt; after announcing last Thursday that
:, he was retiring from the Los Ange·
' lcs Lakers because he had !he HN
' virus that leads to AIDS.
_ ~ " We want to wait until Magic
~· comes back and we have a chance
•, to visit with hiln about his role and
'• what he feels comfonable doing,"
.; Gavitt said. " We'd like to keep
1 him as involved as he can .be'' in
any role he desires.
·I " As far as we're concerned,
:1he ' s still part of the Olympic
;; team," C.M. Newton, chainnan of
; the selection committee, said in a
~ telephone interview Tuesday.
': USA Basketball is the govern:; ing body for the·committee choos&gt; ing the team that will play next
·: summer in Barcelona, Spain.
:: Ten NBA players, including
:· Johnson, were named t6 the team
·' Sept. 21-. The committee plans to
&gt; pick two more players, at least one
:: of them a collegian, after the col·
·• lege season ends.
:; If Johnson can't play, another
;. NBA player probably would be
.; named to replace him " at the lime
&gt; the committee was intending to
;. complete the roster," said Gavitt,
·• who also is senior executive vice
:; president of the Boston Cellics. ·
.; Although he retired from the
'. grueling 'NBA routine, Johnson
· hasn't closed the door on playing in
,;; the l~ss de~ing Olympics. ..
•
11 In this week s SJX&gt;ns Illustrated,
'• he writes, " If I'm healthy, I might
~ very well be on the floor for the
•l opening tap at Barcelona. · '
I• " I get g00$e bumps just think..... 'ring about· whatit·would ·be llke.IIJ. l
'' be on the floor witli those guys,"
' he says .. " I've won championships
· in high school , college and the
: pros. And I've won every award
• there is. But I don ' t have an
; Olympic gold medaL God willing,
:.o I' 11 gel it."
•! At the news conference where
:• Johnson announced he had the HIV '
:' virus, Dr. Michael Mellman, Laker
·1 team p,~ysician, said the same rea·
: iOn Johnson retired would apply to
::him playing' in th_e Ol~pics.
,
• The StresseS and fatigue lijSOOI·
:·ated with the 82·game NBA regu:
•'lar season and additional playoff
;:games were given as a reason for
:•his reL_lrement. Newton said the
;:olympiC team probably would play
·:no more than I2 games.

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Ohio

The. Daily Sentin~l -

ByThe ·Bend

-.....----~

l

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f •. • e

1!

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:

. STORE HOURS
Monday tin Sunday·
.I
BJM.IOPM

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·John C Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine
Question: Recently I have heard
of a fairly new procedure, hys. tcroscopy. Will it replace a D&amp;C?
Answer: The procedure, hysteroscopy, can be thought of as
using a very slender "periscopelike" device called a hysteroscope,
to look into the inside of the uterine
. cavity. The tip of the hysteroscope
is passed through the opening of
·; the cervix and on into the cavity
:· inside the uterus - the space
: where a baby grows when a woman
: is pregnant. Carbon dioxide or.
-occasionally, liquid is pumped' into
:the uterus to slightly stretch it so
· the doctor can get a better view
: inside.
: Hysteroscopy is not as new as
. you might imagine, but it has been
: used considerably more in the last
·few years as the equipment has
:been refined. The advent of
: fiberoptics has made the needed
. instruments much smaller and,
·: therefore, much more practical.
· · This procedure is done for a great
· : number of reasons, particularly for
· the evaluation of abnormal uterine
· : bleeding or evaluation of problems
: with conception. Hysteroscopy is
:- usually done as an outpatient pro-; cedure in the hospital or it may be
: : done iri an office setting. It is mild.- ly uncomfortable and requires only
: a local anesthetic - if any anes. thetic is needed at all.
- In many instances the appear. : ancc of the inside of the uterus tells
: · the doctor all that is needed to
:: make a proper diagnosis. In other
: cases it is necessary to remove
. - some tissue from the uterus to
: establish the diagnosis. It is possi• ble to remove small tumors, such
; as a uterine fibroid, with surgical
:: instruments during hysteroscopy.
:: At times, some uterine abnormali-.

.

·ties can be eliminaltd with a laser
beam passed !hrough the hysteroscope and, thereby, eliminate the
need for more difficult surgery.
In many women with abnonnal
uterine bleeding it may be necessary to obtain more tissue from
inside the uterus than is practical
during hysteroscopy. In these
cases, the traditional D&amp;C-type
surgery' may be necessary. The "D"
stands for dilation of the cervix. In
plain terms, dilation means that the
cervix is stretched to make the
opening temporarily large enough
to allow the passage of surgical
instruments into the body (fundus)
of the uterus.
The "C" part of D&amp;C stands for
cu rettage which is the scraping
away or the uteri ne lining. This
provides an adequate amount of tissue for the pathologist to study and
determine the cause of bleeding,
and in many cases the process is
also curative of the underlying
problem.
Today, hysteroscopy is frequentl y done before a D&amp;C _is performed to be sure that the more
· extensive D&amp;C surgery is actually
necessary.
Hysteroscopy is a procedure that
is done by gynecological surgeons
and not by family physicians. If
you are experiencing abnormal
uterine bleeding, particularly if you
are postmenopausal, you should
see your doctor very soon. Having
hy steroscopy may be one of the
things your gynecologist will rccommend for you.
·
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions, write
to 1ohn C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio University College of Osteopathic
Medicme, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
Ohio 45101.

.•
•

•

Community Calendar items
: appear two days before an event
: and the day or tbat event. Items
· must be received weD in advance
· to assure publication In tbe cal·
endar.
•

Hall.
· REEDSVILLE • The Eastern
Fall Sports Banquet will be held
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the high
school for junior and senior hi~h
football, volleyball and cheerleadin~. Bring three covered dishes.
Drinks and table service furnished.

VVEDNESDAY
itACINE • Racine Baptist
Church wiii hold revival through
Sunday at 7 p.m. nightly. Speakers
POMEROY • The Meigs High
include Earl Shuler, Charles Norris, School Band Boosters will hold a
Rick Harris. Steve Deaver invites bean dinner on Thursday from 4:30
· . the public. Special music by Kin~s to 7:30 p.m. Cost is $3.50 for
-Harmony Quartet, Southern Hill · adults. and $2.50 for children under
· Gospel. Marty Short and LuAnn 12. The public is inviltd.
White, Kyger Valley Quartet,
God's Little Lambs, Living Word
ROCK SPRINGS • Rock
and Faith Harmony Boys.
Springs Grange will meet Thursday
at 8 p.m. at the grange ball.
POMEROY • Revival at the
Calvary Pilgrim Chapel, Route
POMEROY - The Preceptor
143, Pomeroy will be held through Bela Bela Chapter, Bela Sigma Phi
:· Sunday at 7:30p.m. nightly. Dana Sorority, will meet Thursday at the
· Walker, Rockwood, Tenn., will be parish house of the Grace Episco·
· the e~an~elist There will be·_spe- pal Church in Pomeroy at 7:30p.m.
cial smgmg mghtly. Rev. V1ctor Ele8nor Thomas and Reva VaughRoush invites the public.
an are hosteSses. Cindy Oliveri will
·
· . .
present a program on "Holiday
POMEROY • A ~ranuc ~g~ j.~Pianning. Members will meet at
winter ~enc class will be o!'fered ~t 5:30 p.m. at the Sacred Heart
the Mctgs County Pubhc L1brary m Catholic Church for dinner.
Pomeroy on Wednesday at 10 a.m.
: The cost is $13.50 and is payable
POMEROY · The Pomeroy
: upon regis1111tion.
group of Alcoholics Anonymous
will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
. POMEROY - The Meigs Local JTPA office, 117 West Second
· Chapter I parent-meeting will be S~RCt i!l Pomeroy.
L held Wednesday at6 p.m. at Salis·
: bury Elementary. An overvie'Y of
CHESTER • The Shade River
· the Chapter I progr1111 will be SlVCn Lodle No. 453, F &amp; AM, Chester,
: by Wendy Halar, director. Every- will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at
~ one is welcome.
the lodee hall. All master masons
are invited to attend. Election of
. RUTLAND - A Thanksgiving officers will be held. Refreshments
- program will be presented at the \viii be served in the form of the
: Rutland Church of Christ on group's annual oyster stew dinner.
- Wednesday. A carry-in dinner will
: begin ·at 6 p.m. with program at 1
FRIDAY
: p.m. to include the Southern Hills
RACINE - A Thanksgiving Din· Gospel singers. The public is invit- ner will be held at the· Racine
: ed to aucnd.
Grange Hall on Friday at 6 p.m.
Ham and turkey will be furnished.
CHESTER· The Past.Coun· I! ring table service and a covered
: cilors Club of Chester Council No. dish. The ~ublic is invited to
· 323, Daughters or America, will auend. A plg·in·a· poke auction
: meet Wednesday 11 7 p.m. at the will follow tlinna".
: lodge hall. Fayt Kirthart and The!'
, ma White are hostesses. Members
POMEROY • The Belles and
: bring Thanksgiving poems to read. Beaus Western Square Dance Club
: Bring or w~ something pertaining will hold a dance on Friday from 8·
• to Thanksg~vmg.
11 p.m. 11 the Pomeroy Senicir Citizens Center with Keith Rippeto,
POMEROY ~ The Pomeroy Parkersburg, W.Va., as the caller.
: Church of the Nazarene will baye
• revivallhroll8h Sunday at 7 p.m.
POMEROY • Revival at the
: oightly. Sunday services W!ll be II Freedom Go~l Mission Church
, 10:30 ~.m.I!Jd 6 _p.m. WUliam and will be held Fnday through Sunday
: Cathenne Hill w1U be the e~an.ge- with Delbert Benneu the speaker.
. listS. ~tor Glen McOung invnes Roger Willfond, I!IIStor, inviteS the
, the public.
public. Special singing will be held
•
n'""•l
THVISDAY
..,~y.
·,
• RO~ SPRINGS
ltock '.
SATIJRDAY •
POMEROY • The Meigs Coon: Spri~gs Grange will mcqt on
Thursday at 8 p,m. II the Grange ty R~tired Teachers Association
h

~

I

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~

,

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3 LB•

99

298 S[(OND ST.
POM~ROY, OH.

I

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~--~~.

Crisco
Shortening

Page-S

,.....
Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

~-

111e Dally Sentinel-Page 9 .

. ·Wednesday, .Nove.mber ~ 3, ~991 -

·. ·

-~

(

PRICES EFFECTIVI
NOV: 10 ,THRU NOV. 16, . 1991
.
-

Ito

.

WAYNE CAPEHART

NATHAN HALFHILL

.BRADLEY BAYLOR

Pau! Dailey-named Officer
of the Year

Toilet nssue

Sgt. Paul Earl Dailey, a U.S.
Army Reservist and a resident of
Zanesville, son of Raben and Car·
olyn Dailey, Middleport, was
selected as the 342nd Military
Police Company's "Non·Commissioncd Officer of .the Year" for his .
outstanding military service and
perfonnance while a member of the
342nd Military Police Company of
Zanesville. He is being_con&amp;idered
for Non Commissioned Officer of ·
the Year for the 3_91st Military
Police Battalion in Columbus.
TIFFANY HALFIDLL
JOHN CLELAND
ROBERT DIDDLE
Sgt. Dailey has served as a
member of the 342nd Military
dents ror their display or exceptional work and
STUDENTS OF THE MONTH ~ The abcive
Police Company sinee 1uly 1988.
behavior. Students ol the montb are HoWe Fer·
students
bave
been
uamed
·~Students
of
the
His_ ~ryice with th~ 342nd Military
rell, first grade; Bradley Baylor, second frade;
Month" for October at Rutland Elemeatary for
Pohce ~ludes thetr deployment to
Alison Hays, thir~ grade; Tiffany Ha fhill,
showing improvement iu their school setting by
the Pers1an Gul( as a~ or Operafourth grade; Robert Diddle, ·fifth grade;
the following measures: completing all work;
lion Desen Storm. Wh1le there_he
Nathan Hallhill, sixth grade; Wayne Capehart,
being kind to others; be helpful to others; being
· earned the Army CommendatiOn
L.D.; and John Cleland, D.H. (Hollie Ferrell,
honest; and obeying all rules. Community
Medal, the Squth West Asia SecAssault Prevention Services and Parents Advo·
first grade, was absent when pictures were
vice Medal with two B~~ze Sertaken.)
·
cacy for Special·Students commend these stu·
vice suu:s and two certificates of
apprce1au~.
.
Sgt. Dwley serves_as an as~IS ·
tant squad leader. He IS a full-tune
student at Muskingham _College_in
New Concond where he IS maJCnng
Charles Blakeslee, a double past daughter or Deryl and Doi-is Well.
The club currently has 20 memin history .. He is a 1987 graduate of president of the Middleport- The club plans to continue this pro- bers which is slightly larger than
Meigs High School.
Pomeroy R01ary Club, was reco¥· gram with recognition of students the original club of 16 members in
nized for his 50--year membership of the other high schools on a con- 1929.
in the club at the Monday meeting tinuing basis. ~
Richard W..Vaughan, presided
of the gniup held at Heath Uniled
Announcement was made of the at ihe meeting.
Methodist Church.
semiannual Rotary Pancake BreakBlakeslee, in his talk, gave fast to be held Saturday from 7-11
many humorous and other anec- a,m. at Vaughan's Cardinal Store.
,.
dotes. or events occurring during This breakfast is for the p~se of
will meet Saturday at 12:30 p.m. at his long membership. He is the. raising money for the char1ties of
They came lint
the Meigs County M,Qseum in only club member to have achieved the club including the. Crippled
Pomeroy. Make reservations by the lengthy membership.
The first then to discover the NeW
Children and Adults program concalling Mary Chapman at 992In his printed program, ducted by the club for past years. World or Wester:n Hemisphere are bt.
3887.
Blakeslee ~ave high tribute to the The breakfast is open to the public. · Ueved to have walked across a "llllid
Heath Umted Methodist Church
Other guests for the evening bridge' from Siberia to Alaska, II"
TIJPPERS PLAINS . The Tup- ladies who have· served the Rotary included Fred Goebel, Tuppers istbmus since broken by the BeriDg
From Aliska, these ancesto!S
pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053 dinners.
Plains, and Edison Baker, former Strait.
ol
!be
lndlalll
spread througb North,
Ladies Auxiliary will have a bake
A new program for Rotary was member.
Central
and
South
America. AntJu-o.
sale and flea market on Saturday instituted with the recognition of
Blakeslee, in is talk, called pciloglsts bave placed these crossings
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Beans and high ranking sllldents in both aca- attention to the many outstanding
between 11,000 and 14,000 B.C.; but
cornbread will be available and all demic and other activities from members of the club including the at
evidence
foUild In 1967 near Puebla,
donations will be used to purchase each high school in the county. late Lee McComas, Edison Baker, Me1ico, indicates
mankind reach~
gifts for veterans in the Chillicothe Recognized from Eastern High Gene Grate, Dick Owen, John there as early as 3~,000- 40,000 years
.
.
Veterans Hospital.
School were Steve Barneu, son of Werner and many others.
ago.
'
Ron Barnett,' and Amv Well,
SALEM CENTER • Star
.'
Grange will hold its - annual
Thanksgiving Supper on Sat\IIday
at 6:30 p.m. at the Salem Center
Fire Department. Turkey will be
furnished by the grange and every..__.. How To Aw.W Pral!ate ~ .._... How te Re4Ht • Elittilatt
one attending is to bring a covered
by Melody RoberJS
dish. All members, potential memNellie Connolly, sister of June
..__.My Ti AY.W Pr....• Cost
Ftdnl Estate Ta '
bers and friends are invited to Griffin, died recently. Another rela..__.My AWI Is Net ElolgJI r. olen How tt Awoltl 1M c.rts
attend.
tive is Doris Connolly Deeter.
Mest C..
m App I 'ill AGaddlp II
Long-time resident, Sammy
......
How
To
Pr-t
,_blatt
, .. ,_ . . . . . .
POMEROY - The Meigs Band Rairden, age 99, died recently.
' Frt.ltcl I NIUe
DIHIIW WIICIItplltll
Amanda Larkins, daughter of
Boosters will have a Christmas sale
on Saturday at 7 p.m. in the cafete- Ken and Kathy ~kins, Columbus,
PLACE: Holiday Inn, :Gallipolis, Ohio
ria or the high school. All new spent the weekend with grandparitems will be available. The public ents, Mr. and Mrs. Oorsel Larkins.
·... TIME: 7:00 P.M., Thursday, Nov. 14th
Roberta Hill, Columbus, stayed
is invited to attend.
.Spo•ored.y:
the weekend with her parent$; Mr.
POMEROY • "Summer Switch" and Mrs. Roben Larkins, and Jcrty.
Carolyn Whaley is recuperating
and "Alexander Baxter" wiU be
IURIEnl, OHIO
shown at the Meigs Coun1y Public at home following surgery.
DENNIS L. HOCKMAN, Independent Estate Planntr•H2·7066
Library in Pomeroy on Saturday •· Congratuliltions to Brian Collins
and Sunday at 2 p.m. The movies and Jayne Ann Ritchie who were
,will be shown at the Middleport married recently.
Library on Monday at 4:30 p.m.
About 40 people attended the
All area children are invited to Pythian Sister Convention at Rock·
land Temple No. 615 in Long Botattend.
tom.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Harlan Ballard
ll'aveled to Johnstown to see Otis
Fredrick, her brother. A birthday
pany was held in Alta's honor by
daughter, ·londa Wertman, at her
restaurant in Columbus.
Mrs. Mary Andrews, Hilliard,
was in for a visit seeing a lot of her
friends and family in this area.

$

PORK BUn

4 ROLL PKG.

c

129

Steaks., Roasts.~~- -

SPRING HILL .

_.

1·
HILLSHIRE FARMS SMOKED
$ 19
Sausage•••..•••••::~..• 2
FLAVORITE .
.
s
129'
( Lunch .Meats••••••~••
Boneless Hams••:~.

•

CHICKEN

._

.

.

LB

·

Le Quarters•••• ~.... 49
·

M-P Rotary Club honors Blakeslee

CHIC EN

.

.

'

KEEBLER

Graham
Cracker
Crust
60Z.

$ 29

1
TYSON CHICKEN PAniES··or
.$ .
29
Breast·Fil Ll.ET.S.~::1· ·2
KING -.
(_
Wteners•••••••••••w::!-.. 59
Breasts•••••••••••• ~:-•••

$ 79

'

FRANCO AMERICA

COR~

·Spaghetti
O's
14.75 oz.

s

.

FREE

Long Bottom
community news ·

LIVING TRUST SEMINAR

•

I

GROUND

BEEF

FIRST CITY ESTATE PLANNING INC.

.

~

I 0 LB. PACKAGE

$1390

..

'

.

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NOVEMBER 17th•20th.
10:15 A.M. SUNDAY

....

7:00 P.M. Each Night
Rev. Steve Schmidt
, ChiiRcotht, OhiO

.

'

~

•

·EVAPORATED MILK

·~'-'Cindy's Electrolys ·

llll(Q
8000 Or1nd Clnll'lll Ave,,8ulte1

Y\tnn1, W. ¥&amp;. 21101

Hro.: • ..,.,.,.rldor 1-1; Sat. Appolnlmont upon Roquoo!
111 Oftt.. Yloft. Elpl. . 11130111
.
211-~ll~llldl""lol' CaooplomimloJII CoMunoiiGn

·

-GeHIIIIr

2jS1
A,,_..,., v•

.QIIiro.HIIw.10tlnln.l6, IHI
IIIIlt I Pw C."'-

SUGAR
5LB.
$149

COFEEE
·360Z.FR.ROAST
39 OZ. IP • ADC

S399

··

J

!I J
I .

II

�,.

'

r

,-,1 ' ·. . • .

Page-10-The Dally Sent.lnel

·Girl Scouts
.begin sales

PARTY HELD • A Halloween Party was held
recently .by leaders of Girl Seoul Troops in
Meigs County. Pictured, 1-r, first row, are Anna
Norman, most original; Kenda White, Denise

Holman and Catby Cllf'fnro~. pJrettliest. Sec•ond
row, Terri Howser,
·
Moore, Teresa
Wilson, Pam Jpbnsoo, Carlo Taylor, ugliest;
and Theresa Cburcb, funniest.

Southern Local announces honor rolls .
Honor rolls for the first six·
: week grading period in the South·
ern Local School District have
: been announced.
Letart Falls Elementary
First grade. No grades given for
the honor roll in the flfst grade.
. Second grade • L.ori Sayre.
·. Crystal South and Ian Wise.
· Third grade • Jim Alley, Nicole
Blumcnaucr. Holly Hannan, Garret
Kiser. Jessica Nance , Fallon
Roush, Matthew Sbain, DJ. Smith
·and Kay Ia Stover.
· Fourth grade · Jessica Alley,
· Brawn He rman , Autumn Hill ,
:Mandy Spaun.
. Fifth grade. Janey Hill, Jennifer
·Morris and Joshua Whi~ey.
Sixth grade • Jennifer Rou sh
. and Raneua Wheeler.
Racine Elementary
First grade • Progress report.
. Second grade • Matt Johnson,
·.Tyler Little. R.achel Marshall. Jill
:.Matson, all A's; Joe Adkins. Sheri
"Cummins. Amber Duffy, Joey
:Manuel, Jason Miller, Malt
Thompson, Tiffany Williams and
Amy Wilson.
Third grade • Macyn Erv in ,
, Jonathan Evans, all A's; Michael
Ball, Kati Cummins, Clay Enslen,
Tony Hupp, Shauna Manuel, Erin
Roach, Jamie Stemple, Erin Slru·
ble.
Fourth grade · Sarah Brauer,

Kyle Norris, Brandon Wolfe, all
A's; J.B . Boso, Willie Collins,
Carly Crow , Stacey Ervin, Chris
Randolph , Dena Sayre, Bo.bbi e·
Scarberry and Lena Yoacham .
Fifth grade · Jesse, Lit~e . Jessica
Theiss, all A's; Steven Boso, Jennifer Ca rleton , Joshu a Ervin ,
Suzanne Eva ns, Phillip Harris ,
Josie Jarrell, Jerem iah Johnson and
Kara King.
Sixth grade • Nicole Hill, Alicia
Mulford. Nikki Robinson, all A's;
Chad Clark, Tyson Evans, Ginnee
Hendricks, Misty Hysell. John
Matson, Jessica Roush , Danny
Sayre, Stephanie Stemple, Amanda
Theiss, Jason Writcscl and Matt
Hi ll.
Syracuse Elementary
First grade · No grades are
given for first six weeks.
Second grade • Mall Ash,
Nathan Martin, Mary Schultz, all
A's; Aaron Ohlinger, Kevin Slater,
Lindsey Smith and Cody Wallace.
Third grade . Sarah Ball, all
A's; Cara Ash, Jason Cundiff, Jere·
my Fisher , Ryan Hill, Jessica
Janey, Joshua Larsen and Matthew
Warner.
Fourth grade • Eugene Bing ,
Adam Cumings, Josh Davis, Steve
Tacken and Autumn Thomas.
Fifth grade • Ashlie Davis and
Kim Sayre.
Sixth grade • Cynthia Caldwell,
Evan Strubl e, all A's ; Amber

BIG PUMPKINS • Edward Voss, (top), Welchtown Road ,
Pomeroy, knows how to grow pumpkins. He raised these huge
specimens at his home and decorated them for the Halloween and
Tha',lksgivin,g season. _voss is pictured kneeling beside one or the
110ens hos grandcholdren, (bottom), Andrea and Timothy Voss
Galllipc&gt;lis,admire the pumpkins.
·
'

.Hayes and Billy Young.
Portland Elementary
First grade· Progress report.
Second grade · Amanda Hod·
dleston, all A's; Tyler Johnson,
Rus sell Krider and Travanna
Moore.
Third grade· Brandi Codner. all
A's; Nick Bolin, Justin Burris, Jan·
ice Richards and Maggie Smith.
Fourth grade · Erin Bolin, all
A' s; Rebekah Collins, Becky
Davis, Joey McKinney and Anita
Holter.
Fifth grade · Billie Joe Sellers.
Six th grade • Tai Couch and
Crystal Coleman.
D.H: · Darlena Flowers, Zorah
Hensley. Daniel Kuhn and Jerry
Lewis.
Southern Junior High
Seve~th grade . Brian Allen,
Amber Thomas, Greg McKinney,
all A' s; Angie Carlton, Jaso n
Lawrence, Amy Rizer, Hillery Harris, Vanessa Shuler, Emily Duhl ,
Adam Roush and Amy Northup.
Eighth gra de · Pa ul Ihle,
Rochelle Jenkins, Jay McKelvey.
Rayan Young, C:J. Harris, all A's;
Jason Shuler, Jason Barnell, John
Card, Mandy Mills, Nick Smith,
Sammi Sisson. Rob Crow , Robin
Gillespie and Craig Knight.

The Girl Scout Leaders meeting
was held recently in which the
Ieadels wore Halloween coswmes.
Chairmen for the events for the
year were named: Brownie, Teresa
Wilson and Carin Taylor; Junior,
Brenda Neutzling; Thinking Day,
·Beth Theiss: mother-daughter ban·
quet, Carolyn Welsh and ·Cathy
Clifford: cookie chairmen, Patty
White and Pat Thoma. Public rela·
lions person is Anna Norman.
The Girl Scouts are selling mllg·
azines. Last year's QSP winner was
Victoria Norman, Letart Brownie
Troop.
Anyone interested in being a
Girl Scout leader should con tact
Shirley Cogar at 992·2668. Leaders
are needed in some areas.
The next leaders • meeting will
be Dec. S at the Trinity Church in
Pomeroy at 7 p.m. This will be the
investiture, .rededication and
Christmas party. Bring a Christmas
decoration for exchange.

D ofA meets
The Chester Council No. 323
Daughters of America met recently
with Enna Cleland presiding.
Pledges to the Christian and
American flags were given, as was
the Lord's Prayer and first verse of
the Star Spangled Banner.
Bulah Maxey, JPC, read four
verses of the book of Mark.
Esther Smith gave the secre·
tary's report. Reported ill were
Dorothy Ritchie, Doris Grueser,
Ella Osborne, Mary Jo Barringer.
The Past Councilor's Club will
meet Wednesday at 7 p.m. with
Thelma Wh ite and Faye Kirkhart
as hostesses. Members arc 10 bring
· Thanksgiving poems to read or
something penaining 10 Thanksgiv·
ing.
·
Erma Cleland read a poem,
"Just Do Your Best" and conducted
a game at the close of the meeting.
Bul~ Maxey was the winner.
The next meeting will be held
Tuesday and each member is to
take one piece or fruit for a fruit
basket to be taken to a shut-in
lodge member.
Kathryn Baum was pianist for
the meeting.
·
Anending were Elizabeth
Hayes, Bulah Maxey, Belly Roush,
Laura Mae Nice, Esther Smith,
Erma Cleland, Kathryn Baum ,
Ethel Orr, Mary K. Holter, Sadie
Trussell, Elizabeth Bryant and
Martha Durst.

to

8 A.•M. 11ntil NOON .SATURDAY

.. .

; ~)'\
{.

·f.:r·-'\;.r

~-·~~

'

•Priet Of •d for til C:IPhli latt•n i• double price or ad con
•7 point line type o'nly uaed.
' Sentintl is ~01 rnponsible for errorsafrtJ first 'dlf . ~~~eck
for '"0" ftflt day td runt in ptperl . Call before 2 ·00 p.m
dt¥ eft• public.tior, to mike correction.
·~dllhll must bt paid in 1dv1nce are
Cerd of Thenks
Happy Ad1
In Memoriam

COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
. TUESDAY PAP,EA

••
,•
'
gram costing over $250,00.0;,
Checks may be made payable tc) :
"Gifts for. Yanks" and sent to the' ·
local chairman, Wayne Milhoan; :
Post No. 39, A.L.• at '.Box 401 1 •
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
.•
In addition to distributing indi· :
vidual gifts to vetenan patients, !hi:
Ohio American Legion is also con-··
tributing $3,000 10 each of the five :
gift shops ·Operated at the VA hos·
pitals, whereby patients may select :
gifts to send to their families and·.
nearly $20,000.for tlie purchase of ·:
canteen books for VA patients. . ·; · Televisions, radios and other . ·
electronic equipment for the VA :
hospitals and the Ohio Veterans' :,
Home are also being provided •.:
again this year from. the program ; :
funds. The fund will also spend :
over $100,000 on other than Christ·
· mas activities for VA and state hos·
pital patients, as well as provide
, year round recreation opponunities.

'

Yard Seles

· OAV BEFORE PUBLICATION
..... 11 :00 A.M . S,G,TUROAV

- 2:00P.M. MONDAY

WEDNESDAY PAPER

-

THURSDAY PAPER

- 2:00PM . WEDNESDAY

il tOO P.M . TUESDAY ·

FRIDA'( PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

-

2:00P.M . THURSDAY
2:00P.M . FRIDAY

Classified pa!{es.corer the
following telephon!' exchanges ...
Are•Code614

Me ig1 Countv
Area Code 614

Meson Co., WV
Are• Code 304

446 - Gtll ipolia

992 - MiddleQon

317- Ch•hire

Pomtfov
986 - Chester

e?S - Pt. Pletsant
458 - leon

Gtllit County

388 - Vinton

843 - Portltnd

24 7 - Letart Falls

882 - New HIYen

643 - Arabia Ois t.

9•9 - r:.•cine
742 - Rutllnd
667- Coolville

896- Letert

379 - WIInal

lleml
·~m

.-·

C::lassi·Oellsl

41881 Guthrie Rd. Coolville Oh.

BULLETIN BOARD
BUllETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE

PUBLICATION
•

DIABETES SUPPORT GROUP
MEETING
Thursday, Nov. 14, 7 p.m.
Plaasanl Valley Hosp~al
Com,munhy Room
"Surviving the Holidays•

1.59·

5

6789-

WITH FRIES.....S2.29

MATTRESS OR BOX

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

REGULAR. ................... ,.. .................. .'78

Lott end Found
Yatd SaltlPiid in 1dv1ncel
Public Sale &amp; Au chon
Wanttcl1o Buy

·VInyl Siding
•Rtplacement
WlndoWI
•Roofing
•Insulation

57 - Muaic .. lnttrum.,ll

51 - Fruits • \ltt«tbl•
59 - For Salt or Trtde

F~ t f\1

16 ~ Schaols

&amp; lnllruetion

66 - Sud &amp;

18 - Wa.nttd To Do

742·2097

5311 Bryan Place
Middleport, Ohio
11114/tfn

CAIIPET ClEANEIS
anti nLE FLOOI CUE

Tran sporlal10n

21 - BuJiMtll Opportunity '

22 - ~ontV 10 Lo1n

71 - AutosforSel e
72 - Truck s for Sale

Servica

73 - YIMI &amp; 4 WO 's
74 - Motorcvcles
76-Boatt &amp; Mot orJ for S1le
71 - Auto Pan a &amp; Acc•soriM
77--Auto Rep•ir

Es l~te

31-HomnforSIIt
32 - Mobilt Homes to r Sale
33-Farms tor St!e
34- BusinMs Bu~dings
35 - Lots &amp; Acfelg"e •
36 - Aul Est111 W1n ted

711 - C•mpi ng Equipmen1
79-Campeu &amp; Mcitor Home'

l;ttmma

Houus for Rene
Mobile Home~ for Rent
flrml tor Rent
Aplrtment tor Rent
Furnished Rooms
Spece tor Aent
Winte d.to Fl ent
48 ..., Equ ipment for Rent
49 - For leau ..
'

3·14-'91-tfn

1-IDD·I41·DD70

992

691-6164 ·..

OliWII, OliO

7 / 31 /'91 lfn

•

1·14-'11 -·

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

83- Eir:ce~~ating

B4 - Eiedr ic ~ &amp;. Atfriger~tion
85- Gtntl'tl Hluiing
·
86- Mobile Home Repe l'
87-Upholsterv

Public Notice

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF
MARION F. EBERSBACH
CASE NO. 28908
DOCKET 13: PAGE 341
Pleue publl1h In The
Dally SIIIUnol lhrH Umeo
prior to date ol oalo:
Olftora will be rac.lvod at
theolflceoiUnda R. Warner,
113·112 W. Socond Street,
P.Dmeroy, Ohio Willi Novem·
ber 21, 1111at 10:00 o.m. for
tho purchaN ol the following
peraonal property of Marion
F. Eberabach, deceoood, towit:
A 1177 Oldamoblle 4 Dr.
Sod. Offera may be ·modo at
tho d1111 of ute. The Exocu·
tor ,_..., the right to r•
joct any and aH bklo.
Unde WarMf-Eaoon,
Exocuto• ot the
Eo lito of
Horlon F. Eborabach,
DocNood
(11) 13,20,27 3TC

fllod In thlo Court. under
Docket ea .. No. 27233 an
authontlcaled copy or Letloro
ol Authority lu...t to him by
tho Franklin County Probate
Court, Franklin County, Ohio.
Notlco Ia further glvon that.
Ill creditor• ol oald ntoto
who dnlre to oooort their
Ilona on the rNI ootato or
oald doced111t loclled In thlo
otato ohalt prooent their
clatmo, duty oworn to, to'thla
Court within olx montho 11111
tho filing oloald lttllro In thl1
Coon, orlhofr Mid U111oohall
forever be doomod bllrred
and concelod.
Robert Buck
Judge

EXCAVATING .

12 Gaugt Foctoiy

R&amp;C EXCAY~TING
BUUDOZING

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
B·ASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING:
Umeatone. Dirt,
Gravel and Coal
UcQn.. d and Bonijed
PH . 614·992•5591

FIREWOOD ·
FOR SALE
All Hard Wood
For Residential
and Commercial
Dump Truck
Delivery or Pick·
Up Your Own
Also Splitter
Ser.vlces Available

BISSEU I BIID
CONSTIUCOOI
•NewHoGaftllls

•Complote

ltllllltWina

Stop &amp; CoMpare
FrH Estlmatts

115·4473
667·6179

Call 992·6142

GROOM
ROOM
Complete Grooming

For All Breedr

EMILEE MERINAR
Owner &amp; Operator

614-992-6820
Po1111roy,

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

S-31·10 If•

YOUNG'S

USED APPUAIIQS . .
90 DAY WAIIANTY

CARPENTER SERVICE ·

WASHIIS-~IGO

- Gutter wortt
IEitctrlcel end Plumbing
Concrete work

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD
•

-

BIL~

SLACK
992-2269

lffiiGIUTOIS-S IGO .,
IMIGD---$125 .,

. rlflllll.:..$125 .,

Aooflng
Interior a Ext•kJr·
Painting

8-12·90·tfn

V. C. YOUNG Ill

l

992-5335 or 915 -3561
Acrou From l'olt OHiO
POMROY, OHO

992-621 s

Pomeroy, Ohio

-__,,.-""'""';;.11~
· 14:::.-'.:;;90~lf:!!Jn

tMD/'H lfll

MICIOWA E
OYEN ·IEPAII

•VINYL
•.Q.uM INUM StPtNG
•BLOWN IN
.
INSULATION

AU. liliES .

Real Estate Genentl

Iring· II In Or We

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Pi.. Up.

KEN'S APPLIANCE

SEIYICE

•

•cao DVDIS-Sit .,
KEN'S APPliANCE
SERVICE

(FREE ESTIMATESI

USED RAilROAD TIES

•

oms-s.. .,

- Room Addition•

...

r~,;..._...,

992-5335 or
915-3561

" Free Ettlmateo"

PH. 949·2101

&amp;cress Prom Pest OHico

· or Its. 949·2160

117 E. S...IMI St.
I'OIIIIOY, 01110

NO lUNDAY

l/6/ 90/ lfn

IIIIEiffiMI.
'"'""'"""""
AIR
C.ONDmONERS • HEAT PUfti'S and
FORNACES FOR MOBILE. &amp; DOUBlEWIDE HOMES
0

0

0

0

0

O O

O

O

0

0

0

0

°

0

O

O

O

0

°

BENNETT'S

0

0

0

o

0

0

o

0

0

I

0

0

I

0

MO.LE HOME
HEAnNG '
COOLING

located On Safft;d Sdtoolld. off lt. 1•1 .
(6141 446-9416 or 1·100·171-!tiU

Interior Painting,
FrH Eotlmatos
30 yNra experlen••·
Four lettora of
recommendation. HonHI
and depondobto.

(Hqa• Pelntlnt 18 My

'LMC'eJiyJ

Call Ed Battin
collect at
1·614-667·6474

'BIS,SELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM llllT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Rtosonable PrieM"

PH. 949·2101
or Its. 949·2160
Day or Night -·
NO SUNDAY CAUS
· 4-15-H-tfo

205 North Second Ave.
. J~Iddl,port,W! . . .
CROW'S SUBDIVISION-Five Polnto·A nice ooe acre lol
wilh waler and eleclic available. Agreat building lol with
price you can't beat. ·
.
ONLY $5,000
RACINE AREA-St. Rt. 124·Aimosl4 aaes of nlce'laying
lawn and garden aret1 and a 4 bedroom home that wilhin
the last 8 yeart has had new-rcof. aiding, cabineiS, fur·
naco, windows, satellllll, sleel garage, fixtures, and plumbing in bath.
ALL FOR $40,000
Llngovlti..Look·at this nice 1 112 stooy home thai sits on
approx. 31 acres. It has 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, heat pump.
and woodbumer. Some ollhe land is tillable, plus il wnutd
be a great place for hunting.
$49,900

HOURs:.i.ioid H'RuSAf if .......oro
PH. 146·0322 ·
3 MLES OUT BULAVILLE

.

''

..

,.

POMEROY·Doech StrMI")Iou need to see this beautiful
brick home. Has 3 bedrocma, large iving room, lull basement, and a ooo car garage.
O~LY $34,000

OSCAR'S RESTAURANT
Will Be Open On

RUTLAND-Salem St~Somothlng lor MOM :Asplit level
home wllh an open raiiiOd hllway thai has beautiful oak
raiNngs. Half ol a calhedrel ceiling gives this home ari
atmosphere of roomlne11. Has 3 bedrooms, a large bath,
utility room, and a kill:hen loaded wilh cabin&amp; IS. Something
lor DAD;Adetached 2 112 car garage with a woollshop. a
conaato ctiveway, and mainlllnance free sidng. Some. thing lor the kids: A1.8 acre yard and a ne house.

'tHANKSGIVING DAY
Featuring A
BUFFET
With a large variety of fOOds.
From .11 :30 a.m. to 7:30p.m.
$7.50 per person ,
Toial urvica available in all rboms.
Deliveoy within city li!Joits.
Cal for Reservations
446·9495 .

$47,000

JUST BELOW THE RACINE DAM·You'll lave the View of
tho beautilul Ohio River and ihe Great fishing ~ you own
thil 3.6 acre carnpal18 with 786 lett of liver fronoago. Ira
approx. 113 deared and has ill ow.n gravel driveway, and
eloclric available.
' ·
·
DOmE TURNER, Broker......................... ,.....ie2·5692
BRENDA JEFFERS .........................................992·3058
DARLINE STEWART.......................................992-6315
SHERYL WALTERB ..................... ,........... ,.......387·0421

'

I'

- ---

.Every Sunday 12 Noon
Factory Gupa Only
91919t/2-

9· 11 · 1 mo. pd.

Real Estate General

KI NG.........

..

CLUB
Begins stpt; 15

992·3838

Choke Only
9·6-tfn

NoUco lahorebniVIII that
on October 24, 1fi1, SIOVIII
AtY Von Motor, Exeoutor ol
tho oatato of Martha ColtVan M-,lato of 215 Huber
VIllage Blvd., APirtmont A124, W.otiiVIIIo, Ohlo.43081,

~~~~~ :::::·::·::·:··:::.·.:·.·.·. ·· :·:·.·.::.::::·.: .: . :::.:.Ji

'

FORKED
RUN
.
SPORTSMAN

. BULLDOZER and.
BACKHOE WORK,
HOME SITES,
LANDSCAPING
WATER and SEWER
UNES
TRUCKING AYAIWI1
FRU ESTIMATES

Starting Sept. 22

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
PROBATE DIVISION
IN THE MA1TER OF:
CASE NO, 27233
THE ESTATE OF MARTHA
COLLEEN VAN METER
NOTICE OF P.UBUCATION

OUEEN SIZE ~ETS ................................ ..'275 .&amp; UP
BUNK MATTRESS .. .............. ..................'48 &amp;UP
BED FRAMES

.•'

GUN-SHOOT

IG- 17 1MO

Public Notice

•
...,...---

01 lOU FIEI ·

OHIO PALLET CO.

B, · · Homelmprovotm~~nu
82 - Piumbinv &amp; He~~; i ng

SANDY BUTCHER.-.......................................992·5371

--..I..-

•Ruaonable flotee
•Ouellty Work '
•Free Eotimates
•Corpet Hoo F10t Dry
Time '
•High Glasa on Tile
Floor Flnioh
MIKE
Ow..
' II. 1,LEWIS.
Rutland, OH.

742·2451

Serv1ces

41 •2 43 4• 46 46 47-

ORTHOPEDIC KiN(fsizf se'iS'.'.' ij~~ UP

1

, , _ .•, _ _ _ _

CEDAI
CONSIIUCIION
992·6641 or

Ftrt~ il lr

INDEPINDENT ·

liUijhiiSII
Rea l

H2·2772 or

&amp; 1 - F•rm Equipment
e2.- W1nted to Buy
63 -Livtstock
64- Hav &amp; Grtin

16 - R8dio, T\1&amp; CB Rep•ir
17 - Misc;;elltn.Oua

23-Pr9felt~oa•l

JAMES KEESEE

Suppltes

&amp; L1vcslock

1·3- lnsur•rice
14-Busin•• T11in ing

~Wr~:l'i'iilld'''""······ ..........,..., ....... •as

I

'

8·13· '91-~ri

INSULATION

Antiques
Misc . Mtfchandill
BUilding Suppli•
Ptll for Sal A

11 - Help W1nltd
12- Si1uetion Wlnttd

.

MANY THANKS TO mE
VOTERS OF SUTTON
TOWNSHIP FOR YOUR
VOTES
AND CONFIDENCE
.

53&amp;• 5551-

Serv 11:1~s

SPRINGS
FULL OR TWIN SIZE

... "~'~\
.

Stridly lnfo"ool .

J&amp;L

5 1- Houeet'lold Goodl
52 - Sponlne Ooadl

tJII~IIIVIIII~Ill

LAYNE FURNITURE

"At 11M End of tht PoJMroy·Mason lrhllt"

I
I
I
I

12 l!!lut• :lltoiiJun O.ly

MHS BAND BOOSTERS
BEAN DINNER
Thursday, Nov. 14, 4:30·7:30
$3.5D-12 &amp; Under $2.50
Dinner Includes: Cornbread slaw
dessen &amp; drink. High School Cafeteria.

SIRLOIN STEAK

off one (1) package of

28

FREE ESTIIATES

992·7013
or 992·5553

OFFICE 992· 2886

'Special of the Week!

Save
75¢
I

~t.
Padory Clloko

Merchandise

C•rd of Thanks
ln Memory
Annoucement l
GivtiWIV

5 - Happy Ad1

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 starting
at6 P.M.
.

HOLZER CLINIC

...

.eo
.05/dly .

·

Speclallz. . In
C.ustoM Fr- lepair
NEW &amp; UUD PAITS
FOI AU MAlES &amp;
MODElS

Public Notice

992·2118
446·5381

~;··'·

1234-

..........

Oraage Townablp Clark

MAMMOGRAPHY
ULTRASOUND
OB/GYN

THANK YOU lOftlS OF
RUtLAND VILLAGE FOR
YOUR IUPPOR,. AND

. 937- Bufhlo

Cet Rttufh Fast

PATRICIA CALAWAY

A Caesarean section, the surgical
removal of a child from the uterus
througb an abdominal inclsloa, Is
named after Julius Caesar, who, according to legend, was born In this
manner.

576 - Appte Grove
773 - Muon

245- Rio Grende
266- Guyan Diu

I want to thank aU who
supported me.with their
encouragement and votes lor
Orange Township ·Clark. .

Total Health Care for Women

.13.00
•.1.30/ doy

6:30 P.M.

For Sale
Great Price!
CALL

Starting

;42

bra lien up d.., I will btchltged

"A c:lauifi.cf 1dveniHment plac ed ·in The Deily Sent intl ltll·
Ce;PI- cl•tifitd displiy, Busin•s Csrd end legal notlctll
. wtH ~110 IPPIIf in the Pt. Ple,.ant Register and the Gtlli·
lpol~l Dilly Tribune. reaching over 1 8.0()0 hom ...

•

es.oo

1d1 - Grveaw1y •nd Found ads und• 15 words will be

i

tho Candidate

10
Monthly

Mtig~,
. G~j,, or .Mason count:i • mutt. be pre -

run 3 dl'(llt no ch•ge.

Posts join forces for
annual veteran benefit

Paid lor b

3
6

Hardwood Slabs

•Romodtllng ond
Homo Ropolra
•Roofing
•Siding
•Pointing
FULLJ INSURED

:~•·""~ a. ~O. discaunt for ads paid in tdvtnce.

ADOFt AN ACRE • Galli&amp; ·Christian School students recently ::
received their '.'deed" ror 1.2 acres or rainrorest at Rio Bravo Con· ;
servatioo Area, Belize. Studeats donated ruads ror over a moatb to , l
give to the Adopt-aa~Acre program wblcb is au internatiOnal effort : .
to save rain rorest acreage. Pictured holdlug the "deed'' are, 1-r, '
Jenny Ault, Cbris Casto and Susanae Kincaid.

Members of American Legion
Drew Webster Post No. 39.
Pomeroy, have joined with other
American Legion Posts to help
make this Chrisanas memorable for
hospitalized vetemris by rollecting
funds for the annual American
Legion of Ohio "Gifts For The
Yanks Who Gave" program.
This is the 40th consecutive
year the Ohio American LegiQn is
pooling funds from Posts for gifts
and activities benefiting veterans in
15 state hospitalS, five VA Medical
Centers, three outpatient clinics
and the Ohio Veterans' Home at
·Sandusky. The program's name is
the same as the one initiated by
Comedian Eddie Cantor during
World War II.
·
"This effort is not limited to
members of the Legion," ·stated
Commander J.R. Weeks. "We wei·
come contributions from individu·
als and busines~ establishments to
help finance the state-wide pro·

1

WHALEY'S
AUTO PAITS

FIREWOOD
SELLERS . I

Bashan .......

EVElY
,
SAT. NIGII1'

o,.i 15 Wordo
Rote
.
.20
••.oo
u.oo
.30

Words
16
15
15
15
,15

Days

,

.'·

I ttl
UiJ.·· ..
_.
;,

The R ee ds ~i ll e Fellowship
Church Ladies Society will sponsor
a bazaar. yard sale and bake sale on
Saturday from 9 a.m. 10 4 p.m. at
the Olive Township Firehouse in
ReedsviUe.
Tables to rent are available for
$5 each by calling Cathy Mnstcrs at
378-6133 or Tami Putman at 378- ·
6422.

P8ld for by the Candldote, Box :1117, Run•~· Ohio

· IACINl
FIRE DEPT: ·

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992·21Sb
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. S P.M.

Ladies society
. plans bazaar

ED

GUN SHOQt.

• The Area's Number l Marketplace

Phyltis Larlcins.
Games were enjoyed at the close
of the meeting as weU as guessing
the identity of those in costume.
All¥.nding were Mrs. Ruby
Brewer, Mr. an~ Mrs. Harlan Bal·
lard. Janie Filch and Brandon, Mr.
and Mrs. Dorset Larkins, Mae
McPeek, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley
Wells. Georgia Mount, Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Hauber, Delores Hawk
and Melody Roberts.

VO,ES~·

'

'-' GSSI II

LBCA to hold smorgasbord
The Long Bollom Community
Association held its October meet·
ing at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Hauber.
Melody Roberts presided at the
meeting which opened .;,ith prayer
and pledge and offi cers rcporls
were given.
Reports were given on dinner
receipts and donations for th e
month of October and disbursements were noted.
Trustees Stanley Wells, Dorset
Larkins and Harlan Ballard report·
ed on bids for tile at the community
building. installation and labor
were included . Wells showed the
group a tile for approval.
.
A thank-you card was read from
the "Wayne Pullins" family for the
usc or the building for a funeral
reception, .
·
A Nov. 23 .s morgasbord dinner
will be staged by the association.
Details will be announced.
IL was suggested by Harlan Bal·
lard that a $25 food stotk be kept at
the building for emergencies.
Hosting the meeting were the
Hauber family and Melody
Roberts. Cherry. apple and pump·
kin pic were served with sandwich·
es and chips.
Hostesses for the November
meeting will be Juanita Wells and .

•

SAYS ''SELLITI"
story
frame home
3 badrpoms, equipped kilcnen, 1 car
garage, bam. Appro~ . 3.88 acres located only minutes •
from lawn, yet secluded enough to be counJry. Give us a
call, come take a took ..... REDUCED TO
.$27,ooo ......... MAKE AN OFFER.

.

r-

MAJOR REDUCTION! On thlo COMMERCIAL BUIL.DING IN POMEROY. Features nice office/showroom wilh
larqe display window. LoiS of storage space, rooms up·
slalrs lor possible apartment. Main Soraal acoossibility,
river view...UNLIMITED POSSIBILITIES! NOW ASKING

$15,000

A&amp;B
Country OR COMPLETE AUTO
Jr. Goll Sots
UPHOLSRRY
Teaford

Graphite &amp;
Mtlai&lt;IHs
Cust0111 Rttitg

lags, Htotl
Covers, tic.

ProhssiOMI
l~~piltt

.

CoQvenlble Tops,

carpets, Headliner l
Seat Covers and •
Minor Auto Repair.
MAIN ST. MASON, W.VA.

1-(3"' .

614-985·3961

773-9560

LINDA'S
PAINTING

fAU FESTIVAl
SPECIAl
20 SESSI ..IS

lll!li91 1 mo. pct.

VACANT LOT· 60 x 100 on Main St. in Pomeroy. Uti lities
available. Jnimediate possessiOn! ASKING $3,900
TUPPERS PLAINS. Comfortable 1floor plan home with 3
bedrooms cozy fireplace in livi"'l room, full basement. 1car ~
garage. woodbumor. satellilo dish, 100 x 200 lot ASKING
$36,900

INTERIOI • UTIIIOI
FREE ESTIMATES

MIDDLEPORT· IMMEDIATE POSSESSION on this one
floor plan frame home with deck, carpet, llinyl &amp; hard wood
flooring,3-4 bedrooms, 2 baths. Home needs some repair.
ASKING $t t ,900 Make an offer.

Tllke tho pol• Ht of
poll II ...
Lot •• tlo It fer yo~o
YEIY RWOUILI
HIVE IEFEIENCES

SPECIAL! A lillie house located in Anlique for Only
$5,000.00

l.'OOKING FOR A UTILE HOME, JUST SOMEPLACE
TO CALL YOUR OWN? WE HAVE WHATIT TAKES TO
SUIT YOUR NEEDS, GIVE US ACALL HERE AT CLELAND REALTVI .

(6141915-4110

10.23-Dt I mo. pel.

•

HENRY E. CLELAND........................................992-6191 '
TRACY BRINAGEA...........................................t41·24311
JEAN TRUSSELL.............................................t49·2110
JO HILL.•••••••_ ......" ........................................... t85-44H.

OFFICE ..........................- ..................................112·2259

For $20.00
Offer Entia Oct. 31

FOUta

BIDIll

"' 949·2126

1'-11-

�.,

P~12~The

Dally Sentinel

Annou ncernent s

3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

44

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Announcem.ma

4

71 AutOI for Sill , ••
''

:Wednesday, November 13,1991

~T PtE&lt;£ '100~€ IUYI~C.
~ HAUillltlc.t.Y FJ.IAIU,I,R,,
... Wl«l5 If &amp;'(

'

'TAA~ .IT! ~--""'

J I'N&amp;¥4 IT
\lf6 Wli£R
~ .......... "

,~

M

WID .. NOV. 13
. !VINING

KICK THE BALL,
IMAl~ IE, AND I'LL CATCH

WllE~E

....

·'::~~~~' S(Q~Qli}A ... 4~!/iS'

Television
Viewing

~~... OF~,
.

REBATE REBATE!
Up To 11,000 A-• On Salacl
LOt -to AI Elaaa H""" Canlor. OrNI Solaction N-ro
EIH But £1- Homo ContOI. 1·
800-88W710.

Giveaway

The Dally Sentlnei-Pegli-13

_,

BORNtOSER

-

'

Far rant• Now 1 bdim ope, fum ·
or unfum, In Mkldllparl. 114corpll,
-htrf 1112-1221 or 11112-aoc.
dryorf ~IIO'N AC, In
lloclno OH,
2-2135, Npm ,

,I · ' ....

Unllllehod? Sl.- SlngiH AI . _ And LIIIIIYIOI
AWOII You. C'onfldontlol, Wrllo:
SlnglaaJ.. P.O. Box IOQ, Qo~
llpotlo, unlo 4MSI.

KIT 'N' CARL'fLE® by Larry
.. . Wrlghi

13,1991

2·bdrm mobllo homo on • Uti
.... .lot, fully fumlahtd, .....

--

NOTICE • No hlllllng i&gt;r
troojlolling on tht Loitrli 1atm
81 a.llfpolr. f'~. AI prwuta•
........ arovolcl.

Wednesday, November

Apanment
· for Rent

' .

.·

. O Raorranga

IllI
.......- - - -

Wlto4 ~, CLAY I. HIUAN -

.

la!ton of 1M
• four ociamblod wotd1 I&gt;.
low to form four ~mpla wordr.

••

r: I

TR..U' E T

It--,,,rr-5-T.IIr-T",......., -ld

WERE 't'OU 7

IT. ..

I .

r--~~~~--,

I

DARFAI

=·~~;:

wadding -·· a - -.

t--r-1,-~r-·-~r--~r.'7-,lr.'-1 G Comp lete

the chuckle quoted

•
•
•
•
•
•
_
by filling in the missing WOfds
1-..L,.....I-,-.L....L-1-..J yo!J develop from step No: 3 below.

P~ INT NUMBERED

A

.

~ LETTERS IN SQUARES

KHtona, Fr.a To Qulllllod Homo,
Wormed, Uti• Tnlned, FrM
Cat Cara KH To Each Homo. 114-

Part Gorman Shtphtfd dog,
lomalo, opayod, 304-175-5583.
Roa. Goldon llolrlom pupa,
CONSTRUCTION
814:1!12-1047
Now Projoct: Alfocalo Sovorot
Oponlngo. 1-t00-112-2867.
Totn building lor
flrwwaod, to ectmeOnl whO will
CONSTRUCTION
houtowoy. 304-175-5103.
Now Project: Aotocato Sovoral
Oponlngo, 1-t00-112-2867.
6 Lost &amp; Found
DAIVEAS
Found: lloio Tan Puppy Woar- Eom To 1550 Wlc, Small Pock·
1!19 Rod COllar, LIOrli* llvd, 1ge Olllvary, Relocatl, Co. Clr.
Qjjipollo Aroo. 8~101
LDM: 1 llln'a Wollot\..Vk:lnny EARN MONEY Anding Bockol
SUnohlno VIdeo Or mo lllnl $30,000/rr. Income Potenlial.
!!art, On 10111111 BI!Woon lAnd Dololla. 11· 805-1162-IOGO Ext. Y·
lp.m. II You Aolurn, No 10188.
Ouaatlona Aokod. Important Equot ODoortunlty Employer.
Poparo In Wollol. 114-245-t137.
Non Smoking &amp; Drug Fr. En·
• L.o.t: Tlg• C.t, F.m~ .., Front vlronmtnt. Art Your -Entrgttlc,
Powa Dacia-. LDM In SoH llallvoted, Willing To loom
wiiGCiond on.. Vlctnny, If And Wioh To Bo Roc:ognllod For
Your Porlarmonoo? We Will
Found Calll14-l-1.
T - You To It A Mombor Of
Our Toaril. RHponolbltHIH In·
~i ~:0':.~ nE:~::t.t dude
Admlnlotrollva Function
Slrllght Up. Fold lnword On Top In A Conoumor Ftnanclot Sor·
When SCIIrod. Reword, $1001 'lieN Office Wllh Ono Of Tht
Anaw010 To M'11nllft. o14-3f8. LNdonl In ThO Financial ·Sor·
2HI,Orii4-446-MU.
'lie• lnduotry. H You Havo Excollonl AdmlnlotroUvo Sklllo
LDM: Whlta Gorman S ' : J And Top Nolch Phone Sklllo
ta-r Rtvor Rd I Nolah
PI- Can, Jon C:lly, AI 114·
Rd. arM. 114 4'11 Me!
44a~208 For tmmodllto conRowardl l.Dot: Dorlt And Llahl oldorollon.
Brown
SJW)ftld
AuMr11T1n
· Shtppar&lt;!,_ Fomlly Pol, 1 Yoar, FEDERAL GOVERNMENT IS
Vlclilhy: IR.'I75, 814-:rn-2118. A~ HIRING. $18,000 • $721j0001Yr. 1·
801114 1500 Ext. G 1168 For
t•7p.m.
tmmtdllto RooYai'GS&amp;Ie
7
Olllllllolgo Communhy Acllon
Agency hU o part-llmll 1010-.
f!0111J Job opontng In Molaa
cou_nty tor 1n outrMchllntaU
· T~pa to out ol tht UN
Galli poll a
modicll laclllll• ora roqulrod I
only
lhooo
with l.,_bla, rot~
&amp; VIcinity
ablo lrontporlllion I voNd
ALL Yonl S.IH MUI4 Bl Paid In drlvo,. l'-110 lhould apoly.
Advanca. OEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. Thla poolllollolao callillar othir
tht doy bllort tht ad' to lo Nn. ln1oloo dutiN In lht office
SUndoy odhlon • 2:00 p.m. moklng good moth or bookklna 1kllla pnlarnd. High ocr-t
-p.m. Soturdly.
·· - y odMion • 2:00 tcfYOttlon or equlvtltrnt ,..
qulrod. Tht Individual ,mull
hovo otnc01o concom far tho
-nomlcally dladvontogod I
Pomeroy,
abiiHy to wort! ofladlvoly with
Mlddlapon
lhtm ,. · - I l l. Alao ...
OOIIInoo In fodonl pragrama
&amp; VlclnHy
Jnctudlng
OUirMCh
and
.......... lion ... banotlclal.
Slnoo tht poolllon Ia 101nporuy
• part-limo, no lnouronoo
-'"" lro lvalllbll. Ap,
oliclllona will bo ~id
AI Ylld loiN MUI4 II Paid In throllgh tht of bualno•
Adnnoo. O..cllna: 1:CIODol tht on N0v1111blr 11, 1111, at the
!!oy - . tht ed II to run, Ohio luroou ol ~­
......, odMion- 1:OOpm Frlclly, SoNicoa, 45 Olive 81. CloJUpctla.
llondiY odMion !O:OOa.m. Wt 1n1 1n eqUII opportuntty
lllunlly.
omplopr.
Hair Slytlal: Would You Uko To
Pt. Pleasanl
Join OUr 81111'1 Shtor P-&amp;n
Hair Slyllng.l14 441 mz.
&amp; VIcinity
LlborOIO and molntononca mon,
now hiring, rtlocltt, 1-aoo.aaz.
2861
NEED CHRISTMAS CASH?
Work From Your Homo Sluffing
EnvoiopH.
Far
lnlar!na'
-od oar- Solo, Rl. 2, llon/ADII!Icotlon Band
, North, Eckori Chtpal Aood, d....od llamood Envolopa Ta:
Wodl ' y, Thurodoy, I Ug II. Mllllllngum Aroo Publlohlng,
Colla. IWIItlr'l. CJiftl, IPIOI Boa 1111, Zan~~~VIIII, OhiO
43711Z.
- · ·304-17WI24.
- - · much
A

·~-

....

•

"''*

8

PubliC Sell
&amp; Auction

-'""'
r-.
t887
3113.

14

Wanted to Do

Will BobyoM In My Homo
Anr.lmo· • Rodney
Aroa.
Ro .,,,_ AVIIilblo, Call IM-

Wanted to Buy

Subdlvlllon, 3 beclroom1, 2
bllht, DR, K, LR, IIJV! family

room. Courtooy ·to ln&gt;kon.
Shown bv 1ppolntiiiOIII only.
:104-ITs-21121.
.
OWN YOUR 01'/N NICE HOME
FOR $1,500 Ful Price, Oovom·

~~~~:===r'~

_... to buy, llandlna tlmbOI,

· ·~· • ._l**•

lmlr#e~

Lorge oornor lo4, 205-11. rlvor
llorillgo, qulat noltlhbOihood,
largo gordon, paVod roadl, 1ru1t

-..1 Ta luy: · Junk Auloa
Will Or Wit- llal- CaU

L1rrJ L1¥11J. tu IN nn.
Ta lillY: Junll Auloo,

.....

2 Bedroom $200 Month In
Ma10n. Ph.tl UtUitl1.. Rttar.nce
And DopooH, 304-875-1281. .
2 BA houH. Rtf. I Dop. 304875-5162.

46

...... cable
eeww, Ml up

n,

e~

Wlter/

tor lraUII"I or to

build-on. All 1'-"VVYod lnciUdlna
almtion
111,100. 3nl anil
Franl 11-. ...,lard, WV,

IM-I41-Go1S, Ahlr

•"'!',

Tap 1'1111: AI Old U.S.
Ollni,OolciiUnai.-COina,
0o1c1 CoN. II.T.l. COin llhop.
. . . . . . - . Cllllipollt.

lluhl Un• llonlll, I YNr Old.
VInyl lltlng, r.- Malntananco,
Canlllly
4414118. LOcated.. " ' ' · - 114-

propon!J.UmMa.
3 IR. full
Prlcod

llontol
boNmt_f!11 Iii cl
lollil. ..,.24

Bilek I WltiiO With Blue Eno,
Eaoh.
114-21W'411,

Musical

.

•

Uood largo CIIIICIIY Toohlbl

UNd allaiiHo oqulpmant, Including wholl ayatam with
docodora1 rocotv".!i. dilh •
dtaocW, •M-112-11ra ·

South of Carpontw, lottow
algno. Opon . _ . , 8am4pm

59

For Sale

~

or Trade
VCR, H" Color TV, 121 Com·
modaro Carnputar wl• 1111 or
trodo far pickup truck, 304-tll&gt;
3112. I

of a rare,
unsu~~ -kend.
Stereo.
@.
E: Predator IR)

&amp; 4 WD'•

(2:001

9 lllurder, 8M Wrote 1:;1
a....._of
~..amt~~ L~: Tht
Lift Conway

c..o.ta, "" " Good c;Grlll!,lon,
" . . . . lluot Sol:

Twitty, Randy mra: Tanya
TUCker ancl Olhen jOin .
Loretta Lynn u ahe
.,

-~-11012.

1887 Fanl All d•r XLT Von, I

reminlloea and tranle to her
horntlown of llutchtr HOller,

'

61

114 111 2238, IM-441-2511.

3 Room Fumlohod ~~monl,
Hill IIIIo Eul Of POri•, on
RUM, $27Simo. IM-318.f1M13,
30 pwcant ol family lncomo.
Tho Lydia opartmanta In llllon

Cln now off• to qUIIIfltcl 1po
plicWa I 2 IR lludlo apart•
mont with rant truod on 30 par·

olllmlly rnoo... CaU Julia
It 304-m.ll21, If. no lntWer
PiloN INva ITNINOfll Cln maOhlno. £110.
coni

Of Yow Fomlllll ' - ·

=!lad

Ky. (1:00) s -.

:=,..

D LPIT low8ng From Loa

Farm Equipment

a-.
......

John 0... .......
--.~
~~eollonl -Ilion, 114-M2•nnr onar 1:30pm

0 1111 ltolfler J•ka r:;l

.~sscr
~

-- -·--

78

Jlm'a Form~nti.BA. SS.
Waat Galli
814...1-1777;
trocloro •

we DoGgie ttowMr,
M.D. VInnie works on a
ftlm-IIChool acrlpt for a Civil
War movlt. Stno. C

1:30(1)

l-IE SPior5... I

1H£'r' STARtED~

11-\l~

~~HIS
~ICQJfiAl
u~

a..cMJ 15 Ga~ 10 ~
COR msrorr

Auto Pans &amp;
ACCIIIOI'Iel

Clll CelloJII Fllllly AI

hopes Elizabeth wtn marry ·
lhl doctor lhe has started
d~.s-. IJ

10 Mlntlo MlnilGn r:;l
1:00 (J). 0 Nlgld c-

lmpllmlnta. lory,

1111, trodo, l:oo-ti:OO wllildlya,
Ill. Uti Noon.

Chrllllne Ieima her old law
proleiiOI''a I1'UI mttllod of
grading her. Stno. IJ

CIJ

AC,
31.

e MOYIE: 'IICkfltid

8peclal (2:00) Stereo. 1J
QJ ([J Arnerk:M PIQh6uM

Cempere&amp;
Fotd lroctor I Notllnd
round biiOIO NovOinbOI Blta:
3830 Ford 41 hp 1 double volvo,
$13,&amp;00. 1720 Fotd 24 t-. 4 WD I
lcodor 114,000. 130 R lltoro
1001 $1,400. ... 1801,
$1,450·

-

$10,100: -

1U

12001

1111 1'1001
$1\1100. KMiaro Borvtoo Can1011
Stile At. n Point P!Manl ..,.
Rlplay Rood, 30WIJ.mlt.

63

MotorHomu

A amall Vermont town adopta
• Cambodian refugee f•mlly.

IIlii AMT llobtll Homo, 12x11;2

i

bdnn, • .,_ . ...,. air aon-

liZ. Jakl lnci!M
.
fetman McCabe aaarchea to
flnd a woman suspected of
murdering a noveliat. Stereo.

diUonlf', 14100, 114-141-DH ·

-.:::ace,

I ft truck
......
:134:1. lea .....

oink,
' -·

i ~VIE:

SP.rvrccs

Stno.C

a Lorry King u..1

Uvestock

:::
18~11101~nt::;:th~olcl:-o:-atot=rloll=,-:1~igl!l::

Love KUla (2:001

~ Nalll¥!111 Now Stereo.

81

bucklldn, · lnlllod
blick
.......,,., htll01 llrolta only.
$400, 814-1411-2318

10 Father Dowling My•-.

Home
Improvements

HOW COME YOU
., DON'T PUT YORE.

WATCH THEM
SARCASTICAL
GESTURES!!

. ARMS AROUND ME
NO MORE, PAW ?

Dowling Ia helped on a case
by the gltoat of Shtrtock
Holm8s . (R) Stno. r:;l
1:30 (J) • 0 8•1 ohotd Jerry's
recorder plcke up a
myetorl~ly aexy vOice at a
show ht did. Stereo. IJ
D llllllnla WPA WoriiJ
Championship, championship
!rom Las Vegas (1)
10:00 (J) e 0 OuantuniLNp
Sam leapa Into the llle of a
policlman whO Ia haunted by
visions. Stereo. 1:;1
(!)Nelli
(J) MOVIE: QNJ
(PO) (2:20)

VETERINARIAN.
Dr. Ill Crank, DVM. Lorge
lnlmll IP80lllly. 1044'111-7721;
:1044711-1111.

•u7

.J973

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North

'Leadside, do you have a twin
brother?" asked Maxwell Smart.
"No, Smart. Why do you inquire?"
'Because I saw someone who
looked just ~ke you 111111ling in the
Washington Marathoo a month ago."
'That was I, Smart. •
'But you use a wheelchair."
' Not if I keep l'WilliDg. Only when I
slow down do I need my chair."
'Enouch of zis chatter. Let us get Oil
viv zee game," protested Siegft'led.
On llie tbinl deal of the rubber, Siegfried led the heart five against Max's:
contract of three no-trump. Ha~ry
, Boo, lbe famous Hawaiian detecttve,
tabled his cards. Max played low from
the dummy; .Leadslde won wllb his
king and returned the heart 10. Mu
woo In band with the queen, suete33fully finessed the club queen, and then
.!eel a diamond to his ni~ and Wes~'s
JICk. Slegfned cleared his heart swt,
dummy's ace winning.
·
U Max bad led a low diamond at Ibis
point, Leadside's king would have ap-

SOollt

Wttt

Narllt

Eul

I NT

Paso

3NT

Paa
Allpua

••

Opening lead: • 5

j,eared and. Max would have bad nine
tricks: two spades, two hearts, three
diamonds and two clubs. But be saw
an extra chance. At trick sil Max
cashed dummy's club ace. U ~ king
didn't drop from WJ!st be planned to
revert to dlamoods."'ilut Siegfried was
ready - in tempo, be played the club

king.

Now Max should.stiU have led a dia·

mood, planning to play the ace. but he
was deceived by Siegfried's false card

Malt led the club four and confidently .
I~ the nine. Siegfried triumpbantly put his club 10 onlll the table
and cashed two heart winners to defeat the contract.
"You are not playing viv children
Shmart. •
'

®

The World Almanac Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Digits
7 Jane Fonda
movie
12 Llghlly
13 Gorman
14 C11ed for
15 Wrttlngs
16 Lodging
hOUII

17- degree
t8 Sharp turn
21 He1ltate
23 Asian wom·

en'• quarters

Answer to Prtviout Puule

40 Scoi , e.g.
41 - Landers
·42 Prevent
44 Kind of bread
45 In the past
46 Gold (Sp.)
48 Soften
51 Turned-down
corner
55 Prayer beads
56 Cry of
triumph
57 Irate
58 Offensive
s mell

26 Winter white •
otull
28 Long ago
29 Look at
30 Sand lizard
31 Communica·
tlons satellite
33 Jtwllh
nationalist
36 Actor Alan 37 Perceived
38 Of men

DOWN
1 Make an
adglng
2 Hasten
3 Flower
holder
4 Long skirt
5 Mixture
6 Australian
city
7 Smalllalcon

8

Lu ~~: u riant

property
18 Aclress Gabor (2 wds.)
19 - Ocean
20 Oe&amp;cend
(2 wds.)
22 Mark with
spots
23 Worker In a
stable
24 Lethal
25 E.•r,oso to air
27 Pae
32 Bag
34 Mental
picture a
35 Tuty
39 Wean away
43 Schubert's
- Quintet
45 Threebandad
armadillo
47 Hldtous·giant
48 Singing
syllable
49 Long time
50 Food additive

· 9 ·Actress
Hagen
10 Plaything
11 Printe r's
measures
13 Holding of

Ladr Down

C111 1D e 4t Houri The

rtghla or surrogate motherl
are examined. Stereo. 1:;1

Cuolom Uvallock Hauling. Can
Haul To Hlllebaro ..... or Loo
Chucll
Wlttllmo
24UI2~
Trl
Trucking. 11+
2
.
56 Pets for Sale
Soia: A.lllill- lllflolll
:::::=-::-=:-~~i:::o~::=::~ Far
"MIIIt.SN Bo.., Pupa" whlll • Rom And Cht-Anguo .... 11+
flwit and bftndll, Clll 414-11:1: He-1111.
5813

Block, brick, olpaa, wtn- · llntlil, IIC. Clouda Win'"'• Alo Grandt, !)H CaM IMO.E. Dryoi, $81; 0.. Dryw,_fM:
Ro~or, ~- · Froo, 2 Door, w.. 1180, 1121; llolr!i::ar,
2 Dooro , _
Froo, $Mi.-~.I 'i'ooro
Old, Uka ,..., u;,;w,- $a&amp;,

SkiGal Applanc 11. UDDir Groomlna. · AM
llouTi ~ 11lama Pail Focd OMlor. ulla
11a1.r, 1-.na
Wlbb. Cal I ......QI:n, •. -

.......... -·put-log...
=:t.._
.
.

52

82 •

c.-

Wll loultd pllla - ·

383-o231.

Sponlng

Goods

2 At&lt;C lloallfOiod FIJ!IIIa Chow
Chow, 12
Old, Rocl,

-w-

Eo~IIWH-1441

m.

Hilling
Cartlt'l Ptu,..,tng

DalmoUon puppiN, $1110 -'t.
304-137-ata
.

.....

-anJIPIN
OlltiiiOflt. Dttla
,

_53::::-::::-:::A~nt=lq=U::::II::-::=~

:,."= ~~

Plumbing &amp;

.,..

84
Trans port atr o11

Electrlcll &amp;
Refrlgel'ltlon

~

11*'-t

(

-'

· not an Indication of disloyalty. Trying to . TAURUS (Aprli »~~a; 101 It 's best not
patch up a broken romance1 The Astro- lo attempt an endeavor on your own toGraph Mllchmlkfl' can help you under· day that requlm tolid 1&lt;1pport from an·
- -- -- - - stand whalto do to make the relation· other. Waltuntllyouhavethen-.y
ship work . Mall $2 plus a long, aalf· back-up before giving Ha try.
addressed, stampep envelope to GEMINI (MIJ 21-.lunt 101 Don't make
Matchmai&lt;er, clo this newspaper, P.O, promises tQ!Iay you know you'll tt,ve
BERNICE
Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101·.3428.. .. diHicutty kaeplng. Your,commttmont will
BEDE OSOL SAGmAIIIUI (Nov. 23-0ec. 211 In or- be taken serlouery and a failure to prodar to appease another today, you duce mlghl be treated u something
might agree to do something lhal op- unlorglvabla.
\
• poHS your best lnterMta. Be lrlendty CANCIII (,lunt 21-.IUIJ :121 Something
,you're pr-tly Involved In might be
• • • • • • • • • and cooperallve, but don"t be loolleh.
CAPRICORN (Dec. :12..18n. 111 If your · ~&lt;~blected to some negative chang• to.
hopes and expectatlona are not found· day that you didn't f.,_. Before ,...
. ·
.
AZ....'Birthday._
ed upon a 10111ca1 premlee today, your acllng, take ample lima to etze up the
'"'IUUI'
probabiiHieo for lulltllment are ralher new develcllmente.
LEO (July :IS-Aug. :121 II thlnga don't go
slim. Don't kid youreelf.
AOUARIUI (..... 20-F!Ib. 111 You have u amoothly u yau think they ahould totwo choices today: You can either do day, your ftratlmpulae might be to point
thlngstheeuywayorthehardway. Un· the linger of biiiM 11 the nearttt by·
lcirtunately, you might chooaa the latter. stondec Instead ol lllmlnlng tht true
~0¥. 14,1181
Therefore, think ahead,
cauaa.
lllo material security aspe!:IS of your PISCES (Feb. »March 101 Caution VIRGO (Aug. :D-~. :121 Comments
IKe•wlll be of Importance to you In the and sell-doubt are not the same, yet you think of u conalructlwt crltlclom
year ahead yet other manors will taka · you mlghl believe them lo be Identical Will not be Interpreted u generoully by
P!)orlty. Theaa dominant Interests will · today. Tread wartly, but do so wtth hope the target of your critique today. Be
bilng you botli joy and financial . In your heart.
· cerelul of wltat you say and- you say
rftards.
· AIIIEI (~rch 21·Aprtl 111 Joint In· II.
ICORPIO·(OcL :M-Nov•.ZI) This could volvementa with friends could have UBRA (llpl. Oct. :121 Yow dlllreto
be a ao...,.hat unhappy day for you - some unlor...., complications today, opond could subllantlally ..the
lf~r attitude Is ''II you're not tor me, especially If thay are of a bualneas nam..,a you have II your diiPOOII today.
you're. against mo." Just bKause ture. Don't do anything that could ~· a To be on tht llle liCit, r•t(ICI 'fON/I
10me9ne only part!ally supports you Is relationship In jeopardy.
ohopplng to amllt, cult llli8L
....,.--

=

~: ~ t:i Wliii'~ ;;;GIOOI=m:-:::and::::-:Su;-1::-::-l..,.doll=,h--;:-==

Dow;iiOWn Modlin, 1br, COiftoo'
p101t K......,, Full
ln-

et

(J)

In.._,, AIC Movie

'

~~--..om..,....,

lllalrlc
Dopoall Aoqulrod. 814-44

IJtt llftdOe

aclvan~

~

...

Otogrlflltlc

(I)

Alan and hla frllnda IUa

1111 Dodge Cannran. Loodod.
Ea-nt oondRion. 114-448GihftOI....,.
1887 FaniAnlflr, XL, Air, PW,

8ooU

Farm Supplre:;
&amp; Lrvestock

n.

...... aooo. tDW?~-1111.
· vans

By PJaiJilp Alder

CD

OIIC 'II . - two 112 ....
truck. •xc ... meohlnlcil

73

Stno.

their Elcenae.

~~

Building
Supplies

,
. llllrAmriUIJ,
14x711;.-111
-·
mutt

~·· tiOO

~ Raoaonoblo Prlcod. Fat·
tw 1 Fruit Farm, IR 'Ia 1 ml"

lalla hla tMtl for renewing

Make the play ·
in tempo

ailc!lct~

i~:'s.\:'
=-=

ohtny

CIHtr10Y11: Onco upon a
Dud Man t2:00) .
Ill CJJe Dlnn•n Eart

J7
Q63

10 700 Club With Pat

doyt.
tbr
Furnlohod,
121illmo.
Socurlly Qopoal~ Aaloroncoa,

auillod,

. '

hunting--~ 304-27WIIIII.

AKC a.to.a ""'"0..':!:111,
plooM INva .:..:;. ::."'::
' 111111 :00 pm. ndl,
~··
ohlno.IHO.
iur • - lllvOiinl ~ AKC Coall01 s-lat IIUfiiiiH,
II - h . u!lllllro. - · tta'ot I. Main 11-, Pamiroy.
0111~-lloln II. !loll.- Houro: II.T.W. 10:00 a.m. 1o 1:00 - · • wonnod. 1100. lOW7f.
paid.
• - h . 1044'111-1111 p.m., Sunclar 1:00 to 1:00 p.m.. 2223.
avon!• .
114-ttiNIZI.
AKC Daimotlon 11Uf1!1 .!!'ly 2
molal loft, 1200,1144e.ml
ApartmMI oncl houl1 tar rant,' 54 MIICIII81110UI
0111814fi2.2401, Wpm
IEAUTII'UL APARTMENTS AT
· MlrchandiM
A.. I
. 1111, 114BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
-.-Anytlmo.
PlATtS. 531 ......... Plkl
flllm 1112hno. Walk Ia ahco A
...,.,..., Calll14 Ul ISII. EOH.

rll20'; 11100, ..., ,,..., 114

MyltlltetS...,,C

truck, llodJ
trumpll, 1 - · 1883,~lcll~_,..
4-IDMd. •" allro llrlai,
Fruits &amp;
1112. OIIC 112~ drtn
Vegebiblu

58

5

1:00 (J) e .0 Unaolwtd

roq~rod.

Lydia ~rtmonllr Iii .,._ •n
- otlir to
aPIIIIolnto
II lwo bodr
lluciD oP"rl·
---booodonMol
~~
lnciama. Call J ..lll

1171, ...... 1 -ar Todd

=
i..,......

=-

10
5

+
72 Truckl for Sllll

Instruments

•

'J97U
tJ643
K 10 2

Any!M

_.,wv -·~
__ '

coplor•.$800.114"441-0144.

.10

ALDER

1180

z

EAST
• U632

WEST

PHILLIP

f

-lpm.

1 I 2 lr*m apt In Middleport,
UlllhN Fum, dop roq, no polo,
814-11112-2211.
1-bd"" 1pl In lllddllport, 111
utiiHIN turn, 1250 month, 814MW217.
2 BR opt. lbovo Hotzor Clinic,
Point Ploallnl, WV. :IOW'III4488.
2-Apta Pomoroy, 4-room, 1-bllh
unflrml1htdJ on lllllornut Avo,
IM-H2-5110o
2-IA In lllddloporl. No pilL
n utllhiN, $200 POl mo.

-

WANT.
ADS
·WORK I• •

11-. Huokr Pupa Purobrod.

IASEIIENT
WATERPROOFING
.
2 htllor ...... 5 old. UncondMonor lfltlma guoron- .
:104·'f'lll.l770
ta " - .......... fumlohtd. ·
SUrolua Army Ca.-llougo S tl2 y.., Old lloalotOiod llook Froo ' " ' ' - Call oolllcl ,.
clothing, lnoulatod diCiOn
&amp;M-237-0111. doy or niglot.
e~moun.uga
CDVIrall• 130, Anput&amp;u•· 11Wft 1110.
"-nt Wllorproot10th01 us·Combll 1oo1a. ear- ~ bulta OIIVOI, 4QO.
. 4110tbl, 114-882-1803
htrt clolhtng, old · - - · Bom
01'.:!
AI, 21 N. Frl, Ill, Sun, :GO
PM (olllonclld holn during

Apanment
for Rent

=

FRANK AND ERNEST

ll·ll-11

.... K$

• ... 84

Space for Rent

And ·R-oo ={rod, Call
'ft 2p 1.......,• "
~ "
.m. .--..~ •

lflr-

NORTH

BRIDGE

Brvkln, -

• Q 10 8

Twa 2br Mobile HDrnoa Dopollll

44

lllnlllwa
Old, Pir-

+AQ4

=-· ='9=

Irick Homo In nicl location II
Ootllpolla Farry, T01rj

NeiiN-f.

Moll

a WHkl

tllllr
out. -

l1:/r

24WI52.

In 01 Hoapilal Sod. 2021
Chtlhtm Avenue Glltlpctta,
11t Ut 1131,

...., -

R~t~lotorod

Sciin1uz01,

Counlly Moblia H!&gt;lll• Parle,
24UI87.
2 or 3 BR with otovo, wocd bur- Roulo 33, North of Pomtroy,
£ I R TREE SERVICE. Topping, nor, carpotodil buamont, cRy Lolal..!_Onlota, porta, utoo. Call
Trimming, Tr01 Aomovol, Hodgo ochoclt. $32 mo.. 1100 dop. ·IM-w•·1111't.
T~mmlng. Froo Eollmotlfl 614- 614-245-5111.
4&amp;
Equipment .'
317·7'11r.
3 bedroom unfumlthld hOUit,
for Rent
Gtorp~ Porttblt S.wmlll, don't 500 2nd Sti'MI, New Haven, 304houi:J.": loa• to tho mill juot 675-3468.
Loa
SpiH..
Far Roni. Evant · Fl~ood lor oolo.l14.:1'19-2871.
call
75-1~7.
::3b-r 71n-:E=-v-or-0,.
.,.,- n-, 4':-:':111::-111-:-:N•...,OI"'
Molara, 1~1112.
· Flrowood lor 1011. Will dollvw.
Mill Poulo'o Day Caro Cantor. Hotzor\ $285/mo Ptuo Socurlly
$30 truckload. No coni. 814Solo, 1-bto, chlldcoro. 11-F
t. 614-«Utll, 6!4-448258·18110.
Merchandise
1 a.m. • 11:30 p.m. Ape ~10.
Far Solo: 1 Corono Oil Hiller,
Bolora, aftor achocl .. Drop-lno 3br Sacllonol Homo In City, 1
22 nu, Coli 114-441-11104, Ftm
waloomo. 114 441122•. Nair In· Block From Ohio Rlv01 Pll11 1
ClaN Condition.
lint Toddlor Caro, 1114-148-1221. 814-446-2003, Bo!Woon 3 Ana 5I
Household
6p.m.;
304·743-1356.
Far Silll: 8'x12' Rug. Wuhobll.
Motftor of 0111 Will do bobyalt•
Goods
Uk1Naw,814-141o0611.
ling In my homo II F,..loro Bot- 5 BA houae In downtown GaJ..
lori&gt;'lltnon, not lor from Hannon llpollo, $300 mo. 814-448-0644 or 1130'o Solly couch I choir,
Far Sail: Now tNavor Uood)
School. Elatlltnt ret.renc.t, 448·7802.
$200, 114-8411-:1202
Dooro• Pt.-hung, SID: 32x80,
any houro, 304-llt:l-1037.
For Rant: G1lllpollo Forry Corpot h12 $10 I Upl Sola On $110 uch. S !.argo Toblcco
Will Go HouoaciNnlng, 5 YNro 1er011 from Bhlt School. 1WO All Outokla CofiiOI: h.H I Pr- lox•, $45 Eiah.IM-446Eopa-.814~41 8028 or 814story, 4 BR, LA, DR, kitchen $4.H; K.chan Corpa~ 17;"VInyt 1272, Evonlngo I W-ndl.
with dishwasher I lton1_no $4.H. Solo On All Cotpol In OliN lop kltchan lablo wMh 4
441-G225111vo ""'"""·
WIR Tw Caro 01 Tht Ut Or El- rtfriGIII.tar. 1 blth. Clttlng liM, Stock! lloltohtn Carpata, 114- wlcklr bock chllra, $111. 304window AC unN, 441-11144.
111-1272.
doo1y In Thtlr Homo, Ex· largo
boHbolrd hoot, corplfod.
pwllncod. Caiiii4-2JU142.
Wllhtr, dryer hook-up, am111 Chtrrv dining loblo I I chain, 2
Olorogo bulldlng, largo ylld. yn. old. $3011.114-448-IIH,
Moytog W.ohOI And Dryor Uko
S340Jmo.,
plua
udlhl...
Financral
Good Now, Col Ahlr 8p.m. ~~
AeterMcH and MCWitY dtDOelt
3830.
.
roqulrod. No lnalda palo. Avol~
abto Doc. t 304-175-789 or 8711lllnoftl lllxxum 80001 Elllro
4144.
21
Business
Lint, Ukl Nowt 13011. a14-448HouM on Roulh Line· In ~~~~~:::--:-::=== 3831.
OpponunHy
Chnhlro. 2 or 3 lr, 1 both, total 0000 USED APPIJAHCEI Polblfly _...... '"'" IIOYO
!NOTICE I
lfodrlc. $325 mo. otuo MC. dop.
onllqua, good condhion, $10, oil
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. 614-387~30hftor
I,
Uppw Rtvw Ail. Baa 11ono
tlove wu. bt, Nit 110, IJ4.
rocommondo tho! you do buol1112-1181
""' with poopla you know and Syrocu.,.112 double, 2 bdnn,'no Croll Molal. Cal1814-441-'13111.
LAYNE'S FURNR'UAE
NOT lo 1ond money 11\rough tho pall, $175 mo, pluo utiiHIIa, Ph.
Alia Or Mlol? In Your - ?
moM until you htvo lnvaatlgalod 614-882-5324
Comp1at1 homo fuml'\'ll~. BUJ
ENFORc:iR, Kllla rota I
lht olfOIInG.
Throl Bedroom Ranch Wllh 112 ~~ro~
:~
t!'
~tlo
Ad. In """' Avalllbll
1 fNdlna
11
Ac,. Llwn, New Home, In Eac.lOUARAHTEEiii'
ol;
tont Condition, Socurlly 0opoo11 Froo
.
Blum True VIIUI 11-.11 Wall
And lloloronc:oa Aoqulrod. 304- 11ov1na - 1 Hove Lilt: Picnic Mlin 11,..., ca..e.r, Qt
17M7l't, 304-182-341N.
Toblo, 'Pia~1 ~-And Dryer; Rlfa Or Mica? In Your - ?
5 DroWOI ..... Rototlllor, &amp;14- BUJ ENFORc:iA, Kllla rota I
42 Mobile Homes
oWa-ltm.
.mlco In only I ,loodlna,
QUAIWITEEDI Avalllblo ol:
~I Vending Route Far Solo.
for Rent
PICKENS FURNR'URE
O'Dolt ~•.Y.IIue LurnbOI, 834
Wll Soil All Or Part. Ropoot
No..uaod
Bull-. AboVe Avorogo In· ~ Bldroom trollo&lt;, comptotoly Houaoholcl lumllhlng. 112 mi. Ealt llalri'lhlt, PDIMrDJ, OH
ocmolt--2000.
tumlthtd, wuhe(, &amp; dl')'tr, AC, Jlrl'lcho Ad. Pt. PIMIII'It, WV, .
RATI DR IIICE?
304·773-allll.
coll304-4711-1410.
23 Prolesslonal
In · Your - ? Buy ENFOR·
CEif. Kill Alto And Mlco In
2-IR trollor In country, 1175
RENT 2 OWN
Only 1 FNdlna. GUARANTEED!
monthly plua dopooH, Ullthl11,
&amp;14-448-S151
Services
Avoli*a AI: .Control lupply1 17
,.......,. required, 514-M..2833
Vl"ro Fumlturo
Cou~ 81-: Spring Vfllay
CUotom Butchtrlng, I doyo 1
SOlo I Choir, 111.10 W-· Htrdwart,
JICUOn Plkli
wook. Catlll, Hogo, 0..., 304Rocllnor, $1.47 Wnk, Swivel Odoll True 521
Value LIR, Vlno
812.Z3Q.
Rocklr, $3.13 Wnk.luntc Bod Stroll At Third
Avenue, Qo~
Complato 11.41 W•k, 4 - r llpotlo, Ohio.
3 bedroom mobile homo, 2 ,_.,
ChHI,Suhl,
$3.21 7~
-·
Real Estate
pa, $11.17
WMk,
RaoondHionod wnhtro I
bllho• In oountry on 8 ocrn
lnctudol
lloddtng.Counlry.
Plnl
dryora, -h 1100 and up. Wo
land, ~ e~r garagt, 304-171-3030
Dlnlflo WHh 6 4 Chtln, ..,..lea all mokoo. Tht WNhOI I
arllW431.
I10.M Wook.OPEH: - y Df)'OI Shoppa. IM-4464944.
31 Homes fOr Sale
Mobllo homo . far ronl, HUD lp- Thru Sllurdoy, ...m. Ia lp.m.,
12 Noon. Tlll lp.m. 4 Remodeling: Groan Couch And
ABSOWTELY MUST SELLII praVod. Will accapl oonotruc- Sundoy
f'IOO;
led1pr'Mde,
Reducod To Sal: 2 Story :1br lion worbro. 114-44MIOI or Mlloo Off Routa 7 On AOUII 141, Chllr,
Lampo, Oropn, Curtalna, PlcIn Canlonary. ,
Comer Ld In Chtlhlra, Ohio. 1141411321
turoo; llotot Door, MS. Excolllnl Condition. Flnonclng Mobile homN lor ronl or oolo,
72011.
Avlitobll. - . a n t , 1104' call 114-182-5100
3 Bod...., HouN, 118 Klnoon
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Olnlng A- K•chon, Both,
Canlral Air~ Vrnrl Siding, CarPlied. 2 o;;ar Olrwgo. -Within
W.lklntl Dlallnca OI'Tht Pool,
Golf CO.roo And Clnlc. Go~
llpcllo Clly Scr-1 Dlolrld. 814-

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SCII.t.M-'..ETS ANSWIIIS
Rancid - Prove - Young - Oisn)al - LIVING
A city slicker was on vacation In a small town. He .
was hit by a car. Someone covered him with a ~·~cket
and asked if he were comfonable. He replied,'" .make
a LIVING."

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Rlghtslnu.. that confront
the natloll today: l'lllglon In
the claaaroom, the death
penlllty ancl c:MI rlghte. (0:30)
(I) Putblo Peoplea: Filii
ConiMt How lhl Pueblo
tndans viewed their flret
ancountere wtlh Europeans.

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I would u soon wrlla free, veraa u play temts
with the net down." - Robert Frost.

�•

,....

.

Ohio L~ ~ttery

Fight mars
NBAgame
Wednesday

·Wednesday, Novem~er 13, 1~1

Page-14-The Dally Sentinel

.

PickJ: 067~
Pick 4: 3681

Cards: 5-H, 2-C,
9-D, A·S
Super Lotto:

• 11-18-21·32-35·38

Page4

Kil:ker:946470

Low tonight Ia mid 40s. ·
Friday, ldab In mld.a.. Chan"'
of rlla 40 perceuL

See Store For Details

10 lb. And Up • Frozen · ·

·~ ·

Vol. 42, No.136
Copyrighted 1991

Top Frost *Natural

Athens wants demands met before ratifying plan
. The Athens County Commissroners, apparently united in their
desire to have Athens' County
become a single·councy ooliil waste
dislrict, presented a list of demands
they say must be met before voting .
to ratify the AGIUMV Solid Waste
Dislrict Plan.
The Athens Commissioners presented their list of revisions 10 Gilllia County Commissioner and
AGHJMV Solid Waste District
Chairman George Pope at a meeting of the. waste district's board of
directors in Wellston Wednesday
night.

Limit 1 Per Fal!liiY

Pleue, With ' 10 Additional
Food Purchue (excluding
ltemo prohibited by law)

Great With Top Frost Tater Treats

Banquet Original Fried
Fried Chicken

•
1c en

28 oz.
Box
13 oz. Box
•

Limit l .Box

IWFamUyPleM&lt;
With Addltloolal
Purdiue
(-ludln1 Items
prohibited by law)

Limit 2 Boxes Per Familv Pleaie,

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News StaiT
Work 10 repair dama~e on township roads in Sutton and Letart
Townships will get underway Frida y.
I
Material provided
by the state
will be used according to County
Engineer Philip RobertS who made
the announcement during the reguJar meeting of the Meigs County
Commissioners Wednesday.
Damage to the roads occurred
last spring and summer, when the
Yellowbush Bridge on State Route
338 was closed for repairs. Many
residents in the area opted for
" shortcuts" along township and
county roads rather than take the
longer state-set delOur along State
Routes 124 and 338.
As a result, several roads - espedally Manuel Road and Mile Hill
Road, and a portion pf Bashan
Road - suffered damage because of
increased traffic.
Roberts and Project Engineer
Don Johnson videolaped the roads
several times while the bridge was
closed, to record the worsening
road conditions. When the bridge

;

•

ICe
Regular Or Lite

Del Monte Fruit Cocktail Or
Limit 2 Cans

PorFomllyl'loue
With Addltk&gt;llol

16 oz.

Pardwe
(erdudlnl .....
poohlblted by law)

Can
·
,
, ,
Regular
Or
Lite
Varieties
·
·

Limit 2 Per Family Pleue,
with Addltloaal Pu,h...
(excludln1 ltema prohibited by law)

Betty Crocker SuperMoist
Box

Sib. Bag

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - It
will be months before investigators
determine what caused a twinengine plane to crash in a cornfield,
killing five Michigan men aboard.·
National Transportation Safety
Board spokesman Mike Benson in
Washington said Wednesday that a
preliminary investigation suggests
lhat the plane's right engine lost
power before it crashed on the
city's east side Tuesday night
Investigators examined wreckage of the 1973 Cessna 340 that
crash ed minutes after the pilot

•

Gold Medal All Purpose

our
Superlon

Regular Or Ute · Preprlttd 2.29

Umlt I Bottle

- . . l'l!r F. .lly,

Wllh~

(-hldl··Purdwe

One lb.
Pkg.

'

pn&gt;bllll&lt;d "" low)

Ruggles

~~51Lig~~~~~
C~ol

Variety

' Vi Gal.
Ctn.

ton-basid Chenoweth Construction
Co. and piloted by company President Robert Chenoweth, 50.
Franklin County sheriff's
spokesman Rick Minerd identified
the other victims as Henry Davis,
50, and John Zanotti, 30, both of
Flint; Mark Bryan, 31, of Davison,
Mich., and Donald Muncy , 51, of
Burton, Mich.
Davis was a pastor at Battle
Creek Seventh Day Baptist Church.
Prudy Adam, a friend of 1he
Chenoweth family, said Zanotti,
Bryan and Muncy were clients of
Chenoweth Construction.
Benson said a fmal repon on the
investigation could take at least
nine months, but authorities sus·
pect more than engine trouble in
the crash.
"Normally speaking, just the
A Meigs Councy man was found innocent of battery following a
loss
of an engine itself shouldn't •
jury trial last week in Mason County,
cause
a crash," said Chuck
Jimmy W. Deem, Jr., 20, of Cannel Road, Racine, was found npt
Leonard,
a NTSB investigator.
guilty following an indictmenl for battery by 'the.September term of
"They're
designed
to. be able to be
grand jury.
·
floWn
on
one
engine.
So we don't
Deem was originally charged with malicious wounding follow·
lcnow what else happened.
ing a fight with ChrislOpher Von Miller of New Haven on May 15.
"There could have been other
The incident allegedly occurred in New Haven.
problems
that made it worse."
According 10 James Casey, court appointed attorney for Deem,
Dean
Humphrey,
spokesman for
the slate called six witnesses in.the trial. Deem testified on his own
the
manufacturer
Cessna
Aircraft
behalf before the ruling was handed down.
Co., said piloiS are trained to operate a plane with one engine, including on approach to a runway.
•'Even on ralceoff they're able to
operate
on one engine," he said
One person was injured and two vehicles were moderately dam from
his
offiCC in Wichila, Kan.
aged in an accident 'lln East Main Street, Pomeroy, Wednesday
Ms.
Adam
said the plane had
afternoon.
engine
problems
in South Carolina.
Geraldine Walls of Malta, Ill., a passenger in a van driv~n by
After a mechanic worked 011 it, the
Gordon R. Walls, was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospi.tal
five began their return flight 10
for treatmenl of minor injiD1eS by the Pomeroy unit of the Mergs
· Michigan, sbe said.
Councy Emergency ~edical Service. She was released after treat. About six miles from Port
ment
.
Columbus, the pilot notified the
According 10 Pomeroy Police who invesligaled the accrdent,
airport lhat !here ~as a problem
Cynthia R. Neutzling, Syracuse, driving a 1990 GMC ttuclc, ~truck
with thnight engine, said Mort
the rear of the 1987 Dodge Caravan when Walls stopped m a line of
Edelstein,
a Federal Aviation
traffic. There was moderate rear end damage to the Walls' van, and
moderate front end damage to Neutzling's truck. Neutzling ltas .,. Administration spokesman in
cited for failure 10 stop within assured clear distance. The accident
Chicago.
occurred at4:04 p.m.
Edelstein said the engine would
be examined to determine what
caused the problem .
The businessmen reportedly
Two counts of' rape have been fried against Thomas E. Sanford,
went to Charleston to view a build38 of Middleport, iri connection with a weekend incident in which
. ing one of them wanted Chenoweth
two ttenaged girls were alleKedly raped.
.
.
to duplicate in Michigan, The
Sanford was charged earfier Ibis week with aggravated burglary,
Columbus Dispatch reported today.
and the rape charges were filed late on Tuesday,
.
Muncy, operator of a recreational
The alleged incident tonic place early on Sunday morning at a
vehicle n:son outside Flinl, appar·
Srate'street residence in Pomeroy, and Sanford was ralcen into ensently hitched a rid e with
Continued ou page 3
\
Chenoweth .

Woman hurt in accident

24 oz. Bt.l.

Your

reponed having engine problems as
it approached .Port Columbus International Airport. II crashed and
burst inlO flames at about 8:33 p.m.
Tuesday about two miles east of
the airport.
All five people aboard died. It
was the first fatal air crash al or
near the airport since 1984, officials said.
The flight had originated in
Charleston, S.C., and was en route
to Flint, Mich., with a stopover in
Columbus, Bens011 said.
The plane was owned by Fen·

Meigs man found innocent

Margarine

Hot Dogs

re-opened this fall; the Ohio was approved for tlfe ·highway
Department of Transportation department yesterday. The uansfer
pledged to provide limestone and was broken down as follows:
other ma1enals for application by $12,000 from Road Labor to Parts
township .and councy crews.
and Supplies; $10,000 from Loans
According to County
Gara~e
Equipment to Road Equipment;
Superintendent Ted Warner, t e $2;000 from Shop Labor to PERS;
county wiU assist lownship crews and $2,000 from Bridge Labor 10
in the repair of their roads. The PERS.
'
state has provided several tons of
The commissioners reviewed a
limes10ne, as well as asphalt mate- le~ter from Klais and Company, the
rials for cold mix repairs. In addi- agency which oversees the countion, Mile Hill Road will receive ty's self-insurance health plan.
hot mix treatment (it had been hot Upon the recommendation of the
mixed through Community Devel- company, the board agreed to
opment Block Grant funds a year change the anniversary date on the
prior 10 the. closing) using state- plan's prescrivtion card 10 coincide
provided asphalt .
·
with the anmversary date on the
Warner stated that while lime- medical insurance plan.
stone will be applied to roads this
A hearing on a request for a
week, the cleparunent does not plan brine permit was set for November
to perform any asphalt paving until 20 at I p.m. The request was subspring, due to cold and wet weath· mitted to the board by R: Gene
er.
Brasel Cif Cheshire, and requests
County crews are currently in the brine usage for dust and ice
the process of cutting brush on conttol.
l
· Snowball Hill in Syracuse, and
Present, in addition 10 Engineer
mowing on Morning Star and For- Roberts and Superintendent Warnest Run Roads.
er, were Commissioners Manni.ng
An interdeparunenral transfer of K. Roush and David Koblentz and
funds in the amount of $26,000 Clerk Mary Hobstetter.

--Local briefs-__,

Lbnlt 1 Per Family Pleue,

With Additional Pu"'hue
(extludlnl hema prohibited by law)

Blue Bonnet

Jumbo

Mrs. Butterworth's
Syrup·

Our f1neel Quilty
Low In Fat • Low In Calorlea

. T~.r~eY ..

' ,.

Breast

99

Monday 7 a.m. thru
Saturday Mldnlte
Sunday 7 a.m.
'til 10 p.m; .

lncUan

White or Pink

lb.

Prices Good 4 Days
November 1991
Wednesday, November 13 thru
Saturd~y, November 16, 1991

I

Bear Minimum Prices
'

'

Items and Prices Effective only at:

GALLIPOLIS BIG'BEAR SIDRE

continue 10 work together in our
effons to find .markets for recyclables, and consult on all issues
involving solid waste management"
The leuer was signed by Athens
Commissioners Roxanne Groff,
Dean R. Kahler and Tommy
Adkins.
A motion was then made to vote
on giving Athens Conoly a letter of
suppon concemin$1heir withdrawal from the distnct. The motion
was seconded and then voted do\vn
11·3 with the. only votes in favor
coming from the Athens County

Crash victims identified

•
IX

18.25 oz.

At the.same meeting, in a letter
to Pope, the Athens County Commissioners also ~liested support
from the board of directors to withdraw from the six-county. solid
waste districL
The letter slated:.
"The Board of Athens Coumy
Commissioners respectfully
requests the suppon of the Board of
DireclOrs 10 with'draw from the six·
county solid waste dislricL
"We feel it is in the best interest
of our solid waste management
programs to become a single-county district. We hope that we will

Repair work will begin on
Sutton, Letart Twp. roads Friday.

With Additional Purchase (exciudlnsltemo
prohibited by law)
·

Kellogg's

2 SocUono, 14 Pogea 25 cento

AMultimedia Inc. Newtpll*

.

•No Additives Or
Preservatives

e

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, November 14, 1991

.'

.

Sanford charged with rape

representatives.
Districl has helped 10 understand
At the same meeting, the Athens the need for continlled dedication
County Commissioners presented a to helping manage our solid waste
list of demands that must be agreed with the key component in reducupon before they ~ote to ratify the lion of the waste slream. It is with
solid waste plan.
Ibis understanding and responsible
The letter containing · the -~ leadership from our communilies
demands, or revisions, started by that we; the Athens County Comsaying, "Athens councy has demon- missioners, wish to submit the folstrated iiS commitment to the man· lowing revision for the AGHJMV
agement of solid waste over the Solid Waste Dislrict Plan. ·
past several years with financial
Tbe revisions
subsidy as weD as land for a recy·
I. Section III. All language
cling center and continued suppon referring to mandatory fees be
for new and existing programs.
changed to ~·shall" or an increase in
"Working with the Solid Waste tip fees established prior to ratifica-

MUSEUM OPEN HOUSE .' The Meigs
County Pioneer and Historial Society will host
its annual Christmas open bouse on Dec. 8 from
110 5 p,m. at !be Meigs County Museum on Butternut Avenue. Throughout ,tbe day exhibitors

tion of plan or a frailchised methpd .
of solid waste pickup to fund ser- ,,
vice be developed to reflect the
commitment from the counties to
provide additional revenue for the
programs outlined in the Plan;
II. Appendix U. All references
to the positions hired by the District OffiCe be eliminated from the
Plan until after implementation.
n.is will allow the Board of Directors to review the budget and tlit
positions to determine their need
within the Plan. Exceptions
Administrative Assistanl and Edu•
Continued on page 3
~~------~----~ :

will be demoostratinc various crans and other
holiday ideas. Pictured are two or the demon· •
strators, Laurie Reed, left, with arrangements or
dried nowers, and Kathy Reed, with counter
cross-stitched items.
'

Lawyer, Justice Douglas I(J
confer on possible charges
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) City AtlOmey Ron O'Brien said he
wiU aslc Ohio Supreme Coun Associate Justice Andrew Douglas if he
waniS 10 file charges as a result of
rib fractures suffered in a scuffle
with a court colleague.
O'Brien was asked about
charges Wednesday after the State
Highway Pattol released the find·
ings of its investigation into the
encounter between Douglas and
fellow Associate Justice Craig
Wright in a coun offiee on Nov. 5.
The report contams eyewllness

accounls ·that generally confirm
earlier reports of lhe fight that
apparently stemmed from a long·
running feud.
O' Brien said he will meet wiih
Douglas later this week "to see
how he wants to deal with this."
Douglas could not be reached
forcommenL
Wright said he had seen the
rcpon and did not dispute it.
"But I've been telling anyone
who will listen, including Andy,
that I regret Ibis terrible incidem
and hope that we all can get on.

our

with
jobs...
Asked if that meant he apologized to Douglas, he said, "Yes. I
put it in writing." He said he had
not received a respon se but lhat
' "we really haven 't had a chance
to talk to each other."
·
Douglas, 59, last week released
a medical report showing he suffered fractures of lwo ribs in the
encounter with the taller and heavier Wright, 62, in the outer office
of Associate Justice Alice Resnick
on Nov. 5.
·

Merchants discuss holiday projects
Plans for the annual Christmas
Open House, 10 be held Sunday,
Dec. I, from noon 10 5 p.m., were
discussed at Wednesday's regular
meeting of the Pomeroy Merchants
Association.
'A highlight of the open house
will be the Christmas Parade at 2
p.m. Parade chairman is Vicki Ferrell and the theme is "Home For
The Holidays." Line-up will be at I
p.m. behind the old junior high
school. The parade will progress
down Main Street to Butternut
Avenue and to the Pomeroy Fire
Department where it will disband.
Deadline for entry in the parade is
Nov. 25 and further information
may be obtained by calling Mrs.
Ferrell at ButlOns and Bows, 9925177. Sanla Claus will be a special
guest and at the conclusion of the
parade will be in the larger minipark 011 Court Slreet for the children.
In addition to extended hours on
Dec. 1 the association voted to
extend hours on following Sundays
until Christmas from noon to 5
p.m.·and during the week of ~·
16 participating businesses w1ll
remain open until 8 p.m. Some of
the businesses will observe extended hours until 8 p.m. beginning

c

Dec. 2.
In other mauers, Susan lafk,
president, read a t~anlc· you note
received from the Brg Bend Stem·
wheel Association for the " wei·
come bags" ·the Merchants pre·

pared for lhe sternwheelers that
participated in that festival.
The next meeting will be held
Dec. II at 8:30 a. m., rather than
noon , in the conference room at
Banlc One.

Glenn leads De Wine in new poll
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- A poU that shows U.S. Sen. John
Glenn D·Obio, favored by 39 percentage points over potential
Republican challenger Lt. Gov. Michael DeWine comes as no
surprise, a Glenn spokesman said.
Dale Rutland, communications director for Glenn, said
results or the survey released Wednesday by Paul Werth Associates Inc. or Columbus were similar to results or the Ohio Poll at
the University or Cincinnati.
·
"They've done tbree now tbis year. They've consistently
shown Glenn beating any Republican challenger by a minimum
or lS poiniS," Rutland said.
·
"ltblnk·tbese oumbers are verjl consistent with wbat we!ve
seen in otber independent polls," be said.
DeWine said the polls hold ao si~illcance for him.
" I've never put a lot of faitb m polls, particularly a poll
that's taken over a year before !be election. We've seen just as
recently as tbe Senate race in Pennsylvania bow thiaes can ·
change v~ry quickly and bow inaccurate (IOUs tan be,"·DeWine
said.
.
DeWine said be bad not decided wbetber to enter the ract,
and had set no elate for doiog so.
.
Tbe Werth Poll was based on telephone interviews 'Vitb 500
randomly selected Obloans trom Sept. 15 to Oct. 10. It bad a
mar.,!~ of enor of plus or mlous four percentage points.

l,

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  </collection>
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    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="35242">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="35241">
              <text>November 13, 1991</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1958">
      <name>hoback</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="79">
      <name>miller</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1203">
      <name>sisson</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
