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                  <text>Monday, November 18, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pag"e--10-The Dally Sentinel

Just being friends isn't always easy

TRIPLE THREAT • Judy Smith of Lucaster, mother of lS·montb·old triplets, from left,
Brooke, Brandon, and Benjamin, feeds brook a
cookie during the Ohio State University Hospi·

tats Baby AlumQi Reunion Sunday. Tbe annual
party Is given to babies who spent weeks, some
even months, in the hospitals Neonatal Intensive
Care Unit in 19!10. The triplets were bom three
weeks premature. (AP)

Ohio State Hospitals sponsor
reunion of premature children

J)_ear Ann Laaders: "Let's be · DEAR NJ.: Why do you feCI
friends' is a phlasc lhat men and "bilrt 8ild betrayed'? Judd inade no
women have used fllr ages when commitment, nor did he try to
!hey break up. I have been UJ~cere- deceive you.
moniously dumped by sevCral guys,
Wbe.n a man tells a woman he
but wilh "Judd" it was dilferenL He "lhinks of her often," this doesn't
suggested we remain .friend's. It mean his thoughts are erotic. I'm
sounded sood.
afraid wishfullhinking has.distorted
We ex~gedChrisanas gifts and your judgmenL Get real, honey.
he dropped by occasionally. Judd
Dear Ann Landers: In a recent
was always polite and thc;rc was no column,- a woman as~-what she
sex involved. We both dated others, sholild do if a man approached her
but I always believed deep down that on !he slreet when she was alone
someday lhings would get serious.
at aigbt. Your authorities said she
We lost track of one another . should assume an air of assertive·
after a while. Last .week friends ness .and not appear frightened.
saw Judd with an llllnlelive young Here's a better suggestion: Do the
woman. I telephoned and left a unexpected.
messBF wishing him luck. He ca1IOO
I have two examples. A woman
.me baclc: and we had a nice Wk. He stopped at a traffic light. When the
didn't mention the woman but he light changed to green, a man
did say that be thinks about me stepped off the curb, opened the door
often.
on the passenger side, jumped in and .
Last night I called him just 10 said, "Drive on!" The woman replied
say hello. In the oourse of the calmly, "Not until you get out." The
conversation he mentioned casually man shouted, "I told you to drive
that he had been living with the on!" The woman then reached (or
woman for eight months. This is the ignition key, tossed it out the
the man who "thinks of me often," window and Said, "This car is not
comes to my house and gives me going any furlher." The man looked
Christmas gifts, and he's now stunned, got out of the car and
telling me this! It seems he met her walked away.
at a singles dance and they are very
The second example: A young
serious about each other. I feel hun woman who worked as a bank teller
and bettayed.
greeted her next client cheerfully.
My advice to all women is lhis: The well-dressed man carrying a
When it's over, it's over. You can't briefcasepushedapaperbagthrough
be friends with someone you tlact a the opening of her window and
deep relationship with. Chop it off. handed her a note saying, "Fill this
Totally.! felt a lot better when guys bag with money. I have a gun." Ibe
just dumped me. ·• LESSON woman shoved the "Closed" sign in
LEARNED IN Nj.
'

Buffalo
wallops
Miami

Ann
Landers

AN'N LANDERS

11mM8yndlllllle
&lt;Ze.I&amp;GI'I 8J11dle&amp;te.''

in Willoughby, after officers
responded to a call about a prowler.
Police said Patterson initially said
he was dropping off a Mother's
Day gift but later said he committed numerous burglaries in the area.
If a jury determines Patterson
was not guilty by reason of insani·
ty, another hearing will be held to
determine whether he should be
commiued 10 a slate mental institution.
If convicted on the more serious
charges of aggravated burglary,
Patterson faces a possible 10 to 25
years in prison on each count.

---Names in the news--RADNOJ, Pa. (AP) - We epithet for Asians and warns: "Pay
already kno~ Madonna is addicted respect 10 the black fl!Sl, or we'll
10 lhe spotlight: Now we hear she bum down your store, right down
finds TV habit-forming.
to a crisp."
In "No Vaseline," Ice Cube
Madonna tells of whai happened
recently when she was in tells members of his former rap
·Evansville, Ind., 10 shoot a movie. grour., N.W.A., to "get rid of that
She found herself without full devi , real simple, put a bullet in
cable service - and feeling "very his temple, 'cause you can't be a
disconnected," and watching lots · nigger for life crew with a white
Jew telling you what 10 do."
of regular television.
The reference is apparently to
"I probably could get very
addicted to watching television," Jerry Heller, the manager of
the entertainer says in the latest . N.W.A, Billboard said.
Rabbi Abraham Copper of the
issue of TV Guide. "I mean, it
really is mesmerizing, you know?" Simon Wiesenthal Cen1er for HoloBut that doesn't include music caust studies has called the album
"nothing less than a cultural Molovideos;
"Videos are dull. Everybody's tov cocktail."
copying each other," she said. She
likes Prince's music, but his videos
WOODLAND, Calif. (AP) are "silly and cheap and below his The record company and distributor for the lip-syncing duo Milli
ability."
Vanilli have agreed to pay Yolo
LOS ANGELES (AP) -An County $100,000 to settle false·
editorial in today's Billboard criti- advenising allegations, officials
cizes ra~ Ice Cube's hot-selling say.
albu• '-Death Certificate"- as
Deputy -Dislrict Attorney Mark
Jones said Arista Records and Berracist
,
.
The weekly trade magwne swd telsmann Music GrouP, also have
Ice CUbe's "unabashed espousal of agreed to pay up to $100,000 to the
violence against Koreans, Jews and state's.Consumer Protection Prose·
other whites crosses the line that cution Fund.
divides an from the advocacy of

The settlement of Yolo Coun·
ty's lawsuit was announced Friday.
Milli Vanilli' s Rob Pilatus and
Fab Morvan were stril'ped or a
1990 Grammy after adnutting they
did no singing on their album ·'Girl
You Know It's True."
· Calls lO the two companies went
unanswered on Sunday.
Jones sai~ Morvan and Pilatus
have not responded to efforts to
negotiate a settlement of the law·
suit.
A settlement reached earlier in
Illinois offered purchasers of Milli
VaniUi recordings rebates of up to
~3.

front of the would-be robber and
said, "You11 have to go to the next
window. This is my coffee break."
She then walked.away. The robber,
stunned by her response, left the
bank empty-handed.
So, my advice is, when in danger,
do ·the unexpected. ·• W.T.,
BRADENTON, FLA.
DEAR W,T.: Sorry, I don't think
much of your suggestions. There are
roo many gun-carrying nuts out there
who would just as soon shoot you
as look at you.
The safest approach when cornered by a t)lief, mugger or rapist is
10 look for ways to escape.
What can you give the person wlw
has everything? Ann Landers'
booldet, ''Gem.r," is idea/for a nightstand or coffee table. "Gem.r" is a
col/ecridn of Ann Landers' most
requested poem.r and essays. Send a
self-addressed, long, business-size
envelope and a check or money
order for $4.85 (this includes
postage and handling) to: Gems,
c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562,
Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (In
Canada, send $5.87.)

..

'
Vol. 42; No. 139
Copyrlghled 1991

BrBRIAN J.
Sentmel News Starr
Pomeroy Village Council will
seek a grant from the Slate of Ohio
to assist in a viUage clean up .project That decision was made when
lhe council met in regular session
Monday night.
The Litter Control grant was
introduced to the 'board several
months ago by Village Administta·
. tor John Anderson, and council
passed a resolution authorizing
Anderson to apply for the funds.
The filing deadline for the applica-

All-white men's club draws criticism

INSURANCE
111 Second St., Pomero/
YOUR INDEPlNDIN
·aGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

crime.''

"ll's extremely rare" for the
magazine riot to defend lyrics as a
free speech right, Billboard
spoketman Lloyd P. Trufelman
said Sunday in New York.
Cai1J to Ice Cube's recocd com·
pany, Priority Records in Los
Angeles, went unanswered Sunday.
Howe¥er, the rapper recently told
BiUbolrd that hiS lyrics do not refer
to "all Koreans, all whites, all

'

."

· - Billboard noted that til&lt;&gt; .-.r.g
"Black Korea" uses an obscene

JOHN WADE, M.D., INC.
•EQ, NOSE &amp;THROAT •ILLERIY
•HEIIIIIG AIDS • HEAD &amp; NECK SURGERY
C1tt Fer 1e•r
&amp;
SUITE 112 VALLEY DRIVE, PT. PLEASANT

Yessiree. Run an ad on tv and they'll know you existalright ,
You're the one that alw.lr.; interrupts their !avorite show.The · .~ ,, J
one they zap and curse and cry, at aD cosrs, to avoid.Now ~ ,;: ,,. •' · •'"
that you'Ve got their awareness, rry to make asale.We ·' ••·
''
. wish.you.!herest ofluck. 'Ca1 1se you\oejust paid an. .... .""'"''
awful lot of money to talk to people who don't want to
Too OOd }OO're nor in n~per. Things sure
are different there. in fMVey after survey, people say
they rely on newspaper to decide where to shop
and what to buy.Not tv. Not radio.Good old newspape
It's the place they IWTI when they want to buy.And buy
they do. Furniture, appliances, caJS, nips and inveo;nnen
advice. Slraight from uied and uue, f:dS'/ to prod.uce, ·eamomi&lt;:ar
new.;paperads. Kind of makes you wonder why you're not running
more often.After all, what you lose in awareness, you11 more thari make up for in Sales.
'. ,~

I
&lt;
BILL OF RIGHTS
:Rio Grande forum will focus
on First Amendment issues
Almost 200 years ago, on Myers, pastor, St. Louis Catholic
December 15, 1791, the Virginia Church; Angela Price, editor of Rio
legislature approved a group of Grande's student newspaper; Tim
amendments to the United States Scarberry of Hannan Trace High
Constitution. Those first ten School; Barbara Summers of the
amendments, commonly called the Wellston Telegram; Dr. Ivan Tribe,
Bill of Rights, have been inlerpret· professor of history of Rio Grande;
: ed in many ways over the past two and Pal Whitehead, assistant pub. centuries, but still form the back· lisher, Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
bone of the freedoms that Ameri. The panel discussion, which is
cans cherish.
r
open to the public, is sponsored by ·
The impact of the First Amend- · Rio Grande's Students In Free
men1,·with its guarantee~ of free- · Enterprise(S~).£!l~ter.
dom of speech, p~s. rehgiOP and
"The freeaom ,of ass~lllbly,
assembly, will be the focus of a press, religion and speech will be
Thursday, Nov. 21 forum at the addressed in what promise~ to !Je
University of Rio Grande.
an exc111ng and controversial diS·
The forum, to be held in the cussion which will include audiauditorium of Wood Hall at7 p.m... ence participation," said_ Rio
will bring together a panel of 12 Grande's SIFE chapter pres1den1,
residents who deal personally Gregg Hargett
and profession~lly with the impliPeople i~teres~ed in hearin~ a
cations of the FJrst Amendment.
varrcty of v1ewpornts on the F1rs1
Panel members include Joseph Amendment and those who have
L. Cain, Gallipolis Munici~al Court waited fo~ a~ opport_un!tY to
judge; Sara Davrs, coordinator of express thcrr vrews arc mv1ted to
multi-ethnic affairs at Rio Grande; auend, he said.
Stuart Grimes of Ohio Young
"The First Amendment, with its
Americans for Freedom; the Rev. fundamental guarantees, represents
Joseph Hefner, pastor of·Grace a complex social and political
United Methodist Churcti; John mechanis~," said panel !"&lt;X!erntor
Lester of Gallia Academy•Hrgh larry Ewmg, Rro Grande s director
School; attorney lloyd Moore , of university relations. "At its .co~e
Ironton; Monsignor William R. is a group of nghts assured to mdi-

DAMASCUS , Syria (AP) Former hostage Terry Waite went
home to England today, and
Thomas Sutherland had a long·
awaited reunion with his family at
a U.S. military hospital in Germany.
Waite, who was taken captive in
Lebanon in 1987 while trying to
negotiate freedom for U.S.
hoslage~. reiterated on arrival in
Britain that his captors had assured
him the three remaining American
hostages would be freed this
month.
He ·called the . holding of
hostages "wrong," saying: "It is
Self-defeating, and those who do it
fall well below civilized standards
of behavior."
Meeting with reporters at lyne·
ham air base west of London,
Waite spoke·Of shelling and deaths
in the lebanese civil war, adding,
".We know that the people of
lebanon have suffered greatly."

'

~"

The Daily Sentine_l

vidual memberS of society.
"This set of rights includes the
right to form and hold beliefs and
opinions on any subject, and to
communicate ideas, opinions and
information through any medium,"
he said.
"At the same time. the individu·
al rights guaranteed by the Bill of
Rights must be reconciled with
other individual and social inter·
ests," Ewing added. "It is this pro·
C&lt;!SS of reconciliation that has g1ven
rise to mo~l of die controversial
issues surrounding the First
Amendment. Those controversies
are what we hope to focus on during the panel discussion."
This year's 200tb anniversary of
the Bill of Rights represents one of
the Rio Grande SIFE chapter's
major projects. explained SIFE
Vice President Becky Winebren·
n~r.

"In addition to this forum, we
plan two more similar events in
1992," said the chapter's vice pres·
ident for communications , Ruchi
Sharma. "Currently, more than
2,000 elementary and high school
students are studying the Bill of
RighiS and the Constitution using
materials we have distribuled."

Three remaining captors to be
released, former.hostages say

"&gt;
/
'•

•

0

A Multimedia inc. Newspaper

teer Firefighter Dependence Fund
Election Board were appointed by
council last night. Joe Struble and
Bryan Shank were appointed to
represent the fire department and
John William Blaettnar and
Thomas Werry were named on
behalf of Village Council. Btll
Young volunteered 10 serve as lhe
member appointed , by~the other
four members; and Brenda Morris
will serve as the board's chainnan.
Pomeroy Police Chief Gerald
Rought presented council with an
estimated cost analysis for the pur·
chase of new radio equipment for

the police department. The estimate, from lloyd's Electronics.
. was for Motorola hand-held radios
and related equipment If all village
departments are to be equipped
with the new radios, lloyd's estimates the cost at $13,483, and if
· ·the police dcpanment alone is 10 be
equipped, the cost is expected to be
. $8,215. .-- ~
· ·
No action was IAken on the esti·
mate, as any new radio purchase
would have 10 be made from 1992
appropriations.
Council also:
- Discussed final 31Tangements

R S A R

ever
ene

.,

'

tion is December 31, and the apPii· Transportation to maintain pave·
cation does not request a specrfic ment marlcings and conduct snow
dollar amount.
·
and ice control within the village
Council had earlier discussed limits.
the possibility of funding its spring
Council authorized Anderson to
clean-up activities with any .funds oversee the installation of handi·
received, although the funds were capped-accessible parking spaces
not eannarked for any speci,fic pro- in the village's business district,
ject in Monday's resolution.
and the locations of those spaces
Council also had the third and were discussed among council
final reading granting Christmas members.~Therewill be one· such
bonuses to full·time village designated space on each of the
employees, and the final reading three blocks within Pomeroy's
was conducted on a resoluuon downtown shopping dislricL
authorizing the Ohio De(llll1111ent of
Members of Pomeroy's Volun·

area

-

1 Section, 10 Pages 25 cento

Pomeroy-.Middleport, Ohio, TUesday, Nove"!ber 19, 1991

Pomeroy seeks grant to help clean up litter

.

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

Low tonight In 60s.
Wednesday, blgh In mld-605.
Chance ol rain 80 pen:ent.

PageS

BVD.bandit goes on trial; faces 47 courits
count of possession of criminal
tools.
Pallerson, a former factory
worker, has been held on a
$100,000 bond and is undergoing
psy~hiatric ueatmenl at MetroHealth Medical Center in Cleveland.
Patterson pleaded not guilty by
reason of insanity in the spree of
break-ins, burglaries and sex
crimes that occurred in WiUough·
by, Mentor, Eastlake and Willow·
ick from June 1990 to May 1991.
Patterson was 31Tesled May 15

Pick 3: 290
.Pick 4: 6811
Cards: 9-H, 5-C,
6-D, 4-S

"IH1, Loe Aqela

mother, linda Van Fossen.
up with health problems but ISBY CINDY BENEDICTO
•
"He was in the intensive care month-old lripleiS Brooke, Brandon
Associated !'ress Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A unit for 9 months and three days," and Benjamin Smith appear to be . DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - Some ed a membership offer because he rnp. I really believe most members
here have .no bigotry in them, none
an exception.
fanner members lhink an all-white didn't think it was sincere.
doctor at the Ohio Slale University •· she said.
"They
asked
me
to
join
as
a
.
whatsoever. This is no elitist
"They
were
under
intensive
...
,BJ,
now
a
sixth-grader
at
lau·
men's
club
should
open
iiS
doors
to
Hospitals called it an unusual alumtoken
and
I'm
not
a
token,"
said
·
group."
care
for
two
to
six
weeks
but
they
·
relville
Elementary
School,
suf·
blacks,
a
newspaper
reponed.
ni club. The club began in 1931 when
There has never been a black Albritton. "I detested that. You
Every year for the past 10 years, fered from liver cancer when he were off heart monitors after six
couldn't
pay
me
to
be
a
member
.
•
six
fanner athletes met for lunch,
former patients of the hospital's was 2. He had a surgery and under· monlhs," said their mother, Judy member of 60-year-old Agonis
now.
I
think
it's
baloney
when
they
1
decided
to expand and began invit·
Club, which has 130 members, the
Neonatal Intensive Care Unit for went chemotherapy for one year. Smith, 34, of Lancaster.
ing friends who were c~llege ath·
The triplets were born three Dayton Daily News reported Sun· say membership is open."
premature babies, gaiher for a Although the boy is active and
There
is
no
record
of
a
black
letes.
The all-white membership
weeks
early.
Mrs.
Smith
said
they
day.
reunion.
appears healthy, Mrs. Van Fossen
being
denied
membership,
the
has
become
an issue in recent
don't
have
any
medical
problems
at
Among
members,
all
of
whom
About 90 children, ranging from said he still has lung problems.
newspaper
said.
The
only
formal
years.
are
male,
are
prominent
business,
present.
1·15 years old, attended the
Dr. Steven Gabbe, chairman of
requirement for membership is an
"Sure, they say membership is
Gabbe said there are manv fac. political and sports leaders.
reunion on Sunday,.
the hospital's Department of
interest
in
sports.
open,
but why then haven't there
A,! though black coaches and ath"It's a miracle to see these Obstetrics and Medico logy, said tors that cause premature birth.
Club members are sensitive to been any blacks in the club's histo"Women wilh diabetes, high letes address the club's weekly
kids," said Dr. leandro Cordero, many premature children had to be
ry?" said Milt Kantor, a 25-year
who oversees NICU operations.
delivered early because they or blood pressure or cardiovascular meetings, only a few blacks have the criticism.
"I really don'tthink there' s member who resigned over the
disease could have premature labor. been asked to join over the years,
Many of the children were born thei.i mothers had health problems.
anything
10 hide here" said Barry
issue three years ago. "It's the
Those
who
have
twins
or
triplets
the
newspaper
said.
weighing less than 5 pounds and up
Susan Cottrell, 27, of
·
also
run
the
risk,
and
cocaine
use
is
cu,.;ent
member
1990s. How can you still have a
.
Baumgardner,
a
The
all-while
composition
has
to eight weeks earlier than expect· Portsmouth, said she has toxemia
increasingly
becoming
a
problem,"
prompted
at
least
one
member
to
and
former
club
president.
"I
agree
maJor
organrza~on m thrs CitY that
ed, Cordero said. On average, Her son, Ryan Cottrell, now 19
he
said.
we
are
behind
the
times
and
I'm
precludes
certam people? To me,
quit and has drawn criticism from
babies weigh about6 IQ. 7 pounds at months old, was born 2 1(2 months
Corder_o said three or four of the outsiders.
not proud of it. It's embarrassing that's incredible:"
binh.
.
early.
Dave Albritton, a former state and I'd like to sec things change.
The Assoctated Press . was
"I was born on April28, 1980.1
"The doctors thought he might 34 babies under intensive care this
"But to make it look like some unable to contact club offtcials
was 3 pounds and 19 ounces," BJ be retarded but he's all right," Mrs. year are children of cOCaine-users. representative and 1936 Olympic
The babies and their mothers have track silver medalist. said he reject- kind of intentional bigotry is a bad Sunday for comment
Van Fossen told children, parents Coureu said. ·
and hospilal staffers at a welcome
But she said the boy has had tested positive for presence of the
HIV virus, which can lead to
ceremony.
!rouble learning to how to talk.
acquired
immune deficiency syn.
The 11-year-old laurelville boy
Many premature children grow
drome.
was born two months early, said his

PAINESVILLE, Ohio (AP)The man accused of being the
" BVD bandit" for allegedly snipping the underwear off sleeping
men was expected to go on trial
today.
Van W. Pallerson, 23, of Eastlake, was scheduled to be lried in
Lake County Common Pleas Coilrt.
He faces 47 counts, including .23
counts of aggravated burglar}', 14
counts of grand theft, four counts
of sexual imposition, three counts
of attempted aggravated burglary.
two counts of robbery and one

0 hio Lottery

"

.•.

'

'

M·o

Referring to all those prisoners
held in the Middle East, Waite
added: "We will not rest until all
arc freed and there is justice and

peace.''
The 52-year-old Briton said that
except for .his kidnappers, he. was
kept in isolation for the first four
years of his captivity.
Sutherland, 60, also said the
other American hostages· would
soon be freed.
''In about a couple of weeks, all
of the Americans will be freed,
hopefully," Sutherland said early
today upon arriving at Rhein-Main
Air Force base outside Frankfurt.
"It feels awfully good to be
here," said Sutherland, dean of
agriculture at the American University of Beirut. who was kidnapped
June 9, 1985.
While Sutherland rested in a
U.S. Air Force hospital in Wiesbaden, Germany, after his pre·
dawn arrival from Syria, l)is wife,

for the village's 1992 Community
Development Block Grant Fund
project;
- Discussed needed street repairs
within the village;
- Announced that free parking
for the Christmas .season will commence on Monday , although all
parking meters may not be bagged
until afJer~Th~giving.
Present were Village Adminis·
trator John Anderson, Mayor
Richard Seyler, Clerk Brenda Mor·
ris, and council members Betty
Baronick, Bryan Shank, Bruce
Reed, Bill Young, Thomas Werry
and larry Wehrung.

boos are available from several 1()(81 insurance
agencies. Here, Dottie Hawkins and Indepen·
dent Agent John F. Musser or the Downing·
Childs·Mullen-Musser agency become two of the
first Meigs Countians to participate in the campaign, pictured here tying a ribbon onto Muss·

RED RIBBON CAMPAIGN • Ohio resi·
dents are being asked to tie a re~ r_ibbon o.n their
vehicles to discourage drunk dmmg durmg the
holiday season. The red ribbon campaign, orga·
nized by Mothers Against Drunk Driving
(MADD), is co-sponsored by ~ver~l Ohio cor~o·
rations and insurance orgamzat10ns. The rib·

er's car.

MADD: Tie red ribbon to vehicles
as reminder against drunk driving . ...
Mothers Against Drunk Driving
· k' Oh '
(MADD) IS
·
· as mg 'bb 10ans 1once
h·
agam to ue a red n on 1~ ,err
vehicle as a remmder that .driifking
andldrivmg IS a 6fa2tal3 combmlauon.
ast year
peop e were
k'll d
Oh.'
d
· 1 •
I e on roroa ways m a co
hoi-relate~ crashes and 26,792
we~; IDJure ·
.
_
. Nobody. ever bellrevhesl s~mted
th mg as trag1c as an a co o ·re a e
C!ash .cou~~ ha~pen 10 te~, bu~~
~ vicum ... m ere 10 te
em . a
~~~~ h says T~acy Smlih,
s onorary c au:person or
the 1991 Red .Rlbbon Camprugn..
Smrth, a ~~c~m of a dru~k
er, rs a parap e&amp;~c as a resu l 0 e
I9~~crash. ed 'bbo
·
ymg a r n non your car
or_trkuck dremd mds elvfcryonc 00110
dnn an . nve. w~ can save
even one hfe, then we ve made a

Jean, and a daughter, Kit, flew 10
Frankfun. Another daugthcr, Joan.
was arriving later today.
Mrs. Sutherland and Kit then
went 10 the Wiesbaden hospital for
the reunion with Sutherland. The
family la_ter had a reunion lunch of
baked chicken, mashed polatocs,
j:I'CCn beans, salad: strawberry larts,
rcc tea and coffee.
Waite flew home after staying
the night at a Royal Air Foree hos·
pital in-Cyprus.
In Damascus on Monday, Waite
said one of the kidnappers predict·
ed Americans Alann Steen and
Joseph Cicippio would be released
"we hope within the next five
days." Waite added that the man
told him Terry Anderson, the
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
longest-held hostage, would be
Sentinel News StaiT
freed by the end of November.
Hazel Vanzant Wright, a native
Both Sutherland and Waile said of the langsville community in
they were kept in the same win· Meigs County, recently observed
dowless room with Anderson , 44, her 100111 birthday with a party at
chief Middle East correspondent of the Care Haven N.irsing Home in
The Associated Press, who was Pomt Pleasant, W. Va.
kfdnapped'Ml\ic1116. 198s. ·· • · • '"rne·gaihcri~g ·or famil,Y niem:
. U.N. Secretary-General Javier bers and old fnends provided not
Perez de Cuellar - who has led only a time for celebration of that
recent effons to free the hostages OCC!ISio,n but for refie®ons on ~s.
- said Monday he believes all
Wnght s early years 1n rural Mergs
Western captives may be freed by County.
Chris1mas.
Several of those years were
Six hostages have been freed spent as a school. teach.er in a one·
this year _ the most in any year room school house m Rutland
since the ftrst Westerner was seized Townsh1p.
nine years ago.
Among those attendi~g the pany
Under U.N, mediation, recent was Glada Thomas DaVIs, now 93,
hostage releases have been pan of a a classma!C and later a stud~nt of
broad exchange involving freedom Mrs. Wng~t at t~e Parkmson
for Arab prisoners held by Isreal School whtch sull stands on
and an acoounting of Israeli fight· Parkinson Road.
ers missing in Lebanon.
. From among the photo collec·
But the release of Waite and uon of Mary K. Holter, daughter of
Sutherland was apparently not Mrs. Davis, were dis~layed pic·
accompanied by any Israeli prison· tures of the school burldrng as 11
er releases, and suggested that Mid· looks today, and a class picture of
die Eastern power brokers may be the srudents in !906.
Continued on page 3.
Continued on page 6
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difference," says Smith.
The significance of the cam.
.
paign cont1nues
to mcrease,
according lD MADD State Chair·
person Doreen Wisniewski.
"It's as easy as typing a ribbon
. .
.
onto a viSible location on your
car"Wisniewskiexplains.
The campaign originated six
years ago' with one million ribbons
being distributed nationwide. last
ear 60 million red ribbons were
~istributed with close to five million of thoSe in Ohio alone.
The Ohio Insurance Institute, a
1991 Red Ribbon Campaign spon·
sor is committed to MADD' s
eff~rts in removing drunk drivers
from Ohio roads.
"It is a proven fact · unforlu·
nately, at a cost of too many liv&lt;!Sthat drinking and driving do not
· Although the number of Ohio
mix.

alcohol-related deaths and mJunes
has been dechnrng m recent years,
· one death or mJury
· · conm'buted
JUSL
to this violent crime is too much,"
says Daniel Kelso, president of the
Ohio Insurance Institute.
·
f h
A h
not er maJOr sponsor o . t e
campargn mcludes Amencan
Greetings, which has donated 500
miles of red nbbon. The nbb9n
was cut by two correcuonal facdr·
lies in Ohio.
Ribbons will be, distributed by
Domino's Pizza/ the Ohio Farm
Bureau: state liquot stores and the
State Highway Patrol posts.
Ribbons will also be available
through insurance companies and
ageniS belonging 10 the Ohio lnsurance Institute, Independent Insur· ancc.Agents of Ohio and the Profess10nal Insurance Agents of
Ohio.

Hazel Wright, native of Langsville,
observes lOOth birthday recently

".·;. .··:·. ;.,.., ,... LO"C
. ·a·l..bri· ef:s-.. . . . . . ....., . .

~·~
·

Williams trial underwa\1'J

A jury trial got underway in Meigs County Court Tuesday mom·
ing in the case of Mark Williams.
Williams is charged with misdemeanor assault, alleging that he
assaulted Ron Ash in Pomeroy on August23.
County Coun Judge Patrick H. O'Brien will preside oyer the
case. Williams is represented by Attorney Charles H. Knight, while
. Prosecuto( Steven L. Stocy and his assistant prosecutor, George
McCarthy, are trying the case for the state.

EMS units answer JU calls

Ten calls for assis~ce were answered Monday and early Tuesday by units of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services.
Monday at 10:39 a.m., Racine unit went to Broadway Street.
Flossie Badgley was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 4: 1S p.m .. Pomeroy squad went to Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabiliration Center. Sherwood Mer~th was transported to Vet·
Coatlnued on Jlllf 3

'
OBSERVES lOOTH
• Hazel Vanzant Wright or Langsville,
left, observed her lOOtb birthday on Oct. 27 at the Care Haven
Nursiag Home wbere· she bas resided for tbe past several years.
Among those attending her party was ber Ufe·lon~ friend, class·
mate and pupU, Glad• Thomas Davis, ofDexter, now 93.

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Commentary
:,

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DEVOT!tD TO THE. INTERESTS OF THE )IJEIGS.MASON AREA

eJMU.TIMEOIA, N:.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The Associ ale&lt;! Press, Inland Daily Press Association. and
lhe American Newspaper Publisher Association.

LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. Allleners are subjecttc editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned leners will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

•
'

Riffe Seeking Carville's Help
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - When House Speaker Vern Riffe asks for political
advice, it probably means he senses trouble and believes the person he is
asking has something he needs.
Riffe, D-Wheelersburg , took heart Nov. S when U.S. Sen. Harrison
Wofford, D-Pa., slaved off what many thought would be a cenain defeat
by former Pennsylvania Gov. Dick Thornburg.
But Riffe wasn't that surprised, because he knows Jim Carville, who
ran Wofford's media campaign.
The speaker met with Carville last week.
.
Afterward, he said Carville will have a hand next year in the campaigns of Democrats as they seek to retain control of the House. It could
be an uphiU battle.
Riffe says Carville, who has been called the hottest Democratic media
adviser in the country, is going to send him a proposal.
"He's my man," said Riffe.
Thornburg, former U.S. Attorney General, had led Wofford by more
than 40 points in the polls.
Riffe, at an informal discussion with reporters Friday, said Carville
also managed the media campaigns of Democratic Govs. Robert Casey of
Pennsylvania, Wallace Willcinson of Kentucky and Zell Miller of GeorgiaRiffe said he was planning to hire Carville had he run for governor in
the 1990 election.
He says he doesn 'tthink Carville has ever lost a campaign.
"I don 't want to be left at the post," said Riffe. 'Tve never been left
at the post .before."
Riffe has been in the House since 1959. Since 1975, when he became
speaker, his majority caucus was never serio~ly challenged by Republicans, until last year.
·
•
Gov. George Voinovich 'and Secretary of State Bob Taf~ Republicans
clccted .Iast year, and a GOP senator, compose a 3-2 majority on the slate
Apportionment Board.
The board recently adopted a plan redistricting the 99-member House
and ~iving Republicans~ good chance at winning the majority in the next
year s elections.
Democrats are challenging the redistricting plan in a federal court, saying it violates constitutional guidelines. If they win, they may not need
Carville.

Privately, the language is stronger.
One top diplomat says he is sick- .
ened ·by what he now knows about
Aristide.
In the month · since the Haitian
military ovenhrew Aristide's government, his record has been examined under a microscope. Aristide
has emerged as a reckless populist
· who uSes democracy when it suits
him. Yet, because he was voted
into office, the State Department
and the Organization of American
Slates are obliged to support his
struggle.
-·
Aristide incites mob violence.
He made entrees to Cuba's Fidel
Castro and Libya's Moiunmar Gadhafi. His minister of planning flew
to Libya last April to anend the
fifth annual America-bashing ceremony in memory of the U.S . raid
on Libya.
Aristide is vengeful, paranoid
and not afraid to use unruly mobs
to get what he wants. Some of his
rivals have been killed by "necklacing" - the practice of hanging
a tire around the victim's neck and
setting the tire on fire. In a venomous speech Aristide delivered

DR'. BUSH

outside his palace on Sept. 27, he
appeared to endorse the hideous .
methOd, of execution. The translation of the ~h that appeared in
the Haitian ·observattiur quoted
~stide as saying of the necklace,
What a beautiful tool! What a
beautiful insaument! What a beautiful device! It's beautiful, yes it's
beautiful, it's cute, it's pretty, it has
a good smell. Wherever you go you
want to inhale it."
A Haitian Embassy spokesman
told our associate Jim Lynch that
Aristide was not ·promoting necklacing, but was usmg it as a "symbol" and as a "wai.ning to the enemies of the people of Haiti." And
the spokesman said Aristide never
reached out to embrace either
Libya or Cuba
What to do with this democratical!¥ elected president? Last summer, the OAS passed a resolution
that never considered a man like
Aristide. That resolution said the
OAS will act forcefully and quickly to prevent the ovenhrow of any
democratically elected government.
The resolution didn'ttake into
account someone who was elected

i:&gt; STiLl.

WiTH ~at-JoT~eR

P~Tie~T. THaNKS
Fo~ . WaiT;I'IG.

~

~ byHEA. ~. JIC.

" We didn 't use to have this kind of weather
BEFORE we told the American military to gei
out of the Philippines. "

Today In history

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By T~e Associated Press
Today is Tuesday, Nov. 19, the 323rd day of 1991. There are 42 days
left in the year.
Today 's Highlight in History: ·
On Nov. 19, 1863, President Lincoln delivered his Gettysburg Address
as he dedicated a national cemetery at the site of the Civil War battlefield
in Pennsylvania.
On this date:
In 1794', the United Slates and Britain signed the Jay Treaty, which
resolved some of the issues left over from the Revolutionary War.
In 1831, the 20th president of the United States, James Garfield, was
born in Orange, Ohio.
.
·
• ' Iri 1887, American poet Emma Lazarus - who wrote "'!'he New
· Colossus" to help raise money for the Statue of,Liberty's pedestal - died
in New York at age 38.
In 1917, Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was born in Allahabad.
In 1919, the U.S. Sen81e rejected the Treaty of Versailles by a vote of
55 to 39.
In 1942, during World War II, Russian forces launched their winter
offensive against the Gennans alonJ the Don front.
·
In 1949, Monacp held a coronauon for its new ruler, Prince Rainier III,
six months after he succeeded his grandfadler, Prince Louis n.
In 1959, Ford Motor Company announced it was .haJting production of
the "Edsel," a medium-priced automobile that had proven to be a poor'
seller.
·
·
In 1969, Apollo 12 astronauts Charles Conrad and Alan Bean made
man's second landing on the moon.
·
In 1977 Egyptian President Anwar Sadat became the first Arab leader
to set foot in Israel. Thousands of cheering Israelis lined the road leading
to Jerusalem as Sadat arrived for an official visit.
In 1984 nearly 500 people died in a f~restorm set off by a series of
explosions at a petroleum storage plant on the edge of Mexico City.
.
· Jn 1985, President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev
met, for the first timer they held morning and afrernoon serions at their

and Dale Van Atta

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IMansfield I63' I•

democratically and went'on to·
behave dlclatorially.
The OAS had Chile in mind
when the resolution was passed, '
expecting that former dictator
Augusto l'inochel would try to ·
squelch the elected government
that succeeded him. Now,the overthrow of Aristide has given the
OAS its first real test. Vulnerable
democracies in Argentina,
Venezuela, Guatemala and elsewhere in Latin America are watching closely to see if the United _;
Slates and the OAS are selective in '
which democratically elected gov- ;
ernments are worth fighting for..
;

IND.

...

TO RUN OR NOT TO RUN -'
Democratic leaders are casting ''
their eyes increasingly toward .
Albany, N.Y., where Gov. Mario ;..
Cuomo is playing his customary
role of Hamlet, the unwilling and
unhappy warrior on one hand and···
the.great hope of his people on the
other. Cuomo himself is probably
not cenain of what he should do.
He is sensitive about appearing as a :
summer soldier, professing Demo- ·~
cratic ideals, but unwilling to shed ;,
t.lood for them. He can 'I go on '
pl3ying his political Hamlet routine ·,
or he will wind up playing to an
empty theater.
••

summit in Geneva.
Ten years ago: The United States issued a low-key response to the
Soviet Union's dismissal of President Reagan's latest arms control offer
saying Soviet media had been hasty in their criticism:
'
Five years ago: President Reagan told a news conference that no more
arms. woul.~ be sent to .Iran to ''eliminate the widespread but mislaken
percepuon that the Uruted Slates had been exchanging arms for hoslages
on Lebanon.
One year ago: Leaders of 16 NATO members al)d the remaining six
Warsaw Pact nations signed treaties in Paris making sweeping cuts in
conventiOnal arms throughout Euro~ and pledging non -aggression
toward one another. The pop duo M1lli Vanilli were stripped of their
Grammy Award because other singers had lent their voices to the "Girl
You Know It's True" album.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Alan Young is 72. Baseball hall-of-farner
Roy Call)panella is 70. Former United Nations Ambassador Jeane J. Kirkpatrick is 65. Tallc show host Larry King is 58. Talk show host Dick
Caveu is 55. Broadcasting and sports executive Ted Turner is 53. NBC
newsman Garrick Utley is 52. Sen. Tl)omas R. Harkin (D-lowa) is 52.
Actor Dan Haggerty is 50. Fashion designer Calvin Klein is 49.
Spo~tscaster Ahmad Rashad is 42 . Actress Kathleen Quinlan is 37.
Actress .Jodie Foster is 29.
·
~

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···- -

...

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..... . _........... '

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er • liT
nagman .," '

But most ot all he atlacked. In .: .
speech after speech, he 811acked. In
two debates, he atlacked. He kept "
Thornburgh on the defensive and ::
reeling.
On more .than one oc casion, ."
when Thornburgh arrived at a cam-· ' •
paign stop for what was expected ::.; •
to be a relaxed photo-op, he found ., ,
Wofford waiting for him ..Once,
while Thornburgh toured a new
wing of a Pittsburgh hospital with
several Bush administration health
officials, Wofford was outside on .
the street corner before TV cam- 1
eras. He was explaining that ordi- I
nary working folks could not possi- · 1
bly afford the care available to the ·
rich in the wing Thornburgh was . :
toun·ng.
.· ,
This atlack strategy, as well as : :
the campaign themes, was the ,. l
brainchild of Carville. He seems in ·l
many ways the Democratic reincar- ., 1
nation of·the late Lee Atwater; the . •
Republican strategist behind · :
George Bush's slashing 1988 victo- ;
ry.
,;
Like Atwater, Carville is a .· ,
southerner from Louisiana who ·. !
grew up in the rough and tumble of ;
Cajun politics. He believes in Jl!lli- : f
tics as a eonlaCt sport. He rehshes , ·
running ''us against them' • cim- :.
paigns, and be d~ply believes such , ;
a campaign can unseat Bush in '92. ~ :
''Dick Thornburih carne home 1
expecting a corronauon, and he ran ' l
into an election campaign," says !
Carville. "We have a social and l
economic climate today that breeds '
political unrest. We won here by ::
lallcing about real economic issues· n ,
and and Democrats can win in· . , (
!992 by tallcing about the real eco- ;
nomic issues in this country."
~! •

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·~ · ·

ginia to Maine, u winds from the
south increased. The r.Jdli•lippi
Valle~ wu e~pec!ed to hlye i1C31·
tered heavy nun.
.
·
The forecast also called for flin
in eastern Oklalioma, MiJiouri and
,lltinois,
· Temperatures were forecut in '
the 30s in Wyomingaad North
Dakota; the 'Os in the Pacific ;
Northwest and in New En,land;
· the 70s in Southern Calif011111: the
60s anci 70s in much of lhC South;
the 80s'in soutb Texas and 10111heA
Flotilla.
The high for the nation Monday •
was 86 degrees at Baton Rouge,
La

Three.:.

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Continued from page 1
W. VA.
increasing pressure to end. the
hostage crisis.
Iran's ambassador 10 the United
Nations today conflfiDed his country, anxious .to iolprove relations
with the West, had played a 'role in
the hostage releases.
ShOweiS T' slonns Rain Flurries Snow Ice Sunny . Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
"We have done a lot as well to
Vis A5SOciate-d Prr111 Graptic5N81
C1991 Accu·Wealher, Inc.
encourage Lebanese groups and to
convince them to release the
hostages,'' Kamal ·Kharrazi told
British Broadcasting Corp. radio. ·
Extended forecast:
South-Central Ohio
Lebanon is also anxious to end
Thursday through Saturday:
Tonight, cloudy with a chance
the hostage stalemate and get .
Fair on Thursday. Chance of Western help to rebuild after I 6
~f showers or thunderstorms. Low
rain
Friday and .Saturday. Lows years of civil war.
10 the low 60s. Chance of rain 50
•
mainly
in the40s Thwsday.and 35percent. Wedriesday;-rain. High in
lh Da'mascus, Syrian Minister
the upper 60s. Chance of rain 80 40 Fnday and S81urday. Highs 45- Yusef Shakur said Syria he hoped
percent.
55.
all hos1ages drama could be freed
by the end of the year. Syria has
about 40,000 trooPs in Lebanon.

'

Local briefs...--...,

Continued rrom page 1
erans. At 5:12p.m;, Pomeroy unit went to Erwin-Drive. Steve
Erwin was taken to Veterans. At5:16 p.m., Pomeroy unit took Lola
. Kovlachick to Veterans. At 7:07 p.m., Racine unit went to Bald
Knob Road. Carl Offutt was taken to Holzer Medical Center. At
7:59 p.m., Middlepon squad Went to Broadway for Rebecca Perry,
who was taken to Pleasant Valley Hos;&gt;ital. At9:11 p.m., Middleport unit went to Watson Grove Road. Rila Bucldey was treated at
the seene. At 9:34 p.m., Racine unit went to Bashan Road for John
Young, who was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
Tuesday at 4:05 a.m., Rutland unit went to Meigs Mine 2. Eric
Gryszaa was transported to Holt.er. At 9:04a.m., Pomeroy and Middleport units responded to an autOmatic alarm at PNRC.

Point Pleasant man missing
The search is ongoing for a Point
Pleasant man who has been missing
since Friday, November 8, according to Mason CQunty Sheriff Ernie
Watterson.
Michael Oliver, 40, of Point
Pleasant was reported missing by
his sister, Jeanni.e Fellure. He was
last seeri'i'riClay'ilfternOon around 2
p.m. when he left home with a
friend.

Oliver is 5 feet 9 inches, 170 lbs.
with brown er.es and short brown
hair. He was last seen wearing a · ·
faded blue jean jacket with a rebel
ftag on the back, a black sweatshin,
darlc blue Lee jeans and white leD·
nis shoes.
He has a dlagon tattoo on his
MIKE OLIVER
back, a devil ' on his stomach and
taUOOS on his arms. His jewelry
W81terson asks that anyone with
consisted of a ring with two hearts infonnation on the whereabouts of
and a SL Christopher medal.
Oliver call the sheriff's department.

Court news
Marriage license granted
A marriage license has been
granted in Meigs County Probate
Court to Robert Leroy Boling, 29,
lllld Wilma Jean Chapell, 29, both
of Syracuse.
Divorces processed
An action for divorce has been
filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Sherman Gene
Buckly, Middleport, against Linda
Marie Buckley, also of Middleport.
A divorte has been granted to
Christina M. Minshall from Shawn
R. Minshall.
Judgment sought
A judgment action has been
~filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Citibank Dealer
Finance Division, Phoenix, Ariz.,
against Michael S. Faw, Rutland,
. and Qthers, in the amQunt of
$6,468.38.
Nissan Motor Acceptance of
Los Angeles, Calif., has filed a
. judgment action against Terry Bell
of Portland, and others, in the
amount of $5,369.77.

Hospital news

Veterans Memorial
MONDAY ADMISSIONS
Mildred Parsons, Racine; Flossie
Moeller, Cheshre; Sherwood
Meredith, Pomeroy.
MONDAY DISCHARGES Evelyn Gilliand.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, Nov. 18 - Mrs. Troy
Adkins and son, Michelle Burns,
Charles Rogers
great-grandchildren, one brother, Denise Clark, Lora Dickey, Mrs.
Charles E. Rogers, 85, of 5851 John Rogers of Moundsville, W. Gerald Donohue and daughter,
Ireland Road, Coolville, died Tues- Va.; three sisters, Henrietla Wagner Connie Johnson, Willia Miller,
day, Nov. 19, 1991, at the Pomeroy of Moundsville, W. Va., Marge Johnny Schultz, and Jess Vaughn.
Births, Nov. 18 - Mr. and Mrs.
Ntll'sing Home and Rehabililation Wiley of Baltimore; and Sister
Claire
Joseph
of
Parkersburg,
W.
Rick
Maus, a daughter, Jackson .
Center.
.Va.;
and
a
special
friend,
Pauline
Mr.
and
Mrs. Lawrence Vaughn, a
Born on Sept. 15, 1906 at
McClean
of
Little
Hocking.
daughter, Gallipolis.
Wheeling, W. Va., he was the son
Besides his parents he was preof late Francis and Ida Gerdau ·
Rogers. He was a retired printer ceded in death b¥ his wife, Lois,
one daughter, h1s parents, four
from McBee lndusuies, Athens.
3 Numbers
He was an active member at the brothers, one sister, and one grand- Pick
.
2-9-0
·
Meigs County Seniors Center and son.
(two, nine, zero)
Funeral services will be held
an avid square dancer.
Pick
4 Numbers
He is survived by lj¥0 daughters Thursday at 1.1 a.m. at the White
6-8-1-1
and sons-in-law, Janice and Eric . Funeral Home in Coolville with
(six, eight, one, one)
Stephan and Myrna and Ray.Jones, Capt. B. J. Whitalcer.officiating.
all of Coolville; two sons and Burial will be in the Ireland Ceme·
daughters-in-law, Dale and Mary tery. Friends may call at the funeral
Rogers of Stockton, Calif. and home Wednesday after 2 p.m.
PhiUip and Shirley Rogers of Little Friends will be received by the
Am Ele Power ..................30 7!8
Hocking; 10 grandchildren, several family from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Wednesday.
Ashland Oil ........... ....... ....28 7!8
AT&amp;T ....................... .........35 7/8
The Daily Sentinel
Bank One .........................M l/4
CUSPS 211·960)
Bob Evans ........................ 20
Edith Bumgarner
Channing Shop...:..............21
Pu bli1hed every aR.ernoon, Monday
thn&gt;UJh Foiday, I U Court St., Pomeroy,
City Holding ..................... !?
Edith V. Bumgarner, 81, of New
Ohio by the Ohio Valley Publithing
Federal
Mogul... ................ 15 7!8
Company/Multimedia Inc., Pomeroy,
Haven died Sunday, November 17,
Goodyear
T&amp;R ................ ..47
Ohio •5769, Ph. 992;2t56. Socond cia..
1991, in West Columbia.
p»tage p1id aL Pomeroy, Ohio.
Key
Centurion
,.................. 14 l/4
Born March 17, 1910 in
Lands'
End
........................
28
Member; Tho Auodated. Press, Inland
Steubenville, she was a daughter of
Daily Pree1 Auociation and the Ohio
Limited
Inc
.......................
2S
1/8
the late John P. and Jennie M.
Newapaper Aeaociation , NatiOnal
Multimedia
Inc
..................
20
7/8
(Darr) ' McMiltin. She was a
Advertia1ng Repreaenlative, Branham
Rax Reslaurant .................. 3/8
Newapape:r Sa.leaJ.. 733 Third Avenue,
homemaker and a member of the
New YOrkt New Yvrk 10017.
Robbins&amp;Myers
............... .32
New Haven United Methodist
Shoney's
...··:~ ....,... ,.....,...~ · ·'l.~ll- .
... Church. • . . .... • •. . . ..- .,-..., ._...... s
·~ • ., J'Q~l'l&gt;W!T.£11; Sond.f'!&lt;!feo.• &lt;!lanm !!&gt;
. . Bank...
' lnc"'...............
Tha Daily Sentinel, U I Court St.,
tar
............... ~,
She was also preceded in death
Pomeroy, OHio 45769.
Wendy
Int'l...
......................
8 S/8
by her first husband, Claud M.
SUBBCRIPI'ION RATES
Worthington
Ind
................
20
3/8
By Carrior or Motor Route
llumgarner and a sister, Letha M.
Stock
reports
are
/he
10:30
a.m.
One Week ................................. ..........$1.60
Kelly.
Ooo MonUo .... ....... .............................. ICI.95
quotes provided by Blunt, Ellis
Survivors include her second
One Year.................................. _ ••....$83.20
and
Loewl of GaJ/IjwUs.
SINGLE COPY
hus(!and, Evereu E. Bumgarner; a
PRICE
son and daughter-in-law, Eddie K.
Dai!y...... ...................... .................25 Cents
and Janet M. Bumgarner of New
,, Sublcriben not dc.iring to pey tho earri · Haven;
a daughter on son-in-law,
'f. ... er may remit in advance diroct to Tho
Donna
L.
and Richard E. DotsQn of
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
Gtlllpolil Daily Tribune on a 3.8 or 12
mor\l.h bul.t. Credit wm be given canicr
446 41/4
.
Stuart, FL; a sister, Mary F.
01c:h weft.
Griesinger of Steubenville, OH and
No IUblcriplion• by man pcrmilt.cd in
four grandchildren.
areaa where home canicr service ia
Service will be beld Thursday,
available.
November
21, at 11 a.m. at
Ml.ll8ubecrtptlon•
lntlda Gallla County
Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason,
13 Weeko................................... ......l21.84
widi Rev. Edward Hardman
26 Woakt....
a.a .16
officiating.
Burial will be in the
·C5ll Woeloo .......................................... l84.76
·
Outaldo Gallla County
Graham Cemetery.
·
13 w...a ..........................................I23.«J
Friends may call at the funeral
20 w..a ............:............................. l46.150
C5ll w..u .........................................188.40
home Wednesday from 6-9 p.m.
·. /
. .. ..
......... ... . • ' .. ..... .
.,.,...
:" ...... - · · ' f
."!.
.,... I '
· · · ·~ ..
.. .,, - :

--Area .deaths--

"

.

..a

1arge ponlon of Colorado, leaving
up to a foot the Rockies. The same
storm brought one to three feet of
snow above 7,CXXJ feet in the Siena
Nevada.
R,ain was sc attered from the
Gulf Coast to the lower Great
Lakes. Thunderstorms were over
.the lower Mississippi Valley and
the central Gulf Coast.
·
A warming trend was predicted
. along the Atlantic seaboard but rain
was expected to remain west o[ the
Appalaehians . ~ntlllate Wednesday. .
.
Today's temperatures were
expected to rise more than 10
degrees above normal from Vir-

-----Weather-----

Sen Jq,n M. Long ·

0

•I Columbus I 63' I

in 1880.
Sunrise this morning vias at
Ohio's weather fOftiCISt for tonight 7:21 a.m. Sunset will be at S:13
and Wednesday, aecording to the p.m.
;, National Weather Service.
Around the uatloJi:
forel:astm said there was a 100
Rain soaked the nation today
percent chance or close to it of from Texas to the Great Lakes.
showers through Wednesday. .At Rain also feU in Washingl9n state,
t~ sarne.li!Jie. high temperatures · but Skies were fair over the rest of
w1ll remam m the 60s. ·
the West Coast..
Lows tonight are to ·be in tile
Snow continued in Denver and
mid-SOs to low· 60s - or 10 10 15 the southern Rockies. Thunderdegrees higher than normlll for tllis · stotms were expected through parts
tiJ11e of year.
·
of the South. TheAtllntic seaboard
The ·record high tempera!!lre.for had rili14 weather, ex.cept for
this date at the Columbus .weather patchy clouds.
station was 73 degrees in 1985.
Snow let up over Utah on MonThe record low was l below zero ,day but remained heavy over a

'\\.'\'\'\

education at today's cost.
The second phase of the
Over the past 20 years in Ohio
O.T.T.A. program is the college college tuition has grown an aver: .;
savings bond program. The Ohio age tate of 7.6% per year, about' ·.
College SaVin~s Bonds will be fed- 50% faster than the cost of living ·:·
eral and Oh1o tax exempt and mdex. Hopefully the Ohio Tuition "
offered as deep discount bonds, Trust Authority will assist Ohio
which are known as zero coupon or families with an affordable and
capital appreciation bonds. Similar adequate avenue to pay for their
college savings bonds have become children's college education.
··
very . popular in many states
If
you
would
like
more
informa··
because for a comparatively low lion regarding the Ohio Tuition
investment an investor will receive Trust Authority, you can call Ia strong and profi1able return. For 800-589-0TIA at the Trust Authorexample, under this program an ity or, please feel free to call or •.
individual who invests $1,450 write me, State Senator Jan
today will receive $5000 at the Michael Long, if you have any
maturity of the bond in 20 years. questJons or comments about these
This program is a convenient way or any other issues. My number is
for parents to make long term plans (614)-466-8156, and my address is
for their children's future educa- the Stptehouse, Columbus Ohio
tion.
4321 5.
. '

Pennsylvania'smostpopularpoliticians _ a man twice elected governor by wide margins wlio left a top
job in Washington to come home
and make this race.
·
Wofford won ·by running a classic "outsider" campaign. Even.
though he had been serving in the ·
. Senate for the past six months his
central theme was to criticize ''donothing Washington insiders "
which included Thornburgh
'
Wofford won by comi~g for ward with a mixture of old-fashioned liberal and populist themes
He alfued his campaign directly at
the middle and working class playing to their deepest fears. Ov~r and
over he told them they had been
abandoned by the Republicans in
Washington, who were represented
· th '
b Th bw h
m 1srace Y om g ·
·
Republicans assume that a
majority of people want less government, and this was Thorn - ,
burgh's central theme. But Wof'ford came out and said-that-people
expect government to at least provide them a safety net, and under
the RepublicanS it no longer does.
Wofford started to make up
ground in mid-September when he
began to push a na~onal health care
plan, saying it was the right of all
Americans to expect d.ecent,
· affordable health care. The rich can
afford it, he Said. and so too can the
poor under Medicaid . But the ·
working man is being left out in the
cold.
He attacked free trade bills with
Canada and Mexico as making the
rich richer while costing the working class jobs. He attacked the
president's refusal to extend unemployment insurance benefits, and
he atlacked the lack of initiative by
Washington to end the recession.

PA.

~

~
•

State to offer new round of college savings bonds .;

PHILADELPHIA (NE~)Wofford tallied 55 percent of
George ~us~. meet J1m &lt;;arvil,Ie.
the vote to 45 percent for Thornytho JS Jtm Carv1lle: He s the burgh, who had. the strong endorsepoltllcal consullant ~hmd Dem~- mcnt of the W~te. H~se.
crat Harns Wofford s upset wm
Most surpnsmg JS how well
over former Attomif General Dick Wofford did in traditional GOP
~mburgh ~~the .S. Senate race strongholds around the state. He
m enn~yiv~~:ma.
carried a number of counlles that
Carv11le IS re.ady to prove that former Gov. Thornburgh had won
the Slraf:Cgy and Issues that worked easily in Pennsylvani1f gubematori~ere thds November - Sharpley al campaigns. The big~est shock
ocuse on the economy and was that Wofford earned Thorndomesti~ concerns - can also · burgh's home terriroty __. Alleghework nauonally next November to ny County - by more than 8S,OOO
defeat the prestde~~
.
votes . Two months ago, polls
W~fford, a poltucal novtce, w~ showed Thornburgh with a seelllappomted to the U.S. Senate 10 ingly insunnounlable 44-pointlead
~ay. He went on to become the statewide.
frlfSt Democrat elected to the Senate · For Wofford- former college
Dom P~nnsylv~ma in 27 years. The president, one-time adviser to Pres. e~ocrat ea~1 Y1beat Thomr.burgh ident Kennedy who helped start the
m e spec1a e ectmn to Ill the Peace Corps and appointed Pennterm of Republican Sen John
·
'
1vanta
0 f 1abor - th'ts
H·
h0 died 10
·
·
.
sy
secretary
1 crash 10 was his firSt try at elective office.
A~~~~· w
a Pane
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.....;.In'--Th-"'orn'--bw=g._h..:.,_h_e-'-fa_ced
__
one_o_f

•

&lt;

.

~

"L.: - ---·-

'l

·~

Approxtmately $40 to $60 million
of the $120 million bond package
will be sold as Ohio College Savings Bonds with the rest being used
as State Capital Improvement
funds. With the approval of these
bonds the Slate has Finally put into
effect the secon4 halt o a two-part
program that enables Ohioans to
save in advance for their children's
college education.
The first phase of the O.T.T.A.
program is the tuition credits program. Beginning January 1st, the
0 .T. T.A. will allow Ohioans to
purchase tuition credits for $37.50
a credit. According to O.T.T.A.,
400 credits will buy four years of
tuition at any slate supported university, no matter when the credits
are used. Essentially, allowing •
Ohioans to purchase tomorrow's

By The Allot:lated Prw
W~ ttild wet. That summed up

MICH . .

MINI -EDITORIAL - Food :
labels have been a jungle of misih- 1
formation for too many·years and [
f:nally the Food and Dru~ Admin- •
istration is doing somethmg about '
it. All processed foods will be sub- '
jected to strict standards. They :
can' t say "lite" if they aren't. ,
They can't say "now cholesterol :
free" if they always were. And :
they can't tout high fiber as the ;
.best thing since the polio vaccine. •
We're confident that food labelers :
will push the rules to the limit, so :
consumers will still have to carry a "
magnifying glass to read the fine •
print on the labels and a Physi- :
cians' Desk Reference to figure out .
what it means. But we applaud the
FDA for clearing away som~ of the
underbrush.
Copyright, 1991 , United Feature :
Syndicate, Inc.
·''

Sixty thousand dollars. That's
what recent slate projections show
four years of tuition at an Ohio
public college will cost for today's
newborns. Faced with such slaggering inflation and continued
uncertain federal fmancial aid possibilities, many families simply
won't be able to afford college for
their children. However, this past
week Ohio Treasurer Mary Ellen
Withrow and the Ohio Tuition
Trust Authority (O.T.T.A.),
announced lhat they have agreed to
make specially designated discount
or zero coupon bonds available as
part of a $120 million bond package to be sold next month.
Under the college savings bond
plan, the O.T.T.A. will work with
slate agencies to designate certain
bonds as college savings bonds.

and

By Jack Anderson·

Wjll it happen to George Bush,R too?
b tJ

-

'

Does Haiti's A:risti4e deserve his job back?
WASHJNGTON - Before a
coup robbed Haitian President
Jean-Bertrand Aristide of his eounli'y and his clout, be steered $2
lion in foreign a:id to an orphanage
run by his close friend. ·That turned
some heads, but the alarm dido 't
sound until the friend was arrested
months later in a big cocaine bust
Aristide reacted to the arrest in
September by ordering police to
release his friend. Our sources tell
us that Alvin Adams, the vocal
U.S. Ambassador to Haiti, protested, but Aristide did not bend.
This is one of many disquieting
tales about the seven-morith presidency of Aristide, a man whom the
United States is now forced to
sland behind because he was democratical! y elected. As more leaders
in the Western Hemisphere learn
about their neighbor Aristide, the
less jubilant they are about helping
him get his job back.
Publicly, the State Department
has said the Bush administration
will support all efforts to return
Aristide to office, even though the
administration acknowledges some
problems with the populist priest.

Accu-WeathM- forccut for

••'

I

The Dally Sentinel Paga 3 _

Ohio

Ofiio's-weather will continu~~ warm, wet·

Wednesday, Nov. 20

'

.

Pomeroy~lddleport,

( 11111) \!Vr·.tilrr 1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio 1
Tuesday, Noveml:!.er 19, 1~1 :

-

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Tueaday, November 19,1991

Pag~~The"Dally Sentinel·~

.

The Daily Sentinel

•

" .~

WELCOME ENGLAND • Former hoslage
Terry Waite waves from the steps of the air-

plane ai Lynaham RAF base wbidi brought him
home to England Tuesday, endiag 52 months in
captivity. (AP)

I

Anti-abortion activists show up at two clinics
CINCINNATI (AP)- Antiabortion activists showed up at two
clinics this morning in effons to
turn away patients. Abortion-rights
advocates confronted them at both
locations.
· Police reported no arrests at
either the Planned Parenthood
counseling clinic, or Women for
Women of Cincinnati lnc . Both
clinics offer counseling, family
planning ari~ abortion services.
Tri-State Rescue reported Monday \$\would conduct "baby-saving
activ1ties" through this weekend in
conjunction with similar activities
planned in other.cities this weeJc by
Operation Rescue, the national
anti-abortion group whici( Sta$ed
protests last August in Wich11a,
Kan. Tri-State Rescue, led by
Cincinnati ·activists, says it is afftliated with Operation Rescue.
.
Coalition for Choice and the
National Organization for Women
stated Monday they would work
together to oppose Tri-State Rescue's efforts to shut down any clinic in the Cincinnati area.
Abor.tion-rights advocates this
morning linked hands outside a
fence at Planned Parenthood's Elizabeth Campbell Center _to keep Tri-

State rescue members lrom scaling
the fence. The anti-abortion group
s1ayed outside the clinic and left
. within an hour, without saying
why.
Anti-aboction activists then
went to the Women for Women
·vr ·

center, where abortion-rights advocates again lined up to keep them
away from ihe clinic. An employee ·
who answered the telephone there
said the clinic had not begun the
day's work when the protesters
appeared.

-Meigs announcements-Health dub to meet
The Rock Springs Better Health

Club wiD meet Thursday at 1 p.m.
at the Rock Springs United
Methodist Church.
Racine Legion to meet
The Racine American Legion
Post 602 will meet Thursday at
7:30p.m. at the post home.
Movies to be shown
"Martin the Cobler" and "Plymouth Colony" arc this week's
childrens' movies that w.ill be
shown at the Meigs County Public
Library in Pomeroy on Saturday
and Sunday at 2 p.m. and at the
Middleport Library on Monday at
4:30p.m.
MCCLtomeet
The Middleport Child Conservation League will meet Thurs~y
at 7 p.m. at the Rock Springs United Methodist Church. Plans will be

made for the Christmas party. A
discussion will be held on helping a
needy family. Hostesses will be
Becky Steele and Tracie O'Dell.
Pythian Sisters to meet
The Wilkesville Pythian Sisters
will have a smorgasboid dinner at
the hall on Satwday beginning 81 4 p.m. Cost is $5 for adults and $2.50 for children under $2.50. The public is invited to aaeJIII;
Quartet to perform
The Kyger Valley Quartet. will
perform at the First Baptist Church
of Pomeroy on Sunday. The service
begins at 10:30 a.m. and the public
is invited to aaend.
VSC to meet
The Meigs County Veterans
Service Commission will meet
Monday at 7:30 p.m. in the Veterans Service Office in Pomeroy.

Lottery numbers

DIAMOND SOLID
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'ALr14 'KT~

Y. CARAT T.W
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·,

.,""!.~

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.. . . ..

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

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

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.

The _Daily Sehtinel

Sports

.

.. ~~~~N~ov~·e~m~b~e~r!19~;21!~~1~·--~----~~~~~~----~--_J~~~:!~~~~~----~--------------------~n.~~~~~!t~

.Tuesday, November 19, 199.1

Page--4

ESPN reporter's new book exposes underbelly of sports in America
By JIM UTKE
APSportsWriter
It is a rite of. autumn in any bar
where foo~lts the _standard TV
fare. Somebody fumbles at a crilical moment, or sc~s a meaningless touchdown tbatjust happens to
·

cover the spread and the patrons ures," he groans, lOI;Jking for symgrin at one another in a knowing pathy. "The fix wasm." .
way.
We k~ow better. Even tn these
The person they are waiting to . cymcal tunes: when most of us are
hear from is the one who just lost ready to believe the worst about
the bar betting pool, or something somebody else, we refuse. to
much more substantial. " It fiJt· beheve the same about' our sporung
·
contests. And yet, you have only to
ptck up a,;opy .or t'he soon-t~:bereleased Playmg for Keeps to
fmd out how recently and how
close orgamzed cr~me may have
Scatllc at~ ~ton, 7:30p.m.
been to prymg the hd off tbat very
Utah at Miami, 7:"30 p.m.
can ofworms.
NeW Yolk at·HOUlton, 8 p.m.
Chulouc a\ Milwaukee, 8;30 p.m.
Wntten by current ESPN an~
Dallu at Denvm, 9 p.m.
former
Atlanta Jo~al and ConsuL.A. Clippm at Portlllld, 10 p.m.
Phoenix at L.A . taken, 10:30 p.m.
tuuon reporter Chns Mortensen,
the book recounts how two very
Wednesday's cames
ruthless
sports agents, Norby Wal·
Indiana at Boston, 7:30p.m.
ters and Lloyd Bloom, used money
Miami n Phlladelphla. 7:30p.m ..
Utah at OrlllldO, 7:30p.m.
and mUmtdaUon to Sign nearly five
Clenl1nd al Chulolle, 7:30p.m.
dozen
pro football prospects Saaamento a1 Atlanta, 7:30p.m
Swtle 11 Deuoit, 7:30p.m.
many
of
them now NFL stars - to
New York at DaUu, 8:30p.m.
representalton contracts over a twoMinnesota at San Anionio, 3:30p.m
Denver at Phoenix, 9:30p.m. .
year period. And how one of their
Chicago at Golden Stall:, 10:30 p.m.
prmctpal backers, a flashy mobster
named Michael Franzese, talked
from his jail cell about how those
0 hio college
clients could one day prove quite
football standings
handy.
"How close was the whole ·
Dig Ten Conference
thin~
to cominJt off?" Tony
Conr. Onrall

Scoreboard
In the NFL...
. AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Euttrn Dlvltlon

TUIII
Buftalo
N.Y. leu

W L
..... 10 l
6 l
Miami
.... l 6
Now I!IIJ!ond
3 a
lndian•Polls .. l 10
H"""""
Clevoland
Pilubw&amp;h
ClndnnaU

T
0
0
0
0
0

PeL PF PA
.909 342 238
.l4l23l2116
.4l5 207 2A8
.2731l6 Z23
091106261

Cetllrll Dlvlllon
... 9 2 0 .818298168

•• 7 •

~lll:W

... 4 1 0 .364216259
- 110 0 .091170312

W•tern Dlv\Jion
a 3 o .727216179

llatvu
KamuCity
LA. Raiden
Sealllo

7 4 0 .6362!1160

7 4 0 .636203 192
5 6 0 .455199173

o .273195242

3 a

Son Diet•

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

9 1
..... 6 l
San Francilco
5 6
I.A. Ronu
3 I
a-c:linchod playoff berth.

0
0
0
0

1 6

Ttam

WLTP(l.\VLT
' 0 0 1.000 10 l 0
3 1 4 . 62~ n 1 4
4 3 1 .563641
4 3 1 .563 4 5 I
4 4 0 .500 6 5 0
4 4 0 .soo 6 5 0
3 4 I .438 3 7 l
l 6 l .117 2 7 I

Conf. Overall

R-Bwl. Green

.118229124
.l4S2l9229

C. Mich .......
Miami,Oh ... .

.45S2U 155

Toledo

.2731&amp;1 256

.... ..

W. Mich . ....

Ball St.
E. Mich .......
Ohio Univ .
Kent St. .. .....

a.. Aneela Ralden at Clnd•n•tl, 1

Hinm

New Yori .Oiantut Tampa Bay, I p.m.
Miami It OticaJO, 4 p.m.
Pbiladelphia at Phoenix, 4 p.m.
Da!Ya It Seaulc. 4 p.m.
S1n Oict.o at New York Jcu, 4 p.m.
A""'Uiat New OrlWII, I p.m.

Mu:ieu.a

WALES CONFERENCE
Patrkk Dh'IIIOII

Boo ~a~

Q.obcc

9-0·0 1,466

Washington

1().().0 1,446

3

2-o-O 49·39-2 10.0 1s t ~me in hislory ·

3

FloridaSl.

10·1·0 1,371

I

3·1·0 53·36·3 Kicking game hurls FSU

4

Michigan

9·1·0 1,313

4

3·1·0 52·39·1 Going to 15th Rose Bowl

Florida ·

9·1·0 1,270

5 4+0 56·32·1 ls1 SEC tiUe in 58 yrs.

6

California

9+0 1,178

6

1-1 ·0 45-45-1 Wllitecoosec1 ,000yds.

7

PennS!.

9·2·0 1,111

8

2+0 56-45·1 8·1-1 last10atPill

8

Alabama

9·1-0 1,041

7

2·1·0 45·36·0 Struggled lasltwogames

9-t ·O 1,038

9

3·1·0 47·40.3 Losllast 2lo Minnesota

.... 0 9 0 .000 0 10 0

2l 70 6l
2:1 73 l6
217910
11 53 52
14 64 76

774

186462

....... 7 9 2
...... 3 15 1

16 lO 59
1 58 as

.... .

Oberlin

..... .

l 6 0 .143 l ' 0
0 90 .00001 0 0

Midwest Intercollegiate Con f.

W L T PU.GFGA
... ll • 0. 30 911 57

Adanu DMaktn
..... ll62 32743a
973 216161

Bllffalo

Miami(46)

5 3 I .611 6 3 1
441 .500451

1
2

3 l l .388 36 l
270 .221 2 80
t a o .111 1 9 o

Eadh1m

Conf. Ovuall

WLTPCI.WLT

Team
1.-Dutler
-

TWII

W L T PII.GFGA
Cbiooao ...... 10 7 l 2l so 69
Detroit
........ ll I 2 24 84 70
SL LoW ...... a s 5 21 65 75
Minn-. .... a 9 1 11 60 60
Toronto

......

5 14 3

13 51 78

Smythe DIY\Jion
... 14 4 3
.... 9 a 4
...... 9 I 3
... ! 7 l
... 7 12 3
...... 3 17 1

17 66 82

·-··--0

7 '2104

Monday's scores

Chie&amp;IO allldroit, 7:3! p.m.
N.Y. hl•nden 11 Mlnneaotl, 8:05
p.m.
•
Loa Angelca 11 San J01e, 10:3.5 p.m.
N.Y. Ranaen ·•t Vancovvu, 10:35
p.m.

VVodnesday'sgiODes
BOliCK! at Bul!'lllo, 7:3J p.m.
W~~ at N~w Jcney, 7:3S p.m.

Philaddphi~ 11 Pi~burah, 7:35p.m.
Tomn.touSL Lo.ua, 1:~ p.m.
N.Y. hhndeta at Winnipq. B:lS p.m.

WLPd.

Orlmdo

Boo~a~

PilwYodt

Nowl-y

GB

3 .M7

5
5

3 .62.5
5 .500

.... .. •

6 .400
1 .125

...... . I

.l
l.l
1.5
15

4.5

Catral Dhillon

Chi....
7 2 .771
AU..
l 4 .ll6
Deaoil
........... l 5 .500
Cl........
·-· .. .5tt
Milwtukoo . ...... 4 6 .&lt;100
lndltn•

~

4

7 .364

......... 2. I .:100

2
ll
~~

3.5

Mt-DI.W..

W L Pet.

Gl

:=" ..........
. . : : :4 3l Jl~
. .s
.m
~~a~..

lhlll

o.a..
-

• .l!6
6 .333
7 .12l

PacllkDI.WOO
OoldeSU• ....... 7 I .771
L.A. LoPn ..... s 3 .625
S.tle
l 3 .625

_ _ , .......... 5 •. ll6

L.A. Cllpjlln .... l l .500
Swa 11111° .... ._. 3 6 · ~!!
3 1 .~

S•

i·

-~

t

731 14

2·0·0 41 -40.2 FirntBowlsince1978

1 4 Clemson

7-1·1

719 15

2·0.0 40·32·0 Clinched 131h ACC title

1 5 Colorado

7·2·1

622 16

1·1·1 48·40·2 Wonslxslr. overKansas

1 6 Syracuse

0.2·0

561 17

2·1·0 52·40.0 Walker car.-high 148 yds.

1 7 Notre Dame

0.3·0

523 12 1·3·0 57·41-1 Only16 p1S. Iast6qlt5.
0·1·0 36·40·4 Gaddis two 200-yd game

20 Virginia

7-2·1

363 21 1·1·1 40·38·1 Losllo VT 38· 13 in 1990

2 1 Stanlord

7·3·0

304 22

2·2·0 42·38·1 5+11as l7 vs. Cal

22 N. Carolina St.

8·2·0

169 24

2·2·0 40.36·4 Harvey the hero vs. Duke

7-2·0

121

1-1 ·0 33·39·2 Last rank: Dee. 6, 1982

7·3·0

90

2·1·0 47·43·1 Lostlasl2vs. Ga. Tech

7·3·0

87

Conr. Ovrrall
W L- T Pc:t. W L T

x-Thomu More 3 0 0 U))() 9 0 0
Dc:fi1ncc .... 2 I 0 ,607 8 2 0
Bluii"LOn
0 3 0 .000 I 8 0

Wilmins,ton ,

I 1 0 .333 I 9 0

Independents
Ttam

W L T Pet.
.. 10 0 0 1.000

... 9 1 0 .900

FindJ1y

..
Youngstow~ St.
Cincinnati
Tiffin
....
AJuoo
..
Mt. St. Joseph

H 2 0 .800
7 3 0 .700

Urbana

l 9 0 100

4
4
4
4

5
5
6
6

0
0
0
0

.444
.444
.400
.400

23 Tulsa

24 Georgia

25 UCLA

-

PANELING

WAFERWELD

•
l .S

L-:•,7:30p.m.

BUILDING

239'

5

INDIANA PACERS - Signed Dale
Davi1, forward. Waived Mike Sanden,
forward.
ORlANDO MAGIC - SiJI"cd Briln
Williams, forward, \O a muluyeu contnct. Placed Stanley ,Robe.rU, centot, on

ohe;,;..dU.L

Hockey
NatkNI llodltJ Luaue
EDMONTON OILERS - R""llod

c.,. a...
w..-.

O.Good
a..yllat
lllerlar Finish

NEW YORIC ISLANDERS - Sent
""2Fiu
wlioa.

trick, JOl)&amp;eader, and David
10 C•pllll Dituia
""""'-' HO&lt;itoy ........

, loll

6. 98,et~.

NEW YORIC RANOERS - Eotcnd·

marloaer. tluauah ohol993-94 .......
ST. LOUIS'BWES - Auigno! J&gt;o.
minic Lavoie, defememan, 10 Peoria of

lhtlntcmational Hoc:key Leaauc.
TOROI'mlldAPU! LEAFS - Son .
Felia Potvin, &amp;_oaltendcr; .Len E~&amp;u, dc-fcniDid; and Todd Hawtinl, rorward: to
St. loha'1 or the Americ~n Hockey

IM....

SEND TO: The Dally sentinel
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio

- ---

·

·.

Honol~ll ,

69995
39.9~ 5

•

HEATER

n

~
=-

~5.

3:30p.m.

Ealll Carolina
·v1. Nonh Carolina State
·Atlanl~. Jan., I, 11 :30 a.m.

.
Hall of Fame
~
\l¥1 SyfiCUII

..

Blockb ust~r

,,
Alabama
, -'va. cc)Jorado or Nebraska
:Miami
. . ,.Dec. 28, 9 p.m.

. .

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

. . . vs. Ohio' State
Tampa, Fla .. Jan. I, 1 p.m.

c IIlllS
Cil~ornla

vs;CIImaon
Orlando, Fla .. Jan. I, 1:30 p.m.

(Q;
·-'.

Alumblod on your

own latw/bna.
K~

Peach

.............................. . , ,!.. ...... .. ....... ..... .. .... ...... . .......................... . ............. .

..

WOOD

JUoo, rip '""" 11om
""'Gl the A......., Hodtoy

Thomas topped the I00 mark in
·rushing for the seventh time this
season and passed the I ,000-yard
rushing mark for lbe _third consecutive season. Kenneth Davis added
98 yards rushing on .25 carries.
Aside from the turnovers,
Miami moved the ball enough to
stay with the Bills. Marino completed 23 of 42 passes for 326
yards and two touchdowns, and
Sammie Smith rushed for 64 yards
and his first score of the season.

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

Shreveport, La., Dec. 29, 2:30 P·!"·

EMCO
FOREVER DOOR

NaUoul laaktlbaU Ailoc:l•llon

ed the c:oatract of Nell Smith, acncn l

4
4.l

54'

5

1

ll

2

IVANHOE ~:--­
BXB
WOOD

ECONOMY STORM
DOOR

Croubuck or trodltlonol
32or36RorL

of

~
S.llnlord · ,
· ··
va. Georgia Tach
Aloha

OVer 30 styl11 ol paneling In
stock!

Basketball

1.5
1.5

""'l:" " 1': ....... :~...........·......_.!""". :.~ .... : ..... ............... ..... ' . ... ' .... ... ...... . ' ..... "'.'

llll Jlllllsi&amp;tod.
A quick 111 lor Interior walls.

free •aoru.

Cb

Fr11no Sllie or San Jose State
Fresno, Calff., De~. 14,4 p.m.

411Shett

'MILWAUKEE BREWERS Named Tim Foli first bue and infield
coac h; Mike E11lcr batting coach ; Don
Rowe piuhin&amp; coacl\: and Bili·Cmro
bollpM """'· RcWnool Dully Dya-, thin!
buocooch.

IOOUL

SENIOR CHEERLEADERS- Providing
leadership for the 1991-92 Southern cheerlead·
lng squad are these seniors, who were honored
Sul)day at Southern's tall sports banquet. Pic·

tured are (L·R) seniors Michelle McCoy, Ambtr
Cummings, Marcy Hill, and advisor Sandra ·
Baer.
·

you.··

. VI.

BIRCH

a...,., Wi~dts.

MONTReAL BXPOS - Rclcued
K41My Willian. , ~tficldcr. Sipcd Carla. Gcm.alcz, fUll bucman, and llli&amp;Jied
him 10 lhcit minor·Jeaaue ttUnina camp.
Named Jim Hold..,. We11 Cout •coutir1a
aupaviaor and Whitey Ddhd Watem
Canada 111parviaor and major leaaue

Serving Pe'rcentage), Marcy Hill (Most Poillti
Se.rved) and Heather McPhail (Coach's Award):
Hill and Wolle were selected to the AD·Diltrid
13 frrst teanr. AdditiooaUy, HUlwas li .Disbict 13
all-star and was tbe leading scorer in the District
All-Star game,

,,

LAKELAND

Kurt K.nuckcn, pit.chcn; Iody Hurtt, md
Ric.cardo lnpm, outricldcn; and Rico

lhe conLnN of Bobby Ayala 1nd Juon
Saue, pilthCIII, and Jeff Bnnton, Widder, from N•hviUc ol \he Ameriet.n Auociation. Tarry Leo. lira buanan, rot'uaod
u•ianmenlto Naahvillo and became a

TOP VOLLEYBALL PLAYERS- Earning
special recognition for outstanding effort and
skill was tbis young group or ladies rerresenting
the Southern Tornadoettes volleybal squad at
Sunday's rail sports banquet. Pictured are (LR) Angie Swiger (Most Improved Player),
Megan Wolfe (Outstanding H1tter and Highest

CASH6CARRV

699

Purehucd

the Sec:ond quarter.
"I had my mind made up no
matter how many guys blocked me
that I was going to get in there and
get a sack," Bimnelt said. "But i
didn't know I was 20in2 to cause a
fumble and recover it and score a
touchdown.''
With such lopsided turnover figures, Miami head coach Don Shula
said, "t'here's just no way· you're
going to win a game against a team
with that kind of talent."
Kelly completed 20 of 28 passes
for 185 yards and 'touchdowns covering five and 23 yards tp Reed and
10 yards to Thomas.
"I told the guys we had to keep
going," Kelly said, "because I
knew even wtth a 21-point lead,
when you're playing against a guy
like Marino, he can still catch

Fire coda and waterproof on
wall 1110 In llock.
We atock drywall screws and
screw·guns.

DETROIT TIGERS - Siane&lt;l Q,.g
Oohr, John DeSilva, John DOherty 1nd

CINCINNATI REDS -

.
of the second-place New York Jets
in the EBstem Division. Miami fell
to 5·6.
"You have to play almost perfect football to beat the Bills the
way they're r,Iaying right now,"
Marino said, 'and we're not doing
that."
The Bills mounted scoring
drives of 83, 65, 72 and 89 yards.
Thurman. Thomas rushed for 135
yards in 23 carries anil scored
twice. K~Uy threw for three touchdowns, including two to Andre
Reed. .
The 41 points were the most
scored by Buffalo against Miami in
a regular-season game since their
first meeting in 1966, won by the
Bills 58-24. The Bills beat the Dolphins 44-34 in the playoffs last January.
Buffalo is accustomed to production from its offense, ranked
No. I in the NFL. Big plays by the
Bills' defense, ranked third-worst:
have been much less frequent.
The first and biggest turnover
came when a bliJzing Bennett beat
tackle Mark Dennis to the outside,
knocked the ball' from Marino's
cocked right hand; fell on lite fumble, stood up and dashed into the
end zone. That gave Buffalo the
lead for good at 17-10 midY(ay
... in·

.

639

IA•aue

By STEVE!'~ WINE
AP Sports Writer
MIAMI (AP) - The Miami
Dolphins thought they had a
chance to win, and the Buffalo
BiDs took it away.
Buffalo recovered three fumbles, intercepted Dan Marino twice,
turned the tuinovers into 17 points
and beat the Dolphins 41-27 Monday nighL
The Bills, who went into the
game' with .the second-worst giveaway-lakeaway ·ratio in the AFC,
committed no turnovers themselves.
. ·
"In the first eight games we
were pretty pitiful as far as
turnovers," quarterback Jim Kelly
said. "The last couple of games
we've started to realize what we
have to do. We have to take the
ball away and not give it away."
Buffalo's offense wasn't,even
needed following the fust turnover.
·· BliJzing linebacker Cornelius Bennett forced a fumble by Marino,
recovered it and scored on a sixyard return.
''I always try to set the tempo of
lhe game br making a big play."
Bennett sa1d, "and the last few
weeks I've been able to do that.''
'Buffalo improved to 10-1, best
in the AFC and four games ahead

%84112

.

llaseball
Amrrig~n

2"
Y.x4x8
4"

AP

An Unforgettable Event

champ ionship

SHEnROCK

1·2·0 51 ·38·2 RB K. Williams 210yards

Pearl Harbor 50 Years Ago

·'

SALE PRICES GOOD THRU ~OVEBER 30, 1991

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

( ) • FirBt·p/aCfl VOtfiS

'

addthon, Htll was named to the senior All-star team, where she
competed and led all scorers in the District 13 All-Star Game at
Logan last Sunday.
.

476 18

2

Moaday'ssoore
1n4i&lt;n1 Ill, DouoillOI

Toalabl'l

0:.+0

8·2·0

2

........... l
.......... '3
....... I

1 3 East Carolina

1 9 Oklahoma

. 4
l.l

WESTERN CONFERENCE
r-

1·0.0 43·36-1 1 winlrom71hConon Bowl

Notional WlJ'IO

2 .714

...... . 4 4 .500

Wuhinpon

896 13

ten Hanaen bullpen coach.

Atllndc Dl•lftoft

MWni
Philaddphil ....... 6

0.1·0

l 8 l .150 l 8 I

Valparaiso

EASTERN CONFERENCE
5

TexasA&amp;M

ALL-DISTRICT 13 PICKS - Marc1 Hill, left, and Megan

Wol!~ were ~elected to the District 13 all-district volleyball team. In

SEAITLE MARINERS - Named
Marty Martinez tJ¥td ba1c 001ch and. Ro-

In the NBA ...

,_

1·1·1 45-43·3 Osborne 6·13 vs. Okla.

0.2·0 39-51 ·1 2-61ast8vs . Michigan

Transactions

Tonight's cames

899 11

490 19

...

~lln c hOO

PilllbuiJh 7. Quoboo ~

8+1

8·2·0

lndian~pola

Cent. St.
31 Ill 51
22 6t 65
21 80 67
21 72 79

Nebraska

1 8 'ohioSt.

9 2

o
o

StJc.phs ... .. 4 6 0 .400 4 6 0
WayneSt.... 460 .400460

Dayton

Vancouver
wintUp&lt;&amp;
c.Jaoty
LooAnpla
Edmontcl'l
Sm Ja.e

929 10 4·2·0 54·30.0 13-2 at Kentucky since '61

3 6 l .350 3 6 l
2 8 0 .200 2 8 0

9 2

l l 0 .500 6 5 0
5 5 0 .500 6 5 0
550 .500560

Tum

Norrll Division

7-2·0

N. Michig~n

2

o .soo
o .soo

AsSO&lt;. ofMid·East Colleges
CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

91owa

91 0 90091

2

0

5

which ihe Bills j.lon 41-27. The play was origi· .
· nally called a rumble, but officials, examining
tbe videotape, later ruled it incomplete. (AP)

in .on Miami
~turno·vers to post 41-27 win

2 3·().0 47·33·1 Bea1en No. 1, 8 straight

.... .
AJhland .. ..
Grand Vall, ...
Fetril St .......
Sagin•w V•1 .
!Wlsdale .....

a
a

&lt;;:bad Wise, who were recocalzed at Suday'•
Southern rail sports baaquet. Fellow malor
Chris Ebersbacb was absent from the pbolo.

~~Buffalo ·cashes

REC. Y1 OPP.
RECORD PTB. PVS. TOP 25 REC. EXTRA POINTS

THROUGH 11117111

Conr. Ovuall
WLTPCI. WLT
Team
l ·Alleghmy .. 7 0 01.00010 0 0
Cue Res ..... 5 l 0 .833 7 3 0
Ohio Wslyn .. 6 2 0 .710 &amp; 2 0
Wiltcnbt:rg .... 5 3 ·o .625 5 5 o
340 .4295 5 0
Kenyon
Denison ..... 340.429 370
WOOIW:f """ 350 .375 370

In theNHL ...

-

STRIP SHOW - Buffalo defensive back
Kirby Jacksqn (47) strips the ball from Miami
wide receiver Mark Clayton In the first halt or
Monday nixbt's AFC Elist matcbup In· Miami,

1111

9 0 01 .0001 0 0 0
7 l l.8338ll
630 .M7730
522 .6675 3 2

North Coast Conference

Mondly, Nov. 25
S1n F111ncilco at U. AttJclel Rama, 9
p.m.

H ulford

Conf. Overall
WLTPct. WLT

He1dclberg .
Ohio Nrth. ..
O!lerbein ""

SENIOR GOLFERS - ·Completing their
fiul year on the "&amp;Teens &amp; fairways" were (L·
R) senior golfers Andy Hill, Josh Codner and

---~--

Hannan Trace at 7:15 p.m., and
Kyger &lt;;reck will face Oak Hill at 8
p.m .. while Eastern and Symmes
Valley will tangle at 8:45p.m.
The boys preview will be played
on Friday, Nov. 29 at the Universi·
ty of Rio Grande's Lyne Center.
The times and school matchups
will be the same as in the girls preview. All times are approximate.

170 .125 _ 11 00

Tum
l -Ba1d-Wall ..
Mt. Union
Ml.IUingum
John Carroll ..
Ca~ill l
.....

p.m.

12 I I
ll 9 0
9a3.
a 9 1
N.Y.IW.don . 6 10 2

The Southern Valley Athletic
Conference announced Monday the
basketball preview dates and
matchups the girls and boys previews.
the girls preview wm be played
on Friday, Nov. 22 at Kyger Creek
High School. Southwestern will
play Southern in the 6:30 p.m.
opener. North Gallia will take on

Ohio Conference

Sunday, No~. 24
Buffalo ll New England, I p.m.
DaUu al WuhinJton. I p.m,
Detroit It Minneaota, I p.m.
IIOUIIIXlal PiwbwJh, I p.m.
Indianapolis vs. Green Bay at Milwau·
too, 1 p.m.
Kaaw Cllt at C~wllnd, 1 p.m.

N.Y. R"''"'
Ncwlcncy ...
P i t - .....
Ptollado!'pu. ....

I 6 0 . 143 4 6 0

MinnesotA ....

N01t week's action

Tum
Wuhinpon

0
0
I
0
0

o .143 2 a o
Mld·Amerlcan Conference

Monday's score

..
•
..

857 9 l
.714 8 2
.571 5 4
.571 6 4
.42946

2502863 7 0
2 l 0 .286 2 ' 0

Nor\hwcsr.em
Mich. St. .... .
Wisconsin .....

outr.lo41 , Miami71

•' .•

0
0
0
0
0

s

Pun!"'

Watern Dlvlllon

NewOdCiflt

6 1
2
4 3
4 3
34

n:ason

w'hat was going on behind the
scenes. And it is when Monensen
pulls ba;k the cover on those
doings that the.Jlllok sends a.Ghill.
down the spine.
As it turns out; the book's
release·could not have been timed
better. The 1989 convictions of
Walters and Bloom on charges of
racketeering, mail fraud and conspiracy were overturncd · last
September by a federal appeals
court, which cited two errors by
presiding U.S. District Judge
George Marovich.
The government lias announced
it would retry both men. But with
much of the prosecution team now
in private practice and lbe daunting
prospect of mounting such an effort
a second time, there is speculation
that a· plea bargain might be. in lbe
offing.
·
Valukas refused to address that
possibility, but said he wouldn't
hesitate under 'the same circumStal\CCS to take the caie again.
.
·

SVAC basketball preview dates posted

7 0 0 1.000 9 1 0

l ·Michigan ..
Iowa
Ohio Sl.
Indiana ....... .
Dlinois ........ .

Central Dlvlalon
9 2 0 .81a2t2112
Chko~o
7 4 0 .6362i7 224
Dotmot
6 6 0 .l00234 207
Minnaou
.. 2 9 0 .li2l7l2l3
Green Bay
2 9 0 .li2 l302l5
Tampt~ Day

A~..,.

WLTPct.\~LT

Tum

!Idem Dlvlllon
Team
W L T PeL PF PA
,.WuJtington
11 0 01 .000l&lt;lll39
Ailladolplti• .. 6 l 0 .l4lli2 163
O.Uu
...... 6 5 0 .545219223
N.Y. Gilnw .. 6 5 0 .l4ll8lli3
PhocnU
.... 4 8 .0 .333146 219

Valukas, the former U.S. Auomey the Mob from Sinking Its Hooks
who prosecuted _Walters and into Pro Football" - 'is that the
~loom: repeated dunn.~ a telephone . way rhe message was delivered
mtervtew Sunday. I can only .smacked of organized crime. - ·
spe;,ulate. ,
. .
Much of what follows was the
. But I II put 1t m the mo~t stuff of sports-page headlines for
straightforward way I can. We did nearly two years. Recounted are the
n~t take.the case for the purpose of · sordid derails of how Walters and
vm~tcaUng college athleucs. . . . Bloom flouted NCAA eligibility
. Therew.as a v~~lposSI~tl· . rules, how they went after .black
tty of orgamzed cnme mfiltraung collegiate stars only, lavi shed
sports. That. was ~e
why we money on them and their families,
began the t~vesugauon, why we and then threatened to expose and
devoted th~ ume and resources, !&lt;J 1t harm anyone who wanted out.
and why, Valukas add~~· we There are also highlights from the
went through w1th ~e.~fiai. .
two-year trial, during which
The .~tory told m Playmg for defense lawyers successfully
Keeps begms m 1987 when attacked the case against. Walters
Kathy Clements, a nval sports and Bloom by expos tOg the
ag.ent who has been stgnmg aw~y hypocrisy that universit ies disclien1s of Walt~rs and Bloom, IS played in keeping many of those
~verely beate~ m her ~ffice by an same players eligible.
mtruder wearmg a skt mask and
But it is not in the recitation of
gloves. .
what came out at trial that makes
It qutckly becomes clear to "Playing for Keeps" a worthwhile
George_ Randolph, t_he ve!Cfan FBI read. Much of what was said duragent dtspatched to mvesugate, t_hat ing the trial pales in comparison to
the purpose of the beatmg was s1mply to send a message: Stay away.
And most disbUbing .to Randolp~ .
the hero referred to m the book s
subtitle- "How One Man Kept

Cotton
T'XIS A&amp;!ol (SWC winner)
. v... FIOrlda State
Dallas, Jan. 1, 1:30 p.m.

............................................................................ ,, ................ ········· ···

Only

Ft&lt;•sta

·Ptllll Stitt '

. vs; Tan111111t
..
'

··"T:tmfll!, Ariz .. Jan. 1, 4:30p.m.

................................. ..............................................····-·················
~

39999

Ovr ltst Qumlty
WOOD AND
Hat laterlor

llltxlitlslt

COALHEATIR

10.98.etl. 45755

Col~raclo

or Nebruka
. I Jan. 1, 8 p.m.

.

.

�J.,

..

By The Bend
.

The
-

·'•

Cqmmu1ll;r Calendar Items
appear two claya before ID event
and the clay or that event; ttems
must be received. weD In adl'BIIce
' to assure publleatlon-ln the c.al-

-,.

-

P.~y

and a po~uckThanksgiving Diimer
will begin at noon. All members
are urged to att~nd.
·-

:

I

.

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The 1ack Nance,' said police-Lt. Ron
daughter of "Coach" television LaRue.
. • .. . ·
star Jerry Van Dyke wti's found
The body was discovered by
hanged in her home, authorities . f~ily friend Lisa Loring, LaRue
said.
said.
·
Kelly Jean Van Dyke-Nance,
"There was some information
33, was found hanging by a rope tbat she bad spoken of suicide to
Sunday night .in the bedroom of a her husband,'' LaRue said,
suburban North Hollywood apart~
No suicide note was found, and
ment she shared with her hu~and; no othe~ details were disclosed . .

.

'

Pagi-6

•'

'·

'f~

'

BETHANY - .The Wildwood
Garden Club .will meet Weooesday
at 1 p.m. at the Bethany Chun:h. '
Bring tools for making ba•lrets.

now 100 years old, was first a student and later
a teacher, still stands oil Parkin59n Road in Rutland Township.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reeves and
family and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Darn~II,Jeffand Melissa. were Sund8y ·
vtsttors of Dorothy Reeves.
Mr. and Mrs. ~Obert Bailey Sr.
were recent visitors of relatives in
Florida and other places of interest.
The Re.edsville United
Peterson.
, Mrs. Ida Murphy was a Tuesday Methodist
Womeri met recently al
. . ~~- .Kevhi Knapp and Ashley VISllor of Mr. and Mrs . Charley
the
home
of
Mrs. Nina Boston who
are VIStUng wtth her mother, Donna Smith.
·
·
presided
and
opened the meeting
Roush of Syracuse.
with prayer.
Mrs. Grace Weber had devotions by reading "Let's Be Thankful" and "Thanksgiving Day."
A report of 70 shut in calls were
"Magic Pennies': was the theme and Kathryn Knight
made and cards were sent to severof the pledge progmm led by Jane
At the October meeting Pauline al.
Ragan at the recent meeting of the Honon led the Thankoffering proPlans were made 'for a ChristHeath United Methodist Women in ·gram assisted by Beulah McCo- mas visit to the county home on
Middlepart.
mas, Margie Blake, Vicki Houch- Dec. I0 as were plans for the soup
Assisting with the program were ins, Betty Fultz, Kathryn Knight, supper on Dec. 2.
Emma Clatworthy, Nan Moore, Juanita Bache! and Grace Johnson.
Mrs. Emma Durst conducted a
Beulah McComas, Kathryn Knight Hymns sung by the members· bible game with prizes given.
and Scotty Hayes.
'
included '"We Thank Thee AU Our
Refreshments were served to
Pauline Honon, vice president, God" and "Hope for the Children." those named and Mrs. Nancy
opened the meeting with a reading Emma CIJ1twonhy presided at the Buckley, Mrs. Gladys Thomas,
"In Flanders Field." Emma Clat- piano.
Mrs. Pearl Osborne; Mrs. Francis
worthy presented quiet piano
Devotions were bf. Margie !{eed,,Mrs, J&gt;ian_e JoneJI _and Mr.s.
musit ~ D~votionrwere by Scotty
Bla!Ce ind scripture was-taken from Lillian Pickens . Mrs . Osborne
Hayes, "i:ove Thy Neighbor."
Luke and Matthew.
received the door prize.
Hostesses were Clara Criswell

·:,·;~.~·~~ caphallenen ''double price of ad cost .

onlv u•d
.
•sinot;nel not responsible for erronatl8] tint·d., . ICtltck
tor errors flrtl d~ ad runs in pape rJ. Call before 2 :00p.m
lir

dill aft• publlc.rtion lo mike couec1ton.
' Ads thM must bt .,.id in advuce 11e
Card Of Th1nk1

clau i fieclaltvertiHm~l

..

-- - -- -Mo

0

0

...

•· •

- ~

. .......
-

4 - Givuway
6- Heppy Ads
6 - Li:t~~ and Found
7- · V11d Salajpaid in edY1nct ~

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

THE DR;)I\
Now 0..• 01 Satvrdays
for tlte Cltri.._ StaHL
Givt a J..dwOYII balktl
to that l(l!dal Mtlltottt on
your Cltrlslllllslisl.
Wming

slack.
Located on Rocksprings
Rd. in Pomeroy, 3 miles
lronube~Meigs Co. F.ait,grounds.

MONOAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAP,ER
VVEONESOAY PAPER

THURSOAV PAPER
FAIOA'( PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

Classified

fo/lou·in/( lefephom.' exchan/(eS ...

11115/1 mo.

Are.

446 - Gallipoll•

992 - Middlepor1
PomiBfOV.
985 - Chftte r

458-leon

367- Ch•hirt
388.- Vinton
2&amp;&amp; - Rio Grande

256- GuYi n Oist
643 - Arebia Din
379 - Walna1

Co~t 30~

.

675 - Pt. Ple11ant

843- Port'-nd

676 - Apple Grove
773 - MIIon

949 - R•c:ina
7&amp;2 - Rutland

882 - New Hllf'IR
895 - Ltttrt
937 - Butfllo

247-ltlfrtfotlo

667- Coolville

----------------1

"""'
1

IALL fESTIVAl
SPECIAL
20 SESSIONS
For $20.00
Offer Ends Oct. 31

FOREVER
BRONZE
949-2826

614·985·3961
11M:st1

10.3 1 IM.

rno.

. 30

.9.00

.eo

S13.oo

81 .30/ day

14 - lusin•s Trtin ing
Schools &amp; lnstruct1on
16 - Radio, T\1 &amp; CB Rapair
17- Miscelltntout
15 R

Get RecuM• Fast

ll - Homes for Sate

·
32 - Mobilt Homtl fo r Stle
33- Farmt tor Sale
34- Bus.n•s BuHdmgs
3&amp; -· Lou &amp; Acrtlft
36 - Re.il Estate Wented

Real Estate General

Houtthold GoodK
s,ortlng Ooodt
An1iqUU
Misc . Merchandise

56 - BuildinQ SupphM
&amp;6 - Pttl for S1ht

57 - Muaic:aU nstrum tnt I
58 - .f ruits '&amp; Yeg .. ebl•
59 - For S1le or Tr1de

e 1626364 66 -

••

••

.• . •

0

•••

0

••• . ••

·.auto PUIS
Spldlllaltltlill

Cust. . ,,_ . . .
NEW I USED PAllS
FOI ALllWIS I
MODELS
992·7013
· or 992·5553
OIJDU ....

1-100-148-0070

DAIWII,OIIO

7/ 31 /'11

SHOOT.

RACINE FIRE DEn.

CLUB
GUN SHOOT
1:00 --P.M.
SUNDAYS _

Bashan l•ilclng
EVERY

SAT; NIGHI -·

·~·-

Starting Sept.-22
12 Gciuge Factory
Choke

J&amp;L

INSULATION
•VInyl Siding
•Replacemenl
Windows
·Roofing
•lnaulallon

JAMES KEESEE
992-2772 or
742-2097

539 Bry~~n Place
Middleport, Ohio

6i30

P.M~

28
,.r. Sept,
a.-.

~tar·tina
.F..

Gaut•
Strictly~=:::~o.ty
I

12

•VINYL
•ALUMINUM s· IPI~ICl
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

_

BISSELL
SIDING CO. ,

...... ....

'

''Free Eaimetea''

PM.,949·2101
· or Its. 949-2160
NO SUNDAY

11114/tfn

mo. pd.

SPORTSMAN
CLUB
Begins Sept. 1S
Everr Sunday 12 Noon

'BISSELL
BUILDERS · .
CUSTOM llllT
•

'

.

•

HOMES &amp; GAlAGES

"At Reasonablt Pric""

'"· 949-2801
ar les. 949-'2160 ,
Day or Night .. ·
NO SUNDAY

......_

BISSELL &amp; lUilE
CONSTIUCnON

•Garages

"•..

•C0111plttt

lisnodeling
Stop &amp; Ca111pare
Fr" Estimates

985-..473
667-6179

Factory Guns Only

• • i\

. ••J.
0/

..'•
"'====::::::::::::~ I~=:::::::::::::::::=: ~-·d
919/91/2 ....

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER SERVICE ·
I CAN'T AFFORD A HOME OF IIY OWN I ••• 000H YES
YOU CAN I Imagine ownin~ lhis 14 ' 70 Nashua Mobile
Home with 3 bedrooms, carpel &amp; paneling lhroughoul. 10'
deck, underpinning currontly on a rnntoo lot. Now.. stop
imagining! This home is so affordable-you can't aff~d to
pass it up! Wave good-by tolhelandlordasyou movem th1s
home ol
own! ASKING $7,000 OWNER
ANl(IOlJS .... MAIKE AN OFFER!

Serv u:es
81 - ·Homelmprovement a

82- Piuml:ling 6 Ht~t l ng
eJ- Eicc:avellnt
84 .... Eiaetrlcll Refrigeration
8! - Gtnt!'ll Hauling

--

88 - Mobile Homt ~epair
87 - UDhOIIItrv

r

•

locqtttl On Safferd Scheol Ill. eft lt. 141
(6141 446-9416 tr I;IIIIO,jl71··1t4•7

FORKED RUN

71 - AutosforSIIe
72 - Trucks for Salt
73 - Vans 6 4 WD ' s
74-, M.otorcye:l•
75 - Boets &amp; Motors for S1le
76 - Aulo P1rtt &amp; Acc•sor l•
77-- Auio Repair
78 ·- Camp ing Equ ipment
79- Campeu 81 Motor Homes

•

~. BENNETT'S . ~:::a'

GUN SHOOT

Fert ~i.ter

•

MOMUIIOII

Ucenl8d and Bonded

Farm Equ ipment
Wanted to Buy
livestock
Hav &amp; Gre in

Seed Ia

,

PH . 614-992-5591

F ~rn1 Supplir~s

41 - Housn tor Rent
43 -- Aptrtmtnt
Farms for Rent
. 44
tor Rent
45 - Furnilhlld Rooms
48 - Spac:e for Rent
47 - Winted.IO Rent
48 - EQuipmenl for Ret~ t
40 - For Le•e ..,.

•••

9-11 -1

1;14.1111
42 - Mobile Homes for Rent

• . •

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER Ill
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING :
limeatone. Dirt.
Gravel and Coal

18 - Wanted To Do

21 - Susineu Opp.ottunhy
22 - t.lontY to Lo1n
23- Prof•lionll Servicll

••••

BUUDOIING

.05/ doy

Merc h.1nd rse
5, 52535&amp; -

•

I&amp;C EXCAVATING

.42

&amp; LIVI!SIIJck

Mes on Co-. W'J

Me1g1 Counly
Area Code 814

SR12•- -

Tronsporl at;on

the

Gtll il Countv
AJta Code 6\4

.....=c....a~~~

992-6855

Ov'r 16 Wordl
.
.20

14.00
16.00

SPrVIC CS
12- Situ.lion Wanted
1 3- lnluflnce

- 2 :00P.M . MONDAY
- Z :OO P .M . TUESDAY
- 2 :00P .M . WEDNESDAY
- HO P.M THURSDAY
- 2 :00P .M FAIOAY

pa~e$ ,corer

We Sell &amp;Service
Weather King, Miller,
Luxalre, Insider,
Heat Pumps, Furnaces,
Air Condltlontrl

Bags, Heod
Covtrs, tic.

•

RACINE GUN

C. l. Heating &amp;
Refrigeration

supplits also in

·•

CLARENCE ATHERTON

USED RAILROAD TIES

bu pl11 y 1ne 111

plactd in The D1ily Sen !In~ (e• ·

DAY BEfORE PUBLICATION
.- 11 :00 A.M. SATURDAY

COPY DEADLINE -

- Room Adclitlono
- Quftol work

- EI-i&lt;ol ond P1umblng

- Concmo work

- Roofing
.
- lntorloi • E"orior
Pllntlng

)FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
99 2·621 5
Pomtray,

Ohio

11· W90 tin

' I

USED APPUAICIS . ~

wuum

to UY
Wl!IIIIS-$ 100"
DIYIS-$69 .,
IIFIIGRATOIS-$100.,
IAHGIS-&amp;oo·llt&lt;.-lUS ···~
fll1ZUS- $1U.,
'
IICIO OVINS-$79 .,

KEN'S

APP

LIANCE

m-sl::~~~15 _ 3561
Acrots frOM hst Olflct
POMOOT, OHO

A&amp;B

UPHOLSTERY

4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE

.LINDA'S .
PAINTING

PUBLICATION

CUniNG.
CUnJNG,
SKINNING,
WRAPPING

FREE ESTIMATES

••• the pain o1t of

palntln•

Let •• tlo It for jou.
1 VEIT IEASONAILE
HAVE REFIIE,IICES

BASHAN RD.,
RACINE

949·2206

(614) 915-4110

11/14111 1 mo.

• 1Oo23-t1 I ""· pd.

VERA'S NATURAL
. IMAGE .

IIIDIPIIIDIIn ·
CUPIT CliAIIIIS

New Operator:

•F'" E1tlmatea

MILIWI!, Oww
II. 1, ltllltool, OH.

PH. 675·773-5937

•

Mason, WV

Ron,
That same smile
forever more,

HOLIDAY SPECIAL

J

20 Visits For $20.00

lapJ)Y Birthday

SANDY'S VIDEO

64!

308 Third St.,
Racine, Oh. 45n1

...' p

. .·
~

'•

"

..

,

...

.,. ...

,j.·

••

SP.ECTACULARI Describes lhis homel2 story contemporary, 4 bedrooms, 2112 ba.ths, equipped kitchen, fireplace,
bay windows, pine walll, basemont, 3 112 acres. An
absoluiB DREAM HOME thai has beon REDUCED TO
$104,800.

Floor Flnl1h

SATURDAY, NOV. 23

RACINE- An older frame fBIJ11 home wilh 66.33 acres .
Farm Includes barns, crib and sheds. Asking $79,900
ONner will consider any reasonable offer.

.

·

•High 01011 . on Tile

MONDAY, NOV. 11 thru

NEW LISTING-CREW RD. POMEROY- 3-4 bedrooms , 2
balhs, heat pump, W.B.F.P. full basemen!, woodbumer,
patio 6 appliances on 1 112 acre. Wondertul loeat10nl
ASKING $57,000

POMEROY· BUSINESS BUJLDING·2 story with commercial room downstairs, 2-3 apartments upstairs. located on
Main S11'88l This Is a very well maintained buikllng. ASKING $27,000

•Carpet Ha1 Faet Dry

Time

HOME FOR THE HOI.IDAYS In this beautilul2 story bricl&lt;
home whose walls will embrace you with !hat ·welcome
Home" leelin~ the moment you step inside. 7 rooms, 3
bedrooms 1 112 balh, 2 ear garage, front and back porch ,
finished ..Ssemenl. Elagantly decorated in mauve, blu~s &amp;
peach. Spacious onough 10 welcomelheiargest of lam1i:es
lor lhe holidays and all year long. ASKING $45,900

•

f1•t••'
eQuality wo,.

OFFERS GOOD

6 Martin St.

Happy Ads

•llea~onable

ssoo Off Perm Special
20% Off Nexxus Products

•

.5 '

a ftC! JILl fl0()1 .CJlU I

Lori-Redman Bailey ··

~nvertlble

HILL'S ·DEER,

IMTEIIOI • mEIIOI

I
I

COMPLETE AUTO

Business Services

B

.
q

I

Rate

11 - Help Wanted

new members·~~

•

16

.· 1- Cerd of Thanks
2 - ln Mamory
3- Annoucemenls

will 1110 app11r In the Pt . Ple•enr Register and lha Gall i·
polis Dally Tri~me, reaching O't'tr , 8 ,000 homes

I

'•

· lp•cletrl

,

' 0·1

•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992-2269

(llaan ..........,

bgriVIIt

AII flU ll II CP. Ili!!IIIS

c:epl - cl••ified ditpll't'. Busin•• Ctrd tnd legal notices!

i

~

16

8- Public Ulell Auc1 ion
9 - Wantad to' Buy

· In MemOriam

:••

SUPPORT;
.Ill MARTIN

l'ourl-aol
recommendaUon. Honnl
· and dependoble.

•

FOR SALE
All Hard Wood
For Residential
and Commercial
Dump Truck
Dellve!Y or Pick·
Up Your Own
Also Splitter
Services Available
Call 992!-61,42

Rat Rare for conMcut..,_ runt . broken upday s w ill bech•ged
fnr ••~" rl..w 11 Hplrlte edt .

in advence.

.

·FOR

FrH&amp;II11111a
30 Y•" experience.

Custom Flltitg

16 .
' 15 .

10
Monthly

no ch•ge.

•

ALL
II ftlllllftll
LOCAL ICIOOL DIStRICt

lnl..tor P•Jndng,

,..,_ MtltiOubs

16

6

•Free ads - Givuwav 1nd Found ads und•16 wttrdt will be

•A

SHRUB &amp;TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAUtiNG

PAIIIftiG

Jr. Gtll S.ls
Gr. . . ,

Words

1
3

paid. ·

----

ftl

Days

Meigs. Gallia or Muon countt• mutt be pte·

t

Pomtroy,

BD'I

RATES

y

Auxiliary plans holiday events

ROGAN
.n.111ER

Olllroy, VII
11-iB, 1 mL

Praftssltlttl

MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

'

. 614·992-6120

ALJo

p

OWIItr. &amp; Operatar

Teaford
Co1ntry Club

.

Literary club conducts two book reviews

DAR .welcomes.~trnee

.. 35975 Fliltw11•1 Rd.

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

p.~id

For All Breeds •
EMILE£ MERINAR

:,,.,

AIR CONDITIONERS.· IIAT PUMPS IIIII
FURNACES FOR MOillE.&amp; DOUIIIWIDE no•s

Conqlete GrOC!ming

HARLEY uauiiG
1S
~
RISJJtENCE

Reedsville women
make holidayplans

TO PLACE AN. AD CALL 992-2156

Services

GROOM
'ROOM

. REISOIAILE

Classi II

..

- -- --·
WE'Lh
OVERLOOK

CHRISTMAS
TREE$

•

•Rec.Ne 1 .10 diacount for eds

' The

-~ Business

Heath UMW hold meeting

The Racine Chapter FFA has
been busy over the past month.
The Parliamentary' Procedure
Team placed rust at the District 10 ·
Contest TheY. also received a gold ·
rating and will receive a plaque in
April at th~ District I0 annual banquet Students on the team are
Michelle Brown, Chris Brown,
Kathy Ottman, Tcny Ournan, Billy
Jo Long, Jeremy Smith, Chris
Hamm, Shannon Pierce, Christie .
Cooper, Stephanie Sayre, Jeff Rose
and Michelle Friend.
Also, the Urban Soil Judging
Team won third place at the district
level and then advanced to the state
level .soil judging contest held at
PARKINSON SCHOOL CLASS IN 1906 Brickles, Grace Brickles, Glada Thomas Davis,
Circleville. The team placed 38 out
Gladys Thomas, Nellie Parkinson, Melanie
Hazel Vanzant Wright, tbird row, second from
of SS teams who also advanced to
right, was 15 when Ibis class picture was taken
Longstreth, Grace Thomas, and Edith Britkles;
st8te competition·. The three stuof the eight grades at tbe Parkinson School in
second row, Flossie Parkinson, (next two not
dents who ~cipated were John
Rutland Township. Among those attending Mrs.
identified) Clair Parkinson holding the slate,
Amos, M1chelle Brown and
RECEIVE AWAiRD - The Racine li'FA ParU.menta"Y ,ProceWrflht's tOOth blrthday party held recently at
and Ted Longstreth; and third row, Lloyd
Stephanie Sayre. Michelle Friend
dure
Team placed first at the District 10 Contest. Tbe team also
the Care Haven Nursing Home was Glada
Thomas, Floyd Thomas, Clair Parkinson, Denwas used as a substitute.
received
a gold rating and wiD receive a plaque in April at the DisThomas Davis, front row, foorth from left. Mrs.
nis Brickles, Ray Purkinlion, Johnnie Brickles,
The Racine FFA has also been
trict 10 annual banquet. Students on tbe team are; 1-r, rli'St row,
Davis is now 93. Pictured left to right ar~ left to
Everett McKnight, teacher, Flossie Phelps,
busy planning fund raising projects
Michelle
Brown, Slepba'nie Sayre and Michelle Brown. Second
ril{ht, front row, Myrtle Swink Donahue, Delta
Hazel Vanzant, and Maude MidkiiT.
for tfte upcoming months. The
row,
Terry
Ottman,.Shannon Pierce, Billy Long. Tbird row, Kathy
annual fruit sale will be going on
Ottman,
Christy
Cooper, JeiT Rose. Fourth row, Jeremy Smith,
throughout Thanksgiving break.
Cbris
Hamm,
Chris
Brown.
~c~o=n~ti~nu=e~d~fro=m~pa~g~e~t----------------------------------­ Tangelos, navel, and juice oranges,
Mrs. Wright was 15 years old nursing home, a iarge pictuie of the family, afong with numerous rela- along with pink and white grapePoinsettias are also being gro!Wn &gt;;:
when the class picture was taken, Langsville Church which she lives and friends from Point Pleas- fruit wiD be sold. Fresh apples will obtained by calling any FFA memand her life-time friend , Mrs. attended for more than 80 years ·ant. They were joined by several also be sold this year. Further ber or ·adv1soi' Aaron Sayre at 247- by the group to be sold at CI\I'ISt- ·
was presented to her by friends of Meigs Countians, Carl and Pauline in formaiion and orders may be 4322 or 949-2611.
mas.
Davis, was eight.
Mrs. Wright after completing thechurcl!. She received numerous Gorby, Richard and Glenna Fetty,
the eight grades in Parkinson cards, flowers and gifts, along with' Dorothy Woodard, Jo Anne ConnSchool went on to take the teach- a cake inscribed "Happy IOOth cil, all of Langsville: Sally
er's test and returned to the school Birthday." The cake was served Kennedy, Middleport, Glada Davis,
Mrs. Sibley Slack' reviewed the Europe as well as Nol'\h America, ill-treated; and is a chimney sweep ' ~
who now lives at Elam House in
a few years later to teach her with ice cream, mints and punch.
book
"A Generation of Leaves" by of England's fight for the Amen: working for his cruel master, Mr. , •
Among
those
attending
were
Middleport,
and
Mary
'Kathryn
friend.
Robert
S. Bloom, and M.rs. Carl can colonies. This story introduces Grimes. One day Tom slips into a ,:
Mrs.
Wright's
son,
David,
and
his
Holter,
Bashan.
At Mrs. Wright's party at the
Horky reviewed the book "Water the reader to some of these events cool clear stream of water to get · •
Babies" by Charles Kingsley at the as the American colony becomes himself clean. He is taken y the
recent meeting of the Middleport the United Scates.
fairies and turned into a water baby
Literary Club held at the home of
In Mrs: Horky's review, she just barely four inches long. He ,
Mrs. Wilson Carpenter.
stated the book was the author's encounters ali kinds of .strange,
In her review. Mrs. Slack stated fantasy presentation of the evils of beautiful, frightening creatures, A
the book is a detailed tapestry of child labor and of poor sanication naughty boy, Tom has a lotto learn ,
New York and Virginia society in that existed in England in the before he can return to the world as ·:;
the late 18th and early 19th cen- 1800's. Tom, the main character, is his normal self.
~
turies. It tells of the revolution' in
Mrs. Horky, vice-president, con- "'
dueled the meeting. Roll call was -·answered with members naming an
eminent Victorian. The hostess
served light refreshments.
The American Legion Lewis States.
Manley Unit No. 263 Auxiliary
Lula Hampton, education chairmet recently at Dale's Smorgas- man , repor.ted thi s week to be
bord with Lorene Goggins presid- -National Education Week. She will
ing. Tomiko Lewis was the hostess. be placing booklets and pamphlets
~
The newsletter from Eighth Dis- for students in the schools and pub·
trict President Sharon Squires, lie libraries.
•
·YOUR FIRST
Wellston, was read. It stated the
A donation was sent tn Mickey
Eighth District was in fifth place of Williams for usc toward a memoriACCIDENT
-'
the state as of Oct. 31. ·
al for the Koreon War veterans. ·
When you quolily 11 • P"'forrtd
The National Legislative Bulrlolc for Stott Auto Compenieo' .
The mceUng closed in ritualistic
letin has been replaced with 'the form.
special Mtdaliot Auto Polley. your
rates won't go up wfth your first
"Dispatch."
occident.
·
The veterans birthday party a.t
Unlike olmllar pollclu thot rtquire
the Chillicothe VA Hospical is Dec.
thrN yura of policy ownorlhip,
· 19; The auxiliary Christmas party
the Medal in allowo the ••emption
•
immtdiotely,
was planned for Dec. 12 with
Dorothy Casey as chairman. Each
The Medalist recognize• •he older,
eater driver with 1ub.tantial rata
member is to bring a guest.
HONOltED FOR SERVICE • Franklin WUrecent four-day licensed neld trial. They were
reduction• and broeder coverega.
Friendship quarters are to be
Rete reductions begin 11 earty 11
- · Melp Cou1ty BeaJle Club field trial secrehonored ror 30 years or faithful and dedicated
given to the department president
· age 26 and are Pllrdcularly attractary, presented plaques to Kathleen Wells,
volunteer service in operating the club's. food
at
mid-winter
conference
to
be
held
tive for tile 46 to 04 - r old,
~.
Pomeroy, and Jerry Essex, Athens, during a
facility.
.
in Columbus on January 17 and I8.
If lou have 1 lift driving record
11 iuat how low your Clr in1ur:
Bulk mailing was gtven to each
.
once ,premium can · be with the ·
· chairman by·the·president
Mtdtlilt Auto Policy hom Stele
Florence Richards reported from
Auto Insurance Compilnlea. Three new members were attend scate conference March 13- bers that magazine renewals are the American Legion Firing Line
Cell us about this c~r Insurance
approved at the recent meeting of 15 at Dayton.
due by Janu~ . Twenty percent of that the Legion had adopted a resobreokthrough for 11ft drivers.
the Relllm Jonathan Meigs Chapter
At the suggestion of the regent it. the membershtp is needed to make lution making the English language
~
of Daughters of the American Rev- was decided to identify two veter- the honor roll.
the official language of the Uoiled
••
olutionheld at the Episcopal Parish ans in Chillicothe Veterans HospiFollowing the meeting, a guest.
'
House. New members are Abby tal to remember with cards and Leesa Murphey, spoke to the
~
Stratton, June Circle Gray and gifts, The veterans are to be ones poup: She is a graduate of BowlAnna Rulli BllioiL ·
who have no families to visit them ang Green University with a degree
Anal Cleland, resent, conduct- or remember with cards.
In political science. She worked as
Luwuce Services
ed the mtelinl which opened with
Delegates to the state confer- a parole officer for some time in
prayer b)' Bileen Buck and a salute ence in March are Anna Cleland, Bucf!US and ~he spoke to the group
214 EAST MAIN
to the fila by Ma,rf K. Yost. Offi- Eleanor Smith, Rae Reynolds, on this expenenc:e.
POMEROY
cers reports waeJJven and a letter Phyllis Skinner. Alternates are June
The meeting ad)ourn~ with the
wu ready lium Sandy Luckeydoo Ashley and Mary Powell.
992·6687
Lord ' s ·Prayer tn untson and
who now lives In P.ta•kala. ·
Delegates to the national confer- refreshments were served by the
Eleanor Smith, vice regent, read ence, April 20-24,'are Anna Cle- hostesses, Wilma Sargent, Eileen
a letter from Katbryn Colburn, state land and Rae Reynolds. Alternates Buck, Marr _Powell, Frances
re-ent; who ll8ted she is pleased are Mary K. Yost and Alice Stru- Robens and Mary Elizabeth Morwtth lbo pogress of tbo chapters ble.
Paid lor by Cendldllt, 37800 St. Rt. 7, Pol'MI'oy
ris.
../
· she visited in Seplelllber. She wiD
Eleanor Smith reminded mem-

JIGrzel ... __

van Dy!ce couldn:t immediately
be ·re.ched through ABC
spokesman Jasper Vance . Van
Dyke's role o.n the _show earned
him an Einmy nomination last year
and helped him emerge from tbe
shadow of brother, Dick Van Dyke.

Ida Murphy, Peggy Bole,
Carmel Evans, Barbara Davis and
Mirinda, were recent visitors of
John and Elaine Downs and family,
Glouster.
. Michelle Knapp l!as spent some
ttme wit~ Mr. and Mrs. Wayne

Racine FFA
places first ·.

'

hr==:::::;====::;i!;;:;;:;:,::=::;::=1l"F===:::::==:::::=:::;;:::==:;:;::::;•=;
sa·LE '

The death
listed( as office.
a suicJde,
s.ai4 was
o~roner'
spokesman Bob Dambacher.
Van Dylce co-stars with Craig T.
Nelson on the ABC comedy .
"Coach," featuring Vari Dyke as
t~t:1;.~ assistant coach Luther ·.

Wolf Pen community ne-ws

WEDNESDAY
SYRACUSE - . The THird
· , : THURSDAY
. Wednesday Homemakers Club will
POMEROY - The Meigs Cou~- :
·meet :Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the ty Demtierlltic Executive commit- ·;
TUESDAY.
POMEROY ; ·The America~ .· municipal building in Syracuse, tee will m~t--ThurSday at 7:30p.m. ;
Legion Drew Webster Post No. 39 Everyone is welcome.
at the Carpenters Hall in Pomeroy. "'
will meet Tuesday. Dinner is a 7
POMEROY - A tree top angel
p.m. and meeting at 8 p.m. All
RUTI.AND - The Rutland Fire ~
class will be held at .the Meigs Department will sponsorits annual '
members IIQled to auend. •
County Public Library in Pomeroy turkey supper on Thur$day at S "
POMEROY - The Hysell Run on Wednesclay a[ 6:30, p.m. .Th~ p.m. with carry-outto begin 8l4:30 ' .
'
HolinessChurtll,offRoute 124on is a $12,fee and reg!Strauon IS p.m.
County Road 15, win have revival r~uited ..Bring one-half yard white
TIJPPER~ PLAINS - The Tup- ,,
Tuesday through Sunday at 7 p.m. saun or cream colored muslin and
nightly. George Williams, Point · two and one-half yards of lace. pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053 '
Rock Church, will be the speaker. . Michele Garretson is the instructor. Auxiliary wiD hold a special meetPastor Bob Manley invites tlie pubing at the ·Post home on Thursday
lic. .
.
at
7:30p.m. All members are urged · ·
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Revitalization Committee will meet to attend.
REEDSVILLE : The Olive Wednesday at Trinity Church at 7
REEDSVILLE - The Riverview
Township Trustees wiD have a spe- p.m.
Garden Club will meet Thursday .at
cial meeting on Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. at the Reedsville Fue House
SYRACUSE - Revival at the 7:30p.m. at the Reedsville Church.
for the purpose of appointing a Syracuse Mission Church will be of Christ. A Christmas WOfkshop ·,
held Wednesday through Sunday will be conducted by Marilyn Han- ..
clerk.
with Pastor Rick Malloy. Ther~ num and Ruth Anne Balderson.
HARRISONVILLE - The Har- will. be special singing and Pastor Members are to bring gifis for · ·
risonviUe Senior Citizens will meet Mike Thompson·invites the public. · patients at Pomeroy Nursing and ' ·
Tuesday. Officers will be elected
Rehabilication Center.
·~ l

STILL STANDING - The old one-room
Parldnson School where Hazel Vanzant Wright,

Ohio

Jerry Van Dyke's daughter commits suicide

, Tuesday, ~ovem~r
. 1&amp;,
. 1"1 '·'

1

I

Novemben 1891

Sentinel

'

CLELAND REALTY "SOLD" SIGNS ARE GOING UP
EVERYWHERE! IF YOU HAVE EVER THOUGHT OF
SEI.IJNG GIVE U8 A CALL I WE HAVE INTERESTED
CUSTOMERS COlliNG IN EVERYDAY! IF YOU WANT
TO BUY OR SELL THIS IS THE PLACE TO
BE.... CLELAND REALTYII
HENRY E. CLEI.AND.........................................ee2-618;

TRACY BAINAGER..................................."''''..NI-2438
~~~ TAU88ELL .............,..:............................IMt-2etlll
LL......."''"'"'"''"'"'""'"""' ''''"'""""'"'"'"'IIS-4411
OFFIC~ ...............................................................812·225t

.
'

:

Tops,
carpets, Headliner &amp;.
Seat Covers and
Minor Auto Repair. .

MAIN ST¥ MASON, W.VA.

1-(3041
773-9560
91Q191 1 mo. pd.

•Remodeling •nd
Home Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting

FUllY INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES

- . CEDAi

CONSTIUCTION
992·6648 or
"•·6864
1·14· '11-lfn

CHRISTMAS TREES
FOI SALE AT lOB
SNOWDEN'S LOT

'

'

EXCAVAnNG
BULLDOZER 1nd

BACKHOE WORK,

.HOME SiltS.
LANDSCAPING
WATER ind SEWEf'
UNES

TRUCKING AVA!! UU
FREE ESTIMATES

992·3838

A
FIREWOOD
SEUERS .

Hardwood Slobs ·
For Salt

· Griar Pricer
•
CAll
OHIO PAllET CO. ..••
~.

'992··6461

..

�·...... .

!P~ag~e~~~~Th=eioia;l;lyisre~n:lin~e:I·~~:::::::-~----~--~~==~Po~m~e~r~o;y~M~Id~drle~p~o~ri~O~h~lo~====~~::::~~::~~------~T~u~e!sd~afy~,N~o~v~e~m~b;e~r;19~,~1~99~1

i

Announcemenls

SNAFU® by Bruce Bcatiic

for
3

Sincere

for Rent

1174 RMT MobU1 Ho"" 1Zl85,2.
.bdrm, gu, SUrt air condltlontr, 14100, 114-84•2361

Ar11

AWIIt You. c-onftdlrillaL Wrtte:
SlnQIIIc. P.O. lor lOotS, Ga~

Giveaway
Pupa. 112 Bordw Colo

Ito, 112 Colllo, Bloek/WhMo, CoU

614-381.Q388
Weekends.

Evenings

Winter Special: 1102 14x70 3br,
f112 Bllho1 11' Color T.V, VCR,
Stareo, Ana Hut Pump. UIIIVII
And Sot, J17,HII. Fronch CHy
Mobllt Hom~~, 114-448-0:WO. 1·

Of

c

100-231-1417. .

4 .. malt, chow/ hUiky, black

puppllt, 114-812~6

33

Smoll 1 BR. opt 7 Court St.

HOUH Doa, To Good Homl, Part
Wtlner .(nd COCk• SPinill.
Great With Kldti114-258•12'JII.

HorH ·t.rm ~1111, 14 acm:
40 ·:~ r-tlotl, 20 loncotl, 6~121.
34 w
• FLtldt are p.rflct lor
hOI'III. barn, Mop, lhld, Unturntahed 2 Bedroom Gatlgto
hoUto, "" 1110. public ...... AD1rtm1nl, 322 Third Aw•n~.
tytllm, txctJIMt huntlnglr'tl, l"f4-t46.3iltl,
614-256·1903
R-vllfo OH, $80,000, 514-378- Beto,. 9P.M. '

Malt Beagle, to good home.

Friondly. 11.,.._471.

Wtlnutt To GIYNWiy. 114-387-

Farms for Sale

IMSI

7864 ,

"Sorry, ma'am . I can't dance unless
someone's shooting bullets at my feet."

Lost&amp; Found

35

.

Found: Malt Btiall, ' Mostly
Black And Tan, Vk:lnMy Shrine
Club Are:. ~~1:vlllt Road, Ott

Building lotl,1-acreand up, TP &amp;
C · wtttr, Eatwn u.1at Co.,
q~.~art• milt ott SAT, 114--.

4

Rt. 160. 5

471.

beagl~lkt

doa.
Whitt, black tpol on rump. Wtlt
Clr.d for. CtU 114-256-1400 tf
Found: Small

your~ I

lnltructor NIHtCI: Mutt HIVI A
Bullnn~
Education, Com·
p-nolvo Doar11, Sond
Res:urnt To: P.O. 'lox 213, Oalllpolll, OH 45831.

l.lborert and mllnltntnce men,
now hiring, lo $16.00 hr, 1-800-

Wanted
Would Ukt ANlct Place To u.,e
With A Room1t1, To Shtrt

Chol'lt. 614-446-3658.

14 .

3614

t.OST· Ptlr wl111 framld gl....s
vklnty of North Mtln. AlWard!

38S3.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Alck PArson Auction Complnf',
full time IUCUonMr, compllle
1uctlon 11rv~. Uc:enlld Ohio,
Wnt Vlrglnll, 31M·Tn-5785.
F1ll lnvenlol)' Rsductlon Auc:·

Uon. Novtmbtf 23rd, 10 A.M.
l.ocltH On Rt. 17 Blttween

Point Pto-nt And Rlploy1,WV,
Toko At. tr7 Oft Rt. 2, 14 Mllll
Nonh Of Point Ploo11nl o. 2
MIIH Wool 01 Rl~, Tolto At.
87 To IIIIo SMo.
nt Poolid.
Auct,.._: Edwin nllf, 1334,
KMitf'l 30Wt5-31ll.

9

Wanted to Buy
Junk eo~rs and trucks, 11110 HIJ.
lng ~rtl dally,

J•o·, Auto P1r11

Part tim• houriiF'ull tim• pay,
light asumbl~ work 11 horn•.
no txperltnc:e r.qulrtd. 216-

414.0023 oxl. 217 H.

Part·Tim• CaN MaNigtr For

Goodwill

lnduo4rlool

Polnl

PI ..Nnl Area. p.grM n Humsn
S,rvicM Or Atlaltd Fltkl 20
Hra!Wk. Eiperitnc:~ Working
With Pel'lonl With DlubiU11H
Helpful. Soms Trsvtl Ntc:......,.
Reply 0.1dllne Novtmbtr 25,
1it1· S.nd Rnu'mt To: Pertonnol DOportmo!]I,,P.O. Bor 7:185,
Huntington, WY 25T11, EEO,
11/SNIA.
Person to work In 111111 tlore,
part-tlma. Good woltlng cond.
SUO por hour. Roptr fo: P. 0 .
Bo1 201, Galllpollt, OH 45631.

Pomll'oy Nurtlng C.lt• hu
lmmtdllll optnl~ for part·llmt
and ctll In nUf\lng a11ltt1nta.
Clus for Ohio Sttlt Tilting will
pint, Tim IMrhl lf4-M2·7810 be off•rtd with emptoymtnl,
Jlttrlpm.
mutt ht'olt taltphoM, 1pp1y a1
Wanted to bUJ, Stsndlng llmbw, ctnttr, EOE
Bob Wllllamt I Son1 114-192· Radktloglc T~~ehnologllt: lu!J.
5441.
tlmt potillon WHklnds. midW1ntld To Buy: Junk Autot night •hlff, C7 dty• on tnd 7
With Or WlthotA lloloro. CaN days ott). ARRT Reglattrld or
tllglblt. Wnt Ylrglnlt Stitt
Lorry Uvo/y. 514-saa-11:103.

••~ Sol-. 304-'m-6343.
Wont lo bll)' olondlng llmbor I

Top PrfcOo Pold: All

~

U.S.

Coins. Ookl Alng1, llfvti·CoiM,
Oold Colno. II.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 Second Awtna, GalllpoNt.

Employmenl Services
11

Llconto Rogtll...a. Conloel

If .,......,, V•IIIY
Hotpllll. :J04.175-4340, AAIEOE.
per~onntl

AIVtniWOOd Clre Clnttr lite&gt;
ctPflng rMumt tor 1 full·tlmt

LPNht "Send tnqulree 11 1113
Wts naton St, A•v•ntwOOd,
WV25114
ReprtNntltlvM warced·. With
to Order? Hive 1 Pal1(1 Fund
Ralur w/40%? AVON. 0.11 Kay,

Help Wanted

$350/doy procollllnt phono ... 5-2-7180
=.n:o::.=:,.:.~:.:_~ W.nttd lnOCivttecl ..... perwon,
11242.
$2f,II0-$52,000 111 - · trolnln&lt;l
""'vldod, orporionoo prolor~
AVON • AH u~1 • C.U llorflyn ilond rotumo 10 Dally - Woovor ~--1.
PO BOlt ?218 Pomorvy, OH
A Oolly latory Of $300 .For Q'ltll
Buyl!lf llo&lt;cflondtoo, Buyor Wo11 Poy You To Typo Nomoo
NoOdoCI. No Eroorlonco And Add""" From Homo!
tar'(. IM-315-2012, Ert:lll3.
$80.00 Por 100. Call 1 - AUSTRAUA WAIITI YOU
15M ($0.1MIIn.l 0. Wrflo:
PASSE - 33H, 111 9. UnccNnway,
Trtnoporllllon,
407-'212o41117, N. Auron, IL 80642. •
Ext. m. ll.m.-10p.m. Toll We'll paf' you to type ntmll &amp;

Elcti..JC

Pay,

BtnsfMI

Rotundod.

E

oddrtt- tom liornol $80.00
100.
.~. . .51
SO.Himlnl Of wrfto: PASSESpooro. 304.f71.14ft.
7H, 111 S. Uncotnwoy, N
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT IS Auroro, IL 10&amp;42.
·
HIRING. ~}000 • 172LOOO/Yr. 1· Wo'll por JOU lo typo nomoo I
IOUU 11100 Ert. GoMI Fo&lt; lddroo- trom liornol $80.00
lmmed&amp;ll• Altpontl.
P:l' 100, call 1..10Q-811-11M

::=.:;:=:;=.,;:-=:-:-;-;;:;:;::=
AVON I AI Arooo I Shlrlor

($0.ttlmln) or wrttt: PAS£41H,
h~:~"·
malnttnlnc:•, 111 S. Unco4nwty, N. Aurora,IL
,_,
coo1uo hotporo to :;:605
;:.4;2:=.,....,.--:::::---c::
JtZhr porm. F-T ~2-:IMI Work from homo tao por 100
Hotll HMp

propo~ng

LABORERS ·

moll. lnformlltlon
And lllllnt1n1nce Now H~rl' Mnd ltamp to K.S. EnttrJN1111
~I.OO por hour. 1 ·- ••2•
. P.O. Bor 1157-JMW, Hllltldo, N.1
"
0?205. Phono201·711W290.

Mill PIUII'I Dty Clint Ctrlttr.
Sift, atlord1blt, chlklcsrt. M·F

1 a.m. • 5:30
l•fort, ·•tter

p.m. ~ 2~10.

SIMplng roomt with. cooking.
Also tra
. lller sptct. All hook-ups.
Clll '"" 2:00 p.m., 304·~

44f·16", &amp;27 3rd. Avo. Go~
unturnilhtd hou11, llpollo,OH
507 2nd StrMt, Htw Htven. 304675-3461.
Emplro Furnlluro1 Golllpotlo.
Store Hour~ Mona~y Wid,...
3br Socllonlf Homo In Clly, I doy, Frldoy, f A.M. To I P.M.
Block From Ohio Rlvtr Pluo1 Tuttdly, Thurtdty, S.turdly, 1
614-441-2003, htwttn 3 Ana A.M. To 5 P.M. Sundt)', '12: Noon
&amp;p.m.; 304·743-4311.
To I P.M.
For Atnl: QIIUpolla F•rry GOOD USED APPLIANCES
tcrou from IIIII School. t.o Wllhn. drylf'l, rafrigar~hn,
ltory, 4 BA, LA, DR, kitchen .. _ . lkitltll At&gt;iitloncoo,
with dllhwuhtf I lion, no Uppor Rtvor Ra, Booldo Stono
nfrlgtrator, 1 blth. CeiUng fans, Crol4 llolol. Coll114-141-7511.
llrQI
window
u;
unit,
b~t~boud
hut,
oarpettd.
LAYNE'S AIRNITURE
W11hw, dryer hook-up. small '
t:Oo\pfoioUon-Sat,
homo N'""'''~'~1:·
ttorogo bu11dlnt. lorgo lord. Hourt:
. 11
$340/ino.,
J&gt;lut
uth llu, 0322, 3 mUll out 8ulavlllt Ad.
RlflflnCM ond IICtdy do- F,.. DIIIVIf'Y.
l'lqulrld. No Inside peta. AYIIIPICKENS FURNITURE
Iblt Dtc . t 304-17S.1BU or 675Ntw!Uald
.
4144.
HouNhold tumlthlng. 112 mi.
Nlct, 2 or 3 bclrm houN, etr· Jerrtcho Rd. Pl PltiAnt, WY,
~'r· Rac:lnl •rea. e14-m. Clll 304-875-1450.

21

Business
Opportunity
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHING CO.
rtcomm~ndl

that you do bu.._

nn• with peop~ you know 1nd
NOT to atnd monty lhrough th•
mall untH you have lnvtllfgllld
th• oft.rlng.
Locol V.ndlng Routo For Solo.
Will Soli All 0. Port. Ropoll

ButlMN. Above Avertg• lncomtl1-t00-881·20DO.

Local VtndlnLAoute For Silt,

Choopl ~uti
llSS-6363.

II Qule~y. 1.-

Ml1be Boon~ Is Yours!
, Nt!~~ .~et~.~ --· .
am., wlij .. llelllklap ., I Wt

-·ed
r.r

11111e 1a

..... ,. -,.. dta atn
-~~ ..... .,.11111
tk a lie• r. ilal
lllee,la . . . . ~- ..~

.,.., ... .,tk .....

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Solo l

'

Vl'rt Fumllurt

Choir, J11.10 W11k·

Aec:llntr, SII.Q Wttk, Swlvil

Brick Home In nice locltton 1t

Golllpotlt Forry, Wool Twry

And FtmRy Room, Llrao
Kftchon And Dlnl!lf, UtiiRy
Room, 2 Full Batt. Walk In
t..orao
Lot, CMy
Sc~s, 4 Milt• .Fram Town

c,_,,

$5i,SOO Contldtr !fract.ln Of
Mobllt Hom~, 114-44&amp;-1031.

OWN YOUR OWN NICE HOME
FOR JI,ICIO Full Pra. Oo¥tm·
mllll Agoncloo LIQuldotlll(l.
1'*15-51146500 Ell1. HQM8 For
lmlltldloll Aotlol-.
Muttl Unll ' Atnlll, t VIII Old.
VInyl "ding, Low M•lnttnancl.
Conlrolly Locllid, $19,800. 114·

.....558.

1 BR lumloltod tpt. $200 pt,.
eltctdc. Bordmtn FumltUII.
304..75-2401.
2·BR In llddloport, No Pill.
Poy own '"llllloo, 1200 por mo.
Ooootii/Rt- roqulrocl.

HNVyduty Wllhtr W1~1• $150,
Cut To Sll; Ktnmort walhtr,

W11 JISO; C.. To $U· C.E.
w..h.. wu, sg5, Now S7S;

Miscellaneous
Merchandise
1811!1 Ford Etcorl, Httohboclc.

11,500;

1183

Oldamoblll

'"lh -

tlsbll, C111 614-251-1554, Lalve
M...-ge.

2 . brtnd MW In Crtlt Sunal
Wotte t111nlng bD. 20 mlnutt
~~ 1t txhwmely low prk:t.

R•frlgtrllor, Copptrtont, Frott

on

ront-

=~:V:w=:':':..!'~

,32

·.MObile Home s • · ..

foi Sale
O.,.n On Pro-Ownod Mobllt
H._. All You Por to Tu And
TIUo -With Approved Cndlt
Coli Etooo Homo Cantor At: 114·
1'12·1220.
till lloron l2dl, zbr, 2 AC,
Undor!&gt;lnnlnf, Wllltor, D!Jor,
Rolrlaortlor, 11oft, Port Fum.
lll,stllle'n Good Conclllonl 51444f..Z Alllf lp.m.
$0

1f72 121110 lndlon, YIIY good
cond., -'~!'I IJ.500. Makl an

""""""·I

c.uto;'c
::0,';""~=-"::~d~ ~
Of lotwiN. e1t4111UI.

1N4 AoOord U ; 11115
Ford 4r4, P.U. Loodod; tHe
•ChoVoftl, , _ lllloo· Z.nllh
Color T.V. Wllh A.IIA'.il Ridlo,
$100j Konmoro Mlclowovo, $71.

~5~1~1~"4~1~1~111~.~-----

57

Musical
Instruments

;;

I'VE ALWA'f5

WANTED TO J.IAYE
A GOOD TIME . .

,,

,,
h

••
'·

2528

onyllmo

58

11si Dodgt Shadow PSIPB,
Crulu, Tilt, Air, Ntw Tirtt, Low
ExctUent Condltlan,
114
7315 Afttr 5p.m.

.

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables
Ap~ R1110nobto Prlcod. Fol· ·11181 Z-2~ 1 000 mlllt. Air, lltl,
ter 1 Fruit Fll'm, SA 143 " mlie crulto. S
. 614-441-0347.
SouUI of Carp1111or, ;follow
80
M1llbu,
4
dr., 1lr, tltt, c:rulu,
olgnt. Opon SOiurtloy lom-Spm

Big DakOia Farm Hom1, Bul11
On Your Ld. I 8tdroom1, 3

72 Trucks for Sale

Farm Suppltes
&amp;Ltvestock

SOtho, $31,885 And Up. ,,._

7311.
Boltl•

f:'•callld-002·5130
w1rm momlng ·venlr0

Chrlttmu TrNa. T•g trM now.
SIS ony ""'• dug lroo, $25.
Thomat Tr11 P'tnn, North on 2
acro11 from Good Shlphtrd
Church. 304-171o4041.
.

choop. 304-1175-335~

For Solo, Coi&gt;Oirlono Rol. $75.
tlectr~ inoWUty. "llttl• Rt~e~l"

rodt lwlct. $2400 new, Hll tor
$1500. B1throom v1nMy &amp; cornmodo. Both $80. 30H75-4133.
For Sa..: Freezer IMf Grtln
Fid, Holf Or Wholo, 304-112·
2885.

Minotti U1uum 5000, Ellr1
Lint, Ukt Nawl $300. 114-44631138.

- · Novor Utld Applo 2E
Comput.- For s.a.. Includes
K•y Boln:l, DiiC Drive. And
Monitor. Rttall Price, $1.162, h-

mil.., tot:450. 3CI4-812·~·

John Deer lftlnurt tpreadtr, 111M Doclao D,~o, $1,200, 614ground driven, modii·H •riH 2M..164.
~~XCIIItnl I;Oftdlt5on 1 114-112·
11811 1370 lnltrnttlontl with
• .... oflor 5:30pm
"'•ptr, 444 Com. Englnt, 46
'"
. 1.. wll lint, ·air c:ondltlontr.
Pr:'nt J~"::~ "o:O~ ~~ "
1981 ~111 dump trllltr, 34H·72L,
Plow, Tr111opo~ Dltcl Buth Hog, 614-H2·3150
$2,810. Ownor Will F nonco. 8141110 Ford RUigor, tong bod ,
2111&lt;1522.
XLT, AC, Culllto, factory
f HP Alllo Chomn Riding mag .. 0.1 tlr•l 15,000 mll11,
MOWII', f150; GI'IVIJY l'rrtc:IOf', 8 bllck. AtduCICII this w"k
Spood Wfth Plow Tlllor, B- ·SBOOO. Phonll14-44&amp;-42011. ·

73

Vans

1H3 Chivy 5-10 414 BIIZII', I

Wnt Gllllpal'-, 114-441-1777; •pood In gOod condlllon, $2550.
Wldt s'*11on new &amp; UHd linn 30447&amp;-2111111.
tractort &amp; lmpltmentt. Buy,
5 00

round baM November Sttt: 175 PE SUzUki trail, $500. 304-

GUARANTEEDI

Avtlllblt

11:

Eall Main StrMt, Pomeroy, OH

55

...,....

- ,._llolnt~-~· OH~' Wln1••
"'•
"
·
-·
:.24:.UIZ..:.;:.:.t_ _ _ _ _ _""'
_
p
....
for
Sale
56
.,.

o-n

SmaU mull 111m, on• 111m of
work horttt. Hlmpahlrt twt
1imbo. 114-141-1151.

'

.,

:::::-::: ::.. Doolor.
Wlbb. Call 114 441 02:11. 1-100312.0231.

•'
•'

~·

.
'•

floor mala lie. 0 &amp; A Auto,

,.

80Q.27.1&lt;1585.

•.

Rlpllf, WV. 304-372·3933 or 1·

'··'

SIOI.II Vll'oll Grlndtr, 3 YNrs
Old, Uk• Ntw · Slaul s.at Out·

.·:

lULL. CREATE JOBS
"

Williams
Trl tc31.00rwk Trucking. 114-

24 -60QII.
Fo&lt; Solo: Roglllorocl Suffolk

Ram And Chi·Angua Bull. 6142M·1555.

~ E1padttlan brth
~ Wllnlll to 8urvtvol

'·

1IJ Ill Frilntllnt C

SHE: MAKE5 ME QANCE
11-lE ~· Wrn-1 MY

' ''

,.,.

AUNT HARRIET.

,.
·'

"

.

..'·'•,

B

•,'

Hav: Sm111 biiM. Saturdly onlf'
pickup. 504-675-1832.

Homt lmprovtmenlt:
Yura Experllnce On Oldtr &amp;
Newer Hamal. Room Addltlont,
Foundltlon Wark. Roofing,
Kltc:htnl And Bathl. Frtt · EiUm1tnl AtlertnCH1 No Job To
Big 0. 8molll 514-441o0225.

.,.i,

·~.

71

Autos for Sale

1111 Chivy, 327 malar, turbo

400 tl'llns. T1 81aztr, v~ ·~0.
71 Dalton long btd, lltpu. &amp; tl·
trt motor. M PonUac Sunblrd, 5
lpCI .•• cyl., 114-441-25&amp;1 '""
1811 MUlling, I 91., 1utO., uc.
Interior. 1a1 Chevy 2 doar

,.

•

BERNICE
• · I!EFJE·OSOL

llon, 514-311.f4lQ.
1110 Pcnloc Sunblrd, $500 or
boot oflor. Phono 304-67!1-1108.
tltl lflltll • C.llndor, Good
Rid oncl wltllo, . moll booglo, 4 ~...~~."'~'· $800,
yn ~. IM-:1112 2141
Rog. Chi- ctw-Pol - . 1NZ Unootn Town car, tiCIIIMt
oond. new llehtlln tlr11 new
toto &lt;11-ltolo, 114-MN711.
vinyl roof I holdllnor, 1\ooo
Roglll,- Molo lllnloltn rnltoo, $6,000, f14-1112·3410
Sclintuzor, I Wootca Old, Porllolly Houoo lroloon, l,...... 1N4 ChoW Caltbrlty Good
Condlllon, C.IIIIU4f.1402.
a537.

r7

Upholstery

r]

I

'

~'Your

¥'Birthday

==~...,....,.;.;..;,..:....__,,..
llowrty'l Uphotlltrlng wvk:-

l::·

lng lrl county oroo 21
Tho
belt In tumtlu,. up
•ring.
Cal 304-f'ls-4154 101' too ...
ltmolll.

Fatten your Halet .,
with aWMt 1\d

"

..'"..
'•,,

organs

39 South of Ga.
40 Sea pheaaanl
41 Of unorga·
nlzed labor

43From - - Z
45 Wily
46 Uselul
49 Leans
53 Favorite

13 Coronet
14 Rowing tool

IS Dividing
17 Opposite of
.POst
1B Compiler ol

54 Weariness

58 Sphere··
59 Waler planl

game rules
19 Ancient
chariot

60 Rlvtr bi rriar
61 Compass pl.
62 Ctar pigeon
shoaling
63 Faco part

Annoy
MID - lung
Perkier

DOWN
1 Lavish
2 Syringe lsi.)
3 Sadly
4 Fullr

apartment

org.
34 Male parent

S Use a chair

16 Tennis player

gift . Send tor Scorpio's Astro-Graph

predlcllonslor lhe year a~d by malltng $1.25 ptus a long, self-addressed ,
stamped envelope 10 Aslro-Graph. c/o
this newapaper, P.O. Box 91.428, Clevaland. OH CC101 ·3428. Be sure lo slale
your zodiac wn.
.
SAGITi'Aillus (Now. 23-li'K. 2'1) Th'e
probabiiiHes for tultltllng your ambitious
objectl'/es are favorable today. provld·
eel you don 't take on somelhlng you' re

Ill-equipped to hondle. Operata wilhln
your known capabilities.
CAPRICORN (O.C. 22-.lon. 1t) Think
twice aboul attend ing a social Invo lve~
ment today where I here may be people
you dislike. It might turn ou1 1o be a

watle of bolh lime and monor.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. It) ll's ••·
lrsmel)' Important yoo reof!HU your
oblacllvoa loday. There is a poaslbillly
Nov. 20, 1811
you mlghl be slrlvlng lor something Ihal
You CO&lt;Jid be erlremely lucky fulfilling will no1 grallly you once lila achieved .
y011r hopes end oxpeclallonsl n lh&amp; year PIIC!I (Pob. 20olllrch 20) Don' I
lhead . They may nol be of a material wasle y011r valulblellma1oday arguing
111ture, but they could be more with someone aboUt 'an luue to which
voluable.
1hls Individual has a ciOHd mind . II
ICORPIO (Oct 24-Mov. 22) As long u could upNI you emollonally and ac·
compantons are cooperative and make compllah nothing .
con-alone. you 'Ube easy 10 gel along AIIEJ (lllrch21·Aprl11t) Temporarily
wllh today. You're nol apl 10 reapond Nl aside tnvolvemenlo today lhal d iS·
congenially, ho..,..r , when contradict· tract you from your own lnlereals a~d
ed. Scorpio, tra1t yourall to 1 birthday .. locus on Ute anaita of another . In order

to succeed, you musl be ded icated to
personal goals.
TAURUI (Aprlt 20-May 20) Strtve lo be
self·lllfflclenl today Instead of relying
on the support of another. Even il it Is
for1hcomlng, rou mlghl be beller oil
• wllhoulll .
' GEMtNt (ltior 21..tu'M 20) In oriler to
be successful today, you must be con~
s1s1en1. Guard against tendencies to
slack off on your endeavors jusl when
your oblecllves are wllhtn roach.
CANCER (Juno 21·July 22) Jusl be·
cause fr iends aren'l lolally In accord
wllh your Interests today doesn't mean
they dlsltke you. Try not to lilt your emotiona dictate your reasoning.
LEO (JuiJ :13-Aug. 22) Cerllin ·advan·
tsgeslhal can be gained lodfl)' could be
toet or minimized - If yO\J exer1 100
much prHIUra. Know when to stop
pulhlng snd lo Sler1 pleasing.
YtiiQO (AIIIf. :13-lopl. 22) Keep an .
open mind loday and give aesoctalea
crodlt lor being alleaslas '"'ar1as you
are. II you discount their views ahd aug·
ges1tonl ,
II
Cotlld
prove
counlerproducllve.
UIIIA (lop!. :13-0ct. 23) II y011 allow
lhe ,Olher par1y lo propooo the offer.
YO\J re likely 1o ~ lle11tr lerme Ioder .
People mlghl1rNI YOIJ mora generouSly
than you had anticipated .

Konowho COUnty School•
Slor&amp;o.
Crook and c~gu
Splril of Advonlu,.
10:35 til MOYtE: An Eye for on
Er• (2:001
11:00 1}) 8 (I) (I). all • •

a
a

IIJ-•
1!J Night Coun C
A!!••~ ~TI S_!8r~.

.R•
aJ Moctlyver r:;l '

:=-:reo.
ill) 8port1 Tanlll!!!

Qlllordertownt;l
11 :30 l!l Kojlk []
1IJ NtwtwTtch
Cll Nllhtllno C
1111 AIHiilo Holl ~tereo. Q
iiJ • •ur~~~n Antol' cPrime TlrM
· Storeo.
rae
&amp;trMtSidon

e

nme:l

1111

Mot..,.."

Qll MOVt!: Duet (2:00)

11:351})8 1D1 Tonight 8tlow
Stereo.
(I)ChMriQ
.
12:00 IIJ Adam Stnlth
111e Htgllwor 1o - - Q

IIDeLovteon-

o,. Equotrz•

CELEBRITY CIPHER

In""

Cellorny ClC)tltf CfYJI'IOQrwnt.,. cnt.led !Tom q\10111K&gt;n• b)' ltn'\0111 PIOPII. Pill 1M Pl"tMnl.
Each lett•
apt.- .-.:t• tor enou-. roo., ·, eM: r«WM B.

' IVF

D H D Q

FHYDQ

U L H ' B
L J F

B V 0 P F

BVFEPFOZFP

:
-

.

--····

.,

IFOIO ·F

NVD

EMSSOF
NVD
OWl

LX F

N F L J

LIMHX

B V F

QDWHX . '
VLO
TOOOF
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Doing what Is 1lghl tsn'l the problem; II'S
knowing what 18 rlgflt. " .,.- lyndOn 9. Johnson.

Nolhvllo - Stereo.
aIll AIMIIcl'e
HorN

1111 -oNight

I

l

Ball Aquatic bird
Furies
Explodes
Jack rabb ll
AScott

IZl Slrueate for Dofi10Cracy

I

I

6
7
8
9
10
II

~On the Uno: wltll

'

M11ttr Uc.nMd •ltctrlclln .
Aldtnour Electric:el, 304-175·
17111.

1 - Beta
Kappa
4 Escort
9 Cottage deg.
12 Popeya'a
!~end Olivo

21
23
24
28

Answtr to Prtwiou• Punle

35 llosl worthy
37 Of hearing

Robertton

ASTRO-GRAPH

A-'dtnllal or · comm•rc:ltl • -..
wlrlng, naw Hrvlce or l'tpllll.

The World Almanac Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

.

and count dec larer's triclts. (lf you are ·
de laying the game, tell South that you
are thinking about the hand , not about
that trick.) From the lead and tr ick
one, you know declarer has three
spade tricks. (Partner can't have the
K·J of spades beeause South would
have run .the lead to his queen.) And
dummy's club suit is worth five t ricks. •
That is ei ght, and if declarer wins a
heart trick; he will sprint for borne.
Your only chance is to put up the
heart ace and switch to the diamond

In 700 Club Willi Pot

W111 build patio Cov1r1, d~~eka ,
ICIMnld rooms, put up vln,l
tldlna or trllltr akhtlng. 114·

1110 Iuick lk)'llrk. 4 Coi'llndtr,
Needs A~p~lr, $200, o.a.b., 114-

.

a World NewT
10:30

....•

.. .

children. Stereo. Q

S.W· YIC
Servkl,
•
~*' CrMII Ad. Part1, sup- ~
pll.., pickup, and dtllvtry. 614·
,:
44fo0214.
..

or OBO. 304 ..75-2~ twt.

'-- - -------.....1

a

Dnl1

"

+J

l!l Nowe

. ;'•,,

Electrical &amp; .
Refrigeration

Opening lead:

...

East
All pass

has Olm murdered for
•
insurance money. Stereo. l;l

liD II Hunlor []

84

I NT

Nortll
3 NT

\1)

forme r football star's wife

Room addlllona, tiding, roofing,
vinyl rtplactmlnt wlnduw1,
Clrl*!try by AI Tromm, l14-742· ' "·

1179'T- Arn. llmftid Ed~loo,
porfoct body, runo (lrlll. $2fB5

2113
1110 DIIHI Rabbh Good CocU·

10:00 1}) 8 IDil.lw I Ordor A

304-671-23ae Ohio ,,......2454.

w..-

ZH-1434.
1110 Clvyolor Cordobo Ul, 1CJI, t!Aomollc, nlco cor, uklng
11100 010, no r.o4," f14-14a:.

OADBIJRN
SPEED
BCJ'MPS!!

'·

Wesl
Pass

West and South hands. Against three
no-trump, West leads the spade jack .
Declarer puts up .dummy's ace and
leads the heart five. Which l ive t ricks rive, hoping you can run lour tricks In
do you hope lo collect'
the suit.
At the table, unwarned, everyone
On paper , this defense is rela tively
plays low on the heart, hoping declar· easy to lind, but would you have pro- .
.et is about to misguess a K-J combina· duced it at the ta ble?
•·
@ 1111, ....,~REHIWMH AUIL
•
.lion. But when the dummy is tabled,
.
and before you play to trick one, stop

33 Non-profll

(J) (I)
Homofrant Charlie
and Carolina fight over
whether they will ever have

2454152.
- ·· 304-6-0.
N«; Poodlo
10)'1 . . . tm Fo&lt;d LTD, PB, PB, om.1m, 82
Plumbing &amp;
llny toy, oloo CllimjiloO, tlrond AC, 614.UZ·21H
91reachntuura,l~
Heating
1179 Chovrolo1 Mollbu Slttlon
AKC
RoglolCoeur Wlaon, hitch, roof rock, v..,
cart•'• Plumt»ng
spontoto.
And - .. tulo._AC, prico roclucod, 514Fowth tnd Pin•
112-&lt;n7.
514--0162.
Oolllpollo, Ohio
514-44~-:~BN
1179 Chr)'llor Cordobo1 ~ ong,
114412•2'151 S044YMDD. . ~. &lt;.

wish to test yourself as East, cover the

Slotso.
Amoz ng G1me1 New

somt tpllllance repalrt. WV

2328. CALL COLLECT

in my view. Anyone who counts
all hands is already an expert - or
soon wilt be.
Today's hand is of a ty pe tha t al·
most all club playe rs get wrong. If you

Ll.lther's§:.ssimistic anltude.
Zealand

'•
. '·'•

Twtne And Tlgt1 $1 ..,., 100 ForHtullng. lll3-312-4385 0. Etlloon Ron's TV S.rvlct, apec:llllzlng
Moy11 304-fJ'S.IIN.
In Z.nhh 1110 Mf'Yiclng moat
Olhtr bnndt. Hou.. e~ll• , 1110

Soutb

Continuing our look at Eddie Kan·
tar's bridge-lesson notes, we tur n to
the chapter entitled "Defense Counting the Opponents' Tricks" (The
books are available, at $35 each or $60
lor the two, from P.O. Box 427, Ven·
ice, CA 90294 ) 0! all the errors that
are made at the bridge table , that of
not counting out the hand as it pro·
-l11resoes is far and away the most com~

Sound ola
blow
32 Harem

a

.
·•

-WoroMc.,
Ft""'"'
Tobocco
Rlptor, Ohio.
Flnl Fratmon't Plumbing And HNt·
SolO: Novombor 25th., Froo Sood lng, 61+256-1111
.

Transporlatton

a

9:30 (I) Cotch Ourlng a train
trip, Hayden works on

'•

c~.,tta:

a

Rouanne FfoManns
experiences the litters when
she trloi.o give up smoking .
Stereo.
1111 IIJ
'In 1 Chltd't Homo
(PI 2 of 2)' cas Tue~
Movlo 12:00) Stereo. C ·
9 Tuotdly Night Flgflte
Heavyweight boul: Tim
Wi lherspoon vs. TBA. from
Allantic City, N.J. Ill
Ill NoohvUio Now Stereo.
IIIILIIIY King Ll..l
Fllhor Dowling Mylltrlot
(I)

"•

Hollllln Cowt, A.l. Slrocl, D.H.I.
Rocortlo, Somo Roglollrocl
Altoc Hoiololn Built, Sont 01
Top liOWI, 514-288-24N.
Rogltltrid Ptlnl Moll, 2 YNro
Ole!, flO Do)'l Trolnlng, 14ft.
Stock Troltor, $'1,2M; Blci AQHA
S Yoor Old Gliding. 114-2865522.

Q

Nlghl An angry e"'ployea
lets the boss' daughter taka
the bla"!Lfor a murder.
Slereo._t.,l

•'

Home
Improvements

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

9:00 lll8 lUI In tho HMt oltflt

,.

81

.

"

tQ 6

aJ Church SlrHt Blation

'•

Services

Chuck

A\'£51CUlf ~ Sl¥.'5
A TAl&lt; &lt;Or ~ 1«€ RICt\

..,

+KJ 7;

By Pklllip Alder

auacheCI to a Jeane
's landing
Stereo.
MOVtE:
In
IRII2:00)
9 Munier, Sho 1011 Q
Ill O!t Stogo Stereo.
1111 PrimoNowo
Qll Rln Tin Tin, K·B Cop
8:05 (J} Clloh of the C!gmplont
1:30 111e Homo tmprovlllllnt
Tim is under pressure from
JIH IO complete hiS
~t,modellng pr&lt;&gt;loct. Stereo.

.,

·New att t•nkl, body parts, ona
ton lruc:k' whMit, · r~dlatort,

+ 632

OK Q S ,
'K Q 9 6

Not counting:
a common error

IIJe Rucuo: 911 A

Irian dangles from I line

,,

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

• 763
• A8 3
t KJ 7 5

meteoric rise of East African

i

.,.'

....7~1151.
114-441·1716.
Cullom Ltvllloc:k H1ullng. Can
Hlul To HIUtboro 81lea Or Lo-

llpm.

pu-

,

OJI098 1
. J I0 4 2
t A 10 4

SOUTH

lums to Forrest Bedford 10
lind her mlaalng father:
Stereo. [] .
l!l MOVil: StrfpoiiRI (2:00)
(J) Cottego lollkotbol USA
Varlch Reps al Ohio Stele (LI
IIJ Ill Novo Tile lcienUflc
evidence surrounding the
assassination of JFK. r:;l
(I) 8 Full HOUH The !Wins
are brought ho..,s, and Jeese
ft." 't toll them apart. Stereo.

'

EAST

ID Tho Otympl1d The

7:35 til Sonlord I Son
1:00 !lle lUI I'll Fly Away lilly

'

-,-

WEsT

+a

Ill) Crw~flre

,.,'

U·IJ·II

•n

PHILLIP
ALDER

~·~oiFOIIunoQ

In lhe 1956
Melbourne Oly"'plc Games
to the presenl ls traced .

""· 304-I7W1'18.
79 Camper&amp;&amp;
63
Uvestock
Motor Homes
VETERINARIAN.
Slly'lsrk 18 Ft. Ctmpar Tadem
II&lt;. Bll Cronk, DVM. Llrgo Axlt ' E1c:tll111t COndition, S.II•nlmJI apec:lllly. 304475-773. Conlolnid, Vt!Y Nlct, $2,200.

colt.

TO GfT YOUfl I'IAI'ID $TAMPEO.

NORTH
OA 2

1121e Fo"'lly Feud
a Blo a Ster Stereo..
pan~lpallon

~

ANSWERS

t9 8 3 2
O AQ109 4

runners from their flrat

f~ , Guido Tooloc Almoll 5K ln62 wanted to Buy
vnted. Otters vr Tradn ConOld Chivy pono tor 1155 lhru tldertd, 614-446-2306.

=

ond au=...,~ Pol

837-2018.

76

0/CA'(, A£t. yov flOP/.! IN THI
'ElNCAfNAf'ON .fOCifTY, 8£ $1.1/l£

1••

..
I I I I I I .I I I

.., ,·,.

BRIDGE

·IIJ Ente!lllnmtnt TOIIIght
stereo ..~
.
(I) 8 Moiriod... Witll Chltd,.n

'•,

&amp; 4 WD's

UNSCRAMBlE fORI
AN SWER
.

7:30 !lle 1D1 JeopardY! C
l!l Now HC.n Blo 'roil

.,

Mll11go, 614·371-21 11.

Jlm't Ftnn Equlpmtnl, SR. 35,

31130 Ford 41 hp 1 doubfo volvo,
$13,500. 1120 Ford 24 1o1 4 wo &amp;
GUARANTEED! Avolltblo tl: loodlf $14,000. 530 A Botoro
... 1501,
. 81um True YIIUI Slort, 11 Well 6001 $1,400. $1,450; modol 853 12001
Main Slretl, Chnttr, OH
J10,800; modol Ill 17001
Alta Or Mice? In Your Houu'l $1\100. Koolort Sorvlco Coni•,
Buy ENF.ORCEA, Kllla rats I $1111 Rl. 17. Point PlooNnl ona
mlco In only · 1 loodlng, Rlploy Rood, 304-8H48lll.
O'Dell TNI Valua Lumber, 134

llll~yllno

·~

Gehl grinder mlxtt, Ntw Holland
7ft. hoybl"'!, Holfond 8 ft. 1978 Ford Econollnt: vtn. Htavy
hoybln~. Hollond 707 duty. liNd by local •ltc:trlclln .
tortg• hlrvtater, 2 hilda. AC 2 · Call 304-17$-1171 antr6pm.
row, ~ pl. hltch no tiU com piM· 1983 Chtwroltt 414, High
ttr. All tic. cond. 304-273-4215.

I'

PR INT NUMBfRED
l ETTERS
..

Stereo.

·'

klng $100· Coli 514-41U752 t~· ~?~:C,::oo- ' woolcdoyt, ,74,....,...,M::o..:,to..,rc..:..:.y.;.
cl,;e.,_s...,.,.=
811woon a:Oo A.M. And 1:00 P.M.
llondoy Ttvu Frldoy.
FOfd tractor &amp; New Holland Hand• 300 ~trax, 11118, -$2:500.
Rat• Or Mlc:t? In Your Hou11?
Buy ENFORCER, Kllll rolt l
miCe In onlf 1 fMdlng,

a.....tton c

g=:.c...2

. '

a

Hectic - Happy - Fault - Deaden .:. FEEL the HEAT
Have you ever noticed that most of us are ~illing to
change , not becafls e we see the light, but because we
FEEL the HEAT?

•

.,

a

..

"' '•·•

'•".,

SCIIAM-Lm

10 Tho Woltont
7:05 til Too CtoH lor Comfort

·

Hog, Clrotfor Blodo And Sulky
CaD. 304-611-5215, 304-175-6724.

0

1121e e p ; - n t Tonight

Cht1. halfton. Sltp aldl,
ohon bod. 700. 114-448-1340.

Farmcqulpment

8

I

i'

1182 GMC 112 ton 4 whMI drlvt

61

Q

NtwoHour[]

I

c~n

h7r-TI;-"'lr-r.lg:-TI--;Ir-l ···~:pl oto tho chi/Cklo qvotod "''·
1
1
by filling in the missing words
L.....J·'--·'--·'--'·'--'·--'·
you devslop from step No. 3 belOw.

111e c.ndiB c._.
1111 Current Aftllr C
liD e ·llllr Till&lt;: Tile Nelli

1m

plckup1_ UL .c dlo11l, 10,000

Nac.."= R
llllllen8~eo
IIJ Wild Amorlcot-

1:30 ~!,~
.

IIJ Ill MltcNtiiJL,etlrer

·'

Mll•:f:•

good c:ondiUon. 114-245-!5111.

ttd hH

,.,.

..

You
discover many
things while out camping. For
.
•
•
instance last , week I dis· .
covered that flashlight is
• --:-H:-::-E-=c=-=s-:I:-::T-..., case in which to carry dead

"~~

I

®tlltumoiJeIIJintlde !dillOn C

ll.y O.d soe~ to work .
JA.y !lo~r~ ll"K lo t.UOrk.

My Family
By Gentll&lt;ly

:.

form fo"' ~mplo -do..

AL E

aUpCIOM
IONewZorroQ
. 1:361!) Andy Clrlfflth
7:00,IJle ·lUI Whttt of FortuM

'·

,..._,_;...,.;_..;_....;,,..,.,:::'" ' IUIO, IXC. Cond.1 .lotdld, mutt
Wantld·uMd trumpet, 814-812· Hll ' $7900, 614-~i-2i34

~==

ill NIA Today
1111 World Today
.10 Rln Tin Tin, K·t Cop Q
1:0151!) a...rt, Hlltttlltlu

Rl~~

'·

4p.m.
:"
,gtn Pontiac Tront Am, T&lt;opo, ':'

304.f7W4B5.

Butkllng
Supplies
G.E. 01Jor, $85; Gil Dryor, $15; Bloclt, brlolt, ......., wfn-

F-. 2 Door, Woo $150, 814-112-2311 dll)'o.
$125i
1 2 boor, FIOII
Froo, Allrlgerator
115· Rofrtgorolor,
2 YNro
1bf - Furnllhld, . $211S1mo. Old, Llko Now, WhH•hiWu t2f5,
Soourlly Oopooll, R•"'"""•· C.. To JIBS· Uorlg Ft'Nlor,
I'Mo441-2231, 114-441-2111.
ItS; All Bold Wllh GutraniiH,
Skoggo Appllonc11, Uppor
3 Room Fum- Aport_, Roult 7, B"ldt Stone Crnt
Mottl, 114-44f·1'3H.
11111
1111o Eool 114-:IIMIIIS.
01 - · ·
Rt.IIM,-.
Zenith 211nch contolt color TV,
5 0 - of flmllr lncomo.
with rtmOII. $150. 5 pltot Ivory
'lllo lrdlo •PIIImonlo In bedroom suite whh matll'llt I
eo~n now offer 1o qualified •P. boupringL $350. 514-441-7231
pllconlo I 2 IR otudlo lporl• lhtrlpm.
wllh
on 30 per-&lt;II family frlcomo, C.N JLA~
M 104-~lt no aftiWtr 52 Sportl ng Goods
piiOoo loovt ._go on II""
For Silt: 1100 Remlnaton1
Cltlr!o.EHO.
Autom~k&gt; Shot Gun, Gooa
IEAIITIFUL APARTIIENT1 AT Condition, Cbok::t 81rr111, 114BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON 381-1113.
Romlnoton llodol 1'100, 30.115,
never
1 with. new 4 powwr
rnovloo. Calll--2511. EOH. Tttco llred
Scope tnd mounl• 3Q4.
FOt ...... 1 tidrm·,.,., '"'" 575-5541 ollor 4:'00"Pll. " ' ·· •·
0t unbn, In Mkkllport, 114Sovogo boll ICIIoo 30-115. Novor
812-62210&lt; 112-6304.
llrocl.l221. SOWJI-1241. ·
Fu.,._ 3 &amp; Both,
Cloon, No Pllt, RolortnCO &amp; 53
Antiques
Oopooft Roqulroo. 514o44e-1511. ,.;.-~,..,,.:-,.;..~-­
· Nlcoly Furnlohod o-rtmonl Bur or 1111. Rtvorlno Anllquoo,
1br, nul 10 Ubnnl';'"'porltl~: 1124 E. Moln 111011, Pomoroy.
oonlrol holl, olri...'.'MIICI ·;:_ Houro: II.T.W. 10:00 Lftl. 101:00
qubttf -.o-.
P;'!';:.!"ndor. 1:00 lo 1:00 p.m.
·
I ~--2121.
Fum- llll All ,.llllloo JOkf.
1 BR, upololro, 2nd Avo. Good 54 Mlscallaneous
....,.., l14-441-1523.
Merchandise
Fum,_ EH~ In Town
UUIIUII Plid II~ 111/J FI. IIFG -·And Traitor,
==t '
110 1780;
Dop/llof,
30. 10 ~~...
Fu"'- lfllcloncv, 1180/mo.
uua,..
Pold. 7 112 NOll Avtnuo, FO P~nlor, Htyoo
l.alo

otftr. CallofiOr I, 114..:IJI.G31.
11111 Covtntry, 10x12. 2 bdrm,
unfurnlthod, iollh 1 . .k
I -118o 111 ~on ......,, ICII, 1 Qaflpoh. 114 441 4111 • After
owner. 13100, I 4U JIS4
7p.111.
Hendy iNn -lalo 12JttG. 2 BR elrod..,. Uvtno. 1 ond 2 bodmoblfo hoctto, U lo. Noodl Worlt. room tponmonto II Ylltogo
Would 1111ko nlco iddltlon, Monor
ond
Rlvorttao
Afllnmonll In Mlddlopoti. From
11100.
Pli
onor
7pm.
1101. Caii114-DI2·7111.. EOH.

.,

54

dorn" =1roc1.

"' -~~~,.... dlletl, IItle .. .

bulltntl tiiHM
ud ldtrillaa lltea
tk a rl'e•r

·-8

RENT20WN

l LIKE TOWATCJ.I
PEOPLE J.IAVIN6
A GOOD TIME ..

1887 CMda D1ll1 88, 65,000 Mil••, ::
AU Pow.r, Air, Exe1ll1nt Condl· . ' ·
lion. $6100. &amp;14-446-4225, Alter .•

u-.

BaMmtnl With 2 C.r Glrage

.When You Turn To
The Classfteds,

3 btclroom

CD~Ont ·T­
Siar10.
Ill Mlllt nl!lf Hour

'

114·'i'l2-:i0id 1lttr 5pm tor
mortlnlo
~.:::":::'"~'':":·:"':·:::::::::;::::::::====~ Mil,

111 • •

- l!l~-

'

1181 Dodg~ 600 4 door, must

Rocltor, $3.53 Wook.Bunk Bid
12r60 M~ 3 MIIH Complltt
RATS OR MICE?
l.ocll VIR~ Route. Mult Sell From Gall
S8.41 WMk, 4 Or1wtr In Your Houu? lur EHFOR·
, Zbr, Water Ptld,
Oule~y. 1
234·2151.
Chool,
$3.21
Wook;
Pootl/'
BodDopooit,
, $235/mo.
CEA. KIUI Ratt And Ulct In
room Slllle, 7 pc., S11.17 WHk, Only 1 Ftldlng. GUARANTEED!
Local Plf' PhoM Aout1. For '1'14-441015.114 418 mt.
tnctudoo Biddlng.Couni!Y Plno
SOlo, Choop. 1.8Q0.1111-4453.
14x7D til tltc:trlc on prtv1t1 lot Dlno41o WHh llonch l 4 Chllro, Avollttblt AI: Conlrtl Bupply, 17
LAIIftiH. HUD Approvod, JIO.N Woolc.OPEN: Mondoy Court St/111; Spring Vollor
VENDING ROUTE : Gil . Rleh PI,.
Htrcfw:trl, 121 JackiOn Plkt;
304
..
75-4081.
Thru S.turday, ll.m. to lp.m., Odllt True VIla LBR, VIne
Quick? No Way\ But Wt Ht¥1' A
Sund1y 12 Noon Till 5p.m. 4 StrMt At Third Awtnut, Gtl·
Good, 8\Ndy, Atfordtbll, Buti- 14r70 wllh
In CouniiJ.
nnt . . Won"t Lut. 1.-o-2J4. VInton ,,.., W1ttr, trtih Plld. ...1.. Oft Routt 7 On Rout• Mt, llpotlo, Ohio.
In Ctnl•nary.
8363,
$214 l dopooll. 114-388-llf85.
Sc,_l llblo, 4 ft. round $21.00
Cofloo, ond llbloo, $100. 1181
11M Mx70 2 bedroom mobil• AUCTION l SWAIN
FURNITURE. f2 UD FICIOIY buoboll II~ $200.
Real Estate
homo. Rof. &amp; dop. SOWTI-l'NB. Ollv• St., Galli poll•.
Ntw &amp; Used 1111 UD Ftctory Bulbill lit,
2 hdroom lrtll•, compllllly lumhura. ~~~~~ Wllttm l $40.304-195-3318.
.
3151.
tumlshtd, wllhll' • d~r, AC, Worlt boolo. I
31 · Homes for Sale
Stortpe and/01 otllce trtUtr
304·773-6151.
YI'RA FURNITURE
1'1120 , JI!OO, 4tp lront, 314
ABSOWTELY MUST SELLII 2 BR mobil• homt Aelaranca &amp;
514-441-3151
Roclucod To loU : 2 StoiJ 3br
LIVING ROOM: Solo &amp; Choir, chtrl')' '73-'80 1100
Coit
....
2pm,
Corner l.ol In Choohlro, 01\lo. 11 •
$'1H.OO;
Atcllntr,
$141.00; Surptua Army Camouftaugs
•
IEJ:CII..It Condition. Flnsnclna
Swlvol Rocl!or, $81.00; Coffoo l c:lothlng, lnaullled dacron
Avtllal»t. 1104-t32-&amp;151, ~ 2 BR Ioiii olocltlc,1·112 mi. hom End T1bln, $8&amp;.00 Stt.DININQ camouftluge c:ov•l• 130,
Golllpollo on ... At. 558, ROOM : Toblo With 4 Poddid llllhlf US Combo! Booll. COr·
132·1'm, 114-Stll'GMI.
$250/mo. Dop, 1111. rtq'ld. 514- Chtlro, $149.00; Couni'I Pine h1rt clothing, okl 1111* knlfa
2 Bldroom, Hlny Man Special, 44f-3413.
Dlntttt With Btnch nd 3 dealer. Sam "Sonwvlll't SlnOwnor Occuplod, lmmodloto
Cholro . $2111.00; Motohlng 2
WV booldo Pool britco,
- t o n P-blo, teK 2 BA , twrnlthad or unfumllhld. Door 1""ch $34t: Or ssn.oo dyvlllo1,
Rt
21 n. Fri, Sol, Sun, IICIOIHI:OO
O.B.O. 61U~1125.
CiiM 1¥1Uable. llluUful river Sot; Ook Tobfo, c:zre2 Whh 5 PM lo/Ciondod houri du~ng
vlow In Konouoo. looiM Bow
Back
Ch1l11, hunting -oon1. 304-:m-5551.
3 lldroom Houle, 111 Klneon H"'!"
Porte. 114-441-1602.
$628.00.BEDROOII: Pollor Bocf.
Orl'olt, O.lllpollt. Uvlng Room,
Dining Room Kitchen, Bath, Mobllo homo lor ronl, HUD op- room Sullo (5 pc.l, $341.00; 4
Control Alrc Vtnvt Sldlng1.•COr· ·proved. Will accspC coniiNe· Drtwer ChMt, ·~4.15; Bunk
Dllid. 2 c.;or Qorago. Within Uon worktra. 114-441-GSOI or Bid, 5221; Comptoto Fun Mon
Sot JIOS.OO 911 ; 7 pc. Coder
Walking Dttttnc• Of Tht Pool, 81U4H32t
a;droom SuHo, taiii.OO.OPEN:
Oolf C&lt;&gt;oroo And Cllnle. QoJ.
Monday Thru Stturdly, 11.m. to
llpotlt c11r Sc'-1 Dlll~cl. 114- 44
Apartment
lp.m., Sunday 12 Noon Till
245-1152.
5p.rn., 4 Mlln on Roulo 7 On
for
Rent
A-Fromo Good l.ocollon, Hon·
Rout• 141 In Centtnsry.
nan Trece School• Low Price, 1 l 2 bdrm 01&gt;1 In llldcftopon,
For lntaimJIIon, C.u 114-251- UUIItM Fum, dtp raq, no petl, Wnh" Salt: Hotpolnl: W11har,
W11 5175, Now 5125; G.E,
1811.
614-812-2211.

304-675-202t.
By lulldlr Ntw 3 Bedroom Full

Reap The Remis~~~

21'11.

Counly Appllanc•, Inc. Good
used appliances, T.V. ttlt. Open
8 a.m. ·IO I p.m. Mon ..Sat. 114-

.

1117 Chivy Nowa: h.l,h mlltag..
n-. ,rtptllr. Good rtnsporta·
lion Clr. 11,500, For mOrt lnlormltlon C.ll 614-448-2342, Aak
lorP1u1.

Comll1tnttrt11 bf' 81klr, 23
14.H. S1lt On All Csr.pat n books tor $200, 614-1112·200&amp;
Stock! M~loh1n C.rpttt, 114Elt1rlor door, 10132 lnchlt,
448·7444.

WIU Do HouttciNnlng, 5 YNI'I
Exptrianca.l'l4-448-8028 or 814441-G22SIIIvlmetuge.

Financtal

1'15-2440.

Space for Rent

~ehoot Drop-lnt
welcom•. 814-446-8224. Nw In·
tant Toddl., Cara, 614-44W221.

Subdivision, 3 bedroom•. 2
bttht, DA, K, LA, lll~ ltinlty
room. CourtHf' to Brokt11.
Shown by appcMntmtnt only.

ABargain...

required, phone 114-182-6318,

814-..2·22?2

IIJ-•

l·:

18M Dodgt Dortono Good
Condftlon, !Mw Tlrtt1} Spood, 'I ·:

Transmlalon AUIFM St(1'80 };•
CU.eltl, 8unrool, PS, PI, Air ...,,
Cond~lon~2,150 0. Btll Of.
"'· 114-2
•
.
1111 Eloort 11100; "" Hori10n -..
11200; 1NI Plrmouth.J• mlln ' '
$1100; 1117 HOrizon, :JJIOO. 3Q4. ::

Omogo, JI,OOO; 11163 Dodgo
Dl~~ S400; 3 Acll Plooo 01
Ccxlnlry Mobil• Home Pllrk. Lind
And 11om,
$12,000· All Prlcoo Aro NIIIO-

46

3 btclroom houM, 2211 JtH•·
ton Avenue, 1300 month.
Roforoncot &amp; Dopooit. 304-IIJI.

Will takt 0111 of or help llderly
ln thtlr hom1, ..apm, 614-MG2181

•

1:00 llle rn rn •

to

'I pyiyI I
I rEri Aa ~
8
c ~-~
I
I .I .I r .

EVENINO

ur-:..;••haust. $120Q. ~;:
.
' .

114-371-

&amp;14-446-1580.

LABORERS
Now!IISoulhNitlm 41 Houses for Rent
AHD MAINTENANCE NOW Attraln
Routt 33, Notlh of Pomeroy.
304·7'73-5185.
HIRING, T0 "$16 HOU~. 1-IQO. Bualntu College, Sprtna Valli)'
Lott, ren1111, parlt, ...... tall
PIUI. Call Todly, 614-441-43&amp;7(1 · 1 Bodroom Houoo, Fumlohod, 614-lg2·7'171.
1142-21161.
Lost : While Germ1n Shepherd1
Air Condftlonod, No Polo. 114RtQIIttratlon ISI0-05-1274B.
10.12 WHits Old. Ell'l Sttna M1lnttn1nce
Su~rviiOI'.
~.
48
Equipment
Stralghl Up. Fold lnwtrd On Top Fut~lmo. Botory n,.otloblo. 18 Wanted to Do
Whl" Sclred. A•ward, $1001 Mutt h•v• gentral malnren~nce, ,:,,....,,;,;..;.,;..:..;;.,;,.:.,,:;...;:..,..- 1 Yoor Old - . Sbr, At. 180,
1 R I
A"awers To Mtgnum. 6~371- eltctrkll, tiullng, air condition- Will BabytK !n My Home By North Golllo Hlah School, '-::-:-::=::O-:r:::-e':'n:::-==-:2065, Or 614-44&amp;-1482.
Wllk0.
bf Dlclm·
lng IXptrltnCI. PIIIH lpply.ln Anr.lmt.
Rodney
Area. Aval~2~
bor
11st 1200
tt 114- 1,Loa Spllntr Far Rant Evans
person; Sc:tnlc: Hlll1 Nursing Ae ertnc•• Available. Call 614- 355-6711.
'
mo,
poo ·
Moloro, 614-445.. 512,
Cenler., 311 Buckrldg1 Rd. Bid· 245..5887:
7
Yard Sale
Will.
::-:-:-:====:-::---,,E l R TREE SERVICE. T01&gt;1&gt;lng, 2 SIOI'f 3br Comor Lot In
Merchandise
NEED CHR ISTMAS CASH? Trimming, TrH A1moval, l-4tdge ChMhtr., Ohio. bptllent Con~ltlon.
1104-132.f858,
-132·
Wortt From Your Homt Sh,tflng TriMming. Fr.. Eltlm11111 614.7670, 614-317.(1141.
Env1loptt.
For - lnforma- 367·'1957.
-- GallipoliS
lioiYAppUcallon Sind $tlf·Ad2 BR hou11. Rof. I Dop. 304- 51
Household
&amp; VIcinity
dmHCI StamDid Env11op1 To: Gtorgu Part1blt Stwmlll don'l 675-5162.
Mutklngum ArH Publllhlng, hauhL~' loga to ·th• mfll Jull
Goods .
ALL Yord Solo Mull Bo Pold In Box 1111, ZanNvlllt, Ohro Clll . 75·1157.
3 bdm'l, lOIII IIICtric home on
Advanc.. DEADLINE: Z:OO p.m. 43702.
L.ourol CIIH Rd 1314 milo !rom Ctrptl 1112 $50 l Upl Slit On
I will do rug WNVIng • e .oo PI' Big WhMI Slorol, $250/mo l All Ouloldo Carptl: $3.81 l
the day bltort the ad It to run.
Sunday tdlllon • 2:00 p.m. No Exp..-5ilnct Ntc.... ry. A ytrd, 614-1143-5341
u!Hitlq, reltrei'JCM I dtoolll f4.H; KHchon Carpel, $7; Vtnr,t
Friday. Uond1y ldltlon • 2:00 Dilly Salary Of $300 Fot Buying
p.m. S1turdly.
M1rc:h1ndiH. 614-365-2082, Exf.

new

0

St1rtlng at $120/mo. Gtllit Hotel.

5651,MuonWV.

Renlals

Business
Training .

882·2968

l..lon.:::-;"::150=::::.:::..:.7W1:.:..:.:.8.:.5.:.,.-:- •111 ,u11
1111 ~ Eacort, autO•.with lllr, ~ :t

Lots &amp; Acreage

Found:
1 ltn thor!·
~:==7.=:==7.:=::::::===-J'::========~
halrtd Lorge
dog block
In Gtrlleld
An. 1
·
vtctntty. c.n &amp;14 ••1 •ue.
11
Help Wanted
Situation
12

Olour
Roorrango lolttrs of
ocromblod -dt t;o.
low

-:-:

.

Furnished
12
Al:r11,
8
lovol.
At.
7-0hlo.
2
Rooms
toblcco bam1 &amp; base. Trt"'r
~":.""· Prtco roclucod. ~4-74 :1' ;:Roo::::ms~lo::r'::ro'::n:-1,~wo~.:-:,k~or":'::mo~n~th~.

AND J\.1. BE
Ai,.OIIS R#. 1H£ HOUMY,
~ I'D Uk£ 1t1 ~

•••

Kitchin
with
11ova
&amp;
,.frlgtrtlor, $185. mo. plut
utlllll1t, dtpoth &amp; rllel'lnctt.

45

. TMTtMILY
PIIILII

Television
· Viewing ·

Rt~m~

,.,;

•x··

Cl. 614-

bofot05pm

n · ·-;:-

1114 Oldt II Brthm mllaa bul 11'
hid Tl.C, mull'" i .drln,
ctllll'lt condition, $3300, 814- •:
ii2-1t63
,,
1185 ChJWroltt Celebrfly1 4 Cyl., ;~,
4 door, PS, :r....:lr, Gooo coridJ. • •"

wMh '"IIHioo pold, rolortnco ond
dopooit llqUirtd, 304o882-25¥.

looking rlvtr. No Pttt,
44f.0335.

"

haull; D'!4-lt2-Tl38, twenlngs -

In MiddlepOrt, -Ohio. 1 1nd 2
badrvom tumlatt.d tpt, 101M

Ont bedroom •Pirtmtnt In Pt.
Pluunt. Furnlahld. v.,., clun.·
btr1 nlct. No pets. Phon• 304671-1381.

4 ltmllt himtttrl , " 3 mall
hamattra, ctll 114-192-2232

6

Autos for Sale

1184 Dodge Arin, 4 door, bl1ck, ••:

REBATE REBATE!
Up To $1,000 Roboto On Solocl .Nict 1~r APtrtme~, Wtter,
1.01 Modtlt At EIMI Homt Ctn· Traah· Fu,.,.llhld, $240/mo. Plut
t1r. 'Oreal StlteUon Nowh•l'l Sc!curlty Oopotll. 514-445-6558.
ElM But. Ellll Home C.nt1t. 1· Complolly Fumloltod mobllo
I00-68W7f0.
hom•, 1 mi..· below town OVII'·

llpolle, unlo 4563t.

~mtlt

71

AMIFM~ catltitt, 4 Cyl; ntw

SlnQioo All Agoo And utootvtoo

4

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

,Apartment

Sale

Announcements

Unatlact..d?

3

44

32 ·Mobile Homes

:
·

·•
•.

•
,,
·•

·-·.-•.
.•

-~

'

.

... .•..

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohi_o

Tuesday, November 19,1991

Indiana school has strength in numbers -

CONTEST WINNERS • This group of stu·
dents from Pomeroy Elementary School were
recognized as winners or the school's anti-drug
poster contest at an awards assembly on Monday. Pictured, front row, 1-r, are Principal Deb·
bie Brennan, Heather lfYsell, C.D. Ellis, Jeremy
Drickles, Eric Stumbo, Kelly Canan, Jenny
Clark, Robbie Johnson, Chris Smith, Den Carroll, Nicole Runyan, Kris Jenkins, Barbara Saly-

ers, Brian Klein, and Des Jerfers, representing
Dank One, who assisted at the assembly. Second
row, l·r, are Clay Crow, Iravid Anderson, Wes·
ley Thoene, Ryan Pratt, Lauren Anderson,
Michelle Ramsburg, Andy Sanders, Wayne
Barnhart, Donnie Call, Sonya Powell, Kimberly
Lemley, Marianne Carsey, and Matthew
Williamson.

' .I

I

By JACQUI PODZIUS
Assoc:iated Press Writer
PLAINFIELD, Ind. (AP) - If
students at Plainfield Middle
School don't have anything 10 do
after sehool, it's not because they
didn't make the team. Or the band.
Or the cheerleading squad.
·
Ever since the school opened
three years ago, it's had a no-cut
policy for most sports and music
a~tivities. If you try out, you make
the team -no ifs, ands or cuts.
As a result, about half of·the
school's 800 pupils now participate
in one .of the sports teams, ~ band
or t!te choir, principal Jeay Golds·
berry said.
The only exceptions to the nocut policy are the volleyball and
basketball teams and· the select
choir. But there are intramural
teams for those who don't make the
two sports squads, and the select
choir is part of a 248-member gen- _
eratcnoir.
Cheering everyone on are the 71
girls who make up the cheerleading
squad. Boys are welcome, Golds·
berry said, but none bas signed up.
Similarly, no girls have joined the

football team, although they're eligible.
.
Actually, the cheerleading team
is not one squad, but eight. They
rotate every five weeks between
being pompon girls, cheering on
the team's sidelines and in a cheer·
mg box.
The sc ool's other activities
also have highparticipation rates.
The band has 140 musicians.
The football team has 41 players on
the seventh grade team and 29 on
the eighth grade team. The cross
country team had 47 runners this
season; the swim team, 64.
Goldsberry said the philosophy
behind the no-cut policy is more
than just a desire to shock Plainfield's opponents.
"There are so many schools t)lat
approach sports as a business,''
Goldsberry said. "These students
have needs that need to be met
before we can pressure them with
competition and the need 10 win."
The students have responded
"marvelously" to the program, he
said, even though there is often a

_.Ohio Lottery

wide range of skill levels within a
-~am.
· · ·
.
"It can be bad sometimes," said
Cassidy King, a 14-year-old on the
football, basketball, swimming and
cross country teams. "Like in fOOlball, the coach bas everyone play in
every game for four downs,
. "That's OK, except that maybe
it's a close game with a tight score
and-only a few minutes and it's a
weak pl~r.er's tum to go in. But
even that s not so bad. It's about
having fun."
Leah Kottke; 14, who plays Qn
the volleyball and basketball teams,
said opening activities to all the
pupils "shows the school is trying
to make everyone feel special. We
feel like everyone matters."
.
Students with that altitude are
less likely to fail, education authorities say.
Pupils who are at risk of failing
are often excluded by their peers
from extracurricular actiVities, said
Dennis Jackson, the manager of the
Indiana Deparui.ent of Education's
program for at-risk students.

Merchants to
host parade

NAME: _______________________

The Pomeroy Merchants Asso·
ciation 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 1 p.m. behind the old
Pomeroy Junior High School.
Deadline for entry is Nov. 25 and
further information on the parade
may be obtained by calling Vicki
Ferrell at Buttons and Bows, 9925177.

TYPE OF ENTRY:

Pick 3: 292
Pick 4:1022
Cards: 6-H, 8-C,
Q·D,}S
1.- tonlgtltllls-..

Page7

POSTER WINNERS • These sixth graders at
Pomeroy Elementary School were awarded cash
prizes for their outstanding posters in a recent
contest sponsored by the Meigs County Department of Litter Control. Pictured, 1-r are Sara

Craig (who also won district-wide), Danielle
Grueser, Shannon Jenkins, Amanda Ruscbel,
and Julie Hunnell. Also pictured is Debbie Drennan, Principal.

Board welcomes
newest member
The Woodland Centers, Inc.
Board of Trustees formally recogni zes Joe N. Clark as the newest
addition 10 the board.
A resident of Meigs County for
I I years, Clark is the president of
Clark's Jewelry Inc. located in
Pomeroy and Gallipolis. He is a
pas t President of th e Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce and a
member of the Pomeroy Masonic
Lodge and the Grand Lodge of
Ohio.
Clark resides in Pomeroy with
his wife, Susan. Since joining the
board he has been active on the
Finance and Planning Committees.
The Board of Trustees of Woodland Centers meets on the fourth
Wednesday of each month.

(

rain 80 per~enl.

Vol. 42, No. 140
Copyrighted 1991

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
ter to Williams Street.
Sentinel News Stall'
-ln announcing the grant award,
Middleport Village has been Mayor Fred Hoffman expressed
awarded a $150,000 grant from the appreciation to Sen. Jan Michael
Ohio Department of Development Long and Rep. Mary Abel for their
for _the Betsy Ross special housing support of the project.
.
project.
·. Je.an Trussell; Middleport's
The grant money will be used 10 housing speciali~t. said that she
purchase the old Betsy ·Ross prop- anticipates iln early 1992 demoli. erty on South Fifth Av~,JJ1Ze.Jhe _ tion and clearing of'the land, with
. existing building, and clear the land the first house to be under confor construction of housing.
struction in the spring. She said
The land to be purchased that before the funds can be
extends from Fifth 10 Sixth Streeis, released, however, an environmen·
and -from Manley's Recycling Cen- tal review must be completed.

ADDRESS:----------

PHONE:-------------------

Once the site has been cleared, a
street will be constructed down the
center, utilities will be installed,
and the land will be divided into
eight lots.
According to Mrs. Trussell,
eight three-bedroom modular
homes will be build on the lots by a
private developer. These homes
wiU be sold 10 low-income families
who qualify for a Farmers Home
Administration Rural Housing
Loan, she said, explaining that this
means the .applicants must have an
"on-going dependable income".

t

The project will place special
emphasis on single parent with
dependent children applicants, said
the housing specialist.
The Farmers Home Administra·
tion Rural Housing Loans offer
interest subsidy to low-income
home buyers 10 assist in lowering
housmg payments.
. _Mrs. TrusseD explainedJhat the
Betsy Ross special housing project
will allow the Village of Middleport 10 offer lot grants and down
payment assistance to FmHA
approved applicants. With an aver-

age cost to purchase of approximately $42,000 to $45,()00 per
home, approximately $312,000 in
FmHA Rural Housing Loan funds
will .be a available for funding the
purchases.
She said that the loans will be
for 33 years and that 20 percent of
the approved applicant's gross
income must be applied 10 the loan
•payment. Incomes wiU be re-evalu· ated eaeh year with the amount of
the interest subsidy decreasing as
the income of the home purchaser
increases.

Once the lots have been developed, public notice will be-given so
that restdents may make applica•
tion. Those applying can come
from any pan of the county, Mrs.
Trussell said.
She anticipates that she will
begin taking applications from
interested home buyers who want
to. take adxan.tage of the.Jot grant,
down payment assistance and housing payment subsidy in the spring.
All applications will be processed
through Mrs . Trussell at Middleport ViUage Hall.

Schaad returning to.Marietta

Entries must be submitted to Vicki Ferrell,
parade chairman, at Buttons and Bows, 100 East
Main, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, by Nov. 25;

Meigs County's Economic Middleport, also served for. a time
Development Director, Elizabeth as a Community Development SpeA. Schaad, will be pulling up ciali.st for t~e City of Marietta.
stakes and moving back to Mariet- · Schaad's new office will also be
ta, where she will serve as Gover- located in Marietta.
nor George V. Voinovich's
"Schaad's strong economic
. Regional Economic Development development background and her
Representative for Region II.
extensive knowledge of the region
Schaad will be responsible for will be an asset in her new posi·
facilitating economic growth in tion," Voinovich said. "I'm looking
Athens, Hocking, Meigs, Monroe, forward to working directly with
Morgan, Noble, Perry and Wash- her to make sure that the economic
ingtoncounties.
·
development needs of Ohio's
She will leave her post with the Southeastern
Region
are
Meigs County Chamber of Com- addressed."
merce in early ·December, at a date
"The development department
10 be decided with the chamber's will utilize the regional representaBoand of Directors later this week. tives in a capacity similar to a 'corGovernor Voinovich stated that porate sales force' located near
Schaad's work in Meigs County their customer base," State Devel-will help in her new position.
opment Director Ronald E. Jake"As Executive Director and
'd "lllorki dir 11 'th
.. Eco_i16!ii!C"Deorelopment Director prospective
way w · ....,
. n~ and
ec units
Y waof
compames
of the Meip County .Chamber of govc:mmen~ die regional represenCommerce, Schaad has initiated a . tative will complement our teehnifull range of economic develop· cal assistance team working in
ment activity in the area, requiring Columbus. This process will proextensive community involvement vide immediate access 10 developand leadership," Voinovich said. ment staff to held expedite local
"Her many accomplishments in this . development project!."
program have included developing
The goal of the offices is to
programs of priorities for· short- boost economic development
and-long-range development and throughoUI the state while strengthindustrial site development"
ening public·a11d private partnerSchaad, who currently resides in

ships with the bu5iiiess community.
Regional representatives will help
to marshall state resources to
ensure that.local economic development needs are met.
The Development Department
has created 12 regional offices that
will serve multi-county areas. Each
office will be managed by a representative who is familiar with the
areas that they will serve. The
office will provide outreach assistance to local units of government,
business leader~, elected officials,
chambers of commerce and economic development organizations.
Schaa~·'c ame to Meigs County
from Marietta, after she was hired
by the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce in mid-January of this
year. Schaad's Meigs County
appointment came after an extensive search for 'the chamber's frrst
executive director/economic development director.
While Schaad antiCipates leaving the chamber position in early
December, she reported that she
will probably maintain her Meigs
County residence through the new

year.

.

.

TO BE RAZED • Tills old Betsy Rna buDd·
ing on SOuth Fill!~ SL wblcb bas beeD liD eyesore
in the community for many yean will be razed
in early 1992 and tbe land developed into bous-

ing loti. A crut ol $150,000 bas .been aqrdfd
to tbe ViUate of Middleport by tile Ohio Department or Developmebt for tbe housing project.

Fire ~estroys O~i9 Pallet Co., building

Three local fire dep~rtments
Schaad also anticipates that the
chamber will begin searching for responded to the scene of a fullyinvolved structure fife at the Ohto
her replacement immediately.
Pallet Company on Rock Springs
Road near Pomeroy eatly Wednesday morning.
Two pallet manufacturing buildings were destroyed in the blaze,
which was repo_rted ;~t 1:30 thas
morning. Additionally, a forklift,
truck tools, equipment, and an
undisClosed amount of patle~ ma_tc-

rial were also lost in the fm:. The
company's sawmill was saved.
Ohio Pallet Company is owned
by John Cornett, who was unavailable for commept at press time.
A company spokesperson did
state that the plant was not operat·
ing this morning, and t!'at only a
fracuon of the company s employees were on the job site.
In addition to the three trucks,
squad and 18 firemen from

Pomeroy Fire Depanment, Middleport department sent two trucks
and eight men and Cbester depanment sent three trucks and 12 men.
'· The departments left the scene at
approximately 6:30 f·m this moming.
{\ccording t~ Pomeroy Police
Chaef Danny Zarkle, the cause of
the fire is not known, and the
amount of ·damage has not been
released.

Steelworkers rally outside
RAC·chairman's office

RIDE WITH SANTA • Tbe traditional Santa train rides of tbe
Hocking Valley Scenic Ra:ilwaf in Nelsonville will be beld three
weekends before Christmas begmning Nov. 30-Dec.l.

. , )'jEW_A.ODITION ·Joe_N. Clark, lert, _was recently \\'el~_om~
as a new member by lhe WoodlancfCenters, Inc., Board q_f'
Trustees. Pictured with him is wife, Susan.
'II
LEVELED BY BLAZE ·A rire destroyed
tbe Ohio Pallett Co., on Rock Springs Road
north o.r Pomeroy early Wednesday. Tbe
Pomeroy Fire Depal'tmeat received tbe call

YOUR
'

around i:30 a.m. Tbe Middleport Fire Depart·
ment and Chester Fire Department assisted.
Firemen were on the scene unti16:30 a.m.

wHeELI"!G, W.Va. (AP) Steelworkers mvolved m a yearlong labor dispute at a Jackson
C~unty aluminum plant held a
boJS~erous ~ally m O~ao County,
seeking !hell' ,former JObs and the
end.ofaJudge sgagorder.
"¥ore than 1,700 members of the
Umted Steelworker~ umon have
been out of work sm~e Nov. 1,
1990, when the uniOn _s. contract
will! Ravenswood Alum mum Corp.
exp11ed.
The company replaced the
workers wath non-umon
help,
.

clatmmg the umon workers_were
on strike. The umon clrums 11 was
locked out of the plant.
About 400 St~elw,?rkers and
supporters chanung ~ey,. hey,
·what d~,you say? The umon s here
to stay, turned o~t for the dow~town demonstration Tuesday m
front of the Boury_Center, where
Ravenswo?d Chaarman Emmett
Boyle has hiS headquarters.
The Steelworkers then marched
to the steps of the Ohao County
Cour~o~se to protes~ a gag _order
by CltCutt Judge Callie TsapiS that

prohibits them from distributing
information contained in Boyle's
divorce documents
· Following chains of "Lift the
gag order," Joe Eulinc, a repreientative from the AFL-C!O, _spoke on
behalf of Steelworkers District
Director Jim Bowen. who stood
nearby with a gag in his mouth.
"Judge Tsapis-would rather put
a bullet through the First Amendment than disclose the contents of
that dcicument," Euline said. "We
are not interested in any personal
Cont'n
ed on page 3
··
1 u

.--------:-----._,.Local briefs-----------, Three Meigs races due·
Deem to instruct concert band
fior automati"c •eco unt
.. ,

LAYAWAr FOR CHRISTMAS
FREE CHRISTMAS GIFT WRAPPING
OPEN EVERY FRIDAY Tll8:00 P.M.

Officers elected
Officers were elected at the
recent meeting of the Racine Fire .
Department Ladies Auxiliary.
Officers are Tina Neigler, presi·
dent: Alana Buller, vice presadent:
I.,eanne Fisher, secretary and trea·
surer: and Mary Byer, reporter.
There will be no December
meeting due t the firemen and aux. lliary Christmas pany,

A Multlmedlo Inc. Newapoper

Middleport receives $1~0,000 grant ·for housing p_roject

Alfred area news

The Alfred United Methodi st.
Church.cclcbratcd Thanksgiving on
Sunday with regular services in the
.moming and a. basket dinner at
noon. Rev. Sharon Hausman asked
the blessing before lhe meal.
Doris and Lloyd Dillinge r and
Eloi se and Russe ll Archer fur nished the turkeys. ·
Others present were Sarah Cald•
well, Mallhew Boyles, Marl ene
Donovan, Ni na Robin son, Thelma
and Clarence Henderson, Phili p
and Sharon Boyles, Susan Pullins.
Ric ha rd, Fl orence and Tim
Spencer, Osie Follord, Shelia, Dan,
Kin. Daniclle and Tiffany Spencer,
Kathy, Stacie and Alan Watson,
Pam, Aaron and Sarah Yos t,
Wilma and Lisa Henderson, Mari·
lyn Robin so n, Melvin Tracy ,
Ger trude Robin son and Nellie
Parker, all local; Jackie, Eric, Erin
and Jody Brooks, New Marshfield;
•. Clarcncc .and lris.W.ar.ncr, .Rick,
Cindy, Cassie and Richie Dillinger,
all of Athens; Myrtle Flanders,
Gu ysville; Ka thy, Nicole and Kyle
Essman, The Plains.
Weekend visitors of Marguerite
and Delbert Stearns were their
daughter and family, La uro, Daniel
and Leah Cohen. Akron .

· 2 S.Ctlone, 14 Pogeo ~5 cento

Pomer(!v·Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, November 20, 1991
•

Holiday train
travels along
scenic valley
The traditional Santa Claus train
rides on the Hocking Valley Scenic
Railway at Nelsonville will begin
on Nov. 30 and continue weekends
through Dec. 15.
Special train will feature oldtime passenger cars that glow with
the holiday spirit pulled by a
restored 1916 steam locomotive.
Trains depan frotn the tum-of-thecentury railway depot in Nelsonville which is already extensive:
ly decorated for the holiday season.
During the train ride, passengers
are kept warm and will be treated
· 10 a special narration of Chrisunas
poems, stories and music. There
wiU be a treat for the children and a
visit from Santa.
Stops will be made at Robbins
Crossing, a mid-1800 settler village
that features traditional candle dipping and tree decorating with
strings of popcorn and cranberries.
The train will depart from the
station on weekends at 10 a.m. 12
noon, and 2 p.m. on Nov. 30 and
Dec. I, Dec. 7 and 8, and Dec. 14
and 15.
.
The train rides are operated by a
non-profit, all· volunteer organization.
Each ride is limited and reservations should be made early by call·
ing 513-335-0882, between 10 a.m.
and 4:30p.m. or writing the Hocking Valley Scenic Railway, Santa
Claus Trains, P. 0. Box 427, Nelsonville, Ohio 45764.

.

Tbunday, blgh In 50s.. Cbara&lt;e or ·

.,

107 MILL STREET

MIDDLEPOII'

No, we aren't going to suggest hiding
the cOO:kl:xx:k and putting the credit cards Name
urd:r bckaiXi key. &amp;.tt we will recommn:l
The Bank One Budget Guide. It gives you Address
aclose look at where your~ !!/)eS each rc"-ity;r,cc;;;ou;;;m:;;-y.c.s,::::
at,:-:,z'l"p : - - - - - - - - - - - - tnonth. And shows you ways to save and
Please send me the follcrwing Bank One Guides:
invest mpre of whatyou earn. Calll-800- .
Budget 0 Retirement 0
'166-1515 to order your copy. Or use this
Credit 0 College o

roupon. TheGuideisfreefortheasking.
Just what you'd expect from bankers who
dO whatever it takes.
CI I99l BANCON ECORPORAl JON

··-\

UJI,nt~ tohis' .
•••/.ii~"O;, FDIC

.

•

'I

Dent trial underway.

B4NK.-:'ovE

---------------------------------Mail---------coupon to Bank One
Guides.
P0. Box 195l,Mirion, OH
~JlOl-1953

· Several personnel mauers were handled at a recent meeting of ,
the Southern Local Board of Education held at Southern High
School.
David ~ was hired as the Concert band instructor on a volunteer basis, Henry Lewis was added 10 the substitute teacher tist, and
Kimberly Riffle, Tommy Larie, and Roger Lee Jones were added 10
. ·- ·• {he.cultodian.substitute list. .The bOard approvell.-the ..disability
. retirement of Roberta Maidens, music teacher.
Approval was also granted to Melvin Cremeans to transport his
son, Shawn, to the home of Jennings Beegle for special instruction.
Chapter II funds in the amount of$7,955 were noted.
A resolution was adopted to join the Regicnal CoUDCil of Government Coalition of Rural Appalachian Schools, an organization
which, according to Hill, seeb equity in school fundin~.
The vision service plan was updated and J. W. Didion Insurance
was given the 1992 contract.
Attending wac Denny Evans, president, Scott Wolfe, vice-president; Sue GlliCser, Joseph Thoren, Gary Willford, members. SupL
Bob Ord, Dennie HiD, I!QSurer, and Thomas C. Roseberry, 1992
member-elect to the board.

.,

f

resented by Pomeroy Attorney John R. Lentes, while Meigs County
Assistant Prosecuting Attorney Linda R. Warner represents the
state.

Williams case declared mistrial
A mistrial was declared on Tuesday in the case of Mark_
Williams during jury selection in Meigs County Court.
Williams is accused of assaulting Ron Ash in Pomeroy .on
.. •August 23.· ·· · ,..
·
.· ·
··
·. · · · · ·
According to Williams' attorney, .Charles H. Kmght, Judge
Patrick H. O'Brien declared a mistrial in the case following an
apparently inappropriate remark made by a prospective juror.
A new trial in the misdemeanor case has been set for December
19.

Man pleads to reduced charge
A Columbus man accused of auempted murder pled to a reduced
charge late Tuesday.
William E. Morehouse, 39, was indicted by.' the Mei~s County
Grand Jury and chtuged with the attempted murder of Dtan!l Crib,
also of Columbus, in an incident near Reedsville on July 1.
Morehouse appeared without counsel' before Judge Fred W.
Crow Ill on Tuesday afternoon. ·
Af.ll:l a plea bargain agreement was reached between Morehouse
and Prosecuting Attorney Steven L. Story, Morehouse pled to a
reduced charge of felonious assaul~ an· aggravated second-degree
felony.
Considering a· firearms specification within the-indictment
Continued on page 3

1 •

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stall'
Three races in the Nov. 5 gener- ·
al election are scheduled for automatic recount liS .the.. result oLthe
official count bf the Meigs County
Board of Elections Tuesday after-

noon.

During yesterday's session 40
additional votes were added to earlier totals by virtue of House Bill
237. That bill allows walt-in votes
at the Board of Elections Office on
· Election Day for those who moved
prior ·to Oct. 7, but failed to change
their addresses with the Board of
Elections. Those votes are not
added to the precinct totals,llCCOfd.
ing to law, until the officlal count.
The rerount has been scheduled
. for 1p.m. on Wednesday, Nov. 27.
, According tq Jane Fryinyer,
director of the local Board of
Directors, the state mandates that
when the vote totals have a difference of less thin one-half of one
percent of the total votes cast in the
mvolved ~ct or precincts, they

are automatically scheduled for
recount.
One precinct must be counted
by hand and then run through the
computer. If that !lllllual count and
the C.O!IIPU~r. C,QY!I! maJCh~Oll. the
one precinct, then all remaining
precincts involved in the qu~tion­
able race can be computer counted,
the director e~plained.
The races to undergo the auto·
matic recount are:
Chester Township trustee' where
Victor A. Bahr ftJ;Ci'/Cd 336 votes
and G. Alfred Wolfe, 333 votes:
· Scipio Township Clerk where
BettY J. Bishop ftJ;Cived 193 votes,
and Connie K. Chapman, 194; and
Eastern Local School District
Board of Education where there
was an 11 Vote difference betwCCil
Mike Martin with 70S VOtes and 1.
0. McCoy with 696. S. Ray Kai-r
with 8S4 votes and Ron Eastman
with 840 votes were dcclaled willncn of two of the tine open SQII
on the Board. Winner of the third
seal will be determiiled in lhe 11110matic: ffJCOU'!i·
.

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