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nmeS:-Sentinel

Greg Smith Says: .

No need to buy out oftown.
We Will Match Any Advertised Price.
On New '95" Buicks &amp; Pontiacs.

Super Lotto:
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Page4

entine

Shop At Home For Friendly Local Service
Vol. 45, NO. 141
Copyright 1994

you may win a $5 prize from the Ohio VaHey
Publishing Co. Leave your name,. addrea and
telephone number with your card or letter. No
telephone calls will be accepted. All contest
entries should be turned In to the newsraper
ontce by 4 p.m. each Wednesday.ln case o a Ue, ·
the winner will be chosen by lottery. Next week,
a Gallla County farm wiD be featured by the
Gallla Soli and Water Conservation DlstricL

MYSTERY FARM- This week's mystery

farm, featured by the Meigs Soli and Water
Conservation District, Is located somewhere In
Meigs County. lndlvlduab wishing to participate In the weekly contest may do so by guessing
the farm'• owner. Just mall, or drop olr your
guess to the Gallipolis Dally Tribune, 825 Third
Ave., GaDipoiiB, Ohio, 45631, or The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court SL, Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, and

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"People expect me to speak
perfect English," Gomez said.
Many either talk too fast or wltb
too much slang, he added.
"Sometimes If they talk slowly .
it makes me feel smpid."

V-6

.

10,990

are serving as
Gomez's bost family, sai~ their
guest's English bas improved
draljulticall y.
"We found out Americans·· • . EASTFJRN EXCHANGE - Eastem High School bas among Its student population a resident
of Spain until June. Jorge Gomez, a native of Madrid, bas adapted weD·to rurlll Appalachian Ufe,
don't listen to him," HID added.
said Ron HIU, beacJ of the host CamBy. Above, from left, are 15-year-old Daniel Otto, 16-year-old
The Hills consider Jorge as
Eric Hill, .Joyce HID, Ron Hill, liS-year-old Micah Otto and 16-year-old Jorge Gomez• .
anolher son in 1heir family . which already bas three other
sons about 1he ~age.
·
brother and parents. Beyond the
again to study until alfout 9
goings-on less, she added.
"We proceeded from the
language bai'Jier, daily routines
p.m., when tbe family sits down
Schools in tile different counpremise that kids are kids everyand custoDII 'differ between the
for a light dinner.
tries are much the same countries, he,added.
where," Hill sa\d. "It's awful
· "Teenagers in Spain are a lot
except after eighth grade stu·
Waking early in the morning
bard to get a multicultural expefreer," Mrs. Hill said, adding tile
dents must take a test and lhen
rience here in Meigs County."
to catch a bus for school,
difference between living in a
either go on to college preparaAt fust, Gomez said be was
Gomez returijs home for a lunch
city and country accounts for the
tory courses or a trade school,
· afraid of being so far away from
and then sometimes a siesta
free time. But, parents also conGomez said.
his family of three sisters, a
about 2:30 p.m. Then be leaves
trol their children's time and
(Continued on Page 3)

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change. we beuer bring up some
measures we cdn pass, so the
Sunday that a constitutional American people will ,get tbe mesamendment allowing scbool/rayer sage tilat we· re serious about it,"
could' pass, and Indicate they said Dole, who is expected to
would prefer to steer away frr m become majority leader next year.
sucb social issues.
House Speaker-to-be Newt Gin"I don't 1hink we ought to get grich bas promised a vote on a
bogged down" on such divisive school prayer amendment by next
matters, Minority Leader Bob July 4. While most Republicans,
Dole, R·Kan., said on ABC's This including Dole, support the princi·
Week With David Brinklty.
pie, many say the new majority
"If we're going to bring about

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He said that while there was
support for a silent prayer or reflection amendment, "I would prefer
to solve the economic problems
flfSt."

Sen . Christopher Dodd, D·
Conn., appearing with Hatch on
CBS, said there was a ''real reluc·
tance to have Ibis Congress be tbe
first Congress in 205 years to
amend any part of the BiII of
Rights."

Expanding prison
budget vexes state

- -..../

Helms' colleagues
move to tone down
criticism of Clinton
By JIM ABRAMS
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON- Future Senate Majprity Leader Bob Dole.
seeking to calm a storm raised l;ly
Clinton antagonist Sen·. Jesse
Helms. is defending the president
as a capable commander in chief.
"I bad some reservations early
on, but I think be's up to the job
now," Dole, R-Kan., said Sunday
on ABC's This Week Wilh David
Brinkley.
Helms, R·N .C., in line to be
c~airman of tbe Senate Foreign
Relali.91\S Committee when Republicans· like control of Congress in
January, said in a CNN interview
Friday that he did not think Clinton
was qualified to be commander in
chief. He said many military leaders shared that view.
Helms· assertion was quick! y
disputed by Joint Chiefs of Staff
Cbainnan Gen. John Sbalikasbvili.
who called' several news organiza·
tions Saturday to express his full
confidence in Clinton.
"I think it's important to me
that this view not be represented as
1hat of 1he military leadership. or
for that maner. the view of the mil·
itary as a whole," he told The
Washington Posl.
Dole. who bas been a sharp Clit·
ic of Clinton in such foreign policy
areas as Bosnia. said be lhougbt tile
president bad p~rformed beuer
recently in Haiti and the Middle
East, "I tbink he's doing bener all
the time."
Sen. Orrin Hatch, a conservative
Republican from Utah, also sought
to tone down Heims' rhetoric. He
criticized Clinton's compromise
agreement with Nonh Korea on its
nuclear weapons program and said
he'd been "very alarmed and concerned by some of tile foreign policies of Ibis administr. tion."
But be said on CBS' Face the
Nalion tbat Americans should back

whoever is president in military
matters. and "I personally believe
the president has been doing beaer
in foreign policy" recently.
The conservative Helms, an
adamant foe of foreign aid programs !!lid longtime nemesis of tbe
State Deparunent, bad previously
shown be will be a confrontational
bead of the Foreign Relations
Commiuee.
Soon after the RepubliC!ID victO! ·
ry in the midterm elections, be
urged Clinton to put off a vote 011
1he GATI world trade agreement,
planned for early December, until
next year. and warned lUf hls
cooperation on foreign policy mat·
ters depended on lhe administr.l.tion ·
acceding to his demand. Helms is a
strong opponent of the GATT
agreement.
,
White House Cbief of Staff
Leon Panetta returned fare Sunday,
saying that Helms' views usually
represent "a very narrow range of
the political spectrum" and "don't
re nect tbe mainstream of what this
country is aboot."
Appearing on CNN's Late Edit io n, Panetta said such remarks
could strain White House relations
with Heims as likely bead of the
Foreign Relations Committee. He
said Helms should clecido wbetber
be owes Clinton an apology.
Sen. Christopher Dodd, D. Conn., a Foreign Relations Commince member. said Helms was
"coming close to aiding and abet·
tang insubordination" of the
nation· s chosen commander in
chief.
Dodd, also appearing on CBS,
said Helms· remarks were "very,
very reckless" .and affirms the
"notion that Ibis (election) was a
mandate for extremism.··
Clinton bas bad a tenuous relationship with the military because
of his history of protesting tbc
Vietnam War

NATO aircraft bombs
Serbian strongholds

By SRECKO LA TAL
Adm. Leighton W. Smith,
COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov. Reynoldsburg. the likely House
As.sociated
Pres.s
Writer
Nap
les-based commander of
George Voinovicb may make speaker .next year, said sbe ha:&gt; not
COLUMBUS
(AP)
-The
state's
$1.5
billion
prison
budget
SARAJEVO.
Bosnia-HerzegovNATO
forces in soutilem Europe,
another attempt to gain control of discussed tbe school board as~ue
could
increase
as
mucb
as
30
percent
next
year
as
officials
try
to
ina
in
tbe
biggest
NATO
attack
said
about
30 reconnaissance and
the State Board of Ed11cation next with Voinovicb, but said, "We
deal with overcrowding, mentally ill prisoners and commumty corever,
warplanes
from
tile
U~ited
warplanes
from
the United States,
year, a stale offiCial said.
would carefully consider any recrections.
States and three other nauons Britain, France and tbe Netilerlands
Tbe 11-member board, charged ommendations 1h~ governor might
Most of 1he extr.l money would go for extra employees - an
bombed an airbase and nearby sur- carried out "good bits" on Ubdiwilh forming state education poli- have."
.
estimated 1,500 prison guards, mental health professionals and supface-to-air missile site used by na's runways , taxiways and on·
cy is elected by nonpartisan ballot. .
board was cut from 22
port staff at 28 state institutions, The Columbus Dispaleh reponed
Serbs to terrorize Bosnia.
planes parked nearl&gt;y.
'But board President Oliver members in a 1991 comrromise
Sunday.
·
The
raid
on
the
Udbina
airbase
Tbe~e were no reports of losses
Ocasek said in a story published on based on an unsuccessfu bid by
Gov. George Voinovicb bas not·yet approved a budget increase
in Serb-beld Croatia was NATO' s among allied aircraft and all
Sunday in The Columbus Dispatch Volnovicb and some Republican
that could total several hundred miUion dollars.
·
seventh since war broke out. in returned safely to their bases,
be believes Voinovicb will try to state senators to make it an
Bosnia .in April 1992. It was by far Washington officials said.
But be bas said that adding guards, paying for court-ordered
turn. it into an appointed body.
appointed body.
.
·
treatment
of
mentally
ill
prisoners
and
expanding
community
cor1he
large$! by Nortb Atlantic Treaty
The ajrfield altack came tbe
Ocasek said Voinovocb would
Deaeasing 1he size of tbc board
rections
will
sln:lcb
lbe
pnsons
budget.
.
·
Organization
fo.rces
in
the
same
day as Sems. backed by reneprobably .use the two-year budget resulted in members trying to rep"We're
going
to
have
a
difficult
time
in
that
area."
Voinovicb
alliance's
45-year
history.
gade
Muslim
forces, attacked gov.
to be passed next summer to resent districts or nearly one milsaid.
Previous
NATO
air
saikes
have
ernment
troops
across nortbwestcm
change 1he law so be can appoint lion people, which is not the most
The
cost
or
running
swe
prisons
is
the
fourth-largest
expense
in
all
been
in
Bosnia
and
all
invol~ed
Bosnia
and
u
.N. peacekeepers
board members.
effective war to oversee education.
1he $30.8 billion state budget after Medicaid, welfare.and education. ·
a small number of planes agamst were targeted in three separate
"I 1hink it will be a very diffi· Davidson wd.
Tbe prison system, wilh 41,468 prisoners, or 176 percent of
highly limired Serb targets, such as assaults.
. .
cult battle," ~k said, predict"I'm DOl sure people know who
capacity, cootlnues to grow. There are28 percent more prisoners in
a single tank. A statement from tile
Two of the five olher U.N.-«s.
ing a Voinovich failure. "Educa- board members are or how meanOhio 1han four years. ago; 1he
n
ulation bas more than dou·
Brussels .headquarters or ~A ~0 ig~ted safe ~- 1he BosniaJI
lion should be nonpolitical and ingt'ulthe election&amp; are," sbe said.
blec!
since
I
~8~.
.
_
~
.
---~
-~
·
---,rud·lhe-1111"
rwd on the Udbma au~ -capual-of-8araJevo and-the aovcrno~. . __ - lncJependent!
_Y-oinovich hinted several-weeki·
Pri5ons
11ireaor
Reginald
Wilkinson
Said SOme of the growth in
field
from
allied
bases in Italy was ment-beld northeastern city of
Mike Dawson, Voinovicb's ·· ago at a news conference about the
1he nellt two-year budget, which be described as "well above tbe
conducted at the request of t~e Tuzla - also were attacked today .
spokesman. said 1he governor bas state of education in Ohio that be
rate r:J inflation," is rel!ated to paying 904 additional guards includ·
U.N: peacekeeping force in ~osma. by Bosnian Serbs.
·
not decided wbelher to push 1he stiD hoped to change the board by a
ed but not entirely funded In 1he current bu&lt;lget.
Sem planes from 1he Udbma atr·
A U.N. spokesman in Za&amp;reb
Issue, but "1hat will be ~scussed conTbcstlmamtlo:':O~~O:t~ speciA coun order in a lawsuit about trcaUnent of mentally iU prisonbase bombarded U.N.-designated said government troops ~n and
before the end oflhe year.
eq; also is expected to add to costs because the state will have to
safe areas in Bibac, n~rthwest around Velika Kladusa, nortb of
Dawson said that because · fy whether the bo,ard should be
hire psychiatrists, counselors. nurses and suppt1rt staff, 1he newspaBosnia. twice last week, mcumng Bibac; were under attack Ibis morn. Republicans bave captured the 1 elected or appointed. but legislators
per
said.
·
the wrath of U.N. peacekeepers. ing by Serbs from 'neighborioa
1
Ohio House from Democrats. "lhc passed a law requiring.nonpartisan
Three
new
p!lsons
slated
to
open
in
1995·
""d
1996
will
further
'
who called for tile air attacks.
Croatia and Muslims Joyal, to ftlle· ;
dynamics ca1alnly.have changed." ' eleetions.
·'
burden 1he budget.
.
'
gade leader Fikret Abdic.
Rep. Jo Ann Davidson, Rp
. n
• so

·~, :1:3"1...:1:1 CK.&lt;IIL. .

STOll IOUII1 IIOIIIAY •

party must'ftrSt concentrate on economic matters.
Sen. Orrin Hatcb, a conservative
Republican from Utab, said on
CBS' Fact the Nation it is more
important \o pass constitutional
amendments on a balanced budget,
unfunded federal mandates on 1he
states and a line-item veto..
"On school prayer, I really
don't believe 1he votes are there for
a vocal prayer amendment."

.

ers Union luncheon. "But I hope some time during my tenure in die
Congress that we will be able to replace tbe income taX completely as we
know it today."
Some economists have argued against over-reliance on sales, or cOa.sumption. taxes because they place a greater burden on lower-and.middleincome taxpayers than on the wealthy.
However, those attending 1he National Taxpayers Union conf~
loudly applauded Archer' s call to scrap the income tax. favoring alalea
tax. But some participants also scoffed at Archer's suggestion of adoptinJ
a "value added" tax that is imposed during stages of productioo, callinJ
it a "bidden tax". buried in the price of products and. tberefore. more euily manipulared by government.
The Taxpayers Union. which claims 300,000 members, is a vocal
advocate for lower taxes and more government accountability In tax policy.

The

1994 lUlCK CENTURYS

,lA.

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Stair
When Jorge Gomez stepped
off the airplane this August, lhe
only word his host family could
understand was "problem."
The 16-year-old native of
Madrid, Spain, may bavc; bad
five years of English training,
but be'd never spoken it every
ilay. all day long, Gomez said.
Gomez attends Eastern High
School through June and bas
been active in sports and family

life.

1994.BUICK PARK

Ask About Health lnsunace
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GRADUATES • Brenda
G. Swann who recendy gradu·
ated from Hocking College
with an associate degree In
nursing, Is employed at the
· Holzer Medlc11l Center. She
paned her state boards to
become llcenHd. Swann
resides In Syracuse wltb her
husband, Bryan, and daugb·
te.r, Kyrle. She Is the daughter
or David and Ann Zirkle of
Racine 11nd the granddaughter
of Mrs. Roberta Swisher and
the late Jesse MBynard or New
Haven, W. Va. and the step·
granddaughter of Harley
Swisher of MlddleporL

By H. JOSEF HEBERT
And in remarks to the National Taxpayers Union, Sen. Phil Gramm, RAssociated Press Writer .
Texas, also singled out 1he Educalion Deparunent, saying tbe ftrSt tbing
WASHINGTON - Republicans who will control the next Congress . Congress ouaht to do is give notice "that we will not renew 1he leases"
are providing more details of their oft-repealed pledge to cut spending and on its Washington office space.
.
1he size of 1he federal government,
These were tile same deparunents and agencies that were targets for
Appearing Sunday on television talk shows and before a conference of elimination in the Reagan administration a decade ago, but at that time
irate taxpayers, GOP congressional leaders said dramatic changes are D~mocrats in Congress ensured tbeir survival. Now 1he GOP controls
Congress for tbe ftrSt time in 40 years.
needed in 1he tax syscem and tbc federal burea11C111Cy.
· Incoming Seruue Majority Leader Bob Dole of Kansas said that a DIIDI·
The change in power also bas prompted key Republicans to suggest it
ber of departments and agencies ought to be eliminated, including tlie is time to end 1he government's reliance on federal income taxes as its
Energy Department, 1he Education Deparunent and tbe Interstate Com- chief source of revenue.
merce Commission.
Rep. Bill Archer, R-Texas, who will head the House Ways and Means
"If we're going to limit or re-limit government, we have to do it. We Committee next year, said Sunday he plans bearings to explore ways to
can't talk about it, we have to do it," said Dole on ABC's This Wetk Wilh replace the income tax with a broad-based consumption tax, such as a
David Brinkley. He said, for example, be didn't "see any useful'purpose" direct sales tax or "value added" tax.
in keeping the Energy Department.
"It's not going to happen overnight," Arcber tol~ a National Taxpay-

Spanish student sojo,u rns in Meigs

· Hal Kneen.ls the Agrlcullur·
111/ Hor tic u It u r a 1/ Nat u r 111
Resource Agent for The Ohio
State University Extension,
· Meigs County.

to PllgN 35-*
A Multlmeclle Inc. HeM p p

1 Section,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, November 21, 1994 .

GOP leaks more plans for less government

I

Extension Office at 9Y2-66%.
The statewide Buckeye Sbepherds Symposium is being held
November 25 and 26 at the Rama·
da .Universit.Y H~tel i~ Columbus,
Ohm. In conjuncuon watb the meet·
occ~~ge populations of mes may ing will be the Sheep Youlh lnsti.
.
• · tute for 4-H and FFA members
requtre ~ .extem.unator or the ~se ·being held on November 26 at The
of a pesliCJde. Gave our ExtensiOn Ohio State University Animal SciOffice a ca!l a! 992-~96 .~d ask ence Building. For further mformafo~ o~public~on enutl~. Cluster lion please call the Extension
Flies to help m your decasaon.
Oflice
Dates to Remember
·
On Tuesday, November 22 at 3
Vegetable Producers. save MonP.M. the Ohio Deparunent of Agri- day,
December 12 to attend the
culture will be giving 1he Pesticide annual Meigs/Washington County
Private Applicator's Test at the
School ~ing held from
Meigs County Public Library. Veg~table
9.00 A.M. • 2.30 P.M. at the
Pomeroy branch, located at 216 Racine United Melhodist Church
West Main Street. If you are plan- Fellowship Hall. Further informa·ning to take the test . please_call tbe tion will be forthcoming.

&lt;

Ohio Lottery

Cincinnati,
Browns fall in
NFC action

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12GA. 23/41N.

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•

Gallipolis, Ohio ·

p
. op

01

•

�I
-~.

Monday, Novembtir 21, 1994 _

Commeiltar
•

111 Coart8tnet
PolllUOJ, Oblo

ROBERT L. WINGETr
Plablllller

CIIAitLENE HOEFLICH

MARGARET LEHEW

Ge.nl Manager

Controller

LB111!RS Of OPINION m wekome. Tbey lbould be !,;11 tblll 300
-.11 loiJI. All !ellen m aubject to ediliDJ IIIII mUll be signed with namo,
llddNu llld 1e1ep11ono number. No IIDiipeclleU.. will be publilbed. Letten
lbould be in &amp;ood tate, addrellin&amp; ia1101, not pcnoaalillol.
•

Controversy over.dove
hunting unbelievable: Gaeth
By JOHN CHALFANT
Alloclated Prea Writer
COLUMBUS -The hottest issue at a post-election legislative session
was DOt school funding, taxes, or health care. A little bird generated the
most heal. ,
State senacors approved in a close vote a House bill that will clear the
way for the hunting of mourning doves. Gov. George Voinovich is
expected ro sign iL
AdvOOitcS for and against the bill jammed hallways outside the Se~tc
chamber last week and crowded into the gallery 10 watch the session.
· · SCIIIIIe A&amp;riculture Chairman Ben Gaeth, R-DerlliJice, who led the Sen·
ate light for the bUt was amazed by the dispute.
"It's absolutely unbelievable," Gaeth said.
"I understand the people who bave bird feeders, including Ben Gaeth,
and they sec these dove out there. In the summertime, they nest right out
in front of my ofriCC," he said in an interview.
"They're beautiful. They' Ustill be able 10 watch them. II won't affect ,
them one bit." Gaeth said.
The legislalion places doves on lhe game bird list. malting them sub·.
ject for bunting under federal wildlife regulations. •
Approval of the blll was the latest chapter in a debate that_dates to the
mid-1970s when the Ohio Department of Natural Resources tried to
establish a dove season on its own. A coon ruled that only tbe legislature
could do so.
The Humane Society of the United Slates opposed last week's bill.
Saudy Rowland of Bowling Green, director of the society's Great
Lakes relliooal'oflice,traeed her involvement to the mid-1970s baUle.
"Penonally, l'm not aboutro give up," she said.
But opponents appear to have only two alternatives: try 10 repeal the
bill In the next legislature, or put the qu~stion to voters.
.
· ·
.Rowland doubts legislators will want to tackle the issue again next
year.
"We wlll sit down and discuss whether or not we can cotne up with
the funds to put Ibis on the ballot. I am not saying we wiD put Ibis on the
ballot by any means. It will take serious consideralion," she said.
-Gaeth doubted ll ballot issue would succeed.
" It's my understanding that every state that had dove hunting on the
ballot has lost. and that the bunters and environmentalists, ~ I caD them,
have ~valled. I think the same thing would happen in the state of.P~io,"
be said.
The Wildlife Legislative Fund of America said doves are bunted in 37
states.
"This whole controversy over whether you should bunt doves bas
never been justirted based on the facts. It's always been the emotional
aspoct of buuting doves," said Th(lltlas Addis, the fund's direcror of state
services.
.
William l.ong, the bornane society's director of goverruntnt affairs,
said the group never saw any reason for bunting the birds.
. "By that notion, you can take any different population of animals
that's out ~. and if the population's in good shape, wby not shoot
those animals?" Long said. " Why not zhoot robins?"

Letters to the editor
Meigs Library among the best
Dear Editor:

The other clay I called the liblary
at Pomeroy to sec if tbey bad the
bciot eatitled "11ui Post Offices or
Obki" tiy John GaiJacber !PI Alan
PalerL r was informed they did not
have the boot lhat I wanted. The
wod:l:t at the Potneroy liblary then ·
told me they would contact other
pOll offices and try 10 find this

boot forme.

A few clays later, they-contacted
me and said they bad found the
book, bul I would have to go 10 the
~ Ullivenity library. The book
w11 a part a collection that couldn't
be iolmed OUl
1 went to Athens and bad SOllie
of the material copied. The staff at

the Pomeroy library could bave
stopped there and had done a great
job. Fortunately for me, they
dido' l

'

I received a phone caD from the
liblary. They bad located the book
In the Cleveland library. It bad
been sent to Pomeroy and was
ready for me to piclc it up. I did,
and it came in bandy.
To the employees of the Meigs
County library and especially those
at the Pomeroy library - tbanb. .
I also want to encourage all residenls. of Meigs County to take the
lime 10 go to our library. We have
one of the best.
·
James D. Hudson
Middlepon

MICH.

WASHINGTON - The late
Robert F. Kennedy's desk became
an unl~ly chit last week in Rep.
· Charlie Rose's, D-N.C., upblll
campaign to unseat Rep. Richard
Gepliardt, D-Mo., in tbe House
Minority Leader's race.
The North Carolina Democrat is
mllking bis dout as outgoing chair·
man of the House Administration
Comminee to collect on alltbe
favors be's doled out to coUeagues
over the years. One such favor was
helping RFK ' s son, Rep. Joe
Kennedy, D-Mass., ro relrieve from
molhballs the desk that bis father
had used as Attorney General. (The
desk turned out to be too big for
Joe Kennedy's cprrent office, but
be hopes to use it ne xt year if
seniority secures him a.larger
suiu:.)
Rose was hoping to secure
Kennedy's vote in tbe Nov. 30
leadership election, but knowledgeable source say Kennedy called
Rose last week to say be was
already committed to Gephardt.

Kennedy told Rose be regretted
muing the commitment before
.Jcnowlng Rose was in the race. but
now It was roo late to renejle.

By Jack Ande•_son·
1

'

and
Michael Blnsteln
"It deeply hurts me that I can't
help you with this because you've
. been so good to me," Kennedy
told Rose, accordlllg 10 a source.
While acknowledging that "Ibis
is a town of favors," a Kennedy
spokeswoman !Old us that "a desk
isn't going to secure votes." She
added the desk acquisition ' 'hap·
pened about a year ago when
nobody thought (outgoing House
Speaker) Tom Foley and Dick
Gephardt would be in the straits
they are in today."
• While Rose ' s borsetrading
didn't get Kennedy's vote, it shows
bow be's fighting a battle few

believe be can win with a bustling my enemy is my fnend.' "
Sources in the Rose camp claim
dJ)or-to-door campaign. Rose is
cobbling together a surprisinll 10 baye more than BS commitments
coalition of dispossessed from colleagues, including the supDemocrats. He bas reached beyond port of over 30 members of the
his Soulhem base to secure private . black caucus, for a race that will
commibnents from sucb disparate take I OS votes to win. Rose strafe.
sources as prominent liberal Rep. gists thinlc they're sneaking up on
Pat Schroeder, D-Colo., and Rep. Gepbardt tbe same way voters
Kwelsi Mfume, D-Md., outgoing shocked Democrats on Election
· chairman of the Congressional Day.
''Just like Nov. 8 was a surprise,
Black Caucus. A Schroeder
· spokeswoman told us the congress· I think Nov. 30 might well be a
woman Is still uncommitted and surprise,'' one source close 10 Rose
"hasn't sbowo her cards around told us. "Members are very, very
here."
mad that we've lostlhe·House and
Knowledgeable sources say that they realize that Gepbardt and
several conservative Democrats Foley tied us and themselVes too
and members of the black caucus closely 10 the White House."
have been holding private, infonnal.
Sources in the Gepbardt camp,
talks. Both groups Jeel left out of
the CUITCilt leadership loop and are however, say that Rose wiD not get
allying 10 suppon Rose for minori· more than SO votes and are banking
ty leader and MfUIIIe for Democrat· on the fact that Rose's perk·dis·
ic caucus chairman. One source pensing will cut against him. One
close to the discussions said of lhe Gepbardt ally called Rose tbe
anli-Gepbardt sentiment "It's that "concierge" of the House who Is ·
old Disraell saying, 'The enemy of "tied 10 lhe status quo." As chair· .
man of lhe administration commit·
~ UIPA.W lbai2.A\'I'. tee, Rose bad authority over tbe "
scandal-plagued House bank, post
•
''itt H!l:I:Kl
orr~.ce and restauranL
"Rose is a man of the institu· !
lion, wbich is wliy be is well-liked
and bas a constituency within the ·
House," the Gepbardt ally rold our •
associate Ed Henry. ' 'It's difficult :
to associate Rose with change.'' ·
By promising a term limit -of
four years on' bis own career as •
party leader, and tying his oppo· ·'
nent to the unpopular President ·.
ClintoD, Rose's strategy is reminis· • ·
cent of bow Republicans routed
Democrats. Rose allies are target- ;
ing nearly 50 _House Democrats •
who won with less than S4 percent ·,
· of tbe vote on Nov. 8. Many •
Democrats fear Clinton could drag
down the rest of lhe party -even fur- ·,
ther in I996.

N\'1 60Y, 'TOfSI(!

WtW, OF COcJ~ 'S£ '·
M'f• M'f~ -tOPsY!
YOU' HAV£ Gt'OwN1-\KIS I\ FIOERAL-

·

)

ton."

Tf.le long a~m_. of Sen.
Whitman abanooned him, ~yi~B
that sbe would never agai!l grace
Grant's microphone except to talk
about racism. Cbuck Haytaian,

Nat Hentol'l'
'JJ
however, said be was a friend of
Grant and while be abhorred
racism,' be would not boycott
Grant's radio program.
Sen. L.autcnberg made so much
of Haytaian's refusal to follow
Gov. Whitman's lead that Grant
said dUring bis broadcast that one
would thinlc be was the one running
for the Senate.
Meanwhile, the penp
· atetic Jesse

::~~::i= '!s E~sanrz~ ~t!barp-ycott
of Grant' s sponsors to drive bim
off the air. Sen. Lautcnberg ardent·
ly joined in.
Liwtenberg- until the Republi·
cans take -uver the Senate - bas
been Sin charge of the Appropria·
lions ubcommittee 00 Transporta·
lion, where be is an energetic advocate of funds for Amtrak.
During the campaign, on Oct.
26 , Sen . Lautenberg wrote 10
Thomas Downs, bead of Amtrak,
"I am writing 10 caD upon Amtrak
10 cease its advertising sponsorship
or Bob Grant's radio program on
WABC. Mr. Grant bas repeatedly
made statements of the most bate·
ful and bigoted kind ... African·

•

...

·

(,

By Tbe Auoclalfd Press
A strons low pressure system
-moved through the Great Lakes
region today, roucbing off a num·
ber of sbo'wers and a few thunder·
storms.
High wind advisories were
Issued for much of Ohio. Wind
speeds were oxpectcd ro be as bigh
as 40 mpb, with gusts of S8 mpb oc
higher possible.
Skies will clear in most areas
tonight and temperatures will be
much colder. Lows will range from
the middle to upper 20s west 10 the
mid·30s east.
Most of Ohio will be partly
sunny on Tuesday, but it will
remain chilly. Oouds will be more
plentiful in the nortlteast, where
snow showers are possible. Highs
will only reach the middle to upper
30s north and lower to mid-40s
south.
· The record bigb tempe111ture roc
Ibis date' at the Columbus weather
station was 73, set in 1934. Tbe

•

Stocks
---------.37

---------..20

----- -..34

·----- --··-tll

Star Bank --- -·- ··- ........- .36 l/4
Wendy lat'L------ -....- -.143/lJ
WorthingtOn lad.-.............20 3/4
Stock reports are tbe 10:30 Lm.

quotes p,rovlded by Advut ol

~

Announcements

GaiUpolls.

The Daily Sentinel
(USI!IIIJ.NI)

' N!!IDd....,
Naoday
l'ddoy, Ill c ....St.,-..
...,,.,.,,
Obio,by ·
the
0111a VolloJ Publlil1l•
t.... ......y. Olllo 4$1119, .... 992·11S&lt;S.
.... """""pold • ...,,_,, Obla.

eo_,__

_,11M.~~

......... ,.., ud lbo Obla

N.....,. o\11 Cc'd 'L

POfiDI,UIUJ--- .... .

Tb• Dally SoaUaol, Ill Court St. .
-.,y,(lbla 4!1'11.

IJc::.rlor·-SIJIIIC&amp;.nOIIIIATII

I

~

a

Units of the Meigs County Meo10rial Hospital;
Emergency Medical Service
7:01a.m. Sunday, Pomeroy
recorded 14 calls for assistance Cliff Apartments, Errol Ryan
Saturday and Sunday .., .Units Robens, VMH.
responding included:
RACINE
.
MIDDLEPORT
. 3:58 p.m. Saturday, Sellers
2:53 p.m. Sunday, Overbrook Ridge Road, Paul Sellers, VMH;
Cen1¥f, Delben Pridemore, Holzer- - 5:37 p.m. Saturday, Racine
Medical Center;
Levee, Ron Pickens, VMH;
POMEROY
12:46 am. Sunday, State Route
7:15 a.m. Sunday, Pomeroy 124, Donna Adams, treated at the
Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, scene;
"; ·
Betty Triplett, Veterans Memorial
4:03 p.m. Sunday, Racine Vol·
Hospital;
untcer F'lre De.J!811111ent and squad
9:30 a.m. Sunday, Hanning . to Gary Wolfe property on Blind
Ridge Ro;ld, Tyko Palo, O'Bleness · Hollow Road, brush nre, rarelightcr
·
Jeremy Lyons treated on the scene,
Syracuse vm:assisted;
5:50p.m. Sunday, intersection
of state routes 124 and 338, Jamie
Coleman, treated at the scene.
Am Ele Power - - -- --- .31 314
RUTLAND
Akm·- - - - -- ------.56 314
1:47
p.m.
Saturday, Har·
Asbtand ou
518
risonville, Bryan Scott Bert, VMH.
AT&amp;T ...:.------•-----.SU/8
Bank One.----------.261/8
SYRACUSE
1:56
a.m.
Saturday, Main Street,
Bob Evau-..
Ctwnploa lad.--- ---.25112
Lora Cleland, HMC;
CbarmiD&amp; Sbop-------- - .6 31ll
10: I I a.m. S~turday, volunteer
City Holdln&amp; ..- -..--..--.. -..31
rare deparunent and squad. motor·
Fedenl M01l111---- -.21 7/8
vehicle accident at the junction of
Goodyear TI:R
Pine
Grove and Morning Star
K-mart ------- ..--·---·14 314
roads, Greg Webb, VMH.
~ds End'.......... ...........17 Sill
TUPPERS PLAINS
Lmdbdln~----------J071ll
Multimedia lac. - - - - .29114
11:08 p.m. Saturday , State
Polat Bucorp
Route 7, Tony Jones, Camden·
Rellan&lt;e Eledrk :........ .......30 Jill Clark Memorial Hospital;
Robbtas &amp; MJen..---- --17112
7:37 a.m. Sunday, Woods Road,
Royal Duk:b---------·108 7/8 Rose
Carr, VMH.
SbOnetslac.... ~-------14 114

But what about a United States ;
senator - in charge of a subcom·
mlttee tbai directly affected ,
Amtrak's economic well-being - ·
pressuring Amtrak 10 join in a boy· ,,
couofatalk-showbostwboiscrit·
. ical of tbe senior?
i
While anyone bas the right to ,
advocate boycotts, Lautcnberg, by ;
using his senatorial Influence on
, Amtrak, becomes the agent of the ..
state pushing for censorship. This
might be a question for the Senate '"
Elhics Committee.
·-;,
·
There bas been little press atten· ::
.lion to the Lautcnberg way of deal· ~
ing with criticism. t cxpect, though, · ::
that if Molly Ivins or Anna ••
"
Quindlen bad talk sbows and Sen. ·•
Jesse Hebns bad suci:essfully pres- ::
· sured sponsors to leave those nrn.. · "
r·,.. "
grams, press reaction might bave . ~
been greater- and indignant.
·•
On all-black WLIB in New ~
York a statioo that never hesitates •I
•
,,
to auack racism one of lhe hosts ''
Clayton Riley,' has consistent!~ ::
opposed boycotting Bob Grant: ''I :t
want to bear what's being.said. I ':
wantro know what's out there."
''
Nat Hentoff Is a nallonally ::
renowned authority on the First ::
Amendment and tbe rest or tbe ;:
BID or Rights.
:1
(For Information on bow lo l
,
communicate electronically with :l
tbis columnist and others, con· ,~
.t act America Online by calllnc 1· :1
800·817-6364, exL 8317.)
::

It's a pity lhat the pollsters have our democratic Institutions intact ing steadily ever since.
convinced politicians of every and our society liberated from its
"Why? Is It because of Reagan- ' Americans, blue collar ·and_ white,
stripe that it is necessary 10 pander increasingly class-ridden divisions, ite heartlessness, or Democratic have not.
"Perhaps it is because we now : ,
to the people. Since they have, we wlll need truth·tcUing above all coddling, or high taxes, or ineffi·
live
in normal times, rather than the -:
however, we won't be bearing any
cient induslrialists, or undereducat·
rtrst
Hush 25 years after World War ~ :
home truths about the nation's
Hodding Carter Ill ed workers?
economy from Democrats or
"I doubt it. though I don' t actu· 11. Perhaps because l nfoi'mation- • •
Republicans in the foreseeable else.
ally have 'the answer.' Indeed, if age tecbnolQgy is available 10 all • :
furure.
"It is not lhat tbe truth will, in anyone claims be does, laugh biln tultures and adaptable In almost · ' ~
What is more, sadly enough, if and of itself, seUlc our most press· out of the room. That's for tclevl· all, there Is vinually nowhere that ,
m'odem capitalism cannot thrive. •
someone actually summoned the ing problems. It is simply· tbat sion talkers and sideshow barkers.
nerve to cut through tile fos and . without truth, we will waste time
_•'But I do knOw lhat any solu- Perhaps open borders are at fault. .:
spealc candidly, we would probably and resources on placebos that tion wortliy of the name will be or free trade, or women In lhe job ;
lynch him. We have 1rown com- debilitale the body politic and poi· more Cburebillian than comfortina. market. Mayl?e we are suffermg I
fortable with the patronizing clap- son the public dialogue. So let the Blood, sweat and ~Can are certain. from a moral dry rot that saps self· ' i
·
'
trap and free·luncb JNIII8CCliS dished truth·teUiDll begin.
It's ~~ to get wone before It discipDne.
· "But to offer these widely up by eonservalives as well as lib''First, most American families gets
. Neither God nor history
erals.
.
have been on a downbiU slope for guaranteed that the United States advanced explanations Is not to ,
But let's rise· above reality and at least IS years. Adjusted for would be the perpet~al winner or prove their wisdom. No one actual· ·
let our imaginations soar. Some· inflation, median family Income is the econonilc Super Bowl. These 'ty knows wbat Is behind the slide ~ 1
·
.,
where, somehow there must ~e below the level re~bed In 1978. days cballeQFI'I are spUUnc out of In your incomes. .
· "As roc some of the more popu- ··• :
someone wiUing 10 give the follow· · M~ individual inco!De bas been ' the ~!IIDds~
--, ing,~-:' . , ,, •
.
&amp;om&amp; al!_wn.even lon,~r ~for , ' -So the aplanatlo, a~t~ldjust .Jar suggestions for turning lhiillls :
}.adies and ptlemen~
ovc;r: 20 years.
.
be that simple: The United States . "around, ki~Wer f4XeSmay make you :· ~
It Is ·clear lhat you, like most
This Is oot universally true. exists in a vutly cban&amp;ed global feel bette~ temporarily but supply·
Americans, are concerned about One percent of us u;e doin&amp; pbe· market. ln ,which jobs and money side economics bas already been at
· ,
the state or the economy ;-: both nomenally weD. Dunng one illus· don't respect boi'den. Not many baL It struck out.
f
your own and the natlop a. You . trative recent period, J977 ·BB, years ago the SO stares competed
Hoddlna Carter Ill, roriUr :· ~
bave llood reasons for your con· according-tO the liberal Center on ' with each other for plants and State Department apoke•maD - •
cetll, but. unfortunately, there !1fC · ~udget and Po_licy Pri~ties. 'the employment and productlbn. Now and award·wlnlllng reporter, eciJ. • !
no easy answers and no tleservm&amp; ncbest2.S million American1 (bad) the United States must compete tor and publilber, II pnlldent of j ;
_, .
nc:arJy as much income as tbe JOO with scores of nations in the same MalnStreet, a,WuhlnatoD. D.C.- · •
scar.;goats.
If we are to surv1ve this rough million Americans with the lowest kind of contest Productivity bas based television procludlpll 'compassace in America's history with incomes.' The gap has been llfOW· • been the winner: Average working pany.
)
~

teCOJd low ol5 Was set in 1880.
Sunset today will be at 5: 1'1
p.m. Sllllfue on Tuesday will be at
7:24a.m.
Weather forecast:
Today...Windy. Mominll show·
·era and thunderstorms likely.
[)e(nasing cloudiness with diminishing winds by late afternoon.
Hijbs mid 50s to mid 60s.
Tonight... Variable cloudiness
northeast with chance of flurries
by daybreak. ClearinJ elsewhere.
Lows 2~ to 35.
Tuesday ...Miistly cloudy northeast with a chance of snow sbow·
ers. Partly smmy elsewhere. Highs
3~ to4S.
EXtended for~t:
Wednesday ... Fair. Lows in the
20s. High middle 30s to lower 40s.
Thanksgiving Day... Fair. Lows
middle to upper 20s. Highs in the
40s.
.
Friclay.. .Fair. Lows upper 20s to
middle 30s. Highs in the 40s.

.EMS units answer 14 calls

1

0 .... ....... /&lt;c.

I

Say goodbye to warmer
temperatures this week

Laut~nberg

American religious '~adcrs have
urged adventsers to disassociate
themselves from Mr. Grant's
speech by wlthdrawinll their spon·
sorsbip of bis program. Amtrak
sbouldjoin in cond~mninJ Mr.
Grant's speech by withdraWIDll its
sponsorship of his JlCOllrBIIL.."
In Ocrober, neither the senaror
nor the bead of Amtrak knew that
Lautenberg would nqt continue to
chair the subcommil,lee that bas
been sq vital to Amtrak. President
Thomas Downs prom~'Y replied ro
1'1'
L.autenberg's letter:
"I apl?reciatc your bringing to
my attenuon your SCf!OUS concerns
about Bob Grant's radio program
on WABC, and your concerns with
Amtrak's advertising on Ibis show.
Like you, 1 believe stron•ly in the
e
F'lrst ,&amp;lmendment right of citizens
to say what tbey believe. However,
this does not mean that I, as an
advertiser, am required to give
financial suppon to people wbo
choose to spread ba.tred and big·
otry.''
Mr. Downs Is, of course, correct. He can advertise - or not
advertise - wherever be chooses.
In this case, be told Sen. Lautenberg that "I have asked our adver·
tising agency tG cancel Amtrak's
advertising on the Bob Grant show
immediately pnd until further
notice." The senator proudly sent
out a press release celebrllling what
Downs bad done.

Paul E. Sellers

Pearl L. Will

Jac.k A.nderson and Michael -'
Blostein are writers for United :
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

f:AR-12iG\lt~NSTI;\N

There were many bitter contests
in the electionalba;l ended on Nov.
8. &lt;?ne of the ugliest was Democraw: New Jersey·Sen. Franlt Liwt·
e~·s successful baUle 10 win a
thud term. His opponent, Chuck
Haytai~n. speaker of tbc state
assembly, was as tenaciously ad
hominem as the inCUDibenl .
In a _post-election
analysiS,
... Tim
·-"
that "NThe
New Y"'"'
C:S llll1a1
ew
York City r.ad1o talk-show bost
Do~ '!rant rtgured lar~ely ~~ the
campa1gns of both candidates.
Thai
bat f
de
twas somew . o an un rstatement. Grant, a pnckly censerva~ive, was accused of b~i.ng a
rac1st by a group of black ourusters
·s
in New JerseY· Act
. uall
_ y, Grant I
delighted ro ta11c w1th black censerylllives on the air but can be ins~ll·
ry bla 1cs e en m1ld
10 g to
•
ang
c or v.
mann.ered blacks :Wh~ believe that
Manm Luther ~mg s 'dream bas
turned out 10 be •Uusory.
· th
· G 1
All dunng
e campaign, ran
-who bas a very large a~dience
In New Jersey as -:wn as ~~ New
York - was moc~gly mu~ ~f
Sen. Llll!tcnberg wb1le enthus~ucally trytng 10 advance the poliucal
fonunes of Haytaian. Grant had
shown considerable political clout
before, having bad a significant
role in Republican Christine Whit·
man's ascendanc 10 the governor
•
Y
•
· ship of New Jersey.
. Wben t~e black ministers
p1nned a raciSt label on Grant, Gov.

1

•

The Dally Sentinel Pqe I • ,

Paul E. Sellers, 73, Portland, died Saturday, Nov. 19, 1994 at Veterans
·MeiiiOrW Hospital.
.
Bont July 26, 1921, the son of the late John and Clara Long Sellers, be
was a retired farmer and schoolbus driver for SGulhern Local Schools. He
' attended the Stiversville Word of Faith Cburcb and was In the CivWan
Conservadon Corps.
He is survived by his wife, Hazel Pickens Sellers of Ponland; daugb·
ten llld sons-in-law, Sandra and Jim Codner of Portland, and Kittie llld
Rrin Braden of Cottageville, W.Va.; daughter and fiance, Jeannie Nease
and Tom Smith of Racine; seven grantJs:bildren; sisters and brolhers·in·
law, Katherine and Fred Heater of Parkersburg, W.Va, and Ruth and Roy
Kesterson of Rutland; sister, Kathleen Grigsby of Racine; brolhers and
sisters-in-law, George and Vytice Sellers of Racine, Clifford and Mary
Sellers of~~Pa., and Gerald and Hattie Sellers of Pomeroy.
He was
in dealh by his son, William E. Sellers; and brothers,
Edward, Johnny, Earl and Clarence Sellers.
Services wlll be at II a.m. Wednesday in the F'lsber Funeral Home,
Middleport, wilh the Rev. David Bailey officiating: Burial will foUow in
the Bethlehem Baptist Cemetery. Friends may call from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
Tuesday at the funeral bome.

134• 1.•

•1Columllusl38'

"Tbe president is not the prime. :
minister and (tbe minority leader).;
is not bis chief whip," a second
source close to Rose to~ us.
"Rose's main priority is to return '
· the House to m!lillti!y ~!lltus. not ,
necessarily to re-elect Bill Clin·

1 ••

q,-.._

!Mansfield

I

~~N\e.Mf*E~

PaOG,R~.

AC:C:u· Weather" forecast fGr dayUmc cGndltlons and blgb temperature•

No easy solutions to economic woes :;

Berry's World
VocJ

Tueiday, Nov. 22

Gephardt smells -a Rose in the House

The Daily Sentinel

•

--Area deaths~-­

OHIO Weather

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, November 21, 1994

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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TP VFW to meet
Tuppers Plains Veterans of For·
eign Wars Post 9053 will meet
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at post home.
District 12 commander will be presenL
Tbanks&amp;lvin&amp; observation
The Pomeroy Community
Thanksgiving Worship Service wlll
be beld Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at lhe
Pomeroy United MethodiSt Church.
Coogregations sbarina In the ser·
vice are: Trinity, Sacred Heart,
Grace Episcopal, St. Paul Lutheran
and the United Methodist. Father
David A. duPlantier will be the
speaker. Bring canned foods for coop food pantry.

..,.......,, Flowers From!" .

Pearl L. Will, formerly of Rutland, died Wednesday, Nov. 16, 1994 at
the CbarleSIOn (W.Va.) Area Medical Center.
WUI was a retired chemist from DuPont with 42 years of service. He
was a member of the First Christian Cburcb of CbariesiOn, W.Va.
He is survived by his wife, Doris Will; dau$bters, Diana of CbarlesiOn
and Rebecca of HoUis, N.H.; sons, Jerry of Richmond, Va., and Jobn of
O'Fallon, W.; brothers, Galen of CoiUIIIbus, Orville of Yaltima, Wash.,
and Norman of Rutland; and three grandchildren.

Court papers reveal strange
-noises prior to fatal crash
CHICAGO (1\P) - A USAir
maintenance foreman was told of
passenger complaints about unusual noises but cleared the Boeing
737 for takeoff Sept. 8 on what
proved to bi: a fatal flight bc;cause
the pilot told bim the plane was
line, the airline says. ·
Foreman George Fox spoke to
the captain in person after a receiving a tclepbone call from a woman

Hospital news

wbo had overheard a passenger
complaining of an unexplained
noise on the trip to Chicago,
according 10 coon papers.
When Fox asked if there bad
been any problems, Capt. Peter
Germano said "No, we bave a
good airplane."
The jet took off shortly there·
after and crashed a few miles from
the Pittsbijrgb airpon, killing all
132 people aboard. Investigators
stiU haven't determined the cause.·
The Pittsburgh aasb and one in
Charlotte, N.C., in July that killed .
37 people have raised questions
among some travelers about
US Air 's safety _ US Air bas bad
seven accidents, six of lhem dead·
ly, in the past live years.
Today, USAir took steps to
reassure cusromers by annoupcing
in full·page ads in· more than 40
newspapers th at it bas hired a
retired Air Force general to oversee
Hying operations and independent
audiiOrs 10 check its safety.

•.

Accident injures Long Bottom man · ";
A Long B0110111 man was injured in a one-vehicle crash Sa&amp;ur4ay
on County Road 399 (Sand Hill Cemetery) in Olive ToWIIsbip, ilie
Gallia·Meigs Post of tbe State Highway Patrol reported.
Faron L. Speelman, 29, 63455 Slate Route 124, was taken by pri•
vatc vehicle to Veterans Memorial Hospital and was later tniDS•
ferred to Holzer Medical Center. He was treated and released for a
lacerated forehead, an HMC spokesperson said.
· Speelman was southbound, one-tenth of a mile south of State
Route 248, at 3:30 a.m. wben be failed to negotiate a right tum,
went off the left side of the road and struck a sign post. 'the patrol 1
said.
'
His pickup trilcic continued on, struck a bridge abtitmenl, went ·
airborne, struck some trees and came 10 rest on an embanlcment,
according 10 lhe repon.
,
The pickup was severely damaged, lhe patrol said. and SpedmaA
was cited for driving under the influence, driving under suspension l
and failure 10 control.
. ·
!

Man injured in wreck
An Athens man received minor injuries in a one-car wreck on
Forest Run Road in Sutton Township Saturday morning.
Gregory W. Webb, 32, was eastbound on Forest Run Road when
be drove off tbe right side of the road and struck a telephone pole,
according 10 a repon from the Meigs County Sheriffs Departtnent.
Webb was transponed to Veterans Memorial Hospital by the
Syracuse squad of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service
wbere be was lreated and released. Damage to his Ford Escort was
listed as heavy and disabling.
No citations were issued. The sheriffs repon listed failure 10
control as a conlributing factor in the acciclent

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday admissions - Ronnie
Pickens, Racine.
Saturday discharges - Velma
Winland, Racine.
Sunday admissions - none.
Sunday discharges - none.
HOLZE~ MEDICAL C~ER
Discbar11ea Nov. 18 - Mrs.
Tracey Wolford and son, Walter
Carpenter, Flora Sharp, Morgan
Potts, Mrs. Wayne See and son,
Kimberly Sigler, Gwedolynn Free·
man, Orland Ervin, Matthew Bice.
LOS ANGELES (~P) - O.J.
Birth -Mr. and Mrs . Brian
"We will not rest until eacb and SimpSOI!'s attorneys are betting on
Oiler, son, ViniOn.
Discharges Nov. 19 - Christi· every member of the flying_public a longsbot if they thinlc questioning
na Winkle, Mrs. Brian Oiler arid sbares in the cerlllinty of our com- the police-captain wife of Superior
son, Jessie Waters, Shelley mitment to be tbe safest of air· Coun Judge Lance Ito will help
Jines," US Air cbairman Seth · bGlster their case, a legal expert
Ohlinger, Ronald Retzlaff.
Discharges Nov. 20 - Debbie Schofield says in the "dear travel· says.
Tbe defense wants to question
Spence, Mrs . Roy Arthur and ers" k!tll:r.
At least fwo passengers on lhe Peggy York about ber working
daugbtcr.
Births- Mr. and Mrs. Roy night from Cbarloue, N.C. to
Arthur, daughter, Jackson; Mr. and Chicago also cotnplained of strange
Spanish student
Mrs. Ouistopher Collins, daughter, .noises: an unidentified priest and
Beaver; Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Andrew McKenna, a pan owner of
(Continued from Page 1)
O'Dell, daughter, Palriot.
the Chicago Bears and board mem·
Many stereotypes about peo(Published witb permission)
ber of the Chicago Tribune.
ple from Spain just aren' t true,
Gomez added.
"People think we dress like
bullfighters," Gomez said ,'
adding many think Spain is an
underdeveloped country.
Sports are also differenl,
that deal, it would have 10 pay Gen·
SEAL BEACH, alif, (AP) since
soccer remains the main
era! Signal a $50 million t;ennina·
Rockwell International Corp. said
activity.
Also, Americans tend
tion fee plus $5.15 million in
Sunday that 61 .2 percent of
to
get
very
upset and emotional
expenses.
.
Reliance Electric Co.'s voting
if they lose.
John C. Morley, Reliance's
stock bas been tendered in its $1.5
"Jorge is happy whether be
president and chief executive, said
billion bid for the industrial equip·
• in a stalement last week that Gener·
loses or wins.'' Mrs. Hill said,
mentmaker.
adding the importance is in the
al Signal would abide by Rock·
Rockwell, the Seal Beacb·based
well 's acquisition of Reliance if · playing and the fun.
defense company, also extended
Food and conveniences Reliance agrees to a deal and Gen·
the expiration date of its tender
such as drive througbs, bam eral Signal receives the tennination
offer lhrougb midnight Nov. 28.
burgers and pizza - are foreign
Tbc company' s cash tender
fee and costs.
to
Spain, Gomez said. Cooking
RockweU
said
lhat
as
of
Friday,
offer of $30 a share for Cleveland·
and eating together as a family
20,15 2,772 shares of Reliance
based Reliance followed an earlier
Class A common stock bad been bas more value at bis home.
agreement between Reliance and
One Spanish custom that
General Signal Co11&gt;. of Stamford,
tendered along with
~84 shares of
its Class B common o shares of may have embarrassed Gomez
Conn., for a $1.4 billion stock·
is kissing. When boys meet girls
Class C common · ck bad been
swap merger.
for the r.rst time. they kiss them
tendered, Rockwell said.
Reliance bas said if it brealcs
on tbe cheek, he added.
Overall, Gomez said be
enjoys fishing, horseshoes and
life bere.
·
Slaughter steers: choice 61 .00·
"It's different from the things
COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio
I grew up with," Gomez said.
70.00; select 56.00-64.00.
direct hog prices al selected buying
Slaughter heifer.;: choice 60.00- "You really real ize bow mucb
points Monday by the Obio Depart·
ment of Agriculture:
_
69.00; select 55.00-63.50.
you love your country when you
Cows: uneven, 2.00 lower to go out of it"
Barrows and gilts: 50 cents
1.00 bigber; all cows 48.00 and
lower early, 1_.00 lower late;
demand light to very light.
down.
Bulls: steady to 1.00 bigber: all
U.S. 1~3. 230·260 lbs., country
points 25.50..26.50, a few 25s and a
bulls 52.00 and down.
Veal calves: steady to 10.00
few 27.00-27 .50 early ; plants
27.00-28.50.
higher; choice 170.00 and down.
.
U.S. 2·3, 230-260 lbs., country
Sheep and lambs: I0 00 lower 10
points 23 ..5()..25.50.
3.00 higher: choice wools 62.25·
70.50; choice clips 63.00-73 .75 ;
Prices from The Producers Live·
stock Assoctalion:
feeder lambs 73.00 and down; aged
Cattle: steady 10 50 cents lower.
sheep 39.00 and down.

Judge Ito's wife drawn'
into Simpson hearings

Rockwell extends bid date .
to acquire Reliance Electric

relationship Wiibariicer Mark
Fuhrman, wbo said be found a
bloody glove at Simpson' s estate. ·
The defense bas suggested'tbat
Fubnnan, who is white, is a racist
wbo may have planted the glove. ·
York was scheduled 10 take the
stand during a bearing this afternoon before Superior Coon Judge
Curtis Rappe, who will determine
whether she should testify, in the
Simpson case.
The selection of alternate jurors
also was 10 continue today. Twelve
jurors have been chosen and attorneys are searching for IS alternates. As of last week, 28 prospective allemates had beJ:n selected.
Ito said be wants a total of 46. 1be
group will lhen be questioned again
in December.
Fuhrman said be found tbe
glove the morning after-the June 12
murders of Simpson's ex-wife '
Nicole Brown S1mp'Son and her
friend, Ron Goldman. A matching :
glove was found near the bodies. :
Simpson bas pleaded innocent to
the killings.
'

Today's livestock prices

--- -

---~- ~-;.,_,..---------.·

1 ,. Comtlete Medlcal/~urgical Care
For Ear, Nose ~ ThJ~at Including

''

..

. POMEROY .
FLOWER SHOP
•

•

'
•••

I

I06 Butternut Ave. Pomeroy, OH i

(614) 992-6454.
(800)433-6203

:John-A. ada,-M.D•

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

I f'e III ..P

r •••• .,_

W~ll441111111.•1e...ll..•
....... ef II'- PPO &amp; )i.ltl'll ••1•fPPO

Ravenswood, WV· (304) 273-2152
Preneed- Atneed- Postneed
SERVIN.G JACKSON (WV.) MASON (WV;)
AND MEIGS (OH.) COUNTIES
ROUSH
RUSSELL
•'•

'I

\,._ -

�.-

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

·

_

Basketb&lt;JII
NBAstandJnp
.~.

.......

f:edo·
.........! \
New York ............... ..l 3
B -......................4
W..li....a.............4
Ncwlenoy ..............4

l'lllllde/j&gt;llla ............. 3

Mi.uni ..................... .!

~ a
.6ll
..1
.soo l.l

4
4 .lOO
6 .400

6
6

.333
.14!

l.l

2.l
3
.4

ntUJar.-D IICOl'el

Broadila 19, c.. W"...,IO

,•

ao._ IIO.Oberli171
92,

.

3

Cbi&lt;IJO................... ..s

•

Delrool.. ....................s
CU!VELAND .........4
Clwlotte .................. 3

Atlaola .....................2

'-.X..yoa 67, Swortbmoro !7

'-

~toa

~

Do•-.....................
!
......................4
DoJ~ao

s.. AD1oalo .............4

lltlh .........................4
Mio....U ................I

3

Portlllld ...................4
S""""'DIO ..............4
Seallle ......................4
L.A. I..Wn..............4
L.A. Clippett ...........o

4 .SS6
4 .lOO
l .37l

7 .222

c.,....
acto...._...

.~

. I
2.

t3 .625
~
3 .m
3 .m
l .444
I .111

.Ill

3
l
4
S
9

.l71
.l71
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.444

2 .750

4

c..lrolllohrrilollaoel

•

a...,.......

l
I

Codotvilie IO,I~cl W•leyu 66

.ooo

1
2.l
2.l
l
3.5
1.s

Third .....

Clo&lt;lalllll Bible 17, &amp;iocllle, 0-o
~ol20.

ohio Wilily• Kl-~

Cloallkoi.Wp
Cal•loiO. Ohlo Waleyaa 63
Third ploco

Heldelbor1l6, Ohio llomiDicu 14
Cbapioll,.lp
Adrlu 69, Wll"!'•ato• Sl •
Uolr.oiWindo•
a...,loll..lp
Wlodlor, 0DWID71, TJ(fio 71

Tul!lday'• pmn

2l !Nnw Ia 1bo Allo&lt;loted

, _. toil.,. b•ketball poll. with flntpllc:e YOiel ID pll'ellhelel, record lll'ouJ,h
NoY. 20, total pollia bued OD 23 poiMI
. r... r.nt-pllc:o -lluouah ... ptll .. lor
· o Uth-placo YOio,llld pe-_..

naklo3:

r...... &amp; ......
1. ~-- (62) ............ 0.0 1.621 I

1.030
1.023

!1!151·
179

722

711
l64

412

461

m

liS

352
313
2ll
216
1116

170

Ohio women's
· college scores

_.....

10

9

,__m_..,n..a.
TOUrDUIIDII

-12

E. Michipn 40, To~ 37

J::."so . ........ J ~ ~
OIDO ST.........6 2 0

~~.,..

Cnoll.. ._.. ............

a...........,

lobaConollll,haaSL·Bthroad63
TlolrdpiMO
Allred 92, Lob Eric 60

-Tlpo6'a.k
&lt;JIIo w•

1, Pua S, Utah S, Marqueue 4. N.C.
Cberloue 4, Okleboma 4, Coli. of
Cborlcotoa 3, CooiiU St. 3, St. l.
· UNLv 2. M-.RI,Oid Domloloal.

Satunl:t~ smres

Conr.

,..._,.....
..=:f:".

Thld 65,

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
laoi. . DI.W..

e= . .. . . . . ..lf~~.MM~
••trllo ............. 6 l 0 .l4l 234 lll

6 l 0 .S4l 204 :Jill

6 0 .455 Z33 246

Newt!apacl .... l 6 0

.750

.636
.600
.lOO
.l"
.!00
.!4!

.4ll

.311
.273

_,ll:IA3

ll6

c.oeroiDMo...
CLBVELAI'ID.. I 3 0 .m 131 131
a 1 o .121 1n 169

. I'IIUIIurlll .........

New Mtdco 25. Tu~~oEI Palo 21

Oreaoa 17. Oreaoa SL 13

S""""'"'
SL 23, CS Nort!ridl' 22
San Joae St 28, Paarac 1S
Ua.A lisSoulhonl Call9

I1NLv 32, NtYOdl 27

Utah 34, SriiJiom YoUDill
Ullh So. 47, New Mnic:o Sl. 20

Wllhlnataa Sl ::n, W•hi•aton 6
WyorniDall, Hawaii 10

Other Ohio
college scores
Noo-wol'ercnce

Ciodalllli 21. '1\1111 13

YouapiOWD St. 14, lldiiUII St 3

Playol&amp;
•
NCAA DI•.ID-IInl YOIIIId
MooD! Uoloo 21. Allealleoy 19

NAJA Dfy, D·Rrtl rouad
Tiffia 41, Ell'cka 14
Watmlnsler, Pl. 41, findlay 30

Ohio U.S. playofl's
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - RuuiU

rrom the reaioaal fiiWI ud P'ifiap rar
the 1tate temiCiaala ol the Ohio blah

oclloollootboll ployol!"

SaturdaJ'• amres
llh-lsl... l

Beallsville 35, Columbiau34

DeioiK&gt;tSLioba'o 31, Leips~ 14
Mdloaold 3!, New WubiDIJIDD BliCk·
eye Central 0
SL lleaoy 28, Cedorvllle 7
Semlnoal palrlllp
DIYiol..,l
Clmlaad SL lpllliUI (II· I) Y1. Caa·
loa McKioloy (10-2). Rubber Bowl.

Akroa, 7 p.m. St&amp;wday

. W-.illoSoiOII(IJ.I)n.Chii:IDDIII

Colonia (12-0). Molllllrill Stadium, Troy,
7p.m. Sono-doy
DhltlcaD

quo (12-0), Dubl a HIJh School, 7:l0
p.m. Friday

llhWcam

Staub•allll• (12-0), Fawcett Stadium.

Caatoa, , ,30 p.m. Fridoy

' LoD!oo. (II· I) ... Qydo (1\·1), Do•
11011 Slldloon, Flacllay, 7::!11 ~.m., Milly

Dhollloo IV

CieYeload.lltaedlctl .. (10.2) ... Or·
..m. (11-1). 1.a1:e Hlill Sdoool, llortYine.
,,30 p.on. Fridoy
WHEELERSBURO (10·1) ••· Get·
...lowO Valley View (ll-0). Oro""""·
Mldllolllti&amp;J&gt; Sdooo~ 7,~ p.m. Friday

Ml!Jor college scores
Eolll

Browt1 59,Colulll&gt;lo 27

8U&lt;IIIIell29, Fonllllln l6
Coaaoctlcut 21, -...a&amp;ll
DeiJlwore 26, Rhode blucl 7
lldyCroa 27,Colpta6
Laloyetlcl4,Ld!lail20
Milni 31, Tomplo 14
Navy 29, Rice 17
New Hamp1hirt J2, BOIIOI U. Sl
((7[)
Peaa 18, Coraell14

PoooSt.4l,N-17
Pilllburjll 35, RU1Jtn21
I\1DCe(oa.lO,llllll!lluth 13
SL loloa'I,NY 34, W-t4
S-21,Morytud 16

Towaoa St. 42, Morpo SL 1

Weat ViraiDia :n. 801101. Collt~• 20

Yale 32, ltorVIId 13

llh-V

(11-0) vo. Lon Qty Buclteye Tnll (11-1), Red lleYII flald, St.
ClalnYille, ,,30
Cony (12-0 .,, Fridoy
Veraallleo (12·0),
u.. s..1or 111a1o s....... 7:30 p.m. 111dly
Wei~Yillo

r·""

DITW.. VI

(12-0) YJ. BeollniUe (II·
I), llow41'1 Stadium, s-.,.;Ue, 1 p.m.
~ St.loba'o (ll-0) ... St."""'
(10·2). Skip B•uahmao Stadium, St.
loloryo. 7p.m. Sllunloy
.
McDould

Transactions
BIHball

. -CINCINNA11 .. 1 9 0 .112

Ill 2111
llaulloa ............ I 9 0 .100 147 lll

-'-ltuLaNEW YORIC YANICI!ES: lleolpo4ed
Xnler ll«audaz, pllcllw, ror IUip-

........ o......

s.. 01,. ......... 1 3 o .m

:160 111
1Woao City...... ~ 4 0 .636 lU 205
LA. Ra1c1en .... 6 S 0 .S4! 127 :!AI
llla............... s 6 0 .us I'2 271

-

meDt. S..t JIUJ ....... CNtlitlder, ud
1ooe M...,, pit-. autrillot 1o Col..,.
br.aa or tba: lateraatloaal t..aue. hr·
.chued t1oe ......... or Aocly Croallu,
Aady Foailll llld Brill TayiDt, pitdloro;
Jooe - . - . .... llubli Rl-.
Mitt Lou ,.. Lyio MoutDa. outlleldon.

............... 4 7 0 .364 117 217

S 6 0 .US 131 204

WlllllpiJIDo ......

310

N.Y. Oluli....... 3 7 0 .300 171
J 9 0 .Ill 127

~

c..toi.IDhloloa

1

a-

4
Bay......... 6 l 0 .S4S

W 172

llolniM .............. l 6 0 .455 :tll9 237
I'l

,.,_Boy ....... 2 9 0 .112 145

-

S.Froado&lt;u ...
-.
..............
L.A...........

Now OW.....

7 0 .364 206 221
7 0 .364 221 21l

Snaday'IIICOIW
. -

$

Clly 20, a.EVELAND ll

co- 20, Datrolt 10

Bulfalo 2!1, O...llay lO

'"''lrtp'alei7,CINC!NNA1113
P1Uo1owJ1o 1&amp;. lollanol ll (OI')
11aw Eall* n SID~ 11
Dlllllll,WIIllllllN7

(All ......,

Includes: Cleaning; Oiling,

·

Adjustmen~.

SATISFACTION GUARATEED No Hidden .Charges or Fees

Greasing.

TUESDAY, NOVEMBE' 27,2:30.4:30 P.M.

FRUTH PHARMACY·
716 1. '

OliO

$1.99

L·R) aenlon Charlie Bissell, Ryan Buckley and
Geoff Watson. Rebind them are Jason Sheets,
Eric Hill, Chip Suttle and Eddie Friend. (Scott
Wolfe photo)

FOOTBALL AWARDS - Pictured are ~ever­
a! memben of Dave Barr's Eastern football team
wbo won spedal awardll. Pictured are (front row,

99

BUTTONS AND lOWS
• 100 EMala Still p....,.J
Saturday Nove- 26 . II :00 Ill td 4:00 J1111

c

9 99

4A9

O'DEU LUMBER CO.

-

446-1276

SPECIAL VOLLLEYBALL AWARDS -Speda1 awards went to·(L·R) Jessica Karr, Jessica

~0/ts

992-5500

Radford, Patsy Aelker and Rebecca Evans. (Scott
Wolfe photo)
.
·

MVin.•• ~~~on~ti-ou_ed_w_m~'~·R~e4~&gt;----------------~-----

Tbe matchup between the
'
two weeks
ago. He fimsbed
14·0f· minute drive In the third quarter.
NFL'
s fmt two draft picks- the
His
IS-yard
touchdown
pass
to
24 for 165 yards without an interBengals'
Dan Wilkinson and Fanlk
Scon
put
them
ahead
13·
7.
·
ception.
After Biasucci's kick and - turned out to be a non-factor as
He was off-target in the first
half as the offense floundered, bul • Majkowski's touchdown pass put the spotlight shifted to the two
was nearly perfect when it mat- the Colts ahead, Blake bad one injured quarlerbacks.
Blake struggled as the Bengals
tered.' He completed eight of nine more chance. He completed passes
went
three plays and punl on their
of
19
and
13
yards
to
lead
the
Benpasses for 98 yards on the Colts'
fmt
three
possessions. Their only
gals
from
lheir
31
to
the
Colts'
37.
two final drives, setting up Dean
big
play
of
the balf came not from
He
then
went
to
the
long
ball
and
Biasucci's 35-yard field goal and
wound
up
with
only
his
second'
Blake
but
wm
a wide receiver the touchdown.
· Scott's 53-yard pass to Carl Pick"It came down to making the inlerception in four games. ·
"If we would have bit it, it ens that set up a fteld goal.
big plays when we bad to,''
Doug Pelfrey bit wm 29 and 46
Majkowski said. "We stayed would have been a different story,"
Blake said. "It would have been a yards in the rust half, giving bim
poised and carne through.'
perfect call. It was the right call at 12 slnligbt field goals, but missed a
So did the defense.
34-yarder in the fourth quarter that
Blake, playing on a bruised left the right time.' •
ciluld
have ex !ended the lead to 16The
Colts
managed
to
puU
it
out
ankle, was 21-of-37 for 207 yards,
his least-productive game in four despile an injured quarterback l~J!d 7.
Majkowski also struggled for
starts. But be bad the Bengals in a season-worst game by rookJe
position for a third straight win Marshall Faulk, who was held to most of the game. His most oostly
miss was an overthrow of Dawkins.
afler be led them on a nearly nine· just 28 yards on 16 Ci!Jrles.

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Z-lhl3

all-District 13 nominee and District
"This year, 6-4 wu aomewhal Faulk and David Hawtborae;
13 senior AII.Star, while also earn· of a dlsa~intrnent. We weren't Sratisticians were Cryacal Mon'il
ing ali·Tri-Valley Conference bon- salisfted...we left 10melbing 011 tbe 111d Susan Brewer wjth miDa.l!!t
orable mention.
field at Alexander. I believe this David Baker and teiDI ·pbysldil
Special awards went to sopbo· year set the stage for wbat could be Dennis Newland.
· ·•
more Patsy Aeiker (Most Points a great season next year. We came
Special awards went to BeU
Scored), Jessica Karr (Best Spiking together as a team this year and . Defensive Player, Cbarllc Bl~
Percentage), Jessica Radford (Best showed tremendous team unity."
who also was oamed tbe Beat
Serving Percenrage) and Rebecca
"To our seniors I say good-bye. Defensive Most Valuable Pla)'et ill
Evans (Mostlm(IOved).
To our young players, I challenge tbe TVC with 120 tackles as a
Jackson said, "We bad a fine you before this entire crowd to bit junior and 137 this year. Bissell
group of girls. 1 hope they don't get the weight room and make yourself earned a plaque and trophy tapC~Qdiscouraged because of our record better for next season. "
lively for bis efTOtU.
.
this year as I think ·we'll be comGaining ~:;~al recognition
Jason Sheets, who lllllbled for
petitive next season. rm glad they were -seniors
ie Bissell, Ryan
1,003 yards as a junior, wu named
all stuck it out and I'm confident Buckley, Geoff Watson, JefJ' Steib- Best Offensive Back. Sheets COlD·
we'll bave a great future ahead."
em, Eddie Friend, Brian Liter and pUed over half of lbe te11111'1 toCII
Members-of the reserve volley- Chip Suttle. Other team members rushing, which netted more tba
ball team were Alicia Walker, honored were Brian Bowen, Daniel 2.000 yards.
Billee Pooler, Renee Gray, Carrie Otto, Jason Sheets, Chris Bailey,
Junior center Eric Hill was
Newlun, Jamie Drake and Vicki Mike Smith, Adam McDaniel, lllUIIed Best I IDCIDaD. OeofT W._.
Adams. Jackson was assisted by Robbie Reeves, Billy Francis, son took tbe Most lmprove.cl
junior high coach Paul Brannon.
Wally Rockhold, Eric Hill, Micah Award. Ryan BIICkley WOil tbe 110
Varsity volleyball players bon- Otto, Steve Durst, Jason Parker, percent Award. F'arst teaiD ali-'IVC
ored were Jessica Radford, Becky Shaun Long, Eric Dillard, Abe botlorees wm Bissell and Sbeets,
Driggs, Jessica Karr, Patsy Aeilcer, . Rach, Jorge Gomez, Travis Curtis, while Buckley aod Otto earned
Rebecca Evans, Brandi Reeves, Natbao Radford, Don Gobeeo, honorable IIICilli011.
Martie Holter, Mindy Sampson and Brian Wood, Chris Buchanan and
Members of the TVC all-au·
Michelle Caldwell.
. Corey Yonker.
demic team were Charlie BlueD,
Tbe athletic department and · Assisting Barr were assistants Ryan Buckley, Jlebm'a EV~DS. Jes.
members of the coaching staff then Ron Hill, Roy McBirney, Tim sica Karnnd Brandl Reeves.
extended a thanlc you to everyone
wbo helped in any way with male·
ing the (all sports season a success.
SPORTSMAN
Athletic director Pam Douthitt said,
SPECIAI..,s
"We exlend a special thank you to
our Athletic Booslers, parents and
COOIDlunity for all their suppon and
cooperation in malting our alhletic
programs successful."
EHS principal Clayton Butler
"SLUGGERS"
and wife were special guests at the
bead table, along wilb football
Deer Sluga
announcer and master of cere12,18, or 20 page
monies Jim Huff, who was recogniZed for bis efforts.
Members of the golf !Cam were
then honored by Joe Bailey, junior
bigb football coach subbing for
golf coach Dick Rupe. Players bon·
ored for the fmt-ever Eastern golf
team were Ryan Hawley, Travis
Lodwick, Robert Harris and Andy
Reed. Last .on the evening's agenda
was the presentation of the varsity
22 Long
Expre'Ss
foolball team. the TVC runner-up
Rifle
Steel
•
Small
for the second straight year with a
game 6 &amp; 7~shot
6-4 overall record.
Rimfire 50 pk. Shot Shells
Head coach Dave Barr cbalroads 12 or20 ga.
Cartridge
12 ga. 112 shot
lenged. bis younger players to "prepare for the future" and to "get in
the weight room" in preparation for
next year.
Barr reflected, "This is a great
634 E. Main St.
Vine St. &amp; Third Ave.
group of kids. We bave some fine,
quality yollilg men on this team.
1
Pomeroy,OH
Gallipolis, OH
Afler my first year and the scbed·
ule from the devil (Barr's reference
to Eas1ern's non-league schedule in
Locations
1993, wbicb included state power
Mon-Fri 7·5:30; Sat. 8-5
Newark Catholic, tbe year of tran·
Mon-Fri 7-6:30; Sal. 8-5 Sun 10-4
sltion for EHS and Southern) we
tbougbt 6-4 was a great accom·
We Sell Hunting License, Deer Tags &amp; Wetland Stamps
plisbmcntlast year.

Jt!minllba.

those

ID

Same 9ay Service

lierwereltonOred asset~ion.
Reserve and varsity volleyball
awardl were presente&lt;J by bead
coacb POll JPsOII. Jadclon recognized Jessica Radford and Becky
Driggs u four-year players. As
senl~ the duo completed an outstand10g bigb school c:a~er and
according to ,!ackson will be
greally missed. Radford was also
honored as a first team selection

O.,DELLS

we get
calls. ii's a different
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - Jetf ballgame."
It was lbe same kind of ball·
Blake's luck finally ran out Sungame the Colts (5-6) play w~enev­
day.
The Cincinnati Bengals' · er they come to Riverfront Stadiremarkable quarterback tried for um: erratic and unimpressive, but
one more big play in the final ultimately successful. Indianapolis
minute, but Ray Buchanan denied bas won five straight at Riverfront
him anotb!lr storybook ending. over the last su years, the last three
Buchanan intercepted in the end · by a total of 11 points.
"It looked like we weren't playzone with 45 seconds left to clinch
the Indianapolis Colts' 17-13 victo- ing that well today, but when we
bad to have it we did everything it
ry.
Buchanan came away· with ·his 'took to win," coach Ted Marchithird interception on tbe type of broda said. '.'You're not going to
play that has made Blake a phe· win in the NFL unless you can
nomenon: a jump ball to Darnay make big plays. Wben we bad to
Scott. Until the closing minule, the make the big plays, we did."
After struggling on offense all
play bad worked for Blake just
afternoon, they finally made some
about every time.
"They've been coming down plays in the closing minutes behind
wilb the ball the past couple of their injured quanerback.
Don Majkowski, playing with a
weeks," Buchanan said. "They
have very talenled receivers who tom ligament 'in the thumb of his
can jump and challenge for the ball passing band, bit three consecutive
when it:s up for grabs.
passes 10 move the Colts down the
"He kind of threw it up for field as tbe clock ran down. He
grabs and it was let the best man then read the Bengals' coverage
get ball."
correctly and threw an eigbt·yard
Buchanan was lhe best man on touchdown pass to Sean Dawkins
tbe decisive play, although the with I :54 left.
Bengals thought be also was a very
Dawkins ran a quick slant in
lucky man. He and Scott jostled for front of Mik.e Brim, slid to his knee
position as the ball was in we air, as be caught Majkowski's tight spi·
and the Bengals assumed the cor- raJ, then popped up and stepped
nerback would be flagged.
into tbe end .zone before Brim
Buchanan thought he did noth- could tackle bim.
inl! wrong. He wasn't surprised
"I bad him where I wanted
when no flags flew.
.
·bim," Brim said. "He cut back ,
"I didn't push him," Buchanan underneath and I bad my body
said. "I turned around and looked turned upfield. The quarterback
for the bllll."
made a great throw. They made a
"It was ioterference, but that preny good drive."
was irrelevant," Blake said. "I feel
Tbe 62·yard drive was tbe
we played a solid football game. It longest of the day behind
was just a couple of calls and a Majkowski, wbo injured his band
couple of plays here and there. If
(See COLTS on Page 5)

$24.95 when (lelivered

3''

ao._
. . . . . .. 4 o .636 11n 11n
MI-........ 7 0 .636 lAl 19l

style meal prePai-iid In honor of the
athletes.
·
Cbeerleading adviser Lori Hens;
ley made presenlalions to members
of ber 1994 checrlcadlng squad.
Members honored were Melissa
Dempsey, Heather Well, Bekky
Mcintyre, Angle Bissell, Jessica
Cbevalier, Kelly Osborne and
Kelly Bailey. Mcintyre and Chcva-

Buchanan's pickoff
helps Colts hand
Bengals 17-13 loss

SHAVER REPAIR CLINIC

laoi-DI.W..

.l'lollltlolpllil......
. . :. . . . . '¥7 ~4 t0 .lit
m~
.636 221 116

ByDAVE GOLDIJERG
.. sarety Eric Turner. "It seemed like
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) every pena!ty we got w~ offset by
.. The Kansas City Chiefs' inactives on~ or thel!'s· I would hke to see
were Pro Bowlers even possible theu defm1uon of pass mlerference.
Hall of Famers .. .'Marcus Allen, lt'.s awful f';Ustra_ting ~hen you 1~1
NeU Smith,Jobn Alt. Mark Collins. th1~gs aren t gomg fwly or even·
Seven starters in all were out ly.
with injuries, more playing bun.
- A biz~ fu_mble on the play
No matter.
before tbe _wm~mg score when
Joe Montana was there 10 com· Montana, w1th third-and-one at the
plete passes to 10 different Cleveland two, bit Bennett In the
receivers.
shoulder as be attempted to ban~
And unheralded Chiefs like the ball to Anders. Anders fell on It
Tracy Greene, Donnell Bennett, at the one, an~ then two Cleve~d
Kimble Anders and George Jami· players - Stevon Moore and P1a
son made their contributions as in a Sagapolutele - were penaliZed for
20.13 victory Sunday over Cleve- · unsportsmanlike conduct, netting
land. The result tightened up the the Chiefs another half-yard in
races in both the AFC West and total.
Central.
- Four turnovers b~ the
The officials showed up. too, Browns, the most. costly a mlshantbrowing 24 flags T 15 agamst !be died snap by Ryp1en at lhe K~"'"'
Browns.
City five afler Mark Carrier's 60·
"With all tbe people we bad yard punt return bad set up tbe
dropping like flies, to get a win Browns to go ahead 7·0. "If there
with the 45 guys we bad was some· was a turning point, that was it, as
thing," said Chiefs center Tim early as it was in the game,"
Grunbard. "It shows a lot of char- Chiefs' coach Marty Scbottenacter.
beimer said of the play.
"Anyone who makes our team
- An unsuccessful two-point
is supposed to able to step ill for conversion attempt by the Browns
anyone else," said coach Marty afler they bad cut the Chiefs' lead
Scbotlenbeimer. whose Chiefs (7- to 7-6 in the second quarter. "I was
4} moved to within a game of San trying to take over the momenDiego in tbe West and knocked tum," said Cleveland coach Bill
Cleveland (8-3) into a tie with Belichick, who rotated quarterPittsburgh in the Central.
. backs like it was an exhibition It was 3 strange game. starting playing both Rypien and Vinny
in a downpour and ending in sun- Testaverde.
light three hours, 29 minules laler.
This one started like no one
It included:
would sco.re.
- Three pena,Jties on fourth· .
Typical was a series in the fmt
and-sbon agamst the Browns, who quarter wben tbe Browns, with
bad 142 yards in penalties. Twice fourth-and-one at their own 46,
they were forced to punt, the other lined up to go for it as the Chiefs
time they were bailed out wben ran players on and off lhe field and
Kansas City was flagged for inler- finally called a timeout When they
ference on Mark Rypien's founb- lined up again, Cleveland staned to
down pass.
go, then guard. Bob Dahl jumped.
"You look at the siats and you The Browns were penalized and
lll!l_!!l_~ !Jb&lt;&gt;Ut the officiating," said forced 10 punt.

FHEE 1\SPECTiff\

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

By SCO'IT WOLFE
Sentinel CoJTespondent
More than 60 athletes were bon·
ored Saturday night during the
senior high portion of the Eastern
fall sports banquet and awards ceremony at Eas1em. High School.
. Tbe welco~ung address was
g1ven by athleuc booster president
Gary Holter prior to the potluck

Montana .leads
injured. Chiefs
past Brown~_ 20-13

6·
2
~
KIDS, GROUPS &amp; GLAMOUR

6:omColunobuo.

AIIIOil:...........

.

Cbordoa (12·0) ... Cuyobo1a Falll

Wolobl•uit (11-1). Byoio Plol4, .......
7'30 P·"' Fridoy
Raylud Bucker. l..o&lt;al (12-0) .,, PI·

Balolt Weat lraaeb (12· 0) va.

Thl• week's slate-Sat.
Mlchlpa Slate II Pooa SIIIO

l9

NFL standings

s

Midllpa .......... l 3 0 7 4 0
Wilcoolla ........4 l I 6 4 I
Mldlipo Sl.. ...4 3 0 S S 0
bllooio .............., ' 0 6 l 0
. towo .................341 l ll
llldlau ............. l ' 0 6 l 0
l'lrile..............242 4l2
Nofthwa1tn1 ... 2 6 o l 7 1
Mlaaeow ........ l 7 o l 1 o

ftt

lowa49,MiDaaotl42

Football

N.Y.Jtll...........

9 l

~0

OIDOSTATE22, Micltipn6
Fua Sllle 4l, Norlhw-17
Wiacomia 19,1111noi113

EUJbltloa
CloYOIUd SL II, Cle&gt;elllld 1\AU SO
Slovtala Odeja·Marmor 74,
v....,-.St.69

ladi....,..U. ......

*t

Oftrall

1Ddi111a 33, ~~~ 29

Or·=r' n+'p
Keayoa67, MII01160

Moatuo SS, MoolaDO SL 20

DITIIIoAVI

Saturday's smres

a.-z=+'p
..,....
Marieaoll

Far West.

Bolro St. 27,tdlbo 24
Cal Poly-SLO ll, S. lltlh 21
Calilomlll4, Stuford 2~
Colorado 41,1owa St. lO
Colorodo SL 44, Fn111o St. 42
Idaho St. 29, Miaa.·D.IIuth 24

Caatoo McKialey 27, Moallloo 20
Ciat:inaatl Colcrai11 9, ClaciaallJ St.
Xavier 0
ClaY-.St. ipoUUI 40, SlrODpYilie
10
.
WatetYIIIe Sooubl6,Nila7

AkroD24,01DOIO
Boll SL 34, Kcol 0

ThlnlpiMO

Muatt-71,SWT... St.56

141, Now Mellico SL 130,lowo St. Ill,
Milliloippl St. 59, Ml..45, Pwd.. 4l, LoooloriUel7, T - Tedl
32. Tew 22, Te"l''l 20, Cllilonlo 17,
Sl. Joha'o 14, Ari1ooo 51. 13. Briailam
Youoa 13. LSU 12. W. ltealucky 12.
Slliat Lou~ 9, Now Melicol,- St.

0 .112

Qig Ten standings

wa,.Oibur1 6l.Aiklol3

1\llaM 61,

9

LooVepa8owi. 9p.m.

Clpltol a-le
ctouaplouWp
Copitoll3, Dolloaoo 61
.

TeJ.U AAM 34, Texu C'hriatJan.J7
Tew Southwa 45, Laac 42
Tnu Tech 34, Houatoa 0

I 10 0 .090
0 II 0 .000

Tbunday, Dec. t5
CooL MiciUPD YJ, Ne-Loo Vqu,

Mowot Ualoal7. Allc.....y 33

.

o .636

SW Louiaiana 17, W. Michipa 14

....,.~.........k ......
_

16
ll
17
19
20
11
21
14
22
23
24
II

1 •

l 0 l l I .lOO
B~ISI. ............. ! l
I S S I .lOO
Toledo .............,4 l I 6 4 I .!91
E. Midi ............ l 4 0 l 6 0 .4lS
Mioml .............. !

Nc.~onftreatt

Tounamenll

13

9 2 0 .ill
9 2 0 .ill

Keo&lt;. ............... 2 7 0 2

B-JI,MouiiVnoo-ll
Btumoo 69. Doailaall
Brudela61,C..W..... SI .
l!arlbom 7l, Qadolllll Bible 27
OtioiiNia 73, w-. 61

6
7
1
II

1.C. Midl ........ l I 0
BOSU .............. 7 I 0
w. Mlch ........... s 1 o

Air&lt;&gt;o ............... l I 0
OIUO ............... O 9 0
&amp;..Coormacedllq)loa

S.. urtlaJ'I
· re&amp;ulor........, lt:DRI

3
4
l

Ot~raJI

l!: L I l!: L I &amp;J. .

Iuaa

Eli:J!Iblll!!ll

CleYOiud 51.12, Utln11ala Slllybo 10
Xnico97. Wiaa AII-Stn 71
YouaploWD St. 74, BC Zqnb, Ctoll1166

1

Stephen F.Auatia 34, NW Loui1laaa

ll

NAIA Dh·. 1-Rrlf rOIUMI
Arkaa111-Piae BIWfll, Ceatral Sl. 14

MAC standings
Conr.

a.-,......,
Coneaie-Melloa 72, ClroYO Oly 70

oa••rt rectl•l•a , ...,, Memphit
160, Oeorae Wuhiaatoa loll, llliaola

Major college
men's scotes

VIRGINIA l.

w..... , .. 'l1pall'

AP Top 25 men's
pre-season college poll

1.2!6
1,110
1,146

ll,lllloolo 7, Ceotnl Mlchiaao l. WEST

Wtlbub 75,OUvd, Midi.73 ((7[)

01._01 LA.Clippon, IO,JOp.m.

1,491

Notre Dame 39, Baylor 35, Tea.aeace 26,
WiM:onaia 16, lUI Force 12, TolM Tech

TlolnlpiMO

Now-,OISelltle.IOp.m

2. Pam SL (22) ......... 10-0-0 UOl 2
3. Alabltllla(I) .......... II-Q.O 1,411
4
' · Florida .....................9-1-0 1,349
l
l . Miam1 ............. :........9-I-O 1~19
l
6.Colorodo ............... IO-I-O l~l7 7
7. Florida SL ...............9-1-0 1~02 I
I . Te.uoA.tM .......... I0-0.1 1,076
9
9. Aubtn ....................9-l.- l I ,037
6
IO.CokndoSL ........ I0-1-0 9l7 10
II . Kwu SL .............1-2-0 931 II
12. Oreao• ..................9-:1-0 924 12
13. Virajaio ................ .l-2-0 716
16 ·
14.OIDO ST...............9-:I-O 671 22
IS. Ullh ......................9-2-0 631 21
16. ArizoDI .................7-:1-0 539 19
17.SolllheroCII .........7-:1-0 462 ll
II. VirgioioTec:b ........ B-:1-0 4ll
14
19. Miuwlppi St ...... J-:1-0 436 23
2Q. Mlchlpa ............,J-4-0 328 ll
21. Notlh CII'OIIaa ......a.)..() :116
22. Syn&lt;~~~~ ................7-3-0 117
u BriJihom v.u., ... 9-J-O 116 20
24. Wuhioatoa SL ......l-4-0 166
25. tlotl&lt;loColleao .... b-:1-1 14:1 17
WllllllaiJIDa 61, Nollh C010llaa Sllll 44,

Wooot«BS.MIIooe79

- . . .. -.tlOp.m.

&amp;nwoI

· Iuat
1.N - (39)........-1T-O'O I Jl6

Ollatr• retel•l•a ..ale•• Duke 97,

VuW&amp;t0..
cto ..pkoo ..lp

!d!f,ti'A.

1,440
IJI4
IJOI

.

R•Oullc

Mllwauket ¥1. loa1o1 at Hartrord,
Coaa.,
1'1111
··-7:30p.m.
MI....., 11 CLEVI!LAND. 7:30p.m.
OoNOIISUioll Clurloa.,l p.m.

Soutbwest

!.a·BinniD...... 41, Pnlrio View 6
LouiJIIOI Tech 20, ArklmM SL 14
Som llo!llloo SL 34, SW TeiM SL 10

votu l.a parealheua, recorda l.hrouah

llouiloloo 91

101')

W.IIIIDollll,MunoySL 17
YouaptowaSt. 14,todloaoSt. 3

25 ioalllllo The Allocilted

Nov. 19, total poiata baed oa 25 poiaiJ
Cot a fllll·place vote lhrouah oae pollll for
a 1Sth·place vote, aod nnkina ia the p~
YiOUI poll:
,
Lut

O.uaplon ...lp

Tonl&amp;bl'l pmn
S.. Allloalo II Now Yori&lt;, 7,30 p.m.
Miomi 11 Orludo, UO p.m.
Phoeai&amp;ll two. 9p.m.

Mtnf~UA SID

Tho Top

,.Ohio... \I.....
ailey 17

Sl&lt;llmeato !16, CLEVELAND II

CiacianaU 21, TUtu 13
E. lllinola 24, S. DliDOil3
Kw• ll. Mluourll4
Kw• SL Zl, Oklllloma SL 6
N.lowa27, E. Wubloatool7
Non Domo 42, Air Force 30

Prea oolleae roolbali poll, wilb f1111-ploce

I• Manchln T..........

- d 91. Douvit !16

..

'

Mou.a1 Ver.aoa Nuarue 103,

19

MeN- SL 41, Nldlolb 51.24
Middle Tell D. 31, Teaaeuee Tech 3
NELouilioaa ]I,NortbT... 10
NoctbC. .Uoa41, DIIU40
N-..9.l.,..Modlooa6((7[)
S. c..uu St. 46, N. Cwllu AAT
24
SEMiuoiri 17, Teoa-SL 12
SW LoubiiDI 17. W.MidiiJ11l4
SW Mlnourl Sl. 19,ltotloDYille SL
ll
Sol&lt;hCIIOIIu33,Ciemooa7
T-.-M111Ja Z7, AUIIID Pooy 11
Teaa-52, EeaitK:II:y o
To.-Clllttaa~ 34, Alnnla 20
VMI26.
IIC!tiaa St. 2l ((7[)
Vir,;ai• 42, lralaia Tech 23
Wab Pore0110, Oooqjo Tocbl3
Wllllom It Mary 11, J!;cbmoad 20
Mldwelll

AP Top 25 college poll

Mldoon1116, Pllilblr)' 19
Bo01htGO Collott

N..,,..,.., 91, LA. Qippon 97

.IO.I'Iorldi ......................O-O
l~t- ....................0-0
11 aNCINNA11 ..........0-0
13. Mlchlpa ..................0.0
14. OolqotA&gt;wa ..............0-0
IS. Wi........................ O-O
16. Coooecii&lt;Ut .............. 0-0
17. Mld\lpa St. ............. 0-0
11. s;ncu. ...................o.1
19. Okloho.. St........... .Q.O
20. V~llolo ....................l-1
21. vn!Uo....................o.o
21 Oeorala Tedi ............Q.O
23. 0100 ........................ 2-0
24. Wlke-.............Q.O
ll. Altlb... ................... l-1

Maodo:J, N... :II
SID Prudac:o II New Orleul, 9 p.m.

Thlnlploco

I

2. Nonll Clooii•(I) ......Q.O
3. Me:ec:tr•,., .1 .... " .... ~
4.lteolucty (I) ..............0.0
l . Arilooa.....................Q.O
6- ucu.........................o.o
7. Mor,lllld (I) ..............0-0
l.llllu ...........................o.o
. 9. Kaouo ........................Q-0

Mouat UoiOD "~ Alml '5

TlolrdpiMO
MlllllohiO, SL lolia fillllr 77

Sunday•aiiCOI"el

1bo top

N.C. W•lcYIII 6l, ttbot:o S6

c........,
a., a a...,......

3.5

tlotl&lt;ll 103, Wllhia&amp;IODI02
1Adiull02. ao.toa.l9
S.. Alloalo 109, Mi.-101
Stolllti20,Mil-!16
NowYo&lt;l&lt;ln,Alluoa79
01~ Ill, Doll• IS
-•109, lloo.,..IOI
GoldiiSUiol19,1111111ll

~

011-.. Arizoll. ' p.m.

CINCINNAn MDoav•. 4 p.m.
Kau City II Selnla, 4 p.m.
L.A. Ron 01 Su Ill..,, 4 p.m.
N.Y. Oilml 01 WMIIIDIIIOD. 4 p.m.
Pilllbtulllll L.A. Raidln. 4 p.m.
New l!qlaad" lodlllllpOI~. I p.m.

Third (liMO

a

l!ot1110a II CLEVELAND, I p.m.
Milni II N.Y.Jdl.l p.m.
PltillllelpblaiiAlluta. I p.m.

Tampa Bay II Miue~Q~a.l p.m.

Clpi1Ai176, MUll~• 61 .

3.l

SatunlaJ'IICOI'tll

1

Sunday, Nov. Z7

Wuhlo .....Md. 10, Mustiapm 73

.l

.s

.s~

PodlkDt.lolao

Goldeo Sllle ............7
1'11ocal1 ....................6

ORca Bay al o.JJ., 4 p.m.

Tounaameall
cto•plaoololp

.62l
.l71

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldw.. -

Dlomea 10

Dolloaoo

'"-- ~UIIliDIJDII6, FiadJay 71

II••JOJa.k

llldJau .................... ..l

Milwaukoo ...............4

Tolllgbt'•l•me

N.Y.Olull 11 llo...oa.9 p.m.
Week t31late
Tl"'"'v'
Buflolo Olllotroi~ 12:30 p.m

llreo&lt;ii71, S-St.72

c...... _

I

I..A.Ibiden24,New0r!.M 19
N.Y.IetJ31,MI..-11
Arizoool2,1'11ilodclpbla 6
Seoalol2, 't'aq&gt;o Bay 21
s.. m.c~oa&gt; n. LA. a... 21

SatanlaJ'•

'

LSU 49, Ttllaao 2l
Uberty 59. CUrl-a S&lt;011btn 27

lllawr 32. AlluiA 21

Ohio men's
college scores

The Dally Sentinel 1'1111

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·Eastern·fall athletes re.ceive ·honors at awards banquet

Monday, November 21,1994

Page-4

Scoreboard
.'

Monday, November 21, 1994

Come look at this 14'x76' total electric home. Fealuring
OAK FIREPLACE, 52 gal. water heater, water heater

.1994 1('&lt; 70' Lap sidinQ &amp;shingled 'oot-._,_
including many"'" op1iona.
safety pan, 1 piece tubs wilh garden tub in M/Bath, self -~
REDUCED '3.000
storing
storm
windows,
steel
front
door
with
oval
glass,
tile
....::;,.__,
NOW
DELIVERED
$19,99~-r-""'"
I
foyer, upgrade carpet, Honey Pine cabinets, F.F.
Regrigerator, Ceiling tan, delux chandelier, waler culoff
~--'~+val~eS-1F/9;cfornovabll!..llll:cb~.lUIIII!ioJlfreBU p_rQ!!f faucet,
~~- ~;:::~no-o•,::
- delux trim T/0, all glass light fixtures, furniture.
License No. WV00255
,All·
This
F.or Only $23,995. Delivered
.. . .
Just 6 miles South of Ripley
..
Exit 132 off I· n ·, 1/2 mile on N. 21
(Beside family ca~t outlet)
' Mon.-Fri.
9:5pm, Sat. 9·4 p.m. Closed Sunday
•
'
.'
·'

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

,

...

,,

5 p.nt.

. ..

Call
Dave or Bob--At 992-2155
1

.

/

'

�/

· '"Page ~The Dally Sentinel

Poineroy-Middlepon, Ohio

Monday, November 21, 1994

Monday, November 21, 1994

Meigs Land Tax

MEIGS COUNTY DELINQUENT REAL ESTATE TAX NOTICE
(Neme, D11crlptlon,
Acrll ,
Tote!
T-,
Aennmente
1nd
P-'1111)
BEDFORD TOWNSHIP
~·
MEIGS LSD
' 01·00030 000, llalham,
):lery &amp; Lane lllehlm, Stet.
•w 1/201 NE 1/4 oiSW 114·
~1A., $50.21
, 01-00031 000, B11h1m,
GIIY 6 Llnl lluhlm, Stet.
j W 1/2 of SE 1/4 of SW 1/4.
~ 131A. $287 71
' 01-00032 000, B11ham,
~1ry &amp; Lan1 B11h1111, Set. 1
E 1/2 ol SE 1/4 Ex. .057A EX.
) 173A. 3 14A, $7 !12.
• 01-D0510 007, Bogga, LH
)&amp;/or Darle J , Stet 30, T3
fl13, W1/2 ol NW 1/4 5 OOA
but of 25.toA5.00A, $6811
01~1 001, Gh11n, Clrl
~ncent &amp;/or Pemele 8, FR
)6 T3 R13 W Pt of S 1nll
3 45A out of 83 2IA 3 45A
J55337
'
• 01·00114 000, Jenkfne,
quenlle Davie, Et1l, S1ct.
~ 3-21 E Pt Ex 20 75A E
l3 83A, $238 52.
01-00185 000, J1nkln1,
;Ju1nlt1 D1vle, Etel, S1ct.
~ 3-21 W End of NE 1/4 Ex
11DA 8 38A, $12.30
• 01-00IH 000, Jtnklne,
:tu1n111 Davie, Et1t, 81ct.
11 3-21 22 off NE ol 70A E of
ltJA Ex
VIII 42.05A,
p40180
01-00560 000, Pereone,
on1ld 1/or Beverly, Lot
837A out of ti.IIA

~

~ 6374A,$3888

r_ 01-00617 000, Potion,
Jrtmothy H &amp;/or Rorick
tl1n1111, Sect. 28, T.3 .R 13
Corner 41 2tA Out of
;tiO 2SA 40.11A, $305 84
01-00111 000, R1mey,
vld, Etal, Stet. 20 W 1nd
2A N 10.75A, $25114
01·00580 000, R1mey,
I:Javld, Et1l, Stet 25 NE 1/4
iii NE 1/4 &amp; SA overplue
IIA, $107.87
l;_01-00591 ooo, Ramey,
"'.vld, El1l, Stet 25 E 11iof
IE 1/4 Ex 51A N 41A,
l117.24
• 01.01124.000, Akron 011
Corp , Working lnlertlt
Petrick
Btrthe Wllllem1
Olnd OWner, $31 19
• 01.01163 000, Davie, R W
lrll Roy11ty lnterllt
roducero Fund 1187·
/Producero Fund 1187·2
TOS,$483
01·00302 000, Hiley,
obtrt Michael &amp;/or VIcki
1n1, Lot Sect 13·32 18A
of 3tA I SA, $521 73.
01 · 00853 000, While,
1lrlcl1 Etel, Sect 23
•nttr ol N1/4 6 Strip
4Rdl wldt .-&amp; 14A,
1,072.23
1
CHESlER TWP
,
EASTERN LSD
:,._03·00037 000, llllty,
101m11, Sect 12·1 (212) NE
,..rt 40A, $128 to.
- 03·00038 000, B1ll1y,
lmll, Sect 3 (640) NW
1rt pi NW 1/4 out ol 30A
7A,$2t2
t 03·00040.000, B1ll1y,
~1m11, Stet I (212) W p1rt
Ill 20.11A N of RD 50A,

-.w

~

a

S

12112
• 03·00042 000, B1ll1y,
~-. Stcl. 3 (140) Mid on
lln111150A, $110 ..
, 03-DOOBO.OOO, llhu, John
li , Sect 8 (840) Sect 8 T2
j13 W of NW t/4 ex lA tx
liA 38.21A, $113 5!1.
; 03·00H3 000, llrooke,
fl;evln E &amp; Tony• S, Lot 11
llock 12 E 1/2 of lot 11

ll'
!

W'x70.1',$1d.
03·001114 000, Brook1,
In E &amp; Tonye S, Lot 112
k 1 Ex. SE &amp; NE E 1/2 of
1.o1 112,
03·00185 000, Brooke,
Kevin E. a Tonya S, W 1/2 of
41'1170.5', $5 t2
_03·00918 000, Brooke,
~In E. &amp; Tony• S, Lot 112
Block 12 w 112 2, St eo
03·00H7 000, Brooke,
K'evln E A Tony1 S , Block
12 w 1/2 Lot 13, $21817
03-D0117 000, Cerpenter,
Nlthlnlll J , Sect 24 (640)
II!IV prt of I50A NE Pert 1A,

ss sa

'*"

$4-M,

03-00188 000, Carpenter,
llethlnlel J , Stet 24 (540)
1ft! prt Ex 1 51 A 8 4tA,
M4887
'o3·00518 002, Drake,
l'homn 1/or Dtbre, Stet
1W1 (212) Pert oi132A S of
RD E ol Singer SSA 3 OOA,
S8-78.
03·00586 003, Drake,
'fhomae &amp;/or Dtbre, Sect
1W1 (2121 Mid on W Une
14-00A, $40 78
· o3-00586 004, Drake,
Thoma• &amp;/or Debrt, Sect
15-.2.1 (282) NE Cor Ex Coli
2t.25A,$8820
: 03-00588 005, Dreke,
Thomn &amp;/or Debrt, Slcl
11-21 (212) SW Plrt S5A Ex
7 74 1DA 47 25IOA, $2. 87
Cl3·003tl 000, Friend,
liNt!, Stet ·3 (840) P1rt of
Peermene 23A 1t.75A,

.,..,

O:J-00111 000, Neutzllng
WM Rlchlrd &amp;/or Shlron E ,
Stet 21 (540) ~•DA out of
-.aoA SE Pert 40A,

. . . 30.
03-D0838 ooo,

Nottlngh1m, Clrt A/or Miry
7 (540) R12 T4 Mid
on W Une Ex 1 42A 4155A,
.1201.
03-01013 000, Romine,
Kllth A, sect 8
R.13
(040) Prt ol mid ol NE of NE
1/4 1.t21A 7 t2IA, $41.20
03-01381 000~ ll11rhe,
Troy LH 1/or ulorl• .Ann,
Stet. 38 1840) NE Corner SE
1/4 Pt Of '14A 11A, 147"

Jf, Stet

r.z

~11001, Hoacher,
Geortll F. Jr 1/or
...._ 12 TJ "" Lot a 1IA
oill of t.IOA 7IA, $842.112.

-R•-·

COLUMIIA TWP

•• EXANDIR LID
"05-000oi 000, AJimln,
JliOIIj! P a lllriNIII 1u1,
s.t.: 28 out of Nil Cor NW
of, - "il- Ex ,23A t.nA,

..

Ull.73.

••

Bailey: 17A tA $77 II
'
01·00. .3 000, Hunnell
Nl Cor Ex 14 Vein Coal John R 1/or VIolet f:, Loll4
2.50 A, S1115.15
' (341 NW Cor or3A NW of Lot
011-00071 000, Byrd, Gell, 11 25A. $20 11
Sect, 12 1 532A, 1525112
08·00143 000 Shelton
011-GOZSO 000, CrablrH Wllll8m T., Stet. 5 (272) NW
lltUIIh M &amp; Woodrum Com1r 2A, 122.34
Thtlme 1!., Stet. 23 N ol NW
08·00234.000, Sleety
1/42 78A, $271.51
John C , Stet. 5 (252) lA
01-00251.000, Crebtre1 oll252 SW Pert Ex 11A 1A,
Btullh M &amp; Woodrum $7 11
08-00238 000, Gloeckner,
Thelma E., Stel 24 s ol sw
1/4 25A, $4 35
Devkl Erwin &amp;/or S1Uy, Stet.
IJ5.GI432 000, Jordan Dan 35 (220) R 11 T. 1 W Part ol
L., Sect 28 Town 8N R15W All E Say11 Line 20A,
S 70 out of 7.1A 5 70A $1,254 73
$83 tt
'
08·00520 DOD Powell,
01-00433 000 Jordan D
Jerry F &amp; Mlrg1111 M , Lot
L..&amp; Kim Stet' 27 F 2 :~ 14 134) N part ol 112 oi4A
R 15 sw' Co• 5 , 7 ; out 01 ~~;,: 11 Anllgully lA,
1711A 5 873A $718 M
oa 00074 000, Rlcherda,
01-00501 bOll, Milia Ann• Dennie L. Jr &amp;/or Mtlllll L.,
R, Stet 28 Tl R15 Suun Lot Sect 14 (34) SE Cor
Addition Lot 3 $41 45
1 73A, 1320 N
05·00008 ooo, D1v1 1 ,
08-00438 000 Riffle, Dele
M1rt1n W &amp;/or Cerle, Stcl18 1/or Lutz Pam, Stet 8 (100.
on E lint ol W 112 Nell Mid 222) W End Prt ol 42 85A on
1.00A, $383.15
N llnt1 50A, $55712
05·00007 001, Dlvlt,
01·00324 ooo, Smith,
Martin Willey &amp;/or Carla Donald E &amp;/or Vlcklt J , S
Raynell, Sect 18 n R15 End 12 2SA E End Ex.I4A N
1.00A, $25 18
Pt 1.034A, $1,830 33.
05-00181 000, Dungtt,
08· 00713 ooo, Vance
Oron 1/or Den1, Stet 111-33 Lawrence i, Stet 38 (214)
NW P1rt ol SE 1/2 Ex W 112 Ex 2A NWEx Coal Ex
Mlntr.le SA, $1,504 73
22A, 18 824, $553 32
05·00510 000, Mulllnt,
OUVE TWP
Sll.. J 6 Mery Lou Stet
EASTERN LSD
32 NE 1/4 of SW 1/4 Ex 30A
Clt-41382 000, Alltn, John
Wend lOA, $57 73
H. 1/or Robin A, Lot 3-8 E
05-00511 DOD Mulllne, end E of Rd Lot 100-103
Sll11 J &amp; Mery Lou, Sect .25A $215 tMI
15 ·I -32 33 50A $113 70
'
05-00501 000 Mulllnt
ot-01383 000, Alltn, John
Sill I J 6 Miry' Lou sect' H I/or Robin A, Lot (1 oo32 SW ol NE 1/4 &amp; NE' of SW 103) N Pt ol 38A In SWPT
1/4 liSA, S1,838 51
Of 3-1/2A SE Cor E ol Rd
05·00133 000, Seert, 14, $7 52
Thom. . E &amp;/or Glint,
01-00351 000, Devil,
Stcl 10 pert of 11 52A 45A, Jim.. L II Elll Sect 23
$305 80.
NW Pert Ex lOA NW
05·00726 000, Wright, 14 111A S112 57
Cheryl C , Stet 28 40A out
01-00478 002, Glllllen,
ol41 88A 40A $281173
Merk A &amp;/or Cerotyn Kay, 20
• LEBANON TWP
ydo W ollht NE Cor 37 &amp;SA
- EASTERN LSO
out of 47 69A 37 lilA,
06·00135 000, Gheon, $451 15
01·00631 000, Holzer,
M1nuel, Elll, Stcl 33 E Port
of NE 1/4 Ex Cool 103A Ex Weyne, Stet. 24 E 1/2 ol SW
2A 101A Ex 2A tt OOA, 1/4 Ex 20A NW Ex 4 OOA
$451.52
4 25A, $45.76
08·00135 002, Gh11n,
ot 01758 000, Merclnko,
Monuol 1/or B1rbero, Stet Otto 0 &amp; S1ndra K Royllty
33 T3N R11W E Pert ol NE tnt Cerl E Smllh Ptlro Inc
1/4 2 OOA out ol 101 OOA Otto Marcinko Land OWner,
2.00A $838 32
$5 12
06-00162 000, Godwin, L.
ot-01377 000, Reo!,
M Stet 27 N P1rt of SE 1/4 Robert, M, Sect 14·15 SE
Pert Ex. 5 Rdt Strip 54 50A,
28 68A, 122 11
06-00061 ooo, Good
S385 67
Arnold 1/or Myrtle, Sect 25
011·01378 000, Rill,
T3 R11 NW Corner 1612A Robert M , S1ct 14·15 NE
Out ol 51 85A 1 6 12A P1rt Ex 8 75A NE 41 25A,
$157.84
$47 52
08.00063 ooo H1mrtck,
ot-01257 000, Smith, Cerl
Wende L. &amp; Glenn C S.cl 0, Sect 32 N Middle p1rt,
11·22 S Pert Ex Fllchle 100A, $321 05
Willy S 11.31A, $24.80
011-01211 000, Smith
08-00~4 000, Hemrick
GOido M, Stet 14·15 E 112
W1nd1 L. &amp; Glenn C , Stet ol eo 75A E End ol W 1/2
11·22 SE Corner Above 28 25A, $152 02
Dewlttl Run Ex. 1A 8.55A
01·01480.000, Wilford,
$14.47
Roger G &amp;/or Bevlrly R, Lot
OS.00065 000, Hamrick 32
Arblughe
2nd
Wende L. &amp; Glenn C, Sect Subdlvlelon 1OO'x208 3'
11-22 E ol Long Bottom &amp; $50 tMI
HueiPirtoiSA IISA,$154
01-00081.001, Barber,
06-00009 000 H1ymen Du1n1 F &amp;/or Cry1t1l F,
Lawrence, Sect 27 Mid of 100A Lot 104 SE Cor 116A
Sect Ex Coli Ex 1 OOA Out ol2 OOA .teA, $17413
011-00431 000, Browning,
2L75A Ex 6 lOA 21 ISA
$108.07
' Randell 1/or Cindy, Sect 1
08-00138 000 Kern• SE 1/4 20.23A, $483 02
01-00231.000, Buffington
Kenneth Clyda &amp;lor--o.torl~
E E, Stet. It .IIOA, S113 t1
Lynn, 622 R11 T3 PI of Strip
ot-00118.000, Cowdery,
lhl Rd &amp; River 25A out ol Jatfrly J &amp;/or T~mmy D Lbt
70A HA, $19 01
21-21-30 Mcd &amp; Tor Add w
LEBANON TWP
113,$311.28
SOUTHERN LSD
01·00428.000, E1gle,
07·00101 001, Berber, Thelm1 F1y1, Stet. 4-10 tn
Ter111, 100A Lot 185 T2N SW cor &amp; Pert ol lOA 30A
R11W 5 OOA out ol 31 70A $11 112
'
5.00A, $83.00
01-00421 000, Eegle,
07-00015 000 Collman, Thtlml F1ya, Stet 8 N Port
John H Sr, Stet. 7·14 E Prt ol NE 1/4 180A Lot 110
of River 75A, $12 77
6 t2A, $21 01
07-o8115.000 Cornell,
01·00430 000, Elgie,
Frtnk, S.cl 14 out ol 21A Thelm1 Feyt, Stet 8 H Pert
25A, S7t 87.
Middle 1J10A. 123 M
07-D0116 ooo Comell sF
08·00432 000, Elgie,
&amp; Nellie Stet. j4 SE
Thllm1 Feyt, Stet I NE 1/4
•
mer Ex 2 28A &amp; SA Ex zttA
SA, $38M
28 881A, $8143
07-D0117 000, Cornell,
08·00433 000
Eagle
Slmutl f, Stcl. 14 In middle Thelml Faye, sict t NW
of 28A Piece 3 78A, S10 37
Cor. ol 40A NE 1/4 8A
07-D0111 ooo, Cornell $24 52
'
Slmutl F &amp; Nollie, S.cl 14
011-00858 000, Medeleon,
Mlddll17 40A, $4S114
Jlllrty, Etal, Stet 3·1 NW
07·00314 ODD , Long
P1rt ol 43 4&amp;A E P1rt Ex
Dennie Sect 25 NE 1/4 Ex 1.150A W lA, $3 oe
Co1l &amp; Oth Mint. 25A out
ot-00112 000, Pooler,
5217A 25 GOA. $68 74
Mlchlll E &amp;/or lola G SE
07·00385 000, Long
Plrt of 211/2$ E Prt ol S112
Dennie, Stet. 25 NE 1/4 E.:_ Ex 11/2A 8.50A, $4t 35.
Coli 6 Oth Mint 15 87A or
01·00113 000, Pooler,
83 824 2.41A, $458 31
Michie! E &amp;/or lolt G, Stet
07·00558 000, Powell
;:4 NW Cor 6 SOA,
1
Ruth Ann, Stet .23 2 1a A ,...
'
ol N Pt 50 SAw End Ex lA
08·00884 000, Pooler,
Mlchlll E. &amp;/or lolt G , Stet
on N II ne2.11A, $68.22
11·31 SW Cor Sol Rd Ex
07·00111 000, Proffitt, 1.25A.75A, $31841
Monty &amp;/or Allee A. Sec 24
01·01043 ooo Smith
(140) SE 1/4 ol NW 1/4 SA Mlchlll R 1/or Jen11 n A'
$78.72.
Sect 23 2 30A out ol
, !17•001181.~0, • I!Q!!Ib, 100.28A 2 30A, $275.10
08·01383 000, Vlntyl~
Dennie, Stci111S Prl o113A
In SW PRT ol SE 1/4 Ex Lucy 1':, Secl 11·20 NE ol S
1 522A Ex 5 01A 10 488A 1/2 of SW 1/4 2A, $130 34
01·01431 000, Wellh
$14312.
07-00111 001, Stlltll Wllllem &amp;/or Karolyn, Stet'
Robert &amp;/or Trle Sect 30 34 Fa&amp;, T4N R11W 1 SA out
T2N R11W NE Cor ol SW 114 oi38.27SA 1 50A, $3,t80 54
10 0017A out of 2t.25A Ex
ORANGE TWP
1AI0017A, $N.48.
EASTERN LID
07·00145 000, Ev1n1,
10·09332 000, Guue,
Norm• J., Stet 20 NE of Michael E 1/or Mercl1 R
55A SE Corner 2 25A,
Lot (1 O) Wlllhelm 1 n·~
.._..
eubdlv, $42211.
07·0024!1 000, MCGII,
10-00312 000
Heck
UHit A. Sect. 24 NW CO&lt; of Mlchetl A &amp;/or Su~nne Loi
.._77A NE 114 Of 45A 5.50A
Slcl 27 Und 1/4 of
NW
S15U3
prt UOA, $27 t1
07·005n ooo, Pereon•1
10-00124 ooo Sh•
Sell, Lot 33 Pereon1g1 Ola Wlflllm 1 &amp;/or Sheron rplo't'
Portl8nd, $512 15
'
07-00018 000 Powell
S14 15 E End N 1/2 11 483
Roaer &amp;/or Shlrltv Stet It out ol 34 21A 11 453A,
SW Prt E ol Rd of 31A SE SltoB.
cor Ex 1 20A E Side lOA,
10-00883 004, Sw1ln, Lit
$131 45
T., Stet 3 T4N R12 15 378A
07-0DB08.000, Smith, LH out of 80 41A Ex 14 NA
1/or Kathryn, . Sect 35 T2 70A, S7 41
R11 5 02A,
IG-00440 000, Blrrlnger,
.JI7·00121 ooo, Stoblrt Mitchell D &amp;Jor Drtgge uu
momea 1/ot l'hYIIIo, Slot • R, LDI Stet 18 Nli lflrl of aG
38 SECor 3 838A of 33 88A AC N Plrt of 8 100AC
3 83IA, $488.80
1 474/4, $111.53
07-ootoO 000, Wlllbrown,•
1D-0007t 000, 111'1111· w.w
Kenneth A/or Cherlene, &amp; Unnle, Stet 8 T.4 R 12 W
Slot 17 100A lot 155 T2N P1rt of 1 81A 1A, S128.58.
R112 14A of t3A Ex 12 50A
1CHI0540 000, Brookover
William E &amp;/or VIckY, Loi
UOA, S1,1111.to
LETART rw
Hickory Acree Subdlv W
100' S 411'[ 111 8' N 378.5'
p
SOUTHERN LSD
01-00028.000 ••,
13, $714 ...
• ""'ty, C1rl,
10·00241.000, D11nl11,
Elltl, Stet. 5 (235) SE Prt ol Benton T 1/or Klthryn J ,
d•00137.000,

Murrell 0 1/or Pemtll D
Stet. 15 Fr e SECor or saJ(

oui

3

s

eo'

!!

HA

"".21

I

Lot 12A of 0 212A 82A,
$1,410.28
10·00432 000, Koenig,
Ruth Frencee, Lot Sect ·14.
15 E End N 1/2 Ex 11 453AC
22 747A, $380 eo
1B-OON3.000, Loy, Wllll1m
S , Royelty lnlerttl C1rl E
Smllh Petroleum Inc ,
$13.17
RUTLAND TWP
MEIGS LSD
11 00082 000, Bilek,
Connie B , Stet 10 InS Plrl
oi52.17A Mid on S lint W ol
Rd 1A, $452 88
11.00115 000, Bullington,
Phillip L Sect 38 NW Part
ol NW 1/4 Ex 1/2A NW &amp; 3A
NE 28 SOA, $301 7t
11·01 384 000, Cereon,
Robert D &amp; MirY V Drilling
Co, Working lnter111 M V.
Coreon Lind Owner, $20.41
1I-D0247 000, EblrtbiCh,
F11nklln J &amp; Htlen L, S.cl
7 E1/2 ol SW1/4 Ex Coel,
lOA, $444 10.
11·00383 001, H1ggy
Willert J &amp;/or Nelllt V., FR
2 T8 R14 1 OOA out ol2 OOA
t OOA,$3704
11 00850 ooo, Hartley,
Floyd A 1/or Heather A,
Lot Sect -14 12 S Plrl ol
SW 1/4 1 OOA, $12 55
11·00330 000, Hllwltl,
Marcel1ln L., Secl 21, N11r
NW Cor 12A, $21.81
11 00331.000, HIIWitl,
Marco111n L., Stet. 27·28 SE
Com1r 45A, $2M 53
11-G0481 000, Hom, Henry
J , Sect 36, SW Cor 1OOA,
$888.45.
11-G0412.000, Hom, H1nry
J , Stet 30 W Pert ol SW
P1riEx tA45A,$17174
11·01321 000, Hubbard,
C1rol A.D , Sect 25 N'x1 00'
W tide .258A, $51 03
11·00712 000, MUIIII,
Judy, Lot Sect 4, SE EX 7
1/2 Cotl Ex 1t 75A 23.73A,
$20780
11·00725 000, Partlow,
John, Lot Stet 27, Nur mid
ol Wl/2 pert ol 15A Ex 112
Mlntrelt 7 45A, $37 04
11·00728 ooo, Pertlow,
John, Lot Sect 27 n11r mid
ol E1/2 Plrt oi175A Ex 112
Mlntrelt 2 55A, SS 70
11-00727 000, Partlow,
John, Lot Stcl 27, Near Mid
Ex 1/2 Mlnerela 5 lOA,
$1378
11-00804 000, Roblneon,
Peul S 1/or Allee t;, Frtc 38
'UN R 14W NW Cor 21 teA
out ol 121 68AC, 21 ttAC,
$37953
11·00805 000, Roblneon,
P1ul S &amp;/or Allee F, Lot
Sect ·14 ·15 NW Corner
401A, $2470
11·00113.000, Romine
Dalbert Howard, Lot Stet •
21 N11r Cor N ol Rd 1A,
$532
11.011 tt.ooo, wermke,
Anna L. Elll, Stcl 7 NW prt
ex lot• &amp; mid on W lint off
~x 3 62A 156 ItA,

=
6

11.011 11.000, Wemtr,
RICherd N , Stet. t Mutchler
Add 11 42A; $388.04
11·01200 Ot O, Wimer,
Richerd N , Stet. 9 Mutchler,
Add 12 42A, $5 2t
11·01201.000, W1mer,
Richerd N , Stcl. I Mutchler,
Add 13 .42A, $5.28
11.01112 000, W1mer,
Richard N Elll, Stcl 105 ol
Mid W of Rd 3A, $112.11.
11.011113 000, W1mer,
Richerd N., ETAL, Sect 8
NE Comer 4A, $24 70
11.01111 000, Wimer,
Rlchlrd N Elll, Stet I plrl
ol 1 25A W End of 62 37A
156A, $7 01.
11.01111 ooo, W1m11,
Richard N. Et1l, Sect 14 .g
SW P1rt ol NE 30A S ol Rd
1SA, $210
11·00086 000, Wllllemt,
Roblrt D Jr &amp;/or T11111 L.,
Stet e out ol 32 15A NE
End out ol 31 10 538A,
$461!
11-00087 001, Wlllllmt,
Roblrt D Jr &amp;/or Ttrtll L.,
Stet. 6 T6 R14 Mid of NWI/4
875A out ol 1 475A, 175A,
$141.58.
11·00418 001, Wlntt,
Suean, Stet 8 TSN R14W
1A out ol SW Cor oi28A 1A,
$3704
11·01262 000 Woodlrd,
H1ttlt C 6/or Wlllllm A,
Sect 33 E of NWI/4 tx lot &amp;
50A Ctm Ex 14 Vein Coel
88 45A, $560 "
11·01263 000 Woodlrd,
Hittle C &amp;/or Wlllllm A.,
Sect 14 33 Mid Lot on N
End 3A, $7 41
11·01264 000 Woodlrd,
Hettie C 6/or William A,
Secl 33 NW 1/4 ol NE 1/4 Ex
14 Vein Coal HA, $1111.00
11-D0119 000, Burchill,
Bill &amp;/or Florence, Secl 33
(540) N of SW Corn11 Ex 14
Vain Coli 50A, $151.21
11·00120 000, Burchell,
Bill &amp;/or Flortncl, S.cl 33
N11r Mid SE 1/4 Ex 14 Vein
Coal 2A, $52 118.
11-00157 000, Clerk,
Myrtia, Elll, Stet. 1 N P1rt
of 22 50A W P1rt ol 51A
ssoA. $458 eo
11-DOIIII.OOO, Crtme1n1,
Robert E 1/or Dollie J ,
Stcl 11 oil Will lot N of Rd
In SW 1/4 25A, $3.08,
11-D01t2 000, Creme1n1,
Robert E 1/or Dottle J ,
Stet. 18 N11r Mid on W Hne
W Pert ilO 73A, t3Q 11.
11-D01t3 000, Crem..ne,
Robert E 1/or Dollie J ,
Stet 1I Nell Mid on W liM
W part of 44 82A 1 ItA,
$113.25
11·00111.000, D1ll1y,
Jlmet R Krtety E , Stet. 2
1./SOA ol NW oor ol 3 I5A
Aleo 12' WD RT OF WAY,
1 50A, S518.27
11·l_OH!h000. ~llhem,
Uzzle, Elll, Stet. I NE 1/4 8
of 8plrt12.21A lA, $140.81.
11·00312 000, H1ggy,
W11t1r J 1/or Nellie V., Lot
Stet. ·2 ·15 N ptof45A NNr
Mid 3.00A, $41.8t.
11·00313 000, H1ggy,
Wlltll J 1/or N11U1 V, Lot
Slot •7 015 Out or 21.80A
2A of 3A 2A Ex 1 GOA 1.00A,
$2815
11·00314 ooo, H•gn.

a

Walter, J &amp;/or Nettle ~ , Lot
1ect ·7 ·II otu of 21 lOA
NW Cor. Ex 2A off W Sldt
1A, $80 , ..
11·00751 000, Mozingo
Harry RUIIIII M 6/o;
Bertini, Lot Stet 20 21 Mid
of Free IX 47A NW pt 70 12
Ex 2 8152A 87 t341A
$88851
•
11·00221 000, Neutzllng,
Charl11 &amp;/or Cerolyn, S.CL
12 Mid olE 112 N ol CR out
of 88 11A 1 lOA, $5011.02.
11·00834 000, Pllnter
Relph E &amp;/or ll1dellne L;
Seet1 Mid on E Une SE 1/4
Ex 3 1836A 24 11114A,
$131 71
11·00134 ooo, P1lnter,
Relph E &amp;/or Medellne L,
Stet 1 -t ·14 Lot 135 3.20A
out of 8 47A Ex OIIA
2 5331A, $31 87
11·00207 000, St Cl1lr,
Jerry T &amp;/or Oltndl L, Stet
I N ol Rd Ex 552A 338A,
$72775

11· 008t3 000, Thicker,
Karen F &amp;/or Htrahbarger
Glen E, Stet II In S p1rt of
7185A 8112A, $112.15.
RUTLAND VILLAGE
MEIGS LSD
12·00125 000, Gilmore
Mlch11l K 1/or Deboreh J,
Soc 8 (140) SE Cor of
15 34A 12A ol 11A 12A
$288.54
'
12·00128 ooo, Gllmo11,
Mlch11l K 1/or Deboreh J
Sect 8 (840) SE Cor oi
11 34A OIA, $7 84.
12-00310.001, Gilmore,
Mlchltf K &amp;/or Deboreh J
Sect 8 T8 R14 483A out oi
14 287A Ex 2134A .JINA,
$1.55.
12~.000, Molden,
Gl1dy1 &amp; Moldln Nevi,
Stet.. (840) w Pt of 25112A
NW1/4 ol SW 1/4 Ex OIA
OIA,$113
'
12·00007 001, Molden
Werren Keith &amp;/or Kllhy
Sue, Stet I T1 R14 2130A
out ol 23A 2130A, $225 54
12-00001001, Molden,
W11ren Keith &amp;/or Kothy
Sue, Stet 8 T8 R14 15A out
013 50A 15A, $1 13
12 00385 000, Wermke,
Romon F 6 Light Kenneth
H, Lot Stell (540) on S Una
ol SW 1/4 &amp; S ol RR Ex 32
Ex 1 38A teA, $28.N
12~1000,DI~a,Gene

A 1/or Su11n, Sect ·8 32'
NXT to Pr11byterlan PI ol
50A .20A, $80.21
12-0D202.000, Devle, Gtne
A 1/or Su11n Sect 1, E11t
of Ro1d out ol 5DA 15A
$68088
•
12·00231 000, McFerllnd
Minnie, Stet 8 (640) NW of
Grim.. lot S ol Rd 45A
$8171
'
12·00007 001, Molden,
Warren Keith &amp;/or Kelhy
Sut, Sect 8 Tl R14 2130A
out of 23A 2130A, $225 14
12·00253 ooo, Mu ..tr,
nmothy, S.cL 14-8 (540~ SE
PI NW 1/4 E ol Rd ,25A
S388118,

•

12·00311 ooo
WoW.
Monte Rly 1/or Shirley a •
Stet 14 (212) W of H!!ntt;

.21A _,,0 2 5 A , -

14·00411 000, F1mlly
Home• Inc An Ohio Corp ,
SE 1/4 ol SW 1/4 Ex Coli
1 80A 24.85A Ex 3 774A
21 178A, $202.17
14·01350 000, flmlly
Hom11 Inc , Sect 11 Trlcl
11 0 Ex 148A 11.272A,
S5735
14·00847 001, Hubberd,
Jerry R &amp;/or Kethryn J ,
Stet 23 T2 R13 12A out ol
100A 12 OOA, $121 3t
14-00181 000, KIUff, P1ul
E 1/or Frenc11 M , Out of
8.75A, Trl In S Pert 1A
$3155
•
14-00122 ODD, King,
Danny 1/or Cynthll, Sect
25 (140) SW cor ol 18 12A
Neer Mid , W 112 1 04A
'
$30280
14·00823 ooo , King,
D1nny 1/or Cynthie, Sec1
25 (540) 1eo x170' E ol Allen
Gilkey 1 04A Ex 181A
2MA,$3.42
14·02400 000, Marvin,
Stafford, Roy11ty lnltrtll
Htrtld Oil &amp; Gao, S3 17
14·00110 000, Mey11,
Glen folor June L, S1ct 22
(262) F 23 R13 NE Cor ol
50A BSA, $37 t3
14-01007 000, Miller,
Donald Phillip &amp; Lollltt,
Sect 12·26 (140) NE Pt of
SW 1/4 SW PI ol NW 1/4
120 4BtA $273 08
14 01008 ooo, Mlllor,
Don1ld Phillip 6 Lorette,
'Sect 26 (140) SW Cor. ol
Sweuger 14 15A Lot Ex
Mine 33A, $4 10
14·01001 000, Mlllor,
Don1ld Phillip &amp; Lorette,
~ol 32 ($401 on N Line
nair ~ Cor of NE 1/4 Ex
Mint. 30A, $71 71.
14-01174 000, Pugh, Cllll
111111, S.cl 30 (100-308) 1M
Penny Surv Ex loll 1 87A,
S8-88
14·01240 000, Ro1ch,
R1ymond, Sec 27 (212) fr
24 W of Creek 2.35A ol
32.13A, 2 35A, $381 12
14·00411 ooo, Sftobert,
Roger L &amp;/or Und1 C, Stct
31 (540) N11r Mid on S Pert
Ex 2 lOA N Plrt 54 02A Ex
335A, $391 71
14-01-000,
'Stepheneon, Memle M, Sec
26 T2 R 13 (6401 N11r Mid
W112 ol SE 1/4 N of Rd
315A, $40.88.
14-01407 ooo, St1phln10n
M1ml1 M, Sec 21 T.2 R 13
(540) N11r Mid Wl/2 ol SE
1/4 Nof Rd GOA, $1 37
14-01-000,
Stepheneon, M1ml1 M , Stc
28 (540) E Prt of 7 MA Mid
WL1n1 w 112 32A, $3 78
14-01408 000,
Stlpheneon, M1ml1 E Sec
28 (140) W prl nter Mid W
1/2 ol SE 1/4 N ol Rd 38A,
$445
14-00420 000, Stober!,
Roger L 1/or Linda C , Stet
38 (100) E .22A W End ol E
112 5 toA. $233.10
14-00421.000, Slobarl,
Roger L. &amp;/or Unde C , Stet.
31 (540) T.2 R 13 1A out ol
57 52A N11r Mid on S P1rl
1A,$5141
14-00074 000, Stone,
Thom1a A, Stet I In NW
Cor ol W 1/2 of N 1/2 1A,
$2N77
14·00060 000, Batey,
Andrew &amp;/or Belly Jo, Stc1
38 (100.315) Ntar SW Cor
W or Ad 45Aoi85A4 50A,
$11458.
14-00240 000 Cox, J1m11
&amp;/or M1rger1t, St 34 13271
55A ol NW Pt 1 10A NE Pi
of 22 17A W St Rl 17 55A,
$86812.
14-01417 000 Cox, J1m11
&amp;/or M~rgoret, Sec 34 (100327) oliO 47A NW ol St Rl 7
50A, $58515
14-00247 001 Cox, J1m11
Clertnce&amp;/or Mere~rtt Ann,
Stet 34-34 R13 1OOA Lot 32t
SA
Ex

SALEMTWP
MEIGS LSD
13-00803 000 Ball, John,
Lot 11,$103
13-001104 000, B111, John,
Lot 12, $18.te
13-00042 000, Blea, John
L , Lot I Longetreth 1dd,
$1178
13-00043 000, llut, John
L., Lot 7,$17212
13-00044 000, B111, John
L.,lotl,$5114
13·00728 ODD, llurnem,
L11 E &amp;/or Eve R , Sect 24
SW prt IX 37A W 90 19A
7 25A out ol to 11A 7 25A,
$148.43
13-00184 000, Fetty, Llll
E, Stet 3 R 15 R 8 SE Cor
Ex 14 Vein Co11 4 71A,
S113 40
13·00330 000, Jewell
Menlord &amp;/or Joyce, Sect 14
N ol E 1156A Ex 14 Vein Coli
out ol 40 548A 4 OOA,
$12125
13-0D420 000, McDonlld,
Devld E &amp;/or Velvle, Sect
18 SW ol N 200A Ex." Vein 28 out
Coli 2 SOA, $385.17
$10 04
14·00323 000, Eblin,
13-00411 000, M11ton,
Audrey Feye, Et1l, Secl 5 CIIUdt Dougl11 Elll, Stet
NW Pt ol SW 1/4 &amp; W PI ol 28 (540) out ol 18 57A N of
NW 1/4 Ex 75A 73 30A, Union Ave 100 xll' 23A,
$40745
Stt74
13·00462 ooo, Mttton,
f4'·00324 ooo, Eblin,
Audrey F1y1 Elel Sect 5 Cleude Douglll Etal, Sect
out of 74 05A 75A, $4 52
21 (540) on N Une ol E 112
13-D0574 003, Moore, Bob 72A. $4 34
Lee Sect 11 T1 R15 8 9882A
14·00325 000, Eblin,
out ol 52.8187A 1 17 A, Clludl Douglll ltll, Sact
$50 63
21 1540) on N Lint of E 112
13·D076I ODD, Wooten, Of SE 1/4 IX COli 4 toA,
Minnie, Sect 15, 1 425A, ~:-~0321 000, Eblin,
$448 67
Cl1ud1 Douglll, Elll, Sect
13.00103 000 Cllrll, Alv1 2818401 SE 1/4 ol NE 1/4 Ex
B 1/or Karen, St 2 T.l R 15 It i/2A NW 30 SOA, s1ee 32
SE of NW &amp; SE of NE 1/4 Ex
14·00327 000, Eblin,
14 Vein Coel tl 44A, Cl1ud1 Douglal, Etal, Sect
$2,038 70
28 (540) N11r Mid o1 N 1/2 of
13-00311 000, Limbert, SE 1/4 1 43A, S8K
Robert I &amp; Sondra C, Sect
14·01455 001, Femlly
13 1540) T.13 R 15 on sw ol Hom11 lnq, Sect 8, R2N,
Oren Devle 1111A, 1211A, R13W, OIA out of .30A,
$310 53
$12715
13-000tB ooo, Ogdtn-Dfi¥"fif"ot"41f&gt;tOt-=.bmlly
&amp;/or Llndl, SICI ~· UN Homea Inc , Sect i;'r2N,
R 15W 2 3A out oi103-C R13W, 20A out ol 1 OOA,
2.3AC, $152 34.
$303.28
14·00173 000, Hue,
13-00572 000, Scott, 81m
E folor Bonnie G , It 33 8 prt Chlrlolle, Sect 24 NW Cor
of NW 1/4 I SW 1/4 Ex 14 of 71A N &amp; Wof Run 10 OOA,
Vein Coli Ex 5.7t3A $114.77.
14·01354 000, Hyllll,
t7.207A, $1,117 40
13·0071 0 000, Ttykir, Gll11 L. &amp;/or S1r1h, Ste I,
Flore E , Stcl11 -1 I Llnl ol 1840) In Ill Une IS 1 31A or
io 7A 1 HA, $225 01
SE 1/47A, $251....
13·00711 ooo, Wooten,
14·00111 ooo, Hy1111,
Minnie, Sect 15 -8 ·12 NE Roger W, Sect 31 (140)
Cor 40A, $321.14
1 30A out ol 81 StA liteer
1 3·00717.0_90, WQ!Itln, Mid N 1/2 ol N line 57A,
Mlnnll, Stet. 11 '1'"1111krN $2N41
Line ol NW 1/4 Ex 1.425A
14·00117 000, Hy11ll,
28 575A, $113.71.
Roger Wllll1m, Sect 31
SALISBURY TwP
1840) 1 30A ol 0 !lA Naer
MEIGS LSD
Mid N 112 ol N Ln 32A,
4 11·11it11.000,- AniPICh, $211.10
Eugene,...l/or llu~~~_Sact. .. t4-0004S.OOO, 1ty1111,
38 (1D0-327) IO'X7~~ w at •ttph~n R 1/or Joyce A.,
Rd 17 Pt ol 54A 07A, Free. 31, T2 R13 2A out ol
S137
10.24A2A,S117.11.
14 01208 000
14-01281000, Imboden,
•
•
• Bowere, Patrlcle &amp; Rouah M1rvln
Trln1 Oele, Sect 21 (1401 Llonerd, Slot 32 (540) N of
Mid W 1/2 oiiE 1/4 N ol Ave S 150A of N 2tOA Ex COli
lA, $140M
llrldge1.15A, $22.22
14·023tt 000, Donald &amp;
14·02341 000, Little,
loll Little, Roy11ty lnltrtlt Do"1ld &amp; Lole, Roy1lty
Hel'lkl
011
$3.17
tnter11t Her~td
&amp; G11

oua

eo,

eo,sa"

on

14·02351 000, Little,
Don1ld &amp; Lolo, Roy1lty
lnltrtlt Hereld 011 &amp; Ole
Co, $17 71
14·00177 000, Merlin,
Benn• K Et1l, &amp;eel 13·1
18401117 Rldford Surv. E of
Cr 12A, S11!1.63
14·00571 000, Merlin
B1nn1 K. Ell!, Stet 28 Und
1/2 .33A, $2.05
14·00510 ooo, Merlin,
Benn1 K Et1l, Sect 25
(540) E ol CR, &amp; S ol Ru111i
lA, $717
14·00581 ooo, Merlin
Benn1 K Etal, Sect 25
Second T11ct SOA, $3 55
14-00582 000, Merlin
Benn1 K Etal, Sect 28 Und'
1/2 33A, $2 05
14-01203 000, Miller, John
E &amp;/or Lori A Sec I BOA ol
S.32A S Cen Prt ol Fr 2
BOA. $211241
14·00248.000, Milliron,
Dell J Elll, St 28 (100) T.1
R 13 Neer SE Pt ol S of Rd
NW 54A .84A, $214.11.
14-D1121.000, P1lnter,
RIIP.h 1/or M•dellnt, Sect
31 (840) 8W Pt of 30A Mid
SW 1/4 3.42A, $50 25
14-D1128 000, P1lnter
Relph 1/or M1d1llne, Sect'
13-31 (540) SW PI ol SW 1/4
I.SSA, $310 41
14· 02084 002, P11n1er,
Ralph E 1/or Madeline L.,
Sect :11 ·2 ·13 Lot 135 32A
out of 2.2DA, f! 114.
14·00843 ooo;- Robie,
Kenneth M., Sect, 8 15401
212 x 211' S ol School Lot
1 GilA, $445 74
14·01281 ooo, Roble,
Robert 1/or Clera, Sect 8
(540) In Ill S ow WIHI1mton
28IA, S1 ,7N 01
14·01256.000, Roble,
Robert E &amp;/or Clara L, Sect
8 (540) In Ill S ol Wlllemton
412A, S188.23
14-01410 000,
St,heniOn, M1m11 M , Stc
28 840) SW Prt of 2A N.,r
Ml Y{ 1/2 ol SE 71A,
SS710.
14·01510 001, Sllwlrt,
Mlch11l R t,/or Debrt A,
IOOA lot 1376 200 x243
1 1157A out ol 3 OOA
1 1157A, $50415
MIDDLEPORT VILLAGE
MEIGS LSD
15-00511000, G11ry, Max,
Elll, Lot Pt. 11286 W 1/2 of S
1/2 1211 a W1/2 N 18 lot
Horton Add 2114, $102 38
1 5·001 08 000, Hewley,
Norm1n &amp;/or Gilkey Jane
Ann, Lot 4 Horton &amp;
Boeworth 14, $40 15
15·001 07 000, Hewley,
Normen 6/or Gilkey, Jene
Ann, Lot 3 Horton &amp;
Boaworlh $3804
15-00272.000, Lavender
WIIN1m Thomtt &amp;/or ''tty
Sue, Lot 55 Ex 2'x30' SW
Cor, $110.14
15-01171 000, Roueh,
Herry, 'C Jr folor Ell• D, Lot
410 Horton • Add 70 x124
$45077
15-01172 ooo, Roueh,
Herry C Jr &amp;/or Elll D , Lot
pt of lot 1477 SE pt ol lot
Pomeroy add 10 6 by 70',
S3.51
15·01238 ooo,
Su,
Ktnnle, Lot 422 Pom
50 x125 $53 28
15 01240 000,
Set,
Kennle, Lot 435 Pom,
$172 47
15·01241 000,
Sn,
Kennle, Lot 438, $83 48
15-01242 000,
Kennle, Lot 431 Pom,
$4452
t5·01243 000,
See,
Kennle, Pom 437, $4S 10
15-00801 ooo, Stelle,
John D1vld &amp;/or N1111
Dl1n1 Lynn, Lot 124 W 1/2
50'x50 Palmer'• 2nd 1dd,
$337.2,8
1 5·00803 000, Staalo,
John Devld &amp;/or N•,.•
Diana Lynn, Lot 123
P1lmtr't 2nd odd W prt of
Strip 4 xso•. $3 5!1.
15-000117 000, Bllley, Peul
W Lot SIC 2t Lower Pom •
25 x 13' South prt E of rd
$13"
15-000118 000, Bailey, P1ul
W Lot Ste ·28 S.c. ·28 33
on Park St Wttl Prt ol 56'W
33A, $15814
15-01517 000, Bllkt,
=-·Lot 163 Lower Pom,

s ...

15-01516 000, Bleke,
Jove• A , Lot 164 Lower
Pom 11-1/2' E Sldt, Slot 86
15·01077 ooo, !!Ioyer,
Jlmee R , Lot 96 Pelmar •
lol,$1,180 10
15-00401 000, Carpenter,
Larry, Dlv Jonoe Elt 22 w
Side, S788 54
15-002t5 000, COIIII Dor
Cl8rk, lol412 Pom 1412 W
1/2,$1,024.12
15-00831 000, Cuoter, Pit
&amp;/or Joe, lot 312 15A St
Cor oi3A Trect 15A, $2 tMI
15-00832 000, Cuellr, Pit
&amp;/or Jot, Lot 312 2 85A
'
$34180
15·00473 001, Devlt,
Mertln W, 20 x 50' NW
Corner Pert ol Lot tt
$100
•
1 5·01120 000, DIVII,
Morlln W , Lot 81 Ptlmar't
111,$57!1.88
15·111134 000, Devle,
M1rtln W, Alley 15'x100'
VICIIId lilly W ol lot 81
belwttn lola t1
tt,
$2580
1s-ooil12 000, Fuhl, John
Mereu•, Lol107, lllhln Add
Ex 341/2' E Sldt, $51U1.
15-001113 000, Fultz, John
MIICUI, lot 106 Blh!ln Add
Ex 34 112' E Sldt, $14.84.
15·01t57 ooo, Harrle,
Wlllt1m W , Lot 11, $31 41
15·01111 000, H1rrl1,
Wllll1m W, Sect Lot 2
Blocll, 1 Ex OtA, SS32 33.
15·00881.000, Martin,
Franklin, Lot 84 P1lmar'1
ldcl (1111 !33', 110711.
1~5 000, lllllh-t,
Donn• 1/or Terry, Lot 121
Pllrnlr'l 2nd ldd , $157 44
15-001121 000, Mlllh-e,
Donn• 1/or Terry, Lot 130
Pllmtr'1 2nd ldd, S163.01.
11·00011 000, McC1rty
Roy 1/or Temmy, Lot (18)
Riverview
~"'
Subcllvlelon, $1,354 72
15·01071 000, Nunn ,
Mlf11lrtl, Lot (20) Horton &amp;
Bo-rth Add 120, $171.86
15·01078.000, NunnJ
Mllglrtl, Lot (21) Horton a

a

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

{'&lt;.,

Continued from Pege 8
11·01847 000 Henelty,
Beverly I Henally Robert
Lol102 H &amp; DAdd E P1rt
10 S Side, $210 11
18·02137 000, Heneley,
Henry L &amp;/or Beverly, Lot
18 NYE Add, $3110 74
18·02131 000, Henllty
Henry L. -.:or Beverly, Loi
17 NVE Add $87 71
18-02131 000, Htneley,
Henry L. folor Beverly, Lot
18 NVE Add, $544.84
16·021 40 000 Htneley
Henry L &amp;/or Beverly, Loi
" $115 82
18-00827.000, Houdaohtlt,
Emerton, E &amp;/or Peggy M
Lot 425 Sub 11 Union Ave'
Bit 427-q28 $575 75
16-00117 000, Johnoon,
Jeoalt &amp; Btrthl Lot 35 VB
Horton 1 Add, $8.15
18· 01 023 000, Lehew,
Loutae Lot 212 10 x 82 2
out of 24 74A Free 117 Lot
262 21A $17 t5
16 00207 000, Lemley,
Llwrence &amp;/or Oorte L Elll
Lot 460 23 112 Side w'
$878 82
'
16 01841 000, Litchfield,
Deborah, Lot 258 40A w
Part ol E Part o Sub 81 40A
$61173
•
Mattox
16-01121 00,
Clarence Jr &amp;/or Sh11on,
Lot 14, Neylon Run,
$1105 01
16-01322 000, Ph1lln,
Robin L &amp;/or Kathy J, Lot
100-308 1A Sub 2 1/2
$869 12
'
16·01370 000, Quail•
Mary, Lot 23, $412 20
16-01489 000, Ruttell,
Danny 1/or Lllh Jene, Lot
262 · 17 R 13 R 2 Sec 20 Lot
282 117 615A, $211217
1 6· 01639 ooo, Smith,
Klthlun M , Lot 437-437-1/2
100 on Oeborne St Pt ol
437 Corr Dead 386A,

IOIWOrth 21, 1271 7t
15·01 842 000, Schuler,
VI~~ Maxine, 81c 34
110
1 20A Ex Church
lot 1.2A. $2,1112.. .
15·01414 000,
W1rd,
Wllll1m, Lot (8) Bth1n 111
Add , a.N 1/2, US $2.
POMERO ( VILLAGE
MEIGS LSD
16-0iiU 000, Felty,
H1rold, W Ell I, Lot 77, Ex.
SECor,$214.
11-01187 ooo, Fatty,
Harold W Elll, Lol48 S Pert
of Lot 48, $2 84
18-D0544 000 Folmer MIX
&amp; JeH, Linda &amp; Ou11f1
Johnnie MH, Lot 258 •long
Kt.,. Run Not In lo1, $4 87
1S.OOt18 000, John1on
Jttlll • lllrlhl, loll 28, •
27, -28, 171 74
111-0otlt.OOO, Johneon,
Jtttll &amp; Btrlhl, Lot 38 V I
Horton'a Add, S10 It
11-0ot20.000, Johneon,
Jttet• &amp; Birth•, Lot 34 v a
Horton't Add, S5.t5.
18-00121 000, John10n,
Jault &amp; Berth•, Lot 28 &amp; 30
to'x100, $5 28
11·01582 000, Landtre
Ch1rl11 A, Lot 125 to 129
Inc 6 Trl E Side 130 H &amp; D
$2118
16-01513 000, L1nd111,
Ch1rl11 A , Lot 121-1/2 H &amp;
D Add 40 xao, $181 24
11·01541 000, Lergt,
Jeckle, Lot 3 Lincoln
Hllghll Add $503 12
1S.00208 000, Lemley
Lawrence &amp;/or Dorlt L. Etll,
Lot 484 PIICI 14' W Side &amp;
48 E Sldt, $2 04
11·00201 ODD, Lemley,
Lawrence &amp;lor Dorlt L. Etol,
Lot 465 Ex 31'x25 1/2',
$447
18·00210 ooo, Lemley,
Lawrence &amp;lor Dorle L. Elll,
Lot 470 11' E Side, $10 58.
16-01178.000, Moon, John
W &amp;/or Annie Lit, Lot 257
Sub 181/2, $82.10
11-01211 000, Old1ker,
M1xlne, Lot 130 Ex Trl
$2325
16·01281 000, Oldlktr,
Mexlne, Lot 131 Only,
$2037
16·00328 000, Oldehr,
Thom11, Lot 201 D Add S
1/2 Ex WEnd, S8.117
18·00328 000, Oldekar,
Thom11, Lot 208 E prt ol N
1/2 Ex 12' N prl, S16 32
18·011120 000, Oldtker
Thom11 A, Rellrold Street
lol208 E P1rl S35 55
11·00715 000, ROICh,
Jenllte M , Lot 2t3 P1rt ol
1283 12 liCk to Cliff,
$2161
16·00716 000 ROICh ,
Jentllt M , Lot 2M Prt 12M
Front Sllo Cliff $31181
16·00717 000, Roech,
Jentlll M , Lot 295 on Front
St, $33 01
16·00344 000, Stump,
J1m11 S 6 CIIOI Roll, Lot
512 Ex Pert Sold, 70A
Approx., S113 22
16-01100 000, V1nvrenkln
Scott &amp; Slndle, Lot 517
17 x7Bx7t' out oll517 new
eurvty,S271.38.
16-01101 000, V1nvrenkln,
ScoH &amp; S1ndl1, Lot 511, S
1/2, $277 88
16-01102 000, V1nvrenkln,
Scoll &amp; S1ndlt, Lot 511 N
1/2,$24488.
18·00781 000, W1ller,
Hilde, Lot 175 1/2 H 1dd
50 xtO Center N Sldt,
$11828
16 01884 ooo, Werry,
Thom11, Lot 18 &amp; 111,

b

~-~400

$20.75

1 6·00521 000, Young,
John Eerl, Lot C 113 In cor
1111 piece to city lor tl
$34354
•
16-01714 000, Armentrout,
Robert N &amp; Rlgglem•n
VIolet M , lo184, $21.18.
16-01715 000, Arm1ntrout,
Robert N &amp; Rlgglemen
VIolet M , Lot 58, $23 11.
16-01716 000, Armentrout,
Robert N I Rlgglem•n
VIolet M., Lot 58, $25 1t
16-01717 000, Armentrout,
Robert N &amp; Rlgglemen
VIolet M , Lot eo 20 W Ceve
St, $411 51
18-00087 000,
Blumlerdner, John Etel,
Sect Lot 255 Sub 1t 1/2,
$2801
16 00114 000, Brlcklll,
Llrry, Lot 110, $20 31
16 00185 000, Brlcklee,
Llrry, Lot 11t, $138 84
11·00188 000, Brlckl11,
Llrry, Lot 112, $4t.55
18-00448 000, Buchen1n,
JIIH 1/or Ednl, Lot 503
$10307
11·00371 000, D1nlele,
John E Ettl, Lot 255 Sub
5,133347.
16·00561 000, Gru11er,
J1111 &amp; Th1lma, Lot 18 Sub
3 30'X80', $155 03.
16-01155 000,
Heley,
Robert M &amp;/or VIcki L. Lot
100-307 E PI Rear ol
"Switch lot" 2tA, $5 12
11·01857 000, Heley,
Roblrt M &amp;/or VIckie L., Lot
10D-307 13 x25' W Side of
Lot 181 &amp; 20' Rt ol Wey
(•IIIMnl), $164 08.
11·01151 00,1!,. H1l1y,
Roblrt M 1/or VICki L., Lot
10D-30718x100' N ol111,
$38.78
11·01151 000, H1l1y,
Robert M &amp;lor VIcki L., Lot
100-307 E P1rt .IIAApprox.
$1372
11·01151 000, H1t1y,
RoNrt M &amp;/or Vlclkl L., Lot
100-30711'x100' N ol 111,
$3878
11·01851 000, Heley,
Robert M 1/or VIcki L, Lot
100-307 4'x85' N of 111
S12t1
•
11-01814 000, H1l1y
Robert M 1/or VIcki L., Loi
307 15x48 SE Cor (Switch
Lot) H&amp;D, $7 30
11·02341 000, Hilty
Robert II 1/or VIcki L., Loi
307 ll'x178 (Switch Lot)
se Cor .lOA,

MillO

11·02431 ODD, Hilty,
Roblrt M 1/or VIcki L., Lot
1$2 34 xBO' NW Cor ol Lot
SilO 7t
'
11·02517 000, Hilty,
Roblrt M 1/or VIcki 1-. Lot
111, W P1rt 43'x4', $1
Continued on l'l!gt 7

:G.

I

000 Stumbo,
Cheryl Lot 258 E Part ol
Sub N Ex 40A, $83110
16-01100 000
Teaford,
Gordon, Bruce, Lot 376 Trl
Cor Mulberry 6 Ann Sl Ex
24.$74123
16·01748 000, Tiemeyer,
Alva L Lot 4 Lincoln
Helghto Add, $395 20
16-01374 000, Tucker,
Annette D , Lot 265,
$19610
16-01774 000,
Vanv11nken, Hervey &amp;/or
June, Lot 39, $1,034 to.
16-01975 000
Young,
Frank &amp; Donn1, Lot 256 Sub
1-1/2 1, $187 95
16 01976 000
Young,
Frank &amp; Donna, Lot 256
NYE Add 1 1OA Sub 14-1/2
1 10A, $341 03
16-01870 000
Young,
Janet Coomer Lot a NYE
Add, $1,051 97
SCIPIOTWP
MEIGS LSD
17 00831 001
Allen
Robert, Sect 30 4 556A out
ol 12667A Ex 1 0001A
2 0752A, $17.28
17 00831 002, Allen,
Robert Sect 30 T7N R1 4W
1 0001A out of 3 07 53A
1 0001A, $110 01
17·00841 000,
Allen,
Robert, Sect 24 34A ol
10 OSA 34A, $4 52
17· 00557 001, Allhouu,
Mervin 6/or Bonnie, Sect
36 T7 R14 on N Une of Sect
3 OIIA out ol 53 06A 3 09A
$37140
17-00011 000
Brady,
Nathan L , Lot Sect, 20-21
North of Ro1d 2 68A,
$1544
17-00001 000, Hom, Henry
J, Lot Sec 14 E ol St Rdol
Harrleonvlllt #17 50A,
$1"04
17 00785 000,
Karr,
Dor)ald R Jr 1/or Edrlcllt,
Sect 14·7 (650) S 1/2 ol SW
1/2 24A out ol 74 93 24 OOA,
$18957
17 00507 000 Oebornt,
Luther Lee &amp;/or Brendo Kay,
Sect 35 T. 7 R/14, SW 1/4
24A out ol 42 50A 24A
$260 48
17-00858 000, Proulx,
Andy, Seet17 (540) E Part ol
NE 1/4 Ex 26 12A E 42 93A,
$30274
17-00859 000, Proulx,
Andy, Stet 16 (640) SE Part
Ex 169A E 28 37A $75 31
17-00860 000, Proulx,
Andy, Sect 17, NE Pert ol
17.25A SA $7 71
1l-D0511 000, Roberteon,
Alb\orte Lot 31, $138 0
17-D0612 000, Robtrtaon,
Albert•, Lot 34, $11147
17·00613 000, Roberteon,
Alberte, Lot 35, $19 47
17·00814 000, Robartoon,
Albert• Lot 35, $11147
17 00178 000, Cotterill,
Steven D &amp;/or Barba11 c ,
Lot (10), $702"
17·00178 ooo Cotterill,
Steven D folor B1rbara C ,
Lot (8), $10 ..
17 00180 000, Cotterill,
1\ftn D &amp;/or Berbera C ,
Stet ·16 (540) NE ol NW
1/4 Ex 16A E SA, $95 0
17-00766 000 Gemblll,
Relph Frtd, Loll14 E ol C•
N ol C P Chu OSA, $81 80
17 00767 000, Gambill,
Ralph Fred Lot Stet ·14 70
oH S 1 81A 27A, $13 70
17-00350 000, H•nlng,
Ru11tll L , Sl 30 Mid on E
Line ol NW t/4 1 01A Out of
42 75A 1 OIA, S811 0
17· 00385 000, H1y11,
Jlmmv Pretlon &amp; Julo sue,
Stet 1 3 27A o""-ol 84 50A
ol N1/2 3 27A $201?1
17·00204 000, How1rd,
Denny B &amp; Eve S , Lot 1A W
ol Rullend Rd S ol NE
Church Ex 23A, 77A,,
$1,027 81
17· 00313 000, How1rd,
D1nny B &amp;/or Ene S, Stcl28
(1140) W End ol 152 25A Mid
01 E 1/4 137 SOA, $2,072 33
17-00384 000, How1rd,
Denny B 1/or Eve S, Stet 20
(262) NW Cor 17 50A,
$32117
17·00315 000, Howard,
Denny 1&amp;/llf Ev• S, Stet 20
(212) SW Pert 41A,
$1 05412
17-0D415 000, Hyett, Troy
&amp;/or MarilYn, Stct31T7 1114
N Mid 112 out ol 40A Ex
3 41A, 12 liSA, S1,83144
17·00411 000, Kennedy
WUIIIm E. Elll DBA Rid Hill
Fermi, Sect 10 (212) WEnd

Wllll1m
F11ma.: .,.,., •~••
End I:X
$8882.
17-oot03.000, P11t1rton,
R•ymond L, 18401 2 852A
oul of 42 27A 8 elcle of 143
48A, $745
17-001104 000, Pallerton
Reymond L , St (840) S oi
Pomeroy &amp; Herrleonvllle
2 1824 ol 2 852A 2.112A,
$147 78
17 00173 000, RttVII,
Vlrell, Lot SicL -38 NW P1rt
105 Second Sl, Pomeroy, OH.
Ex 28 52A NE P1rt 11 48A
.1,33130
'
~
(above Bank One)
17-00711 002, Stover,
~.J..~ Tel. No. (614) 992-5730 ~..L.~
Thoma• M, Sect 4 T7 R14
SE Comer 2 BOA out ol 30A
~ General Practtce of Law mcludtng
280A, $133"
Dtvorces, Real Estate &amp; Bustness
17·00712 ooo, Tipton,
Donold L &amp; Berry Ch1rl11,
N 1/2
R.14 ~.,.-~~
II
lot
Stet SWI/4
·33 (840)T7,
N 1/213A
.....- - -. . ,__ _ _ _ _ __
41 SOA, $371 01
WHALEY'S AUTO
17 00818 000, Wendling,
ruRTS
Peggy, Lot sect .... NE P•rt
11
•
ol
NW1/4
15 737A,
Specializing In Cuatom
s1,s01 7o
sunoN TWI'
FrSOUTHERN LSD
NEW USED PARTS FOR
18 00032 000, Amberger
TU. the Plln out of
William R , Sec 31 T3N
pelnllng. Lit • do II lor
-ALL IIAKES IIODELS
R 12W NE Cor 1 33A of
Vtry__.,_
112·70U OR
38156A 1 33A, SSt 17
Fn11 Eltlmmee
18·00218 000, CIJtrk
Before&amp; p.m. leave
..12-5563 OR
Wteloy &amp; Gtneva, Stet 10
IIIIINgll.
TDLL FREE 1-100 141·007t
SE Corner 4 91A, S33 71
Atfar 8 p.m.
18·00755 000, D1y, Relph
.._ ~
DARWIN, OHIO
J &amp;/or Rolle K, Lot 22 Pert , .._ _ _ _ _ _.:;
1101111 TFN
42x75,$24tt
I'
18-00781 000, D1y, Relph
J &amp;/or Rilla K., Lot 2t Sub
C Ex Strip N, $206 88.
18-00787 000, Dly, Rllph
J &amp;/or Rell• K, Lot 21, Sub
One mile out
B, $11582
143
from Rt. 7
18·00518 001, Heln,.,
Tuea ·Wed • Frl • Sal
Den• E &amp;/or H1ln11 N1th1n
Jr, T2 R13 100A Lot 2tt
1-6
1 t5A out ol 5 58A 1 81A,
• Craftsman Tools
$26 99
•Toys
G~~~g~
18·00817 000, Holelngar,
•Guns
Larry Jr &amp;/or Mtlllll Ann,
Loads of Mise
Sect 9 E ol Rd Ex 12 112A S
48A,St8551
Buy-Sell· Trade
1111
18· 00722 000, Joneo,
992·2060 101511 mo
William M , Stet 25 NE
Corner ol Sect 1125 5 544A,
$58575
18-00878 001, Moore,
Terry, D &amp; Unda M, 1OOA Lot
215 T2 R12 1 02A out ol
&amp;.51 A 1 02A, $55 52
18 01010 000, Peckham,
•New Homes
Jeffrey 0 &amp;/or VIcky K St 2
Llgllt Hauling,
•Garages
50A out ol 98 50A
Shrubs Shapped
Adjoining to 62A SOA,
-complete
$32 ,,
and Removed
Remodeling
18-00955 ODD Phllton,
John R 6/or Petrlcl1 J ,
Mls. Jobs.
Stop &amp; Compare
Secl 36 on N Lint ol S 1/2
1 002A out of 7 77A 1 002A.
FREE ESTIMATES
$1843
915-4473
16-010114 001 Rote, Rolph
E Sr, Seol 2, T3N, R12· 11,
7122104
1114A out ol 2 51A 1 114A,
$243 92
~ohn R &amp;/or Petrlcla J
Alen Thom11 &amp;/or Deborah
18-00951 005, Routh, 1 88A out ol 9 lOA NE Cor A Lot 57 C1rleton 2nd Add,
Su11n l, Stet 29, T2, R12 PI ol 11 23A 1 002A
$435 21
1 138A out ol 5 103A ax $518 ,,
'
20·00497 ooo, Lowery,
017A 1 538A, $14515
20-00501 000, Plcklne, Al1n Thom11 &amp;/or Dlbo11h
16-01146 000, Slmme, Rita Kay Lot 8 Salt &amp; Coal A , Lot 57 Carleton 2nd
Mery Donne, Lot 100.300 E 2nd Add, $10.
edd , $435 21
ol Lot 317 1 33A 1 33A,
20-00500 000, Pett1r1on,
20·00510 000 PICklnl,
$311411
Rill Key, Lt 211 50' Wd Bit Andy L &amp;/or Terri, Lot 21
Buffln~n Add , $258,88
18· 01283 oot, Stoler, Lt I Strip 1111 of l.t I lltll •
20·011585 000, Wolford
Morlon D , 8elng Lot oi Stet C01l 12A,$7.81.
Goldie
1/or Jim, Lot 291 E~
15 T2 R12 41A out oiUiOA
20·00214 000, Frencle w50 1SA,
$1,015 56
41A, $170 54 ~
WMMM E &amp; Rttd Kathy
20 00561 000, Wolford,
18·00527 000 Stumbo, Jean, 288 fol ol Blelr'e 3A Lot
Goldie &amp;/or Jim, In S Pt Ex
Tammy S &amp;/or Wllllem B, 1 4tA, $1,287 47
Pt ol lola Sold From C H
Lot 78, $77 111.
20..00215 000, Frencle WMS Truot11 Ex 32A 5 71A
16-00140 000, Brown, WM E &amp; Rted Kethy Jeen: $5312
'
Patricia M &amp;/or Michell J , 288 P1rt ol 2 tiA N ol
20-00233 000, Ytouger,
Sect 19 R 12 '1:3 1 ISBA, Blelr'e 3A Lot Ex 571 Chrlllophtr A &amp;/or Crltllne
202A $1445
$8650
R , Lot 5, Ctrletone 111 edd ,
20-00415 000, Lowery $122 45
18 00725 000, Dllgerd,
Boyd and Cltrl V., Lot 15, Alon Thom11 1/or Deboreh
20 00234 ooo, Yeeuger,
A, Lot 5I 10' on W end ol Chrlttopher A &amp;/or Crlatlno
$854 33
18·00813 003, Moore, Lot 51 C1rleton 2nd edd R , Lot 6 C11ltlone ht Add,
•
Terry D folor Unde M , Stet $1524
$1 ,024 42
38 100A Lot 281 T3 R12
20·00496 000, Lowery,
1 65A out ol 5 12A 1 15A,
$273 51
16-01167 000, PICklnl,
Real Estate General
Kimberly S, Sect 24 180A
Lot 11220 3 02A out ol
7597A T 2 R 12 3 02A,
$51745
18 00186 000, Smith,
Donold E &amp;/or VIckie J ,
Sect 3 W ol W 1/2 ex Coli
40A, $1 497 53
18-01281 ooo, Wamer,
Michael C 6/or Shtlll G ,
Stcl 2 NE PI of 71 04A SE
PI S ol Rd Ex Lola 34 45A,
$1,732 78
18· 01 358 000, YeiUgtr,
Chrletophtr A Stet 13 -2
on W Line S ol Perker 40A,
$17 50
RACINE VILLAGE
SOUTHERN LSD
19-00013 000, Aut hereon
SR 124 RACINE 2 story frame home wnh 4 bedrooms 1
Beulah, 22 E 1/2, $8 44
bath plaster walls hardwOOd flooring FA N G heat front &amp;
19·00159 000, Gheen
sode porches rear pa~o and shad 1 1/2 car garage bwlt on
Manuel, 61, $3t 54
bookcase cellarorea cable hook up flreplace
19 00161 ooo, Gheen
ASKING $40,000
M1nuel, E &amp;/or Barbart G
67167,$51 37
POMEROY· Located on SA 7 Thos noco 2' story frame home
111-00014 000, Authoreon,
on approx t acre features 3 bedrooms t bath newer carpet
Blullh, 23 E 1/2,$113 45
newer furnace knotty pine panehng m kotchen single &amp; dbl
19·00110 ooo, Gheen
windows hardwood &amp; carpet lloonng 8 G Heat C&amp;S
Manual, 62, S8to 51
and TPC water
ASKING $28,000
19-00284 ooo, Lvona,
Jackie L Sr &amp;/or Delortt
MIDDLEPORT Bradbury Rd
2 story fra me home on 5
Gena, Sect 18 (540) N Pert
acres Home oncludes 3 bedrooms 1 bath double hung
ol Elllt 1 07A
27A
wondows carpet &amp; wood lloonng N G F A heat C&amp;S elec
$308351
water partially remodeled and free gas
11-00308 000, Pellll
ASKING $35 000
Joteph 2, $273 82.
SYRACUSE VILLAGE
SOUTHERN LSD
Z0-00044 000, Bllnttt
Jane L Etel, Lol281 75x1 oo' I ' eolectric
N ol Rd 140 SE ol 17A t!
$15.31
•
20·00045 000, B1rn1tt
J1n1 L Etel, In S Poo1 oi
6 ~ Ex lot Sold Eel
75x150 $70
20-00128 000. Countt, Yen
S &amp;/or Peul1 J, Lot 12
Crook'• 1et ldd , l-47 ~
20·00220 000, Donohue,
David L , Lot 77 35 W End
$1818
'
20-00140 ooo, Ettep,
Charlll 1/or Ch1rllne, Lot3
Slrrlngere Add, S181t
20-00141 000, Etltp,
Ch1rl11 &amp;/or Chlrl1n1 Lot
37,$45053
•
20·00142 000, Ettlp
Ch1rlt1 &amp;/or Cfherlent, 37
25X50 S End, $10 14
20-00404 DOD, Eltep,
Ch1rleo &amp;/or Charlene, 38
B1rrlnger'a Add., $122.80
20·00225 00, Philion
John &amp;/or Mllllnt, Lot 24A •
out of 11.23A Pt ol t lOA
24A, $841115.
20-00502 000,

ANNOUNCEMENT

Now Accepting New Clients

DENISE L.BUNCE

,

AnORNEY AI UW

m

p•INnNG &amp; co
l1terior
&amp;
E
llterior

,. ,.

a

••r
a

61 811 180

FIRE DEPT.
GUN SHOOTS
SAT., 6:30 P.M.

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

12
Faclory C.Ue Oaly

O&amp;E ELE~TRI~
OUR PRICES WILL NOT PUT YOU
IN A STATE OF SHOCK.

• Cuatom llade

Resident and Small Electrical Repair
(Lamps Welcome)
Home Repair Also
992-5251
992·7162
John
Doug
11f17Mrl

replacement

Morrison's Heating &amp; Cooling

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

•ill Slack
992·2269

windows

I Fre,e Eatlmat11
• $200 lnstal~ed
Call For Details
"VISIT OUR SHOWROOr
110 Court Sl Pome•gr. Ollio -

''Look [Ol the Red 1iiii:1 White Awnllll"

Sales, Service &amp; Installation

992-4119 AI T,....Owlef 1·800..291·56'00

Your Total Comfort Assured Dealer
Low Rate - Financing Available
Call Today for Free Estimate

TRI COUNTY RECYCLING

(614) 992·7434
Authorfs.d Amnfean Sta,...d .O.aln
11/1"82

Oae Step Complete Aute •••Y Repair

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK FOR YOUR CONVEIIIEIKE
MON.·FRI. 9-6; SAT. &amp;SUN. 9·3

Paying Today 55 Clb. for cleaa dl'f
alumlaum cans.
1C •5c Bonus per pot111411otflanllltll--.
We Buy All Non Ferroua Metall

CILL FOR CURRENT PRICES

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

992·5114

Chuck Stotts
614-992·6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome

StaiB Rt. 33 •

aasr.. a.11r1

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUOION

• Solid vinyl

DII'Win, Ohio

1WZI/Mel

Kenny's Auto Rental
Kenny's is the place to come
when you need a car rental.
We ltave Cars and Vans!
Kenny's Auto Canter
264 Upper RtVer Rd
Gallipol111, OH 45631

SANrrA7101
POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable tot lets rented.
Dally, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates
Job sites ' Camp Sties ' Family Reumons &amp; Parties

1·800·48CH 590

NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING

Bus (614) 446-9971

Limestone, Sand, Gravel and Coal
WE HAVE A· 1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE
Lu:.,noed &amp; Bonded - 20 years experoence
992-3954

BISSEll BUilDERS, IHC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions e Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

Emergen c v Phone 985-3418

ROCKY R. HUPP
&amp; Acctdent Ins Co.
PO Box 189
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760

Amertcan General Ltfe

(No Sunday Calls)

Choose and
cut your tree
(or we II cut 11 for you)
Rtggs Tree Farm
39507 Rockspnngs Rd.
(at corner of US Rt 33)
Pomeroy Oh1o
992·5702
Carol &amp; Dav1d R1ggs

614-843·5264

BINGO
Racine AmeriClln
Legion Post 602
Now having Bingo
every Sunday Night
Starting 6 45 prn
Doors open 4 30 pm
The more people
playing tile bigger
tile pay-off
Save ed for 1 free card
945-2038 or 945-2044

11121/94

lackHH
Senice
HaJ for Sale
Dnld Williams
Gtltral
C01tndl1g
&amp; Excavati1g
992-4103
I0&lt;17ol!n

J&amp;L INSULATION
531BryonPI8CI
tll2 2772
Office Houn lion -Fn
1:00 lllfto3 30 pm
VInyl &amp; Alum Siding,
Roofing, VInyl
Replacement
Wlndowa, Blown
lnauletlon, Storm
Doore,Storm
Wlndowa, Garegee
Fr•E•IIm-

Midcletlllrl

, ,

Grade d Benefit Whole Life IS now avatlable The
plan offers coverage of up to $10 000 wtth no
phys1cal exam and no health questtons asked on
the applocatoon Ages 40 80

614·992:7643

RIGGS
CHRISTMAS TREES

t

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Addition•
oNew Garegea
oEitctrlcal &amp; Plumbing
-Roofing
olnterlor &amp; Exterior
Painting alao concreta
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.(f. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
W1!W2tfn

HAULING
Umestone

&amp;Gravel
Re••o•alitle Rates
Joe II.

s.,.

SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2131

L1fe • Med1carc • Cancer • F1re
Health • Accodcn t • Annuny • IRA • Mortgage

Ann ouncerli e1·, t s

DU'I

API'LIAIICI
SIRIICI

For All Maifr
Bra1u
Used Applia1cea
for Sale
Call
614-992·5515

4

Giveaway

1G'11mn

Howard L. Wntesel
ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE

ESTIMATES

949-2168
&amp;1&amp;'84 TFN

S.autllut o.nnan

Wl...,lo.,;

Pointer Spidt, SM , . DSZL

"'

Killen 8 W•U Old ~~
6331

Metal Under~klrtlng Ftta 121SO
Mobile Home 814-441-0221

Roady To Go 4 W1tk Old PupPill AKC Mather. Akllo, FotiiOr:

Doberman lllx-.1 614-31'1-71101. •
Sllvw ISabt. Soliz Mtuct llttto.
V""f Frlondty, IIUOI Find Good'
Homa

o.. To Dlvon:o

6

Lost &amp; Found

032~

114-Sit-

Found mat. Brfttony ha """'

ntU1orod 614-1112-3012

LOST Iorge malo blk &amp; brew"

Shophord mix Vlclnlldy 5 lilt.
Rd G•lllpoll• Forry ReWARD

30H7ii-t04J
Lost Small Fomolo 0oa Par(
Chow Long Hair Tan CMl'n Cof..'o
lor Thura&lt;f•y s~ S88 And Built
Monon Road R._rd vane.
614 U63858

~

7

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
Starting Slug
Mate lies
Friday, ,Nov. 11
6:30

S•nday, lov. 13
1:00

Cocker~~~~!~
Bred for

Quality and
Temperament
SpeclaiJlng In Pert-c:okn
lor lhow ena oomplrlfOIII
Stud .MCI &amp; pupp11
young alta 1or ...,
41750 lllle HIM Rd

Recine, Oh
114-14W417

Yard

Sele

l

Gallipolis
&amp; Vlclnhy
ALL Yorcl Stitt lluet 1e Pttld In

Advance DEADLINE: :a:oo P.Ot.
tiM day ...,..,. tt.. -.1 1o 1o run
S..nday -.ihiCOl • 2:00
Friday Mondey odltloft •
p.m Saturday

8

Public Sele

&amp;Auction

t::i'. ;.

�Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

Monday, November 21, 1994
November 21, 1994

The

OhiO .

NEA Cra11word Puzzle

BRIDOI

Anewer to PI'M'irue Puall
38 Prtncely.lllllln \
flmlty
,..,.,~~
31 Accomjlllnled
42 JFK'a
·. 1-':-11-:t::-

ACROSS
I

1 Sen-, Calif.
I Ella to ION

PHILLIP
ALDER

lUI' 'N' CAIU.YI.M lly Larry W......

BEATfiE BLVD.no by Bruce Beattie

e

wanted to Buy
On

• 8 7 2
•Q 7 6 3

&amp;MEEK

Oct-··-

Wlntld To lu,: A Colw Of The
Dracula Pllv AI Tlie lrlol

~
11114. ..

•6 4

::16;:~;a;;:!.L

fi·Z1

IT

1.00~

LIKE.

•A 10 53

1HI~

~li.X)J'T~
~ LGFTIIJ

AAr. G()(kJG 10 !!£ A
LOr EAStER. fOR (LIIJW
IIJ 11.1£. ~rr 11UJ ~

CIMn Llle......,. C... Or
Truoloo, 1117 llodolo Or Ne
Smlthlluloll ......... 1
Ellllom A : - OolllpoiiL

'iil.

EAST
•K J 7 5

liJASH!m'OJ ~

• A ti
tiO 9 8 2
•Q 9 4

A FILieust'ER

SOUTH
• A I0 3
•Kl0954

Dooontld 11-N, - · , ....

~. old ~
·
old .....
- old
lnllqul
fumllft.
R'-lnl
lq..._

•J .
•K J 8 2

R- WI
-b
. ,u-y - · lf4.112.
2121.

J&amp;D'a.Aulo-Md

z.

YOU SQUINT ALL
TH' TIMEb ELVINEY !!
YOU NEE
TQ GO SEE

181 -A-Oallft:

Wanlld To au,: -.ol To

~01'111.

-.114-44
Buy

lhgU Ill
J ..
h.~~" •

-fe.f

UICC Pll r M o ' N i d . . IMit, IJMII.11M.

Ill;p!'lijohn boll

W1l
Fiiuwood

0110, 114-1
with ...... 72111.

11

-.1

llo.

-

lead: tK

Can you spot
the winning line?

'PH' EYE

DOCTOR

By Phillip Alder

ll ,_., F 1110, 4X4 R.......
...... ...... P,IOO. 014-N&gt;•
.

/

..

=====··'·
73 VaiUI &amp; 4 WD'a

l::felp wanted

THIS 15M'&lt; REPORT
ON T~E STO~ OF 'fi.IE
FII/E LITTLE H065 ..

OR WAS IT
THE SIX
LITTLE
PIGS'?

OR THE NINE
WIUCH IS TilE KIND OF
LITTLE HOGS,
REPORT 'IOU GET WilEN
OR SOME~HII'I6 ~ 'lOll WRITE IT WHILE
LIKE THAT ..
•
FROM VOUR DESK
~ FRONT OF THE ROOM ..

j

I
~~_j!

Supp res
&amp; Lr ,•eolock

F,,lm

---

Rent als
All real eslale adVentslng In
lhls newapaper Ia aubleet 10
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes~ !legal

..

llmllallon or dlocMmlnatlon
~ on race. color, ralglon,
ee1c famllal statua or national
ollglrf, ·or any lnten11on to

~78~.~Auto~.~P~an-.~,.~.:... :.
_60RNLOSER

f'fl.£ T~UPOC ~"'

..

rt;~ m ~ ~lc.Nt\1!

l&lt;oowllngly accept

advertisements for real estate
wlllch Is In violation of llle law.

are avatlallle on an equal
opponunlty basis.

45

-.....

~...,_=~;....."':"""
...=- Of&lt;l · - ........ fOUl: ...
A-n.
..,nnl·wooll or -h. or • eul e•.r 11oote1i or Wlrlta

A-

•• •

-AI: 140
llpalll, 1114-

Fumlahed
Rooma

lllortlng .. - - -

lit ttl'liiO,

II 1:;;..,- with

POIJfAL JOBS

111At Mr. Fer E.- And
ADDI1clllan
Ctii!N
ll3tlt Ell. CHM,
I AJI• .f P.ll,
SUn .f'rl.

.

POIJfAUOII
Stoll
11t.oM,rr.,
apprtcatlon
-......_.- ~
1301 at. WYMI. lltn lpJtt.

Sun.frl.

104-m.l, llllMnWY.

31 Homea for Sale
PevedDII ISS)LI111. Ola • ,._ ....... 'n• hoM,
.......... 11• • • •

Z Ctr

n.'::.~J!

m• P.a

........................
~ ~Cnlkorr ~
4 la•u-. I Full a.thl. 10

..

..........

!

_ _

·-7:144.'to

wllh .....

..

,.

~

I AA\E. TO Ttl,.~! VOO,CIIIEf, M
IT~Jtr.ITA~

a= Till£ ...

I.

CIMI a ..... fb Fonl Y1nt,
tM .......
Or•l
Perot .... Oul Of

~.letch and r se

er.a...-., !rllt• .,.

!IlL ...
111111111 oondhlirn, 114 IIINIIO.
J!oaplltlo Fer A l'lolln Win-

~

/#..'{ NE.IGHBOIG GOf

A BROWN

BELT IN IT,HlD fiE Cllt&gt;lT
AGHT ~~~ loJ~YOOT
OF~~&amp;'-{,1

JXVKD
VJ ' G

TAJ

XOB. IBFXO

JOKKVG

MZA

SVDO

Pliillip .:tlder has just published his
new book, "Gel Smarter at Bridge."
It is available, auttJgmphed upon request. jtJr $14.95 incL p&amp;p .from P.O.

Motor Homes
DON'T SEE
NAME

AN'(Io/~ERE

ON ,HERE

YOU'RE

I

ON
A

•

••••
IAMI

I

I

UNISOF

L--L--L--L--L-~#

r 1$ 1"..~

TUPYT

1
.

.

.

.

'Haveyouevernoticed,' my
~ friendmoaned,'thateverytime

-

you get a little money saved,

Q

Tr &lt;'ilSIJOII~iiiOil

~~~~t~

that you

Complete the chuckle quotod

~Y fill•ng in the missing words

y&lt;W develop

!tom stop No. 3 below.

A PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS
f# IN THESE SQUARES

I ~~ici~~WlR LETTERS I

r

CBNII

FBNVSSZ.

_
_
.
_
.
1L-....1..-L.....J......J'--...J..--'

MV

PZASIK'J

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "When il comes lo eating, you can sometimes 1\elp
yoursen more by helping yoursen less."- Richard Armour.

l--n~!io-'l'll7r-rl-,lr--rl-l

campe... a
I

VG

(FZCCOKJIJZN)

TOSVO'EO.'

~

B

LZJ

.--B::--::E,...,..B-=R,. .,.,.u-=R:----.~·~:P~n~-

I.I I - I l ·I

SCIIAIMETS ANSWIRS
Verify - Rusty- Hovel- Client- THIEVES

t!oW. .... 011 Wlrlta Wllh

Groin "'""' •• • Ill CIJnrlo
llanl hl,11t 4.1SJI.

STRIK£ A8LOW IN TI-E WAR ON
1-fGH I'IOCES. SHOP Tl-f CLASSFED~.

~~-()!ltr.

4 lrlaa•, hlnlly

IMVKL,

.

t:'t.:_y.~
-0111

IZK ' J

I

=..

buy

'V

Box 169, Roslyn Hts., NY 11577-6169.

:;;c:or.w:::':::::-~I~P=.... ~.~,~,.

....

,.

second diamanll . Finally,
Kantar
the carefully preserved club
two to dummy's three and ruffed a
third diamond. His eight tricks were
one spade, one heart, three clubs and
three diamond rulfs in hand.

I·

!!atwJ Pille MUd Allll Rllllr
To Uie 110 Pllr,IM 441 I W
24140 ...,.. IUIIdlnii for Cal 1&amp;1 ·paczldlnllll fUmlal
- · Ctll 1M-mote Clr ... 11011\
Adlltlna N; Unll 1110
2CII"'I......
114411ot211.

46 Space for Rent

. 11-Anllllom_,
I I - - . 1 111 lolhl, LR, I

I I I * - ...._ I

="3

by Lule Campos
Celebrity Cipher Cf'IPiograms .,. c:reat.ct !rom quotaliOnt by ltiTIOt.Jt peoPII. PM! and
Each letter., the~ •tands lOt anott.r. TO!My's clJe· )( BqUals H

aee,

•

Hoell. 'Plno, - ....... 11121-a47
::..01+10-tt ...., ~

='Ha Cll ....~;...... ...

Rea l Estate
Stoll

.

CELEBRITY CIPHER.

~~~~~~~~~~---=---~~~~~~~;a~s~paderuffinthedummy) an~

This newspai)er will not

, IIOOili~• -

wOIBL.Y".
•,

· Acceaaorlea

make any such preference,
llm~adon or dlscrtmlnaUon.•

BALA~(.e

ON YOU/l
AC(.OlJNTJ....
~

10 advertise "any preference,

OUr read8f8 are hereby
lnfonned !hat ell dwellings
advertised In this newspaper

~Ow WOULD~ PU''~·e

Ttlt

.

Some golfers, aged 50 or more, play
on both the regular tour and on the se·
nior tour. In bridge, we have a few play·
ers doing the same thing, as it were, ex·
cept that they must be at least 55.
Eddie Kantar swung a club in the
Senior Swiss Teams, held during the
NEC World Bridge Championships,
whi~h took place in Albuquerque, ·
N.M., from September 17 to October L
On this deal, Kantar hit his approach
shot straight into the hole.
Against two hearts, West led the di·
amond king and switched to the heart
queen: two, ace, four. East returned
,the heart six: king, three, seven. How
did Kantar continue?
If Kantar had ducked a spade now,
West would have won, cashed the
heart jack and returned another
spade. Tlien Kantar would have had to
guess the location of the club queep to
make his contract.
· The headipg gave a subtle hint to the .
right line. Assuming the clubs were 3·2,
the contract was laydown because
South held a critical s,P?t: the club two.
After winning with the heart king,
Kantar ran the club jack. It lost to ·
East's queen and a spade came back;
played the
but Kantar won with the
· club eight to dummy's 10 and ruffed~
1 diamond in hand. Declarer continued
by overtaking his club king with dum·
my's ace &lt;if West trumps in, declarer

or .,._
-··-

4-011-PIIo.Cooo'
-Of ....... """ AniiiRold, SM,DCIO, ~-.
14 Cnlb CNak Rei,
. . . On -top ...... I7H1IIt.

ending
8 Will of Gertlnt
9- olvolce
10 Move to the
mualc
12 Weird

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Sooth
West North East ·
Pass 1 NT
Pass
I •
Pass 2 •
All pass

=·~~
77W3Q~

Tap Plld: AI Old u.s.
COIIII,Goldlll!W.-Colnl.
Gold ColnL M.T.I. Cain lhop,

predelf IIIOf
45 0111'111"111 bone

weight
Additional

perfonnence · 48 ConcienNCI
131lefon thlt time
molt!Yie
14 o.-ruel
49 u- one end
15 Yecht blain
ola jiiiOCII
16 SCooby51 A19Y outburtt
17 VHMI'o lowatt 53 Walllr pol
dec~
54 Of the eyn
19 Actress
55 Unaucceoolul
Suuncar
20 Uncomfortably 56 Vtmllh
formal
Ingredient
22 Store
DOWN
25 Dutch town
26 Prod
1 Act
30Smlllekln
opening
2 Tow•dand
w~hln
31 Com-plant
3 Raverberatlon
· perta
32lereellelrllne
4 Tll!elln gezelle
5 Raady-(2 wdl.)
6 Arrange.ln
33 Actrnl Sue folds
34Heel1hy
7 Comperallve
35 SCOIItah r l -

WHILI[ GAZING ON TilE GUTTEIUI'I~~;rHI!Y

L15T£N TO THE HYPNOTIC WOIWIS ~ 6Y
THE WOMAN STANDiNG !tEXT TO IT!

t

f'irst crook: ' I don't want to be judged by my l)el,rs.•
Second crook: 'Why not?' First crook: 'Who wants to be
tried'by a bunch of THIEVES?'

Roant.

- : 0.0 ,..,_, Siding &amp;

:=,.an;:.~;'l=t"• ~

---41R,ZIIIIhe
-SJilh 1 1Dold
1144111Dol
End
- dlr
4:plll

.ASTRO-GRAPH
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

a

Plumbing •

Or~

T~sday.Nov. 22, 1994

1 ~\he year ahead , you mlghl .assume

.."" .
·~·~

I

'·'

h·~liier responsibllille&amp; and work ha.ider
lhln you have In lhe past Truly, thiS IS
ndt a negative development; the rew.ards
will be commenauratelo your efforts.
SCORPIO (Oct . 24•NOV. 22) Folio~
thioug~ 011 plans )OdaY as they W8l't! lnr·
!Iaiiy conceived . Making .lasl·mlnule
changes could prevent you from geHing
lhe deaired results. Know where, to lOOk
for romance and you'll find II. ·TM AstraGraph Malc~maker h\slanlly reveals

,,

Which signs are romantically perfect lor
you. Mail $2 to Malchmaker, c/o this
newspaper, P.O. Bo~ 4465, New York,
NY 10163.
"
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0.C. 21) Today
you could be very effeotive at -managing . things for othe,. as long as money isn't
involved. Be as helpful as possible. short
ollending cash.
·
.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jen . 111)
Partnership arrangements might nol work
out wellloday. II may be particularly dmi·
cun if you're working with someone who
is as independent as you are.
AQUARIUS (Jan. :ZO.Ftb. 1t) Keep any·
one not directly involved In your private
affairs from interfering loday. You should
do well ~ you ope!"le without any intru·
sions.
PISCES (Feb. 20·Merch 20) You may
have to resolve a misunderstanding
be!ween triends loday, so prepare to act
as a peacemaker. YOu will be successful
nyou remain tnipanial.
ARIES (Mirch 21-Aprll 111) Today your,
greatest rewards might come f.rom help·
ing others. See what happens when
cotlipaQsion overshadows greed.

TAURUS (April 20.May 2o) Somelh&gt;ng
disruptive migM happan. between you
and your male today. Smooth over the
rough spots by playing down the problem
and letting lolerance prevail.
GEMINI (Mey 21-June 20) II could prove
prolilablo ·lo slay in your own-bailiwick
loday. Avoid involving yourself in situa·
tions you cannot directly controL
CANCER . (June 21-~uly 22) Today.
don'! listen lo outsiders who wanl to
counsel you in a problem belween you
and !he one you love. Their su~stions
may make maners much worse.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Once you eslalr
lish .your agenda loday . il might be
extremely difflcull to stick to il. Manage
disruplions as they arise: don'llel them
manage you.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Your friends
will be supportive of you today if you
rernef!lber to make requests instead of
demands. When you eros&amp; this delicate
Nne, few will offer help.
' 1
LIBRA (&amp;ept. 23-0ct. 23) You may face
unysual developments today. Use your
head as evenls lranspire. Overreacting
could easily lip the scales from succe&amp;S .
to failure.

I.'

�Monday, November21, 199l

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio

Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Giants edge
Oilers 13-10
in grid action

Child responds appropriately for inappropriate touching
· her, "Gel die hell of my lap. You're
watching too much TY."
It isdilfJCuh lhese days for children
mmake die finedislinclions between
what is accepiBble IOIIChinglllll whll
is 110(. If that child is criticized for
-n.-s_....,
,c ,..,, sync~~ca~
expressing her feelings, she will learn
lhatitis safer to keep quiet. The next
Dear ADD Luden: You misled time she feels that she has been
lhe polnt.whcn you responded 10 the IOUChcd "in lhe wrong place," she
grandfather who asked how may remain silent- and this time, it
honlnblc, decent IIICII can protect may be aulhentic abuse.
themselves in lhc face or inmasing
It is understandable lhat an adult
claims of aexual harusmenL
mightbe alarmed 10hearaccusationa
It aeems that while his 9-year-old from his own blood relative, but if a
granddaughter was siaing on his lap, child tells you 10 stop touching him
she said, "You arc IOUching me in or her "in lhe wrong place," please
the wrong place." Instead of pay auention. Children should never
appreciating her IICIIsitivity, he told be diSC01Jn18ed from expressing their
.

Ann
Landers

......Lao._

Beat of the Bend.~.

feelings. Th do so~ to deprive Jhem ICIIII early that dley,too, have righll
of lheir power.
· and to trust their instincts. I
We must help children understand wholeheartedly agree that we must

what Is and is 1101 appropriate
IOIIChing.This is by no means an easy
process, butlhe more children are
cncouraicd to exprcssdleir feelings,
both positivcuidncptivc, lhe beau
adjuslcd IIIey will be. And safer,IIJO.
- EVANS'ION, ILL.
DEAR EVANSTON: You have
writrenaleuts dw I hope will be lhe
buis for discussion in many
tinderganens and first-grade
classrooms.
•
So many youngsters have been
brought up 10 believe lhat whatever
adults do is OK and lhat children
must IICWII' question them. They must

teach children lhedif'fRnc:ebetween
what is "OK 10uching" IIIII what is
not.

Thanks for.an opportunity to &amp;et
Ibis information out
Dear Ann Landers: l have lived
wilh "Herman• for 14 years. We have
a teen-11ge son. We were never
married because his wife refused 10
give him a diYOrtC.
Herman's wife died six months1110.
At her funeral, the oldest of his lhree
daughrers begged him not 10 marry
nie for at least ayear "out of respect"
for her mothet
Here's the problem. Htnnan and I

tee."

·

"Greased Ligbtnin"' and "We
Go Together" will be the back·
ground music for a second appear·
ance of the Shady River Sbufflcrs
under lhe direction of Paulette Har·
rison. Making special appearances
in the number will be Holly
Williams and Daniel Young .
Williams bas•traveled from Pitts·

it'~

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62. (Ill CaiUII/a,

Vol. 45, NO. 142
copyrlght1994

son.

d
Commu.·n1·ty ca 'en ar

--------

Pomeroy-Middleport,

Ohi

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News starr
A Meigs County fugitive will be
in jail for at least three years on
two felony counts, Meigs County
Common Pleas Coon Judge Fred
W. Crow mordered Monday.
David M. Persons of Long Bot·
tom and West Columbia, W.Va.,
was found guilty of stealing ·a Jeep
from a bar last March and leading
authorities on a 100-mile per bour,
nine-mile chase on State Route 7
toward Eastern High School.
The jail term will be two years
on felony au10 theft charges and 18
months on felony fleeing, served
consecutively.
. The 32-year-old Meigs native
also faces Meigs felony charges of
escape from a Veterans Memorial
Hospital window while still shackled and lhe IIJeft of the handcuffs.
The preliminary bearing is set
for II a.m. Monday, Nov. 28 and
trial o.n Thursday, Dec. I, Meigs
Prosecutor John Lentes said. Persons remained in lhe Meigs County
Jail !his morning.
Lcotes said Persons' testimony
was untruthful and he showed no
remorse.
"He bas a complete tack of
respect for the·judicial system,"
Lentes said.
. Lentes requested a 30-day con-

Seeking help
21

urges continuation of fight
and don't know bow to run
schools," said PhiUis, wbo spent 16
years as the $ate's assistant super·
inlendcnt of education.
About 1,200 of tlle 3,600 school
buildings in the state should be tom
down. Or, to bring the schools
within code standards would cost at
least $10 billion, Phillis said.
"We know that money make's a
difference," be added. "If it didn't
lhe rich schools would be sending
us ttackloads of money."
The srale- acting on the wishes of the "education" governor.
George Voinovicb - appealed tlle
Perry lawsuit. This appeal should
take at least two more years, Phillis
said.
If the equity forces win the
appeal, Phillis said he hopes the
legislature will:
• equalize facilities across the
slate;
, raise the current per pupil
spending from about $3,000 to at
least $5,000;
• replace venture capital grants

-competitive programs where lhe
richest schools reap tlle most bene·
.f it- wilh money for each school;
• infuse money for technology
in each district;
. • increase funding for at-risk
students in all schools; and
• change the funding mechanism
by eliminating property tax-based
funding and switching to a combi·
nation of property and income
taxes and realigned slate finances.
Most poor schools also need
new textbooks anll equipment,
while olher schools remain understalfed, Phillis said.
During the last 10 years, fund·
ing for primary/secondary schools
increased 95 percent, lhe slate bud·
get grew by 125 percent and prison
operating costs jumJ)ed 311 percent.
"Kids in Ibis state don't bave a
fundamental right to a quality education, but prisoners have a right to
a quality environment," Phillis
said.
•
Voinovicb's attempts to derail

Christmas Craft Sale
Nov. 26 &amp;27
Upper Block E. Main Pomeroy
Time: Sat. 9·6 Suri. 12-5
Spons. by: Sorority
Preceptor Beta Beta

from the Meigs County .Chamber or Commerce
cut the ribbon while store manager Mark Prof.
ntt, ten, end employee Deborah CJeek, rl1ht.
bold the ribbon;

I

'

1·

I

and programs aimed at helping
poor children.
The plan would require d.istricts
to ante up a total of 25 mills in
property taxes, including unvoted
millage and levies still on the
books, to receive slate money. The
mandate now is 21 mills.
Thai means weallhier districts
would generate more money than .
poor districts, thereby receiving
less stale money and freeing funding for poor districts.
Tbe plan docs include an option
of guaranteeing that each district
would receive at least $150 per mill
levied if that were above what the
formula would otherwise allow
lhern.
State Superintendent Ted
Sanders, who appointed lhe panel.
said it would cosl about SI billion a
year 10 begin phasing in the recommendations.
Sanders said estimates of a total
S3 biUion cosl sounded reasonable.
Ohio uses stale and local taxe s
10 finanCe: education - $5.5 billion
this year. But despite the stale aid,
wbicb is calculated 10 balance the
spending among districts, some can
afford to spenil far more on their
students because their local proper·
ty.-tax bases are higher.

doing tlle patching itself, the vii· active part-time, and new or limited
By JIM FREEMAN
lage bas been gelling more bang for pan-time employees will receive
Senllnel News Staff .
$150 and $50. respectively.
As pothole patching season its buck, Blaetmar commented.
"People
in
the
village
like
to
Village employees will be
comes to an end. Pomeroy's polknow
what
we're
spending,
their
allowed
10 lake off !he day follow boles are slowly becoming an
money
on."
be
said.
.
ing
Thanksgi
ving and will also
endangered species - at lcasl until
At
Hysell's
request,
a
resolution
.
have
Monday
following
Christmas
next spring.
. .
Maya John W. Blaettnar updat· increasing appropriations into !he and New Year' s Day as holidays.
In communications by Blaettnar,
ed village council on street repair ge neral fund by $23.000 was
work during Monday's meeting in approved afler council vmed 10 council showed gratilude 10 Jeffers ·
suspend lhe rules, giving the reso{Continued on ·Pa~e 3)
lhe Pomeroy Municipal Building.
According to figures from Vii· lution all three rcatlings and passlage Clerk Kathy Hysell, the vii· ing it on an emergency basis.
Also, council gave and
lage bas purchased and utilized
approved
second readings of resoapproximately 232 tons of asphalt
at a price of $6,852.39. In addltton. lutions authorizing lhe cancellation
the village bought $689.02 worth of outstanding checks l)lld granting
of tack. a tar·like substance used to the Obio Department of Transportation eonlfOI over village signs
prepare potholes for patching.
along
U.S. 33 (Main Street)
The Daily Sentinel will nm
Blaettnar noted that village
through
Pomeroy.
jle
published Thursday so that
work crews have not visited aU of
In
addition,
council
accepted
a
.
its
employees may observe the
Pomeroy's streets. but added that
Thanksgiving Day holiday.
the village could probably continue second reading of an resolution
Regular publication and busipurcbasing bot mix until mid· granting Cblisunas bonuses to village employees. Full-time salaried
ness hours resume Friday.
December.
,
By 1purcbasing bot mix a~d empl1oyees will receive $200 while

No paper
Thursday

NEW BUSINESS -The new Pomeroy Super
Sundry alore on East Main Street officially
opened for buslne11 Monday morning wllh a
brief. ribbon-cutting ceremony. Here, Pomeroy
Meyor John W. Blaettnar and Patty Calloway
I

Mon.·Sa!. Middleport, OH 45760
·Visa &amp; MasterCard. Layaway available.
614/992·4055

the equity effort is inexcusable
since the state bas already admitted
tlle current system Is inadequate
and immoral, be added. But, the
governor wants to avoid the politi·
cal fallout of losing this fight so
he 's employing "scare tactics,"·
Phillis charged.
· The govenlor claims the
changes in school funding would
cost billions of dollars, which is
unsubstantiated, l'billis said. Also,
the governor said local schools
would lose control - but local districts have so liltle control already
because of state mandates , he
added.
The governor also said Ibis sys·
tern wouid mean equal money for
all students, or Robin Hood-type
stealing, Phillis said.
"Each child should have e~ual
access to a qualily education,' be
added. "We have prisoners of
geography today."

COLUMBUS (AP) - Some
wealthy school districts may end
up sbouldering a greau:r tax burden
to free more state money for poor
schools under a proposed funding
system.
The plan could cosl $3 billion a
year.
A panel of scb:ool-finance
e~pens has made the recommendations to the Stale Board of Education , the Columbus Dispatch
reported today.
,
The panel W'as Conned to come
·up willl a new way to fund schools
after a court ruling earlier Ibis year
that Ohio's funding system was
unconstitutional.
·
Perry County Common Pleas
1udge Linton D. Lewis Jr. ruled
July 1 that the system was
inequitable because of disparities in
spending per pupil among districts.
Gov. George Voinovicb is appealing !he decision..
.
Under the plan, each district
would be guaranteed at least
$4.350 in basic student aid in combined slate and local money. That
would be an increase from lhe current minimum of $3,035.
In addition, there would be an
increase in money for special edu·
cation for handicapped children

·Pomeroy Council .learns village
winning war against pothol~s

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
2:00 PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!

10-5

.
.
Proposal puts burden
on wealthy districts
.:..- ~ .

-----

. Bear Campany
The Ohio Rrver 204 N.,5econd Avenue .

U.S. leaders voice support
for continuing Israeli aid

tempt sentence be dropped so PerBy BARRY SCHWEID
sons could be sent immediately to
AP Diplomatk Writer
lhe Orient Correctional Center.
WASHINGTON - Senate Republican leader Bob Dole is offering
"Although it will be an inconve·
suppon for continued foreign aid to Israel and lhe potential deployment of
nience for lhe sheriff to retrieve
U.S. troops on the Golan Heights.
him, Mr. Persons is a security risk.
Seeking backing from olher leaders of lhe GOP-led Congress that wiU
He needs to be somewhere much
be seated in January, Prime Minister Yilzhalc Rabin was making the
more absolute," Lentes said.
rounds on Capitol Hill. He also was me.eting with Defense Secretary
Persons' trial testimony about
William Perry, Housing Secretary Henry Cisneros and other Clinton
the events of the morning of March
administration officials on a busy two-day visit bere.
5 contradicted statements by wit·
On Monday, Presidenl Clinton assured Rabin be would ask Congress
nesses at the bar and authorities.
to keep U.S. aid at lhe $3-billion-a-year level and to approve new funding
for an anti-missile defense system.
Persons' attorney, William
Safranek, admitted Persons may
Reports in Israel quoled U.S. officials as saying the United Slates will
ba've fled from police, but the
canplete lhe transfer of $250 million in money previously pledged 10 help
owner of the vehicle let Per~ons
undergird Palestinian rule in the Gaza Strip by the end of the year and
....
seek release of $125 million ne~l week when donor countries meet in
drive il
Persons said be showed up at
Brussels 10 discuss lhe Palestinian situation.
SENTENCED- David M. Persons, standing, was sentenced to
The Cove (The Watering Hole) to
"We are going 10 have a very robust security relationship." Clinton
two years In prison for felony auto theft and 18 months for felony
meet a woman be knew from Parksaid afteJ an SO-minute meeting in the Oval Office !hat centered on lagging peace talks between Israel and Syria.
.
ersbur,, W.Va .. and wben he · fteelngln Meigs County Common Pleas Court Monday.The
charges arose from a March S Incident lhal resulted In a high·
couldn t find her be decided to
That view was echoed by Dole, R-Kan., who will become Senate
speed chase. Persons faces lrlal next week on escape charges. In
mingle with people who were
majority leader. "I would hope and I would guess that atlhis time of great
foreground Is Persons' ollorney, William Safranek.
standing around a red 1979 Jeep
tension in llle Middle East where we're trying to achieve peace lhere
wouldn't be any effort to reduce lhe level of aid," be said at a meeting
Cherokee.
Monday with Rabin.
He tllen proceede!! !O leave for
Reassuring
Rabin
on
anolher
point
as well, Dole said be would be
!he Meigs deputy sherill who set a
beer with tbe owner and when car wilh Persons.
aulhorities flashed lights behind
When be came out of the bar at ·roadblock at Five Points, bolh said inclined ~ ''work with the president _and lhe prime minislcr' · on deploythem, the owner lept out of the car closing time afteJ drinking beavily, 1bere was no one else in the car mg Amencan troops on the Golan He•ghts as pan of an inu:mational force
and Persons led police on a high· lhe Jeep was gone, Seyler said. His during lhe chase and no footprints to monitor any lsraeli-Syrian accord.
"When the time comes and e·verylhing is resolved you'll get a very
speed cbase.
girlfriend, Anna Chapman, admit- or signs that anyone fled from lhe
sympathetic bearing in this office," Dole said.
Butlhe lestimony of Jeep owner ted that when she came to picK arrest scene.
Since an agreement is bound to involve an Israeli withdrawal from the
Wilh three cruisers trailing PerMichael Seyler and lhe police who Seyler up at 11 p.m. •she left the
chased Persons conflicted with Per- keys in lhe vehicle.
,
sons at more than 100 miles per strategic border enclave, Clinton went out of his way at a joint news consons account. Seyler said he did not .,,, State Highway Patrol Trooper hour, Persons sped down !he mid· . ference willl Rabin to emphasize lhe ..Uni(ed States intended "to stand
behind Israel and its security."
{Continued on Page 3)
know Persons and did not get in the Barry Call and Kevin Meadows.

I· .C[Uify--f·u rid i n'g~·advoCafe
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Starr
Dr. William Phillis, leader of
the Ohio effort to get adequate
funding .for all of the state's public
schools. challenged about 20 Meigs
educators 10 continue fighting during a speech at Meigs High School
Monday.
"We need to get local people
energized," Phillis said. "It's a sad
situation. It's one thing to acknowl-edge people aie different, but il' s
another for government to pel)lCtuate those inequities."
Phillis and The Ohio Coalition
for f:&lt;juity &amp; Adequacy of School
Fundmg that be leads won the
Perry County lawsuit in July,
wbicb stated the current funding of
schools is unconstitutional.
Poorer schools must no longer
settle for tokeniSJII from Columbus
- particularly recent placebos of
extra equity funding for a few
schools, be added.
.
"A lot of people in Columbus
just don't bave
a clue .abOut schools
.

1 Section, 10 Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

o, Tuesday, November 22, 1994

-. Meigs fugitive
gets three-year
prison sentence

row, left, Jeaslca Johnson,
Graeser, Sarah Anderson, Jodie Slsso!!. Lautren
Anderson, Erin Krawsczyn; lhlrd row, left,
Jeanie Newell, Crystal Vl!l!&amp;lnm, J~!!!!Y Cl!m•
mlns, Bridget Vaughan, Danlelle Grueser, and
TU'II Erwin. Choreographer Is Paulette Harrl·

collecdbJe·bean

Low lonl&amp;bt In lOs, clear.
Wednesdly, llllnny. High In 4011.

PageS

~lldaself-addlrssed,fotlr,bluilrus-

burgh, Pa, where she is now living, organization, will be doing "There Cindy Fields and Paulette Harrison. to take part in this year's show . . I've Said It Again."
Making up llle slio)'l orchcsqa
Harrison has not only re~;&gt;rganized · Jayne Hoeflich Mann, Lancast- will be Jennifer Sheets, who bas
lhe Sbadr River S~urners for next er, a veteran of the local production . served as rehearsal accompanist, on
weekend s production but also bas will vocalize "You Mlidc Me Love · the keyboard; Rice on the guitar;
trained a 15-membcr pony chorus YOii' wbile IIIIOihcc vciCillll vocal· Junior Wbite·OD the bau and Kcn.lflie wmm wtu· ~ppe~r \\Wie durin§ut of JJifllenlHfiow,Ullly Hood, · nedfMsEihinny on lbe dfpma. Tllt
the show on "Down by the O·bi-o' will do "A Good Man Is Hard to · group will present a IS minute JXOand "Sunny." Making up the line Find." Both Mann and Hood are gram before the performances on
are Lauren Anderson, Sarah.Ander- also members of "The Committee." bolh evenings. ·
son, Jenny Cummins, Tassi Cum· Also a veteran of IIJe show Denver
Members of the stage and light·
mlns, Tara Erwin, Dan!elle Rice, will present a "Re:O.ember ing crew are Scott and Gcri Wal·
Grueser, Kelley Grueser, Wbttncy When" medley on his guitar.
ton, Pat Thoma, Tammy Buckley,
Haptonstall, Jessica Johnson, Erin
"Kansas City" from "Okla· BrentZirlde and Danny Young.
Krawsczyn, Jeanie Newell, Billee boma" will be the vocal solO of Hal
Sharing equally in the proceeds
Pooler, Jodie. Sisson, Crystal Kneen, Meigs County's Agricul· from tbe 1994 show will be the
Vaug~ and Bf!dget Vaughan.
tural Agent, making his second Meigs Division of the American
Makmg_thetr second an_nual appearpnee in the annual musical . . Cancer.Society and lhe Middleport
appearance m lhe '94 show wtll be The second blackligbt number of Arts Council.
lhe Meigs High School Jazz Band, the show will be "Sing You Sin·
Curtain time on Thursday lind
organized and directed by Toney ncrs" by Bob Hoeflich assisted by Friday will be 8:10 pm.
Dingess, Meigs band director. The
young musicians will present
"Ain't Misbebavin"' and "Medium
11
Cool." Members of llle band are
MONDA
.
6:30 p.m. at Middlepon Church of
Sam Cowan, Dodger Vaughan,
POMEROY _Meigs Athletic Christ. Meat and beverages provid·
Ladeana Grover, Jonathan Avis, BoosteJs fall sports banquet. 6:30 ed.. lhose_attending to take covered
Susan PaRe, Robin Donahue, Mike
c s
o
Parker, Courtney Haley, saxo- MoJI(Iay in llle cafeteria at Meigs dtsh. hris tewart speaker at 7:3
b
J
R · b · Pb 1' ll'
High School. Those attending to p.m.
P ones; oey uc u,
tp take two covered dishes. Meat,
TUPPERS PLAINS- The
Edmonds, Oaniel Russell, Adam
White and Jodie Sisson, trumpets; _ beverages and rolls wijl be provid· Voice of Democracy speech con·
Kelley Grueser, Tara Grueser, ed. 9n;g Smith, former Ohio State test, 7:30p.m. Monday, spo~S!'red
D
c
All-American, speaker.
by Post 9053 VFW and Auxtltary.
LETART - Letart Township Refreshme,nts. Public invited.
orothy Leifheit and bad Dod;
son, trombones with Kevin Neal on
the drums.
trusiees, Monday, 6 p.m. at the
PO~EROY -Public school
Sam Cowan, making his second office building.
sympos_JUm ~onday at 7 p.m. in
appearance in lhe Big Bend show,
MIDDLEPORT _ Meigs the ~etgs ~t.gh Scb~l ~afeteria
' II b · · "I' G
s 1·t
,
b' f ·
featunng Wtlliam L. Pbilhs, execuwt e smgmg m onna
County ~e~ s Pel1ows 1P amt 1Y tive director of the Ohio Public
.,Right Down and Write Myself a Tbanksgmng dmner, Monday, School Coalition
Letter" and will present a saxo·
phone solo, "Near You." Cowan is
also featured in the finale along
Public Notice
wllh Sheriff Soulshy and lhe entire
cast. "You Won't Be Satisfied ·
with verloue Fire ProteeUon
RESOLUTION 11.114
. Until You Break My Heart" will be
qencltl Iii Melg1 County In
BE
rr
AESOLVED,bylhe
!he vocal number of Sarah Anderthe
Slate of Ohio.
Council of the Vlllege . ol
PASSED Nov. 7, 11184
son wbo bas participated in lhe proPomeroy, oil membere:
Kelhy Hynll,.
duction for several years.
Thet the Vlllege ot
Clerk·Trlaturer
Pomeroy
hereby
withee
lo
Amy Perrin in a first appear·
John Mu-r, Preeldllll
enter Into en ·~ra~ment
ance in lhe local musical wiD sing
14, 21;2TC
"It's Always You" and Kelley
:! 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111!::
Grueser, also appearing vocally foF
-!he first time with the Big Bend

never too late to have a hapPY
childhood! :

Pick 3:
1-2-0
Pick"4:
9-7-9-3
Buckeye 5:
7-9-21-25-32

· Frielllis altd Stop Being iblltl)l"

stlld $5.05 .)

DOWN
O·W·O· • Brlnglllfl an
appropriate touch to the Melp County Talent ·
Showcase of 19!14, to be presented at the Meigs
Junior High School on Nov. :ZS and lei will be
these teen danc:ers with their routine to "Down
by the O..bi-o." The group Includes: front, left,
Tassi Cummins, Wbllney Haplonstall; second

REMEMBER

nve

she was alive'/ I really need
your counsel, Ann. •• MAJOR
QUANDARY IN N.Y.
DEAR N.Y.: Herman ~ you a
lot more than he OWCI his daughl«
Enlist the help of both your
physician IIIII Herman'• to move up
die wedding date. Good luck.
.
Lousome? 'IbMclrillrt ofyour lifo
IUid IUTII il Qlflund. Wr/U! for AM
l.muiulMWboolrltl, "How to Milke

Meigs Talent Showcase to run two ni

MIDDLEPORT-"Musical
Memories at tbe House of Blue
Lights" will be the theme for the
. by Bob Hoeflich
1994 Meigs County Talent Show·
case which plays at the Meigs
...-""""-1: Junior Higb School in Middleport
Friday and Saturday nights.
Coincidentally, 17 of you read- • Zane Trace School.
Trevor received five trophies for
For the fust time this year, the
ers correctly Identified tune 17 in ·
the "Wbatsa Name of That Song?" baseball as a player in .bts minor musical, ttaditionally stllged on the
league ieam of seven, eight and Saturday after Thanksgiving, will
contest
Tune 17 was • As Time Goes nine-year-olds who were undefeat· be presented two nights in order to
, . By" ·and IIJOliC amling up with the cd in league play and won lhc tour· better accommodate patrons since
right title were Mildred Milburn, ney championship. Trevor also last Y~· the production played to a
Middleport; Jan Ours~ Middleport; played, by invitation, on a major stand_ing room only crowd. .
.
Jean Wright, Pomeroy; Loretta league team of 10 to 12 year olds
~treeted b~ Bob HOC:fllcb, lilts
Beegle, Pomeroy; Manba Hoover, and that team was rust place in we year s ~o"! wtH open wtlh a vocal
Pomeroy; Donald L. Snyder, league and tournament play. · group smgmg Music to Remem. Athens; Gussie Hostottle, Trevor was presented by "Good bcr." Making up the group arc Hal
Pomeroy; Margaret Brooks, SpQrtsmansbip Award" for bis Kneen, Kathy Hood, Charlene
Albany; Betty Curfman, Syracuse; work !here. He also made lhe all Hoeflich, Jim Soulsby: )ayne
Ruth Young, Middleport; Pauline star team for nine and 10 year olds. Mann, Tobin Mann, Jackie Buck,
Wolfe, Racine; Margie Weaver, Trevor also plays basketball and Carolyn Thomas, Susie Soulsby
Racine ; Rita White, Cheshire; soccor at his school.
at!d Bob Buck. Veter~ vocali.st
Laura Guthrie, Long Bottom;
Giving Trevor a little competi- wtth the show, Peggy _Bnckl~, w11l
Mazie Hannahs, Pomeroy; Louise tion already is his sht-year-old pick up lhe theJI!C wt!!J her ~e
Gloeckner, Pomeroy, and Marie brolller. Jordon. who was oltcber House of Blue Ltgbts. . Backing
for his undefeated t·ball team and her on the number ·wtll be the
Boyd, Racine.
Winning the $S prize out of the received a fl{st place trophy. He Sba~y River ~bufflers who are
group was Pauline Wolfe who is a was leading scorer on his champi- . holding a ~umon of former mem·
whiz at naming those tunes. • As I onsbip Zane Trace youth league bers espectally for the l!J?4 show.
recall, Pauline bas come up with soccer team and scored the team's The Shufners group mcludes
lhe correct titles on all of the 17 tying goa'IIO capture championship Joanie Anderson, Lauren Anderbonors for his team in the last game son, Sarah Anderson, Jane Banks,
songs in the contest
laoi!e Blaettner, Charla Bu~ge,
Here's the clue for song 18 of the season.
The Buck family tefi Middleport Dant~lle Crow, Jenny Cummms,
which was copyrighted in 1941 and •
was made popular by the band of about a yeat ago when 'Jon's work Tas_st Cummms, Debbte Evans,
wilh Columbus Soulllern Power led Jodi Glass, Whllney Haptonstall,
the late Glenn Miller:
"You leave the Pennsylvania to a transfer 10 Cbillicolhe. Incl· Asb!ey Hann~s. Rhonda Han~s.
dentally, Tami bas slarled work at a Melissa Hamson, Paulette Hams;
station ' bout a quarter to four.
"Read a magazine until you're Cbilllcothi: bank so the Bucks Kay Hemsley, Andrea Krawsczyn,
obviously are a busy family.
Erin ~awsczyn, Lara ~cC_Jeary,
in Baltimore;
Meggte McCleary, Jodte Stsson.
"Dinner in llle dinner, nothing
Some volunteers are needed to Linda Young and Julie Zirkle.
could be fmer;
·"Than to have your bam and help prepare the stage for the Brickl'es wi!l make a sec~nd
eggs in Carolina"
upcoming Meigs County Talent appearance wtth a smooth vcrston
jOO_y..!!!!~._WWtal!! lM_Dai!Y
llbowcuo to_be. prc:ICI!te...J1,~ _of "Stars,!'.ell on_ AlabaJna." _ _
Sentinel, 111 Cot,rt St., Pomeroy, Meigs hmior Higb School In Mid"DOii t Get AroilM Milf~ eAlly•
Box 729-B . I'll expect to bear dleport next Friday and Saturday m~" and "I P,on:t Want 10 Walk
from a lot of you on this 'un.
nights. Cast members and anyone Without You wtll be the vocal
else wbo can lend a helping band'in selections of Laura Guthrie, anoth' Receiving awards must be getting the settings in place are er veteran of the Big Bend presenbecoming ~old bat" for Trevor_ -asked to meet at the school at 9 rations. A new women's vocal bio
Buck, 10-year-old son of former a.m.' next Friday mOrning. "Many canposcd of Sharon Hawley, Debresidents of Jon and Tami Buck, bands make light wed:.'!
bie Cirueser, and Dixie Sayre h!IS
Chillicothe, and grandson of Mrs.
Advance tickets for the musical been organized for the 1994 show
Addie Buck of near Pomeroy, the are now on sale at the Middleport and their numbers will be "The
rate Gail Buck, and Fred and Department Store, llle Ohio River Nearness of You" and "String of
Pauline Hoffman of Middleport.
Bear Co., and Bahr Clothiers iD Pearls." Sayre for lhe first time
Trevor received 17 awards Middleport and at Swisher·Lobse, with tbe Big Bend organization
between May and Septelll:ber. Chapman Shoes and the Cbauteau will ~o.solo on.:·• Got It Bad and
Twelve were for acadenuc_achteve· Beauty Salon in Pomeroy. The That_Ain t Good. Another v~teran
ment. The two the famtly were advance tickets are $4 each while of Btg Bend shows, Karen Griffilh,
most proud of 011 Trevor's behalf lhe charge at the door will be $5.
is reiUming to lllis Year's show and
were one for being lhe only student
About this time, evflY show, J!IY will be featured willl her trumpet
in his class 10 receive all A's and worst dream tends to reoccur. We oll "Blues inthe Night."
· lhe olher for being named for the bad a show and no one came. Now
Cllad Dodson, making his ftrst
"Male Citizenship Award" by his that makes it bard-for me, that appearance in lhe 1994 production
fellow students. Trevor attends is-to keep smiling.
vocally will do "I'm Beginning to
See the Light" and a new dance
team, Rae MiU Gwiazdowsky and
Tan Dooley will be featured with a
tap routine to "Me and My Sbad·
ow~" one of the two blackli~bt
numbers IIJis year. A clogging
trio, Paulette Harrison, Kay Hemsley and Danlelle Crow will dance
to Columbus Stockade Blues" and
show veteran, Meigs Sheriff lim
Soulsby will use "Deep In a
Dream" as his vocal solo. Soulsby
will also do the solo work on a
comedy number, ".Fast Food and
Fast Women" by a group of cast
regulars known as "lbe Commit·

FIVE GENERATIONS- Tbll
generation fimUy or Lona
Qev8Jier, Reecllvllle, gathered recently for a pldun. Here l'rom
the left l'rollt are AnaJe Taylor or Columbus with her great-grand·
mother,~ Cbevl!lia-, holdlllfl the ftftb aeneratlqn Infant Klara
Taylor or Columbus. Back Is Evelyn Spencer of Tuppen Plal.u,
aDd her 10n, Roger Spen£er, third generation In lite Chevalier
fllllllly.

arc both in failing heallh. Our 1011
does not know we aren't legally
married. I don't want to wait anOiher
six months, but Herman insists. I've
had major iiiJiiCIY IWice, and Herman
has a bean c:ondi&amp;ian. 1 am 39, 111111
he is 70. I'm beginning to think
Hermandoesn'treatly WllltiO marry
me after alL ·
Tell me, Ann, does his daughcer
have lhe right to ask her father 10 do
this? They hardly had much of a
relationship when his wifewasllive,
llldlheydon'lhavcmuchofonenow
She docs not consider my 1011 to be
her brother. If Herman has so much
"lelpi!Ct" for his laic wife, why did
he live wilh me for 14 years while

Ohio Lottery

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