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                  <text>October2B.

Beat of the.Bend...
. by Bob Hoeflich
We have 1 lot of senior citizens
around. lf you aren'tthere yet,
hang on, you'll get !here. Many or
you, )'lllllll and old, might enjoy a
conlribution.from Floyd Carson, .
Pomeroy, an octogenarian, w~o
~- llong lhc profile of a semor
Citizen. .
.
It goes Ukc thos:
. "Who is a senior cilizcn? What
1s one?
"A senior citizen is one wbo
was here before television, peni· cillin, polio shots, antibiotics and
frisbees. Before f!Ozen food, nylon,
dacron, xerox, Kmsey, radar, Duorcsccnt tights, credit c;ards and ballpoint pens.
"For us, time-sharing meant
to11cthemess, not computers. A
chop meant a piece of wood, hardware meant hard wear, and software wasn't ev.en a word. Co-eds
never wore slacks. We were before
pantyhose, and drip dry clothes,
before ice makers and dish washers, clothes dryers, freezers and
electric blankets; before Hawaii
and Alaska became stales, before
men wore long hair and earrings
and women wore bllledos.
"We were before Leonard Bernstein, yogurt, Ann Landers, plastic,
the 40 hour week and minimum
wage. We got married first and
then lived togelher. How quaint can
one be?
"Closets were for clothes, not
coming out of; bunnies were small
rabbits and rabbits were not
Volkswogans. We were before
Grandma Moses and Frank Sinatra
and cup-sizing for bras. Girls wore
Peter Pan collars and thought
cleavage was something butchers
did. We were before Batman,
Rudolph, the red-nosed reindeer,
the Snoopy; before DDT, vitamin
piUs, disposable diapers, jeeps, the
Jefferson Memorial. And pizza,
checrios, instant c.offee, decaffeinated anything and McDonalds
were all unheard of. We thou~ht
fast food was wlllll you ale dunng
lent. We were before Boy George,
J. D. Salinger and Chiquita
bananas; before FM radio, tape
recorders, electric typewriters,
word processors. elecb'Onic music
and disco dancing and !hal's not all
bad.
"In our day, cigarette smoking
was fashionable, grass was for
mowing, coke was a refreshing
drink and pol was somelhlng you
cooked in. If we would have been
asked to explain CIA, MS. UFO,
NFL,1FK, E8A or IUD. we would
have said we were dealing with
alphabet soup.
"We have seen more changes
than any other genention. From
horse and buggies lo men on the

moon.

"We are lpday's senior ci~zcns.
A hardy bunch when you think of
how our world has changed and of
the adjustments we have had to
make.
·
"We hope you adjust as well."
"P.S. we also saw the coming
and going of the motlel T ford. at
the time the best car on the road,
and it if was here today, it still

might be.•
Meantime back aldie ranch it's
once again 'time for Param~unt
Park$ North American talent
search. Talent scouts from
Paramount Parks are looking for
young, bright sin~crs, dancers,
acllln, instrumcnlalists 'and tcchnicians to fdl some 1SO openings at
their five paries this summer.
Auditions closesllo us wiD be in
Cincinnati on Nov. 13 and in
Columbus on Nov. 17. I have
numerous details so if any of you
wan110 give it a shot, call me.
A lillie closer to home is a
reunion by members of the 1983
Meigs Hifh School graduating
class, the Oth year since graduation. The event is scheduled for
Nov. 26 al the Holiday Inn in Gallia County. For information and
input get in touch with Kim Fraley
Wise, 919-299-4SS8, or hula
Swisher Bonnett at 992-6848.
This is the week the ghosts and
goblins could get you if you don't
watch out. However, you're
immune if you keep smilin~

Children's league
hosts party
The Middlepon Child Conservation League held its annual Halloween ~y for the children and
grandchildren of the members.
All the children came in costume. Many games were played
and prizes were awarded.
A shon business meeting was
conducted by President Kitty Darst.
RoD call was answered with "your
favorite Halloween cos:ume from
the past".
Final plans were made for the
program book for the year. Christmas dinner and gifts' for a needy
family were discussed. More information on this will be available at
the November meeling.
Refreshments of hot dogs and
sauce, potato chips, cookies and
apples were served to members and
the following guests: Vincent
Broderick, Robert Harris, Holly
Broderick, Megan Broderick, Jeremy and Joshua Manley, Caddric
Gibbs, Clayron and Amber Blackston, Judy Matlea and Mary Harris.

AUXl•1•tary meets
The Lewis Manley Unit 263
American Legion Auxiliary meet
recently at the home of Dorothy
Casey with Lorene Goggins as
hOaleSS.

presents

.._.......... .,-'!-.............
progr~i
The
Circle of the Trini- w1111 prayer. She thlnktJd ~
ly Church met - d y with Maiy who helped witb the Sttmwhee ;
nize wlllll causes ljlem to lose their Elizabeth Chilpman piuenting the activities at !he ~· · . ~;
tempers.
, program.
The IP"?'I pro~ of calling ~
"Mostof~lintebedocsn:trcalize
Some ofit was taken from the shut-ins will be conunilcd. ChriSt•
he'sfuriousuntilhe'ssmackingher," "Upper Room." $he also read mas giftl (or eldetly and shut-inf
material from" All ( lcally Need 10 were diacUS8ed.
.
~
Althof explains.

A lone, enraged man
Coatlnued from page t
with an angry person, some sem·
blanceofpeaceandnon-physical violence can usually be mamtained." he
says. "Saying it's wrong and its all
his fault is not going to solve the
domestic violence pioblem."
He adds that a large percentage of
domestic batletings begin with an a.:t
of violence by the victim. Sbe may
slam a cabinetdoororthrow a plate 10
the Door.
However, Dovyak draws a line be·
tween abusing objects and abusing
people. Some people get mad and
break things, he says, but they would
never hit another person.
"Although it is normal to be frustrated by the range of problems all of
us might have, most people clearly
understand that violence is not an
acceptable way to deal with that," he
says.
Dovyak estimates that in over 1S
percent ofrelationships problctns are
resolved wilhoutphysicalaggteSSion.
Most men, he says, do not physically
abuse their panners.
"I hope that we can get better about
reconstructing among the male population an intolerance for this kind of
behavior," he says.
Tactics for survival
In Althof's miild, lhere is a kiild of
hope that victims and abusers can
grow to understand one another and
live together peacefully.
He says abusers can learn to recog-

Heencouragesmentofin4altrma- Know I Learn~d in Sun,day '
live behaviors to violenee1 IIICh IS School," a coUectioo~of humorous
leaving the horne and visiting a rela- .stories ~ h)lm Slllldale~oot.
of.
live. The angry husband might wrjtt Other teildiil_jJ mrlnded"
a note describing what's bothering ' the Vacant Front ·RoW" which dishimandteUthewifehewillcallherin cussed how at sponaevents everyan hour.
one yo-ants to sit in the front ro'Y,
Victims Althof says should talk to but m church the front row 1s
'h th
' a1 ed
always vacanL AnoliJa: story, "The
abusers w en .ey are c m or so- Shoes" told of how children used to
berandtrytounderstandwhatcaused have two pairs of shoes, one pair
them to be angry:
for everyday use and another that
While he admots that abusers can was worn only to church. The. probecom~~~le,Althof,encour- gram ended ~th tnYer•:
a~ v1cums to l~len to r,equesl:i,
The busmes.s meeting was
who;h ~y be as sunple as "''~ to o~~ned by President Qay Perrin
me, or Stop bouncmg checks, or
"I'd appreciate it if you were here
when I came home from work."
N
E B
"Violent people lend to be nonArmy PvL I ancy . ennett
·
th d •
I.ttl
has comple,led ~c .traiJ\ing at FOrt
asseruv.e- ey 0~ t ex~ress 1 e Jackson, Columb18, S.C.
r,rustrauons ap~na1ely, he says.
During the training, students
It would surpnse you that a lot of received instruction in drill and
these people think of themselves as ceremonies, weapons, map reading,
nice guys who have long been hun- tactics, military courtesY· military
ing."

Ohio Lottery

Salmon
named
AL rookie

Perrin rem~~ everyone ~1.
"Sock Money IS due at the next
meetin.&amp;. She :also ~d votuntccl.1.
arc sllll needed ID the school
enric!Jment program.
. ·.:~
D1ane Hawley and AhccGt~ w~ named as the norni~
nann$ comiDittee.
;,..
Enc Ruasoll, grandson of Mall:
Kautz, was added to the prayM
line.
:."'
The refresbrnent table was ~
rated in the Halloween them~
Trick-or-treat bags were favor~~
Norma Jewell and Peggy Hartt8
served sundaes and nuts;
~.: •

Pick 3:

982
Pick 4:

3252
BuckeyeS:
S-10-16·21-33

PageS

•

Bennett
·
. [etes baszc
. trammg
• • s;:
comp

Vol.ol4, NO. 131

I H 1\ I L . _, I H \ I 0 L L \ &lt;.I. \\\ \ln.'\ I '- "&gt; \ II I'\ I II

Lives affected by
domestic violence...
"Judy," sitting in a swing
behind Serenity House,
was helped by the shelter
after almost a decade

•POWER WINDOWS
•TRUNK RELEASE
•POWER DOOR LOCKS
•DELAY WIPERS

· of abuse. She is
'

now working and

'

• •
•
en}oyzng
marnage

to a non-violent spouse.

Domestic violence victims relate
stories of physical, emotional scars
By KEVIN PINSON
OVP News Staff

Hospital pews

, (EtlllDr'• MU: T1ut ,.,.. of lit•

Dinner was at Dale's before the
meeting. Helen Culmer, fJtSt vicepresident, was in charge of the
meeting.
Does were paid. Annette Johnson is cliaplain of the auxiliary. A
donation was made 10 the AmeriMount Aconagua, on the Chile·Ar·
canism and Government Test pro- gentina border, is the highest point of
gram.
land in the New World. Its altitude of
Lula Hampton will be hostess 22,834 feet above sea level is more
for the next meetin11. Culmer gave than 2,500 feet higher than that of
lhc closing ceremorues.
Alaska's Mount McKinley.

I'!'''"" In thofollowing

:,_, -~~J(t/taftl·,..~~i'f'"NI4.i.lilJIJ.r~ ~ ·-··
. . . ...t

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Oct. 17 dlaehar1ea - Tanya
Lewis, Clara Moasbatller, Cl)arlcs '
Grueser, Genritde.Ha11, Amailda
Jarvis, Shirley lleavct, Dale Gross
and Coranna Atchisoil.
Oct. 17 birth • Mr. and Mrs.
Jeffrey Maynard, daughter o(
Pomeroy.

MASON FUR~TURE CO.
No Tricks ••• Just Treats•••
Friday, Oct. 29 &amp;

Satu~ay,

Oct. 30, 9 a.m.·5 p.m.

child, Judy told her husband she was leaving. HC attempled to hit her in the head with a crystal candy dish,
but she warded off the blow with her arms. Herriglnarm

.. required:eighl~. w1eft;1'11D."'· ·.A,

Two lives atreclcd by·~estic violence.
Judy separated from her husband many limes, but the
. . One \I!Oman. rebuilds her life while another lives in . marriage co!Uinu¢ for seven years. Even after the
· fear.
_
.
..
divorce, she and her ex ·continued an off-and-on relaMeet1udy and S~wn. two women whose lives were lionship for two years:
diSrupted by abUSive men.
Judy blamed low self-esteem and a precarious finanFour and a half years ago,Jpdy arrived at Serenity cialsituation for her inability to cut lhe ties. Her husband
House, a local sbelrer for abused women, with three often rold her that no other man would want her and her
children and two garbage bags full of clothes. She was children.
also carrying unseen baggage - a
"After a while you stan to believe these things," she said.
drug and alcohol addiction aiKl the
physical and emotional
of al"When you're tike that, you feel
I II•· 11/111 In \ \, un
that there's no help whatsoever."
most a decade of abuse.
When Judy was 15, she mel 20The siwalion intensified her drug
year-old Gerald During their shon
and
alcohol problems. Judy said
'
·
DOMESTIC
courtship, Judy said she witnessed
she abused alcohol and marijuana
no evidence that he was lhe violent
to escape the abuse.
type.
The last straw came while living
"I only knew him for three
in Cleveland. Gerald broke down
.months," she said. "You think you
the door to Judy's apartment and
IN OIIR
ripped her clothCs off. She man. really know the person but you really don't."
aged to escape him and ran upstairs to her father's apanmenL
The two married when Judy
Gerald broke down the door and
teamed she was pregnant. He had a
1/u
\
Ji'IJJII
1
chased her into the bathroom,
good job with the raltro,d. she said.
soshequitschool to becorheahousewhere she shut a bigger, Sb'Onger
wife.
door between them.
The abuse began while she was still pregDIUIL Gerald
She had taken the phone in with ber and dialed 911.
smacked Judy across the face when she fed their kitten Judy was able to give theopemtor her name and address
some hamburger.
before Gerald pulled the cord out of the wall.
He then threw the pel out the window. The cal was not
While her ex-husband shouted death threats through
hurt, but Judy had to give it away.
.
the door, Judy climbed into the attic and opened a
Both Judy and her husband were suffering from window 30 feet above the ground. She said she was
alcohol and drug problems, she said. Fler most severe ready to jump when police arrived.
· beatings were administered when he was suffering
"I believed that night that I was going to die."
from a hangover. Many of them occured while she was
Judy relocated 10 southeastern Ohio and stayed with
pregnant with one of their children.
family. She did not let Gerald know where she was.
"I can't tell you how often it happened, but il was an
Family problems eveniWilly forced her 10 move in
ongoing problem for seven years," she said.
with a friend who also abused alcohol and drugs.
When she was eight months pregnant witll .her third
Continued on page 3

scan

'

VIOLENCE

COMMUNI'I'Y

KNOWLED·GE:
. THE BEST MEDICINE
Team Up with a Diabetes Educator during '
National Diabetes Week for

'DIABETES: THE BASICS'
a free Workshop Focusing on the Basics ·of Self-Managment

States want regional
airport close to border
WHO SHOULD ATTEND: People with Diabetes, tlleir Families and Friends
WHERE IT WILL BE: Pleasant Valley Hospital Downstairs Conference Room
WHEN

SAY~ EXTRA ~O%· . EVERY •••
...LIVING ROOM SUITE ~DINEnE SET ...BmROOM SURE '.
...RECLINER · ... DESk ·~CURIO :.GRANDFATHER CLOCK · , •
·...SOFA SLEEPER •..TABLE SRS ~GUN cABittET$.
•••ENTERTAINMENT
CENTER
.. ,
.
..
.

IT Is: Monday, Nov. 1, from 6 to 8:30p.m.
(Repeated Tuesday, Nov. 2, from 9 to 11:30 a.m.)
'

i WHO WILL FACILITATE: judy Hennessey, R.N., Certified Diabetes Nurse Educator

Rollin Roht, M.S, R.D., Registered qletitian

So that we may accomodate all who wish to atte'nd,

please register in advance by calling,the PVH PhysicianMatch health line at:· ·

'

. ·•'·

'

'

'

675-lPVH (675-1784) ·
or toll-free, 1-800-333-lPVH (1-800-333-1784)

•

•

.. .
.

PL,EASANT·VALLtY·IIOSPITAL
The·familyof professionals

·R

· '

Construction of pan of the proposed connector road from Rock
Springs to Ravenswood, W.Va.,
and a new Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
may be a lillie closer to becoming a
reality.
. Th~ Ohio Department of Transponatton announced Thursday that
the first section of the connector
road has been separated from the
environmental document being prepared for the entire project of 18.6
miles.
In addition, ODOT recently
announced that the agency is in the
consultant selection process for services to prepare the location study
for a replacement of the aging
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge.
The target dale for completion
of the new bridge is 2000, said
John Dowler, deputy director of
Dislrict 10 of the Ohio Department
of Transponalion.
Dowler added that the old
bridge, while slnlcturally sound, is
only 20-fcet wide and costs
$200,000 a year 10 maintain.
The Federal Highway Administration has approved tlie request to
let the fJtSt section, a length of 2.25
miles running from Rock Springs
to Stare Route 7 at Five Points, to
. ~·~tand on its o.wn environmentally," said'Uowler. '· ·· · '·
·
OOOT District 10 officials have
long awaited this deci§ion and
believe this is the first time the
Federal Highway Administration
has approved such a requesL
"One of the main reasons (the

C tnc.tl11
..----..-

Federal Highway Administration)
approved our request is because
construction of thiS fU'St section of
the connector is actually the com·
pletion of the Stale Route 7 Bypass
which presently comes to a dead
end at Meigs High School,"
Dowler said.
According to ODOT; the Federal Highway Administration
approval means that the 2.25 miles,
which has few environmental concerns, can be pulled out from the
rest of the connector road project
and final work expedited to bring
this section to construction.
"There are few wetlands and
cultural and historical resoun:es JO
be considered in this section,"
Dowler commented. "OOOT has
shifted the proposed alignment for
the highway to miss one historical
building that was involved in the
first section."

The estimated cost for the 2.25
miles of four-lane highway is $11
million. Dowler said he hopes !he
contraCt for this section of the connector will be sold by end of summer 1994 with construction to follow soon af1er.
As for the rest of the conqector
road. ODOT expects the entire
enyironm~.ouat document to be
comptelcd.by late'l994.
Qridge·to be resurfaced
Motorists using the newly resurfaced Pomeroy-Mason Bridge may
have noticed the recently installed
surface resembles the old surface in
places.

ODOT announced that a portion
of the new deck overlay will be
redone in the spring.
Mike LanJ. construction engineer for Distnct I0, reportS the sur.
face texture of an area 300 feet
long by 20 feet wide on the Ohio
side or the bridge is unacceptable.
ODOT and 'rhe SheUy Company of Thornville, contractor on the
$129,379 project, are working
together to determine the best
method of correction, Lang said.
"Due to the nature of the material, the preferred option is to
remove and replace the material "
he commented.
'
Because the material cannot be
applied if the ouldoor temperature
is below 50 degrees, the contractor
will not replace the faulty section
until next spring's warm weather,
he added.
The new overlay was applied to
the bridge earlier this month. The
~aterial, Rosphalt, is a specialized,
hoghly durable aspbalt according to
ODOT.
,
ODOT also announced that rclo- '
cation of a stretch of U.S. 33
between Athens and Darwin is in
the preliminary development phaae
with a location study underway for
a_new f~ur~laJ!e, hi_lbway.between
tlie two Sltea.
A consultant wu authorized in
April.
According to Dowler, ODOT's
intent is to reduce this study phaae
from five to two years with design
of construe lion plans to foUow.

Commission donates dump truck to township
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs County Board of
Commissioners during its weekly
meelin$ Thursday agreed to give
one of 1ts old dump 1rucks to Bedford Township with lhe stipulation
that the township perform the needed maintenance on the vehicle.
Engineer Robert Eason said the
township's old truck had broken
down and said the highway depan·
ment was phasing out that parlicu·
lar type of truck, a 1985 Chevrolet
single-axle dump truck with a
gasoline engine.
Following its meeting with
Eason, the commissron met with
Patty Pickens and Chester Township Trustee Oris Smith.
Pickens asked the commission
to write a letter 10 Eason authoriz·
ing him to approve a road serving a
subdivision off Aatwoods Road in
Chester Township.
Department of Human Services
Director Michael Swisher met with
commissioners asking tltem to sign
a form authorizing the county to
lease property to the department of

years, Swisher said. The amount is
based on depreciation of the property.
Swisher explained the department would pay rent to the county
and that the department of human
services would in turn be reimbursed by the state.
In other matters, the commis·
sion:
- Accepted the sole bid
received from Asphalt Material
Inc. of Maricua for paving material

for the month of November.
.
- Met with David WiUoughby ·
of the Otis Elevator Company of
Athens concerning maintenance of
county owned elevators. WDioughby explained that his company
would be inlereSied in servicing lhe
elevators.
Present were Commission President Robert Harlenbach, Vice President Janet Howard Tackett, Com.
missioner Fred Hoffman and Clerk
Gloria Klocs.

Local briefs
Deputies investigate trespassing

human services.

Meigs County Sheriffs Deputies took a report Thursday that a
truek had run into a local man's corn field.
Gene Fulton told deputies that sometime between 4 p.m. Tuesday and 6 p.m. Wednesday a four wheel drive truck ran off Stale
Roule 338 into his cornfield.
Tbe vehicle crossed the field, tnveled around the edge and then
made two or three passes into the field. The windshield came out of
the truck.
Fulton estimated damages at $1,000 because the parliclular section was a research project using 13 v.arieties of seed .
The matter is still being investigated.

The agreement, if approved,
would place $3,400 into the county
general fund each year for 10

Truck hits deer

Standard Time will
return this weekend

WASHlNGTON ~AP) -It's
. time to cban1e your ;i:klck.
M01t of .U.erlca falls back to
stiadard tftile this weekend,
. turnlnt diA:ks back one hour
S.turday nlibL
The otndal time for the
dt!IDie Is l a.m., local time, Sunday. Dayll1ht time retul'lll next
AprU3.
Safety experll are ""IIDI people to add ftre 18fft7 ta lbe equa1loa b7 repiKinlmolte detector
·balterlel Ibis weekeud allo. The
batterlea aonnall)' tast abOut a
brarich.
year, aad the aloaan "o:llan1e
:. "The one reservation is that the
your clock, chan1e your battery"·
facility needs to be locatCd ai cloeo
prQvldea a hudy remiader to
to KentuCky as possib~... he said
make lbe l'f\'lkh •
, Thui'sdax during a m~g '011 tho
A few areas do not aeed to
topic in .Soulh Poin~ 6hio.
'
'
...
'
.
.
'
worr7 about turalDI lbe clocka
· H~ncock, who. said he was
WIT(:HES OF MIDDLEPORT - A cr~~c:ldlllcllre •d a bobback becalllt they did DOt IO OD
Spcakina for Kentucky Gov. BIJ'I:I=,
blln&amp;
cauldron
helped
thai!
lbree
wlk:ba
combat
a
o:WII7
October
da)'lllh.t
time· last sprln1. Tbose
ton JOnes: s.id he favdrl Evergreen
, ev~nln1 1'11u~a7 allht at Mklilleport'a Halk!wen CtJebrttlon.
ln~lude Arl~ ~wall, the pari
Church or Mount Oliver. · . ·
The three t.dlee.partklpatl!iilla the vllll&amp;e's Sleepy Holow attrac· . of Indiana Ia the Euten ti•e
.·· Olkle Ford, 8n Ironton, Olllo,
zoae, Puetto Rico, the Virain
• • b.usinessman, said Ohio. orficials • lion were, frll!ll left, Tracy Davld!on, Darla ZIIIJIAb aiJd Carolyn
Elam.
Is"'Ddland
AmerlcaD Silmoa.
alsO favor
tw iildl.
·
•

AILIMI

ODOT outlines
US 33 projects

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Kentucky and Ohio government
officials and businessmen support
West Virginia's plan for &amp;,regional
airport but want irclose to iheir
borders, officials say.
· The airport would. serve the
Charleston-HuntingiQn•Parkersburg region. Sites are under eohsidemtion near Moon! Olive, Mason·
County, near ·Confidence, Putnam
County, and ncar Evergreen
Church, Putnam County.
·· .
, "Kentucky favors a regionaL
.a irp9n that would serve .eastern
Kentuclcy,'' said Michael Hancock,
nianager of the Ken)ucky T,_nsp,ortation Cabinet's e!lsmeerinil
1

2 ....... 12,.... • -

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, October 29, 1993

llulllmedalnc.

· . fi
'd d Arm hisJ~
Jusuce, .~ 81 • an . Y "'
and tradiuons.
Bennett is the da11ghter
Thomas and Nancy
S3119 Carpenter
d.'J'Ortiii~~
Her husband
Susan D. White
Road, Long BoiiOlll.

V6POWER
•CRUISE
•OVERDRIVE TRANSMISSION
•AM·FM STEREO/CASSETTE
•AIR BAG

•

· ~

EMS responds
to six calls
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
answered six calls for assistance
overnight. Units responding
include:
Wednesday - 10:02 a.m. Syracuse to Plants Road for Addie
Cummins who was transported to
Veterans Memmial HosPital; 10:16
a.m. Middleport to Page Street for
Flora Edman who was treated at
the scene; 10:56 a.m. Syracuse to
Condor Street for Nelson Watson
who was transported to VMH; 9:01
p.m. Rutland to Meigs Mine 31 for
Cecil Dillon who was transported
to O'Blcness Memorial Hospital;
10 a.m. Middlepon to Cole Street
for Lori Feser who was transported
toVMH.
Thursday - 7:44 a.m. Middleport to Main Street for Walter
Green who was transported lo
Pleasant Valley Hospital.

/

Meigs County Sheriffs deputies responded to an automobile
ace idenl early Thursday morning.
Grover L. Riddle, Kingsbury Road, struck and killed a deer on
State Route 124 west of Rutland.
. Riddle's 1993 Chevy truck received moderate damage to the
roght fronL

Guilty plea entered

a

A Meigs County woman has entered plea of guilty to trafficking in LSD in the Meigs County Cooilt.ofCommon Pleas.
Trudy Dent changed her plea to·guilty after the charge was
reduced to the third degree felony.

Shock probation granted
Judge Fred W. Crow Ill has granted shock ~lion to Charles
E. Michael, Jr. According to the entry he wdl be released from
prison and will cnroll in lhc SEPTA program as a condition of his
live year probation.

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those

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Man cited for DUI
Thomas D. Rankin, 32, 613 MaJtet Street, Waverly, was cited
Thursday for driving under lhc influence driving under auspelllioft,
failure to drive within marked lanes and no seat belt, the GalliaMeigs Post of the Stale HiJhway Pab'Ol reported.

Bloodmobile to visit

The Red Cross blQoclmobile will be at the Southern Loc:al Hip
School in Racine, Monclay. Nov. 8 from tO a.m. to 2:30p.m. Anyone I 7 or older may gi~ blood.

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�'

; Friday, ~ 29, 1993

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LEI I ERS OF OPINION on welcome. They abouid be leas than 300
words. All (etten are subject to editing and must be signed with n11111e
address and relepbone number. No uruigned leUen will be pub!iJbed. Le~
sbould be in good rasre, addreSiing iSiues, not penonllities.

Letters to the editor
Dependent on services

mr

Being confined to
home, I
am dependent on servtces from
others. The Senim' Citizens organization bas been extremely helpful
to me for transportation and inhome service.

Friday, ~tober 29, 1893

WASHINGTON - Its own
chairman calla· it a "liUie-known,
arcane regulatory commission."
But the Federal EReriY Rcgu~ .
Commission spendS money as if It
were in the bureaucratic big
leagues.
The commission may be asking
the federal·government to fork over
an extra $80 million - or $67,000
per FERC bureaucrat - for a new
office complex here. Yet the agen'
cy has only 1.200 employees and
an annual $146.5 million budget.
FERC officials argue that this new
complex- including a $91,000
fitness center- is a necessity.
Officials complain, for example,
about operating out of three rented
offices located in different buildings.
Christine McGue, FERC's
newly appointed executive director,
cites other concerns: "slow and
cumbersome" elevators; the
orfices lack "zone temperature
conii'Ois," so some are less comfortable; and the use of microwaves
at !urich starts "blowing fuses
everywhere.''
McGue told our associate
Andrew Conte that plans for

Please vote YES on the Senior
· Citizen Levy, November 2, 1993.
They need your support and so do
others, like myself.
MaryM. Lyon
Middleport. Ohio

No one bas ever accused FERC
of frugality. When tho agency Iluilt
)day-c:are center for its cuirent site
10 1989, it cost ova- $1 miUion but
initially only enrolled six ciJil~n.
A 1992 investi~ation by the Government Opelllltons Subcommittee
on Environment, Energy and Natural Resources;headed by Rep.
Mike Synar, 0-0icla., d,eiCf!Dined
thatFERC's problems with wasting
money "appear. to stem in large
transportation and sale or natural pan from an attitude by administtagas and elecaicity, is already fore- tive managers at FERC that the
seeing budget overruns.
commission is somehow a 'special'
It requested $5 million to $7 entity not subject to manr procemillion in ' 'above srandard costs" dw:es and regulations applicable to
- items not allowed by !he Gcner- O!her federal agencies."
.
al Services Adminis11'81ion, the fed' PERC also fits into a !liger' p!ccralJ!overnment's landlord. Some &lt;.Jure of fedtral office ~.profli-·
of th1s·.extra money is earmarked ... 'gacy. We tepc&gt;rted earlier this year
for essential computer cen~rs and . that -while the nation is already
hearing rooms. But there's also a: · awasll'iit 400 million square feet of
rrill factor: $64,()()0 for two loclcer. unol:cupic&lt;J QffJCC space, the fedcrrooms (in ,11ddltion to the fitness al'·pCC~~ment bas $11.4 billion of
cente_rr);; nirie smolcing lounges 'for · office construction u'nde..Way. In
$31,000 10ta1; five private kitchen Citi~s where commercial office
anil·privatC batl!roorns for the eon- ' ..~ rates are as high ai 30 pervenience of the agency's comnris- .;e.i:el!.t. the federal government consioners at· a cost of $83,000 total; .i tiliJICS to fuel a building boom in a
two escalators for $90,000; 'and bust matkeL McGue arglies lhat the
$270,000 for a day-tarcccntez.
_ !'ew '~lll8l'l" , building FERC envi-

FERC's new buDding will provide
"the best bang for the buck for taxpayers." But F.ERC, which is
responsible for setting rateS for the

By Jack Anderson
and
' MiChael Binstein

C.•uJ~ WORMW&lt;F'!I' "~b

Another complaint
line.
Dear Editor
We hear some of the village
Here we go again - another
complaint about the Rutland village officials are saying we haven't
been out of service for a day. What
sewer system.
Our problems continue - On would you say we had. When they
OcL 19, we found the pump stock work on the lines ~d they're apan
on again, at 5 o'clock I called. Han or when the pump switch is pulled,
answered our callat9 o'clock. The or when we had raw sewage sitting
lines were clofged. He worked in a tank on the lawn.
When this pump won't work we
around the sw11ch box until he
reduce
our usage until they get us
finally g01 the pump to work again.
On Tuesday, OcL 19, we found the back on line. Is this complete serpump on again. This time the man vice?
How much longer is this situacouldn't get the pump to work at
tion
going to lasL
. all. He pulled the switch, and told
Roy and Margaret Johnson
us they would be back on WednesLeading Creek Road
. day to find the trouble. On
Middleport.
Wednesday they got us back on

Seeks yes vote
Dear Editor:
I am writing in behalf of all the
senior citizens in Meigs County
who have illnesses or are handi·
capped in some way. I am one of
those people and I don'tknow what
I would do if I didn't have the
Senior Citizens Center. It has
. helped me in so many ways,1 can't
begin to tell you how much. The

girls 'come in once a week for two
hours (unless I ask for more lime).
They take me to the doctor, do a lot
of my laundry, and are always
there for us . And I surely hope
everyone will vole "yes" for tht.-~..,...
levy.
~ .,__;:
ThantYou,

_........._--

EvelY!' Ca$1C
MiddlepOrt

"

rations too.
I am getting tired of this and I
want these people to know that 174
Cole Street and 160 Cole Sb'eet is
now being protected by a video
camera and they will go to jail
when we fmd out who it is.
I would also like to stare that we
are not responsible for any accidents to anyone on our property
without permission. You people
out there need to know that this
video camera will be turned on at
daik and turned off at dawn.
Mrs. William Fink
Middleport

0

what they want. Coach Deem said
they would be sick of basketball
when they get older. But do not
forget to tell them when they get
into the high achoollevel, they can
be cut from the team. Only 12 players make the team. So what happens to the average and below
average players? Each school could
find time in the gym for ~e third
graders. I know that last year the
school at Tup.pers Plains .was
empty a lot. It is just a matter of

Mr. Shue never interfered with

basketball teams or the all-star
teams. Eastern never cared about
getting any elementary basketball
programs up until the parents got
one started.
,
Ralph co!Crruin
Tuppers Plains; Ohio

•

'
·
By The AIIOcllted Pnaa
Today is friday, OcL 29, the 302nd day of 1993. Thtle are 63 dsys left
tho yell.
· Toda_y'sHi&amp;bli&amp;htinHislory:
.
; On Qct. 2!f; 1~, "Black Tuesday" deacended upon the New York
'stodt Ex.clllnie; PriCe. con~ ll!"id 'panic scllli!g and thousands of
ill~ I )l•Wea*1ttliPedoutu Amc:nc:a sOielt Deptession began.
, Onla illil
' 1111.:: - - • - ............ the E-l•·h ---'-,military' ·adven~
.,..... ...,..._
161 8 . 5 .. .. ..,.. ...,._.,.,
llltlpocc.wasoxecuiedlnl.ondon.
•
Ia 1682, die rt-r4'1erof~sylvania, William Penn, landed at what ts
DOW Cbollei';Pcillil.
,
. Ia 1901, Pt: r""• McKinley's assasain, Leon Czolgosz, was electro-

:m

clllliCL

Ia 1911, • -'""'- ne...............
. n J-..h Pulitzer died in CharleSton,

S.C. l
............. -.........-··,..-· ..........
.
1 1a 1913.dle~klal'l)ukey was proclaimed.
.
'
Ia !940.
ot V(~r Henry L. Stimlon ~ tbe first number,
,. ••• rlla'lftn&amp;p!l e•lme mllillry draft.
,'1 lit IM7,b · •&amp;ltlltly~ Cleveland Preston died inBalliittcire

sKUIWT

Ever since the end of the Cold followed that up with the brisk
War, this country has been in the occupation of Saudi Arabia and the
midst of a great debate over the cir- oil emirates, the whole global econcumstances under which American omy (which is dependent on Midforces may properly be asked to
die.
The standard answer to that
somber question has historically dlc 'Eastern oil) would have been at
been, "When, and only when, his mercy. President Bush, to his
some vital American interest is at erernal credit, recognized this, and
stake." That was certainly the case quickly mobilized a miJitary·coaJiduring the entire 40-year span of uon that ended such hopes.
·
the Cold War. The Korean and
Subsequently however, CNN's
Vietnamese wars were properly ubiquitous cameras have treated the
understoOd as simply sldnnishes in world 10 a l)orrifying aeries of picthe great battle for national survival tures of bullet-riddled Bosnians and
being fought out between the starving Somalis, and powerful
superpowers.
pressures have been exerted' to
When the Cold War ended, and employ American forces to end
rhe United States emerged as the these tragedies - at the cost, if
only remaining superpower, it was necessary, .ef American lives. A lot
inevitable that the question would of effort has bee!! invested.in ingesoon arise, "Which of the many nious explanations of why some
crises that arc always affiicting the "vital American interest" Jllstifiea
world warrant military intervention such a cosL
·
by tht; United States?"
Now, however, New York
By pure coincidence, one of the Times columnist William Safue, in
earliest passed the crucial test of a characteristic'liurst o£ int!lllecwal
involving a vital American interest. • honesty, has reformulated the case
if Saddam Huuein had been for global intervention. I- happen ti&gt;
allowed to seize Kuwait, and had disagree with him.pas5ionarely, but

=:g~~s~~i~:J!e~~~
- what
third grade talcing what is left _

:Today In history

,

. sions would help it "get the most
out of people that we can."
.
Should GSA decide against
McGue and FERC, the agency's
lawyers hav_e ~!ready drawn up
wish list for renovations to the old
offices. They have asked for ali
expariiled law library that should be
next d001to their offtces. They fret
that if it's moved to another floci,
they would have to walk 100 far to
gain access. Other FERC adminis·
trators have been recently spotte4 ·
taking decorating tips from ornate
federal courttooms in lnticipation
of revamping the agenc:y's hearing
rooms.
FERC's_moving request comes
against the backdrop of Vice President AI Gore's National Performance Review, which is trying 19
win disciples to the cause of
"downsizing." Gore seems to hav'e
won few converts at a "littleknown, arcane regulatory commission.''
·BOONDOGGLE OF . THE
MONTH- An unemployed factorY worker was recently retrained.to
become a massage therapist. Here's
the rub: It was done w1th $16,700
of taxpayer money under somethin!! called the Trade Adjustment
Asststance program, which was
designed to help workers deal with
the threat of imports and global
competition.
This was one reason why Labor
Department investigators charge
TAA with falling ·"short of meeting the tiaining and re-employment
goals implied by the act for a substan~al portion of participants."
Congress appropriated $71 million
for TAA in 1991 and $72 million
in 1992. But investigators found
lhat one year after leaving the program, as few as 10 percent of the
workers were employed in trainingrelined jobs whtch gave them at
least 80 percent of their former
wages.
While the average cost of training each worker is only $4,467,
prices can vary. TAA spent ·
$27,617to help ooe worker receive
a bachelor's degree in ceramics;
$115,000 for an experienced laborer
to bceorne a chef; and $20,423 for
a maintenance worker to receive a
masrer's degree in an education.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binsteln 'a re writers for United
Feature Syadkate,lnc.

a

Area deat;h

Sdolo Tntltftl to .eet
The Scipio Township TrulleeS
will liiCCIIlll Nov. 3 • 6:30 Jl.nl. in
the~ Town HaiL
Play to be pet '-ed
Tbe Mounaineer Opera House,
Milton, W.Va., wW preaent Petticoat Junction on S-.day • 8 p.m.
For more information can 304-733·
2721.
Bazaar aad craft allow
shelrerhelpedhergaini~tclence.
Saint Paul United Methodist
"It helped you undtnland yourself Church
will have ita annual bazaar
bettu, it ~lped you help ~ourself," and bake sale oo Nov. 5 and 6 from
' slie said. ''Thanks to Serenity House, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. The event is beins
I've become a stronger pct80il and I sponsoral by the Willillg Wottm.
can stanc1 up fer myself.•
ome1atia1 c1a11 o11erec1
The Jackson Basketball Orfi-

!

Weather

Soatll-Cutral Oblo
Tonight, rain likely, pos,ibly
becoming mixed with snow late.
Low In the low 30s. Chance of precipitation 60 percent. Saturday,
cloudy with a chance of rain or
snow showers. High near 40 .
Chance of pn:cipitatioo 50 pen:enL
EK!encled forecast:
Sunday tbrou1h Tuesday:
Fair on Sunday, except for a
chance of snow showers northeast.
Lows in the 20s. Higha 35-40. Fair
on Monday. and Tuesday.

Hospital news
Veteratlli Memorial
Thursday

Admissions: Octoca Ward,
Pomeroy.
Discharged: Nelson Watson,
Linda Brunty, and Van Barber.
HOLZER. MEDICAL CENTER
Oct. 18 diJcbarces - Heather
MCFadden, Mrs. Gary Michael and
son, Linda Jenkins, Justin Hypes
and Pansy Thompson.·

ciab AJP:iltion will be cm+rtini •• adult ersucaticia claal feW
tlac Rcrelltd in offic;Wq hiP
IChool 'b'l'Jrttball. 'Die -ceahl
compll:lioa mthe clall wll eaebl4
the official to offteiale ill levels
eKCCJX for vanity for the 1993;94
se11on. The first clau will &gt;be
Wednesday at Meiss Hiab al 7
p.m. lllllnK:tor will be Dave Jeftk•
IRS.

Craft allow to be IMid
The Racine United Methodist
Wo.men will be apouorina: a
Cluisunu BIIZIII' on Dec:. 4 from 9
a.m. to 4 p.m. in the IDCiltii'OOill DC
the Racine UMC. Craften CJn
reacrve a table for a $10 fee. For
further informatioo call 949-2454,
949-2881 or 949-2013.
Order at Eallera Star
The Racine Lodge and Raci\)e
Chapter or Order of Eastern. Star
will have clean up day starting at: 9
a.m. Saturda,l! at the Lodge Hall.
The f'OUP will also have initiatioo
. practice lll1 Sunday 813 p.m.
Sl'ug shoots ltllrt
lzaak Walton League slug
shoots start Sunday at I p.m. at
lzaak Walton Farm on Boy Scout
Camp Road.

Please Vote For and Elect

To The County Board of Education
•13 Years experience on Meigs Local Board
•19 Years business experience In Pomeroy
•Married to the former Patty Haggy
•2 Grandchildren attending SouU :em Local and 3 attending Meigs
Local
•Active member of the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist church since 1968.
At present time I hold the offices of Chrl•tlan Education Director,
Adult Sunday School Teacher and hold a position on the Official
Board .

I Would Appreciate Your Support on
Election Day, Tuesday, Nov. 2nd
Thank You
Robert E. Barton
Paid for by candidate, 34110 BR 7, Po!MI'OY, OH. 4&amp;711

HU·R·RV, BEAT THE.
COBBLINS TO THESE DEALS
AND SAVE, SAVE, SAVE!

at least he has statCd his case hon- latest lucky beneficiary of Ameriestly.
ca's ",democratic ideals." JeanSafire argues that Americans Bertrand Aristide was overwheltUmust be prepared "to expend blood ingly elected president by the vatand treasare in the establishment of ers of Haiti, wasn't he? What
order that protects self-rule beyond choice have we, then, save (o
our borden.'' And you can stop expend American '"'blood and treawasting yoilr tears over sending sure" (suirting, Safire rather tob
American boys to die in such -~igh- casually suggests, with "CIJ\
minded adventures: "They're not agents" and "air cover") tQ
boys'; they arc men and w(lmen impose him forcibly on the resistwho volunteer to be hired and ing military of that pathetic coontrained to kill other people when . try?
•
nece5$Bl'Y to defend oo• our dem9What does it mauer that Aristide
cratic ideals."
·.
is a jm&gt;-communist, anti-Ameriel!B
Whateva- ~lsc you may thinlc of ex-priest r~cently described by
the Safue Doctrine, it bas at least President Bush's National Security
the virtue of clarity. ·'IJtis country, Council director, Gen . Brent
he insists, must be' prepared to • Scowcroft, as "a certified psy; .
expclld both "b1001! al)d treilst1111" chopath," or that the hurnan-nghiS
to estBblish. '.' orcjer .that WPI~ts organization Americas Watch .con~
self-rule,'' 'apparently anyWlierc on fmns his enthusiasm for the brutil
the globe that such .order is dueat- ''necklacing" of his foes with
ened. And if that costs American Darning tires filled with:ga5oline? .
March bravely forward, boy~
lives oo• well,' they volunteered,
didn't they? And they con~nted, (and girls). Remember that it'·s
moreover, to be trained to "kill· "our democratic ideals" that you
other ·peopJe" who 'et in the way are' being asked to die for- no!
of "our-democratic ·Ideals." Tum- . Aristldc.
· about's fair p~y. a t • in war. . ·
WIUiam Ruaber Is a syadlcati
So open ,a few mo~e- g@vesites , eel writer for Newspaper Eater·
at Arlington and contemplate the prise Aasoc:lltloa.
.

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r;~PerMo.

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willlife :after -death -b~ ·tike?

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Dinner was just about over. The _friends and eating her app!{p~.' .; :0 the ship would seem to get:smll'/
was a far deeper symbol
litUe company was ptheled around
lbe idea lhat when we die',we and smaller· until it sinks -beyond . of the eternal borne than the cold,
the dining room table,, having will n01 be am lhat anything has the horizan·to be seen oo more. · . · shelterless deserts .or astronomic81
dessert.
changed :- thlt•we will go,right oo
BUt what has, lia~nOd tc?· the space."
.
·.
.
A member of the group posed a
. .: . · , 1 ~9YIIP' abo8rd the SIP!'.? ~mg. '
In the end, we may have to give
question for the stately, gray-llairM
·' ·
· :• . · ·:: ·He haS passed·out or the si,¥lit of · up,our quest for details about die
woman sitting at the h~d or the
,fl~
~~iS fri~nds ontsh~. Bul!l~e ts.'dle,: lifestyle and;Ooor plan of heaven.:
table. She was the mistrilss of the
·
• ·.,.,"same· as ever. •He ts not COIISCIOU•·
• We Can take our stand with the
house and one of the leading mys- eating.our'
pie_ ;j a'~ • , o~ hivin&amp;.~ any horiioa.Jin~; country doctor who Was viSiting:.
tics of die time - which was the of great comfort to many, people,
Hts stll'f!)Undings ~ unchanged. . terminally i)l patient in his home, ;
Hugh Studdert-Kennedy, the . He soea 00,~ ~distant counu,y · .. "'?oc," s!'i~ the dying ma9,
earlr l900s.
. ' Wliat would happen !0 you," authOr lirid journalist,' felt dial wav ,~nd 'there hvea and IQVe.J and . r,ou re a relitl?eus person. What
the guest 8lked, "if IJOmeciliicarne
: '
'
•
,' ' ·' enjQyaas ~fore...
! - wtll heaven be ' T~
.
in here ~i now and•~ a ·bull~! 100~ • iWa!e tJt8t, Je8us, in
P,rtlm ~ ·time he ~OUt or : 'li~e old Jlhystctaf! p~~sed a
throu~h your head?"
·· •
FoUrlh Gospel had more dian 'once ,the.ib¥Y tnll) one of the liUie file . ,m~t aild ~ he S81d: !3'J,,~
· W1thout so much u 1 moment's said thil belie~ "shaU neVa llCC streets df L!lndon '· lhat Sunday' . you heir that scratdling oulside the .
p,ause, the paaician ~y ~. death.:' But the ijlca had never · evening, said Suddert-Kennedy, he ' dpor~ That:• my dog. I brousbJ
Why, I "':ould go nght on eallng teally cqme llomc 'to him .with any ~ad no more fear of death; . : .,• hi!J18long.wlth me ~y. He 'Y811.ts.
myapple.p1e."
• ·
· vividness.
,
··
; T,he apple pie ind.~ lhip:are., }II come 1n. He's never been ul
She~ not mean to deny that, , Then·, oile ,Sunday evening in ·.mctaphQrs for wl!at bfe 1n heaven ll'l,l~· ~e .has 110 idea wl)a~ ~h~.
to ~er r n • she would~ to 1..onoon he went into Westminster , will be lilie.
.
.
• roo'!' is like. He onl~knows o;t·
~ qu ~~~ She:eant } ~ . -'~Y..' .
. ·
. MetBphQQ are the laDsuage-of
~lcno'h!tl;:. ~];':']
0
ne.
. Ill!'_ aware
. · _,,· · 'Wtlberforc_
oo (1759-1833), the .•. the poet rather tlian th~ scientist, ,
w
ven ~ . · ..
ex~ &lt;if dYII!&amp;; Ufe TtOUI&lt;(go • gi-eat Bnlllsli cleric, wu pn!ilching.· But. they are not, on dilt ICCOUDt; know only ~e thing ,abOut 11 ~
on for her 'M tas ifnoth1ng liad
' Deatli, aaid Wilberforce, bad anyleuuue.,.
, .
· Clo!Jil!lhenl·. · ·• .
· :·
· happened, She would go right on ilwaY. lllmedtlbim lilie beitisoo _· The poet often c-=•~q 111
This prospect of bemg in God.t_"'
.~xptzl~J. the joy she was feel- , I ahi~
.nina for a ~t Cld!ll'Y· ' of lllllletbiq tl1ll II
y .,.-if,·. presen~ in heaven .- WhaiCVCiJl,_
mg •while bemg surrounded by ~ To
Wllehini fiom the llliale. not
reaL SOIMibiiur' lhat · ~llojmtght .\ie fou~ In_ that othC!f .
1
•
•
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_
.
illtiddlll
the !UiofUI.7 ,
wor d - led Dante! PollnJ. ·thlt,
BgyjJt's ~inai PeniniUia. ' ' · · ' · · ·
·
'·
•· &lt;- ac:.....:. if 1·t ~-- enlarxed ct.......... an aDd long-time editor .,.~
"in 19~ "The Hwltl'!)',!:Brinkley RepQrt" ~as rmc·;'iughtly 'our~"'O'fdio ~CIII, it TilLs Cht,~i}an Herald mag~zlno,l&lt;t
TVnew~replaciDa ''TheC!-JNewiCIIJVIII.
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In 1964, ihlewa ~ off wtth the. Sw of India and other pqs from
Father ,Georae 'l'yrrell once wW be ibe ~Y after they ,IIY r~·
the American MIIICUIII Of NruuraPiillllO' in New Yptk. The Sllr and oblelved that "die lleMn tblt lly delll."
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•r~.~tbes-i:-w.crilil, llrael_~ .anin~~ of_ --~~ihe~alioaal~.forWomen_wasfouncled. .. -~- . • .. =:e:r:,~~~~:~~~~ :.,.::;::~.~,.~ Ea~r:..-~. _
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she hdpea, Shawn uid abe will find
the COinJC to write to her boyfriend
and tell him,the n:lalionlbip II over.
Sb&amp;wn was helpcid by Scmlity
Houle after .. &amp;r8J1'11CIII wilh bet
mother left her and bet cbild homeleu, The lhell« boused ha' until abe
was ~le to move iJm • lii(MbiiCIIL
Although still uncia' the shadow of
domeltic violence. Shawn said the

,..

William A. Rusher ·

Third grade basketball issue
Dear Editor
This is about Eastern
Local Schools third grade basketball. Some people are against it people who do not have children in
· the third grade. But it is okay for
: third graders td play on a fourth
• grade team ln some schools.
Several reasons discussed with
me and high ,achool coach Tony
:0eem and Doris Wells, head teach·
er at Tuppera Plains Elementary
were insurance, 100 young to play
: basketball and not enough time in
: the gym for third gladers.
If insurance was needed, I
agreed 10 pay for IL Too young to
pfay basWbttll? Some schools start
at the fll'll grade level. What about
bascblltl? They play baseball when
they are in ·kindcrgarten. What
· about' the Jlarents of the third
: ~ 'l:heY pey taxes too. What
: about the'third ~ tharwant to
·.play? 1·suess tt does not matter

now:

dead right
she said.
came back to town after visiting her
Today, Judy is 1 member of a 12- mother In Charleaton, W.Va.
step recovery propam. She earned
He 'began choking her bcemtsc she
her OED in 1990 and in March will had not asked; his jtCrrnission to leave
eel~. her fourth anniversary of town, she aaid.
,
mamage to a non-abusive husband.
"lt's)ikc he was trying to dominate
bepile the 180-deJtee turn in her me."
l,ife, Judy aaid her experiences still
The couple fought about once evaffccthetlelfealeenlonadailybasis. ery t.Iu= weets. Shawn said druga
She has to COIIIciously ll!nlggl~ 10 and alcobol we~e 1101 the cause keep ~self image up.
stephei. beat hei whenever he felt
"The,old th6ughls CRlCJl back in," J'ustified because of something she
1M said.
did.
Wlii!e JiJdy tebuilds her life, an- Thebeatingsoftenn:sultedinblack
~victim lives l!ftdcr a iha!low of eyes and brusies. ADd on one occafear. .:
sian, a fractured wrist.
Shav.ln.'s boyfriend Stephen, the
AmanphonedShaWrtatherhouse
fatberqfherchild,haSbeeninprison while her boyfriend was visting.
· ·
for •.tw~ years · for stabbing a man Stephen ripped the phone out of the
' H ld F tt ·
'
dllfing ,an arguii1CIIL
wall and attempted 10 hit her in the
aro e Y
She ~ Jceeps in tOuch with him, ~ with a broom4liclc.
Harold W. Felty, II, 64, of althougll,hCwasnotspcWngtoher
Shawnbloclcedtheblowwithhcl
Hampllln Hollow Rolld; LangsViUc,
at~ time of the lntervitw ·because arm, resulting in a fraclure which
died Thursday, Oct. 28, 1!193, at she-"'·"·" ·to send him m
' 'oney ·
was-·•·•atthehospitalc.......,..ncy
Veterans Memorial' HospitBI fol'"'""""
·
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The' jealous type, Stephen sends room.
loWID
Shawn "'-·•··'·"letters
' promlSlD'
· g
Medical workers Died to get her to
, 1928 ·
uu"""""''6
Born on 0 ct. 29
·
·
,
m
to
kt'll
her
or
make
·
her
so
she
I
. Sharon, w. Va., he wa5 the son of
~I them who attacked her, but she
· the late Walter and Dolly Glover "wouldn't even want to look in a wouldn't give his name.
Feuy. He was a retired coal miner mirror" if she sees another man.
They never learned that Shawn's
' and carpenter.
•
Their relationship ' is in itS sixth anacker was the man who had driven
· . He belonged to the Full Gospel year.
her 10 the hospital.
· Lighthouse Church tit Pomeroy; He
Although he will not appear before "I know ifl had ~charges, he
. is a veteran of the Marine Corps, the parole board until March, Shawn would have gone to jail," she said. "I
World War II, and a member of the said she stiUjumps every time some- would have been more scared after
United Mine Workers of America, one is at the door.
he got out of jail."
Local No. 1857.
"If he were to knock on my door
Shawn bas entertained the idea of
He is IIUI'Yived by hil wife of 45 nghtnow,ldon'tknowwhatiwould breakingitoffwithStephen,butfear
· years, Virgie Arbutus Richards do," she said. "Ican'tlivcwondering keeps her in the relationship.
· · Felly. LangsviUe; a daugbtez, Tam- if he's going to get out of jail and
"It wasn't that easy," she said. "I
· · mie Felty, three Jons, Terry L. come down and ldU me."
couldn'tjust walk up to him and say,
· Fetty of Sprinafield, Robert WesThe couple began dating in Octo- 'ldon'twanttobebotheredwithyou,
ley Fetty of Pomtn?Y· 1and Harold her 1985. Three years later, she was leavemcalone.'Hefcielsit'snotover
· W. Fetty, Ill of Midd eport; two
·
'I h
·•
..
. 'th hi ch'ld
brothers, Wai!U-B. Fetty of Balli- . pregnan1 w!
s 1 ·
unn e says 11 s over.
. · more alid Wallace Fetty of Point
Shawn ~d she was never hurt be·
Despite everything he has done to
Pleasant, w. va.; five sisters, Billie fon; or dunng the pre~ancy and had her, Shawn said she still lov.es
· Ann Bufftngton of Georgia. Eileen no tdea Stephen was viOlent.
Stephen.
HaD Phyllis Cadle and Mary Fetty
"He seemed like a nice guy, she
"We hl\(1 enough good times to
. all of Middleport; Gloria Jean~ said. "Heclidn'tseemlike the violent cover up the bad times."
· of Columbus; 11 grandchildren, type. He's only violent when he
Shawn said she may have found
: three SJeit-&amp;ranc:1children, onesrep- doesn't get his way."
,
someone who will make her happy
great-jireat pandchildren, and sev- . TheftrsttimeStephenshowedsigns and care for her and her child.
· era! meces ind tiephews.
of a violent streak was after Shawn
If the relationship wrns out the way
Besides his pareniB he was pre~"!""~~"!""~JII!!I'!"'!!~!"!'!~'!'!!'~~~~~~·
ceded in death by a daughter, BarIIIILIIILIDIII
bara Jean Fetty, a grandson. Tetry
Lee Fetty, Jr., a daughter-in-law,
II COOiff ·IDac&amp;lftO~I
· Trcsa Rose Fetty, and three broth'If you - coneerned about the morel bno•tdo~ of our n811on,
·ers.
the removlil of rellgloua freedom mid preyer from the ci...room,
Funeral services will be held
you need to vote tor a Bible Blillevlng Chrlat._. BualnMeman who
Monday at II a .m. at the Full
SUCH A MAN
·Gospel Light House Church in
will ltllnd up tor whitt 11 right. BOB BARTON IS
•
Pomeroy•.Pastor Roger Huntez will
With v•re of ·~ u chlilrtlllln ol the Po.-oy School
·officiate and burial will be in Miles
Boanl, d..p Chrlltlln conviction, and uncompromlelng faith, Bob
· Cemetery or Rutland. Friends may
Barton will ltllnd tor montllty lf'd lnt-urtiy.
call at. the Birchfield ·Funeral
VOTE FOR BOB BARTON FOR
Home, Rutland, 2 to. 4 and 7 to 9
MEIGS COUNTY BOARD OF JUC.AllO_N.
· Sunday.

Who pays for democratic idealism?

Property protected by video
Dear Editor:
I am very upset with the people
· who can't keep their hands to
. themselves.
· Every year we decorate ror Hal·towcen. We go all out for it for a
:VelJ special reason. It is our grand·son s birthda}' and we try to make
it very spcc1al for him since he
lives next door to me.
His mommy and daddy also go
all out. We should be able to do
what we wanL This year they had
pumpkins carved oui and sitting on
their porch. Needless to say, they
were destroyed. Last Christmas
tl)ey desuoYed,our Christmas deco-

~

~ 11m abe decided to - help.
- wi jlllt dloqht one clay thee had to
• be IOillelhin&amp; beller for me and my
•' chilllnla "lhe aid
Judy Cllled the Woodland CCnter's
· CRISJSUNE wht'l'e she wasrefemd
• toSeienityHouac. Theshcltez'utaff
helped bet iato a drug and alcohQI
treatment ~ an.d placed her
c~ with family members while
she repined control o( her life.
Afler 27 daya at the •heltez, Judyfound an apartment and moved out
oo her own.
"lf Serenity House hadn't shown
me that different way•. I would be

.

.
.
Big budget for little-known commiSSion

DEVOTED TO THE IN'I'ERE81'8 OJ' 1111: KEIG8-IIASOI'I AREA

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

Page, 2-The Oaiiy Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
'

111 Ccnut Street
Pomen17, Ohio

Pea•

~ Dom~s#c... ....:c~•=tla=*.;:;;:;,Jrom=P;.;::•~1------:--------------- ---Announcements-~-......•

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

The Dally Sentl~.l

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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OPEN
SUNDAY .

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The Daily Sentinel
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FrlciJiy, OCtober 21, 1ttl.
Pegs 4·

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Friday, October 29, 19$3

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PomeroY;-Middleport, Ohio

£~

~. Thirty~nine

AP Sportl Writer
It's getting down lO thai lime of
year when visions of trophies dance
through the heads of coa;hes, play-

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NEW YORK (AP) - Thirty- infielder Alan Trammell, Milwau, nine more players today became kee outfaelder Rotiin Yount, New
eligi~le to file for free age,ncy as York Yll!kees pitchers Steve Farr
· the f1rst of baseball's offseason and Frank Tanana, Toronto outdeadline days passed.
· field~r Rickey Henderson, Blue
..
Only one new player, San Fran- Jays .pitcher Mark Eichhorn,
.;: cisco' catcher Jeff ,.Reed, was Atlanta pitchers Steve Betlrosian
~ - offered arbitration ThUI'sday, the and Jay Howell, New- York Mets
; deadline for playei:s covered by the first ' baseman Eddie Murray ,
~.:; restriction against repeat free agen- Philadelphia pitcher Larry Ander: ) cy in a five-year~· Earlier in the sen and Phil lies outfielder Jim
~: week,_the I.~s ~ngeles . D~gers · Eisenreicb.
~i ~the aib1tration offer to pitcher
Some, like Murray and Eric
•·· Kevm Gross.
Davis, had clauses in their con'
Iflhi: players don't agree lO new tracts that prevente4 teams from
deal~ by Jan. 18, they will making jlrbitration offers and
ex~hangc figures with tlieir·glubs blocking their right to free agency.
along with the rest of the younger Clubs still have to decide whelher
players in. salary arbitration,. those lO exercise options on Davis, Tramwilh 3-6 years of major league •ser- mel and Yount.
vice.
Orsulak, 31, hit .284 wilh eight
· - Two players who began the day homer$ and 35 RBis, fmishing secwaiting to hear about arbitration ond in avemge. He made $700,000
offers agreed to new contracts. this season. The new deal gives
Outfielder Joe Orsulak and the · him a $100,000 signing bonus and
New York Mets seuled on a $1.7 salariesof$800,000perseason: He
million, two-year deal, and pitcher. also lias the chance to earn an addiMark Davis and San DiegQ agreed tiona! $200,000 each year in peron a one-year contract fo~ $400,000 formance bonuses.
guaranteed, $12.6 milliori less than
Davis, who won the 1989 NL
the fO!If·Year deal he .got when he Cy Young Award with ,lhe Padres
': left the Padres lO sign with Kansas after saving a league-high 44
:; City after the 1989 season.
games, drops from a $3.25 million
: · · Detroit Tigers left-bander David salary ibis season. The 33-year-old
: : : well~. was the only player to file left-bander was with lhree teams in
. " Thursday, increasing the total to 1993. He was traded from Atlanta
:: 37. The ~ditional39 increased lhe to Philadelphia on April 13,
:: Lotal of those still eligible lO file to released on July 2, and signed by
!· 72, including nine waiting lO hear the Padres on July 10.
:: wh~ther clubs will exetCise 1992
He appeared in 35 games for
•, op11ons.
San Diego, going 0-3 with four
:. · Pitcher Tim Leary found out saves and a 3.S2 ERA. The four
:: Thursday thai the Seattle Mariners saves were the most since he had
:! won~t exercise their $3.25 million six wilh Kansas City.in 1990.
:• option on him.
..
Davis' contract includes
•', Among the players not offered $175,000 in possible performance
:• arbitration were Boston catcher bonuses: $25,000 if he's wilh the
Tony Pena, California outfielder club in May, and $50,000 each for
•j Chili Davis, Detroit outfielders June, July and August
:, Eric Davis and Kirk Gibson, Tigers

TOP .
top · · In the
Bomber
division at Vln.ton Raceway were,l-r, Bert Flora,
cb81Jlplcin;
Bobby Bailey, oi' Reedsyl,le, the 1993 Skyline Champ; and Delbert
Roush,

Newman wins featu:r~e at Vinton Raceway

':

Conard Newman won the V-8 victory, taking first across tile startBomber feature at Vinton Race- finish line on:·the white flag lap. ·
Newman and .S.milh swapped
way, however, Pomeroy driver
Todd Smith, ~!aimed the season some paint lll! lhe last lap in some
points championship at Vinton real door•IQ.dixr raeing wilh NewRaceway Park during the last man romiilgtoufon top 81 the finpoints race of the season.
ish.
Smith also finished second in
Scott Williamson claimed the
the feature event to Newman ·in the Road Hog feature over Ben CotterSmith/TNT Racing T-7.
ill and Don Yost, while ,Alva SulliDelmas Goff claimed the first van and Leroy Dunaway .followed.
Bomber heat followed by Smith
Carry hyne claimed the heat
and Rick Blake of Reedsville, the over Wi!Hamson and Cotterill. The
second place finisher in points in secona heat was won 'by Chris
the Bomber division.
Bickle over Robert Cornell and Jim
Newman claimed die V-8 fea- · Borders.
.
ture over Smith, Goff, Adrian
.,.Roo,ky Blake,,Reedsville, won
Doles, Howard MiUer and Kevin, his sixth heat race of the, season· in
Dixon. Smith had led the entire his fo'ur cylinder Road Hog ahead
race and was well on his way to

term round her way to vldlory
lane sever.al tiDieS .this season
in the Powder 1'1!11' division at
Vinton Raceway Park.
Although very lady-like in
appearance Cotterill was
aggressive behind the wheel.
As a result of her success, Cotterill received a trophy and
check from Vinton nagman
Bob Thomas In VIctor-y Lane
at Vinton Racewa.r. ·

Marauders 7th
graders rotnp

Watson hospiu.ll~

Former Eastern High S_chool
teacher and football coach Ray
Watson suffered a cardiac. arrest
Sawrday before lhe slart of the PiuWVU football game in Morgan.
. town, W.Va.
•
Watson is 'in Room 107~ o'f
Ruby Memorial Hospital in Morgantown, where he is expected to
undergo surgery next week. . .
Watson led Eastern lO a wmnmg
season six years ago and started,!he
next season, but health problems
forced him out of coaching after a
. couple of games, when··Ron Hjll
· and Don Eichinger became co· coachesoflheEagles. ·.
;
Watson laler became principal
: of Wirt County in West Virginia~
.~ where he recently retired after
nearly four decades of coaching
and teaehing.

of Tony Roush and David Lively.
The second heat was a family
affair, consisting entirely of Meigs
County kin, as father Delbert
Roush finished second behind son
Frank Roush and ,ahe.ad of son .
Darin Roush. ,
Frank Roush won the .fourcylinder Road Hog feature ahead of
Delbert Roush and Don Yost .
Blake, an Eastern High student,
was trying for his sixth feature win
of lhe season, but was caught in a
ferider bender with Roush and was
sent to the tail.
Ginny Adkins won first place in
the heat. for four-cylinder Bo!ll~
ahead of Reedsville's Brian Bailey
Contiimed on page 5

Meigs ~igh.th. gra&lt;ters. .

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win 22-18 over vc

Meigs I'umped out to a 16-0 lead
at the ha f and added two more
touchdowns in the third period and
went on to defeat Viliton 30&gt;-0 in
seventh grade foot!lall action Tuesday. The win gi.ves the Little
Marauders of Carsoti Crow and.
Bryan Zirkle a perfect 7-o mark for
the season.
'
.Jeremiah B
scor(d the
farst two
the'Little
Marauders
point.
Humphreys, dcsp~te playirag

.

By Dave Hartis. ·
'
Brad DavenpOrt's 16 yard 'pass
to A. I. Vaughan witli .6:43 .left
gave lhe Meigs t.Jarauders a hean
stopping 22-18 win.'over Vinton
County in eightli grade f90tball
action W~dl)esday ., .evening..
Vaughan 1s touch\iown ·r.eception,
his setojld of lhe game came aftCr
Chad Han soil recovered a Viking
fumble.

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3

ers and fans.
This is the stretch. run in college
footb~J. a string Of three or four
weeks when every game can decide
a championship, a bo~l berth or a
playof( spot. Or every team can
have a hand in denying its opponent of Ill of diose hono:rs.
Eight Ohio .colleges are ranked
and sUI!. hold out hope of playing
beyond the end of the regular season.
Ohio State is ranked third and
leads the· Big Ten Conference by a
game heading into Saturday's
matchup with No.l2 Penn State. A
victory by the Buckeyes would
move them closer to .a trip to
Pasadena for the Rose Bowl: an
Ohio Stale loss and as many as five
teams could be in a dead heat for

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with a non-refundable d~posit
·by Novemb~;22;. 199,3. Polaris
· · lli~l guatante~ av~)abiHty of
. r thl .model you ciJQOsc. . "' '

ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) While Tim Salmon didn't get off to
a spectacular start and his season
ended'2 1/l weeks eaify, the numbers he posted in between were
good enough.
The California Angels outfielder
hit .283 with 95 RBis and 31 home
runs, tied for ninth in the AL. For
lhat, he became the fourth American Leaguer to win Rookie of lhe
y ear honors in a unanimous vote.
Salmon's statistics would have
been even more impressive if he
hadn't missed the final 2 1/l weeks
of the season. I!ut an inning after
hitting a grand slam in the Angels'
15-1 rout of Seattle on Sept. 15,
Salmon brob his left ring finger
while fielding a line drive. ·
"After my season was over, and
I got hurt, then I could really get
away from lhe game a little bit and
look at what my final numbers
were,lhen I said, 'Hey, I'm going
Lobe the one to win it,"' he said.
Salmon's victory Thursday
completed a sweep by the Los
Angeles-area teams. A day earlier,
Dodgers catcher Mike Piazza was

·=

SOCCER
'
.
DOHA, Qatar (AP) ~ S~ud.t
.:Arabia and South ·Korea quahfied ·
for 1994 World Cup, while J•pan
fell short allowing a JOIIl ~ith 10
' seconds '1oft and tying Iraq 2-2; ·
. . Iraq Iran and North ~or~a. finfoulth, fifth aDif sixth in fmal

Ji. ...._~.~~ ....:.,.....,-.:521.14

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unanimously voted NL Rookie of and fmished lhirtl.
the Year. The only other time both \
"There has been a build-up to
awards were won pnanimonsJy was \...this point, so it hasn't been a total
in 1987, by Oakland's Mart MeG- shock," Salmon said. " But 10 hear
wire and San Diego's BeniiO Santi- Jack (Lang, the secretary of the
ago.
Baseball Writers Association of
Salmon, 25, joined McGwire,' America).say 'unanimous,' that did
Carlton Fisk (1972) and Sandy s~ me.
Alomar Jr. (1990) as the only AL
'That means everybody who
rookies to win unanimously and saw me play thought I was above
became the fmt Angel ever to win and beyond all the rest of the rookthe award.
ies, and that means 1 lot lO me. It's
"Going into spring training, 1 been 1 aemcndous season for me,
wasn't trying to reach any marks,"
I've really enjoyed it. and this is
Sal.mon said by telephone from jusl the icmg on the cake."
Hawaii, where he's vacationing. "I
Salmon said his biggest accomwanted lO get my feet wei, get a plishments were his 95 RB!s and
rhylhm going, get myself comfortlhe 931URS he scored.
able in the box every day.
The third-round selection by the
"To have the kind of year I had,
Angels in the 1989 amateur draft
you can't even describe it I did not
joined lhe team after hitting .347 in
expect that. This is something you
1992 at Edmonton, leading the
dream about achieving, maybe after
Pacific Coast League in homers
four or five yws in lhe game, but
wilh 29 and RBls with 105. He was
not in my rookie year."
voted the PCL's most valuable
Chicago WhiLe Sox pitcher
player and selected minor league
Jason Bere got 18 second-place
player of the year by several ba:;evotes and was runner-up with 59
ball publicalions.
points, well ahead of Boston pitcher Aaron Sele, who had 19 points

Newman ... Continued from page

Tiffm faces a diffiCult contest It
Wesaninsrer, while F'Uidlay aave1s
10 Urliena. Bolh have valid lhoclat
lhe playoffs.
1be- rest or the games on a bUiy
day f&lt;l' Ohio teams inelllde Toledo
at Kent, Bowling Green at Miami
of Ohio and Akron at Ohio U. in
the Mid-American Conference;
Baldwin-Wallace at Heidelberg,
Capital at Ohio Nonhem, 1ohn
Carroll at Marietta and Hiram at
Muskingum in lhe OAC; Alle&amp;heny at Denison, Wittenbug at Oberlin, Wooster at Earlham and Cue
Reserve at Ohio Wesleyan in the
North Coast Conference; and
Bluffton at Wilmington in the
Association of Mideast Colleges.
Non-conference action finds
Memphis State at Cincinnati, Valparaiso at DaylOR, Geneva at Malone, Kenyon at Waynesburg and
Mount St. Joseph at Olivet
Nazarene.

He hit just .171 in 23 games
with California in late 1992, but
was assured a starting. spot in the
outfield for 1993.
"Salmon is the story of the
year," Angels manager Buck
Rodgers said at the end of the season. "He had twice the home run
and RBI production we expeclld."

Sports briefs
TENNIS
STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP)
- Jim Courier, Boris Becker and
Sergi Bruguera - the Nos. 2, 3
and 5 seeds - lost in the Lhird
round of the $1.65 million Stockholm Open.
Switzerland's Marc Rosset used
a powerful serve•and-volley to
defeat Courier 6-7 (7-5), 6·3, 7-6
(7-3) to reach the quarterfinal s.
Becker, three-lime champion, lost
to MaliVai Washington 6-1, 6-3 .
and Bruguera, French Open cham·
pion from Spain, fell ·3-6, 6-3, 6-2
to Jonas Svensson of Sweden.

Vote For

4

and Tom Christy.
In the feature Adkins claimed
the win ahead of Bailey and Bert
Flora.
After the race, track champions

Blake, and Delmas Goff. In the
Powder puff division, Tina Cotterill claimed the crown ahead of
Doris Maynard, and Vern Harden.
The top three finishers in the

presented, while suests were treated to a hog roast and bean dinner.
Several hundred people were treated to lhe fete and musical entertainment was provided for lhe fans.

champion; Tony Jacks, and Bryan
Seagraves, while Rocky Blake
claimed the Four-Cylinders as
champion, ahead of Joe Smilh, and
Don YosL

wcre. crowne!' Jlnd ·-~!l!eF, award&amp; . -~ V-8'·a w.,...,Ric!t B~,

FREDERICK M. TUTTLE
Unuplrtd Term

Chtster towashlp Trustee
Pd. for by candldllle: Fn~•lck II. 1llth,
111181 Tuaa Rd., Pomeroy, OH. 45781, Ph. 1111-CIU

- ------- --··iii.----------------------------.

Cash
and trophies
to the
lOpbonuses
three point
leaders inwent
lhe . .
V-8 bombers, Four-Cylinder
Bomber class. and Powder Puff
divisions. Road Hogs, which ran
The following have endorsed the
half the season, were awarded trophies fo rlhe fti-st three spots.
Meigs County Democratic Executive
The top three Four-Cylinder
Committee
Bombers were Bert AQill, champiSalem Townahlp Trustees
on; Bob Bailey, and Delbert Roush.
The top V-8 Bombers were
Lebanon Township Trustees
Todd Smith, champion: Rick

VOTE YES FOR THE SENIOR CITIZENS LEVY

Vote For and Retain

S.ports briets

•

fmt place com~ Sunday mominJ.
~nelli would like 10 delay the
But Ohio State is not the only ~ttrement )Wty.
team in the s1111e with a 1o1 ridins
~Division
Mount Union (7on ils pme SIIUnlay.
0) IS ranked first in the Nortb
Youngstown State is ranked Region and ~IIDCC (~) is No.3.
No.1 in the nation in NCAA Divi- The lOp four teams make the playsion 1-AA. The Penguins are ·7-1 offs. Mount Union can move a step
and hope to maintliJ! the 10p Spot ~loser to the Ohio Confem~CC title
when they host Buffalo Slate.
when it plays at O«crbein SaturThe lOp 16 teams in the final day, while Defiance faces its
rankings advance lO the playoffs. IIICmeSt test lO dale when it enterThe Penguins have ~ remain- lains Thomas MOre.
ing with Indiana State, Illinois
Central State, like YoungslOyro
State and Akron.
State, also leads its division. The
Ashland slarled. Fred Martinei- Marauders, who have made the
H's final year as head coach with playoffs an annual tradition, are
back-lQ.back losses. Since then, the . ranked first in NAIA Division I
Eagles have won six in a row and goina into an idle week.
have climbed to No.17 in this
In NAJA Division II, Tiffin week's Division II ranltings. Mar- enjoying its best season ever in the
tinelli, in his 35th year as coach, eight years of the program - is 7announced before the season he 0-1 lllld ranked fifth in the nation.
was retiring at lhe end of the year. The llraRons jumped 10 spots afler
Now with games ·rem!lining at last; week's vactory over defending
home against Northwood, a1 Indi- nabonal champion Findlay, which
anapolis and at Northern Michigaq, feU from second to lith this week.

California's Salmon namedAL 'Rookie of the Year

TH

Chester Township Trustee
'

You'r Vote and Influence Appreciated
Pd. for by the cancldolit: Orla Smith, UH&amp; bgl• Ridge Ad.

l-illo--..·------La...ingio--•""•o•H•.4•5•7"'-·Ph-.M-"•2511•
·•

P'ftllla.&lt;! Ia .,.
--!l'ri«-'" -~...

.

4.3 3S 3
4.l 29 I

' Drown, N.O. ,,_, ..109 431

McCallum would succeed Dick •
Hunsaker; wllo resigned Oct. 1~ .
amid a scandal involving NCAA
rules violations, WLBC -radio· in .
Muncie and WJ'HR-TV in lndi-'
' ana'pons.re)l(l'ted.
·
· Ball Stl\tC .sports information.
director Joe·.Hernandez would not
confirin the repOrts when contacted
aL home Ibis morning. The univer-'
sity scheduled a news conference
for 10 a.m. EST.
McCallum, Ball State's all-time
scoring leader with 2,109 points
. and all-time steal' leader with 172,
was the Mid-American Conference ·
player of the' year in 1983; his
senior season. He was a three lime
· All-MAC selection and a three- ·
time Ball State most valuable player. He led Muncie· Central lO the
. 'Indiana high school state champi. ·. onsbip iri 1979. ·
.
He followed his colle(!e coach,
SteYe Yoder, to Wisconsm, where ·
he was an assistant coach for 10
....
yeafs before moving to NCAA run- ,
·,, rier-up Michigan in the off-~n.
. McCallum gave Michigan coach '
Sieve Fisher a three-year comll!}t-.
ment that allowed McCallum to
leave'· if the Ball State job came :
• .
. open.
• Hunsaker, the Cardinal .cQach
for four rears. reSigned after a uni'versjty lrivesti$ation found four
' playen h8d ftJCCtvecfillegal inducements, extra benefits and unaulho, .
rized fiDatlCial aid.

IO!Id&lt;clria,IO paylte ...,..,:.,.,
Tho Dolly SeMioel
ctedil Willbo

'

l

AIL Yell. AY~oi.GTD

Waucn, S.F....... .IOI 511

~r:,ws confere,n~ today. repo~

NO -.oi.. by moll

•

150 S

Sanden, 0.. ...... 161 -726
Pqmn.Atl. ....... 119 l34

' MUNCIE, Ind. (AP) - Ball
State was ex~.ted lO name University of oM1chigan assistant Ray ·
McCallum as its new head coach as

•-~·
o - oll or 12

. 52 -

451

94 1111 9 6

76

Rlllhen
Playtr ,

R""'"
AlL Ydt,

Th....., 8»1...... 1·31 l66

....

Mllli'

C'htm. AW. ........liO

Quarlerbub
Player
Att.Cam. Yd&amp;. TDint.
M.....,., K.C.....IOl 63 171 6 I
Marino, Mia .. ...... 150 · 91 1211 I l
Eoitooo, NYJ ...... I92 122 1611 9 6
Elway,Den .........221 141 1641 10 4
O'Donneii,Piu. .. lll 119 13l7 6 3

c.w.rra..Se....137

AtLCom. Yd1. TDlnL

su..m.,NYO ...... ll4

Ava-LGTD
Fomr, Pitt.......... l41 S68 3.9 30 1

·--·to
-Ill-----11. .
H

Player

AFC leaden

Plt)'er

0

' Aikm•n. Oa1.......117 126 '1650 5 · '2
11.....,_ AIL ...... Ill Tl Ill 8 4
Yiouna, S.F........ .2ll 14l 1636 lO 9

MGnda7, NoY.I
WuhinJtOntl Buffalo. 9 p.m.

I.

1

Qualfa'boclll

CiDolaaati, Clenlaad,
Hout...,,PI....,.
.

..

2

NFCteaders

Opc~ft~dl\1:

..

3

Sharpe. Den. .........34 3S4 10.4 J1
Johnson, tnd. ........ 31 lAI
7.1 36

s~wa•• Dawcr, 4 p.m.
~It Minnaloll, I )MD.

.,

c•;:l~,...,.....,.....~~~~~..~----..ii-.;.;;.

...

IJ.y at Atlanta, 1 p.m.

McCallum to be named
BAll State coach today

TRUSTEE ,
Chester fp~nstilp

.

Bladcl, Sol...........40 416 10.4 21

A. Mill«, 5.0.......3.5 415 11.9 43

New OrtellllatfhoorU, 4p.m.

GAJt!l" .1. D·l~lf

10017. ~ '•'

Player
No. Yds. AVI· LG TD
Sl1ught.er, Hou.7 .41 438 10.7 41 3

San Diqa at LA. Raidc:ra. 4 p.m.
LA. ~~San Func:iloo, 4 p.m.

Vote .·For &amp; Re-.Eiect··

I Wlltllhe, BteUam }'l(ewtpiper SUII,
7li nlni . A...,., !lew York. .New ~ort

.SundaJ, Od. 31
Orieaao .. Omcm Bay, 1 p.m.
Kamu City 1\ Miani, 1 p.m.
Now Enallnd allwiilnlpo&amp;. 1 p.m.
N.Y. Ieu atN.Y.~ll. I p.m.

.

It

Reeelven

Dallu at Philldelphla, 4 p.m.

frOm

By DAVE GOLDBERG.
injury.
Game Ill in,the Bills' attempt lO
AP Football Writer
Marino's absence is one reason sweep lhe teams lh81 beat them in
Don ShuJ.l! could have picked an the Dolphins are favored by just a Super Bowls.
easier opponent lh11n the Kansas point. Last week, against IndiNo Problem.
BilLS, 24-3
~~l. Chiefs as he tries to tie George anajlolis, Shula reverted to the pres' career record of.324 wins on Marino days as Mark Higgs and Dallas (minus 10) at Philadelphia
· Sunday.
Terry Kirby combined for 172
The problem for the, Eagles isn't
' He'll just have to take them as rushing yards.. ·
that the Cowboys remain the best
. they come, -though, and it's the
Thlll wiU bC harder to do against team in the NFL. The problem is
~ Chiefs who are coming lO Joe Robthe Chiefs. And Neil Smith and Lhat they've given lip ol) ;them· bie Stadium.
. ·Derrick Thomas·will be in the face sclves.
:. · And it won't be Dave Kljcg:·v., of Mitchell, •wl)o makes his second
COWBOYS, 27-9
.
;; Scott Mitchell, either. The Chiefs . NB.'start.
'
New York Jets (plus 7) at New
~ will probably go with Joe·Mcin"tana
. Siill, he's banilled the pressure York Giants
·even though he's played only 12of : well so , ra~ . And the emotion
~ the 24 quarlers·this year. It would behin!l Shobi makes it ...
~ be nice to have a Montana-Da!i
' DOLJ&gt;ij}NS,20-17
• Marino matchup for this ,game;·llut Detroit (plus 4) at Minnesota
~ Marino's out for the ~n with, an
OK, it's o~tly lhe NFC Central
~ ·
·
' " · · but this is still for farst place.
'
~
The Daily Sentinel·.· ·.·
Minn~ota's problem is that it
:1
·
ncclls tl\o defense to score touch'·
.LvqiZIJ.Mf)
downs. Detroit's problem seems 10
F.UL~·,IIME
.n._. Moadoy lllroul)l hav,.,.,....
~ "··n sol ~~:•, l'libllallod
J\1dol', Ill•Tlli
Co¥rt St, P.o..ror. Oblo bY l1li
' .v.... - Wayne Fontes
.. 0111o w~oy ""bllo!Wra 1:4!-yiMullln.l~ . ·says Rooney Peete IS lhe quaner- :
" lie.. ,.....,.,, Oblo 4S7~~. Pll. 9!12-2156.
back.
'
.·
: Sooaldet..-pald""""""''·Oblo. '
· he's healthy ...
• ' ~ 111o AIIOI:illld Preu, ud 1110 !!M•
16-10
,
lllioi J.,) • Atlodllloa.: ·NIIlollll.~
9) at Butralo ·

White, Hou........ .120 423

N&lt;It week's NFL actloo

T~

... '

3.l 21 2
3.l l4 2

Russtll, N.E ........ I22 .426

- * Football * -

'

.

35 yard
up wjlh a goal nne stand wilh two
Rumoo added
Clltra point lii!IS·
seconds left lO preserve the victory.
.and Justin ~pymo!ii; added
Bentley 'led the Marauders on Meigs ended their.season with a 5·
46. Davenpart, also'.aa.ded,
the. arbilnil with nine carries for 65 . 2 mark. Don Dix~n coa~hed the an interception on !lefense; ·. ,., ..
yards, Sean Powell added 35 in · Marauders and was liSSisted by • • y\,(j· ' t'' .• •.. :~ ··,~· ;,.. / (.
fiVe Carries, JOhn Davitlson one for Rick Blaeunar.
CO LONY THEATRE
34, J. R. Rife'one for 26 carries and
The Vikings jumped outlO a 12- ·•
(Waylon Me Kinney one f&lt;n 25
. 0 lead. e.arly in the fi~st period l-...!~~~~~~t~N_2j
The Marauder defense was before Hanson scQI'ed from a .yard
sparkedbyagoallinestand in late out with 1:341eft in the period,
in the second period. Besides Stew- Matt WH!iams added the extra
art, Bentley and Jessie Williams points to.make it.a 12,8 game. · .
both added interceptions. Tile
Da-.enpor.t hooked-up with
Vikings were limited to only four Vaughan
20·yilnla.outon their ' .
first downs.
first scoring· ioss o~ the evening :

.

Scoreboard

'•'

·FOR.
,
-

:Miami coach will try to match
:Halas' record with win over·Qhiefs
'

... l

••

· with :4:32 left in the third period,
onc.c again ,Williams added the
.ex:iia poiilts t.ri give Meigs a 16-12
leaf;~, .
.
. ,.·
~inton County scored ju5t 1:59 '
later to give the Vilcings the 18-12
adltllntage, that set the scene for
Davenpcllt and ·
. Wil)ianis led ,
the ~round with
carnes·, .
adcl~·

f!p• 5

more
Ohio college grid teams in stretch·run
t baseball players .
m.
:. become free agents
By RUSTY MILLER

WINNING QUARTET-The winning quartet, or perbaps, the
king and his court, Todd Smith, of Pomeroy, (left) is shown with
his teUow competitors In victory lane following the season cbamplonshlp races at VInton Raceway Park in Vinton. Pictured, 1-r, are
track champion Smith iD lhe V-8 class; second place Rl~ Blake of
Reedsville, second place Delmas Gorr or LaagsvUie, l(Gotr and
Blake tied for second) and fourth place and "Hard Luck Award"
winner Rocky ''the Wild Hare" Davidson.

~ Dilly Sentinel

.

.

Long Bottom Community Association ''
Salisbury Township Trustees
Star Grange 1778
Chester Township Trustees
Pomeroy Merchant Association
Letart Township Trustees
Pomeroy Village Council/Mayor of
Pomeroy
Meigs Housing (Maples) Board
Middleport Village Council
Meigs County Planning Commission
Rutland Town&amp;hip Trustees
Hemlock Grange 12049
XI Gamma Epsilon Sorority
Meigs County Garden Club
Public Employee's Retirement
Association
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce
Middleport Literary Club
Meigs County Health Department
Gallla-Jackson-Melgs Board of
Alcohol, Drug Addiction, and Mental
Health Services
Meigs County Republican Executive
Committee
Whitley~• Grocery
Melp County Retired Teachers

··• Aa.oclittlon

. Let Chtidf WI~

.,.ShOW YOU HlNV lb save ThQUsands

Senior Citizens Levy:
Lions Club
Meigs Ministerial Association
Sutton Township Trustees
Rockaprlnga Grange
Scipio Township Trustees
Preceptor Beta Beta Sorority
Olive Township Trustees
Orange Township Trustees
Racine Village Council
A.D.K. Sorority
St Paul· St. John E.L.C.W.
Bedford Township Trustees
Meigs Unit of American Cancer
Society
Columbia Township Trustees
Pomeroy United Methodist Church
Reedsville United Methodist Church
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
Racine United Methodist Men
Racine United Methodist Women
Rocksprings United Methodist
Women
Rocksprings Better Health Club
Middleport Child Conservation
League
Rutland United Methodist Women's
Circle
Meigs Council on Aging's Board of
Trustees
Meigs County Farm Bureau
Pomeroy Eagles Auxiliary 2171
St Paul United Mehthodist Women

WE HAVE SERVED 20 YEARs--HELP US SERVE FOR.20 MORE

In January, February Inc/ Mllrch .

Purchase Your New Horne Now. Take Delivery ofYour
NewHome •,BttweenlanJJlii'Y lstandMarch31$t. 1994
anq R.ecei~ Your 'special Winter Construction bisco\Dlt.

.· .

Chuck Wlngen, Builder
Comer of Rt. 50 _!In~ carol Lil. • Athens, Ohio
Call 592-4119,.S.92.:3749or 691-6404
'

.

·, ·i:WblltBu~l!r
.
. ·•Hom11 Sold UmW FmHA Do Not Qwa/1/)1

THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT
•

Plld for by ~ Melg• Senior Citizen• Levy Committee,
Jane Walton,
45169, "''renurer

�Friday, October

The Daily Sentineli'

By The Bend

Friday, October 29, 1993

:

~----------------------------------------------------~--------------~--------------------------!P~~~e~6 .
.•

... .

•

1

:Literary club highlights author Overpayments can be avoided
was

I

Eileen Duct
hostess for the
·&lt;XL 20 meeting of the Middleport
Literary Club. Betsy Panons welcomed the members and guests and
led lhe poup in the club collecL
A book will be placed in the
Middleport Library in memory of
·Kalbryn Downing. The group went
·on record u endorsing the upcom:ing le¥y for the Meigs County
on Aging.
· Parsons read the quotation for
.the day and introduced Beuy Fultz
.who reviewed "William Holmes
McGuffey and his Readers."
• Born in a Christian home in
·1800 McGuffey wu an avid reader
·who considered hard work an
imporiBIIt part of life. He complet·

:councn

grammer

ed
acbool and became an Cincinnati publishing company,
itinerant educator who started Truman and Smith, to write a series
many smaH achools. Upon funher- of elementary reading textboolcs,
ing his education he became a the fmt being published in 1836.
schoolnwtcr, tachiog pltilosophy Thc:ac readen were filled with phonetic exwcises and drills. poems
courses al Miami University.
, An ordained Presbyterian minis- and stories which reflecled his own
ter, he assumed the presidency of ethical morals and rule for fundaOhio University in 1837, but soon mental good behavior. The reader..
round himself in uoubtc because or were used for teaching pupils for
his stem Calvanist views. He then age6to26.
went on to teach moral philosophy
Excerpts for the readers were
at the University of Virginia.
presented
as follows: "The Little
Describes as a very human, good·
Loar'
presented
by Sara O~n.
beaned man, McGuffey enjoyed a
Whittier'
s
"The
Fish I Didn't
fine reputation and it is said that his
Catch"
by
Betsy
Parsons,
LongfeJ.
influence was as popular as the
low's
poem
"
The
Wreck
of the
Bible.
Hesperus"
by
Juanita
Bachtel
and
He was commissioned by a
an excerpt from Lee's "Eulogy On
WashingtOn" by Phyllis Hackett

It's your world

Meigs County
Special to The Dally Sentinel

the benefici~ dies and the death is
not reoorted timely. As one exam·
pie, i( a person dies and his or her
benefit check is directly deposited
into a joint banlc account after the
person's death, the surviving
spouse is overpaid if he or she
receives benefits on the deceased's
Social Security record.

By ED PETERSON
retired persons under age 65, and
Social Security manazer In
for persons between age 65 and .69.
Albens
the limit is $10,560. (1bere's no
Last year, over one millions limit for people 70 atia· otder).
peo11te received more money from
Because it is difficult to estimate
Social Security than they were enti- exact earnings for the year, we
tied to receive. Don't worry, it was encolll'llllc )leneliciaries who work
not widespread fraud or a huge ID ~ us .to adjust their ~stimated
government giveaway. Pl:qlle who • earntngs tf they get a ratse, wort
are overpaid by Social Security arc overtime. or otherwise increase
required to relUnt the money. either their income.
by direct refunds or by havtng their
Many overpayments can be
benefits reduced to cover the over- avoided. For example, if you file
payment
for Social Security benefits several
Most of these overpayments months before you pl3!l to retire
occurred because beneficiaries who and then you decide not to retire.
work while drawing benefits you "!ustlet us know. Otherwise,
earned more than they had estimat- we wtll automatically send you
ed and their income exceeded benefit checks, and you will have
Social Security's annual limits. The ID refund the money.
annual limit in 1993 is $7,680 for
Overpayments often occur when

I

If you follow the . reporting
instructions, you can avoid the
inconvenience and possible hardship of having to return money that·
you were not entitled to receive.
It's easy to repon events that
would cause you to be overpaid.
Visit the Athens Social Security
office (221 1/2 N Columbus Rd) or,
call us on our toll-free number, 1-·
800-772- 1213, business days:,

. Bike 'tour set
for weekend

HOMECOMING SPEAK·
ER • Tile Rutlaad Cburc• of
the Nazarene will be eelebratinalts bOmecOIIIin&amp; oa Suada:r
at 9:30 a.m. Special Home·
comln11peaker for lbe aenlee
wiD be the Rn. Kea Ma)1W'd
who will preaeut ."Senooo ou
the Mount''. The spealler wDI
be attired In dresa typical of
the time Jesus live. DfDner will
be at nooa, and at l p.JI!. there
will be lllappiratloa featuriaF
''The Mountain Top Slaaen' •
The pubRc Is lavlted to attend.

The Wilton Civic Association of
Wilkesville is presenting and
Cyclepath of Athens is sponsoring
the first specialized tour of the
Appalachian foothills on Oct. 31,
Nov .. 21 and Dec. 12. The starting
bme ts noon.
The cross country 20 mile event
will be organized for the pr:o/expen
riders, spon, beginner, cttizcn and
women. The cyclists will be competing for prizes in excess of
$2,000. The route is a combination
of road and of£-road travel with
some hill climbs.
The Wilton Civic Association
will be serving a spaghetti dinner
from I to 4 p.m. at the Pythian Sisler Hall. It is open to the public and
the cost is $4 per person.
For funher information interested ~ns may contact Tym Tyler,
Oh10 Dislrict Representative for the
U.S. Cycling' Federation at 8904145 or Cyclepath at 593-8482.

Your Support l• Creatly Appreciated

ELECT

William 11 1111" Osborne

will have an open dance from 8 to
II p.m. at the Meigs Senior Cenler.
Caller will be Bill Baumgarner. All
western style square dancers are
invited.

Dues of $5 for churches will by
paid then by blanket certificates.
MIDDLEPORT • There will be
a ballroom dance at the Legion
Annex from 7 to 11 p.m. Music
will be by George Hall. Dress up is
optional.

Coming Friday, Oct. 29th

POMEROY - Pomeroy Church
of the Nazarene will be having a
homecoming with regular services '
at 9:30 a.m., potluck dinner at.·
noon. Special singing with the Bis-• .
sell Brothers at 1 p.m. will be fo1-:
lowed by evening services at 6 p.m.· ·
Pastor Glen McClung invites the ·
public.
.·

WILKESVILLE • A smorgasoperations and the Rural Aban By MlkeDubl
FRIDAY
bord diMer will be held from 4 ID 6
doned Mine Pro_gram, helped
In June, 1943, the Meigs Soil Meigs County get tnvolved in the
p.m. at the Wilkesville Pythian
and Water Conservation District Resow'Ce Conservation and DevelHOCKINGPORT • There will
REEDSVILLE • Olive Town- Hall. Open to the public.
-wu ,formed and with its inception opment Program.
be a Halloween round and square ship Trustees will hold a special
POMEROY • Pomeroy Church ~
the Soil Conservation Service was
It was though this program that dance from 7:30 to 11 p.m. at the meeting on zoning at 6:30 p.m. at
Mil.TON - Mountaineer Opera of Christ will be having a revival. ·
.invited to Ulist with conllCI'Vation some of the critical areas surround· ReynQids Building. There will be the Shade River State Forest build- House will present Petticoat Junc- Oct. 31 through Nov. 5. Services
effons in the county.
ing the Meip County landfin were prizes for costume contests. Cost is ing on Joppa Road.
tion aL 8 p.m. For more information will be at 10:30 a.m. on Oct. 3r
It all began with the Meigs Soil seeded. It was also the program $3 for adults and S1 for children
call304-733-2721.
and at 7 p.m. on week nishts. There :
and Water District supervisors tha1 enabled us to seed many of the under 12. MusK: will be by Out of
POMEROY • Flu shots will be
will be a special hymn smg at 7:30 ;
requesting Ralph Barker, then a eroding roadbanks along county the Blue. Ronnie Wood will be given by the Meigs County Health
RACINE • Racine Lodge and p.m. Sunday. Damy Evans will be :
multi-county conscivationist baled and township roads. Crownvetch caller. Everyone is welcome. No Depanment from 9 to 11 a.m. and Racine Chapter Order of Eastern
the evangelist
;
in Athens County, to ask a "state that resulted from this project is alcohol wiU be snowed.
I to 3 p.m. at the Senior Citizens Star will have clean up day starting
'
soil «nervalion mao 10 meet with still visible today. Bob left in 1986
Center. Shots will also be given at9 a.m. at the lodge hall.
MIDDLEPORT
·
Fall
HaUelu'
the board in the September 1943 to become the Resource ConservaTUPPERS PLAINS • A round Monday at the Health Department,
jah
pany
will
be
beld
at
tbe
United
meetingM. Ralph contacted T.C. lion and Development coordinator and square dance sponsored by the 9 to II a.m. and I to 3 p.m. and on
SUNDAY
Pentecostal Church from 10 a.m. to
Kennard lbe state soil conserva· in Marlena. Ohio.
Tuppers Plains Veterans of Foreign Tuesday from 9to II a.m.
1 p.m. There will be games, prizes
tionill for lbe Soil Conservalion
The current Dislrict Conserva- Wars Post 9053 Ladies Auxiliary
HOBSON • Special singing by and free lunch for the children.
s~ who tben responded with a tionist for Meigs County is Mike · wiU be held from 8 to II :30 p.m. at
SATURDAY
the Rev . Dennis Weaver Family Free bus ride to and from are availI~ to the Mcip Soil and Watcc Duhl. Reclamation and Resource
the post. Music by C.J . and the
and preaching at 7:30 p.m. at the able by calling 992-7748.
District .tx.nl acknowledging their Conservation and Development County Gentlemen with Red Carr
RUTLAND - There will be a Hobson Christian Union Church.
request .for assistance with their effons are continuing. Conserva- and Melvin Cross calling. All wei- Halloween dance at the Rutland Everyone welcome.
DEXTER • Dexter Church of
conservation planning efforts.
American Legion Hall from 8 p.m.
lion operations efforts are full come.
will celebrate its homecomChrist
Oli September 7, 1943 at the blown with the 1985 Farm Bill
to midnight." Music will be by Pure
CHESTER - Izaak Walton
ing
with
dimer at noon in the baseM
. etig
e S ' Soil and Water District activities.
LONG BOTIOM • Faith Full Country and Then Some. There League slug shoots stan at I p.m.
ment
and
an afternoon program.
·board meeting, Kennard presented
Gospel Church will have special will be costume judging. The pub- at lzaak Walton Farm. Smooth bore
Former
pastor
Charles Russell will
FJ. Reed as an "assistant conserva·
healin~ services at 7 p.m. with
lic is invited.
or rifled barrels, no scopes.
be
there.
Everyone
is welcome.
tionili" to help in Meigs County.
In addition to the Dislrict Con- preach:ng, singing and fellowship
Reed bad served for over 20 years servationists mentioned above following. Pastor Steve Reed
as a county agent in KinJwood, there have been several other SCS invites the public.
(Preston County) West Vtrginia. employees who have given much
'He wu .., native of Pennsylvaqia to the conservation progrii!l in this
and served. Meigs County until
October 25, 1948 when ho
•
transferred to the Harding Soil Heber
PO~QY • QeUes and Seat!~ ~
Consavation DistricL
Gord!ln
Wes!em ·Stylc··Sq118re' Dance Club '
' Reed's successor was Carl lists who
Billken who came on board in COUDl¥ ~
November, 1948. Conservation actensucs
efforts bloomed ~ c.ls super- County
vision. Even. today, 4S yean later, Area Soil
and still visits
Your Vote and Support Appreciated
evidence of his efforts exist. Mei's County upon request for
N"umerous practices such u live- spectal soil information. George
Pold lor by c.Mtdoto, 51111ulbony Hll., Pomof!l), Oh.
stoCk ponds, spring developments, Beatty, Paul Evans, and currently
and even passed waterways are Reid Youns have served on lbe
still functional with many of the engineerins staff and have been
cooperators he serviced. Carl respousible for the survey and
served as District Conservationist design of the numerous conservauntil his retirement in June, 1971. lion practices that are currently in
He currendy is living in Florida.
use in Meil!' County. George Lash,
Dave Perry assumed the District Clarence Price, G~e Carper, and
Conservationist's responsibilities Hugh Custer were :ilso Soil Confrom Carl. He continued with the servation Service employees wbo
installation of the above conserva- have assisted in Meigs County's
Lion practices aiid worked with conservation efforts.
landowners and Carmen to encOur·
We have come along way in this
age erosion control prieticel such county since SCS involvement in
u strip cropping and c:onservalion 1943. The conservllion practices
In My Four Year Term We Have ...
.cropping rotalionJ. Dave served the seen on a drive throuJh the beauti·
• County through June, 1975 when 1)11 Meip County IOP.'Fr&amp;phy have
he tnitsferred to Madison County. not been the result of Just the Soil
•Paved 3 township Roads
He currently resides in Hiland Conservation Service, but a con•Purchased A Mow Trim Tractor and New
County where he is the District certcd effort of numerous agencies
Conservationist
wortin.)ltocether. These include
Dump Truck
From June, 1975 throuah the Me:p SOil .00 Wa/6 Conser·
•Acquired Land for Rock Springs
November, 1980 Boyd Rulb was vation Diltric~ and their supervithe District ConservauonisL
son, silllCr IJCncy ASCS, the Ohio
Cemetery At No Cost
Besides the normal conservation Stale University &amp;tension Service.
Air cond., tilt wt.el, cruiH control.
practices installed, Boyd wor~ed andliiOit imporiBIIdy the landown·
•Dust Control for Last Four Years
hard on the Rural Abandoned Mine en, l'artnen. IIIII COO~~C"Btors who
84 CHEY C20 COIIYJISION VAH-----·:...'4,995
Program (RAMP). He identified . haye wortetf IOd conb~ue 10 lllrlve
P•ld for by Canclld:ata: Ed Durat
306 v.a, tuuv loillll!d with utru.
and took several applicatio111 for for ~ best conservabon methods
31340 Noble SummH lid., ~pcin, Ott.
90 CHEV. 510 ~IAUR uve, air concL ........., _58,955
reclamation wort, In 1980 Boyd poa:ble.
moved to Athens county to work in
I( YO!! are interested in conser·
81 CHr'· 510 ILAZER 4.3 VB, lluto., mr, load.-'7,950
the Soil Conservation Services's vation gave PS a call. We can all
RAMP office.
each other. Our phone is
85 FOID·Fl$0 ILT lARIAT AJr,81!to.,302 VI
*4,995
HI, my name Is Tara
BOb F'trSt succeeded Boyd from 992-6647.
; 91 CHEV. 510 IIADR 4 DR.
f15,SOO
1980 -1986. Bob, in addition to
The address is 33101 Hiland
Wyatt. I'm a 4th grade
Auto'., ..., COIId.. 41,000 mille, 1
the program areas of conservation Rd., Pomeroy, Ohio45769.
atudent at Middleport
15,995
17 DODGE D2SO,PICIUP auto., air, 318 VI

Old Milwaukee
Presents
TYSON MUGRAGE

Country Line Dance Lessons 8:00
Dance 8:30

-.from

0-.

~

JJ»',•r 1 l!lwcf(;(l:ll \ '
Llbar~ -.;utty of ...

.............. ,,.,...

aa

.-n

If you've triad everything, and
' found no answer, WI simply ask:
"ISN'T IT TIME FOR JESUS?"

lrtll'rr ' A• .1•--~ '·hecor'

Elementary. My mom,
Brenda Phalln, Is a
candidate for Meigs
Local School Board. With
3 of us a.ttendlng school
In our cilstrlct and one a
pre-med student at Ohio
Uhlverslty, she understancll· the Importance
problems of our edu~tlon.ln the peat 14 years
Mom has been a room mom, PlO president of
both Middleport and Bradbury Elemel'l..ry and
been active In 'our baseball, basketball and
f~ll program aa well
Cub Scouts. She .Ia
curre.,ay an ...latant pr•achOol teacher and hu
for 4 years.
· .: ·
Now aha wanta to work for you and your Klda,
~ - .
. '
Please votefor her on Nov..2.
·
"·

and

.

'

.t

......

!

Thank You, .

, Dudfl... r..no~P.O, - · IIIOt

'

.

.

461
Vlrjlfttl l~

81 clion O.J1

Rule 12(A)(1 ~

~~~)

.lwryWny

Dl....,lor of Tr-f,':j liilon
(10) 8, 15, 22. 21, 11) I, 12

...

DESCRIPTIDN OF THE

PARCEL DF I.NID AND
ESTATE, INTEREST OR
RIGHTTHERIN

APPROPRIATED
PubliC Nollce
Slluitlod In the Toomohlp I,....,.:--.....;;~;..;.;~;..;,.-of S.llobury, County of
llolga and Stole of Ohio,
and kno"!''' u - • pa1 of
100 - · Lot No. 313, • pa1
of Town 1 - · Ronga 11
W.ot, u ohown by lh
recordod lhlga County Tu
Plot, Mop No. 27, Prriol No.
011, ond more fully
bounded and dMcrlbed •
lo-:

Unlaiown)
LEGALN011CE FOR

PARCEL NO. 3-WD

(HIGHWAY) ALL RIGHT,
mLE AND INTEREST IN
FEE SIMPLE, EJICUJDIHQ
UMITATIONOFACCESS,IN
THE FOLLOWING
DESCRIBED PROPERTY
Beginning In the contor ol
tho rood on tho aouth lno of
100-. Lot No. 383:
thonce wMt iiboul 200
IlOilo tho dill;
thonco In • northerly
dlrocllon to tho cornor of
the Silvio Roger oNI Honey
Snydw aoutll pr cF I rty IIIIo;

oddr•o(M)ore unkn-n to
lite PtolndH will toke notice

CLA~~IFIED AD~

FIL THE

LEQAL II011CE
l1lo -""' I don olllo
Albony
Independent
Agrlauflln I oolaly d bo
IMikll•:dat•~No• bor I,
• • .. the Aaor:r
Hill, :UI: liiJ, Ollie, • 1 - •
the houn o1 1:00 P.ll. ond
7:00 P.M. c:.nclda,_ lor
Dill 1:,. _.,._ r '1 ata
of the , . . _ _ ICIIIclol
sl aloloftdlloldor ol o 1. .
ot-berahlp loket. L8ot
to punt~- • 1tn
111-barohlp lloltot to
October
21,
1111.
C.Osld I 1 pollloM to bo
fllotl wltll iho oooretery
Octo bor II',
Thonofour (4) rlrooto.. te bo
oloolotl lor tho • - 1enrt
1 - . 1 - ond clrw""
to bo oloolod lor the -1-1•.
h I 1 d :II

car-..

1•.

The.....,,
Aerl ulture lnlol)

Dorio H. ....

thenp Nat •bout 200
'
fool to tho
ol tho (10) 15, 21.211 1c

1NJ

I

DAY SALE - SATURDAY. OCTOBER 31Jh
MIKE SILLS

84"FOID md ~·va. Mo.,elreoncl...- · - -....'3,995.
89 IIIC~ (IITUIY 4 D!l• .VI, 8h•rp. --·---· 14,995 .
90 OL.DS ·cUTLASS CAllAIS SL 4 DR...---·-'7,450
Y-6, 30,000 mlel,- ow-.

· .
,.
1
YOLKS J,OTA 4.DR., 51p11d, air·---·--· 3,995

"87
.87.VOLIS GOlf 4 DR·., .auto., •lr ------·'3,3$0
ii·FORD TEMM) 2'1)i-.,s ~PI

d,llrcond.,. _ _ _ *3,250~

· 89 CHEV. SPECTJUM 4 Dr.,s.putl,alrconcL....

•

~

I

..53,450

··

I

.:
I'

.

•

'
'

s

'

YELIIOW
ONIONS

nBIB

DONUTS

s

· lOIII

· 3LB.III

YDiaa n. Clll

FLIIOIIH

CHERRY

s

PIE nLLINB

LB.
I

I

I LB.IAI

II 01. BIG

'·

MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROMI
'

CB FRIES

POTATO

·.
'•

•

'

Moat of thl-ebQye lletedlre Ruat Free eouthern
~ vehicles. We .1ito h!ive :~everal eh1rp c1re - 4

cyla., "cyls.lnd 8 c:yiS,
'

'

· · .. : Yeur J.ut ltop car no,

IIIIR81Di
.

'

'

· ·.· .

Ao~hnt .... ..,...ln~....,
m' ,
11~-1410 1
Ceol

JlmtnV o..

'.
aoggee,a

GOOD FOR 5 TRIPLE VENDOR
COUPONS 5~ OR LESS 1030/93

Tara
\~

"'

,., d1recl accordingtr: Civil

! POWELL'S SUPER VALUE

S6~99 5

"ia

·--7

P•oe1No. 2·WD

•

Salisbury Township
Trustee

The Good news is: THERE IS
HOPE.. :I;IIs name is JESUS, and
He ~!.Jn help you overcome the.
problems you're facing aod,bring
~ and happiness back Into
your life.
·

r...ln right of
l n . - ond to ond
1r0111 . , fllklull-.
.... ponolll noled lbclvo
oholl further .... nollco ....
unlooo they, or their
Alloir.,, lllo . , Alllwer no
' - ..., 21 ...,. oll8r ....
_ . . . , o l ............
Publlcllllon, l10y will bo
d-od to hove wolvod
lholr rJght to - • • · ond ·
IM-OIIwllbo-00 ·
lruo end judgNIIt wUI bo:

The

163.07; . ond Civil Rulo
4.4(A~ ReviMCI Code.
And further offlllnt ullh
nol
Rlbocco A. Splllnhow•d
Aulollnt AttorMy Gon••l
Swom to boloro mo ond
oubocrlbocl In my pr_..
thlo 4th doy ol October,
11113.
AobortLSchiAttomoy ol 1..Notory Public In Md
for lhl ~ of Dhlo,
147.03 A.C.
Ufetlmo Commloolon
Ohio Rwlood Coclo Section
2703.14; 163.07; lnd Civil
Rule 4.41A) (Addr-

====---~---------------_J

For

•

It lo noCHoory thoroloro
to glvo nodce ollho fling of
tho Potlllon heroin by
Publication, In occorcllnco
with Soctlon 1703:14:

331 Richland Ave, Athens 593-6661

ED
DURST

overwhelming you? Many
people do.

ow-a

purp0111 , n•m•ly the
melting, conatrucUon or
ltnprOV-t ol:l- Route
7, Section 0.11, llolga
County, Ohio, oncf "' ftx ...
votuo of Oiilcl pr-'f.
properly oouvht to bo
approprlat•d 11 more
opoclllcoHy. a.crlbod u
folio•:
llniiMwn Ownor, .....
Molgo County, Ohio

Cl•ra L. Caeto, Max G.
H•rtenbach, • Clara
Hartenbaoh
who••

In the
Longbranch Ballroom
at
The Ohio University Inn

Ohio.

hor..ltor for hlghwoy

PUBUCAllON (Six (6)
·
lnaortlono)
lao A. Seyfried, Gladyo
Soylrlod, Almo
W.
Holllngaworth, Mox W.
Seyfried, Lucille Seylrlod,

"Your Country Night Out"

Basic training
completed
Pvt. Tyson Mugrage, son of
Charlie and Peach Mugrage,
Racine, recently graduated from
Fon McClellan, Ala. after completing six weeks of basic lraining and
II weeks for advanced individual
training for U.S. Army Military
Police.
After time spent at home,
Mugrage will be stations at Fort
Lewis, Wash. in the Military Police
Corps.
· The 1993 Southern High School
graduate joined the Army in
December 1992.

o.fondonla
C..oNo. ts-CV-17
Allldavlt
STATE OF OliO
COUNTY OF IIEICII II
R-oo A. Spolnhoword,
being nrat duly · - · ·
depoooo end ur• lhot lito
Ia o duly •:rpolntod,
qualified on
ocllng
Aoolatont Attorney Gonwril
of thri S1ato of Ohio; lh.. the
Plolntlff, Jerry Wroy,
Director of Tr.,oporll-.
Stole of Ohio, eHlca, by hlo
Poltlon, lo opproprlate ...
porporty dMcrlbocl tlloroln
ond lo fix lho value lhorool;
tltat tho rHklonoo (ol of the
Dofandonl(o) namici bolow
•r• unknown and CMnot
with roaoonabla dl.llill""'!.'"
be oocarlolnod:

0

Po11eroy VIllage Council

VOTE FOR AND RE·ELECT

-~~r~~! ~e~~s ilt___~a~..-.._.':,.o4'-'•

lAo A. fleylilod, "' ...

Pold for by condldate, 63417 SlAt. 181, Reecfovlll-, Oh 45772.

·---·-·

tolophono cl-ieo -

Y.

OLIVE TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE

Community calendar
Community Calendar Items
appear two dlyt1 before an event
and the day ot that event. Items
must be received In advance to
assure publication In the caleudlr.

lhorougn eearan · DY •n _th_, _ _ _ by .-1;
ligOIII ol Plolndlf ol.,. dMcl tho
tMM• eoulh 1 d•••n
Dlrootor
of
lnclej!M 1141 lo CUI'NIII l 0 Tronoporliltlon of the • - - t -uttfr.otto ...
chock on tho Aucllor'o ol Ohloo, who hoo lnolltltoclo Plooo of loglnnlng,.
compuiM found no furloor prOCHdlntln the Co- - · · · 0 . 1 1 1 o l • lnformollon on th. .o
Piooo Court of llolgo - · ilr lo!ll, on4 bolftl of
doloncl.lnll: llgOnlopob "' County, Ohio, "' opprOI'ri* unllnownowr~lnlho
nolghboro of lflo l*col, •d -lain pr-'Y dMcrlbod Court of ...;:. tolo of

'

I

age

�..
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, October 29, 1993
.,

Apo stol1c

'

Church of Chnst

Ep1scopal

.........1 ClolrrdiiiiCiorlll
212 w. Main St.
Puwr: And~w Milot
Sun&lt;!a,r School · 9:30a.m.
Wonbip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
WedneoOay Servi- - 7 p.m.

w-.

-1
33226

Hol111ess

oiChrill
aut-.·,Churdl
Heme Rd.

R- IIIShlnlll Boll- Clourcb

S...da~ School - II a.m.
Wonh~p - IOa.m., 6 p.m.

Middleport Churdllll Cbrill
5th and Main

Frot
WUI B~u:!:="
Ashs..-,
.
........, Marl&lt; Monow
5-.lay SeMc:o • 7:30p.m.

Sundoy School - 10 Lm.
Wonbip -II a.m.,
Wcdneaday SCrvicc:-7:30 p.m.
Rulllad Flnt Bapllll Churdl
Sunday School • 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip - 10:45 a.m.
Pom&lt;rOJ Flnt Baplill
PallOr: Paul SliniClll
EaotMain Sl.
Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.
Flnt Soullltm BIP.Iill
41872 1'amaoy Pike
P1110r: B. J...amarl'l'Bryont
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonltip • 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wodneoday Semc:ot- 7:00p.m.
Flnt Boplill Clourdt
aa4 PolmerSL, M~=
'"-: Rd1 James A.
Sunday School- 9:15 IJD.
Wonhip - 10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
A.B.Y.- 5:30 pJD.
Lord'a Stn&gt;oor ht Suilday of .,..ry moruh.
Wod.iesday Service- 7:00pm.

6lh

RadDe Flnt Bapllsl
P.-: S - Fuller
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp- 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wodneoday Semc:os -7:00p.m.

sa.er -

Bapllsl
Putor: Bill Liale
S101day School - IOa.m.
Wonhip • 11~ .. 7:30p.m.
Wednes4ay Savices-7:30 p.m.
ML Unlmr Baplllt
Panor : Joe N. Sayre
Suoday Sdtool-9:45 a.m.
Evenina - 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Savice• -6:30p.m.
llellllthtm BapUII
PatiOr : Rev. Earl Shuler
Sunday Sdtool - I0:30a.m.
Wonbip - 9:30a.m.
Thunday Services- 7:30p.m.
Old Balbo! Free Will BapUII Chun:h
28601 SL Rt. 7, Middleport

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Bvening - 7:30p.m.
Thunday Service• . 7:30
Hllllkle Bapllll Churdl
StIlL 143 ju11 ol! IlL 7
l'lupr. Rev. Jomea It Acne, Sr.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m., 6 p.m .
Wednesday Service~ -7 p.m.

Putor. AI Haruon
YI)Uth Minister. Bill Frozier

Keno Churdt Ill Christ
Wonhip • 9:30 o.m.
Sunday Sd&gt;ool - 10:30 a.m.

Sunday School ~ 9 a.m.

Worship- 9:45 a.nt, 6:30p.m.
Bradbury Churcb Ill Clrlll
Ptator: Tom Runyon
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonbip - 10:30a.m.
Youth Mcetin11· ,,30 p.m.
Evtnins Service- 7 p.m.
Wednesday, Bible Swdy - 7 p.m.
Rutlond Churdllll Christ
Puwr. Eogene E. Underwood
SWiday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worihip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Bradford Churcb of Chrill
Comer of St. RL 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Ev111geli11: Derelt Suunp
Youlh Minister: Marl: Ncxter
Sunday School - 9:30am.
Wonhip • 8:00 o.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneodly Servioet ·7:30p.m.
Hickory Hlllll Churdo ofChrill
Pa•tor: Jo.eph B. H01kin1
Sund1y Schoo) - 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 o.m., 7 p.m.
Wednetdoy Servi&lt;es - 7 p.m.
Uberty Christian Churth
Dexter
Paswr. Wondy Call
Sunday Evening - 6:30p.m.
Thundoy Servioe - 6:30p.m.

PallOr. I..., E. K...
Wonhip - IOa.m., 7p.m.
Wodneodly Savioea • 7 p.m.
Falllt Baplill Churdt
Railroad St., M"""
Sunday Sdtoo.l - 10 a.m.
~onhi,&amp; - 11 Lm., 6p.m.
y Savioeo - 7 p.m.
W

F.,.. Rua Bapllll
..._ : AriouHun
Sunday School · lOUD.
Wonhip - 11 LJD,

ML MorWI BapUII
~A Moria&amp;., M¥11 I
,._,lr:¥. 0ilboo!C111J,Jr.
Stnloy School · 9-.30 a.m.
Wonbip ·10:4~ am.

~=:.·:...

SunoloJ ,..... • 9-.30 LftL
W...... -IG-.4' a.m.
'llounday- . 7:30 poiiL
Sola&amp;.
··- Wll Bapllll
P1o1Gr:
Paal Taylor
. Stllday Sclleol · 10 LftL

a-.

. a--..,.,...

W I

ll'rr~ · 7p.m.

Mlneravllle
Pastor: Deron Newman
Sunday School ; 9 a.m.
'Wonhip - 10 o.m.

Rudand Churdt Ill the Nllll'tne
Putor: Somud Barye
Sunday School- 9:30 un.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Servi&lt;oo - 7 p.m.

Sunday Sdtoo.l - 10 un.
Wo~~" - 9 un.
Wedn
y - 7 p.m.

N -·a.Aifr&lt;id

Racine
Pastor: KeD Molter
S101day School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - llo.m. snd7p.m.

Hazel Communlly Church
OffRL 124
Pu10r. Edoel Han
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip -10:30 a..m., 7:30p.m.

Laurel Clift' Free~-~~ Churdt
Pastor: Peter Tn!mblay
. SIDiday Sdtool · 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip- 10:3Q_a.m., 7 p.m.
Wtlllrloidof ~- • 7 p.m.

Dyoovllo Crmmunll)' Churcb
Sunday Scbool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - IG-.30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Pallor: Rev. l'hi1lip Scalberry
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30a.m.
Wednesday Services . 7&gt;30 p.m.

Wonhip • 10:45 -··7:30p.m.
Wodn!!tday 7:30p.m.

ML Oll•e CommuniiJ Churcb
Putor: [A........, Buoh
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Bvenins • 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service . 7 p.m.
United Folllo Clturdo
Rt. 1 on Pomeroy By'Pan
Pa110r. Rev. Robert B. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servia: - 7 p.m.

T-Church
Co. Rd.63
' &lt;;;..,j,Sd&gt;ool];; • 9:30 Lm.
w
• 10:30 LftL

Tuppen Plolno Sl. Paul
Plator: Sha~m Htunnm

Sunday School· 9 Lftl
Wo11hip -10 o.m.
Tueaclay Servicca- 7:30p.m.

Putor: Mult Sbut
S~mday School · 9:30-a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 -.m .• 6 p.m.
Wedneodly Services • 7 p.m.

Albury (SJ-)

P1110r: Deron Newman
Sunday School - 9:4S a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m.
Wednesday Se~ - 7:30p.m.

Cloonlt IIIGed Gll'replteq
OJ. While Rd. ol.f St. RL 160

Middleport Churdt Ill tho N....... o
Pastor: G~ory A. Cundiff
SIDiday School · 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Enlet'prile
Pur.or: Keilh Rider
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 9 a.m. , 6 p .mr
Tue1day Service• • 7 p.m.

PUICir. Pa Henson
Wonhii&gt; • II a.m.

Weclnelday Setviceo • 7 p.m.

O!ater

s...t:=.6

l'loiGr: Gary IIJnes
: ! a.m.

C\\\;(( Srul

P. J. PAULEY, AGENl
Nal.!onwide Ins. Co. 1)
.

re..,..,,

ol Columbus, 0.

104 W. Main
992-2311 Pomtrov

- . • •.'·

. 'GRAVELY
.
. TRACTOR SAlES
-. - . .
j

• &lt;

J.. ,..

...

'

Pomeroy, OH.

SNOUFfER

u-.uNGS.(OATS

FIRE &amp; SAFETY
'SAlfS &amp; SIIYKE
. 992~7015

. F'SHEI ·
FUNERAL HOME

172Ntrtlls.c-IA•a.
ll~~hu I, OW.

.
26.

Seutli 21141
•

SWISHER &amp;LOHSE
PliARMACY
sJXw.Fmoocton· ·
' 9t1-29SS

AOSCU · ·
~-b.:
· 7 RfUTS
. liKE '
·,DIAaS

992-5141 .

Michlloport

Folrvlew Bible Churdo
l.elall, W.Vo. RL I
Putor: James Lewis
Sunday Sd&gt;ool - II ~.m.
Wonhip- 9:30 1.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:30p.m.
Calv~ff

Bible Churcb
Pomeioy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Bloc:twond
SWiday Sehool ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneoday Service-7:30p.m.

.

0

,

814-867-PETS

Calvary Pllartm Chapel
Harrisonville Road
Pa1IDr: Rev. Victor Roush
SWlday School9:30 o.m.
Wonhio • II a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

. PHONE
INSTALLATION
_Jacks Installed
Extenalona run to

DHfnnt Rooma and
Outside Buildings
FI'M E1tlm1t11

614-367-0421
101111113

Garage Sale

R
HAULING

Friday &amp;. Sat.
Comer oC Main &amp; 8th Sl. ·
Middleport, Oh-- Baby Furnnura,
clothes, water bed, antlquaa,
otamlna stepper.
of Misc.

Sdvenvllle Wcrd otFallh
Pu10r. David Ddey
S~mday School9:30 o.m.
Bvllling - 7 p.nt

Lots

Rt.Jokla&amp; Life Church
'00 N. 2nd Ave., Middlepon
Pntor: Lawtatce FOft:ft\an
Sunday School - 10 am;
Wednesday Servioet - 7 p.m.

1625 G•lloris

•so ,., load

Pool Toumaritent
1 pm Sunday; Oct. 31
Open Bowling 1 pm Sunday
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Phone 992·3432

Churcb Ill J,_ Christ,
Apootollc Folth
1/4 mile pall Fon MeiJ• oo New Unuo Rot.
· Pastor: William Von Meter
Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wednesday-7:00p.m.
Friday-7:00p.m.

Call
Ralph At
1111

Pentecostal

HAUUIIJG: UIMelone,
Dllf, Gnivel and COlli
UDMtood iond Bondod

PH. 614·992-5591

EXCAVATING

Public Notice

-6

BULLDOZER BACKHOE

Public Notice

LEGAL NOnCE
PUBLIC NOTICE
Cllunly Budge!
Melgo
NOTICE Ia horeby given
!hat on Saturday, October Commlulon will meal
301h, 1ft3, II 10:00 o.m., I ~.Nk&gt;~1,1183,allhe
public aalo will be held at omce ol tho Mtllgo county
211 Weal Sacond, Pomoroy, Audllor to complote tho
Ohio, to Mil lor 0110h lhe budget work lor the year,
111114. Howord Fran1&lt;,
folloWing colliteral:
chairman
ol tho Budgol
1890 PontlaoGnlnd Am LE.
'SNI1G2NES4031C285147 Commloalon.
The Farrnoro Bonk and
Savlnge
Compony, 5
Happy Ads
Pomoroy, Ohio,.....,.. the
right to bid at thla oale, ·and
to withdraw lhe above
collotorol prior 10 oolo.
Furthor, The Formara Bo~k
and Sovlnga Compony
raoervea the rlghl to relact
any or oil bldo oubmlned.
Furthor,
1ho
above
collateral will be oold In the
condition It lo In, with no
·e xpreu or
lmpllod
,wmentlal glvan.
From your
, For Further lnlormotlon,
contact JeH Gilkey at G92·

SWiday
MlddleportPrabrterlan
Sunday Sd&gt;ool • 9 loftL
Worship. 10 a.m.

ond TAACi&lt;ilciE WORK ·
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOllE SITES Mel
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING
DFiiVEWAYS INBTAil£0
UMESTONE-TRUCKltfG

FREE ESTIMATES

I

IRIMaad

Happy
50th
Birthday,
PawPaw!

Seventh-Day AdventiSt
So•••·DoJ Advend•
Mulberry HtJ. Rd., Pomeroy ·
Putor: Roy Lawimky
S.tunloy Servioes:
Sabbath Sehool - 2 p.m.
Wonbip - 3 p.m.

Un1ted Brethren
Ml Hert111111 United Brtlhren
In Chrill Churcb
Tent Comrmmity o{f CR 12
Paswr. Robert Sanden
SWiday Sehool • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip ·10:30o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednelday Servi&lt;et -7:30p.m.

REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
-FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992·2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
~.

Golf Clubal

Repair,
uoad Golf
Clube,

HOUSE FOR SALE
By TRINITY CHURCH
Sybil Ebersbact'l Home
Located at 166 Mulbe.rry Ave.,
Pomeroy, Ohio. 2 story with
basement. Excellent
condition, hot water heat.
Contact 992·3172 or 992·3381

on Stale Route 124
Pattor: Rev. Robert Marldey
Sunday Sc:hooi - IOa.m.
Wonhip -7:30p.m.
Wednesdoy Services -7:30p.m.

Trophleo

Pia-

61c-915-3961

EAGLE
I.ANES
(Former Mason Lanes)

3rd and Pointrey Stlltts

F - Goaptl Million
Bald K,lob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pa-. Rev. Roger WilUOrd

WINTER HOURS

• .... wv

BILL Q~ICKEL'

992-.5432

SUPP~y - ·l ,

FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE

•

, . "iJil(rtit~· and St•rl'i.-ft .4l~·on "
'
Established 1913 ·

1192-2121 .
·•106 MuCbtrry Ari.

' SERVICE

T

~.

SERVICE
. 36970 laiRII Road
•PCIIMI'oy, Ohio
GRAVEl,. SAND,

Plumbing

Extorlor

LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL
&amp; FILL : DIRT

992·3470
OWNER: ltff Wid!•.._
DAVIDSON'S
PLUIIliiHJ
.nv~~~ing

~! -·

31to4t.adi••
. 4/29/93

..................
Frame Repair

ESTIMATE$) .

V.C. YOUNG Ill

992•701, or
992·5553

or TOLL Fill

I..OG-141;0070
DllWIII, 01110

UCINE
MO*ER CLINIC
WAllll Alln
Parts a.. Servkt

Mowers • Cha• Saws
W..dtatws

Authorized: Srlggo l
Slratton MTD, Ryan,
I. D.C. Repair Cenlar
PICKUP . and DEUVERY
Houra 96· M-F 11-3 SaL
Cloud Sunday

ltyOwHr
fenced yard, walking
dletence lo echooi or
church. ld11l lor
young family.

CIIIIN9-2244
after&amp; p.m.

992-6215
Pomeroy, Qhlo
.

Richard M~re
h• joined our .tart.
Richard COmM to
with 12 yn.
experience at

Pomeroy Home Ia
Auto and C&amp;A

Auto

ComeYisn Us.

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE
WORK
Porches,
·Patios,
Sidewalks
.· 992-7878

GENERAL·
HAULING
Limestone
Dirt
Gravel
992-7878

mnmo.

MQWJ

Any Condition
614·992·7553
HAULING
LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL, TOPSOIL
&amp;COAL
SAYRE TRUCKING

8YRACUSE, OH.
~

11111-112.,S118

eo........

'fine flbrCca

nllll..._oiUJIIIIka • - • FAX

:t•r--

WINTERIZATION SPECIALS
CERTIFIED MECHANK
OUTBOAID MOTOR s3r
INBOAID/OUTIOAID W
WINTER STORAGE AVAilAIU

Bisque, GI'Hilwa,.,
Paint Brushes,

Acc•sore..,
Finished Pieces,

and Day &amp; Evening

~en~c~q

Classes available

now.

POMEROY
HOME REPAIR
All types of

Carpentry,
Plumbing,
Electric, etc.
10% Dioscount
Senior Citizen•
742-2443

MARINE SERVICES
HOME SinS
Located In Eastern Meigs County. 1 to 5

acre tracts available. Tuppers Plains &amp;
Chester water; electric available, on site
septic tanka &amp; roads to each lot
approved. Partially wooded with rolling
hills.
From $5,000 up

Call Gene Riggs 985·3594
Memory Mates • Portraits
Special Occasions

TREES
Wholesale
&amp;. Retail
up Rotall at

Remodeling

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

985·4473

SnoliwHn'a lot In
RuU..d, Oh.
Wholeoale $10 at hrrm,
$12 INUvorod. Retail lot
wiH be open 8 a.m. to II
p.m . otwtlng Nov. 24th.

'

I I I I I I\ II
( tl

r.... ares· toe·.

ROOFING

NEW ..;. REPAIR
Guttel'l
••
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning

Painting

FREE ESDMATES

·949·2168

TRI-COUNTY RECYaiNG

•DOZERS

•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKiNG

D.A. BOSTON
EICAVAnNG
(614)
667·6621
4-19-93-tln

3-111-13-tln

\1:,\lll ll

THE
PHOTO PLACE

109 High Street
Pomeroy
Bob and Charlene Hoeflich

Call

· HowriL Wrltesel

au"*" flllodet.!

.

CHRISTMAS

loNiew Homes

AREa WATER
DAMAGE
RESTORA110NINSURAHCE CLAIMS

Ownermm Faulk, Manager
technicians on evefY job.
Guarenlead

COUNTRYSIDE
CERAMICS

N9-3086

WV013372

w. llpKielbio In:

24Hour
Emerllllf'CY Service

Ofi·Pr-.. En• om
FREE ElnMAlEI
Joll lllorrie - 15 Yr. Exp.
Tri-County Aru

Is

now accepting all farrou• metals
Including: tin, cast Iron , long and short Iron.
Must be smaU enough to be moved by hand.
Short Iron (Ia• than 3ft.) 1.75 per hundr.d
Motor Cast.....2.00 per huncbwcl
Clean, dry alum. cans .23 pound
Prices subject to change without notice
Located at the comer of S.R. 143 and 7

Phone 992·5114

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

EVERY SUNDAY
AT 1 P.M.

Beginning Od. 3

*dfllf*Y (on efta)

Anllt1nW l

.IISSELL
COIISIIUCIIOII

314193 1 mo.

FactoryCWte,
12 pgeoaly.

they duervelt

,....,mo.

614-742·2138

RACINE GUN CLUB

We give c•rpet end
upholalery the
" SPECIAL CARE"

IIOUIS
CO-UIICI1101S

--- ·--

·WANTING
TO BUY
JUNK CARS
&amp; TRUCKS

CIUIIIIIG

1cti2111 mo.

M--tln

Bill's nre
ofRIIv-ood
annou11C81

IU IUIIII &amp;110111.1

• Low, wide 60 and 70 • Series
pelfonnance profiles.
Two strong flbergla11 belts
Aggressive tread design
Smooth riding polyester cord

Special RIWIL Dayton
Truckload SALE Prlcea

New Homes e VInyl Siding
New Garages e Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
~E ESTIMATES

614·992·7643
(No Sunday Calls)

bo&lt;tj.

2/12192/tfn

8130 1tc

-

POIIEROY· Butteynut Avonue- A ,3 aloiY bulldln&amp;. wilh
'

.

·"\27

Veterans
Memorial Hosp~tal

115 I . Mtmorkii ,Dr.

PDflltroy

..····-....

304· nJ-5533
Open 6 Day's A Weak

00 --

a•

OFAC!·---------------..···---

CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
36358 SR 7

Mobile -.nd Doublewtde owners...

Chester, Oh. 45720
985·3406

FURNACES

'ARNOLD'S
PLUMIING,
HEiniG &amp;
COOUNG

e

DOlliE 'n.RtiR. llrok•............_,_ .................112~
BfEitEIA~!IFFEM.~-----·····-..aoll
&amp;NeY -.rr~f'!"·---··· --·---·-·~.-...a71
.liMY IPAADUNG- ....·--·•-ooooHOHflOOOOOO(IM)-

...

Shade River Saddle

CALL

ICIIIIm

....1100

hd or ocdd be _....rllad Into apartmonta. AIKINQ taJ,DOO

~- -it.b\

DAN'S
IUNSMISSION
&amp; AUTO REPAIR

982-8321

POMEF,IOY·IIric:lt 81-t-ln !own- A cull and cozy home ona
ponlbll 2 bedruoma, alao 2 belha, beaUtilul deck. ceiling
fill a. WoWd be a g!MIIIIIllal or atarlllr home.
S25.000

Main . .

,[',,'

located on VIne SL In
Recine. Ample lot,

Pomeroy, Ohio

o-

"&lt;

'dJ

J

lOME
FOI SALE

"....

368 East Mlin St.

a.rvo rooma and tWa hall ballla. Would make a.IJINt MHUng

EWING FUNERAl HOME' ·

HAUUNG

Specializing In
Automatic
Transmlaaions

RACINE· Pine
Road- A 2-3 bedroom home altlilg on
a 1111e- 2 112- Haa a atar.go building with atlldlod
~. a 20.30 walklhop, hog .,.,, and a chlcktn

hoUie:

992-~l:iOCPomerov

,.....,.,...,.,,.,......,

M1HERIV1IJ.E· The worko all done In IIIIa 3
bilh ' - wllh all naw wiring, roof, rum-•
hot wallr ...._ MW your .ppointrneiltloday.

. Homel,te saws·

214 E .

Sun.•Thu,._ 4-10 pm
Fri. Ia Sit., 4 pm-?

&amp;nVER8V1LL.E-8ald Knob Rd.· Appn&gt;X. I/211C,.Iot wilt a ·e
rocitil, 4 bedroom hoine. Hai • lorvo iving room and kitchen.
Hu a 48 fool long IIDIIt pordt, oerpo~ and a lui ba-L
ONLY 111,1100

. ·-

.

.

Second Ave.

Middleport, OH

(row's Family R•staurant
·."lulllrl•lll"lll~g frlt/C6/t•u" ·
·' 221 W. Main St., Pomeroy

,

lll'

(3041' 773·5515

RIDE"OUR

.

lJ~Vf

'{(J\Jt11ilf~TI~~

mo.

GUN SHOOT

Real Eltat1 General

Weeki from Otde oi .Puft;hase

Pavon

. 614·915~4110

Joe N. Sayre

JOAN TEAFORD

Special EBIIy Bird
S100
Thl8 ad good for 1
FRE'E card.
l..lc. No. 0051-342

.

for you.
VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

Reasonable.Rates

Pattor: Clyde W. Hendenon
Swrdoy School - 9:30a.m.
· Bvenin&amp;- 7 p.m. .
Wedneodly Servioe -7 p.m.

..
. '
' '
POMERQY, OHI0-992·6677

'i..

12-3()-92-lfn

·THE COUNTY CLUB

•
Real Estate General

Eden United Bretltr.. ln Chrlot
2 1fl miles horlh d. Reedsville

'

i

1011oflll3

girls,
Tiff&amp; Brit,

2138.
(10) 27, 28, :IV; 3TC

FREE EmMATES

Tlblhe pttln out ol
pejntlng. l..t me do It

-

&amp; IIEE

oSofid Vnylllllttlafed
Replacement Waldows
of..iletime Warranty
-Guaranteed lnllaiiMion in 3

CLUB

..9·2104

(~10~~~1~~~--------- - ~~~~~

Syrocuot Flnt United Preobyterlan
Sunday School - I0 o.m.
Wonhip • II a.m., 4 p.m. (hi &amp; 3nl Sun.)

IN POMEROY
8:46p.m.

614·992·71

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWERUNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOMESITES "

Meatball &amp; Philly Steak Subs .
1 Free Bag of Chips &amp; 1 Free
Drink w~h purchase of sub.

Mlddlepor1 Pentecootal
Third Ave.
Rev. Clarlc Baker
Sehool - I0 a.m.

1m1101

EICAYAnNG · WHALEY'S AUIO
PARTS
BULLDOZING
Specializing in Custom

is now offering

Peftlecollal A_,bly
St. IlL 124, Rac:lne
PallOr: Williom Hoback
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Bvenins - 7 p.m.
Wedneoday Servi""' - 1 p.m.

EAGLES

Middleport, Oltio
mo.

CUSTOM DESIGNED FOR YOU

EVERY THURSDAY

- ~AIITING

CNekRoad ·

742·2904

Halloween Party
Sat. Oct. 31
Pomeroy Lanes- 992·3432
Moonllte Bowling
Come Have Fun

Cllllmr Tabernacle{:hurch
Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wonbip • 7 p.nt
Thunday Service - 7 p.m.

LINDA'S

ltll2ftl-

Rtnt·A·Lane
Sunday &amp;. Monday night
3 hours· $15.00
Cell for Reservations
Phone 992-3432

Faith FolloWihlp CruiLde for Chrlll .
Pas lOr. Rev. Franklin DickSJ.I
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

-992 -2104
0

I

Classes Will begin Tues.
Nov. 2 6:30 pm
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Downstairs
· Conference Room
Call 675-4340 ext. 232
For infonnallon or register

'·

P reur•ptions

992-2975

Polnll'cly

• • ••' Jf,

• .., '

2QHond..- St.

Ph.IIM101

171 ......

Birth Rite
Child Birth Education

'

/:

I ; ~

illwenfo-nt,
peraonel prvtectlon,
lulnnel MI'VIce, pupa &amp;
young doge lor .....
By IIPIJt. only

C.rlelon lnterdeltomlnoU...al Churdt
Kinpbtiry Rood

Syracr. Clnordllll lha N-rero
l'lotor: Rev. Rick SturPJI
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
W..meaday Servicea • 1 p.m.

83 Mill Str_,t , !! ,... .
. Mldcltport. Ohio 417,0 .' :
1&amp;141912·11117 - CII.·OOKBI
. CHURCH IUP!'LIEI . I. ll!iLEB

·'""""
......

White'• Chapel Waleyu
Coolville Road
Puror: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday Sd&gt;ool -9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 o.m.
Wednesday Servia: • 7 p.m.

205

· · u~

. ,,..

TUPPERS PLAINS
BMic ob.d~Mce,

South Btllttl NcwTMam_.
•
SiJ-R;.Jse
Putor: Duane Syderutric:ter
Sunday Sc:hool- 9 a.m.
W&lt;inhip • 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wodneodly Service • 1 p.m.

0

Weclnelday lfcrvic:a • 7 p.m.

SWiday School • 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servia: , 7 p.m.

..

Neue Selllomtml Cb.urdl
Sunday Wcnhip ·2:30p.m.;
Thunday aervicOI • 7:30 p.lll.

RNdavUio Followaltlp
Cburdo litho N...-.e
p......, John w llouaJu .
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp • 10:45 LftL, 7 p.m.
w.....,.y Services -7 p.m.

Flatwoods
Puror: Kcith Roder
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip · II a.m., 6 p.m.
Thunday Services - 7 p.m.

Nnr Life Clourr:lo Ill God

Full Goopaj LIP33045 Hillnd Rood, Pomeroy
Paa10r. Roy Hunler
Sunday Scbool- 10 a.m.
Bvarina7:30 p.m.
Tueoday A Thuraday - 7:30p.m.

Racine

CtnlralCIUIIer

Applo IIIII s-td Sll.
P1110r: Rev. David Ruuell
Sunday Sd&gt;oollllll Wtinhip- 9:30a.m.
Bvenin_a s.m--7 p.m.
Wcdnetday s.m- · 7 p.m.

Sundly School· 10 a ,ftL

P"'C..ftOII SHOP

Sunda~- 9:30a.m.

HoddniJ&gt;Orl Church
GnndStreet
'S101day School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip- II a.m .
Wednelday Semocs - 8 p.m.

Reerlnllle
Puwr. Rev. Phillip Scamerry
Wonhip -9:!0 a.m.
htol 3nl Sunday • 7:30p.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 o.m.
Wedneodly Services -7:30 p.m.

s,..... Clolrrdo ., God

"· ,.

Falllt~urcb

Bethel Clourtl
Townlhip Rd., 468C
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m.
Wedneodly ServiceJ - 10 am.

Loot_~m

10 a.ftL
Wonhip • II o.m., 7 p.m.
Wodnetday Savic:a - 7 p.m.

(~INC. .

M.O...Chopt!Cioorcb
Puoor.: Mike Mabon
Sunday tehOol - I0 a.m.
W011hip • 7 p.m.
Wednesclay Servia: - 7 p.lll.

Coolville U.lled Mtlltodbl Pll'lllt
Pattor: Hel111 Kline
CooiYIIIe Oturdl
Main "' Fifth Sl.
Sundly Sd&gt;ool- 10 a.m.
Wonhi~ • 9 LnL
Tuesday Semoes -7 p.m.

Joppa
Pas10r: B=da Weber
Wonhip - 9:30 o.m.
Sunday Sc:hool - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services -7:30p.m.

~School -

MEIGS

Cltrllllu Ftllawilblp Ceohr
Solan SL, Rmland
Pattor: Robert B. Muoier
Sundoy Scbool • 10 a.m.
Wonhlp - 11:15 a.m., 7p.m.
W..meaday Savioo -7 p.lii-

Rulload Bible Melhodlll
l'lltor: Rev.Iv.. Mycn
SIDiday SdtooJ. 9:30 il.m.
Evenina- 7 p.m.
wednesclay Service~ • 7 p.m.

ChPIItor: Sharon Hauunan
W&lt;&gt;f!bip • 9 a.m.
Sunday Sdiool • 10 a.m.
Thunday Servioes - 1 p.m.

........ Clitoo:dt ., God
Putor: lolm P. Con:onn

s,....... MI1411 Bridseman St., SyiiCllte
PallOr: Roy (Mike) Thompoon
Sundoy Scbool • 10 a.m.
Bvenina • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

EuiLelart
Puwr. Ken Molter

Pnwr. Shamn Hau1111an
Sunday Sd&gt;ool.• 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip ·II Lm., 6:30p.m.

......

Faith Tabtmodt Churdt
Bailey Run Rood
Pu10r. Rev. Bnuneu Raw1011
SWiday School- 10:00 IJD.
Evlllina 7 p.m.
Thunday Servioo - 7 p.m.

SuiiAln
Pu&amp;or: Kenneth Baker
SWidoy School- 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a_.m. (lit .t 3nl Sun)

Mlllp c-.dve Parlllh

P-.Rev.J-s-didd
Stllday School · 9:45 LftL
llvenina- 7·p.J!1.
Wednesday SeM..,. - 7 pm.

1

MarnlnaSIIr
Pallor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School • 9:45 o.m.
Wonltip • 10:30 a.m.
Thunday Services - 7:30p.m.

ML Olive United Metbodlll
Off 124 behind W'dkesville
Pu10r. Cwleo Iones
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
Thunday ServiceJ • 7 p.m. ·

Mt. ...... C l i - fiGrNI

Middleport
urth
515 l'eadCom%':~~~
St., .
1'11110r. Sam Alldenon
Sunday Sd&gt;ooltO a.m.
Evlllins • 7:30p.m.
WednesdaySemc:o • 7:30p.m.

Cannel
Putor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m. (2nd A 4th Si..)

Graham Uolr.d Mtlltodlll
Wonhip- 9:30a.m. (ht &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:)0 p.m. (3nlol 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Church o f God

The S.l'"tloa Army
liS Bunemut Ave., Pomeroy.
S~mday School· 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Batbany
Putor: Kenneth Baker
S~mday Sdtool · 10 a.m.
Wonbip • 9 a.m.
Wedneoday 5erviceJ - 10 a.m.

United Me thodiSt

Clool II• Uoloa
llan(onl, W.Va.
Putor: Rw. David M&lt;MaUJ
Sundoy School· II a.m.
Wonhip ·9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
W-y5cMcoo - 7:30p.m.

Trlolty Coovqollmral Cburdt
Pastor: Rev. Robtnd Wildman
O!ardl • 9:1S o.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m.

Pallor: Floralco Smith
Sdloo1- 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 o.m.

Pas10r. Dawn Spaldins
Sunday Sdtool - 9:4S a.m.
Wrlnhip - II a.m.

1lartfonl Cloosrdl.r Clirlat lo

Eadd•• H-Ill Pray.,.
(at Burlin&amp;ham dum:b &lt;if Route 33)
PuiOr. Robett Vance
s...day wonblp • 10 a.m.
W~etday servioo - 6:30 p.nt

S~mday

SL Pool Lutheran Churdl
Comer Sy&lt;llll= A Second Sc, PomCIUI'

Chn sttan Un10n

Putor: Thenoo Dlllbam
Sunday. 9:30a.m..... 7 p.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.

Satnnllle

Our S.vl- Lutharan Churdt
Walnut and Henry StJ., RaYelllwond, W.Va.
Co-pa110n: Revs. Richard .t
Patricio Bonda·Ktu&amp;
S101day School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • II o.m.

s..dar. Sdooal: 9:30 Llll.
WonhipSemce: 10:30a..m.
Bible SladY. WociMadoy, 6;30p.lll.

.... c.....-11117 Clourdt

~

S.JemCeater
Pastor: Ron Fierc::e
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Wonhip -IO:IS a..m.

Lutheran

· -..
...Smnn
., Cilrlol
Putor:a.
Pblllp

Other Chur ches

Wednesday Service~ . 6 p.m.
Rulload
Pu10r. Anhur Cnbttoe
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Thunday Services - 7 p.m.

Sl John Lutlleran Church
Pine Grove
Pas10r. Dawn Spaldins
Wonhip · 9:30a.m.
Sunday Sdtool - 10:30 a.m.

t

Wonhip- 1&amp;.30 Lm.,7 p.m.
w.........y Servi&lt;oo -7p.lll.

Worahi.p- 10 Lm.

a..,.anbed Clourdo Ill J - Chrlll
Ia Lalllr Day Salall
Porllll\d·Raclne Rd.
Plator: Jeny Collin•
Sl81day Scltool- 9:30 a,ftL
Wonhip • 10:30 Lm.
WedneidayServicea · 7:30pm.

H...lock c .... Clnordo
Plltor: Chorlea IlcJmiaan
Sunday tdlool· 10:30 Lm.
Wonhip - 9:30 '-!"·· 7 p.m.

New Hav1111 Church oltlll N'ernnne
PuiOr. GJenrloa Stroud
Sunday Scbool • 9:30 ......

Rod&lt; Sprtnp
Putor: Keith Rader
Sonday Sdtool - 9:15 a.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Lanpvllle Cltrlllllan Churth
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - !0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

Pvrlload Flnt ChiD'dl Ill tho Nuart~~e
Pu10r. W'rllilm Juail
SU!)day School -10:00 LJD,
Wonhip • ~:30 p.m.
w.....,...y Servicea - 1 p.m.

~nee)

Hyooll Run Bolin- Church
P1110r: Roben Monh:y
s...day Sd&gt;ool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Service • 7:30p.m.

VIctory Baplbllad?"daot

525 N. lad St. MiddlepOrt

Ch - C,h urdt of the N...,....t
Pastor: Rev. Herbert Gro~e
Stmday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service~ - 7 p.m.

Pat&lt;or:
Kcc
Sunday Sd&gt;ool · 9:1.5 Lilt,
Wonhip • 10:30 Lm., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service• - 7:30p.m.

Weoleyan Bible Hoi'- Church
75 Pearl SL, MiddleporL
PatiOr. Rev. John Neville
Sunday school - 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp - 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.nt
Wcdnetday Service - 7:30p.m.

Beorwallow Rlclet Clourcb or Chrill
Puror: Jock Colegrove
SIOiday Sdtoo.l-9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wodneodly Servi&lt;os - 6:30p.m.

Tuppen Plain Church ri Chrlll
Pn10r. Bill Wines

· Heath (Middleport)
Putor: Fnnk Smith
Sunday Sd&gt;ool • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhlp • 10:30 am.
Wednetdoy Services - 6p.m.

Purl Chapa!
Puwr. Flomta: Smith
Sunday Sellon! - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Pine GNK'e Bible Rolin- ~ordt
Ill mile dfRL 32.5
PasiOr. Rev. O'DeU Manley
Sunday School· 9:30 a.nt
Wonhip- !0:30a.m., 7:30p.nt
Wedneodly Servioo - 7:30p.m.

S!Jnday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 8:1.5, 10:30 un., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Servioet - 7 pm.

Zion Church Ill Chrlll
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (RL 143)
PallOr. Roser WaU&lt;Il
Sunday Sdlool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 o.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Scrvioet - 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Churdt Ill lha NIIUI'IIIo
P1110r. Rev. Thanu Mc:&lt;luna
s...day School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 am. ond 6 p..m.
Wednesday SeMcet • 7 p.m.

New I..ill)l Road, Rulland
PatiOr. Rev. Dewey Kin&amp;
SIOiday tchool- 9:30a.m.
SuDclay wonhip -7 p.nt
Wednesday pntyer meetins· 7 p.m.

Wednesday Scrvioet - 7 pm.

SlO
Putor:
Sundoy
a.m.
Wonbip • 11 a.m.
1 p.m.
Woclnoaclay Service - 7 p.m.

ForeoiRua
Puur. Deron Newmon
Sunday Sd&gt;ool • I 0 o.rn.
WOIIhip - 9 a.m.
Thunday Servicea • 6:30p.m.

TII-IIIII l·t
ACADEMY

Happy
50th
Cumby!

nlllllod -p~e~a Will
flnancing IIVallafiJe.

Life e Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Hla1th •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • .Mortg~~ge .

QUALITY WORK
&amp;GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD

(614) ~2-7474
POMEROY, OHIO

IMEIICAN GENERAL LIFE Inti
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPAIY

01FilmS311.DOmo.

C•IIIEIINEn'S .MOBILE ROME
IIAnH AID COOLIIII ,

Galllpoll, 011.

......11 ot Toll Frae 1-100-172-11117

Rocky I. H•pp, DaC.U. • ....,
lox 119
Middleport,
45760
(614) 143·5264

o••

�'

.

.

•

.

•

-

1'he Dally
/, 1110\,11,

•I

t

...~ .

BEA1TIE BLVD."' by Bruee Beattie

'11 '1'-,

......
.

="!:·t.oo... ...
~-- ....':1.
3 Announcements

1

t

,

Apaibi ..11
for Rem

- ·. . . . . . . . . , _

KIT 'N' CAllLYLE® by Larry Wrtpt
.

'

f

,.

•

'

October ~.1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio·

The Dally

- ALLEY
." '
.,

pMrillenl

.NEA Cro••word Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACIIOII

__
.,.!WI.__ •.,-··~
4U2GOII-.

..
.!&lt; .

.2;;:. i;f? . . . _
l\lfnlollod
no

PHILLIP
ALDER

;t ~
.)

••

Nloe, - · 21r. "1"'111110111, Wid
hoalio~~p, ref., dep., no poto. 8'1W112.

NOI\TII

•..

• su

•s

.. • ·H ·IJ

• AKQ7

...... CA. ~ 114 .441 a~.
ono · bedroom ...,.ll.monto,
1221/m0,1........_ ullhloO, tiOO
.-.r~ty dopoelt, no poll; 114-

.QlO H2

..
.

EAST

••••

IIIZ.zzil. .

.KQU

ThrM bod,_,. """"""' In

•A a 74

.10113 2

~'f1'J,I14-H2..UU.

.,•u

SOUTH

...
•

.AKJ852
.A 755

·''.

..

54 Mlacellaneous

..

Ptts·tor

~·

Vulnerable: Nortb-8outb
Dealer: Soutb

.

~

4

BMullful

Cllico

Ktnena,

MY BROTHER BUBBA

.·

IS COMIN' FER

Mothor C.t, 114-25H445.

Help Wanted

411utty klttlnt. &amp;14 U8 0485.

11

4 ~- old purebrod KMohound,

"$400" Or -

goad wolchdog. ~londly; 4yr.
Old mln&amp;M~n ooiiJ., emart,
. gontt., 814ot14P.28t8.
I Monlh Ofd Male, White c.t
Lona Hair Slut EyN, 814-317053:1:

Mothor of 2 will bollfolt In my
homo, Onwt, M¥1

Suppbn, P.O. Bax 81, Hllloboro,

TUiollng In maol ~er:to,
grodn 7-12. coHIIoW4
.
Wlrt to do: drYWoll &amp; block

Hcrno No E•DOrlenco oory, Auoh StOO Soli AddroStomoed 110 Envolopo To: D&amp;A

OH45133.

AVON I All AIMI I Shlrtoy
SJIIIro, 304-1175o142tl.

Boy Wlf d~ All Olooo, 15
Peyne,e 4 . 0m.
Froo Kht- To Good Homt
Only! C.ll Aftor 5:30 P.M. 114-

AVON! All • -· Noocl oKiro

money or want a carHr, ehhlr
way-call Marilyn. 304-882·2145

or 1~00-1112.f3118.

245~151.

AVON CHRISTMAS Sotto AI
Work Dr Homo. Avorogt $a -$14
Houtlj. Pluo Fontaotlc Dlocountol Door-T...OOO.. Opllonol.

' Froo Pupo, Port Coclcopoo, 114258-ftM.
Klltono To Good Norno,l14-258·

I~O.JU-4738.

1403.

A VISIT,

A W.... AI

PAW!!

NWenc.: ~r.

woril. 304-f71..150.

21

~ wanlt

lnclvldualt Inter..
~r.. no
door to door, 1..aoo..&amp;27-4t40.

tod In Nmlng

I

ASK YOUR DAD IF HE
w ANTS ME TO RAKE.
YOUR LEAVES ..

l-IE SAYS "r10W
MVCH FOR JUST
ONE LEAF 7 ''

.,..---rt'C &gt;I

....

MY DAD THINKS
l-IE'S VER'f' FtlNN'(

••

..

,.
~·

Hours Flexible, 114--446-4247.

Lost &amp; Found

6

Ful~nm~

0111co -Saloo Poonlon,

Some Travel A•
Found: INglo, Plno Grovo/ Wlh Benefit,
Sond Rooumo To: CLA
F.- Run .,.. hn by cor but qulrocl.
c/o Oolllpotlo Golly Trlbu~ 1
olllltllvo, eH54411.
825 Third Avenu., Oalllpolll, un
L.oll: tan •nd brown IS mo. old 45831.
1n1le
Hlnwllyan
khten, FU(LER BRUSH. Moko your
Foodllnd vlclnhy, Ocl 251h, l14- Chrlotmu Fullor tht. r•r. Eom
1112-11tl.
$2001mo., .,.,. tJme. 304-17510111.

:m,

Yard Sale

7

Acoounllng
PotMion:
...__.., Loe.tl Compony
Soalilng An lndlvlduot Wllh Four
Yoor ACcounting DogrM. Mull
Hove Exptrlonc.. Exctllont
Btn•lfta. CDmpinullon Com-

Gallipolis

&amp; Vk:lnlty
ALL Yord SO!oo llust Bo Pold In
Aclvonco. OEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.
tho doy boton tho od Ia Ia run.
Sundoy oclltlon • 2:00 p.m.
Frldoy. - . y odhlon • 2:00
p.m. Slturdoy.

mtnsur~te

With

23

. FRANK AND ERNEST

F" rrn

Supp l1 rs
&amp; L1ve,to c k

.. ....-"-----

.

FRANK
Real

Estate

SRNIS'S
POSTRY

-·
~·

...••

Experllnce.

CORNER

•

Third Av.nUI, GalllpoUa, OH
45831.

sec:. Ause

TtfEY LIICf

... wAStt

TO l-IE A~OUI'Jt&gt;

AND

Sond Roowrt~ To: CLA 210, c/o
Oollb&gt;ollo Dilly Tribuno, 1211

fOUASt4!

UPON Tt{e PAMP
ANI&gt; t&gt;U~TY G,OIJNI&gt;
(Tt-ttY I&gt;OI"''T ttAVt
ANY c.t-~o~es
TO

/

t&gt;O)

YOU' ALWAYS MUST

/lfMtM'E' TO ....

-..
":.

BORN LOSER
~

••

~

.

~

~

,

1-!0\o.l L£T'~ :££ .&amp;lADYS 1":&gt; THE:
I-\~":&gt; HEAD
~~TU~

--hntlly YoniSOio: 8oturdlr.
Cenl......, Townh:UM, Lota 0t
Ckrlhoo, All S'- Antlq-.
Furnlluro, Lalo Of Mloo homo.

/1\U'::tT fiE.
T~£..

-Lanl. 'Cont-ry
Salo: Poll•
Rood, Frldoy,
·10121, .1, Saturday 30th,~·

..••

SURFACE MINERS

'

WHERS l.U)(EW.BOURE:i' 15 ...

~ID IN THE: O\et::5E
DE~TMa-rr AT Il-lS

AND I

6UP5RMARI&lt;ET.

Sobyoltter Muot
Hovo Aoloroncoo,l14-~1.
Truck Cor!!PI!'Y In 0o11 Hll,
Ohio le ~ ExporlSimi Trer:tCJr llilllor Exctllont P~ ExDOrlenoocl
Drlvoro Only. ~te....-z.777:J.
Truck drlvor, ·- the ""'!!. 1 yr
oxporlonco..r... homo. -Undo,

T-hor -

=

304-t7WIR'U.

•

~.. &lt;::::::.~-.A.

'. •

· - - - -4

~=t-'i·~~~~=·~'i~~cnto~=-~
r.quii'ICL ifiKI
P I - ~... 200 Moln 81.,
Pt. Pt.olnt,'"\VV28IIO ,
Wonlod: poll time ldtcllln holp

&amp;Auction

TODAY'S HISTORY: On Ibis day in
1929, 1he U.S. stock markel crashed,
beginning 1he Greal Depression .
TODAY' S BIRTHDAYS : J am es
Boswell 11740·17951 , writer; Fanny
Brice (!891 · 1951 I, singe r-comedia n;
Jo seph Paul Goebbels 11897·19451 ,
German Nazi official; Connie Mack Ill i
11940· 1, U.S. politician , is 53 ; Melba 1
Moore 11945 ·1, singer-actress. is 4~· J

Tran sport&lt;J t ton

F'IIUIM lo 8u: A.JI, Ilia Pt.

Public Sale

On some days we exclaim to anyone
wbo will listen bow glad we are to be
alive. Yet on otber days we mutter
darkly about wishing we bad stayed in
bed. Wby is Ibis? Biorhytbms• Genetita? Planetary alicnmeat? Wbo
knows? But on today's deal, the wind
was blowing favorably for Nortll·
Soutb - and for Soutb in particular. It
occurred during the match between
Poland &amp;Del lcelaDd at tile 1963 ~
pean Championships ln Baden-Baden,
West Germany.
Sometbing Wl!llt badly astray witb
tbe Polish auction. Let's leave specu·
latlon &amp;Del fact in tbe mists of
antiquity.
••·
U West leads tbe club king, even
four spades will be defeated. Alter
winning trick two with bis ace, East
plays a !bird round of clubs, and West
must collect two trump trieks.
However, against a slam West
wasn't golllg to be so brash as to lead
from king doubleton, especially as. it
was dummy's first-bid suit. HopinC be
bad two trump tricks coming, be
sought safety in llis heart Ba(Uence.
Declarer '11'011 witb tbe ace, ruffed a
heart in tbe dummy and cashed tbe
tbree top diamonds lyiDg there, discarding bis club losen. Next came a
club ruff, a heart ruff, a club ruff and a
ruff, bringing everyone down to
cards. West and South bad only
trumps remaining.
·Declarer led a club from tbe durn·
my and ruffed with tile spade eight.
Westoverruffed withtbe nine, but now
be bad to lead away from bis Q-10-7
into Soutll's A-K.J. Si.l spades bid &amp;Del
made!
Ia It fair to say tbat tbe Soutb Pole
was bot that dav?

IFRIDAY

-

I==·~~,l..tt.raa.t,
Oood "''""' _ ....
~ I ;.11Nnc11

8

MRS. HARllJI.IG A'OI&lt;ED ME 11::JO&lt;\Y

-iY·~ =:lJNu.oo

, 48M2 SA 124, Rlclnt

'i

&gt;

'

•

'

.•

Autos for Sala

Rlcll Poo_, Auotlon Cqmpeny, ond blrtondor. !lind llllrotiCI
full time 1uctk:lnelr, oomp11C1 ond Mtlll,. ltldrMO ond Jlltono
number to ~ . . 427, PWroy,

....
Ohlo I Wool
304-71W711.
· ·VIrginia,
Uc.

9

Wanted to Buy

,.._ """ ·-

Ohlo417M•

.

w- to do light work
oncl orrondo thrw ofto,_. •
....... ......2.f714.

rumnuro, no

55 . Building
.- Supplies

--11141.

llocjt, llnl
brlclo,
· Wlnwlndowl,
..., - tic. CliKHie

D :: riled .Conenrw, wall • •
phonol, · old lampo1 . old tho"
. - . . . , old docu, onllquo
- - R,_.nt Ani.._,

,...

tirw, Rio Ot'ond1, OH CoU 114-

2454!2t

- . , ownor. 114-1112·

==/"*, . ,.
-

~

;,·

Matchmaker mstantly revealS which signs
are romant1cally per1ect lor you. Mail $2 and
a lang, self-addressed . stamped envelope
to Matchmaker . c/o th1 s newspaper . P .O.

•·

Box 4465 . New York. N.Y. t01 63.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov . 23·Dec. 21) Those

ASTRO·GRAPH

••

Wo ""' .........

I D'o Auto Plrlrr tnd SOIYago,
&amp; truclio.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

.,
.
••
,•.

To Bur: Jri Autoo
Willi Or WltlrcrUI Motaro. c.n ·

-

~MY

•·

1.~

lorn loo torgo or too ornon, will
buy - . pl-. or - plllo
Mt•lhDikl.
· call OltJr Martin,

-

u..tr- 1114 a• 1303.

-od To Bw: 8tondlng n...
llir I - · O!ood Prloei, 114-IIDI

way
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) II you par·

e~

• ·In the .year ahead an important endeavor
r lnight go off in a direction you dtdn't anlici~. pate. let evenls 'ha\le t heir own way .
, because every1hlng should wont out to you r

be disappointe.d ll he/she doesn't share
your en1husiasm ,

origin, ... .., ~-tlol••"""

Saturdly, Oct. 30, 1993 ,,

.... ..., euctl , . ..... ~
lmllillon or~.·

•

61tim~le advantage .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Avoid diclaJorial lypes today because you're likely to feel

:'fastronQ need' to express your indepen • .1

denee. You 'll resent being bossed around
wants to ,rearrange ;'O ur
agenda Know 'where to look for romance

Jby anyOne 'wtlo
"~""-

'I

..---·-

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

unli n1shed tasks or assig nments you 've
been'sweep1ng under the rug since th e
beginnmg of the wee k m1ght vy for immedi·
ate atte nt1on today Get them ou t of the

tictpate today m games that are soc1alt y
competitive . you 'll be Judged more by your
sportsmanship !han your play ing skills .
Wt1ether you win or lose. do it with grace .

..••

-on-·"*'·
Nllglon,
... ,_ _ olrtlllo""'

-'

12 Wdl.)

7 Slloon

2 Flrlt·flte

a llemln-

12 Wdl.)

ltcence

3 llodlaUon

IIIIMd Off
lretancl
10 "-IIIIo•
11 Futuro oUys .'

rneaaurea
4 Gownt
5 lrltllh

1 TY't

talking horto

6

.....

ule
~·-

11 W1cie """'

ilze

20 l.lquefy
22 Nobltmlln
23
24
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37 Claar
38 Food additive

31 Kollleclrum
41 Pt11nt dlsoaoa
42 Office nota
43 Otery or
Houeewlla
44 Glotty llbrlc
45 &amp;-shaped
molding

46 Local movie
lhe.ltor(ol.)
47 Frotto
46 Gultartot Atkins
50 Actor Ron -

CELEBRITY CIPHER

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "All I really want is

10 be

able to see my son

grow up to be an honest. healthy and good man ." -

Gloria Estefan.

WOlD
tAll I

I

RUGENN

I

TAWAI

A

PRINT NUMBERED

I

Today is the 302nd

..•.; MORTY MEEKLE AND

=~~~~.bo.!:.~~"'=

All Yord Solei Must 8o Pold In
~. Ooocllnt: I:OO!Im tho
doy tho od lo to run,
Sultdoy oclhlon- 1:00pm Ffldoy,
-~
ociMion
IO:OOo.m.
S.turtloy.
sor.. Nov. 112r t-7, E"'

15 River In
Germany
H IIIII
57 For lear that

Eut
Pua
Pua
Pas
Paa

day of 1993 and the
38th day of fall.

·'

SOlo, Frl I Sot, Corner Surtooo Mlnono Nooclocl For OUt
llolnlo llh St, 11-porl, Ohio. Of Stoto Woril. . ~Gil
1loby fUmltuN, clothoo, · bod, onllqUOO. ottmlno • - ·
loti ol ml.c.
Wolfdlr,
And " ' - -hlnla,
~Ilion, Room
And

Middleport
&amp; Vk:l nIty

Pass

31 Co•-clal
building
32 Gockl-of
helllnl
33Potllc
COIIIriCiton

maU.r

4111ulllm.50 Futuro bird
51 A com.,_
UFomllehorM
53 Zodiac algn
541uty ••

.....

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; Vk:lnltY

Pomeroy,

Paso

2NT

u~:'eiiJ
231!'.:~­

42 IAitetNrrOI
45 From Hvtng

By Pbllllp Alder

Business
Opportunity

Golllpollo. 114-441-0332.
dog,
houoollroloon,
good Fun &amp; Part·Ttmo Monogor &amp;
noturocl, good wlchlldron. 304- Styllll, - d For Rtp&lt;ttlbla
Solon. lmmtdloto Oponlngo,
I'IW578.

s•

17- Hart
18 Downward
b1p
20 =HIIOnltt
nttr
21 w luland

He floated
out of bed

·· - PEANUTS

With OWn Toole, Alferencet,
Work By Yord Or ly Job, Topo
Fumlture, 151 SecOnd Avenue,

Poll Rotrto- 1 112 yooro::. Nooclo,
To Glvo Awoy - · 8
7-1'113.
To good home, whlto tomoto
LAb

Pass
Pass
Pass

11 VMIIIelo

2t Whet•

,.

Exporloncod C.rpot lnotoll••
Port

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Opening lead: • J

•

Financi al

Norta

1•

•

Umo. 304-f75.2784.

love

INihef

31SIIIIpeat
31 FrtiiCh

WELCOME
MAT!!

••
j,.'

Will lrobyolt In my homo, cloM
to echool, have r..,..te~a.
boforo I oftor ocltool IIIIo full

Welt

t•

GOODY ! ! I'LL
GO THROW OUT
THE OL'

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Soata

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BARNEY
Employmenl Serv1ces

I Cllyeyelllh
12 WMder
13TwoP...-

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·•

Comll!olly · Fumlohod mobile
llcMnO, 1 mile belol! Qollpille,
DV'trlooklna rtv.r. ~ No

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35 llrdl- -

o;t:t
11 O.•nllt

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In dUIIIN.
.. 110 HUD, rwl. ,1o

34

1"'-1

and you 'll lond il. The AS!ro ·Graph

lion .

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Persons whO
do not usua lly oppose position s you take
mtght oller unexpe cted oppostlton today
Analyze you r acttons to see what you are
dotng dtflerent.

GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) The control ol
some th1 ng perso na lly tmportant to you
mtght be in the hand s of other s tot)ay
tnstead of With you If you're patient thts will
work ttse ll ou1.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) Pre ssure lrom
your peers today mtght try to induce you to
do something tha i does not necessarily
serve your best mterests. Be fi rm and stand

your ground

AQUARIUS (Jan. 2G-Feb. t9) Objectives

LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) Your chances lor

that are of importance to you today might
not be of equal interests to your inate. Don 't

as good as they could be , because persons

PISCES (Fob, 20-March 20) You should be

achieving your objectivlis today may not be
wi th whom you're involve may think you're

too self-serving.
VIRGO (Au~. 23-Sept. 22) SOmeone who

able to get aiong wit h al r'l)os t everyone
today. with the e~ception of a know-it-all .
Characters of this ilk may ex ceed your

knows how to get you to talk without reveal-

p~tience and tolerance.
ARIES (March 21 · Aprll 19) You mig ht

you dpn'l watch eveJything you say.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Your probabili·

experience a triUe more stress than usual
today In areas tha t atfect yo ur material
involvements with others. Don 't let small
misunderstandi ngs get blown out of propor·

ties for personal gain look extremely good

ing things heJshewarits tb keep conlidenlial
may successfully interrogate you today if

today. Do n'!

l~elyou

have to sha re

you acquire with someone who was
cal!y present but didn't make a,contribution.

.'

~ lETTERS

I'

II II

I IIII

larel
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Grocer · Noisy · Yacht • Zodiac . NOTICE
A wile complained to her hairdresser, "My husband
says I have too much gray in my hair.' The hairdresser
laughed and said, You should be glad that he gets close
enough to NOTICE."

OCTOBER 291

�•

•

Sunday

$1.0()

.

'

Wisconsin., surprises Michigan

Did you
remember to
do this?

'

Inside

Meigs residents' activities catch
Bob Hoeflich's attention __.. :. B-5

Alonglbe river ..............81·8
Bu.sintss/Fann ...............D1-8
Classified ...- .......... -~- ..DZ.. 7
Entertainment ............ - .. B-8

Kevin Pinsori eyes moving as the
bane of modern existence - B-8

Deaths ................- -......A·7

Editoral ....................--.......A.6
Sports .................- .........Cl..S
Weather ...............:...........A·2

Occa....,.t,.ow. Hl&amp;bo35 to 40.

•

tmts-

TOYOTA

94 TOYOTA TERCEL

VoL 21, No. 38

~:

..

AM/FM cassette

Air Conditioning, AMIFM

$13,995

cassette, loaded!

$8495
94 TOYOTA COROLLA

Issue will give Children in violent homes Levies·
shadow
parks new life are often unseen victims
funding

$9537

Proposal generates support
from groups that rarely agree

93 FORD TEMPO GL

.
Driver's side air bag, V6,
loaded with equipment

By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Neglected
state and local parks could get a
face lift under a constitutional
amendment on Tuesday's statewide
ballot. Voters must decide if the
state should borrow money to do it
Gov. George Voinovich and
legislative leaders propose to create
a permanent mechanism for
improving state and local parks and
natural resources.
Neglected building mainte·
n:ince, pollution prevention, flood
control and other projects are targets of the only statewide issue on
the halloL
· For state pari&lt; visitors, the proposal might mean being able to use
modem flush toilets instead of old·
fashioned pit I.atrines, or camp·
gfll!lllds equipped,~th electricity.
. Local park patrons can look for·
:wm:d' to a new source of maiChing
'grants to develop or expand com·
mWJity parlc:s and l'i:Crealion.
All of it, supporters insist, with·
out an increase in ta'xes.
The proposal has generated
unusually wide support, bringing
together individul!IS and groups
who seldom agree.
For example, the Ohio Environ·
mental Council, a consistent critic
of Voinovich's performance on
environmental matters, nonetheless
backs his parks proposal. Evcn the
Ohio AFL-CIO and the Ohio Manufacturers Association see eye-toeye.
"What we're talking about here
is a once-in-a-generation opportunity to protect, actively and aggressively, these resources lbal arc so
~ital'lo the state," said Donald Van
Meter, public relations consultant
for Ohtoans For Our Parks and
Natural Resources.
The problem is that buildings in
most of the state's 72 parks and 19
state forests need repair and renovation after more than 25 years of
heavy use.
"We have 32 dams in this state

Automatic , air, driver's side
air bag, power loc::ks, loaded!

$13,995

$12,995

94 CADILLAC SEDAN DeVILLE

94 TOYOTA CAM RY LE

94 FORD TAURUS

/-?/:~~~
........ ___ll__iJ

Loaded with equipment,

Como Check Tho """' locly Style

Loaded with equipment
"Ower «) Toyolaa Available"

Dual air bags, \16,
automatic, air, loaded!

$31,995

$17,495

$15,995

~~~~==

.

DO\ILSTH . \ IOI.L\( 'I \\\ \IH'\ I :ss \10\ Ill

Air Conditioning, cruise, automatic,

93 OLDS .CIERA

16 Secdon 111 Pages
A lluntmedta Inc. nowopaper

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, October 31, 1993

Copyrlghlocl1013

93 FORD E·150 CONVERSIONS

$14,495

that have deteriorated to the point
that they are on the verge of .
becoming serious threats to down·
stream homes and other properties." Van Meter said.
The amendment would allow
the state to borrow $50 million a
year. No more than $200 million in
debt could be outstanding at any
time.
Bonds sold to raise the money
would be paid off with about $20
million a year from existing taxes.
Of the fast $200 minion raised,
$160 million will be used to
improve the state system, while
$40 million will be distributed to
local governments.
The Qnly organized opposition ·
has come from Ohioans for
Responsible Government, a group
with fewer than 100 members
headed by Rlcliaid Sheir of Columbus. ·
'
·
·
Sheir said about half the projects the state is contemplating
could be paid from increased park
user fees or charging concessionaires more to do business in the
parks.
He criticized legislators for
spending money that cou ld have
been used for parks to finance spe·
ciallocal projects such as the Gateway sports complex in Cleveland.
Sheir portrayed the proposal as a
question of priorities between parks
and schools.
"We're asked to vote on a park
issue that would increase the dining
hall in Maumee State Lodge ... for
$1 million. And yet we do nothing
for the elementary schools in rural
Ohio," he said.
I' Van Meter dismissed the com·
parison during a recent joint
appearance with Sheir before the
Columbus Metropolitan Club. He
said the parks plan would cost
about $20 million a year.
"That represents a little bit less
than four-tenths of I percent of
Ohio's annual appropriation for
education. II is a drop in the buck·
e~" Van Meter said.

By LISA PETERSON
out." she said. "while liule girls tend 10 internalize."
Times-Sentinel Staff
It may be due to who they are identifying with in the
He comes home from work and there she is, talking · violent sirualion.
on the phone, again. Knowing she has no phone
Teenagers often express anger and become physiprivileges she quickly says goodbye and places the cally abusive towards the mother.
receiver in its cradle.
Malcom Nichols a therapist at Woodland Centers
Amoment 100 late, the shouting begins followed by Inc., a local mental health center, attributes this 10 a
pushing and progressing 10 punching.
learned behavior. "Children wiU handle stress the
Across the room cowering in the comer is a lillie same way they see their parents handle it, by lashing
boy who wiiJlesses this violence and degradation.
out." he said. '"They pick up the same traits even
The effects of this scene may have an impact that though they may sympathize (with the mother)."
could span his entire life.
OveraU the emotional and physical abuse results
While this scenario is fictitious chances are it has in low self-esteem, poor social skills and a lack of
been a reality for many children in Meigs and Gallia trust of society in general, he said.
Counties. The Serenity House, a haven for victims of
"They feel isolated and different from people and
domestic violence, can · attest 10
have feelings of persecution."
Zivney agrees. "They
that.
have a fragmented or incom·
Sixtypen:enlofthewomenwho
rill' 1.1111111 I Snin
plete sense of self." she said. "In
seell refuge in the Serenity House
adults
it is what is manifested as
bring children with them, accorda multiple personality."
ing 10 Director Hilda Tirado.
These behaviors are a cry
"Children in a domestic viofor help. Children are not
lence siruation are generally con·
'"v'JOI .ENCE
equipped with the tools to handle
sideredappendagesofthemother,"
the hostile environments they
Tirado said.
are submerged in.
These children are seriously af.
"They are trying to teD
fected. They exhibit dysfunctional
people they·arein trouble by the
beha.vior.-and-suffer" retanlelJ development varying with their age
way they behave," Zivney said.
COMMUNITY
"The child's behavior is only a
and the length of exposure 10 the
symptom of the whole problem
hostile situation.
(domestic violence)."
Libby Zivney, a psychological
Nichols states, if a child
assistant at Althof and Associates,
a local counseling clinic, stresses that a child that is in is referred to him for behavioral problems it is usually
indicative of a deeper threat, and he will auiOmatia hostile home at any age is damaged.
cally seek out signs of abuse.
Reactions to abuse
Biggest problem: neglect
If a child is very young, preschool for example, she
said, there may be a delay in emotional development.
Both emotional and physical abuse will evoke
They may transgress to sucking their thumb, bed these types of behavior in yoWJg domestic violence
welling, or they may even quit speaking.
victims.
The first and most identifiable fonn is physically
School-age children generally exhibit unruly aggressive behavior, she said. "Lillie boys tend 10 lashContinued on A·2

DOMESTIC

IN OUR

Law would tighten arrest procedure
when they feel a crime has been commiued.
By JAMES LONG
It passed the house with a vote of96-0 in July and
Times-Sentinel News Staff
Stories in the Daily Tribune and Semine/ this is expected to be in senate hearings through Novemweek have shown that police. judges and victims ber, according to state sources in Columbus.
"This bill is a vitally important f1rs1step toward
are refusing to tolerate domestic violence. State
eradicating domestic violence," Sutton said after her
lawmakers want them to get even tougher.
House Bill 394, introduced this summer by bill passed the house this summer. "It establishes a
State Rep. Betty Sutton (Barberton), strengthens statewide law enforcement policy under which ofdomestic violence arrest laws - essentially forc- fenders wiD no longer be able to avoid arrest and
ing law enf01;cement officers to arrest abusers
Continued on A-2

litigation
By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Voters face
239 school money issues Tuesday
in an election held against the
backdrop of a trial that challenges
the state system of financing education.
The Ohio Depanment of Education said 102 property tax levies
would provide districts with money
to finance daily operations.
Another 65 levies and 42 bond
issues would suppoit school construction projects, while 29 districts
are proposing school district
income taxes.
Not all the issues would renew
or raise levies. A millage reduction
plan is at stake in the Three Rivers
district.. Harni110n County.
The election coincides with the
second week of a trial in Perry
County common pleas-court of a
lawsuit that wants the current state
funding system declared unconsti·
tutional.
Primary and secondary educa·
tion is financed through a combination of state, local and federal
taXes.
Local taxes provided 52.2 percent of school money in fiscal year
1992. The state provided 42.1 percent, and 5. 7 percent was from the
federal government
Local money comes mainly
fro m taxes on real estate and from
school di stri ct personal income
taxes.
State money comes from pan of
the general revenue fund, the
account into which perso nal
income, sa les and other tax pro ·
cceds are placed, and from th e
Ohio Lottery.
The Ohio Coalition for Equity
and Adequacy of School Funding
contends on behalf of 500 districts
statewide that the system is structurally flawed.
Districts that lack valuable property must impose far higher tax
rates to raise the same amount of
money that wealthy systems
receive from the identical level of
taxation.

Voters to decide levies, local offices in Tuesday's election
GM·TOYOTA LOCATION
WAS

NOW

90 Olds 98 RegeiiCJ llralgham .... .. $13,995 St2,898 ,
92 Sltum SL 2 Sldaft.. ........ .. .$12,995 $11,888
90 Teyt!J ClnHy LE, V6 .......... $11,995 $10,888
$8888
hllliaC Stllblnh ............... $10,995
IIIIIs Cullm Sullllmt .. •...... .. $16,995 .,4,888
Oldl 11111188. '.' ........ ' .... $17,9,95 .,.,888 '
13 hlitiiC Sdlld Prix tE ........... $15,995 ·at4,8&amp;15 •
13 Cldllc Sedan DeVIe .. ........ $26,995 .,.3,1815
11 ACUII LileM LS .... .......... $26,995 sa3,1I.S

~-

,.
'

TRUCKS AND VANS

FORD LINCOLN-MERCURY LOCATION
WAS

'

89 Pontiac LeMans SE .. . .. .. . .. . ..
85 Mercury tapri, one owner . . . . . .
91 Font Taurus GL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
87 Mercury Grand Maflluls . . . . . . . . . .
87 Nlssan Senlfl : ............ : . ..
86 Olds Cullass S~~p~eme . .. . .'. .. .. .
88 Olds Ciera . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. ..
87 Mercury T•z : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
86 Fonl EICIII. Waton .. .. .. .. .. .. .
.

$6995
$4495
$9995
$6995
$4995
$6995
$5995
$3995
$2995

NOW

$8888
$3498
SB988 ·
$5888 ,
$3888
$8888
S488S
S2888 .·.
St888

WAS

NOW

90 6MC Safari Canvlrison Van .. . . .. $12,995 $11,8815
S8888
86 C~evy C-20 4x4 rtckup . . . . . . . . . . $7995

14 Chevy C·1lPickup, automatic . . . $6995
81 Chevy llllzer; full size 4x4 . . . . . $8995
81 ~ CGn1111ioR Van ·. . . . . . . . . . . . $8495
16.Ford Conwersio" Van . . . . . . . . . . . . $6995
91 Chevy S·10 Pickup, 7000 miles .$10,495
-14' Ford f·150 4x2.:' ... . ........... $3995

$7488:
SS.88
$9488
1

"Unlls ,aub jectlo pri or sale and credil approval.
All l)riCft InClude applicable rebates and incentives

'

"

•

•

Senior levy sought in Meigs

Judge race Gallia's highlight

By CHA,RLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - Village and
township officials and board of
education· members will be elected
and the fate of ei¥hl levies will be
d~ided when Metgs County voters
go to the polls Tuesday.
The polls will he open from
6:3010 7:30p.m.
The only levy 10 be voted on
county-wide is the 1-mill, five-year
tax iss~;~e r~quested. for .l!royiding
and mamtammg semor ctttzens services. That levy, based on current
property valuation, will generate
$235,421 a year.
Funds from the levy, if passed.
will be used to supplement federal ,
state and local monies already
going into senior citizen programs.
Rutland Village will have two
levies on the ballot. Otie is an addi·
tiona! 2.9 mills for current expens·
es for five YCllfS, •nd the other a
permissive tax, .which is listed as
an additonal tax of $5· per motor
vehicle, to be used for repairing
roads and bridges in the village.
Fire levies on the ballot include:
• Scipio Township, a replacement tax of2 mlllf'for five years.
• Rutland Township, an renewal
of .3 miD for live years.
· • Chester Township. a replacement of I mill for five years. ·
• Pomeroy Village, a replacement of I mill for five years. ,
. • Mid9leport ViUage, a replace-

GALLIPOLIS- It may be an
off-year election, but Gallia County
voters will have a variety of choices to make when they go to the
polls Tuesday.
An election to choose a lodge
for the Gallipolis Municipal Coon,
as w~l as seats on the Gallia County LOcal and Gallipolis City boards
of education, in addition to township trustee and village council
races, are to be decided. A levy for
the Gallipo~s City Schools, township fire protection tax issues and a
local alcohol sales option for Rio
GrandearealsoontheballoL
Polls in a11·36 precincts open at
6:30 a.m. and close at 7:30 p.m.
Board of Elections officials said
the only change in polling places in
this election will be for Gallipolis
1-A, where voters will casl their
ballots at the Conner Chuck Collier
Auto Service building at Third
Avenue and Court Street
WilliamS. Medley, appointed to
fill the vacancy on the Municipal
Court bench earlier ·this year by
Gov. George Voinovich, is seeking
a six-year tenn as judge and is run·
~ing on the Republ!can. ticket. He
ts opposed by Galhpohs attorney
and f~er Gal~a County Common
Pleas Judge Rtchard C. Rodeqck
.
Jr., a De~ocrat.
Three mcumbents on the Gallia ,
Local board - Jo~n R: Fellure,
Steve J,agers and Phtl Sktdmore are seeking re-election. FC4lure is

j

'

ment of I mill for five years.
•
Village SealS
Each of the five villages will be
electing four people to fiU council
scats.
The candidates in Rutland from
which the four will be elected are
Judy Denney, Gladys Barker,
Danny Davis, Stephen Jenkins,
Warren Jerry Black and Duane 0.
Weber.
In Racine, council candidates
are Gary K. WiUford, Larry Wolfe,
Alfred H. Lyons, Robert Beegle,
Dale E. Hart, Phebe Robens, J utie
Randolph and Douglas Reese.
Racine will also be electing a
mayor for an unexpired term and
the candidates are Orland Lee
Floyd and Jeffrey L. Thornton.
Jimmie Snodgrass and John C.
Holman are running for the single
seat on the the Board of Public
Affairs.
Candidates for Syracuse Council are Larry W. Lavender, Eber 0.
Pickens, Donald C. Shaffer and
Kathryn Crow. Gordon Winebrenncr is seeking another term on the
Board of Public Affairs.
Racine, Rutland and Syracuse
are all non-partisan contests;
In Middleport, lhe candidates
are Robert Gilmore, Dewey Hor·
ton, Michael Childs and Paul Ger·
ard, aU Republicans.
Running for the foor open seats
on Pomeroy Village Council are
George Wright, John ~usser,
I

•

·
PUBLIC TEST -Ballot countlna equipment was given a
practice run Friday In preparation for Tuesday's election. Here,
Rita Smith; director of the Mel as County Board or Elec:tlons,
watches tlae bii!Iot counter 10 through its paces as Henry Well, a
member ol the lloard, looks on.
• A,

Thomas Werry, and William
Younl!. Retlublicans, and Larry
Wehnlng, DemocraL
'fowuslllp Trustees
Two uustees .will be elected in
each of the 12 townships, with
Chester and Salem also to fill unex·
pired tc:nns. Candida~s are:
Bedford - Robert F. Hawk,

Virgil C. King, Dale F. Brickles,
John E. Martin Sr., and William
Charles Cook.
Chester - Full term, James B.
Hawthorne, Oris L. Smith, Gary R.
DiU, G. Alfred Wolfe, Blair Win·
don and Roger Hayman; unexpired
term, Elmer C. NeweU and Freder(Contin";l!d on A· l)

I·

com pleting his first term on the
board and Skidmore his second,
while Jagers is completing an
unexpired term.
Challenging them are Billey L.
Halley. Mel Carter, David Mills
and Roger Schultz.
For the Gallipolis City board,
incumbents Joan E. Schmidt and
Dr. Timothy V. Kyger are up for
re-election . Mrs. Schmidt is seek·
ing a founh tenn on the board and
Kyger is completing an unexpired
term.
They are challenged by Edward
M. Vollborn, Lynn E. An gell,
Sharon W. Yates and Brad Yoho.
Only three people filed in April
for the three open seats on the Gal·
lipolis City Commission and will
receive complimentary votes Tuesday. The seats will be filled by
incumbent Carol P. O'Rourke, for·
mer city commissioner Dow w.
Saunders and Celestine M. Skinner.
Saunders and Skinner will replace
Wilma Brown and John Taylor,
who chose not to seek re-election.
Tax issues, option
Tax issues facing voters include
a 7.5-mill operating levy for the
Gallipolis City Schools; a 1-mill
renewal of the ftre protection levy
for Harrison Townshil'; renewal of
a seven-tenths of a mtU ftre protec·
tion levy for Raccoon Township;
and renewal of a 1-miU rue protec·
tion levy for Springfield Township.
(Continued qn A·2)

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