<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="10307" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/10307?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-01T02:48:54+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="20749">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/bd7fc327745dc8189172ab7434c1ffb1.pdf</src>
      <authentication>ffcbe85863a40afd5fd5d6c6b2463fb8</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="32902">
                  <text>ha•

16-llle o.lly Sentinel

Thursday, Novemt~er 11, 1993

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Long to be
honored with
reception

Sisters make career move

By KILEY ARMSTRONG
Associated Press Writer
MOUNT VERNON, N.Y. (AP)
-They've lllllde a career move at
age 100-plus- and the Delany sistcrscouldn'tbehappier.
Retired educator Sarah "Sadie"
Delany 104 and retired dentist
Elizabeth "Bessie" Delany, 102.
have become authors.
These proud daughters of a
freed slave share their wit. wisdom
and observations in a lively, literary reminiscence called "Having
Our
Say: The Delany Sisrers' First
SEN. JAN M. LONG
100 Years."
Miss Sadie and Dr. Bessie
coaxed
from suburban obscurity b '
opportunity for those who have
co-author
Amy Hill Hearth,
never met Sen. Long, as well as for
his Meigs County friends to see have found their sudden splash of
fame most bracinf.
him again."
"Ooooooh!!! 'm enjoying it!"
proclaims Dr. Bessie, who loves
being known as the "Little Sister."
"We're havinjl the time of our
lives!" chimes m the matriarch,
Miss Sadie. "We're tickled to
death!"
Their boolc, already being used
by Bob Hoeflich
as a hi~ school and coUege text, is
brimmmg with historical commenbJtY from their own, platinum per·
I'm pleased with the efforts of N.C.
spective;
it's br turns touchmg,
some membcn of die Meigs Local
Nancy will hold beginning and thought-provoking, playful, proBoard of Education dlese days in advanced beginner classes for girls
.
.
.
pressing for a more "buy .at home" six and older. Registration will be round.
The•r
words
conwn
almost
eenauitude in the school sysrem.
at I p.m. this Saturday 81 the Mid- ly matter-of-fact references to the
I don't believe the local mer- dleport Arts Council quarters. If degradation
they have wi1nessed:
e hants are asking for any special you have any questions on the pro- the post-slavery years, lynchings,
considerations. They just want an gram just give Nancy a ring at 992- "Jim Crow" segregation laws.
equal shot at the business and, of 3796.
course, boliOm line is that if local
businesses aren't supported as
The Women's Auxiliary at Vet·
much as possible, then one day crans Memorial sends big thanks to
dley are no more. And we've seen Elaine Ralston, Middleport, who
this happen.
dropped off a bag of toys to the
By "the way. speaking of the hospital for use in the Urgent
Meigs Local· Dislrict, students did Care/Emergency Center for chilwell in die IIIIIUII ~ origi· dren. The toys ease some of the
na1 story writing conleSl conducted trauma involved for the kids.
By VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV
by an Athens newspaper. Three
Associated Press Writer
juniors r.ught by Joy Bentley aldie
Joan and Charles McLain were
MOSCOW (AP) - A hard-line
hi~h school took fust, second and guests of honor at a reception held
opposition leader accused President
th1td plac. e' honors. They are Walt at their Racine home on Oct. 17 by Boris Yeltsin's government today
Williams, Jamie Ord, and Jason their children, Beverly Moore of of blocking his party from running
Dellavalle. At the Meigs Junior Racine; Mike of Cheshire, and Jim in parliamentary elections even
High, a student of Gay Perrin's, of Pomeroy. in observance of their though it has substantial popular
Bonnie Smith, won second place 40th wedding anniversary. It was a support
prize money.
Sergei Baburin, leader of the
pleasant event and Joan and
Charles extend thanks for all of the Russian Popular Union, claimed
Nancb!,allacc Swartz who has cards and other kindnesses you that authorities had cut off phone
been in
since die age of 6ve extended to diem.
lines and seized offices belonging
is launching a program to teach
to the party. He told a news conferb8lon at the Middlcpou Arts CounTalk about gelling ready in ence that lists of supporters' signacil headquarrers on N. Second Ave. plenty of time. Cindy and Joe tures to get die party !1'1 ~ ballot
in Middleport.
Fields have the interior of their disappeared after a police i'aid.
Nancy \VIS a membeJ !lf the West Main SL bome in Pomerpy
Police and government officials
Glo-Ettc5, the group's dirice twirl extensively decorated for the have not 'i:oinmented on Baburin's
team and die parade corps over the Christmas season. T.he tree was claims.
years. The Glo-Eues were state decorated and lighted Tuesday
The Russian Po~ular Union was
champs several times and won . evenin~. Next come the outside amon~ eight parttes the Central
11ational honors at Notre Dame decorations.
Eleclton Commission dropeed
University several times also.
from elections because they fatled
Nancy twirled competitively with
Dan Thompson of 3255 25th
the Glo-Ettets and individually SL, Rock Island, Dlinois, 61201, is
.winning numerous awards. In 1977 looking for you for some help in
she won die title of Miss Crescendo locati~ aome facts on his genealoThe names of Jimmy Eakins and
lu majorelt.c camp held 81 die Uni- gy.
Kasey
Roach of the D. H. primary
He s ~ng for information
'versity of Rio Grande. She was a on the family of John or James class and Jason Autherson and
Meigs High School majorette for
born in the mid-1800's Jason Caplinger of die S.D.H. class
all four yeara of her high school Thompson
in Pennsylvania and living in at the Letart Falls school were
work and was featured twirler in Meigs County in die 1900's. If you omitted from a list of students malc1980. Later she taught baton, gymoffer any help please wrire Dan ing the honor roll for tlie ftrst nine
nastics and tap dancing at the Bar- can
week grading period.
at
the
above address.
ret Arts Workshop in Washington,

3?,

Beat of the Bend...

But they are buoyed, too, by lhe
triumphs - from their own
impressive family sa'a to their
pride in the 1960s c1 vii rights
movement.
And , most recently, they're
buoyed by daily fistfuls of fan
mail. " Lots of them were my
patients; they .thought I ~as dead, I
1magme," says Dr. Besste.
Don't be fooled by her prim
appcaran~e: Dr. Bessie is the spit·
fire. Siuing ramrod-straight, she
hol~s coli!' in a n!ece's living room
wh1le Mtss Sadte - tactful and
mild-mannered yet clearly
nobody ' s fool- chuckles and
interjects from the easy-chair.
Miss Sadie is'"the sweetest.
most loving sisrer you'd find anywhere," says Dr. Bessie. To which
the sweetest' replies: "Don't lay it
on too thick."
As usual, they've walked to
their niece's place from their house
do I'll! the street. Miss Sadie,
slowed only slightly by a June hip
injury, got a sturdy boost up the
front slep from Little Sister.
These "best friends from Day
One" grew up on a North Carolina
college campus. Their father. freed
from slavery at age 7, became a
vice principal and America's ftrst
elected black Episcopal bishop.
Their mother helped run the school
while instilling 10 offspring with
self-dis'cipline, compassion and
confidence.
·
The school taught reading and
·

writing to former slaves. all
"grown people." That impressed
th~ Delany children: all "10 later
worked and saved their way
through college.
,Eventually, the Delany sisters
migrated 10 New York City. Along
the way, they rubbed. shoulders
~ith intellectuals Booker~- Wash·
mfOn alld W.E.B. DuBoiS, entertatners Cab Calloway and Lena
Home and actor Paul Robeson.
Miss Sadie g_ot her master's
degree at Columb~ and.became the
ftrslblack. ~mesbC-SCJence teac~er in the pubhc schools. Dr; Besste
openedaHarlemdentaloffice.
T~eir ~other's e;'lample
notwithstanding, women m those
days lial! !'&gt;choose between.careers
and famthes. There were suttors, to
be. sure. But common sense prevailed.
''Wh~n people ask me how
we've hved past 100. I say,
'Honey, we never married; we
never had husbands ~ .worry us to
death,"_' says pr. B~lll;,
•
~VJS:CS Miss Sadie: Don t get
mamed JUSt because he looks pretty, He's got to have good genes,
and have so~e sen~." .
Dr. Bess.te ~e.ured m !~SO _to
cart: for thetr w_hng m,other, Mtss
Sadie kept teaching un!!ll960.
In I ~~7, ~eary of CJI~ ,hfe, they
~aused a btt_ of a sh~k by buyID$ a house m a w~1te _subu.rban
netghborhood. They ve ~JVed tn~
pendently there ev~r smce. Mt~s
Sadie does the cooking, Dr. Besste
·'the servin_g.''

Government accused
ofblocking election

--

to present the 100,000 signatures
required to get on the ballot.
Baburin said his party had collected the necessary signatures, but
22,000 disappeared after the raid
two days before last weekend's
deadline. Thirteen parties did qualify for the Dec. 12 election.
But Baburin stopped short of
directly accusing police of talting
the missing signatures.
"I wouldn't blame our worlcers,
many of them women, for the lack
or vtgilance, since they have never
before dealt with riot police armed
with assault rifles," Baburin said.
Baburin said police !Old him the
raid was carried out to search for
Alexander Barkashov, a fascist
leader hiding from lhe authorities.
The Russian Popular Union is
an ultra-nationalist group opposed
to Yeltsin's political and economic
refonns.

· 'rhey ha~e .~~time housek~r wbo IS
. as,?ld as :-ve
are. says ~~- Besste. We hke
.
herl~~:
d bl'
. ~ , ~a 10 an. pu •c 11\1evtston ~. MacNed-Leh~er News
Hour keep !hem meticulously
abreasTh t.ofhtheale
1!"11 n Jsliup·to e~r_
:,egdi
1
dale,li?D- a ow-.at et, gar c, c011
hveroilanduptosevenvegelables
a day.
..
. Ex~ when others draw atten·
Ito~ to •!· the belany_s seldom
~ouc~ thetr age. That trail could be
tnhen~ : ·
.
~~age 90, thetr mother raced
t~etr b~othe~ do'f." the Sta_tue ~!
Lt!Jerty s ~~- I was funous,
Slid Dr. Bessie. .
No~, the shoe ts, on ~e other
foot. I te\1 them. pon two~
about mel I 1_1 be all nlll!~ And .if I
~rop dead .nght now, Jill be all
nght there II be somebody else 10
carry on."'
The concern of loved ones. she
says, "tickles me. I hayen't bec:n
afraid to live and I won t be afraid
Ill die."

Photographer finds her niche in a blind
By D.W. PAGE
long·time fascination With animals
AMpclated Preu Writer
and photography. When she :.vas in
, · RICHMOND, Va. (AP)
third grade, her father had given
Elbows and egos made Lynda her her first camera, a small box
:Richardson reassess her career in camera. and she'd promptly begtm
:news and cooporllle photop~Jlhy.
!skin$ pktures of everything and
: In 1986, she trailed ill die rush anythmg.
and fla')' of daily picture delld1ines
"My eyes and mind would suck
:for die patience and auiJe needed to all the wildlife pictures out of mag"wait nearly a monih in a watery azines and books I!IY parents got
:blind to gel a picture of a timid me," she said. "Those visual
Central American duct.
images reinforced my feeling for
Now the 34-year-old Richmond animals. Animals are so depend:resident is considered one of the able.~ give me a feeling of ful·
risin11 stars of wildlife photOIIfll· fillment.
.
.
;phy. wilh a current exhibition tour- . On weekends. away from_poh·
mg natural history museums.
tiCS and sports, Richanlson Slid she
After sraduatin• from Mary found her love of the outdoors and
:w~ Collcce m FmJericb- . her ~vocation for photography
'burl with a dcliee in an. Richard- meshm11.
'101111J1l11:1lticed with sevm1 SIUdio
''I realized I was tired of the
photOgraphers. That led to a job • h • and buslle, die SlleSS, all the
an amiiiCIIICIIt p.t phocographer
politicians, CEOs, star athletes and
In her spare time she worked~ their attitudes. I got tired of the
a stringer for The AsiOCiated Press ep and die elbows,'' she said,
in the early 1980s, shootin11 everyHer h!l'band, l'ree-lance phojOgthinJ from collele basketball to the raphcr Ttm Wright, encouraged her
Genml Assembly.
to 111111 full time to wildlife photog"It wu lliah III'CU rush rush raphy·
·
rush .•.. Maybe bec:a~se I im
Smce then ~job has taltcn ~er
short, I was llways JCUina elbowed all over die Untted States, to Mrica
out o1 the way by the othc:r photoa· and to Central America. She· has
raphctl," aid die !1-foot-2 photoara~.
. l'f'H.
At weekend&amp; she puraued her

shot for National Geographic publications, the Smithsonian Institution, the National Wildlife Fedenttion, the Sieq'll Club, and news and
wildlife magazines and publications in this country and overseas.
John Nuhn, photo editor of
National Wildlife magazine, says
Richardson has a style of her own.
"Lynda ... maps out what she
wants to shoot to illustrate the
story. She researches the animals
and the people involved," he said.
"She can make things hap~en
without dislurbing the animals.'
Richlrdsonls work has brought
her face 10 face wilh a rare canebrake rattlesnake at a range of 18
inches. And in Africa, she met a
bull ele~hant on a very personal
basis: • We crawled out on our
hands.. and knees to within S feet of
hi

m.

Her guide suggested she not
move, no matler what - as long as
she and die guide remained on their
hands and knees, the elephant
would take diem for warthogs,
"I was somewhat offended by
that characterization," she said,
laughing.

s0

----

p
F
E
I

Unions try to
deter Streisand
LAS VEO~!~AP) - Blll'bra
Stteluad ref
to cancel two
New Ye.'l Ilion II die Ullin&amp; of
unloa• ilaat say the 'new )COM
Grind Hoco1 It llllkln&amp;it ,bird for

allow worten 10 exerei10 their
riaJ!t to YOIC (or 1llioll. lcpiiUICI·
lion.
The ailiJet said ia 1 · llltemenl
thai p 1111· ''cleVOfOCI macb of my
life 10 01-int the !UIIIepl rl&amp;h•
ol wortcen" and ''lhll remaiu my
'commitment today and for the

At The .

'

E
R

s

......

Vol. 44, NO, 141
Multimedia Inc.

'if
·"

'

CHURCH

CLASSIFIED ADS

·November 13th - November 17th

First Baptist Church
6th &amp; Palmer
Sts. Middleport
.

EVERYONE WELCOME

..

'

the observance which was held on the 7 Sth
anniversary of tbe armistice which ended
World War I. Here, Joe Struble of Drew
Webster Post 39 fires off a round from his
rille.
.
fl

Speaker defends free enterprise

l!!i

1:00 A.M.
TO
6:00P.M.

,

~

a•~..;1J•~
COMPLETE LINE OF PROVlCO BIG·H FEEDS

Orand Opening No,emher
•Bird Feeders &amp; Bll(d Seed
•Applegate Round Bale Feeders &amp; Gates
•Farm Supplies &amp; Medicines
•Pet Supplies
•15 Different Kinds of Dog Food
•Horse Tack, Saddles &amp; Wormer

GUND OPENING SPECIALS

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
"Let us honor and remember, each with our own
silent prayer."
Jerry Gust of the University of Rio Grande made
that appeal as featured speaker at Thursday's Veterans
Day observance in front of the Meigs County Courthouse.
Recognizing the service that ve~erans have done
for the country, Gust urged those present Ill also remember the families and friends of veterans.
Veterans have fought for individual libcny and
freedom. Gull said, and will likely be called upon again
to fight a different SOl"\ Of battle: the battle Ill support the
funcrican free en~erprise system.
''The battlefields of the future will know no bounds ...
with the objectives being people's minds, their apathy
and votes," he explained.
Gust, a U.S. Air Force veteran of the Korean
Conflict, contended the American free enterprise system is already under attack on the nation's campuses
and maintained many students are indocUinated inlll
socialism by instructors who disavow free enterprise.
"Can we sit back and leave the preservation of
America to someone else? Let veterans bear the standards and protcct the rights of Americans.
"We must preserve the individuallrccdom and dignity of all Americans so the American experiment can
survive and become better.
"With increasing gifts from Washingllln, come increasing burdens on our individual liberty," Gust cautioned.
To illustrate, Gust portrayed two different images
of America: one depicting the traditional American

dream, the other warning of a dystopian future where
downtrodden families, overburdened with laws and
taxes, become spineless servants of big government.
No democracy has ever survived more than 200
years before
being brought
down by cor•
ruption, Gust
said.
"Become involved," he
concluded.
Gust, a frequent speaker
on subjects including management by objectives, leadership, motivatiOn,communications, safety,
self and subordin81e development as well as
JERRY GUST
threats to the
American free
enterprise system, has spoken Ill groups throughout
Oh1o and other areas including New Yorlc City
Dallas and Chicago.
·
Approximately 75 people attended the Veterans
Day observance on the 75th anniversary of the World
War I armistice. Participating were American Legion
members representing several local posts.

yeteran recalls day shooting stopped

•50 lbs. Tri-Biend 21% Dog Food $9.00
•Sale On All Pet Foods
•Free Brass Printed Name Plate with Purchase Of
Any Dog Collar
•Zimecterln Horse Wormer $11.95 ea.
or $11;00 w/addltlonal purchase
•50 lb. Salt Block $4.00
•50 lb. TM Block. $4.75

NITE
·LIGHT DEALER
.
.

34562 ST. RT. 124
RU1UND, OH. 45775
'

J

ClEAN It Willi

'S FEED STORE·

..'

•

·~

SALUTE_- L!JClll American Legion members ~ecogn•zed vete~ans Thursday morning
by fll"mg a salute durmg a ceremony in front
of the Meies County Courthouse Thursday
. mo':!li.!'g. '\.PPrD19mtltely 100 people attended

· 61.1.1r.1.•

RECEIVES MEDAL- Thomas Turner ot Middleport, seated·, received the World War I Service Medal Thursday during
the Veterans Day dinner at tile Feeney-Bennett Post 128 or lbe
American Legion hi Middleport Thursday. Preseatlng tbe
medal were,l'rllm left: Charles Carr, post commander; Dominic
Belton, past dept. commander; Jay M. ElliS, past district commander, and Jim Colllas. lst vice commander or the 8th dls-

trlcL

·

·

1 Section, 10 . . . . . - A 11u1t1mec1a 111c. Haw r r

Nelsonville shootout

'Let us honor and remember. .. '

HOUSE DVERFLOWIIIC?

Evenings 7:00 pm Sunday 10:15 am

&lt;loudy, blp In upper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Frlday,.November 12, 1993

EDITOR'S NOTE: The Delany
sisters • book is published by
Kodansha America; cost is $20.

Evangelist Rev. Charles Norris

Low lonllliht lr'Ollnd 58,
&lt;bu.. of raTa. Saturd:l;.IIIOit)y

•

SALE$ tHROUGHOUT ·tHE STORE
LAYAWAY
NOW FOR CHRISTMAS
.,

REEDSVILLE .
NAZARENE
.
Friday, November 12th
7:00P.M.

Page4

RftiVAL

CHA·P
FEED STORE

'

'

F

~=:rrvr~y
lhe
hu bcell auared the botel will

In Concert

Pick 3:
533
Pick 4:
1982
Buckeye 5:
5-7-12-35-36

:es.. .

Names omitted

future."

Petrovic
honored

Authors at 100-plus have full life

A Meip County recqMion bonorin&amp; Sr.tc Sena10r Jan Micllael
Lona (D-Circleville) will be lleld
Friday evenins lldle Meigs County Senior Cenrer ll 6 p.m.
Democratic Party Chainnan Sue
Maison aid that a donllia1 of $IS
will be taken II the door.
Sen. Long, • native of Middleport, wiD scdl: rc-eleclion to a dlin:l
term in 1994. He was fust elected
to die offiU in 1986.
"We're looking forward to a
fun, informal eveni":~ether,"
Maison said. "We are
of Sen.
Long's accoml'lishmcnts. The fact
that he is a nabve of Mei_g;s County
make us even more proud."
"It'a imponantto oote that die
reception ts open to the public,"
Maison said. 'This will be a perfect

Ohio Lottery

By JIM FREEMAN
Thomas Turner was 21 years
old when he was shipped to
France during World War 1 and
although the years have dimmed
some memories, Turner, now
97, recoUected the day the fighttng stopped 75 years ago Thursday.
Turner recalled he and some
other soldier.; were sleeping in a
deserted German hou se the
morning of the armistice.
His daughter Sonia Parsons
helped recall: "When they woke
up it was quiet; they didn't
know what had happened."
Turner, Middleport, was recognized Thursday night at a
Veterans Day dinn~r at the
Feeney-Bennelt Post 128 of the
American Legion. He was presented with the newly issued
World War I Service Medal on
the 75th anniversary of the
armistice which ended the war.
Of the tens of millions of
World War I soldiers ~ only
about 10,000 are still alive. The
youngest are in their 90s.
Back home, Turner's family
Continued on 1'111e 3

Three remain hospitalized

NELSONVILLE, Ohio (AP) Two pobc.e officers and a juvenile
wounded tn a gun battle outside a
convenience store remained hospitalized today'
One man was killed in th e
shooting that began about 1:15 a.m.
Thursilay when police approached
a car suspected in a hit-and-run
accident.
Scan McFall, 19, of Nelsonville
was killed after he ftred on office~
outside a convenience store on U.S.
33, Nelsonville police said.
Nelsonville Officer Jody Kin~ ,
30, and Buchtel Police Chief Kevtn
Clawson, 26, were injured. King
was in serious condition with a
head wound and Clawson was in
fair condition with shoulder and leg
wounds, both at Grant Medical
Center_ in Columbus, Nursing
Superv1sor Beverly Haffken said
today.
, A 15-year-old whose name
wasn't released was in fair condition with a hip wound today at
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital in
Athens, said a nursing supervisor
who would not give her name.
Bill Biddlestone, the Athens
County prosecutor, said two Nelsonville juveniles were in the back
seat of McFall's car. They were
released to their parents because
they were not involved in the
I

'"\

·

'·

AliTERMA TH - Authorities examine the body or a suspert
shot Tb~rsday during a gunfight outside a convenience store in
!"'elso~vdle. o.n~ suspect was killed and two police oflkers and a
JUVenile were InJUred. (AP)
.·
shooting, he said.
Nelsonville Police Chief David
Valltinburg said McFall ftrSt fired a
9mm fistol at police officers. That
set of the battle in which the juvenile also fired at officers, police
said.
"It was the scariest thing I ever
went through," Officer Miles Wolf

Jr. said. ' "You think three to six
minures is no time whatsoever. But
when you're trying to survive, it's
a long time. •'
At least 30 shots were fired,
Biddlestone said.
Nelsonville is about 50 miles
southeast of Columbus.

Harrison accepts honors as
Meigs County person ofthe _year ·
Twelve community leaders from
the 10-county Southeastern Ohio
Regional Council were recognized
Thursday night at the council's
25th annual Person of the Year
awards banquet
Businessman Phil Harrison or
Pomeroy accepted honors as the
Meigs County Person of the Year,
citing family and community commitment as the ingredie nt ror
growth.
"We want to rry Ill keep Meigs
County growing and hopefully we
can do that," he said.
Harrison is part owner or PDK
Construction Inc . of Pomeroy
which employees 55-60 people .
Harrison distinguished himse lf
in scholarship and athletics while a
student at Pomeroy High School
where he was a member of the
National Honor Society and named
most valuable bas ketball player in

,,,.

.,

•••
'•

Pffil HARRISON
southeastern Ohio basketball All
State.
After graduating from Pomeroy
High School in 1960. Harrison
attended Bethany College in
Bethany, W.Va., and graduated in
1964 with a bachelor of arts degree
in education with a minor in economics.

Remaining active in athletics
while at Bethany College lfarrisori
was selected three times to die All
Conference Team in basketball and
named Most Valuable Player in
1964.
He was also named outstanding
sent or ath Jete, honorable mention
All American and was inducted
mlo the Bethany College Athletic
Hall of Fame in 1981.
Arter graduation, Harrison
worlced for American Oil Company
in Baltimore, M.D., from 19641967, St Regis Paper Company in
Columbus from 1967-1971 and die
Ben Tom Corporation in Columbus
and Pomeroy from 1971-1985.
In 1985, Harrison started with
PDK Construction Inc. of Pomeroy
as pan owner.
. PDK Construction Inc . is in the
h1ghway construction business
Continued on Page 3

Racine council discusses water project
·. A recycling grant and water proJects were again topics of disc usSton dunng a recent meeting of the
Racine Village Council.
During discussion of a recycling
grant,-council members expressed
concern of what the village would
have to do to participate in recycling.
It was learned that items to be
recycled have to be baled and that
the baler costs $7,800 and the glass
breaker costs $2,000.
It was reponed by Thornton that
a company from Cleveland would
buy the material, however council
members became concerned ot

where·this material would be slllred
until the company came.
The mayor was requested by
council to contact Liller Control
Officer Kenny Wiggins and inquire
tf the Galha. Jackson, Meigs and
Vinton Solid Waste Plan will take
care of the village's requirement to
recycle 30 percent by 1996.
Th&lt;;~rnton "?PDrted that a grant
for domg the nve!iJank has a filing
dare of July. He advises that a boat
doclc requires a 30 percent incline
but because a boat_ramp already
eJUsts, the grant, whiCh requires 25
percent matching funds from the
village, could be grandfathcred.

No actian was talten.
Thornton reported he had talked
with the Buckeye HillS/Hocking
Valley Regional Development Dis trict and that die three-in-one projects have to be bid. He reported
the waterline along Yellowbush
Road will be the first_project as
soon as n passes environmental
review .
The new water well wiU be die
second project slated for spring
while the water meters will be a
sum!"er project. The village has
rccetved a Sl56.100 Small Cities
Development Block Grant. The viiContinued on Page 3

Problems continue forM as on Co. schools
Four Mason County schools
should Continue on probation for a
third year because of poor attendance and test scores, a repon to
the State Board Of Education will
recommend today.
According 10 a story in
Thursday's Huntington HeraldDispetcll, the report Slates the West
V"trginia Department of Education
is "panicularly concerned" about
the attendance rare at Point
Pleasan~ Hi~ School and Point
Pleasantlumor High.
During an inspection team's follow-up visit on Seprember 28, they
concluded the overaU attendance
rate at the two schools has been
below 90 percent for four consecutive years.
Because of test score below SO
.percent, Hannan Hi.rlh School and
Central Elementary have also been
recommended for continued probationary IIIXmlilation.
The rejlorl also recommends the
county school system continue on

probationary accreditation status.
According to the Dispatch,
.critics of the local system plan Ill
make a public appeal for better
financial accountability rather than
academic
standards
during
Thursday's session of the state
board in Charleston.
"The problem with these followup reports is that they don't go far
enough," said Shirley Gue of Ashton, a parent and executive
chairwoman of the West Virginia
Taxpayers Action Group (TAG).
Gue told the Dispatch that she
and Sharon Holley, another Mason
County parent who lives near MillOll, wiU BlleDd IOday's meeting Ill
discuss the problem of "overnll accountability" in the county school
system. Holley will address the
boartl during the public comment
period. Oue said.
Thursday morning. the Register
attem~ 10 ctlnlacl Mason County
Supenntendent of Schools Michael
Whalen. Attempts were unsuccess-

ful.
The on-site inspection of each
county school disUict is a pan of
the public education reform enacted
in 1988. Mason County is one of22
counties that have been inspected
so far, the Dispatch reponed.
All counties have been graded on
attendance and test scores and 23
other counties arc on probationary
approval. Atrendance of less that 90
percent and test scores below die .
50th peroentile automatically bring
probationary accreditation.
Mason County schools' original
on-sire inspection was May 12-17,
1991. The first follow-up visit in
!00 county last November resulted
m a February report that continued
probationary status.
The Dispatch said today's repon
to the SIBle board is a result or die
second follow-up visit there since
II of the county's 16 schools
remained on probation last
February.

�Friday, November 12, 1993

Commentary

Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
PomeroY-Middleport, Ohio ·
Friday, November 12, 1993

i

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather
Saturday, Nov. 13

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DltVOUD TO THE INTERESTS OF Tim JBIQ8..MAS()N AR1tA

\VASHINGTO)'{ - As a pros· ibou 8IIOiher I' .AA'
,
nosuc.i10r, ROI$· Pt!Ol enJoys die
! . po tli_. COn,sP,traeY
are nmnlng at lheir lowest level in
traek record of a Oy-by-lll&amp;JI. It forthis one to deft;~" a 1!18SSlve oo!· f\C&amp;I'Iy a decade, or at one-founh
of the banking syste.m until tile level of last year's rate.
tuneteller: He is seldom .held :
ter the November elecuon. He
Perot's frequent oulbursts about
accountable for his false 'alarms, his
American prisoners of war held in
fanwtic claims and his fictionaliud version of reality.
Viecnam is another case of fear tri·
This hasn't stopped him from
umphintl over facts. An hhaustive
yearlong Senate investigation on
sharing a soapboK with the vice
the POW·MIA issue earlier this
president - or holding the trump
card on the North American Free
year concluded lhat there was " no
TradeAareemenL
compelling evidence" that any
A look at Perot's prognosticat· dubbed it the "December Sur- Americansremainaliveincaptivity
ing during last year's campai$11 prise."
today.
.
•'Right after Election Day this
Peroc is not convinced. "We left
particularly claims concernmg a
"December surprise" and Ameri· year they're going to hit us with a men behind," he claimed recently,
can POWs -- shows a wanton dis- hundred (bank failures), it 'II be a feedin~ false hope to hundreds of
regard for factS and a deftness for SIOO billion problem," Perot pre· families. "There 11re still men
walking away from error. It also dieted.
·
alive. There is overwhelming evisuggests that the anti-NAFTA cruThere's a reason Perot has dence."
sader, who huffs about the "giant dropped lhe "December surprise"
Evidence? Perot peddles the tes·
sucking sound" (of jobs flo~~ to from his stump speech. It never timony of .a convic~ collaborata
Mexico), may be hyperventilating happened. Five days after Perot whose clatms of "live sightings"
satd lhe doomsday would occur, have been completely discredited.
aboutlhe trade pacl
Perot's agenda this autumn has the nation's banks were still stand·
Peroc's polshot patterns are the
been to convince workers lhat spe- ing. In fact, banks are having a same in both the POW and trade
cia! interests in Washington are banner year. Bank profits Ibis year debates. He claims that "even the
conspiring to steal their jobs soared to $lOA billion in the sec- strongest NAFfA supporters now
through NAFTA by relocating ond quarter this rear. second only acknowledge that the agreement
industry south of the border. But to the $10.9 bilhon earned in the will cost U.S. jobs." However lhe
last autumn he was darkly intoning ftrSt quarter of 1993. Bank failures great majority of econom'ists

1

By Jack Anderson

ROBERT I.. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Central Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETIERS OF OPINION 11111 welcome. They should be leas than 300
words. All letltl1 are subject to ediliog and must be ai&amp;ned with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, oddmssing issues, oot penonalitiea.

The slow process of
internal change in Congress
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASIDNGTON - Congressional remodelers are trying to en$ineer
sweeping change in the ways or the Senate and House, saying it's vualto
regain public confidence while acknowledging lhat old habits and empires
won't yield easily.
Some of them may not yield at all.
Anxious to get goil)g, reform-minded senators presented their proposals for change without waiting for their House counterparts, who have
been slowed by political disputes.
·
The Joint Committee on the Organization of Congress has been at
work on proposed changes for the past six months, in 36 hearings and at a
two-day summer i'ctrea\ to go over alllhe advice. Joinl proposals were to
have been ready earlier Ibis fall, but haven't been sealed yeL House lead·
ers say it will be done this month.
Senate members of the reform panel approved their package Wednes-

and
Michael Binstein

THE THREE LITTLE PIGS (REvt)Ef)VERSION)

~------~.

~--------~

THE FIRST PIG

THE SECOND PIG BUILT HIS

BUILT HI~

HOME ON THE EMT COAST

HOME IN THE

ANI&gt; THE

•

THII~D PIG

MIDWEST

Bw.T HIS

HOME ,ONTHE

dayThe issues range fi'QIII inside procedures to matters like staff cuts,
curbs on filibusters, revising the way ethics investigations are handled and
switching to a two-year·appropriations process.
There's also a politleally potent proposal to make Congress subject to
laws it enacts on employment. health aild civil rights.
Sen. David Boren of Oklahoma, the Senate chairman of the reorganization panel, said it would add up to the most sweeping overhaul of
Congress since World War D.
It will be difficult but winnable, he said, because people want change
that will make Congress more efficient and accountable.
"They've seen what happens when the process doesn't work," said
Boren, a Democrat.
Sen. Pete Domcnici of New Mexico, the Republican vice chairman,
said it was time to stop talking and start work on reforming. "It's going to
be hard to get this done," he said, "very·hard."
The reform proposals come up for action next year, each house acting
on issues affecting its own procedures, both branches on matters that
apply to Congress as a·whole.
Among the major points in lhe plaa Boren and Domenici presented:
- The requirement that Congress comply with the laws it passes
affcctin~ employee and civil ri~ts. ~ealth and safety. ~·s a sensitive
point w1th the voters; a poll earlter thiS year showed 87 percent of Ameri- . Students of democracy h'ive
cans favored extending the laws to Congress. When 11 came up in the long been concerned about~~1992 presidential campaign, President Clinton and both his rivals ger ~ voters may~~ pobUctanS
who ~Imply prom1se them, more
endorsed the idea.
.
.
There arc bills pending to do the same thing; 236 House members have good.tes, without bothe~tng to
signed on to one such measure. The reform plan, and the bills, would explain where the money W!ll com.e
apply the rules SCI by law with enforcement a congressional operation, not from. U11less c~ecked, thts .habtt
subject to the executive branch agencies that cover private employers and can lead stratght to nattonal
the rest of the government. Boren said there would be a provision for bankruptcy·
.
There are two reasons why ~t
coun review.
-A shift to two-year appropriations, instead of fmancing lhe govern- ~:i
~waotersys do
.~:.ThepartftrstfthiS
.
ment year to year and sending every agency hack to Congress for money
• 81 ......
o e
every winter. "Everybody has 10 come every year, on bended knee," u~. have ~ugh self-restraint 1;0
Boren said. It takes time, diverts effon and keeps Congress from looking avotd such a -•sa5!Cr. ~ second.JS
that a wealthy SOCiety like the Untt·
at results before it votes more money.
But it also would curb the powers of the congressional seniors who ed States can affcrd. to play Uncle
ovcrscc appropriations. Sen. Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., chainnan of the Sen- ~nugar for qutte a while before keel·
ate Approp~iations Committee, opposes.the c~ge, and there will be ~tiff
g over.
.
.
.
opposition tn lhc House as well. Domemc1 swd that may be the most diffi. for
~gy ~::::;:
cull proposal on the Iisl
em, liberal•dominated Democratic
-Cuts in congressional branch staffs, including those at the Library of Party: Find something the AmeriCongress and the General Accounting Office. Boren said the aim would
can people haven't got announce
00 a 12 percent cut in. a payroll of about '~8,000 ernpl~. That's supthat the ha e •• · ht:' to ·1 and
posed to match exccuuve branch cuts pronused by the White House. They then ~iS:~ gi~ it to ti!~
money saved would be earmarked for deficit reduction.
trusting 10 lucli: that the expense
- A new system in Senate ethics cases, in which alleged wrongdoing
involved won't be the straw that
· would be investigated by outsiders, probably former senators. That would brealcs the camel's back
crcaLC a sort of grand jury of investigators, who would report their fmd·
President Clinton's health care
ings to an elhics commiucc of senato11, selected by loL The committee
. · the Illes
.
f
and lhcn lhc Senate would judge the case.
p~gram !S JUSt
t ~on o
That would not have avoided the Senate's latest ethics problem, over thts particular scam. On CrossSen. Bob Packwood's withheld diaries. '"!e Senate Voted to enforce a
subpoena for them, an awkward confrontation that could have occurred
'under the proposed new system, too.
·
-A limit on the number of commiuees a senator can serve on, and a
You could usually fmd the mtlk
on the kitchen·table at our
reduction in the number of subeommiuees. As matters stand now. 29 sen- bottle
h
hen
· And
ators would have to give up a panel to fit the limits. Boren said there
w~oS:v:r
got:e::
~~~~Wted
~hould be no exceptions. When there was an attempt to limit multiple
commiucc roles in 1977. nearly half the senators got waivers and slayed rigtttin without waiti~g for theoth. pul
ers~~~~ere invited out to
• re 1auves
· •f
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice prnldent and colum· our r.ancy
or supper.
nlst for The A.lsoclated Press, lla1 reported on Wasllln&amp;ton' and When we sat down at the table, my
national politics for more than 30 yean.
~ounerced~l:r~~~. !b~~fdrel~do
when they figure they have caught
. a grownup in a mistake, "Someme two ,....__ .. We had
body ·~
,.......1
By The Associated Press
never
of ualad fmt.
Today is Friday, Nov. 12, the316dl day of 1993. There are 49 days left
So I suppose you could say we
in the
grew up without mamers.
~ ay's Hilhli&amp;ht in Hislay:
.
You could- if you were talkOn Nov. 12, 1942, the World War II naval lJattle of Guadalcanal ing of the ldnd ol manners you read
bepll. Althouih both sides suffered heavy ~· the Americans won a about In the etiquette books. But
~ victory over the 18pllllCSC, whose fon:es m Gnadalcanal were left · after I became an JJdult, I realiud
vinullly iaol'ited
that we had beCn learning the kind
On this dale: .
of table mannersthatcounL
hi IBIS, American suffragist Elizabeth Cady Stanton was born in
Weothernever cri(iclze~t!:r~~~
IohnttoWD. N.Y.
our m
put on our
uU.,
In 1920, ~ball. got its ftrst "czar" as Judge Kenesaw Mountain Lan- I have come to aee, is more a mark
dis WIS elected c:ommissioner of the American llld National Leagues.
of good breeding, tlian knowlns
iil1921, represCillatives of nine nations ll8thered iri tiie Jillion's capital whether tO clear the table from the
for die 111r1 eX ihe Washington Conference lor Limitation of Armaments.
right or the lefL
.
In 1927.1oief Stalin became lhe undisputed rul« of the Soviet Union
"Yuk" was not a word heard
u Leon 'rrouky Wll expelled from the Communist Party.
around our house at aupper time.
In 1944, dilring Wood War II, the GertMn battleship "Tirpitz" was We were not allowed ··to stttff our
sunk oftN«fty. .
mouths, ot to tllk witll food in our
In 1948; farmer Jeptnese premier HidelQ Tojo and several other World mouth a. We 11110 had to say
"Please" and "Miy l?"'My father
War U Iapaneae leaden were sentenced to death by a war crimes tribunal.
tolerated
no nonsense at the table.
In !9S4, EIUIIsland, the imniip8tion llatilin in New Yorlt Harbor,
c!Oied aft« proceain&amp; more than 20 million immigrants Iince 1892.
He certainly ~·t hive tolIn 1975, S~~p~U~e Qlan Iusticc William 0. Douglas retired llecanse of era!Cd Robert ~ s !DOlt mano• l'&amp;illng bealth, eildins• record 36 t/2-year term.
rallle ThmksgJVJng dinner, when
In 1980, the U.S.IIJIICC probe V~ger I came within 77.f1XJ mileS. of the future author -12 yeaqt old. •
SiJWR, ..wn, benclllb the p•t•s nngs while transmitting data back to
The parents of two ol the boys
Sifth. ' .
,,
'
that Robert hi!IIB 110\UlCl with were
· In ·1982. V:uri V.' AndrapoY was elected to succeed the late Leonid I. suddenly calltd away on .the ·holiBrezttnev M piacn1 sccmary of the Soviet Communist Pany's Central day. It was arranged that 'the three
boys would try their ltand at cook·
Comm.Idee. .

WEST COAST

••
@TIIE.t;lllcii~~ri ~ ~.

·

believe just ~ !'PJXlStte. NAFTA
levels the playmg field for the
American worker, and opens up a
massive new market for goods and
services that have been kept out of
Mexico by high tariffs.
" We can't continue the status .
quo with Mexico,"
Trade :
Represenlative Mickey Kantor told .
usduringarecentinterview.
.
"The rules are stacked against ·
American workers: This is what :
confuses me about this (Perot's) .
position or olhers."
Perot's politics may be more .
enlightened than his economics.:
Kantor, who was Clinton's cam- ·
paign manager, said Clinton under- :
stood that opposing NAFfA dUring ·
the campaign miglit hav~ cinched :
the ele~tion : ''W,e !"ould ~av.e :
locked tn Ohio~ Michtgan, Illmms·
.and Pe~ylvanta. 'f!lat would have
locked m the electi'?n; .we could
have stopped campwgmng at that
moment He (Clinton) didn't do it·
because he thought it was irresponsible."
Acting responsiLiy has never
been a consll'aintfor Perot.
DOLE VS. DOLE - Senate
Minority Leader Robert Dole, R•
Kan., can play lhe slraight man bet·
ter than anyone on Capitol Hill, but
he didn't seem to be joking when
he offered his post-mortem on last
week's election results. From the
Senate floor following GOP wins
· in state and local contests, Dole
gloated:
"I've always said.lhat if a party
is winning elections, they must be
doing something right. And the
voters are saying that the Rc:publican Party has the right candtdateir
and the right ideas."
Some may have flashbacks 10
Dole's day-after analysis almost a
year ago to lhe day, wheri Bill Clinton routed George Bush who
received only 37 percent of the
vote. The Senate•s spinmeister had
a different take on things: "Well, I
congratulate Gov. Clinton. But
keep in mind that 57 percent of the
voters voted for somebody else. So
there was no mandate, no coattails,
no majority."
Jack Anderson and Michael
Blostein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

u.s.

W. VA.

r:'st

1J: !::ru

:J

_

William A. Rusher
of every. American citizen. When
C ongressman Armey dare d to
doubt it, preferring universally
available medical insurance
instead, I acUJally saw a newspaper
headline the next day breathlessly
reporting Armey's callousness.
But health care isn't even close
to being lhe last use of this ancient
liberal wheeze. Have you consid·
eri:d, fa: example, the Right to Eat?
Do you realize that 40 million
Americans ~o to bed hungry every
night? (Netther did I, and by the
~;~!~:ifl•t I-;boy:~~v~~~~:~

:IT.

media w· I pick it up and repeat it
until it is drilled into the public
consciousness.) Can the world's
wealthiest society allow this disgrace to continue?
So down the road ~ srniling·
deniagogue will waVJ a small card
in the face of a joint session of

~

Today in history
J.ear.

Cd

·
mall•.....- and maltin lhe'
"':~'
g tr
own Thanksgivmg meal.
. "We w.ere given full inst~cttons, whtch we followed wtth
mg a 8

Geor·oe
R. c,D'Ja·uenz
b
0 .
much horseplay," Allen said in a
magazine article he wrote quite a
few years later. "As the smells
began to emanate from the big
wood range, · we w~;nt · around
clumping one another on the back
and chortling with satisfaction.
AcDtally, we cooked a pretty good

But somctliing ~r y~lue v,:as
learned on that Thanksgmng Day.
• •Actual1,y • • reported All
"we had all hid an early lessonen,
that joy and lackThaofrestraint~ not
synon~mQII;Il....
t there.ts real
cv~!l~ ~~ euquette, formahty and

ivilization.

Allen noted: "What made it
memorable was that we were on
our own. free of siSterS and mothers and lble to dispense with such
things as napkins, bread-and-butter
plates, mannu.s and all civilized
resttaints.
.
"We heaped mounds of mashed
potatoea on our plates, took all the
gravy the'P.lates would hold, elimi·
nated sissified thin slices and just
cut the turkey in chunk.s - to
match our. aJ)petitea. If iomeone
reached IJCII)8I the table and clawed
off 1 choice piece, nobody sent him
frora.the table. we jUft Jauched and
-"*" -" ..- .011
. -~-....

j

•·""!' ..... ....,..

a

Racine...

'
··
.
·

'\

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS lJJ."'J
Publllhecl every aftcmooa, Moaday throul,tr ·
r-ridly, Ill Coun. St., Pomeroy, Oblo by the .

J"oS ' SfC.\)f{\1'¥ 1.

Ohio Volloy Publilllloa Compaayn.tuiUmodla .
Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156.
Second c!UI PQ&amp;tlle paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

\

~\'-

Member~ The AaloeiJUd Praa. aud the Oblo ·
~'~"'""'* Allocllllo~. Nalloool Aci...U.ma
Repruenlaf.iYe, Dru.ham New&amp;pipcr Salu,

73:l Third Annue, New York, New Yort
10017.

POSTMASTER: Solid ........ - ... 1o '!he
Daily SeaUnel, 111 Cowt St., Pomeroy, Obio
4.1769.
-

Yo\1 c~" s:rop

SVliSCRIPI10N RAT!S
117 c.m .. or ftWor RCMtt•

WCIP.~'C'ING- .

0.. Woot..................................................$1 NJ
Ooe Mol\lh. .............................................. .$6.9!

/

0oe v...........................................,_.. saJ.lO
SJNGLit corr
PRICE

\

According 10 Allen: "About

1iaJf way t11!oU&amp;IJ the moat; vJo 111

sot quiet. Nobody finished 'his
mownainOUJ servins. We cleaned
up dle'dilbel without ally Cl)tbuaiind ---~....... If
asm . .......... .,.. o in different
directions, nOt lllking.
"I.wasn'tabletothinko.hutey

sulll&lt;:rlMI DOt dellrtq to PlY tbe ClrTier maY

remllla ........ direct lo 1be·.Daiiy Se,...el

.oaalbtee, &amp;11 or t:l: IIKIIIh bMil. Credit will be
aive• c:MTkr t«:b week.
No "'boctlpdou by moll parmtllld ID .,..

'(OU'~ FI~EP! .
I

'.

""'"·bome&lt;!llle("'Y!coiaanlbbte. .

0

•
•

'

''

J'
f

A dry ftre hydrant is installed on
roads near a pond or creek enabling.
firefighters to pwnp water from the
body of water mto pumper II'UCits. .
Holman repoi1cd the ftre depart·
ment will puichase the materials
from its o)l'ln funds and install an
additij&gt;nal dry ftre hypt on Trou-·
ble Crec;k making-six hydrants
available In case of f'tre.
Council approved Holman's
request to ptUCtiase some hard suction hose and also a heavy duty
lock fa: the·kitchen door at lhe ftre
department anneJ&lt;. ,
Council also approved having
I van Powell check the furnace at
tile annex •as well as check on an
eleclrical ~lem.
.
Councti ·approved installin¥ a
light near·the concessioq building
at~~ It was reixl!ted
.
it would
cost
per lnonih • .
Street· Commis~oner Glenn
Rizer asked that council assist in
gell}ng the survey frons bl!ck from
:res1dents. It was noted that the
forms 'did not have 10 identificatipn
on tllem so lhat is why there was
pool' response. Rizer S81d the forms
were needed so water samples
could be taken to teal for leld as
requested by the Environmental
ProtectiOI) Agency.
.
Cj&gt;uncil recessed until 7 p.m.
Monday:
Council · members preseqt
included Robert B'eegle, Henry
Bentz, Scott Jill! Ron Clark .and
Doug Rees. A'llo present were
1bornton, Holman, Rizer, Manhal
Don Dye and Firem10 David Neigler.
- ~

ss:os

Daily ......................................... --:IS Ceall

-•

ti~U.C: ~owever, the fes-

continued from Pa1e 1

!age's share in matching money
wiD be $76,000.
The 'State Issue II Pnlgram (now
called the State Carita! Improvement Program) wil be underway
for infrastructure. Council discussed a s(orm drain problem
behind the old Hayman Hardware
building. The mayor was inslructed
to get an engineer estimate on
extending·the existing storm sewer
from a point in the alley that was
recently repaired to the nver's edge
so that the end of the drain will not
be covered with mud.
Fire Chief John Holman report·
cd that three dry ftre hydrants have
been installed in areas served by
the fire department: one at Old
Town Creek in Lebanon Township,
one at Yates Pond on Lee Circle
Road in Sutton Township l)lld one
at Dravo in Letart Township.

~~~~ · ~~ct,

•••

.

'

$10,000," he said.
NELSoNvn.LE, Ohio: (AP) The co;~lition behind a lawsuit
Shoemaker said he and Ms.
seeking to reform the state's sys- Abel had proposed that the state
tem of financing public schools provide $150 million, but other
took time out to tour two school lawmakers reduced the amount.
"It's l!llC.onscionable, especially
buildings in need of repair.
when
the slate passes a $200 milRepresentatives of the Ohio
Coalition for Equity and Adequacy lion bot:~d issue for state parks,"
of Sc.hool Funding toured NeJ. lihoemaker said, referring to a measonville Elementary and· Nel- sure voters ~ved Nov. 2.
sonville Middle School on Thurs- · The posSibility of an explosion
day. State Reps. Michael C. Shoe- and fire at the elementary school
maker, D-Bourneville, and Mary worries district Superintendent
A. Abel, D·Athens, were along for Jack Hillyer.
the tour.
The school was built in 1958
The lawsuit is being heard in
near
an old ~nip mine. The land is
Perry County Common Pleas
slipping,
raising· concerns that a
Court. Court was not in session
s.udden
shift
coul4 ~upture a gas
Thursday because of the Veterans
hne.
that
runs
through the ceilings
Day holiday.
of'a lll8 classrooms. ·
··
"It's something you think abOul
William Phillis, the .coalition's as you go to sleep at night,'' Hillyexecutive director, said an impor- er said.
tant trial issue is the substandard
Engineers monitor lhe situatioo
condition of Ohio's schools.
daily, he said. The sc~ool w.ils
"Ohio has had a history of closed for a few days in December
neglect of school buildings," after cracks appeared in a wall and
PhiUis said. .
the floor of one classroom droppei\.
In 1990, the Slate Department of
At the middle school, an auditOEducation identified $10 billion rium is also used as ufeterijl,
worth of school building needs. gym and classroom. Hillyer said
The state offered a $69 million the Ohio Board·of lndusbial Relabond issue to help districts, Phillis tions forced the' district. to close a
said. ·
section of the school lasr summer
"That's like borrowing $69 for because of a slructurai problem in
1
repairs when you needed the rear wall.

•
W!¥-,.S 0111 YOIJfl: MI~O?

meal.''

.

'

.

across
a good one behind the ear
'
knuckle and say. sternly, Robert,
you're at the table!'"
G~rge Plagenz.ts 1 syndlcat·
ed writer for Newspaper Enter·
prise Association.

c~

Funding suit plaintiffs
tour
Nelsonville schools
.

H added· "'A~ da Ia
e . • . ew Y~ ter 1
began eabng wtth zest agam. But,
from !hen on, .
. .

=

. sumr Pr.Cic::dy

Tonigh~ rain developing with a
Extended forecast
low around 50. Chance of rain is 90
Sunday 'tllrough Tuesday:
pe~cel!t. Satur~ay, mostly cloudy.
Chance of rain Sunday and
Rwn likely matnly m lhe morning. Monday. Lows in upper 30s to
High in the tipper 60s. Chance of mid-40s. Highs 55-65. Fair on
rain is 60 percenl_ .
Tuesday. Lows in the 30s. Highs in
the 50s.

1

'th
of ~:--,
·
wt ~y sense I&gt;1=we •or qutte
a whtle. Whenever the ·meat was
mentioned aftexward, we had to
:=~d we had

,

- .-. ---Weather........;·; .._..-

Cifiiilress'and ~Jill the 'awlimdfng add various alleged! health foOds
lawmakers that this piece of plastic to the pack:age, andY vid/ ial
will guarantee every Amentan a supplemental paym~ for c:;ns
basic diet of three square meals a with cxceptionallv costly dietary
day (duly modified for variations in requirements. "Sfn tues'' could
age. size and gender) frolll the era- be imposed to proltibitive levels if
die to the grave.
desired on' high-cholesterol items
What's more, since this "bene- like egg's and b Iter (Wh h ld
fitl " wt'II be means-tested and will
·
u '
y s outhe
taxpayers be burdened
with
replace such current costly welfare medical costs of the heart atlacks
proSJ!URS as food srarnps, the p~i- these gluttons bring on themdent s numbcr-cruncbers wtll selves?)
assure us that the plan won't cost a
If all this sounds far-fetched
cent: on the contrary, it will save just wait a few years. Why, af~
the government money.
all, shouldn't the right to eat be rec· Strictly as a political proposi- ognized as a basic human right, and
lion, lhe idea will be a sure winner, as such underwriaen by a prosperbecause (like food srarnps) it com- ous nation? It may occur to somebi,nes the greed of \h~ recipients b~ .lo po.int out that nutritious
With that of the subsi~ f~~ ~
ts available today, from go~and Olhcn (S!JCh as ~~busi- emment sources, ~ anyone who 18
~ COIJlORilionA
h
s) ~ .
. uced!be un~bl~ to fe~d htmself. But the .
'"""·
uge coa ttion, me1u mg baste nght to tt has never been proboth the Black Congressional Cau· claimed by C!!ngress and imple~us and the farm bloc, WJU whoop mented as a smgle PfOU8J!I at the .
tt througb.~ngress. . . .
feder~ level. Come on, bberalsl .
Once It s passed, mdtvtdual There s work to do.
.
congressio,nal ~emagogues can
wu.Uam Rusher Js a syndlcatearn Browrue potnts )'e!ll' after year ed 'Imler for Newspaper Enlerby proposing amendments to prise Association.
'
increase the basic calorie count,
'

On Than~sgiving, mind yo~r manners

'. l .

3

em California and winter storm
wamin$5 were posted in Western
mountaim Thursday. Most eastern .
stales were dry.
A rapidly moving storm settled
over Southern California early in ·
the day, bringing rain and fears of
damage from mudslides in areas

le.ft prone to erosion by recent
wtldfrres.
Fires left stretches of hills bare
in Laguna, Malibu, Altadena and
elsewhere. The slides were the ftrst
of many expected from winter
rains.
High wind warnings were po.st·

ed over the Alaska penin1ula,
where unseasonably warm weather
left ski resorts in the Anchorase
area green and dry .
But winter weather reigned in
the Southwest. Rain, changing to
snow in higher elevations, reached
west from Southern California to
western Texas and Oldahoma.
' ..

i_j
•1

t

Veteran ...

Next liJ&gt;eral cause: the. right to eat
fire" recently; Michaet';Kinsley ·
challenged Rep, Dick Anney, RTexas, to deny that governmentassured health care is a basic right

By The Associated Pras
Some rain was heading toward
Ohio for the weekend, the National
. Weather Service said.
.'
An approaching warm front
could brin~ rain to western Ohio
tOnight whtle te";lperalure~ u,nder
cloudr sides hold m the upper 40s.
Skies wiU continue to be cloudy
on Saturday, with highs in the 60s,
forecasters said. But showers are
lilcely to resume on Sunday and
continue Uuough Monday.
Dry weather is on tap for Tuesday as high pressure m&lt;ives into the
area. Seasonal temperatures in the
SOs are forecast.
-,
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 74 degrees in 1879
.. while the record low was 16 in
1911. Sunset tonight wiD beat5:18
p.m. and sunrise Saturday at 7:1 S
a.m.
Around the nation
Rain caused mudslides in South-

MICH.

Perot's forecasting mostly off base

"-gl

Cloudy and rainy weather forecast for weekend

Accu-Weather• forecast for daytime conditions and hi&amp;h

The Daily Sentinel

The Dilly Sentinel

13 -

.

~~·= ·

.............:.............: .................. .$ll.&amp;4

26 woe~~a................................................ .s.43.16i

Drew Webster Post to meet
· Drew Webster Posl 39 of the
American Legion will meet Tuesday tO ~uss popn sed changes to
· post'!Xl!lstitution md by-laws. All
mtmberJ requiJed to attend this '
importiiiJt meeting. •'

are

Farm antlq~ club IO·meet
· Big Bend 'Farm Antique Club
28 .............. ,................ ,....... ,M5.50
will
meet Monday 8l 7:30 p.m.. ai
5 2 -....:...............:.......... ~ .... JSSAO 1
the Meigs Goun\)' Library. . .
ll Woolrl ..... ,..................................,....... .$14.76
.
.
O.UW.MojpC..., . '
13 Woolrl ... ~.... .,.................................. .$23.40

Continued from Page 1
thought he had been killed. Parsons said. Apparently anothe~
Thomas Turner had been listed
as missing in action.
Not until after the war was it
discovered that he was still
alive, Parsons commented. "No
one lcnew until he cameihrough
Dexter lhat he was alive."
Although Turner did survive
the war, he remembered one
close call when a German sniper
shot at him.
"I was sitting on a wall and
the bullet struck the wall
between my legs," he said.
I played dead until it got
dark, he said. Some French people helped me get back to my
oudiL
Service to counrry is a tradition in Turner's family. Two of
his sons, Clovis and Emmett,
were stationed at Pearl Harbor
when the base was au.acked by
the Japanese on Dec. 7, 1941 ,
another son, Clair, served in
Vietnam.
.
Turner's brother, Frank,
served in World War II while a
grandson, Larry Wayne Parsons,
was called up for service during
Desert Storm.

WORK ON DRIVE-THRU BEGINS. Conor a new three-ltme, drlve-t!Jru bank·
lng facility at the Famera Bank and Savlnp Co.
got underway this week. These two Wesam Con·
struction employees were busy Wednesday

struction

afternoon breaking up some concrete on tbe
parkinl lot iD preparation for tile foundatloll of
the aew buildill&amp;- The entnnc:e 10 the lot rrWest Main Street has clo8ed wiJIIe the work coes
on.

---Announcements---- EMS responds
Southern gospel performance
The Joyfulaires will perform
Saturday at 7 p.m. at Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church.
'
Church anniversary and revival
Bradbury Church of Christ,
Middlepon, will have a revival and
IOOih anniversary celebration Nov.
19-21 at 7 p.m. nightly with Evangelist Art Bush. There will be spe·
cia! music 15 minutes prior to services . The public is in vi ted to
auend.
Leading Creek Board meeting
The Leading Creek Conservancy District will hold their monthly
board meeting on Nov. 17 at 6 p.m .
at their office. The public is invited
to attend.

,_-Local briefs-. Safe recovered from B&amp;E
A safe stolen Sunday night or Monday morning from the
McOure's restaurant in Pomeroy was recovered Thursday on Wil·
·'low Creek ROad. ..
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported the opened
safe was discovered by Salisbury Township Trustee Butch Brinker.
The safe was turned over to the Pomeroy Police Deparunent for
processing.

Deputies investigate wreck
No injuries were reported following a two-vehicle accident at the
junction of SR 124 and Tyree Boulevard in Racine Thursday around
7:50a.m.
According to repon from the Meigs County Sheriffs Depart.ment. Dallas A. Hill, 40, of Greenwood Cemetery Road, Racine,
was westbound on SR 124 and struck the back of a pickup truck
driven by Corissa M . Mulford. 18, Morning Star Road, Racine, who
was stopped to make a left turn onto Tyree Boulevard.
Moderate damage was reported to Hill's 1989 Mercedes Benz
while light damage was listed to Mulford's 1993 Chevrolet S·IO
which is owned by Kevin Grady of Racine.

Meeting changed
The November meeting of the
Gallia-Jackson-Mcigs Board of
Alcohol, Drug Addiction and Mental Health will meet on Nov. 22' at
6 p.m. at the Holiday Inn in Gallipolis.

Harrison ...
Continued from Page 1
erecting·guardrail, signs and fenc ing. The company presently
employs approximately S5-60
employees.
Harrison remains active in youth
affairs. He was past president of
lhe Pomeroy Youth League and the
Big Bend Little League Association. He was also former head bas·
ketball coach at Meigs High School
from 1990-1993.
He is the sponsor of lhe Rodney
Paul Harrison Memorial Scholar·
ship Fund. From the fund, scholarships are given each year to Meigs
High School Seniors that have
done the most toward drug and
alcohol prevention while at Meigs
High School.
Harrison is a former member of
the Ohio Contractors Association
EEO/MBE Committee.

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services
responded to seven calls for assistance overnight. Units responding
included:
Thursday- 10:49 a.m. Tuppers
Plains squad and ftrSl responders to
Arbaugh Addition for Clifford
McCartney who was transported to
St. Joseph 's Hospital; 11 :36 a.m.
Racine to SR 124 for Rose Bowen
who ws transported to Pleasant
Valley Hospital ; 1:02 p.m. Syracuse 10 Second Street for Rachel
Cundiff who was transported to
PVH; 3:23 p.m. Syracuse to Third
Street for Mary Jane Arms who
was transported to VMH; 7:42p.m.
Middleport to Page Street for
Mabel Walburn who was transponed 10 VMH; 10: II p.m. Middlepon
to Leading Creek ROad for Juanita
Miller who was transported to
VMH; 11 :29 p.m. Tuppers Plains
squad and ftrSt responders to Mudsock Road for Ruby Burke who
was lransponed to Camden-Clark
Hospital.
Friday - 2:04 a.m. Grant LifeAight II Jransponed Juanita Miller
from VMH to Ohio State University Hospital.

THANK YOU FOR YOUR
SUPPORT FOR THE SALEM
TWP. TRUSTEE RACE.
CECIL "Buddy" STACY
Pd. for by the c•ndldltte:
35999 Salem School Lot Rd., Dexter, Oh.

Deer-truck collision probed

· IARGAIN MATI. .I:S SA.T. a SUN

A Pomeroy man's pickup truck sustained light dam age in a deervehicle accident Thursday around 7 p.m.
Jason McDaniel, 18, SR 124, Pomeroy, was nonhbound on U.S.
33 and struck and killed a 10-point buck that ran into the path of his
1982 Chevrolet.

IAIIGA .. NIGHT TUISOAY

.

f;J" c:Dt'IPlCATa A.VA.I~I

I' \ I' I

~

II

~1HUTO'~WW

Sheriff's office not soliciting
The Meigs Councy Sheriff's Department has had inquiries
regarding telephone solicitors requesting donations for law enforcement, S.heriffJames M. Soulsby reponed today.
"The only organization that the sheriff's office endorses in tfie
Buckeye State Sheriffs' Association, however, it is not doing any
telephone calls." he said.
If you receive any calls from other organizations asking for
donations, just tcU them "no thanks", he advised.
Soulsby commented the public will be informed if Lhc Buckeye
State Sheriffs' Association does a fund drive.

to seven calls

COlli I MC 500111 t
"llDOIUIS FAMILY VIU.UU"

Rill CDP 5
' : 10 01W.1 , . , _ M!'l- . 1:1 0 II'C- l J J

Mental health board to meet
The Gallia-Jackson-Meigs Board of Alcohol, Drug Addiction
and Mental Health Services will hold its regular meeting 6 p.m.
Nov. 22 at the Holiday Inn in Gallipolis.
The board usually meets 7 p.m. on the third Monday of each
month at its 414 Second Avenue office in Gallipolis.
·

.

.

THANK YOU FOR YOUR
SUPPORT FOR THE OUNGE
TWP. TRUSTEE RACE.
BENNY UPTON
.
.

Pd. for by the cMdldate:
40350 Sliver RldgeJid.. RudevlU., Oh.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES I SERVICE
204 Condor SL

·&gt; l'llmen&gt;y, OH.

F~L AND WINTER

HOURS

Tues ·Fri•.8:00-5:00
Sat. 8:00·12:00.
'

COLONY THEATRE
FRL 1HRU lHUAI.
TOM HANKI,IIEQ RYAN IN

SLEEPLESS IN SEAITLE Po
ONE EVENING IHOW 7:30
ADMISIION 1Z.00
AND
SHOWING AT 1:30
FAt.. IA't, SUN.
BRUCE WILLIS IN

STRIKING DISTANCE A

. ONE EVEIIGN IHOW t:30
ADIIIIIOtt SUO

DELINQUENT REAL ESTATE
PROPERTY NOTICE
In complia1ce wit~ provisions of Sertio1 5721.03 of th
Revised Code of t~e State of Ollio, t~ere willie peb•s•ecl
01 November 22e a1d November 29, 1993, i1 ••is
1ewspaper, a dellaq.ut Iaiii hst containing ••• desc..tlol
of ••e property as It appears 01 t•e tax &amp;st, ••• 11111e of
tke persa1 itJ.wllase .... tlte property is listed, tlte CltiiOelll
of taxes alii pet~ahles dwe c.cl enpaid.
Eac• persoa c•arged wit• real property taxes aad
pe1ahles •y pay t•e fe11 a111011t of taxes at t•e Meigs
Coullly Treas~rer's Offke by 4:30 P·'!l· 01 Novemller 18,
1993, to avoid pl.....ioa.
T.. avoid addltioHI Interest c•arge, a taxpayer may
Hter lito a writtH agreemeat wit• t•e Co11ty Treaswer
to pay o•e·flft• (I /5) of t•e deli1qmt taxes, pies al
CIITHttaxes due prior to Decemlter 1, 199 3.
Ust willie ready for pllllcatio1
Novelllher 22 nd November 29
NaiiCJ Pner Caarpllel

Meigs Canty Alllfw

441 Dill

'·

�Sports

Friday, November 12, 1993

The ··Daily Fr~~!!!!f'!~l~

lntheNHL,

took good shots, bul just wasn ' I
knocking lbem down. But you' ve
got to play through !hat''
Pe1rov1c's pareniS Jole and Biserka, his brother Alcksander and
former Croatian teammates Dina
Rajda and Stojan Vrankovic joined
NBA commissioner David Stem,
NelS general manager Willis Reed
and coach Chuck Daly in !be ceremony. The NelS retired Pelrovic 's
No. 3 jersey.
Pelrovic was killed in Germany
on June 7 in a traffice accident
"His ceremony was very touching," said the NelS' Derrick Cole-

man, who finished wilh 35 points
and 16 rebounds. "We used to
have him out there with us. But
when it came down to gametime,
we tried to block it out We didn' t
ex~ute down lbe slrotch."
Miller scored 17 of his 28 poiniS
in lhe fourth quarter on 6-for-7
shooting in !he period. Rile Smits
and Pooh Richardson made two
key baskets each in overtime for
the Pacers.
The lead ' changed hands seven
times during overtime. Smits and
Richardson, who scored 17 poiniS
each, gave _the Pacers one-point
~

Scoreboar·d
*-

_;_ • Football

Dlvlsloa IV
(AU p-IOolpt)

Next 'week's NFL slate

AI Wapa.._ Ha....,l'ltld

Suncby, Nov, 14

Vcruillcl (9·1) va. Oclph01 Jefferson
(10.0~ 7,30 p.m .
AI Xtnla Col Fkld
CiiK:inn•ti CAPE (1-l) VI. P\Un Cil)'
Jonl\h~~tAidet~l), 7:30p.m.
AI Cambr5d:p MKFII'I&amp;IIId Sladlum
Amondo·a.......&amp; (1-2) " · Hannibol
River (6-2), 7:30 p.m.

On:al Bay 11 Ne w Orlc:.~~nl, 1 p.m.

Hwaoa 11C~CINNATI,l p.m.
Aloena It O.Uu, I p_m.
SUI Francisco 11 Tampa Bay, 1 p.m.
Miami al Philadelphia, I p.m.
Wubini'OA at N.Y. Gi1n11, I p.m.
Kanau City It LA. Raiders. 4 p.m.
Allanta al LA. R1ma, 4 p.m.
a..EVELA?&lt;.1&gt; u Sc.~t~le.. 4 p.m.
MiilnCIIO&amp;I11 Dc:nvcr, 4 p.m..

At ... MMIII' Fulton tleld
Bainbrht1• Pain' Valley (8-l)
c.o.lu.;Dc(l-2~

N.Y. Jc:cut 1ndianapolil, 4 p.m.

Open da\8: DcuQlo New &amp;Jland
MMd11y, Nov. 15
Buffalo 11 Piu.1burg~, 9 p.m.

Al

SprinJfield (9·1 )
Warren Kennedy (1-l) , 7 :30p.m.

Qu1rt~rhukl:

AU. Cum. Yd1. TDiaL

M.itc:hcll, Mi1 ...... I 12 67 949
M01Una,K.C..... 122 73 961
Elinon, NYJ.. .... 241 157 1996
Elway. Den ......... llirt
2147
Marino, Mia........ I 50 91 1218

ua

7

2
1

6
!

Division V

8

3

(AIIIanwJ lon..hl)

A"gi.GTO
4. 1 25 2

C. W~m~n,S... ... ll'~ SM

3.4 17 4

RU&amp;MI.l,N.E........ l57 5W
Whitc,llo\1. ........ 131 465

3.6 21
3.!5 14

4.0 38

B

3

2

)h·cl'ivl'f'l

Player
l'n, \'d~. Awa.LCTD
Bla&amp;.,Sa . ..........5 2 547 IO.S 21 J

SlluPcr, llou......sn 573

ll .S 41 4

l.ahnlqll,lnd. ........44 3J!J
"- Milkr,S.D...... .43 lM
Sharpe. Dr:n. .........41 440

7.7 36 0

13.6 66

4
10.7 31 3

leaders

Qua rh·rh11rkl

Plal7ft"
1\II.Cum. Yd11. TDI.C..
. Aikman, o.J ....... 21 'll 1ol(i 1911!( 7 2

Heben.All .......... l65 102 11.52 11
Youna,S.F. ........ 245 If•? 1901 II
Beucrlcin,Ph• .... 215

·,.I £ ,•Jri1Jt,0.\.. .... J ~ 7

S
9

1 4 ~5

9 7

126 1595

9 9

J(u, ht&gt;n
, l'llrer
MI. l'•l~.
Sandon,Det. ...... 210 977
. ' Pqram.All ........ l~

fof-1)
f&gt;~t2

Wu~en,S . F........ l~7

sr,7

4.7 42

4.5 29 l
4.5 39 4
4.2 29 4

C. Caner.Min. .... .49 4'Jl 10.0 40 3
Rice., S.F.. ~ ........... 4X f~K IJ. ~ 41 S
13.5 53

9

COl..tJ)dOUS, Ohin (:\I') - Regional
I;Cini!'tnal peirin~ " fnr ll1.: 21n d annuli
OhioJliah Schuul ALhlclic Aw &gt;Cillion
l. i t.aat foa.bllltoum;~m~n :

Dh·lsiun I
AI ~ippo ·rl ~l .1dium
Cincinnati Moc lk r (10 -0)
CaurviUc (10.0). I p.rn .

VI.

AI l\' ippt·rl St .. idum
· CincinniLi SL Xni cr (7 - 3) vi.

Cincinnai l'rinC'-'nn (9- 1), 7 p.m.
At Upper Arlin~ I"" ~lo · m,wl•l Stadium
Hilli.,cl (9-1) \',., l .a nc UICr (7 -1), 7
p.m.
AI r.brlnn lb rdir&gt;l! Stadium
WNlCIYillC l'nrth {~ · ~) nr l.inu Senior
(1-2) n . Mnwu Vcmron ( ~-n 7 r .m.
At Ma ~fll un
P1ulllruwn 1' 1~· - r Sldiurn
C.nlnn McKinl.:y (~ - 1) v1. Cuyahosa
F.U. Wallh J..:~~ u i t (9-0). 1 r .rn.
At rarrna .. , •.r~ •.ldd
Mandield (ll · l) n. Mu1illon
Wuhin110n (9-1). 7 r.m.
At 1\l,-1'11 f-'innit· St;,uliurn
Clcvcl1nd St . IgnAtiu s ( 10-0) va.

SlronJ-IVillc (9-1), 7 r .m.
All.lk ~·,wucl :o- r:n1ium
Eax:lid (IO-U) n . 1:..~; C:l.:.wcl1od Shaw
(10.0). 7 p.m.
(All J,tll lnl'!i tuni l!hl)
AI Dl)lun Wt·k·umc !'iladlum
Piqu• { 9· 1) v1. ,\ lnnfl&gt;c Lcmon ·
Motvoc (1· 2). 7:)0 r .rn.
Al Mldllk·IIMft ll;.r nil t. ~ htdiutn
/
Ftanlllitl (9· 1) \' ~ . ll•1wh un kn~&lt;~ (l-2),

HOp.m.

~ Al~c.....M-wlla ...•
' IAUinlllo (IQ.O) ... llni-IAit•
(1•2): 7o30 pm.

...

_.... _
~

Millon.....

w..._

(9-1), 7o!O p.an.

FoMril (10-0) ws. c.Mmlbul P

Sunday's games

Sac:nmc:nLO at New Jcncy, 1 p.m.
Dcuoitat Poltland, 10 p.m.
CLEVFl..AND at L.A . LUers, 10 p.m.

-*NHL*EASTERN CONFERENCE
Allantk: Dhtlllon

Team
W
New Jeney ....... 12
PbiWlolphil ...... 12
N.Y. Ronp .... !I

L T Pta. GFGA.
3 0 lA " ll

6 0
5 I

24 77 65
23 64 47

Wuhinp ...... 9

7 0

11 51 S4

Floridl .............. 7 7 3
N.Y.Iolondon ... 411 I
Tamp~Bay ....... 312 2

New1rk Calholic (10.0), 7:30p.m.
AI Bowllna Green Bobol Stadlu•
McComb (9·1) ••· l..ibczty Center (B·

2),7o30pm.
AI M....Wd Ram FWd
erc.tline {B-2) n . Slnduaky St. Muy'•
(7· 3), 7:30p.m.
.
AI DoYW Cr-'- SUdlum

Steubcnvlllc Catholic (1-2) VI. How1rd
Eut Knoa (9-1), 7:30p.m.
AI M01odon Lohr Field
New Philadelphia Tu~e~~nwu Centnl
Catholic (8-2) w. LDrain Cl.earvicw (1-1),

CB

New Yod; '""'""'"'"4
8oAon.......~ .............l
Odanda ..... -............. 3

0 1.000
1 .750
l .750

Miomi ......................2
New Jcn.cy " "'""""'2

I

.11&gt;7

1.5

2

.500
.250
.250

2

Philoddphio ............. l
WuhinJIM ............ .. I

3
3

Alonzo Mourning took advantage of Shaquille O'Neal's foul
lrOUble, scoring 18 points and grabbing 10 rebounds as Charloue beat
visiting Orlando for the lOth time
in 13 games.
Mourning, four for six from !he
field and 10 for 14 from the freethrow line, scored 18 points in just
18 minutes.
O'Neal was was assessed lhree
fouls in a four-minut e span· of !he
lhird period and went to the bench
with five. He didn't play the fourth
quarter and finished wilh 19 points
on 6-for-15 shooting.
Heatl16, Bucks 103
Rony Seikaly scored 33 poiniS
and helped spark IWO lhird-quarter
rallies as Miami sent visiting Milwaukee to its fourth consecutive

TJIANK YOU FOR
YOUR SUPPORT IN
MY RB·ELECTION AS
w •R.4 NO.I.,.
&amp;.Dwuo
n
'

'

TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE!
EUGENE C. LONG

lO

9 50 61
I 3S Sl

Norlhnlt Olvlllon
9 6 3 21 59 62
BOIIoa .............. 7 4 5 19 51 41

Monoeol ........... I 5 2
~··········· · ·· 6 10
OWwa .............. 4 I
B•ffolo .............. 4 10
IWtfmd ............ 411

I
2
I

II 46 36 .
13 61 62

10 59 61

9
9

I

53
43

64
65

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Tum

W L T Pta. GFGA
T.................... 12 2 3 21 68 42

SLJ..oW ........... 11 2 2
Dallu................ 1 1 4
OUcaao ............ 1 7 2
Wimipct .......... 7 8 2
Dctroil. ............. ' • 1

:M
18
16 ·
16

S4 43

64 ,.
55 SO

62 61
13 61 60

P.cltk: Dlwllloft
• 2 26 67 S6

CalaU1 ............ 12

VaDOOUWII' ........ 10 5 0

Lao Ailploo ...... 8 7 2
SanJ010... ~ ....... 4 11 3
Amheim ··········· • !I 2
l!&amp;n.............. 3 14 I

Cetllnl Dlwkklll
t .150
Qwloae .................. 2 2 .500
Doln&gt;U. ..................... 2 2 .500
Allaota .................... 1
2 .3!3
aJ!VJ!L\ND ......... I 3 .250
ladlo~\~ ..................... 1
3 .250
Mllwaukae ............... I 4 .200

I
I

20 S4 4S

II 67 67

11 38 57

W
.
. - Pittsburgh defenseman
Kjell Samuelsson (left) and Cbica1o's Brian NOll'
nan crash into the waD during their battle. ror the

10 .. 64

7 47 71

OtictJ04, Pituburgh 1
St.l.ouil 3, Tororuo 2

Da11u 4, San Jose 0
C.J.aary S, Anahcim 4

I
I
I.S
2
2
2.S

games

Bu.tfdo al MWadclphia, 1:05 p.m.
San Ja~eal New Jcm:y,1 :3S p.m.
Boatcn MN.Y. l &gt;~.l1nd.:.ra, 7:05 p.m.
Edmamon at llartford, 7 :35 p.m.
Dato« al PitllburW., 7 :" p.m.
N.Y. Ranacn 11 Wuhlnaton, 7:35p.m.
Quebec IL Tlmpi1liy, 7:15p.m.
Ol&amp;awa 11 Monw.l, I:OS p.m.

OUc.ao 11 Toronto, I :OS p.rn.
Mtdwed Dlwtslon
Tttm
W L Pet.
HOUI10n ................. ..4 0 1.000
Ullh .........................3
I .750
San Antonia ............. l
2 .500
Don&gt;a .... ...........••.. 1
2 .333
DtDu ..................... .. o 3 .ooo

Dallu 11 Winnip.:g, S:OS p.rn.
Vancouver 11 Calguy, 8:0!1 p.m.

Minnelotl ................

o

4

.ooo

PaciRc Dlvllkln
Sooalo •.•..... ••........•..•
0 1.000
At0&lt;1\i1 .................... 3
I .750
Sacnmano .............. 2 I .6/il
L.A. Cii'P"' ........... 2 2 .500
Oolden St.11e ..... ....... l
2 .333
l'odlond ................... 1 2 .333
L.A. Lalr.cn .......... .... I
3 .:zso

St. l.oui111 L..c. Anacl120, Ul5 p.m.

Gl
I

2
2.S
3.l
4

Sundtay's ~lilmes
QucbK: ll Florida, 6:05 p.m.
S.nloae 11 N.Y. R•n~m, 7:lS p.m.
DtUu 11 Chicago, 8:35 p.ra.
Anlhcim It Yln~ouvcr, IOJ)$ p.m.

-*Transactions • llasehall

I

l.l
2
2.!

l.S
3

Thuroday's scores

lndianoiOI, Now Ieney 105 (01)
Miami 116,Mi1-103
Chulaao 1:10, Odando 17

H-101.-99
Scaule 115, CU!VELAND 102
L.A. Clippcn 1t I, Dcuoit 99

Owlono at BaMn, 'f:30 p.m.
Plliladolphia ., w~. 7,30 p.m .
MiamillOr\andO, 1 :30p.m.
New Ycrt al lndWta,l p.m.
Dlllu at Mimelnu, l p.m.
OdJOil. a1 Uuh. 9 p.m.
Omvet II L.A. Laken, 10:30 p.m.
CL£Vtl.AND II Golden SUite. 1Q-.30

p.m.

San Amonio ll S.cnmc:nto,. I0:30 p.m
A tiona at Portland, I 0:30p.m.

Aml·rlnn l.u~ul!

NEWYOkK YI\1\'Kt:l;S: Named Tad
llh.laendcr adv.noc. scout.

Uuskc1 h;~ll
liSA BASKETJI,\1 .1.: :"~rncd Clccrp
Ravdina mt21. '1 co1ch fur Lhc 1994
Goodwill Oamcs.
"Nalklnllll• , ltdh;ell ,\ ,. •.:1111~

NEW JERliY l'ITS : l'laCI.Id O.vid
Wadcly,JU-Ud, on injuN&lt;I NA..:n'e. SiiJMd
Ron Anderson, rnrwnd, l U I UllU-)'CU

CALL:

JEFF WARNER
INSURANCE
11S WElT 2ND ST.
POMEROY, OH. •7&amp;11
PH. 1141112-'478

Saturday's games
Mil••'*eutN~ Y.on.. 7 :30 _p.m .

na.w

At'talblura..,._.~

0..-abtU'J ONift (9· 1) va . Parma ·

-(1-2), ,,.,,....

AI(10-0) ...

Cha- (7-3~ 7,30

Men&amp;Boya'
Air Sheer Fl\rct Mid

. I

Air Trainer Clrcu~ Low

Wlr•• It ,,.,., Fo Atbletlc lllot1, We'rt
Gof '"' Whl• la•ll1 toreredl

..'
.'

JUST DO IT. 'l
r.;

~ ... .:.•;1'.'

,:-.-\

•

NBA contests ..•

M.tJt tlnalrill 00-0). 1:30 p.m.

,.

I

will

(9-0), 7 ,)0_,....
AI 'lftJ M
71111~
Coltunbua Wahnon (10..0) n . Sa.

-

~~.. :-,~•-,~

,.o'

By The Associated Press
Tbe Ohio High School Alhletic
Association is happy to move a dispute over a Division I football
playoff spot out of lhe courts and
onto the field. ·
Lima Senior and Westerville
Norlh high schools agreed Thursday to play each other at 3 p.m.
Sunday 10 determine lhe final playoff spot in !he big-school division.
The game was scheduled at Marion
Harding High School.
"I really .want 10 commend
Lima Senior and Westerville North
on the decision and now we can gel
out of court and on the field,"
OHSAA .commissioner Clair Muscaro said.
' The association, faced with
!)pposing coun rulings, offered to
allow !he schools to play to resolve
!be issue.
' The agreement will extend the
big-school playoff schedule by one
week, but the four other division s
are not affected, OHSAA lawyer
BiD Heichel said.
Other first-round divisional
games will be played as scheduled
beginning tonight. Mount· Vernon
play the winner af !he Lima
Senior-Westerville North game in a
farst-round contest in Region 3 on
Nov. 20. The winner of !hat game
will face the winner of Saturday's
Hilliard-Lancaster game. The
Hilliard-Lancaster winner will h3vc
next weekend off.
Division I teams in Regions I, 2
and 4 will have the weekend of
Nov. 26-27 off to accommodate the
extra game, Heichel said.· State

No games ton(&amp;ht
s~~.turd.aJ•s

puck in the fint period or Thunday night's NHL
contest in Chicago, where the Blackhawks won 4l. {AP)

.
Lima Senior, Westerville North to decide
contender-for .last playoff spot Sunday
.;. :,.

Baatan !,'l!dmcnUWI 1
Flaridi5,0Uowa4
.
Nowl"'"Y 5, Philoddphill
WIJitin&amp;!on4,T-Boyl

3
3

thorough aaarcr. DY an
agent ol PlalnUII of tho dood
lnduoo IMI lo current &amp; a
chock on tho Audtor'o
computer found no lurlher
INTHE
OF
COMMON PLEAS, IIEIGI Information on lhooo
delendanla; egonl opoke to
COUifT!1_0110
nelghboro of !he parcol, and
Jenrwrer
Director of 'hn•P Wlon tel..,hone dlroctorl• - e
...fched without lUCCI II.
·-ofOillo
"It lo nocoo..y lhorolore
Plaintiff
to give nodoo oi!M l111,. of
v.
tho Pellllon heroin by
Leo A. a.yfrletl, II at.
PubllcaUon,
In accordance
Del•d•nta
Can No. 13-CV-77 wllh Sacllon 2703.14:
163, 07; . and Civil Rule
Allldnll
U(A~ RovtHCI Code• STATE OF OHIO
And further affiant aallh
COUNTY OF IEIGI 81
Rebecca A. Spalntlowanl, noL
bolng flrol duly · oworn,
Rebecca A. Spainhow•d
dopH• oap thai ohe A•oalatant Attorney Gen•al
Swom to boforo mo and
Ia a duly adpolntad,
quallllod an
acllng oubecrlbed In my pr-c•
Aaalatanl Attorney Gen«al thlo 4th day of October,
of !hoi Stato of Olllo; llat lie llle3.
Robert L SchlPlolnllll, Jarry Wray,
AIIorney at t..w
Director of Tronopotlallon,
Notary Public In .-.d
Slalo of Ohio, oeoka, by hll
lor tho S - of Ohio,
PoUllon, to approprlalll ...
147.03 R.C.
porporty dwcrlbed lh•aln
Ulotimo Commloalon
and 1o fix lho value U...Of;
lhatlhe r•kllnco (o) of !he Ohio Revleed Code Secllon
2703.14; t63.07; and CivH
Delondanl(o) na....t bolow
Rule U(A) (Addreu
are unknown and canrtot
Unknown)
wllh ro•onablo dlllgeotoo
LEGAL NOTICE FOR
bo aac.rlalnod: Loa A.
PUBUCATION (Sbo(B)
Seylrlod, Gladyo Seyfried,
lnaertlona)
Alma W. HolllJ19aworth, Ma
W. leylrled,
Lucille
Leo A. Soylrlod, Glady•
Alma
W.
Seyfried, Ct.ra L. Caolo, Seyfried,
Max G. Hartonbach, '' Clara Holllngoworlh, Max W.
Seylrlod, Lucille Seylrlod,
Harlenbach.
Tho lollowlng acllona Clara L. Caoto, Max G.
wore lakon on behalf of the Harlenbach, &amp; Clara
whoa•
PlalnliH to oourtaln the Hartenbach
placl(o) of realclonce oflho addreoo(ao) aro unknown to
unknow~ DefenC!"'nt(o): A lito PtalntiH wllllako notice

u..=

'-

. ~~

' J

.. 1

{Continued from Page 4)
shoiS in lhe first half and didn't
miss a basket in the second half
until 7:42 remained. He finished
wilh 17 rebounds and made six of
nine free lhrows.
Christian Laettner scored 22
poiniS few visitinf Minnesota.
SuperSonics 1 5, Cnallers 102
Ricky Pierce and Dellef
Schrempf scored 22 points each
and led a key 11-0 run starling late
in lhe third qUirter.
Visiting Cleveland Iiailed 8166, but used a nine-point run 10
close willfiif'lix poiHIS witll I :20
left in lbe lhitd quarter. Mark Price
led !be CAvaliers wilh 20 points.
Clippers 11), Platons 99
'Mark Jackson had 21 points and
12 assists, .while Danny Manning
added 20 poil~ts as lhe Clippers
took a 28-poi'nt lead in the first
half•
Terry Mills scored 18, points,
and Joe Duman had 16 for visiting
DelroiL

•

•

_:..-:t'/-:'\ •

' •'

I

,~

.,

semifinal games had been scheduled !hat weekend. The Division I
championship game will be played
lhe weekend of Dec. I0-11, but !he
date and the site had not been
determined, Heichel s&amp;id.
Both schools agreed to the Sunday game late Thursday afternoon,
Heichel said. The association proposed !he unique solution during a
conference call after an Allen
County judge slid lhe OHSAA has
!be ulpmate aulhority in determining the playoff reams.
If eilhcr school had turned down
the offer, bolh would have been·
eliminated from lhe playoffs.
Earlier Thursday, Allen County
Common Pleas Judge Richard
Warren told the association 10
decide which school would play.
Warren ruled the association
properly decided that Westerville

North had violated the association's bylaws on student eligibility.
The ADen County order confliCied
with a ruling by Franklin County
CoJRmon Pleas Judge William
Gillie, who said Westerville North
should be aUowed to play in Saturday's game against Mount Vem on.
· The OHSAA, the sanctioning
body of prep sports in the stale,
ruled Oct. 28 thai Westerville
North High School had 10 forfeit
two games because il used an in eligible player.
But on Monday, Gillie overturned lhe forfeiiS, aUowing Westerville North to edge Lima Senior
out of the playoffs. Playoff positions are based on the OHSAA's
computer ratings and the reversal
of the forfeits gave Westerville
North lhc advantage.

-------Sports briefs-----Golr
MEXICO CITY {AP) - Donnie Hammond and Jay Don Blake
shot 6-under-par 66s 1o share the
first-round lead in the Mexican
Open. John Daly, suspended indefinitely from the PGA Tour on Sunday for picking up his baU wilhout
holing out in the second round of
the Kapalua Imemational, opened
with a 72.
FootbaU
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - AI
the request of Sen . Mitch
McConnell, R-Ky., lhe U.S. Justice
Department has agreed 10 look into
whether an agreement between a
coalition of &lt;;ollcge conferences
and postseason bowls violates
antilrUstlaws.
McConnell wrote 10 assistant
auorney general Anne Bingaman
last month, arguing !hat an agreement among five conferences,
Notre Dame, and the four major

bowl games could constitute a violation of the Sherman Act, since it
excludes other indcpcndcut teams.
FootbaU
HOUSTON {AP) - Florida
State's Bobby Bowden and his son
Terry Bowden of Auburn became
!he first father and son finalisiS for
lhe Bear Bryant Award as the college coach of the year.

THANK YOU
For Your
Vote and
Support!
Larry Wehrung
Pd. ""

loy--··

.

second shutout of his career, and Ulf Dahlell had two
goals and an assist as DaUas beat San Jose to snap a
•
six-game winleu stteak.
Wakaluk mide his fourth start of !he seuon in
place of Andy Moog and stopped 20 shots for his
first shutout SIDCC Feb. II, 1992:
Mike Modano,lhe NHL's leading goal scorer, had
lhree assists for the host Stars.
.
Flamu 5, Mighty Ducks 4 - Gary Roberu,
stuck in a goal-scoring slump earlier !his season, bad
a shorthanded goal and an assist as Calgary defeated
visiting Anaheim.
Raben Reichel scored twice for lhe Flames.
• Roberts signed a four -year, $6 miDi on conttacl in
the offseason, but struggled early in the year, scoring
just once in II games. His shorlhanded goal at18:16
of !he second period was his fourth in five games and
fiflh of lhe season.
Bruins 5, Oilers I - Boston added more players
1o iiS injury list, but slill had enough to beat Edmonron. Bolh Ray Bourque, who strained his left shoulder, and Cam Stewart, who has a probable fracture of
his left ring finger, missed lhe third period and Ilteir
s1a1us for future games was uncertain.
The loss at Boston Garden came one game after
the Oilers swpped a 14-game winless skid. Dmitri
Kvartalnov, Steve Heinze and Cam Neely scored
goals that gave the Bruins a 3-1 lead midway through
lhe third period, and Adam Oates and Brent Hughes
scored in !be final minute.

Public Notice

Ohio Revleed COde Sudan
2703.14; 113.07; 8lld Ci¥11
Rule 4.4 (A)(AdJ WI

Pd. for by candidate,
51849 Bald Knob Rd., Long bottom, Ohio

..

into an empty net with six seconds left
Blackhawks 4, Penguins l - Jeremy Roenick
had one goal and two assists as Chicago won its third
straight game. •
Ed Belfour made 23 s'aves for lhe Blackhawks.
Pittsburgh did not take a shot for nearly 12 minutes,
and Rick Tocchel scored lhe only goal for visiting
Pittsburgh.
Panthers 5, Senators 4 - Florida won its lhird
straight road game when lady Hull scored wilh 50
seconds left in !be third period.
Hull,. formerly with Ottawa, beat goaltender Craig
BiUington with a screened shot.
The Senators $COred three slraight goals in lhe
third period 10 tie it at 4. Bob Kudelski, with his second goal of lhe goal, and rookie Alexandre Daigle
led Ouawa' s comeback.
Capitals 4, Lightning 1 -Rick Tabaracc i
slopped 33 shots and WashingloA won its sixth
straight game.
Sylvain Cote scored one goal and sci up two others for !be visiting Capitals.
,Blues 3, l\1aple ~rs 2 - SL Louis scored two
goills on pucks !hat deflected off Tor.:lnto defenseman Dave Ellen and won al home.
One puck went off EDen's stick and another went
off his skates.
Breu Hull had a goal and two assisiS for SL Louis.
The Maple Leafs got goals from Dave Andreychuk and Wendel Clark.
Stars 4, Sharks 0 - Darcy Wakaluk earned lhc

Public Notice

Thunday's ICOI'eS

EASTERN CONFERENCE
AUaalk DIYIIIN
W L PeL

50

.
Hornets 120, Mugic 87

Seikaly, who added 13
rebounds, and Harold Miner, who
sco~ 18 points, scored six poiniS
eacn during a l~-3 run !hat gave
Miami a 70-65 lead wi~ seven
minutes left in lhe third period. A
I 0-1 run put the Heat ahead 84-73
with I :38 10 go in lhe quarter.

Ken Nonnan scored 30 poiniS
for Milwaukee.
Rockets107, Timberwolves 99
Hakeem Olajuwon made 15 of
17 shots and scored 36 points as
the Rockets won their fourth·
.
straight game.
Olajuwon made seven of e1ght
(See NBA on Page 5)

1'1111...,.,. ·········

-•NBA*.
Tum

17

99.

loss.

lion of anonymity, said the team would soon
announce !hat Lem•eux will be oot until mid-to-late
January so he can continQe rehabiliation from offsea- .
son back surgery.
The bad news came a day before NHL referees
and linesmen were to vote on what lhc league calls
iiS final offer for a new contract. The league already
has lined up 80 men as replacemeniS in case there is
a slrike.
In olher games, Florida beat Ottawa 5-4 , Washington topped Tampa Bay 4-1, St. Louis defeated
Toronto 3-2, Dallas defeated San Jose 4-0, Calgary
beat Anaheim S-4 and Boston beat Edmonton S-1.
Devils 5, Flyen 3 - Tom Chorske scored twice,
including a goal in lhe lhird period !hal put New Jersey ahead 4-3.
Philadelphia tied it at 3 on Viacheslav BuiSayev's
fourth goal, at 2:28 of the third period. But Chorske
scored 4 1/2.minutes later and John MacLean scored

Centr•l Dlvlllon
VI .

Tontcht's £am..

l&gt;ivbolon II

-

l.lncuter Fllher Catholic (I 0·0)

WESTERN CONFERENCE

(AIIl;eUU'lli SNI Llrfllll } )

Al..,_,._..
JloUowe (IQ.O) n.

Sullbtraer Manorial Stadlu•

Olie~aa .................... 3

,Ohio high sehoul
football pla~·uiTs

}

At Gahanna Lincoln Fltld
Marion Pleuam (10..0) Yl. Woodd'Wd
(1·0), 7 ,30 p.m.
AI Z..nentlle

3

5. 2 62 6

lh···d····rs -

.

AI Clay'- Nartlnftonl
Sidney !.dun., (7-3) n. Loalond (10.
0), 7 ,)()p.m.

AwMI.GTD

Pl.lytr
~ ... \ ' tl~. 1\ vJ! . LCTD
Sharpe.0.8 .......... 57 h. !t) 11.2 .SO 7
·ltvin,O.I.. ............ 52 ti ~ l 15.8 61 2

.

At Celina Sladhnn
SL Henry (10-0) n . Mari1 S1cin
Marion LoeaJ (7·3), 7 :l0p.m.

7:30p.m.

Dcaia, RIITII ....... 126 511.1

lliaon, AU.............4 K {Jo-17

Manch$C:t(9-l),7:30p.m.

6

... ,..,
1\11. Yrt11.
Thomu, Buff...... !% ROI')
~Uta-, Piu. ......... 172 Mill

VI .

AI Gufleld Uel&amp;hll Blauaruftd field
Gate~ MiU1 Hawken (9-1) "'· Akron

12
lS

)t.,~h•·rM

Simml, NYG ...... 2ns 121J

Boarct.an S,-rt.Jn SUdJ•m

N~• Middlaown

AFC leaders

~FC

VI.

pm.

HOpm. ·

At S.*lky Strobel Field
Hwoa (1·2) v~ C...y (9-1), HO ~m.
Al Dtf\anee Fred J, Brawn Slldllnn
Montpelier (9-1) vs. Ton~ot:•n:r CJueao
(1-2), 7,30 p.m.

OUcaao at S1n Diego, 8 p.m.

Pta,_

-

. .

PhilldllplsilllP-1.,., Jmey, 7::i0 p.m.
BUitDrllt Qicqo, 1:30 p.m.
Ur.ah at Dllba.l:lO p.m. .
Phoenilat lkuton,l:30 p.m.
Ooldc:r~ S\ltc 1t Denver, 9 p.m.
Atlan&amp;a at SaUlc, 10 p.m.
San AIUOrlio at L.A. Clippon:, 10:30

advantages betorc SmiiS put !hem
ahead for good on a jumper with 57
seconds left
In other games, Charloue beat
Orlando 120-87, Orlando beat Milwaukee 116-103, Houston beat
Minnesota I 07-99, S caule beat
Cleveland 115-102 and the Los
Angeles Clippers beat Delroit 111-

teams may lose Lindros, Lemieux to injuries

By Tbe Associated Press
The Philadelphia Flyers lost Eric Lindros for up 10
six weeks because of a new injury and the Piusburgh
Penguins may lose Mario Lemieux until late January
because of an old one.
The big loser, some say, is the NHL.
"It's hard to believe !hat two of !he premier players in !be NHL are both going 10 be out of action,"
Chicago's Jeremy Roenick said.
Lindros, the Flyers' leading scorer, sustained a
partial tear of lhe medial colhileral ligament in his
right knee in Philadelphia's 5-3 loss to !he New Jersey Devils on Thursday night He was to undergo an
MRI exam today, and is expected 10 miss three to six
weeks.
Lemieux, who won his fourth NHL scoring Litle
last season, missed his second straight game because
of lhe flu as Pittsburgh lost to Chicago 4-1. Bul
sources close to lhe PeQguins, speaking on lhe condi-

Pacers beat Nets in overtime after Petrovic's jersey retired

The O..ly SentiMI Page I •

.

Pennsylva~ia

Page 4

In theNBA,
By The Associated Press
Even the Indi1111a Pacers were
moved by pregam e ceremonies
honoring !be late Drazen Pelrovic.
The New Jersey NelS paid lribute 10 !heir leading scorer from last
season before their home opener
Thursday night 11 lOOk some time
for !he Pacers to gel unlraeked, and
!hey finally won 108-105 in overlime - !heir first vic10ry in four
games this season.
"II was tough silting lhrough
!hose ceremonies," Indiana's Reggie MiDer said. "You couldn't belp
but get involved. In lhc farsl half, I

Pomeroy-Middle!)9rt. Ohio

Public Notice

Public Notice

lh.tlhey haYo t..n ouod by
tho
Director
ol
Tronoportatlon of!M Btata
of Ohio, who heo Inotllltod a
proooodingln tho CMomon
Pleao Court ol llelgo
County, Ohio, to_.....
certain property dHcrlhoroaltor for highway
purpoooo, namely tho
making, conotrucllon or
lmprov-' of:B- Roula
7, Section 0.31, llelga
County, Ohio, and "' fix lie
value ol uld property. T11o
property ooughl to 1M
appropriated r. 111010
opoclllcally deacrtiood u
-:
Unknown awn., o1 at.
llolgo County, Ohio
• - Routo7
Section U1
p.... No: 2-WD

LMTAllOH OF ACCE. . II
1ME FOLLOWING
·

'=.::J'

OEsa IBED HtOPEHif
8 gl•'*'tlln loa - • of

tho r&lt;Midoa.,. _.. ... of
100 a«a Lot No. Ml:

lh••• waot 201
toot ID the~
lhanco In 1 northerly
d i - n ID tho of
1M llhta Aogar 8lld .._,
Snyder -lh pr1p

It 11M;

thence - t about toO
!Ht to tho c•tar ol tho
lOIII;
thence -lh 7 . . , _
w•t
toot Ill . .
Place ol Boghonltt••
eotttaiNng 0.561 o i M IIIOfo or lou, and bolntl of
u n - n - i p In ...
Court ol lloigo, ttato of
Ohio. '
Ownoro retain right of

DESCIIPTIOH OF THE
PARCEL OF LAND AND
ESTATE, INTVIEIT OR
RIGHT THERIH
APPROPRIATED
Situ- In tho Townlhlp
of S.llobury, County of
Moiga and Sta• of O.hio,
and known ao IMina part of
100 .... Lot No. "'· a part
of Town 1 North, Range 13
W••t, •• ahown by the
-clod 11o1go County Tax
Pia~ Map No. 27, Parool No.
016
and more fully
bou;_ and -ribod ao

-ut '"

::::::::.:·.::
Pot-

I"'
ii::Ji~~ ...=.¥,

loHowo:

FEE SIIIPI..E, EXCWDING

They~~ '*-1

NOW
AVAILABLE
.
IN THE

CALL
NOW
THIS SPACE
THIS SPACE

$16.00

$8.00

1111llttolgllte, _
, , 011.

REVIVAL!!

loot.. Anni&amp;Jn1a17 C•l•...,.tlon!f
Presenting Chrlat througtl the Word and Song •
Art Bush

IUDIURY CHUROI OF OIRIST
PLACE:

DATE :

3tl58 Bl'IICibury Rotld
Middleport, Ohio
Tom Runyon, Mlnlater

THIS SPACE

$12.00

992·2156
FOR MORE INFORMIIION

NOVEMBER 19·21, 1993
SPEOAL MUSIC 6:45 EACH EVENING
7:00 P.M. EliCh Evening
10:30 A.M.

Service

and

Wei
IIOtod llilloft
. - lurlher 11M llllliGo h l
unleoo they, or their
.Aaomly; lito an AM- no
t.tor .... 21 deyo llllor tho
-plolan of.,. ...tw of
PubllclliH, they will be
IIMMod to have wal¥011
their rlglot lo - • • · and
tho ........ wll bo liMn •
true and Jud. . ont will be
,....,... anar....,: Chrll
Auto 12(AI (!).
Jerry w.,
DirectorofTr• JfDI ... Dft
(tO) I, IS, 2Z, 21, Itt) I, 1Z

Call By 2:00-P.M. Friday for Su1day Edltlo1

I

�.:.P;~:ge:_:6~Th:e::Da:l~ly~Se::n:ll:ne:I______________________________~P~o~m~e~~~~t~M~Id~d~le~po~rt~,O~hl~o~~--------~------------------~Fr~ld~a~y~,N~o~v~e~m~be~r~12~,~1!99=~

a

Ft1dey, November 12,1993

I'
I
~

Apostol ic

Church of Chri st

Cllardl ol JOIUI C~rilt ApootDIIc
VanZandt ond Ward Rd.
Pastor. J.mes Miller
Sunday School- IOJ Oa.m.
.
p.m.

..........,, Clour&lt;h tf Cbrilt
212 W. Main SL
Putor: And~w Miles
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Semc:es - 7 p.m.

BO

Pomeroy Wostsldo Chur&lt;h of Christ
33226 Cltildr&lt;n's Home Rd.
Sunday School - II am,
Worship • I Oa..m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday ~rvices · 7 p.m.

H..,. Baplbt Chun:h (Soulhem)
S10 Grant St., Middleport
Pastor: Rev. David Bryan

Sunday sckool - 9:45 a.m.

Worship - II a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wcdn~sday

Setvtce - 7 p.m.

l''tte Will Baptist Church
Ash Su.CI, Middleport

Pastor: Mart Morrow
Saturday Sel'llice - 7:30p.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m.,

Wednesday Ser.~ice-7 : 30 p.m.
Rutland First Bapllst Churclo
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:4S a.m.
Pomeroy First Baptist
Putor: Paul Stinsoo
Eul Main Sl.

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Flnt Southero ~tlst
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. Lamar 0' Boy1111t
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip -10:45 Lm., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

Flm Baptist Citur&lt;h
fM!t and Palmer SL, MiddltipOrt
Pa!stor: Rev. James A. Seddon
Sunday School · 9:15a.m.
Wonltip -10:15 Lm., 7:00p.m.
A.B.Y.- 5:30p.m.
Lord's Supper 1st Sunday of every monlh.
Wed1101day Servia:- 7:00 p.m.
itadne First Baptist
Pastor: Steve Fuller
Yot.nh P.stOr. Aaron Young
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip-10:40Lm., 7:00p.m.
Wednetday Services ·7:00p.m.
Sliver Ruo Baptist
Putor: Bill Liule
Sunday School · !Oa.m.
Worship- llun., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service1- ,1:30 p.m.
Mt. Unh• Baptist
Putor: Joe N. Say~
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Evening · 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services · 6:30p.m.
Belhl.,..., BaJill51
Pastor: Rev. Earl Shuler
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 9:30 a.m.
Thursday Services· 7:30p.m.
Old Betllel Fr.. Will Baptlll Chlll'ch
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening-7:30p.m.
llnmday Services · 7:30
Hlllsldo Bopllsl Church
St. Rt. 143 just olf RL 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School· 10 a.m.

Middleport Chun:h or Christ
Sth and Main
Pastor: AJ Hartsm
Youth Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Ktno Chur&lt;h of Christ
Wonhip · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Bearwallow Ridge Churcb of Christ
Pastor: Jack Colegrove
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wedn....,y S..vices - 6:30p.m.

Zloa Church or Christ

Pomeroy, Harrisonvillo Rd. (RLI43)
Pastor: Roger Wat.IOO
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servia:• - 7 p.m.
Tuppers Plain Church c:l Chrllt

Pastor: Bill Wines
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 9A5 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Bradbury Church or Christ
Panor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.
Youth Meeting· 5:30p.m.
Evenina Service • 1 p.m.
Wednesday, Bible Saudy - 7 p.m.
Rutland Church o( Christ
Paslor: Eugene E. Underwood
Sunday School 9:30 a..m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
M

Bradford Chun:h of C•rlst
Comer of SL RL 124 ol Bradbury Rd.
Evanaeli1t: Derek Stump
YOUllt Minister: Martt N01u:r
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonltip - 8:00a.m., 10:30 Lm ., 7:30p.m.
Wedncaday Ser.~ices - 7:30p.m.
HlckO&lt;J Hills Chur&lt;h otCbrlst
Pastor. Joseph B. Hoskins
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Uberty Christian Church
Dexter
Pastor: Woody Call
Sunday Evening-6:30p.m.
Thunday Semce - 6:30p.m.

Lanenllle Chrlstlan Church
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servi~ 7:30p.m.
Hemlock Grove Cburdl
Pastor: Olarlet Domi&amp;an
Sunday school - 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 9:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
RotdJ\'IIIe Chur&lt;h or Christ
Pastor. Philip Stunn
Sunday S&lt;hool: 9:30a.m.
Wonhip SCr.~ice: I 0:30 Lm.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Wonhip-11Lm.,6p.m .

Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Christian Union

VIctory Bapllst lndependanl
525 N. 2nd SL Middleport
Putor: I.-nu E. Keesee
Wonhip -IOLm., 7. p.m.
Wedn .....y Semoes · 7 p.m.

H.-tford Clloor&lt;h otCbrtlt lo
Christian U.lon
Hanford, W.Va.
Puuw: ReY. Dovid MeManis
Sunday School- II Lm.
Wonltip - 9:30 un, 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Semcea -7:30p.m.

Faltll Baplllt Cborch
Railroad St., Masm
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wonhip · lla.m., 6 p.m.
WedneW•y Services • 7 p.m .
Forest Run Baptist
Panor : Arius Hun
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship· II a.m.

MI. Morta• Baptist
Fourth ol Main SL, Middleport
Pa•wr:,fev. Gilbert Cnia, Jr.
Sundiy Sehool • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:43 a.m.
AntlqultJ Baptlll
Putor: Kemelh Smith
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
·
Wonhip - 10:43 Lm,
Thu!lday Servia:s - 7:30p.m.
Rutland Fr.. Will Baptlll
Salem St.
PUlOr: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday Sehool- 10 a.m.
Evenina·7p.m.
Wednelday Sema:a -1 p.m.

Ca tholic
SMnd Hwt Catholic Ch....tl
161 Moslbeny A.._, Pomeroy, 99l-58118
Pua: RO¥. Waller E. Hoinz
SaL Coot. 4:45-5:15J&gt;.m.; Man- 5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. -1:45-9:15 am.,
Sun. Mass - 9:30a.m.
Dailey Mus • 8:30 Lm.

Hob- Christian Union
Middlet&gt;o Ohio
Sunday
10 a.m.
S11n.day evening, 7:30p.m.
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.

sd..:!i,

Church of God
MI. Moriah Cllurdl or God
Rac:i.nl:
Putor: Rev. James Sauerfidd
Sunday School · 9:4S a.m.
E-..ning - 7 p.m.
Wedi!Oiday Semcea - 7 p.m.
Rutland Church ot God
Pasl«: John F. Con:onn
Sunday School - 10 Lm.
WOI1hil&gt; - !!a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Semcea -7 p.m.
Syracuse Church of God
A!'Pc and Seoond Sti.
Pas lOr: Rev. David Ru11ell
Sunday School and Wonltip- 9:30a.m.
Evening Services- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servicea - 7 p.m.
Chur&lt;h ot GGd of Propllecy
0.1. White Rd. off SL RL 160
Pastor: Pat Henson
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip -lla.m.
Wednesday Semcea - 7 p.m.
Now Life Church ot God
O..ster
Putor: Gary Hinet
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 6 p1m. .
Wednesday Semc:es • 7 p.m.

Epi Scopal
Gl'lice Eplecopal Cbutdl
326 B. Main Si., Pomeroy
ReclOr. Fr. Bill Lyle
Holy BucbarUt aad Suaday S&lt;hoolllLm.
. Ccllreoladcilowln&amp;

Minersville
Pastor: Dtron Newman
Sunday School • 9 Lm.
Wonhip - 10 a.m.

Holi ness
R•otSharooHoii_Cb_
New Lima Road, Rulland
PallOr: Rev. Dewey Kilts
Stu1day school- 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship •7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting- 7 p.m.
Pine Grove Bible Hollnaa Church

1!2 mile off RL 325
Pastor: !l:cv. O'Dell Manley
Stu~day School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.
Wesleyan Bible Holln.., Clourcb
7S Pearl St., Middleport.
Pas1.0r. Rev. John Neville
Sunday school- 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.
Hysell Run Holiness Church
Putor: Robert Manley ·
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:45 Lm., 7 p.m.
Thunday Service· 7:30p.m.

M

Pomeroy
Pastor: Eun1tac (G10ce) Ku
Sunday School- 9:IS a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 Lm., 6 p.m.
Wednc1d'ay Servicea 7:30p.m.
RockSprlnp
Putor.Keill&gt; Rader
Sunday School· 9:15a.m.
Wo"!hip • 10 a.m.
YoutiJ Fcllovislup, Sunday - 6 p.m.

Lutheran
St. John Lulheru Church
Pine Grove
Pastor: J?awn Spalding
W onhip ·9:30a.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
Our S.vlour Lutheran Churdl

Walnut and Hcruy S11. , Raveruwood, W.Va.'
Co-poston: Revs. Richard .t
Patricia Bonds-Krug
Sunday School - 9:3oa.m.
Wonhip · II a.m.

SL Paul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St, Paneroy
Pastor: Dawn Spaldin&amp;
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m.

United Methodist
Graham Unlled Methodist
Worship-9:30a.m. (Ill a: 2nd Sun~
7:30p.m. (3rd.t 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.
MI. Olive United Methodlll
Of! 124 behind WilkesviUe
Pastor: Ot•le• Jone1
Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Worship • 10:30 Lfn., 7 p.m.
Thunclay Services ·1 p.m.

.

Molp Coopti-atlve Pari*
Northout Clullor
Alfred
Pastor: Shai'CCl Hausman
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip - I 1 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Chester
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Wonhip · 9a.m.
Sunday Scltool-10 a.m.
Thundaiy Service• - 1 p.m.

Joppa
Pastor: Bmtda Weber
Worship-9:30a.m.
Sunday Sc:ltool- 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Lone-

Pastor. R"'. Phillip Scarberry
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worohip - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.

Central Clumr
A5bury (Syra~)
PuLOr: Deron Newman
Sunday School - 9:45a.m.
Wonhip · 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services 7:30p.m.
M

Ea~rlae

Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - I 0 a.m.
Wonhip - 9 a.m.
Flatwoods
Paator. Koidt Rader
Sunday School · I0 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m.

Forest lltin
PutOr. Deron Newman
Sunday School • I0 a.m.
Worahip -9 a.m.
Thunday Semces - 6:30 p.rq.

Faltll Followsltlp Crulldo for Christ
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

Rejoldnl Lifo Church
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Paamr: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School - I0 a.m.
. Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

The Salvation AnnJ

Middleport Community Chur&lt;h
S7S Pearl St,, Middleport
Pastor: Sam Andenon
Sunday School!O a.m.
'
Evening· 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Semce. 7:30p.m.

Cllftooo Tabernacle Chun:h
Cliftoa, W.Va.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
. Wonhip -7 p.m.
Thundly semce . 7 p.m.

Fallh Tabernacle Citur&lt;h
Bailey Run Road
Pastor. Rev. Emmeu Rawson
Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.
Evening 7 p.m.
Thunday Semce - 7 p.m.

Sunon
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Won hip • I0:45 a.m. (I 11 ol 3rd Sun)

Putor. &amp;bel Hart

M

Rutloftd Bible Melhodlll
Pauor: ReY. Ivan Myen
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Evonina - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Main a: Fifth St.

Sunday School - 10 Lm.
Wonhip - 9 a.m.
Tuesday SeMccs - 7 p.m.

ML Olivo Colllmunlty Church
Panor. Lawrence Bush
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service -7 p.m.

Hockl_.tChurdl
GrutdStSunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship • II a.m.
Wednesday Semceo - 8 p.m.
Torch Church
Co. Rd.63
9:30a.m.

PaiUW: John W. Doua!as
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- m45 a.m ., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Public Notice .

Q\\;f(

S,.w (&amp;.r.,

,., 93 MHI ,Bir•l
Mlddl..,ort, Ohio 41710
(1141112-1117.:... (111 -00KBI

CHU~CH .UPPLIES • BII~I.ES

,,

'

.Ill\

\

:;

... OSTj

..

'

. ttf-t!S9

PIISCIImON SH~P

•'

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

l "'"""
•".....

· 1 -~

MEIGS
CENTER, INC.
Mln8glr

204 Condor St.
, P-ray, 011.

Ph.H2-2101

992-2975

J. 1Wcus Fultz

Pomeroy

Specializing In Cuatom
Frame Repair
IIW&amp;IIDNIIIIIOI .
AlliiAIII &amp; . . . . .

992·7011 or
. H2·5551

or TOlL Fill

1-100..141..0070
IIIWII, OliO

Ume and

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY

IA"'-'NGS.COATS

· FISHER
, FUNERAL HOME

992·7075

172 lltrth S.COIIII Au.
"'tllau.rl. Ohio
.

• ' I'

,•

'

' '

PHARMACY
we Fin Dow&gt;rs'
Preicriplions

.

992-5432

'

McLendon

'.

I'

.9t2-5141 '

264 Sotitll2nd

Milldltpjll't

EWING FUNERAl 'HOME ::

..,iJ(tlity ar~d &amp;'1- •·i."·~:.-41~~,.; ..
Established 19~ , . ·,

Financing Available

~rr~

&amp;;,L

,

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

. SpeCializing In
Automatic

Dal.IOSTON
EICAYAnNG
1614)
667·6628

992-6321

1-800-553-3586

-,

I

••,.

(BEAT THE BAN)

NEW-REPAIR

NORINCO MAK 90 (AK4n ....."'""5180
NORINCO UNia SKS ........................ SCJ5
1200 ROUNDS NON-CORROSIVE •• 5130

Gutter Cleaning
Painting

••

-·

..

WICK'S HAUUNG
SERVICE
36970 lall RUII Road
Pomeroy, Ohio
.GRAVEl, SAND,
LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL
&amp; FILL DIRT

Gutters

Downspouts
FREE ESTIMATES

992·3470

949·2168

CALL Aml6:00
304·483·7256

.,

't\ \
.

OWN£1: .ltff Wldt.._

3-16-13-lfn

e·

1-I00-714·DRE

I

,..,.,

FREE ESTIMATES

7fll1mo.

992-3838

VARIETY OF QUAUTY
METAL TOYS.
112-33114 8:30-4 IIDn.·Frl.
742-3020 Aller 5:00
P.dal Tmctorl A"tJ ' "1

,.

,.,

In lima of nHCI we
w~ld .nu to thank:
Holzer Macllcal Can•
ter IJf'ICI ataff, Galli·

,.

frlanda and neigh·
ben 8nd nllatfYII,
EwfnCI Fwwal Home,
La1nn• ·Clark; R.N.,
Continuity' Car•, Dr.
Wlthtnlll~ Dr. Linder
l Ml'l. •Paul Taylor
anif alngal'l, Velar·
·ana . Melnorlll Hoa·
pilaf. '
'•

' IJnearefY,
ChlldNII ot
Nalaon Wlllon

.....

MIS,\OD In
Pomeroy'I
Mulberry Helghtjl
area, 1 white

m[xedwlth
apricot coloring;
neutered cat.
Bobby Ia a
friendly and

5

511

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. Agent
a

Box 189

Mllldltport, o•lo 45760
(614) 143·5264 ' 51t4.93Mn

New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESlDENTIAL
IW.EE ESTIMATES

614·992·7643
INo Sanday Calls)

TRI-COUNTY RECYCLING
Ia now •cceptlng •II ferrous metala
lneludlng: tin, c11t Iron , long and short Iron.
Must ba small enough to ba moved by hand.
Short Iron (leas than 3ft.) 1.75 par hundrad
Motor Cast..."2.00 par hundrad
Cl1111n, dry alum. cans .23 pound
Prien aubjact to change without notice
Located at the corner of S.R. 143 and 7

Phone 992·5114

446-9515
CUPET &amp; UPHOlSTERY ClEANING
I
WV013372
Wa apeclella In:

We give carpel and
upholetery the
"SPECIAL CARE"
they delervell
aile)

RRE&amp;WATER

DAMAGE

RESTORATION·
INSURANCE CLAIMS

CERTIFIED MKHANIC
OUTBOARD MOTOR s32"
INBOARD/OUTBOARD saO"
WINTER STORAGE AVAILABLE

Happy Ads

Ernarganc:y Sarvlca

ATTENTION
Mobile end Doublewlde owners...

FURNACES
Happy 43.rd
Birthday
Ruth
. Carpent~r! .
Hope Your Life
will Co Better

· Inside cat•

with Etu:h Year.

For

Lrme,
Your

IOIERT IISSEll

coNmucnoN

loNiew Homes

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

985-4473

ARNOLD'S
PlUMBING,
HEAnNG &amp;
COOJING
QUALITY WORK
&amp;GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD
(614) 992-7474

POMEROY, OHIO
111211tflt

Me,ory Mates • Pottralts
Speclsl Occasions
•.
II I

\ I• \ \

I
i I

I

I)

a

C.U 614·7G!o31151

WANTING
TO BUY
JUNK CARS
&amp; TRUCKS
Any Condition
614·992·7553
ArmouncrnwPb

3 Announcements

'

( II

Wholesale
&amp; Relail
up Retell at
Bob SnoWden'• lot In
RuU ..d, Oh.
Wholeoale $10 at t.rm,
$12 delivered. Rotan lol
will 1M o,.... a a.m. ta
p.m. olarllng Nov. 24111.
Tr.e1 •re 5' to t'.

24Hour

WINTERIZATION SPEOALS
==~aD=Maba II

definitely an

Can

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENI INSUUIICE COMPANY

w. ..... •100 .....

1 CBI:CI of Thanka

FURNITUR'E &amp; HARDWARE •
Homelile S.iws ·

992·S130 '·Pomeroy

Gravel
992-7878

2/12/92/lfn

r--------------,
·
HowdL Writesel
NOVEMBER SP.ECLU
ROOFING

.I

·992-2121
106

DAN'S
IR-NSMISSION
&amp; AUTO REPAIR
368 Eut Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

3315l .... GrwtRIINI
...... OW.45771
614·992·5344

214;E. Main

Middleport, Ohio
GREAT SELEcnON AND

Dirt

•

Tr~msmlsslona

. "llllftl•tKt~lti!g Frlfi Cltld,."

Pom'ert»y

Limestone.

•:

Come by and register
for tree Battery to be
giver\ away December
24, 1993, No purchase
required to regiater and
don~ have 10 be present

'st., Pom11roy

AT THE
QUAUTY PRINT SHOP

'•

.,

(row's F11mily Restaurant
221 W. Main

r'VFarmToys

~·

poll• Vlult ~pany,

·lJX[t ·

DK's

..•.'

,..

.

MISHER·&amp; LOHSE

~

c

Ll LnRE lAIN

' '.

117

.

':

1111:1193 1 MO.

BILL QUICKEl

.
GENERAL
HAULING

11/IW1010. pel.

'

. MOR'l'GA.OE COMPANY

SUPPLY

..

'

Now has beautfful Cocker Spaniel ·Puppies. Also
featuring a 2 fl. common Black Tequ. Layaways are
now available tor Chriatmaa. Sale on our entire 81oc:k
of large aquariums.
new heme.

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shot
Strictly Entorcad

·'

.;,•

POMEitQY, OHI0-992-6677

304-ns-5533
Open 6 Day's A Week

...

-.

"•'

FIRE DEPT.
EVERY
SATURDAY
6:30P.M.

CALL

V1vt . . . .

~·

I I

RACINE

__

opened

and Dr. Wllbr, Rev.
'SAlES I SEIVICf

,

GRAVELY TRACTOR SAlES

.

I-'IMI-Itt

PIITS

MY or • bklo. ·

•1

RIDENOUR

0.

.

right to wlllwo
lr1'811Ul•IU• llld to releot

•'

Eden Unlled Bnlhren In Christ
2 Ill milcJ north of Roedsville
on State Route 124
Pas10r. Rev. Robert Muldcy
Sunday Schooi·IO a.m.
Wonhip- 7:30 p.m:
Wednesday SCrvices - 7:30p.m.

P. J. PAULEY, AGENl

Na;:~~:~;;:~ Co.

992-6215Porn....,, Ohio

WHAL.H'IAU10

to win.

u~

V.C. YOUNG Ill

l'tHIV. . the

Freedom Goopol M!Mion
Bald Knob; m Co. Rd. 31
l'aatoi:·Rev. Roier Willford
Sunday Sc:ltool • 9:30 Lm.
Wonltip- I 0:4~ Lrit., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonltip • 10:30 a.m. and 6 pm.
Wednesday Semcea -7 p.m.

(FREE EBnMATEII)

Turkey at Eagle Lanes
Mason W.Va. Turkey Roll
Saturday
Nov. 13 8

Relall-.
The VUI-ve of Byracuoo

'•

Kingsbury Road
Pastor. Clyde W. Hmclenon
Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servioe ' 7 p.m.

Porn....,
Cburdt or lhe Naarane
Putor: Rev. Thmtas MoQuna

P.Jnllng

Win Your Thanksgiving

Carleton Interdenominational Church

Syraaue Church or'the Nazanno
Pa1tor. Rev. Ric:lt Sturaill
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip " 10:30a.m.,6p.m.
Wednelday Sel11icea -7 p.m.

[EEW~Ork

ond Plumbing

.,

~:

Soulh O.thd New Teslament
Silver Ridge
Pastor: Duane Sydenttricker
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.

Church otthe Nuarene

334 Palmer Street
Middleport, Oh

GUN SHOOT

·~

'

Noue SeWement Cllur&lt;h
Sunday Won~ip - 2:~.m.;
Thursday .ICIVJccs- 7: p.m.

R&lt;edavllleF-lp

~Adciii-

• ....,lor

~

Middleport Church ot lho Nuar011e
Pastor. Gtqooy A. CUndiff
Sunday Scliool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wqclnesday Semces - 7 p.m.

Saturday Nov. 13th 8:00am

United Brethren

Full Goopellllghthouse
33045 Hilond Road, Prmemy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday Sc:ltool- 10 a.m.
Evening7:30 p.m.
Tuesday ol Thu!lday- 7:30p.m.

CARPENTER SERVICE

'::;

'

MI. Hermon Unlled Brethr•
Ia Clorlsl Cloun:h
TCllas Community off CR 82
Pauor: Robert Sll!lden
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip -10:30Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Semcea . 7:30p.m.

Unlled Faith Church
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass
Pastor. Rev. Roben. E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday Sc:ltool- 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
We&lt;b:aclay Semce- 7 p.m.

.. .';.. ' .

,.

Seventh-Day Advent!•
Mulberoy Hts. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Lawinsky
Saturday Servia:s:
Sabbath School- 2 p.m.
Wonhip - 3 p.m.

Sunday Sc:ltool - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

. .. .

614-742·2138

Inside Estate Sale

Nolie•) will alto appear in the PoiDt Pleuut Regiater and
tJae Callipolil Duly Tribune, ruchiDB otrer 18,000 hom•

Seventh -Day Adventist

Lonallouom

O.thel Chur&lt;h
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip · 10 a.m.
Wednesday Servia:&amp; - 10 a.m.

.,.

Syracuse Flrsl Unlled Premyterlan
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m., 4 p.m. (ht ol 3rd Sun.)

Fallll Gatpel Church

.·; '9

~.

;

Middleport Presbyterian
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Wonhip -.10 Lm. • .

M..... Chapel Chur&lt;h
Pastor.: Mike Mauon
Sunday o&lt;hool - 10 a.m.
Wonhip- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Coolville United Mothodlll Parl!h
PaslOr: Helen Kline
Coolville Church

SAYRE TRUCKING

0

Harrl-vllle Presllylerlin Chur&lt;h
Wonhip - 9 Lm.
Sunday School - 9:45 Lm.

ChrlsUan Fellow!hlp Contor
Salem SL, Rulland
P1110r: Robert E. Musser
Sunday Sc:hool'-10 Lm.
, Wonbip- 11:15 Lm., 7 p.m. ·
Wednesday Semce - 7 p.m.

Wkle80and70 - a..t..
ptllormMCe f)RIIIel.
•Two •trona~ bello
• Aegreoolve lrMd dellgn
• Smooth lklng pclyeiter cord

JOII N. Sayre

Vll~.:~sr=:
Cln-rr-.

Pres byterian

Dyesvllle Communhy Church
Sunday Sehool - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.

~.

:: .

,
Ia Memoriam
Yard Sa.lea
• A el.,.ified advertiHtneat placed i.n Lhe The Dally SeDliDel
(neapt Claulf...J Di.play, Buain- Card or l..etlal

1

Daytona Ffldlel 60 and 70 Series

RIIIOIIIblt.RIIH

is now offering
Meatball &amp; Philly Steak Subs
1 Free Bag of Chips &amp; 1 Free
· Drink with each purchase

for errwallrat day ad rUDa i.o paper). Call before 2:00 P·•·
day alw puWieatloa to ..U.e correction
• Ad. tlult••t 1:.6 ,._id in advance are:
G.rd of Thulu
Happy Ads

••

Middleport Ptnlec&lt;lltal
Third Ave. ·
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday Scltool · 10 a.m.
E-..nina - 6 p.m. ·
Wedneaclay Semcea ·7:00p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m .. 7:30p.m.

Lauro! CIIIT Free Methodist Church
Pastor: Peter Tremblay
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip : 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servia:s - 7 p.m.

Recei" d11e0uot for ada paid ia adnDCe.
• Free Ad. : CIYU.wa:r aod Fouad acL u.nder 15 word. will be
ru.a 3 da)'l at DO claarp.
• Price of ad for aU capitallellen U double priee of ad cott
• 1 poiltt liao type oaly ......!
1
S..dul • .a l'elpoa.ible for error• dter fU'1L day (ciNck

.:

Poft-1 A_,.bly
St. Rt. 124, RaCine
Pasulr: William Hoback
Sunilay School- 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Huel Community Church
Off Rt. 124

Radne
Putor: Ken Molter
Sundsy School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip II a.m. and 7 p.m.

: Ada ..._..~. the couty you.r ad nma au11t be prepaid

PUblic Notice

Pentecosta l

Syracu10 Mission
1411 Bridgeman St., Syraousc
Pastor: Roy (Milce) Thompoon
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

East Letart
Putor: Ken Moher
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Wedne~y -7 p.m.

POUCIES

. UM£STONE,
GRAVEL, TOPSOIL
&amp;.COAL

CLOSED SUNDAY

CLASSU'IF.IIS
GET RESULTS • FAST!

Church or JesUI Chrlsl,
•·.
Apostolic Faith ·
J
1/4 mile pall Fort Mei&amp;s on New Lima Rd. ·P'aator: William Van Meter .
t.
Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wednesday·7:00 p.m.
Friday-7:00p.m.

115 Bunemut Ave., Pomeroy.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Mornln1 Star
Pastor: Kemelh Bakor
Sunday School - 9:43 a.m.
Wntaltip- 10:30 Lm.
Thunday Semocs. 7:30p.m.

_.

HAUUNG

MoN. tbru FRI.•, 8A.M,·5P.M. : SAT.S-12

Calvary Pllcrlm Cbapol
Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Rev. Victor Roush
Sunday Si:hool9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Semce • 7;30 p.m.

'

Trlnlly Conuoeatlonal Church
Postor. Rev. Roland Wildm1111
Chur&lt;h - 9:15a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m.

Carmel
Putor: Kennelh Baker
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 Lm, (2nd ol 4th Sun)

!

M

Stlvenvllle Word ~fFalth
Pa11.0r. David Dilley
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.

lldhan1
Pastor: Kenneth Balcer
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip , 9 a.m.
Wedn....,y S&lt;rvicea - 10 a.m.

''

Calvary Bible Chur&lt;h
Pomeroy Pike. Co. Rd.
PasiOr. Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip' l 0:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

Endtlme H..,.. of Pra7er
(at Burlingham &lt;hurd! off Route 33)
Paaor. Roben VIUice
Sun!'.£: wonhip - 10 a.m.
Wedn
y service . 6:30p.m.

Snowvlllo
Pastor: Roronce Smith
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 9 a.m~

I
I

Pallor: James Lewis
Sunday School- II a.m.
Wonhip - 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service -7:30p.m.

lbrrloonvllle Conimunll)' Clour&lt;h
Putor: Theron Dwham
Sunday - 9:30 am. and 1 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Thu!lday Semcoa - 7 p.m.
Salfllt Center
Putor: Ron Fierco
Sunday S&lt;hool- 9:15a.m.
Wonhip - IO:IS Lm.

Reedsville
Pastor: R"': Phillip Scarberry
Worsh1p- 9:30a.m.
ln.!: 3rd Sunday-7:30p.m.
s~~J. School - 10:30 a.m.
Wed
y Servicea - 7:30p.m.
Tuppers Plains Sl. Paul
Pastor: Sharoo Hausman
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m.
Tueoday Services - 7:30p.m.

Fairview Bible Churth
Letart, W.Va. RL I

Other Churches

Rutland
Pastor: Anhur Cnbuee
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.

I
j
I

Now Haven Churcb orthe Nazarene
Pallor: Glendon Stroud
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
'Wonhip - 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servia:a -7 p.m.

M

!
!

Puler: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wemesday Servioe -7 p.m.

Portltnd Flnt Cliurch ol' lhe Nua....,e
Pastor. William Jus1is
Sunday School -10:00 a.m.
WonhiJ&gt; - 6:30p.m.
Wedneoday Semceo - 7 p.m.

can 992-2156

I

White's Chapd Wesleyan
Coolvi.Ue Road

Rutland Church ol'tllo Nuarone
Putor: Samuel B.,Yc
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wedneaday Semces - 7 p.m.

Pearl Cbapd
Pastor: Aora~ce Smith
Sunday School - 9 Lm.
Wonh.ip 10 a.m.

Latter-Day Saints
RtcJ11anlzed Cllor&lt;h ot J..,. Chrlsl
In Lauer Day Salnll
Portland-Racine Rd.
Pastor: Icny CoDins
Sunday Sc:hool- 9:30a.m.
Worihip • 10:30 Lm.
W.-c!ay Services-7:30p.m.

Chester Church or lhe Nazareae
Putor: Rev. Herben Grate
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Hoatll (Middleport)
PUlor: Fnnl: Smith
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worahip·- I0:30a.m.
Wednesday Servia:s- 6p.rn.

To place an ad

THE
PHOTO PLACE
109 High Street

POIMI'Oy
Bob •nd Charlene Hoeflich

'

I

..

•

•

�Tbe Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BEATTIE BL YD. TM by Bruct Beatlit

3 Announcements

35 Lot• • Acruge
IIYIIIAL 7• ACRE JljiRCELI:

No ~I No Naaalnal
Juol '!hit IIIlo 01 Your CliOice11

/:.'~~ a.~i ~~=

~1!

Co. IOH!H-1'120.
F - In Cllrlel Chrlotlan
DatinG S..V~ "Helping Chrlolien Sl.,lao ftnd Qvlollan

r:ar ..":'nt.t...::~

' ~ . ,:.~
:_ ~ ..' (j~
·
«

;;,;

•

·

,
1

(I

oldnnlng, cutllng. wrop·olng,frlozl.::S.
- · -AIIO making
hlc~ory..
ed
Je&lt;kr,
1ummer Nuup, lnlll bologna.
c..wtonl'o Gnicltl', Honc~enon

~

,

Renlals

'!
. . • , .

-

Ohio

.

BRIDGI!

ACROSS

::::.-.::.:.•.,;.
1H7

•. FUANIIHINGS:
WNUGitllron T - W/4 Choln;
Fen R!!\lltl!ll Choir 181;

-.n

100 D 'llllllo, 1m

••

Giveaway

FuM

.AQ2
tt7U
.QJIOU

tor 5 P.M. 614

446 1019.

Fru Klllena, To Good Home

Help

Wanted

AYONI All arHe. NMd extra

mon•y or want a CJI'Hr, alther

Only! can After 5:30 P.M. 614245.-59$1.

way-call Marilyn. 304-882-2845
or 1-i00-D92-1351.

Mlxlld Breed Male, Good Wetch
~· Brown &amp; Black, 614oo44681 ·

Eltclrtclan NNdecl For Loc ..
Job k'l QaiUpoUt, Ohio. Send
Rnume To: Coli EIICiric, P.O.

Bo• 735, Will Mlln StrHI,

Lost &amp; Found

6

Jackton, Ohio 45640.

Found: Young Grey Female Cat,
On St ate Street, Near High

School, 614-446-2592.
Lost:

12yr.

old

Samoyed,

18

a.no..t llolntono•.-.

PoiMiiiCintl~

-r.

"6%

··•

qulred 614-133-2336.

eclance, rHding, etc.,
3toa.

114-tt2~

203, Gallloplla, OH 45631.

Lost : ladln diamond &amp; gold
wedding rtng, reward, 6'14-992·
3a53.

Lolt:
Mulberry
Helghte,
Pomeroy, whlta fluffy cal with

apricot colorings, lnalde cat,

n... : 1f15 c-eo Chevy overcab,

a..·,

mony - _,.~.. tt200
wn-lor a.ovy plallup ..

Cur1alna, Spruell, New Jewt.y,

Poaltlon
Available
To
Coordinate Women'• Suppon

P.M. 814-446•178:!.

lohl Of Evorythlngl 12th, 131~.
Group And Provide Education
14th, 1 Mila Woot Oft Rodney.
To High Sct-1 Sludonto
Don1111oo Thlo Hugo 3 Fomlly Rogonlng Vlolonco In lntorporGaraga Sat. Birch Ulne Off
oonal Aofotlonohlpo. Pooltlon lo
Behind Hutton car Waah look App;oxlmotoly 10 Houro A WoOk
For Signs, Frldoy, Soturdoy.
On A Conract Boalo, 16.00 Por
Condldoto Mull Be ComYard Sola: 2 1/2 Mlloo Otd Hour.
tort- Spooking And Working
Nolghbot!iood Rood• Amlctuol With Groupo Arid Hoyo Somi
Olohoo, l Mo;oo Of uorythfng KnowladtJII ·Andl Or Elpoil""""
Thu,., Fri, Sat, 10:30 A.M. To Dooling With Poroono In Cilalo.
4:30P.M.
PI- AooiY To: Poroonnol,

PloltU:
w-.
•

44 llogo s.w 211 Blue a· Waod
3 Badrooma, Gaa HNt, In Glt- Box £xtrai, Exc. 1421; Marin
llpollo, 614-448·2003, 614-4411Ellm, Exe. $275. (8141
1409.
-·11172 Doyo; 11114) 281-11lt
~,...,_ Aok Far Slovo.
Nl"- 2 Baclroom MobiJe Homt,
St1t1 Rout• 218 Ar.a, R•tarance Remlhgton 700 BD1, ban -=tiDn,
And OopooM Roqulrod, 814-281- 30.01, now 3xll ocope, $450.
8251.
Morlln 30-30, laver ootlon, boo.

n.

Public. Sale

8

P.O. Bo• ~' GaiHpollt, Ohio
45631.

2bdrm.

This ne~aper wll not

aooopt

adVerllsemenls lor real estate
wtoldllo In vlotltlon ol tho
law. Our readers ar-. hereby

dord 12vo. pu•I'IIIAC:'A . 37, 12ga. dear gun, 114 2• 1122.

tor and lolder, ahov... draglina,

Slt!O: 114-Vtl2·

:.

Elaalrio Sw 1par 121; W.U cue

63

Llveltock

" " Chevy

-

-·

Real Estate

Complolly Fumlohod Smoll
Hou-. QOQ/mo, Pluo Utllhlool
And llol&gt;ooft. 814,4411~36. Cot
Boloro1p.m.
Coulllryaldo Apt on 1181. 2 llod100'!'!.CIA, OlD, WID Hooltup1
$3301Monlh. Roqul,..
114-441-4222 .. -211'1.
Flrol
Hotzw
Aportmonto,

163,000. 304-182-2312.

driller, doZir, certlhd w•ldar,

Second A.venue1 QallipoiiL 114441·1800 5onlar, OIMblod, I

2 Bed100111 HouH WHh B...
Antlquaa and UHd twnlture, no ond ell- mochonlc. Tranopor. monl Oft 518, All CHy Utllftloo,
itam too larg:e or too amall, will lotion, room, boonl provided, 138,500 Firm, Finance, Call
buy one plec:t or conapleta poy $1,112.00 wookly. 1.aGQ.8211. urrr. 114-446-1157.

~~~=~~~&amp;.tl:

alao wanted· old 8117.
bicycles, call O.by ... r11n, 614- Trucking Compony In Oak Hill,
992,7441.
Ohio lo Sotklng Exporlonco
. O.Coralad 81onewa.., wall , ... Semi Tractor /Trallar Drivers.
phOnaa, okf lampe, old lhet· Excollant Poy, Exporlonced
rnot"netera, old docka, antique Dilvoro Only. Coli 814-882·7773.

lncomo. FMHA Suboldtzed', HUD
Coriltlc:oln -ptocl 114-441-

household,

1800t Equol Houolng Opportunn...
.
Fumlohocl Apoi1mont, UtiiiUN
Pold, 1 BedRIOtll, Upololro,
Socond Avon.u•. Clollpotlo, No
Polo, Excollonl Condlllitn, 114-

tumhura. Rlvarln. AnUquea.
Ru• Moora, owner. 1.,..n2~

2521. Wa buy ntalea.

1tlltl AQHA .......

by Bonnv Ooo
Bar, 1112 AOHA Gokllna. r-.
tlwi "'o':"ticl':tl:l AQHA FIHy. Blil
,514--22.

'u._ln
Y- Otd
- · 1,1100
aun lbo.,
112
112 Anauo,

.-oo..........1'111.

TV'a,
Refiigaratora,
Freezar., YCA'a, Mlcrawavaa,
Air Condlllonere, Waahera,

Oryoro, Copy Mochlnoo, Etc.

304·7"13o5343.

CM-4 t:alor monitor

tDr perta.

304.f7UI72.
Wontod To Buy: Junk Aut..
WHh Or WHhoul Mot- CoU
Lorry Llvoty. 114.:1118,1303.
Wontod To Buy: llondlng 11m-'

bor • Plno, Good PrtcoO, 814-

318-.
Tap -

FOR SAL£· 2 bedroom houo..
112 .era In oount:ry, Aacfne ar.a,
now dlcubto pont tiH~n win- . l u l l " " - , ·-~build­

45

Furnished

Rooms
....
•• - ti4-141-2MO
IUOiotllu•~
....
n-.- $25,000,
lor 1:30 p.m.
A-lor ron1 • woOk or month.
811120/mo. Clolllo Holol.
llorlllf
GOVERNMENT -ES From 11 114. 1110.
WAHT£0
.
SiJbatkutoo: Toochtr, Aldoo, iU Attp~~lrl. Dollnquom Tu
Cooke, And Iva Drlvare. Com~ Propt~rtr. RapaaNulona. vour Slooplfio room. whh cooking.
polhlvo Solary. Contoct Tho ..... (1 105olltl2-. Ex1. QH. Aloolrollw · AllhooiMipo.
Coli ••• 2:00 p.m.,
304·7'13Ouklng Hond School At: 514- 10181 'For Cunant Aapo U.t.
5111,MaeonWV.
·
317-7371.
~For Soto: 8 -ho Otd, 3
Bod--. 2 Botho LP 0.
18 Wanted to Do
WHh Hoot Pump, W/0, Stove;

Polcl: All Old U.S. •A'•':'I';;'Cont:=:~:::m:;:.'Z::-i-:-:::-::...,~~
Frlg, DWt 1 ~"• Genge, With
••~o. Or
.,Wllno;n •umlturo
10
Mlnutoo From Clovln Aiiil Got·
1St s-ind Avonuo, Gollipallo.
Good Neighborhood
•112·23'/'il. Uc. No. WV003452. llpoll..
114-387~7217,
Wonted to b&lt;ly: uoed _,,. Beby end child olnlng dono 01
hotnoo.l14-44f.0171
INI roooonoblo pr!Coa, will Mull Sol: 3 Bod"'""!!, 2 AM/I.
Excollant Condftlon, ..... Coma
Wonted: book· Tlioinu Borlon:
• • Make Ott.,
OOII-niildo
phyololon
of
Syroc- on. •.,...Wl'l7.
Rlwir ·FI'Ontll~&amp;~ 4 •o•oom
Brlck, 114-411-l't67 Allor I P.M. .
WANTED: onglno lor 1 - Ford
I

.M3.....

4111-L

1HO~CR210R,.,._

-

-4211.

IS IT TRU~ Tt4AT IN A ntviOU$

--,

78

............. .w.....
m2. Or 114 -

1M-112-

3131.

.

we~e A
fAMOUS F,EN'~ i
-~
PAINn~

LIFE YOV

•

Auto Parti &amp;
AcceiiOrlel

'

'I

1

111111 3110 ...._, lllllil ....

" ves.

,,.,..,lull
......
- -n·will
· tninWw
CliOW

u.;-,. ·

aso........ uao; 1111
~

.!'!!1

~~ •.14011; •tot

~.

1m Fanl Von, e ort. liOO =:d

•

,r t--rl-,-1.,--~1

I r

8 ~:~~iRr~:~t~m I'
I ~~ic:~~~ LETTERs I

- · 114-a4~
- ~l"
- '

Ctil .... dug 130, -

Nov. 12, 1993

camping
Equipment

Toclny is the 316th
clny of 1993 and the
52nd day of faJl.

...

..... 2 Smf out Oood 8hap1:d Church. ~

Tr• Form, 304.f1J1.4041.
Clalh Cor Cooor F a r - · Or AKC llltg. Bo- - . Slhlllor Cor: Good CondJ. moloo, - tomo1oo, !own tofth
tlon; $100, t14 41112111.' .
Whllo
........... - $2Jtloo.,~

-r

Com ..........IWI. HoH
Cotn 112111 ~ TNII EF Ta

1101.

!

1

IIPOCH . lol' ' llo~lng 11
SUJma.. ·-·2167.
=~ .chywot•l

~ Wanted
. to Rent
·

campers a
MotorHomea

,

1111 15 1'1. """ a.ltlnd eoll;l
With
lion, :.~~D, P* Carillo•

1 Tl-111-JK 1T6 6a.IE'Tl-IIN6'
L.IKE: A P.AroL.E: •

, SOMEOA.Y WE'u. ~Dt..OA."'"E
~~ . I lf.oCINOER 'M-\AT
6~~16 . UKE .

~­

1HI - . . _
Woo...,..l)or
Trollor,
z. goo -

tlghl...................

ponoblo tollol, $'1110, 1

~~

,

~~~~~ko~1

Roglotored

lrlnonr
·lloiMial pUpa. 4 old,
oholo I -.nod,ll50. Fltuw:ad: All Hlilda ad' lpdl 1157.
Qollv- 140 Plolt.Up .Lold.
114-211-1311 Or ~11125 AKC Roaloloml Chow P......
114-281-14auftw 5:30 P.ll. · ·
EvonJnto.

···-

IFRIDAy

l=omfiOr UI01
or will !redo t. line wl MIK'

1ft lntok olldo In

304-4111-1'/'iiS.

•

RU'f

NOVEMBER 12 I

Drw'r
r,....,TUfl.ot

8VM.+f IAJ G

lory. .............. " ' ••• 2311.

1J71 Fold LTO, Low - Condition, Coli 114-$
1117,- I P.ll.

"
ASTRO·GRAPH
BERNICE
BEDEOSOL'

r~tcrch&lt;Jnd l se

•

l.otllo -llokoo Into Doublo
~-11· ~ '211.
. . LAYNI'81'URNIIUAE
Can I ' ?a ~ home furmniUIIallili-.lil
' ""'
-

. . . ,_,.lid.

llo; ........ . .......

. : - . . $71, ~ Comlorloblo.

2.:1 -

Okl, GOod Condftlcml

Ten~. tM-+twm.

The new employee made small errors in his endeavors to prove he could d~~:Jcib. The boss told him tha~
"Mosl people would su
1n small things if they were
not troubled with 9reat AMBITIONS •

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
CELEBRITY CIPHER
1948, Hideki Tojo, the Japanese leader I
c..brlty CtDI'Ief cryptograms .,. ctMtlid from quo1•tlor" by famous Pf!OPie. put and ~~
who ordered the attack on Pearl
Each lett« In the clpMr 1tanda IOJ anot'* roc.y·• ckHI: F ~ c
·
Harbor, was sentenced to death as a
war criminal.
j 'G K G FWHYB, G M W H T 8 PW
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS; Elizabeth
U M U t
KZWL
Cady Stanton (1815·1902 ), reformer; K U Z
JWTTIMWWB
Auguste Rodin (1840-1917) , sculptor;
PCV
u TGVVTC
Harry A. Blackmun 09Q8·l , U.S. jurist, UXB
FWYVUPC
is 85; Grace Kelly (1929-1982), actress·
J u y c
EUEGCD
U XB
princess of Monaco; Stefanie Powers U X B
MZGVC
0942-), actress , is 51; Neil Young
0 C X XGKC Z
&lt;1945·1, singer·songwriter, is 48; Nadia EWWSO . '
TIXFJ.
Comaneci (1961-), I,YJltnaslics great, PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Old men declare war . eut ;t Is the )'O&lt;Ith !hat
is 32 . ~:;~~~~------=-=====mu::st~fig~h~l~
. a~n:d~d~le~·-.. ~~He~r~be~n~H:o~o:w:r~.~~~~~~~~~--~~

stamped envelope to A9tro-Graph, c/o this ". TAURUS (April :ZO..Ioley 20) Small poinls ·
nawopaper, P.O. Box 4465, New Yoi1&lt;, N. 1 are ve;y algnHicant in any contracts or legal
Y. 10163. Be sure 10 slate your zOdiac l agreements you negotiate in this cycle.
What you're puffing IOgelher could •n&lt;!~re
sign.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0oc. 21) Try lo lor a long, long time.
.. ..
be ol aeslatance today to persons who GEMINI (Moy 21-June 20) Everyon'
need your help. 'Do it, however, without knows you're pretty good al hondling two
seeking praise or affention. Your ra.wards situations simultaneously. l'n this i
will come secretly.
frame , however, you might have se&gt;•erall
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 18) Your 1T10T11 balls in the air 1hln that:
.
sphere ollntluanco might nol be too eldon· CANCER (June 2hluly 22) Your cuatOdi·
alva today, but 11 may have enormoua lllnatlnell are very p!OTIOUrtCid today and
lmpacl with close friend&amp; . Keep this In when you put endNvors together, they'll
mind, lhould !hey looi&lt; to you lor ~ldance: be designed to protect you and those lor
AQUARtUS (Jin. »FFb. 18) Whon prop- wham you're responllble.
•
.
etty.. modvet8d tO!My or t:llallengld by com· LIO (July 23-Aug. 22) You're In 1 good :
,petition, your desire to wil,6ould
cycle lor oompletlng compllellod lnvotv•
exc:etdlngly strong, eapeclally In carnr ' menta 10 your lltlllllactlon, 10 tlon'lwute
mattert or thlnga 'that affect your r,epula· ypur lima today on situations that aren't
tton.
,, .
·-lngful.
'
' ·
·
,
PISCE8'(Feii. .2G Mal~ 20) A 101U110n 10 VIRGO (AUg. 23 lipt 22) Thla 18 a good
1 pruent dllei!)ml c.n be fc!und today H d*y to catch up on corr1tp0iidenca ~r
you drew upon a' ailccelllul almilar ~~ jlhOnl 011111 you'Ve betrl'!.ltQie&lt;lling la1IIY.
a~; Whit -'*! then lhOuld 1110 There ore 11 loul five ~ WhO are BnX·
WOilt lor you.-.
'
laue to
you.
Alllll ~ 21.J.jllll 111) Your Q - UIIIA (lip!. D-Oot.. 23) Your lOng le!ln
oppcllfiMIItilt.ll
IJI1It.,. ~to- .ilnlnaill ~. look alllrlmely 'lltrae-,
tl1roufllrMII';IIIilllll you haw with ...... I... It thtl U1111 - .. you could lxperi·
lniiNd llt;ough 11*1Q1 you
lllllty lngi. 1
m~ hlght ' fllan IOwt. TOday might
, _ Oh ~r own.
· ·
' · be In e~tatnple. '
·
''

I

·=-~

II III III

-SCIAM-LETS ANSWERS
Behead- Swifl. Folio • Domino • AMBITIONS

.1t".''UI~IU.IU

•

r r 1 r I' I' I' I

I

Tr&lt;. 11:&gt;po rt a11 o n

Bu Price Roduaid Ill, 114-241-

lonko, ..:. .........

:.i~R'",~-='
S'72-2133or1

78

Chilotmu T._l Too troo

I:

e

...

~

I

L

1m-.y~,_,.~

Employment Serv1ces

apoo..;~-.

II • 11

:::Jr. Trll•n lnl1ila, u..t i.

•

AVail I All _ . I Shliloy

\r-\Aioll:;)

-·

1.1 1~:'~ II'' d

t1elp Wanted

WAS

' - · VW lioN ..... aoc.71.t

.

ASAP,
I
·2455,
I::IOon&gt;e:OOp;n. or I-·24D
oftw 8:00pm.

11

~

•i

ro,/'1 TOULOUS~.

4WD U1111t - . .....

luot aworlioulod, 1210.-liiil
Plrl• a - . 30W7M41S. •
lit. .,. ola lnltlloled, -

win-

7 Gloooy lobrlc
8 Porty ghero

I

_FRANK AND ERNEST

,oiiiJ-~11-

AKC

COIM, 0o1c1 A - au- Caine, eddhlono,
lng, roofing,
Gold Colnt. M.T.il. COin Shop, end olcllng. Allon, :ICM-IJ'S.4534

Foollwi,

74 · Motorcycles

tum

1 Docoya
2 PlolnUfl

0

'

..~

COtiCIItlou, 114-JI'MIID.

DOWIII

Some 30 yean ago in The Brid&amp;e
World masazine, AI Roth and Tobias
Stooe set 22 high-level declarer-play
and defense problems taken from
tournaments. They have just been republiabed as almoet half of a Dew book
called "lj'or Experts Only" (Granovet·
ter Books, $17 .9~. 800· ~2f&gt;.4718). The
other'IZ essays cover various facets of
blddiDc and card·play.
lta-+-+-Terence Reese contributed a piece
featurlns falae-eartls by declarer. ro.llar+-+day's deal Is built around one of these.
After some very pushy biddiD&amp;,
West. 11!11 his fourth-highest spade
asalnst three no-trump, East putt1ng
up the 10. How sh'ould South plan the
play?
·
Recma"De lenars of
If the club finesse is working, there
four JCrambled words
are 10 tricks: one spade,. four hearts
low to form four words
and five clubs. Even if the finesse is
lotiDI. there are nine tricks - as long
as the defenden don't score at least
YELAVL
five tricks flnt, of course.
Tbe ingenuous declarer wins tbe
lint trick with the spade jack, plays a
heart to dummy and takes the club fl·
ARVIL
neue. Wben it loses, West has an automatic diamond switch. East wins with
lo--t
the ace and returns a ipade. After
cashiDg four tricks in that suit, the deH AL T £
'It's not easy to find just the
fenders set three more diamond tricks
for five down.
1--r--r-.....---.-l : right glasses," the eye doctor
The iD&amp;enious declarer wins tbe
1
1 ~
told the elderly man. "Tharsfor .
.._. . ._ ....__...--~.L--t sure," agreed the old man •
flnt trick with the spade king. He
croues to dummy and takes the club
rl-:--:::------~-~especially if you're buying them
flnesae. But now West, afraid declarer
. L E B E FE
'fora··--·-··!"
started with four spades to the K-9,
1--TI-=,r;:-~l~,r;...,,,--1
Complere "'• chuckl.• qUOiod
continues with a low spade to his pari·
_.__.__..;._..;._..L.--1
by lollong on ihe m;uong _,dl
...
ner's jack. Well, 'that is the plan, but
rou develop from step No . 3 below.
declarer
promptly
claims
an
1 overtrick!
4
Tbe title of the book is self·
.

1tlt2 llulchmon . . _ o~W~tr~Ql

J &amp; D'a Auto Part. and Salvaga,
alao buying JunK cars &amp; trucia.

Wont to buy: 1181 lonely 1000

X

1tti~4Whtl.~

614--256--1238.

Junk Care and Truclca 11""'2*
5001.

:

3202 """ 5pm.

Grai:louo living. 1 ond 2. bodlOOm ... rimonto ot Vltlago
Manor
and
Rlwr.laa
Aportmento In llldclltpon. F10111
1202. CoN 114.fi2-585D. EOH.

Cotor

fl'xqlna topper,
11100, 114
1tu Fold Tliw... bli41(11111 '#.. AI Power, ........,, lb~

.1-4411.

448... 523.

Don1 Junk Ht Soli Uo Your NonWonting Mojor Appllilncoo,

}

~-~·10~
aulo.,
air, ~ ..

.!!I.,_
-or.
Ron EYIM EnllrpMee, JfiCk..
:r'"c.J.
-..:=.J~na L
- , Ohla, 1~21.
4 P.M .. on. Fttclilr.. Alh c.i;.

24Ul2t

s-10, s •..• .,..
nr

Condlllon,~S.

~]:EA

S300· Soo o\t: 4ZI S..Oil!f
Avon'uo, GlliiiMIIto.
.
55
Building
zs· Color
lorillh T.v., Conoolt.
. Suppl'·s
Good
Condftlcm, PO; Bolw
"'
llltoopor Brown, Orango, Gold,
Good Cond"lon, PO, 114-- Blodt, brick, .._, llntolo, 15!119.

~

c-oilo

3Af.prope~~~

4 lloiowy book•
5 Plfcel of lind
6 Fooiboll

hl'+-t-+--

Fold·~~
-

211N110.

Win..... Rio Orondo, OH Coli 114-

aw avdable on an equal

=.....

Good Condftlon,

st:DRAGE
TAHKS Atheno UYootodt ~ l!l*lal
........o And GraUnd FDA ,Nou...,
.. Colllolo,
- ·All
·
AI 1 P.M.
2 CUll RoglolOI'I $100 loch; APP""od Far ..__

3St7.

c:::

advertised In thla newspaper

Somoono to Oloy wllh old•ly 1:-~:-:----:--:---­
In ..., hoirio. Aotoroncoo 31 Homes for Sale
Rick Poo;wn Auction Compony, lady
rooulred. Exp«'- prolorrod.
tun lime auctioneer, oompleta Call 614-a2o5H5 w•kdlya
174 Mayo Drtva 1 N~ Havan, :Z
auction
aervk:a.
Ucenud between 1Qam-4pm.
atory brick, ! DHroom, 1 112
ftli,Oldo • Wnt Vlrglnlil, 3Q4.
Surflce mlnere ,_..d fDJ out· bitlh now Corilor hoolpump,
773.f785.
room
wlflreplaca,
ot•ate worit. Operatore neaded flmlly

Wanted to Buy

eiiCtrlc, ap..

lntonnod thot oil -·lntJII

&amp; Auction

9

•pta., lOIII

plio....• lumlohod, laundry
room litcURioo to oehoot
In t-n. Apptk:attona ovtl,_
ot: Vlllogo G;oon Apto. &lt;141 or
colt 114o812·3711. EOH.

14" VGA monN•,

'

'::=~~

w-. mac1o1 14,
Ololnlaoo 81001 H .. h l a h a

All pass

loncllon
53 Pork lor wild
lllllmlla
54 01 poor
qtllllly
lie Tier
57 Pine product
58 North Caroline COIIIQI
58ACireHSotn.m
80 Form onlmlle
61 Fender fllw

By Phillip Alder

~"'WiooiWD. - - -

Smhh

Eul

3NT

•44 "
Llltt
"''
48 TN-

Testers taken
from tournaments

A NEW
BRIDLE !I

•

3044-t

anv

make
SUCh preference,
Mmltauon or dlsa1mlnatlon. •

IOlOwlng~

LOOKIN' FER

1J71011Cplok_,_.....,
....... - · '30W1io4010.
•
IIU Fanl
Alum.
5111. ·
1114 llodao Rom ~. I

!!.

Only, Call BltWHn 10 A.M. ·12

STORE!!

11111
Dodtlo
INCk, Holf.Con
good body,
;uno

Opportunity

Nordt

3711111'
38 llllld
3Uid
41 Tex. lime
42 Wipe liard

WE-UNS HAPPEN TO
BE CUSTOMERS

1 ::i'~\,~c0\,

:!.'

Business

Ufa and Huttll lnaunnc• 1400gol. tonk, Molp • Atheno
Sa..., Do you have control of Co., 614-llta-e56a.
your -n lllw? Ex.. ndlng Snock /Sodo Rta. $1,200 /Wk
Property &amp; C..uatty Insurance Pot. GiOOt lnv111-4100.1JM.0354.
A - lo looking lor 1utt I port
tiiM agent. Eam whlla you Vondlng Routo: For Sola.

Friday. Monday edition • 2:00
p.m. Saturday.

OUT OF MY

::"~C,.';A.~

loom. T,.lnlng
provided. Strong, Sotld CUh Bual-o.
lloirrlngton
Alchorftol!
20
Benerlla. Mual bli a Hlf ltarter, High Trofflc, Locol ~-.
SiJntono h!Ming bod - bedroom, country oottlng, G!.."i•·.!.
-1.
MS. 304- lonnor,
Lost: Tan Pomeranian Dog, Lett
Ex.. rlonco prolorrod. Sond N- Equl-t. 1-284-8311!1. ThCryotol Sun Wotlw bullio
4 mlloonorlh 01 Hml-.vllla on ~~••
ruuma lo: Agent, 114 Courl
s.an sunday, If ~.nr::.,.. l,.n 40hra. on them,
Him PINM Call, 6
·7725.
Stroll, Pomofoy, Ohio 45'/llt.
oxcollorrt, t1200 Filiil,
:/,\,~~~J.!;45~opoo~~ 53
Antiques
114-1'12.:1802.
NURSING
ASSISTANTS
Yard Sale
7
Trollor lor ront In Syracuao, Buy or soiL Rlvorlno Amlq-, Som ~llla'o onny IIUt'Diua
Wo Aro Looking For -obla
muot hove roloroncoo, 814-992· 112'4 E. Moln 91-1, on Rt. 12~ olnco 1114 by londyVHio Poet
People Who WTII Give Our Aaal:ma.
Pomeroy. Houro: M.T.W. IO:ou Ofllco hoo lull tlno ol- comdont Tho Coro And Roopld
a.m. to 1:00 p.m., lun*r 1:00 flo-, Jw;lor ltkltt 4 lo .....,
Thay O..rve. Stat•Taatld
44
Apanment
to 6:00 p.m. 814-Vtl2-252tl.
Poopla Will Be Conoldtrod For
Gallipolis
XXXL. Compoolvo - · F;t.
lmmodloto Emplormont. Brlng
Sot.Sun,
noon till I:OODm,
for Rent
&amp; VIcinity
Rafa,..nca Information. Othara
54
Miscellaneous
othoro doya I houro. -~
All
real
estate
~eni:Sing t1
Moy Aot&gt;ly For Nuroln11 A•l•
11155.
1br. opt., po~lally lumlohod,
3 Family: Winter Clothing, lant Trlfning Cfua To llegln In
this nowop;tptT ts Mlbjod to
Merchandise
2200
blocll,
Pt.
Plauont,
Chlldran, Adutta1 Tore, Fuml~ Docombor. All Appllc.iitlono
tho Fodorol Folr Houolng ACI
Uood
-_ .....
1200/mo. pluo utllklao. 304.f7&amp;ture, Misc., Frli:fay, Saturday, M..t Ia Rtca.lvad 8~ Thuraday,
ol1968
which makoo Hitogot
10 9 - Blcrcla Uko - · PO, roclnora, oholro, dlnl"' loblo,
1038 1ttar "Spm.
Sunday, i-? O.orge'a Creek, Novemebtr 18th. Former Ap.
114-441-3005.
choirs end hut'!!!,_• to advtillao ';r;y ptolenince,
Appro•. 112 Mila From Rt:7.
condll:lon,l~·l~.
pllconto
Should
Aoopply.
2 1 br. apia., ru.ton~bla rent.
or
tlocmilnallon
lnitallon
1181
Ponloon boo~ II Pluunt
Hill Manor, 7'143 U.S.
304-175-2053
or
675-4100.
ALL Yord Soloo Mwol Bo Pold In
lloicury rnqtor, $4000; 1t11 ..,. WATER LINE SPECIAL: 114 Inch
based on race, color, religion,
Advance . DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. Routo 23. South, Plltoton, OH
2 Bod,_, Upatolro AJ&gt;IIrt• t!quo Glboon lllllb;r,- oondl- 200 PSI $18.15; 1 Inch 200 PSI
45011,
114-289-2314,
EOE.
sax
famllal
status
or nattonal
tha day before lha ad Ia to run.
mant, Unfuml•hiHI, No Pate, tlcln, $400; 38l ax II"ICkord Bolt 132.10: Ron ev... EiihlrDIIM..
ortgln, or any lrfentlon to
Sunday adhlon ~ 2 :00 .p.m. Part~Time 81rtendar, WHkMdl
Oopoon Roqulrod,ll4-44&amp;-2583. computor with 107 honl drlv.. Jockoon, 0111"11~ .
colt 614-892·2203.

t h o - · - . . , . -....

on

West
Pass

34 ao&amp;lllll

llrlleiiY
31110ttancleftt

Opening lead: • 6

GIT· T.HAT MULE

72 Tl'uckl lor Slle :
'17 Fanl truck, JB2 IIICiiM. . .

INonCEI
Help wanted: now taking ap- OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
pllcallont lhur.fri-Sat, Nov. 11· ,.commtnda that ~ do ~u•
12·13. Hortlonl Rooto~rant .
nooo wfth pooplo.you k.-1 end
Lody To Work In Rohlll St.,., NOT lo oond monor lhrougn tho
Mull Hava Experience In Aatall mall until you have lnvaatfgatad
And Selling, Raterence R.. lhe otfarlng.
qulrod, Sond Aoolloo To: Bo• For Sale: Water Hauling Bu.,_

4P.M.

~;BARNEY

Ftnancial
21

Sootli
I NT

~·

Will tu1or In my home on anr

Lost: 2 male Bissett Hounde,
brown-black·whHI, J•rricho Rd
&amp; Rt. 2. Lloyd Roach, 304,.;75Lost : Gold Chain With Dolphin
Charm,
Sln1ift'llntal
Value,
Reward: Call 614~46-6813 After

Suppl1rs
&amp; L1veslock

rdtlll

7 Roome .wtth Bath, F.u.l HHI,
[)epoalt and Aeterwno. R•

oubjld, gredoo K·12. moth

..tf..addrNHd llamD.d -..
volopo to: B &amp; B Molting Sor·
vlco, P.O. Bo• 830525, Mloml, Fl

3132.

tQJ
.AI71
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

Slovo, Colt After 2 P.M. 814-411-

0527.

814-4*1

Por11and area, minor haatth
prvblems, family ~. 614-8435358.

33163.

•Ka

.KHS

=-e-=Room
==-:7--,-s"'t,okorma,......-~tlc
"'

g:-:....ca.iiilal1'A~~::.r-.s':::J:
·

SOUTH

Flboralaoo ........ $100
Eliot; Nowl'lboralaoo
3tiNplace,
BR homo2clooo
town, dock,
car tocarport.
gu Tub
iiso Eoch, 114-24Wl52 A~
hNt, CMltlrll air. $425. 11...,.. loriP.M.
·
IIS.!S ••onlngo

:;-;::':::-:-:-==::-c:-:-:-:---,.

Yard Work Wlnctow. W

EXTRA INCOME
EARN $2004500
WEEKLYc IIAILINQ TRAVEL

GUIOES.t"or lntonn1tlon Hnd

Wanted to Do

21 Trlgoftomelry
term
23 link In
middle
24 ACirellRemick
271mlllhoiM
210ou
32 Film director
-Stone

.10753
.,.7
tAIOII

Couch • Choir, m or ......~
lor. 304-e7U781.

11

7
18~=
eoldler

EAST

f\!.

===::i

17 ActorW.U.Ch
18 Luclly

ll·IJ.U

••

ChMt " - · tzOO. Moonovox
eornatJ
$200. Antique
Clblnot -•ng mochlno, $50.
All oxc. oand. :IOW71-7528.

"H
th Ch · t
1
"
r=====e=re:c:o:m:e ==e=-rr:'s:m=
a :s :ca:t:a:og=s:.

u=:-

1 ~ Truck tlri~ITI

NOIITB

o.a

Free tamale Fox Terrier, 614--742·

e .... tlowlfll

13 ,lllllurl

Aucllon Or 4 lllloo
141.
Open I A:ll. To I ·P.M. IIon -lot.

2445·
Free Klttana, To Good Home, Af-

ALDER

14 And not

:.0"'
:."1 ~a::::"::.::..
"""J
$1.00. 2 . . _ . _ .... 'l...

only, will dollvor, 304-175-51!0.

1De!Miorlle
5 POIInd'l -

'

Ql----

lunk Bod'.. - · Uno

......

PHILLIP

Gonlon-Woy'1if1ZI.OO
_,ng ·'!Win lion Sol .... Fun
hi 101..1. ~n tMI lot; 4
o..-.... 144.11; Cor .......

wv. 304-875-5404.

Calico kht..,e, 1o good home

NEA Croanw.ord Puzzle

-.~11,01111

OUTSIDE

~
.

.
.
.
=-.,.....--· ·~

1117- CIIX-11, ....,.._

n•

f.Frtday, November 12, 1993

•

ALLEYOOP

71

VI'IIA I'IIRHITUAI

Coli

!1 ~

~

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlaht

Hounhold
GoodI

land; - . ,...~... end hllto. 114-4414151 Or
111 u21
lol' goc&gt;c! mop. lo411Wt3'tO DAY SAME AI CASH
M45, Alhtno,OH.
OR REHT-.2.QWH (NO DEPOSIT)

.

-J.!:.
~' ' · ·· ·'

Ptirtnera,. Clll '1-10043Q.-JIH,

4

51

Friday, November.12, 1883

you mlgl)l 'hove.a .num·
blr oiiUICiotla oppon~ to uliltZe your
or~nlzall0111i and leadara~lp qualllltl. .
You're t,IIP!Ined J9 be a paqe setter a bit ·
~ (!l·~t~t ~· . '
· . "
ICQRIIIO («*. Z,..Nov, 22) Your inllu·
~ ~ o11111 Ia quU lfn!nQ at thle ti'l\8
. II1CI ...,_. •IIY lio growing
stronger.
, . . . , ~ 1t1.e aXCIIent c:hanctl
tor ~Wild todly. Glt IIU!DP 1'1' 1118 ·
by ..~ lltll ~ l'l1lilh.,. .
gtMr/tlng you il . . , _ .,_,, Send lOr
your Aatro-Grlplt prodlclton• today by
INiflillll -1 .2~ and a long, seK-add,._,

even

' , . .. .

beco"1"

•lrllm

aur

r

u

.

11\0\1

'j

..

�'

••'•

·.

By
The
Bend
.

The Daily Sentinel
·Meigs County's
newest prod~ct
PageBl

Friday, November 12,199J
·
Page-fb

'

Wife with herpes does not mean·infid-elity
Deu Au ••eden: Cu you
1111111 IIIOibt.r leaiew 111 herpes? I bope
10.

Two yean 11110. I becamo ill with
hip fever, chilla llld 1e~ ptet
pain. The diii"'O!is wu acailll
belpcl. At the lime, I!IY il•lllald llld
I bid been IU'IiecllS yeua. He wu

R. DAVID GillSON

EDWIN HARPER

Four night polemic
discussion to be held
A four night polemic discussion
will be held Nov. 15, 16, 18 and 19
with Edwin S. Harper of the United
Pentecostal Church of Huntington,
W.Va and R. David Gibson of the
Church of Christ of the Alto,
W.Va
The first two nights of the
debate will take place at the University of Rio Grande, Fine and
Performing Ans Center. The topic
will be trinity versus Jesus only and
must Jesus be said at the time of
baptism with each participant either
debating or affirming the topic.
Thursday and Friday nights the

lbe only ~ex pu~ner rd ever hid in
my entire life. He showed no
S)'lllploml. Ufe in our houlchold
was hell. 1banta to the help of
several doctllrl, we learned a lot
about genital helpes.
1. Since my husband had other
sex pabiQi prier 10 our m.riagc,
he could have contracllld it lhen.
Some people have sucb a mild c:asc
that they don' even know !bey have
lapes. Nevertheless, !bey become
carriers. Yeanlaru, they may have
llllOih« mild (unnoticed) outbreak
and pass Ill the virus.
2. Condoms do not proteCt against
lapes because the virus is in lbe
entin: genital uea.
3. If a sex pa!UICI with a cold sore
has oral sex, he or she can infect a

debate will be held in the Don
Morris Room of lite Memorial student Center, Marshall University, partner.
400 Hal Greer Blvd., Hunti n~ton,
W.Va The topic of debate will be
do signs and miracles exist in the
church today wilit each participant
affmning or debating.
DURHAM, N.C. (AP) - The
Each night's debate will consist acclaimed creator of a rice diet for
of a 30 minute affirmative speech a the overweight is accused of keep30 minute negative speech, a 20 ing a woman as his " virtual sex
minute rebuttal by the affirmative slave" for 20 years, enforcing disand a 20 minute rebuttal by the cipline by whipping her bare butnegative.
. tocks with a riding crop.
For more informmion call 446Sharon Ryan, 43, leveled the
1494 or (304)525-5451.
allegations in a lawsuit against Dr.
Walter Kempner, founder of Duke
University's Rice Diet Clinic.
The allegations against the 90year-old diet doctor are " entirely
Teaching on Prayer" followed by unfounded," said his lawyer, E.C.
prayer by Hope Moore. Helen Bryson Jr.
Teaford had two readings.
More than 22,000 people have
The Christmas party was tenta- participated in the weight-loss protively set for Dec. 9 at 6 p.m. The gram at Kempner's clinic, includplace will be announce later.
ing celebrities such as Elvis PresAll officers were retained for Icy, Buddy Hackett and rival diet
another year. guru Nathan Pritikin.
Attending were Jean Stout,
Duke University Medical Center
Hope Moore, Helen Teaford, Irene said it will investigate the allegaParker, Marie Houdashelt, Wanda tions.
Rizer, Mary Lisle, Beulah Ward,
Duke spokesman John Burness
Bob Smith and Mary Cundiff.
said medical center officials

----Community calendar---Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day of that event. Items
must be received in advance to
assure publication in the calendar.
FRIDAY

Ann
Landers'

other.

ANN LANDEIIS

"1993, Lao Aile ....
Tlm.. S)11dical&lt;
CreolonSJ!Idl&lt;al&lt;'•

Dear ADD Lallden: Thirteen
years qo, I almost married a man I
had dated fer )rear. "Dan. was the
love of my life. We were not lcids,
both 3!1 years old, tllld Dan had been
married befote. Wedding plans were
set, and then, the bottom fell ouL I
discovered that Dan was not
divorced and that he and his wife
had had a j}ing going all the lime
he was see1llg me. I canc:eled lbe
wedding and him along with iL
Because I was so hurt, I ran
straight to an(llber man, whom I
married. It was a big mistalce. After
12 years of mutual unhappiness, we
spltL
Dan heard about the divorce and
came bact in10 my Jife. He conned
me iDto believing I was his only true
love. We bid a lovely time for t1uee
-lhs. Then, I caught him with lbe

a

·'

4. I am a nurse, so I could have
picked it up while tending a patienL
I am meticulous about hand
washing, but that is no guanmtec.
We still don't know how I got
genital herpes. I have had two
flare.ups since the initial outbreak.
My husb111d baa never bad a
S)'lllplom. I have _ , bid a ICll
panner Giber than my husband.
Please tell "Trouble iii Toletk!" I
believe her buaband complalely.
I know be could have conlnleled
berpes without having 1n quamarital affair because that is
what happened 10 me. -- NEW .
ORLEANS, LA.
.
DEAR N.O.: Thanks for the
backup. I have received many

-woman.

•

;
I

'

•
h!f

Twice he bid bumililred me, 111!1
I wu determined 10 Jet even.~I
calqed a eet!eH'five piiC*I of
in pweUjc: jocby llhans, 'lllaCJied ft
10 helium lillloona, hanimeRcl 11
s1ake in the puund, and there ·it
floated, In front of his houe, faciJik
the road fer al110 lee.
~
It bas been 1 month, and I havat\
heard a word from him or the
woman. Sign me •• PEEliNG

al turkey dinner at the Tuppers
Plains Fire Department will stan at
4:30p.m. at the firehouse. The cost
is $5.
CHESTER - The Eastern High
School Band Boosters will sponsor
a craft shOw from 9 am. to 4 p.m.
in the high school cafeteria There
will be a large variety of crafts,
food and entertainment. Everyone
is welcome.

music night from 7 p.m. to midnight. All bands are welcome.
Refreshments will be available.
The public is invi~ to attend.
SUNDAY
POMEROY - All Meigs area
singles are invited to a Thanksgiving dinner sponsored by SOLOS at
7 p.m. at Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. Bring a dish to
share. For more information or
reservation call Sharon at 985 4312.

TUPPERS PLAINS • Round
and square dance sponsored by the
Tuppers Plains Veterans of Foreign
Wars Post 9053 Ladies Auxiliary
from 8-11 :30 p.m. at the post.
POMEROY - Belles and Beaus
Music by CJ. and the County Gen- Western Style Square Dance Club
tlemen with Red Carr and Melvin · will sponsor and open dance at lite
RACINE - Southern High
Cross calling. AU welcome.
Senior Citizens Center from 8 to II School
sportS banquet will be
p.m. Caller will be Ed Pabst. All held at fall
I
p.m.
For more informaLONG BOTTOM - Faith Full western style square dancers are
tion
call
Rulit
Shain
at 247-4965 or
Gospel Church in Long Bottom cordially invited. Refreshments
Nease
at
949-2955.
Jeannie
wiil have a hymn sing at 7 p.m. will be served.
Pastor Steve Reed invites the pubREEDSVILLE • "Cross and the
lic. Fellowship wlll follow.
MILLFIELD - There will be a
Switchblade"
will be shown at
round and square dance at the RusReedsville
United
Methodist
SATURDAY
sell Building from 8 to II p.m.
Church
at
6:30
p.m.
Fellowship
with music by Out of the Blue.
will follow . Pastor Phillip Scarber·
HARRISONVILLE - Har- Caller will be John Russell.
ry
invites the public.
risonville Lodge #411 will meet at
7:30 p.m. Work in Enter Prentice
HENDERSON- C.J. and the
POMEROY • There will be a
Degree. Refreshments will follow. Country Gentlemen will play at lite
Thanksgiving
basket dinner at
All master masons are welcome.
Henderson Community Building
Alfred
United
Methodist
Church at
from 8 to II p.m. featuring Frank
12:30 p.m. Turkey will be providMIDDLEPORT - There will be Bowles on the fiddle.
ed. Everyone is welcome.
a revival at the First Baptist Church
MILTON • Mountaineer Opery
from Nov. 13 - 17 at 7 p.m. nightly
GALLIPOUS - Modem Woodand at 10:15 a.m. Sunday with the Hou se will present "Lost and
Found"
and
the
"McPeake
Brothmen
of America Camp 7230 will
Rev. Charles Norris of Racine.
ers" at 8 p.m.
have a Thanksgiving dinner at
Dale's Smorgasbord from noon to
CLIFTON · There will be a benALBANY
Modern
Woodmen
2
p.m. The cost is $2.50 for ages lO
efit hymn sing at.the Clifton TaberAmerica
Camp
4
798
will
hold
a
of
and
up and free for children 9 and
nacle Ch~h at 7 p.m. The Mounmatching
fund
Chinese
auction
under.
Call Mildred Ziegler at 992tain Top Singers will be the feawith
100
drawings
and
cow
plop
at
7770
for
mote information.
tured group. Pastor M.C. McDaniel
Alexander
High
School
starling
at
invites the public.
1'&lt;'11!·
CHESTER - There will be a
3p.m.
slug shoot at the Izakk Walton
TUPPERS PLAINS - The annuLOTTRIDGE - Lotlridge Com- Farm at I p.m. Smooth bore and
mun ity Center wil! host country rifled barrels, no scopes.

received complaints in 1975 that ordered her to rCinove her clothes
Kempner had used a riding crop on and whipped her buttocks with a
several patients, but they character- riding crop, the lawsuit alleges.
ized the incidents as improper ther- Several weeks later, Kempner
apy rather than sexual misconduct allegedly seduced her at her home.
The school said Kempner was
According to the lawsuit,
orderetl to stop using the riding Kempner persuaded Ryan to drop
crop.
out of college, moved her into a
Ryan, in lite lawsuit filed Nov. home he owns and hired her to
4, said she came to Duke to lose work for the clinic.
weight in 1970, when she was a 20From 1970 to 1987, Ryan
year·old college student
claims, Kempner maintained his
Later lit at year, Kempner rcpri- sexual relationship ·with Ryan by
manded her for gaining weight, isolating her from all but his inne.r

VICTORIOUS IN FLORIDA
::
DEAR VICTORIOUS: fm nOt
S!IJe what you think you 'Willi, btft

A Mulllmcdra In c

•'

Memben of the Riverview Oar·
den Club recently enjoyed dining at
the Point of Vtew Resturant in

ParkersbtJ!_g.

Auenchng were Betty Boggs,
Frances Reed, Mary Ahce Bise,
Gladys Thomas, Maxine Whitehead, Ella Osborne, Margaret
Grouni&lt;:kle, Marilyn Hannum and
DCiorel Frant.
NOll' program boots were disttibuled by Mn. Reed, vice presidenC. 1be next meeting will be on
Nov. 18 at the Reedsville Church
of Cbrilt. A Chrjstmu workShop
will ~ conducted by Marilyn Up·
num tllld Ruth Anne Baldcrlon.
MemberS a to tate lifts for the
Pomeroy ~ursing 111d ltebebilita·
lllln Center padenta to .the Novembei meedna. ·and Ill: also asked to
take finger foocb . .

NPw sp.lpcr

Although he feels it is imponant for the kind of jobs that exist in this
the U.S. to have such a pact with disttict.~ Stticlcland pointed out.
·GALLIPOLIS - The North Ameri- Mexico, Stricldand says the poorer
The Kuppenbeimer's clothing raecan Free Trade Agreement could re- country is not ready.
tory in Wellston is a such a planL
sult in lowered wages and lost jobs"It seems to me that Mexico needs Most workers there, he said,cwntly
two blows the area's frngile economy to make some intermake just about minicould not take, Congressman Ted nat changes before "I'm concerned it's not mum wage.
Sttickland, D-Lucasville, said.
we enter into this
"They'll be comSoutheastern Ohio's voice in con- agreement," he said. good for the district and peting with plants at
' gress plans to let o.ut a resounding
Strickland said his ,
•
• • Mexico that may pay
"no" on Wednesday when the House biggesteoncemisthe 1m voting no, lwpmg 1ts . their workers sixty.votes on NAFTA.
"do~nward p~es - de/eOled.,
five ~nts an hour I!Jid
"I'm concerned it's not good for the sure on Amencan
Ted Strickland not mm1mum wage,"
disttict and I'm voting no, hoping its wages that would DC he said.
defeated," he said. "I hOpe we can go cur should the agreeD-Lucaavllle
But losing jobs is
right into talks .with Mexico and ment become legislite ultimate fear about
Canada to get a better deal for the IJ!tion. Opponents of NAFTA bave entering into agreement with a coonAmerican people.n
argued that compc;tition with cheaper try that pays lower wages. The border
NAFTA would remove aU tariffs lal)or will cause American wages to and its inexpensive workers might
.and' other trade barriers among the plummeL
draw them away.
U.S., Mexico and Canada to create
"The lcind of jobs that will be sus·
Strickland said he has been invited
the world's largest free trading zone. ceptible to that lcind of pressure are to visit the Mac Tool Co., Inc. factory

•

circle, strictly controlling bcr diet
and medical care and persuadinJ
her to stop seeing her psychiatrist
Ry an plunged into mental illness and a deep depression, oo\)'
realizing the scope of Kempner s
actions during thenlpy after quif·
tjng her job in 1987, she claims.
Kempner, who retired las( year,
developed the rice diet in 1939 for
patients with severe high blood
pressure and later used it to treat
patients with diabetes, kidney dis,
ease and other health problems
worsened by obesity.
,.

Meigs Junior High Schoobhas Daniels, Brad Davenport, Scott Marshall, Rusty Marshall, Stever
released its hqnor roll for the ftrst Dodson, Robin Donohue, Crystal McCullough, George Miller, Shiellt
nine week grading period.
Eblin, Elizabeth Farley , Chad Nease, Danielle Peckham, MelisslJ,
Seventh grade : Lacy Banks, Folmer, Jason Frecker, Brianna Ramsburg, Jenny Sigmon, Wendi
Wesley Barnett, Jamie Barret~ Tri- Gilmore, Danielle Grueser, Cort- Shrimplin, Amy Smith , Zinnia
cia Davis, Sarah Dean, Meridith ncy Haley, Chad Hanson, Jenny Spears, Eddie Trader, A.J. Vaugh~
Felts, Ben Fowler, Jennifer Heck, Hayman, Sara Lee. Mich~cl an, Melissa Williams and Sandra
Melissa Holman, Justin Jeffers, Leigheit, Jason Litchfield, Dusty
Young.
;
~Y Johnson, Becky Johnson, Jesstca Johnson, Matt Justice, Misty
Hart, Kristina Kennedy, Lori Kin:
nison, Kelli Lightfoot; Arland
.
.
McCartney, Tamera O'Dell, Kim
Ritterbeck, Rebelcah Smith, Clay.
ton Tromm, Bridget Vaughan,
Kasey Williams, John Davison,
Missy Darnell, Jenny Howerton,
T.J . King, Ben Molden, Stefani
Pickens and Josiah Rawson.
Eighth grade: David Anderson,
Lauren Anderson, Rachel Ashley,
Pd. for by the caridldme: .
Billi Jo Bentley, Leigh-Ann CanRt. 1, Box 150, VInton,.Oli. 45188
(
terbury, Carty Chasteen, Wcndi

in Sabino, where ~sentatives told . .
,, . ·. . .. ' --:-~ -. "·, ( .,:-';:;.,_;;:::(: '
him discussion is underway for the
plant to be closed and moved 10 Texas ·strt~klao~~$.qpp6.ijiti)n
to NAF'J'A at+giJih,ee
in the event that NAFTA is passed.
"I thinlc that this is not unusual," he
said. "I thinlc this is happening in ' • Lost X»bs,
plants across the country."
lower wages
Striclcland said it is not unreason- ,
able for the U.S. to ask iLl southern
. :Potential for
neighbor to make some changes on
·
~nomic corruption
labor issues. The European Economic
Community - wl!ich was some 30
years in lite making - had similar
• No reason to rush:
concerns with Spain.
Not thiS NAFTA
The difference in economies
throughout that community,
• Conc11m for Mexican
Strickland estimated, is no greater
labor laws
than 3to I. That ratio for lite U.S. and
Mexico could be as great as I 0 to I.
Ironically, Stticldand said, Canada
• WllleBP"r811d national
may have similar concerns about the
JiXIec:ISIOn '
Continued on pagt A2
:~

·"

.·

'

,'

agreed "pon by the commi~s , as:'/ltni.fi.c!fil
•'to .
t•-.!

1994 BUICK CENTURY

AS LOW AS

!-... -~ ~t- ·

1·

GaUia CQuhty; cuid, they
I

•

~

'=i

have .J,ee'n determined as
Staerlng committee
co-chair Wayne King

14,795•

5

Tu a 1111e Not lnclue!ed

Gov. Voinovich gives last-minute boost to trade a~cord
By ROBERT E, MLL£8

Century Special Sedan

•Standard Driver Air Bag
•Anti-Lock Brakes
.Power Locks &amp;Windows

AS LOW AS

-cruise Control
•Tllt Steering
•AMIFM Stereo Seek &amp;. R"''"

A•wllttd .er,u Wrtt• ,

COL~US,Obio(AP)-Gov . GeorgeVoinovich's

•Split Seats
•Trunk Release

admil)isllation hoped to give a last-minute boost to the
N~Ameriean Free Trade Agreement by lobbying two
Ohio congressmen who ~ain undecided.
Atthesamelime,aspolcesmanfor!he800,000-member
Ohio AFI,.-CIO said labor Q!!ions around the. state will
continue working to defeat the proposal to be voted on
WedneSday in the U.S. House.
Michael Dawson, the governor's press secretary, said
Friday that Voinovich will telephone U.S. Reps. Paul

'REGAl CUSTOM

$18,675*

Tu .. 1111e Mol; lnohoded

Gillmor, R-Port CliniOn, and Thomas Sawyer, D-Altron,
who are undecided about NAFI'A.
Meanwhile, Agriculture Director Fred Dailey said he
and three other state agricultune officials will tour the state
Monday for NAFTA, a ptoposal he said will benefit
Ohio's farmers.
They planned to stop for news conferences at airports in
Cleveland, Tiffm, Dayton, Cincipnati and Columbus.
Daily said 'agricultural trade with Mexico already is
booming "and llllification hf NAFTA will only further
accelerate this trend."
Others on the trip will be William Swank, executive

vice president of the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation, and
President C. Ray Noecker and Executive Direc10r Steve
Maurer of !be U.S. Agricullllllll Stabilization and Conservation Service.
Voinovich announced his support for NAFrA in August. He said lifting trade barriers among lite United
States,CanadaandMexicowouldmeanatleast3,700jobs
for Ohio during the next 10 years.
Kent Darr, spokesman for the Ohio AFL-CIO, said
Ohio'slaborunionsremainconvincedthatNAFrAwould
cost the state jobs and industries because of cheap labor in
Mexico.

He said unions also will continue I~ against
NAFT A, especially in WashingiOil btltalsoin thedislricts
of House members who remain undecided.
Local unions were buying media time foranti-NAFTA
ads in districts that include those of Sawyer and Gillmor
Darr said.
'
The AFL-CIO also was writing Ohio's members of
Congress who oppose the treaty, he added.
Three of Ohio' s 19 House members announced Thursday that they have decided to support NAFfA: Reps,
David Hobson and John Kasich, both Republicans, and
Rep. David Mann, a Democrat. .

Hillary pitches health · News capsules
~~==~============~=========
charged with
NLRB seeks injunction against
·care pl~n in· Marietta lee!'l
attempted .murder
UMW, former BCOA members

MARIETTA. Ohio (AP) - ij.illary Rodham Clinton accepted a newspaper's
invitation and visited this city on the Ohio River to explain the Clinton
adminisaation's health care plan.
·
The fJrSt lady spoke for 30 minutes to 2,250 people at Marietta College in
southeastern Ohio after a maning visit to Clev.eland.
' 'This is a historic opportunity, one that comes only once in a generation,' '
Mrs. Clinton said. ' 'Other generationssiOOd up to their challenges. It is time for
this one to do so as well.' l · .
She viSited Marie)ta after an open leucr from The Marietta Times asked her
to address the concerns of small town reSidenu. Accompanying her were Sen.
John Gleim, D-Ohio, Rep. Ted Stricldand, D-Ohio, and former Gov. Richard
Celeste, the a4minisaation's point man on health cane reform.
•'National issues ought 10 be decided in placell like Marietta," Stticlcland said
while introducing the fii'St lady. "You heard us and you renewed our faith in
government's ability to Slay in 'IDUCh."
.
She paused after ber speech to shake ltands with the crowd but did not field
any questions.
, .
··
.Evelyn Hall, 86, of Marietta, is legally blind and wheelchair-bound. She said
~was ~'thriUedoutor.myslfin"toshalce. ~ds · twice-withMrs.Cii!lton.
. "11ove those two kids," the wolllan said, referring l!l President and Mrs.
· Clinton. "I to14'her I pray for tlteni every day." .
·
·
Earlier in the day,lbe fJrStlady told 12 families Of patientS at Rainbb'w Babies
,and CliiJdren' s Hospital of University HospitalS of Cleveland that the plan will
focus bn incentives.
,
·· ·
She said it will encouraae health care facilities to keep children and adUlts
.
·
Continued qn plge A2

•Key~ EnJiy

•Tilt -cruise·
•Aluminum
Wheels
.PoWer Seat .
.
O.Concert
Sound .
r
.
.
,
ol.eather EJucket Seats -Dual CCimfortemp Air Conditioning '· S~akers

'

.

POMEROY

FAlL CO'OLIN,
. . G'SYSTEM
•Drain &amp; Flush Systt~~
•Add 2 Gallone. ·Anti~Fr-.ze
· •lnepect Hosea and Belts
•Prenura Teat system
~~

E
'

$

9·5
..

Cake and Bever~~•• WIIJ Be S•tved . .
.

'I"JI :•rJ IJ o 'JH

Pomeroy a14bmitted
projects for funding

THANK YOU
FOR YOUR SUPPORT FOR THE
. .
SALEM TWP. TRUSTEE RACE.
-CLARENCE.E: MIGH,t

Hillside Baptist Church
SUNDAt ·NOVEMBER 14th, 11 A.M.
There will lae special singing by
The Chlldr.en of God and ·
Th• Redee111ed Quartet.

Mrddleport- Pom r•ro'i Cdllrpolrs-Pt PIPil ' ..lrll- November 1-1 1'J'JJ

Meigs junior high honor roll announced l

•3800 V6 Engine

4th ~nniversar~

Clinton bargains for votes, AS

By JAMES LONG
Dmtt§lntlotl Nm §taU

Regal Custom

STATE ROUTE 143

LOW 50s

,strickland casts resounding 'no' on NAFTA

if that stunt made you f~1

"victllrious,• it may ha~ been worih
the effort.
.
·,
~hat's rhe mull abolll pot, cQ.
cm~~e, LSD, PCP, crack, spuJ aNi
dnWMrs? 'The Lowdowll 011 Dope~
1uJs 11/1-IO·the-mmute ifl/o1'llttltloll 011
drugs. Send a st/f-addrt~d. lo11j,
busifless·si'll e~~velope lllld a check
or 1f1DMY ortkr for $3.65 (tlris ;ft.
eludes postage allli ltandli11g) IQ:
Lowdow11, c/o ·AM Lollders, P.Q.
Box 11562, Chicago, Ill. 6061/.05~2. (In Canoda, sellli $4.45.)
'

\U:

Garden club
distributes
new books

Hl70$

•
nnts-

Woman claims she was dominated by Duke Diet founder

Eagle class revamps church
A report on project work W@S
given when the Eagles Class of the
Syracuse Asbury United Methodist
Church met recently at the church.
During the meeting conducted
by Irene Parker, it was reported
that the class has purchased new
drapes for the social rooms and
new flower vases for the altar table.
The bathrooms have also been
painted and new carpet is to be purchased for them.
Devotions were led by Jean
Stout and the topic was "J esus'

teaen from ~ who Wlllllld 10
vouch for "Toledo's" husband
bec•JIIe they. 100, had had the Slme
experience. My~. bless them,
ue loyal not ooly to me but to each

••'

Irish upset Florida State,.Cl

..

JAMES R, ACREE SR., PASTOR,
INVITES THE PUBUC TO AmeND.

J

.. ..

'

NELSONVILLE,Ohio(Al&gt;)A teen-ager wounded in a
shootout in which his brother
waslcilledandtwopoliceofficers were injured was charged
Friday with two delinquency
coon~ of attempted murder.
Jos.hua McFall , 15, of ~nvltteOIIIoer
Nelsoilville, was in fair condio!,ocly King
lion Friday, with a hip \VOUnd at O'Bleness Memorial
Hosjlital in Athens.
,
McFall's brother, Sean, 19, was lcilled Thursday
after he ftred on officers as they approached a car
suspecllld in ~ hit,and-run accident.
The officers wowided in the gun baute outside a
convenience store on U.S. 33 remained hospitalized ·
Saturday 11 Grant Medical Cen~r in Columbus.
, Nelsonville Officer Jody King, 30, was in serious
condition with a htad wound, and Buchtel ·Police
Chief I&lt;;evin Clawson, 26, was in fair conditi011 will!
shoulder and leg .wounds..
.. Two{)ther Nelsonville juveniles in Sean McFall' s
cat were'release4to lbeirparents becapse they 11ere
not involved in the sllooting.
.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) - The National Labor
Relations Board has gone to federal oourt to prevent the
United Mine Workers from entering into contracts with
four former members of a coal industry bargaining
gro,up.
A hearing is set Nov. 29 before U.S. District Judge
Joyce Green in Washington, D.C., on the injunction
nequestrtledTuesday.
The labor board wants to bar the UMW from entering
into agreements with AMAX Coallndustties Inc. of
Indianapolis,FR:eman UnitedCoaiMiningCo.ofMarion,
Ohio, HDinerCityCoaiProcessingCotp.ofHomerCity, ,
Pa.., and American Electric Power Co. of Columbus,
Ohio.
The four companies dropped out of the Bituminous
Coill Opemtors Association after the UMW went on
~e May 10 against association members over job
seamty.
They have reached separate interim agreements with
the union.
.
Without an injunction, lbe union and the companies
' ' willcircwnventthecoUectiveblrgainingprocessatthe
expenseofotheremployermembenoftheBCOA," the
labor board said in its filing.

GOOD MORNING

Today's Times-Sentinel
19 Sections - 198 Pages

Business
Calendars
Classilieds
Comics
Editorials
Local
Obituaries
Almg the River
Sporm
Weather

01&amp;8

B4&amp;5
D2·7
Insert
A6

AJ
A7
81
Cl-8
A7

Columns
lim Freeman
Aug Lauders
IiJD Sands
CbuckStpnc

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="354">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9678">
                <text>11. November</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="32904">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="32903">
              <text>November 12, 1993</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
