<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="11166" 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/11166?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-14T09:34:49+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="42133">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/e61cb160b68e7702bf0220e3a57e30f0.pdf</src>
      <authentication>0e10d01d9706a1f3aac929a7cd136b5f</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="35216">
                  <text>•
·

P~ge-08-S una.;y

runca··-:&gt;clllhocl

Farm Flashes

.Burley tobacco quota hik-e
l·s authort~zed by USDA
EDWARD M. VOLLBOR~
County EKtension Agent,
Agriculture &amp; CNRD
GALLIPOliS · In a news
release on October 25 , U.S.D.A .
authorized a S percent increase in
marketing of a farm's basic Quota
of Burley Tobacco. For example, a
producer on a farm having a basic
· Quota of 1,000 pounds and an
effective Quota of 16,000 pounds
could market an addition al SO
pounds of tobacco without incurring a penalty. Under currcn1 law,
· the Secretary of Agnculture has
...auJ.hQ.rity to encourage additional
'marketing of Burley Tobacco, up to
.' 5 percent of the basic Quota on the
· farm on which the tobacco was
JIU)duced. This flexibility was pro. \lrded wilil lile idea of being better 1
able to meet the demands of export
- ----.and-dornestic·markets-. - The 1991 U.S." Burley produc tion is currently esttmated at 643
million pounds, up about 8 percent
from 1990. The U.S. IS the world' s
largest produ cer. Malawi is the
. world's second largest Burley pro·ducer with an estimated 157 mil·
lion pounds. In 1960 their preduc: lion was not much more than Gallia
·County· now produces. Warehouse
sales will have opening da y on
No•einber 25 .
The Ohio Crop Repon estimated
that 92 percent of Ohio soybeans
liJld 85 percent of the com has been
harvested. The comparable five
year average is 70 and 44 percent.
Top soil moisture was rai.Cd 62 percent short.
Tbe newly opened O.S.U. Piketon Research and Extension Center

Export totals up
WASHINGTON (AP) Exports of unmanufactured U.S.
tobacco totaled 12,599 tons in
August and were worth $84 million, 11!1 increase of 30 percent in
volume and 34 percent in value
compared with a year ago, the
Agriculture Deparllncnt rcpon.s.
" U.S . cjgaretle exports for
August 1991 toti!led 15.6 billion
pieces,.valued at $310.4 million, up
' 17 percent in volume but down 22
:·percent in value compared with
;August J 990.
• ' And U.5'J expons of bulk smok;inj tobacco for August 101aled
"2,220 IOns, valued at $18.6 million.
\Those exportS were down 14 per: ~ent in volume and 8 percent in
value.
.

I

..

'
will be llle site for 1111 mfolmationai
meeting for people intcrcsteq in
growing vegetables and smili)
fruits. The Thursday, November 14 '
(7:30 p.m.) session is 10 get an idea
of what kinds of fruits and vegetables are alr.cady grown in soulilern
Ohio and 10 see what other crops
could be grown. The horlicullure
program at the center will help
growers decide what crops are
profitable to grow as. well as sug:
gesting possible m·arket outlet~ for
their produce. For more informaLion call Carl Camaluppi at 614 _
289-207 1.
Reminder: November 5 is the
dale that we need payment for the
November 20 Charter Bus trip 10
the North American Livestock
Exposition
·

F

· mHA

November

·

plan to modernize under fire on Hill

Dy.JENNIFER'DIXON
AP Farm Writer
WASHINGTON- The Fanners
Home Adminis.tration 's eff?ns ~~
modenuze and tmprove .sel'\ltces to
f~ers and rural commu,mucs are
,co~.mg ~der r'!C on Capuoi Htli.
I. don t believe Fanners Horne
has .~ good handle on ~~actly what
they re trymg to do, · satd Rep.
Glenn English, D:Okla., chatrman
of. the House Agnc~lture. subcommmee on consertiauon, credll and
rur~ development. . , . . ..
Th~ Congress ts cnumed by
the admmtstrahon for mtcromanagm~ programs; and unfortunately,
thts appea~s to be one of those
areas m whteh Co~gress will have
to gel mvolved ... stmply because.iL
appea~s Farmers Hofl!e is either
unwtilmg or m.~apabl~ o.f ·doing it
forthemselves, English S3ld.
The General Accounting Office
and the Agriculture Depanment 's

office of inspector general also
have identified several concerns
about FmHA's $520 million ·
automation program and have sug·
gested ways to improve planning
and oversight.
· · ·
"We gcne(lliiy ,have agreed with
these concerns and have put a hold
on major purchases of e~juipmcnl
relating to the automauon pro gram," FlflHA Administrator LaV.
e(lle Ausman said iii written testi·
monyto English's committee Tuesday. ·
·
·
. He said oversight of the automa·
uon program has been elevated "to
the highest levels of the agency"
but conceded FmH~ has run into
some problems movtnl! mto a mod:
.~':"· technoiogtcal CDVlfl!ll,l!lCD!,__ .
. Accordang to the GAO, the
t.nvesugauve. arm of Congress, ,
FmHA plans to moderntzc the
automated systems used to make
and coiie&lt;:t loans. The effon started

Ohio L&lt;ittery

·Bengals ·
capture fi.rst ·
·victory

in 198'i..alluts in.tc.'ndcd IO .J&gt;Utlile mcnt and o•ersight. contributed
the fatiurc of lile first two cffon.s,
~Jl:~Js;;/ poslllon 10 mtntmtze said.
It is the third moderntzation
As it attempts tiS. ~turd moo.,m1
aucmpl since the mid-1970s, the ization, the GAO said, FmHA ·
GAO said , Inadequate planning ; not rcsoived ·its longsLallding
problems.
combmcd wilil ineffective manage, nin~ and oversight
.

Pick 3: 538
Pick 4:9352
Cards: 2H, 2-C,
QD,K-S
Super Lotto:
S·.$-22-31·32-43
Kicker:l38825

•

PageS

. 614-44t&gt;-2412

Or Phone 446-NASE Anytime.
Health Insurance Designed
Specifically for NASE Members
Finding good health insurance at affordable rates has been almost
impossible for self-employed businesspeople. Now. with the NASE
dt over 300.00 members strong. you can have quality coverage at group
rates . . and with group protection 1
+You cannot be singled 041 forcancellauon or premium increases.
regardless of your claims
+ $1.000.000 benent for each accident and each stckness
+ Expandable coverage tailored to meet your needs and budget
+Built -in cash accumulation fund to offset out-of-pocket medocal costs
+ Choice of f0 deductible amounts
'
+ Automatic family continuation benetit
+On-the-job coverage for business owners ~~hours a day. 7 days a week!

en Ine·

GUYAN TOWNSHIP CLERK
NOV. 5,_1991
Yo!lr ·Vot,e And_~\lpport
. Appreciated!

Is____
.

-" Vol. 42, No. 12B
Copyril!hted 1991

· 1 Section, 12 PlgN 2S C*lla

Allutdmedla Inc. Newept~P«

Pd. lor by eand., 116&amp;5 St. Rt. 218,
Crown

•

45623

stop·new landfills·

Do-you think bringing.in up to 10 TIMES more trash than
what we produce Is a "local" solution?
The proposed plan place• NO LIMID on taking outside
tra1h.
The proposed plan places NO LIMIT$ on building more
landlllls in our district.
.~,.,.
The plan uys oar d~strlct wUI be in debt by Y. million dolo.·I
Iars 1ft the third year of operation, growing to over .$ 26
mUilon.
'

,.. ,

Paid For By Educators Action Committee
Rita Sl~vi~, Treasurer, BoiC 287, Syracuse

Defeat of the local six-county
solid wilSie district plan won't necessarily prevent the construction of
new landftlls in the area, the direc·
tor of the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency said.
In a letter written to district
county commissioners, Oonald
Schregardus, OEPA director, said
he believes there is "considerable
confusion" regarding the three proposed lanctrtlis in the Athens-Gallia-Hocking-Jackson-Meigs·Vinton
Solid Waste District.
"A number of J!C9Pie in the district apparently believe that disap·
proval or failure of ratification of
the (plan) will automatically stop
any funher consideration by Ohio
EPA of (landftll applications)," he
wrole. 'This is untrue."
·
· Schregardus explained 'that
although House Bill 592 declared a
moratorium on ali landfill development. a waiver of that ban could be
made if the lack of a new landfill
would create "undue hardship on
the applicant" or on the county or

NO!
CaU 'y our township trustees and urge them to
DISApPROVE the present solid .-ute plan.
.
'
We want to take care of our OWN trash and lt 11 a local
bat do we need outside trash u the 1olutlon?

"If the distnct plan is approved,
the permit issuance moratorium in
HB 592 is lifted," Schregardus
said "If the district plan is disapproved, permits can be issued for
district facilities for which OEPA

mas ll&amp;hts.
.
are Dale Thoeae, Joe
Clark·, Whitney
Wes Thoene, Annie
Chapman, Nancy Thoene, Susan Clark and
Scott Dillon.

PREPARING FOR THE HOLIDAYS·
Memben of tile Pomeroy Merchants Assocla·
tloa aDd olber ·voluateers braved the cold on
Sunclly aftemooa to decorate tile trees lo the
larger minl·park on Court Street wi!b Christ·
&gt;

•

West Virginia officials say
wildfires hurt civ!c pride

"

1991.PONTIAC SUNBIRD 2 DR.

$8995:... ~. . . . . .

NEW 1991

...-.

G~AND

IIVI

$1000

AM

has received waiver requests."
OEPA has already granted a
waiver to Mid-American Waste
Systems, Inc., the letter sa'id.
OEPA is in step one of the waiver
review process for applications
s~bmitted l&gt;Y Sands Hill Waste Servtces, Inc. and Kilbarger Construction, Inc'. for two other landftlls to
be built in the district.
.Each company i~ seeking a permtt for a !,()()().tons-per-day facility.

jointdisuict~uestingiL

A.P.R. FINANCING ON
NEW LESABRES .
AND BONNEVILLES

+Coverage is issued within -18 hours in most cases
+Toll-free service and clatms numbers
+ Fast. fair claims payment
+ Servke ~enter dedic:iied o.cl~sively to NASE Members

•

By MELINDA POWERS
OVP News Staff

Is taking tons and tons of out;side trash, bulldina morl
lancUUis and creating a debt of more than SZ4 ·mllllon a .
local solation?

Coverage is provided worldwide and b full y underwrinen by PFL Life
Insurance Co. Rated "Excellent'' by A. M. Best Co. PFL Life is il fully
owned subsidiary of AEGON USA. a financial services holding company
with $6 billion in assets.
.

It Cost The Taxpayers
. $400 Extra Per Month ·
'($80 Per Board Member)
To Have.School Board
Meetings Twice Monthly
Instead Of The_Usual And
Customary One~ Current
Board Men1.bers Have
Benefit·ed.·From The
Continuation Of This
Pe~licy. lsll'tlt nme For.A
Chan e In The School
Boar Of Meigs Local
School District?

mcstly sunny. Hlgb.

•

JEFFREY l. ·FOWLER

'

Rltd Rvpi II ilatfve

near40.

.

.
SoUd Waste Distrlct placed an ad
entitled: "A Local Sol.a tion to A Local Problem." · J .

LORALEE CARMICHAEL

low tODigbt.ln mid terns. .

T~esday

..

-

.
.
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) Saturday, officials said.
- Arsonists' siege on West Vir·
Foresters said Sunday the fires
ginia's forests is robbing natives of were being contained, but many
civic pride that helped them believe worried that the fire risk would
their home was almost heav~n. remain high until the next signifieven if the rest of the country cantrainorsnowfalls.
·didn't, an official said.
National Weather Service meteWildrtres have blackened more orologist Rick Arkell said no such
than 240,000 acres in nine states. drenching appears imminent.
West Virginia-has been hardest hit,
A hovering weather pattern
with more li1an 200,000 acres dam- could continue to dissipate storms
aged.
before they reach the area 'or send
The resulting pall of smoke in them veering io the north, Arkcll
the Appalachian hiUs have evoked said.
ima~es of smoldering volcanoes
While the 30· and 90-day outand mvoked feelings of gloom.
looks indicate rain eventuallv will
"I think there is a genuine fall, statistics from September and
shock and puulement that so many October painted a bleak picture.
West Virginians seem so deterPart of eastern West Virginia
.mined to set so many fires aitd reported those months wer¥the dridarnage their own state," said Bob est ever, and areas of Virginia also
Brunner, spokesman rot West Vir· were plliched.
·'
.
ginia Gov. Gaston Caperton.
Records were reported in
"Even though we have been Roanoke and Pulaski, with neither
long considered a developing state, .coming close to an inch of rainfall
a state with a low per cafita last month. It's too soon to predict
income, a state without some o the a drought, but Arkell said drinking
bells and whistles a lot af states water supplies in some places
had, I think West :Virginians have could bottom out if rain doesn't
ton$ clung to a sense of pride, a come in 111e nell.t month.
feehnf that they take care of their
Virginia forestry spokesman
own,' Brunner said Sunday.
Lou Southard and West Virginia
"But if you go out to the fire Division of Natural Resources ·
lines and talk to the firefighters, Director E.d Hamrick said the dry
they have just had it up to the gills, wealher's a major rue concern.
because they're fighung ftres that
"As we go further into the
not only have been set; but they've week, fire conditions will wotsen.
reset three or four times," Brunner There's jusi no rain in sight,"
said.
Southard said
West Virginia foresll')' chief Bill
"I picked up the paper this
Gillespie said most of the fires mominF and heard the worst of it's
were deliberately started.
over,' Hamrick said Sunday.
"We have more than 500 ftrcS, "Weill Sll!e hope so, but we need
and 98 percent of them are arson," to get some rain. Until thai haphe said.
pens, we need to be vigilant."'
Nine new rtres were reponed in
In Tennessee, where more lilan
the state Sunday, the Division of 6,000 acres have burned, officials
Forestry said. One mountain in were beginning to send crews
Cedar Grove, Kanahwa County. home.
.
was silhouetted by fire Sunday
"It's looking good,'' said Tennight.
nessee forestry spokesman Dave
"It's been burning every· McMorran. "The winds aren't as
where," said Faye Moore, whose strong and we can't justify 30
restaurant was less than 100 yards crews if we have nothing but small
from the blaze across U.S. 60.
fires."
At least six people have been
Fires also appeared under conanested on arson charges. Bl'llin W. b'OI in Kentucky, but foresll')' offl·
Page,. 22, of Sissonville w~s 'cia! Sieve Kull said dry weather for
charged with four counts of arson 18 straight days is a concern.

Gillespie said li1e fires are honing the chronically strapped soulil·
em West Virginia economy. The
forest ban has blocked logging and
many petroleum drilling operalions.
But John Brown, West Vir ·
ginia's commissioner of touri sm
and parks, said he didn't believe
the fires would hurt the state's
campaign to attract tourists with
ima~es of natural beauty.
• I think it's just a blip in time,''
he said. "It's nothing , I think,
that's going to affeci us long-term
in negative sense. We're not get·
ting any calls on our I -800 numbers that are saying, 'Hey, gecz, we
want ro cancel our vacations.''

\

A paid advertisement in the
Nov. 3 issue of llle Sunday TimesSentinel encour-.ged district residents to "call (their) township
trustees and urge them to ·disap·
prove the present solid waste plan."
The ad was purchased by the
Mason Association for a Cleaner
Environment (MACE).
.
MACE and other groups
opposed to the district plan have
said that lbree landfills are more
than the district needs. Residents in
the six district counties generate
appro~imatcly .600 tons of trash per
day.
Three l,OOO·ton facilities only
encourages out-of-state dumping,
the ad says.
"Do you lbink bringing' in up to
10 times more trash than' what we
produce is a "local" solution?" the
ad said. 'The proposed plan places "
no limits on taking outside trash. •
The Galiia County facility could
be the only landfill operating in the
district in a year, offlcilla have
said. The Allied Iandrill in
McArthur and the WdiJion lanc1flll
both closed recendy, The Kilbarger
landftll on the Athens/Hocking
County line has approximately one
year of capacity lefL
The Gallia 'County landfill
rece~tly received a tempor-ary
extension allowing that facility to
take in up to 600 tons of trash per
day.
.

.

-

.

.

U.S. Senate race in Pennsylvania
to be watch~d clos~ly Tuesday

By Associated Press
the mterest of pohllct~s looking
Democratic Sen. Harris Wofford ahead 10 the 1992 campa1gn.
of Pennsylvania struggles to keep
"There's a great d~ of disenhis appointed seat on ·Tuesday chanunent and frustrauon about the
against a challenge from former econcmy" in Pennsylvania, where
Attorney General Dick Thorn- Wofford .has wtped out most or ali
burgh. Mississippi and Kentucky of Thombu~gh's 4~-pomtlead in
are picking governors in off.year the polls, S81d Charlie Black, a .rorelections.
mer spokesman for the Re~bhcan
.The most far-reaching contest Nauonal Committee who mamrams
may be the one to timit the tenure close ues to th.e ~.
of members of Congress from
.senate MaJOr:tlY Leader George
Washington state-a measure that Mttchell, D-Matne, told CNN: "I
names no politicians but could think the big winne.r will be J:1arris
affect the fate of many, including Wofford and the btg loser wtll be
House Speaker Thomas Foley.
George Bush."
San Francisco, Houston and
.Even if Wofford loses, Mitchell
Boston are among the big cities ~td, "lile.fact that this is a com~tholding mayoral elections, and vot· tuvc race ts a great and devastaUng
er~ in Virginia and Pennsylvania dcfea~ for the .pol!~ies that the presw•ll elect new members of the tdent IS pursumg. ·
House.
Prest~ent Bush , as~ed .~bout
The Pennsylvania Senate race. Mitchell s comme~ts. sa~d, Unhwhere Wofford has fashioned an uh, no . I thmk Dtck Thornburgh
underdog campaign around middle- wtll WID because he deserves to
class eeonomtc issues and support win. I feel pretty good about that
for natio~aJ· health insuranc~. and .. one." ... •
.
.
t!Je.Washington ballot quesuon to
Wofford, appomted ~fter. the
bmll the terms of the state's con- death of Sen. John Hemz tn a
. ~ressional dele~ation have drawn plane-helicopter collision last

spring, is seeking to become the
fll'St Democrat elected to the Senate
from Pennsylvania in nearly three
decades. He is a former aide to ·
President K~nnedy, Bryn Mawr
College prest~ent and state labor
secretary.
Thornburgh, who served two
popular ~rms as governor in the .
1980s, restgned from the Cabinet to
make the Senate race.
•
The term-limitation campaign in
Washington state would force
Foley, a Democra~ and the rest of
the state's delegation into retirement in 1994 by setting a J.hreeterm limit on House members and a
· 12-year limit on congressional secvice.
Financed largely by a conservative group based in Washington,
D.C., it has been e10braced by
many Republicans as a precurser to
a broader campaign to roust
entrenched Democratic majorities
in the House and Senate.
. Opponents of the measure in :
Washington state have vowed a :
court challenge, and Foley spem
. Continued on page J

...-------Local briefs------Goodyear, workers reach agreement

the meeting," explained Cantahippi. "I also would like to see both
new and established growers get to know each other and to learn
from one another."
A discussion on the possibility of organizing a fruit and vegetable growers' association wiU be another topic.
·
The meeting is free and open lo all people who are interested in
growing (fults and vegetables for llleir livelihood or as a supplement
to their other income.
Cantaluppi is availabe for any questions at289-2071.

A tentative agreement was made Friday evening between the
joint negotiating committees of ihe Goodyear Tire and Rubber
Company Point Pleasant polyester plant and the United Rubber
Workers Union Iocal644.
The new 'tentative agreemen~ if ratified, will replace the current
agreement which is due to expire Wednesday.
· ..
The agreement will be presented to the membership at 7 p.m.
Monday and 9 a.m. TUesday 81 the Point Pleasant Moose lodge. All
Goodyear • URW bargaining unit members are urgeil to anend the
ratir1C8tion meeting.

EMS units answer 13 calls

Correction

Jeff Thornton is not a candidate for the Southern local School
Board, as was reponed yesterday in the SlUiday Times-Sentinel .
Thornton's petitions for that race were not validated when rtled with
the ~eigs County Board of Elections.
Additionally, Susan K. Pullins is the incumenl clerk in Orange
Township. Patricia Calaway is challenging Pullins for that position.
Calaway was incorrectly identified as the incument in the TimesSentinel yesterday.

Growers to meet at Piketon

People who are interested in growin' fruits and vegetables in
Southern Ohio are invited to attend an tnformalional meeting 011
Thursday, November 14 at the new Ohio State University Piketon
Reswch and Extension Center at 7:30 ~.m.
·
The center is located at 1864 Shyville Road, twa miles east of
U.S. Route 23 off State'Route 32.
,
"Horticulture is one of the program areas at the center and I
would like to see local residents grow and market high value and
specialty horticulture crops, especially the vesetable and small
fruits," said to Carl Canllluppl of the center.
, !'To get an Idea of what kinds of fruits or vegetables are anady
growri and to see what other ci'OIIS could be grown is one purpose of

•

Units of Meigs County Emergenpy Medical Services answered
13 calls for assistance over the weekend.
On Saturday at I :44 p.m., Middleport squad went to Page Street.
. Cora Webb was taken 10 Veterans Memorial Hospital. At4:08 p.m.,
Syracuse unit went to Wells Run Road for Pearl Hawthorne. He was
taken to Veterans. At 6:53 p.in., Middleport unit went to Page Street
for Edgar Brewer. He was taken to Veterans. AI 6:53 p.m., Middleport unit went to 1'1tge Street. Georgia Watson was taken to Pleasant
Valley Hospil81. At 9:32 p.m., Racine and Syracuse fire departments were dispatched to Tanner's Run Road and State Route 338
for a rekindled brush fire. At 9:56 p.m., Pameroy unit wen~ to
Burlingham for Abranda Storms. She was taken to Veterans. At
I I: 10 p.m., Pomeroy squad went to Forest Run Road for Janet
Oiler, who was tteated bul not transported.
On Sunday 81 12:48 a.m .. Middleport unit went to sbuth Fourth.
Emory Gordon was taken to Veterans.
At 3:47p.m., Middleport squad went to Beech·Strect. Ollie MiJ.
ton was taken to Veterans. At 4:38p.m., Pomeroy squad responded
10 Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center. Ellen Young was
transponed to Veterans. At 4:39 p.m., Rutland unit went to Lasher
Road. Sharon Stewan was taken to Veterans. At 9:30p.m., Rutland
unit went to Hysell Run Road. Angela White was lake'n to Veterans
On Monday 81I2:12 a.m., Racine and Bashan responded to Sta~
Route 124 and Portland for a rue.

'

'

ot

I

••

�-' Commentary
.

Monday, November 4, 1991
Page-2-Tiie Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
·Monday, November 4, 1991

'

The Daily Sentinel

.

.

,

I

of:C~te~vc:e
Memorial Hosp'uiJ~tii~at~::~
r,
1 of

Edward Delton Sayre .

Sharon Wright

. Delton
. Sayre,. 57, of
:
39, of 285
Edward
.Sharon Kay W!"ght,
.
1
h
! orml'l Y
Sellersburg, Ind., died Saturday, Mlilherry Avenue m P001eroy, died
t e_~utland area, dted .Sunday No_v. 2,1991, atHumana Universi-.. on Sunday, November 3,.,1991•
WA~ffiNGTON -· How about of unnecessary shooting and niis- who spoke Spanish, but the request
momang, Nov,. 3, 1991. ' . .
. Ho ita! in Louisville, Ky.
Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point
111 Court Street
10
tbis for an example of your tax dol- handling of weawns at Customs. If was deni~d. None of the ag_ents
Born Apnl 4, .1897 Metgs ty ·B010
·sp J 30 1934 in Letart he PJ.... ..nt, W.Va. following a brief
Pomeroy, Ohio
· at work? Recenil y, som·e US
- ·
1oo k'mg to 1aw · monttonng
- .. , · h'IS wtre
· and watttng
... to
t'l
n
County
she-was
aPethfna
dauahterHysell
of the ~was a sonan.of ·Mary
• ·Qpal
•- Sayre' of · tllness.
. ,.,.,.__
.
Iars
.
.
Amencans
.
a
re
late
Hlrah
and
She .was· a Ltcensed
Practi-.
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEJGS.MASON AREA
Customs Service agents cruising enforcement to stem the .tide of make tbe bust understood Spanish, machine guns, may be unaccounted. •
Letart and the 1a1e Dallas Edward cal Nurse.
tbe Mexican border near Presidio, crime, tbey had better look beyond making it difficult, if not impossi- for in the Customs ftrearms w~eGeary. She was a homemaker and a s
'
.
Born on June 2 1952 in
Texas,
in
their
Blackhawk
helithe
Customs
Service.
ble
for
them
to
know
the
right
house
in
Fort
Benning,
Ga.
One
member
of
the
Bradford
Church
of l a~. was a mailltenance supervi· Pomeroy, she was !he daughter of
~MULTIMEDIA, INC
copter decided it might be fun to • On the 'night of Oct. I, police moment to move in.
senior Customs manager in WashChrisShi f~ over 3q yearsdb.
sor witb Reynolds Metals Co. of James and Virginia Pierson Whit· ·
, open fire on jack rabbits. Th.ey picked up two Customs agents for
Sources told us that after the ington is said to have had 10 Sovi. e 1S. sumve
Y severa1 · Louisville· belonged to the Sellers· latch. . · . .
·
·
began
peppering
the
ground
belgw
allegedly
shoopng
up-the-deserted
Colombians
pniduced
the
cocaine,
.
et-made
pistols
from
the
warehouse
.
cou~~
n~
andneph~ws.
·
fiurg-·UDite&lt;l
MeillodiSt
Church;-Besides
lier
parC"~ts
;- Mrs.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
8 e was·pre. was past master of the Cottageville Wright is survived by her husband,
them
witb
ftre
from
tbeir
.223
Cill·
Chin
Tiki
Polynesian
restaurant
in
a
Customs
official
in
the
backup
in
his
possession
for
years.
.
es
.
es
er
parents
Publisher
iber serni-autQmatic machine guns. DeiroiL There were no injuries, but squad decided it was time to move . .A congressional subcommittee
cede~ tn death by her husba~!l, MaSonic Lodge 54 AF &amp; AM, and Michael Lye Wright: a daughter,
The
ruckus
was
unnerving
fer
there
were
no
criminals
involved
in.
Ile
sped
toward
the
trioJn
his
.
has
aslced
Cu~toms
Commissioner
Carl, 1~ 1955; two brothers, Marion past-- worthy pab'on of the Cot- Tammy Kathryn Wright; a son,
••
CHARLENE HOEFLICH . · the rabbits, not to mentiori a local either, just two off4uty agents witb car and when he stopped, forgot to Carol Hallet for an explanation and
. PATWIDTEHEAD
andSWt~n. . be h ld Wed
tageville Order of the Eastern Star J&amp;Son Lee Wright; four brotbers,
Assistant Publisher/Controller
General Manager · school official who heard tbe bursts a few drinks under their belts, put the car in park. ll began.rolling . an accounting of tbe missing guns.
emces wt 11
e
nes- Chapter 16. · ·
.
Max (Debbi) Whitlatch and Ten:y
of gunfire ripping across the desert police said. The agents were and while he tried to stop it, his
The Custonis equipment speday at II a.~. a! the Bradford
sUrviving are his wife, Peggy G. (Paula) Whitlatch, botb of Middle·
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association and
and complained to the police. The released without being charged gun went off twice, wounding tbe ci;llist who blew.tbe whistle on the
Ch~h.ofChri~l WI~ Dere!' Stu~p Sayre·; two sons, Kent E. of po~ Jun Whttlatch of H~llywood,
the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
Customs cowboys.were . no1 on a witb· anytbing. Customs -is investi- :undercover agent ··· · ·· ·------- - missing-guns-was ftred-in Mayt butoffiCtatmg:..B.unal.w.tll. be•. m.M.iles"---EIIt:hart;-· Ind:-;--'-Todd-- -e. of Cahf.,- and George Whitlatch of
drug mission at the time, but, gating the case while the two
Press accounts indicate that has since been reinstated after the
Ceme~ mRutland._
..
· Louisville, Ky.; a daughter, Tamara Jacksonville, Fla.; her mother·in· .
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
according
to
our
sources,
were
just
remain
on
active
duty.
Customs
officials
in
Newark
origifederal
Merit
Systems
Protec~ion
Fnends
may
call
at
Ftsher
Crenshaw of Jeffersontown, Ky.; law, Jean Wright of Pomeroy; her
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name.
"testing out their weapons." NorOn June 25, an undercover Cus- nally b'ied to claim tbat tbe agent . Board intervened. He is ~urre~tly
Funeral Home on Tuesday from 2- two step-daughters, Debra Padgett brother-in·law and sister-in-law,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
soould be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.
,' aged
mally,toCustoms
are atencourtomsand
agent
in Newark,
N.J., was
had shot investigation
himself accidentally.
An awaiting
a hearing
on htsheclatms
4pnor
p.m.to and
one hour· ersburg;
and Rebecca
Smith, both
of SellBennie-and
test theiragents
weapons
a ftr- shot
permanently
paralyzed
by internal
has since
tbal he was
ftred because
spoke
semces p.m.
at theand
church.
two sisters,
Geraldine
Y. Pomeroy;
herSandy
siste_r-in·law and
_
__
___ _ _
ing range, bu\ bo~s will be boys.
alellow__offi.Cl:t.duringca-4rug bust found..serious..shoncomingsJruhe_up;. ~--~ _
- -• - - - - - ' - - - - - -- --Rill-Of-Point-l!lcuanl,.-#lld.Arlene_bmthecindaw.~B.ecl!:y and
L..-----------:--~----:---------~I-_ -""'A'i'p="parent ysome·of the boys tbat was a fiasco from the slart. The operation, but no action hl!S I&gt;e:n COLD WINTER AHEAD.L. Grimm of Letart; i brother, Anderson of Cambridge; six
behave like boys all too regularly undercover agent had connected taken against the supervtsor tn For months we have been reporung
Lawrence Hysell
. Thomas L. Sayre of Letart; and six nephews; five nieces; a .great
o
in the Customs Service. This and with two Colombians and arranged charge. The agent who did theacci- tbatllie Soviet economy is in sham. L
K H ell
grandchildren.
nephew and several aunts, uncles
Othe
834 . The funeraJ
• 1vmg
· severa1
· pounds of denta1 sh.ooun~
· has been trans- bl es. The r~ a1·tly ts
· .ar
' more gnm
·
. :r-sc
, 74 , died
'
·
r 1'nct'dents have oub'aged and asb' ng mvo
Westawrence
Main Sb'eet
Ravenna
will be Wednesday, and cousms.
.
.
embarrassed the ·more responsible cocaine. They met in a bote! park- (erred to headquarters. .
than anythmg yet reported m the
Frida Nov. I !9\ll at Robinson II a.m., .at the Foglesong Funeral
She Wl!5 P~ m death by a
Customs employees. Our associate ing lot with the undercover agent
In another episode currently media. The latest intelligence estiMem~ nosP'tal in
fol- Home wtth the Rev. Herman Jor- son, Davtd Mtchael Wnghl, and
Dean Boyd has gathered informa- wearing a wire. He had aslced for under scrutiny by Congress, hun- mates warn bluntly that the ecolowing an~~ bean attack.
dan officiating. Burial will be in her father-in-law, Lloyd Wright.
tion on several alarming incidents an experienced undercover backup dreds of firearms, including nomic upheaval could leave the
Born Jan. ,
ill
Pomeroy, the Eyergreen Cemetery.
.
She allended Buckey_e Htlls
23 1917
Soviet .Union in total chaos. ll
Mr. Hysell was a son of the late
Fnends may call at the funeral Career Cen_ter and the nursmg ~oBy ROBERT E. MILLER
$3ii', THe ONI.Y
could be the worst fmancial catasDanny and Jeannette (Bearhs) ~orne Tu~sda~, 5 10_9 p.m. Mason- gram at Rto Grande Commum_ly
Associated Press Writer
llte c~N pr::&gt;o'lie~'T Ollr::&gt;SeLVeS i$
trophe
in
history.
The
union
is
Hysell. He had lived in Ravenna ~c 8!8vestde ntes will be held, and College. She. attended Laurel Cliff
COLUMBUS - Attorney General Lee Fisher says he enjoys being
"'
~
"'
..
"
breaking
up
in
to
sq
uabliling
most of his life but was formerly of 10 lteu of flowers, tbe family sug- Free Methodist ~hwth.
Ohio's top lawyer and plans to seek a second four-year term in 1994.
WiTH
$fR'iC.T'
Mat~PaToR'Y
DRU~
republics
and
even
some
of
the
Pomeroy.
He retired in 1982 from gests contributio~s be ~ade to the
Funeral semces wtll be held on
But a bid for governor also is possible. dependmg on what others may
aND
AIDS
T~STi#6!
"'LI.&lt;IN
THe
republics
are
breaking
up
into
Enduro
Rubber
Company
where
he
National
Leukeml8
Soctely.
Wednes4ay
at 1 p.m . at Laurel
do and what the overall picture looks like at that time.
t
,..,._
smaller
squabbling
ethnic
entities.
worked
aS
a
night
su~rvisor:
He
Cliff
free
Metbodisl
Chwth. .
0
Fisher a Democrat ruled out the possibility of running for the U.S.
D""
''N"'
Dt:&gt;r'''""
.
c:&gt; "'1'T f.lS.'
The ruble is almost worthless.
Fnends may call from 7 p m to
r. ,.. vt;t-. 11
was a member of tbe irst Church Bas1') 0. Stone
· ··
Senate, despite the ex~ted retirement of Democratic incumbent Howard
Inflation is soaring an intolerable 3
of God in Ravenna and tbe Amen9 p.m. on Monday and 2 p.m. to 4
Metzenbaum.
percent a week. All of tbe despercan Legion. He was a veteran servp.m. and 7 l'.m. to 9 p.m. on Tue;;The attorney general commented at an informal news conference in his
ate
attempts
of
tbe
Soviet
leader·
ing
with
tbe
United
States
Marine
Basil
"Bill"
Ouo
Stone,
76,
of
day
at Ewmg Funeral Home m
offtce where he shared pizza and soft drinks with reporters.
ship
to
bring
the
economy
under
COJ]lS
during
World
War
II.
Point
Pleasan~
W.Va.,
died
Fric)ay,
Pom~y.
.
Unlike his more reserved predecessor, Anthony Celebrezze Jr., he
conlrol have failed.
He is survived by his wife of 53 Nov. I, 1991 at Pleasant Valley
In lteu of flowers, do~auons
poked fun at himself and exchanged one-liners with reporters who
MINI-EDITORIAL
The
years,
Leasly
!hie
Hysell,
a
daugh·
Hospital.
may
be .made to Laurel Chff Free
· showed up - two days before Halloween. - w_earing Paul Pfeif~ maslcs.
grand
"Andean
strategy"
to
slOp
ter,
Shirley
Colpo,
Ravenna;
seven
He
was
a
locks
and
dam
operaMetbodtsl
Church or the Amencan
Sen. Paui.Pfeifer, R-Bucyrus, lost to Ftsher m last November s race for
cocaine
where
it
starts,
in
Colom·
grandchildren,
three
~eat
grand·
tor
and
a
carpenter.
Cancer
Soctety.
attorney general by 1,234 votes. ll was the _closest statewide contest in
bia, Peru and Bolivia, is a bust.
He was a member of the HuntOhio hiStory and one that wasn't resolved unbl early tins year.
Hundreds of millions of dollars are
children; two sisters, S irley Karaf- ington District of the Army COJ]lS TliT
h
Fisher did a double take when he walked into the room and spotted the
spent at that front in the war
fa, Cincinnati; and Beuy of Engi~eers, a Winfield, W.Va.
masks. Then he bent over with laughter. The masks were fashioned from
againstdrugs,andonly I percent of
McGowan, Kent · '
lock and dam operator, General
a reproduced and enlarged picture of Pfeifer.
tbe cocaine coming from the region
Besides his ~arents, Mr. Hysell Service Administration Depot
Soutb:Central Obio
. " Can I have one of those?" he asked. "I've always wanted to be
was preceded
m deathDanny.
by a son, Navy yard, Pomt
· PIeasant, w.Va.,
rdi ng to
has
been
intercepted,
acco
Nonnan,
and
a
brother,
Tonigh~ clearipg and very cold.
chairman of the Judiciary Committee," he added, referring to a panel tbal
the State Department inspector
A memorial service was held and was a World War II Navy vet- Record low of 15-20. Tuesday,
Pfeifer heads in tbe Senate.
general. The same amount of
d
(M d ) 2
th
eran
mosdy sunny and not as cold. High
10 ay
But then the talk became more serious.
money spent on drug rehabilitation
on ay at p.m. 81 e
He was also instrumental in around40.
Short Funeral Home Ravenna
Fisher reeled off a list of activities tbat keep him busy as attorney genExtended forecast
and education programs in the
Chapel with Rev. Carl Holm offici-. writing, singing and playing tile
eral and otbers that he has in the works.
.
· United States may have made~ dif·
guitar in the area.
Wednesday tbrougb Friday:
He cited various consumer protection programs, including a " Hall of
ference, but that's not the way
ating.
Born June 27, 1915 in Leon,
Continued
unseasonably cold
Shame" project tbal exposes perpetrators of fraud. He mentioned lawsU!ts
George Bush fights a war.
W.Va., he was tbe son of tbe late through the period. A chance of
· to protect Ohioans from hazardous wastes and an automated fmgerpnnt
~ &amp;fS'reiH "'
Copyright, 1991, United Feature
Minor Stone and Myrtle Myers rain or snow showers Wednesday.
&gt;·
~
1i1:M1 1M. IIIWS ·rl&amp;a
system that he said will p apprehension of criminals.
,
A chance of flurries and squalls
Syndicate,
Inc.
W
th
N'b
rt
Stone.
· Fisher plans to eslablish a child proteCtiOf! division in his office next
Or
Y
I
e
Besides his parents, he was pre- extreme nortbeast Thursday, fair
year, and he said he will continue effons to give the attorney general new
ceded in deatb by his wife, Made- elsewhere: Fair on Friday. Highs
toOls to fight organized crime.
Wortby Franklin Nibert, 78, of line Mae Austin Stone, one daugh· 40-45 Wednesday and in tbe 30s
"In a word, I'm loving it," he said
Gallipolis Fe,rry, died Saturday, ter, Betty Lou Stone, and seven- Thursday and Friday. Lows mostly
The
40-year-old Fisher said although he plans at this point to run for
November 2, 1991, at Holzer Med- brother.; and sisters.
'
in the 20s.
A funny thing happened to of a state where the currents of bestinapersori,andsotbeoriginal
re-election, by 1994 he may be ready to make a bid ~or governor.
.
ical
Center.
,
He
is
survived
by
a
daughter
.. .. ''If George Voinovich doesn't run for governor. 11 would be more like- George Bush as he was rolling white supremacy still ruh deep and Bush surfaced anew, for a spell, on
Born February 10, 1913 m Gal- and son'in-law: Karen A. and Rusmerrily along in his cynical "Cry wide.
Election Day 1988. While JOggmg
.. · ly " he said of the incumbent Republican.
·
Iipolis
Ferry, he was the_ son of the sell A. Pearson, Point Pleasant,
And tbat got him reverting..
tbrough Houston's Memorial Park, Danforth, R·Mo., whov was under
· 'Voinovich, also 10 months into his term, says he plans to seek re-elec· Quota!'' campaign to make the
late
Ch~rles .~. and Ltllte Rose . W.Va., a mother-in-law, Bessie
Grand Old Party a White Man's
Bush feared Senate Repubh.cans Bush asked Lee Atwater to take his the misapprehension that Bush
tion.
Henry Ntbert.
Supple, Henderson, W.Va, several
Party.
would join Democrats to ov~d~ a old job as GOP chainnan and con- cared about the nuances of legal
Veterans Memorial
He
was
a
member
of
the
Jordan
nieces and nephews and two grandThere he was, embarrassing and civil rights.bill vel? -leavmg htm tinue his old mission of reaching rights policy. Eyen when Bush
SATURDAY
ADMISSIONS Baptist Chwth, w~ he ~ed as children.
enraging decent-thinking Republi- Isolated wttb Davtd Duke and the out to blacks. He envisioned a new caved in, accepting a ftnal comproOtis
Casto,
Long
Pearl
a deacon. Also: he .was re~ from
Graveside services and military Hawthorn, Portland:Bouom;
can senators witb his disingenuous bedsheet brigade. That would never effort to double tbe GOP's tradi- mise version, he couldn't explain
and
Abranda
ACF Industnes tn Huntmgton, graveside rites will .be held at 11
effort to shore up his 1992 base of do: So he decided to return .to. the tionally·minuscule 10 percent of how the· bill's new language difwhere he was employed for 30 a.m. Tuesday, Nov, 5 at the Sun - Storms, Shade.
white male voters and brand pnnctpled ways of the ongtnal black voters in presidential elec- fered from its old.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES - .
years.
.
crest Cemetery witb Rev. Bennie Al ~ce
Democrats tbe party of minorities George Bush, a fe~ow who n~yer tions. Bush said upwardly mobile
Houdashelt and Lawrence
"Look," said Bush, "it's very
He was preceded m d~ath by Stevens officiating. Burial will foland feminist activists. He insisted IYopld have gotten .mto tbe postbon blacks in America's suburbs could technical, and all I know is I can
Scarberry.
one da~ghrer, Donna Jane, m 1950; low.
real sc3ry feeling to me not being every civil rights bill t!ley proposed where he'd chll!"pton a cOO:·word be conVinced that Republicans best simp,ly certify it is not a quota
Dear Editor:
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS three siSters; and one brother. .
Friends may call from 7 to 9
On Friday, October 11, 1991 I able to breath. My parents Frank was a "quota bill" (never mind the rally cry of whtte s~premacts~.- represent tbeir hopes - and tbey, bill. ' Click.
Emory
Gordon, Cheshire; lames
Survtvors mclude h1s w!fc, p.m. Monday at Foglesong Funeral
: : got choked at school and I would and Pam Colwell would like to bills specifically disavowed "quo-· not even to ensure hts own pohbcal in tum, would make tbe GOP the
Millon
,
Middleport; and Ellen
"ConceptuallY.," said Danforth,
Thelma Harbour Ntben of Galtipo- Home
·
permanent majority party.
• like to thank the scbool janitor, thank the school for the quick tas "). Pursuing politics ov~r poli- prospenty.
Young,
Pomcory.
"it is the same btU."
lis Ferry; two daughters, Phyllis
·
cy, he-refused 10 compromtse wtth
The original George Bush was a
But Bush s noble game plan
:... Carroll Johnson, for perfonning tbe action tbey took.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES "Now," said Bush, 11 we can go
Stevens of Gallipolis Ferry, and
Thanks again anyone, from any party.
young Texas congres~man who seemed to die witb Atwater. Goad- forward togetber on civil rights in
· Heimlich maneuver on me. It saved
Ronald Holley, Michael Bradford,
Juanita
Copland
of
Cummings,
Scott Colwell
But suddenly, Bush discovered voted for a Fair Housmg btll- ed by his White House chief-of- this country."
my life. I would also like to thank
and Charles McKown.
Ga.; two sisters, Louise Weethee of
4th
grader
at
an
overwhelming
majority of black because it. was ri~hl- only I;&lt;&gt; ~ arrogance, John Sununu, and abetthe school staff for their part in
So here we are in tbe WonderGrove City, OH., and Rena VanSalemCenter Elementary Americans rejecting pleas of civil conservauve whttes defeat htm m ted by his politically tone-deaf land of Washington. Our presiden~
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
making it easier on me. It was a
Sickle of Barboursville, W.Va. ;
Discharges, Nov. I • Mrs .
rights leaders and Democrats and ~is 1970 Senate race. Yet he con- counsel, C. Boyden Gray III, Bush who fought and lost on civil rights,
three brothers, Bud E. Nibert of
Michael
Beckley and daughter,
supporting his embattled Supreme unu~ to reach out !0 black v~lers narrowed his stghts. By crying that is seeking ways to reach out anew
Florida; Eugene Nibert of Grove
CLEVELAND
{AP)
Here
are
Courf nominee,, Ciare~ce Thorn~.. as Rtcha~d Ntxon s Repubhca_n even the compromise civil rights to blacks who spumed tbeir civil
City; and Henry Nibert of Gallipo- the selections Saturday night in tbe Bonnie Cogar, Betty Dovenbarger,
Angela Hood, Mrs. Freddie Matha
foe
of
affmnattve
actton.
~~'.
Party
chauman.
But
Bush
put
his
bill
offered
by
Republicans
was
a
val
was
very
successful
and
we
rights leaders to support his man
lis Ferry; three grandchildren; and Ohio Lottery:
..• Tb tbe Edillir:
ews
and dau~hter, Barbara McKee,
And
tbat
got
him
rethinki~g.
,
principles
,into
deep
storage
when
·"quota
biD,"
he
sought
to
solidify
could not have done it witboul your
Thomas.
two great-grandchildren.
Super
Lotto
Robert
Molbhan, Dustin Thacker,
Then
Bush
saw
LouiSiana
s
he
made
hts
pact
wtth
~onald
Rea·
a
base
of
white
middle-class
males
Watch for "The Return of The
Funeral services will be conThe Riverview Elementary help. The support is very much
5·8·22-31
-32-43
Kenneth
Ward, Jared Williamson.
inost
famou
s
Ku
Klux
Klansman
gan,
and
kept
them
on
tee
when
he
to
assure
his
1992
vic10ry
in
SoutbOriginal Bush: The Civil Rights
dueled Tuesday at! p.m. at the Jor:P.T.O. and staff would like to aJ.lllreciated. Thank you.
(five,
eight,
twenty-two,
tbinyBirths,
Nov. I - Mr. and Mrs.
and
neo-Nazi,
David
Duke,
parrotparlayed
tbe
black
countenance
of
em
and
border
slates.
President" - coming soon to your
dan Baptist Church with.tbe Rev. one, thirty-two, forty-three)
'thank tbe businesses and individu- Smcerely,
Keith
Dye,
a daughter, Gallipolis.
The kinder, gentler politics of TV news.
Debbie Weber, ing Bu sh's anti-quota, anti-civil W_illie Horton into .a victory of
Charles Moses and the Rev. David
als who donated or contributed tO
The
jackpot
is
$16
million.
Nov. 2 • Harry
Discharges,
head teacher rights bill rhetoric to emerge as the mtxed messa~es - cn~e and race. racial division and exploitation
(C)l991
NEWSPAPER
Frazie officiating. Burial will fol- Kicker
our recent fall carnival. The camiBright,
Mrs.
Keitb
Dye and daughRepublican candidate for governor
But wmmng can bnng out the infuria~ clear-tbinkin~ Sen. John ENTERPRISE ASSN. ·
. . low at the Beale Cl!apeJ .Cemetery
l-3·8·8-2-5
ter,
Mts:
Bun
Hall
and daughter,
in Apple Grove.The bod~ wiU be at
(one, three, eight, eight, two, Charles Plymale, 1ason Rankin.
the church one hour pnor to ser- ftve)
·
Births, Nov. 2 - Mr. and Mrs.
-~
vices.
Pick
3
Numbers
Dear EdiiOr:
For that, the Meigs County
Buddy
Malone, a son, PatrioL Mr.
Friends may call at the Wilcox5-3-8
I would like to take this oppor- Board of MR/DD is extremely
and
Mrs.
Ronnie Sprin11er, a son,
en Funeral Home today after 6 p.m.
(five, three, eight)
tunity to recognize an outstanding I!J'aleful. The viUage of Syracuse is . Two things need 10 be said not one voter in 10,000 doesn 'I expansion in American history"
Crown City.
has left tbem worse off than when
Pick 4 Numbers
: young man in the village of Syra- fortunate to have such a_responsi- about David Duke. The firSt iS that know iL .
Discharges, Nov. 3 · Seth
the
people
who
vote
for
him
cannot
Nevertheless,
to
say
all
tbis
is
it
began,
and
tbey
are
botb
fright9-3-S-2
. - cuse - Rick Chancey.
ble citizen and good neighbor. On ·
Amos,
Sally Brewer, Justin KlinThe Democrats, meanwhile, are
(nine,
three,
five,
two)
Recently, Rick went to great behalf of everyone at tbe Meigs be absolved based on supposed not to say that the Duke phe- ened and furious.
glesmitb,
Joshua McCoy, Maude
It doesn't maner that what he so far down a blind alley they don' 1
Cards
Iengtbs to assist the staff of Car- County Board of MR/DD thank ignorance of his past activities and nomenon is explicable solely in
Taylor.
know how to get out They neither
The D'aily Sentinel
2 (two) of Hearts
Binhs, Nov. 3 - Mr. and Mrs.
lcton Schooi/Mei$5 Industries in an you Riclc.for being there when present beliefs. The second is tbat racial or regional terms, though proposes will do nothing to better can or should abandon black Amerhe
is
not
an
isolated
virus
but
an
there
is
ample
justification
for
tbetr
condition.
ll
is
almost
irrele(USPS
~IS.INIO)
2
(two)
of
Clubs
emergency situauon which tbreat- needed. You are truly a "hero" in
Dwayne
Burton, a daughter, Point
early-warning manifestation of a believing just tbat. Soutbern poli- 1 vant that if the entire welfare popu- ica. Their support of civil rights
Q
(queen)
of
Diamonds
Publiahed
every
ai\ernoon
,
Monday
ened the health and safety of an our hearts!
,Pleasant, W.Va Mr. and Mrs. Jerpolitical disease that infects the tics for most of tbe years between lation were to disappear tomorrow may be a millstone, .but it is also
through Friday, I U Court Sl. Pomeroy,
K
(king)
of
Spades
Sincerely,
enrollee . Rick ' s willingness to
ald Wisecup, a daughter, Oak Hill.
their
proudest
monumenl.
And
if
Ohio by the Ohio Valley Publiilh!ng
!865 and 1965 was the politics of and affmnative action were wiped
• assist was possibly tbe difference
Beue Hoffman, entire nation's political system.
Company/Multimedia • lne. , Pomeroy,
black
votes
alone
cannot
guarantee
To take ftrst tbings ftrsl, Duke is white supremacy. Louisianans take from the face of tbe eartb, his supOhio 46169, Ph. 992·2156. Second ~;Ia•
" ·_ between an emergency and a
Interim Superintendent
their electoral success, the with•
pr»tage pt;id aL Pomeroy, Ohio.
no
accident
The
white
voters
who
pride
in
their
well-developed
taste
porters'
condition
would
not
be
; tragedy.
propelled him into Louisiana' s for political nuts. But David Duke, materially improved. What does drawal of black suppon does guar·
Member: Tho Auociated Praa Inland
gubernatorial runoff !mew exactly the man running for governor of matter is tbat mainstream ~oliti- · antee their electoral failure. Bu\
Daily ?rei• Aa•ociation and the Ohio
Newapaper Auociation, National
what tbey were doing and who tbey Louisiana as a Republican in 199 J, cians have not done anythmg to eitber through stupidity, arrogancl&gt;.&lt;
Advortit1ns Repruentative, Branham
were supporting. :fhey selected a is the reflection of a far more com- improve it through mainstream or suicidal design, they have madlt .
Newepaper Sa.lu.r. 133 Third Avenue,
themselves
complicit
in
the
eco··
former Ku Klux Klan leader whose plex set of circumstances than a methods for over a decade. What
Now YOrk, NewYurkl0017.
By The Associated Press
record of virulent anti-Semitism superficial reference to history mauers even more is that he is nomic siiiiation that now afflict . -'
POSTMASTER: Send addn:eo changct lo
Today is Monday, Nov. 4, tbe 308th day of 1991. There are 57 days and blatant racism is as well-docu· might suggest. And David Duke, scratchin~ a deep psychic itch, most Americans. As they belated! ' ·
The Dally Sentinel, Ill Court .St.,
come
to
realize
that
middle
Amerf
·
•
left in the year.
.
Po""'"'l', OHio 46769. ·
mented as it ill available from one whatever the outcome next week, inflaming 11 slill further but producca
has
real
problems
that
desem
.
Today's Highlight in History:
.
end of tbe state to another.
says more about the troubled -stare ing a temporary sensation of relief.
SUBB~RJPI'ION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Routo
On Nov. 4, 1979, the Iranian hoslage crisis began as militants stormed
When the third of the electorate of American politics than he does When he attacks welfare cheats and attention, tbeir conversion is mos t
One Weot. .......................................... $1.60
·tbe U.S. Embassy in Tehran. Although some of the hostageS were freed that supported candidates other about Soutbem panicularism.
quotas and "the liberals," his mid- suspect among those they lonl(
One Month .............. ,..........................$6.95
One Ycar.......................... ..........._ .... $83.20 '
several weeks later, for 52 otbers, it was the slart of 444 days in captivity.
tban Duke or his opponent, Conner
Let it be said plainly. Given tbe dle-clas.s supporters cheer' as much seemed 10 ignore.
8INOLECOPY
Note
tbat
these
are
all
generalOn this dale:
Gov. Edwin Edwards, .decide. right set of circumstances, a David because he seems to be on their
PRICE
Witions
about
a
national
condition
In 1842, Abraham Lincoln married Mary Todd in Springfield, IU.
Daily...................................... ....... 26 Ccnta
where to go in tbe Nov. 16 runoff, Duke could emerge today in just side as because tbey know that tbe
In 1879, humaist WiU Rogers was born in Oologah, Okla
tbey, too, will know exactly what about any pOlitical subdivision with phrases are code words for "nig- rather than about a · specific
S11becriben nol da.irirw t.o pay tho t~rri ­
Louisiana election. David Duke
In 1880, tbe fust cash register was patented by James and John Ritty of they are doing when they vote. a white majority. He and his roes- ger'• and "commie.,.
er may remit in advance d1rect t.o The
DaytOn, Ohio.
Callipollt Daily Tribune on a 3.6 or 12
Each vote cast for Duke will be a sage are viable·precisel_y because
They also know- that he is not could win in Louisiana on the basis
month baeia. Credit wiU be given earricr
In 1884, Democrat Grover Cleveland was elected to his fust term as vote cast knowingly for a racist tbe alternatives, which is to say the tbe inventor of the code words. The oi local conditions that are not
each week.
president, defeating Republican James G. Blaine.
.
whose recent recantations of his two major parties, are so morally election campaigns of Ronald Rea- directly replicable anywhere else.
No I!Jbleriptlone by mail permitted in
In !922, tbe entrance to King Tutankbamen's tomb was discovered in "youthful indiscretions" have and intellectually bankrupt. He has gan and George Bush made tbem As of tbis writing, tbe odds are 50arcaa w horv home carrier aerviee ie
Egypt.
available.
been repeatedly belied by his activ- a ready audience for his scapegoat- acceptable. What's good enough 50 tbat he will do just that But the
nco-fascism
that
he
represents
and
-In !924, Nellie T. Ross of Wyoming was elected tbe nation's first ities and comments since he ing politics because so tiumy in his for president of the United States
MaltSabo&lt;rlpllona
lnalde Gallla County
woman govert,~or so that she could serve oul the remaining term of her late emerged as a Klucker on the audtence know that they are the - remember Willie Horton? - is promotes can and wiU be replicated
13 Wooko...................... ................... $21.84
· hus!Mind, Wtlliam B. Ross.
·
Louisiana State University campus victims of an economy that has not good enough for them. Unlike oytside Louisiana if one of the two
26 w..u .........................................$43.16
62 w..u ..........................................$84.76
In 1939, the United States modified. its neutrality stance in World War two decades ago. When you pull been worked for their benefit for a George Bush, moreover, Dav\d , national parties does not soon proOvlolde GaW. C011nl)&lt;
D, allowing "cash and ·cany" pwthases of anns by belligerents, a policy the lever for Pllvid Duke, you very long time. The much-touted Duke is for real. When he says ·~ vide a decent and effective alterna13 Woob ....................................,..... $23.40
tive.
that favored Brirain and France.
·
2s w..u ................. ...................... ... $46.110
endorse an unprincipled bigo~ and "longest peacetime economic he means I~ and they love iL .
·

.

·

·.

.

..

·

·

·

·

·

·

·

The Dally Sentinel PIQI 3

---~Area deaths~--· Bertha Evans

·some custom·S alg. en·t.S. have too muc·h fu· n

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

artS

By Jack Anderson
·and Da.le Tlan -"-tta

..
....

~8

Flsher lt"kes J• ob, but
eyes governor 's office

Wrigh~;~io:~f~--jt~ee~,~a~nd~w~er~e;~~~a~t~tb~e~lils~t~sests~ion~o~l~tb;e
~C~row~·_:__
prc,gram last
J.~~T~o~mjJR~e~ed~,JB~iJII~~Q~u~ic:lt:~e~I,~J~u~dge~~F~r~ed~W~.
Steven L.
and John Rice -of OCES.

Ravenna,

SO I

WaY

TTCat er

Could it be the original George Bush?

By Martin Schram

Hospital news -

Letters to the editor
Appreciates staff

Lottery numbers ·

Appreciates help

- --..,.-- - - -

-, -A good neighbor

What the votes for David Duke mean

Hodding Carter; III

Today in history

'

'

.

.

.....

-

Joan May, Pamela N~eu; Elizabeth ScliPd,
Mark Murpbey, and Sam Crawford o1 OCES.
Second row, 1-r, are Brian Reed, Chuck Kitchell,

COMMITEE MEMBERS • Tliese lndlvldu·
als or the Mel~ County Chamber or Comm~ct
served on tbe Take Charge'· Planuln&amp; Commit·

M ezgs
• EMS
Boothe of

.

has 12 calls
POMEROY - Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services units
answered 12 calls for assistance on
Friday and on Saturday morning.
On Friday at 9:56 am., Middleport unit went to Stonewood Apart·
ments. Alva Reed went to Holzer
Medical Center. At 10:08 a.m .•
Rutland units went to Zion Road
for an auto ftre. William Hudnall
was the owner. At!O:S4 a.m., Middleport squad went to Race Street.
Robert White went to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
At 1:3.0 p.m., Rutland squad
went to Salem Center. Violet Jarrell was taken to Veterans. At4:35
p.m., Chester and Pomeroy units
went to State Routes 7 and 248 for
a motor vehicle accident. Opal
Kauff, Tina McGrath and Teresa
McGrath were taken to Veterans.
At5:11 p.m., Rudand unit went to
State Route 124 for a motor vehicle
accident Jeff Bickers was treated
at the scene . Eva Mckinney was
taken 10 Holzer by Rutland unit at
6:11 p.m. At 7:07p.m., Racine
units went to County Road 35 for
an accidenL Brian Bass was treated
at the scene.
On Saturday at 12:06 a.m.,
Racine and Syracuse units went to
Tanners Run and State Route 338
for a brush ftre. Bashan, P001eroy,
Ravenswood, W.Va. units were
called to assist. At 2:21 a.m .,
Pomeroy unit went to New Hope
Road for Otis Cas10, who went to
Veterans. At 7:23 a.m., Middleport
unit went to Stale Route 7. Edna
Christman was taken to Hoizer
Medical Center. At 8:·31 a.m. ,
Racine and Bashan were called to a
rekindled ftre at Tanners Run and
Route 338. At 10:46 a.m., went to
State Route 7 and Forest Run Road
for an accident.Jerr)o Lee Van Kirk
and Kevin Jewell were treated.
Taken to Veterans was Loreua
Reitmire. ·

_;...Meigs announcements-Rutland PTO festival
The Rutland PTO will have its
fall festival on Sunday from 6·9
p.m. at the school. There will be
food, games and prizes. There will
be a country store, ciafts and gift
items.
Sacred Heart bazaar
The Sacred Heart Catholic
Chwtli will have its annual bazaar
'th di · be · ·
on Nov. 14 wt
nner gmnmg
at 4:30 p.m. Cream baked chiclt:en
and homemade noodles will be
served. There will be games, craft
·
·
stands, fiSh pond and' religious arb·
cles as well as attendance prizes.
Contest planned
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post
No. 9053 and Ladies Auxiliary will
sponsor a "Voice of Democrac~
Contest" on Wednesday at 7:30
p.m . at the post home in Tuppers
Plains. The public is invited to
auend and funher information may
be obtained by calling Mary Bryant
at985·3376.
Revival
The Racine Baptist Church will
hold revival Sunday through Nov.
17 at 7 p.m. nightly. Guest speakers include Earl Shuler, Charles
Norris and Rick Harris. Pastor
Steve Deaver invites the public.
Services Sunday will be at 10:40.
a.m. Special music wiU be provid·
ed during revlval by the King's
Harmony Quanet, Southern Hill
Gospel, Marty Short and Luann
Wh[te, .Kyger Valley Quarter,
God's Little Lambs, Living Word
and the Faitb Harmony Boys.

u.)s....

Continued from page 1
the weekend campaigning against
it.
Although term limits have won
voter approval in California and
elsewhere in the past, Washington's initiative would be tbe ftrstto
apply retroactively to current
officeholders.
ll comes at a particularly awkward time for incumbents stung by
the controversy over bounced
MHS band receives checks
at the House .bank and
unpaid
bills
at the Capitol's reslauexcellent rating
ranrs.
The Mississippi governor's race
The Meigs High School March· pits the Democratic incumbent,
ing Band, under the direction of Ray Mabus, against Republican
Toney Dingess, was awarded an Kirlc Fordice.
"excellent" rating at state competition in Columbus on Saturday.
Field commanders, Holly
William·s and Stephanie Price,
received a "superior" rating for .
their performance witb the percus- ,
sion and auxiliary units receiving
an "excellent" rating.

\

'

'

Racine Legion to meet
The Racine American Legion
will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at
:::~~:.e.
The Racine American Legion
will host a bean dinner on Vetaans
Day beginning at II a.m. at the
post home. All veterans are invited
to attend.
Dance plauned
The Pomeroy Senior Citizen
h ld dance Fri
Dance Club will 0 a .
•
day from 8-11 -p.m. with mUBil: by
the Happy Hollow Boys of Athens.
Public invited. Those attending
bring snacks for the snack table.
Auxiliary 10 mee1
The Etbel Lee Ltllies Auxiliary
d
No. 2171 will meet Tues a'y at
7:30p.m. with potluck 81 7 p.m.
Plans for the auxiliary Christmas
party will be made.
Pomona Grange
The Pomona Grange officers
conference will be held at the Rock
Springs Grange Hall on Friday 817
p.m.
Luncheon plaaned
The Modern Woodmen of
America Camp 7230 will have a
luncheon on Sunday from 12:30 to
2:30p.m. at Dale's Smorgasbord in
Gallipolis. Cost is $2 for persons
over age 10. Children admitted
free. Correct amount of money is
requested upon registration.

Stocks·
Am Ele Power ................. .30 S/8
Ashland Oil ....... ,..............28 S/8
AT&amp;T.. ......................;.......38 318
Bank One ..........................46
Bob Evans ........................ 19
Charming Shop .................. 20
C~ Holding ..................... l6S/8
F era! Mogul.................. .16
Goodyear T&amp;R ...:..............49 1/2
Key Centurion :........... :...... 14 3/4
Lands' End ........................20 1/2
Limited Inc....................... 23 1/4
Multimedia Inc.................. 22 3/4
Rax Reslaurant .................. 1/4
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 39 !(}.
Shoney's Inc ...................... l9
Star 1lank ............... ............23 3/4
Wendy lnt'l.........................9 1/8
Worthington Ind.... .'..........:19 1/4
Stock rtports are~ 10:30 a.111.
quotes prorilltd by Blu111, Ellu
and Lotwi of Gtl/lipo/is,

Ya lha Electors of Ch•ter 7wp.
For a caring, bonast and coac•nad
individual for trustaa,

Iota for and R•Eiect

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 45Z4

G. ALFRED WOLFE
,NOV. Bib, 1•1

. . : .

Paid for by r•J• none, 36882, Texaa Rd.,

Funeral arrangements
don't have to be made
on the day a person
dies.

r, Oh.,

AS SEEN
ON MAJOR

CABLE
TELEVISION

There are many decisions
related to the funeral and
burial of a loved one that
need attention by the family. .
Now you can provide for
them by planning your
F
IH
funeral with Forethought®
unera ome .
funeral planning*.
James C. Birchfield,

Birchfield·

When the time comes, a
single call to our funeral
home should be all that's
needed.
CaU w today fo.r more
infonnation!

Owner
Main St.
Rutland, Ohio

742-2333

•Funded bj polklet from FOMhoupt Llretnouruce ComponJ

"

52 Weell.o .........................................t88.40

..'

.

.

.

�,.

..

'

·'

·Page . 4 . The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, November 4, 1991

cannot
our team's intensity and aggres·
siveness. Do you tell them to quit?
We had our whole line-up in by the
t!Jird quarter... guards running the
ball and a tackles catching p~ses.
I'm just pleased with our team's
performance."
Southern coach David Gaul
said, "No comment ...That's the
best I can do at this
"

After Eas.tern's first offensive relagated to using several freshmen • lO .set :tp a 3 ~run for h~sel~ as
effort was, f9~ed, Soothe~ was the in the lineup.
.
. • he struck J!l!Ydirt for the third. ume
tean:J thaumuated the ~nng. Four
At the the. 2:10 marl:: Tim B1~- and McQuue added the exuas for a
stra1gh.t passes from the1rown ~0 sell scored .h1s first of 01ree TD s 44-6 sco.re.at.the 5;57 mark. .
yard hne gave SHS enough. d1.s- 9" a. four yard run to g1ve Eastern .
At this pomt B1sse~ was_ejected
tance to set ~p a lOuchdown 10. 115 1ts fustlead, 12-6. SHS .stopped for reportedly !hrowl.ng a punch,
fust possess1on. Up-and-commg the PAT run, but that fll'e 1gn1ted a but ended the mght w1th full-game
quarterback Michael Evans was devastating offense that did not stats and a great effon of 28-199,
flawless as. he looped a seven yard cease.
three TD' s, and one conversion.
pass to N1ck Adams to post the
Things began to fall apart when
Although the ·offense takes the
game's first score. The next play at the 7:14 mark Michael ~mith spotlight, Eastern:~ defense was
may have been one o,f th..~ keys to · scored hJS second TD reception of excellent all evenmg long. That
the game as RU!!sell Smgle19n went ~5 &gt;:ards with T~ .McGUJ!'C driv- effort was led by LB Jeff Durst,
for the. two pomt conversiOn and _mg 1n ~e two po111t convefSI!)n; 20- JYho h~d 16 oyer all tackles, one
was drilled hard by the EHS front · 6.
caused fumble, and one knock
line. A.lthough one man does.n't
At the 1:13 mark after a penalty down to lead the way. ~rosh Charmake a d1ffere~ce always,losmg had already recalled one of East- he B1sscll was no less 1mpresstve
Smgleton, commg off .a 300 plus ·em's TD's-the Ea~les' nest struck with 15 tackleS, two knockdowns,
game had to be devastaung.
.
again when McGwre ran six yards and ~me major league plays, while
, Agam, giVe credit 10 a hard hit- off tackle for the score. Mtke seniors James McDaniel and Smith
ung EHS team. That score came at Hoffman a&lt;!ded the ~tras on a 28- anchored the ends, and down l!'en
the 9:3~ mark.
6 game, which siOod at the half.
Hoffman, Short, and Barnett did a
It dtdn' t take-long for sopho· · Firsrhalf statnaw s·outhetn 's great job in the 'irenches~ - -- ~-·
more QB Robert R~ to rally h1s Adams have a 7· 36 ~e. SmgleRod Newsome had an interceptroops for f:be firSt u~e. Showmg 10n gone after a 1-2 mght, Evans 1- tion that set up the next score, as
much stamma like h1s counterpart 13, and Ronnie Wagner 1-2. Jere- EHS still had most of its
hitEvans, Reed marched Eastern my Dill, who was injured early , ters in the game. One minute
downfield for its first
a fme
lOugh the fi!St half with a 5- McGuire trotted in from one
22
T~D~~~ni~:hun~R:o~n~w¥:~31:~f~his.sec~n~~~:rthe-m~cl~inIO
score
Dill was examined at the
the exuas for a
score.
The PAT extras failed at the 7:16 did notreturn tO the game,
Southern tied so hard, but
mark,
For Eastern Tim Bissell was youngsters, frosh Scott Grace and
Southern seemed baffled with- already 13-for-134, Hoffman 1-14, Tucker Williams were among those
out Singleton's presence in the and McGuire 7-73. ·
getting severe pu11ishment from the
backfield (and likewise his pres·
Receiving-wise Smith was 3-62, EHS defense. Michael Evans,
ence at right defensive Iackie), SHS Durst 1-8, Bissell 1-10, and Wes despite the circumstances, managed
'KNOCKS DOWN PASS • Eastern's Rod Newsome (41)
wandered aimlessly in the back· Holter t.JO.
to maintain composure, but SHS
down an attended pass for Soutbern player In eadzone
knocks
. field, although Nicl:: Adams broke
Eastern was strong from all was merely demoralized by this
Saturday's
SVAC lin!lle. Tbe Eagles won, 70·6. On right
during
off some good runs in a IS·32 directions, two deep at many posi- point.
·
trailiog
play
is Mike Newland (40).
·
end SHS was tions, and exhibited the play that
At the :01 mark of the third
night. By
made them a state-ranked team for frame, reflections of the was void, the score 70-6.
Score by quarters
much of the season. The emotional "Juniorewski" play went into
Eastern seniors Mike Hoffman, Eastern ............ .l2163214 ..70
loss at Oak Hill echoed for two effec~ but this time in his own vee- Mike Newland, Terry McGuire,
weeks, but the shadow from thai sion, the "Shane:a-rewski", guard Rob Newsome, Jeff Durst, Tim Jackson ...... ,.......6 0 0 6 .. 6
defeat was certainly gooe Saturdar, Shane James hit the endzone from Bissell, Mike Smith, Wes Holter, Statistics
Eastem·struck early and often m 16 yru:ds out The play is a legal James McDaniel, Steve Barnett,
the third frame, showing no play in which the guard faces the ·and
S
E
Dan Short played there last Department
15
remorse and taking no prisoners' line for one second then spins game and went out in a big way. First downs .................8
A 48 yard punt return by senior around in a counter and gmbs the Tackle Dan Short caught a .pass for Netrushing ...............62 416
JeffDurstsetupthefustscore. On ball for a run. Wes Holter's ten yards.
Pus attempts ............ 22
12
·
that play soph. Scott Golden suf- attempt at the fake field goal were
Completions
..............
10
6
Southern seniors were Ron
fered a foot injury and left the foiled.
Interceptions
thrown
...
1
0
Wagner, Jamie Proffit~ and Shane
game.
Durst later mn a punt back 56 Circle.
Yards passina .......... 105
~5
Moments later, Tim Bissell had yards to the ten yard line, where --- SHS Evans was 10-22 for 105 Total yards .............. J67 501
an eight yard scamper·to paydirt at Pat Newland ran it in for the score. yards. EHS Reed was 6-12for .85 Plays ........................ 39
63
the 8:S8 mark, then carried in the The PAT's failed.
Fumbles ......................4
2
yards.
.
extras as well for a 36-6 score.
At the 3:'27 mark, Newland
Lost
fumbles
...............
0
0
Hoffman was 643, Newland 4After a failed SHS offensive again hit paydirt for the second 36, and McGuire 12-101 rushing Penalties ............ 15-135 11-105
drive, Bissell scampered 26 yards time, while the Randy Kaylor kick for Eastern. Smith was 5-S2 receiv- Punts ................... l0-30 1-16
ing.

Huskies rout Arizona.State

Eighty teams qualify for
Ohio State prep playoffs
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Eighty teams were in the Ohio
Hi~h School Athletic Association
, football playoff pairings released
Sunday.
Even though six teams with
three losses each made the elite SOteam field, McArthur Vinton was
the lone unbeaten team to miss out
on
the playoffs.
LOOKING FOR SOMEONE TO IIL\1'-1\.
And Philo lost out by the closest
on behind him, Southern's Rob Hill (16), left goes for a
of
margins, finishing tied for the
against Eastern's Charlie Bissell (31) during Saturday's 1rld
fourth
and final playoff spot in
nnale. Eutem won, 70.6.
Division II Region 7 only 10 come
up short to COlumbus Beechcroft in
•
a
tie-breaker.
•
The 1991 playoffs get under
'
way Friday with 21 ·games involvs....loy,7p.m.
ing teams in Divisions II, l11 and
COWMBUS, Obio (AI') - Rotim·
AI a...... UII&lt;Olo
IV, with teams from all five divial Nmifinal peirinp for~ Ohio Hiah
ColumbUI DeSalea (7·3) VI . Utica
s.tooo1
AlllloCi&lt;
(11).11)
sions playing 19 more games on
_
, Alooeiltlon 1tato r004hlll
.Saturday nighL
DIVISION I
Twinabura Chamberlin (9·1) v1.
All JI•M Sat•rdaJ al 1 p.111. 1nle11
Clltlli.a Matt,II'CUI (9·1)
Twenty-two teams will see postAI Mllllllllil Arlin
season
play for the first time, while
.· AI Klfat ~MAd Ga-111 Field
Akron St. Viltocot·SL Mary (8·2) " ·
22 of the 23 unbeaten teams left in
Cinclttttid Eldor (10·0) " · C..tcrBIICYJUI (9·1)
rillo(9·1)
AI Yoo.......o F~con
the state will see action. ,
AI lloytoo w.-. Slldlum
Oirud (1·2) Yl. w-. (9·1)
McArthur ViniOn County went
c&amp;!cinnati Princeton (10.0) VI . OxAt w.~ Mollenko'pr
fotd Tala_... (1[).0),7130 p.m.
Mentor Lake Ctthollc (9-1) v1 .
10-0
but finished seventh in DiviAI IIpper Arll.....
Aahtabttii1Wbor(9·1)
sion II Region 7.
DubHn (10-0) vt . Columbu1
OlVISJON IV
8makhiVIII(9-l)
All Pill• Frld17 al7:31 p.m. unletl
It was in that same region where
•
AlT..,
oUt..-....oPhilo
was edged by Beechcroft.
Piqtla (10.0) Yl, 0om City (10.0)
AI Hilliard

Scoreboard

.

At~

olio-At lruniWic:k

a.- (9·1) n . Tolodo SL Jolin's

(7-2)

At CulM FIWf:ttl Stadium
Mulillon Wuhinaton (1·2) v1.
AUm EJUt (9·11

•

.·

At Flmde Stacll•

Clevdlncl St. Janoti'" (8·2) YS. LIJ&lt;..
wood (1·2)
_ _
AtMeator
·'
Eucllil (10.0) " · 8,... (1·2)
DIVISION D
All 1••• FrldaJ al 713lp.111. unl••

o&lt;lt..-....nolod

AILinut
S1 . Mtryl M11morial (10·0) vs.

:«~~

O.yton Dunbu (7·3) YI .. N - (I·

Millo ll.owktn

Manohcotor (11).11)

.

At MU1111onl¥t
Unim10wn L11te (10.0)
(\1.1)
AI Lancuttr Fullon
PCirtamou&amp;h (9· 1)

Yl.

¥1. Col~o~mbu1

w....

Al-~diMlddlotcnm p.,orid&lt; (7·3) n. Mui·

Bcodlcroft(l·2)

AI JlodlaJ llonotU

Fottorit (I 0.0) vs . Holland Sprina·

on PIMNDt (9·1)

'

AI LocldaodR-Mooturtal
Cincinnati Miriemont (9·1) wa.
CindnnatiCamay Illy (H)
At Zal..... S..~ Mnaetlal
Newark Calholl.e (9· 1) vt. M1lvem

At Berta rfn'nle
B•Y ViiiiJ6 Bs1 C"l) •• So!M (9-1)
Al Eul Unrpool Pallmoll
Stevbatvilk (10.0) Yl. Younptown
Chancy (9-1)
AI SteuMnfle HardiiJ
Rayl1nd B:ueteye (10.0) va, Beloit

(11).0)

At St. Clair~Ytllfl Ftll'f"'undl
Wooddield (10·0} n : Shldy1idc: (S·
2)
AI U.. Slot...,.
Bluffton (10·0)~
. Defitnee Ay·

W•B-~I),s.....liy, ?~m.

DIVISION m
All
PrWay •l1:3t p.11. unl••

11••

.........
At.-Wonto.
~I

(9.1) " · Atmn

At Younllf.OWn Spartan
C~ MemOrial (7·3) YS.
Konnody ('/.3)
DIVISION V
All . . . . SatuNII)' tt 7 p.m.

Lollilville

fidd (9.1)

AI Sa... RIIIJ
Columbial'lt Cre•tvicw (9·1 ) va .
S..UbomilloC.Iholio (8·2)
AI 51...., Julia Lomb
SprinJ:!.c.!! Cttholic (8·2) n
Dolplal
(9.1)
AILlooalalh
Mldcll £lain (10-0) VI . l.lbctty Ceo·

..
o....

~..:.t'
2)

W011 Jotrcrnon (9·1) n AmandaCloaJaodt (9·1)
AI Wa&gt;trl7 Roklilw
Wheelcnbtq (9ol) v1, Porumoulh
Eut (9-1), Sa1llldly,1 p.m.
At Do.., c.Alhltnd Mapl•on (1()..0) n C•dir.
(I-I)

onvillo(9.1)
'
AISLMI'fiM-al

Dllphoo SL lolut'• (9-1)

All« (1-2) vt. CinciMIIi

A,.-Jofl'loi'IUII!dooaticxt{l0.0) ·
Al ..... Wwll
.
•~ PW Onlllln ~I) vt. · ~,

VI.

....
(9.1)I •
AlHa-Loltl

Alr...-•SpatUo
110111011 (9·1) n . Sootlt Point (7· 3).

illltGn .!?'!~

(Overall-nnal)
Team
W L PF
Oak HilL............. 8 2 319
Eastcm .................. 8 2 346
. Symmes Valley .:.. 6 4 296
North Gallia ....,..... 6 4 244
Southern ............... 5 S 261
Kyger Creek ....... ..4 6 13S
Southwestern ....... .3 7 136
Hannan Tmce ....... 0 9 52
(Conference-rmal)
Team
W L PF
Oak Hill ................ 7 0 271
Symmes Valley .... 6 1 282
Eastern ..... ,.. ,...... ,.. 5 2 253
Southern ............... 3 4 154
North Gallia ......... .3 4 197
Kyger CreeL ....... 3 4 108
Southwestern ........ ! 6 94
Hannan T!ace .......0 7 44
Saturday's score
Eastern 70 Southern 6

PA
144
110
161
181
30S
225
318
314
PA
106
94
98
228
166
166
264
281

season.

•

· "This will be the biggest game

of the year for us," Washington
quarterback Billy Joe Hobert said
of this Saturday's meeting 'with the
Trojans in Los Angeles.
Hobert spolce following a 44-16
rout of Arizona State on Saturday
that gave Washington an 8-0 record
and a second-place lie in the AP
poDs with idle Miami. It's the best
start for the Huskies since I 984
when they won their first nine
games and went 11-1 to fmish second to Brigham Young for the
national championship,
Although USC is 3-5 after a S230 loss 10 No. 7 -catifornia on Saturday, Hobert pointed out that
Washington hasn't won in Los
Angeles since 1980.
Cornerback Dina Hall said the
Huskies want to take an 11-0
record to the Rose Bowl, where
they seem to be headed.right now.
Last season, Washington won the

".':~ (9.1)

· Vou For Gnd B•O.et

HAROLD "Butch• BRINKER
FOR

Sal.islaury Township Trustee
THANK YOU
Paid lot by candldltge, lllrold ·autoh" Brlnur,

· h11• Bailey Run Rd., Porn-y, 011.

Pac-10 title despite a late-season
loss to UCLA.
"Last year we lost a game and
still got to the Rose Bowl," Hall
said. "We don't want anything bittersweet this year."
Hoben, meanwhile, stayed away
from any talk about a national
championship. Hobert got into
coach Don James' doghouse after
Washington's win at California two
weeks ago when he said the
Huskies should skip the Rose Bowl
and find a place to play either
Florida State or Miami for the
national title.
Meanwhile, Bowling Green
became the first team o gain a
bowl. berth, clinching a trip to the
California Bowl by winning the
Mid-American COnference with a
17-7 victory over Miami of Ohio
on Saturday.
The most significant game
among the Top 25 came at Boulder, Colo., where No. 14 Colomdo
and No. 11 Nebraska, tied for fi!St
place in the Big Eijlht and thinking
about the automatic Orange Bowl
berth lllat goes with the conference
title, played to a 19-19 tie.

VOTE FOR-

SIJSAN PULLINS
Appointed Orange Township Clerk

.

;
::
~·

:

!':.
.'
~
.,
•
:,:)
..

~

'
:;:
""
::.:

::!

:~

•:
:.
•

I

:::: our story' each week.
game is
''You ·never know until it's
; , four quarterS, and we usually'play over," Houstoil quarterback War.:~ just one or two."
ren Moon said.
."'l ·Elsewhere,. Atlanta surprised
The Redskins received in over- ·
:;,. San Francisco 17-14, Cincinnati time and were forced to punL But ·
.. defeated Cleveland 23-21, Chicago Darrcll Green made his NFL- leaddowned Detroit 20-10, Buffalo beat ing fifth interception on a pass by
New England 22-17, the New York Moon, giving Washing10n the ball
Jets defeated Green Bay 19-16 in at the Oilers' 31. That set up
overtime, Mionesota topped Tampa Lohmiller
Bay 28-13, Dallas downed Phoenix Dolphins Colts 6
27-7, New Orleans beat the Los
Marie Duper caught ·a 12-yar_d
Angeles Rams 24-17 and Denver TD pass on Miami's fii'SI possesbeat Piusburah 20-13.
sioo, and that was enough to win.

'to,

N."'.,Yro4... c.L.- Mas,
U. c..lvlt, GIN

The Meigs Marauder volleybilll
team lost recently in the sectional
volleyball tournaments held ~~ the
University of Rio Grande. The
Lady Marauders defeated Rock
Hill IS-4, 15-7 10 advance to the
sectional fmals only to.lose to Jack-

Meigs eighth graders blank
Wellston squad by 14-0 count
Brent Hansen ran for one touch- started at the Wellston 44 and
down and passed for another as the .stalled at the 15. Wellston took
Meigs Marauder eighth graders over the ball and completed three
defeated Wellston 14-0 recently. passes in driving to the Marauder
The game was very physical and it five but time ran out on the Jackson
includ~d a Golden Rocket being County team.
ejected in the third period.
Hansen had an outstanding
·:r Hansen's gave the Little game, he completed nine of 13
,Marauders a 6-0 lead on the fust passes for 77 yards and the touchplay of the second period with a down. Mash caught four passes for
one yard plunge. Tmvis Abbott set . 23 yards and the td, Paul Pulllins
up the Marauder score with a inter- caught two for 31. McKinney led
ception. The Meigs scoring drive Meigs on the ground with 37 yards
was for 48 yards in 15 plays. Chad in 13 canies.
McKinney made it an 8-0 game as
Tnivis Abbott paced the
he ran for the extra points.
Marauder defense wtth the two
Wellston was on the move late interceptions, Gary Canterbury ·
in the fllSt period, but Abbott came recovered an enemy fumble. ·
up with his second interception to
kill the drive and the Marauders
went into the locker room at the
half with an 8-0 lead.
The Marauders took over in the
LEBANON, Ohio (AP)
third period at the WeDston. 35 after Alpheus
returned .10 the winner's
a shon punt. With the aid of two
circle
in
the Lebanon Raceway's
Wellston penalties including the
featured
Open
Handicap Pace Satejection the Wellston player the urday,
Marauder drove 10 the Rocket four
It was the 4-year-old's third win
yard line and Hansen hooked up
in
the series. Alpheus returned
with Bert Mash with a four yard
$5.40,
$3.40 and $2.40. On The
scoring lOss. The extra points was
Double
Sam, tiring in the stretch,
no good and the Marauders held a paid $3.20
and $2.60 to place.
14-0 lead.
Louie
Louie
paid
$3.20 10 show.
Meigs was able to ice the game.
The
daily
double
combination of
in the fourth and final period when
9-1
paid
$31.20.
the Marauders held the ball for
A crowd of 2,805 wagered
almost five minutes. The drive
$284,44S,

Lebanon results

'\.

MEIGS LOCAL SCHOOL BOARD

lOft FOR

JDL
SCOftiiLL
NIIICIIIIJLI.AII
CODICIL

Your IDIIIDd lapporllppraclllld
Pilei for by Candldltt, Jullln Scott Hill,
P.O. iDX183, ll!iolnt, Qh.

_

LeoCancttdate
:JvLorris
For

Paid For By The &lt;andl!late

FOR

Paid lor by Cllndldatt, Roger Abbott,
108 High St., Pomeroy, Ohio

t1l ,( .

; ,

.. ,

BUY1-GET1

uNL n

........

.....

' ·'

PIZZA&amp;

PASTA
675-1812 • Point Pleaunt
a

Mason•

SAYS ABOUT

GARY A. PHILLIPS...
...Gary Phillips has demonstrated an on-going and sincere coneem for
educational issues at the state, regional, and local levels. His knowledge of educational issues in southeastern Ohio and Meigs County has
been a source of information to the legislators in Columbus. Phillips is
a dedicated, hardworking professional who strives for a quality education for all children. Furthermore, he has been actively involved in
seeking alternatives 10 public school funding in the state of Ohio.
In short, Gary Phillips is the kind of person committed to making
every youngster's education a success.

,. . ,. ·•

·"";: ~

~

GARY A.

PHILLIPS
MEIGS LOCAL SCHOOL BOARD
Pilei lor by tho C.ndldllo, 38133 Hemlock Grova Rd., Pomaroy, Olt. 45769

VOTE BERNARD D. GJLI(EY
For SaUsf!!!a. Townshi Trustee .,

Pomeroy'• future,

TO THE V01'I!IUI OF IAIJIBUKT TOWNIIDP
I am a candidate for Township. Trustee, I fully intend to contact yo\1
perscnally, however sometimes people are difllcult to reach, so 1 a m
enclosing a resume of my experlence.I reel I am the best suited C4J""
dtdate for the office of Township Trustee ror rollowlng reasons:
i
~QtH~eace•
':

Bruce Reed has:
•EXPERIENCE
10YEARS ON VILlAGE COUNCIL
2 YEARS AS PRE~IDENT
6 MONTHS AS ACTING MAYOR

•FINANCIAL KNOWLEDGE
.....

12 YEARS AT FARMERS BANK
VICE PRESIDENT FOR LOAN OPERATIONS
DEGREf;IN RNANCE FROM OSU

•LEADERSHIP

PAST PRESIDENT POMEROY CHAMBER
PAST PRESIDENT MEIGS COUNTY CHAMBER
EXECUnVE ADVISOR SMALl BUSINESS
DEVELOPMENT CENTER OF SOUTHERN OHIO

ELE.CT

hu not been one lnaLalled at Bntdfonl C&lt;melt!y. I think there should be

BRUCE J. REED

... tnatallcd then:, . . ..
•'fruh - I aiAO believe the traah cleanup along the township ro!lds Is a very

lm~tant factor. This labor II also obtainable through the Department of
fJuman Sci'VIc·c.a . Sqme of the townships in Uu: northern part of the state are
applytng for grant money (HB 36) for recy&lt;:llng. I think Lhllldea should be lnves·
Hgat~ furth'er. If Saltsbwy Township could obtain any grant money we could
,work with the Metga County Utter Control and the vtllagea of Pomeroy and
Middleport. Recycling la going to be a major l18ue In the near future . There I•
also 2 or 3 township roads In Salisbury Township, that the rcatdenta are
rcquesUng water linea be laid . If I am elected your trustee. I will pcnonally ,get
the applications Riled out and aubmltted to the County CommiMioncrs. This Is
the llntt atcp.
"""" .........., ...... -I loci that our,. and £me....., Squad unlla an: amana the
bett In South&lt;aatm Ohio tnd Iii&lt; ahouW aupport litem In Ill)'
poulblc to help litem
u-dc tltclrunllo or .. ,
tltallh~Jd i.. of acni«.

nth....,

,.

"'1

Vote Bernard D. Gilkey
For' Sallllnlr)' Township Trustee

Paid lor by the candidate, Chrla WoHt,
48580 Blind HOllow Rd., Rlclnt, Ohio 45771
.

...

VOTE FOR ·

atilt

It will benefit. your children the first year if
elected.

CHRIS WOLFE

STATE SENATOR JAN MICHAEL LONG

lrcc labor rrom the Department or Human Scmcc:s. When I was a Ttust~e 20
yean ago we tnltalled duak to dawn light at Rocksprings Cemetery. It stopped a
lot or lrcap~ and vandaltom, and I think It Also showsallluc respect. Then:

VOTE FOR
"

For Ohio
And Experienced Leadership ;.
For
Pomeroy
.,,
......

•AmeriCa.n Lc~t~an Post 128

I would have time to ,s erve the people.

leading to a loss to the Beall!.
Chris Jacke tied a team record
with a 53-yard field goal for Gfee!l.
Bay (2-7}, but missed a 42-yard trr.
in overtime. The Jets (5-4) won.
after recovering a fumbled punt by:
Vai Silcahema.
·
Cowboys 27, Cardinals 7
Emmiu Smith again put on :0
scoring show against Phoenix anl1
helped Dallas win,
•.
Smith scored twic·e on 3-yaiq ·
runs and again on a !-yard run. H&amp;
has nine TDs in hi s la st three
games against the Cardinals.
.:
Roben WilUarns blocked a pul)t
and intercepted a pass for the co..,_
boys (6-3), off to their best stait
since 1986. Johnny Johnson ran [()'
89 yards, including a)-yard scoce:
for the Cardinals (4-6).
••
Vikings 28, Buccaneers 13
!
Terry Allen replaced the incf'
fectivc Herschel Walker and rQI
for a career-high 127 yards and t~
10uchdowns for Minnesota,
;.
·-.
.. '

r--]~~-:~;;;;;;r.i:~;d~;;i;i;~-,
Leadership

•Veteran of WOrld War 11
•FOE 2J71
.•MC!p QJunty Senior Clttu.n
I WJI.L U A fiiU, 11X1 ntlii1UI
•Tewa~ ..... ·I think there should be a hard surface road program started ln the tDwnshlp while lhe Issue money Wld any other mon ey that can be
obtaJncd Ia available. One: mile per year Is bcucr than nothing or doing 4 or S
mdes'half way than have It revert back to a gravel road a fter the winter Is over.
Batley Run hu been a high water route for yem. There should have been a hot
mtx: program started on tt when issue money ftrst became available. Ball Run Is
another example uaed In cue o( high water and sUJI Is gravel rood .
•C.-'...._ • The ccmetertes arc al110 a high prtortty. They need to be cleaned
and mowed when nCCCNUy and kept free or tralh and litter. Trustees can oblaln

Remember how your)'ire Levy money
W88 handled?

rourtb-quarter ac:tloo of Sunday's game at RFK
Stadium Ia WIShlnglon. The Redskins won the
pme; 16-13, In overdme, to remain undereated.
(AP LaserPboto)

Bills 22, Patriots 11
Thurman Thomas ran for 126
yards and Buffalo won its 16th
straight game at Rich Stadium.
The Bills (8-1) could not pull
away from New England (3-6). But
. three field goals by Buffalo's Scott
Norwood and two misses by Jason
Stauvrosky were the difference.
New England rookie Leonard
Russell ran for I00 yards for 1he
second straight week. He gained
106 yards on 27 carries. including a
· pair of short TO runs that were
both set up on fumbled punts by AI
Edwards.
·
Jets 19, Packers 16
Pat Leahy atoned for a big miss
early this seru;on by kicking a 37yard field goal with 5:20 left in
overtime.
Leahy, the NFL' s oldest player
at 40, made four field goals. His
22-yarder with I minute remaining
in regulation gave the Jets a tie at
16. Earlier in Chicago, Leahy
missed a 28-yard try in overtime,

HERE'S WHAT

•Member of Ohkl Trustee and Clerk's A.uodatlon

·LETART TOWHSHIP VOTERS

5 P.M.-9 ·P.M.

PICKUP OR DINING ROOM
-~

estei in regional play.
Nikki Meier led Meigs in the
IOurnarnents with 12 points, Meier
was 15 of 16 serving, led the
Marauders with four aces and four
assists. Chrissy Weaver added 10
points, she was 12 of 14 serving
with five kills and five blocks
- including three for points. Kim
Hanning chipped in with nine
points, she was IS for IS serving.
The Lady Marauders finished
their season with a IS-I record in
the Tri-Valley Conference and their
second consecutive TVC crown,
The Lady Marauders had an overall
record of 20-2 and finished 15th in Lions (6-3) led 10-3 at halftime
Division II in the state's final AP before Chicago (7-2) rallied.
mtings.

•VFW Foot 9926

ATIEfiTIOH!

fR~~!

Kevin Mack Scored three 10uchdowns for the Browns (4-5), but
fumbled at the Bengals' 16 with
five minutes lefL
Saints 24, Rams 17
Steve Walsh, subbing for the
injured Bobby Hebert, threw for
269 yards and two touchdowns.
The Saints bounced back from
their only loss of the season, a 2017 defeat by Chicago last wee!:: in
which Hebert's right shoulder was
hurt, to hold off Jim Everett and the
Rams (3-6).
Vine~
Buck intercepted
Everett's [II'St pass of the game. He
also picked off Everett's despem·
tion throw into the end zone on the
final play,
Bears 20, Lions 10 .
Jim Harbaugh sparked the Bears
with two touchdown passes to
Wendell Davis in the second half.
Detroit and the Bears had not
met while tied for flfSt place since
1956. Playing in a minus-8 windchill factor at Soldier Field, the

Allllla-

JHANKYOU .

Leo Morris • Box 212 Rutland, Oh1o 742·2455
Retired Employee of the Meigs Local School District

A WEST VIRGINIA COMPANY

SURR9UNDED - Houston Oiler runoiDg
back Loretizo White (44) gets manhandled by
Wasblnglon Redskins lioe backers Aodre
ColUns (55), lett, and 'Kurt Gmiveia (54) during·

•30 yoaso of public eervlcc Including; .
,.
- 2 ycara as County Commissioner
- 5 yean Supenntendent Metgs County State Garnge for O.D.O.T.
•Township Trustee ror J3 ~ars
- 4 yean aa supervisor wtth Middleport and Meigs County Litter Control
•I was serving u County Commtaskmer when the grant money was acquired ror
l:lle new senior clttzen building aDd acccss road. The architec ts were aJso hired
to start thl1 ·projl!t:t.
·
·

Your Vote and lnflu~n&lt;e Appredated ..

ROGER ABBOTT
Your Support JJill Be Appreciated!

son 7-IS, 7-15.
Jac!,son has. since won the district title by defeating McDermott
Northwest 15-7 and 15·8 and
Sheridan 15-7, 15-8. Jackson was
10 have played Columbus DeSales
this past Saturday at Canal Winch-

Meigs Local School Board

VOTE FOR

this season when Cleveland kicl::er
Matt Stover missed twice in the last
two minutes.
· Stover, who had made his previous 10 tries, hit the upright on a 47yard attempt with I:56 lefl His 34'
yard kick with one second remainmg was blockc:ct.
.
Boomer Es13S0n rallied th~ B~ngals (1-8) from a 14-3 defic1t W1th
a, pair of to~chdown passes, and
J1m B_reech s 38-yard f1eld goal
early m the fourth quarter p~t the
host team ahead.

Meigs volleyball_team ousted
from · sectional tournament

VOTE FOR - .

.------~~~~~~~~.-···~~----........

·.·· ON NOVEMBER 5

1

a

NOVEMBER 5, 1991

42249

.

.

•

,

By Tbe ASsociated Press
. . Ton~\'a~ New York Giants. Duper caught three passes for 64
T)le ,Washington Redskiris are play io ·
pbia. ·, . . · ¥ards an,d matched Nat Moore's
stillperfect after nine games. So · Tbci Redskinure off to the best team record of 7,547 receiving
arc the Indianapolis Colts, sort of. stan in team histOry. ·
yards.
The Redskins remained the only
"I'm having as m~~h fun as a
lndWlapolis moved to midfield .
unbeaten team in the NFt, beating coach can have '' the-Redsltills" Joe in the fmal two miJ!utes, but tilmed
Hoi'Js1011 16-13 in overtime Sunday. Gibbs said.
' ·
·
.
the ball over on downs when Jeff
in a possible Super Boivl preview.
· Houston (7 -2) began the day . George threw , incomp.lete on
Chip Lohmiller kicked a 41- tied with Buffalo for the best · founh-and·S. The Dolp~ms (4-5)
yard field' goal 4:0! into overtime record in the AFC. Even witli the ran out ihe clocl::.
after .. Houston 's Ian How field loss the Oilers lcid the Central by Falcons 17, 49ers 14 .
misS¢ 33-y.arder with I second . b games. ' •
, ~ ..-.. .· Michael Haynes caught ·0 Hail
left in regulation.
Earnest Byner lan for 112 yards ~pass for a 44-yard .IOuchdown
· ''It was a classic game and a for the Redsldns; and. his 23-yard ~llh I second left. flayne~ outdisappointing loss,'' Oilers coach TD scamper gave fbem a ll6lead JUmped seven other play~ m the
Jack.Pai'deesaid.
with 14 minutes left. The Oilers, end.zo~e and gmbbed Billy Joe
Indianapolis, meanwhile, lost who held the b8ll for only 1:45 in Tolliver sJob. .
·
again. The Colts feU 10 Miami I~ .the. third quarter, moved 79 y,ards
.lJ!e"h9st l'alcons_(5-4) moved
and are the league's only winless in the fourth, with Lorenzo White's 80 yards m the last 53 seconds after
team.
1-.y,ard_touchdQwn _run tying _the _ th!:_42e!i..(4-S) went ahead on .a 30- _
. It's no surprise why the CQI!S score with 1:4210 go.
_
yard TD~pass from Steve Bono 10
are~ bad- they have not. scored
Brian Mitchell fumbled the John Taylor. Bono took over after ·
a touchdown in 53 possessions ensuing kickoff and the Oilers Steve Young, who earlier threw a
over 20 quarters,
recovered at the 23 but Howfield's 97-yard touchdown pass Ill Taylor,
"It's the, same thing each kick hooked wide. Last week, left with a strained left knee.
week," running J&gt;ack Eric Dicker- Howfield missed three extra points
23, Browns 21

E
••
"
,
::

•

·v - VOTE FOR AMAN WHO CARES -

Your Vote &amp; InRuence.Appreclated
THANK YOU!

MiniiOr

(9·11
AI Nortlt Rlqmllo .......
S•ndloak=L
May'• (1·2) n . Pair-

(l

SVAC grid standings

Both teams went 8-2 and both compiled 147 points in the OHSAA's
computer mtings, based on the size
and success of a team's victims.
But in lhird-level points - points
accumulated by a victim's of a
team - Beechcroft had 413.3333
points 10 358.5 for Philq.
That was enough to ~et
Beechcroft into a regional semtfinalll)atchup with Portsmouth. ·
First-round games include two
matchups between unbeatens, both
. in the big-school division: Cincinnati Prince10n vs. Oxford Talawanda and Piqua against Grove City.
Newark Catholic in Division V
is making its 16th appearance in
the 10urnament and .wiD be setling
its sixth state championshiV,
Ironton and Cincinnau Academy of Physical Education, both in
Division Ill, extended the longest
string of appearances. Both are
playing in their seventh stmight
regional semifmal.
Only one of last year's state
champions has the opportunity to
defend its title. St. Marys Memorial
carries a 10-0 rceord in10 the Division II proceedings this time
around.
Last year's other state champions were: Wairen Harding in Division I, Hamilton Badin in Ill, Versailles in IV and SL Henry in V,
Garnes will be played at region·al sites the fllSI tllree rounds, with
the finals in Divisions II, III, )V
and V set for Nov. 29-30 lit MassilIon Paul Brown Tiger Stadium and
in Division I Dec . I at Canton
Faw~tt Stadium,
'

By Tbe Associated Press
The Washington Huskies have
slOpped thinking about the national
championship and started thinking
about Southern Cal. That'~ their
next hurdle on the road to a perfect

.Redskins edge .Oilers ·16-13 in
~ overtime to.remain- unbeaten
•-

fin

·Eastern hands Southern gridders 70-6 loss
BY SCOTT WOLFE
RACINE-For one quarter the
EHS-SHS rivalry was a great
game, but thereafter, the Eastern
Eagles rose to the top in a crunching way to ruthlessly destroy the
Southern Tornadoes by a whopping
70-6 margin here Saturday evening
at Roger L. Adams Memorial Field
in Racine.
Eastern ends the season at 8-2;
and after a reported loss by 4th
place Shadeyside from .WMPO
radio SJ!turday , night, Eastern
would have a very slim shot at a
playoff berth. (Coach ChuriDa stated that unless it was a misprint,
Shadeyside had won as of Sunday),
Southern ends a much improved
season at 5-5.
Bissell, Hoffman, McGuire,
Reed, Smith, Durst; the list goes on
anll on_lil_th_e number of Eagl.es thatrifled themselves into the spotlight
Satuiday night. Each man did his
job all season long in registering a
fine perfonnance.
Eastern Coach

Monday, NovemtM!r 4, 1991

'

.

'

..

Pakf;.. b)o. -idol"· ilemiiO 01..., ... Aa, IL, ..... ,.,.., OH,

•

'

MAYOR
...

AND

ELECT EXPERIENCED
LEADERSHIP
FOR POMEROY
Paid tor
hv tlha

John F.

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
-

-

Monday, November 4, 1991

.

.

By The Bend

Robinson nets 33 in Spurs win

· S_EA,TTLE (AP) ~ - David
Ro~mson coll~ted almost as many
~ as baskets.
.
San Antonio's 7-foot-1 center
sc~red. 13 or his game-high 33
pom_ts m a physical founh q~.
leading the Spills to a 106-98 VJCtory over ~e ~cattle SuperSonics in
SIII)~Y rught s.onl~ NBA game.
. T~ese ~md of. S~?'es are
tough, Rol)mson saici...'.'JLwas_a
real physical game, but you have to
~~ V.:lth that lcind of thing n?.w or
llsgomgtobealongseason.
. R~bins~n ~nd Seat~le centers
Benoit BenJ&amp;mm and Michael Cage
exc~ged bumps 3!ld body bloclcs
throughout the game. Robmson
won the battle by hilling 12-ror;l9
from the from the field: grabb1ng
seven rebou~ds, blockmg seven
shots and ~g five steals. .
BenJamin fouled out w11h 9
points and Cage had 4. ·
Though the Spurs controlled

most of the game, they needed
Robinson's 7-pointspun in·the last
two minutes to flilish off the Sonics. ·
•
Glll¥ PaytOn's steal ~d driving
layup tied the game at.95-95. Then
Robmson took over. · ·
.
He put San Antonio ahead to
stay with a pair of free thrt!_ws2Yiih
2 minutes lef~ ar.d his b&amp;slcel wilb
1:12 left put the Spurs up-102-96.
His dunk with less than six seconds
left .added ari exclamation point to
theSpurssecondvictory.
Willie Anderson added 17
points for Jhe Spurs and had 10
assists. The 6-foot-8 fon.Vard held
Scanlc's Ricky Pierce to 16 'points
on 4-of-12 shooting.
"David was great, but our
defense really did the jOb against .a
tough Seattle team," Anderson
said.
The S.orfics (0-2) played their

second straight gaine without
S~awn Kemp, The 6'foot·IO: forward is out with a sprained left .
foot
Payton and Nate McMillan wc;re
hampered with nagging injurieS but
played.
..
·
Derrick McKey did his ~Ito
piclc up the slack for the Soru~. He ·.
scored 23 points on 8.of 14 shoOting and-added seven rebounds -and -·
four steals. .
·
Eddie Johnson added 21 points,
but was just 8-for-21 from the
field. oMa Barros added 10.
· .
· The Spurs (2-0) .are without
¥uard ROI1Strickland, who.is at an
1mpasse in conttact·negotiations ·
with the Spurs ll)anagement. ·
· The three-man point guard rotation of former Sonic Avery Johnson, Tom Garriclc and Greg Sutton
combined for 14 points and eight
assists.
·· ·

.-c Blues lindjiig -ways to win By KEN RAPPOPORT
H01:key Writer

GOING FOR TWO - Saa Antonio Spurs
Sam Elliott (32) goes for two as Benoit Benjamin
of the Seattle SuperSonics tries to block lbe shot.

during the first quarter in Seattle Sunday nlght.
(AP Laser Photo)

Stadler wins
first U. S. meet
since 1984
1
2
3

4

Florid!~ State beat LoulavUie .............. 40-15
Miami ...................................... did DOt play

WuhlDJton beat Arizona State .......... 44-16
lllehl&amp;an.beat Purdue .......................... 42.0

5 Notre Dame beat Navy ......................... 38·0
6 Florida beat Aubum .......................... 31-10
7 . At!!bama beat Mlsslaalppl State ............ 13-7
8 PeDD State .............................. did not play
9 Nebruka tied Colorado ...................... UJ-19
10 CaUfornla beat Southern Cal .............. 52-30
11 Iowa beat Oblo State ........................... 1&amp;-9
12 Tezaa A a: Ill beat Rice ...................... 38·21
13 Ohio State lost to Iowa ........................ !J-16
14 Tennes11ee beat Memphis State .......... 52-24
15 Colorado tied Nebraaka ...................... l9-19
16 Clemson beat Wake Forest ................. 28-10
17 Eut Caronna beat Tulane .................. 38-28
18 Syracuse beat Temple .......................... 27-6
19 N.C. State beat South CaroUna .......... 38·21
20 Oklahoma beat Kansas State ............... 28·7
21 Baylor beat Arkansas .............................. 9 . .5
22 Georgia .................................... dld not play
23 UCLA beat Waahlngton State ............... 44-3
24 A:rkansas lost to O,ylor ......................... 5·9
25 · Frenso State lost to Utah State ......... l9-20

Virginia moves into top 25 for
first timefollow~ng 42-0 roinp
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va.
-- (AP) - What began as a rebuilding year for Virginia has turned
into a Top 25 season that may last
one extra game.
"To be where we're at right
now is grea~ but we've got to keep
moving up," Marie Dixon said of
the Cavaliers, who beat Virginia
Military Institute 42-0 on Saturday
and a day later were installed at
No. 24 In The Associated Press
poll.
'
It mad:ed tlllimt ran!cing·of the
season for Viig!Ma, which lost 15
staners from a team that was No. I
in the nation for three weeks last
fall.
This year's team lost two of its
first three games, and a rash of
injuries severely depleted the
offensive line. The wounded
included Dixon, a highly regarded
sophomore guard who underwent
preseason back surgerj and just
recently r.etumed to the starting
line'!J'·
~
V1tginia's 1-2 start prompted
coach George Welsh to set a goal
of a winninjl season. He wasn't
even sure h1s young team could
accomplish that.
"I thought there was a suong
possibility early in the year that we
might not be a good team," Welsh
said.
But the Cavaliers have responded with a six-game unbeaten streak
that has met their coach's goal and
caught the lltelltion of bowl scouts.
The Peach, Gator and Independence bowls were in attendance
Saturday as Virginia improved to
6-2-1.
· The victory over Division I-AA
VMI did nothing for Virginia's
bowl hopes. The Cavaliers need to
beat one of their two remaining
opponents- North Carolina Sta1t·
IIIII Virginia Tech- to ieaeh the
minimum of six Division I·A victories needed for postseason consid-

erllion.

..

AI the other end or the llnlcings,
Florida State remained No. l and
WllhiDJton moved into a secondpllce de with idle Miami.
WashinJton (8-0), which has
bilen inching closer and closer to
Milmi lho lui few w~. flllllly
cauJht the HurriCIIIe&amp; (7-0) lfter
po11ndlng Arizona Stale 44·16. The

Huskies and Hurricanes each
received 1,413 points from a
nationwide panel of sports writers
and broadcasters. Washington got
four first-place votes, one more
than Miami.
.
Florida State (9-0) remained No.
1 after beating Louisville 40-15.·
The Seminoles, who have occupied
the top spot every \"eek this season, recetved 53 of 60 first-place
votes and 1,492 points.
Michigan (7-1) stayed No. 4 following a 42-0 win over Purdue.
Notre Dame (8-1), whic~ blanked
Navy 38-0, is still No. 5 and Florida (7 - I) remained No. 6 after
downing Auburn 31-10.
California (7-1) rose three spots
to No. 'I aftCr routing Southern Cal
52-30, while Alabama (7·1) fell
one notch to No. 8 after edging
Mississippi State 13-7.
Idle Penn State (7-2) dropped
one spot to No. 9 and Iowa (7-1)
Jumped one place to No. 10 followmg a 16-9 victory over Ohio State
(6-2), which fell six spots to No.
19.
Nebraska i~ lith, followed by .
Texas A&amp;M, Tennessee, Colorado,
Clemson, East Caronna, srracuse,
North Carolina Stare, Oh1o State
and Oklahoma. Rounding out the
Top 2S are Baylor, UCLA, Georgia, Virginia and Indiana.
Virginia (6-2-1) climbed to No.
24 after beating VMI 42-0, while
Indiana (5-2-1) rose to No. 25 after
defeating Minnesota 34-8.

PINEHURST, N.C. (AP) Craig Stadler was the model of
decorum throughout the Tour
Championship. Even in victory, his
emotions were in check.
"You spend so much energy
accomplishing something for so
many years, and when it happens,
it's not really the element of sur,
prise, it's just more a matter of
shock and it takes a while to sinlc in
that you've really done what
you've been trying to accomplish,''
said Stadler, who birdied the sec·
ond playoff hole to beat Russ
Cochran on Sunday.
Stadler won his fmt tournament
on U.S. soil since 1984. During the
tournament he said his play was not
grea~ but it held up throughout the
weekend at Pinehurst No. 2. He
even admitted that his patience,
which often taxes him, was kept
under control.
"I just kept telling myself, and
it held true, that every time I made
a bogey, lhat's all ri~ht I just gave
myself a litde boost, ' Stadler said.
••Jt held b;Ue today. That was about
it,j'ust trying to keep an· even
kee ."
Stadler and Cochran were tied
after 72 holes at S-under-par 279
' on the rain-dampened Pinehurst
course. The pair played the last
round of the last official 1991 event
in even-par 71.
After esch player two-putted for
birdie 4 at the 16th hole to begin
the playoff, they went to the par·3
17th. Stadler hit his tee shot within
8 feet to set up the victory.
Stadler budied to take home
$360,000, moving him up to secand on the money list. Cochran
won't go home hungry, however.
He won $216,000.
Fred Couples dropped behind
Stadler into third on the money list,
a spot he n~ed to keep in order to
tie Corey l"a-}in on the points list
that derennines the PGA of America's player of the year. Pavin won
both ti~es despite a fmal-round 72
fot a lOth-place tie at287.
Pavin led the money list with
$979,430, the fmt time in four sea.sons the leader did not go over $1
million.
PGA champion John Daly, the
only player in the 30-man field
who broke par in the final round,
finished third at 282.
Bruce Lietzke was fourth at 283
afrer a 71. Chip Beck, Nick Price,
Nolan Henke and Jim Gallagher
were next at 285.

Toledo raceway
TOLEDO, Ohjo (AP) -Easy
Max driven by Jobnny Rosson won
the 11th race featured pace at 1
mile in I:59 4-5 at Raceway Parle
Sunday night and paid $9 .20, $5.60
and $2.80.
Grande finislled second and
returned $7.40 and $3.60 and Mack
Heath paid $2.40 to show.
The second race trifecta of Nos.
2-6-7 paid $4,160.80..
The crowd of 1,293 bel
$199,471.

ELEO

JEFFREY Se WERRY
Meigs Local School Board
"v'Increase students • self esteem
-JSuppon SB I02 revising county Boards of Education
-Jsuppon an elected State Board of Education.
.JAn educator forprogressive education.
-JSuppon equal disttict funding throughout the state.
If I can be of assistance with your children in Meigs
Local, pleue let me know about your problems.

Jour vou fs 1r•atl1 appNelat•IL

•

P1ld lor by the candldlll, J. S. Werry,
412 Spring Ave., Pomtroy, OH.

scored with 28 seconds lefi in regulation as the Blues rallied from a

ways to win these days ... well,
least fmding ways 10 tie.
Trailing. in the last minute, the
Blues pulled their goaltender and
pulled out a 3-3 tie with the Winnipeg JeiS on Sunday night It was
the fifth tie in the last eight games
for the Blues, who seem to thrive
on pressure situations these days.
"We've played 14 games and I
thinlc this is the eighth time we've
come from behind," coach Bqan
Sutter said. "It just shows the character." ,
With the tie, the Blues extended
their unbeaten streak to eight (3-05).1t was the third such occasion in
that span that they lifted their goaltender in the final ininute of regulation time to tie the score.
"We realize we've got a good
team but we've got to turn some of
those ties into wins," said Nelson
Emerson, who scored twice for St
Louis.
In other NHL games, it was
Vancouver 7, Edmonton 2, and
Minnesota 4, Chicago 4.
Prior to Sunday, the Blues had
tied Chicago 4-4 on Oct. 19 on a
last-minute goal by Brendan
Sharuthan and tied Calgary 2-2 on
Oct 26 on Ron Sutter's goal, both
times after pulling their goalrender.
This time, defenscman Jeff Brown

game in a row that the Jets were
diappointed late in the game. On
Friday night, the Jets fell behind
the Calgary Flames 6-3, rallied to
tie in the closing minutes, then lost
7-6 in overtime.
·

With less than a minute remaining, the Blues pulled Chris Joseph
for the extra attacker. Brown
scored on a screened shot from the
point to send the game into overtime.

Allison PyroilSOO winner
PHOENIX - Dale Earnhardt is
too much of a competitor to be
jubilant over a ninth-place finish,
even if it did virtually hand him the
$1 miUion NASC~ Winston Cup
championship.
While Davey Allison was running away to a convincing victory
in Sunday's Pyroil 500 at ·Phoenix
International Raceway, Earnhardt
had his hands full just trying to get
his car to·the fmish of the 312-lap,
·soo-kitometer race.
"We didn 'I have it today," said
Barnhard~ who even spun out early
in the race. ''I thinlc the motor was
a little bit wealc, but the (chassis)
setup was a little bit off, too." '
It didn't really seem to thrill
Earnhardt that his conservative
showing at Phoenix means he only
has to talce the green flag in the
season-finale on Nov. 17 at Atlanta
Motor Speedway to salt away his

MU JYins triple OT thriller
over Western Carolina 27-24
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
· - Dewey Klein's 34-yard field
goal on Marshall's fourth play of
the third overtime gave the Thundering Herd a 27-24 Southern Conference victory over Western Carolina on Saturday.
Marshall (S-3 overall, 2-2 in the
conference), rlinkeil No. 19 in
NCAA Division I-AA, snapped a
two-game losing streak.
Wes!Ml Carolina (2-7, 2-3) sent
the game into overtime at I0-10 on
Phil Shirley's 21-yard field goal
with 6: II left in regulation.
The Southern Conference plays
ovenirne in conference games, with
'each team getting the ball on its
opponent's 25-yard line. If each
team scores, they go into another
overtime.
Marshall held Western Carolina
on the Catamounts' third possession, stopping Kevin Thigpen inches shon of a fii'St down at the 16yard line. The Herd then went eight
yards in three plays to set up
Klein's game-winner.
In the first ovenime, Thigpen
jumped in from one rard to make it
17-10 aftet Shirley s extra point.
Marshall came back to tie i't on
Todd Donnan's 9-yard, fourthdown pass to a diving \'ticardo
Clark;md Klein's kick.
Wesrem Carolina then chose to
defend, and Glenn Pedro put Marshall up with a 12-yard scoring run
on the Herd's fifth play. Klein

tie was

For

mounts' possession, Deirick Ranis
hit Thigpen for the score on a
founh-and-10 play-action fillce, and
Shirley's kick made it 24-24.
After a scoreless first half,
Pedro ran.56 yards on the fii'St play
of the second half 10 the Calarnount
four, then scored on th!:. next play.
Linebacker Kenny -Biinks retovered Donnan's fumble at Marshall's 11 to set up Thigpen's 2yard run, malcing it7-7.
In the third quarter, a 55-yard
run by Orla11do Hatchett set up
Klein's 19·yard field goal.
Pedro rushed for 139 yards on
21 carries, and HatcheU added 113
yards on seven carries. Thigpen
had 80 yards on 29 carries,
Donnan made his second
straight start in place of Michael
Payton, who is recovering from an
intestinal ailment. The freshman
was 8-of-21 passing for _66 yards.

second straight series title and the
fifth of his career.
Of his fourth-tum incident on
lap 56, Earnhardt said, "The car
was loose and I Just kept driving it
and driving it. Fmally,l hung it out
too much and around and around it
wenL It was a show. I was luclcy to
keep it off the wall.'
"I wish we could have been a
lot better here," Earnhardt said
with a shrug. "I would have lilced
to wmp it up today. If 1 don't fall
out of a tree deer hunting the next
two weeks, we'll be OK. Then
we'll get them at Atlanta. We'D go
for it there.'~
Earnhardt, who came into the
mce holding a 157-point lead over
Ricky Rudd, came away with a
!56-point margin over Allison,
who moved nine points ahead of
the struggUng Rudd.
Earnhardt will get at least 43
. points·simply for starting in the top
40 at Atlanta, and the maximum
points' that can be earned at a single
event is 185.\
·
"It talces two weelcs to get to
Atlanta and take a gree flag, but if
we can do that we'll be OK." ·
Allison led 162 of lbe last 166
on the one-mile oval 'and beat runner,up Darrell Waltrip to the finish ,
line by a satisfying 11.41 seconds.
Srerling Marlin wound up third,
followed by Alan Kulwicki, Rusty
Wallace and Ernie lrvan. A lap
down were Jimmy Spencer, Geoff
Bodine and Dale Earnhardt.

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE
Ill Second St., Pomeroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNn ·;
SINCE 1868 ·

lOTI-

TO WEAVER
FOR

Southern Local School Board
ftiUKYOU

Pold tor by the Candldoll, Tom w.....
1318DuuySL,Syroc~••,OH.

a~d~d~ed~th~e~ki~c!k~.~o:n~t~he~C~a~ta~-~::::::::::::::::::::-::::::::::::::::::::::

To the Voters of Our Meigs Local School
District:
Richard Vaughan has served on the Meigs
Local School Board lor over 10 years. His concern is lor higher education and a good ,s chool
experience lor our chUdren.
We are asking lor your continued support of
Richard Vaughan for Meigs Local . School .
. Board.
Let's elect a·caring and c~ncerned team to our
School Board, itarting with:

The Daily Sentinel
Monday, N()vember
4, 1991
.
. '

·.Page 7

-Contemporary·living·
· Cindy Oliveri
County Ext. Agent
. Home Ec. and 4-H

•

of nonnal weigtit

As many· asolie-!hird of people .
.with these eating c!isorders rna y ·
fluctuate ·between anorexic· and
BULIMIA, ANOREXIA: ARE bulimic behaviors. Some research
YOUATRISK?
indicates that as·ml!lly as 20 per~ent of women on.college campusThis Is the seconq article of a · es suffer from one of these eating
two-part series on eating di~rders, . disord~rs, The incidence among
which often begins in teen and pre- teens and pre-teens seems to be
teen girls.
·
increasing rapidly. Youths involvejl
Today's focus will be bulimia, a in activities where weight control is
very different esting disorder from very important, such as dancing,
anorexia ne!Vosa. People suffering . gymnastiCs and wrestling, are espefrom bulimia are often of normal cially vulnerable.
weight or are slightly overweight.
Successful treabnent programs
They binge~ consuming large .typi~ally _!nclud~_ psyshotherapy,
arnounts-of·food, and then purge, .. med1cal and dental treatment,
often inducing vomiting, or using behavior modification, nuuition
diuretics or laxatives, to get rid of education and family counseling. A
the calories consumed.
program must be comprehensive to
Bulimia typically begins during be effectiv~. Accept that recovery

s~~otr~~orin
Yh~undg' wome.n,

d

of t IS 1sease m men an
boys is also incressing.
Bulimics exhibit some warning
signs that are .very similar to
anorexics. but most signs arc very
different. Some will:
-Become secret carers, hide food
in their rooms.
-Disappear after eating, ofren 10
the bathroom.
·
-Eat enormous meals but don't
seem to gain weight.
-Feel out of control, express
guilt over esting, act depressed.
. -Use laxatives, diuretics, diet
pills and even syrup of ipecac, the
substance used to induce vomiting
after accidental poisoning.
-Show great fluctuations in
weight, but are often overweight or

· PAMELAHAGGY

~e- . d~ll~;s~e~n~ra~~~~~~~~o~F~n~c~E~R~s~-~o~m~~~~~r~s~fu~r~!~ia~!~~!~!~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~-~
Heather
elected for the 1991,92 scbool year. Pictured are, Trout, treasurer;
Copley, president; and

w1ll
.
hyour local mental health
center, sc oo1 nurse or an eating
disorder treabnent ·center for help:
If you want to learn more about the
.disorder you can also contact your
local Cooperative Extension Service office, health department or
physician.
Prevention of esting disorders is
the key and must focus on the
young person being more selfaccepting. Self-esteem and contidence are important, as is the
knowledge that one does not have
to be perfect to be loved and
accepted. It's also imJ!C\rllUit to try
and reduce the importance placed
on thinness in our culture. Teach
· children that people of all body
types can be successful and worthy
people.

.

Metgs
• c.ounty.. Garden Clubs
·
meet
front (L
. toR): Brandy Gillia_m,, assistant trea-

.

rrc

eo
.

The fall meeting of the Meigs
.County Garden Clubs was conducted recently by Pauline Atkins,
county contact chairman, at the
Meigs County Extension Office.
Stella Atkins, Star Garden Club, ·
led devotions with the topic, "The
Windows of Gold" and a reading
"In Autumn Time."
RoU call was tal&lt;;en with Rutland
Club having the most in attendance. There were 28 members
· from 10 of the II clubs present at
the meeting.
h 1Mrs.
· Atkins
mak ththanked
· all for
e pmg to
e e spnng regional
meeting in Meigs County a success
and also for participating in the
Meigs County Fair Flower Shows
and the Stemwheel Festival Flower
A discussion was held regarding Show. Chairmen were Betty Dean,
the invitation of active American
Legion Auxiliary members within
Meigs County into partnership with
Meigs County Eight and Forty at
the regular meeting of the Meigs
The Presb~an Women's CirCounty Salon No. 710, Eight and cle of the Middlepon Presbyterian
. Forty, held atlhe home of Marjorie Church elected officers for the
Fetty.
coming year at a recent meeting
A discussion was held on the held at the church.
Meigs County Tuberculosis Levy
Officers are Mrs. Carol Harper,
and the group voted to support the chairman; Mrs. Velma Rue, colevy.
chairman; Mrs. Betsy Horky, secreThe group will be selling
~CBI\~. cashl:ws 3!ld ho~~ay napkms to ra1se money for the group
treasury.
Awards were p{esented to Lula
Hampton who received an honorable mention for the publicity
scrapbook.
Catherine Welsh won an Alnerican Flag for her report and she
donated the flag to the Salon.
The hostess served donuts, cider
andamixofHalloweencandies.
The Eight and Forty DepanrnenI 'Oh
'I
ta d io w1 I hold a national
reception for the Ohio salons on
Nov. 9 at the Akron Fairlawn Holiday Inn. The Eight and Forty
National Chapeau wil,l be honored.

Eight and Forty
hold meeting

G

. .

asiO,JUnlor
.

Maurita Miller and Adda Lou Resort. She distributed show
Lewis. Janet Bolin was chairman of schedules and club presidents drew
the Stemwheel show.
classes that their club is to bring to
Regional rosters were dislribut· the show. Each club is to furnish
ed to each club president.
one dozen sandwiches and two
The following reports are due to dozen cookies.
stare chairman by Dec. 15: publiciMrs, Atkins thanked everyone
ty boolcs, program books, outstand- for their cooperation during her
ing garden club and outstanding term as county con~ct chairman
garden club member.
.
and then installed the new county
Due to s~te. regional and coun- officers for a tenn of two years:
ty treasurers are due and if not paid Karen Werry, county contact chairimmediately members will not man; Sheila Curtis, vice-chairman;
receive the "Garden Path."
Donia Crane, secretary; Adda Lou
Perennial and tree .orders are due Le w1s,
· treasurer.
by D'ec. 5.
The next meeting will be held
Sheila Curtis, chairman of the April20, 1992.
Christmas Flower Show, ''We WeiRefreshments were served by
come Christmas With a Song," Middleport Amateur Club as host
announced the show will be held for the evening.
Nov. 23 and 24 at Royal Oak

Women's Circle elects officers

'KAYLYN SPRADLING

Second birthday
•
Kaylyn Renee Spradling celebmted her second birthday recently
at the home of her parents, Jerry
and Charmele Spradling , New
Haven. W.Va.
Guests attending were seived
cake and ice cream.
Attending were Jerry and
Charmele Spradling, paternal
grandparents, Frank and. Lorene
Spradling, maternal grandmo~er,
Dottie Turner, Alka Marble, maternal great grandmother, Vicky,
Robert and Stephanie Ohlinger,
Jeremy Hudnall, Denise Bunce,
Kauina Turner, Monica Turner.
Sean Dodson, Rose and Rene
Edmonds, Jimmie Cain, Dave,
Alberta, Andy and Beth Hysell,
Judy and Cindy Adkins, Ben Riley,
Dale Angie, Nathan and' Derrick
Brickles, Tony Roush, Jerry and
Kathy Cain.
Sending gifts were Dave, Bren·
da and Missy Jeffers, Rick, Darline, Dave and Rich Stewan.

·
·

tary; and Mrs. Marcella Coleman,

treasurer.
Plans for the annual Thanlcsgiving dinner to be held at Gilmore's
in Pomeroy on Nov. 26 were dis·
cussed. Reservations can be made
wilh Dorothy Morris or Kate
Brown.

JACKSON -~Camp Governor
William Dennison Number 125,
Sons of Union Veterans of the
Civil War, \\!ill hold its annual
meeting on Nov. 12 at the Pondcrosa Restaurant in Jackson. Dinner will be at 6:30p.m. and the
meeting will follow.
The featured speaker will be
Dr. Anthony G. Chila, Professor of
Family Medicine, Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine,
His topic will be Civil War Postal
History.-This-one hour-presentation
of slides and discussion features
postal iteJDS used from 1961-1865,
from Dr. Chila 's personal collection. He will review the nature of
postal usage and has, (or presenta- '
tion,
written three day.s
High school students who are beforeletters
the First Battle of Bull Run,
U.S. citizens and who are interestand
at
the time of President Lined in applying for $1,000 college.
coln's
assassination
scholarships should request appliThe dinner and meeting are
cations by Dec. 14, 1991 from 'Eduopen
10 anyone who has an interest
cational Communications Scholarin
the
Civil War,
ship Foundation, 721 N. McKinley
Road, P.0. Box 5002, Lalce Forest,
Ill., 60045·5002,
To receive an application, stu·
dents should send a note stating
STAFFORD, England (AP) their name, address, city, state, zip lzaak Walton, author of•the classic
code, approximate grade point book about fishing, "The Comaverage and year of grad~tion. All pleat Angler," was bOtn here in
requests for applications will be 1~93. AJthough well schooled and
fulfilled on or about Jan. 15, 1992.
w1dely read, he did not attend a
One hundred winners will be university.
selected on the basis of academic
In addition to his most famous
performance, involvement in work, Walton wrote biographies of
extracurricular activities and need five clergymen and authors, includ·
for financial aid
ing John Donne and Richard HOQlc,.er.

Scholarship deadline

Author and angler

UPCOMING PERFORMERS • The high-stepping daace
troure, "Rhythm Ja Shoes" Will kick up liS heels at the htsloric
Arie Theatre Saturday, Nov. 16 al 8 p.m. Tickets are avallable at
Peddler's Pantry. For more information, call the Morris &amp;
· Dorothy Haskins Ariel Theatre at 446•ARTS.

Carson not exactly retiring
RADNOR, Pa (AP) - Johfllly 'Tonight' - I am toolcing forw:mJ
Carson already is working on one to slowing down a bit and taki~g .
of his first post-"Tonight Show" time to smell the flowers," he Said.
projects - a TV special on politi· "But I am definitely not reliring.''
cal humor.
It will air as the 1992 presiden·
tial campaign starts, he said in TV
Guide. Carson steps down as host
of"TheTonightShow"inMay.
The special will contain political
Edwin H. Land invented polarhumor "going all the way back to
ized
glass, the first pmctical synPresident Coolidge and will also
thetic
light-polarizing material
have a lot of new material about
found
useful
in sunglasses, cameras
current politicians," he said.
and
optical
instruments,
in 1932,
"After 35 years of !ll!ily work
on the tube - five years with a and produced the Polaroid Land
daytime show and 30 years with camera in 1947.

Meigs local School Board
.

VOTE FOR

JOHN HOOD
Paid For By The Clndldoll, John Hood,
55 PHrl SL, Mlddilporl, Ohio

Paid for by Candidate, Richard Vaughan, 3rd St., Mldcllepon, Ol;llo
I

a

Chorale selection
Robin White, son of Robert ami
White, Coolville, has
selected as a member of the A Cappella~ Singers and thetChorale at
. Ohio Valley College.
White, a business major, is a
member of the Kappa Social Club
and the Stage Band.
A Cappella Singers will give 20
performances this year throughout
West Virginia and Ohio and plan a
spring tour in the Midwest. The 12c
member Cholllle will sing contemporary Christian arrangements for'
special events such as Y9!dh rallies.

been

D~ve

El£0

PHILLIPS
.

MEIGS LOCAL
BOARD OF EDUCAnON
~It'a

n., Fer A.c•••l'l"

Paid tor by "'- c.ndklo11, ians
Homlock an... tiel., Po-,, Oh.

,

Due to lull time employment,
I am withdrawing lrom the
November sth ele.,tion.for
OUve Township Clerk.
1 wish to than• those voters who
supported me bJ ,.,nine "''
nominating petition.

Wilma Jean Vineyard
-,. Pold for by Clndldlle, Umberger Ridge Rd., Reedlvlllo, Oh.

Somttfiing (joot!'s .Pl{ways t:;oofjng .PIt

(MASON FAMILY
RESTAURANT -

News notes

·BOARD
·THANK YOU

..

''

Lennie Haptonstall read "Keeping the Covenant Alive as the Least
Coin Offering was collected. She
also conducted devotions, reading
from a paper that had been prepared by a Conner member of the
church to be given at a youth meeting in 1945 . The topic of these
devotions was "I Must Use My
"''!m·e-and~Talenl as &lt;lod-Given
Gifts."
Rev. Kris Treintong led the
study "Empowered to Show Love
Through Responsible Stewardship." Love was the theme of the
study. Three lcinds of love were
discussed: Love of God for humanity, love of humanity for God, and
· love of people for one another.
The program ended with a
responsive reading _of the poe!"
"Reflections" by Michael Quo1s
and the singing of "Rise Up, 0
Saints of God."
Rev. Treintong closed the meeting with pray~r.

Pamela Haggy, daughter of
Ernest and Brenda . ·Haggy;
Pomeroy, has been selected to
appear in the 25th annivezaary edition of Who's Who Among American High School Students.
Only five percent of studentS
from the nation's 22,000 high
schools are honored with this
accomplishmenL
Haggy is a 1991 graduate of
Meigs High School and is attend.
ing the University of Rio Grande
where she is srudying to become
medical secretary.
While in high school, Haggy
was active in several organizations.
She attends the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church and is employed:
at Adolph 's Dairy Valley in
Pomeroy.

Annual meett'ng

MEIGS LOCAL SCHOOL

RICHARD VAUGHAN

representative.

Locltecl on lit, 33 beside Mason Exxon and MISon Mo~. Mason, wv
...

.

.

.

liO!HESTYLE LU1VCII SPECIAL.&lt;:).
Jlonduy Friduy. 11

&lt;UJL 10

:1 p.m .

MONPAY -Spaghetti, Garlic Bread, Soup &amp;Salad Bar
TUESDAY· Philly, French Fries, Soup &amp;Salad Bar
WEDNESPAY • Meatloaf, ChOice ol Potato.
'·
Soup &amp;Salad Bar
JHUBSDAY -Mushroom Burger, ~ranch Fries, &amp; Salad
fRIDAY- F'ISh Sandwich, French Fries,
Soup &amp; Salad Bar
TUI8DAT II Tll1JI8DAT. CIIJU)Uif 111'fDD 12 &amp;AT Pita
I'ROII CHILDUlf'l IIEI'fU. !EXCLUDES DRINK &amp; DESSEtm
UIIIT 1 CHILD PIRAIXILT

ovr

I

&amp;liT
CfRDiRS AVAil &amp;if E (304)778-iBil
IDIORI OBT
VISA • MAlmRCARD • AMERICAN EXPREsS

10% DliCOOl'IT

ACCEPrEO

�'·
_, 1

Page ~The Dally Sentinel

Monday, November4,1991 .

Cpuntry and
western·top: 10

Daughter appreciates
efforts her parents made

.

'

Comm'-nity Calendar items
apjle!ll' two days before tin event
ancl_tbf day of.tbat event. Item&amp;
must be received weD in advance
to IISSUre publl~atlon fn tlie cal·
endar.
. ..... - '
.MONDAY
'POMEROY. The_Meigi I.oc41
Band Boosters will meet Monday ,
at 7:30p.m. at die high school band
room. All parents are 11rged to
atlel)d.
· . ·
. - - ~.

. I. "Anyll)ore," :rravis;'fritt

2. "Som~." Alan J.!!Cl®n
3. "~t Yourself in My Place,"
Pam Tillis
..
.
· · 4. "Brotherly LoYe·," Ke\th
. Whitler and Earl Thomas Conely
. 5. • A Picture. of Me (Without
You)," Lorrie MorgaJ)
6. "Like We Never Had a Broken Heart," Trisha .\"earwood
~" 7. "Hun Me Bad," PllliY Loveless
·
8. "Templed," Marty Stuart
9. "Then Again,'' Alabama '
10. "You 'Couldn't Get the Picture," George 1ones
(Souroe: CashbOx magazine)
•

~

200111 annlversarj over tbe weekend that recreated what many consider tbe U.S. Army's great·
est defeat. (AP)

r-,

SYRACUSE • The Sutton
Township Trustees will meet Monday ~~. 7:30 p.m. at the Syracuse
Muntctpal Building.
REEDSVILLE • The Faith Full
Gospel Ladies Circle will hold a
fundraising · event oii Monday- at
7:30 p.m. at the home of'Bobbi
Reed uf ReedsviUe. Proceeds go to
the church. Public is invited to
attend.

-

Turning sand
unto'gold'?

_____

COOL VILLE • There wiU be a
hunter's safety course on Monday,
Wednesday, Nov. II and 13 at the
Coolville Lions Club Building in
Coolville. Por more information
call Robett Pullins at 667-3831, Ed

Postal Service haUs Uoiversity of
Vermont

' ,..

DAVID VI. FOX
TRUSTEE of LETART TOWNSHIP
Yom Vote and Influence Appreciated
THANK YOUI
Paid for by the cancl., David w. Fox,

24265 Rowi Rd., Racine, Ohio

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-21 S6 ·
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to SP.M.

VOTE FOR

.

LEAH (Cricket) ROSE
•

unlil

NOON SATURDAY

against takin$ fellow Christians 10
court and agamst hiring anomeys.
The Byle!li, who operate one of
two Oea markets in Hartville, ftled
suit Oc~ 25 in Stark County Common Pleas Co~
Their suit charges that Lapp and
minisiers Elmer Z. Yoder and Noah
N. Schrock went 10 their house in
!989 ~ confrQp~ thlll!l for hiring an attorney to repre5erit them in
a zoning matter.

Words

Days

16
15
15

1

3
6

15

10

'

Monlhly

run 3 d•• it no ch•ge.

•Ptlce or 1d tor all ca,hlll•t•n it double price olad cost .
"7 point lint typt only u•d . ·
.
•s.,.tintl it not rHponsiblt for errors afrtt fint'd~ . jChedl
tor trron tlrtt cl..,. 1d runt lrt peperl . Ctll befo;e 2:00pm
d~ ther public:•Uon to m•• correetion .

ftiAIIIYDU

•Ada thlt must bt Plld In advtnct tre

Plkllor by Cllndldltt, LNh Rose, 24151 CR 28, RIICIM, Pltlo.

.

. ' Card ofTh.nlle

Happy Ads

In MlrriOrllm

Ylrd Sal•

'A cltttifitd advertiAmtr'll plated in The Dilly Sentintllt• ·
cejU - ciMtifitd ditplty, Rutin•• Card and legll·norieetl
will alto tPP ..' In tht Pt. Plt••nt fltglttll tnd the Gtlli·
polis Dlily Tribune. rteehing ovtr 18.000 homes.
·
COPY DEADLINE -

MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY ~APE~
THU~SDAY PAPER

PHILLIPS

FRIDA~ PAPE~

SUNDAY PAPER

DAY BEFO~E PUBLICATION
..,.. 11 :DOA.M. SATURDAY
. :.. 2:00P .M . MONDAY
.- 2:00 P-1 M. TU~SDAY
- 2:00P .M . WEDNESDAY
- · 2:00PM . lHURSDAY

··-

- 2 :00 P ,M . FRIDAY
'

'

* •KNOWLEDGEABLE
**HARD-WORKING
..DEDICAT.ED
**ENERGETIC

DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

P.ald for by the eandldate,
338133 Hemlock Grove Rd.

FOR SALE:
Four Goodyear Vector Pt 95 ·
70R14 MIS Tires, an tor $50.
One Vltamaster Dual Action
Exercise Bike for $50. Cell
Vlkkl995-7456 or 992-5719

ELEC!

LARRY D•
A Belter Fulare

l'lkllor by Randy Hum)~Myt~ 30110 Rooll8prlnga Rd, Pameroy, 011.

REWARD MONEY
Offered for Information
About Persons who
damaged bridge at
Cleo Smith, Please
contact 992-3371
Meigs Sheriff Office

W•ldag ,..,gather Far
I

BULLDOZER •nd
BACKHOE WORK,

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOW

HOME SITES,

We Wm Not Be Undersold

LANDSCAPING .
WATER Md SEWER
UNES
FREE ESTIMATES

*Save up to 50% on Ft.iel Bills
· *Increase the Value of Your Home
*Call for Free Estimates

. 992·3838

742·2328

Howard L Writesel

Is Your Roof Ready For Another Year of Ice and Snow?

ROOFING

Now's The Time to Fliid Out.

liUCIJNG AVAIWL£

ca11 992-1&amp;142

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning

Convertible Tops,
Carpets, 'Headliner &amp;
. Seat Covers and
Minor Auto Repair.

P~inting
FREE ESTIMATES

'

$4. 00

.30

IALL fESTIVAl
SPECIAl
20 SESSIONS
For $20.00

GUN SHOOT
FORKED
RUN ·
.
SPORTSMAN
CLUB

013.00.

81 .30/ doy

.eo

Every .Sumlay 12 ~

conMcuthle runt, broken updaytwill bt ch.,led

9/9/91/2

m~

Aru Code 614

Aru Code 304 .

441 387 388 245 -

992 - Middleport

1!175- Pt . Pleaunt

Gallipohs
Ch•hire
VInton
Rio Orsnste

256-Guyt~i1- Dist

143 - Arabi• Dist.
379 - WIInlt

· Pomeroy
915 - Ch"ler
843- Portltnd

247- Leton folio

949 - ,.actne

742- ,.utland

&gt;•

Paid lor by the CBnclldate

AGES 3 and UP

THE DANCE
COMPANY
992-6289

676 - Applt Creve
173 - M..on
•

882- New H..,.en
895 - leun
937 - Buffllo

•P
I

LEGAL NOnCE
The Public Udlldes Com·
missiOn Of Ohio haa oot tor
public hoartng Cue No. .
22-GA-GCR,torevlewtheg"
coot recovery rot• ol Columbla Gao of Ohio, Inc., lhe
operatlon of Ill Purchased
GaoAdjuatmontCiauoe,and
retoled mattora. Thla heerlng

tht Recuhc Fist
Public Notice

Prolflll, Deceooed.
IN lllE COMMON
ESTATE NO. 20121
PLEAS COURT,
Twonty·Thlrd end Final AoPROBATE OIVISION
oount of Frank W. Porter, Jr.,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Truotoa Under 110m V ot l~e
IN lllE .MATIER OF SET·
lLEMENT OF ACCOUNTS, ·bot Wlll and Teolllmont ol
PROBATE COURT,
Jone LouiN 0. Smllh, D•
CHHCI,
MEIGS COUNTY, OliO
Acoounlll ond voucharo
· ESTATE NO. 28708 • Flnol
olthll'toltowlng nomed llclu- and Dlolrlbudve Account
clorleo hon been flied In the Ed word Jockoon, ExiiCtllor of
ProbaleCoun,UetgoCounty, the Eollllt oi'Fronk C. Clark,
Ohlo,lor lppiOVIIInd IIIII• akoFronkC.Bogo;Decoaoed.
ment:
.
Unl••• excepllono oro
ESTATE NO. 28131·Finol flied lhllreto, aetd occounlo
and Dlttrlbudve Account of will b•lar hllorlng before uld
Thom11 Toylor, Executor of Court on the 4th day ot 0..
tho Eolllo of Blain Taylor, cernber, 1991, atwhloh tlmo
au Blaine Toylar, Oeolloed. aokl-11 wtn be oonoklESTATE NO. 21275·ll*- erectand continued from dly
t-th Ann ..t A - t ol 1o dey unih ftnatiy cllopoud
William J. Hobttener, Truo- of.
toa of the Truot Cr•ted by
Any peroon lntorootld
ttem Eighth ol the Laot Will may file Wrl11en exaeptlono
and Teottmenl of Unnlo a; to oold -nto or to mot•
1011 ponelnlng to the execuToylor, D-Ied.
ESTATE NO. 28735-Flnal tion of the true~ nollfto than
and Ololrlbutlve Account of ftve doyo prior to tho dolo 111
Lolo J, Ebertboch, Executor lor hearing.
ol tho Ealllle ol Woyne E.
. Robet18. Buck,
Brlcldoa, O.O..oed.
Judge Common Pleoo
ESTATE NO. 28112·Ftnal
Court, Probell Dlvlolon,
and Olotrtbutlve Account of
Malgo County, Ohio
JohnS. Wolle, Admlnlolrator (11) 4,1TC
of the Estate of_Shelly M.
,I

loocheduledtobeglnat10:DO
a.m.
on Tueaday, December

--------

•LIGHT HAULING

•FIREWOOD
•

BILl SLACK
992-2269

USED RAILROAD nES
RENT·TO-GWN
IIIIIIIU. PIIGIUCTS

OVEII·IEPAII

faclory Authorired Repair
. lV ·-VCR • Slereo Box· C.D. Player
• Typewriter

Pick Up.

Phone·

lEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

• Radar

H2-533hr

Entert
Center

915-3561

An11 ,,.. PMt OHico
117 I. s.c.M St.

H.E.C.

Pomeroy

992-lS24
9!2711 mo.

Window•

Take tht pol11 oat of
polntl""
Let 111 llo It for yau.

FREE ESTIMATES

BACKHOE
WORK

YERY RWOIWLE
NlYE IEFEIEICES

(614)
696-1

1614)915-4110

538 Bryan Ploce
Middleport, Ohio
I

BOB JONES
EXCAYAnNG
DOZER and

LINDA'S
PAINTING
IHTEIIOI • mEIIOI

JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 or
742·2097

111141tfn

CAIPn CLIANEIS
and nLE FLOOI CAIE

.

•Raaoon1ble
fta1es
.
•Quality Work
•Froa Eatlmatea
•Carpet Haa Fait Dry
·
Time •
•High Glon on Tit.
Floor Finish .
·
MilE lEWIS, ow..-

10.23-91 1 mo. pd.

IISSILL I lUilE
CONSTIUCDON

YOUNG
CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Addition•
- Gutttf' wortc.
- Electrical 1nd Plumbing
- Concreb wortt

-,Roo11ng
- lnttrlor •

.

•New Homas

•Gai'CII'I
•c-plete

......a...

Et~~terior

Stop .&amp; Compare

P1intlng

!FREE ESTIMATES)

FrH Estl111atea

V. C. YOUNG Ill

iJIS-4473
667-6179 .

' 992-621 .

II. I, Rut.,nd, OH.

742· -.,._...

!======~ I1t~:;;;;::~~~~

3, 1991, 11 the olllceo oflhe
Commlaolon, 180 E11t Broad
Slroat, Columbuo, Ohio. All •
lntereotld po111M will be
given an opportunity IO"bo
helrd. Funher lnlormollon
may be obtalnld by oonllcl·
lng the Commlooton.
'THE PUBLIC UTIUTtES
CQMMISSIOH OF OHIO
By: Gary E. Vlgorllo,
Secrellry

(11) 4, 1TC

- ......... iuut

•VInyl Siding

•Roofing
•lnsulatfon

Public Notice

667 - Coolv~lt

BISSEll
SIDING CO.

PO.EIOY,

•Rtplacemtnt

992-5335 .. 915-3561
Arro11 From Post Office
OHO·

458- Lton

•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

9-6·1 mo.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Me~on C o.-. WV

•~LUMINUM SlplNG

_,_JU.IWIS__.
Iring H In Or W•

J&amp;L
INSULATION

lANGE!- 0.-11&amp;-$125 op
fiiiiiiS-$125 op · '
IIICIO OVENS-$79 up

Classified pal{es .corer 1
jollo~illg te/ep/1011~ eXC~UII!(eS .. .

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TIIM and
REMOVAL

•VINYL

mo.

10-31

DIYIS-$69

too

Artl Code 614

f.S1-.

NQ SUNDAY

Factory Guns Only

WASHIRS-$100 op

•• MPirlte ads

Meigs County

JOSUHD.JACIS

PH. 949-2101
1-Hw-1,.., 949-2160

tO DAY

.08/ doy

011111 County

We Guarantee Your Sadsfactl••

"Free Ealmetea"

Begins Sept. 15

USED

.42

$9.00

Repairs, Gutters
_Building and Remodelng

9 / 9 / 91 / 1 mo. pd .

.20

86.00

992·2653

For Old &amp; New Roofs, Shingles

FRIIISTIMAnS

949-2168

10/1/lfo

CAll JACKS ROOFING &amp;
CONSTRUCTION

NEW- REPAIR

PH . 61•4· 9: ·2·6691

Over 16 Words

Aale

15

Public Notice

BOARD OF EDUCATION

Your Vote WUI Be Appreciated

ATS INSULATOR®

FOR SALE
All Hard Wood
For Residential
and COmmercial
Dump Truck
Delivery or Pick·
Up Your Own
Also Splitter
Services Available

- ·-PON
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULI,NG :
Umestone. Dirt.
Gravel and Coal
Uconoad end Bonded

MEIGS LOCAL

TO MEIGS LOCAL SCHOOL ·
BOARD
NOVeSTB

••

8 A.M.

:~•·,..,~ 1.50 discount for edt pacid in edYence.
• Free ada - Glv ..way and Found ads und• 15 words will be

Your Vote and Influence Appreciated ·

MAYOR
IILLIIE OF POMEROY

992-6641 or

11/Q/91 1

RATES

Meigs. G111ia or Muon counllef mutt be pre·

ELEO

'

CEDAI
CONSTIUCnON

773-9560

• The Area's Number 1 ·Marketplace

•

'

The Bylen.also asked in the suit
for reinstatement and a public apol·
ogy from the church.
The Mennonites, a Protestant
sect which originated in Switzerland, base their faith on the Bible
and are known for the strict sim·
plicity of their life and wO!lihip . .
Bishop Andrew K. Lapp said
the church, which has about 18
members, vo!ed to expel the Byle!li
for violating biblicaf prohibitions

•Siding-.:... __ _

•Painting
FUUYINSURED
FREE ESTIMATES

MAIN ST., MASON, W.VA.
.
t-(304)

Classifie

Change!"

RANDY
.HUMPHREYS

PLEASE ELECT

...

REEDSVILLE • The Olive
Township Trus~ will meet Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at the Reedsville
FireHouse.

•Remodeling aile!
· Home Repalfl
•Roofing

BALLET, TAP &amp;

ELECT

'

SALEM CEN1ER ' The Salem
Cenrer Volunteer Fire Deparunertt
will bold an Election Day dinner on
Tuesday from 11 am. 10 7 p.m. at
the fuebouse.

PORTLAND , Revival services
at the Portland First Church of the
Nazarene will be held Tuesday
through Sunday at 7 p.m. nigh~Y:

HARTVll.LE, Ohio (AP) - A
Mennonite couple expelled from
their church for hiring an attorney
to sue over a zoning issue can be
readmitted if they repent and live
Christian lives, their church said.
Barbara and Walter Byler, who
said they have been shunned by
members of tbe King Mennonite
Church, have sued the church and
asked for $1 in punitive daniages
and $1 in compensatory damages.

It's time Far A

Names in the news

POMEROY •. The Women of
Grace Episcopal Church will have
an Election Day luncheon at the
parish house with soup, sandwiches
and pie.

Mennonite couple sues church, clergy

The Unive!liity of Vermont was
founded in 1791 by Ira Allen,
younger brother of the famed lead·
er of the Green Mountain Boys,
Ethan Allen: The Marquis de
Lafayette, on his lriumphal tour Of
America, laid the cornerstone and
dedicated the "Old Mill" in 1825.
First day cancellations may be
obtained in tbe usual two methods.

Candidate For
Southern local School Board

ROCK SPRINGS • The Rock
Springs United Methodist Church
wiU have an Elec lion Day dinner
on.Tuesday with vegetable soup,
bean soup, com bread, pies and
sandwiches. Bring containers for
take-out

CHESTER • Chester·United
Methodist Church will have an
Election Day dinner,on Tuesday
from II a.m. to I p.m. Plate lunches include ham loaf, scalloped .
potatoes, green beans, cole slaw or
applesauce, roll and drink. for
$3.50. There will also be soup,
sandwiches, pie or cake.

MIDDLEPORT • The meeting
of Pack 245, Den No. 4, will l;le
held Monday at 6:30 p.m. at the
United Pentecostal Church in Mid·
dleport.

Magazine industry honored by Postal Service
Mail to "United States Postal
Service, Stamped Envelope Agency, Williamsburg, PA 166930500."
If you would like to gel a f'l!li~
day of issue postmark, you may
purchase them at your local post
office, place in a larger enYel&lt;_&gt;pe,
and send to: Customer Supphed
Envelopes, Magazine Industry
Envelope, Postmaster, 1200
Goodleue Rd N, ·Naples, FL
33940-9991. For USPS affixing,
send your pressure-sensitive, self·
addressed envelopes and 34 cepts
per envelope in checli: or money
order 10: Magazine Industry Envelope, Posunaster , 1200 Goodlette
Rd N, Naples, FL. 33940-9992. All
first day requests must be post·
marked by Nov. 6.

..

POMEROY • The Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
will hol'il a Longeberger Basket
Party on Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
parish house of Grace Episcopal
Church.

TUPPERS PLAINS • The
Orange Township Trustee will
meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the
home of SuSan Pullins. ·

News briefs

. The Postal Service's tribute to .
anniversaries of leading universi·
ties continues with a 19-cent His·
toric Preservation Series postal
card that hails the University of
Vermont's bicentennial.
Feawred on the card is the ''Old
Mill,'' a national historic landmark
on the university's campus. The
card is the 19th in the Historic
Preservation Series.

hold its annual oyster supper
on Tuesday during the regular
meeting. Dinner is at 7 p.m. and
meeting at 8 p.m. All members are
lirged 10 al!end. ·

LETART • The Letart Township
Trustees will meet Monday at 6
p.m. at the office building. ·

1

tune.

Wigal at 667-6657 or Ed Rood at• Jan and Kath&gt;.' will perform. Jim .
667-6348.
·
Hcckalliron will be the evangelist
·
·
MIDDLEPORT • Tbe MiddleJ!~CUSE • The Ptesbyterian
pon _Garilen Cfiili wlH meet with · Church ·in Syracuse will have a
tbe Middleport Amateur Garden sOU)! supper on Election Day
Glubon·Mooday.at7:30 p.m. at the - begmning at Ih.m.'Bring contain'
Presbyterian Church in Middleport. ers for carry-out. vegetable beef
Membe~ bring tine dozen .~~s souP., sandwiches and ~ie will be
and rectpe. Mrs. Janet Bolin w11l available.
present a demonStration of (:hrist·
•
RACINE • The Racine United
mas arrangements.
Methodist C.hurch will b_ave 8!1
POMEROY • The fifth and last Election Day dinner on Tuesday
book in the "Always A River" beginning at II a.m. through the
series at the Meigs County Public evening _m~. Soup, s&amp;~~dwiches
Library will \Je bel_(! Monday at 7· . alit! desserts will be available.
p.m. Dr. Davtd Moult!, Ohm Um·
versity, will be the_narrator for
RACINE • 1be Soutliem Jurtior
- "Shantyboat" by Har)an Hubbard.
High Boosters will -meet Tue:sda,y· l
at 7 p.m. at the jun_!9r h.igh,
PAGE VILLE. The Cohimbia interested parties are invited _to
Township Trustees will meet Mon- attend. ·day at 7:30p.m·. at die rue station.
FOREST RUN • The Forest
TUESDAY
Run United Methodist Chi!I'Ch will
• The Amen.can have an Election
dinner on

meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the
Kyger Creek Clubhouse. M!li. Ada
·Hobbs, Dayton, will be the special
speaker.

'Elvis Presley vehicle at center·
iffi
d d.z.vorce case
0 our-year-o

By SYD KRONISH
. For AP Special Features
A unique 29-cent stamped enve- .
lope is being released by the U.S.
Postal Service to honor the 250th
anniversary of the magazine pub·
lishing industry in the U.S.
· Tbe new envelope is made froll)
50 percent recovered fiber, 10 percent of which is post-consumer. It
is similar to the hologram envelope
' ..
where the stamp design is patched
. to the inside of the upper ·nght cor·
ner of the envelope, appearing
through a die-cut "window'.' in
two lines of black type and cen ·
te.red above a stylized globe are the
words "American Magazines."
The dares "1741" and "1991"
· are seen just above the globe on the
left and right respecliYely. A rect·
angular rule encloses the globe and
the type.-Printed in black on 'the
envelope and below the rectangle
are the words "Creating a Brighter
World." To the left, in red, is
"USA 29."
The · magazine industry's
anniversary date in 1741 recalls the
·ume when Andrew Bradforopli&amp;·
'HOW DO I LOOK NOW?' ·Rev. Robert Sl:buller pronounces
lished the "Americah Magazme"
biiiiiCif nt 11 1 Rddle II be returned to tile pulpk of tbe Crystal · in Philadelphia. Todsy the publish·
Cathedral in Garden Grove, Calif., Sunday. The evangelist suf·
ers claim there are 11,000 maga·
fered a cerebral hemorrhage two months ago in tbe Netherlands.
zines, with some 500 new ones
(AP)
appearing each year.
The stamped envelopes may be
ordered with a pre-printed return
address (up to four printed lines
containing a maximum of 47 charNEW YORK (AP) - Supreme Hill's allegations were "obviously acters each) in boxes of 50 (Item
Coun Justice Clarence Thomas' poliiical" because of their timing. 2186 at $17.40 per box) and boxes
wife says Anita Hill accused him of Hill claimed during the conf'uma- of 501l'(Item 2175 at$160 per box).
sexual harassment because she was tion process that Thomas harassed
Your orders with return address
in love with him and "never got her when she worked for him in the information must include your payearly 1980s.
• • whnl she wanted."
.
ment in check or money order
Virginia Thomas also said faith
"In my heart, I always believed made payable to "Posunaster," or
helped her and Thomas through Ms she was probably someone in love with your Visa or Master C.ard,
stormy Senate conf'umation hear· with my husband and never got including your cart! number, expiwhat she wanted," Mrs. Thomas ration date and authorized signaings.
"It was spiritual warfare," Mrs. said.
Thomas said in People magazine.
"Good venus evil .... We shut the
CULVER CITY, Calif. (AP) kitchen blinds and turned on Chris· Tbe director of Arnold Scharzeneg• " tian praise music to survive the ger's "Terminator" movies scoffs
worst days."
at sug~estions filmmakers are
Mrs. Thomas said she believes rcsponstble for violence in society.

'

Business Services

'

'

r
.

A series of chemical rea1:1tons
developed by a University of
Michigan researcher may be the
thoughts and the inabmty to fonn
beginning of a new chemical indusclose relationships. The rust thing
z·
try that runs on sand, instead of
mytherapistsaidwas,"It'snobody's
petroleum
products.
fauiL It's up to you to fiX it." I know
I
The
scientist
is Professor
now I must lake charge of my life
Richard
M.
Laine,
who
descrilles
and I am doing just th~
.
AKRON
(AP) ,- A 4-year-old company. It isn't known whether we've gotten ·to know each other. I
the new chemical process as one
New Orleans: Speaking about dtvorce case that has reached the
that transforms common beach
the
bus
will
remain
at
Grace
land,
.
have
never
discussed
any
case
with
suffering is not about blaming our Ohio Supreme Coun may decide
sand into a series of silicon-based
Madden
said.
him."
parents. It's about self-knowledge, the fate of the tour bus sold by
chemicals, polymers, glasses and
compassion and forgiveness. Don't Elvis Presley four days before he · James Sturm has been represent- · . A message asking for funher ceramics with several potential
ed in the divorce case by James comment was left at Wilsman's law
deny us this. It's the first step in died in 1977.
Wilsman, a Cleveland attorney who office Sunday night. There isn't a · applications.
healing and overcoming YC$1'5 ·of
The Akron Beacon Journal also had done work for the couple's home phone listing under his name
"The chemistry is novel,'·
abuse, depression and anxiety.
reported Sunday that the case . jointly owned company.
Laine
explains in the Oct. 17 issue
in the Cleveland area.
Burlington, Vt.: When there is involves Mary Sturm, 63, of
of
Nature,
"but the reactions are
An Ashtabula County Common
Wright couldn't be reached for
a lot of screaming, hitting and Ashtabula, and her common-law Pl~as
simple
and
require.only inexpen·
Court judge disqualified f\lflher comment. _There wasn't an
fighting in a family, you can be sure husband of 18 years, lames Sturm. Wilsman from the divorce proceed- answer Sunday mght at the court sive starting materials.
that one or both parents grew up in
One of the couple's key assets is ings, citing a conflict of interest offices in Columbus.
"The basic reaction involves
families like that. My childhood was Presley's first tour bus, which is because of his earlier representaethylene
glycol, an alkali base and
The trio demanded that the
hell because of it. I decided 10 break worth $600,000 and generates uon of both Sturm~. An appeals Bylers sell their property to another Si02. It's analogous to dissolving
dial chain and thanks to six years about $150,000 a year in income at coun upheld the rulmg, but James Mennonite who runs a comoeting beach sand with antifreeze."
According to Laine, his research
of counseling, I did. My kids are Presley's Grace land Mansion in Stunn took the case to the Ohio flea market, the suit said.
Memphis,
Tenn.
could
open a new field of silicon
terrific and their kids are going 10
Supreme Coun, which ruled 5-2 in ·
When they refused to sell, they
The
couple
bought
the
bus
for
chemistry
producing alternatives to
be terrific, too.
July that W~sman c9ultl represent were put out of the King church
$5Q,OOO
on
Aug.
12,
1977,
and
many
petrochemical.based
prod·
Drugs are everywhere. They're.
him m the d1vorce case.
and blacklisted in other churches,
ucts.
easy 10 get, easy to use and even planned ·to use it for vacations .
Justice Craig Wright wrote the the suit said.
Laine's silicon chemistry
Presley
died
four
days
later
and
the
easier to get hooked on. If you have
majority opinion 'in favor of WilsLapp denied demanding that the
research
Sturms
turned
the
coach
into
a
began .four years ago
man. Six months earlier, Wright Bylers sell the land to Howard
questions about drugs. you need Ann
tourist
attraction
across
from
while
he
was
on the faculty at the
and Wilsman went together on a Miller, who owns the.HartviUe Flea
Landers' booklet, "The Lowdown on Graceland.
University
of
Washington, wbich
Virginia vacation and a Florida golf Market adjacent to the Byler Flea
Dope." Send a self-addressed. long.
has
filed
for
a
patent on the proThe newspaper said records outing,lhe paper reported.
Market.
business-size envelope and a c'heck show lames Sturm transferred
cess.
·
"I'm absolutely confident she
Lapp said the Bylers were not
or money order for $3.65 (this ownership of the bus to himself as
(Mary
Sturm)
got
a
fair
shake,"
officially
shunned and that church
includes postage and handling) 10: a gift on March 21, 1990. Sturm's
·
Wright
told
the
newspaper.
·
members
can speak to them but
Lawdown, c/o Ann Landers, P.O. attorney has direc!ed him to avoid
Wilsman
defended
his
relationthey
must
sit at a separare table at
Box 11562, Chicago. Ill. 60611· public comment on the issue, the
Inventor Charles F. Keuering,
ship
with
Wright.
church
gatherings.
0562. (In Canada, send $4.45)
paper said.
perfected the electric self-starter for
"Craig
Wright
and
I
share
a
Barbara
Byler
said
no
area
MenLast week, coun receiver Daniel love of golf," he said. "I have nonite church would accept them, automobiles in 1911 after previous· Madden said be had the title for the always paid my OWl! way and so so they drive 100 miles llf worship ly inventing lighting and ignition
bus convened back io the "Sturm bas he. It is pure coincidence that in Cocheron, Pa. ·
systems for them.

'

'

'

Ohio

l!est·selling country-western
singles of the week:

Ann
Landers·

~~n~~e~~s~i:~:ict~~

••'

' '•

Dear Ann Landers: When I was
I 3, I wrore 10 you about a crush
that I had on a kid at school and
now I am writing again. I'm 34. This
time, it's in response 10 "Baffled
ANN LANDERS
Parents" who feel unappreciated by
"IMl, Lot AQ'eiM
their children. That Ieifer hit me
hard.
.
=.n::=~~·~
Too many children fail 10 appre·
cia!e their parents while they are still change you!lielf." Spending a whole
living. I'm thankful it's not 100 la!e life being miserable and putting
for-me. I kriow now how hard Mom the blame on your parents is a
and Dad worted 10 give us kids the cop-ou~
: . : lhings theyne-flad. They weren't
Beverly Hills: My college sophoperfect, but then, Reither were we. more son came home for the
• • I'm thankful I still _have, lliUIBrents weekend and out of the blue he listed
• • so I can uy 10 repay lliern for the all ·the things 1 had done to make
sacrifices they made when I W8:i him an emotional cripple. He said .
growing up. •• BOSTON
his therapist opened his eyes. Ann,
. DEAR I!O~';tl;_'!Jumks illr your I'm such a wreck from thlll kid's'
resPD~se- Thai 'fi,i\l:r ~ly _hit a attack on me thaH'm thinking· of
hot butiOO. Surprisingly,llie mail ran going into therapy myself. The Bible
20-to-\ . against your point of view. said il best, "Sharper than a serpent's
Read on:
th "
FIRE AT WILL • Volunteers In soldier uni· The leue r from 100Dallas:
...
.~orms
re~nact
·~e
Fr0 m PhoenlX:
1 was a co-dependent
~
"' "St. Clair's Defeat" batUe or
·: · "Baffled' Parents" questioning the from a dysfunctional home and this
Nov. 4, 1791. Nearly 300 volunteers in soldier
"
t u d" f ad 1 h"ldr 10
unifo_rms and Indian dress participated in tbe
_ _ _ _.-6cj~urrjj;efnThi~enlm~
o~foU~
t ec~~®tlen~:~~:~ "psychobabble.:.Six..year~[ __.':"..._.,._....~~=~..:::~===::::..:=..-=:.
that went wrong in their lives
got to me. I say it's about time
parents were made accountable for
the way they raise their children. I
lived in a home where parents
screamed obscenities and there was
alcohol-fueled violence and broken
furniture. Once I said to my mother,
"This family isn't normal." She
replied, "How do you know? Have
yo·u ever lived with any other
family?" II took years of therapy 10
surughten out my life.
Chicago: lust because parents put
their kids through college doesn't
mean tbey 81'!' wonderful. I was
always told (by my parents) how
lucky I was because Dad made good
money and we had everything we
wanted. In my early 20s, I sought
help for chronic depression and
learned that as far back as my
presChool days, my father was an
alcoholic and sadistic in·the bargain.
He. would pull my hair, twist my
anns (all in fun, be claimed) and
once when be was "trying 10 reach
me to swim" he held my head under
water until I nearly droWned. Let
your readers know that cbild abuse
among the wealthy is just as painful
as it is among the poor.
Albuquerque: To those adults
who are now blaming their parents
for the way they turned out, I say,
"If you don't lilce what you ;u-e,

.

...

.

..

SHOOJ
•·

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT

IACINE

FilE DEPt'.

lashan Building

1•00
p•M.
•
.

SUNDAYS

Starting Slpt. 22
12 Gauge FCKtory
Choke

-'BISSELL \
.BUILDERS .
l

CUSTOM IW.T
HOMES I GARAGES
·~ 1-blt Prices"

PIL 949·2101
or ln. 949·2160
Dly or Nlght- ·NO SUNDAY CAllS

Announcements

3 .Announcement•
"Froo Slntto 8UI1011n, Porlonot
Ado. WJIIo To J.S.O. P.O. Box
184, -Ilion, Ohio 4 -.
Abloluloly no hunllnt or
the HoRikJ R""
Mil
on Swth• Rd.,
Honglng RoCk Rd. 1.1 Codor Hoi'
tow Rd. W. Will pr I CIAI
vlolaton. 0. I Iotty

EVRY
NIGHI
SAT.
6:30 p.M.
Startil11a Sept. 21

._=on

11 Galp Chilo
Strictly

R.,_ll.

TAl-COUNTY ·
RECYCUNG

s.p Thtnk You

UMIIoohod?
Slng_loo All -

lll!oMro

Area

Ulootvloa
Awolt You. llGn-111. W",.o:
AM

SlngiH, P.O. loa 1114S, Qol.
Hpollo, Ohio 411:11. .

4

Giveaway

25J.:,:li~.
Umlt)
For
pry AtumlnUIII

10 Monlh Old PuDOlll·=~

1WMIIOnly
Nov.1 thru 7
Trt-caunty IIi opon
t 1111-t pm 7 dlyu w.l!
buying •• non ....,.
miiiiL loalllld 011
Pomeroy bpauat

2 lloiO Doao. """ - ShopherdlllioO
• .-..
ms.

c....

JoL oi .R1L?l10

Ph. ltZ.5114

Port 81ock Lob, Aild
Mix, 304-171-1211.

a

.

'

�-

.

____....

--:-.

'.

Page-:1 0-The Dally Sl!ntlnel
4'
Purebrtd

Glrm1n

44

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Shtphtrd

Apanment ·
· for Rent

KIT 'N' Cl\lLYLE® by Larry Wrii!.JI

Pup, 10 Wilko Old, 81H4H32i.

6

The

1991

SNAFI.J® by Bruce Beattie

Giveaway

71
.

Lost &amp; Found

.

Tabby Fomalo Col, 101211 By
PPJH, 304-675-7121. .
.
Loot· Rod WIIHo toco, Horfotd
cow, 114-388-85i2
LOST: 2 mo. old calico khton.
Loot· Cimp Conley oroo. Chlld'o
pot. 904-875-11110.
Loot: Mod. olzo whlto, oho~·
halrod dog. MUI Cr11k paot 11011
......... 81W45-1101!1.
Loot: whoOI covor on Fou~h

=

oon,&lt;)No.1~

Found: Smtll Ortnge And Whitt

-- '

Television
Viewing

AutOI fOr 5811

... Fanlll-ng Cit Loadod,
tolopo, tiiOO or ollor• .rack·

'

@ooGIR........,.:)

\{ .

Topaz, IOW'II-

AUTOII .....D

lAD CREDIT

.

·•

,,

ottADDnwll. ...
- DoWn· ...,
0~-­
.....11. 1·
~.:MHrt.

'

·•

'

llon:li'f

MQN., NOV. 4

•

O•

'

·~ EYEN.ING

_,..

ltltlt ·· ' 2 ton truck, ..
ak:~..,. runogood,
I

.

,

Yard Sale

To srz• 3, Women• Coat• Ap-

pllanooo. Homo lnlorlor, Muoh
Moral
81 Paid In

2:00 p.m.
11 run.
........ad2:00to p.m.
odhlon • 2:00
Moving - Salt:

plll nCtl, Air Condt,

Hiding

Hou~enold

Goode, •14-441·1'133.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
725 Chtstnut St., Mlddl•port,
Tu11. 1115 v-4pm. Loto of baby
clothn,. c•r Mit, d~ear.tlva
lttml

All Yard SAIM Mull It Paid In
AdYince. Dudllrw: 1:00pm th•
day before th• ad '- to run,

Sunday odltlon. 1:00pm Friday,
Monday odltlon !O:OOa.m.

saturdl.,.

Now 1·5, g..spm, 2· mil• out
LMdlna Cr..k Ad ott Rl7, trifler
on right, Homt lnttrlor, tum,
tiC. COII·Woocf bumlng llov•

$150

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

"The anlnials you're supposed fo see here
were all just captured for 'J(U: hQme!QW11_Z90·" ~

r1-ll:;i~~~d~--r-========i
11 Help Wanted
':'".'-:-:~=~~=~--= 18 ·· Wanted to Do ·

~

~tanding

Fann halp wantod (mllklr), 1141'12-2822
FEDERAL GCWERNIIENT IS
HIRIN~·.J'.:oooo • $72BOOO!Yr. 1·
IGU
Ert. Q 811 For
lmmodloto Ro-11.
-;:';;ci-;;:0:;:::'-i=:-=::::-::=:::CIALUPOUS JOBS Hoi Ad_.
tllod In - - · All Typoo,
I , _, 24 HOur Roconllng. 1·
I00-288-224t.
GIM lluot h11Yam Or Otdor,
$7 Por Hour Pluo Tlpo, lnlorvlow
:104-871-1781 B-n 3 And 7.
lndlvlduall Or Couptoo Eager To
Work Whh Chlldron And
Adol-nca Aro Nlldod For Intonu Spoc:lallzod FOliar Peroni·
lng. lluot Han A Commlttmont
To Uu With Emotional
Probl-. Pro'-lanal Parwnt
T::~~~~ Provldoct. 1'11111 Coli
I
2:81 Far Information
About EllglbiiiiY Roqulromonto,
'Aok For Homo BU..

pint, Tlm B11rh• 61ol..eii2·1BBO

1h1r8pm.

W1ntad to buy, Standing tlmblr,
Bob Wllllamo I Sono '"""2·
5449.
Wonlad To Buy: Chlldrono VCR
Tapoo, 614·3711-2284. ·
Wantod To Buy: JINik Autoo
With Or WlthoUI lloloro. Call
, Larry Uvlly. 814-388-1303.
Wlnlod ~ To Buy: Juntc Autoo,
· Scrap llolal 11~1-0013, Altar
2p.m.
Top Prlcao Pold: All Old U.S.
Cotno, Gold Ring'!. Sllvor Colna,
Gold Cotno. II.T.:o. Coin Shop,
111 - . . Avonuo, Cllltl!loi)L

and--

I·
11004711-2000 Ext. 2124.
• $3110/DAY PROCESSINO
I'HOIIE ORDERSI PEOPLE
'
CALLYOU.
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.
t-eoo-:115-0242.

2--

AVON • AU 1~. Coli Marilyn
woa-304-112-..,.S.
·

....... Pooltlano,
Dp....,., ~. Mnd
lnilulrM to Royal Oak Qlflt, ~ Fllln a• Rd
- : :..or 0111 tor tntorvlow 114112
•
A Dolly 11111rV Of UOO For
Buylnt llorcliandtM. Buyor
lllidOil.
Erportonoo ..._
lilY· 1.~2. bUIU.
AUIITRAUA WANTS YOU .
ExPly,
llanolh'!,
Tr.._.lllon,
407412...1111.
Ert. 171. to.m.·1Dp.m. T;il
. Rolundo&lt;l.

No

' AVON I AU AlOia I Shi~~

Spoaro, :104-875-1421.
'llbytlttor Hoodld In lly I
3DopAWHIL- .
.R-mo To: CLA OM, CIIUipotll
-0olly~,l21 Th)rd Annul,
Qalllpotll, ""4IIUI.

'Q

Renta ls

Barpln Salt: Nice troot frio
rw~lglrltoro • lido lry aida &amp; top
lrlliort .... nso. cut to fiiO.
woro $175 out to $128.
Dryora 171, WUho!lf $71,
Rotrlgorotoro ~ frio 1171
$121. All ootd with
guaront11. Skoggo Apptlanclo.

114-441-13111.

and

f::.::":!po~frT..!;

445-11144.

Couch, matching chair, woodorr
kMchln tabla, a- tCIIIDod
dlntncr toblo, 4 chllro, dootc: tMo
248-112U, or 304-871-12t4 altar
Nov. I .
County Apptllnoo ~-,.c: . Good
ulld lppllilnooa, T.V.IIIo. ODin

8 o.m. to I p.rri. lllon.-Sat. tM448-1811, 827 3rd. Avo. Ga~
llpolll, OH

Gu otcivoi71.114488-1U4.
GOOD USED APPI.IAHCES

Waahtrt, drylf"',
...... Skitlltfl

904-81..71188.
2 bedroom trailer, eewer a water
tumlaMd. R•f~r~ncu, Aa.o
trollor opact. North Rt. 1 Loculi

Good ulld oota bod $100;
Smoll gao haotor, $35. ~6181or-5.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE-·
Road on right, Pl. Ph. :104-875· Complllo homo,-' tum~l~.
1078
Houro: -~ 1-5. I
3 mllol out Bulevlllo Rd.
2 bedraom mobile home, pal1. 0322,
FrH
Dolvary.
tumllhod · In llld•opM, 81~
112-8031
llovl~~g Sail: lluot 1111 IVOrytho
lngl
T.V., piCnic
2br . . _ - F o r Ront, SMo tabla,5 droww ohool.
blko, plano. 1144414722,

.,,rcllo

•-nu.

441"'121.

PICKENS FURNITURE
-lilted
HouHhotd tumlthlng. 112 ml:
Jorrlcho Rd. Pl. Pluunt, WV,

-..- .

In c-rnunky Organlutlonti.
Sand AIIUmo To SarMfnlllcFar·
lind, W-Ind Canllr, :10811
VInton Plko, Golllpotll, OH
481131. EOE.
Routo Sololm4n Wlntad: IIUII
Hlvo Alrllhy To a - II A.

Portobto opl. olu • • - I
dryor, $250. 114....1-3231.
RENT20WN

.12 A Lot. I Roomo"1·112 Batht,

Largo Khc'-. DH, LRI.~.br,
C.rpoL lit llt.M\ Galhvpll,

8-l!llll.
10 yr. old, 3 bedroom homt In

Brltlbuly, z ot""'fl building
wHh oloctrlo, llghlool Nlltllban
couri, dog ~";a awlmmlng
pool, $45,000, I

-3537

ABSOUITELY

MUST SELLII

Comor
Choohlro,
RoduoodUlTo Inloll:
2 sioryOlllo.
3br
Exoollonl ConctMion. Flnanotna
AvalllbiL 1104-nHIH, IC)4:

11:1:!·7$70, 114-311'0141.

· drl~

pluo collar -

lad woll, dug will, 2 out·

r:~=-~tlr."t

bbtl R
7 mllollrottl boWf.
lng IIIIV, Rt. l2, 104-'IM-1210.

3Drtvo,
Bodroom
- ·L.lvlng
Ill K'-"
Goltlpolle.
Room,
Dining
-VIn
Kllchlil,
Bath,
Truck. CloOd AIIN. . T F-WorklroAnd~. =..~ z""/;ar a'.~'"\,~,~
Abllhy ToW And Dotlvor Dolry WalkinG Dtotonca ot~Tha Pool,
Prodricll And Molnlaln fOrotlar Golf c:c.- And Clinic. Gal·
- R o o - I n - llpotll Chy Sc- Dlttriol. 114With . Carrr!lonY p,_. 245-1152.
dUN. CDI. Llconio Roqulrod.
Hind Holp Computor Ex· 3br, LA, Dining Rcom, Equlpoeil
portonoo A Olralltlod Ap- Khchtn, Bath, Oarag:.CA, C..
ptlcanlo lluot Aptlly In P1110n tiNt, Low $201. 81W1H314.
At 2400 :loltoooon Avonuo, Will
Brick In nlol location oi
Galli.... Forry, Wilt Torry
~~' rr...=a~ Subdlvhlon,
3 bodroomo, 2
AJI, And I P.ll.
batho, DR, K, LR, lorga tomlty
Wlnlod mallvotod lllolpo-, room. Couri..y to Brokara.
$21,0MU,OOO lit y..r, trolnl/llr Shown by oppotntmont only.
prarldod, Ol'porta304-875-202t.
lind to !)otty-Sanllnol Duplex l)ou• Dlut extra lot.
PO ... 1211 P-roy, OH
Both ildio roady to ront. Buy
41lll8
and lot pay tar kutt. 4th St.,
Syroouoo, 814-8112-5324
12
Situation
GOVERNMENT HOliES From $1
Wanted
CU Ropalr). Doll:.':: Tu
flropertr· Repae~~
. Your
Clrt. Aroa Ct 1105-.-. Ext. QH.
lOlBI For Currant Ropo Llll.
OWN YOUR OWN NICE NOliE
FOR $1,400 Full Prioo. Go....,.

..

pro..,..,,

m•n~~:r;:• Haw I)Quklltlng.
t-10
500 Ert. HCIIH For
lmmacUIIt Anllelnct.
HouNiof uSI Of rent, S BR, full

~.

AoiilllnOoo,
Upper At"' Ra. Boaldo scono
Croot llolll. Col1114-445-73118 • •

Homes tor Sale

3-

Flrowood, Will Dillvor,

11202.

11~211-

114-441-31S1

Yl'roFumlluro
Sola &amp; Chair, $IUD Wllk;
Rocllnor, 15.41 W11k, SwlvoC
Rockar, 13.13 Woolr.Bunk Bod
Comploto 111.41 W11k, 4 Drawor
Chlit, $3.21 Wllk; Pootor Bodroom Buho, 1 pc., $11.$7 W11k,
lnol.- lllddlng.Counlry Plno
Dlnatto With BanCh l 4 Chatro,
$10.111 W111LOPEH: - y
Thru Saturday, to.m. to ....m.1
Sunday 12 N_, Till lp.m. •
111111 Off Routo 1 On Routo 141,
lnContonary.
..... coal-wood bu-, I largo

44

Apartment
. lor Rent
1l 2
In Mlddlopori,
UtiiMII Fum, dip roq, na pota,

"*"' .,.

In Rio
1.~~~~~~ll2~·~22l;l~.~~~~:

tbr Untum- Apaotmont On
lot Avonuo, All Utllhlol lnotudod, 0opoo1t And Ro""onco
Roqulrild, 11H4f1.43111, 304- atno hoYH 1peaker8. and a
1187 Honda EIHo, 8M-JII2:2433
175-2330.
2 bedroom aporimonl, HUD ••· Sat: Twin Bodo, Good COnctl·
caplad, ' rotor1n011 requlract. tlon, 114...,...1110.
304.e71-2122.
SWAIN
2-BR In lllddloporl. No poto. AUCTION l FURNITURE. 12
Pay own ullhlol, 1200 par mo. Olivo St., Golllpotlo. Now l UMd
_
........ requlrod. tumltwe, hilt.,., Wllttm &amp;
IM-112-2381 dayo. ·
Work booto. 114-441-StSI.
2br
Furnllhod,
$23tl{mo. Uoad Rolrlaorator, Slrlo By Sldo,
locurfty llopooll Of c:-, lfol Point; :10 Inch
1200. 4N $ooond Avonuo. 114- Etricirto Ro~ ~. Hot·
UUZ31,114-44WMI.
ootnt; WUhar And ~ Drywf:j' Whho
GE; lllcrowovt Whl~
. All In
3 Bad,_, Story And liZ Unfup~ Good Condklonl114 ~22.
nlahod Ho- 507 • Sacond
VI'RA FURNITURE
St'""IJap~:
Hlv"fwF.SIMo,
114-441-31S1
Ph•
,»4..
I.
UVING ROOM: Sola l ~Choir,
3 Room Aparimont, $1H.OOL Aootlno~. $141.00;
NtH Milo Elll Of POrter, On SWivet "ookor, IH.uv; eon.. a
Rt.1514, msm.. 114-3111-1113.
End Tablol, $a.OO Sot.OININQ
ROOM: Table With 4 l'lddod
BEAUT1PUL APAiiniENTS AT Chalra,
$141.00; Country Plno
BUDGET PRICES AT-JACKSON Dfnltto ·wtth linch And s
ESTATE!,, S38 Jackoon Plko
llti.OO; llllciii~PD 2
11om $1....,., Wolk to thoo l Chilli,
Door Hhch $341· Or - .oo
movlll. Cllll11141 1501. EOH. Sat; Dok Toblo b."i2 With I
1
Ban
Cholro,
Cloan 2 bedroom ground floor Bow
1821.00.
BEDROOM:
Pooler
Bad·
1111, .......... cllpoall~na polll, ""'m BuHo (I pc.), 1341.00;
4
:10Ul'Wtl2 lflor 1:00PM.
Drawor Choot, $44.0; Bunk
EtlctoncJ Apaollflll\l,~alll, Bod, $22tLCompllto Ful Min·
Oulol, Kopl, Nl
Fur- !"It $105.uu Sal; 7 pc. Co!ar
nlilllld, Clfpllul, All
IliUM 1010room SUho, ..88.00.0P£N:
Fl!'!lllhod, Air Corlllltor~ng. llonct.oy Tlrru Saturday, la.m. Ia
111111 2102.
lp.m., Sunday 12 Till
5p.m., 4 111111 ott Routt 7 Of1
For - · Now 1 bdrm opl, tum l!outo 141 In Canlonary.
or unlurn, In 11-port, ~14112-8221cr 112-1304.

AI....._,

61

Fann 'Equipment
Ill IIF Trac:tor t4,350; II IIF
12,115; 10 IIF With luoh Hoa,
Orodar Bloda, And PloW, $3,4~.
Dwntr Will Flnanco. ~~
1122.

·--·

..... ,......... ·~3.

Pluta'o Doy l:io Cooter.
llato, lllordabta, oi!Cidoont. 11-F
1 Lm. • l:tO p.m. Aoll ~10.
lltlort, lftor lchoof.' Drop.lne

wr'nma. 114 111 1114. Nlw 1ft..
flni'TodcltrC.., 1111111227.

-·

-Ro...,_ Duty
NurolnalRH
Avalloblo,
~-

I

Till ......
Ill.

...

--

.,
-. . . . .. Uno,--·

dryoro, uch $100 ond up. Wo Attention: Dolrvonln And Fo,.
Hrvlca an mak11. Tho W•- • . """· &amp;-Ill• -lilt InDryor 8h-. 814o441141M4.
-nc• For Tho Soli Eml&gt;lopdWVA Anrl Ohio, 114 441'1U.SE;
Shopomkh IIW l mlkll ... Anyln
•nt!lr
I driltpr- I tulmlng Balry plga tor uto, IM-IMWOIT.
lathl caii304·1'1W7W
Snapper Riding Lawn lllowK 11 BIM Cronk, 0'111. Largo onlrrilr
Horoo.-..1 Yoaro Old, i410.
:104-875-7m.
Cd 114-441o•n3.
CUllom U-ook
,- •
Sola hli tflll Oldornobtll, Haul To Hlltobon&gt; noodo wwa, $100. 304-1124W. Gilly. Chuck Wlttlamo Trlplo
CrHk Trucking. 114-245-10111.
Burptuo Army Cimoutllugo
clothing, lnaulotod dacRHI Young - · -HOII.
ClmorlCia'!tfO COVIrllll 130,
toathar us Combo!. Boota. c.r- 64
Hay &amp; Grain
ha~ &lt;lolhl~ old timor knlta
daaloo. Sam ••omor.'lllo'l ~~ Groin Storogo Aval- .I I; Por
dyvlllo, WV booldo Pool urrlco, luahll liMp~ Fomw, At. 38,
Rt. 21 N. Fri, Sat, Sun, . - . .:oo VIrginia, 304-1137-aotl.
PM (~ondod houri during
hunting
3J14.273.1855. . Hoy: Round • s-1 batoo.
Sahrrdly only pickup. 904-871UHd lllolllto oqulprnont, ln- 1132.
tiUdlng oyotom whh
d - . I'ICIIvor, dllh •
Transportot ton
- · · 114-112-8173 .
WATER WELLS DRI~LI!D: Foot,
Prompl S.rvlct, Wattr Guaran·
1Hd. ~l'31l
71 Autos for Sale
Whlllchalr, Walkor, Clut-, 2
ea... Yorv Good Cordllon,
nso.J!~ 3222 Ell. 14, '"'"

-'ally·

=Cin

--&gt;-

m ......

WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
Ron Allloon 1210 Sacond
·Avenue, Galllpotlo, Cillo, 814441-4338.

55

Building
Supplies

Block, brick, ...... wln-~.!fnloto, .... ctau&lt;~~i wtn,..., rrro Granrlo, OH Call 114-

.24Ut21.

56

'

Petlfor Sale

=..:.ndAitsu=...,
~
Doa~r. -~

lin Pol Food
114-441.(1231, .......
352.0231. .

w.... Coli

79

I
•

$1100 OBO, no rutt. 114o1411'

2813

..

-Yio

-

.

ri

hlah:;:
·

GUITAR WIOHIII Prlvoto fn. 11117 a.vy Novo:
•-ructlon.lhl ~ -'Hntnao. ~Ooodlo
· - · ~ l'ot' lion tilt'.
l'ot' .....
... llllilructor .rorr •ton
~ Alii
WIUIIIII! M Criminal Rm.. Jar Paul. ~
114-44~-~IU lpootal ......
dlllounta on gular .._. 1111-110 Trona ~. T~llg Doltato Farm Homo, ,,.. Mrioaln
a111o, NO. - . , btuo
Ori Your Ul. I lodroomo, a "iiiii;;idii-.;iiftiij'Jiiit;ae; w-r fliNt on hood, hiiiii,
htha, 138,1111 And Up. f1Wtlfl. ~ IIMICIIor I 01-0, · · - One
I J Mil
Fumllhed 1311.
Y - ...._, II!'Jif tum
~In Point,.._,
-~~·•,• .:11111!!;1RIItlt
.~_ ~~ 1lon, Camoro,
~~ lllnl
-Air,
.
-!I!'J..1m~
l.ol!!od. Hctll,
&amp;ulo,
~c:=..
Nicol
Ptlt. Commadaro t2f CooriJitolli
Compoaor
Inch
Cnlfll, '1111, AIM'II
PIGnllr Color T.V.
,M,23t 111111, 1 o:JI"';.f'o~.~
-~Apori_., IM-441:33H.
17&amp;-:1112.
114o+tM711,
""·

140HINIII. ....

Avon For Solo, Hugo ltlattlool
OINiw,OidDuaro-AndCcrllocloro lllrno. tltartor 1VIIIt 10
Lm. To rrm. And Dlllv Thlre
Allor Unl AU - . ll4o4tlfl.
OUI.

.

~-

S-.l':i,g'

Electrical &amp;
Retrlgaratlon

1

=.,':'soo: ..=.:-

-

,. . ,

C.-.

B7

U

pholatlry
::-::=::""':~~~-..,..,
1 llploa!M~ aorvto~·
lng
111-y2f yopro. Tho
boll In tumltu.. ......artng,
CoN 30W11o4154 tor fr11 •
timet•

,

......

v.

llll 1D

W...atns

.

a Naah11111 Now Star

D SUhl Timber
Champlonahlp from
Hayward, Wit. (T)
Ill Lany King Uvel
llll Fllhlr Dowling IIJite~..
Cowling aNks to provo 1h8
lnnocenos ot a man who may
bi'hla son. (R) Stereo. !;I
8:30 llll oe oe•lgttlng women
The Issue or ~~exual
harassment Is reflectad .!PO"
by the women. S1ereo. Iii
10:00 (I) Howe
(!) (!) C. E..,.11 Koop, II.D.
Stereo. C
llll IIJI.Norlhern EJPOIIIN
A ~ozen 2DO-yaar-old corp118
Is diiiCOI:od near Ctcoly.
Stereo.
tllle Hu ""'

BARNEY
TATER II WHAR
t

DID THAT

YOUNG·UN

CRAWL

OFF TO?

.J8 75 1Z

t8
+88513 2

+AQJ
+QJI09
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
Wftt - N«IIf '"'"EEit
2 NT
Pass
3+
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

t-NT

Opening lead: • K

ruff a heart in hand, play a club

© ,.,, ....,.,.. """'-'" ......

®

-

The World Almanac Crossword Puzzle :
ACROSS
1 Texae clly
5 Female e o~
dltra (abbr .)
9 Common
allmanl
12Take - 13 - - lhe
ground flo or
14 Spoil
15 Sea bird
16 Enlorlaln'er
- llcEnllre
17 Actress
luplno
18 Gaggle
membe tl
2D Give an
addreoa
22 Small bird
23 Bernt leln, for
ohor!
24 llr. Zlagteld
27 Delay
29 CurHd
33 Form of
element
35 Blbllcalloibe
36·Cause of

Answer to Prel'jou• Puzzlt

dill1118
37 Taka - al
(reoanl)
40 Slort ror
future use
42 Clam genus
43 Aclor Sj)aokl
44 Tic· - ·lOt
46 Fatlalrcrafl
(abbr.)
48 bride'•
palhwar
so Leg part
53 South of Ala.
54 Singer Jeroy
56 Got ot1
58 Gypoy man
59 Jacob'a son
60 Nevada cllr
61 Pollee alert
(abbr.)
62 Actress Lamaro
63 Time - halt

DOWN
1 Humorlat

2Snugas -

7 Computer
tanguago
8 Traps
9 Partly lund
gla11
10 Mlnonin
11 Type of llz. rd
19 Farm building
21 Egypt's Sad at
24 Tells untruths
25 Future
LL.Bs.' """
26 lira. Charlto
Chaplin
28 Flower
30 - - eveh
keel
31 Temper
display
32 Made do wl1h
34 Eramlnalion a
38 Somt lhlng
unuplalned
39 Forttlul blow
4 1 Stumu~

...-

3 Singer Nat
Klng 4 Small hooler
5 Eanodropplng devlet
6 Chemical
sut1ix

Natjonita erom Plttlburgh (T)

Ill WOI1d Newt

llll ·1oo etub Whh P"

Instantly reveals which signs are roman- ~ TAURUS (April 20-May 201 Oon·t gel
tlcally perl.ect lor you. Mall $2 plus a Involved today wllh Individuals who are
tong, sell-addressed, stamped enve- not In harmony with your Interests and
lope
to Matchmaker, clo this newspa- objectives. If you do. you might tlnd
BERNICE
per, P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland, OH yourself In lhe middle olsomethlng you
BED~ OSOL
44101 ·3428.
• don'! want to be part ol.
SAOmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dtc.·21) II you ~ GEMINI (a..y 21-;luneaGJ It you have a
do not succeed on lhe first ellorlloday, testy asaignmenl you must take care ot
at least give yourself credit tor What . today , analyze Ita po1enllal problems In
you 've done. Aher palling yourself on advance. Don 't run around without a
the back, regroup and go again .
. · game plan.
'
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jen. 18) It your CANCER (.111M 21-.IUIJ 22) Try not to
desires are purely materialistic today,. beloopossesalvetodayoteomeonetor
gralltlcatlon could evade you. For prop· whom yoli have a strong allrectlon. The
er balance, think ol ways 10 enrich your . looser the laaah, tho more responolve
' spirit as well.
this Individual wtl be toward you.
AQUARIUS (.Mn. 20-Ftb. 111 Friends . LEO (Jtotr :D-Aug. 22) In order to prowill do things for you today because · teet your pooltlon and Interests today,
You could be · luckier than usual In · they like you, not becaull8 they feel obll· l' you might have 10 do 801118 sharp negoachlevtng Y'!"r goals In the .year ahead , gated 10 do so. Smiles, nol snarls, In·• tlallng. Focua tho 1hrust around your
even though victories might not come : . duce cooperativeness.
. strong areu.
on the first try. Your 118Cond efforts are l PIICIIIFtb. 20-Mircll aGJ It you lake j VJRQO (Aug. :D-IIpl. 22) Whether you
dynamHe.
; youriiH and developmentaloo oerloua-· suc:ceed or tall today will depend on
ICORPIO (OCt. 24-Nolr· 22) You might ~ ly today, II wltllnhlbll your progreu. A your altitude. When dealing with dlffl·
have 10 deal with some uncertainties., philosophical outlook could put you In cultles, took tor their positive att~butea
early In the day. However. your allec· · the winner's circle.
· and begin from there.
tlvoness tncreall88 with the ticking o1 . ARES (Merclo 21·Aprll II) lnttesd ot LJIRA (llpl. 23-0cr. 23) You're not
tho clock and, by afternoon , you lhould . leaving an Important matter up to a, likely lo add to your IIIIIs wtlh high
hive evmythlng under control. Kn~ sornatlmes unreliable friend, take con· rlak ventur•todl)', but you could piotll
- . to look tor romance and you 11 trot ot the lllu,.lon yourHII1odl)', oven 11 you proceed along prudent practkloli
~lnd 11. Tho Aatro-Graph Matchmaker 'though you'd prefer to do olherwl~~e .
llneo.
'

\

i
i

lo

dummy and ruff another heart wi!h
the ·spade jack. Now lead a ~de to
dummy, ruff the last heart wtth the
spade ace, draw trumps and unblock
the club ace. In hand you have the Q-J
•of clu~ and dtamond ace left, so you
· c~n claim.
1 Note that If you lead a trump to
dummy at trick three and ruff another
beari, you Will go down, West ~nl·
1ng hos smgletoo club. True, you would
have been del~~ of Westhad led!~'"
club, but be didn t. Make b1m pay.

~~~~Men' s

ASTRO-GRAPH

Pass
All pass .

7+

M8jor Did

Elizabeth Ia hired as a
waitress; Gen. Cralg Is voted
man of the year. Stereo. 1;1
18 On Stlge Stereo.
D lchlap Tllk
llll Adventure• of lhl Black
StaUion 1;1
.
8:00 C]). 0 'TIM! Gambler
llllurtll: L.uctc ollhl Drlw
(PI 2 of 2)' NIC llonciiJ
Night If the lrlovtft (2:00)
Stereo. C
(I)
ABC Mondlly NigHt
FootbiDLsnts at Eagles (L)
Stereo.
(I) (!) A
n Experience
Stereo. C
llll a . .lllurphy Brown
Murphy gets a cour11e In
parenting When a trlend's
daughter visits. Stereo.
i1J WWF Prime Tlma

RDblr110n
10:20 (J) MOVIE: A Flollul ot
Dolllrt (2:00)
10:308 Croolt tod Chill
11 :00 C]). ill CDie Ill NIWI
(!) Night Couot Stereo. 1;1
(I) Nowtwatch

eonfocllo~

1111 • AIMIIIO Hill

iiJ lleoGyver Q
121 On ltqe Stereo. .

'-rt--t--t-;

OheltiOoiSpeed

,.

Bt-..!....on!fJ

11:30(1) Kojlk C
I
(!) EuiapNn Jouma
ill ArMI1!0 H.tl

ae·s_..,. ........
CMii Tltnt Aller Prime

r.tSIIrto.C

.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

c.ttbJHy Clphtr CI)'PICif'MII at• cruted ffOfft quat•liotll by llmiMII PfOPII, PISt ltld pruent
EICI'Iittterln tl'le cipMf tllndt !Of MWJther. TodiJI 'I cAll: V «fW!!s r.

=~Terto

·' W TN y ·

1D MOvr~: Weatom Union

HEFZHLA .

Ill MoniY1IIII

45 LU Vt oil ·
47 Royal
.
hUddrtll ·
48 Alktw
49 Poatic loot .
51 Small vaHoy
52 DNr
•
53 lrlonk't Utle
,55 Guidod :
57 - - 11Uit
(overmuch) ,

X L A J W IE J H V

HW

0 L

BUT

.•

OL

'UNOUVZ

U H

(2:00)

e 0 Tortl(lht 8how
s-.
12:00(1)
NIWI
0 e LoN CoowliCIIon
11:31 (I)

(II.

Ill Tile EQUIIHr
8 NMiwill Now Stereo.

a Ntw1Night

JHZ

0 L Z H . '

XUR

OLLEOWDX .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "HoNrwood: a town that has to be disbelieved ." - Walter Winchell .

· to be -

..

~

C 1991 by HEA. IOC.

' '

.

'·

I'

magazines
from all over

e

.

- -Cial\"'
1:&amp;••
111

r:bJ'

ITSGOIIX&gt;
10TAI'E
llME

EAST

.9

By Phillip Alder

a

...

. WEST
+853 z
•KQ
+Kl09 7S I
+7

+AJ764

e

R-

c.nor'l Plumbing
Fourth and Plno
Ohio

No

PACI(I\GE! .

BASEMENT
WATERPR!X!FJNG
Unconditional 111111~ guoran-.
IH. Local rafwonc• fllml-,
F'" ootlmol11. Coli oo111r:1 1·
114-237o04811, day ar night.
a-mont Wot.._
tlng.

111 113-5211

.....

IN MY 8AC~PAC1(...

a Son

Ill.

Plumbing &amp;
Heating
11,000 BTU warm momtncr
hiller. l.olky luot volvo. 111

Kolar

AI HoMt. Coli

lo/CHI 'IOU CAN
••.WHILE I TEND TO
sttclt. THESE GuN&amp; OUR UThE SURPRI9E

Home
Improvements

=r

.,_town
=-""·No CA.'"'"

.ALLEY OOP

Servtces

1p 1 ~ lalllina
In Z.itkh 1110 IIMClna rriCII1
o«har bnnctL oofo, oliO
oomo aPIIIIInoo 10t111n. WV
304-11143118 Ohio IM-446-2414.
A- oddltlano, oldlng, rooltng,
vlnyf NPIIDIIMI• wlndawi,
co.- br At Tromm, 114-1112·
2321. CAU COLLECT
Sapllc Tonk Pumping 110"Gollll
Co. RON EVANS EN1ERPHISE8,
ollokoon, OH 1-.e37..121.

ll·l-ll

SOUTH

01
· 8:00 Cll
Fmh
" " - to
This week 1 wbl introduce each of
Bet• AirIDI
Willis
auprlaed
team ho has something In
the six Independent English-language
common with hla dale.
bridge magazines that a re published
Stereo. C
around the world .
(I) MOVI!: TIM! Big ChiU (Ri
Bridge Today is produced by Pame(2:00)
Ia and Matthew Granovetter in a
Cll (I) 8 MacQyver
house in Ballston Lake, New York. It
MacGyver lall'lnaponed
· 6'
b·
thl
·th
· t
back to the 17111 century. (PI
os a .-page 1mon y w1 a vane y
of a r ticles, both technical and humor·
1 or 21 SteJ:.G ~
(I) (!) Ch
Stereo. 1;1
ous, intended primarily for the serious
1111 Ce E""*'t' Sha
. tournament player. The annual subCoaCh Newton has to deckle
. scription is $21 (800·872·2081).
between ptaytng by the rules
Today's hand is based on a contribu·
or winning. Stereo. C
lion to the magazine by Eddie Kantar.
0 MOVIE: Two lilioleo for
Cover the East-West cards and plan
Sllltr Iori IPGl (2:00)
the play in seven spades, West leading
o ·Murdlr, She Wrote 1;1
the heart.lting.
121 On Sligo Stereo.
North's two no-trump was the Ja.
~u~' Night
cOby
ra ise; three hearts
Prtt'IIINewt
liiiiil:-~ ·~~~~~!;:or void~ in that sui~
ll])l:ijjiiiil ol Prince
was a cue-bid; and sev·
8:o&amp; (I) MOVIE: Two llulellor
en spad~. showed a touching faith in
1111er lora (PG) (2:15)
South's declarer-play.
Cll
IIIOUOm
Nlcl!
The correct line is a dummy rever·
:
8 30
0
mlaMis hiS chance 1o fill In
Win trick one with the heart ace,
lor a flier band leadar.
Stereo.

2211. llonhor Fully Sail Conlalnod Camlllna Tr-, AIC, I
-lng, Eioollont Conctllanl
304-B'Ia-1514.

..,..,.,. ...,., put up vln
traitor olttrtlng. •

10 Down On Pro Owrwcl Mobile
All You Pay II Tu Anrl
Tltlo With..,._.,. Cndll • . . . . . . .
4112111111
Coli EIIII-·Conlar ..: 114: , _ Olllltula, Qy . . _
772-1220.
IDI/Irlo.llir rr.to. lt~ 411 1031.
l2xtO 11110 Vogo I lA lOIII !lMP!oltr , _ _ moblll
tlectrlc, MW eaFDit. daoni, U• " - I ioill
o..,.
trw nlct. IM-44&amp;odt~
Palo,

~T.::J

7:35 (I) lonloocl

:=.=r~ong, Ron's TV hrvJOI.

eruo..

ALDER

D NFL Mondey Nlgh1

1m Ford malor '-'o, 23 II.,
18,181 actual mltoo; I noio
Mlchalln llrw, 1ully contalnod,
aood
conct., roody lo '"' 11100,
114-tMI-2038

13l'U2t.

7:30 C]). lUI Jeopaodyl
(I) Now h Can le tail
(I) E111e!111nment Tonlghi
Stereo:J;I ~
\11, Meil'leci...Whh ChlldNn

Ole Family Feud

II·~~~~~~~~~

81

PHILLIP

18 le 1 Iter Stereo.

~=~· Ex'::l:nc!ms::':,n'~

1171- Corio, T·T- Mony
-Paint Joll, lluot SaO
To Ailtlndoto, :J04.41711-4281,
304-fn:4111.
IIIlO Clwyotor ~ L.S, f.
cyt, auiCIIIIIIIc, n1ct car, liking

NORfH

+ K Q10 9

7:05 (I) Too CtoM tor~Comf011

Ql' Wheel ol F-nel;l

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Complota Moltlta- Sat-Upo,
Ropalro; Commorlcal, R tlal lmpni._L Including:
1Mtllullang, 1 cvl., 1utomat&amp;c, Plumbing, Eloolrlcal. 1 rexc. lntNior.l044ra:3110,
CIIImt Accoplod. 114-2111-1111.
1171 Vollt. runo good, good
lim, body fllr, 1400. 304-451·
11311.
Newer - · ·Work,
Room Adtlltor.,
Foundotlon
Root!IIQ,
1171 Chavotta, 4 Spood, $250, Kltohono And Batho. ,,.. f!i.
114-371-2147.
tlmat•l ,Aettnncn, NO Job To
1171 llonto C.rto, 310 £ntilne, Big Or 9motll114-441o0221. •
1800, -771-!101.
JET
1171 Oldo Ill 250. auto, air, tiH, Aarotlon Motoro, ropalrod. Now
crulte, new t ,..,, txotlltnt ego. I r•bulll molort In otook, RON
EVANS, JACKSON, OIC. 1.aoo.
dhlon, $1100, 114-111124537.

Mobile Homee
for sail

--~·-·

UNSC RAMBLE LETTERS TO
GET ANSWER

e

-loa

HGOiiltat, IR *-'-·liking
f)l,icjcj, coiiiM-liiZ"llm.

32

A
V

c

·7-:-=- ::-=

UniQuo ~BR ont-Bradbury Rood, oxtro building,
127,500. 114-H:I-1 .or 2113"" "3~~ 'lory nlca, SoiA Ranch,
briCk
"""'·
corport
112 - lMO
mont, oak har;;;.o;,;,i' t1ooro.
from

PRINT NUMBERED LE'TrE RS IN
THESE SQUARES

+&amp;3 2
+AK

1171 .flip CJ.I, 2SI, I
()yll~, Rune Groot
Now
Tfr•, $1,400, Flrm. IM-2C5-IMIO
730 caae 1111ctor, Comlorl King, After 5:30p.m.
251 gooii dull romotoo, gcoa 11110 OliO 310, &amp;ulo, Air, .. ,500.
Mlbit, 14-62·7302 latl ~Wen.
114 3811 1521.
~~~~:lingo
:;Cialll;::;,.g- ri:n-dor.,.--m:llo-r,""N:-ow-;;Hott=ond
-; IIIII Chivy 3/4 Ton, 4 D~vo, 4 Spood 310, Air Con711. hilvbt"'!, Now Holland 1 ft. dhlonlna,
Til Wti'Mt, Sunroof.
Now
hoyblnd, . NOW Holland 1!17
814-31Mm.
lorilgo
hlrYMtor,
2
hNdL
AC
2
St
ovo,
- . 3 pl. hlch no 1111 com planFull.slzo Ford BR~f~C4! 1 300lp.m.
tor. AH oxo. conct. 304 ..7~215. 11112
onglno, ~hool drlvo. IM-1112·
Old Camera Cotlodoro: Willing Jlm'o farm EQUI"';.rrt4.SR· 35, 2404
To Sail Koyotono 110 AutomaiiC Wilt Galllpotlo,
f.l777;
Projoctor, 40 v... Old, $10. . Wlrlo Hllctlon now 1 ulld farm 11183 9-10 4114 Chivy Bllzor In
good condMion 5 opood
3
;;.'14':--441-423-'-::--7:..::;
trKioro 1 Imp-. Buy, fronamloolon, 12Uo. 304-175Rato Or llloa? In Your - ? loll, lrldlo, 8:00-B:CIO -kdayo, 21'11.
Buy ENFORCER, Kille &amp; SaL 1111 - ·
mloo In only t fllcllng,
1181 Plymoth YO¥gor Van SE,
GUARANTEEOI Avalllbll al: MIIIIJ Forvuaon 265 Trldor 41-K mllll, ~YI. auto, accldont
Baum Trua Voluo StOf!,.ll 80 !:1!., M.ll5j.1114 International,
M1ln SlrMI:, Ch•lter, utt
Sl,vw; 800 rotd, Llvt Power, ==roblo, 14100, fl.lpm
$3,250; 340 lntornatlanall2,380.
Rota Oi lllco? In Your _ , ~ Will Flnanco, 114-2Bf. 74
u..torcycle.l
Buy ENFORCER, Kllll &amp; -::::-:::,...,::::;-~=-===
mlco In only .I fllcllng,
11111 suzuki 4 ~II,
GUAAANTEEOI AvaHablo al: 63
LivestOCk
""""" ...,.
0'0.1· Trua Yaluo Lumbor, 134 ~~""':'~~~-"::::-'~ runo . - . ....,
~~~ Main SlrMI, PDmlroy, 0H
1111 2 Ho111 c - !1!ck1 1185 Honda 8'*-. 100 CC,
RATS OR MICE?
Trallo(, _ , 11-. ~~~ 2,400 miiiL ~-3Cll0.
1
In Your H-? luy ENFOR·
!!! olg $~~a::;
75 BoatS &amp; Mot0~
CE~~~And-ln 1-~
~
110
Only 1 Foedtng. GUAIWITEEDI
Doyo Tnrfnfng. I
for 58""
Avolllbla AI: Conlral SUpptyll7 4 Y•r Old Dotdlng, Broken,
.,.
Couri St-t; Spring Vo loy AIIO 2
And I lridll. 11181 Cajun loot, 11112 Fl.
Hordwaro, !21l :llrikrtiln Pltui; 11444W773.
Flborgllll, 110 liP llartnor Ao&gt;Ottll Trua ·Voluo LBR, Ylne
poox. 12 Hourw On 11-, Ufca
Blrllt At Third A...,.., Qa~ I Month Old Rogfll- T..,. Now, 11,710 Or ottw, tlpotll, Ohio.
Wllkor Colt, Good llaod 117W040.

Will build patio - - . .

:J.ml

~

No. 3 below.

• o\10 63

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

Cr.k Rd. Pitta. aup.
ptlol; pickup, ond clallnry. 114441.0214. .
'

tcrll

A

•.-c.

Dovlo

•J.7111."

by filling In tho miulng -d•

you dovolop from IIOP

GIIC Sllrla CIIMio. 11113 112 ton
2 WD, tully loaded,
cond.
Qarogo kipl. 114-441-2445, Alii
torvrrgll.

On~

a • • rgoo Portallll8awmtll don~
haul loao to tho m1NlUll
CIII30M75-ttl7.
!Jilt To HoM '-lronina Dono
In A - . ct- Ptooo? Call lie
Anrl Wo Wll Tllk A11out M. I

.1...-..l.'--.J.. ...;,_1.,.- ' ·

BRIDGE

S Fl. Buoh !tog, Good Corldltlon
Or TraH For 4 Ft Buoh Hog.

bollmonl, lurdotto Add. Pl.
Ploallnt.IM-245-5438.

CNA wilt coro tor lldorly tn my
'-'o or 1'01111, COlt 114-t12·7171
E I R TREE SERVIC&amp;. T-'nt•
Trlmrn'- Trill Romovot, HOcllfl
Trlmmii:.. 1'1'• Ettlmatool ~~

I ..

1 I ·I I 15 O

Farm Suppltes
&amp; Ltvestock

Carpot tx12 $10 I Upl Sail On
All Outalda C.rpol: $3.11 &amp;
$4.88; Khchon' Caipot, 17; VInYl
14.88. Bolo On ~It C.rpot In
Stoetd Mollohan Colpota, 114-

s-r.

CoM-· 31

~~

''

bulln••.•

SCIAM.lETS ANSWRS
••·t
- Realm - Either .:. HIT THEM

w.-

POSITION AYIJWL5: Alllltanco

.I ·,~~±J

FL A8 E

who

.;=-=:::--=--=-= ,.-

No

~

I I II ' I .

Merchandtse

2 Bod,_, 1200 Month, Plua·
UtiiHioo, Rotwopco And Dopooh,
304-875-12111.
2 Btdroom .Country HouiJ,
Stow, Relrlantor, lllfenncta,
Dlpooh, IM-'}51.1785.

875-72112.
NMd Chriotmao Caoh? Work Do You NMd s._.. To Cloan
from your .home lluftlng en-- Your Homo Or ottlct, R.un Er·
val-. For Information I ap- randa Far You, Type UOII"' Or
plication, lind ooiNdrl.....t
Do Hllhh lnourance
1t1mJ)Id Wivelo~ to: Mu1kln. AIPGrilr.
Biting,_. .... p_. HoVI A
gum AIOI Publlohlng, Box 1111, Clown
Dollvtr HoiUm Bollana?
ZlnttVillt, OH 4370f
H So, Contoot: Ql~ Friday S.,.
No Exporlonol NtCIIIIry. A vic•; llacklo Rlckord Lav-,
Ditty Sataiy ot
For Burtng OMlor, 3-·3710.
Morchand!U. 114-388-2082, Exf. Plano tun~!~~, :mh rr or Hrvlco,
3813.
tuning
Flpalr, Lane D.tnllll
Porn010, POSTAL JOBS $11.71· 114-X~-2~11
$14.110111r.
oxp. noodod. For
oxam and •ppllootlan lnto:J_call
Real Estate
1·21Wil'l537 7am-IOpm 7UOJI.

Provldo Dlrocl Sorvloo To 9Jri.
tlmo Of Vlotlnca. Bac_.o In
Wonlod: Old hrbo rodlol,
Work, Rolotod Fllld Or
old radla porto, old rodla Social
Equlvallnl ExporloncL Ex·
catatoao. Radial mUM . hove. porlonoo Wortdila WithE-condlllorl.
- -Chucko.
....... Phono
11M2. :104Arty
llanaiY Dlotur!IM PCIJIUiallon.
A.....,. To Sondril McFo"
8824220. Big ....., tar oorno Sand
land. - n d Contoro, :10811
rnorlolo. ··
VInton Plkl, Golllpotll, OH
41131. EOE.
Employment Services POSITION AVAIWLE: Vlc:llmo
A l i i - Spooiallol. Ro....,..
llblt For Thl Dtwafg'nttnt(J:
~Ilion And . _ .
Help Wanted
01 Tho Vlctlmo Of Vlotonca
Program. LPC1, LPCC, Or USW
$2 500 CREDIT CARD!
Guoroiiilld oamo dar IJIPfOVI!I Wit~ Rolotod uporlonco Prolor·
Aloe ~ q_uollty tor NO ......,.. rod. Exporlonco Worki'\L.~h

· VISMIC

FJI.IU: 112 Aoril Lillo ~Fin0noliig
Avtlllbll.l11111 1512.

Opportunity
--..:...;;;;:;;;.-'--INOTICEI
OHIO VALLI!Y PUBUSHINQ CO.
I rocommondlthot you do bualo 2 bedroom home, Hartlord, wv,
n111 whh pooplo you k,_ ond
304-Ha·20tl.
NaT to oond m - through tho
mall urou you havo.ln-Tgatod 3 IR houoo In town'whh ba»
thl offorlng.
_., carport. Anlllbto Nov.
tot,
• dapooh. 814-241Local Von~lng Routo For Sale. !114 $3!Gimo.
anar
I
p.m.
Will Soli AU Or Pall Ropoat
Buoln111. Above Anrag' In· 3br, 2 Story With · -.......
~· In Town, . , _, Pluo
comot t:80N81•2000.
Local Vandlng Route For Salo, ~taronCM Roqulrod,
Chaapl Muot s,tl Quickly. t.aoo,
05-8383.
4 BA, 1·112 both, contral gao
hilt, newly romodllod. AvaU·
Local Pay Phono Routo. t:.ow oblo
Dor:. lot. 1325/ma. I mo.
Coot, High Rotum. t-801).1111• ucurHy dopoolt. 1821 NMh
3333.
Main,
WV.
:J04.875-8127,
tvtringa.
Local VandiPg Routo. Pricod For
Oulck Salo. t.-.234-211!1.
Throo Bod"""" Ranch With, t/2
Ac .. Lawn, Now-· In Exoll·
=t:;a wt =~:= a'i."nu~= 1on1 Condhlon,
o.poon
ond • goon.-lto. It JOU'ro Urad And Rotor- Roqu rod. of woildng tor oornaono otH 875-17111, 304·2·3888.
and woulcftlko logo Into buolniH tor youroott, 814-1'12-2157 42 Mobile Homes
(will train)
\
for Rent
23 Professional
11181 14•70 2 bodioom moblio
homo._rw-cll, plua dopotlt,
Services

•300

·I .J

T Av EL

GQOdS

BusJ~ss

21

~

K A. R 8 y E

L...J-

Financtal

hOWl. Rtflrii\CM I MUll. 304-

Umber &amp;

I

air··

Edwardl T-poriotlop nooda
aTR lroct...,rollor drlv.,. ap- Would llko to bibyoH In my ~
pllcantL lluot have good driv·
Ina r.cords, tilt bid upwienct, homo In Brodbury Wllkdoyo.
liable work hlltory, and 3 yoaro Reference~ avalllble It needed,
114-11924537

KUWAIT, :u~D: WORKERS
$35.00
&amp; Up Plr Hour. Tu Froo.
Rick Purson Auction Company, Both SkUiod
I Urroklllod For
full tlmt auc11onHr, compll1t Into.
auction 11rvice. LlctnMCI Ohio, 888. Call 8t5-7lll-81106 Ext. K·
Wut VIrginia, 304·773-5715.
Matura1 rlopondoblo bobyolttor
9 Wanted to Buy
wontoa In my homo, trrwgutar
Want to buy

I

L....

8 Acroo Above Htndtroon, Woot
Vlriglnll, $5,1100. SUrv~od
Rlglit 01 Way, ~8M.
Building lola,1-toro orid up, TP l
watll', e.~""· M•lr
quariar mila SR ~ 11~118 3

c

Furnhur11. Ap-

Mower1 Wild Eotor1 Chain Saw,

.Roorrongo lotttra ·of ..... ·
four ocramblod -d• bolow to form four olmplt -.lo:

I

35. l..(its &amp; Acreage

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
4 Family Yard Salt: Euroka,
lluo Houu, Acrau From D.tm.
. Novombor-41h, 5th, to.m.... p.m.Bodo-o,
·Boby
BoyCurt1in1,
C1oth11
Llmpt, St.reo,
Toya,

_ .;...__...;;;.,....;; l4l!o4 lty ClAY I.

Q-v.murd In
· . , I · ·1
building: "You think ,yot,tr job Is
.;...J.L.....I..--t..--L.
. ....J· o tanae. ln ~ they pass
~-:-~:--::-~:-'--, outldetrk
- the ___ ,.
DAWOME
5
Comploto tho ckucklo 'quoted

.

256·1335.

7

1

I.

Av•nue, Galllpolle Ohio, 1514-

.·

...
~~::.' s~"~lX-4i.i~s·
fi9UAII--- -.,

•'

~

�'

.
Ohio

Monday, November 4, 1991

Ohio Lottery
BELLEFONTAINE, Ol)io (AP)
- A_Playboy playa~ate wbose husband was shot and killed by a f!UI
will,continue to work for the magazme s 900 telephone line, but also ·
wants to warn others of the dangers
of stardom, her agent said.
SJacy-Arthur, 23,-who-was the
1990 Mrs. Ohio, plans pul&gt;lic
appearances beginning this week to
tell people how her husband, James
Arthur, 36, was shot when he
refused a man's request to take pictures of her.
"SI8Cy has a story to tell- this
.hysteria of people stalijng sws,"
said her agent, Chris--Miller. "She
wants to warn people there··are nuts
out there."
!ames Lindberg, 32, of Woodland, Calif., shot Arthur three times
outside a downtown building the ·

Eagles
wallop
Giants

I

F. "Bill,_Harris .

TRDS-£
1 111
•nllll•lll
IO'H'UI TOWNSHIP

Plar,~t was her dream. That was

TIAIK

J

ELECT

PATRICIA
-CALAW-Y

ORANGE TOWNSHIP CLERK

ELECT

•Adult &amp;Pediatric Allergy
•Hearing Aids
•Recurrent Ear Infections
in Chndren
•Asthma
•Headaches
•Runny Nose
•Snoring
•Mandrement of Skin &amp;
Facia Lesions
MEDICARE ASSIGNMENTS A&lt;aPTED

675·1244
Suitt 112, V6r Dr~ Pl. Pltalllll

. VOTE FOR

-ELECTWho: E_
Uen J. Rought
When: November B, 1991
What: Mayor of Pomeroy _
Why: hll Time Mayor

Meigs Local School Board
Putting Our Children -First in Education
Paid for by the C.ndldale,
-38218 S.R, 143, Pameroy, Ohio 4578$

THANK YOU

MEIGS COUNTY RESIDENTS
Wou_ld you like to purchase a 50x100 ft. building lot in a
good location for only $3 500?
Would you like to budd a new home and pay
· no real estate taxes for '15 years.?
Would you hke to have up to $5000 FREE for site

•

'

,.

.

-

,..,

~.

1 Section, 10 Pogeo 25 cen11
Au...lmedill Inc. NewopaP!If

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tue•day, November 5, 1991
-

School issues, term limits alllong Ohio issues
•

repeal part
district's tax base, city council term
limits and ·mayoral races in three of
the state's largest cities arc among
issues Ohio voters wil\)lecide at
the polls today.
'The repeal effort stems from a
dispute over textbook content. The
question of whether to limit terms
is contained in two P.roposals in
Cincinnati. Mayors will be elected
in Columbus, Toledo and Akron
and hundreds of other local races
and money issues will be decided.
. There arc no statewide races or
issues.
Secretary of State Bob Taft estimated 2.6 million people would
vote today. That would be a turnout'
of 45 percent of the 5.7 million
Ohioans registered to vote.
Voter turnout in Columbus was
running about as expected late in

say the

50 percent those
registered were expected to vote,
he said.
Lucas County Board of Elections Director Gary Byers estimated that 56 percent of Toledo's registered voters would cast ballots.
comparable to the turnout in the
1989 municipal elections.

In 35 districts, voters will decide
whether they want to pay an
income tax to support schools.
A 5-milllevy is the target of the
repeal proposal in the northeast
Ohio community of Willard. The
levy provides about $640,000 of
the district's nearly $8 million budget.
Voters will decide 1,099 tax
The loss would force major budlevies, 59 bond issues and 315 get cuiS in the district of 2,400 stuother issues. The issues include 247 dents, S_uperintendent David
money requests for 218 school dis- · Hirschy said.
triciS.
At issue is a textbook ser-¢s
One of those districts is in called "Impression," which some
Cincinnati, where a 9.83-mill levy parents say contains improper
will be decided. The board of edu- ma1crial. PareniS say the books has
cation says the 51,000-student sys- references to suicide, abuse and
tem faces a deficit as much as $47 possibly the occult. ·
million this year. The levy would
The school district says there are
generate $46 million a year for five no references LO the occult and that
years.
the rest of the ·subjecl maucr is

.l~~r!!~'!'! !o.tll!'~ ~~!~"I !a!!.-

....

McELROY, JR.
RICHARD B•.BAILEY PAUL M.Candidate
For
SAU.SBVRY·rOWNSBIP
·cLIJIK

Care • Concern • Compassion

Paid for br the Candidate
Ellen I. Rought • 158 Uitcoln Hill, Po111ror, OH.

Vol. 42, No. 129
Copyrtghll!d 1991

J- -1

JOHN A. WAD~ M.D. INC.
BOARD CERTIFIED
SPECIAUZING IN

'

.

Jim's dream. Jim would not want
ON PARADE • Students at Rutland Elemen~
· _ _,HpartiCipate
~a'!;ll-;coween liilliiS
costumes. Students 'rrom tbe sebool
somet~ing like this -to ~elnll[dt_!
. ltiJhl !iS~ I-------------=·P.aii~IOJ~Ily:ll_le,~ndldll!-o:'"!-:lllrrl..
t.ary took to tbe streets on Friday to parade ibeir
parade each year so the putifrt--&lt;Jream.
· .
may see tbelr outfits.

EAR·NOSE-THROAT
ALLERGY

•

at

Y111r lata WiD Be Appreciated

AJ:thur's ~e~ wi!S Sa!Jifllay. .
M1ller s8Jd hts chent 1s afraid but will continue her work with

POMEROY • Head lice is gen-If your child has an itchy
-Thoroughly ~ash or dryerally a more embarrassing prob- scalp and you suspect head lice, clean clothmg, beddmg, and p_erlem than a serious one, according look for lice and nits behind the s~nal eallte~s tha~ay be carry_,~
to Norma Torres, R. N., of the ears, at the crown or the head, and hce. S ttems tare 1mpracu .
at th~ nape of the neck Most to dry clean, such as stuffed ani·
M · c t Health De
bu~'~ts ha ou~ls often eno~a:;u:;,er:;; important, check the roots ~f indi· mals, in a p~tic bag for ten days,
:an im · r:t health issue
nts vidual hair strands.
.
or put them m your dryer, set on
·of yofog children.
pare
-If your child does have hce, htgh, and run tt for one full cycle.
· ~estauons
·
carpets, upholstery
. L'tce m
usua 11y occur ask your pediatrician whtch treat-· and-Vacuum
mattresses completely.
m young
three
to 10, •m,.;e.n,.;tto-u•se•.- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .
who
playchtldren,
together,ages
share
clothing
or bats, or are in close contact with
one another, she said.
Lice cross all economic and
educational boundaries and they
infest families from all walks of
life, Torres noted, as she gave hints
on how to prevent and treat head
lice.
·
Her suggestions:
- Teach your children not to
.borrow personal items from
-friends, such as combs, brushes,
Paid for by the Candidal&amp;,
hats, hair ribbons, scarves, towels
46686 Gulhrie Road, Coolville, Ohio 45723
or clothin~. ·

Low tolllptiQ mid :zoo._. Wedaesday m•lly cloudy.Higb
In mid 40s,

Page4 ·

~s:. owned. then shot and killed

Tips on how to avoid head lice: Torres

Pick 3: 184
Pick 4:2578
· Card$: 6-H, 6-C,
10-D, 9-S

If you do, Contact Jean Trussell, Housing
Spedalist, for further Information.
Phone (614) 992-6782
_..,12~37!!!J~

t.:Ou1nCil members
to four colisectoiive two-year terms. .
A counterproposal calls for no limiiS on the number or terms served.
If both issues pass, the one with the
most votes would become law.
A third proposal would require
the city to use proportianal representation to elect council members.
With that method voters rank their
candidate preferences in order,
from one to nine.
Proportional representation was
used in the city for more than 30
years, untill959.
A court has ordered tine innati
to revise its at-large system of
electing council members. Today,
nine members will be chosen from
among 26 candidates.
In Columbus, Republican Dana
Rinehart chose not to seck re-election to a third four-year term as
mayor. Voters will choose between
Republican Greg Lashutka , a former city attorney, and Dcmocral
Ben Espy, a city councilman who
is seeking to become the city's first
black mayor.
Toledo Mayor John McHugh is
challenged for a second two-year
term by Paula l?ennypacker in a
non-partisan election. The candidates were the top two vote-getters
in the city's primary. ·
Akron Mayor Donald Plusqucllic is seeking his second full fouryear term . The Den:'ocrat w~s
appointed to an unexp11ed term m
January 1987. He faces Republican
Michael Callahan.

~-·-··

\•

VOTED YET? • PoDs will remain open until 7:30 tonight so if
you haven't voted yet, there's still time. Indications late this morning were that tbere would be a heavy turnout of voters in Mei~
County. At Pomeroy's third ward, poll worlters said that business
'had been brisk all morning. Here Daisy and Chuck Blakeslee mark
their ballots.

Pomeroy. Co~ncil t~ pledge

ThJ. oervleelo prorided throu,h the jotnlerforlo of lhc
or
Middleport aDd the Co•ernor'o Omee e of Appalaetwi.
- - - - - - - - --------- ----- - -~---

sum

for Yule electrical hook ups
Vital services to Maig·s County cbildr•n and adults
have bean cut due to a severe lack of funds.

We need .your help
to avoid even deeper cuts.

left seated, social services supervisor for the
Meigs County Children Services, wilh Bonnie
Carroll, coordinator of Post Adoption
Resources, sealed right, and Linda Well, adoption supervisor, center, both of the Athens
County Children's Services, and Ruth Powers,
Meigs L'brarian, standing right.

POST AI&gt;OPTION RESOURCES • Books
and other literature on a variety of post adop·
tion services are now available at the Meigs
County Library. At the library when the materi· ·
als were delivered were Charles Knopp, social
services worker, standing, and Cynthia Mills,

YOU CHOOSE•••.
I MILL FOR ,.BREE YEARS OR

.11-county area adoptio~ project
_will continue through next fall
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Starr
The dynamics of adoption on a
family and how LO a~apt to the lifelong process is the project empha·
sis of Post Adoption Resources of
Southeastern Ohio which Monday
placed a variety of materials in the
Meigs County Library.
.
Linda Well, adoption supervisor
at the Athens County Children Ser·
vices, said that the project began

CD,. MENtAL RftiRDI,ION SERVICES IN
~ ,.RINIPOR,ItiON
~ HO' LUNCH PROGRAM
_
~ -PHYSICAL 'BERIPY FOR CHILDREN or,
:?( CIRLmll SCHOOL PROIRAM

last fall with a federal adoption
opportunities granl and will continue in an 11 -county area through
September, 1992.
The emphasis. she said, will be
on developing a core of adoptive
families, therapists and social
workers committed 10 p_roviding
continued service for adoplivc families.
The counties served through the
grant are Athens, Gallia, Hocking,
Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs, Mor-

--Local briefs-____,

I

'

EMS units answer two calls
Two calls for assistance were answered by uniiS of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services on Monday and early Tuesday.
On Monday at 2:35 p.m., Middleport squad went to Pearl Street
andJransported Violet Bailes to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 4:28 a.m. ·on Tuesday; Syracuse unit went to Third Stree_t.
Retha Snyder and Pat Snyder were treated but not transported. ·

Tbe Only Good Choice Is •••

Meigs schools may get project

v·OTE FOR the
carleton school/meigs industries levy

david weber, coaamiHaa cbalnaaa •1-1111

·

Cari11Dn Schooi/Melga Industries Committee, P.O. Box 307, Syracuse, Ohio 45779

.

. The Athens-Gallia-Hocking-Jackson-Meigs-Vinton Solid Waste
District has submitted a grant application to the Ohio Environmental Education Fund of lhe Ohio EPA.
. .
. .
If the grant application ts funded, the d1str1ct will tmpleme~t a
pilot project in the Meigs County Local School Dtstncl The proJeCt
• wiU emphasize positive soli~ waste.managemem pracucc:s by offering students hands-on learnmg acuv1ues dealmg wtlh ljtter, water
pollution and conservapon of natural resources.
..
.
Terri Belville, pubhc educatio~-awareness-adve!"'smg coordma- tor for Jhe. district, said the deadlme for the submttlal or the g~ant
applications was Nov. I and if the dtstnct does recetve the fundmg,
the project will begin in February, 1992.
.
.. . .
Meigs County elementary schools that w1ll. be paructpaung .m
this project include Riverview, Syracuse, Han-isonville and Sahsbury. .
-.

'"

,,,

gan, Perry, Scioto, Vinton, and
Washington.
·
Post adoptive services, Well
explained, are based on the belief
that adoption is a li(e-long process
which impa cts on the adoptee,
adoptive parents and the birth parcniS througho ut their lives.
Services provided through the
gram will include pub!ic informalion events, distribution of literature about adoption, crisis intervention Lhe development of local sup- .
por~group s for adoptive families,
literature proytded 10 local ch1ldren
services for staff development and
adoptive parent education, fun. filled events for adoptive families,
training for mental health
providers, caseworkers, and adoptive pareniS and toncurrent support
groups for adopted children, ages
eight through 18 and their parents.
These concurrent groups, she
said, are offered free of charge and
can make a tremendous impact on
the adoptive f~mlly. Many profesSionals dealing with adoptees do
not understand the dynamics that
adoption creates within a family
unii and therefore cannot offer
appropriate treatment to families
experiencing diffiCulty .
Anyone who wants more information ·or services should contact
either Well or Bon'nie ClliToll, program coordinator., at 592-3061 ,
Athens County Children St!rvices.
Families are also encouraged to
have their nanles added LO mailing
lists for adoption events, a quarter·
)y newsletter and trai~ing opportu·
nities.

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Starr
Preparations for Christmas were
made when Pomeroy Village
Council met in regular session on
Monday night.
Council agreed to pledge up to
$500 for electrical hook ups, maintenance and installation necessary
to hang Christmas banners and
other decorations in the Pomeroy
business districllatcr lhis month.
According to 'Clerk Brenda
Morris, who attends Pomeroy Merchants Association meetings on
behalf of council, spotlights have
been donated LO the assoc ialion for
usc with the green banners, which
were first purchased last year.
Additional banners have been purchased for the upcoming season,
and many of llle' older decorations
have been refurbished.
According 10 Morris, the ban-

ners arc now SCI 10 hang on Main
and Co~un Slrects,"Wiili the refurbished candy cane decorations 10
hang on Sceond Street.
Council voted lasl month to
onee again approve free parking iri
the downlown shopping district for
the Chrisunas season. ·
The second reading of an ordinance granting Christmas bonuses
of $200 to full-time village
employees was held, with all council members voting in favor.
Th ird and final readings were
held on resolutions authorizing Village Administralor John Anderson
to apply for Issue Two funds on
behalf of 1hc village and changing
language in the village building
permit laws.
Lear pick-up
Leaf pick-up dates for this year
were set last night. Leaves will be
picked up in Precinct I on Lhe 181h
of October, Precinct 2 on the 19lh

JID.d..Frccinct3_on.th(;_20th.-Those -----1
residents who wish to have leaves
picked up arc instructed to bag the
leaves and leave them at the curb
on the appropriate day.
In other action, council also:
- reviewed a proposed resolution ·
from ODOT regarding pavement
markings and iee and snow comrol
on State Routes within village limilS;

- discussed structures within the
village in need of demolition and
properties in need of cleanup and
maintenance;
• approved the Mayor's Report
of fines collccled in lhe amount of
$3,185.
Present, in addition to Morris,
were Council President Larry
Wchrung, Council members Bruce
Reed, Belly Baronick, Bryan
Shank , and Thomas Werry; and
Mayor Richard Seyler.

Five elected to new terms
on Meigs County Fairboard
Five members were electe,d for
three year. terms to the Meigs
County Agricultural Society Boat;d
of Directors at Monday mghl s
meeting held in the secretary_'s
office on lhe Rock Spnngs Fao_rgrounds.
The only new member elected
was Mary K. Rose. Re-elected
were Jennings ~eegle, Ed Holler,
Addalou Lewis, and Dan Smith.
Others on the Boatel are Bill Radford, Barbara Fry, C. W. Henderson Roger Spencer, Lori Reed, JciT
Fol'mcr, Vtrgil Windon, Tim
Bearhs, Charlie Shain , and Jim

Sheets. A total of 107 votes were vcntion was set for Jan. 14-17 in
cast.
Columbus.
New officers will be elected a1
II was decided a1 the meeting 10
the December mccti ng.
sell ·both membership 'tickciS and
Arrangements were made at the season tickciS in 1992. Both, it was
meeting 10 request from the Ohio ex plained, will be good for
Dcpartmcnl of Agriculturcrthat the entrance in to the fair every day.
1992 Fair be set for Aug. 17-22. The difference will be in the cost,
Next year's fair will again be held · season tickets will be $10, and
for six days. it was decided. Mary membership tickets, $12, and only
Gilmore, secretary, reported that those with membership tickets will
the extra day brought in additional have voting rights. Membership
revenue of approximately $&amp;,000.
tickets will also be available only
Plans were also made to change to Meigs Couo1ians who arc 18 or
the fence to include the race horse , older, and registered voters. barns. The Ohio Managers Con-

Decision could come-today in
Ohio redistricting dispute
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- A
three-judge panel will rule in a dispute ov&lt;;r whether federal or state
courts should decide legal disputes
arising from Ohio's new legislative
redistricting plan.
'
The ruling could come today.
Lawyers for DemocraiS argued
with GOP counterparts for more
than two hours Monday . The
judges later indicated they won't be
long in reaching a decision.
Republir.ans argued that the fed,

eral courts should leave reapportionment to the Ohio Supreme
Court, which the GOP controls 4-3.
The Democrats urged the federal panel to retain jurisdiction.
U.S. District Judge Nathaniel
Jones, a Democratic appointee of
former Prc.sid·em Jimmy Carter,
presided over the hearing and said
the case would be taken under
advisement.
Sitting with !ones were U.S.
District Judges John W. Peck of

Cincinnati, a Democrat, and David
Dowd of Akron, a one-time GOP
candid ale for the Ohio Supreme .
Coun.
The panel extended until 4 p.lfl.
1oday a temporary restraining order
it issued in the case last week . Lawyers said that indicated to them
that a decision would be made·
within that span.
.
The restraining order prohibitS
Secretary of State Bob Taft from ·
Continued on page 3

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="316">
    <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="9607">
                <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="35218">
            <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="35217">
              <text>November 4, 1991</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="113">
      <name>evans</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4372">
      <name>geary</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="29">
      <name>hysell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="642">
      <name>nibert</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="335">
      <name>sayre</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="193">
      <name>stone</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1868">
      <name>whitlatch</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="367">
      <name>wright</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
