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'

I

wv

OH Point

19,1993

Ohio Lottery

Browns

Pick 3:
450
Pick .: :
6831
Super Lotto:
2-3-5-27-37-41
Kicker:
695795

rally to top
Raiders
PageS

•

LDW t&lt;&gt;nfgbt 1!1608, cloudy.
Tuestl&amp;y, doudy, blgb In mid-

70s.

'

•
I

Vol. 44, NO, 102

1 Section. 10 P..., 35 a.,lll

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, September 20, 1993

Multimech Ina.

A Multim..ti•lnc. Now•~

·Penny Aeik~.r . croWned
Catfish Festival Queen

1993 TOYOTA TERCELS
• Driver's Side Air Bag

•V6

Hundreds on hand for weekend tictivitie$

• Tilt, Cru.ise
• Power Windows &amp; Locks

• Loaded I

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stall'
· Music ranging from the golden
oldies to gospel, craft demonstrations, children's activities, and bar-

gains galore in sidewalk sales,
made for a delightful outing for the''
hundreds of Bend area residents
attending Middleport's Catfish Fes. tivill.

Sponsored by the Middleport
Community Association, Saturday's celebration kicked off with a
pet parade down North Second
Street just before noon. About 25
pets, an kinds and sizes with maiiy
m costume, were judged and
rosettes were awarded in several
categories.
.
The winners were Megan and
Harrison with Shihtzus in the
category of most original. Both the
girls and their dogs were in clown
costuming. Mike Smith who
brought his Basset hound in pirate
costume won the best costumed
category, and John Davidson took
the top award for cat costume.
Capturing the award for the
most unusual was Clara Saunders
with her goat. The other rosettes
went to Carol Southern for her
J;loxer, the biggest dog, while Jessica Cale and Yalerie Conde won the
most unusual transporlation award
(or their entry of Samantha, a collie, traveling in a little red wagon.
A highlight of the afternoon was
the crowning of Penny Aeiker,
daughter of Pat and Cindy Aeiker,
Pomeroy, a senior at Eastern High
School, as 1993 Catfish Festival
Queen. First runner-up was Angela
Searls, daughter of Tammy and
Kenneth Seatls, Middleport, a
senior at Meigs. The Miss Congeniality award was won by Angie
· Whilc;'dilughter of Bill·and Judy
White, Middleport, also a Meigs
studenl
Other contestants were Robin
Gardner, Middleport, daughter of
James Gardener and Jacqueline
Hartman, Heather Knight,
Pomeroy, daughter of Vincent and
Susan Knight, and Sandy Vance,
daughter of Rex Vance, Har-

Laura

ALL DRESSED UP- Chelsea WaUace got "Sugar", II Sbibtzu
and Beegle breed, aU dressed up for Middleport's pet parade at
tbe Catfish Festival Saturday.

bratioa. First runner-up was Angela Searles, left
l'ront, and Miss Congenia6ty was Angle White,
l'roat right. Other contestants were, standing, 1
to r, Robin Gardner, Heather Knight, and
Sandy Vance. (See additional pictures on page

FESTIVAL QUEEN - Penny Aeiker, daughter of Pat aad Cindy Aeiker, Pomeroy, seated
center, was crowned 1993 Catfish Festival
Queen Ia ceremonies held at noon Saturday at
the Middleport Community Association's celerisonville.
Flowers and gifts were presented 10 the contestants and the gueen
was a1so given a .$200- savings
bond

6).

.

music, the Middleport Church of
Christ with gospel and barbershop,
Blj~~ wi!IJ~k musi~ , clogging by tfie Midnight and B1g Bend
Cloggers and dancing by Slltin N'

Amy Roush, the 1992 queen, Lace.
'
was on hand to assist in the cereUp and down Nortl1 Second
monies. Chuck Kitchen was emcee. were children's games and ~tivi­
Afiemodn entertainment all well ties, craft displays and fO(Jd booths.
received by the large crowd includ- Games for the children, like wg-oed Denver Rice on his guitar; Dee war, sack,Dces and billloon toss.
and Dallas and CJ and The Country were helain Dave Diles Park by
Gentlemen with country-western employees of Farmers Bank. A

pizza eating contest was also held ·
in the part/
Veterans Memorial Hospital and
the Meigs County Health Department were on had to do health
checks. and during the afternoon
several craft demonstrations took
place.
Mary Wise showed how to cane
chairs, ?vfari!yn Meier, demonstrated tole painting, Susan Baker created bears, Shirley Huston did basket
(Continued on Page 3)

Poll reveals Ohioans want change in health c~re system

• Automatic • Air Conditioning •
AMIFM Cassetle • Bed Liner •

• XLT Trim • AMIFM Cassette •

Chrome Bumpers • Loaded!

iia,sn $tG,
SPECIAL PURCHASE USED CARS
·93 Pontiac Sunbirds . .... $9995 93 Ford Tempos .. . . .... $9999
93 Pontiac Rreblrd .... $10,999 93 Mercury To,az . . . .. .$9999
91 Acura Legend LS ... $23,995 93 Ford Taurus .. . . . . .
93 Ford EscDII .. . ... ... $9999
93 Olds Ciera . . ..... .$12,995
93 Ford Aerostars ... .. $16,995
93 Pllllllac Grand Am . .$11,995
· 93 flnl Econallne van .$16,995
90 Pontiac Tranipert SE . .$12,995
91 Ford f-150 P.U . ... .$10,995
91 Cadlac Eldllllla .. .$19,995 91 Ford Taurus .... .... $9995
93 Pontiac Grand Pllx .. $12,995 93 Ford Mustang C.w•. $13,995
92 Buick Century . . . .. $12,995 93 Lincoln Cftlilenlal . .$22,995

TRUCKS
92 Chevy S·10, V6 .. .. .$9995
84 Chevy C·1 0, auto. . .... $6995
86 Chevy 4x4 K20 . .. . . .$6995
81 Ferd Bnnco I 4x4 . . ... $5995
81 flnl F·150 4x4 ..... $8995
98 ltd Rl. RT,IIIt, 4.0 .. $9995
92 Nlssan 4x4 . . .. . .. $11,995
85 Chevy S·10 4x4 . . . .. $6995
II Ford Conversion . . ... $8995
16 Ford Convel1iall . .. ..$6995 .

UNDER $10,000

UNDER $7,000

UNDER $5,000

91 Buk:k Regll.. ....... $9199
88 Buick Riviera . . .. . . .. $8995
88 Cadllc Brougham .... $9995
91 Lu!Nna APV Van . .•.• $9995
88 Nlssan Palhflnder .• . • $9995
90 Mercury Cougar .. .... $9995
91 Ford Mustq GT .. . .. $9995
90 Henda Accenl . .. .... $8995
91 llenda Accord . . . ...• $9995
89 Pontiac Grand Prix •.. .$8495

91 l'lnllc 6000 LE . .. .. $6995
91 l'lnlllc Grand Pllx . . .. $6995
90 Pldac Grand Am .. . .$6995
88 Cldllac Devle' ..... .$6995
8,8 Iuick Pille Ave . .. . . .$6995
19 Chrysler New Yorker . .$6195
16 llldl Culllss . .. . .. . .$6995
91 Polllac SUnlllrd . ' . ... $6995
88 111ft CieJra .. ....... $5995
IUercury
. Topaz .... .. $6995

90 Chevy Lumina .. .... .$4995
85 Mercury Marquis .. ... $4995
87 Chevy Celebrity ...... $4995
89 Chevy Caviler ...... $4995
89 Suzuki Samurai . ..... $4995
87 Nlssan Se~ra .... •.. $3995
85 Chrsyler 51h Ave .... .$3995
87 Mercury Grand M11q ... $4995
89 Ford Escott .. .. . ... .$4495
88 Chevy lllrtlta GT ... .$4995

· s.ae% wltn IIPProved credit. AU prices Include rebate• and lncentlvee. Offer Expires Sept. 25th. Unite subJect to prior sale. Not.,.
. oaponel~ote
or ommlaalona.

• Buick, Olds, Pontiac, Cadillac, GMC Truck

• Ford, Uncoln, Mercury
~ Toyota

593-6641
East St;tic Street
Athens

CLEVELAND (AP) - Most
Ohioans questioned in a newspaper's survey said the health care
system must be changed to control
COlliS and they were willing to pay
more taxes to reform. the health
care system.
· Eighty-one percent of the
respondents said they would accept
a I percent increase· in federal
income tax to improve national
health care, The Plain Dealer poll
said Sunday.
Ninety percent of Ohioans who
responded in survey results
released Saturday said the health
care system must also provide
health insurance for everyone.
More than 80 percent of the
respondents favored higher !axes
on cigarettes and alcohol, while 63
\ percent favored higher t;txes on
health insurance companies,
according to the poll.

Seventy-five percent of the
respondents said every citizen ,
despite income or ability to pay,
should be able to· get adequate
medical treatment.
Regardless of what President
ClinJon proP.oses when he
announces details of his health care
refonn plan, 57 percent of those
polled doubted the pian would be
enacted before the 1996 election.
"Vfe an know what we need,"
said Albert Baum of Lorain, a 32year employee of East Ohio Gas.
" The problem is the politicians.
They'll do what the lobbyists want
10 do.
•
"I kn ow what it' s going to
come down to: 'I've only had four
years; give me four more and I'll
·dO it." '

. Gordon S. Black Corp. conducted the survey for the newspaper.
The company surveyed 1,000 Ohio

residents by· phone ·from Aug. 12- specialist they ·want, and that's
22. The margin of error was 3 per· unfair," said Ms. Sottile, 44, whose
own insurance limits her ability 10
cent.
Democrats and those describing use specialists.
More than three-fourths of those
themselves as liberals were most
likely to favor federal involvement polled did not like the idea of waitin the health care system, the poll ing longer for routine care, and
said. But ReP,ublicans and conser- more than 60 percent opposed limvatives favored higher taxes and a its on their choice of doctors of
larger role for the government to hospitals.
''I'm not going to a doctor I
improve health care, the newspaper
don't
know just because an insur·
said.
ance
company
tells me," said Sally
More than two-thirds of the conservatives, for example, said they Boehnlem of Cleveland. "I've
could handle a 1 percent increase in known my doctor for 22 years and I
income taxes; more than half said have confidence in him."
Vice President AI Gore told the
they would go as high as 5 percent,
·newspaper in a recent interview
according to the poll.
Jane S.ottile, who lives near that the Clinton plan would not
Cincinnati, said uni versa! health deprive the public of iiS freedom of
choice,
care would be abused.
"We're certainly going to retain
"I work in a doctor's office and
see Medicaid people get whatever the element of choice so that peohealth care they want, see whatever ple will be able to chose their own
health care providers," Gore said.

Way cleared for Demjanjuk's return to US
JERUSALEM (AP) - John
Demjanjuk, extradited to Israel in

1986 to stand trial as " Ivan the
Terrible," will rerum to the United

~-Local briefs-----.
Snow money to be distributed .
Meigs County's political subdivisions will be $49 ,254 richer
Wednesday following distribution of the snow emergency cheeks
according 10 Robert E. Byer, director the county's Emergency Management/Emergency Services Agency.
· Byer announced todar. he would hold a press conference at I
p.m. Wednesday to distnbute th7 checks. The checks will "«: distributed at the emergency serv1ces offiCe on Mulberry He1ghts
located behind Veterans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
· All townships and village representatives are asked to attend 10
receive their reimbursements for expenses during the S!IOW emer·
gency from March 13-17.
:rhose 10 receive reimbursements are all townships, the viUages
of Pomeroy, Middlepon, Racine and Syracuse, the Meigs ,Cilounty
Highway Department and the Meigs County EMS. All county officials are invited 10 attend.
•

Woman injured in one-car crash
A Gallipolis woman was listed in serious condition this morning
· in the inrensive care unit at Grant Medical Center in Columbus following a one-car crash at the junction of Forest Run and Minersville
Hill roads in Suaon Township Sunday around 1 a.m.
According to a report from the Meigs County Sheriff's Depart·
ment, James B. Paaerson, 32, 32414 Pleasant View Road, Racine,
was eastbound on Minersville Hill Road .and
- failed to stop fot SIOJl
(Continued on Page 3)
.~

States after Israel's top court
cleared the way for his release, a
congressman says.
The Supreme Court on Sunday
set aside appeals for a new Nazi
war crimes trial, ending the long
saga involving the retired Ohio
autoworker. His departure from
Israel had been delayed five times.
Demjanjuk was acquitted July
29 oi being "Ivan the Terrible," ·a
Nazi guard who operated gas
chlmbers at Treblinka death camp
in Poland during World War II .
With the new raling, he is free to
leave the country immediately.
In Cleveland, ~:uk's sonin-law, Ed Nishnic,
the deci- .
sion "definitely good news." But
citing J,liiSt delays, he added: " We
are gom' to approach this thing
very caubously, very carefully."
Nishnic and U.S . Rep. James
Tlaficant, D-Ohio, planned to leave
today to escort the 73·year-old
Demjanjuk, who stayed in protective custody. Traftcant'"'said he
expected Demjanjuk to be back in
the United States before Friday.
The ruling by Justice Theodore
Orr was the sixth time the court has
aealt with Demjanjuk's case since
his acquittal, when a five-member

panel said there was reasonable
doubt about his identity as Ivan the
Terrible but found that he had beeri
~nt at other Nazi camps.
Orr rejected appeals by Holocaust survivors and Nazi hunters
who sought to have Demjanjuk
retried on charges that he was at the
Sobibor death camp as well as concentration camps.
They had mounted an international search for Sobihor survivors
who could identify him. Demjanjuk
has said he spent World War II as a
German prisoner of war and
claimed. he was the victim of mistaken identity.
Israel's Attorney General Yosef
Harish already had decided not to
prosecute Demjanjuk further, saymg the evidence was too Wll8k and
there was risk of double jeopardy,
or trying him twice on the same
charges.
The Supreme Court needed
~ccptional circumstances to overtum the aaomey general's decision.
Orr's ruling meant those circumstances did not exist
Nazi hunters and Jewish ocganizations criticized the ruling, arguing that Israel was letting.a war
criminal go on a technicality.

1994 MISS AMERICA • Kimberly Aiken, Miss South Carolina, kicks the surf toward photographers during her annual photo
session oa the beach In Atlantic ·City Sunday. She was crowned
1994 Miss America Saturday night. (AP)

Crews clean up
after coal truck fires
EVANSVILLE, Ind,, (AP) Cleanup crews plan to spend much
of this week trying to remove an
undetermined amount of fuel from
a drainage ditch at MSC Trucking,
Inc. following a Sunday morning
fue at the Evansville facility.
The fuel flowed from the MSC
parking lot after 18 tri-axlt; dump
trucks were set on fire about 2 am.
in w~at officials say might be an
1.1

arson attempt linked to the longrunning coal strike.
· The firm has hauled coal for
area mining companies affected by
the strike.
It is not certain how the fuel was
spread around the parking lot, but
Cpl. Eric Williams of the Vanderhurgh County Sherifrs Department
said arsonists could have used a
fuel dispenser that remains active
ill all hours.

�Monday, September 20,1993

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

.

By Jack Anderson

Michael Binstein

,

CJ,!(,t!
, Cll'lf!,
Cl,f&amp;K! C/,f(/(t
,

•

Perhaps there was a hardened
soul somewhere who was unmoved
by the sight of Israel's leaders
shalcing hands with PLO Chairman
Yasir Arafat at the White House

~~~ ;,~~iJ!in~'!.:~~~!r~~o~

~.

.

--

achievement but like most, it built
on the past. Jimmy Carter and
Cyrus Vance would be tbe ftrst to
acknowledge that theirs was not a
·

Hodding Carter Ill

·well, a f~t of American public life
_
too often forgotten- in the angry.. , stand-alone SIJCCCSS.
~P of contempot•y politHenry Kissingec's presence was
teal debate. J us~tbclneath the Silrfice a·physical reminder of that fact.
controversy, deep currents of His shuttle diplomacy in the 1970s
agreement of shared goals and produced the stand-down from concommon vision have shaped Arner- Diet after the 1973 war that was the
ican foreign policy for almost a necessary precondition for Camp
half century. There is no reason David. But Kisliingec's innovative
they cannot be refashioned to meet approach was itself s~asful . ln
current challenges.
part. because the contending parties
What reminded me of that was m the Middle East undentoocl that
the presence at the signing ceremo- his objectives were mudl the 11111e
ny of all but one of the living foc- as his predeceasors'. The means
mer secretaries of state 111111 of two could and did change, but the ends
former presidents, George Bush sout~ht by the United States in the
and Jimmy Carter. As it happens. I reJIOn have been essentially the
worked for President Carter wader same since lhe Cleation of the stale
the direct supervision of his secre- of Israel in 1948.
.
tary of state, Cyrus Vance, before
That was why ·Presidalt Clinton'
and after the epochal Camp David made such a point of ateering
agreement. It was . a historic: ·Arafat toward former Secretary of

_,

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Serv.ice
responded to 16 calls for assistance
KY. .
during the weelcend. Units responding included:
.
Saturday- 10:16 a.m. Syraaillill!l
cuse to Syracuse Ballfield for .
afll&amp; Brandon Hill who was treated at
the .scene; 1:53 p.m. Pomeroy to
Overbrook Center for Flossie
.Via. Assocliited p,.,. Grapt;c.Net
C1993~c:cu·Wealher,lnc. • Moehler who was transported to
Pleasant Valley Hospital; 6:~.m.
------Weather~:':"":::----:--:-:- Tuppen Plains to Kaylor R for
south-centrai Ohio
.. High around 75. Chance of rain is Alice Board who was transported
to SL Joseph's Hospital; 6:58 p.m.
Tonight mostly cloudy witll a 30 percent.
Pomeroy to West Main Stteet for
chance of 'showers ahd thunderExtended forecast:
.
an auto accident in which Donna
storms. Low in the low 60s.
W~nesday through Frtd~y:
Chance of rain is 50 percent 'rues- .
Farr.on Vfedn~y. Lows m the Long, Christina and Shawn Ferguday, mostly cloudy in the morning 50s. Highs m mtd-70s to low 80s. son, Beth and John Schneider
with a slight chance of showers. C~nce of sho~ers Thursday. and refused treatment: 7:23 p.m.
Pomeroy .to West Main Stteet for
Decreasin~ clOuds in the afternoon. Fnday: Lows m the 50s. Htghs
mostly m the 70s.
Kathy Elias and Leah Barley who
were transported to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; 9:14p.m. Rut-----land tO Timber Hill Road for David
· 1 B
Molan who was transported to
We tba · ryson
Anna Lindelllail
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital;
Funeritl services for Weltha M.
AnnaL. Solomon Lindeman, 11:41 p.m. Pomeroy to Osborn
Bryson, who died Saturdily at Vet- 63, of Ashland died Saturdily, Sept. Street for J.L. Blackwell who was
erans Memorial Hospital will be 18• 1993.
iransported to VMH .
lield at 11 a.m. TuesdaY ~ the F'tshBorn Jan. 21, 1930, in Union·
Sunday-7:46a.m. Syracuse
er Funeral Home in Middleport. town, Pa., to the laie I.:eRoy and to Forest Run Road for Pauline PatThe Rev. Peter Tremblay will offi- Grace Marie Bryson Solomon, she terson who was transported via
ciate and burial will be in Wells was a homemaker and a former res- Grant LifeFlight to Grant Medical
Cemetery.
ident of Chester. In addition, she Center; 10:55 a.m. Rutland to Com
Friends may call todi!Y (Mon- was a member of the Ashland Hollow Road for Sheila Doheen
day) at the F~her Funeral Hol)le in Church of the Nazarene.
who was dead upon arrival; 2:28
~ddleport, from 7 to 9
and
She is survived by three daugh- p.m. Pomeroy to Meigs County
Tuesday from 9 a.m. unti the time ters ·and sons-in-law, Judy and Sheriff's Department for Ray Fosof serVice.
Mike McFadden o~ Hepry, Tenn., ter who was U'flllsported to VMJ:I;
Theron Van Inwagen
Mary and D~ B!illey of Bartlett! 6:44 p.m. Pomeroy to East Mam
; Theron "Corky" Van lnwagen Tenn., and Jantce and John Bereny• Street for Edna Stobart who was
of Columbus died Sunday: of Doyles~own; four sons and transported to .PVH; 7:05 p.m .
s71 'l 19 1993 at Doctors Hospital daughters-.m-law. Robert 1:-· and Pomeroy and Middleport volu~teer
ep . 'eo! •b
Sharon Lmdeman of, Clinton, ftre departments to Lmcoln Hetghts
N~;:: in ~~m:~oy on June 17, R~n~ld 1. Li~deman of Akron, for a fire involving a structure
1922 son of the late Harold and Wtlham R. Lmdeman of Man~h- pwned by Jack Large; 8:37 p.m.
Mary• Jessie Chadwick Van lnwa- . ester, and Donald and Tonya Lm- Rutland to State Route 124 for
·en he was retired from Saint de~ of Pomeroy, and 11 grand- Ernestine Williams who was transg h
H · 1· c 1 b
children.
ported to VMH: 10:04 p.m .
~nl r;y osptta 10 0 urn us
Others surVivors !nclude three Pomeroy to Union Avenue for Lola
ter . years. .
.
·r sisters and brothers-m-la~. Kath- Koyalc!)ick ,who was .transported to
"He ts survived •.by. hts .wl e. "' leen ·ana Howard Maac and Jean ~ VMH; 10:09 p.m. Racine to Pearl
· Bvdss•e. Van l~wa gen, IWE0 brothend and Barry Lonsinger, all of Ash- Street for Gina Knotts who was
an ststers-m- aw. r~est an
land, and Naomi and Roger Higgs transported to PVH. ·
Freda Van lnwagen. of Middleport_ .of Orlando, Fla.; 011e brother and
Monday -7:04 p.ni. Reedsville
(md Sammy and Mi!IY Van l~w!l- sister-in-law, the Rev. and Mrs. to State Route 124 for Foster Niday
gen of New ~pshue: two SISters Kenneth and Caroline Solomon of who was transported to Camdenand brothers-m-law, Sue and Paul Medellin, Columbia, and a stepsiS- Clark Hospital.
Marr of Pomeroy and Barbara and ter Lilliam Speelman of Beaver
Carroll Smith of MiddleP&lt;irt: sever- Falls, Pa.
lj] rueces and nephews. .
She was preceded in death on
; He was preceded m death by. Aug. 24, 1990, by her husband,
two brothers, Edgar of Pomeroy Robert 1. Lindeman to whom she
~nd Bobby of New Jersey; two was milrried on May 9, 1946. Also
mfant brothers, Harry Eugene ~d preceding her in death were two
by Bob Hoeflich
R~ger, and two SISters, All~e brothers and one sister.
Wmce of Mantua and Natalie
Services will be held Monday at
Stgler of R~tland..
. . . .
g p.m. in the Ashland Church of
: . Cremauon wah no vtsttauo,n the Nazarene with the Rev.. Ivan
Final plans are being nailed
~1ll be held at Mr. Van lnwage~ s Beatty officiating. Locally, services
down
for the annual Racine Fall
r.equest. Arrangements are bemg will be held Tuesday at I p.m. in
to be held this Saturday,
Festival
conducted by Shoemaker Funeral the Chester Church of the Nazarene
SepL25.
Home, Columbus.
with the Rev. Herben Grate officiThe annual parade will move
ating. Burial will follow in .Ghester out at 11 a.m. with the lineup to
'
Cemetery.
. start on the Star Mill parking lot at
(Continued from Page I)
Visitation will be held one hour 10:30 p.m. Shorty and Mary Ball
.
weaving, Wallen Roush demon- prior to each service at the respec- and Scott Hill are heading the
strated and displayed lapidary, ·and tive locations. Den bow-Primm parade which will exit the pmk on
the Big Bend Antique Fann Club Funeral Home, Ashland, is in Vine SL, at the firehouse, go up
had several pieces of equipment on charge of all arrangements.
Vine to Fifth, then to Elm St., and
display.
down Third winding up at the park.
. A quilt show was held by the
Trophies and C8$h will be awarded
Middleport Arts Council on both
to the first, second and third place
Saturday and Sunday. Free fingerentries. The Racine Area Commu·
printing of children was' offered at
nity Organization is sponsoring the
Peoples Bank.
parade and the Fall Festival Com·
Two accidents were investigated mittee
, Numerous door prizes provided
will present awards.
by merthants were awarded during over the weekend by Pomeroy
As you may remember, a pump, .
the day by the Middleport Commu- · police.
lcin growin~ contest is held in conAs the result of an accident Fri- junction
nity Association. Tom Dooley,
wttll the festival. Participresident. chaired the festival. The day at 6:21 p.m. Donna M. tong, pants are to talr:e their pumpldns at .
queen's selection committee was 27, Gallipolis, was cited for driving a booth which. will be set up on
composed of Merri Amsbary, under suspension and failure to Pearl Street. next to the restaurant,
maintain assured clear distance.
Niese! Gerard and Tammy Searls.
10 a.m. to 2 p.m. John DudThe 1968 Ford ttuck owned by from
ding
is
in charge of the pumpkin
Steve Coffman of Boise, Id, being conteSt with
The Daily Sentinel
judging to be held at 3
driven by Long rammed into the p.m. There will
be prizes is three
(liSPS liJ-Htl
rear of a 1992 Ford ttuck driven by age groups which
12 and
PubliJbed evay afteraooa, Moadly tbrouah
John Schneider of Prospect Hill, under, 13 through include
Friday, Ill Court St., Pomaroy, Ohio by tho ;
18,
and
and
Pomeroy. Schneider had stopped in over with first, second and19third
Oblo Valley Publilblaa CompayiMulimcdla
Joe.. Pomeroy, Ohlo •5169, Ph. 992·2156.
preparation to malcing a left hand
trophies to be awarded.
Second clul po~tt~o paid 11 Pomeroy, Qllo:
tum. There was light damage to the place
Meigs
Countians or others interrear of Schneider's truck. The vehi- ested in setting
Memb&lt;r: The Aalodllod Prca, 10d die Ohio
a craft, food, or
Ncwapaper AJ&amp;ocilliou, NadODil Advertiliq
cle driven by Long with moc!Crate game booth mayupstill
do so by conRepreacntatlve, Braohlm NewtpJper Salu,
front Cl)d damage was disabled and tacting Shirley Stewart
733 Third Aveuue, New York, New York
at 949towed from the scene.
tOOI1.
2210,
the
Home
National
flank .
At 9: 18 p.m. Saturday, two pasPOSTMASTER: Sead -..,, clwlps to ThO
The
setup fee is $10.
sengers in a 1971 Chevrolet truck
Daily Senlillel, lll Court SL, Pom.oy, Ohio
A complete time schedule on all
• l769.
driven by Roger Dowell, Pomeroy,•
of
the happenings of the day will
fell from the truck when he pulled
SUBSCIUPTlONRAT&amp;S
be
announced later this week.
ly c.m. or Motor Roate
from Super America onto West
Ooe Woek...........
.$1 .60
There is to be scads of musical
Main.
&lt;Joe Mooth.c•·····•·•··"··•···· ····•·····"· '···•""".$6,9l
entertainment
on .IJand and a festiDoe Ycor...........:...............:.............. - ..$13.20
Police said that as Dowell
SINGLE COPY
val
queen
will
be crowned among
· pulled ·front the station, the passenPRICI
other
events.
Meantime, if you
ger door opened and Kathy Elias,
oauy:........................................35 Coa11
have
any
questions
contact Kathryn
38, and Leah Barley, nine months,
Subla'lben uot dealriq to pay lbe carrier may
Hart
at
949-2656
after
6 p.m.
fell from the vehicle. The Pomeroy.
remit Ia advaDCe dlrecllo Tbe D.U.y Seatiael ·
on alhtee~ ail or l2 rnoath b•ll. Credit will be
emergency squad transported both
Attractive, personable Sheela
livea c.ner etdt week.
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
DeLayne-1
know her as Sheila
No svblcripdoaa by nuil permitted In ...,
where they were trea1e.d and
wllotehomoCIITitr-lsanlloblo.
Fetty-seems
on the br.&amp;nk of a
released.
major
break
into
the country music
MollS.boa=
Police received a report from
lasloloM...
1J
.
business
and
I
know
you join me in
13 Woou................................................slt.s•
Don Tale Chevrolet that sometim!l
hoping
that
she
makes
il
26Woelll ..................................................$43.t6
Saturday a 1993 Corsica on the
ll _ ...................................................$8.4.76
Sheela
will
be
doing
two shows
company's sales lot had been broOoololdo Molp C...IJ,
13 WMIII .................................................$23.40
ken into and the steering column at the Jackson Apple Festival, 8
28
.$45.50
dama$ed. The incident remains p.m: and 9:30p.m., this Friilay. She
52
.$88AO
will be accompanied by her six
under mvestigation.
.·

Area.deaths

y.m.,

1

riOIS. the NeW Ycirt Civil Liberties
Union )lOints to Section 1985 of 42
United States Code and BB~ it permits a cause of action .,.mat anyone who conspires to deprive others of "equal protection of the

attacked while driving ho~De, waS
afraid to leave his house for three
days. He kept calling 911 for help,
but was tofd, "You're from theHasidic community - trust in
God." But this, however, is the
police's failure to proJect- which
laws.''
Section 1983 permits individu- may not be enough for federal
als to file suits against anyone who, · intervention.
The same problem probably
under color of state law, has c•nsed
tbe complainants to be "deprived exists with the complaint of Riva
of any rights ... secured by the Con- Katzen, wbo says in an affid,avit
stitution," and the laws of the that "on Aug. 19, 1991, tile ftrst
day of violence in Crown Heights,
United States.
Still, a number of avenues to hundreds of people took to the
prosecl!lion may be barricaded. For streets, rallying to cries that
tnstance, tbe NYCLU does say that promised to finish what Hitler had
"as a general. rule, a government's started."' Badly frightened, she
failure to protect an individual called 911 "at least six times but
against private violence does not never received JXl)leetion when he(
constitute a violation of tile due home was besieged under cover of
process clause. However, an allega- darkness by a mob hurling bottles,
tion that police officers in some bricks and stoneS.·'
If there is 110 federal redress for
way had assisted in creating or
increasing the danger to the victim' her, there may well be events dur,
ing the riots that are not of that cal"
would implicate due process."
There are witnesses who claim egory. In Crown He~hts, fear and
that ' indeed did happen. For hatred of "the other ' have been
instance, according to the NYCL~: intensified because of those four
"Police officers assured Isaac Bil- nights. A full-scale involveinent by
ton and his son Yecbiel that it was the Justice Department could also
safe 10 proceed down Schenectady dispel the city-wide suspicion that
A venue, and that they would the White House - wanting to
receive police protection. These keep David Dinkins as mayor same officers looked on and did has pressured the Justice Departnothing as father and son were ment to withdraw.
chased and severely beaten with
Nat Hentorr Is a nationally.
fists, bats, stones, bricks, bottles, renowned antborlty on tbe First
Ameadment and tbe rest of tbe
sticks and razors."
Then there is Yehuda BID of Rights. c~
Benchemoun who, haying been

range from 65 to 75.
High pressure will move in for
Wednesday' and with sunshine the
mercury will recover to the mid70s to lower 80s, which is slightly
aiJove normal for this time of year.
Fall begins Wednesday at 8:22p.m.
The record high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 97 degrees in 1895. The
record low was 37·in 1956.
Sunrise this morning was at 7:17
a.m. Sunset will be at 7:32p.m.
Around the natioa
The Midwest and Plains were
mostly cloudy but dry early today
as warmer. weapter moved mto the
region, while unseasonably cool

weather lingered in the Easl
Temperatures dropped to nearfreezing this morning from nonhero New England across the upper
Great l;akes region. .
Mostly sunny skies in the East
today were expected to yield to
thiCkening clouds late in the afternoon. ·A cool rain was forecast
across parts of the Appalachians,
with afternoon thundershowers in
the Gulf Coast states.
Damp weather also was expected over the Great Lakes region.
Slcies were expected to clear in
the Plains and Midwest as clouds
and showers moved east. Highs
generally in the 80s were expected.
The West was expecting some

clouds but little rain.
On Sunday, thunderstonnl and
bigh winds struck )IIIU of the Midwest, with a torudo reported IOUih
of ShJllllrock, Okla., and 7S mph
gusts at Coffeyville, Kan. More
than 2 1(2 inches of rain fell on
Topeka. Kan., breaking a record set
in 1965 by about 1/2 inch.
The nation's high Sunday was
98 in Laughlin, Nev. and Gila Bend
and Lake Havasu in Arizona.
Today •s highs were forecast
mostly in the 90s along the Gulf
Coast to the desert Southwest: the
SUs for the South, Midwest and
West; the 70s ill the liCI'thern Plains
and in the Roclcies and 60s in the
Northeast and N&lt;ritwest.

Penny...

Police probe
two accidents

.•

lamb's dream, I thought of some- :
thing else as well. Because funda- ·
mental , dr11matic changes have :
ttansfonned lhe 'face of the world :
with numbing rapidity, and bec•nse ·
new problems have arisen to sCize :
~.J.'=~ib; ~r~ our
Blt!!Dlion and focus our con- :
and 1srac1
year.
cems, we have almgst forgotten ·
In an equally nice symbolic- how to celebrate accomplishmenL :
touch, Baker and Vance were Ileal· Many of (not least, me) have
ed side-by-side. Their wives were been beUer I\ raising tbe specter of •
llso witll them at this moment of future dilemmas than at applauding :
jof~!US hope, just as they had been
the solution ofpast quandaries.
:
w1th til em on those exhausting
diDiomatieTOII)'S through the' MidI Such myopia is i mistake. If we .:
dfe East when tlley were still in
are
unable to claim credit and take :
office. There could not lie two pleasure
in the face of auccess, we i
more different oeople than those will inevitably
view tho future 1
two, nor is Henry Kissinger the
more
pessimistically
than we :
~ as eitber of them, but history
should.
'
will recml that~ WOiked for simi•
lar objectives 10 the Arab-Israeli
conOict during their years at tile
·aoddlng Carter ID; former :
State DepanmeiJL
State Department spoke1man •
As I sat there on tllat perfect . and award·wlnnilla reporter, edl· ~
September day, cm11Iting with all tor and publisher, ls president of 1
the rest at the utterly mind-bog- MabiStreet, a Wublnatnn, D.C.- •
gling spectacle of lions sitting baed televlsloa production com-- l
.
. down with lions in .quest of the pany.

it'is

us

.

.

N

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .,._. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

w-.. . . . . . . . . . . . .
w-.. . . . . ...................... ......

••

Stoneyridge Campgrounds at Beaver, and the
Wilkesville Festival and Bean Dinner. The
group is made up or Chuck Williams, Robert
White, Jim Carnahan, Roger Bissell, and Larry
Jones, pictured left to righL

TO PERFORM • Middlebranch; a gospel
and bluegrass band, wiD peiform at Saturday's
Racine Fall Festival at 6 and 9 p.m . Together for
10 years, tbe voup bas played at Star Mill Park,
Racine, Tomahawk Park at Copley, W. Va.,

Hospital news
VETERANS Mli;MORIAL
Saturday admissions- Lowell
Bing, Long Bottom, and Mark
Werry, Pomeroy.
Saturdily discharges - None.
Sunday admissions- None.
Sunday discharges - Sandra
Payton, Syracuse, and Ernestine
Williams, Rutland.
Holzer Medical Center
Sept. 17 discharges: Phyllis
Green, Margaret Bums, Rita Hill,
Mary 'Grimm, Terrell Smith,
Harold Broyles, Carl Thomas,
Jeraldine Howell, Delbert Carter,
Stella Gibson, Martha Fortner,
Susan Halstead, Anna Welsh, Mrs.
Shane Pierce and daughter, Rom a
Northup, Opal Fitzpattick, Naomi
Roush, Terri Mahley, Alice Sauer,
Mrs. David Hunt and daughter, and
Darlene Graham.
Sept. 17 birth: Mr. and Mrs.
Gregory Sheets, son, Pomeroy.
Sept. 18 discharges: Martha
Alcoxader, Jamie 1oqes, Paul Bell,
Linlla Lyons and John Roderick.
Sept. 19 discharges: Mrs. Levi
Byler and son, Dona McFan,n, Troy
Pickens and Aaron Doles.
Sept. 19 birth: Mr. and Mrs. ·
Kevin Meadows. daughter, MiddleporL

Beat of the Bend...

•

State James Baker, who served
President Bush, after the formal
business was over. It was the BushBaker team that prodded the parties
back to the conference table, the

By Tbe Associated Pret111
A wann front associated with a
low will affect Ohio tonight and
cause showers and thunderstorms.
As the low moves out of Ohio
Tuesday there will be a threat of
showers in the easl.
Rainfall amounts through
tonight could reach up to an inch.
Severe thunderstormS are also possible over the southtnt third of the
state early tonighl Highs will range
from the lower 60s northwest to the
mid-70s south.
The clouds will decrease from
the west Tuesday while the east
remainS mostly cloudy. Highs will

.

t'~or Clinton the man, Foley is
downright in awe of Clinton's
intellect, ene~ and even hospi~­
ty. "He genumely seems to enjOy
tile company of people in public
life," Foley said. "I'm not sure I
can sa}' that about every presi·
dent." To illustrate, be explained
hQw durin$ his travels with Clinton
aboard Atr Foree One, the president couldn't seem to pry hunself
awar, from his guests.
.
• Sometimes presidents, whet)
· they have guests on board Air
Force One, will spend a certain'
amount of lime with them, and then
· uncletstandably will spend a certain
amount of time by themselves to
prepare or rest," said Foley. But
Clinton enjoys eating 110d laughing
with guests "to a greater extenl
frankly than I would be doing. He
likes to talk about .programs and
policy and alternatives."
NAFrA and othec items on this ·
autumn's legislative agenda wilL
subject Clinton and Foley to their
biggest tests yet.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binsteln are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Historic accord points to the future

The Dally Sentinel-Page 3

W.VA.

Will justice serve in Crown Heights?

Berry's World

•

in southern Ohio tonight
Rain expected
.

EMS responds
to sixteen calls

-

Nat Hentoff

PA.

INO.

c

Today in history ·

-~

conditions and high temperatures

•

Congress were stonny at best. ·
"There were blank looks," he
recalled. •'I think out of 70 pecple,
seven Cl' eight put up their banda....
For most DeniOCI'ItS who are now
in the House, there was no recollection of serving with PJesldent
Carter.''
If many Democrats can't
remember Carter_, no Rep11blican
can r(,lCall the last time the GOP
controlled the House. "In the
House there is sort of a Jle&amp;!imism
about coming inio majonty leadership," said Foley. "Republicans
have never had, in the living memory of any single melllber of the
House, a role in leadership. So that
creates a kind of 'we're the oppos~
lion, you guys won the election;.
Don't ask us for help."'
Along with the bounties of vic·
tory come burdens. Tile end of
dillided government means the end
of excuses - and new expectations. "(Being speaker is) sometimes perhaps a little more convenient," Foley said of life under a
Republican president. "You disagree wben you wish to. You don' t
have any responsibility to carry die
explanation of lhe president's prof:: if you don't really support it

government, each requiring different coalitions. That's why afte!' the
presidalt, Foley may have the second .toughest JOb in Washin,ton,
trying to shepherd an increasmgly
unruly flock of free-lancers in the
House who are fracturing along
ideological, gCQIIliPhical and even.
and
raciallines. ·
The art of coalition-building
should be smoother with the end of
divided govemmenL At least that
and say he's got to oppose was the political fantasy some
NAFTA."
Democrats labored under after
Rule No. 3: NAFTA pmponents Clinton's victorv- but it's a fanare getting routed on the rhetorical wy Foley tried to dispel early on.
battlefield. It's time for a counter- He Jecalls a meetill$ auended by a
offensive.
groll{l of Demoaanc Hoose mem"We've left the rhetorical field bers Just before Clinton's inauguraentirely to the opponent.... Very · tion. One member rose to giddily
few members can tell you quic:ldy proclaim: "Now everything is
what is the good side of NAFTA. going to be great." .
There is a seminar-like defense of
Foley com:cted his colleague:
NAFTA. But the othec side is, 'this "I said the problems are going to
is wrong and it's going to cost jobs be there. They are going to be difand, by the way, if )'011 are going to ferent problems. Comparatively
vote for this we're not going to for· they are going to be welcome probget iL'"
lems because we're all glad to have
NAFTA may be one of lhe most a Democratic presidenL" Foley
nettlesome issues Foley faces this then asked for a show of hands for
fall. but there's also health care, how many remembered Jimmy
political reform and re-inventing Carter, whose relations with
Foley said. "The same things is
true in reverse. (Majority Whip)
Dave Bonior, D-Micll., isn't going
to be able to take some member

She is the only Cabinet member said, should have the last word.
whose autograph may be more Mayor Diflkins, widely believed to
prized than the president's. This - have been customarily late in
aura, however, bas been dimmed in responding to tbe violence, said it
New York.
Janet Reno was ready to
announce that the Justice Department had closed its civil rights
investigation of the still-resounding
four days of riots in · Crown was "essential" for Reno to take
Heights, Brooklyn, in August 1991 . charge. But many of his supportm
during which Yanke! Rosenbaum, feared he would again - as in the
a Hasidic scholar, was stabbed to Girgenti report - be pilloried.
Lemrick Nelson, 16; was tried
death. Some Jews were bealen and
many more were terrified by roving for Rosenbaum' s murder and was
bands of black youngsters, enraged acquitted. This summer, in a letter
by the death of 7-year-old Gavin to Janet Reoo aslcing her to underCato when a car driven by a take a full probe of those nights
that the Hasidim called a pogrom
Hasidic Jew went out of control.
Reno had decided there would and others described as a disturbe oo federal charges by the Justice bance, the New Yorlt Civil Liberties Union noted that the state's
Department against anyone Girgenti
report had severely critieither in connection with the murcized
the
police's investigation of
der or any of the other acts of vio- ·
the
murder
fCI', among other things,
lence. Also free of further investi"neglecting
to interview possible
gation would be New York City
EDJ;J'OR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vk:e president and colum· police officials and Mayor David witnesses, abandoning potential
nist ror The Associated Press, bas reported on Washington and Dinkins with regard to their han- leads and failing to identify and
national polldcs ror more than 30 years.
dling of the rioters. But after arrest Rosenbaum's other
protests from Brooklyn District assailants.''
There are complaints from
Attorney Charles Hynes and others,
blacks.
Cannel Cato. father of the
the attorney general said she would
boy
killed
by the runaway car, says
On this date:
wait a while to look at any new
In 1870, Italian troops took control of the Papal States, leading to the legal justifications for going in.
he was prevented by the police
unification of Italy.
.
Gov. Mario Cuomo had ordered from helping his injured son and
In 1873, panic swept the floor of the New York Stock Exchange m the an earlier investigation - with was badly beaten by tllem. One
wake of railroad bond defaults and bank failures.
limited powers - by State Crimi- offiCer allegedly called him a "nigIn 1881, Chester A. Arthur was sworn in as the 21st president of the nal 1usuce Commissioner Richard ger." Aroong some Nacks, there is
United States. succeeding James A. Garfield. who was assassinated.
Girgenti. In his report, Girgenti a continuing sense that J!!stice has
recognized that he had composed overlooked the Cato family.
As for other dimensions of the
only the overture. Reno's office, he

•

Accu-Weather• forecast for

Foley wants party harmony on NAFTA

~~es Exon

;;'\~

Tuesday, Sept. 21
MICH.

Surgeon General ticks ,
off Senate conservatives

~-. -

OHIO Weather

Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy •adleport. Ohio
Mondey, September 20, 1993

WASHINGTON - House
111 Coart Street
Speaker Tom Foley, D-Wub., has
Pomeroy, Ohio
drafted some political rules of
DBVOTED TO TIU llfTEitR8T8 OP THE IDIG8-IIASON AREA
engagement for the congressional
battle over the North American
Free Trade Agreemenl
Rule No. 1: Keep carnage
among Demoaats to a minimum.
"One of the things I'm conROBERTL. WINGE'IT
cerned about, even though 1'!11 a
Publisher
strong supponer of NAFTA, is that
the debate and resolution of this
not be a divisive carry-over
issue
MARGARET I.EREW
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
problem
for the Democratic
Controller
Genenl Manatler
Party," Foley told us during a 90minute interview last week. "We
L£ 1 lEKS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be less than 300
don't need to have NAFTA and our
wotds. All leoen am subject to editing and must be signed witb. name,_
disagreement about NAFTA infect,
addreu and telepllooe number. No unsigned !etten will be publisbed. totten
so to speak, our health-care decisbould be in pxl tute, addreaing mues, oot penonalitiel. .
sions.''
Rule No.2: NAFI'A will be a
vote of conscien~ for Democrats,
who can't be strong~armed into
switching their voces.
•'What I cannot do is take a firm
and even emotional opponent ·of
NAFTA and bring him in and sit
By WALTER R. MEARS
down
and say, pointing my linger
·
·
AP Spet:ial Correspondent
.
at
him,
'you've got to support the
WASHINGTON - Maybe it's time for blunt. even diswteful talk
president
and I want you to go out
about problems like teen~age pregnancy and controlling AIDS. Mannerly
and
vote
foc NAFTA.' No way. I
messages are not ~g.
couldn't
do that with a pistol."
So Surgeon General1oycelyn Elders isn't worried ~hen .tradi~onalists
take offense at her views and the way she states them. I think I uck a lot
of people off that refuse to deal openly and honestly about the predicament of our children today," she said.
.
She certl!inly ticked off Senate conservatives before gaining confmnation earlier this month.
Even among her supporters.there wer~ sugg~tions !"at she llJ!Ie down
the act, avoid what one Republican descnbed as ·~cendiary rhetonc. .
But that's the confrontational style that JUSt mtght get through to lcid;s.
coming from a black doctor who worked her way IIJl from rural poverty m
a Nebraska Democrat, personified the dilemma.
"She rilay well be j~ what the doclOI' ordered for our nation's medical
needs " he said. "Maybe we should take a straight-talk IIWllllk!h."
~n Elton said be couldn't accept thin$s like condoms in the schools
and sex education in place of teaching absunence. He voted oo.
Sen. Nancy Kassebaum supported the oomination, although she J!Ud
she wtm~'t comfortable with the way Elders argues ber case fCI' abortion
rights, condom distribution and other steps against teen-age pregnancy.
"She deserves the chance to try to reach.young ~le who no one else
seems to be able to reach," the sena10r said.
In a way, the Elders nomi.natio~ renewed the f~ily values argument
that Republicans raised as an tssue m the 1992 campmgn, to lillie avail.
The internal debate over that traditionalist social agenda ~PJ.l is goin_g
on among Republicans, as when Pat Buchanan told the ChristJan Coalition last weekend that conServatives should bolt into a new party of their
own if the GOP drops anti-abortion vows from its campaign platforms.
Elders is an ardent supporter. of the right to abortion and bas argued it
in harsh terms that enraged the religious right and offended Roman
Catholic Church leaders.
.
.
Among other Elderisms that drew protests: her observauon that c~­
dren are taught to drive cars but not what to do m the back seat, that a gtrl
on a date should have a condom in her purse, that crack-addicted prostitutes should be offered contraceptive implants so that they could "~
sex, if they must, to buy their drugs,'' and .that sex edu~tio~ should begm
as early as kindergarten to teach respoDSJble conduct m nme to make a
difference.
. .
.
"Maybe everybody would buy into it if she just put it m ~· diplomatic language," said Sen. Dale Bumpers of Arkansas, supporbng. Elders.
And Kassebaum said she hopes the new surgeon general can deliver her
messages in tenns .that will bring consensus and won't be lost in controversy.
·
'd
But the style has ~ part of the mes_sage: Sen. A1!m S.lDipson ~
Elders has a unique abihty to reach an audience of uncanng, mespDIISlble
young
people.
the alk .. s·
'I believe she can talk the talk and walk
w , tmpson S31"d •
"She can communicate with these lcids."
She'll get to try, at least, in a post that has become a natiooal platform
on health cli{e issues.
That has put the job in the center of political disputes on issues ' like
abortion. C. Everett Koop, the Reagan-Bush surgeon general who was not
considered a role model for the job, was denied confirmation for nearly a
year because of his staunch opposition to abortion.
In 1964, it was a report from the surgeon general that declared
cigarette smoking a health hazm:d.
.
.
.
. It has been a job withc;mt pohcy m~ng po~ .. Republican.s OJ?POSlllg
the Elders nomination satd she may gam authonty m a reorganiZatlon that
would have the surgeon general oversee disease prevention, women's
health programs and health promotion.
For all of that, Sen. John Danfonh of Missouri said the whole thing
may not make a lot of difference. He voted to confU'IIl. " Dr. Elders struck
me as unimpressive and foolish," he s~d. '.'but I d? not think l;he ~epub­
lic will fall if our next surgeon generaliS ununpresstve and foolish.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

..----~Briefs ... - - - - ,
(Continued from Page 1)
sign at the junction of Forest Run Road . .Patterson's car travelled
across Forest Run Road and into a creek before strilcing embankmenl
The car was not discovered until approximately 7:30 a.m. at
which:time the sheriffs department and the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service responded to the scene. A passenger,
Pauline E. Patterson, 38, of 57. Buhl-Morton Road, Gallipolis, was
trilnsported to GMC via LifeFlight helicopter, the report stated.
James Patterson received minor injuries and was not treated.
.
Damage to Patterson's 1984 Chevrolet Cavalier was. listed as
heavy and disabling. The incident remains under investigation.

an

Vehicle strikes fence, ditch
A Poin.t Pleasant, W.Va. man's vehicle sustained moderate, disabling damage Sunday morning when it sttuek a fence and a ditch,
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Hi~hway Patrol reported.
Earnesto E. Ward, 26, 1421 Ohm Stteet, was northbound on
State Route 143 in Scipio Township when he lost control in a curve
and went partially off the left side of the road. The vehicle then
crossed to the right side of the road and struck a fence and a ditch.
The pattollisted unsafe speed as the contributing factor.
No injuries were reported and no citations were issued. The vehicle was towed from the scene.

.

Fire damages home
Heavy smoke and water damage was incurred in a ftre Sunday
night at a house owned by Jack Large on Lincoln Heights,
Pomeroy.
Pomeroy firemen were called to the scene at 7:05 p.m . and were
on there for about an hour. According to Danny Zirkle, the fire
started in a mattress in a bedroom. The ftre was contained to that
room of the one-stoiy frame house.
Pomeroy had three trucks and the emergency squad on the scene,
and Middleport assisted with a truck and four firemen.

Meigs announcements

7

Salad supper slated
member hand and her two bac)mp
SPRING VALLEY CINE~~
Preceptor Beta Beta chapter of
singers so it should be quite a Beta Sigma Phi is holding a salad
446·4524
' .. ".,
show. During one of the presenta- supper Thursday at 6 p.m. Ill the .
UIIGAIN MA. . . .IIAT. &amp; . . ..
UJICIAIII NtCIMT JUIIDAY
tions a video will be made of her
Parish House in
performance and this w'ill be sub- Episcopal
Pomeroy. Members are to bring
mitted to Miller Lite which is spon- salad
and supplies for craftwork
soring. an European tour of country session.
music performers. Hopefully, the
video will properly spotlight Sheela
so that she will be one of the select- Free Dance to be Held
ed performen to do the tour. By the
A round and square dance will
way, Sheela is also preparing to be held Saturday night from 8 to
begin cutting an album on October 11:30 p.m. at the old American
IL
Legion hall in Middleport. CJ and
the Country Gentlemen will pro- .
I've told lou about Mike vide the music for the free dance.
Roberts, son o Nonga Roberts of Those attending are asked to take a
Pomeroy and the late Robert snack for the snack table. Children
Roberts, a popular school teacher, a are welcome if they are accompacouple of times. Now let me tell nied by an adull
you about son number two, Roben
(Bob) Roberts who is also malcing
his mark in the world.
Robert was a member of
Goodyear's award-winning latex
SECOND ANNUAL .
team honored at the 31st Research
and Development Magazine
MEIGS COUNTY CHAMBER
awards banquet in Chicago on
Sept. 9. The banquet honors the
OF COMMERCE
100 most technologically significant new products of the year.
DANCE CRUISE ·
Bob who helped develop
Chemisat, a saturated nittile latex,
ON THE
is pictured at his laboratory in the
1993 R. &amp; D. 100 Awards Magazine entitled "Technology's Brightest Stars".
Chemisat, which was selected
by more than 7S scientific experts
in a variety of disciplines and the
R. &amp; D. Magazine editors, was recognized as one of the year's most
technologically significant new
products.
Bob and his wife, Nancy, were
STERN WHEELER.
flown on Goodyear's corporate jet
Thursday Odober 7
8:00·11 :00
from Akron to Chicaao to attend
the dinner held at the Museum of
Boardi•t 7:30
Science and Industry. Quite an
honor for a hometown boy.
Cash bar
Hoursd'oeuvres •vsltable
I received a notice that an area
store was1 having a 25 percent
reduction sale on all of its Christmas decorations over the weekend.
And I'm still tryi11g to figure out
what to do about that Halloween
pumplcin. Do keep smiling.

Tickets '25 per person $40 couple
Umited number of tickets available
for More Information Call 992-5005
Tickets available at the Meigs County Chamber Olflce.

,,

�Monday, september 20, 1993

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

With second-half comeback,

Mon~~sepUHnber20,1993

Page

4

AMEIIICAN CONFERENCE
-Dhllloio

T-----·
b fir r I' - -·
·----·

WL
2 .0
1 l
I l

-I,Nowfeot3

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

aJM!I.ANI) 1 2 . - 2

In the NFL •••
T
0
0
0

M
1.000
..500
.500
N.Y. * ---· l I 0 .5011
Ncw&amp;Jiaod.,.. 0 3 0 .000

T-lllr

Ohio college
football scores

l't' PA
51 )4
29 30
:11 44
... 40
... 74

0

Ooioop 3, OololoM I

·• '· r - t

Clllif

- 4 , E-. CltJ I

Salurday's acdcm
k:wC--...G
BaD SL :lA, Ohio 16
w. MidUpa 20,""""' 3

lilil- ()ooi.JO.IO) " ~12.9),7~JUL
B•1tiaon (VUeUa.t• 1· 9) 1t

aJM!I.ANI) (Miai~ 7o05 p.m.

C..lnlCLI!VELA!ID.. ' 0 0 1.000 69 43
61 Sl
-_
·-··-·
__ ,, I 2 0 .333 ~
51
C!NCIIiNATI .. 0 3 0 .000 2770

North CeQ Coeterace
~.., 1 .... w...... 3
Dc:nimrt ll, WGIOII.Cir 0

w"""""- 34; Eulbom o

r&lt;f•,..,.. 5-S), f.S).
· - ......
,.,• ...,.(!AI.

llottwt' --·--·
LA.-·-·

Bo)dw;o·Wolla&lt;e4S,IIinm 13
I' ' t 7
.21, Ourb!U 14
101m
zs.Ctpi&amp;al 0
-Ualoa49,-.-21
Oltio-23. ...... 0

S..JiioF---· 2 I 0 .f67

I 0 .500

- ----· 1 2

o .m

--

C..ln!Dhllloo
I 0 .f67
&lt;mal Bay.. -... I I 0 .5011
MOtnaoto .. -... I I 0 .500
CloicoJO ............ 0 2 0 ,000
Tamp Bay .~-.. 0 2 0 .000

Ddmil_..:...-. 2

--

Ncw Odaol .-. 3 0 0 1.000 II 5S
SUI Frutc:iloo _. 2 J 0 .lii:J7

74 66

S110day's StOreS

on-

NLieaden
BA1TIN!r. Sua Jlioao, .358;
Jclf.n., SL l.aaU, .343; B•U. Se
Pru.c:iloo, .336; Rob Tbomptoa, San

Ohio higb school
football scores
Salurday's acdoa

t·,

T· Vo-

111i. N.Y. 1oto. CJiiooao, a...0,
- ., TanpoBay

Abaa lloboo 36, Godic1d Hts. TJinity
Allllintown Fitch 43, Erie (Pa.) Prep

m.b..,

13
Bellaire St. Joha'J 16. McMc.cbcn
(W.Va.) lloo.ohoe 14
Cudino122, u.tpo- 14

Dawer. EtnJu Q!y. 9 p.m.

Nut week's games
SundaJ, Sepl. U
a.EVElAND at Indiarwpalia, l p.m.
GftaiBayuMi
a1 lp.m.

Cia. Moeller 24, CovinJID!l (X.y.)
Cath.7

C... St. lpatmo41,0..clmdllla. O

a... Ufti....a.y 23, Onose 7

E. Cleveland Sbaw48, Clew. Eut Tech

L.A.IIamouH..-Ip.m.
Miami II Baftlla. 1 p.m.
y_.,. Ba.J at OW:qo, 1 p.m.
PhoaU • Dcrrcir.. 1 p.m.

Saafr 'smat,NC'WOde&amp;DI,4p,m,
Sooa1o at CNONNATI, 4
New EoaJ1a4 • N.Y. lclo, p.m.
Opm dolo: o.a-, I t - . Oty, LA.
lWdas. S.. lliao, llo11u, N.Y. Oionta,

f.m.

Philedefphi1 WMI.in.oo

Late Cath. 24, Puma Htl. Holy Nune

23 (0'11

rr.

Malvem
E. CIDlOD 16
, Vofon! 13,-NOO'e0....9
Norwalk St. Paul S6, Oanbu.ry Lr.kcDcleO
Painclvillc llarvq -40, Ashtabula SL
loitn 6

Puma s•. :14, C1o.- 20
Pballlllllh 3S, Dty, Belmont 23
Sao&lt;blky St. 'MI&gt;y'a69, S. Cmtnl 0
Spana. C.thotic 49, Kenton Ridac o
l'oL S&lt;:ot. 47, Doontit Soutltout4m 0
Tol. SL FnDcal 7, Detroit Ca1h. Ccn·

tn10
Tti·Valley 23, W, Mulkinauril 9
r ...... - Catt. 12. Bricfaepcm t4
Wunn ~y48, Beachwood 21
Wamm Local41, Pub:abwJ fN.Va.)
South 27
WIICiford ()licit.) Our Wy :!4, 0...

APTop25
college poll

gon Strudl 0

The. T0p 25 teama in The Auocia ted
Prcu 1993 c:olleae f001.ball poll, with ·
f1nt· placc vo~e~ in paNillh .... recordl
tltnuzjo Sqtt. 11, toW poW&amp; buod ... 2S
poinu !o.- a finl·placc vote thtou&amp;h one
pcial foralSth-pUc:e vCM, uwl rmkin&amp; in

... '""""'"' poll:
Lut

h.Weok
1.!44
1,413
1,396

1,299
1,110
1,137
1,067
916

ll. Ariz&lt;&gt;oa , ____, __ :HJ.O
16. Wuhitwton--·-- - 1·1-0

17. Swtfo••L .......... ..2:1.j)
!1. North Cazdioa _,_].l.j)
19. N. Can::llina SL ·-· ..2-0-0
20. Califomia ............:l-C).O
21 . Blizjomt Y"""' ...J.I&gt;O
'22. vupia._,__, __:H).C)
2:3. Looiooille,,
W'IICIOISin ..-·--···3-0-0
:!4.
_____:l-C).O

a

11

10
1"

97..
912

I

12

904
732
618
610
S86
S6l
480

S
6
7
16
1l
18
20
13

463

17

37S
:160
:ll9
231
73S

21

2S. Au-............. ..3-0-0

-

• BasebaU • -

I

3
4
9

19
2l
24

63

o-. - · - · -

n&amp; 2S. Jndiua 2-4, W•t Vir)iaU.
20,
Cuuti·

JWau Staaal7, Vqiailt Todt 12. Tow
10, Midtipo s.... 9 , - - .. Sao
~ Stato 6, W .......... Sta10 6, &gt;fu.
doaJppi S, Bay~« 4, ctaa.oo 4, Soutbom
C&lt;l4,
3, Gocqia :1, Jlawali
2. North- 2. UCLA I.

ArizMa-

Uabat 0

Wboolin1 cW.Va.) Lioaly :14, Hudaon
WaumRalcno7
Wllldblm 43, Richn...... Htl. 14
Y&lt;MtJI, Moooey 34,0.. VASJ 14
z.-vw.a- 43, Milia 0

Eulmtlli-

Tu.

W L

I'IUla6eltlhia .........90 S9

M&lt;mul ................16 63

St. Louia ·------12
Cloico.......____76
Pitbl uqt ·--.. --69
Aorida ,,,_, , __62
NcwYodt . ____.,lO

67

74
10
17
99

w....
Atlaota ... - .....
..... c96- S4
S... frrn · .. - ..92 56
·--.. - - .71 71
1M AnaeJea ...........75
CINCINNAn......69
Coloraclo ..............62
Sao Dqo ............ll

13
II
89
92

M

.604

.

=

Gl

.S77

4

.lSO
.507
.463
.416
.336

loU
2l
211
o40

I

.640

.62:2

3

.523
.SO'l

17J

.460
.411
.317

27
345
31

~

M«ttrcll6,
Fi&gt;i• 5
SL Lou.iJ 7. PWburah 6
A'lfude1

Florid• (llouab f.ISj .. Plillode!pbia

New Y odt (Hi11mon I ·7) a l'1aabtup
(W•-6-7), 7:3Sp.m.
Lot An~Ju (It Manine.z 9· 10) at
CINCNNATI (Jtijo 13-7), 7:3S p.m.
St. Louis (Arocba 11 ~) " Chicaao
(Mcqan 9-13),1:05 p.m.
Son mn.iaoo (lloabaioo 1·2) "Jlaua.

(Swiltdelll0.12), I:OS p.m.
San [)qo (Braclil l-12) at Colorado
(ll..u. 11-f4), 9:0S P""-

South

101t

Alabonia 43, Alit ..... 3
Ak:om SL :U, Alaboma SL 2l
Aubwn 34, LSU 10

Flo!idl 41 ,r - 34
AoridaA4M41,litWonSt.l9
Flo!ida SL 33, Noath Camliila 7
Gocqia S2. Taa Ttdt 37
Gniil&gt;!ioJ St. 33, T - SL 21

Adanll: (Smo!U: 1.(..10) It Monlreal
(Hill !I-S), 7:3! p.m.
FloddJ (Wacbea 2--1) • Phi'delph'a
(Mike Willianta 1·2), 7:15 1"'·

Los Anac1et (Henha1er 12·1 1) at
CINCOOI'ATI th !! 2-4),1:35 p.m.

l.oliMIJe 3S, Arimna St 17

Vami21, V.,W.Ttdt2
Hwilli(&gt;lri49, Vlllllat!ilt7

New York {TcJJbeder l-2) at PittJ·
1().1), 7:3S p.m.
SL
· (fcwbbury 17·9) •t Chica1o
(Bautiata 1-3). I:OS_p.m.
San Franciaco (fana 2--2) 11l Howton
(Pootupl 15-4),1o05 p.m.
San Diet.o (Wam:lll~) at Colondo
{Booatficlcfs.JO). 9o05 p.m.

IN&lt;IItl&lt;;:t'"

SW I Anri'!l• 11, ~ SL IS

Soudt Calolina 34, Louulana T cch 3
Soutlt.,. Mia. 44, NE t..uiaiona 37
SoUhan U. 46, Pram. y,.. 6
l'ulaoe I 0, William &amp; Moly 0
Wm:t V'qi.ni.a 42. Maryland 37

J'lono SL31. Iowa 0

y.,..,._.

Ok 1·b-· St. 16, TWA 10
Rioe 14, Sam Hau.on SL 13
Te~~o~21, S~21,1ic

r- AAM n,J&amp;.Jurl o

.S50
.544
.!17

K='"' ····---62

II

Ookload .............. 60 II
1

Bn,lutm Y - 'II, Colondo SL 22

"'-oSL4l,New_..,lA
HI..U•9.~ 1 7

New Ymt ._..........:13 61
Bahint&lt;n ........ _ .. ll 61
Boatao. ................ 77 72

Ll!raioS6,\V ' tSLO
Nltn*a ; • taA 13
NewMalooSL31, r .....EI Puo l4
Soo Diooo St. 3&amp;, Ai&lt; 1'oioo 31
Stmlonf~I. Coloiado 37

4
S
9

.SIO

10

.ol73
.4%1

IS.l
225

W-DIJ6l

Sotllhwest

s.,to. 21, Utab St. 24

Pd.
Cl
.571 ,...,. -

Ctl&lt;oao. ........... ,_,M "'
r ... ........___ ..80 69
~ Cily --·--" 72
Sellllo.--..----16 73
Califomia .. _.,_..67 II

.!37

4.S

J17

.4!3

7J
I.S
17

.413
.405

:!4

.SIO

Salurdar'• srores

Tctel\wS.J' -,. 1
- 7 . aJM!UND6

SlOLI!N BASES: Cur, 1'14rida, SO;
Ori.Jaom, W:aaual, 45; Jeffaia, S1.
Loaio, 4S: NDoa, 42; D. Lowi&amp;,
San Pm • , 40; E. Y~ ColCDdo,
3J; c
= New Yo4. 31.
I

PmliiNG (16 -~; T. 0.......
pt.ne'ei,W., 15·3, .&amp;33, l.4S; Olavine.
A1lonta, }O.S, .100, 3.11; I'OitD.,t. ""too. 15-4, •719, 1.94; A-z, Ath=a. 16l, .7d2, 2.10;-.
19-

s.-

7, .131, 111; ~ Hr1..Wptri• 146, .700, 4.07;
Il-l,

SWift.s=D"' . .

.692, !.Ill.

STIIIDGUTS: Rijo. CINCIMNATI,
21M; S•olls. Albota, 191; 0 . Jobddu,
- . ..., - . S.J:lioF,I74; !far.
....... - . . . 167; St+Diilla - pbia. 163: a....-.llli&lt;:op,
f6;t.
SAVJ!S: M,_, C1oieoJo, ~; Havey,
Florida, 45; LM s.itb, St. Loub:, 4S;
Beet. S. Pn 'p r 41: Mildl Williaml.,
l'ltilldelpbi.o, 39; ..- . . .... """"'""·
3 1 ; - . - 2 7.
AL!todon
BAmNG: Olerud, Torooto, .369;
Malilm, Tarmta, .334; I...arlm, ~

n.om... CIUooso. .322; R.

LAND, .320; O'Ncill,New Yolk. .314.
RUNS:..._ Tau, 120; Molil«,
Toronto, 114: White, TorOGto, 112;
Loftaft. a..EVEIAND, 107; R. Alomu,
TararWt, 105; ~ Detroit, lOS; R.

Toraito, lOS.
111: Tbom.u, Oaicaaa, 126; Belle,
llJ!III!U.ND, lll; Cater,,....... 11'&lt;
C..nnz·l• Tau, 11"; Fielder, Oc::lroi.t,
112; a-p, CUM!U.ND, 111; Moli·
t«,T-.105.
Hn'S: - · , _ 197; Baap.
CLEVEJ..AND, 193; O ..nad, Toronto,
••

I

I

m: R. ""'"'"·
r - .CIJ!VELAND,
"'' Pod:....
-..a,
171; Loftoo,

170;-... ~ 0.,..170.
DOUBLES: Olerud, Toronto, 51 ; ~
Wbiu, ,..,.., 41; - · , ..... 31:
CLI!VFJ.AND, 36&lt; ~ tuou.

PITCHING (16 docibons): Guzmao,
Torooto, U-3 • .112. l .91; lteJ, New
YO&lt;k, 17-S, .773, 2.91; Widanan, New
Yolk, J:J..4, .76S, • .47; Appi.er, Kanu~
Cily, 17~. ·"'· 2.62; Fomondc., OU.:.·

,o, 11·7, .701, US; Mulint, Blllimorc.
14-6, .700, U6; """"""T"""'to. Il-l,

•692,3.14.

STJJXEOUTS: R. Johnson, Se..ule,
%11; Oa:zman, Taraato. 112; Lanpton,
c.Ii!amia, 179; Finley, California, 174;
tt.... Cily, 172: Appicr. ltansu
a.,., 166c EWrod, Mihnukoc, 161; K&lt;f,

c-

SAVES: w..._"'l'• Kon.., Cily,
43; D. Ward, TORI110, 41; Henke. Tau,
37; R. llemoodoz, C~Uca 1 o, 3S; a...
Boston, 33; Ec:kcnlcy, Oakland, 33;
Api1on.
30.

.u.

v ....
- • Transactions * -

Nallooal Loo,..

23

.

----.....Crait,... d-_.,
Devid Leoaa...., MDCCn; Min C....

- . - - ... Jolalleooby.lofl
..tllat Woolf, lfPl w!np. to Adinto·
dac:t af U. Amade n llockcy Leaaue; .

o...a.-. ..·
__. CJ. D•

I

,IOFmtWt)'M

L..f:., Jcl!
a.

=· IJlnin Ootat.,
o;.-.........

Walk•, ds'm

oeat.-, tiM 17'• lh•eahan end Tim
Sfilllio,
Olturio - ·
OJ Loo-N- Manc1o,

.-or:

-. ......_-Loop.;

Trwftll' llau• •lilA Soou Loud~•, ripn

vt-.!.BaliD.oO

Q

v-

Clark's Jewelry
We buy old Gold
Cl... Ring, Wedding Ringa,
Chaina, Brac:tltta, Walches any ,
condMion Hi~tet Pricee Paid
Clark's Jewelry Pomeroy

, 1oalten

. . Jr.l.k ....... . ,

E-. City 1.• s-teo ,
Ttul 9. Calift=ia 2

•

DETROIT RED WfNGS : Aaaipod

NewY..t4.-3

OM1aa4 3, Qicaao2

Palme.r, who homered twice for
Maybe there won't he any close , Texas. ' 'From )!ere on out, every
races in the American League this game means a lot and this is a big
blow."
year.
The Toronto Blue Jays and
Tanana, 7-16 overall this seaChicago White Sox took big steps son, allowed eight hits and four
ooward division titles with victories runs in seven innings. New York
Sunday as their closest pursuers made three errors in th first two
lost. The New York Yankees innings.
Danny Darwin (15-11) gave up
dropped four games behind ToronIo with an 8-3 loss 10 the Bos10n three hits and one run in six
Red Sox, and the Texas Rangers innings. John Valentin had three
fell 4 Ill games behind the White hits and drove in four runs for
Sox with a 9-8 loss at California
Bos10n with an RBI double in the
"I've seen close races change second, a two-run homer in the
and tum around very quickly," fifth that put the Red Sox ahead 4-I
said a hopeful Frank Tanana. who and a run-scoring single in a fourlost in his f'trSt stan for the Yan- run eighth.
kees. "In 1987 with Detroit, we
In other games, Chicago beat
came back in the last week 10 win Oakland 3· 1, Baltimore beat Mil,
the divisioo when Toron10 went on waukee 8-4, Cleveland beat Detroit
a losing streak."
12-2 and Seattle beat Kansas City
New York, which hasn't been 4-1.
this far out since Junc 18, lraiis by
, Angels 9, Rangers 8
five games in the loss column with
With .California trailing 8-6 ,
12 games left. Toron10 has won Chad Curtis singled off Bob Pattereight straight, its longest winning son and Henke walked Chili Davis
streak this season.
with one out Gonzales then hit his
"They're all pressure games secood home run of the season, his
now. That's not going 10 change," first at Anaheim Stadium since
said Don Mattingly, the hero of the JIU!e 19, 1992.
Yankees' dtanlatic 4,3 viciOry SatDaryl Scolt (1 -1) pitched one
urday. "None of us are willing 10 inning for his first major-league
let this get awsy."
victory, and Joe Grahe sb'Uck out
ToroniO, which beat Minnesota the side in the ninth for his ninth
10-0, has iiS largest lead of the sea- save.
son. ·
Dean Palmer homered IWice (or
"We're going home after with a the Rangers.
great road lrip behind us and with
momentum on our side ," Joe
Blue Jays 10, Twins 0
Carter said.
Juan Guzman scattered eight
Texas, which has 13 games left, hits over eight innings, and visiting
was an inning away from beating Toronto hit a team-record nine
California, but Rene Gonzales hit a doubles by eight players.
three-run homer in the eighth off
Guzman (13-3) walked four and
Tom Henke (5-5), who had con- sii'IICk out four before Duane Wsrd
verted 37 of his previous 43 save relieved 10 sian the ninth. Mike
chances.
Trombley (5-5) allowed nine hits in
"This is one of the IOughest of 6 213 innings, including. five of the
the year to lake," said Dean Blue Jays' doubles.
By The Associated Press

...

s- ~ _. Jt.oOo Hodoce,-'"
t.caden; B•oi' a..r..~ Ijor"Ma·
_.,
·Jim
.11
-

.....

-~~:A:"

...

--me:t.JrPLYal:
·-,
·
et.M
0oo1a-,...
Yaddt
. o.·,n, •ETnCJ Bpll ... fonr.rd•:

DROPS BACK TO PASS- With Los AllgeIes Raider defeasive Ilnemin Howle Lonr
breathing down his neck, Cleveland quarterback VInnie ,1'estaverde (right) drops back •u

Domi 108 Pizza
is now offering
MealbaH &amp; Philly Steak Subs
1 F111e Bag ol C~ &amp; 1 Free
Drink with purchase of Sib.

.

pass in the rourtb quarter or Sunday's AFC

game Ia the Loe Angeles Coliseum, where the
Browns wo11 19-16 In the game's ftnal seconds.
(AP) '

Steelers keep Bengals winless
with registry of 34-7 victory
.

.

By ALAN ROBINSON
ftrSt IOO,yard game of the season Yimcey Thigpen also made scoring
PITTSBURGH (AP) - -The -he had an NFL record-tying 12 catches.
Pittsburgh Steelers gave Barry Fos, last season- and the Steelers have
"II was reminiscent of I 992,"
coach Bill Conher said. "We got
ter a new contract, and Foster gave their ftrSI vic10ry.
the Steelers the old Barry Foster.
"Defensively, we knew. we had the running game going and we
. The 1992 division champion to stop Barry Foster ... but we really got it going after we staned
Steelers were B6rry Foster, and his could not slOp the most basic play throwing the ball. You've got 10 be
1,690 rushing yards. But Barry in football, handing off and letting able to throw the football' in this
hasn't been Barry, and that means him run up inside," Bengals coach league 10 be able to run it."
The Bengals, in contrast, have
the Steelers weren't being th~. David Shula said.
Steelers.
Foster 10uched the ball on 14 of scored just three touchdowns in
But Foster was back to his old the 19 plays on the f'trSt IWo scor- three ~es. are 0-3 for the seeond
slrellgth Sunday, running through, ing drives and had 85 yards by time tn three years and have lost
around, and past the Cincinnati halftime en route 10 his 13th 100- nine of their past10.
"I had the gall to think this
Bengals for 103 yards in a 34-7 yard game in the Steelers' past 19
could be a big game for us, a tumSteelers' rout. The S\eelers (1-2) regulsr,seaSon games.
.
fmally may have found themselves.
"We knew they were 0-2 and in!! point, bui I was obvioqsly very
"We needed this real bad," said that dtey were ·going 10 get back 10 miStaken," Shula said, "Our footTim Worley, Foster's backup, after basics by running the ball, but they ball team has one hell of 11 long
the Steelers' most one-sided victo- still did anything they wanted to way 10 go from being able 10 comry since they beat Cleveland 35-0 do," the Bengals' Lance Gunn pete with a f-OOd teaiD like the
·
in 1990.
said. •'Once they did that, it opened Steelers were. '
David Klingler hit 11 of his ftrSt
The Steelers showed some new up everything in their offense.''
wrinkles, such as throwing on rtrSt
It certainly seemed that way to 12 passes and was 17-of-21 for 135
yards - the two staning quarter-'
down and running on second, quarterback Neil O'Donnell.
ratl)er than just the' reverse, and . "This was the ftrS! week I could backs w.ere a combined 38-of-46
some old ones, like Dwight Stone · throw the ball like I wanted to," - and got the Bengals 10 within
running reverses and the long- said O'Donnell, who has tendinitis Hl-7 on a 15-yard scoring pass 10
absent tight end Eric Green catch- .in his right elbow. "I'm not going Carl Pickens.
ing passes.
to lie, the pain's still there, but I
But Pittsb~h came right back
But, mostly, the Steelers showed feel like I can play with it all for O'Donnell s J8,yard scoring
the Bengals (0-3) they still can run year."
·
. pass to Thigpen with 36 seconds
thClbaiJ,
..
'
.
O'Donnell was 21-of,25 for a left in the f'trSt half 10 make-it 17-7,
"We knew we were a good career-high 84 percent, 189 yards and the second half was a blowout
"We need 10 get some confi,
team, but people needed 10 see it,'' · and his rtrst three IOuchdown passFoster said.
es of the season. Stone scored on a dence, and 10 get some confidence
Giv.en a $10 million contract· ·nine-yard reception and a 38,yard w.e' ve got 10 win,'' Klingler said.
extension last week, Foster 'had his reserve, and Ernie Mills and · "I felt like we could beat the Steelers.''

Chicago win while
closest pursuers suffer setbacks

Allllritaa Leaauc

......:JI~Y-.
Nal..,-ta,..

'

Toront~,

11lXAS RANGERS: llc&amp;i&amp;n&amp;toelllkk
RllDd, pi&amp;cbm. far . . ipmall.

-

Liriano's two-ruillriple put Colorado ahead for goOd 111 2- I in the
second. His hil came after two
w.alks by Pedro Martinez (10-4),
who made his firs I stan after 61
relief IIJll)eanlnces.
Arman1ki Reynoso (11-10) was
the winner and Darren Holmes got
his 2Ath save.
MariiDs 2, Cubll1
Chris Hammond ended his
seven,game· losing Streak, pitching
Florida past Chicago at Wrigley
Field.
Hammond (11-11) won for the
fll'st time since July 2, and helped
himself with a squeeze bURL Bryan
Harvey sb'Uck out the side in the
ninth for his 45th save in 48
chances.
·
Steve Trachsel lost his major
league debut, giving two runs and
four hits in seven innings . He
s1ruck out five and walked one. Jeff
Conine hit his i 1th homer in the
ftrSt inning fdr the Marlins.
Cardinals 7, Pirates 6
Mark Whiten hit a tWIKIUt, IWorun double in the bottom of the
ninth inning that lifted St. Louis
over Pittsburgh.
Whiten's double off Mark
Qewey (1-2) gave him 96 RBis. A
pair of wslks set up the winning
hit
.
The Pirates took thjlle&amp;4 in the
top of the ninth on pinch: hitter
Dave Clark's two-out, two,run
homer off Milce Perez (7,2).
Pllclres 6, Astroa 3
Phil Plantier hit his 32nd home
run and San Diego won at HousiOn.
Planlier hit a Iw.o-run homer in
the sixth inning. Kevin Higgins
drove in three runs for the Padres.
Andy Ashby (3-9) pitched seven
innings for the win and Mark Davis
closed for his fourth save. Darryl
Kile (15-7) was the loser.

In AL division title runs,

BasebaU

'-

(Hyllloft

Team
W L
TOIOII.0 .........- ......16 63

Dcuoil.,._,,_,,, 76 73
CLI!VELAND .••• 71 79
Mil ..lUbe - -··· ··--"' 16

Tctlodo 49, S. Dlii&gt;oU :U
Utab 41 , Kaoua 16
W"iiCIIftlin 21,1owa Sl. 7
St.l6. M&lt;qul SL 27

FarWest

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Ealllm

40;
Atlaata, 37; Matt Williamo,
Saa Pnnci.Jco, 37; Chat, A&amp;Janta, 35;
Batllla, Now Yolk. :14; Jolo0ri1!, Atlanta,
34; ......... Soo Dioao. 32. •

AP Sports Writer
The Montreal Expos were down
to their last chance of the game,
and maybe their last chance of the

MONTIIEAL EXPOS: Pll...t M.UC.
Alou, Gltfielder, c..lhc IS()..day emc:raenc:y
dinblc&lt;l 1iot. Callod up Clilf Foyd, outfielder, from H1nilbuq of lhe.Eutem

Midwest
Ariz&lt;tnal6. 111inoia 14
8a11 SL :!4, Ohio. 16
Oncinnati 10, Miami, Ohio 23
lndUna :!4, Kmltdy I
Kmau SL 30. Minltoiota 2l
N. lllii&gt;oia 23, Ad&lt;lrtiU SL 7
NO!tlt-.m 2 2 . - Collep 21
N-Damo36,MidUptSLI.

J-

9; 1. Bill. Pi..-p. 9; Colao-. ~­
Y,c d, I; E. Y~ C ' 1e, 7; Martin.
7; c.tilla, Calondo, 7.
IIO!oll! IIUNS: &amp;ado, Sat l'mlcioco,

NewYolk.l61.

Tuesday's pmes

Dub 4:1, Aaoy21

niPU!S:I'ioloy,~I2;8Uilco.
LOI~lO:llk ,. ' Ptai'et I&amp;Aiie

n.

(Schillina 14-6),Hs p.m.

Pmn t 0,DanmGJtb6

41; ~:· HoulOD, 40; o,t.tn,
Pbi1a
• 40: !l.....u. - . 37;
GillaiJ, L Ua;a, 37.

LAND, 34: Salmaa, California, 31;
Palma; Teua. 31; Tc::uldm, Dcttoit. 31 ,
STOLEN BASES: Lof&lt;on, CLEVELAND, 63; II. Hcadcnon, TMOOto, Sl;
Po1onia, Cllifomia, 49; R. A1om.ar,
Torvato. 41 ; CwW:, California, 45; L.
Jolull0111, Cbicqo, 35; White. Toronto,

San mn.iaoo7, a!'ICNNATI3

Tonight's IPDIOS

- I I , Caatclll2

DOUIIL2S: Bidt- Col!nodo, 43;
Ba,.., ~ 41; a.,... Sat Dio&amp;o.

HOME IIIJNS : Q....,t.z, Tous, ... ,
Thomu, ~a_ 41 ; Griffey Jr., Seattle,
41; Palmcirv, fga, 36: BcUe. CLEVE-

Sunday's scores

Allanu 11. New YOlk 2

N•"1 31, E. lllinaia 10
Ohio SL 63,l'lttabuoJit 21

'.169; Bll-,er. Atlama,

7.

c.tando I, Loa ""&amp;eke 5

Bmwn 1:1, YU. 3
Califomif; 51, Tanplc 0
Maio&lt; 17, H•ndto•.... al3

Oril.lm. )'

TR1PI.ES: L Jolmson, O.iCIJO, 13;
Con, Cbic:aao, 13; Hulse, Tcu1, tO ;
Mdtao, tuou. Cily, 9; Lolloo, CUM!LAND, I; T. Fcm.aade2:, Toronto, I ;
CUyler, D&lt;tnoit, 7; Aodenoo, B " ' -

Florida 1, Chicaao 1
Sao Di&lt;ao 6, Houatoo3

Boau&gt;nU. «.HolyC....II

s..

an.-.-35.

6, aNCNNATII

New 'l'odt 3, AtlaiU 2(10Jm.)
Jl!tilo+lpbia l, - - ~
SL 1Auio I, 1'1-.p I
Hou110n 4, San Diqo 2
Loa Aqda 9, c.tando 0

East

-

~3~lf'....~~~~

au...., 6, PkbLo s

Major college
football scores

s-.

LAND, .323;

Salurday'ssmres
Sao F1

.315.
IIUNS: il)'btn, PIWadclpbia, 13S;
s. P · -.. 114: Ooot.-.
102; - · A - 102; Jolo0ri1!, At·
1mta. 91; D. 1W1i111. P'r1 ddphi• 97; J.
llcl1, Jl!• I ' 97.
1181:1..£0. Allallla, 110: G-. At·
IIDia,IIO; loloa Williaml, Sua P,. . -o,
li!S;&amp;odo,S.P
. ,IOl;Doultoo,
pbjl..t..Jphi•, 103; Zelle. !L l..ou.d, 99;
Loail, M.
HITS : 0,-,l'biladclpbia,
110; J.
Bell. Pit-, 171; Once, CbicaJ••
176&lt; s.. D;op. 175; Jo!f....,
St. LoaU. 173; B'lftll. - . . , , 171;

"'-· r ....... .:121; s....,. CLEVE-

NATIONAL LEAGUE

2

1.374

11. T - ---·.2-J.j)
12. s,.,.-.. _.. _ ..z.o.l
13. Cclbado .. .... - ..... ..2.1.0
14. r .... AAM ....... ..2·1.j)

wdlaville 21)

l':.-:"0:.:,~' .~itt?; ~

169.

Cbanloo ND.Q. 21, Ctoncl 0

Rabcrc.th. 30. Akxmdm 20
!ntotm43, T&lt;i. Start I
l••.u-Sc: io 14, Weinon (W.Va.)
Modoaoal2

Toqbt's pme

7

1aodCloicoao ~
CJ.{I), · n-7l .. Calif.."" - - 4-3), 10o05-

To1odo 49, S. l11iocU 21
Wultiopn, Mo.lS, Cue w.....,. 10
Younptown St. .56, Morpn St 'I1
.

13

N.Y. Oi-. 20: LA. RaooiO
Scoalo 17. New~ ••
Jlloi'
34 Wubiqlaa 31
Soo
:i7,- 30
CLI!VELAND 19,l...A. IWdon 16
S.Diooo l l , - 1 7
Dollloi?, PboooiiiO
()pea date: Buffalo. lndj,~, Mil·

' · ,.._ s'------..3-0-0
10. ,...., I
_2..6.0

,_0

Aboo E. 34, 1Emou&lt; 0

PltubtuD :!4, CINCINNATI 7
New Otfoiao 14, Doontit 3

·(CloaMoo 11·13) •• , .......

,.JO.tOl. 7:35,..._
.,..)lls-io(1obo·
IOD 17·1). JO;QS2&amp;
r - a.,. ....
"!'!!'!!"" 1-2) .. Ook·

Tlffin 31, SLAmbroa%7

l...A. Raoo .. ..... I 2 0 .333 43 56
Atlaota --.--.. 0 3 0 .000 74101

T'111'·1-T
I. Fli&gt;cida SL (S7) ....&gt;HHI
:Z. Alobama (S) ....,_.J.I&gt;O
3. Vmti ---· --·~
4. -Dome ••• _.J.I&gt;O
s. floDdo -·-----.J.I&gt;O
6.Nc:tnst.a .... _. __ ,.:J..O.O
7. ObUoSL •.,_,....... :S.O.O
I. Mid!iP"--·---"'.j)

-

(S:A'

FiDdlay2J, Wcwtmin•er.Pa.lS
!l.uocMtrl!, BNI!ton23
Hanii49,1taat 17
MINI -22, Urbina 14
Mototll SL Joocplt 42., Ma1aoe 6
Ohio SL 63,l'illllttqh 21

17 31
27 36
10 50

w....... ot.-

I

Hi Cllota (lnaaaaat 1-1) at New

Yoolt~IO.J3). 7:30p.m.

0.-31,-1
IWi.Moe 43, Amm n

S2 43
S3 26

ot CLEVJ!.

LAND~ 2-1~ 7o05-

Aollllod:IO, S~IIod&lt;9

Phil • \' ;.. ~-.. 3 o o uno n 6S
Dolllo---·-·.. . I 2 0 .333 43 ll
----· I 2 0 .333 ... SO
W................ I 2 0 .333 76 til

r-lay'a ......

-s.n:e::;
. B.ru.... ( . ,

c-.1 St. '13,
.
0
0 . . :10, Mimi. Oltio 23

WL T M PFPA
N.Y. a-__ , 3 0 01.000 69 !1

I

.

• r1cw tiMidlul con.a

•

3-5); JO:o! .....

M i l - (!lip-. 1·3) "Douoh

'11tomMMole42, W'~:l&lt;

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
,_

~ca..

-

c..D:n

1 I 0 .f67

(!.-,.

•

" - " " ' tc-·11·11) .. Ootllod

ow.eoor......

2 0 0 UIOO

~Cltr --· I

x..,.... 27

Ohio w..~eyon 32.

w--

, _ CPmlk 10-6) .. -

11).1).1-_JUL

again," .the pitcher said. "There's
no way in lhe world he's safe. You
can't give a team like them four
outs. But he did, and game over.·: .
With the bases loaded, Sean
Berry
popped up 10 Kruk. Cordero
season.
followed with a grounder between
Down, but not OUL
Instead, Wil Cordero kept Mon- third baseman Dave Hollins and
•
treal in the middle of the fiL East the bag for the win.
Tjm Scott (7 -2) was lhe wiMing
race, hitting a twO-run single with
IWO OUIS in the 00Uom Of the ninth pitcher.
In other games, Atlanta defeated
inning that beat first-place
New Yotk 11.2, San Francisco beal
I'IIWidelphia 6-5.
Rather than slipping sill garoes Cincinnati 7-3, Colorado defeated
behind the Phillies with only 13 left Los Angeles 8-5, St Louis rallied
10 play, the Expos closed 10 four past Pittsburgh 7-6, Florida beat
games back. Montieal woo twice in Chicago 2,1 and San Diego
the three-game set, their last games downed HOUSIOn 6-3.
Braves 11, Mets 1
of the year against Pbiladclphia
Tom Glavine became the first
' 'This was the hardest series
I've evec played in my·life,' ' said NL piu:her in more than 20 years 10
Monuelil 's Larry Walker, who win 20 games in three consecutive
reached base in the ninth on a key seasons as the Braves battered the
error. "The young kids on this Mets to mainlain their NL West
team never give up. We just keep lead at three games over San Franplugging l!long, never say die."
cisco.
"We have io look at the positive
Glavine (20-5), the NL's first
side," Phillies catcher Darren 20-game winner this season, went
Daulton said. " This series was a six inninj!8,. allowing nine hits, two
good experience, good to be runs, walking one and striking out
involved in even if we lost IWO of four.
Lh.ree.ft
Otis Nixon had tltreC hill in the
The Expos, who lost 5-4 Satur- Braves' 14-hit auack off Pete
day night when they left a runner Schourek (3-12) and three Mets
on third base in the ninth inning relievers.
against Mitch Williams, also bailed
Giants 7, Reds 3
5-4 this time going in'IO the ninth.
Matt Williams hit two home
With one out, Delino DeShields runs and San Francisco left Riversingled off Williams (3-6) and siOie front Stadium headed in the right
second. After rookie Rondcll White direction in the NL West. race.
walked, Walker grounded 10 ftrst
Scott Sanderson· (4-2) pitched
baseman John Kruic. The ball car- five innings and gave up four hilS,
omed off Krulc's chest and Walker including home runs by Keilh
slid head-first 10 beat Krulc's throw Kessinger and Thomas Howard.
to Williams.
Bobby Ayala (6-9) was the lpser.
Williams, however, insisted first
Rockies 8, l)oclcers 5
·
base umpire Charlie Williams
Nelson Liriano tripled and drove
missed the call.
in three runs as Colorado beat Los
"Impact umpiring takes its lOll Angeles at Mile High Stadium.
By BEN WALKER

T~lpBIII

Mlca- 4

'"

Montreal tops Philadelphia 6-5
to trim Phillies' lead iri East

SudaJ'I_...

• Football • -

PIG• 5

.

Browns edge Raiders 19-16

·.

In NL division title races,
-

The Dally sentinel

White Sm&lt; 3, Athletics 1
At Oakland, Calif.,.Robin Yentura's two-run homer off Dennis
· Eclcersley 'in the ninth gave the AL
West leaders their 14th viciOry in
21 games. Frank Thomas opened
the nbtll with a sing(Q off Eckersley (2-4) and VentUf$ followed
with his :12nd home run.
Scott Radinsky (7·2) won in
relief of Tim Belcher, and Roberto
Henandez got three outs for his
35th save.
Orioles 8, Brewers 4
Harold Baines drove in four
runs and visiting Baltimore ended a
25-inning scorless streak 10 remain
five games behind ToroniO.
Arthur Rhodes (5-4) allowed six

Tiffin finishes ~n first place
of Redmen soccer tourney
With a 2,0 shutout of Indiana ranked sixth in the NAJA for last
University/Puntue University-lndi: week, defeated Scou Morrissey's
anapolis Sunday, the nationally- Rio Grande crew 3-0 Sunday to net
. ranked Tiffin University soccer second place. IUPUI fmished third,
team emerged in rtrSt place of the tying 1·1 with the Redmen follow,
University of Rio Grande-Lanzera ing two overtimes Saturday, folClassic, Rio Grande's first spon- lowed by its loss to the Dragons.
Rio Grande took fourth place.
sored tournament in the spon.
"This worked out okay," MorTiffin, listed ninth among all
NAJA schools last week, defeated rissey said of the two,day event.
Lindsey Wilson (Ky.) 3-1 Saiurday "Fqr the first time we had two
to be the only team in the IOurna- nationally-ranked teams here for
ment to end with tw.o wins. LW, some good soccer. It was also very
good experience for my team, and

(See AL on P11ge 5)

.-----------

from that, I think we'll be okay."
In spite of the shutout Sunday
by LW, Morrissey felt the Redmen's perfonnance was stronger
than t~e previous day's meeting
w.ith IUPUI.
While Rio Grande controlled
most of the second half and had
limited the visiiOrs 10 a single goal
in the opening period, "it was a
much better effort against a team of
this caliber," he said.
LW first scored at 35:03, and
broke loose late in the second half
for its remaining goals at 19:53 and
4:05. Both teams took nine sho!S
on goal apiece, while Redmen
goalkeeper Jim Egner was credited
with four saves.
'The ¥uys who came in off the
bench d•d very w.ell, but at this
very well, even without Billina, point, the game is mental," Morriswhich shows that they're coming sey noted. "They have 10 under, along."
.
stand that whoever they play,
· Cooper still managed to notch they've got to take care of busi14 Itills, three serving aces, six digs ness. I'm happier with the results
and three block solos against Tif- because the effort was there, and I
fin. Her sister Kellina added 14 can't fault them for the effon. We
kills, a servinl! ace and a block 10 controlled most of tile game, and
the effort, whtle Deana Smith was while I think two of the other
· responsible for a serving ace and · team's goals were gifts, the botiOm
two digs. Stephanie Mclaughlin line was that our guys came out to
also had a pair of digs.
· play."
Renee Bums contributed five
On Saturday, Rio Grande scored
kills and a block, Kristy Lindsey within the first 10 minutes on a
· had two kills and eight digs, goal from Josh Mauer, freshman
Michele Warne four digs, and Jo forward from Jackson, on assist
Chapmari four Itills and six digs to from fellow ftrSt-year player Travis
.shore up the defense.
Duslcey, a forward from
The win brought the Redwomen Wadsworth. IUPUI netled 'its single
to 5-7 on the season, which conlin- goal 10 leave the score tied at the
ues Tuesday at 7 p.m. in Lyne Cen- , end
of regulation, prompting the
tee against Urbana.
two overtlmes with no resolution.
The Red men had I 0 shots on
goal to IUPUI's 19, and Egner
recorded eight saves.
they're one of the best teams in the
"We were 1-0 after the first 10
conference,'' Mash said Saturday.
·
d th
· d
f th
•'But I think Georgia Southern is mmu!CS, an
e remam er o e
still the best. We were less ready 10· half was great For about 45 minplay tonight. The best teilm should utes we looked like wotld-beaters,
always he ready 10 play. ••
but we came out in the second half
"The penalties and mislakes and simply went through the
were what made the difference in m!)tions," Morrissey reflected.
the football game,'' said Georgia
For Rio Grande, 2-3-2 overall as
Southern fullback James Williams, the week begins, the townament
who rushed for 88
marked its first home appesrance
While Mash still thinks plentL following nearly three weeks of
of Georgia Southern (2, 1 overal , play on the road. The Redmen
1·1 in the Southern Confc;rence). he return 10 action Tuesday at Stanley
also has ample respect fot defend- L. Evans Fi.eld agai~st S~awnee
ing Division 1-AA champion Mar, State for thetr ftrSt Mid-Ohio Conshall (3-0, 1-0i.
. ference meeting of the season.

Redwomen sweep MOC
.meeting against Tiffin
Playing for the part of the way
without lhe expertise of senior middie hitter Billina Cooper, the University of Rio Grande volleyball
team nevertheless had little trouble
sweeping its home match against
Mid,Ohio Conference rival Tiffin
Saturday.
The Redwomen took the Lady
Dragons in three, 15-13, 15-0, 15-3
to improve their conference standing to 2-l. Cooper, the team's only
four-year player and sllindout ath. lete at Jackson High School, was
talcen out during the ·second game
. due to muscle problems, but is
expected 10 rejoin the lineup when
during this week's schedule.
"I was very pleased with our
perfonnance, both offensively and
defensively," Rio Grande Coach
. Patsy Fields said. "Our team played

. Marshall
remains unbeaten
..
.

.

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Marshall got plenry of help from
Georgia Southern in beating the
Eagles 13 -3 over the weekend.
Maybe that's why Georgia South,
em defensive lineman Alex Mash
wasn't a picture of gloom and
· doom after the game.
"(Marshall) proved today

· ALgames...
(Conlinued from Page 4) ·
hilS in 6 1/3 !Mings and Alan Mills
finished (or his third save. Jami~
Navarro (10-11) gave up five runs
and nine hits in four-plus innings.

r.ants.

~··· - · - - ·

By JOHN NADEL ·.
give them a I6-3 lead.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -CleveBut Testaverde, who completed
land Browns coach Bill Belichick 10 of 22 passes for 1S9 yards, then
sprung B surprise on Vinny Tes- guided the Browns on a 90-yard,
. taverde. Then Teslaverde did the 12-play drive 10 make it 16-10. The
same 10 lhe Los Angeles Raiders.
wuchdown carne on a 12-yard pass
Testaverde relieved an ineffec- 10 Lawyer TiUman with 2:261cft.
ti ve Bernie Kosar early in the
The Cleveland defense held, as
fourth quarter Sunday and guided it did throughout the second half,
Cleveland on three late scoring and with the Raiders backed up 10
drives 10 give the unbeaten Browns their 10-yard line on fourth down,
an improbable 19-16 victory over punter Jeff Gossett ran out of the
lhe previonsly unbeaten Raiders.
Los Angeles end zone for an intenEric .Metcalf scored the winning tional safety, making it 16-12.
IOuchdown on a one-yard run with
The move seemed smart, but
two seconds remaining 10 cap a 45- Metcalf spoiled the strategy by
yard, eight-play drive.
returning Gossett's free kick 37
Kosar and the Cleveland offense yards 10 the Raiders 45-yard line.
were overmatched through three Then came the winning drive.
quarters, and when Testaverde
Teslaverde threw paases of 16
· entered the game, the Browns and 17 yards 10 Marie Callier 10 put
trailed 13-0.
. the ball at the Raiders' one-ysrd
"I thought we had a chance,'' line with 11 SCI:Oilds lefL After an
Testaverdc Said. "I told the guys to incompletion and With 110 liincouu
hang in. I had no idea 1 was going remaining, Metcalf swept left end
10 go in. Bill just came over and un10ucbed 10 score.
.
said for me ,10 warm up and get
"I'm ph sically and emotionalready." .
ly sllocked,7. Raidm defensive end
The Raiders were in great shape Howie Long said. "It's a lesson 10
when Jeff J~ger kicked a 53-yard all of us, you have 10 crush somefield goal with 4:58 left - less body when you have them down.
than a minute after James Trapp We have 10 stejl on their throat and
intercepted a Testaverde pass - 10 choke them . We didn ' t choke

them."

Teslaverde signed u an unrestricted free agent with dtc Browns
last spring after playina lix yem
with the .Tampa Bay Buccaneen
and- meeting cxpectalions.
He di'd on Sund1y, but will
remain a backup to KG..
"Bernie is our ltarting quarterback," Belichick Slid. "He bad a
little problem with protection.
Vinnv, on the other hand. SCfllm bles around a little biL Thai'a what
we brought hi!D here for. He
stepped un and did a great job for
us today.'1
MeU:aif ~ four touchdoWns
in Cleveland's 28-16 victory over
the Raiders last year, but was wellcontained until his long retmn on
the free ldck.
The Browns (3-0) won deapite
not crossin11 midfield· until their
second possession of the third

quarter.

The Raiders had 10 first downs
and 129 yards of offense 1D three
downs and 37 IDial

:rds

rtrSt

for the Browns in the flnt
• The
second half Will a differattstory the Browns had 17 fitst'downs ·and
283 yards of offense to one fmt
down and 27 yards fir the Raiders.

Auburn breaks into Top 25
poll for first time since 1991
By PAUL NEWBERRY
AUBURN, Ala (AP) -Coach,
es like to downplay the ranltings.
They always say the only p&lt;illthat
counts is the last one.
11tat's not the case today', however, with Terry Bowden of
Auburn.
"Normally, I w.ould say the
rankings don't mean anything,"
the Auburn head coach said upon
learning his team was No. 25 in the
latest Associated Press college
football poll. "And there might be
another time when being ranked
doesn't mean a thing. ·
"But right now, I think it's
encouraging."
Especially w.hen your team that
hasn'! had a winning season since
1991, which also happens 10 be the
last time Auburn was in the Top
25. The Tigers dropped out of the
poll midway through that season
after an upset loss 10 Southern Mis·
sissippi and a close victory over
V;utdcrbilL
Auburn is 3-0 under Bowden,
who came to the school after Pat
Dye was forced 10 resign in a playfor-pay scandal that wound up
landing the school on NCAA probatioo for two years.
The latest victory was psrticularly impressive: a 34,10 triumph
Saturday night at LSU, where
Auburn had not won since 1939.
"It did a lot for our program
just being able 10 win on the road
like that," Bowden said. "It was a
great confidence builder."
He hopes the rankings will be as
well, especially since the Tigers are
not eligible for the Southeastern
Conference championship due to
probation.
"It's a plus, and we've been
looking for pluses,'' Bowden said.
"We're not in.contention for the
SEC championship this year (or
next), and if we're going to become
a better team we need all the motivatiooal tools we can set This is a
positive tool.''
·
Bowden, though, warned that
Auburn can't feel too confident.
After all, the Tigers started 3-0 in
1991 and 4-1 last season before
collapsing in the second half both

years.

"I can't believe w.e would let
that situation happen," he said.
"We've not had a wiMing season
the last three seasons."
Louisville also broke in10 the
Top 25, while BasiOn College and
Anzona State fell out. Louisville
beat Arizona State 35-17, while
Bos10n College lost to Northwesiem 22-21.
It's Louisville's first ranking
since fmishing I4th after the I990

MHS sports schedule
Today
Golf-TVC Match at home
Volleyball-River Valley
Reserve fOOlball-at River Valley
Tuesday
Golf-at Gallia Academy
Volleyball,at Alexander
·
Thursday
Freshman football-at Wellston
Golf-TVC match at Vinton
County (Franklin Valley)
Volleyball-at Belpre
Friday
Varsity football-at ·Point Pleasant
Saturday
Cross country-at Lancaster Invitational

Meigs Athletic Boosters
to meet Tuesday
The Meigs Athletic Boosters
will meet on TueSday_ at the high
school begining at 7:00. Marauder
football coaph Mike Chancey will
be present to show films of the
River Valley game and talk about
this weelc's game with Point Pleasant

season.
"I am happy for the team that
they have been included in this
select group already this season
and that the voters have recognized
that we do have a solid team,"
Louisville coach Howsrd Schnellenberger said.
"Our team's goal now is to ·
keep working and advJn(:e lhrou&amp;h
the season to an even hi11her
level."
Florida, meanwhile, is on the ·
move after beating T01111essee 41,
34. The Gators jumped four spots
10 No. 5; though Uley are still dtird
in their state behind No. 1 Florida
State and No. 3 Miami.
The Seminolea remained on top
after beating North Carolina 33-7,
receiving 57 ftrst-place votes and
1,544 points in a nationwide panel
of writers and broadcasters.
The other five first,place votes ·
went to No. 2 Alabama, which
crushed Arkansas 43,3, The
defending national champion
received two more first,place votes
than the previous week.

Miami stayed No. 3 with a 21,2
viciOry over Virginia Tech, and
Notre Dame held ontO the No. 4
spot after defeating Michigan Slate
36-14.
Nebraska moved up two notches
to No.6 after edging UCLA 14,13,
while Ohio Slate jumped four
laces to No. 7 after pounding
63,28.
.
Idle
'
rote two spots 10
No. 8, Penn Slide jumped five spots
10 No. 9 by blanking Iowa 31-0,
and idle Oklahoma climbed two
notches 10 No. 10.
TeMessee is Ilth,'followed by
Syracuse, Colorado, Texas A&amp;M,
Arizona, W~hington, Slanford,
North Carolina, North Carolina
State, California, BYU, Virginia
Wisconsin, Louisville and Auburn.'
Tennessee, Syracuse and Col·
omdo each fell six spots. Syracuse
lied Texas 21-21, and Colorado lost
10 Stanfonl41-37.
North Carolina drop.JIC4 from
No. 13 10 No. 18 after tts loss to
Florida State.

Wallace wins SplitFire 500
ByWAYNEWOOLLEY

DOVER, Del. (AP) - Rusty
Wallace bruised some feelings and
Dale Earnhardt's Winston Cup .
points lead and IOld competitors 10
be ready for more.
Wallace's 28th career victory
Sunday in the NASCAR SplitF'tre
500 at Dovec DOwns International
Speedway ,allowed him to cut his
second-place gap to 181 season
points behind WinsiOn Cup frontrunner Earnhardt.
His seventh win of the season
on a b'ack that's given him difficu(,
ty his whole career came as a good
·omen as he prepared for the final
six races of the season.
"I've got some of my great
rljcetracks coming up," Wallace
said.
Three of Wallace 's wins this
year came at tracks where the circuit is returning during the final sill
races.
Wallace's Pontiac beat Ken
Sch!'llder's Chevrolet by .4 I seconds, followed by the Chevys of
Darrell Waluip, Dale Jarrett and
Harry Gant.
The winner drew the ire of several drivers by touching off a w.reck
that heavily damaged five other
cars. Wallace set off a chain reaction erash on a rest.art on lap 370 .
that also ruined Earnhardl's day
when the five-time champion was
ruMing second.
Staning behind Hut Stricklin,
Wallace hit Stricklin in the left
rear, sendin¥ his Ford into Earnhardt and R1cky Rudd. Earnhardt
wound up 27th.
.
Wallace speculated that Slricklin missed a gear and wasn't able 10
get out of his way.
"When I launched, he dido 't
launch as quickly as I did," Wallace said.
Earnhardt, whose cur w.as badly
damaged, blamed Wallace.
"I don'tknow what Rusty was
thinking." Earnhardt said. "He ran
right iniO the 27 (Stricklin). The 27

didn't miSll a gear. He was naming
right along beside me." ·
Wallace said he has been hit
from behind many times on
restarts.
"It's each guy for himself.''
Wallace said. 'When you take 40
cars and put 40 drivers in them and
tell them 10 go, we don't put on.our
turn signals, we go for it These
things happen.''
. . ·
Wallace, with a winning speed
of 100.334 mph, notched his ftrSt
win in 20 tries on Dover's highbanked, one-mile oval. It was also
tbe slowest winning time on the
traclc.
.
The race was slowed considerably by 16 cautions, which broke a
track record of 14 reached at the
September 1988 and June 1993
races. The 103 caution laDs tied the
murk set during David l&gt;earson's
victory in 1975.
Three of the automatic stops
were called for tire checks because
of several single car accidents
caused by tire failures.
The final NASCAR,mandated
stop led 10 the final sprint, with
Wallace grabbing the lead from
Waltrip Gil the first lap, 480, on the
high-banked traclc.
Waltrip's crew chief, Barry
Dodson, said the final caution lap
was liiiiiCCCSS81') and em: his driver
the race.

.DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSEl

INSUUNCE
Ill Second St"' Poany
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1168

Complete Medical/Surgical Care
For Ear, Nose &amp; throat l1cludl•g

John A.

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

Pl. PIIJIBt, WI.
Call ....,._1144 r. 1R1. •laM alii
Me-.r of let•• HO &amp;litleNI
PPO

�. '

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Monday, september 29, 1993

Monday, September 20, 1993,

page 6 ·

~~-~~~~--~--~·~----~------~~----~--~,

Catfish festival featured parades, clowns, fun

IIM~•C•IIY

IlEAl LilES -lhe Most
Advance~ All VInyl Replacement
Windows on the Market~ ·

••

'

Why p.ey hlth eat-•f·t•w• prim ••••
een ttl It lmlly entl •m $$$1

To place an ad

Monday P•per_
TW!IIday Poper

Call992-2156
MoN. thru FRI.

8A.M.-5P.M. -

S.u.B-12

CLOSED SUNDAY

• Ada oullide the. coun~ your ad ru.n.1 mUll be prepaid
• ReceiYO dilcouat for ad. paid iD ad.V&amp;DC:e.
• Fno Ado : Ci-way aad Fouod ado aader IS wunla will be

J.

ru.a3 day• at ao d.arp.
• Price of ad for aD capitallelt.n i• double price of ad c:01t
• 7 poilU liDo type ooly wad
·
• Seatiael il not r.pouible for erTor• after flr1t day (check
forerron fnt daj ad runt in pa~per). CaD before 2:00p.m.
d.y aher puhlication to make correction
• Ada that lllu.l he paid in advance are :
· Card of Tha~~lu
Happy Ado
]a M-.oriam
Yard _Sale~
• Aclouillod adnr-,..t ploced Ill tllo The Dally Soallael .
(exeepl Cluoifoed Oi.oplay, BwiD- Card or l.epl
Nolloeo) will aloo appear Ill the PoiDt Plouaot R.pter aad
the CalJipoU. Dally, TriLue, NchiJJ8 over 18,000 hom~

h·
~

&lt;'

A

'

I

'·

,)

•.'
.{·

'

~

~

'

-~

'
TOLE PAINTING ·Craft demonstrations
and displays were featured ill Dave Diles. Park
during Middleport's Catfish Festival. Here Marilyn Meier pamts a scene on an old ·kerosene

•
'

•

beater. Her work emphasizes restoration and
decoration of antiques as well as preservation
and e_nbancement of family heirlooms.

~

"

.

•
'"i
,.;;--.,

~~

Thursday Paper
Friday Paper

Days
1
3
6
10

Words
15
15
15
15

C~Y

FROM A CLOWN • Seyeral clowns
moved .about town durlilg tbe CatrJSb Festival to
give candy treats to the chUdren, Here two year

old Ollvili Rose Davis of Rutland gets a sucker
from clown Pat Johnson.

446-Galllpollo
367-Cioeohlre
388-VIatoo
245-Rio Graade

742-Ru~oad

379-Walaat

458-I..oa
576-.l.pple
773-Moooa

c.......

98s..a.-.
843-Portlaad
247-Letart Pallo 949-Roebte

Dtot.
643-Aralolo Dlot.

446·4514- 1·800·766·4013

Wholesale Prices

882-NewRne
895-Letort
937-BulF.to

Sh,ade River Saddle s•op .

on
VINYL REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

Monthly 15
$1.30/day
$.05/day
Rates are for conseeutive rune, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.
.
Bu•in- Card•••.$17.00/ Inch per momlh
Bulletin Boud••.$6.0CIIInch per day

CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

. '195"11STA1LID
Up to 84 united Inches In
wood fl'lrnN lnltall.ci In 3
w•kll from
of purchase
Call now for turhter details
and free estimate.

~~~

date

CLASSD'I f) liS

36358 SR 7

11- RwiD- Oppartuaity
22- Moaey 10 Loaa
23- -Prof-i~l Serriceo

P... for Sale
Mu)callntarwneab

Fruit•

a

Tromm Builders

Veptabloo

.AMI
.GENEUL LIFI1IIII
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COIIPUY

Rutland 742-2328

F.. S.lo or Trade

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgige

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Apnt .

New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replltcemant Windows
Room Additions e Roofing

lox189

Middleport, o•1o 45760
(614) 843·5264 1114/IMfn

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

667-Coohllle

FREE ESTIMATES
171·-A.utoo f• Sale
Traolu for Sale
41- Ho..u for Real
ValLI &amp; 4 WD1t
~Mobile Ho- for Heat
Motoreyelu
oU- Far ... for Re~l
Bo•t. &amp;: Moton for Sale
44-- ApartJMDt for Rent
Auto Partl &amp; A..,,,.,• •
4S- Funilbed Room~
Auto Repair
46-- Space for Real
Camplns EquipmeDt
47- 111/aoted to Ret
48-- Equipmeat for Relit
49-'- For X....

614-992·7643
(llo Sunday Calla)

BUI'a Tlrt
ofRaveMWaad
. anrioU11011.· . '·

2/121921tfn

.;.,l

.; 3-r JD ·Memory
S- Armounet~meft'4-Civeaway
S-HappyAdo
6- Jmt aad Fouod
7- Loot ud Fo..,d
8- Public Sale &amp;

11- Help Wanted
12- Si-ilou Wuttod
13-- ID1uraaee
14- BuoiDIII TraiaiiiJ
15-- Soboolo &amp; IDitnetion
16- Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair
17- Mileellaoeow
18.- Wanted To Do

Auction
9- Wanted "' Bur

.

~

54- Mloc. Mercltaaclioe
55-- Buildiq SuppUoo

Publlc Notice

~-.
~~~ il
~ $'

MOST ORIGINAL WINNER • Me,an Harrison and ber dog,
''Pat'' a Sbibtzu donned clown costummg for the Middleport Ca.tr.sh F~ival pet parade Saturday. Megan received a rosette in the
most original category.

CHAIR CANING • To· demonstrate splint seat caning, Mary
Wise worked Saturday afternoon at Dave Diles Park on an antique
chair belonging to Dorothy Roller. Nellie Zirkle looks on as Mary
works oa tbe seat.

Stripping research
raises academic
. eyebrows at Kent

PET PARADE WINNERS- New this year
the pet parade proved a _popular event at Mi~­
dleport's CatrJSh Festival. Tbe winners In vanous categories were from tbe left, Megan and
Laura Harrison witb Shlbtzus most original;
Mike Smith, a Basset, best costumed; Clara

Sanders, a goat, tbe most unusual; Carol Southem, a Boxer, the biggest dog; and Jessica Cale
and Valerie Conde, with a coiUe who rode In a
little red wagon, tbe most unusual transportation •.

Ohio college picked for
electric-car competition
CEDARVILLE, Ohio (AP)Cedarville College is among 12
u.S. and 1Canadian schools taking
part in a contest to build a combination electric- and fuel-powered
car.
The U.S. Department of Energy,
Canada's energy department, the
Society of Automotive Engineers,
and Saturn Corp. are sponsoring
the competition to develop a hybrid
vehicle that boosts mileage an~
redUces pollutioo.
.
Building the car will give Stu·
dents knowledge they could not get
·from books, said Chuck Allport,
director of engineering programs at
Cedarville.
"These are not trivial problems," Allport said. "They are.
right up there with wbat the maj~ .

automobile manufacturers are try·
ing 10 get a handle on."
Allport said about 200
Cedarville students will be
involved, including engineering,
business, and communications
majors.
Saturn has donated cars 10 each
of the schools, which must conven
the cars into hybrid electric vehicles.
Under the rules, the students
must create a vehicle with a small
combustion engine that powers an
electrical system, which provides
extra power for acceleration and
high speeds.
The combustion engine can be
kept at a steady speed, reducing the
added fuel consumption and pollution that comes from frequent

aCceleration.
The car must drive normally,
meet pollution requirements and
have good engineenng quality.
The student reams will compere
in Detroit in June and - after malcing improvements in their cars again in 1995 and 1996.
Robert Larsen, of the Energy
Department's Argonne National
Laboratory, said hybrid electric
vehicles could be m production
within 10 years.
' ·
Cedarville, a private Christian ·
liberal arts school of about 2,300
students in southweStern Ohio, was ·
lhe only school in lhe slllte selected
for the cdmpelition.

CLEVELAND (AP) - A Kent
State University professor is not
giving rave rev1ews to a doctoral
study on why strippers strip.
'
Werner Lange, associate professor of sociology at Kent's Ashtabula campus, said lhe research by two
doctoral students did not examine
economic inequalities, the decline
of institutions and racism.
•'I consider it voyeurism in the
guise of sociological research,"
said Lange, who had not read the
studx.
' If lbese guys want to visit porn
shops and watch nude dancers on
their own time, firie. But don't disguise it as intellectual research.··
Jonathan Epstein, 33, and Scott
Reid, 27, interviewed dozens of
strippers in Oeveland, Brook Park,
Akron, Kent, and Toledo and convinced many to fill out survey
fonns.
The survey was conducied
between October and April, with
about a year of research before
that, Epstein said. He said they
hoped 10 publish it in an academic
journal.
Some of the strippers reported
earning as much as $30,000 per
year for worlting 20 hours a week,
Reid said.

Constitution week
September 17 through 23 'com·
memorates the signing of the Constitution of the United States of
America. this guardian of liberties
established our Republic as a selfgoverning nation dedicated 10 rule
by law. This week to laud the
achievements of those courageous
men who, two hundred years ago,
struggled to balance a limited gov•
ernment with the rights, privilege
and responsibilities of American
citizenship.
This announcement was provided by tM French Colony Chapter,
National Soc~ty. Daughters of the
American Revolution.

'The Emmy Awards:'
well-mannered and dull
By FRAZIER MOORE
AP Television Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Emmy
was so busy patting herself on the
back Ibis year, she forget 10 entertain the TV audience.
"The 45th Annual Primetime
Emmy Awards," 41ired live by
ABC Sunday rii$hl, was unleavened by wit, sentunent or blooper. ·
It had the emotional pull of a
Muzalc serenade. It was little more
than a video printouL
Why, it almost made the viewer
long for that dul!lb Energizer
Bunny gag from last year.
Perhaps most remarkably, it
ended after three hours - half an
hour less than in 1992. Thank
goodness.
Oh, Emmy had the best of intentions. That was clear.
Staged on a set of glassy panels
that resembled an arboretum with
no plants, the program was a study'
in dignity and taste.
TV's Queen Mother, Angela
Lansbury, reigned with predictable
class in her white ruffled collar. It
was a marked change from last
year's co-hosts, comic Dennis
Miller, Tim Allen ("Home
li"'~~~~~~~~~~

Stocks
Am Ele Power ................... 39 1/6
Ashland OiL ...................... 33 118
AT&amp;T ................................ 59 3/4
Bank One ........................... 40 318
Bob Evans...................... ~ ... IS 3/8
Charming Shop.................. 11 5/8
Champion Ind . ......................... 13
City Holding ......................28 1{1
Federal Mogul ...................25 5/8
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................46 1/8
Lands End .......................... 37 1/6
Limited Inc ................. .............21
Multimedia Inc..................35 1{4
Point Bancorp ......................... .14
Rax Restaurant .....................1/32
Reliance Eleclric................ l8 318
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 20 3/4
Shooey's lnc ................. :.... 21 3{4
Star Bank ........................... 34 Ill
Wendy Int'l........................ l5 1/8
Worthington Ind..........:.....28 1{4
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
or Gallipolis.
.
lli;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::=;;;::=;;;a-;1

I' \

Improvement") and Kirstie Alley
("Cheers"). Needless 10 say, there
was no monologue.
Nor were there dance numbers
cheesing up die works.
The inevitable montage of TV's
past y~ar ("and what a year it's .
been!," Lansbury trilled) unreeled ··
to the strains of Beethoven's Ninth ~·:
Symphony.
.
··
The most affecting part of lhe ~
show was a compilation of farewell ·~
moments from beloved TV series. · .
With Mary Tyler Moore standing
by, viewers relived goodbyes from · ·
such favorites as "MASH," "Barney Miller," "The Fugitive" and, ··
of course, "Mary Tyler Moore."
·
Then Moore moved on,to a fond
farewell to shows from last season:
"Knots Landing," "The Wonder
Years" and a sitcom called
''Cheers.••
Later in the program, ABC cor- ' :
respondent Barbara Walters Sf!C?ke ,
for several minutes about teievtsion •.
at its half-century mark.
"II is time that we, not the commissions and panels, concern ourselves with doing something about
violence and moral values on televison," she said. "And generally
spealcing, we haven't."
The closest thing to a personal
tribute came when Bob Hope was .
brought oo, complete wilb standing · .
ovation, but as just another presen- ,
ter .. Even he managed jusi one
quip: "You all remember me - ·
the comedian without a talk ::
show." Then it was back to chuck- :
ina ow awards.
·•
The best crack from a recipient
came courtesy of "Seinfeld' s" J:
Larry David. He accepleiJ ~.is_com- ~:
edy-writing Emmy wit!\ a deadpan, •
"This is all very well and good, but : ·
I'm still bald."
·;
Tom. Fontana, who won the · i
drama-writing award for "Homi- ~
cide: 'Life on the Street," took the :
opporlunity to spealc up for all TV ·
drama, whose populanty in recent · :
seasons bas waned in comparison •:
to half-hour sitcoms.
.
·:
''It's not the fault of the Ameri- · 1
ean public thlllhe dnima is in ttou- ·:
ble," he said. "We have to~ .~
out a way to reignite the imagma- .
tion of the American people." ·
:But overall, lhe ·presenters· and '
winners read their lines and gave ':
1lheir
·duiilks in 30 iecoods ·

1

Public Notice
Notice to Truck Deatera:
In accordance wllh
section 307.86 of the Ohio
Revloed Code, seated bids
witt be received by the
Board of Mel go County
Commlulonert, Court
Houoo, Pomeroy, Ohio
45789, until 11:00 a.m., Sept.
211, 1993. The btdo will then
be opened and rud aloud
at 10:30 o.m. on SEPT. 29,
1993 lor the purcha•• of:
ONE NEW 1994 TANDEM
DUMP TRUCK
Bid opeclftceUon• may be
picked up at ~he Melgo
County EnglnMr I Office or
tho Dlltce of the Melga
County Cornmt..lonero.
Tha Meigs County
Comml11lonero may accept
the lawool bid, or oetect the
best bid lor the Intended
purpo··· and reserve the
right to accept or reject any
or ,an blda andtor any part
thereof.
Gloria Kloea,
Acting
Clerk
Board
ol Meigs
County Comml11lonero
(9) 13, 20; 2 TC

1

card of Thallkl
Tile Family of
LIZ SAYRE

would Hu· to thank

avery-

who helped
In 10 many dlfterant
way1. Tbankl for the
bRutlful flow.-., the
food, the cards and
m_, and •peclally
your pniY.-..Tiiankl
for Rev. Albert e.tey

eoMollng wordl, and

a epeclal thll'lk you Ill
Rev. Louie A. Hu...ll
for hla wordl or

comfort

and

ewrythlng he hal
d - to help 911r
family. Liz will be
IBdly mi8Nd by her
family
and
by
evwyone who m-

h•.
'
'1111 F11111lly of Liz S.yre.

1

'
.
,

:;a:.

General Hauling
· Mobile H~me Repair
Upholoterr

c........

MII.U.port, OW.
614·992·7144

Public Notice

p U.8 LIC

11124192/lfn

4/29/93

ROIERT BISSELL
CO.NSTRUCTION

THURSDAY,
SEPTEMBER23, 1993~10:00A.M.
LOCATED AT 25 WARWICK DRIVE
IN POINT PLEASANT, WV.
MRS. THOMPSON· IS MOVING AND
'
WILL BE SELLING THE FOLLOWING:
Beaulilul wrought iron dine!IB with roses and leaves · must
seel BroyhiA dining room 1uit8, Montgomery Ward miCtOwave, Whilpool rehigenttor, Quality hide-a-bed, beautiful
caived spinet desk, 19' Saara color TV, cocktail tables and
others, anllque magazine rack, chaire, rocker, ~iner, B&amp;W
PD~:~~~ble TV. 3 pc. bedroom 1ui111. 3 drawer Orienlal marble
lop chell. melal wantobe, Kenmore wuher &amp; Q-yer. ol~
Singer IIIWing machin&amp;,lltl1110,exceltanl appliqued tulip quilt
green and white and lour other qullta, dollle1, 8 day wood
clodc, 6 place oetting of fint China Dream pattel'!l, Oriental
vue, teapot ligurinas, Fenton, Comlngware, antique doll,
round glltld bevel mlrri&gt;r, gllllod bevel mirror, wall plaqueo,
beautiful paintlnga (OIIIa Queen ~y Chlrlas Hooper, Falll
Milt by Burton Dye), blrdpidlna anclolhlrl. balkttl, Chrill·
·mu decorallons, cialtl, Griowald Wagner akiiBII, poll,
pans, pod&lt;et ktllve1, movie "'""n, bookl, Remington typawrilllr, Sell1-m cleaner, mlk Clllll, ginger j... hand
tools Craltlman 1oc:ltat aet, drllla, IBWI, null, bolla, cl'op
cord~. floor jack, step ladder, wheelbarrow and moral

AUC710N CONDUCTED BY

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.
MASON, WV
773-5785
AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON
OWNER: HELEN THOMPSON .

LilliCH

.

............. 01' .... crl property

~UJII-I!OIIIo.~.l -Vt;~lr.IM

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE
WORK
Porches,
Patios,
Sidewalks
992~7878
7fT 1 roo.

oG

aragea
oComp_lete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

985•4473

7122193

L'j::::=c==~
li
YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
1-R&lt;&gt;Om Aclcltlone
11-IJuttorWorl&lt;
-Electrical and Plumbing
-Roofing
11-kl,lrlor a Exterior
Paining
(FREE EBTlMATEIJ)
".C. YOUNG Ill
w.

992-6215

Pom.-oy, Ohla
1-tO·G·IIn

WINTER HOURS
Sun.·Thurt. 4-10 pm
Fri. &amp; ~•• 4 pin-?

b....,,..,.,Wlil l i iV
.......,. ...... pODI . . .

Interior &amp; Exterior

Paint Mobile Hon~eel
and Aluminum Siding
I•P&lt;&gt;wer Washing

Fill IITIIIAJII

son• lltler IINte N.

ht.. •,011.417U

985·4181

HAULING

EXI''-AWMI
I.UI.'IING

LIMESTONE,
GRAVE(. TOPSOIL
&amp;COAL

Eam

SAYRE TRUCKING

DRIVEW
UMEITONE-llii.ICIONG

314/93 1 mo.

Gravel
992~7878
7nllrro. .

614-7 42-2138

992,3838

WATER
HAULING

~;:===~~~~~~~

Arnold'S

PIUm••lftlt
HHfIftl ·

1625 Gallons

•so per load

· D.A. BOSTON
EXCAVATING

~
vu••••
RICHARD ROBERTS ·

"Ad Speclaltl.•"
122 Jq Drift, Gllftpall1, Oh:
448-7112
FaxM:IIce

DMID.~IIIIM....,_

-hoi ... ,.
- . . ,.....,
.. •• .~~.IJtond,

lltn.-..."',_Co,

IJvel Q...on-onat Cll ,.
_ .. .1017llll.ltll, .... Por
tati1JIIO.

u r ntne "" Ooroki

Na

~....

lid,

Trolipa

pi

··--

Rolpll

At

742,2904

QUALITY WORK
&amp; GOOD RATES

HAULING
SERVICE
36970 Ball Run Road
POJHroy, Ohio

GRAVEl. SAND,
LIMESTON(, TOP SOIL

Gutters
Downapouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

&amp; FilL DIRT

992~3470
· OWNER: Jtll
•

FREE ESTIMATES

949,2168

Wldt...._

WHILIY'S AUTO
PARIS

UCIIE
MOWER -CLINIC

GlvelwiiY
111W1Wm.

4·-···

• · - Cello

-

!"Pf.!g ••

112

-Old 1M
I WooltMoll
01111 K.._,
- · .Y
/Whlt.
_
~ KJtt-

114

a.nra.

Utter-.

....•.___ .....

F,_
.,_,....,.

l(llttnl, To Good Homo1

_,., .,. 112 ....

DAVID ARNOLD
(814)
Pomeroy,

ROOFING

p rt) . . . . . . .
• Will llo

· 4 - k " rr I

Call

&amp; Cooling

1-11-13-tfn

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADE~
•TRUCKING

3 AnnouiiOIIIId

4

FREE ESnMATES

NEW-REPAIR

Dirt

'Rea-ble RaiH
Joe N. Sayre

AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC IY8TE!18,
HOME IIITEI.and

HAULING

4-tll-83-tln

3rd and PoltllfOJ Stntts ·
Masatr, wv
(304) 773·5585

LP••lnth"' Servlcea

Howard L Wrltesel

667·6621

(Former Muon Lane1)

ENtERPRISES

GENEUL

(61~)

EAGLE ·
LANES

. Richard Moor. ··
. has jolrwd our ltd.
Richard oomea tD ua
with 12 ,._ .
experience 8t
Pomeroy Hotne &amp;
Auto and CIA ·Auto
Cotne Vlllt.UL

lllJII~JI~CKHOE
and 1 ~ WORK

loNiewHomes

Llm~stone

AuCTIoN

TERIIB: CA8H QA CHECK WllH lA

31904 .......

.

IN THE COMMON PLEA!! and Dl•trlbullve AcCO.llnt of
COURlPROBATE DIVISION William E. Neutzllng,
MEiuS COUNTY, OHIO
Execulor of the E•tate of
tNTHEMATTEROF
Helen G. Neulzllng,
SEffiEMENT OF
DeceaHd.
ACCOUNTS,
ESTATE NO. 27220 • Final
Sentinel
PROBATE COURT,
and Dl1lrlbutlve Account of
MEiGS COUNTY, OHIO
Paul M. RHCI, Admlnl•lralor
Classified&amp;
Accaunl• end vouchero WlththeWIIIAnnexedolthe
992 _2156 .
of the following nemed Eotale of Katie Guth,
flduobtrlaa have been flied DeceeHd.
tn the Probate Court, M•lsl•
Unlen ucer,tlone era
County, Ohio, lor approval flied therelo, u d account•
end oettlem111t: ·
wilt ba lor hearing before
ESTATE NO. 26392. Flnet eeld Court on lhe 25th day ~ ~-,_...,....,..,.~~~
and Dlolrlbutlve Account of of October, 1993, al which tr
Vv 0 n n 1
S t n a 1, lime oold accounts wilt be f&amp;A TREE TRIMMING
Admlnlotrelrlx Wllh the Will considered and conllnued
Annexed of the Estate ol from day to day until nnalty Trlllllli.... TGpplng, R-.1
John L More, O..C.Hd.
disposed of. ·
· frH Est....,tl
ESTATE NO. 27798 •
Any peroon lnlerested
l
Mts
Parllal Account of Lyle J. may flte wrltllln excepllono
tGYt
••
SWain, Admlnlllrator of the to said •ccounto or to
742•2360
Estate of Mary Rulh swain ritatlero pertaining to the
DeceaHd.
' execution of the truot, not r - - - - - . . , . . - . ,
ESTATE NO. 27394 • Final Ieos than live days prior to
BINGO
and Dlllrlbutlve Acoounl ol lhe date oet for hearing.
Joyce schultheloa 1nd
Robert Buck
EVERY THURSDAY
Gerold w. Burke, Co·
JUDGE
Executore of the Eottte of
Common Pleat Court,
EAGLES
VIrginia Swift Burke,
Probate Dlvlolon
CLUB
Deceased.
Meigs County, Ohio
IN POMEROY
ESTATE NO. 27434 • Flnol (9) 20, 1TC
-------6:46p.m.Public
Sale
Special
Ea~y Blrd
8
$100 Payoff
&amp; AuctiOn
This ad gOod l~r 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-342

Nat p ;

Plumbing
iJ,.,.,,.

52- Sportins Goodo

.

FACE PAINTING • Always popular with children Is face painting. Here Sblrin Nuggud paints the Chicago Bulls emblem on JiU
WUt's cbeek. The race painting weut on all afternoon at the Middleport Catfish Festival.

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMIIHG

51- Hou.ehokl Gooda
53-Antiquoo

Health •

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire •

I \1:\1-..1 1'1'111 ~
,\11\I&gt;IIHk

32- Mobile
for Sale
33-- Fanu for Sale
M- Rwi..., Buildinp
35-- Loto a .Ac"'"8"
36- Roal Eotate Waoted

Chester, Oh. 45720
985-3406

Toll Free 1·800·291·5600
...

6 75-Pl. l't......

992-Mlddloportl
Pomeroy

2S~ayaa

CHRISTIAN'S CONSTRUOION

'

Gallia CoWtly Melf!l CoWtly M810D Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

·1.

Until October 1st: Buy any replacement
window and racelve FREE - Beautiful
woodgrain Interior.
Colort: Light Oak, Dark Oak, Cherry.
1-Jfellme GuarantM.

Rate Over 15 Worda
$4.00
$ .20
$6.00
$ .30
$9.00
$ .42
$13.00
$ .60

Clm•ified page• cooei- the
following &amp;el.eph0116 e%cha.ige,, ••

,.,..,p'

4

1:00 p.m. Tueoday
• t:OO p.m. Wedneoday
tOO p.m. Thuroday
1:00 p.m. fri4ay

Wedneodly Paper

Sunday Paper

POLICIES

~

DAY BBI'DRE PUJ!UCATION
1:00 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Monday

COI'Y DBADLINB

¥••

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

Malo llaor .,.,..... kltl011, to o
,;:. 1: - . . - IOWl&amp;-

-Uealloe-.--.
304-417M720.

Spitz pupploo.IOW'IW-

6

Lost &amp; Found

Fowtd: - l r l l l - . .11
dog, hoalll coon nt1x, IR Nt

.,..,IMxltl 2101.

Found: Block lAb, VIcinity: Rt.
141. Puibwnouth Rd. c.ll To

ldontlly,IM 411 3117.

Lool·
Rut-:
- · - Dell
lw
rolurn
wlh -~~~to
~Ulland Clvlo c.-, 114Lool: Hnlwd IIIIUIIOOUI Sept. lth, IM . . IR

~--~~~~­

1

Yard Sale

Specializing In Custom

WALIII ALLEY
Parts IIIII Senb

Frame Repair

Mowtn • Gall S.WS

AI.I. . . . . IIIIIIU

. w..a.ters

H2·701Sor
H2-S51S
or IOU. fill
1-ION410070
' NIWIII, OliO

Authorllld: Brlgge &amp;
Slratton MTO,_ ~.

I. D.C. Repair eent.r
PICKUP 111d DEUVERY
Hour• "" M-F N lilt.
Cloalldllu~Dy

Galllpolla
&amp; VlclnHy
ALL Ylrtl la1M M\111 1o Plld In
AdvanOe. DIAOUIII: 1:00 p.m.
the . , ~~~~- tllo Oil It .. tun.

llur!doJ - - • 1:00 ......
Frldo~r.....,.a:oo

p.m.

8

141·2104
SHill&amp;

LINDA'S
PAINDNG

IRIM••II
REMOVAL

lmRIOR
FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out of
palntlng. Let me do It

•LIGHT HAULING
ofiREWOOD
BILL SLACK

. 992·2269
USED RAILROAD TEl

VERY fo~
R
BLE
HAVE REFERINCES

614·915-4110

12-:JO.tl!.lln

.' .

...MI/1-pd
..

..

.

.

•

Public Sale
• Auction

.
. . .,
..
....
..._.,
IUik
......
-····

r;: ('!Z!
I

auotlen -else. e• I •
iM,Qhle a WoM ~
7JNIII. '
PL 'I IM1I 1'111 lllrUI, :11401
Jocltlon .........

*'

.
.
.
-=
-IIIII)·-~~ ....

=·~rent,

..... far

I

dQWIIk

.....
.
--

Want.ct to Buy

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

AnlkluN- ......t..... . .

!'Ur·

-. · P~Me

or

Ill

pI

hoionnhaliL ... 00, ·llillln,

.114-111-'11141.
...... ..... -.........

.,

.... . ... -- ....

�a

Page
9

The Dally Sentinel

wanted to

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BEATIIE BLVD."' by Bruce Beattie

Buy

Monday, September 20, 1993

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrigllt

44

71

Auto• lor

20,1993

S8le

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACROSS

37 Dawn
goddell
40 DeiHl
41 Sip
backward
44 JljllfteH
IHh
478p1CioUI
48 - Gota
Secret
51 llnlature

PHILLIP

ALDER

NORTH

1·11-11

53
55
58
57

ACCUitomN
Foola
An exploolve
......ge
coniiiMr
58 Pllonograpll
lnv111tor

+AKI5 S2

.Q4

-·

·1' .-

+AK5
+A K

1 D:lkl'i "THI"--K
BIU. V..OOLD GO
FOR lT

WEST
Q109
2
J 10 e 7

EAST

+J7

•H75

teo

8 65 2

+BI

.AK10963
tQ62

+H

Vuloer able; East-West
Dealer; North

· -·-:"""" - ---·-····....... ..

BARNEY

11

Help Wanted
AVONI All ar111. Hood oxtro
money or went a ClrMr, .rthlr
Way-&lt;011 MorliYn. -:zt.45
or 1-1100-1112-1358.
" AVON I All A,..o I Shirley
Spooro, 304-675-14211.
llobyolttor Noodod MaJuro, Non-

"'

I AIN'T NEVER PITCHIN' HOW MUCH
HOSS SHOES WITH
DID YOU LOSE,
THURLOW AG'JN !!
PAW?

THREE

OAOBURN

LOLLIPOPS
!!

44~-~ftl.

Cordlnol Frolghl Corrlero.O.T.R,
Drtv.,. . .nrid for a new ••

lntmorlolltotlor pointing, rool

hovo1yr, O.tA. uporlonco

mobil

lng a

v~n

pul~

trailer, good at•nlng

PlY. lltt model equipment, Blue
Croa Blue Shield, Inc., .. op off

palnUn~nctwath hoUHI •

Domlno'a PlzZII In Pomeroy It
now accepl.lng appllc1tlone.

Around
, Tho
World,
Domonatralor. Froo 11100 Kh No
CollOctlng Or Dollvorlng, Aloo
Bool&lt;lng Portleo, Coli 6t4-245-

5031.

Eaay World Excollenl Payl AoHmblt Produclt At Honw. Calf

Toll Froo, 1-800-417-51166, Exi.
313.
"Elr:prt.nced MediGail S.cr.tary,
No WHkondo, Or Shift Work,

Aooly In Poroon, -lcol Plua,
tU Shit• Routa 110, Galllpolll:,
8:30o5.
FLATBED
DRIVERS.C.rdlnol
Frolght Corrloro hao on oppor·
Junlly lor lllibod drlvora thot hr
MCond to nonel Do you awn
your own tractor? Have you

thought oboUt buying your own

1111ctor'? 11 baing a company

rou

driver whalt
lrt lnteresttd
In? Then. cal Cardinal today at

1-800.11211-6:122 ond uk lor
Boyd. WE HAVE IT ALLI
Loeal

Buslnus

Privately

OwnodL I.Doklng For Socrotory.
Send ""ume lo: sees P.O.
Box 452, Galllpalla, OH 45631.
Notional Publhrhlng Firm Nlodo
Peopl8 To UHl Postcard•
From Home. $8001Wk. s.. Your
Own Hourw. t-100.-7377, (t41

Mln/18
Or Writ': N.Aurora
PAASE- .
33T,
181Yrw•l
S. Uncolnway,
IL 10542.
REAL ESTATE CORRESPON·
DENCE COURSE: comploto WV

BuBIness
Opponunny
INGnCEI
OHIO VAWY PUBUSHINO CO.
- n d o thot you do Wfth pooplo you - · and
NOT ta oond...,.,.,.
moll unlll you hi.. od
tho allorlng.

21

=ho

Local Pay Phone Routo:

~

A W11k Patent'-!. PrlCid To

Sell. 1400 481 7132.
I.Dool. Vonolng Routo: 11,200 A

WHk Patontlll. Muot Soil. 1 -

03-1130.

Well Eotabllohod l.ocol Buol·
,_.,, Oolllpollo Ohio Aroo With
2 11- In Opomlon,
B - Conclele 01 Approx.
s~,ooo Wodh 01 Accounlo
Wroch Aro llolng Sold For .SO.
On Tho Dolltlr. Ropoat Rlltoll
Culltomoro_ A 10,000 SQ. Fl.
Bulldlnt. Compllle Wllh l:holn
Unk FOilCI. OWnora Will THCh
You Tho Buolnooo a Olvo You
Tho Contacto For y..., Buying
NNde. PurchiH 01 Thle lull'
, _ Moybo Modo llHorol 01~
lonnt Woy._ Purchuo Tho Aocounltl I L.o- 1 Or Both
Building• Or Pun:hue Thl
Whole BualnHa. Sorlou. lnqulrl• Only For Appolnlmont,
1..14-25&amp;-aVBU.

lr--:::;:::--,

No Umo loll oN job. Fully oocrodntd.BASIC
APPRAISAL
CLASSES:Chl.-on Oct. 415Mirtlnoburg Oct. 11-21.1-tooA~pUonl.t,

All real estate ~entstng In
1h1s n e - r Is IUbled 1o
tho Fede111l Fair Housing Act
o1 1968 Which makes n11oga1
to adVertise •any preference,
lmllallon or -nation
based on race, color, r..glon,
ux familial stilus or national
ortgln, or orry lnlonllon to
make any such preference,
imhallon or dlsalmlnatlon."

Col-

logoJock Kolly

Pl..unt Phone

Poroonolhy, Good OrJllnllltlonol SknJo, Abllhy To WO&lt;k
CIOHiy With Anothor Sharing
RuponalbHitl11 40 Hro Por
WNk. Send Roaumo To: CLA
285 c/o Golllpollo Dally Trlbv~~~

825 Third AVInt..te, Gelllpolil, utt

45131.
SouthNotorn Probollon Troo~
mont
Aftornotlvo
(SEPTA)
Cent or
7 W. Twoniy-Nino Drl..
Naleonvllle, Oh 45714
(6141 753-15000

This newspaper wll not
knowing!\' accepl
adVertisements ror real estate
WhiCh IS In Ylolallon o4111o
klw. our readers are hereby
lntOfTned thai .. dwelingl
advertised in this newspaper

Application•
tained from
your local
Employment
Posting to

may only be ob•nd rwtum.d to
Ohio Bwuu of
S.rvk:H oftk:t.
CIOM Oct~ 1,
11191
Part-time Cook· dMCrfptlon u
tollowa: Hourly 11111 $8.80, epproxlmllely 20 hou('l per weik
Inclusive of wHkenda and

are avaJiable on an equal
opportunlly buls.

alai In the ouporvlolon ol
realdente wortl.lng I~ thl dlnlnt
room •nd kltchtn. Aleo aeelttt
In hllping a daily accountability

of lnnnloryl lnvolcn, MMII

Hrved, nqu1sltlone, dilly J*·
formanca thltta, a.m. checldlll,
food uaag1, and maintenance

nNdo. Ablllly to llllln lor oboont

personnel and ablhy lo perform
dutl11 without aupervlalon I•

Minimum

rtqulred.

quallfle..ion.high
Kh~
dlrloma or aqulvalant lnd on•
(1 yqr of exparl•nc• In lnstltuUonll food Nrvlel.

Train for amploymant In the
tltctronlea field . Opponunltlu
lnclud• lechnlclan In electronic
rtpalr, .ttctranlca englnuring,
communication and computet
rtpaW. Openlnga a.valllblt rn the
Oct. 11th clan. Call now. The
J.dult Education C.ntar, 1-800-

137-5608 or 614-753-31111.
Wanted :

.omaOM

wname

ponloo to glvo rldoo ot 10yr. old
birthday pony, will bo G-7
chlldrwn. 304-675-»58.
Wanted to Do
Cortlllod chll.d caro provldlr will

18

take a.re of children In mr
home, Cheltlr arM, pltaM call

114-115-4»2 Mary.
Cortllled nurwlng oMiotam will
coro lor/oft wHh aldorly In thllr
h~L- outstanding rilarencea.
304-wai-2123.
LPN . - work In M•- or
Galllo County. Will do tomporory
or homo cars, doy or ovanlng
ohlfto. 304•773-5357.

we• dU!t. But as Covert Bailey said, "No
remove all the fat from your
body, because the brain is entirely fat.
Without a brain you might look
but ail you could do is run for
u~ I
office."
In bridge, normally we love to
plump with trumps. But there is an
casional deal - like today'a ~ 111l"~h we are forced to diet down the
.t trun'" surplus In order to make the

I WASN'T SURE
'(OU I-lAP NOTICED

n.•••

1188 Shultz mallll llonw. 2br, 2 Wanllna to ront· 2 or 3 bedroom

think a positive response to a
l ~:~~~, 1artiflcial and forcing two-club

call• only. 304-475-1113 """' tlon, prohlr prlvato oottlngl 614lpm.
·
812-2428, If no IMW'er p n•
_ 3bd
..... mou"'o on ,...hlno.
1114 R• d1111n 14 x.u,
1
rm., ncJudN oldrtlng1 otopo, blocko,
5yr. warrtlnly, nomeown1rt! lnaurw,ncl, and 1 year of tr.. tot

Rea l Estate
Homes for Sale

2 bedroom houee, full bl•

mont. 30H75·14U.
3 bedroom homO In Rutland,
double lot, gordon, Coller, outbulldl~gt;,

Mnmecllata .,.,...,.

35

Lots &amp; Acreage
2 Loto For Sole: Apprordinatoly

1 AcN lot, &amp; 112 Aare Lot, 4110
mile out Neighborhood Rood
011 Sl Rt 141. 114-448-3438 lor
moro lnl....,.,lon,

Grande • PI- Coil Ill Connell AI: Donna Sum...,..:..-:.~
For Mort lnlormotlon. I

1251.
For ult or rent· one bedroom
houlton P.. cacllltrMI, $7100

$121,000. 30W7S-2Z41.

Uko
2
Homalllu-.

""I••

114 441 4871.
3-4br., 1 112 bath, b..amMI,
g~~rao-,
fenced yard, near
ochoOie, "75 pluo d_.H. 304175-1242.
3br.,

2306

dopooM

a

Jefter8on

Ave.,

roloronca. 304-675-

42 Mobile Homes
11174 Kirkwood 12165 Total Eloc.:r
CA, I Hoot, 1\oo Add Ono, 1r•
Aero MIL Country Slitting, 114388-i700.
2 lodroom Mobile Homo In Go~
lla Coumy, 12110/Mo., Pluo
UtllHioo, On 218, Rohlrwncoo,
Dopooh Roqulrod, 114-1183-41501
After I P.ll.

Th,.. bedroom, eil electric, one

child, no pllto, J24(11mo., New
Havon, -2~418.

Two bedroom mobllo homo lor
ron1 In country, dopooft ond
Nt.rance~

raquiNd,

814·14•

2133.

M,OOO,DP.

SIIO.Zf

S35,100.
MonthlY

1,.,.,.•. t14-441-11S?; u, o;.

Pa

44

Apanment
for Rent

1 llodroom Furnllhod ~... In
Aeloronoo I DlplooN,
No Polo, 114-441-1311.
t bdnn. opoitment In Pomoroy
~.

lornoni,l14-1112 ...11.
lodroom

f1 N4 41101 Allar 7 P.M.

and bo1 aprlnge, dreuar and

Houses for Rent
lroottooo
2 bodrocxn, Flrot Avo. Gal· refrlg•n~tor, $75. 304-675-.2052.
llpo11o-12110/mon., dopoo 1t end Sldo by oldo relrlgorotor, 1225;
rwt.rancu Nqulred &amp;1-.256- goo
t20o or $400/pr., 81415211.
11112~07 .
2 Badrooma Furnlahed, O.po.H
&amp; Rtlorenco Raqulrod, No Palo,

than 201n, MOOD,

HI $44.15j C... Bed'a

Bunk Bod'o, Pooler lodo. Fud
Line 01 Southwootorn v.Stortl'\1! At S20.00; lndlano Many
Shopo o I Slz• Stortlng At
$5.00. 2 l.ocatlona ·BIIIdaltouto
Auction Or 4 MIIM Oul 141.
Opon I A.M. To I P.M. Mon &amp;t.
Bodroom group; Bod, mottrooo

Jarrtcho Rd. Pt. Pl•nnt, WV;

or S15GIIno.j 2 bedroom ._..
In l.ottrt, Ohio, 11500; call Crow

I Crow R11lty, 114-1112-2120 or
814-112-3581.
Houae I t 112 ICI'II, out ol clly
nmno, c - ta a
..orwe, email blrn, fenold, 3br.i
llrgo lamlly _ , a ldtohln,
lormolllvlng l 'dlnl?!o •• 2112
b.tho, utllhy room, z car (lll'ogo,

1119 Sli
Drawer

: • __________....J·I
!!!!!!!!!!::::::::!!!..:....:..

2411. Solorl POnloon, 35lip
llocUIJc.MW - · hHd, loa

Malt Sot 189, Full
0uNn ft41 Bot; 4

caii304-67S-14&amp;0.
Soaro
Coldepot

41

75 Boats &amp; Motors ,.
for Sale

loddl~,...ln

mirror. Viiy good condition.
~mpoho, Bigfoot Pork, Racoon 1350114-446-1155.
CNII, oqulppod w/ oloctrlc
hNt, AC. TV, microwave, polio, 011 cook etove, fair cond., $100.
utllfty bvlldlng, oovoroc dock, 304 ..75-4833.
boot do:._.oCCIII to crook, GOOD USED APPUANCES
t15,500.
75-441'1.
wa•ra. dryers, retrtaeratore,
SEVERAL 7· ACRE PARCELS: rongn. SkogiJI Applloncn, 71
Molal Couniy, . Solom 1\op., VIne Stf'MI, CaiiiM-441·7318, 1·
Milt Mra. Remote, be•utltul 100-4119-34119.
lend; - · · pooture ond hlllo.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Coil lor goad mop. 1-514-5113- Complete
hom• tumlehlnge.
8545, AthOna,OH.
Hou,.: Mon-Sat, t-1. 114-446Trallw l..ol For Solo, 814-2541- 0322, 3 mllel out Bullville Rd.
FrN Dollvery.
1148 Allor 5 P.M.
PICKENS FURNITURE
Now/Uood
Rentals
HOUNhold fumlohlng . 112 mi.

alon, 113.1500 010, 114-111Z.a502.
3 Bedroom., 2 Ba1h1, 2 Clr At·
tachod Oorogo, Outbuilding, 2 Mdroom trailer, ref &amp; dep, Rt.
BldwoM -llchool Arlo, 114- 12 N. l.ocuat Ad on rlght, 304175-1071.
387•7504.
2 Bodroomo, CA, Rontor Solo
COUNTRY HOMES I ACREAGE
Eltre L.orga Contompory Homo On L.ond Conirect. 2 Blocko
On 17.8 AtrM MIL With 2 llomo, From Big B11r. ft4-448-1401 A~
Pool, 2 Pondo, ft1i!r000; 4 Bod' tar 4 P.M:
room Home, ·2 112 111thll, Lll'lll
Eoceptlonolly Cl11n,
Porty Room, All On 4 Acroo MIL Fumlehod
2 bedroom lrllloir In Porter .,..
114(1,000; 110 Aero MIL Form 114-318
8000.
With lorn. 30 Tillable. 11'.!1,000;

80 Ac,_ IIJL $30,008; All ut' 'fhi,
Abov. Within S Mlleo 01 Rio

INTtllN.ATIONAL.1
t4tLP! ~ N~tl&gt;
TO It ,~LtASEl&gt;
ftlOM lle.ALITY{

rontOd"kii;' lliddloporl, 115,000; OUTSIDE
FUANISHIN(lS:
1114-1112·11110.
Wrought Iron Tobie W/4 Cholro;
F•n Bock ROcking Choir 158;
33 Fanns for Sale
Gordon Arch way·o 11211.00

304·773-1121.

no

trailer.

'

__.....,..{ !'.'(. ~

Auto Pans&amp;

Accesiorles
Flohor "Momo Boor" W-rn55
Building
lng Slovo t:IOO, 114-44W110t.
Supplies
For So1.- new compoot dleco,
novor boon opon!d, ttO or Block, brick, HWor olpoo, win·
S85 for Ill, 814-M.am.
dowa, llntela, etc. Claude Win·
Fuel oil furnace, t1nk and air

duel, 1200, 114-IIIIU035.

Glrl'o Calli Slzo 10 &amp; 12, One
N..., Wom, Cotar Plnll, Tan.
110 -$15, 1114-441-2380.
Go Kort. 3 HP &amp; up, -lal on
1 HP, In otack, Morrlo Equipm1nt, 1514-1112-2451 or 114-JG•

2580.
Golf Clubo Elcallent Condition,
1-1 Motol Wooda p~ lrono, e...
tomlzod Sat, Wfth Ba•,
• $275.
114 446 4503.
Groon Nay chllr, $30, 114-1112,
1_800_._____·- - - --t
Hoaior luel oil, 10,000 BTU,
uHd vary little, haa blower,

Soora brond, S85, 114-1148-2521.

'TllEY Y&gt;.'f,
•rH££m..'&lt;

8323.

-on

4

"'w

t-.

:7a't

s...-.,

=-=-

54

Cle-.

:3d'

I~TII€e&amp;~~

Til€~!

CATOl£~

my's king, cashed the ace and ruffed
spade. He led a club to dummy's
and ruffed a wirullng spade. After
tlii'Ding to dtlmmy with a club, be
out the winning spades. East bad no
defense.

.i

L;:;__;:llr...~..o==-...~:....l~__. ~.~ ~~r~]~~~§~~
-

ANDWINmROP
a..R FJI&lt;eT ~YOF e0100L..,
No. lee !5tRDI.EV Ef6,VE: eACH
OF UeA L..ITTL..E NIA.P. ..

.

'

~U\'IU I.'ZI UUD
tit '''t ~ 3Vo
·
,.,. ',~,

j,.,,.Jn..

i!O'!~ ~"'
1993
the w
is theand
263rd
'.,,

ofsummer.

i(:',Fi
'""

Mil
'm1

''31&lt;~
'~

'AKZ

')&gt;

'$"

~

W&gt;!,&lt;rl&gt;-~&gt;" X&lt;, 1~ • •

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
. 622, Mohammed arrived at Medina
I a lter completing his flight from
~ Mecca, ushering in the Muslim
ITODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Upton Sin.\
' Clair 0878· 1968), nove list; Maxwell
Perkins (1884·19471, editor; Ferdinand
"Jelly Roll" Morton (1885· 19411 ,
pionee r; Arnold " Re d" Auert•ach]
(1917·1, basketball coach-executive,
76; Anne Meara !1929-l, aclress, is 64 ;
Sophia Loren !1934·1, actress, is 59· .

FZIEZT

DZU

AKGA .
THS

NHZED ' A

WGD'A

AKOA

·r,. -- :.

AKZ

VSYRA

EZWGSWSE . '
.

TGDIZZE .

EHSDN

KOPZ

VGVZ

KHSEZ

YD

UKYAZT

f.&lt;'-·- ~~

B'fCKA .

LHIN .

..... .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I grow up watching the CBS Evening News and
wanting to be Walter Cronk"e." - Connie Chung.
WOlD
eAMI

I

THICWS

- ~...,c_o.,.-N.....
KI _K-r---~1
3

_ I 1

.

f.

.

DA F T E

I"

I

•

•

Two old timers were discussing the shape of the world.
s
~.· ''These days," one old timer
.
.
.
.
.
said, "people take pills to go
,..------::-~~- to sleep. In my day they used
RDRE AL
a method called •••• ··--."
~-T~-'-':,.1-7 -,1--.,1-,o:IB.:-11
Complete rho chuckle quored

II

Sept. 20, 1993

Tll£~N ~

5 Whool Compor 1117 21 "'·
Yukon, Air, AwninD, lxtl'l Nice,
UHd Vory Uttle, Hlich Included,
P,IIOO, f t W - . .

...

trick one with dummy's dlam~on~d~~~
casbed the beart queen and
heart to his king. West's
was a stab in the cholesterol belt.
However, South spotted a diet plan.
U, at trick 12, the lead was in the dummy and be was left with the A-10 of
hearts, be could catch East's J-8 in a
trump coup.
ThisSouth
required
taking
two to
ruffs In
band.
played
a spade

01~

IIi-.

tochmonto 140, 114-448-047 AI- :..:;:,;...::,::,:...:.:.:..::==--~t__o7-r~
5 ;:.:,0o,:..P:.:.M=.,.
. .,-,,-;..,...__~-I AKC Roglotorod C'- C';:
Pupploo, S1150 Eoch, 114-4111King Stza Wall- Dirk Color,
SWAIN
AUCTION I FURNITURE. SZ 114-4111-7081, L.oove MnAKC Rottwollor pupploo, GorOlivo St., GolllpoUa. New I Ulod Anytlmo.
man &amp; ch•mplon bk»oddlntl,
tumlture, hutm, Wutem I
Kina Sin Woterbed1 1150, 114- exe. ltmpw~~mant, POO, rNdy
Tra nsporlat 10 n
Work booto. 1-3151.
441'1001
10 A.ll. ' 2 to go, Attiena. 114-441-3715 afl•r
Woohor I Dryer For Solo, 114- . P.M.
lpm or anytime wolilenda.
37t-23!1 H No Annrw Lave •
Lorge motol dog cog•. boroly AKC Shlltlio Put&gt;oiN 1Minlatura11
·,:,..,:Aut,::.;::.o;,;;s..;f~o~r::.sa;,;:;,;le~=
Moouge Will Coil Back.
UHCI, ~ld US, will 0111 lor MS. Colllo~Soblo Arid WhHe, 8.Wko -::
Waahari: Dmr, Aafrlglf'ltor, ;..114-:...:
.:14
.:_:,2W;:.:.:.5:..:·-.,-,--:---,.-I1175, 4-317-o212.
!:~ ~~=:t:r.~.;:t~'::
Color .V. FrMt.er, Air CondHionor,
campor .
Slza Lorge placoe ol alato lor point· AHontlon Orouoa Hunlorol AKC 2 ~ ~don, body &amp; lroml.
Brlttnay Sponlel pupo, ohoto 1 8800.
75-3110.
Refrigerator, MlcrowiYe, 814- lng, S2111.; Wlnnlo tho c~onglng toblo, S20; coat Iron wonnod, t150. 304-llll-1517.
~ "·vo•-. 4 door .. 251-1238.
1
bath tuf) WJIInk I commod•,
.,., '"'
.a. -.wvv
t100; '114-11112·3881.
Bird doa. lloglotorod Englloh mlleo, 250 IV, outo., P·~~~
52 Sponlng Goods
;;:::::_::.:..;;;,:=.:::_-:--.,--,-,I Satter, ~.._ ooma tnlnlng, lent condftlon, 821100 OIW, 114Llkl now living room choir, gold S2QO. 30....,,..,tO.
·
112-1710.
P.S.E. Fox Flro Croubow
__,"'-."''1_4-· l Coppor-nooo BNgloo, oid, =1m:;:.:,B=u:..lc.,.k""L.oS....,.o-b-,.-A--1--R_un-_
Oulverl. • Arrowo 11501, Slm- ~-=d:.:.a.::T'=5::..,.-u-phi&gt;=l•-::••-ry..,.._825
304-575-2075:
nina Condition, Now Tlroo I
mCHW ""'"' Bow Scope,
In ;Lo¥1 ...t, •xcetltnt condition, sao.
:;=::;.:;==--=~::.:.:::_..,..,,...,......,Batftry, $BOO Or l.Ma, 1'14-441Box,
$75,
114-245-41047
brown flo-. ,75, 114-1112- Dol-tlon Pupploo....~e
4151.
EvenlniJI.
215=2·- - - ---,..-- l
I Wookl ""'- I
:
P.S.E. Fox Fko CJOHbow
1422.
1m
Brwn
Eqijia.;;;;j
Oulver 4 Arrowo1 I Sling, iiGcid Moving: Hoovy Duty Wltlrlpool ~=-::--c,--,=:-:--:---:-- 414 Engine, PI,
, ~~
Condit1on, $175, 1114-441-8157 Af.. WoehOi • Drjoor 2 Yoaro Old, Floh Tonk, 2413 J:f.~n Ave. To Pull Compor, tz.
1300; Rool NICa 4 Po. llodroom Polnl Pl-nl,
75-20113, 1132.
tar 5 P.M.
SuN• 8400· Nlco Ook Oook, lull llno Troplcll lloh, blrdo,
XI Sliver HaWk hunting bow, t150; Nlco ilprlghl Froow S175. omlll anlmalo ond aupplloo.
1110 - · LIZ, turbo 400,
cobra
algiD,
peep abe, 114-245-11112 After 8 P.ll.
Pit
Oroomlng- mirror tolopo, 11,000 mllol, 304lltabllzer I quiver, r11ng1 4J.. • :.:.::.::==o:::::.:.:::::___ l Mcl.eod'o
175-2714
or 304,.75-1577.
·
Muat
Soli:
Frlgldalto pc&gt;odloo J1roomod1 bothod oriel
Olb. 304-6'15-5470.
Relrlgeratot; Coppor Tono, lea ~lppod. ft3; eoc- St&gt;aniele,
S3
Dodgo, 210 - - ....
Make&lt;, Ronnhomonl Contor, S20"; omall Collleo, $2ll; largo 1114 mi1NQI.
loodad. •-~
Antiques Worko Onotl t1150 Firm, 114- Coilloo, 130; olin Iorge ~. low
01011oltor I'p:m. -lrdaya.
"A-nt"'lq_uo_pla.,...no-,""11;.,oo~"o"so"'.-6"'14-"'" 388_
::..:..::3Sl::,::...--::-:,..,.,------ l$35. Houro: I:OOOm-I;CIOpm, flO 1184
llorowy
llarqulo
:c
Sunday -k. Coo Coolville,
1192-3816.
Muat
Sell:
Frlgldalro
Stove,
814-1117-31115.
1111-gon.
Sillll
oo
II, , _
:,:.::...:.:=-::--=:--:--,,....,-,- White With Oio11 Door, Sol~ :.:..:..::.:.=::::.____ ___ good,I14-MN1111.
Buy or alii. Riverine Antlquee,
1124 E. Moln Slroot, on Rt. 124 Cl11nlng, Worko Por!oct $100 Roglat- Coillo pupp(oa, 1150.
~h Coil, 4dr, Pomoroy. Hourw: M.T.W. 10:00 ~Fnn,~~~~~=388==
..~3Sl~.~~~· I:304~·,.~7~5-114~·=--------- 1184
good, k::, $3fO or 1 - lor
a.m. to 1:00 p.m., Sundlly 1:00
NEB Jllmoo- Jowo, Fuanodu, fi1
Musical
ol ..,.a~ voluo, 114cto~B~:OO~p~.m~.~~~~~~35~»~
· --­ Willow, Pro Racing, WhNI For~
tuno,
.
110/U.,
114-112lnatruments
Miscellaneous
328hllar 4:00. •
,......,.....,_ _ _ _:..__..., 11M ..... SkyWit, .wlnl
buckol _,_,_ Old Slngor llootrlc -ina ,.. ·Bundy Cornot lrUt~~pllt, 11t1011 ndkl,
Merchandise
pump. ..... lt!'U• .14 24i •••
ohlno, portablo. otlll runo, 110, condlllon, ftiO, ft4-lll2-3142:
110 Iuick L.o Bobro llmftod , ~1:;14:;112~·1221.;;~=~==,., I Bundy 1rom-,11u now, UHd
uc.
cond.,
S2000a1 all
-·
· OLD USEO BAICI&lt;S (ALREADY 0111 IIIIOn,$300, 814-1112-1114.
Motchlng
WNhor
......_
Ht
Sll!llie P!:"!'l!h Horn, 8800,
1100. 304-171-fN. - · • C~NE0),
304 ~711-3Ul1200. BRICI&lt;S, tteo. 1Conn
Y•r Did, W - . • 2 Loraa Oluo Olapiar eo."'!.i 1 One 220 olactrlc hlltw, sao, ~-:::c·:.:E:;:YIII:::;ina"-~-::---­
Mod. m.p~oy Coli; ~I .,.. . •14-t12-2871J oftarlpm.
l'lull, 1300, 1uo thon ono yoer
ploy Cue; 3 Fill Cilblnltl; 2 ::.:..:...:::=.:.:..:=..::::.::.::...
___ 1aid;
01 ...lor ....
~; 1 Largo Woden Dlapiey; 1 StockmoUa Ito.., 114-441-0127. 11100, 1 112 yoera old, 1,._
Caoh balofor; 1 I.Mgo Countortop; 1 llod. Counilf1ap With SWord, aP!M'DI. 3 hlllt lana. 11113, ...,lngo, llorb or IIIYOI.
Oroworo. Ramo Con Ito Soon In
blodo1 Wfth ..01 Par Solo: . _ Iundy
Oalilpollo, - . -.
condnron; 171, coli 114- IEllcolilnt Condftlon, tnv, Altor
258S.
.
1:00 114-448·7188,
2 Tail Truck Lood 01 Firewood
On..l Hau:'z\i To 10 Ton A Two tlroo- ·~. S2G - h Klmlolt olano, uc. cond. 1114Loed,l14-2
.
114-1112·2317.
• ta.aef.
-

a

AREMiYCO?

.,..,.-...,.,;;_....;,;.,;.:...:...,.....,,..
Ath11111 UVMioek Sa5M: Special

832'2810.
64 Hay &amp; Grain
:-:----=-.,....,-;,..,,.,....,-Ha
ro bo'- ~ 150 a
;r:.;::'IBO.
-· ••· . up,

----{,., YEN\...TilE 'T110J3C e
l~.[;o..tiOT~ IF

WELL., YOU
~WAAT

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

K1nmore Sweeper Wlth Beater COIIr., Slameee klttan. 114-441·
Bruoh Canlotor folpo WMh At· 0404 or 304-1171-2207.

..

:::.:;::..._-,-.....,...,,..-- -

4 chromo rim. w( loctory clelr
coot, 4 lug WI C-ah lou~,
OT tlrw, only ulld 1 mo.
te,., AJo Granda, 'OH Call 814-245.ft2t
FaU F - Coil lloia1 Th;noday, 115-3010,
Soptembar Z3, 1112, At I P.M. All Bumper ~ollor hMch modo lor
56 Pets for Sale
Broodo Foadlr CllvN "-otod. Como Accaptod Sllrtlng At Ornnl but lh othor .... $11.
Groom and Supply S h - 4 P.M. On Wod .......y. All Con- 304..75-23UI.
Grooming. All
alyieo. ll_gn- Wile-, 114-UZ. Full lizl truok molll tOol box
Julie Webb. Call 114 441 0231.
2322, Or f14-e98.3531.
1111 wl2 aida mountod tool
3 Malt Ragletared Hlm~a14~n Canle
Hauling:
An"lme, boa•, $100. Tommy Lift,
KHtono, 6 Wooko Old, I
~- PLA Rlllobora Ohio, toll(lat,!, IKo Ford pickup, 188113188.
Evory llondoy. Chuck Wllllomo, 1181, ..oo. 30~8-2101.
AKC Bollton Torrl•a, g Wooko Triolo. CrHk Trucking. 114-24550tf
otd, $200, lli'14-256-e354.
Umouoln butt, 114-1112·»118.
1 AKC Oormon Shophlrd; 1 Full
Bloodad Soblo Colllo, 1175 Both, Aogloterod Anblon Egypllon
ook 'truck rocko, I' 4", S&amp;f,
Will Soli Soporale, 614-448-7117.
lilly, 4yr. .Did, boy, eyr_old rock- '
Ing ~lng, $1200 101Ch, 304- 114-11112-l'MI.
AKC Pomoronlon, Spitz, Poodle, '112·
•
79
Piking••, Italian 'Grevhound,
campers &amp;
Groot Dono, ShoRio, Bollton Tor· T11m 01 Droft Muloo, Ho,_ l
Motor
Homes
rt.r, Chow, Miniature Plntcher, L.orvo Wagon, Mlko Ofhlr 114Uvastock

,
Uf' llRIGHT -

AAt&gt; E.J.ilLY TCU..t

Shonnlu 22IJ f Fl., Flnhrh Mowor 1188 Eo- NoodL..Bought New,
I Ft. B - 14,000, 114-387-0112, $312, Wll Soil: 01150, 114-211114 Ul 8321.
·
tolt.

63

'BORN LOSER

guarantee at least two
1 should
three honors in that suit.

Without
but with values for a
positive response, you make a "waitIng" bid of two diamonds. But
double-checked with Blackwood.
When the dtimmy came down,
erythlng looked fat-free. South

~El.LO, AMN~STY

lar, tool Med, many new nema,
$3000 - . . $23,000 Finn, 10% AntiQ.. 001k llnln84''am t•blo
S2811mo., lllnd COI'IIract, call wJI rihalrt, buttiiL 3
7$..22t10.
PD11y,ll14-lll2-2 lor dlttlll"'
VI'RA FURNITURE '
Mullt Hll· 14x111 Oovorner, 114-44e-3158 Or 1114-446-4428
3bnlm. lront kltc:hon corpllt
'10 DAY SAMEAS CASH
th~, - · outbuilding, OR RENT~.OWN (NO OEPOSIT)

41.71 Acno 2 9iory Form
Hou11, Leo. Barn, 2 Mlleo From
MerwrviUi, Tobacco Bau, coal,
Out Building $35,000, 114-25411175.

I'

Merchandise

Ctlli1• ,.
1~--------::.:..::::...:=--,..----,51
Household
&amp;-a OICroo, hln""d, 70x12 mobile
homo, ierao 1101o barn, root ..~
GoOds

for Rent

31

&amp;..:::;.~~:;;.......u

ronl,..till
lor oniJII17llmo.,
800
37-3231,

3034.

holldayo. Aaponolblo lor tho

pr1p1rallon and urvlng of
mealtlo themidentl. Muat . .

+J

t n•·v@r worried· about doing? Right -

blth, uklng $14.001), Mrloue haua1, ln clun and good condl..

requlremenla at your own pace.

766-4477Noi111N8tem

Pus
Pus '
Pus
Pua
All pass

.

What do we aU do that our ancestors

304-1175-4833.

Financial

Eom Full·Timo Poy For Port-

Pua
Pus
Pus
Pus

Ill: LIL
10 MNiclnal
plant
11 Type of.
Clilllql
12 Snick and -

PbllUp Alder

, odd jobo. 15yro

lip., IXC. rwfll. FrM tltlmltll.

poy, loy ovor poy, brook4own
poy, C0!11pony pold ponolon, 401 Mloo Paulo'• Doy Cori Conlor 1
K .Un. home mftl wHkandt. Block Willi 01 H!IC On Jaci&lt;Oon
Coli Boyd Adldno, 800-t211-6222. Plkl 11-F I A.M. -5:30 P.M. II
Ouolhy And Experience hr Tho
Dolry Farm Flold Men &amp; Rollo! t1 ConcOm For Your Chlld'o
Milker Or Dairy Htrdtman Muet Care. Cell Uo For A VIOH. lnlont
Han Experttnc. With Cowa &amp; /Toddloro 114-44&amp;-822l POr Form Equlpm.,.,. 614-245- ct\-ra /School Ago 8 5047 Evenlngo.
8224.
O..lgnet" IDnlft..-, Part-Time Or Will bobyoit In my homo, c Full, Exporloncod Machine to ~~ehool, have reftrancet,
·Mechanical Send Reaume To: holoro &amp; after ochool &amp; lull tlmo.
Box CL.A 281, C/o Oolllpolle 304-4175-2784.
Dolly Trlbu!!! 125 Third Avonuo,
Galllpollo, ....,1 45631.

Time Work At A Chr!stmu

Eut

7 lrlth accent

8 Evoluat''

Reducing
the key suit

Smoker In My Home For A 7
Month Old Cob After I P.M. 114-

mlnal In HurriCane~ WV, ~utt

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Opening lead:

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1 - Raton ,
Floflcla
2 Hawllllan
dance
3 Whwe S.ll
Like City 11
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SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS . .
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My sister·in-law was gelling very aggravated because she couldn 't go anywhere while her car was in
the shop. "Home," she stated, "is where you stay while
your car is beinq REPAIREDI"

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Home
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BASEMENT
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lope to Matchmaker,

cto this

newspaper,

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Greater bene·
lils ere likely 10 come to you ioday lhrough
a new channel rather than from sources

P.O. Bo• 4465, New York, NY 10163.
upon which you usually draw. Do nollry to
· LIBRA {Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Today you will s1ruc1ure lhings 100 preci~ely.
loam by teaching. When you impan know!- ARIES {March 21-Aprll 19) Do not pre·
BERNICE
edge lo olhe rs, you'll be amazed a1 how judge developments loday, because your
BEDE OSOL much you'll learn In the process yoursoll ini1ial assessment mighl be weighed on lhe
which previously escaped your attention.
negative rather lhan lhe posilive side.
SCORPIO {Oct. 24-Nov. 22) In order lo TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Char!ges nol
improve your linanciallol in lila al this lime. ol your making could be lhe ones which
it mighl be necessary 10 Jake a calcufaled - work oul lhe besl lor you in lhe long run
risk. Give il ma1ure consideralion il you leel loday. Oon'l get lluslered if you e• perience
lhe odds are lavorable.
.
a shi« in condilions .
SAGITTARIUS {Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Your GEMINI {MOly 21-June ZO) The key to your
grealesl assel today is your ~bilily to lead succes s today could be based upon lhe
and inspire olhers. It looks like you will depth arid exlenl ol your cooperalive spirit
hilve an opportunily lo use illor yoursell as 11 you 're willing 10 help olhers, 1hey'll be
Tutldly. Sept. 21 , 1113
well as lor lriends.
prepared tp help you .
In lhe year ahead once you lap inlo some· I CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 1 8) . CANCER {June 21-July 22) II you are
·111ing productive or prolilable. you'll inslinc- Sometimes il's unwise lo pulloo much ere- . .: determined 10 linalize several crillcal mal.tively know how to expand it in1o ~omelhlng &lt; dance In hunches dr inluilive perceplions_. 1ers today, your probabllilies lor achieving
1jreater. Things a re slaning lo look very . Today, however, could be an exceplion, so · desirable end results are excellent The
promising.
. il you leal slrongly abou1 some1hlng, follow I ball is In .your court, so do your lest
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Siopt. 22) This could be a . lllhrough. ·
-LEO (July 23-Aug~)
· very benelic:lal day lor yoo, provided yoo're -AOUARIUS {Jan. 20-Fob. 18) 11 you have . · Socially yoo hove a good lriend who could
able to keep everything you wanl to do ori high hopes and e•pectations allhis lime, ! be o1 great holp Ia you a11his time in lhe
·accomplish In proper locus. Operal81rom • :!here could be iuslilicalion for your leelings.: ' business wo~d. Oon'l be afraid Ia ask lor
prepara&lt;f agenda. Know where to look lor 'IYou'ro In a lonunate cycle where several ; asolstance il you're prepared 10 do some.romance and you'll find il. Th8 Aslro-Graph lucky breaks could follow in rapid succes- · . lhlng benelicial for himhlar in relum.
Matchmaker lnslanlly reveals which signsjsion.

I

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Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

llllldonilol
wiring, now

ASTRO-GRAPH

are romanlically perfect tor you . Mail $2
and a long , Sell-addressed. slamped enve-

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�, Pllge 10-The o.Jiy Sentinel

Markworth birth
announced

TIMOTHY MARKWORTH

M9nday, September 20, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Up or down; debating the toilet seat

David and Amy Hager Markwonh wish to announce the birth of
their first child, Timothy Connor,
on Aug. 27 at Utah Valley Regional H9Spilal in Provo. He weighed
eight pounds and two ounces and
was 20 1/2 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Bruce
and Pamela Hager of Coolville.
Paternal grandparents are Carl and
Chryl Markwonh of Provo.
Amy, a 1989 graduate of Eastem High Scjlool, is now a senior at
Brigham Young University in
Provo. David is employed by Utah
Valley Regional Medical Center.

;

Dear Ann Landers: Let's blow
the lid off the toilet seat debate
once and for all. Equality and Jiber.
ation may be the order of the day,
but Western society still gets its
knickers in a twist about who left
the toilet seat in what position.
It's phony chivalry to suggest
that men leave the commode in the
appropriate configuration for the
next female visitor. We know that
the dainty little hand we're sparing
the trauma of a seat adjustment is
the same dainty little hand that
gave the bowl a vigorous scrubbing
yesterday.
So, if common courtesy suggests that one user prepare the
facility for the next, it must also
enjoin women to leave the seat up
for the next standing customer.
People sharing a b&amp;throom should
sit down togelher (perhaps in a different room, on chairs) and reach a
satisfactory compromise.
Maybe some entrepreneurial
plwnber will finance his retirement
with a tinie-delay, self-closing toi·
let seat that tucks itself into a stan·
dard position after the user leaves
the room. Or perhaps each of us
could exercise a little commn cour·

several babies and dozens of kit·
tens are drowned in toilets. You
should have taken this opportunity
to advise all adults toclose the lid
and train theif youngsters to do the

Ann

same.

ANN LANDERS
"199), Loo AD&amp;d•
Tbn,. S)'Ddlaole
Co..ton S,YIIdlaole" ~- .

Coral Springs, Fla.: Like most
females, you have been culturally
brainwashed. You can bet the man
who leaves the seat up is making a
statement about the way he feels
tesy and close the entire lid and about women. It's not about man·
leave the porcelain presence look- ners, it's about control, stupid!
ing its designer best. - Canadian
Rational Reader, No City: When
Throne Thinker
you use the bathroom, it is YOUR
Dear Throne: I was staggered by responsibility to put the lid and the
the number of people who had seat in the position that serves you
strong opinions on bathroom eti- best. lt,is not someone else ' s
queue and were eager to express responsibility to do this for you.
them. Some sent photos . Keep Real class is how you tend to your
reading:
own ileeds, instead of carninJl and
From Everett, Wash.: Our office whining beCause other people don't
has two unisex toilets. We resolved do it for you. In our house, every- ·
"the problem by asking everyone to one puts the seat AND the lid
close the lid when they fmish. Now down. It looks nice, nothing falls in
the men don't feel picked on, and and the dog can't drink out of iL
no one has to look mto the gaping
Sioux Falls, S.D.: Regarding
mouth of an ugly toilet. Carson The Great Toilet-Seat Debate:
City,
There IS a
Nev.: The best reason to close solution. Buy a fluffy toilet tank
lhe lid is to save lhe life of a small cover and matching seat cover.
child or a household pet. Every year, They are attractive, and the bath-

room will look so much better. The
bulkines$ ensures that the seat will
always fall down after use. I discovered this by accident and no
longer need to worry about drown·
ing in .the middle of the night
Dallas: I'm a 7,1-year-old male
who does not· spend his time writing ta newspapers, but this flap
about whether the toilet seat should
be up or down is just nuts. I would
like to know what the bell differ!IJlce it makes in the first place, and
10 the second place, I cannot
believe that! am taking the time to
write this letter.
Dear Dallas: And I cannot
believe more than 20.000 people
did the
·
same.
Do you hav~ questions about
sex, but no o11e to talk to? Ann Landers' booklet. "Sex and the Teenager," Is frank and to the point.
Send a se/faddressed, long, busl·
ness·slze envelope and a check or
money order for $3.65 (this
Includes postage and handling) to:
Teens, c/o AM Landers, P.O. Box
ll562, Chicago, Ill. (j(}(jJl .{)562.
(In Canada, se11d $4.45 .) ANN
LANDERS (R) COPYRIGHT 1993

Facts to know on Social SecuritYRbeneffts.
By ED PETERSON
Social Security maoager In
Athens

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS • Mary Tyler Moore . 56
accepts the Emmy for best supportiog actress in a miniser~ 0 ;
special for her role in "Stolen Babies" during the 45th annual
Emmy Award;; in Pasadena, Calif., Sunday night. Moore wrote a
new chapter In Emmy history by winning her seventh trophy
tying the leading Emmy acting tally with Ed Asner, (AP)
'

Hayman family reunion held
Descendants of the late H.A.
Fred Hayman and Gamet F. Polk
Hayman will hold the 21st reunion
on Sunday, October 3, at the home
of their eldest son! C.E. Hayman,

Sr. of Antiquity. The reunion will
begin at I 0 a.m. There will be a
dinner at noon and games in the
aftemoqn. AU relatives and friends
of the Hayman family are invited.

In 1992, more than 132 million
workers and self-employed persons
paid Social Security taxes.
At the end of 1992, more than
41 million persons were receiving
monthly Social Security benefits.
Mos.t of those receiving a monthly
check (62 percent) were retired
workers. E1ght percent.were dis·
abled workers, and about 30 per·
cent were the spouses or children
of retired, disabled, or deceased
workers.
In 1992, more than 132 minion
workers and self-employed persons
paid Social Security taxes.
Under Supplemental Security
Income (SSI), blind persons may
deduct many expenses related to
work-such as transportation and
meal costs- before figuring if
their earnings affect their benefits.
If you are a student receiving
social security benefits, you should
know that your check generally
stops when you turn 18. But they
can continue until your 19th birthday if you are still in elementary or

Garden club to sponsor competition
The Rutland Friendly Gardeners wash stand 30 inches by 10 inches.
General Rules
will hold a show entitled "Saturday
Class 4 · (Special Class) White
I. AU entries are to be' done by
Matenee" at the home of Kimberly Christmas · Handmade Christmas Rutland Friendly Gardeners except
Willford on Wednesday, Septem- - ornaments. Must include some invitational and junior classes.
ber 22 at 7:30p.m.
plant material (dried or real).
2. All entties must be in place
The divisions and classes will
Section ll ·Invitational
by 7 p.m. and not to be removed
be as follows:
· Class 5 - Little Women - Minia· before 9:30p.m.
Division A • Artistic Designs
ture not to exceed six inches. Fami.
3. Oral judging will begin at
Section I · Rutland Friendly Gar- ly room -Wood fireplace mantle 7:30p.m. OAGC rules will govern
deners Only
with rock background, six inches.
the show.
Class 1 - Rings Around the
Section Ill - Juniors
4. Judges decisions are final
World .- Outdoor wreaths to be
Class 6 - Take Me Out to the
5. A 3X5 card with materials
hung on lhe front porch. Class 2 • Ball Game - including a ball listed must accompany all arrange·
On Golden Pond · Water showing arrangers choice, boys bedroom.
ments •. this will be provided by the
master bathroom . A and B · On
Division B - Horticulture
commmee.
edge of tub with off white wallpa·
Section I • Senior potted plants
6. No artifiCial plant material
per with large flowers of peach,
Class 7 - Flowering. Class 8 - ll)ay be used. No painted or anifilavender, medium green and tan. C Cacti or succulent, one plant per cmlly colored material is permined.
- Commode tank with off white pol
7. All horticulture exhibits must
wallpaper with large fiQwers of
Section ll - Cut Exhibits
have the. variety written on front of
peach, lavender, medium green and
Class 9 - Hybrid Tea Rose. entry tag.
tan. D - Peach counter top with Class I 0 · Roribunda Rose. Class
8. First through fourth place ribmirrored background.
II- Grandiflora Rose. Class 12 . bons will be placed in each class
Class 3 - Gone With the Wind · Miniature Rose. Class 13- Zinnias,
Mass livingroom. A - Wicker trunk one stem. Class 14 - Marigolds except juniors where the judge may
place as many ribbons as she see
with wallpaper background of off one bloom disbudded.
' fil
white with flecks of mauve and Se~tion ill ·Junior Horticulture
9. There will be a best of show
blue. B and C - Space of 25 inches
Class 15 - Roadside material and reserve best of show picked for
.
by 28 inches by 12 inches with oak smgle stem. Class 16 - Marigold.
juniors and seniors. There will also
board background. D - Dark wood Class 17 · Pumpkins.
be a horticulture sweepstakes for
juniors and seniors.
·

.

high school.
Questions and Answers
Q: What's the difference
between Medicare and Medicaid?
A: Medicare is a Federal health
insurance program for the elderly
and disabled regardless of income
and assets. Medicaid, on the other
hand is a medical assistance program ointly financed by the State
and Federal governments for eligible low-income individuals.
Most Social Security beneficia·
ries 65 or older and those who have
been getting Social Security disability benefits for 2 years or more
are on Medicare. Medicaid covers
health care eltpenses for all recipients of Aid to Families with
Dependent Children (AFDC), and
most states also cover the needy,
elderly,
blind, and disabled who
·
receive cash assistance under the
Supplemental Security Income
(SSI) program.
·
Coverage also is ·extended to
certain infants and low-income
pregnant women, and, at the option
of the State, other low-income individuals with medical bills that
qualify them as categorically or
medically needy.
Q: I am blind. Are there special
Social Security rules I should know
about?
.
A: Yes, there are. Call Social
Security's toll·free number, 1-800. 772-1213, and ask for a copy of the
new booklet, "If You're
Blind ... How Social Security and .

Supplemental Security Income can
A: No, not as long as you keep
Help. Its available in large ·print, your maiden name and you don't
braille, and a recorded formaL
get Social Security benefits. HowQ: My neighbor, who is retired, e.ver, if you start using your mar·
told me that the income he receives nc:d name, you should notify Social
from his part-time job has given Security of the change.
him an increase in his benefit, in
· Q: ·A few days ago I saw a
addition to his aruiual cost-of-living poster that advised individuals 65
increase. Is this possible'!
or over with limited income and
A: Yes. Individuals who return resources to apply for Supplemento work after they start re&lt;:eiving tal Security Income (SSI) at any
benefits may be able to receive a Social Security office. Next month
highr benefit based on those earn- I'll turn 65 and I thought I'd be eliings. Social Security llutomatically gible for SSI sci I planned to apply
refigures the benefit amount after · until my neighbor told me I'd probthe additional earnings are credited ably be turned down because I have
to the individual's earnings record. children \who could help support
The earnings can be an advantage me. IS this true?
as long as they do not exceed the
A: No. Your eligibility for SSI
annual exempt amount.
· would not be affected by your chilQ: I have been reeeiving Sup- dren's ability to help suppon you.
plemenlal Security Income (SSI) But, any support they give you
checks for several months and my would be considered 'income for
check has always arrived on the 1st SSI purposes and could affect the
of the month. I cash the check amoum of your )lllyment For more
immediately, shop for groceries, information, contact the Athens
and JlllY my rent that is due on the Social Security office at 614-592lst as well. What happens when the 4448 or call Social Security's toll1st of the month falls on a Satur- freenumber,1-800-772-1213.
day? Must my rent be late because
Q: When I started receiving
I can't cash my check until Mon- Supplemental Security Income
day?
(SSI) checks, I received a boolclet
A: For SSI recipients, if the 1st that told me what I should repon to
falls on.a Saturday, Sunday, or . Social Security. I misplaced the
legal holiday, the SSI check should booklet. How can I get a new one?
arrive on the previous banking day.
A: Call your local Social SecuriQ: I recemly married, but I still ly office or Social Security's toll·
use my maiden name at work. Dot free number, 1·800·772-1213 and
have to let Social Security know 1 ask for the booldet, When You Get
got married?
SSI, What You Need to Know.

BULLETIN BOARD

•

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRIDAY

NOW
AVAILABLE
IN.THE

Community Calendar
Community Calendar items · its regular meeting at 8 p.m. Dinner
appear two days before an event will be served at 7 p.m.
and the day of that event. Items
must be received in advance to
JACKSON · South District
assure publication in the calen- Health Conference at the South
dar.
·
District Extension Center from
8:45 a.m. to 2 p.m. The theme is
"Women's Health: You do Have a
MONDAY
Choice." Registration is $4 and
provides morning refreshments ~
RACINE • Racine Village lunch and a packet of materials.
Council will meet in recessed ses- Pre-registration is requested with
sion Monday at 7 p.m. at Star Mill Deanna Tribe at the South Disttict
Park.
Center in Jackson at 286-2 177 or
LETART · Big Bend Farm
Antique meeting at 7:30 p.m. at
Dale and Jo Kautz's residence.
TUESDAY

Cindy Oliveri at the Meigs County
Extension Office at 992-6696.
POMEROY • Fmtemal Order of
Eagles #2171 Auxiliary will hold a
meeting at 7:30p.m.
WEDNESDAY
RACINE - Evangelist David
Crowell will be speaking at the Fellowship Church in Racine Wednes·
day, 7 p.m. The public is invited to
attend by pastor Charles Bush.

ITt ACREAl DEAL

DARWIN - The Bedford Town·
ship Volunteer Fire Department
Committee will meet at 7 p.m. at
the Bedford Town Hall.
POMEROY · Drew Webster
American Legion Post 39 will have

THIS SPACE
$8.00

THIS SPACE
$16.00

Broncos
Page4

Vol. 44, NO. 103

1 Section. 10 P - 35 ...,Ia
A MuiUmedllllnc. rMnpooper .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September 21, 1993

Muttirnedt•lnc.

Low tonlahtln mid 50s, p•rl·
ty cloudy. Wednesday, cloudy,
blgh In low 80s.

-.P6Rleroy council to examine census · results
By JlM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Stalf
Cable television service and a
census-related money snafu were
among the items discussed in Mon·
day's regular meeting of Pomeroy
Village Council.
Lester Errett, regional Cablevision manager, met with council to
discuss cable television service for
the viUage.
Errett explained the company
has went through the fli"St phase of
new federal regulations concerning
basic cable service. Basic service
covers 12 channels.
Company officials have been

n.egotiating with area tel~vi~ion sta·
uons 10 obtam retranSIIIJSSIOn con·
sent. "We anticipate no problems ...
it looks very, very good," Errett
said.
Councilmember Bill Young said
people in the' village were con·
cerned about losing the two
· Columbus television stations
offered by the company.
Young called the two Columbus
stations·"Meigs County's link to
civilization" and said many youngsters in the county think West Vir·
ginia Governor Gaston Caperton is
the governor of Ohio because all
the local television sta!ions are

located in West Virginia.
"I'm pleased to announce that
fiber optics is coming soon to
Pomeroy," Erriu said. "The system
will take us weD into the 21st cen·
tury.
The project will involve laying
fiber optic lines and testing lines
into homes for signal capacity and
quality.
Discuss overpayment
Pomeroy may have to pay
$16,783 to the Meigs County Auditor~s Office due to overpayments to
the village from the state.
Attorney Pat O'Brien. explained
that local governments receive

money, basl:d on P.opulation fig- approximate drop of 20 percent in
ures, from the state which is paid the vil_lage •s population, figures
through the county auditor's office. councilmembers found hard to
The payments. were mistakenly accept.
.
based on the 1980 census during
O'Brien said the money would
1992 and the first seven months of be taken from disbursements paid
1993, O'Brien said. Some villages to the village. The money is to be
were overpaid while others, such as paid back in 12 months, however
Syracuse and Racine, were under· council asked O'Brien to see if the
paid.
reimbursement could take place
Councilmember John Blaettnar during a 24-month period. In addibrought up the possibility of revis- tion, councilmembers asked
ing the census locally.
O'Brien to determine if. the census
I'm more interested in the figures could be locally revised.
money we stand to lose in the next
. In other matters, council
10 years that I am the $16,783, he appointed Sandr!l Bell as new
said. Census figures indicate an meter maid upon the resignation of

Mullen sentenced
to at least 3 years

Demjanjuk
to leave
Israel on
Wednesday
JERUSALEM (AP)- John
Demjanjuk plans to leave Israel on
Wednesday after nearly two
months of court-ordered delays
while Holocaust survivors and Nazi
hunters appealed for a new trial.
Prison Services Spokesman
Dubi Ben-Ami said he had been
informed that the retired Ohio
autoworker and his family had
ordered tickets for Wednesday.
· ~nQlllet .lllur.ce_wbo demanded
anonymity confirmed tickets had
been reserved for Wednesday.
Ben-Ami said Demjanjuk would
be able to leave the Ayalon prisoR"
in central Israel once he showed he
had airline tickets and permission
from another country allowing him
to enter.
. Citing concern .for his client's
safety, Yoram Sheftel, Demjanjuk's attorney, refused to say when
Demjanjuk was leaving or where
he was headed.
;'He feels exceUent," said Sheftel. "He is preparing for his leaving, everything is packed. Otherwise, he is doinjf nothing."
Ben-Ami S81d he would not be
aware of the destination until Sheftel showed prison authorities ihe
tickets.
.
U.S. officials said Demjanjuk
would be given a letter from the
U.S. embassy that would permit
him to return to the United States.
"We hope to get out as soon as
possible, hopefully within the next
48 hours," said Demjanjuk's son·
in-law, Ed Nishnic, on arrival at
Israel's international airport. "We
think the coun has spoken once and
for all."
Nishnic and John Demjanjuk Jr.
arrived with U.S. Rep. James A.
Traficant Jr, D-Ohio, and two hefty
unidentified men believed to be
bodr.guards hired by Demjanjuk's
family.
Sheftel also said he was sure
Demjanjuk was on his way oul

Kelly Snyder.
·
Council also approved amend- .
ing the resolution to form the Big ·
Bend Water Disttict between the •
villages of Pomeroy and Middle- '
port. The revisions affect the length ;
of board rnembers' terms and abo!- ·
ishes pay fer board members.
:
Council also discuSSed the new :
DUI laws and potential problems .
with immobilizing and impounding •
vehicles.
·· Present were councilmembers
John Blaettnar, Scott Dillon, Bill
Young, Thomas Werry and Larry
Wehrung, Mayor Bruce Reed and
Clerk Kathy Hysell.

WESTERN DAYS UNDERWAY- Vaugh·
an's Cardinal is celebrating western days·with a
variety of activities. Last week's features includ;
ed performances by vocal and instrumental
groups and dancers, a pet show, and hayrides.
Pictured here Saturday is a wagon load of kids
being taken from Vaughan's parking lot uptown

to the Cattisb Festival. The ·tractor driver was
John Holfman. With him are Michl King, right,
and Gale Patterson, both employees. On the
agenda this week are cloggers on Thursday
night, hayrides on Friday night, and a country
dance band, pony rides, and petty zoo on Saturday.

By JlM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Stair
.A ~omeroy attorney found
guilty ~ August on four counts of
corruplin~ ~other with drugs must
serv~ a mm•mlll'!l of three years foJ.
lowmg sentencmg Monday after·
noon. .
.
D. ~chael Mullen, 41, supp~ed
tw~ girls, aged. 1_1 and 13, w1th
Valium, a prescnplion drug, on Friday, March 12,, and Saturday,
March 13. The girls were treated
later at Veteran~ Memorial Hospital after overdosmg on the drugs.
. Mullen was sentenced by visit-.
mg Mo~gan County Judge Dan
Favreau m the Meigs County Court
of Common Pleas to four concurrent five-to-15 year terms on each
count, two years of which were
suspended. The Ohio Revised Code
calls for a mandatory three-year
term on the charges. ·
In addition, Favreau sentenced
Mu_llen to five years probati~n
which must be served after his
release and ordered him to seek
drug, alcohol and psychological
counseling.
"We would have preferred a
much stiffer sentence. We're not
happy with it," said Prosecuting

Attorney John R. Lentes. ,
Lentes asked Favreau to impose
the maximum penalty .of four three·
to-15-year terms to be served con. secutively while Herman Carson,
an ~!hens County attorney represen ling Mullen, asked for four concurrent three-year terms and no
fine. Favreau said a pre-sentence
investigation revealed Mullen had
no prior juvenile or adult record.
"I am glad that tbis terrible
ordeal is over for the children
involved. Hopefully, they. can go
on with their lives " Lentes said
. "I feel sorry ihat Mr: Muilen
through his actions has wasted his
ability to help people, but everyone
must be treated equally. His law
degree and his past relationship
with the attorneys in this office
should not and did not make
exempt from the law."
Mullen requested counsel be
aJ?POinted by the court to represent
h1m during an appeal, which has
been filed.
Mullen was remanded to the
custody of Meigs County Sheriff
James M. Soulsby for immediate
conveyance to Orient Reception
Center to begin his prison term.

11-year old pilot in clouds,
Housing
starts
up
7.8
but knows homework awaits percent in August

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ~An
11-yeat-old trying to become the
youngest girl to pilot a plane across
the United States had not forgotten
more down-to-earth matters.
Victoria Van Meter, a sixthgrader from Meadville, Pa., knows
what awaits after her planned
2,900-mile flight.
"They're going to be giving me
homework when I come back and
I'll be staying after school," she
said Monday after landing a single·
engine Cessna 172 at Pon Colurn·
bus International Airport
Victoria and her flight instructor, Bob Baumgartner, took off
Monday morning from Augusta,
Maine. They spent Monday night

in Columbus and left early today pilot because she cannot get her
for St. Louis and Oklahoma City.
license until she is 16.
.
They hoped to reach San D1ego
She said she was doing all the
by Jhursday, after stops also in flying and communications work.
Albuquerque, N.M .. and Phoenix •
Victoria said the view from the
Ari z.
air of different land forms was
VictoFia is missing two weeks impressive. "We've been studying
of classes as she tries to become the things I've been. seeing, so it's
the youngest female pilot to fly pretty neat," she said.
cross-country and the youngest per,
Her parents, James and Corinne
son to do it from east to west.
Van Meter, had reservations on
A 9-year-old boy, Tony Alien- commercial flights to join her at
gena of San Juan Capistrano, each overnight stop.
Calif.. Oew cross-country from
Victoria, who wants-to be an
west to east in April 1988.
astronaut, said the cross-country
''We're going against the winds, attempt did not scare her.
goiilg this way," Baumgartner
"I'm not afraid. A lot of people
said.
ask me that but, no, I'm not
Victoria, who started flying in afmid," she said.
October, must fly with a licensed

WASHINGTON (AP) - Housing starts shot. up 7.8 percent in
August to the highest level in 3 1(2
years, the government said today.
Building activity rose in every
region of the nation except for the
NonheasL
The Commerce Department said
construction of new homes and
apartments totaled a seasonally
adjusted annual rate of 1.32 million, the highest level since 1.44
million in February 1990. It was
the steepest increase since an 1U
percent gain a year earlier.
·

In advance of the report, many
analysts had_ C?&lt;pected starts to total
only 1.25 million at an annual rate.
The department also revised
upward, tO a 1.23 million mte, the
number of starts in July, which ini.
tially were estimated at 1.21 mil·
lion.
·
Starts have been sluggish
recently, falling 1.7 percent in July
and remaining unchanged in June,
despite mortgage rates that were
near a 25-year low. Starts so far
this year were up just 3.2 percent
!rom those of the same period a
year ago.

WASHINGTON (AP) - White
House strategists, taking seriously
Ross Perot's unrelenting campaign
against the North American Free
Tmde Agreement, want to portray
him as an extremist.
The fall counteroffensive is
expected to include a series of tele·

vision ads by 'retired Chrysler
Chairman Lee Iacoeca, a supporter
of the contentious trade pact with
Mexico and Canada. .
"I think he has an awful lot to
offer this debate," said White
House press secretary Dee Dee

Myers.
The stakes in the battle were to
be raised today with the expected
announcement by House Majority
Leader Richard Gephardt that he
opposes the pact. White House
sources said the Missouri Democrat
was expected to .say .he wouldn't

actively work agamst the president.
Administration officials hope
lacocca can help blunt Perot's contention that the pact would cost
more than 5 million U.S. jobs and ·
endanger the domestic auto indus·
try.

.congress approves military base ·c,osings

•

FOR MORE INFORMATION

IN
THE
CLACCIFIEO

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White House enlists lacocca in effort to counter Perot

THIS SPACE
$12.00

POMEROY - The regular
monthly meeting of the Meigs
County Library Board of Trustees
will be at 1 p.m. at the library.
REEDSVILLE - The Olive
Township Zoning Commission will
hold a regular meeting at the Olive
Township Fire Station at 8 p.m.

CALL
NOW

Ohio Lottery

Chiefs
defeat

Call By 2:00 P.M. Friday for Sunday Edition

WASHINGTON (AP)- Military bases that escaped the 1993
.round of closings could have a
shon·lived reprieve with both the
·Pentagon and Congress intent on a
leaner post-Cold War defense.
· Cougress re,soundirigly efldorsed
the Pentagon s smaller-is-better
strategy Monday by agreeing to
close 130 bases and scale back 45
others despite the loss of thousands
of jobs.
The Senate vote was 83-12 to
accept the recommendations of the
seven-member Defense Base Closure and Realignment Commi&amp;sion.
1be recanmendalions now go into
effect, since negalivc votes by bolh
houses of CongmJS are required to
override the commission.
·

The next round of closings is set
for 1995, and Defense Secretary
Les Aspin said when he released
the Pentagon •s strate$Y in Aufust
that even more closmgs wil be
required.
Aspin's plan scales back the
mjlitary to 10 Army divisiOns, 12
Navy aircraft carriers and 20 Air
Force wings and reduces the active
duty force to 1.4 million uniformed ·
men and women.
Cuts in the defense infrastructure has lagged behind the dozvosizing of die military force, and
senators want to ensure that the
rc4uctions are commensurate.
Senate Armed Services Chairman Sam Nunn, D-Ga., warned

that failure to close bases will
return the military to the ' hollow
force of, the 1970s when the government "kept the bases and erod·
ed the readiness of forces to fight."
Sen. John Glenn, D·Ohio and a
member of the Armed Services
panel, sympathized with lawmakers
whose states are losing bases but
said it was necessary.
"The Cold"War has passed us,"
be said. "We're in a time of slowdown .... We don't neetrall these
bases, and basically we can't continue to pay for them.' •
Even senators whose states suffer, including John Warner, R-Va.,
and Howell Heflin, D-Aia, backed
the base closures.

"We have to support tne pro·
cess," Heflin said. "We have to
downsize. We have to consoli- ·
date."

The bulk of the direct job losses
will be concentrated in three states.
Hardest hit are ·California, slated to
lose more than 40,000 military and ·
civilian defense-related jobs; Florida, facing the loss of 22,000 jobs;
and South Carolina, which is
expected to lose more than 14,700
jobs.
Among the major installations
on the list are Alameda Naval Air
Station in California, the Orlando
Naval Training Center in Florida
and the Charleston Naval Station
and Naval Shipyard in South Car·
olina.

MEETS WITH GOVERNOR • Paul Gerard, Meigs County
Republican Party chairman, left, is1pictured with Gov. and Mrs
George Voinovich at a recent meeting in Columbus.
•

Gerard meets with governor
Meigs County Republican
Chairman Paul Gerard met recently
with Gov. George Voinovich in
Columbus.
Gerard said that the governor
expressed his suppon of efforts to
·retain and create jobs in Meigs
County - especially coal mining
jobs - and of his desire to work
with local authorities on economic
developmerl! in this _!Ilea.

According to Uerard, Gov.
Voinovich cited three areas of
greatest interest, jobs, roads and
education, as holding lhe key to the
future for Southeastern Ohio.
During his visit in Columbus,
G~rard also met with Lt. Gov.
Mike De Wine, Secretary of State
Bob Taft, and several department
heads.and state senators and representatives.
.

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