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I

Page

't
•

Tues~ay, October 19, 1993~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

10-The Dally Sentinel

••
•
•

A look back at the Showcase

•

....
"

Ohio Lotte~y

Blue Jays
rout Phils
10-3

Pick 3:
090
Pick 4:

3501

Buckeye 5:

-Page4

24-27-30-31-34

In._

!..-tonight
nln.
Tbunday cooler, hlp Ill mid·
50s.

•
VaU4,NO. 124

2810-. 12 hgee 35 cenla
A lluiUm.... lnc. !Nw8paper

Pomeroy·MI.ddleport, Ohio, Wednesday, October 20, 1993

llulllmecllalno.

\ 4

Clinton steps up
NAFTA sales pitch

\

MAKING APPLE BUTTER • The weekend
rain didn't stop these senior citizens from mak·
ing apple butter at Showcase, Meigs County. In
a copper kettle over an open fire at the Rock

Springs Fairgrounds, they made 30 gallons
which they sold. Nellie Hatfield, stirring here, is
pictured with Allee Wolfe, Center employee,
seated, and Nadine Hudson.

PROMOTING THE SOAPBOX DERIIY •
Bill Snouffer is planning now for Meigs County's fourth annual soapbox derby n_ext summer

by promoting it at the Showcase. Here he talks
about the derby and its importance to youth
with Bruce May oC Rutland, left.

WASHINGTON • President
Clinton is stepping up his sales
pitch for the Nonb American Free
Trade A~eement even as he sig·
nals a Willingness to compromise
with Congress on the thorny issue
of higher taxes to pay for iL
The White House was trans·
forming the South Lawn into a
giant trade fair today to showcase
companies that expect to benefit
from NAFTA. And S11n. Paul
Simon, D·Dl., planned to 51ep forward to , make a high-profile
endorsement of the agreement,
according to an administration offi·
cia! who spoke on condilion of
anonymity.
Foes or NAFTA , meanwhile,

.. '

~

-'11!1 \,

· -•·

'· \

tf

were setting up their own exhibit at
the AFL-CIO 10 coun1er the While
House "Product Day," displaying
examples of products and jobs they
said would be lost if the trade pact
is approved.
"The big companies see big
profits from NAFTA. but for the
American taxpayer, it's a losing
proposition," said Jim Jantz of the
Citizens Trade Campaign coalition.
With a House vote on the trade
pact scheduled for Nov. 17, Clinton
is grappling with the tax issue on
top of already strong opposition
from organized labor and some top
congressional DemocratS.
On Tuesday, he signaled a will·
ingness to compromise on plans to

raise $2.5 billion in taxes to replace
federal money that would he lost
under NAFTA from removal of tar·
iffs and related rwncial barriers.
The plan had been sharpIy criti.
cized by some conservative Republicans, whose votes Clinton needs
10 push through the trade agreement
"There are still some practical
things to work out," Clinton said
of the administration's proposal for
increased fees on international air.
line and cruise tickets and higher
rail and truck fees.
U.S . Trade Representative
Mickey Kantor, in testimony
before the House Ways and Means
Continued on page 3

Christopher heads for Europe
WASHINGTON (AP) - Secre·
of State Warren Christopher's
eight-day trip 10 Europe is designed
to show support for Russian Presi·
dent Boris Yeltsin and to promote
capitallsm in the former Soviet
empire.

. tary

ENJOYING AN EXHIBIT • Michael London, a consultant of the Ohio Arts Council, was
at the fairgrounds Friday for the Showcase.

Here he joins Mary Wise, president or the Mid·
dleport Arts Council, to look over that group's
exhibit.

. DEMONSTRATING PIONEER SKILLS.
Donna Davidson or Rutland was taught by ber
grandmother how to use a loom to _make rag

rug!r. At
a loom rfom
the 1930's to demonstrate her pioneer skill at
the RoekSprinf!S Fliirvp_unds.

'•

Monday thrv Sunday
8AM·10 PM
298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, .OH.
\

PRICES GOOD WEDNESDAY, OCTOB.E R 20th ONLY
INDIAN SUMMER

APPLE JUICE

ftJNA

.a oz~ ·cu

FR_OZ

by Miek Williams wllile (from left) Charles
Christopher, who leaves today,
Kitchen, commander; Ron Eastman, VSC; Max
begins his venture in Hungary,
· Cale, veterans serviceem~er; Nathan @iggs,
where American investors provide
DA V. com,mancler, a~ ·~!'n!ld -Osborne, ·VSC,
the grealest source of foreign capiwat~ on. Worfti''War I .-etenn·Gamer--6rifT'm·- - tal; .S2.5 billion, and he winds up
was unable to atte!ld the ceremony.
next Wednesday in Latvia, one of
the first stales 10 wrest its indepen·
dence from the communist realm.

Snyder to address Meigs Republicans

.

STORE HOURS

'

VETEitAN Rli:CfoGNIZEi&gt; - Two World
War I•Veteruis from Meigs Coanty were re~·
111zed Tu~y 'n!allt durllla a cere!Dony ~t the
Drew WebSter"l"l!st of'the American Legton In
.,.. ·-pCJIIi"~~ tr~~'$lili7,;iil\i~;' who'gi!rved in
the 37-Ohio Army Divlsloa, Is presented 3 medal

State Senator Cooper Snyder
(R·Hillsboro) will be a special
guest at the Republican Party's Fall
JWiy to be held Thursday at 6:30
p.m. at the Rutland Civic Center.
_ Snyder is the only announced
candidate for the Sixth Congressional District seat which will be
on the ballot in 1994.
Dee and Dallas will perform at
the rally which, according to
Republican Chairman Paul Gernrd,
will provide good food, good
friends and good entertainment.
_ · Snyder began ser\ting the 14th
Senate Disuict on April 3, 1979"
As a result of reaJipOr!ionment, the
14th Senate District is now com·
prised of seven full counties in
southern Ohio, including Adams,
Brown; Clermont, Clinton, Fayette,
Highland and Pike. The district is
basically rural, with agriculture
being the major industry.
.In the current 1201h General
Assembly, Snyder $erves as chair·
man of the Senate Education,
Retirement and Aging Committee.
He Is yice chairman of the Senate
Economic Development, Technology and Aerospace Commiuee and
serves on the Hi~ways and Transportation Comm•ttee, and the Rules
Committee. Snyder is vice-chair·
man of the Legislative Office on
Education Oversight, co-chainnan
of the·Joint Commiuee on Educa·
lion Technology Equity.
I He is an ad hoc member of the
Ohio Board of Regents, serve~ on
the Ohio High Speed Rail .Authority and the Jobs (or Ohio Qraduates
Governing Board. Senator Snyder
is vice c_hair of the Ohio Retirement
Study Commission wllich lends
oversight to the state pension sys·

terns.

"DINNERS

.

Training Committee and on the
Assembly Of the Legislature, Edu·
cation Committee. He is also a
member of the Education Commit·
tee of the American Legislative
Exchange Council and immediate
past vice chairman Of the Education Commission of the States.
His interest in public service
began at the local level where he
has been actively involved in corn·
munity and church service includ·
ing: 25 years as a Sunday school
teacher; president of the Rotary
Club; scoutmaster; and member of
the Great Oaks Task F,orce devel·
oping vocational education pro·
grams for handicapped children.
He is a founder of the Clinton
County Family Y, served 13 years
on the Clinton County Board of
Education, was a state uustee and
member of the Executive Commit·
tee of the Ohio School Boards

.

As a member of the National
Conference of State Legislatures,
Snyder sits on the State/Federal
Assembly. Education and Job

The key stops are in between, in
Moscow, where Russian President
Boris Yeltsin retains uneasy conttol
Association and an elected state afler
brealcing up a coup by oppotruslee of the Ohio Hardware Asso· nents of his reform programs, and
ciation.
in Kiev, where Ukrainians are in
The Senator has ~n a consis- the midst of a political and eco·
tent recipient of the "Watchdog of nomic maelstrom.
Christopher will urge Ukraine to
the Treasury" award and has been
dismantle
the 176 strategic nuclear
rerognized for outstanding legislamissiles
and 40 long-range
tive service by many groups,
bombers
it
inherited when the
including: Citizens United for
Soviet
Union
disintegrated in
Responsible Education (CURE);
the Ohio Retired Teachers Association; the Ohio Association of Civil
Trial Attorneys.

711CI

LIYEICIKBS

port.

1401. ;

,.

.

"

'

GOOD FOR 5 TRIPLE VENDOR
COUPONS 5~ OR LESS·10/20/Q3 ·

"

•

'

Miller is charged with three
counts of rape which allegedly
occured between June 1 and Aug.
"
31,1988.
Judge Dan W. Favre11u of
McConnelsville is hc!iuing tile case
by assignment in the ¥eigs Qiunty
Common Pleas CourL Judgei are
aSsigned to hear cases outside their
'

•

home counties by the Supreme
Court when a conflict occurs mak·
ing It Impossible for the resident
judge to hear a particulllr case. .
fudge fred
Crow m earlier
found Miller guilty on a separate
char_gc and sentenced him to the
maxunum penalty. In a letter to the
court, Miller's attorney aSked that
Crow qot preside at the trial which
began Tuesday with jury selection.
As a result Favreau was assigned to
' hear the case.
Crow said he and Favreau lu!ve
each heard cases for each other

w.

In counterattacking, President
Clinton and Christopher have
emphasized their unflinching sup·
port for Yehsin and his programs.
A Sflnior U.S. official told reporters
Tuesday at the Stale Department it
was the "No. I foreign policy pri·
ority."

So firm is U.S. backing, the
offiCial said Christopher would not
contact any opponents of the
Yeltsin government. He also will
begin preparations for a visit Clin·
ton "hopes to make next year" to
Moscow.
"Boris Yeltsin has repeatedly
proved his democratic creden·
tials," said the official. who spoke
on condition of anonymity.
Clinton met with Yeltsin in
Vancouver. Canada, in April and
promised him $1.6 billion in Amer·
•can aid, including direct grants and
credits to purchase food and other
goods and to convert government·
owned enterprises to private companies.
Yeltsin has scheduled elections
for a new parliament on Dec. 12
and said a presidential election
would he held the following June.
Critics have urged him to move up
the presidential election, but the
U.S. official said timing was up to
the Russian government and that
Christo.pher would not make any
suggesbons.

Pomeroy woman hospitalized after wreck

Most recently, he was honored
with the "Guardian of Small Business" award from the National Federation of lndependel)t Business
(NFIB) and the BOBCAT award
from the Businesses Of Border
Counties Against Taxes for opposition to last December's tax
increase. Snyder has received the
"Founding Father's Award" from
the JAC (Jobs for American Graduates) National Network in recognition of his commitment to at-risk
youth; the 1992 Outstanding Con·
tributor to Education in Ohio
Award from the Ohio Confederation of Teacher Education Organi~tion; Distinguished Governmental Service Award from the Ohio
Council of Private Colleges and
- Schools; recognition from the Ohio
School and Transit Association as
"Legislator of the Year" and the
only two-time recipient of the
American Legislative Exchange
Council's "Outstanding State Legislator - JeffersOn Award".

A Pomeroy woman is confined
to Grant Hospital, Columbus, for
treabDent of injuries suffered in an
automobile accident on Lincoln
Hill at 5:55p.m. Tuesday.
Mary Bentz, 67, of the Flood
Road, Pomeroy, was reported in
good condition by a Grant Hospi·
tal spokeswoman this morning"
There was no information available
on the extent of her injuries.
According to Pomeroy Police,
Dale F. Bing ·. 34. of State Route
143, Pomeroy, driving a !977 Pon·
tiac was uaveling down the hill
when he lost conttol of his car on a
curve and crashed into the vehicle
being driven by Bentz.
The impact turned the Bentz
1984 AMC vehicle around in the
road" There was heavy damage to
the driver's rear panel and the vehi·
cle was towed from the scene .
There was light damage to the frorit
of the Bing car.

Accident victim
in good condition

· Snyder resides near Hillsboro in '
Highland County with his wife,
A Cheshire man is in good con·
Dorothy. They have five children dition at a Columbus h~ital after
and 10 grandchildren. Snyder is his vehicle struck a gas line Man ·
retired from a third generation day nighL
hardware business.
Earl W. Wines, Jr., 47, 27191
Stale Route 7, was flown by Life·
Flight emergency helicopter ser·
vice to Grant Hospital after being
trl!Jisported to Veterans Memorial
Ho'Spital
by Meigs County Emerwhen conflict occurs.
gellcy
Medical
Service.
The two judges have agreed to
A
Grant
spokeswoman
reported
w.aive their statutory fee which
Wine's
condition
this
morning
and
eliminates the need for each county
said
he
is
being
treated
for
fractures
to pay the visiting judge, Crow
said. This results in substantial sav- to the upper and lower extremities.
According to a report from the
ings tc;iliolh Meigs and Morgan
·
Gal!ia-Meigs
J&gt;ost of ~he State
counties and has been approved by
H.ighway
Patrol,
which was
the Olli? ~upreme COU!'i, he added. relellsed Tuesday aflemoon,
Wines
G~hli -County Assistant Prosewas
westbound
011 Leading Creek
cutor Maill: Sheets is re~nting
the state·in iu. case agmnst Miller Road (County Road 3) in Salisbuty
who is represented by attorney ToWJiship ..ben be drove off the
Harry Re4lhar~ and Geral,d Sim- left sid~ of the road and struck a
Continued on page 3
mons, both of Columbus.

Opening arguments underway in Miller trial
By stall' reports
opening arguments began today
in the Meigs County CoiD'l of Common Pleas in the uial of George
W~ Miller Jr., S2. of Middle-

December 199L But despite
promises, Ulaaine' s parliament has
not given its approval or agreed to
ratify the Nuclear Non-Prolifera·
lion Treaty.
And there were news reports
today quoting President Leonid
Kravchuk in Kiev as indicating his
government would keep conttol of
all 46 of its more modem SS-24
strategic missiles.
As Christopher sets out, the
administration's foreign policy is
under attack as indecisive and
wrongheaded. A persistent critic,
Rep. Frank McCloskey, D-Ind., on
Tuesday called for Christopher to
resign on grounds that he 1s "not
seen by our allies as an effective or
serious secretarY of stale."

Both Bentz and Bing were taken
by Pomeroy squads to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Bentz was
transferred from there about 9 p.m.
to Gtant Hospital. Bing was treated
and released.
Bing has been charged with fail·
ure to conttol.
Also investigated by Pomeroy
Police Tuesday was an accident at

the intersection of Sycamore and
East Main. According to the repon,
Barbara Sieske , 27, of Rolland,
backed into a truck owned by Foreman and Abbott and driven by Nelson Morrison, 30, Middlepon.
11 was reported that Sieske was
backing to allow a delivery truck to
enter the roadway and did not see
the vehicle behind her. There was
light damage to both vehicles.

Cheshire home damaged by fire
A mobile home in Cheshire
owned by Tim Kearns was exlen·
sively damaged in fire Tuesday
morning.
Middleport Fire Chief Kenny
Byer said that the fire started in the
bathroom and spread into a rear
bedroom causing heavy fire damage. There was water and smoke
damage to the rest of the mobile
home. Cause of the fire has not

been determined, Byer said. He
also reponed that there was no one
at home when the fire staned just
before 10 a.m.
On the scene were two trucks
from Middleport, one from
Pomeroy, and a squad from Rutland . There were no injuries
Kearns has insurance it was report:
ed.

Gavin scrubber project six
months ahead
of
schedule
....
CHESIURE, Ohio (AP) - American Electric Power said it is
six mouths ahead or schedule for installing new scrubbers at the
Gavin Power Plant.
Good weather and cooperation among construction crews
has hastened the project's progress and could result in a 10 percent cost reduction, said Mike Price, spokesman for Columbus
Southern Power, an AEP subsidiary.
Columbus Southern owns the Ga!Ha County plant, about 25
miles south or Athens.
The savings eould total about $81 million for construction,
.
which could 1aean the company would ask for smaller rate
increases from customen in tbe long run, Price said.
Tbe $815 milllo11 project includes two smokestacks with
scrubbers, support buildings, equipmeat and by-product dis·
posal areas.
The scrubbers will allow high-sulfur coal to continue to be
burned at the Gavin planllllld meet federal anti-pollution standards. The coal is mlaed by the company-owned Southern Ohio
Coal Co. in Meigs and Vinton counties. . ·
AEP predicted the project will be completed in June 1995
instead or the orlaJnal taraet date or Decelaber 1995.

\

·•

�\
Wednesday, October 20,1993

:Commentary
-

-

The Daily Sentinel ,
111 Coart Street

Pomeror, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERBST8 OP TJU IIEICS-MASON' ARJtA

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words. All letters are subject 10 editing and must be signed with name
address and ~lepbone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Lette,.;
sbould be m good tas~. addressing issues, not personalities.
·

Deadline for - publication
of election letters Oct. 27
. The Daily Senti~el we!comes letter.s regarding the Nov. 2 general
clccuon. However, m the mterest of famteSs, no election leuers will be
accepted after 12 noon on Wednesday, Oct 27.
. Individuals should address issues and not personalities.
Letters purely ~ndorsing candidates will not be used:
Letters should be 300 words or 1~. prefe.fllbly typed. All letters are
sllbJect to ed1ung and and must be s1~ed wtth name, addr~ss and telep~onc number. Telephone numbers wtll not be published. No unsigned
!etters will be published Letters should be in good taste.

~r~ftili~i:tdl~~ ~::e~~n~

and Means Chain!an Dan Ro~tenkowski, D-III.
The tenn of lhe grand jtll}' lhat
has been receiving evidence rn lhe
case is nearing an end. New U.S.
Attorney for the District of
Columbia Eric Holder must decide
soon whether lO ~ss for an indictment now or wall for a new grand
jury lO be seated and swt presentmg evidence all over again.
Sources continue 10 say lhat lhe
case against Rostenkowslci remains
weak. The only witness against lhe
powerful Democrat is former
House posunaster Robert V. Rota.
He is plea·bargaining for a reduced
sentence on an embezzlement
charge by naming several congressmen for whom he says he laundered campaign funds by redeeming starilps bought with campaign
money for personal cash.
One major problem is that, at
the swt of the probe, Rota, under

Page-2-The D*IIY sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, October 20, 1993

certain lhat R~nkow;ti~

Robert Bennett-

are

nation's best white-collai' criminal
defense auomey _ will have a
fi ld da aile . lha
te
Y gmg t Rota is mak-

~~;~~:;:~~:fn~tJ~!~om

Prosecutors had hoped to per-

sua~e a Ro_s~wski employee 10

tesllfy agamst hun. However, lhis
does not seemed lO have worked,
and the prosecution is left· with
Rota as its only neal witness.
Bennett is also reponedly exerting behind·lhc-scenes pressure to
l!et a final decision on whether to
mdicc. Apparently the defense feels
that if~ case is~ or ambiguous, polllJCal types wtthin tile Juslice DePIIJrllnent may be less willing 10 move ahead than career prosecutors might. Whelher it will be
Attorney General Janet Reno or
Holder making the decision
remains 10 be seen.

thabseem

1R&amp;M~IS

'"

Rebirth of Jersey City becomes a sign of hope

. JERSEY CI!Y, N.J.- This lauon that_is 30_percent black, 25 Schundler won two-lhirds of the
ctty
ts a Sl?ne s throw from ~e pe~ent H1spamc and 10 percent vote, despite the fact that registered
A company without a conscience.
Statue
of L1_berty, but her back IS Astan.
.
.
Democrats outnumber .Republicans
For now, Mortal Combat is the vid-violence c\amp, hands down.
turned
from
tL
.
.
In
a
special
elecuon
last
Novemby
10 10 I.
. But speaking of hands, anolher video game called Time Killers will let ·
For
much
of
lhiS
century,
tt
has
The
voters wanted change and
you slice off lhc appendage of your choice from a hapless opponenL If
been
a
blue-collar
factory
tow~
on
they
got
it What Schundler and lhe
lhat's not gory enough, try Desert Assault, which lets you set enemy
lh~.~est
bank
of
the
_Habuledson
River,
citizens
of his city have already
troops arue.
1anded
1 was SO UD~VI
w
lO
done
to
tum
lhe place around has
Parents who take !heir ~i.on seriously will keep these dehumanizing
Amencans
t~at It was long ago
been
so
extraordiDI!JrY
lhat it bears
diversions off-limits to k!~s~~ for the manufacturers, who apparently
watching, e~ially with dozens of
think a new movie-style rating system will stave off a deserved backlash, \ ailed to_the !ired· lhe poor and the
huddle
ed
UDnugranli
.
.
t
massedrus.
.
other
rmancially beleaguered cities
mte J!!em SL for sleazy.
orrupt po ttctans,
gs rn lhe ber- held to finish lhe tenn or die suffering from similar problems.
streets and schools so poor lhatlhe last mayor, who went to prison on
Schundler has done more than
The (Zanesville) Times Recorder, Oct. ll
state
had
lO
tak~
them
over
several
fraud
charges
Schundler
a-:oi4
indictment: He has reduced
Not even !he president gets to choose his priorities alllhc time.
years
ago
made
tl
~~on
f~
New
eme~ed
victorious
in
a
field
of
19
cnme,
attracted new busineS;SCS and
If u will recall, it was a solemn pledge of candidate Bill Clinton 10
York-based
televlston
statiOns
to
candidates,
becoming
the
city's
jobs,
and brought the nearly
foe
like a laser oli U.S. domestic problems.
cross
the
Hudson
to_
showcase
Jerf'trst
Republican
mayor
in
1S
years.
bankrupt
city from a $40 million
, lhc economy is getting shoved aside as the No. I issue. There's
~
Ctty
as
a
tragtc
_example
of
Democrats
called
it
a
fluke
and
·
deficit
m
November
to a swplus by
Som . l'll='s Haiti. There's lhc Soviet Union.
:
~~y
and
desphau:.
.
h
pulled
out
all
the
stops
to
beat
him
May,
resulting
in
significantly
Even the best-prepared, most focused presidents occasionally have 10
u
t
t~gs
.are
c
angmg
ere,
during
last
May's
election.
The
leglower
property
taXes.
deal wilh problems not of their choosing. President Ointon is finding lhat
and hope IS al~ve .- thanks lO "a endl!lry St. Anlhony High School
He believes this is only the
out now.
young man w o JUSt rea11 Y came . bask~tball coach from this city, beginning, and aims to be a twooul of ~ow here and represents a Bobby Hurley Sr., was impressed term mayor who makes Jersey City
The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, OcL 18
It has been six monlhs since Ohio's bloodiest prison riot erupted atlhe revolu~10nary c.~ncep! ..ror the wilhSchundler'sstyle,evenifHur- -of all places- "America's
Soulhem. Obi? Correctional Facility. And th~ perspective offered by ISO R_epub~ Party. That s how lhe ley's expectations were humorous- Most Lovable City." Schundler
days of hmds1ght puts a bl!lrsh glare on the mtstakes that penni~Jed the riot h1gh pnest ?f conservat~sm, Jack ly humble. "Schundler did a very has even cynics in the city believKemp, descnbes Jersey Ctty Mayor good job in the few months he was ing it may have a real future. For
to occur.
Bret
Schundll:!', who SOJ!le see~ a in. He dioo't get indicted; he didn't conservatives
like
Kemp,
A "dysfunctional family" is how lhe director of lhe Illinois Departseco~d
commg
for
mner-cuy
do
aliylhing
embarrassing.
By
our
Schundler
is
"a
kind
of
Lincoln
ment of Correction described the Lucasville prison staff. In a speech
standards, that was somelhing," he Republican, recognizing lhat equalbefore the Ohio Civil Service Employees Association last week, How~~~rd Amenca.
Schun_d_ler
uses
langua~e
fr_om
told us.
ity of opportunity is what people
Peters _Ill said !he staff's lack of preparedness fueled the riot
street
poliucs
lO
arcane
soctolog1cal
Machine
politicians
unified
want"
IJ's hard lO quibble wilh that characterization, especially after the
Jr_eatises,
from
_bond·lrllding
mechl!behind
a
single
Democratic
candiSchundlet's secret weapon may
recent revelation that top prison staffers didn't _get along.
msms
lO
~e
Btble~
to
preach
to
lh~
date
in
.the
general
election,
be
the local citizens. For one lhing,
But the problems didn ',t stop lhere. The pnsoo administration seemed
overflowmg
melung
pot
..
But
lhiS
bankrolling
him
with
comparative·
·
lhere
is a widely respected newspaalmost to .invite a riot The rebellion erupted the day before lhe prison was
young_ mayor ~as a grow1!lg con- ly large political conlributions as per, The Jersey Journal, wh1ch
to go into lockdown for a tuberculosis test on resistant inmates.
Petel'S said the Lucasville staff desperately needed more training and gregauon lha~ ts not lhe ~nd nor- they dreaded the thought that keeps the mayor honest with solid
drills. That seems indisputable.
· mal~y found m C&lt;?nservauve tern- Schundler would be permanent. investigative reporting ·and an
Beyond lhat, lhe Depl!lrtment of Rehabilitation and Correction must pies. a lower-to-middle-class popu- But the machine was whipped. astute veteran political columnist,
more actively monitor lhe morale and temperament of lhose who guard
Ohio's convicts.
·

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

LIBR.AR.Y

..

-.
•
&gt;

...

~

II tlt:l by N!A, Inc

•fxcuSII me ... where is the 'Dead White Male'

section?"

••

I

TV. you nught think_lhe prestdent attention to bow to deal wilh lhe shfa:ay from
lhe i':ff'uve and
and lhe press arc gettlllg along bet- press than any administration since
This adverse ~lud~ sp k
tcr of late.
Nixon's •• said one Cl)nCSJXlndent lh
ar s
Zoe Baird seems a distant mem'
·
·
reats ~d. e~en ~sty b_ehavior·
ory,lhe infamous $200 haircut is
Acc_ess ~s lll!'~ted, mtery1ews ·are
all but forgotten and ''Travelgate"
Jl
r
.,
dem~ •. mqumes are fibbU$tered.
is almoSt a trivia question. There's
":clevpllon camem crews are ~
even some statisucal evidence to for a large metropolitan daily. ctallyirked l!Y lhe way they are
back up lhe noti011 that Bill Clinton "They have a very cynical and h~rde~ alo~g by young Cbnton
and the pack that covers him have manipulative view of tile press. ~~d~s yan~mg on yellow rope~.
struck a truce: The Center for Some of. the things they do are
The While House staff doesn t
Media and Public Affairs which downright nasty."
.
think of-themselves as cynical,"
·counts the ·~sitive and n~gative
This 1 reporter continues: says 1 COITCSJIOndent "They Jh!nk
statements atred about the presi- ''They've made a tot of enemies in of lhemselves as savvy. They think
dent, recently re~ an "upturn the White House press corps and they arc better and smatter than
in Clinton's TV unage." His press that's saying somelhing, because eYer¥onc: else. They think everyone
coverage is stiU worse than George 90 percent of the reporters are else IS a.icrk;"
B~sh's was four years ago, but Democrat$. A lot of lhe working · Tbe '!Vhite _I{Jluse reporters I
lhmgs seem to be getting better. .
press get screwed ovec in a Jot of spoke wtlh believe lhe contemptu~ust goes lO show, you shouldn't wayallld !heY can be hcanl saying, ?)IS IO!lC flows ~ lhe top down.
~heve what you sec on TV. 'Jbeie I Hate these people."'
• · . When I met Chnton two years ,
~oea app,e ar .to hav~ · been an
A ~orresr:.::ent'for a news , 118?•", said~ eor;resPOII4ent. 'lhe
trnprovcment 1n .the tone qf Oin- bureau ·comp · that Clintqn .and ' ~shod dealing wtth the ~- He
ton's coverage m recent weeks, · his lides arc dilboneat. Yet IIIOiher liked them.• He wa approachable,
J!iankll proba~ly to. the machina- White Holise reporter AYB flatly personable. But he neve_r really
Jtons of prea1denuat counselor that C1imon lies.
~nderstood the press and 111 func.
Dav!d Qecgen, a masterful image
~ their ~ the people in the · uon. He felt betrayed by the siOrieS
nupnpld,ator and pmta. han!ller. But Wh1te House see lhe p:ncil and T
e

"ose•nh s.n.ear

\

~·

Pater Weiss.
.
The city alsq llappens to be a
rap music powerhouse, presided
over by Queen Lalifah, whose
record label and management company feature some of the hottest
names in the business. Both comedian Flip Wilson and ·Malcolm
Jamal-Warner (of "'The Cosby
Show':) hail from here, and Ozzie
Nelson was a football coach at a
local high schOOl.
In addition, many neighborhooclfi are still neighborly. All lhe
ethmc groups seem to ~et along
with surprisingly little stl'lfe. There
was no burning or significant
demonstration here in lhe wake of
the Rodney King beating trial.
Youlh gangs fighting for turf are
relatively rare, as are drive-by
shootings.
The old C8J!IIIrd was lO say lhat
lhe Statue of 1;-tberty had turned her
hack on the clly. The new answers
ar~ nu!!lerous, and bespeak city
pnde;, She trusl.! us to cover her
back, one says.. Another: "We1re
always there behind her, supr,!ning
he.r ~she faces New York.' Final~· We are her most loved chiien, who follow behi~d, just like
any b~ood f?llows J!\etr molher in
the anunal kingdom.
.If these citizens; these ideas and
th
h ts ~r can make it a success
~~~ for~~;:. be a new

~~utli!~!!!~5e7~fl!lrfO~!~.~e!2~iveY!!~U~~!ush~·
fr~e
press
:J:
~! an~

Berryts World

••

fl dam tal

U.S. House's "reform week."
stble~ow. .
. .
Back in. August when lhe House
It ts not JUSt that .Repub!t~ans
was debaung lhe budget, Speaker and DemocraiS are wtdely divided
Thomas Foley, )).Wash., promised - and. J!t~Y are.-. but there l!'e
that he w?uld suspend all other deep div~10ns V.: 11hm bolh parues
House busmess for the last week in
unJXISS}b~ to bridge.
OCtober in ordet to take up a num- .
ne group o em~rats, for
ber of refonn measures. .
mstance, has ~:~!me up wtt!t a plan
. It appears no~ lha! sev~;3- th_at ~ould subject CamjiBign conmficant refonn btlls will be
: ll'lbuuons above a e;erla_ln level - One will require much more ~·000 per carnpatgn 18 a. sugge~detailed reporting for all lobbyists, uon - 10 taX~ or. some~ng akin .
including very detailed reports of to lll?'es. That tdea IS not bemg well
any f~nds given to or spent on recetved_ by man~ DemocraiS who
entertaining a member of Congress. - surpnse .- nuse large amounts
- An9the~ will require that . eact;~mJW&amp;Jtcyc~i·
~
Congress and ns members be sub·
ew1s~. _epu tcans are ~jectto a range of civil rights, labor damental!Y s~lit over lhe quc:s.!k&gt;n
and ~ment laws. Still unclear, . of contnbutt!lns from po~tttcal
lhough, ts whelher the courts will action commmees. Some m the
be given the ability lO enforce these GOP want to_ ban lhem C?~pletely.
laws, or whelher lhat wiU be left up Others - big .P~C re&lt;:lpleniS to some kind of congressionally want only to. bmtt the amount of
appointed panel. The problem is a funds a candidate could get from
PACs to perhaps $300,000 per
campaign.
Some campaign f'mance bill will
undoubledly pass, but it is likely·to
be far from the kind of basic
reform that most say is needed.
The White House is said to be
getting very annoyed with the
major heallh insurance companies.
Publicly, insurers like Aetna, Prudential and Cigna ~~~re saying lhey
support lhe Oinlo!t heallh care plan
- with some modifications, of
course. Privately, however, the
Clinton heallh care team says these
same insurers are pouring big
money into an organlZ8tion lhat is
workmg feverishly to scuttle the
entire.plan.
Th~ ~eall_h Care Leadership
Councilts
bemg funded by insur..
e~. ~g compani!'S and for-profit
hospitals. One of Its spokesmen is
former MassachusettS senator and
presidential ' candidate .Paul
Tsongas. -"
·
Said one White House health
care advocate: "The insurance
companies want lO appear the soul
of reasonal!leness. But behind-thesCC!ICS they are funding lhis organi·
zatton whose sole purpose is to gut
any meaningful reform."
·

tear !he still-beating heart out of your dying enemy? Or rip his head off?

'•

ISS~

·finance
Don't expect broad campaign ~ fithrna:ce .r:::_r ~t1s almost
refonn 10 come out of lhe
. n a no
re onn ts pos·

Robert}.• 1.1T.Q'f7D'IIan
n1 &amp;••• .

:
By The Associated Press
-· Excerpts of recent Ohio editorials of national and statewide interest:
· :J'be Columbus Dispatch, Oct. 15
: The National ~ndowment for Democracy, a "private" foundation
:funded almost enurely by the federal government, is at a crossroads in
. Congress.
· ·- Lawmakers hold lhe purse slrings 10 the foundation's future in this
; (ilst-Cold War era.
: : The time has come 10 close lhe federal purse and dedicate lhe proposed
· .amount of money instead 10 reducing lhe federal deficit.
·- The Cold W~~~r urgency gone and international communism in tatters
m.etest groups scrambling for federal funds are talcing lhe "enlargemeni
:Pf democracy" palh.
· There is a legitimate advisory role, but for democracy to take root in a
: ~veloping counlry it must be planted and tended by lhe people them. selves.

What kind of company would ml!lrket a home video game that lets you

ment will etlher be handed up by

poss~bl~~ ::;:ye;:~f~~ix~!dt~atter dirrere~o~:e~~b;! of :0.

Excerpts from other
Ohio newspapers

·it'be Athens Messe~~ger, Oct. 14

~ltrrom.the~udgeon:The mic~~dasamonolidiic
ClrnJOD White HouiC and· lhe peo- buncli of nayiaym and nitpickers
pie who report,on it !R !101 getting wbo ~ ~ ihe lrivilil and refuse

,~ :~~ ~~~
vtew the ClinJOD crew as IIICltpen·
enced, pushy, incompetent and

The Dally sentinel

'

~~J~~~~s~{.~:;.~.t}o~r:,?~
..
~~?
~!.....
fett:s
Offi~ investiption report tiw

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.; ~;·.:a.m.~

Somebody had better negotlato
an end lO this madneas before It
gets totally out of hand.

day 10 h·J•·stor
• ·y·

.110·
· •

about the
Genn!fer Fl_owersH. He ~sn t lhink he IS cymcal.
e sees htmself as burned."
lndeed. So burned lhat he openly pro,voked the .media at last
spnng s annual dinner honoring
radio and tele.vision correspondents. "You·lrnow why I can stiff
you on the press conferences?" he
said "BCcause Larry King libemted me ftom you by givin11 me JhC
American~Iedirectly!'~'
~ ~Y. think this whole sit·
uauon 1s getung a!)surd. Clinton
cannot simply lhumb his nose at
. the traditional press. Where dOcs he
lhink st6ries about draft-dodging
and Gennifec Floweo come·from?
lbe_press cann6t sintply dismiu as
dub,ous. and ~tful evbt)' move
thCjo White House makes. Skcpti·
cism is bcallhy, cynicism is m8lig:
~L
'

·
. By The Alloc:lated Prw

.

·

· ·

Ignore tlieu man's accomplish· , 1 1740 M ·
menu. They question why Bohn ia • lheandeaa thherefsherabefacame ruler o,f Austria, Hungar~ anil ·
em upon
o
lhqr, Holy Roman Emperor Charles'VI, . .

,,

Wednesday,.Oct. 20

by Bob Hoeflich

MICH.

'

.

Committee, said lhe administration
wants lO double lhe fee charged on
rail transport across international
lines to S15 per crossipg: The $5
ree on airline and ocean liner tickCIS and on commercial trucking
For absolutely free you can movements across lhe Mexican and
attend a dance to be staged Satur- Canadian borders would be dou day from Sto 11 :30p.m. on the old bled 10$10, Kantor said.
White House Press Secretary
American Leg.ion Hall in MiddleDee
Dee Myers said the adminisport featuring the music of C. J.
tration
thinks it can raise the money
and lhe Country Gentlemen. Chilit
needs
while holding lhe increase
dren 12 and under 111re invited to
in
the
air,
sea and truck fee to
attend in costume and all children
$2.50.
11/re welcome as long as they are
Myers insisted that congression·
under adult supervision. Alcohol is
al
opposition
to lhe taX increase
not pennitled and lhose attending
was
"a
relatively
small piece of
are lO talce something for the snack
N
AFT
A
and
a
problem
that we
table.
think we can dve:·
Roy and Maurita Miller were on
the move over the weekend with
the Meigs County Showcase and
Continued rrom page I
ac1ivities. Roy had at least one tree and a gas line. The patrol cited
antiqne car at the rairgrounds and unsafe speed as the contributing
Maurita pl!lrticipated in lhe flower
show. Roy and Maurita ~~~re taking factor.
The vehicle ignited. but not
the recommended action since the before anolher motorist was able to
loss of their only child, daughter, help Wine out of his vchicie, MidNancy. They're keeping busy . dleport Volunteer Fire Depl!lrtment
Bless them both.
Chief Kenny Byer said.
The' MVFD responded to the
Time "do" march on. It's hard accident with three truel&lt;s and lhe
lO imagine lhat we have only about emergency squad. Meigs County
a week to stock up on the trick or sheriffs deputies were also on the
treat candy. Do keep smiling.
scene.

Ever heard of "Seyler's TTeasure Chest"?
You probably hav~'t since the
new business m Pomeroy to be
known by that name is not going 10
be open until about Nov. 11.
What is it? Well, it's a different
concept of meeting and dining for
Meigs County and I'll fill you in
with what I lrnow at lhis point. The
• lcolumbusl67"
Treasure Chest will be located at
lhe comer of Butternut Ave., and
West Second St., in what we
remember as the former Weed
Wholesale Co. As you probably
remember Dick and Nelia Seyler
bougb4 lhe building several years
ago and resided lhere for a period
of time. .
The interior of lhe ll!lrge building is being remodeled some and
redecorated in preparation for the
opening of the ne.w business .
Some of the rooms will be done in
~
a
Victorian lheme. Some will be
Ice
Sunny Pl. Cloudy Cloudy
done in country. The establishment
~•Anoc:itti«&lt;Piw•Gnpt;c.~Ht
C1993Aecu-Wealher,lnc.
will offer breakfast, lunch and dinner in most pleasant atmospheres.
In addition there will be an emphasis on parties, meetings and conferences. Victorian crafts will be
South-Central Ohio
sunny. Cooler wilh-·tem~tllres offered.
As tiine marcheS on, gerhaps, I Correction
, Tonight, occasional showers and falling from around 60 into ihe 50s.
lnfonnation provided The Daily
can give you more details on the
thunderstorms. Low around 60. Chance of rain 60 percent.
new business which is being read- Sentinel regarding the American
Chance of rain near I 00 percent.
Friday through Sunday:
Heart Association's Annual Heart
Thursday, showers likely in the
Fair. Lows in lhe 'l()s. Highs 55- ied·by NeliA Seyler.
Fest was incorrect. Linda L. King,
morning, then becoming partly 60.
Reeently, I received word that nutrition educator, said lhat rnateri·
Wendell Hoover underwent a six als were distributed at Powell's,
by-pass heart operation on Sept. 24 Krogers, Vaughans and Foodland.
at-St. Mary's Hospilal in Huntinger, who who survives and resides in ton, W. Va. He was in the hospilal
Eunice BroWn
Gallipolis. .
until Oct. 2 and was recuperating
E11Dice Jean Brown, S9, of Cape
She is survived by husband Sid- slowly at his home on Rock
Coral, Fla., formerly of Meigs ney B. Edwprds, married Sept. 5, Springs Road nw Pomeroy. How.
CLEVELANb (AP) - Here are
County, clied Tuesday, Oct. 19, 1959 in Ch_arleston, W.Va.; one ever, Wendell had a relapse and Tuesday night's Ohio Lottery
·
1993, following a lengthy illness.
son, Sidney R. Edwards of Point was rushed to Veterans Memorial selections:
Buckeye 5:24-27-30-31-34
She is survived by her husband, Pleasant; one granddaughter, Hospital and then returned to St.
Pick 3 Numbers: 0-9-0
Jay Brown or Cape Coral, Fla.; a Kaitlin Jo Edwl!lrds of Bidwell; one Mary's Hospital. He is again makPick 4 Numbers: 3-5-0-1
son, Terry ~coli Brown of Tampa, .sister, Pally McCelland of Gallipo- ing progress and will 15e home
Fla.; four daughters, Vicki Will, Jr., lis; and one brolher, Paul Barlc.er of soon. Meantime, Wendell's wife,
and Glenda Fay, both of Florida; Georgetown, Delaware.
Marlha, had an emergency room
Jackie Pence of Indiana, and BrenShe was a homemaker and a experience at Veterans Memorial,
da Cotterill of Harrisonville, and member of the Point Pleasau probably brought on by anxiety but
seven gnujdchildren.
..
Moose Lodge.
she's o.k.
Services will be 2 p.m. Friday in
At any rate, Wendell and
Funeral services will be held at
the Oel Prado Funeral Home, 3740 dte Cremec:ns Funilral Chapel with · Martha appreciate you prayers,
111 Second St., Pomeroy
Del Prado Blvd., Cape Coral, Fla. Rev. Kenny Baker officiating. conr•m, cards and notes and they
Burial will follow in the Rife thamc you. A nice couple who
at 2 p.m. Friday.
YOUR IND~PERDENT
Cemetery at Bulaville. Friends may deserve to have things look up a
call at lhe Chapel form 7 10 9 p.m. biL
AGENTS SERVING
Katherine Downing
Thursday.
Kalherine Bovie Kircher Down- ·
MEIGS COUNTY
Pallbearers are Paul Knox, Paul
Saturday night need not be the
ing, 88, Middleport, died Monday,
Knox Jr., Larry Johnson, Roger loneliest mght of the week. EspeSINCE 1868
Oct 18, 1993, at O'Bieness Memo- McCelland,
Kenny Blankenship cially this Saturday.
rial Hospital iii Alhens following
and Branson Collins.
an extended .illness.
Born Sept. I, 1905, in Gallipolis, she was lhe daughter of lhe late Cl
H d
Harley and Emma Geisler Bovie.
arence en erson
She graduated from Ohio UniversiCll!lrence Wilson Henderson, 75,
ty in 1927 fronllhe school of music of Allred, Ohio, died October 19,
and in 1937 from the school of 1993 Ill the Worthington· Manor in
home economics. She taught at Parkersburg, W.Va., following an
Middleport High School for several extended iUness.
years.
lhBorn Fe,bruary 9, 1918 in
She was a member of the Sigma A ens County, he was the first son
Kappa sorority, the Alpha Iota of lhe late Charles "Lee" and Ocie
Chapler, and an honorary member Carr Henderson. He was retired
of Beta Upsilon Chapter of Ohio from the dairy fann business and
University. In addition, she was a was actively involved in serving
member of lhe First Presbyterian the commumty. At one time he was
Chwch of Middleport, the Middle- a township trustee and for the past
port G~~~rden Club and the Literary 28 YCI!IrS has been an elected memCiub of Middleport
ber of the Meigs County Fair
Surviving are a son and daugh- . Board.
Surviving are his wife of 53
ter-in-law, Dr. John and Patricia
Kircher of Columbus; a daughter years, Thelma Harper Henderson;
· 1 J
and Pa 1B
one daughter and her husband
and son-m-aw,
oan
u on- Linda Sue and Dave Williams or'
nell of Dayton; a stepdaughter and
husband, Ml!lrlha Jane and Rensse- Belpre; one grandson, Aaron David
lear R. Johnson Jr. of Lafayette, Williams of Alexandria, Va.; lhree
brothers, SheriDan Henderson and
La.; seven gran d c h1'ld ren; 1h ree Harold
Lee Henderson. , both of
stepgrandchildren; 17 great-grandchildren; f'tve stepgreat-grandchil- Alfred, and Ralph Henderson of
drcn and one great-great-grandson. Coolville; and one sister, Margaret
Preceding her in ~lh were her Follrod of Pomeroy.
husband, Rodney Downing in
He w.as preceded·in deatli by his
1992; a brother, Fred Bovie.
· p~~~reniS and an iilfant sister.
Services will be held Friday at 1
Ser.vices will be held at 1:00
p.m. at the First Presbyterian p.m. Friday at the White Blower
Church of Middleport with the Funeral Home in Coolville. The
· R b'
ff' · ·
. Rev. Sharon Hausman, assisted by
Rev. KtiS
o mson o ICtatmg. lhe Rev. Paul McGu;~, will offiteL'·
Entombment will follow at the
-·
Downipg Mausoleum in Riverview ate. Burial will be at the Burson
Cemetery in Middleport.
Cemetery in Shade. Visitation will
Friends may call at Fisher be held from 2:00 to 9:00 p.m.
Funeral Home in Middleport from Thursday at lhe funeral home.
5-9 p.m. on Thursday. Memorial
contributions may be made lO the
First Presbyterian Church of Middleport, 165·N. Fourlh Ave., Mid.The Daily Sentinel
dleport OH 45760.
(VSPS ZLJ.Nt)

I

,,,,,

....... .

---Weather~--

•

Clinton
...
Cootinued fi'OIII page 1

Beat of the Bend...

Accu-WeaJlier• forecut for

_;___Area deaths.- - -

Lottery numbers

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE

Accident...

.Stocks
Am Elc Power ...................39
Ashland Oil........................34 lfl
AT&amp;T ..:.............................39 7/8
Bank &lt;&gt;ne ...........................40 Ill
Bob Evans................................ 19
Channing Shop .................. I3 318
Champion Ind..........................14
~lding ......................30 3/4 '
F
~ul ...................24 7/8
Goodyear ctR ......... :........45 7/8
Lands End ................ ................41
Limited Inc............................. .23
Multimedia Inc ..................39 3/4
Point Bancorp ..........................14
Rax Restaurant. ...................... .()6
Reliance Eleclric ................ l7 .3/4
RObbins&amp;MyClS ..................... .18
Shoney' s Inc ........................... .23
Star Bank ........................... 34 1/2
Wendy Int'l........................ l6 318
Worthington Ind......................28
Stock reports are the 10:3
a.m. quotes provided by Adv
rJ Gallipolis.
...

Hospital news

Holzer Medical Center
Oct. 19 discharces: Bertha
Bennett, Anita O'Donnell,
Stephanie Smith, Dixie Blevins,
Earl Winters, Zelia Coppick,
Pamela Bonecutter, Mrs. Johnny
King and daughter, Rhonda Lucas,
Karen Tayl'or, Emma Comer,
Drusilla Stapleton and Jami SanName clarification
som.
Oct. 19 births: Mr. and Mr;.
The four-yw-old child pictured
in the "Along the River" feature Johnnie Dotson, daughter, Gallipdstory on recycling in the Sunday lis.
, Times-Sentinel OcL 17 was Casey
.
Rtchardson, son of Tim Richardson
Cal Hubbard, a pro football!iJie.
and Cindy Fields . The name of
Casey Richardson-Fields as given man and also a major leagpe
by Mrs. Fields is not the child's umpire, is in both the Baseball 8l1ll
legal name.
Pro Football Hall of Fame.
'

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY
Thb Weelr'• .SJNef4al:

HAMBURGER

74 4
WITH FRIES •••••• $1.44
MON.-SUN. 10:00 AM-10:00 PM •

992•2556

''V
n
Say 1es to

the Kicl~er and

avoid those
Kicl~er

Blues! -

P\lblished evt:fY alterDOOD, Monday throuah
Friday, J II Co~ St., Pomeroy, Ohio ' by the
Ohio Valley Publiahill.l CompuyJMultimedia
lac., Pomeroy, Ohio 4!769, Pb. 992-2156.
Secoad olou [l011a8o pold • POmeroy, Olllo.

Joann Edwards
Joann Edwards of Gallipolis
died Tuesday in lhc Holzer Medical Center.
Born in Belle, W.Va., she was
the daughter of the late Roy A.
Barker and 'Lillin 'M. Welch Bark·

Sf'RING UnLIEY CINEMA
446· 4524

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J.Walihllio

.

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. .

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�Weclneadey, October 20,1993

Sports

By Iq!N RAPPOPORT
AP H.odtey Writer
.
The Mishty J:?IX:ks? They're mi~ty smprising.
. And the Florida Panth«s aren t doing too badly
.eather.
·
'
The NHL's.two newest expansion teams continued 10 ~~~~ the_u own Tuesday nighL
.
Playmg thetr fii"Sl road game, the Ducks beat the
Ra!tsers 4-2 at New Yort to streu:h their unbeaten
streak to four (2-0-2) after losing their first two
games.
.
The Panthers, m~while, played a 2-2 tie with
the -~ Angeles Kings, las&amp; season's Stanley Cup
finalists. The Panthers remained a .SOO ream at 2-2-3
"I'm S!'J'C _the Rangers might have taken us light!·
~! the begmnmg,' ' Anaheim t:oach Ron Wilson
B.u.t ~ur team ~layed reall_y well for 60 minutes,
.whirrcb IS ~!tat we ve been doing lalely. We ca&amp;ch 'em

In Game 3 of the World Series,

,

.

Molitor vindicates Gaston with ·bat in Jays' 10-3 win over ·Phils
Philadelphia Phillies 10-3 to take a
2-1 lead in the Series.
"It looks like Cito made the
right choice tonigh~' ' Phillies manager Jim Fregosi said.
Gaston still bad a tough decision
to make for Game 4. His plan was
to use Olerud tonight against righthander Tommy Greene and bench
Molitor. "Olerud wiU have a hard
time following what Paul did
tonigh~" Gaston said.
Molitor also made Gaston look
good in the field by starting a difficult 3-6-1 double play in the seventh innins when the Phillies had a
rally startmg. Gaston didn't even
use Olerud as a defensive replacemenL

" I caught one at the right time "

more in the ninth wllen many of the
fans had already left In addition to
Molitor's great effon, Roberto Alamar was 4-for-5 with twO RBis and
two runs scored.
"TheSe gurs have been doing
this all year,' Gaston said. "It's
hard to get through this lineup,
even without the DH."
Despite Toron1o's success in
Game 3, the designated hitter situation has become the focus of the
World Series.
Olerud is the thi-rd batting
chan\p not 10 be in the starting lineup for the World Series, joining
Willie McGee of the 1990 Oakland
A·s and Chick Hafey of the 1931
St Louis Canlinals.
Molitor, who will no_t play third
base in the Series for Ed Sprague
because of a weak throwing ann,
was second to Olerud in AL batting
with a .332 average. He had 22
homers, 11 I RB!s and 211 hits.
hearing and then makes up his Olerud hit .363 and flirted with
mind and illakes it stand.
.400 for several months.
"We don't feel like we're a
weaker ballclub just because any
one guy is sitting. Because Cito
treats us like professionals, nobody
is going to jump ship and say, 'I
should be the one playing.' ''
For all the debare that led up to .
bis selection of Molitor," the manag·
er reaDy had no other choice - for
this ~arne, anyway. He could not sit
Mohtor against a lefty because of a
career .363 mark against south·
paws. And because of-a combination of rust and a bad shoulder,
Molitor can't throw weD enough 10
replace Ed Spra~ue at .third or
Rickey Henderson m left.
Now is the time io be inventive.
· Gaston can play Molitor again at
fii"St base tonight. And he should.
But he won't,

rer imd Joe Carrer liit a sacrifice fly .
Molitor said. ''I was relaxed at rJst
Gaston looked like a genius.
base, though I wasn't coordinated
Molitor hit a home run to left
on a couple of plays . Whatevet leading off !he third and there was
Cito decides, his players are going a sense things were decided. Pat
to make it work."
Hentgen took advantage of the
It seemed everything the Jays . early lead and left after six innings
tried in this game worked to near wilh a 5-1 advantage.
perfection.
"I had plenty of time to get
The Blue Jays scored three runs
in the fJrSt inning after the start of ready," Jackson said of the rain
the game was delayed one hour, 12 delay. "That wasn't the problem I
minures by rain, lalcing an edge off had in !he first illl)ing. I was just
the 62,689 fans at Vererans Stadi- ton strong for some reason." Jack·
um.
son had eight days off since beating
Rickey Henderson led off with a Atlanta 2-1 in Game 4 of the·playsingle against loser Danny Jackson offs.
and Devon Whire walked. Molitor
The Blue Jays blew it open with
foUowed with a triple to right-ceo- three runs in the seventh and two

In World Series history,

Olerud third batting champ to start on bench
ByJIMUTKE
PHILADELPHIA (AP)
Baseball put ltim in a no-win situation and he won anyway. Now Cito
Gaston is about to be reminded of
the terrible burden of success - he
has to do it again.
Only twice in 89 previous
World Series had a reigning batting
champion staned a game on the
bench. And Gaston, the Blue Jays
manager , boldly made it three
when the 90th series made its debut
in this National League town.

!'
l

1

Gaston had no choice . Baseball's shortsighted, now-you-seehim, now-you-don't designaled-hitter decree foreed him to sit one of
the two best batrers in the American League.
Those two would be John
Olerud, who hit a staggering .363
while playing fii"St base for Toron·
to, and Paul Molitor, who hit an
only slightly less-staggering .332
primarily as a designaled hitter.
· After several days of handwringing and several go-rounds of

eenie-meenie-minie-mo, Gaston sat
the .363 hitter. Fonunately for all
involved, the .332 hitter just hap·
pened to go 3-for-4 Tuesday night,
driving in three runs and scoring
three times in the Blue Jays' 10-3
win.

And fortunately for the Jays and
Gaston, Molitor did it swiftly.
Phtladelphia star1er Danny Jackson's 14th piiCh o~ the fJJ"St i~ing
was r?ped by Moht~ for a tnple,
bnngl_ng _home the ftrst two runs.
Two m?1ngs later, he deposited
J~ckson s 43rd ~11Ch over the leftf1eld waH an_d t~to the Toronto
bullpen, vm~tcaung h!s manager,
hts manager s reputation and hiS
own.
"''m glad," Molitor said with
characteristic understatement,
"that !backed up Cito'sdecision."
If that _sUJ;prised ~aston in the
least, he didn t show 11.
"Those guys have been doing
that all year for me," he said. "I
think Oly wiD have a hard time following that act tomorrow."

No doubt
And no doubt the Blue Jays'
sweet-swinging first baseman will
be losing some sleep worrying
about what to do for an encore.
"You just go out and do the
best job you can. That's all I'm
going to be doing," Olerud said
bravely, "trying to hit the ball hard
and see what happens."
Good things better happen _
but not just for Olerud's sake. Gas. ton may have found it uncomfonable buclcing conventional wisdom
the frrst time. After tonight, he'll
have a lot of explaining to do if
he's wrong.
For the little respect he gets out·
side his clubhouse, Gaston has
earned every bit he gets from his
players. And maybe the toughest
part of making this little gambit
come off so smoothly was making
them believe that it was going ·to
unfold exactly the way it did.
"He's that way with us
··always," veteran Dave Stewart
said. ''He listens to everybody
convinces them they've had a fa;;

··r think it's bad"
, Gaston said.
" It's not good for the World
Series...
The Phill!es threatened in the
botiDm off -the ftrSt agains1 Rentgen. Mariano Duncan singled with
one oul and Jo6n Kruk singled to
righl. Caner bobbled the ball for an
error, allowing Kruk 10 rake 8CI:OIId
~r DUIIC81i had ldviiiCed to third.
- Krulc' s ball in the hole would
have been an easier play for Olerud
to handle since he wean his glove
on his righl hand while Molitor had
to make a back-handed auempc.
Hentgen, 13-3 overall on the
road this season, escaped the jam
by striking out Dave lloUins and
Darren Daulton.
""¥~~ether it's Molitor, Olerud
or Sprague, you can't'lose," said
Hentgen, who led the Blue Jays
with 19 victories this season.
"They're three players who are
great offensively and defensively."
Maybe it wasn't such a tough
decision for Gaston after all.

· David Williams missed his
team's game last Sunday at
Foxboro, Mass. because he was
with ltis wife foUowing the birth of
their son the previous evening. The
Oilers said he should have caught a
late flight ·to Boston, and on Tuesdjly they docked him a week's pay
for missing the game.
That check is worth $125,000.

•

"Because he did not play in the
game, he wiD not receive his game
check," the Oilers said in an
unsigned statement. "This however, should not be construed or
reporred as a fine.''
Williams and attorney Leigh
Sreinberg could not be reached for
comment Tuesday night, but Steinberg said Monday he would file a

TRACK CHAMPION - RoCky Blake of ReediYiDe, 1 abadeat at
Eastern Hlgb Sdaool, was tbe 1!193 Four Cylillder Roadbot dlvilloa
lraek daamplon at Vlatoa Raeeway In Vlatoa. Tbe U-year-old
Blake, In •1s lint year, drives a 1!181 Cbevy Cltatloa I R·l ud II
spousorecl by Bnun Road Towlneln Belpre and Blaile's Auto ll4!dY
in Reedsville. Tbe car Is powered br a 2.5 Cbevy four-cylillder with
witb lillie modification. At one pomt Blake woa five festures Ia a
row en route to tbe ebamplonsblp.

(See WILLIAMS on Page 5)

Scorel1oard
- • World Series • •
TUtlld.IJ'tltOrt
.. Toronto 10, Philadclpbit 3; Toronto
w#dl •ca:iCI 2-1

_

Tmfalt,t

· _Toront_o

PlillldolpiUa (

6~:;~omyro

,........,

n

11 -12)

1~).1 , 12p.m .

Taronla (Guanan 14-3) at

phU (SclQ1Iina ·16-7). u 2 p.m.

Ph.iltd~­

.......,.

SltMr*J
Phlladdphil. at Toronto, 1:12 p.m., if

.......,.

Snday, Oct. U
Philaddphia ll Toromo, 1:29 p.m., if

w""'-

10-ToL C111t. Calk. 7-0 ................... "..... 34

Olhen rtcmlna ll or more polnb:
11-franCD.t R011 17. 12 (tic}Cill. Andc:r-aon, Youn11. Austintown FilCh 16. 14-

WOIIOrVilleNonhiS.
Division n
Tum

EASTERN CONFERENCE
AllonlkDI... Iao
Pia. GFGA
10
15
PlilldotpU.I ....•. l I 0 10 ~ 16
N.Y. '""""' .... 4 4 0
8 31 'rl

TUM

WL T

NcwJcnoy ....... 5

rr

oo

Florida .•. ·••••···•• 2 2 3

TUnpiBtJ -······ 2: 3 1

N:Y.IIIoadon... I l 0
Wuhinpn ...... I 6 0

7 20 20

5 15 IS

2 16 26
2 18 36

Norlltaut Dl•lllon
PlttlburJh ..... ... . 5 3 0
10 24 23
8CIItan ....,......... 2 2 3

7 2J

- ··········· 3 3 l
IWtlord ............ 3 • 0

7 22 21
6 23 2!1

~-·· ····-· ··· ·231

!2623
2 23 33
11521

B§ffalo.............. I 6 0
()»awt; .............. 031

19

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Centnl DI•Woa
TW L T Pta. GFGA
T ................... 7 0 0
14 3l ll
SL laW~ --~ ··· ··· · I I 0
I 21 l.S
312
12AI9
.......... .......... 321
72321
Uetroil... ....... .... 2 s 0
4 26 3S
~JO ............ I 4 2
4 l7 24

o.n-.. ..............

Padfk Dl"'-lon
.................... 4 I 2
10 38 ~
Calpty ...... ....... 4 I I
9 21 15

Yancou"' ........ "' 1 o
··········· 2 2 2
Hdmontan ......... 2 4 I
San SCIIII ..........•. 0 S I

-

1 11
6 16
!5 21
I 9

14
19

24

21

5·Bdoit WCit Branch 7·0.......... ......... 191
6-Collunbw Waamon 7-0 ................ 173
7-Vc:nnilicn 7-0 .................................. 131
I-O)'ic7.0...•.... .......•...•..... _............ .. 112
9-M&gt;diom 7-0 .......................,._ ...........41
lO.Bdlewe 7.0 ..................................... 32

Ollttn nulvlnall or more polnll:
11-Colwnbua Eutmoorll. 12 (tie)-Avon
Lake. CaUaa 21. t+Puma Padva 19. 1:5Whiteball· Yearlin&amp; 16. J 6·Holllnd
Sorinlllold 13. 17 (lio).Cin. RoJ,Cr Bocon.
Milloistma W"' Holmco (I) 12.

2--

Dlvlslonm

Twa
I·

Ptl.

y...,. IJdu1inc (l3) 7-0 ..•.... .••...••.374

(I) 7.0.
--327
3-0cmantoWn Valley :View (3) 7·0 ..215
4-Wo-0)7-0 .....•....•••.•..•••..- ...•••213

s.n..-SherWan (1) 1.0.-..111

6-Y~. ~yl-2 ..•.•............... ..1!9
1-HamillooBodin (I) 6-1 .-................140

I-Bellailo6-1 .......................................85

9-TwinlllwJ 011 b catin 6-1 ........... ....74

' "Wittelerilawa 7-1- -:....o..---""'

(tic)-Cin. Counuy Day, Sua~ Ouaw•yiS. 21-&lt;:olwnbilna 14.

- • Transactions • BasebaU
National t..uaue
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS : Named
Jose Cudcnal firlt·bllc coach.

Basketball
National Bukdball A11oclatlon
BOSTON CEI..TICS: Waived Rodney
Monroe, Lamoni Strothcn and Brian
Olivu, pudl.
UfAH JAIL: Signed :Karl Malone,
CCilttaCl extcnlion

forwud, to 1 tw&lt;&gt;-year

lhnoush :m&gt;.

FootbaD
N•llonll FOGibaiiiAaJue

CHICAGO BEARS: Acquired Tim
Worley. running back, from the Pitta~
Sleden for a conditional clnft choice m
1994 md 199~ . Wli\led Dmcn Lewi1,
NMing book.
GREEN BAY PACKERS ' Sianed
Kevin Willianu, rwtnin blclc .
MINNESOTA Vlfc:INOS : Signed
Rory Gravca, offensive tackle. W1ivcd

hel Jenkins, comctb•ck. Added David
Wihon, clefensbJe back, 10 \he pnclice
~quid . Waived Tracy Boyd, guard, fmn
lhe prm;.. "!UOd.
NEW YORK GIANI'S: Pl.aot.d 0corse

Thornton, defen1ive ucklc, on the re·
aerve-DDn--foolball Ulnel• lilt.
PHOENIX CARDINALS: Re-signed
Eric BlounL. runain&amp; back. Wliv.d De111er
D1"lil, dafmai.ve back.
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS , Cloimed
Twy Bpp., dctcnlivc u.c:klc. of! waivm
&amp;om the Atlanta Fdcma.

• Anaheim 4, N.Y. R.m1en 2
Loo ........... 2, FlaDdo 2

OdMn real•'. . 12 Of' ...... polnta:
o....,aon 47. 124Jihcn (2)
4&lt;1. 13-Waftrlr 44. 14-Compbeii'Memoriat 30. lS-Caot.on Cent. c!.th. 25. 16.

s. &amp;o.r.m 4

DlvlsloaiV
r...
""
I·Akmn --(16)7-0 ............. 31!

SHOTGUN
SHELLS &amp;
RIFLE
SHELLS

Olhen rwelwiM U or men DOinll:

II·Pioia City J..,.tlion .W. (2) ~1 . ll-

Non.h Um• Soulh Ranae (3) S9 . 13·
Clulaovillo aa-Muolo (2) 43. 14-Cin.
(I) 36. JS.LIIcanlllo VaiL :U.
I6-Moa1p0llor 17. "t1 (lio)-Boinbridae
Paim V.U.JL Ne.• ~ddletown Sprin&amp;·
fiold "· 19-.......W. Aqoriau ll. 20-

w,......

By Winchester

,.....,....Colh.14.

and
Remington

Dlvllloa V
h.

' T-

t·SL"""' (19) 1-0 ........................ 363

l-Newllt Oolll. (14) 1-0 ··-·-·······-····"'
3-"r"-eld 6-1-"- """''"'"' .........202

•1111 Oolll. (I) 5·2-···-·-....12:2
l--lloalooJ.6-1 ..~-············120
9-CooiiMUo 6-1 ............·-····-····-·······112

1·"

t

IO.Loddawl 7-0 ·--'--········-····-·-··- -'1

oean ncoi!IRIU.,...,. ,.....,

11-Now. ·Pblla. ,........ Cadi. &gt;15. U-

.

.

I

.

Molwal, MIIC4olb 23. 15-~ 2:2. 16
(~o}C....U... Sollduotr
11-.~k

Si. Narr'• 21.

r.ha.e._,. 'n+

:; 20. 19

'

'

t

"I h_ave yet ~ ,hav~ an easy game against an
expans10n team, sa1d Kings goaltender Kelly
Hrudey. "lbey make·you believe they have limited
talent, then they crash the net and shoo~ ••

~O.RMAN MacLEAN .
Nat10nal Basketball Associ·
auon IS more than anxtous to start
playipg again- foUowing an off.
season of shock and tragedy.
·
Michael Jordan's retirement
from the "three-peat" world champion Chicago Bulls- soon after
the 01~r of•his father - .got the
mostilutCntioil.
B!\t .th_ere was a flurry of bad
news off.th(( court, JUSt when the
world's best basltetball circuit
seemed~ be !'~ding high. .
. ·~·,ih1s pomt, the NBA IS ready
and willing to tum to its 48th season, which begins on Friday, Nov.
5. Siarting wi.th an opening night
doubleheader, TNT will sho~ SO
~~ular-season games on nauonal
le.ll'V. The NBAon ~Game
of theWeek"will include two dozen
regular-season relecasts.
. 1~

The off-season woes mcluded nght, J':'orth Amenca. The planned
the ~ of All-Star guard Drazen ex~s101t 10 Toronto and. Vancou·
PetrOVIC of the New Jersey Nets, ver IS set fm- next Yel!f.
who was killed in an auto crash in
The accusations and revelations
Europe.
•
about '• Air'' Jordan' i g~bling
Then there was the sudden death activities away from ~lball had
of Boston Celtic star Reggie Lewis. marred things only- a bil. They
He died of a heart auack in a gym forced NBA commiSSioner David
in July.
• ,. ·
Stem Ill investigate his showcase
Muuni Heat guard ;Brian Shaw player.
.
lost thr~ family members to an
Then, in, early October, Jord!lft
auto accidenL
stunned the sports world by reurRichard Dumas of ll)e Phoenix ing.
Suns was suspended for drug
Th~ ne~t dar. S~em tied. the
abuse,
gamblms mvesugauon up w1th a
And James Jordan was gunned nice bow and said Jordan had been
down on a lonely road in Carolina.
cleared It was over.
His son - the game's biggest
Dream Team II was named
star ever- had helped the NBA to without cenrer. ShaquiUe O'Nea_I,
go global.
the NBA roolcie of the year. H1s
It establishe,d itself as the commercial sponscrl won't let him
fasrest-grilwill£ of the four major play on the U.S. squad 81 tbe World
pro sports in North America. That's . Tournament in Toronto next sum-

'

By RUSTY MII:L~R
on ll _attempts ~scored a touch· win o~er Otta~a-Glandorf;
. A,P,S ports Writer
down 10 a 1~-9 vtell?ry ove{ Se~eca Wauseon s Cory Gnggs compleled
B1U Buschur stole the thunder East; Fostona wan1ts 30th straight SIX of 11 passes for 214 yards and
from' the !lueling tailback$.
regular season game, beating War·, touchdowns covering 33, 31, 15
. TQp-ranked SL Henry was host ren Harding 42-25, as quarrelback and 78 yards- running his season
to N'o;,-4 Delphos St. John's in a Damon Moore rushed for 211 totals to 19 touchdowns and only
meetins· of 'teams witb perfecl yards on 18 canies and also passed five inrerceplions- in a 40-7 vicreeoids Friday.
.
for 76.m~ yards.
.
tory over Evergreen; and q!larter·
In one !=Dl11er w.as Doug Speck,
Le1ps1c's Trevor Schroeder back Nate Meffer and w1deout
who rushed for 221 yards and a caught two touchdown passes and Mike Howe hooked up for touchtouchdown in 28 carries for St. ran for two other scores in a 46-7 downs passes covering 22, 24 and
Henry. He also eompleled his only_ victory over Vanlue; Columbus 15 yards in Toledo Whilmer's 35-7
pass Qf the game, 11 14-yard ~h- South's Dwayne Hanis carried 23 victory over previously unbeaten
down,strike to Tim Neitfcld.
· times for 269 yards and three Oregon Clay.
In tbe other was Ken Kierns, touchdowns IIJ!d p8Ssed for another
Warren Champion is 7..0 for the
who carried 22 times for 193 yards· score in a 36-34 ,victory over first time in history after a 45-0
for'SI• John~s. He also caught a Northland; and David· ~ose of rout bf Brookfield. The Flashes,
pass for 12 yards and returned a Monq,elic:r picked up 258 yards on who have outscored opponents
24 101M and scored on runs of 79, 235·20, ha\le ~· only two Trumlcickoff38 yards.
But Buschur, a SL Henry defen- three and one yards in a 41-13 win bull Athletic Conference titles in
sive back, upstaged .both. He over Delta.
the past 25 years. Not even their
picked off a Sl. John's pass and
Mount Vemon's Matt Buiriey 1970 team : led by Randy
returned il 70 yards In the third broke a scoreless tie late in the Gmdishar, won a champwnship.
quarier for Sl Henry's rma1· touch· third quarter a~ainst Marysville
Ironton had three scoring
down in a 20-14 victory. Then he with a 40-yard mterception return. "drives" of one play and another
intercepted another pass in the fmal Less than three minutes later, he of two plays in a 47-14 victory
seconds to loCk up the win.
seored on an 89-yard run. He also over Belfry (Ky.); Wo?ds~ield,
Elsewhere, Mark ~anson added both extra points - and whose reachers~ on strike, IS .s..o
picked up 302 yards rushmg and totaled 237 yards rushing on 23 but wnry because It_ must play e1ght
scored on runs of 57, 53, 77 and carries - in the Yellow Jackets' games to even qualify for a playoff
one yards in Balti"more Libeny . 21..0 viccory.
SP_Ot; McCom~ remained unbea17n
Union's 57..0 victory over Swnnut
Anthony Olivero~ Akron Buch- w1th a 4~-6 v1~tory over Arcadia,
Station -Licking Heights; Charles · tel bloc;ked two punts, caused two but saw 1~ strmg of c_onsecuu.ve
Woodson scored on runs of two, fumbles, intercepred a pass and had quarters Without allowmg a pomt
22~ Olie, 73, 29 and four yards 14 tackles in a 15·6 victory over end at 22.
.
Centrai-Hower. But -when you talk
New Concord John G!enn ID!CJ"·
rushing 26 times for 237 yards in Fremont Ross' 46-16 v!clo~y about do-everything players, you cepted se~en pas~es, .m~ludmg
over Bedford, Mich.; Madison s mention Larry Walker of Cleveland three by Micah Whirehair, m a 24John Hedges carried 24 times for East Tech. Walker;not only returns 14 victory o~er Philo; Waverly lost
234 yards and scored on runs of27, kicks and plays wide receiver, run· for the fii"St time, 14-7 to Wheelers3S and 63 yards in a 47·30 vic~ry ning back and tig~i end, but at half- burg, _but that was nothing new over Jefferson Area; Jason Lugm· time he takes off hi~ helmet and the Pirares have handed Waverly
buhl gained 21 I yards on 33 carri~ pads and plays IJie "drum in the i~ ftrst loss fi.v~ times in the lasl
in Columbus Grove's 20-0 wm GoldenScarabmarchingband
ntne years: WUiwnspon Westfall
Clyde's Josh Gregg caught.lhree has outscored opponents 25S-52
over Ada.
Alex Eggleston carried 27 tim~ touchdown passes Blld also threw a while. winning seyen in a row; and
for 231 yards and three scores to 60-yard scoring strike plus Ch11ltcothe Hunungton, outscored
-Columbus Walnut Ridg~'s 25-19 blocked two punts and punted 174-19 coming in, upset conferloss to Marion,Frankhn; Troy twice for a ~0-yard average in a ence preseason favorire Piketon 28Piickett or Carey rBf1 for 204 yards · victory over Castalia Margaretta; 13.
Elida's Doug ~pencer scored on a
All three of warren Hard 1·ng's
· I JaiDS • • •
15-yard fumbl~ recovery and a 27- losses have been to unbearen reams
(Continu¢ from Page 4)
- yard interception return in a 23-7 _and 6-0 Canton McKinley is on
"David was with his wife Debi,
to experience ihe joy of seeing Scot
Jr. &amp; Missy
born," the Oiler-statement said.
"Once the birth had occurned and
doctors had assured David that
Debi lind Scot were doing well,
there were aj!proxima~ely .I 7 hours·
until the lcickoff of Sunday's Oilers-Patriots game."
SCOI WIIS bom 816:25 p.m. CDT
Saturday. ·
"At this time, the Oilers clid
exPe!;l David to join his leammates
and eoilches for the game. There
were several connecting flights on
Saturday niglit (after 9 p.m:) that
would h8ve gotten David 10 Boston
in plenty of time for Sunday's
game.
..
h
.
.
"In addiuon, c anenng an atr· ·
craft to "Boston was a possibility.''
Steinberg said Williams tried to
. take a'later .flight to Boston but
could Dot make the arrangements.
Offensive line coach Bob
Young was one o( the more vocal
CJIUn'JfM UYAWA'f..AVAIU&amp;U
Oilers -officials who criticized
Williams:
.
OPEN MONOAY NIGHT·UNTlL 8
·•· S~oot, I had a baby when I
was playing. Ninety pc:rtent of the
guy~ have babies whe~ they're
pla)'JIIg, butlou never miSS J!II!IIC~·
~ wife to1 me she was havmg a
y land I said 'Honey, I've got to
go play a football game."'
The Oiler staremenl emphasized
the club was very sensitive tO the
HO Norlll Seoond
Wil!ifia!s: plight. Debi Will~ms
Ill
Ohio 41710
had a·misCarriage in August1992.
•'This needs 10 be emJ!Ilasized,''

DaUas.

. "•

CaouckJ 5, Bruins 4 - In Vancouver, Pavel
Bure scored twice and added an assist as the Canucla
defeared Boston and broke the Bruins' four:game
unclefeared streak.
Bure, who scored 60 goals last season, gave the
Canucks the lead for good at 2·1 with a brilliant
effort early in the second period. Bure split the
Boston defense pair of all-star Ray Bourque and
newcomer Paul Stanton before slipping a forehand
shot past goalie Jon Casey at !:SO.
Jose Charboimeau, Sergio Momesso and Trevor
linden also sctnd for Vancouver.

- •·

~er 1f he has to promote thetr
nvals.
The NBA also lost a legal fight
against player contracts rigged to
evade the salary cap regulations.
With the pre-season openers in
sight- including a round of inter·
national exhibitions - another
problem arose. Charles Barkley of
the Phoenix Suns coUapsed at practice with numbness in a leg. He
recovered, but cited an old back
ailment and talked of making this
his last year.
Can the NBA survive the loss of
Larry Bird, Magic Johnson and
Michael Jordan in just two seasons?
"We can and we will," says
Stern . "New superstars will
emerge. The NBA is very competitive. Expansion is coming. Participaiion in the world chan\pionships

~nd the Olympics will heighten

mterest. There are still new worlds
out there to conquer."
Meanwhile among those with
their eyes on ~nquering !he postJordan NBA are Phoenix the New
York Knicks the Clevet3nd Cavatiers and the Houston RockeiS. The
Knicks, under head coach Pat
Riley, became the pre-season
favorites of many experts . The
Suns also seemed ready to rise
again.
!n the playoffs last season,
Ch1cago beat New York , 4 games
to 2. for the Eastern Conference
title; and Phoenix, 4-2, for the
NBA title.
As for ~ig NBA stari, there are
plenty commg back.
Karl Malone of Utah, Hakeem
Olajuwon of Houston and Mark
Price of Cleveland joined Barkley

·
p

"
:::.

...
·

···

(as well as Jordan, of course) on
the All-NBA Team at the end of ;
last season Patrick Ewin of Ne ·
York led~ second ream g
w
·
Plus the NBA is welcoming
another crop of ltigh·priced rOO&lt;ies
- includmg Chris Webber of
Golden State, Shawn Bradley of
Philadelphia and Anfemee Hard·
away of Orlando.
Speaking of Orlando, the Shaq
Attack is back.
·
O'Neal really turned out to be a
Magic man.

But wiU the highly publicized
young cenrer ever "be like Mike"?

.

Maybe so. Shaq is the heir
apparent to "Air'' Jordan's most~
lucrative tide - King of Endorse- '
ments.
·'

the sched!lle for this weekend.
Spealcing ~f unde_fe~ted teams,
55 of them suD remam m the state.
But !he losing continues for others:
Bedford Chane! has dropped 44 in
a row, New Lebanon Dixie and
Columbus Mifflin have fallen 30
straight times.
Finally, some food for thought
for traditionalists.
-Perry High School had new
artificial turf instaUed at its home
field before the season began. The

Pirares are 3-1 on the road - but

().3 at home.
-Napoleon's teachers are on
strike so volunreer coaches had to
be b~ught in for last week's game
.

Sports briefs----------:.

FootbaU
LAKE FOREST, Ill. (AP}The Chicago Bears traded two conditional draft choices to the Pittsburgh Steelers for running back
Tim Worley, and larer released run·
ning back Darren Lewis.

•
Worley was suspended the"
entire 1992 season for violating
NFL's subs~BRCC abuse ~!icy. This
year, he played in all SIX Steelers'
games, gaining 33 yards on 10 car.":
ries.
•·

VAUG,HAN'S CARDINAL
ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION

CUSTOMER APPRECIATION
HAYRIDES

CHIC CASUAL PANTS

FRIDAY, OOOBER 22nd and
SATURDAY, OOOBER 23rd 7 P.M. TO 9 P.M.

20% OFF

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against Sylvania North vie-w. :
Napoleon won 25-10, maiChing· in·
one night the ream's win total froni ':·
the rest of the season
·

20%oFF

.

'I'

Hartford ouiShot Toronto 30-23, bu\' Mark Greig
and Andrew Cassels were the only Whalers to beat
Potvin.
Potvin has allowed IS goals in the Leafs' seven
games for a league-leading 2.14 &amp;oals-against aver·
age.
Penguins 3, Islanders l - Pittsburgh jumped to
an early three-goal lead and used Tom Barrasso's
strong goaltcnding to send New York (1-S) to its
worst start in 21 yean.
Larry Murphy scored 30 seconds into the game on
~e Penguins' first s~ot against Tom Draper, and
Pittsb~gh followed w1th goals by KjeU Samuelsson
and Mike Needham before the contest was 11 min·

NBA
heads
into
48t]J,
sel:lson
l!-fter
off-season
~hocks, tragedies
..!IY

'

II

Leafs.

CHIC JEANS

·.

AD-VERTISING DEADLI . E
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER ·2
.

S"o did the Panthers.

Wendel Clark seored twice and Dave Andreychuk, Doug Gilmour, Dave EUeu, Mike Krushelnys·
lei and Glenn Anderson added goals for the Maple

·W"ll.•·

Your ·ad Will Reach O,ver 2q,ooo
··Ho1seholtls In ·Thf Tri·County Areal

.ISON, W~ VA.

Looc- rlt•or Cot•• 4t. 13 (lie)·

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-Thursd•y,:November 11

PICKENS
HARDWARE

"

.

Will Be Published in
l~e Daily Tribune,
Pt. Plea•a•t ~agister and
lhe Daily Sentinel

....__(3)7-0.- .•.•.•.•..•.•••19!

s.w.-.w ml-0 ....,.._.. _.............112
6-llalpllol St.laha'o 6-1 ·--·-·-······t-19

.

G GUI.DB

BU

Donlon c.~e. r.....on~.
WASHtNOTON CAPITALS ' Ao ·
liancd Rick Tabuacci, loWe. to Portland
ofthe American Hockey Leap:.

W'illianwport. WM!.U 2.4. 17-Mc:Ar1hur
Vlalon Count)' :U. 11-Nellonvllle-York
21.19-tlluldlovllloCI.-12

sao '•

,.

NIUonal Hockii!J Leaaue
TAMPA BAY UOIITNINO, Signed

1-B-(1)6-t ·····-····-···············"
9-Codlz 6-1 .·-··-···.................. ······ ........19
IO.W.umJio (I) 6-1 ................_...........71

SL Louil4, Sm JCIIC I

GO
.18.1 8

Hockey

11-Wam~~~

l -Wamnbaoc!Y (1)6-t :................ 19!
6-0rwoU o....nto~~ey (ll 1-0 .......... ,163
1-V....m. (1)6-1 .-.......................... 132

T..,.oo 7, llonlcri 2

.

SAN FllANCISCO 49ERs , Signed
Llrry Kclm, linebacker. W1ivc.d Juon
llilldl, olfauive tackle.
SI!ATI1.Jl SEAHA WKS ' Signed Roy
Bcny,lincboem.

:Z.A......
. ~.() ·-·· -·:..•..........•..........231
3-CAPE 6-1 ......•..........................241
Doljlboo
.... (3) 7-0 ......... .......241

Tuesday's Kores

• PlllobwJh 3, N.Y. Wanclcn 2
Vlftt:tiii.ZVflr

Pta.

I·Foowio (29) 7·0 .•........ ............. ......373
:Z.SL Mayo Manoriol (6) 7-0 ...... .... ..352
:1-t..Wville Cl) 1·0 ·····-····················.266
4-Stalben.Yille (2) 7-0 .. ....................... 261

-*NHL*-

~

I.a... SLlpwl"' (33) 1-0............-.317 ·
:Z.Cin. Prin«&lt;on Cl) 7.0 .....................320
:1-Cin. Moollor (2) 7-0 ........................m
4-Muoillon
l"ll 7-o ........2.50
5-C...Im MoKinloy 6-0 ..............•..... .2113
6-CattaYille (!) 7.0 .......................... .175
7·1!uclid 7.0 ..•...........•....................... 145
I·Moaillon Perry 7-0 ...••........ ............ 113
9-Laaca&amp;t.er 1-0.....................................94

guard.

Maple Lcaf1 7, w•alen 2- The dnbeaten

Leaf•; backed once again by the elceptional goal·
tending of Felix Potvin; belt the visitinc Whalers for
their seventh viccory in a row.

...

ures old.
That's all the offensive support B~ needed
as he turned away 4S shots - ineludinl 24 in the : '
second period -. m an oflt.ll speciiCu1ar perfcxmlace •
at Nassau Colilcwn.
•
Blues 4, Sbarkt 1 - Ciaig Janney seored IWo
goals and Cunil JoseplliiOIIPCCI 38 shots, leadina the
Blues over the winleasShailr:S at San Jose.
The Bfues (4-1-0) SWled the season with three _
straight wins at home until Saturday's 4..() loss at . ·'

Busohur upstages star tailbacks in St. Henry.. St. John's battle

"I'D stick to what I said before
the game ,'' Gaston insisted,
"which is that Paul probably won't
be in the lineup for Game 4 or
Game 5."

grievance and possibly sue if
Williams did not get paid.
Judging from ra!lio call-in
shows, a majority of fans support
Williams.
That, however, didn't deter the
Oilers from withholding his pay·
check.
·

0

Scou MeUanby shoe over the net from cro.e range.

Scholastic sidelight

Oilers dock Williams $125,000 after be attends son's birth
By MICHAEL A. LUTZ
HOUSTON (AP) -Scot Cooper Williams did not enter this world
quietiy. Or cheaply.
Williams, the newborn son of
Houston Oilers starting tackle
David Williams, has caused a controversy in Houston that makes the
bf9uhaha over the ream's 2-4 stan
m~est by comparison.

sail

In other NlD.. action, it was TOI'OIIto 7, Hanford 2:
Piusburgh 3, New York "'"'dm 2: St. Louil4, S•
Jose 1, and Vancouver 5, BOIIon 4.
Mlahty Ducu 4, Rnaers 2 -Terry \'"ake'.s hat
trick and Guy Heben's goaltending led Anaheim to
its ftrst road victory.
Hebert made 40 saves for his ftrSt victory of the
year.
.
Yake scored a power-.Jll!ly ~from jusl Qf! the
left post with 6:21 renuuning 01 the third period to
give Allaheim a 4-21ead.
.
· Rangers goaltender Mike Richter made 33 saves,
but feU 10 0-3..0 as New York lost its ICCOIId ltraiaiU.
Pulhen 2, Klop l - Hrudcy stopped SO shots
by the s!UJ!rlsing Panthers, who in turn held Wayne
GreiZky and the Kings scoreless through the ftna161
minures.
The Panthers shut OUI the NHI,.'s higbeat-scoring
ream after falling behind 2..0 in the ftrSt 3:16.
Hrudey turned back seven of the eight power
plays by !he Panlhen, who failed to capitalize on a 5·
on-3 advantage for 85 seconds lale in the third peri·
od. Alexander Godynyuk's slap shot hit the post, and

f

Peg1

Florida's NHL entries record unbeaten-streak extender, tie
.

By JIM DONAGHY
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Paul
Molitor turned Cito Gaston's difficult deeision into an easy Toronto
viciOry.
The Blue Jays were supposed to
be at a big disadvantage in Game 3
of the World Series on Tuesday
night without a designated hitter.
Gaston, taking a defensive risk,
announced before the game that
Molitor would start at first base
instead of AL batting champion
John Olerud.
A questionable call, but one that
worked out just fme.
Molitor hit a two-run triple in
the ftrSt inning and a solo homer in
the third as the Blue Jays routed the

The Dally SenUneJ

Pomeroy-lllcklleport, Ohio

..

CORNER OF
GENERAL
HARTINGER

AND
PEARL STREET
MIDDLEPORT
992·3471

�.
'Page 6 The DaJIY Sentinel

PoJIIBI'OY-Middleport, Ohio

,,

w~neaclay,

wednesday, OCtober 20, 1993
•

PUMPKINS ·

99~

aS

''Spookta·cular~'
••• PRICES SO GOOD, IT'S SCARY!

PU·RE
SWEET

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BEftiR Quality!
BEftiR Service!
Blni·R Selection!

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SUGAR

Take H~Dae A Big Bear Hug!

Holter birth
announced

· =-"' =-",

[

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Prices IHectlve Thru October 23, 1 993

----

9 a;~;l;ss Top

.

...

..."
..

•

LIMIT 1 WITH
$100R MORE

Michael and Bobbie Holter,
Racine, announce the birth of their
first ~a\lghter Miranda Ariel ·
Holier. Miranda was born on Sept.
5 at .camden Clwk Meniorial Hos·
pita! in P~~ersburg, W.Va. She
weighed seven pounds and 12
punces aile! was 20 inches' long.
Paternal . grandparent~ are
• Charles .William and Linda Rae .
Holter, J{acine. Paternal great- .
grandjllqents are Nathan and Patty
Pickens, Racine. Maternal grand·
mother is Mary Ann Cropper,
Nashville, Tenn. Miranda is also
the niece of'Glenda Dawn Ho!tec.
Racine.
.
.
Milanda·was weleonied home
by her.brother, Kevin Emery, 10,
both grandmothers and an aunt,
Glenda. The home was decorated
with ballOQns. streamers and gifts
by her·aunt: .

TAMAUCK
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WIWCI

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Sold In 5 lb. Bogs · Gov't Inspected
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with the puchase of !lny THREE VOS products.
• Automatic entry into "Golden Savings"
Sweepstakes w1th each mail-in
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SSOO certificates far gold jewelry
• 200 Sealnd Prize Winners...
S25 certificates for gold jewelry
!Mrillllllllo ~lor 11/lltll IS......,. .... far WI

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&lt;/'

SURGEON GENERAL'S
WARNING ,.. Smoking By

Pregnant Women May Result
in Fetal Injury, Premature
Birth, And low Binh Welg~t.

..
WI Raaec we,lhl

to Umtt Ouaitlilll • 'Prloll

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From Our Delicatessen

Country Crock Classic

King Salmon

Cooked Ham

Shedd's Spread

99

Vicky German, daughter of
Howard and Janet German of
Langsville received her Master •s
degree in Biological Sciences for
Ohio University. Vicky, \fho
resides in Atheps, is currently
e'mplqycd .by,. Ohio University
ChilliColhC Bnmcb.
.•

' \

.

I j I

lb .

Ill.

N

Tamani Theiss of the Ohio State
University College of Pharmacy
. reeenUy compJCllll! a five-year col·
lege curriculum, passed the exam
of the Ohio State Board of Pharma·
cy and Is licensed to practice phar·
macy in the State of Ohio.
Pharmacy licenses were award·
ed by Joseph Sabino, Jr., president
of the Stille Boai'd of Pharmacy, at
a ceremony held on Sept. 15 in
Coi!Dnbus.

German receives
masters degree

99

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Theiss receives
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announce the birth of their daugh·
ter Shelby Breanna Johnson on
Sept 25 at Pleasant Valley Hospital .. She weighed eight pounds and
six 'ounces and was 20 112 inches
long.
Maternal grandparents are
Clarence and Virginia Hayman,
Antiquity and pa1emal grandpar·
ents are Douglas and Alma Johnson, Racine.

~

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Robert and Lisa Johnson

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.....

ASST.

Paa•

The Dally Sentinel

-.·

HALLOWEEN

een

. Pomiroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

RIDY 10 CAlVI

PRE

October 20, 1993

or

Deluxe Macaroni &amp;Cheese

Specia

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10 to 11 oz. Size

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'Pomeroy-Middlepo~ Ohio

ii~~~~=========--=~~-~~====·~P~am~M~o~y~U~Id~dl~epo~~Ot~I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~W~~~-~M~--~~Odo~~.1~
Ohio 'University
College·of Osteopathic Medicine

..

Cnll 992-2156

Family
Medicine

BISSELL BUILDERS, IIICo

MoN. thru FRI. 8A M.-SP.M •• SAT.8-12
. POLICIES

CL!)SEL SUNQAY

• R~i¥o dilcou.nt for ad. paid ia ad.-auce,
• F.ru AdJ: C.ivein·ay and Fouad ada uDder 15 word. will be
n;n 3 r.la11 at na charp.
• Pricp dad for aU capltaii!!U.n i.• double pri.:e of ad cO.t
• 1 ,poi•llin:e type ouly \lied
• !'a.tt.ael i.s not rt~~po•ihie for erro"re dler fint day (e~k
{.,f ern~a fir:tt day a.:J nuu ~ ,-per). C.U belprw 2:00p.m •.
cL..r a!ter pal-lie~t.tlOn to ...J~e oorrecdor&amp;
• A-:lr tlvu "''"t M pald·la .~vnee are:

and 12111 rib pair! are not attached
to the b~astbone in this manner.
Ribs, by the way, are numbered
starting with the fii'St pair near the
neck and continuing down to the
12th·sctofribsatlhewaisL
Costochondritis is just a q_uick
way of describing the symP.fOO!s of
painful swollen rib cartilage. It
occurs most often 10 the cartilage
of the second and third ribs either on one or on both sides of
the chest. Ribs move with respiralion, particularly with the deep
breathing of exercise. The ribs also
provide an auachment for some of
the muscles that move the neck and
shoulder. As you might assume
fn?'!' this arran~ement, co~~hon­
drius can tum sunple actiVIties like
talcing a deep brealh or ieaching to
~lrieve a can fro,m the pantry iniO
a difficult and painful experience.
Medical science hasn't determined the cause of this condition,
but .it has ¥iven it an additional
name - T1etze 's Syndrome. The
symptoms usually clear without
treatment in a few months, but that
is a long tilne to wait for pain to go
away. Pain medication, like the
aspirin you have taken, ocher antiinflammatory drugs and heat may
ease the discomfon. There is no
specific medication or treatment
that works best for this problem,
and we have found no treatment
that shortens the length of the illness. Our treatments only make it
more bearable. Talk to your doctor
about an anti-inflammatory medication that is less irritating to the
stQmach than aspirin. I'm sure he
cari help you get relief from the
discomfort while you wait fa- your
body to heal itself from this condilion.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions,
write to John C. Wolr, D.O.,
Ohio University College or Osteopatldc Medicine, Gnllivenor HaD,
AtbeDS, Oblo 45701.

Carol d 'fbaulu

Hoppy Ado

!n l\lllmo.ri.am
~ Yanl Salet
• A dusif'"..d adYtr l~ea~ plaeed in ~ Tbe Daily S.a&amp;btel ·
(e~~:eepl Clar•il'ie~l Dilplay, ~'tainON c.r.l or t.,..1
.
Nuu:;..J wUioloo •ppoa,r In !he Point Plaaut Ropier.;,.,~

• the~..oaiUFoli. Daily TrihWic~ ru.clnnt: over ta,ooa hom1511

New Garages o Repll!lce"*'t Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMEllCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
NI.EE ESTIMATES

614-992·7643

ares lights and pump-- '",.
stolen· $100 Reward. Please
notify the Sheriffs Office in
Meigs
County, Pomeroy,
·,.

Rocky I. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agnt
lox 119

'

OUR NEWEST LOCATION IN MASON, W. YA. IS
OPERA'!l'D BY CHRIS NEAL
2nd Loallllon .,.., Lon Neol

'!f!l~ i;i;i~YL IOW75-3331

"'

·CLUIIIII

. Adcltloiio .
'Gualr Work
.'
~And

·,

October 20, 11188.
$IKIIY mteel!d by
children •

.... ..- ...

., '

,

...,~

992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

r

Specializing In
Automiltlc
Transmission•
·
' ...
368 East Main St.

GOY A. GUINTHER
whO p1111Md away 4
years iigCi'toc:taY,

~roy1 0hlo

SI92-G21

IMH2-IIn

PLUMBING,
HEATING&amp; ·
COOLING

•$ACK ....,......n

EIC_AVAnNI

Sale
, &amp; Au,:tlon

ONE-t:ET.ONE

QUALITY WORK
&amp;GOODR~TES

(614)
667·6621

DAVID ARNOLD
992-7474

Valleydale

Red Delicious

.Bacon

--AppleS

Located In Eastern Meigs 'county. 1 to 5
............ tracts avll!llable. Tuppers Plains &amp;
•-•• 11 .... wist tl Atltals, OW.. '"• US SO &amp; 32
I wa11l 'II ltHa.i ..oltlo -~ 1111 lilt 50 Will ltWU Cht~ter water electric available, on site
tanks &amp; roads to each lot
IMcAI'IIIIr. Aldlllls.,.r• of .k
Sftls posttd.
approved. Partially wood with rolling
Owl of stile dttcb ,....., aiMM lott«.
bocluloww w.-.oiM; ,.., btckdow• w.-,toiNd hillI.
From $5,000 up
I ~~:·~·1: atiiiHt; ~~t-.llkt ... *"sws"w/lllnwt;
I'
itlssl• 11k laltlt Hd coiiiiiiHII11;
, • •JIIIIl ... HG'IIailos; ... I.-kills tlosk li\111 .. lto4
ICIAH
ckilla atltillets; "I« 3S7 ltl...k... pistol
lw/1111. box; WiiiGullf' 32 plstai;.W. ..-tlflcts; clocks;

•.left.

a::. . .

Call Gene Riggs '85·3594

al••

1-tlts; reHVIt 1111 waller pottery; pti•KII si,.H lty
FROZEN, FREEZER PLEEZER

Banana
Pops

ei!J9yed • ride Friday llftei'IIOOII durln1 the Big Bead Stemwbeel
.Repltll 011 the P.A. DeDIIy. For mOlt ol tbeae lltudenl8 tbl8 was a
.lltlt eter ride 011 the Ohio River Stemwlteeler.
·

Sleepy Hollow located down by
the Page Street marina in MiddlepOrt will COfi\C alive for Halloween.
· Plans are being made by
'Feeney-Bennett Post 128, its Auxiliary and MiddleJ?On village for
another commumty Halloween
pany thete. It has been scheduled
forOcL 28.
Again this year the main feat=
will be haunted hayrides through
the forest where eight scenes are
being created. Bob Gilmore, chairman . promises a thrill a minute
from the stations which have been
electrified for sound effects, black
light, spotlight, and animatell
spooks, "Even Jason and his chainsaw will make an appearance." said
Gilmore.
.
·The hay wagons will move out
at 6 p.m . with the residents of
Ov~ Center leading the way
throuah the woodl.,There will be
four wagolls pulled by .tractors
operating all evening to avoid
lengthy delaYI for the trip .through
Sleepy Hollow. .
· Pllns call fa- each person arriv-

ing at the sire walking or in a car to
be given a ticket which entitles him
or her to one wagon ride. The wagons will' be loaded at the top of the
hiU. A legionnaire will be on each
wagon.
Sponsors for the stations are
Vaughan's Cardinal, People's
Bank, Farmers Bank, McClure's
Dairy Isle, and the Sons of the
American Legion.
Since trick or treat will be taking place throughout the area on
the same ni~ht, costume judging at
the .commuruty pany will not occur
utili! about 7:30 p.m. The judging
will be held by the Auxiliary in the
ligh'CC! area at the lOp of the hill.
Troph1es will be awarded to the
winners in sevemt calegories
. There will be. free hotdoks and
c1der and donuts provided by the
Legion and served around a large
bonflfC.
Gilmore ex~sed appreciation
to the ~any volunteers who are
involved in staging the community
party.

: .Officers elected for Eastern Star
New ofi"JCen were elec:ted at the
recent meerlng of Harrisonville
_ t:lt~Peer, Order of"the Easrcm sw,
· • IJeld at tile Malonic •Temple.
':. Plullae Alkint. wortliy llwron llld
' RobeR Reocl. worthy palrOII, ~
. . lidlu II the 1111!1Poo1
· •
Sleeted were Betty Bi1hop,
• ' wOdlty IUIIOit; D!'!1 Bilhop. wor• lhy Jllln1il; ·Grice w~ aaociatc
. : inatrcln; ·Larry Well, 111ociate
· p~q~~~~; Clint Mite Hytell, COildilc·
~Pit Arnold, IIJOCi•te conduc·
lieu -lad Jornke Hoffman, new

lru$1Cc.

The paster matrons and pattons
were welcomed.
The sunshine collection was
taken by Dana Hoffman and Darlene CosiO and a get wcll can! was
signed for Ruby Difld, ~ J_lllientlll
Ovedlrook Center in.MidciiCJIM.
The table blessing was giVen by
Harold Rice before the group
entered the dining area whm they
we~ served ~freshments by Joe
and Janet Bolin, Jim and Donna
Nelson and Larry and 1udy Well.

12-CT.--

. KROGER

KIJOGER ,

Buttercrust

,.

BUYONE-t:ET ONE

2o-oz.

BUYONE-t:E'I'ONE

,.

:r-s: c.lt « dtaclt w/posltl¥1 ID.

Old of slate ct.,ckt nted b.. lotttr. Food av._altl._
Hll .............., . ,..tr.... .

MUffinS

"

'

-r tllllisttd it.,, Stt F.U ad ill Od.

liAatiqHW.O.

Engli~h

·Bread

'

laJ~~t Ollis; 1141

AldloiHJ Mark Hlfdlinson 614·698-6706
l..lmsecl and Bollded Ia o•lo

6-CT.

llsltless Parlier Frank

BUY
ONE..f:ET·ONE
.
'•

can BENNEn'S MOBILE HOME
HEAnNG AID COOLING

446-1411 or Toll F-1-IQO.I72-51167

PHONE
INST4LLATION
Jacka Installed
ExtBnslons run to
Dlff•ent Rooms and

EXCAVATING ·

BUllDOZING
PONDS

LAND CLEARING

HAULING
LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL, TOPSOIL
&amp; COAL

Outside Buildings

Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

FrH Estllllliltls

SAYRE TRUCKING

CQUNTRYSIDE
CERAMics ·
RACINE, OHIO

Now Open with
Classes Now
Available.
Morning • Evening

CiaPI-• Call for Detallo
114114086

WATER I
SEWERUNES
BASEMENTS•

· HowriL Wtitesel

NEW-REPAIR

GENEUL
HAULING
Limestone

Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning

P•intlng

FREE ESTIMATES
3-16-93-lfn

7n/1roo.

REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING

-FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992·2269

61

BISSELL

CONSTIUCnON
-New Homes
-Garages
-complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

FREE ESTIMATES

915·4473

992-7011.,
912·5551
ar IOU fill

, ...,...41·0070
DIIWII, OliO
7131/9Mfn

12-30-92-lfn

EVERY THURSDAY

WATER
HAULING

EAGLES

1625 Gallons

BINGO

.
O.FFlCE
. 992:-2886. ..

R~IERT

mo. pel

PARIS

USED RAILROAD TIES

.

1112113/1

••

7rl21113

IIW I IISit NIU FOI .
All lUlU IIIOHU

TRIM a•lll

II

614·915-4110

Frame Repair

SHRUB &amp; TREE

CERTIFIED MECHANIC
OUTBOARD MOTOR s3re
. INIOARD/OUTBOARDsaoWINTER'STORAGE AYAIWLE

HAVE REFERENCES

. WHALEY'S AUTO
Specializing In Custom

JION SPECIALS

FREE ESTIMATES
T•ke the pain out of
painting. Let me do II
for you.
VERY REASONABLE

Gutters

949·2168

Dirt
Gravel
992-7878

LINDA'S
PAINTING
tmRIOR

ROOFING ·

1tw.93

Real Estate General

•

•

.-.oomo. .

.

45 .Iiles l!l~f of Cli~tothe

5-LB: BAG, GOLDEN OR

aaliafied · .;,
ee_::;~tochn;;lclll~n•:onii:i,Job~·j
customers

614-742·2138

oa:24at
Pht,riew 8:30 ci~., Alliciy,

1-,LB. PKG., SLICED

Bany, Ownerfllm Faulk, Manager

SEPTIC SYSTEMS

D•.A. 1051011:
8

20 years of

OUFumoe•

Galllpolla, Oh.

. •TRUCi&lt;ING

~

BUY ONE-GET ONE

Sleepy Hollow slated for party

r·•-

'

V.~. YQUNG,' Ill

•

THE P.A. DENNY • Pomeroy Elemeatary ltudenll

'I.

Plumbing

IEXIarlof ·

ro.JnUna ·

24Hour
Emergency S.Vice

11?-lna Mlllllle.

. (~ El'!lii"TI!Jl

..'1 ..... ..............

_

. . . . --with

FURNACES

and_o- of lleli14 County
holding' momborahlp
oer11ftcotaa, for at IMiol 15
daye baforo tho date 111

&amp;AUTO

WV013372
We apeclaUa In:
RRE.WATER
DAMAGE
RESTORAT1()N.
INSURANCE CLAIMS

Mobile end DoublaWJcla owners...

yra.

l~ .~~ryof

Mltl.leport, Olllo 45.760
(614) 143-5264

304-nwm

Meatball &amp; Philly Steak S~
. H .ree Bag ol Chipl &amp; 1 F~
Drink whh purcha!Je of $lb. .·
•

:

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fl" • Hulth •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mo~age

js I)OW offering

~ ·J.

~~ ~

ACCIDENT INSUUICE COMPANY .•

S~ Cove Rd. Also two

Dominos Pizza

Tho Annuli otectlon oltho
. ) 1.
Malgo County Agricultural
llem!1ero of the tocllly
Society BCiard of Dlrooloro
declare their
oholl · .ba hold at · tho
tar lhe oftloe of
Secro.taryt Olllao on .,. lair .
!JJ.~ty. by
grounde NoliOnlber' tho tJrat
s.cr.iory ot
nln~ten hundnd •nd nlnty• patlllon
thr.e. Poua; !!Will be «~pen
or
bolw•• S p.m:.to 8 p.m. Cln
the uy of liM election.
Tht uld aloctlc:in oholl be
by biiiCIL Bolloia muat to.
marked wllh In·· ~ oppoelte
tho .,.mo·of •oh candldote
votod far: atherwlte the
nama will ilot•bo counlod.
Tho caellng ot vo'teo -lor
dlnctora by proxlee It not
lobo ,.mhtod. '
Drily !'"ldlnia 11

~~~~~~~~------~

W. have • Imp otaok ol-al nome brend lirM and
II we don't hoWl, we C... gotiL ·

election; m•v vote.

.

~-~----~--~------~ ~

ttie arrest and ~ion
persOn or persona
burned my mobile home on

'

.....

~

$2,000 ··

~VYI'\t1U

Chester, Oh. 45720
985-3406

2112192/tfn

Public Notice

'

CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REP~R
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
36358 SR 7 .

(No S.MIIy Calla)

GET USIJi..TS • .fAST!
Public Notice
.

.

New Homea.oVInyl Siding

• Ad. Oo.J\1~ the C.OW'lly ·your ad nma auat be ~repaid

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

· Question:
having a rmible
tiine with chest pain. My doctor
says I haw oostochondritis, and he
has recommended that I take
aspirin. It helps my pain, but it
huns my stomach enou~h that I
can't continue to take 11. Wbat
causes costochondritis and what
Cljll I do for it since I can't take
aspirin?
-Answer: Chest pain is a commoo symptom. Most males think
they ~ having a heart problem
when they frrst experience chest
pain, and most females think they
luive bmlst cane~. These are nor!11)11 reactions since these· conditi0ns are common and serious. For- ·
t~nately, CC?St~hondritis isn't a
life-threarcnutg illness as are bean
disease and cancer. However, it
sure can make yoo mighty uncomfortable.
: Our ribs are an important part of
tie human body. They fonn a proteclive cage around the vital organs
within the chesL In addition to their
protective role, the ribs also mu5t
move - sort of like the sides of a
bellows - to help force air
into,and out of the lungs. Accomrriodating these 1wo role~ poses
some mechanical' dilemmas. The
best protective rib cage would be
rigid, while the best "bellows"
action requires movement. Crea1!1feS with a b9ny skeleton, includ' ilig humans, solve this problem in a
similar way.
- Ribs are rigid .because they are
bOne, and this rigidity provides an
excelleot prorcctive cage as well as
a flflll saucture for the auachment
of muscles. Each rib is attached to
the vertebra of tile backbone with a
type of joint thai allows a gliding
mption. The situation is a little dif·
ferent in the front of the chest
w~ most ribs are attached to the
b~tbone with a section of llexi- .
bie cartilage thai bends to accommodarc rib motion instead of gliding as mostjoints·do. Only the lith

rroplace an ad

CLUB
iN POMEROY

•50 ,., .....

POMEROY_
HOME REPAIR
All types of
Carpentry,
Plumbing,
Electric, etc.
10% Dioscount

Senior Cltlzena

742-2443
104-1-pd.

TREE TRIMMING

Call
Ralp. At

6:45p.m.

Special Early Bird
$100 Payoft
This ad .good for 1

742·2904

FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-342
11124fol2/ifn

MiddlePCif'l, OH ·
IINERIVIL.l.E· The 'worf!e o8 don. ltllhio 3 bedroom ono
both hoine with all no1N wiring, roof, full*t, lniUiallon and
hot w.ter lanldAalol yoior appolnlrnilnt laday.
$31,000
EAGLE R~:dl::'t. Approx. 7 acroe of ~acant ground;
MOet le 110
'
• groot building llill. Woler and
d:~\~~~~la. Owner will finance with a roo~
.10,ICIO '

•

l

RAC%1!· Family needed tpr lhle 1 1/2 etory, 3-.t bodiDOift
· ~ with • pon:hot. 112 ba-~ clnlng 10om,. family
room and • ornll outbuilding. Good lliDd lot: .
-.

lb.
U.S. C:RADE A, KROGER
(4· 7-LB.A ~'G.I FRESH

KING SI?E, WHITE

.Turkey
Breast

Heiner's
_Bread
.

. THIS IS NOT A BUY ONE' CET ONE FREE ITEM

..

.

'

CAFFEINE FREE DIET'PEPSI,
DIET P~PSI, M()UNTAIN
DEW OR

Pepsi

·cola .
• THIS IS NOT A' BUY ONI!CIT ONI FRI!E ITIM

: wu·-.spo ·

!If-...

WU' .11,0!111 ' . "

I

'

..

. .

'

~Y·

'

NOW •tii,!IDII

•

Btld1 St!Mt·ln town· A cull and oozy homo
- poNililo 2 bod10om1, oleo Z ~thr, bolutlful dack,
oelling IWie. W0111d boa great ronllil or atarter homo.
.
'
. .~~.000'

. ,.

.

aiDOLEPoAr, PoWOII St· Acroogo- Salting on tha edge of
tilwli ooukl ba lho apot vou'ro ·looking "r. City wat.r 111d
• ~ g avlllloble. U10aoroo 'anci~0.1. . oelfilght=

......_____

....
-Mr-----1111

'
oonw ~ ..,...,.
.l .;.......~............................ . .
.... _._.,......... ,._
'

~.,

FOR YOU

NOW. aa~

, TRAii.ER -OHLY· A 1.981 2 bodroolll 14X80 1110b!1e honio
. wlit; ' ~ 1n111latlor\, ~INcl dining room, ua'11eii tub,'ahll
. okvllalil; PIUtiOII

11t1CY IUTCHIR-----"'"--.:..
,._.., lfiRADLIHO------'"'--J ~) _ _...

'o .,.CI._.;:,__ •••• ..:.-MA!'-:--~J.'..-:o;_.:.-...-.1111111

TO BUY
JUNK
CARS
..
&amp;. TRUCKS

oSolid VinyllnsulatedRell~C1111lent Windows
oUfetme Warranty
o(&gt;uera"'eed Installation in 3
vt'ielca from Date Of Purcha..

.....

',',\'1 !II' Tll
'r ( ' 1\

) I'

ol

r1~J

·i ! I rJ \ 1 I iI I l '-..,

Aiy Condition
6-14-992·7553

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

GUN SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY
AT 1 P.M.
RACINE GUN CLUB
Factory Cl!oke,
12glllltOIIy.

Begl•nitg Oct. 3

tn011c

7fT,

EAGLE

LANES

(Former Maaon Lanes)

3nl and P-.y Sl11tts

•-.wv
13041 773·5515
WINTER HOURS

sun.·Tlali'L 4-to pm

BUI'anra

ofRavenawood
•nndui'ICN

SERVIa

Richard Moore

hae joined our abttf.
Richard como tO ua
~h 12yr..
axpetl-.at

Pomeroy Home a
Auto a{!d C¥ AutQ
Come VIlli Ue.

.. I
!

Fri. &amp; Set., 4 pm-?
Nl1tr,.q,.,,.,lllll ...... ,.

.
..
....

36970 W R• Road
PO!IIII'OJ, Ohio

.,

GRAVEl, SAND,
liMESTONE, TOP SOIL
&amp; FILL DIRT

992·3470

.-

...

"••

�P.omeroy-Middleport, Ohio

10-The Dally Sentinel

Page

BEATTIE BLVD,tM by Bruce Beatlie

Wecineaday,

3 Announc:ementa

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _......;.P.;;.;omeroy...;...~~M,I"'!dtlle=!po:::irt,::O:::h:::lo====,
The Dally Sentinel Pea• 11
;-Wi'.edi'n'ii~e:;:ll~darty,nbct:Po_be_r20_;.'1_993
.:::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::=::::=- ...·
•

...

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by La.:i-y Wright

Apartment
tor Rant

20, 11Kt'l
•

...................... _

'

? •

~

NEA Crouword Puzzle

'

.

~~=a...- ,oao..
.

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

UIIne

5 Give up
8 Calli., llftlne
tiHIInltlon

National

Park

13 laMballor
Nobln 14 ClUb -

=.-e..-;~
~'''!.C:.::
Coli--.

In Chrtol Cllrlolllll

a.-

I'IORTH

Poolnon.

NOriCioNO h~ wHI

1onc1 on leh • - pr
Dlllrlcl, At. sa

+8 s

bo ...

-..o

ofllencllr.oti.AI'IyOMtN~I I
~ wll M PI DMCL1M.
mbo

!IIIWifl.

usummer''
18 SelfrH

20 Graucutter

EAST

REDUCE; Burn oH '"' whllo jOU
· Tolre OPAL, ovalloblo at

Fruth-ey.
Talk Uve To A AMI Glftad
Payohlc
5440, Ext.
4517. h.lll Por llln. llull a. 11
Yra. Procall Co.102-e54-lUO.

Q IOV

,....21.

+KI

221c1a. Ume
23 Tille of

+8542

24W-1
271!w.,...Ung
31 Ol10m1

•uat
+J3 2

K8&amp;5

reepoct

SOUTH

32 Low l1lando
33 Actroao -

.Jl012
+1074

C181rt

34 Egg drink

+AJS

351nllance

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: West

,.

Weat

BARNEY .
WHAR'S SNUFFY?
WE HAD A
CHECKER
MATCH AT
THREE !I

z+

Pus

Nor"

Eut

••

All pus

Obi.

37 AutiiOr -

Cllclwlll

38 Encounltn
40 N.Uweol
(111111.)
41 YellOw ocho&lt;
42P-'eonala
45 Svmboll
48 Uke (eull.)
50 Sand IIIII
52 Com Mly
53Hokll
Hlaion

54

Singer JIIMI

55 Gu.lt
5I SauH Marie
57 Sly, lldllong
look
5I Lola and Iota

poerotl

+J 10 z

Sow"

15 Dry
1e Try to

perauldo
17 Fr.nch lor

.AKQH
t AQI
+K7&amp;

EEK ANi&gt; MEEK

r 'tJ,

· ·11·11

.

__..... ,........ ........

38Sinpr-

1 Willie

12 -

-

.-·.

prtHnt In I
region

5 Pleco..nnv
6 Bronll heroIna Jano-

DOWN
1 RUMian ruler

7 - H•mmar·

2 Ireland
3 Labor

lkjold

8 Foeo
II Small duck

4 ConatanUr

lalftonent

11JU-In
Gonn.ny
1Q P- Gynt'o
IIIOihlr
21 Hockey great
lloblly-

23 Eye lnlectlon
24 Region

25 Aroma

26T27F:=:.
28 Eg,u..t

Pus

.._

Opening lead: + A

HE SET HIS

10 Lawlall enter·

211 Dillllld

30 llelghllorol
VIetnam
32 Wllklnt tUCk •
35 Fortr38 Orchlllra
Olilllllllr
38 loclrMINovak
38 Plloylng

ALARM CLOCK
FER THREE

They read you
.ike a book

-

By Phillip Alder

41 Daub

PEANUTS
I THINK SOUNDS ARE
INTERE5TIN6, DON'T YOU?

WJ.lAT /5
'(OUR FAVORiTE
SOUND?

42 hllto hit
All top declaren have antennae
43
Step- -I
tuned .lor the faintest vibration thai
44 Olllrtbtoto
reveals infonnatioo about your band
45 GraniC!, In
when you are defendlllfl. Sometimes it
ho&lt;lldrl
isn't a mannerism that gives you
46 Montreal
HUplllyar
away, but the lead you make or the
47 Appearance
card you play. In today's deal, lhe
46 Prooarbl
donesian eipert Ferdy Waluyan
•' KLUNK"? 'I'ES,
51 SouiiiWHI·
played as if be could see through the
·ern Indian
''KLUNK" /S A
backs of the cards.
VER't' /NTEREST/N6
West's band is too Sti'OIIfl - and unSOUND ..
~~~~~~ lor a weak two-bid. If you
open a weak two with a void, it
I won't be any too 1000.
~::;::!::::~!"!'
West led the spade ace and another
CELEBRITY CIPHER
c.brlty ~ cryptogrwna . . ~tid ffom quot8tlonl by~ peqlll, PMt and ~.
spade to East's king. Back came a
e.::tl IMf•ln thll dpfMr Nndllot MOther. TDdfiYI Clue: W..,.,.,. II_
trump, West discarding a spade. Wa·
iuyan woo trick three in the dummy,
' TKIXSOA
OAYDHF
S F
B
played a low heart to his band and fi·
l ____....;;~~ .:ceufully.
nesaed dummy's diamond queen sucYDKE
HRODHE
VKAUDFF .
E R C
Now he cashed three more
rounds of hearts and lhe diamond ace,
U I 0
Z BY D
URNTDNF
ARSOA
bringing everyone down to four cards.
The dummy was left with the diamond
PKAW
E R C K
Z DB L
XA
E R C K
AS A BVI lmVE/l •••
nine and K·7·6 of clubs. South bad the
spade jack and the A-J-3 of clubs. West
AITtl&gt; AL,_ I&gt; AY
V D 0 . '
KSUZBKL
VKSUO .
retained the spade queen and the Q-10PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Mel Brooks has made me laugh as much as any
9 of clubs.
human being can make another penon laugh." - Ca~ Reiner.
FO' A "B\J5 STOP"
Waiuyan played a club to bis ace
and eiited with lbe spade jack, disWOlD
IJGN TO
carding dummY's last diamond. West
UMI
was forced to lead away from his club
CtMN6t iO
- . . ~y C\AY I . 'OILAN
queen into declarer's split tenace: K·7
"Bv5 GO".
Rtorrana• letters of the
in the df11!1111y opposite J-3 in band.
four JCrombled wotds be- .
Wby did Waftiyu play tbla 108y,
low to form fo\l r word1.
rather than talt:e a simple club fi.
nesse? Because of West's opening
lead. To lead the ace from A-Q wu
ME R T H I
dangerous. Waluyan felt that West
r"
must have bad even more unattractive
OE~TO
holdings in the minor suits, wbich
meant
be bad the diamood king and
~t&amp; T1ID\
club queen.
ESOEB
OOlolt-1 loliTI\
3
There was no interference on that
P!.EIU't Of

1

72 Trucks for Sale ..
1m - "'- .._, taoo.··
11WQ.1112, CIII.Aftor I fiJI.
:

FRANK AND ERNEST

-

Chovr CIS b, 1 1011,
dully.
atiO ......... good ·)
tru&amp; 1044'11-'1217..

:.....::::....._..J

·

tl~

w

Pt. Pleasant

· '~~~:~' s«:~cillA-~t.trs·

&amp; VIcinity
Huga garago aalo. Rain or
ohlno. Nice olllhlng, bop
G - IAvl'o, IICIIIIo, drapoo,

home lntlf'l« picture frlimH,
rowing mach/no mloc. Soncfp
Halahla, tallow olg.il, Thur. Ocl.
21,1:30-4:00,.

-Hondo·CR 250 R, . _ .,•

Porch BaJa: 2217 N, lloln St., FrJ.

- ·-......

1

1-10,

0

:

75 Boats &amp; Motors
tOr Sale

sat-sun, to:QO.I:OO, "'""""""
.......
....... IUictwllf'M'III.

-

L_.:::::::::__::::=::::=:.J

~llNte LOST ~15 JOB

./

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

r"

rll'. ~8UI6 f... /IIIU&gt; I&gt;IUR~C. ...

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

~

mE. TWO A. I».Y

311ttoo a- Tho o.m On Rt. 7,
Oct- 2111,· 22nd, FumNuro,
Clothing, Cooto,llloc.

II

I

W~TER

Amnoo. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.
tho daJ loa!Dro tho ad lo lo run.
'""""' adltlon • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday adMion • 2:00
p.m. Soturday.
L _ ___;:s.:~--.:::::.........J

&amp;Auction

-ion
........ Llcm:=.·-~·~
Paaraon Auo1lon Cornpony,
full 111M I' trail llMf, ooniple(e

Musical

Instruments

eom...,.y 23

Pmgroa '" L.ocot
-.ng An lncliVtdUII With Four
Moount!ftg Dagroa. lluot
bpootonoo. Eacolonl
llanaflo. Col--ion c-~~ Wlh Exparionco.
land lloourna To: CLA 210, c/o
Galii&gt;OIIo Dally Tribuna, 8:11

9

v-

DNonllld llonewa,.., WIIH t ....
. , - , old . lom~okl thoro
_ . . . , old
onllquo

AMoan, .....,.

tumMura.

RUlli
2521. WI bUy 1111100.

tquoo.

114412·

78

1:#. -ton. sao.

Protaaalonal

SeiVIceS

J l D'o Auto Porta a n d - aiOI """"" Jv,. ... l trucfio.

-m:a4:1.

Wllnlad To luy: Junk Autoo
With Or Wllhool llotoro. Col
Latry Uvoly. IM 3U 1301.

·-·

Wllnlad To Ivy: Bloop~ ~
ber • Pine, Good
•

Paid: All Old U.S.

C01n1, Gold Alna- C...
Qokl Colno. II.U. Colli &amp;loop,

111 -A-,GaJIIpallo.

A~.

c-

"""""'· llWIUMa.

&amp; Ltve&lt;;tock
1 \ 1 1 - - odVorllolng In
thlo
"''bjod to
tho .._.. Fllr Housing Ad
a4 1968- ...... lllagol

._.,Is

1rame. lr10rcl ap 1die ' lrltanloa
-~-Coaloaopn.

POUE . IUILIIINQ

304-e7WII7.
Ralnbaw lo F

-·-naJton

IPICIAL

:10'•4G'I'. , _... GIIYofurna Roof,
1 _2 YHN Old, ....
..... . ~ llori'
bc:elllnl Col\ciMoon, , _ , ..
....... EREl:Tio.
"""
7141 """' • P.M.
U210411.

t o - ·onj pn~faronoe,

based on n101, color, ralglon,
sax famllll atatua or nauon11
~. "'..,-~ton to

Roallotlccorlll--~

~~., 11M - · 145. •

make l1t'f ~ proforance,

imlllllon "' lloafllllnlllon.•

Rod-.!: ......~Tau

"""""t

llnowlngly
a&lt;MKIIHmlnlafor raaJ alate
whk:hlo In violation altho
low. Our-~~- hol'llby

•

.

'

IIMk. wndtnw

ruth

"5"•

C8llll

(Nnlll ...,._ olaCiolng).

~

::':ir.':l!:J;

. . avallbleanMequal

apporlunty-

11'xl

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illlfL :

r

'

SNVICCS

,.,.•

"":"--~-~::..,...~

,.

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1

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:.

Improvements
IIAIIIIENT
WATERPIIOOAIIGI

·---·
,ft.. ,_, unoDI&amp;
d"l ,,...
-· ._..,..
-~ , .

ond w Umouoln, MilO - ·
114-MIJ.J4U.
:;.:..:.::::.:.:::;...,...,__--,,....,_
...
And
For..,
lola,
IllApril
4411011. ' lullo

1

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,:w ..... ::
=·If!:'

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of 1tH .Co.
Orlncl
Chorntllon "-· llltody
Hilt llalno'a,fOW7M171.

~:;z-.22? ~..z..Z.z.z:.

~.

Door.

·- BJoc-llalfti.AnJou Club-·

-·--

•.-.,...,.

~

,63,...,..,.,;.;;U.:..,v..,•_,at_a....,-c,..k,....,_..

Plan.-·ind ~ -

lim 8out11olllo:!-

• iJIO

au..._,._

••-po

-W11tor ' Plllo. A-blo

Thlo OOWIJ'- wll not

lnlormod lhlf .. .a

61 ·Fann Equipment

•
lllllr ·
...........,... CA:::tt,.:'
"""
-=·1::=
' .. 11 . ... . _ , option,
,'''

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too. !.ocol ro- , . luoo.,Wd.
Cell ,....,...,.,.. Or - 0411 " - ......,....,......
illllflhel1fll. _, .

~ -' ~

~iiTRO-GRAPB

• ·••• ANi.

-,

up a broken romance? The Astra -Graph

Matchmaker can help you to understand
' · what to do to make the relationship wort&lt; .
Ma il $2 and a long, self-addre&amp;sed,
stamped envelope to Matchmaker, P.O.
BERNICE
Box 4465, l'olew Vorl&lt;, N.Y. 10163,
BEDE OSOL
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Rewards will
to you today in direct proportion IO
this will occur. To succBed you must first
the olforts you expend: Don't expect big
have
purpow and focus.
returns il you're JUSI skating through and
QEMINI
(May 21 -Juno 20) Discussions
truSling to luck.
.
with
friends
could prove enlightening today ,
·SAQITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) You
but don't lock yoursell into a business or ·
dOn't have to dO something big and expen·
flnanoiat deal wi111oul additional investiga- ,
sivo today In order lo lei a loved one knOW
1
how much you care. Small, thoughrtul gas- tion.
luret win dO lhe jOb better.
, • CANCI!R (June 21.July 22) Evon though
Tltureday, Oat. 21 ' 1tt3
CAPRICOI'IN (Dec. 22-Jan. It) When you•oe likely to gat a strong start today, yau .
operating In concert with another today , could qlllckly become disinterested with I
your endeavor as you go along. Therefore,
Education and teeming will come easter in don't1ake a greater share of the glory . you onlght not linlah what you stan.
1118 yur aheitd II yotJ study things lor which : Accolades and rewards lor a joint e~ort LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Occasionally we ·
you hay• on immadlate use. Expanding sllOUkf be equal.
can dO a liltle harmless exaggerating and , .
your kn6Niec~ge ~ wm not only be per· AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-FIIo. 18) Make decl·
nothing
Comes o1 it Today, hoWever, a lack '
..,...NY aralllylng, II 'could prove profitabta siona today predicated upon reality and of candor with co-workers could lead to ·
existing facts . Blue sky, reaaonlng could
as
serious cooi,pttcations.
)mpair
your judgmenta(ld lead you astray.
UBIIA (Bepl, '23.0cl. 23) When dealing ·
VIRGO (Aug. 23 8apl. 22) Small financial '
Wfth'iolhtoll tod.iiy, do no1 t?ehave in a supe· PISCES (Feb. 20-Uan:h 20) Avoid incllna• delllnga are likely to be competently hanrloror condescending manner. You're on lions today to franalorm l!'fllll ~lflleultits
died by you Ieday, but s~uatlona involving
lihaky grti,Und II) tltli area lll!l you could trip j Into aomething larger and harder. Use your lafgar ltakes 4!11ght be ·mtsrnanagaq. Don,
splendid lt!laglnattOn in poallive ways.
liv8f your own oohoeltringa. Trying to pelch

come

'"" .. ..., lllv.. ~. Antlquoto,
1124 E. llllft llraot. tn II. 124

~ . H11n:'!LT.W.

...... lo

:oa.t:.......,10:00
1:00

toi:OOJUL""

·

54. ~

ARiES (March 2f ·Aprll19) Business or
financial favors should not be requested
today from persons you know on a purely
social basis. II may be wiser to go to an .
objective banker.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Once you hit
you r Stride today, you'll be a productive , ,.
Industrious pertoomer, but Ws rather 'illy" ~

j

Wil i •"

,
·

.
,
i

.-

. .... .,.

''

..

'

r
f

take monotllry rillca.

BR E 0

p

1 I I' I I

linglirstheblurled, '·-· - -·-·'"

A
V

7

0

Complete the chuckle quoted
by hJI .ng in the mtutng words
L....J.......JL-..L.....J-..L.....I you develop from step No . 3 below.

1

IWEDNESDAY

-.Jnod,

I I

I
rI
I"~

AV E B I L

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1973, President Richard Nixon fired
Special Watergate Prosecutor
Archibald Cox and Deputy Attorney
General William Ruckelshaus. Attar·
ney General Elliot L. Richardson also
resigned in the "Saturday Night Massacre," which led to calls for Nixon's
impeachment.
TODAY'S MOON: Between
new moon (Oct. 15) and first
quarter &lt;Oct. 22l .

RIFF

35ft, ... !'!*~. fully ...~

-

Today is the 293rd
day of 1993 and the
·, 29th clay offall.

1.'

I()!=I

...301.
79 C8mpers&amp;
MotorHomea

F&lt;111n Suppl1es

odveftloodlnlhlo,.wopoper

IT! ACREAl DEAL

oecu::JE::o ~ E&lt;FOW

IINouollkino(OIHiolno,114o

P•·

Npollo, Ohio 41831.

HE

ForSaloorTradoo21ft,Niflllnod oampor, 110011 cooldlllon,

AEPRESEHTATI'I£

Ga~

Q-.1 n-t:: ~ Qoi..Y ~T

.... ·1511., ..., ·~ ....

SALES

Raoumo To: P.O. lox 334,

TlMIN&amp; ...

Equipment
......, . , . 080 1172

41131.

L.ooaJ c-pony le l.ooldng For
An Aoo......,., llotlvolod
eon FOr ArM BalM. Person
S11ouk1 Paaa1u Good Communlclllon SkiiiL
A
Pluo. lonollta P1uo SatorJ. SOncf

I IS-AVE MY 06D AF'la&lt;SHAVE LOTICN R:R HIS
B IRn-1 ClA:'r'•• •

" ' - .,_. Huolloral Co-

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Lookl San Yaaro And 111onor
On your Homo -goge
WllhoUI Aollnonclng. CaJI1-IOJI.
Nt-tiOI For Dotollol

TAU&lt; AeaJiROTTEN

camping

For oot. Conn trumpol, _,
114-112o

Thlnl AYonUO, GolllfOIIo, 011

Eocro-

T"'' -

I

Oct. 20, 1993

Public Sale

I
III I r

The new bride wanted to
surprise her husband by wears 1 16 1 1
~ ing a new skimpy skirt outfit.
. . . . . .
She asked him what she should
.....--------.wear with ~and wilhoutlhink-

ALL Yard SOIOO IIUII Be Paid In

8

'·

•

•

•

.

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE
ANSWER

•

ANSWERSNimbus - Venus - Hutch - Jagged· HUSBAND
, After a lengthy wait at the exchange desk of a local
1 ,department store I overheard one woman sigh, 'I think
. next time instead of exchanging lies I'll just exchange my
. ~HUSBAND.'

OCTOBER 20 I

.,

�.,
•

•

•

~

. Page-12-

w~nesday, October 20, 1e93 .::

.

The Dally sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·---Community calendar---Community Caleudar Items
.;appear two ~ before aa eveut
and tbe day
tbat evenL Items
must be received In advance to
assure publication in tbe calen·
dar.
WEDNESDAY
RUTLAND • The Rutland Fire
Oepanment Auxil~ will' meet at
7:30p.m. at the Fire ration.
REEDSVILLE - The revival at
:Reedville United Methodist Church
-will meet nightly at 7 p.m. throu~h
:Friday. Rev. Berry Wyent is t e
·guest speaker.

.J

'RUTLAND - Leading Creek
Conservancy Di strict will hold
their monthly board meeting at 5
p .m. at their office. The public is
.fnvited to auend.
. POMEROY - Boy Scout Troop
.#249 committee meeting will be
: held at 8:30 p.m. at the American
: Legion Hall.
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse
,T hird Wednesday Homemakers
-Club will hold an all-day potluck
·meeting at lite town hall. Members
·are asked to bring a tapestry nee. die, various yam and scissors.

RACINE - Racine American
Legion Auxiliary will meet at 7
~m . at the post horne. There will
a guest $1)C&amp;kcr.
RACINE - Racine American
Legion Post 11602 will have supper
at6:30 followed by a meeting.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The TUP.pers Plains VFW and ladies auxiliary will have their moiithly dinner
at 6:30 p.m. Members are asked to
bring a dessert.
CHESIRE - Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency will hold a
free clothing day from 9 a.m. to
noon at the old high school in
Chesire.
RACINE - Racine Grange will
meet at 7 p.m. at the hall.
POMEROY - There will be a
spathetti dinner with the Meigs
Hig School Football team from
5:15to6:15p.m. in the highschool
cafeteria . A small donation is
required for all you can eat
POMEROY • The Pomeroy
Group of AA and AI Anon will
meet at 7 p.m. at Sacred Heart
Church. For more information call
992-5763.

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
,Democratic Party Executive Committce meeting 7:30 p.m. at Carpenters' Hall.

REEDSVILLE - Olive Township Trustees wjll meet at 6:30 p.m.
at the Shade River Slate Forestry
Building for the purpose of adopting the solid waste plan.

ROCK SPRINGS - The Middleport Child Conservation League
annual Halloween party for children and grandchildren of the
'members at Rock Springs United
Methodist Church at 6:30p.m.

RUTLAND - The Meigs County
Ref,ublican Party will have a fall
ral y at 6:30 p.m. at the Rutland
Civic Center. There will be food
and entertainment For more information call County Chairman Paul

7UP
DR. PEPPER ·

Gerard at 992-6736.
POMEROY - Meig$ Local
School District will hold Its annual
parent mee~ from 6:30 to 8 p.m.
at Salisbury ementary. The meeting will include an overview of the
Chapter
by the director
Wendy
and the ICaChcrs from
the individual buildings will have
P,rCsentalions by their sbldents.

ST()RE HOURS

JJ:':gram

Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter
1188, Beta Sigma Phi, meeting was
held recently at the home of Charlotte Elberfeld. The meeting was
called to order by President Donna
Jones and was opened by members
reciting the ritual.
· The minutes of the previous
meeting were read and approved.
Thank yous were read from Mary
. Powell for the group's $25 donation for a Meigs County ad in the

a -1
Val. .... N0.121

s

MIDDLEPORT • There will be
a round and square dance at the
Old Legion Hall from 8 - 11 :30
p.m. Music will be by CJ and the
Country Gentlemen. Admission is
free. Children are welcomed with
adult supervision. Children 12 and
under can wear costumes as they
wish. No alcobol will be allowed.

Meigs Commissioners
OK contract, ~pprove
investment . fund policy

49

•

MIKE SELLS
'.

POTATO.CHIPS

BASHAN - Red Brush Church
of Christ will have preaching services at 7 p.m. and at 10 a.m. and 6
p.m. on Sunday. Denver Hill will
be the speaker. Everyone is invited.

II oz. BAGS

RACINE • rae RacJtle PTO will
be staging a aunte house from
6:30 to 9 p.m. There will be games
and refreshments.

~PORK LOIN••••••l~••sl

49
.

the social commiuee planning the
next social. The next regular meeting will be at 7 p.m. at the home of
Eleanor Thomas.

GAZA CITY, Occupied Gaza
Snip (AP) - A leading PLO moderate and longtime friend of Yasser
Arafat was shot dead in front of his
12-year-old son today, sharply
escalating the irifighting that followed the Israel-PLO accord.
Assad Saftawi, 58, was one of
the founders of Fatah, Ararat's
main faction of the PLO, and the
tblt'il man ·from the:.~P' shot to
deatH 'since the PLO·'and' lsrllel
. signed a Palestinian autonomy
agreement on Sept. 13.
Saftawi served as an intermediary among Israel, Egypt and the
Palestine Liberation Organization
before -the accord was signed. In
April, Prime Minister Yitzhak
Rabin spent 20 minutes at
Safrawi's house, stopping to drink
tea. The visit was broadcast on

c

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION
(Including Domestic and Fonlp Suboldlar~)

FLAVORITE GRAPE

JELLY

State Bank No. 176
of Marietta, Wuhlngton Co•nty, Stale of Oblo 45750, at the close of business September 30,
19113.
•

'

US*l WHITE POTATOES *10

ASSETS
Casb and balances due from depo~itory iostitutiona:
a. Nonintenst-bearing balances and currency and coin ................................ ........................ ......... 13,852,000.00
b. Interest-bearing balances ................................................................................................................... 998,000.00
Securlties ................................................................ ................................................. .................... oo oo ........ 89,590,000.00
Federal funds oold &amp;. securiliN pun:baoed under agreements
10
in domestic olf'ICCI of lbe bank &amp;: of its
Edge It Apeoment subsidiaries &amp;: .in mFs: •
Federal funds oold ...... .............................................. ................................ ..................... ................ t t.SSO,OOO.OO
l..oiDI and Jeue fiDillcing receivablN:
Loans and leaoea, net of unearned income ....................................................... ........ 276,980,000 .
LESS: Allowance for loan and leaoelossN ..................................................................S,I33,000
Loons and leaoeo, net of unearned income,
allowance, and reserve ................................................... :................................................ ...............271 ,847,000.00
Pro.niiiCS and fixed usetJ (iocluding capit&amp;lized leues) .................. ................................................... .9,500,000.00
Other real ealllte owned ........................................... ..............
oo .......... oo . oo•oo ...... .. 30,000.00
lnlangible usets ............. .................................... oo ............... oo ...... ............. oo ................................. oo .............. 198,000.00
Other asselll .......................... ...................... ....................... .............. ................................ oo ........ •oooo•
5,654,000.00
Total asselsoo ......................... oo .......................................... ...................................................................403,219.000.00
Total urets and losaes defemd ursuant to 12 U.S.C.
.
1823(j) (sum of items 12.a and 12.b) .......... :................................................ ..................... ...............403,219.000.00

2LB JAR

99C

.,..,u

I'I

PUR EX

.

Good Only At Powell's Super Valu
'I
I
Offer Goad October 171hru October 23, 1993
I'
llmlt1 Por Cuatomer
. - - ••• - - - - - - - - - - - - .• - ·- - • - - -. - - - - • 'I

II
I

DETERGENT

•••••••••••••••••••••••

00

136 oz. box

00 . . . . : . .

R•A·A·A·A~•••••~A·A·A·~

11

1
:1

:,:1

9'9

1
'I

1

Ollar Good October 17 thru October 23, 1113
LlmH 1 Per Cualomer

I ·

COUPON

II

::

PURINA CANNED .

:1

::

CAT FOOD

::

I

:!1

1:

.

6.5 OZ. CAN

0

Good Onl t Powell's Super Valu
Offer Good October 17 thruOctober 23, 1193
llmH 1 Por Cualomer

11

II

5 ·100
'

11

·GROUND .

BEEF

.

1:

We. !be undenl&amp;ned directon, aU..t !he correclllell ot !he Report or Coodltlon and declare !bet it bas beoa
examined by us and to !be beat of our lmowledao and belief and bas been prepmd In conformii!Co wi!b olf'wial
ioltnJCiioDI and it true and c:orroc:t.

::
'I: 20 OZ CAN

:

Robert B. Evw

:wuton1 D. Dimlt - Directors
Dollllis D. BlaUiet

SIIU of Obio, County ofWIIilloaton, • :
·
S'wom _to and aublcrilied before me Ibis 13th day of Oc:lobet, 1993 and I belcby C&lt;rlify lbat I IDl not 111
oll'ictr"" c&amp;.- ot tbiJ bonk.
.
.

II

11
1
11

Uaa M. Pfllf, Nolll')' Public
My colllllllnlon
OJtpira October 26, l99'
,,,

3 DIAMOND

,a

,

......,__ Goad Only t Powoll'o Super V.lu
..,... Goad OctoMr 17 tlll'uOctOber 13, 1193
UmH 1 Pet Cuo1omor
.

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'COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) - A
storm damaged about 25 homes
and businesses, .fauscd p~ ·of a
building to collapse and knocked
out electricity to about 2,~00
boroes·Qll the city's southwest Slde,
autboritie&amp; said.
· SoiJ'!&amp; people in the area said
they saw a funnel cloud, but the
National Wc8thcr Service said ri9
tori1ado or fUJID!Il cl~ was ~ight·
ed on radar when the storm passed
through Weclncsda~ njaht.· '
Wcather scrvtcc spokesman
Dick Hathaway sald the SIOnl\ was
tra~ling at about 3'-40 mph with
will* up to~ mph.
· .
"1hal call dq ~ awful lot Qf
damage durin&amp; a downburst
(Wind),.. he said.

~

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..

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--~~····~-~~
- -~·-~·-····

;

-GROUND •
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CHUCK'
·10 lb.

s 90
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0

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I

Storm kn(Jcks down wall, power lines

.

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- 2L1 oo

90

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Fire Oepariment for $5,775 and the
purchase of a generator, smoke
ejectors and an engine for the generator for the Bashan Volunteer
Fire Oepanment for $2,615. The
bids received from Dill's were the
lowest bids reCeived.
It was pointed out that the Coun
Street paving project in Sutton
Township would not be ccmpleted
until next spring.
- Approved an animal claim of
$25 for a sheep killed Oct. 15
belonging to Ronald G. Beegle,
Racine.
- Approved weekly bills in the
amount of $55,4 72.06.
- Agreed to auend a fund raising kick off for the Disabled American Veterans which is seekin~ 1
handicapped-accessable buildmg
for its meetings.
.
DA V Commander Nathan Biggs
said veterans have climb steps to
get inside the current building. "It's
not for a disabled person ," he
added.
"We need the building," he said.
The event will be held 7 p .m.
Monday at 124 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy.
- Met with Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce representatives Dave Baker, Paul Reed and
Denny Evans to discuss advertising
for the posilion of Meigs County
Economic Development Director.
The three were appointed by the
chamber to cooperate with the
commission to select a new economic development director.
Commissioners and chamber
representatives agreed that the new
economic development director, if
hned from outside the county,
should be required to move into the
county.
Both partie s agreed to put
10gether ari advertisement and then
advertise the position with the hope
of having a new economic development direc10r.
Pre sent we re co mmi ss io ner
Roben Hartenbac h, Fred Hoffman
and Janet Howard Tackell and
Oerk Gloria Klocs.

Offic!iits planned to review the .
damage tOday to determine whether
.a tornado had touched down, Hathaway said.
No serious injuries were reported, authorities S81d.
Strong winds blew down part of
a1bujldiqg 111 Ruan Leasing Co.,
said ftnl U. Ra\ Raider. ·
Columbus lire Battalion Chief
Jim Este.p said another company
building was damiged._
D&amp;vid , Mille~. a 32·- year-old
welder, was working inside the
Advanced Industtial Manufliclllring
building whel! the storm hit. . ~
"The wind staned pickiRJ up,
and as I .went to Illat the doOr ~~just
knocked .my (welding) hood off
and I hit ibci ground. •~ Miller said.

"I iust covered my head ·and held

on.'•

A wall in the building bowed
but it did.not fall, he said.
J .R. Thomas, director of the
Franklin Coupty Emergency Manag9mcnt Agency, said about 25
houses or buildings were damaged
by the storm.
· .
The Franklin Township Fire
Del'artmeht provided shelter for
rest debts who .could not stay in
.their houses.
Coll,lmbus Southern Power Co.
crews were .working to reslore
power to about 2,900 customers,
said spokcsnian Baqie Briuult. He
did' not know how long it would
take.

ed that it should get the paperwork
:;a it can be aware of SCIP requirem_ents. Thornton will go to a meeting in Marietta on the program on
Nov. 7.
Clerk Carolyn Powell reponed
the village had received a check
from the state for $265 for partial
reimbursement for snow removal
costs during the spring blizzard.
Due to fmancial reasons, counci l
turned down an offer by Cecil
Maynard for the village to purchase
two lots near the water building. It
was noted that one lot is on th e
ri verbank and the other lot is
between Fourth Street and the
water building.
In other action, council:
- Set trick or treat for Thursday, Oct. 28, from 6-7 p.m. If residents wish to participate, they are
advised to tum on their porch light.
This is the same time and date as
Syracuse Villa~e.

. - Tabled actions on applying
for a grant to obrain recycling bins
for use in the village.
- Reported that commodities
will be distributed at the fore station
on Nov. 9.
- Discussed instructing the
marshal 10 rake action concerning
the 9 p.m. curfew for people under
the age of 18 and several places in
the village that need cleaning.
- Agreed to investigate com plaints of poor cable television
reception.
- Approve d the purchase of
various 1tems requested by Street
Commissioner Glenn Rizer.
Attending were council members Roben Beegle, Henry Bentz
Scott Hill, Doug Rees; Thornton:
Powell, Rizer and Fire Chief John
Holman. Absent were Ron Click
and Julie Randolph.
Council adjourned until 7 p.m.,
Monday Nov 1
•
· ·

Coalft.rm Wl"lllay o·'JJfJ
·150 miners next month

H

'I

COUPON

PINEAPPlE

·$

:1

~·A·A·A·A~•·•~·~A·A·A·~

11

10 lb.PKG

1::1

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CblofPinancial OftiCer A 'li'ea.ater, Oclober t3, 1993 - (614) 374-6112

I .

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a.
PKG.
Goad Only At Powell's Super Valu

~·A·A·A·A~•••••~A·A·A·~

John W. Conloa,

&lt;

::

·---------------------~----------11

been

•

CARNAnON

·············~·········

I, !be underligned offt&lt;et, do belcby declare lbat .!bia .Repmt of Condition bu
poepared in conformance
wilb otliclal insbiJCiiOna ond is rrue and comctlO !be ~!est of QIY knowled&amp;e and belief.

·•

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COCOA MIX·
10

:1:

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1
11

00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

•

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::

LIABJLI11ES
Deposits:
a. In domestic offices ........................ ................................................................................................. 344,343,000.00
(I) Nonintorest-bearing ..................................................................................... 35,857,000.00
(2) lntenst-bearing ................................................................ -................ ......... .308,486,000.00
Federal funds pwdlued and llCCurities sold under agreementa
to repw-cbase in domeotic offices of lbe bank It of its
Edge &amp;: Acreomenl ouboidiariel, &amp;: in mFs:
a. fedora! fundi purtbued ...................................................... ..................................... ...........................40S,OOO.OO
b. Securitie1 sold under -menll to ~t~plli'Obue ........... ................................................................. 6,409,000.00
Otbet bon-owed money ........................................................ :................. ............................ ....................... t6,29t,OOO.OO
Other Uabilitie.s ..................... ..........................................
2,8,2,ooo:oo
TotalliabilitiCI .................... ................ oo ..................... oo ................ ...................................................... .370,300,000.00
EQUITY CAPITAL
Common stock (No. of Sb""" 1. Aulborized ..................300,000 ...................................................... 1,87S,OOO.OO
Swplw (exclude all swplua Rllled to prefeme! a!Oc:t) ......................................................................... 7,346,000.00
a. Undivided )Wfits U&gt;d capilal IOJerVel .................. oo ................................................................. oo ... 23,698,000.00
Total equity capilal ........................................................ ....................................................................... 32,919,000.00
Total equity capilaJ and 101101 defened
punuant to 12 U.S.C. 1823(j).,...oo .. oo ........................................................................ ........................ 32,919,000.00
TotalliabilitiN, limited- life preferred stock, and equity capital, .
and lossca defemd pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 182.3(j) ....................................................................... .403,219,000.00
MEMORANDA: A-la oulll&amp;Ddlllc • of Report Da1a:
Standby letters of cmllt. 'futa1 ................... ...........................................................................................3,319,000.00

·

COUPON

1 1I

ues through June 30, 1998.
CSMIEA members will receive
a two percent increase on the base
salary for each year of the contract.
The new starting salary for teachers
is$17,646.
Other terms of the five-year pact
include:
- Giving bargaining unit classification to the positions of physical therapist, maintenaoce repair
worker I and vehicle operator I.
· - Five days for bereavement
leave added which is deductible
from sick leave.
- Thirty days for assault leave
added when reimbursable from
workers' compensation.
- Vis ion insurance plan added
for the provision of fram es and
lenses every two years.
Other action
Emergency Services Director
Raben Dyer informed the commission that the county's hazardous
material plan is almost complete.
The plan points out area within
the county where hazardous materials could be a problem, he commented. The plan has to be updated
every year.
Bob Snowden and Brent Bolin,
repre senting the Leading Creek
Conservancy District, approached
the commission requesting the
county serve as grnntee for a Community Development Block Grant
which would be used to extend
water lines in the county.·
Bolin said the proposed extension would enable residents along
Side Hill, Carpenter Hill, Cotterill
and Dye roads in Rutland and Scipio townships to hook up the
LCCD system.
, After meeting with DOnna R ussell of Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Development Distric~
the commission approved 1992
Community Development Block
Grant bids from Dill's Fire and
Safety Equipment.
Commissioners approved th e
purchase of air tanks, hose and
couplings, nozzles and coveralls
for the Scipio Township Volunteer

Racine council discusses grants

.

11

this month for talks in an effort to
stop the killings.
There has also been tension
from more radical elements within
the PLO and Islamic militants
opposed to 1he accord. But the
Islamic Resistance Movement, or
Hamas, issued a statement con demning the killing.
"We in Hamas strongly condemn· these J?hysic:al..liquida~ons.
We are again's! political assassinations as a lan~uage of dialogue
among Palestimans," said a leaflet
faxed to The Associated Press.
. Mohammed-Abu Shaaban, an
attorney, wa'S shot dead on Sept
21, and his assistant, Maher Ikhail,
was killed last week. They had
formed a group called Farah Van·
guards that organized mass rallies
to suppon the peace agreement

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Stall'
The Meigs County Board of
Commissioners in regular session
Wednesday approved a new county
invesbnent policy and a contract
for employees of Carleton SchoolMeigs Indusoies Education Association.
The commission approved the
Meigs County Investment Policy.
proposed by Treasurer Howard
Frank.
Frank said the policy includes
the formation of a county investment board comprised of two commissioners and the county treasur-er,
The policy covers invesbncnt of
county funds in accordance with
the Ohio Revised Code to limit
invesbnent risk through diversity.
Frank said he created the plan
because other governmental entities have lost money by making
investments not covered by federal
securities. The policy complies
with the law to prevent bad investments.
"All funds in our county are
secured by federal securities,"
Frank said . "We try to maintain
investments through local banks to
keep.our money in Meigs County."
OK contract
The board of commissioners
along with the Meigs County
Board of Mental Retardation and
Developmental Disabilities and the
Carleton School-Meigs Industries
Education Association, representing teachers, instructor assistants,
vehicle operators and workcenter
staff, reached agreement on a fiveyear contrael
The contract was unanimously
ratified by the CSMIEA membership on Oct. 12, and appro~ed by
the Meigs County Board of MRDD
on Oct. 13. The previous contract
expired June 30 and employees
continued to work under an extension of the previous contract
throughout negotiations.
The new contract becomes
effective July 1, 1993, and contin-

· Within hours of paying back tlic
$177,500 she embezzled from a
local bank, a Mercerville woman
was ordered to serve three to 15
years in jail for her crime.
Community Development Block•
Brenda K. Cremeens, a former
Grants and recendy renamed Issue
employee of Ohio-Valley Bank,
II grants were among the topics
was sentenced Wednesday in the
discussed by Racine Village CounGallia Counly Common Pleas
cil which met in a recessed session
Court of Judge Joseph L. Cain.
Monday.
Prior to sentenCing, a bank rep·
It was reported the $15,000
resentative confumed fCJr the court
Community
Development Block
that Cremeens had paid back the
Grant
for
sidewalk
replacement is
money she embezzled wbile
in
the
environmental
review stage.
em!!_loyed by OVB.
Work
on
the
sidewalks
will be
ClillrFd with one count of theft · EMBEZZLER ·sENI'ENCED - Brenda K. Cremeens and ber
done
in
the
spring.
The
grant
and eight couniS of record ramperattorney, Robert Toy 'ot Athens, prepare to leave the GaUia Counmon·
e
y
cannot
be
used
on
sideing, Cten)CCIJS received two threety Court of Comm~ Pleas Wednesday after sbe was sentenced to
walks
in
the
floodplain.
to IS-year sentences. The terms are
two coocurrent tbree· to 15-year jail terms for tbeR or Obio Valley
Thornton reported he will stan
to be served concurrently at the
Bank f\ands and records tampering. (OVP pboto by Kevin Pinson)
working
on the grant application
Marysville Rcforma~ory for
for
the
rehabilitation
project in
Women •.
cials
said
they
are
pleased
with
the
·
When
she
pleaded
guilty
August
November.
This
grnnt
will
provide
Cremeens was also prdered to
outcome.
23,
special
prosecutor
Georg.:
Ellis
funds
to
rehabilirate
dwellings
of
pay $2,000 by December. for spe"Ohio Valley Bank, as a major qualified residents.
reponed
.
C
remeens
embezzled
the
.
cial prosecutor• Oeor~ Ellis' fees.
part
of
"the
sentence
handed
down
money
!)Ver
a
10-ycar
period
and
Thornton
also
reponed
he
had
Sbe IS also supposed to pay the bal·
ance of the cost of prosecution, .falsified teller and general ledger by Jud$e Joseph Cain, received full received a news release on the new
restiwuon or the stolen funds," the State Capital Improvement Prowhich has nOt been tabulated yet, records to cover her traeks.
statement said. "We are pleased the gram (formerly Issue II) regarding
She
admitted
to
the
crimes
in
a
by Dec. 1!194. Ellis estimated the
bank
has been totally reimbursed grants. Clerk-Treasurer Powell
to
Gallipolis
written
statement
total costs ,would be near $15,000.
and
that
this matter is now official- reminded council that it must
police.
An employee of OVB since
ly
closed.
In
a
statement
to
be
issued
to
1970, she was promored last sum·
watch its 'finances since it will have
to borrow $75,000 to match a
.mer tD manager of the mini-bank. OVB employees today, blink offipending grant
After discussion, council decid-

II

l1

Israeli television .
There was no immediate claim
of responsibility for the assassina- .
lion.
From the moment the autonomy
accord was signed in Washington
there have been fears that internal
struggles within the Palestinian
community eould unravel plans to
start ,transfe¢ng
authority to the
.
__....,_ ......,............
PLO·~JU~~uug ·~., J:J •._ ... ,· · ,,, 1
"We ate really worried ai!Qut
it,'' Rabin said of that turmoil afrer ·
hearing of the assassination. ·He
spoke at an Israeli army camp in
the Gaza Strip after touring the
Khan Younis refugee camp.
An internal struggle erupted .
inside Fatah over which faction
would gain power once the PLO
takes over the Gaza Strip. Younger
leaders were summoned to Tunis

Gallia woman st!ntenced 3-15
years on embezzlement charge

c

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.

PLO official assassinated

TOWELS

The Peoples Banking &amp; .
Trust Company

.

Presidential Palace In Paris early today at the
start of bis two-day olflcial visit in France. (AP)

ARRIVFS IN PARIS· PLO cbairman Ya5s·
er Ararat, left, Is l"eeted by French President
Francois Mitterraod on tbe steps or tbe Elysee

SCOn PAPER

Attending were Jane Walton,
Donna Jones, Joan Corder, Char·
lotte Elberfeld, Clarice Krautter,
Reva Vaughan, Ann Rupe, Jean
Werry, Eleanor Thomas, Maida
Mora, Velma Rue, Betty Ohlinger
and Rose Sisson.

2 Sectlone. 12 Pagoo 35 -.1a
A llultlln-lnc. . . _ . _

Pomeroy·Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, October 21, 1993

llulllmeclalliO,

' ~ loniKbt Ia 30s, dear.
Friday bJ&amp;b ln upper 5&amp;.

•

24 PK., 12 OZ. CANS

SATURDAY

00 . . . . . . . . . . . 00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Super Lotto:
9-10-16-29-30-34
Kicker:
524298

•

RC COLA
PRODUCTS

TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tuppers Plains VFW Ladies Auxiliary
ts sponsoring a square dance with
music by C.J. and the Country
Gentlemen. Callers will be Red
Carr and Melvin Cross. Everyone
is welcome.

Beta Beta club gathers for crafts, business meeting
Ohio Magazine and from the Stemwheel Festival for the members
helping to sell their items.
Members were asked to volunteer one hour or more a week to
help in the grade school enrichment
program.
Hostesses were Clarice Krautter
and Reva Vaughan.
The remainder of the evening
was spent with the ways and means
commiuee working on crafts and

'

'

c

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, OCT. 23, 1993

FRIDAY

Pick 3:
416
Pick 4:
2815

-Page4

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH •

ROCK SPRINGS- The Rock
Springs Better Health Club will
meet at I p.m. at the home of Phyilis Skinner.

.

2LITER

Monday thrv Sunday
8AM·IO PM

Ohio Lottery

Blue Jays
take 3-1
series lead

Testimony continues
today in Miller trial

ZANESVILLE, Ohio (AP) The Ohio Power Co. is cutting
hack on supplies of Ohio coal at a
Testimony continues today in power plant and a subsidiary wi II
the Meigs County Coun of Com- lay off about 150 miners ne xt
mon Pleas in the trial of George month, the company said.
Ohio Power IS trimming the coal
William Miller Jr., 52, Middleport.
supply
at its Muskingum River
Miller is charged with three
Powerplant
near Beverly. One of
counts of rape which allegedly
the
plant's
generators
will be COQoccurred between June 1 and Aug.
verted
to
bum
low-sulfur
coal from
31, 1988.
West
Virginia,
said
William
Lhota,
The state presented witnesses·
vice
president
of
Ameriexecutive
Wednesday following opening
arguments and defense attorneys can Electric Power Service Co.,
for Miller are expected to complete which owns Ohio Power.
The conversion will help the
cross-examination of state witnessplant meet requirements of the
es today.
Judge Dan W. Favreau of 1990 Clean Air Act, Lhota said
McCoonelsville is hearing the case Wednesday.
Employment should ~main sta·
by assignment

'

t

ble until the late 1990s, when
another phase of clean air regulalions will go into effect. AEP said.
Central Ohio Coal mines about
2.7 million tons of coal each year
in the Cum berland area. After the
switch, the plant's other generators
will need between 1.4 million and
1.6 million tops of coal a year.
:
"Right now, we' ve got about
900 tons of coal on the ~und at
the plant," Lhota said. ' We need:
to get that down to about 400 to:
450 tons on the ground to be ready·
to meet the requirements of the
Clean Air AcL"
AEP is the largest consumer eN.
Ohio coal, burning about 13 mil&gt;
lion tons a year.

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