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                  <text>Not everyone hails Bush offers of aid
ly CHif IIOWN

Am c!ate4 Pmi·Wrller
SHALLOWATER, Texas-

Not C¥crybocly is s~tisficcl with

cane Andrew blew in.
The $755 millioo in crop diBis·
ter aid wu aulhorized .by Coop:~~
last year but withhclci by the Blllh
despite protests from farm JlOUilS
long before the hurricane made

work with you and the next sea-

son's crops Clll be !UIIed," Bush
slid. "If llddilionlf dine funds

are Meded, we will secure than.''

Pteli4eat Bush's helpin&amp;lland,
Bush'siiiiiOiilanlmll Wedles~ if it W. nice fat hila 10 dmp
dly Cllllll . . the heels of hit deci·
by.
·
manm wone.
si011 a day Clrlicr that the fedCnl
'l1le Jftlident, on I wllirlwilld
"Unless they come up and add
will pick up die edi1e
relief aib. Thlt oould add
Cll!!pup clay in w~icll lie doled to this '" this money doesn't gn
0111 - esport ....,iea 10 wlleat anywhere," said 1eff Black, who billions 10 lhe bqet deficit, SOliiC
r., m -'lilled a bill oa the 1111: JIIOWS about 3,500 amA of caaon dlis yar IIIII die ra1 Reli:L
In Soath Dakota, Bash
oht•.-jitfia}l! s.llllollllled . in Hale County, one of the West
!I' _ia cattoa coaatry. 1too .nrele.ase TCJW areas hit by excessive rains denouncecl IlelliOCillic chlllenger
Bill ClinfO!I iS I pruectlonist, dlen ·
Millioa ill ~ dia8lt:r
durin the May planting season.
IIICe.
.
·
"~ur losses in cotto• on the announced a $1 tiillion program of
· Aid Mile m.y of the bel!efi· South Plains could reach $700 mil· expert subsidies fat the sale of U.S.
cllriel lftl'•t""' tho8e dcciut, lion alone when it's all said and wheaL
In Shallowater, Blish attacked
alliin p ..... ~ .IIIII !hey MIOU!II· done," said Black, who attended
ed 10 IDO lild(I,IOO I&amp; Some lann· the p!CSidcnt's appeaa•ICC II a cot· Clinton as a bi1 ~~der, then
·
aid.
en, iiiR • elsewhere. abo ques- ton gin in Shallowaw on Wednes· mleased the
Later, at~eneral D)'!lamics
liollecl w~y Bash badll't noticed day.
dleir plilllllllillhil ;n:a.t in 1;11
Those losses are unrelated to plant in Fort Worth, he lifted the
elecliOII yar- .sd after Hum- · Andrew; preliminary estimates 10-year b111 on the sale of
indicate the hurricane itself caused adVliiCed fillltm 10 Taiwan, clearabout $300 million in damage to ing the way b Taiwan 10 buy ISO
rice and other crops in Flaida and F-16s peafllps preserving 3,000
jobs II the pilnL
ATLANTA (AP)- Jimmy Louisiana. Farmen elsewhere have
The pesidelll's staff said before
lost crops to freezes and drought
ci.a: The politician. The peanut over
Bush's
sq, in SllallowattS it would
the last yw.
The ..U..poverty CIUSIIdcr.
"I know that $7SS mi1lioo wiD not he political. Secret service
Now, lhe poet.
not
solve every problem .... But agents confiSCited signs with sJo.
The fOI"'Ier president has two
these funds will help keep farmers gans .of support as 7,500 people
=~ die fall issue of Gelqia on their feet so that the briers wiD filed miO a dirt lot SIDI'CIIIIdinl the
ODe, "Ptiorilies of Same MexiChillha," is about a group of
childlell who app11a:b the poet in
MoKk:o. He~~~ thaiiiO ask for
.-y. I t
they ask b JIIIICI'

c:::
0

ms

a-

Names in the news
r.-.

local cotton &amp;inBut the ~ cheered as Bush
=*ed ~ 011 taxes,lptllding

"'Uiite
the·~world s . . . food IUDIJiy
llld
Willi II

drive up ita cost," B•ih said.
"Yes, I 1111 for food safety. But
let's also protect the consumer
from the luaucnr. ..
. A handful of m....auwonm
~ in the crowd. "Us poor people are tired of hearing Geor&amp;e
Bush promise lhin&amp;s llld then not
deliver," said Mary Rodriguez,
whose husb..d worb at an auto
pans store in Shallowater. "He
raised taxes. He doesn't keep his
word."
But "II'Cilly appreciated his
visit," nid Norma Smith of New
Home.
Bush also wu met with some
skepticism the Generall)ynamics
plant when he IIIIICJ!IIICCII his blessIRg, still requiriaa canaressional
approval, for Taiwan 10 buy the F16s. "If they build diem here, it
will help," said Billy Smith, 33, a
seven-year employee of the COIIIpa·
ny. "Just because they sign a coo·
ll'ltl doesn't mean they'U be built
hctc. ,.

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:

Reds
•
gatn
on
Braves

6-5-3
Pick 4:
4-2-6:.4

PageS

Vol. 43, No. 94
Copyrlghlod 19i2

SAFETY WINNER • Plctved above are, from left. Nlkkle alld

Danlelle PbliHps, acceptlDJ a dr:f chemk:allire mlngulshcr from .
the MlddleJ.I:C!rt Fire Departlllent on behalf of tbelr motller, Glu
PhDUpa. PhDUps WIIS the August winner In the department's Home
Safety Awareness Program.

'*'

Strickland opposes mass
·mailings by opponent
Democratic Congressional candidate Ted Strickland expressed
anger today at the fact that Bob
McEwen is "still sending out mass
mailings paid for by Laxpayers in
order to promote his political cam-

.tiJCIIICils,

1\e Olha' poenl •• 'Miss Lilliln
Sea l...eproly for the FIISI 1Jme,"
is lllbollt Clna''s IIIOiher's Tt'Oit as
• - i l l Boalbay, India.
"I pt my mast before I would
take 011 tis duty, pve the child a
allot a11d then, not well, slipped
awrt 10 be alone and scrubbed my
bod)' 1111illt was raw," the poem
IUIIII.
Willi tinlc, lhe mnc lftd pMient
pow c1o1er. "~ dlen love grew
benoOCII the 1'11'0 of us, so whea I
kissed her lips, I didn't feel

paign."

Cherie Williamson, Iris Payne, Ed D'urst and
Tricia Wolre. 1'be supplies left the bank's lot
yesterday bT way or a Salvation Army convoy.
Tbe Salvation Army in Athens bas collected
three 24-foot - i trucks filletl with tbe supplies
to date. Captaia Timothy Hig~ins of the Salvation Army says the supplies wiD probably go to
Lolaisana, wbere supplies are most needed rigbt
now. Among those wbo assisted as supplies are
loaded were Jon Karscbnik, Bank President
Paul Reed, Donna Schmoll, Ed Durst, Cbris
Yeau1er, Pul Jobnsoa, Carolyu Elam and
Cberit Willia-. ( Pboto by Brian J, Reed)

Practically very nook and cranny of the main
lobby of Farmers Bank and Savings C0111pany
ia Pomeroy was rtlled oo Thursdlly with snpplia
for lbe soutbera victims or Hurricaae Aaclrew.
During a week-long campaign to collect sopplies, bank customers, church groups and otliet'
concerned residents brought in supplies by tbe
bag and boxful. Gallon upoa gallon or bottled
water will be taken to tbe victims, as will aumed
goods and non-perisbables of all desc:riptioa,
baby food, diapers and paper products, soft
drinks and even pel food. Pictured above with
some or tbe supplies are Farniers Baak employees Darla Zuspan, Linda Mayer, Carolyn Elam,

~.··

Carter began writing poetry

. - yan ago. Some of his poems
will also be published this fall in
North Dakota Quarterly and in
Newl..etlers.

CHICAGO (AP) - Figure
llbW Krilli Y...,..chi is turning
pro bulllli&amp;lll mn 10 amaiCUr sta·
111110 de{cnd ha add medal at the
1994 Ol)llllllicl.
Tbe 21-)'ar-olcl piau 10 COlli·
pale ill Decemlx'r • the DuraSoft
World PICJI! si'•~ Pipre Stalin&amp;
a-pe 'p in l.allllover. MI.
"Ript BOW I'm lootin&amp; for·
ward 10 a profeaioollCIRC'Z and
tile challenJCS it will bring," she
said We&amp;\! rK!aY·
She Ills lllltil Feb. 19 to apply
for Jein r r Delli as .. llllalt:UI'.

2 Socllono, 16 Page• 25 conto
A llultlmedla Inc. Newa~aper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September 4, 1992

,...-----Help is on the way••• ~------.

Mostly cloudy tonight. Low
60-65.

"McEwen has sent out over an
estimated $50,000 worth of political brochures at our expense in the
las; two months and now he has
hundreds of thousands of those socalled 'newsletters' sitting on pallets in the basement of the Capitol
ready to mail just in time to beai
the September 3 deadline," Strick·
land said
Strick:land was referring to the
law that says mailings paid for
through a congressional represenla·

live's budget are not allowable during the 60 days prior to an election.
"Mcl!wm is obviously trying to
squeeze every penny out of the Lax·
payer he can, because in the last
monrb, he has sent out three large
mailings and now he has this one,"
Slrick:land said.
"The only way he beat Con gressman Miller was through
'unethical ~lings' and now he's
gning to try ro defeat me the same
way," Slrictland aiticized.
Strickland said he believes it
was the loophole in the 1990 frank.
ing ref!IDI law that gave McEwen
the 286 vote edge he had over
Clarence MiUer in JIDlC's primary.
The law aUowed house membcn to
send wpaycr-supponed mailings

ouiSide of their own districr under
the guise or "introducing" themselves in the new district. After a
court challenge, the law was
changed, but not before McEwen
had sent what Miller described as
an "une1hical if not illegal" free
mailing into !he lOth district.
The National Taxpayers Union
Foundation, which tracks congressional spending habits, said that
since January, 1991, McEwen has
spent $176,532 in taxpayers' dollars to send an estimated 1.17 mil·
lioo pieces or mail to the sixth districL
"What we are seeing this week
is a last minute mailing being sent
by McEwen just prior to the dead·
(Continued oa Page 3)

*

DYERSVILLE, Iowa (AP) Meat Loaf will sing die
natiOIIaludlem before Sunday's
Field of Dteams chariry baseball

llock •

llld other cdcbrities. includin&amp; Kelsey Grammer of TV's
"Cheen" ucl Mark DeCarlo of
"SIUds," wiD lite on retired major '
tus~s Regie Jacksoll, Felxuson
1eakl11s, Bob Gibson and 'Vida

1) . - :

Blue.

The pme is played 011 the diaclrved from a COlli·
field for lhe 1988 movie "F'.eld of

11101111 t111t -

~·'

Unemployment in August edges Mayor Reed announces free
down; could rise in September parking for Pomeroy shoppers

BEAN BLOSSOM, Ind. (AP)
- Bill tdol•oe is qiC!Iing a muse111110 honor die bllqrass musiC he
Cl [

9

live Dinctor of the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce. In the back row, from left, ate Jo
Ann Crisp, Paul Reed and Jon Karschnik or
Farmers Bank aad Savings Company, Mary
lisle and Mary PoweU.

RIBBON CUTTING • Roltert Harden Jr.
cuts a ribbon Thursdlly signaling the opening or
bis Plus Systems computer srore in Minersville,
42992 State Route 124. In the front row, from
left, are Estlter Harden, Robert Harden Jr.,
Robert Harden Sr. and P111la Tbacker, Execu-

~

The Bill Mcllloe Museum holds
c~•mes. II*Jiill!lhed sheet music
and bl' SJ1II ~
Kitty Wells ud 1ohllny Pay·
chect will be 011 hind this weekend
for die opeaiDJ, Monroe said.
Monloe was born 80 years agn
in lite mountains above Rosine,
ICy., whiR ~usic ~played on fiddles, lllrmalicas, Zldieri IIICl man·
dolins.
"l bad to play the mandolin
becai""IDY bi&lt;Ahas took the guitar
a11d fiddle. It's a good thing,
thouP. because that's what made
me known," he said.

By DAVE SKIDMORE
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON
The
nation's unemployment rare dipped
slightly in August to 7.6 percent,
the second consecutive decline, but
the improvement came from a spe-

cia! suinmer jobs program for teen·
agm, the gnvcmment said today.
The rate, wllich bit an eight-year
high of 7.8 pacent in 1~ before
declining to 7.7 percent 1ft July,
could well soar apin in Seprember
with the expirati011 of the jobs pro-

Bid for Issue Two project
approved by Syracuse council
By KATIE CROW
Sentinel Correspondent

EAST HAMPTON, N.Y. (AP)
- Billy Joel has pleaded innocent
to illeaally carchmg striped bass
dllrinJ a proteSt on iidWt of commercial fi!hermen.
The singer and I 9 fishermen
weiC iatued summonses during the
July 21 proiC8I in Amapnseu, the
Lonalllud town where he and
wife Christie Brinkley own a
house. They entered the pleas
Weft ny llld face $2SO fUICI if
to~~vicled.

1oe1 Ul pven his support to a
sroup of com•ercial fishermen
Who say their ny of life is threat·
eMd by stare regillations limiting
the ilze .-1 method of the carch.
ne COII~Mtiallilbennen say the
ralclfllv« aport fikznltirl.
For iMtance, the resulatlons
•OCI'Iire COIIIIIICI'Cial fishermen to
1101t tllftliSII ·t11e1r - . .-1 throw
llld:· the . . . fish - • proce,_., IIIey aay is lime-consuming

-~·
..

41300·LIUREL CLIFF ROAD • POMEROY, OH.

----

------------------

A bid in the amount of $15,850
submitted by Jeffers Trucking and
ExcavatinB was accepted by Syracuse Village Council on Thursday
night for completion of an Issue II
project.
The bid, the only one received,
is for the Bridgeman Street culvert
replacement project ncar the Syracuse Church of the Nazarene. The
first Issue II project in Syracuse,
the only one completed, was a culvert and sidewalk placed in front of
Syracuse Elementary School. Other
projects being planned include
paving of streets and alleys, and
street repair .and culven replacement on Bridgenuin in front of the
fire station. The largest of those
projects is the paving, which is
estimated to cost $55,000.
.
Work on the projec~ in front of
the ftre stati()n is expected 10 begin
this week. On the subject of streets,
Mayor James Pape announced that
he will apply for a grant to help
with the much-needed replacement
of eight or more culverts within the
viUage.
Mayor Pape and Police Chief
Jim Connolly reported that sevml
culveru on private propeny need
:Cleaning. Council asked that own:ers ~'pitch in" and help out by
cleanmg culveru in front of their
prope_ny. ~ape also reponed ibat

gravel has been placed on Marina
Drive from the ballpark ares to
Stare Rouic 124. Additiooal lllllleri·
al will be placed in the area later,
accmling 10 Pape.
Bill Gilkey of Pomeroy met
with llOUIICit and asktAI to be commissioned as a police officer. Following a discussi011 of the maller,
Pape said that he would contact
Hocking College, where Gilkey
plans to auend school, to see to
what exrcnt the village would be
liable. Cooncil is wifling to assist
Gilker providing council is not
liable m any IIIIIIIICf,
It was agreed that council
should contact the RaciMJSyracuse
sewer district with regard to those
residenis who have never been COO·
nected to the sys~em.
In otla business, COtDJCU:
• Agreed to coniiCI property
owners who need to cut weeds;
- Accepted the mayor's repm of
fines collected in the amount or
$1,361;
• Accepted the police repon of
Jim Connolly, which reflected 27
cilllions, two breaking and enrering incitlenrs investigaFI:d. lftd two
reporu of vandalism. The vehicle
was drive 1,230 miles with 120
hours of SCI~ in August.
Also allending were council
members Bill Roush, Dennis
Wolfe, 1im Hill, ICalic Crow, Jack
Williams IIICl Kcooy Buckley, and
Jan~ Lawson, clerki\reasurcr.
}

gram financed by Congress after
the Los Angeles riots, analysts
warned.
.
Labor Deparunent officials estimate 75,000 youths found jobs
under the program in July and
100,000 in AugusL
Meanwhile, a separate survey of
employers· payrolls showed that
even with the youth program, there
were 83,000 fewer non-fann jobs
overall, the worst decline in nine
monlhs.
In advance, economists were
looking for an increase of around
150,000 jobs.
The August decreases were con·
centrated in retail trade, down
71,000, and manufacturing, down
122,000, the steepest in 18 months.
Today' s report was like Iy to
become political fodder in the presidential election race, with President Bush focusing on the
improvement in the rate and Democratic . nominee Bill Clinton focusing on the secood drop in payrolls
in three months.
Payrolls had risen 177,000 in
July and fallen 76,000 in June. ·
Bush's re-election effort bas
been plagued wilh voter dissatisfaction with the virtually stagnant
economy. Although the gross
domestic product, the total of all
goods and services produced in the
United States, has been growing
slowly for five consecutive quarters, the unemployment rate bas
continued to rise in most months.
The problem, according ro
economists, is that the torpid economy, although growing, is not generating enough jobs to accommodate new entrants into the labor
force, such as college and high
school graduares.
And many layoffs now are considered permanent staff reductions,
rather than lelllponry responses 10
slow sales. lndustties ranging from
(Contiaued on Page 3)

Pomeroy shoppers will be able
to part for free at metered spaces
on Saturday, according to Mayor
Bruce Reed.
Reed staled that because of the
inconvenience experienced by CUS·
tomers this week due to road
paving on Main Street, parting in
the village will be free on Sawrday.

In addition, crews working on the

paving project will no~ J:le on the
sire on Saturday, provtdmg rehef
from traffic congestion and delays.
Reed said that although the
wort began at an inconvenient time
for many local people (ftrst of the
monrh). work had to begin because
the conuactors involved, Shelly

Company and Tom Mayle and
Sons, were behind schedule.
The Ohio Dcpanment of Trans·
portation reporiS that the project,
which involves milling and paving
of Main Street from the Nyc
Avenue intersection to the
Pomeroy/Mason Bridge, will cost
$177,579.

0

•

pa~inF· Tbe construction Is expeeted to ftalsb
sometime next week, weather permitting.

GRAVEL sWEEPER ·AI Oli.lo Departmeat
or Transportation lrorker sweeps IJ'Ivtl from
Main Street In Pomeroy, prepirll2 the..- for
'I

I

i

�·~

Friday, September 4 1992
•

Gommentary
.. •'

'

'

: : The Daily Sentinel
,,.

111 Cnrtltaeet

',

··.

,_.roy, Ohio

DI:VOftD TO Tim I!IITUDTa OJ'1111t 10101 yeao11 AREA

ROBERT L WJNGE'IT
Publlsller
. PATWHITEHEAD
: Assistant Publbher!Contrullor

CIIAitLENE HOEFLICH

•
•
:

Geaenl M~Uger

LETIERS OF OPINION are wok:ome. They lltould be Ieos tbu 300
•: words. All !etten ore subject to Jdllla&amp; and must be siaDed with name
; · addloss and telephone numbe&lt;. No unliped le!W'I will be published. I.e~
•: lhould be in good taste, adciJeuin&amp; i s - 1101 pmotll]itiel.

An industrial Bill
9fRights
•

••

·:•

By JOHN CUNNIFF
;:
AP Business Analyst
;•NEW YORK - More than 200 years after die Bill of Rights estab1~ that power should reside in people rather dian government, manufilf turers throughout the country are considering a special one of their
0~.

·:Many of them feel that in spite of the Consti!lltion they havee ~:a~~
IOfit their freedom to laws and regulations, and they seek to "
thiJse emded rights'' by presenting their case to the public.
:; seeking public support, the originaiOrs of the document state: " We
hll'!e to convince the public that if they can take away the rights of busin$s they can take away individual rights."
:•Ten lhousand copies of the proposed "Industrial Bill of Rights" were
mailed las~ week to. manufacrurers around the ~mmtry, with the hope that
r~1p1ents mturn wtll bnng the case 10 the public and to elected officials.
,•The concept evolved over several years from discussions, comments
anll criticisms among manufacturing conference attendees at the University of Day10n's School of Engineering, and culminated with the mailing.
::The introducti~ .to the proposed bill seems .to synthesize the feelings
of, many mduslnahsts m recent years, refemng to a need to reclaim
" i)lherent rights us~ by 'factions' which have wrongly used the
wwer of government'
: 'A restatement of rights is needed, said Carol Shaw, associate dean of
t!ie Engineering School and initiata of the concept, in order to ''cut loose
59me of the shackles hampering American industry" in a global econo-

Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, September 4, 1992

-=- --

~

=-

•

'S"

FEMA's civil war creaued the
At the center of.the political
stonn is FEMA Director Wallace biggest headlines over the discloE. Stickney. a political protege of sure that the agency's fanner execfonner White House Chief- of Staff utive director, Thomas R. McQuillian, had attempted to pressure a
homo9exual employee into provid·
ing offiCials with a list of homosex·
ual e!'lployees, and. for steering
quesuonable consulung contracts
to friends. The employee, Jerald
Johnson, claimed that agency officials infonned him that furnishing
such a list was a precondition for
John Sununu, wbo has been singled participating in an international
out for stinging criticism by con- conference in the fall of 1991.
Stickney later defended the
gressional investigators. Even the
agency's inspector general says action on the grounds that se.;urity
there are several investigations in officials were concerned whether
any employees concealed thei( sexprogress.
"Not only does FEMA have a ual preference and were "vulneradisproportionate number of politi- ble to coercion." FEMA insiders
cal appointees relative to other fed- say that Stickney was more
eral agencies, but the findings indi- involved in the aborted blacklistiog
cate that the high numtkr of politi- effort ·than he now claims.
Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass.,
cal appointees has adversely
impacted FEMA, •• according to a who is openly gay, described himpreliminary Senate Appropriations self disgusted by the wbole controversy and threatened to hold hearCommittee report.
Stickney's response·was 10 tell a ings. "This is the silliest thing I've
Senate Appropriations Subcommit- heard of from a federal ageocy in a
tee hearing this summer that he had long time," Frank said. Frank's
come to know "some of the· most threat of hearings caused Stickney
mean-spirited people I had met in to act.
"The list in question was
my life" wlien he arrived at the
agency.
destroyed in the presence of myself

By Jack Anderson
and

Michael Binstein

....

1~

.,......-

!I~~=-

my.

::: Joseph Martino, autha of the Industrial Bill of Rights and director of
management programs at the Engineering School, said that
..;ach of the 10,000 recipients were asked to disaibute additional copies.
·:: Each of the nine articles begins with the phrase "Government shall
O,.alce no law..."
:. Article I states that_government shall not restrict the rights of buyers,
~Uers, emyloyers a Willing employees to enter into any oontract which is
not·m 1tsel illegal.
;. )..ike the original Bill of Rights, this one has associations with revolut~bnology

:· Originals are available from The Institute for Manufacturing Rights
P:o. Box 534, Wright Brothers Branch, DayiOn, Ohio, 45409-0534.
'

Today in history
•
By Tbe Associated Press
· Joday is Friday, Sept 4, the 248th day of 1992. There are 118 days
!cit in the year.
: Today's Highlight in History:
·.On Sept. 4.• !781, Los Angeles was founded by Spanish seulers. (Its
o(igmal name: El Pueblo de Nuestra Senora La Reina de Los Angeles de
Porciuncula. ")
: On this date:
: In 1886, Apache Indians led by Geronimo surrendered to General Nelson Miles at SkeleiOn Canyon in Arizona.
In 1888, George Eastman received a patent for his roll'ftlm camera
and registered his trademark: Kodak.
'
· In 1917, 75 years ago, the American expeditionary force in France suf·
feied its ftrst faralities in World War I.
: Ir 1948, Queen Wilhelmina abdicated the Dutch throne for health reasons.
· In 1951 , in the frrstlive, coast·to-coasl television broadcast, President
Harry S. Truman spoke to the nation from the Japanese peace treaty con·
ference in San Francisco.
In 1957, Ford Mo10r Company began selling its ill-fated Edsel, which
p~ved so unpopular it was taken off the market in 1959.
. In 1957, Arkansas Gov. Orval Faubus called out the National Guard 10
pr'cvent nine black students from entering Central High School in Lit~e
R!)Ck.

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

-Berry's World

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"Hurricane Andrew? But I have all my reporters covering Hurricane Mia
Farrow."
.
. In vie:-v of the Republicans'
mtroducuon of "family values"
mto the campatgn, it behooves us
to ~ake sure we know what we are
talkmg about, and exactly where
we stand.
. ManyDemocrats show every
stgn of smcerely believing that the
only "real issues" in the campaign
are the ~conomy and their usual
laundry-hst of hberaltdeas on bow
to make America better (nationaltzed health care, etc.). On such a
~1ew, the Republican preoccupauon w1th such matters as the pro·
tec~on of unborn human ll!'e, Murphy Bro--:n 's casual dectston to
have a ch1ld out of wedlock, and
the .~forementioned "family val·
ues strikes some Democrats as tittie shortofpuredemagogy.
. Buttt tsn't demagogy. These
ISSues are the ftrst rumbles of a
new stonn thatts fast approachmg
the Amencan pohUcal arena. It wdl
qUickly replace the old battles over
the condu~l of the Cold War and
the supenonty of a free,-market
economy. both of whtch the
R ~p ublicans , by sticki_ng to the
pnnc1ples of conservatism, have

SPEAR CATCHER tURNED
SPEAR THROWER

r

won hands down. .
.. The new batU~,ts often ~al.led
_the cultural war. In fam IllS a
d1spute between those who seek to

·

William A. Rusher

uphold the so-called "traditional
values" of American life and those
who argue that these must be
replaced by new values.
That is the philosophical basis
for the Democratic Party's recent
tactic of seeking to build a coalition
of " disadvanta~ed" minorities
(blacks, ultrafemmists, homosexuals, American Indians, the furtherout environmentalists and more
recently even the handicapped and
the deal), and winking indulgently
at bizarre "lifestyles" and the
recreational use of drugs.
A person would have to be deaf,
dumb and blind (in other words,
''disadvantased" in three different
ways) not to recognize that the
underlying implication of that tactic is derogation of the traditional

American values. Deny it as they
may, the ' attack is visible in contemptuous references to "white
males" (a majority of whom, by
the way, haven't \'Oied Democratic
in over a quarter of a century) and
scornful declarations that the
"Ozzie and Harriet" family- two
parents of opposite sexes, with
children, a dog and a car - is no
longer the American norm,
Conservatives, however, know
very well that in a nation of 250
million people there are bound to
be all sorts of living arrangements,
that many of these contrast sharply
with the traditional family, and that
some of them deserve our full
respect It is important to make this
clear, because the Democrats are
trying hard to persuade anyone not
a member of a typical familysingle parents, bachelors and spinsters, and homosexuals for whom
traditional marriage is simply not
an option - that conservauves are
their enemy. That just isn't ttue.
What conservatives do contend
is that the lraditional family, where
it is possible, offers by far the best
conditions for raising children and

QUAYLE'S
CLOSE
ENCOUNTER - As Dan Quayle
beats the drum of "family values,"
the vice president attended a golf
outing more than a decade ago that
created some embarrassing ques·
tions for a family man - so much
so that some Republicans feared it
would come back 10 haunt him during the 1988 election.
The story dates back to 1980
when Quayle was servin&amp; as an
Indiana congressman. Quayle
shared a cottage with some con~onal colleagues and a lobby·
1St by the name of Paula Parkinson,
who once posed for Playboy. It was
all paid for by a IObacco lobbyist.
Wilmington News-Journal
reporter Joe Trento smelled a story
and wrote about the arrangemmt in
a (ront·page piece, but it turned out
to be an even bigger story than he
imagined beciluse several Wash·
ington politicians had had close
relations with Parkinson.
,
During the 1988 campai~n.
Penthouse published a story claiming that Quayle had sexually
propositioned Parkinson but she
had ~ebuffed his advances. "He
was putting the moves on me, •• she
claimed. One of Parkinson's attar·
neys claimed that she reported
Quayle's advances to the FBI in
1981.
Jack Mitchell, author of the new
book "How to Get Elected,"
writes: "Aithou~h Paula's lobbying skills were !united 10 her considerable sensual appeal, an FBI
investigation was undertaken to
determine whether there.'d been
.any sex-for-votes hanky-panky
between Mrs. Parkinson and her
political patamours. But the wellpublicized probe ended with an
mconclusive whimper, and soon
pretty Paula faded into obscuri.

Mitchell concludes that maybe
Sen. Lloyd Bentsen knew better
than anyone that Quayle was '"no
Jack Kennedy.' ... it's unlikely that
(Kennedy) would have passed up
such a tempting amorous opportunity_."

transmitting to them the nation's
common cultural heritase. This not
only assures the health and sb'Cngth
of the society, but provides by far
the best basis fa the development
of the children themselves (as the
pathetic saga of Woody Allen, Mia
Farrow and their miscellaneous
holdings in the next generation is
' currently demonstrating). It is,
therefore altogether proper for the
govern..;ent to encourage and
strengthen the traditional family,
above and beyond what it may be
able and wilting to do for others.
I see no reason on eanh why a
lifelong bachelor (for instance)
should disagrw with this. Na do I
lhink that the government should,
on some theory of absolute social
equivalence, be ~ired to issue a
marria~e certifiCite, for example,
toapall'ofhomosexuals(orheterosexuals, for that mauer) wbo simply want to play house for a while.
Allowing, and indeed respectin,,
cenain sorts of atypicllliaiJons 11
one thinJ; offiCially eiiCOUf88ing or
subsidizmg them is surely another.
(C)l992
NEWSPAPER
ENTI!RPRISE ASSN.

Tell about creation and evolution
A headline in the San Diego - belief in the Bible story of creUnion-Tribune said: "Big Bang ation - should be taught in the
Puts Science and Faith on the Same schools,
Side."
I am for telling the pupils both
stories.
You will notice I said "tell,"
not "teach.' • The word teach has
the connotation of indoctrination
- of implanting infonn-tion and
But that isn't how everyone sees ideas that are to be learned and
it The writer of a letter to the edi- absorbed. So it is natural that partor in The Lutheran magazine said ents who believe in evolution do
of the Big Ban~ theory : "Why not want their children to be
would anyone think that an explo- "taught" creationism.
But teaching and tellin~ are twO
sion could create something? An
different
things. Couldn t we tell
explosion blows things apart but
our children about both evolution
never organizes anything.''
and
creationism without scaring
A J'I'Ofessor at Lutheran Semianyone
iniO feeling we are trying to
nary m Philadelphia said the stale"
take
over
their minds?
ment about "looking at God" is
As a parent, I want my children
"poetic but imPOSSible."
Michael Moller commented: to know about the theory of evolu·
"God is not an explosion. God is tion .
1 also want them to know - as
the creator. No matter how close
we come to the Big Bang, we can- part and parcel of being educated
not see God. God is not the begin· - that there are a lot of p,eople
niog of lime. God is beyond time." who don't believe in evoluu&lt;in and
All of this leaves us just about who do believe the world and man
where we were in the debate over were created as the Bible says.
I want them to know what legiti·
whether evolution or creationism

George R. Plagenz

~

conditions and high temperatures

IToledo I 82' I

Who's inc~u~.ed in 'family values'?

Charles Darwin has been dead
for more than 100 years, but his
theory of evolution still hasn 't
caught on with most Americans.
A Gallup Poll has found that
only 40 percent agree that "man
has developed over millions of
years from less advanced fonns of
life." A plurality of 47 percent of
those polled feel that "God created
man pretty much in his present
form at one time within the last
10,000 years" - despite what
Darwin said.
Nor has everybody foll!ld reason
to get excited about the latest scientific disco'very about the creation of
the wald.
Researchers discovered what
they' say is the missing link that
confmns the Big Bang theory. This
theory holds that the universe
began with a gigantic explosion
about IS billion yean ago.
"If you're religious, it's like
looking at God." said the leader of
the research team that found the
purported missing link, new data
on temwrature variations in early
cosmic radiation.
·

.••.

Accu- Weather• forecast for

IMansfield.la1'

I•

IND.

'' '' '
•lco1umbusla1 • l

ness.

ty ... "

~n.

:.. In a cover letter, Martino asks what Abntham Lincoln and Samizdat
1-(ii~e in c~mon , Samizda_
t is a self-publishing technique Russians used to
S!)read thetr v1ew that radical change was needed to bring about a demoq:u;c free-market system.
: The answer 10 Martino's question:
. .' 'Abraham Lincoln said, 'with public sentiment nothin~ can fail, with~~ 11 nothmg can succeed," to which Martino added: • Samizdat is an
01\afllple of this in practice,"
:· "We ask you to disaibute this document via Samizda~" said Martino
'!ho hopes each recipient will disaibute an additionai!O copies.
'

Satu nlay, Sept. 5

•

and other agency officials," Stickney wrote Frank last May. "Additionally, I am directing FEMA's
General Counsel to review Mr.
Johnson's personnel and security
files in Older to delete any unfavor.
able characterizations of, or infer.
ences from, his refusal to provide
the list.''
Destroying the list ~·t erased
the blemish that this and other
boondoggles have done to impair
FEMA's credibility and effective-

W. VA

leo

,'

Sunny Pl. Cloudy Cloudy
C1992Accu-Weather, Inc

----Weather-----By The Associated Press
Sunday through Tuesday:
Sunday and Monday, humid
with a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the low and
mid-80s. Lows in the 60s. Tuesday,
fair. Highs in the 70s. Lows 55-65.

Soutb Central
Tonight, mostly cloudy. Low
60-65. Sarurday, partly sunny with
a chance of afternoon showers.
High in the low 80s. Chance of rain
40 percent.

---Area deaths--Lena Criner
Lena Walter Criner, 86, 14
Cruzet St, Gallipolis, died Friday,
Sept. 4, 1992, at her residence.
She was a homemaker.
She was born Oct 20, 1905 in
Henderson, daughter of the late
Charlts Walker and Iva Henry
Walkerlee.
·
Survivors include one daughter,
Mrs. Herbert (Phyllis) Rowland of
Gallipolis; two sons, Odell Criner
of Columbus, and Ervin Criner of
Hillard; two brothers, Lee Walker
of Gallipolis, and Forrest Lee of

Strickland...
(Continued from Page 1)
line," Strick!and said. "Thus, we
can expect to see thousands of
pieces of junk mail hitting our
mailboxes at taxpayer expense.
What is unfonunate about this
deadline is that it was designed to
prevent members of con~s from
abusing the franking pnvilege in
order to influence the outcome of
elections."
"Instead," Saickland said, "what
we are seeing is a mad rush to put
out as much junk mail as possible
prior to the deadline for the sole
purpose of influencing this elec·
tion. If we ended this abuse right
now, we would save the taxpayers
over $87 million nationwide."
"What I propose is that congress
allow citizens 10 send mail to their
representative for free and end this
abuse," Strickland said. "Let the
people have the perk. If members
of Congress want to send unsolicited mail to their constituents, then
they should do it at their own
expense, not the people's.''
McEwen's campaign manager,
Barbara Briggs, u~held McEwen's
mailing privileges m a news release
issued this morning.
"Strickland)is obviously upset
that Bob McEwen is dealing with
the issues important to the people
of the Sixth Disaict," Briggs said.
"If he had his way, no one would
know that ·Bob is the leader on
issues of supreme importance to
the taxpayers, jobs, highways and
health care."
"Liberals love to go off to
Washington and never let the taxpayers know what they are doing to
America," Briggs said. "Our
'Keeping in Touch' correspon·
dence comes out of the budget allocation for equipment, expenses and

communicauons."

macy, if any, creationism may have
- both from a scientifiC standpoint
and as a way of stating a ttuth that
science alone can only dimly and
awkwardly hintat
It is not that the monkey-intoman story ·is ne'cessarily untroe. I
am in no position to judge. It is just
thai, if man is a special creation of
Go~. it is the artistic person -:whtch the autha of Genesis most
assuredly was - and not the IICientist wbo may be beuer lble 10 get
US to IICII this.
..Our insislence on IICientillc
.
preCISion IRd lceWIICY m the10 mat·
ters is open to question. Symbols,
such as the Bible Bll1ry &lt;i caiO'.t,
seek to ex(!IUS trutha that ean:10t
be &amp;Pillehended in any Other w~y.
Saence, of course, must ~..e true
to il!Oif. But it mu11 noc on that
accoun~ rule out all O'.htr expres·
sions of truth. Unless ·.;c tell school
children that trul!a has this ·dual
nature, as educatrn we will be failingthem.
(C)I992
NEWSPAPER
ENI'I!RPRISE ASSN.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Dry weather returns to Northeast, Florid3

OHIO Weather

Relief agency in a hurricane of its own
WASHINGTON- Even before
Hurricane Andrew swept across
South Florida, a political stonn of
equal magnitude tore the roof off
the federal government's principal
relief agency, the Federal Emergency Management Agency - rendering it badly damaged, disabled
and demoralized.
The litany includes internal
bickering and feuding, accusations
that the agency has been treated
like little more than a political
dumping ~round by the Bush
administrauon, gross mismanagement and a bizarre summertime
flap over. the disclosure that the
agency kept a blacklist of gay
employees.
To be sure, FEMA has strayed
far afield from its original mission
of coordinating response and
recovery to major disasters and
emergencies in the United States,
with a 2,300-strong workforce and
a budget of nearly $800 million.
The political sideshows have
clearly distracted the agency from
its main mission. FEMA has
received poor marks for its
response 10 previous natural .disasters - it handles about 20 presidentially declared crises a year including Hurricane Hugo and the
Lorna Prieta earthquake.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

"This is an expression of Congressman McEwen's priority to
keep people informed," she oontinued. "Strickland should give
account for what benefit Ohioans
receive for his taxpayer salaries. He
should explain what he's been
doing - other than running for
office at taxpayer expense."
Briggs went on to discount
Strickland's political posturing.
"Every two years, we get these
types of meanderints from professional candidates, Briggs said.
"We don't pay a lot of attention to
it, and frankly, I can't understand
why Strickland doesn't want tax·
payers 10 know what Bob's doing."
Briggs also said that McEwen's
newsletters go out at regu!w inter·
vals, not only in election years.
"Congressional auidelines limit
district-wide mailings to six per
year. Congressman McEwen mails
two • she said. "lt_only bathers Ted
SaiCklanct if ithlfpens to be a year
when he~s runn•"ft for Congress
again," she added. '1. wonder, if he
were elected, would candidate
Strickland choose not to answer .
constituent mail or let the taxpayers
knOw what • if uything • he was
'doing? It's easy to critkize from
the outside when you've got no
reoord to stand on."

Pomeroy; three grandchildren; ana
one great-grandchild.
She was preceded in death by
her husband, Rudy Criner, on Jan.
1,1991; three infant children; three
sisters; and one brother.
Graveside services will be held
2 p.m. Sunday at Pine Street Cemetery, with the Rev. Leland Allman
and the Rev, Everett Delaney officiating. Burial will be in Pine
Street Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Willis
Funeral Home on Saturday from 79p.m.

EMS units
answer calls
Units of Meigs County Emergency Services answered calls for
assistance on Thursday and early
Friday.
On Thursday at 8:57 .a.m., Tuppers Plains unit went to East Route
681 and treated Arthur Heiney.
At 12:38 p.m.• Racine unit went
to State Route 338 and lOOk Nicole
Blumanauer to Holzer Medical
Center. At 2:02p.m., Pomeroy
squad went 10 Village Green Apanments. Nancy Ackennan was taken
to Vetenms Memorial Hospital. At
2:55 p.m .• Pomeroy squad took
Anhur Heiney to Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital , At 7:02 p.m.,
Mfddlepon squad went to Overbrook Center. Keith Robinson was
taken 10 Veterans.
At 1:38am. on Friday, Middleport squad went to General
Hartinger Parkway and lOOk Martin
Davis to Holzer. At 7:58 a.m. ,
Pomeroy and Syracuse squads went
to Hemlock Grove for an au10 accident. Judy Schleifer, Tiffany Harder, and Carrie Lambert were taken
to Veterans. At 8:23 a.m.. Racine
unit went to an accident on State
Route 124. Serena Davis was taken
to Veterans and Donald Shaeffer
was treated at the scene. Sandra
Baer refused ueaunent

Major airlines
delay fare
•
mcreases

By Tbe Associated Press
Cloudy but dry weather greeted
the Northeast today after a night
that brought strong winds. heavy
rain and some flooding to parts of
the region.
A band of thunderstorms was
expected across the northern
Plains, and unsettled .weather was
forecast 10 move inland acorss the
Pacific Northwest
Another day of thunderstonns
was forecast for the Southeast.
Dry weather was expected to
replace Thursday's thunderstorms
in southern Aorida. However, more
showers and scattered thunder-

siOnns were possible late 10night or
Sarurday.
On Thursday, winds of up to
100 mph, possibly from a IOmado.
tore through Stamford, Conn. The
winds ripped up a bank's drive-up
bay and hurled it across a shopping
center's parking lot. Two people
were injured, one critically.
The National Weather Service
said a tornado touched down in
Endicott. N.Y .. damaging ttees and
a filling station. A stonn damaged
trees and roofs at Scarsdale, N.Y.
Heavy rain produced local
Oooding over northern New Jersey
and southeastern New York. Up to
3 inches fell in two hours Thursday

evening, flooding pans of Westchester County, N.Y.
Highs today were forecast in the
90s throughout the South; in the
80s through most of the Midwest
and the Southeast; in the 70s
through the Northeast and most
regions west of the Rockies· in the
60s in Montana and alo~g the
Pacific Northwest coast.
The ·high temperature for the
nation Thursday was 105 degrees
at Lake Havasu City, Ariz., and
Imperial, Calif.
Across Ohio
The northern half of Ohio will
be clear tonight, while clouds move
in from the south. Lows will be

from 55 to 65.
Sarurday will see an increase -in·
the clouds with a chance for show- ;
ers over the south. Highs will be in '
the lower and mid 80s.
:
The chance for showers and ;
thunderstonns will increase Sunday '
and especially Monday with the ;
approach of a cold front. It will •
become more humid with tempera. ;
tures in the 80s.
;
The record high on this date in •
Columbus was 96 degrees in 1953. ;
The record low was 46 degrees in ;
1982.
•'
Sunset tonight will be at 7:58 ::
p.m. Sunrise Saturday will be at '
7:03a.m.
:

'

Union protests hiring
practices by Wal-Mart
lahar. The company wants to come
By MITCH WEISS
Associated Press Writer
into a community and have the
TOLEDO- Wai-M8(t should community support it, but they
don't want to suppon the commusu~pon the community by hiring
unmn labor if it wants the commu- nity. It's unbelievable."
Several telephone messages left
nity 10 patronize its stores, a labor
at Wai-Man's cotporate headquarleader said,
Consttuction workers are angry ters in BeniOnville, Ark., were not
that Wal-Man has awarded con- immediately returned.
Last month, more than 100 contracts to build a store in Bowling
Green to non-union companies, struction work¢rs and their families
Ray Medlin, president of the attended a Bowling Green City
Northwest Ohio District Council of Council meeting to protest the
city's decision to rezone land for
Carpenters, said Thursday.
About 100 workers demonstrat- the Wai-Man store.
"I think Wal-Mart thinks we
ed this morning outside the Bowlwent
away. We're just beginning.
ing Green site.
The
people
in Wood County need
"Here we are on the eve of
Labor D~y and companies like jobs," he said.
Other unions plan to join the
Wal-Mart, who try to treat their
people like they did in the 1930s, protest
David Sadowski, spokesman for
still exist The message we want to
United
Food and Commercial
send to Wal-Mart is we're not
Workers
Local626, said Wai' Man
pleaSed with them," Medlin said.
"We just want to let the people urges consumers in advertising
know we're tired of Wai-Man and campaigns to buy American, but
the way they treat the ccmmunities the tetailer carries a high number of
they move iniO. Local jobs for local foreign-made goods.
In Adrian, Mich., about20 miles
people," he said.
Medlin said there are about 400 northwest of Toledo, union memunemployed members of council bers have been protesting construcliving near the site of the proposed tion of a Wal-Mart store for the
store, about 20 miles south of Tole- same reasons.
do.
"The bottom line is jobs for
Medlin wants Wai-Man 10 hire local people," said Joe Blaze,
local construction companies and spokesman for the Iron Workers of
workers for the job.
Toledo. "It won't stop with Wai"It's just not in Bowling Mart.lf we can't change it here, we
Green," Medlin said "Wal-Man definitely can't change it in the
does this all over. They hire these state or national level."
companies that use non-union

Lawmaker says he
might .sue agency
By RODD AUBREY
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - A state legiSlator says he's willing to sue the
Ohio Department of Human Services to get the information he
wants,
"If l have to take them to court
and gel them to open every file
over there I'll do 11," Rep. Mike
Fox, R-Hamil10n, said in an interview Thursday.
Earlier this week. Fox criticized
the department for what he called a
gag rule that prohibits employees
from tallcing directly 10 legislators
or the media, a charge the agency
denies.
He said he was trying to get
information about topics such as
Medicaid use, frequency of procedures and number of doc10r office
visits in a year. He said a verbal
order 10 direct calls to a special legislative office slowed the process.
Fox said his decision about
whether to ftle a lawsuit, use the
Freedom of Information Act or
write legislation depends on
responses 10 the criticism,
Gov. George Voinovich nominated Fox in 199lto be the depanment's director. Fox started hiring
people, but he withdrew from consideration when repons surfaced
that he bounced 15 checks worth
$3,200 at the state treasury.
But Fox ·promised to continue
working in the Legislature for
human services issues, said Jim
Bruney, a spokesman for the agency.
"In the beginning of this pro-

cess, in the early months of 1991,
we were all Mike Fox's people,"
Bruney said. " How we got from
that point to this I don't know."
Bruney said the department set
up a special office to handle
requests from the General Assembly. He said Fox's questions get
pnonty.
"The whole idea is to keep that
request up on the surface, not get
lost and buried on someone' s
desk," he said.
He said workers are allowed to
talk to legislators and reporters, as
long as they don't violate the confidentiality of those seeking help
from the agency.
Bruney also denied that plans
are under way to dismiss depart ment Personnel AdministraiOr Paul
Guthrie.
Guthrie was one of two people
who !Old the State Highway Patrol
earlier this year that Margaret
Golledge, the deparunent's senior
deputy director, helped create a
supervisory job for a department
executive's estranged wife. Ms.
Golledge was suspended without
pay for three days.
"Mike Fox makes some pretty
serious allegations," said Jenny
Camper.
a spokeswoman
Voinovich. "If there's proof and
facts related 10 the aceusatioos, we
definitely need to be brinF them
forward and work on them.'

By DAN BLAKE
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK - The nation's
major airlines are giving air travelers a short reprieve from ticket
price increases of $10 10 $40 that
Hospital news
were planned for this weekend
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
American Airlines, the nation •s
Sept. 3 discharges- Evelyn
largest carrier, said Thursday it
Austin, Mrs. Micheal Dupree and
planned to raise fares Sept. II
daughter,
Derek Durst. Qyde Hamtnstead. But spokesman Marty
mons, Gary Hess. Mrs. Brian ManHeires said the airline would reconring and daughter, Mrs. Anthony
sider the increase after the Labor
CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are Nolan and son, Mrs. Clifford RoseDay holiday.
Thursday night's Ohio Lottery berry and son, Mrs. Edward ScurUnited Airlines said it would selections:
lock and daughter, and Mrs. Dondelay its increase until Sept. 10.
Pk:k 3 Numbers
ald
Swisher and daughter.
USAir said it would also pot off its
6-5-3
Sept.
3 births - Mr. and Mrs.
planned prioe hike,
(six, ftve, three)
Rodney Bailey, daughter, Pomeroy .
Mr. and Mrs. Made Hall, daughter,
Meigs announcements 4-2-6-4Pk:k4 Numbers
Chester.
(four, two, six, four)
The jackpot for Saturday •s
Club to meet
Super Lollo drawing is worth $4
The Big Bend· Farm Antique million.
Club will meet Tuesday at 8 p.m. at
Southern High School.
Meeting date CIIID&amp;ed
The Syracuse Board of Public
FRI~ SAT., SUN.
Affairs has changed its meeting
FRI. TIIU THURS.
TOI OJUJS(
date from Monday to Tuesday at 7
TOIIWIIS, GEIIU DAVIS,
· IN
p.m. due to the holiday.
IADOIINA
PTOtomeet
IN
Riverview Elementary PTO will
PG 13
meet Tuesdaf at 7 p.m. in the
SChool gyrRIIISIWD. All other meet·
ings of the 1992·93 school year
will be held the fmt Tuesday or
each month as a result of a change
in the organization's by-laws.
ltadJH coaDdl to.Racine Village Cotiticll will
Ollm.IIIIDW7:JI
meet Tuesday at .'•.P.·m. It council
. . . . $1.51
chambers in Starrruu Part.

Lottery

COLONY THEATRE

FAR AND AWAY

OWH1

----·-A~lr;MIIIW

...,.,

Unemployment...

Stocks

•1

(Continued rrom Pa2e
banlcing 10 defense contracung are
coping with long-term decline.
Manufacturers are saiving to best
overseas rivals who enjoy cheaper
labor costs.
"America is being forced by
powerful competitive pressures to
get its act together, and that means
cost-cutting, shedding jobs and
efficiency ," said economist
Stephen S. Roach of Morgan Stanley &amp;Co.
The summer youth employment
program helped push the jobless
rate for teen-agers down to 19.8
percent in Augus~ from 21 percent
in July and 23.6 percent in June.
However, the rate for adult men
edged up to 7.3 percent last month
from 7.2 percent in July. The rate
for adult women held steady at 6.5
percent
In the payrolls survey, government employmen~ which accounted for the bulk of the temporary
youth jobs, rose by 84,000 after an
82,000 gain in July,
Construction employment lost
7,000 jobs in August after a 16,000 ·
decline in July.
The unexpected August decline
in payrolls raised the possibility of
action by the Federal Reserve to
lower interest rates in an attempt to
stimulate the ecoocmy.
·
The Fed· s key discount rate
already is at a nearly three-decade
low of 3 percent and, until today's
report, most economists thought
the central bank would refrain from
further reductions because of the
weakness of the dollar. Lower rates
reduce the dollar's v~ue against
currencies in countries with higher
rates, such as Germany.
But economists have said the
Fed probably would not let the dollar stand in the way of lower rates
if they clearly were needed to bolster the domestic economy.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial Hospital
THURSDAY ADMISSIONS Paul Sellers, Portland, Keith
Robertson, Middl~ and Dennis
Harlowe, S~ Mary s. W. Va
THURSDAY DISCHARGES Floyd Brickles, Marcia Karr and
Danny Barrett

a

-lo

I

llfii :ii:!~IVI N

Am Ele Power ................... 32 1/2
Ashland Oil.. ..................... 13 1/4
AT&amp;T.................................42 5/8
Bank0ne...........................44
Bob Evans ..........:.............. 18 3/4
Charming Shop..................30 1/2C:ity Holding ...................... l8
Federal Mogul................... 14 3/4
GoodyearT&amp;R .................. 621/2
Key Centurion ................... 19 3/4
Lands End .......................... 27 5/8
Limited Inc....................... 23 tn.
Multimedia Inc .................. 24 3/4
Rax Restaurant ................... 3/8
Reliance Elecbic................ l9 1/'1
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 15 3/4
Sboney's Inc ............. ,.... ..... 17 7/8
StarBank ........................... 32 '
Wendy lnt'l........................ ll 3/4
Worthington Ind................ 21 1/4
Stock reports are the 10:30 '
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
Ellillbd Loewl cl GaUipolis.

~==~.
The Daily Sentinel
(t18P8 111-110)

Pv.bliehed enry ~tlemoon, Monday
t.hrouth Priday, 111 Ccxu1. 8L, l'taiWIO)
Ohio by the Ohio Valley Pllbliehlai
Compaay/Mu1Umtclil Inc., PoDMnJ', ,
Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2156. S..O.d dua
po1tap paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Member: The A..acia\ed Pnu, and. ~
Ohio New1p11per Auoc:iation, National

AdYert.ilin1 RllpruentatiYe, Branham
Newspaper Sal1111, 733 Third MlnatJ
NewYort,NewYotk 10017.
POSTMASTER: Send ed-. cha.,.. to
The Daily Sentinel, J 11 Court. St.
l'ameroy. OHio 45769.
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8UB8CIIIP'I10N IIATU
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Wook. .........................................11.60

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SINGLICOPY

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PRICE

Doily......................................... ....:u; c.n..
Su.t.crfben not detirilll to .-Y Lhe eurimay ramit in advanc~e dinc:t kl The

11'

Daily Sentinel on a three, aix or 12
!DIII.Lb buill. Credit will be ,tven canier ·

-h"'*-

No 1~ptton1 by mail pemuUed in
anae •here home eerrier 1ervice ie
•••ilable.

t......... ..,
Mall 8ab.crl~•

t3 w..u. ........................................ $21.84
28 Weeks................... .......... ............. l43. t6
62 Weeks.......................................... IA4.76
O.tlllda Melp Coaat)'

13 Woob......... ................. ................ l23.40

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

7!DO ,t !a lllll' .

• •utiii:

......

IN·UI

j,

�Friday, September 4, 1992

The Daily Sentinel

By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP)- Manager
Lou Piniella thinks his reeling
Cincinnati Reds still could get the
last laugh.
·
The Reds ended their sevengame losing streak Thursday night
by scoring twice in the ninth to
beat the New York Mc!ts 4-3. Their
fii'St win in a week moved them 6
12 behind Atlanta in the NL West
with just 29 to play.
Not great odds. But Piniella
isn't writing off his team just yet
When a room full of reporters
laughed at a suggestion that the
pennant race is heating up Thursday, PinieUa kept a straight face.
''Go ahead and laugh,'' he said.
"A lot of funny things have happened in this crazy game of baseball."
Several improbable ones came
together to end the Reds' longest
losing streak of the season.
The Mets blew a ninth-inning
lead for the ftrst time in nearly two
years. Reliever Anthony Young,
perfect in 12 save opportunities,
finally blew one. Paul O'Neill, 0
for 12, doubled home the tying run.
And Jeff Branson, also 0 for 12, hit
a potential double-play grounder

Page-4

Gallia Academy to host Meigs in season opener Friday night
Marauder Wing-T attack this fall

'Gallipolis will host Meigs on
Field in the 1992 football opener for both schools Friday.
''Kickoff is SCI for 7:30 p.m.
·It will be the 20th meeting
between the two schools. Gallipolis
lelids the series with aitll-8 mark.
&lt;Jallia Academy High School
h~has 10 lenermen returning from
last year - seven from the Blue
Devils' 6-4 squad which downed
MHS 35-14 at Pomeroy in the 1991
season opener -and three transfer·
le'itermen from Hannan Trace.
Meigs has six returning veterans
from last year's squad which finisljed 4-6 overall.
.
~Expected to lead Mike Staggs'

are Eric Wagner, junior, at quarterback with Breit Newsome as his
backup; junior Heath Hudson at
fullback and Mike Cremeans at
tailback.
Man Craddock will stan at split
end and Aaron Drummer at tight
end. Mike Welsh is expected to
open at wingback.
Senior veteran Steve Swatzel
will anchor the offensive line at

center.

Tackle Kevin Lambert is the
man to watch up front
Meigs will run a multiple 4-3 set
defense, with Mike Cremeans leading the way from his linebacker

Southern spikers beat Eastern
By SCOTT WOLFE .
· . Sentinel Correspondent
, After dropping !he first t\\10
decisions of the year to Wamm and
Trimble, Suzanne Wolfe's SoutheiJl Tornadoes defeared county foe
Eastern Thursday evening in
Rocine.
Senior Christie Maidens led
Southern's scoring assault with 14
points and a good floor game,
wliile senior Angie Swiger also
played well in the back line and
a(\(led I 0 points.
Jodi Caldwell, who added
se'ven, was followed by Megan
Wolfe's four and Andrea Moore's
two.
The fii'St match flashed back to
the long-running rivalry between
the two schools and Southern won
the Close and exciting shoot-out by
a 15-13 margin.
Megan Wolfe and Eastern 's
Stephanie Otto had a great front
line battle. Wolfe ended the night
with five kills, hitting 12 of 13
cltailces, while Otto had five kills.
''Andrea Moore, a sophomore,
dominated plar. with nine kills and
hit20 of22 spiking attempts.
Jaime Wilson, who led Eastern
scoring with nine, was followed by
Kathy Bernard's eight and Carrie
MOrrissey's five.
:Eastern came back to win t~e

second match I 5-11, setting the
stage for a good finale. Southern
lOOk the upper hand at mid-point
and never looked back in a 15-8
finale.
Earlier Ibis week ...
At Trimble Wednesday, Southem, now 1-2, fell to Trimble 15-10,
15-3 as Molly Mingus Jed the winners with 13 serving points, seven
assists and five kills. Anna Downs
had eighlAngie Swiger led Southern with
four points.
Southern won the JV game at
Trimble 15-9, 15-5.
In reserve action. against Eastem. Southern won 15-13 and 15-0.
Jennifer Lawrence paved the
way with twenty points and Sammi
Sisson had six.
Brandi Reeves paced Eastern
with six and Kelli Ridenour and
four.
Southern also won the junior
high match in three sets 15-12, 915 and 15-8.
Amber Thomas led Southern
with nine, while Kim Mayle had
nine for Eastern.
·
Eastern, now 1-1, defeated Warren Local Wednesday and was led
by Jaime Wilson, Carrie Morrissey
and Stephanie Otto.
Southern will play Gallipolis
Wednesday.

European tour tabbed as helpful
for .OSU men's basketball team
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)DOug Etzler and his coach, Randy
A~ers, agree that a recent European
tour with a team representing the
Big Ten Conference was very helpfutfor the Ohio Stale guard.
·'I thinlc it helped me in terms of
p((ysical play and overall confidence," Etzler said.
"It wasn't dirty, but they
aUowed a lot of things like hangil)g
on your shirt Offensively, they let
guys push off, hook you or use the
forearm to protect the ball."
. Ayers said the physical play and
increased playing time will help
Eizler.
"Just from looking at Doug
when he ~ot back, he seems a lot
s(ronger, • Ayers said. "He got
playing time at both guard-positions, which is sure to help him."
The 6-foot sophomore from
Convoy Crestview High School
averaged 17.9 minutes per game
ap~ made 22 of 44 shots from the
floor. He had five steals and was
charged with seven turnovers.
· Etzler, who will be competing
for the point guard spot vacared by
~ark Baker, played in all seven
games on the tour, starting four. He
!Weraged 7.3 points, 1.3 rebounds
aJl(l2.6 assists per game.
· The team of mostly young players, coached by Northwestern's
BiU Foster, won six of seven games
in England, Belgium and the
Netherlands from Aug. 6 to 18 and
ayeraged 106.3 points per game.
• "We came together preuy well
iu a limited amount of time,"
Epler said. "Coach Foster is a nice

guy who really knows his basketball. He got us motivated to represent the U.S. and Big Ten and
make sure we were winning while
we had a good time."
Etzler said the team had a bi~
reputation to live up to with its vistt
coming so soon after the gold
medal victory by the United States
in the Olympics.
"I remember this one headline
that said something like 'Younger
Dream Team Coming to Play,'" he
said. "As Americans, we represented a version of the (Olympic)
dream team and they were geared
up to beat us." .
Its only defeat was a 124-123
decision against Sunair of Belgium,
whose roster included former Indiana player Todd Jadlow.

post
Gallipolis is coming off two
pre-season scrimmages with one
major injury. Starting 215-pound
junior center Man Loveday suffered a knee injury at McArthur in
Sarurday's Scrimmage against Vinton County, and is out 'for the sea'
son. Matt Wamsley, a 180-pound
junior defensive end, suffered a
shoulder injury in drills this week
and is a questionable starter. Jason
Casey, a 215-pound sophomore

tackle, is coming off an ankle
injury in drills, but should be ready
for Friday's opener
Blue Devil head coach Brent
Saunders will start 190-pound
senior guard Roger Warren at center.
Bryan Hall, who experimented
at the fuUback post during pre-season drills, has rerumed to his tight
end position, according to Saunders.
Saunders said he was "well-

pleased" with the defense ~~ this Sam DaviS at left guard and Darrin
point of the season. Offenstvely, Powell at right taekle.
Starting backs are Chad Barnes,
the GAHS ·mentor said the Blue
Chuck North, full.quarterback,
Devils looked bright in spots durback,
Jamie
Caldwell,
tailback and
ing the pre.season scrimmages,
especially the running backs and Nathan MiUer, wingback.
In other Friday openers involvquarterback. He added the line
played well at times, led by 6-foot- ing Southeastern Ohio League
2, 280-pound sophomore left tackle teams, Nelsonville-York is at
Dylan Evans, and Hall, but it lacks Athens, Wheeling Park is at Logan,
Belpre is at W~n Local and M~r­
overall experience.
gan
is at Martetta. Jackson wtll
Bob Mabry will open at right
play
at WeUston Saturday night
tackle, Ryan Barnes at split end,

------Meigs-GARS starting lineups------Meigs Marauders
(Offense)
Pos.-PLA YER
WT.
TE--Aaron Drummer .. .157
LT--Walt Williams ......205
LG--Brian Smith .......... I%
C---Steve Swatze1.. ..... 200
RG--Shannon Staats ... 176
RT--Kevin Lambert ..... l93
SE--Man Cradd'ock ...... l44
QB--Eric Wagner ....... .. 131
FB--Heath Hudson ....... l55
TB--Mike Cremeans .... 188
WB--Mike Welsh ...... .. 151

GAHS Blue Devils

(Defense)

YR.
3
2

2
4
2
4
4
3
3
4

ENDS - Staats and Lambert;
TACKLES- Ben Fackler (4-188);
and Shawn Petrie (2-181):
LINEBACKERS - Hudson, M.
Cremeans. and Tom Cremeans (3170); - HALFBACKS - Jim
Pullins (4-140) and Jered Hill (2150); FREE SAFETY - Drummer;
STRONG SAFETY - Welsh;
PUNTER- Wagner; KICKERNathan Brown (4-175); FIELD
GOAL AND PATs- Carlos Miana
(4-180).

(Defense)
ENDS - PoweU and Matt Wamsley (3 -180); TACKLES- Evans
and Mabry: MIDDLE GUARD Sturgill
(3 -185);
Paul
LINEBACKERS - Hall and
North; CORNERBACKS - Miller
and Jeremy Davis (3-130);
STRONG SAFETY - Jason Stansberry (3-160); FREE SAFETY C. Barnes; PUNTER - Hall;
KICKER· Tim Slone (4-180).
GAMESJTE
Memorial Field,
Gallipolis
Kickoff Time: 7:30p.m.

(Offense)
Pos.-PLAYER
Wf. YR.
SE--Ryan Barnes ......... 140
2
LT--Dylan Evans .........280
2
LG--Sam Davis ............l75
4
C--Roger Warren ...... .190
4
RG--Bob Mabry...........215
4
RT--Darrin PoweU ....... 200
3
TE--Bryan Ha11 ............ 200
4
QB--Cbad Barnes ....... .145
3
TB--Jamie Caldwe11.....155
3
FB--Chuck North ......... 175
4
WB--Nathan Miller .... .150
4

4

Ridenours
915·1307

CHESTER

.591

.S4t

.530
.474
.444

.406

6.5

I
ll.S
19.5
24.l

- I I , Adulll2
CINaNNA11.4.NewYCidt 3

Pituliwah 9, S o n - 3
Toda~'s lames

~turclay's rames

llloaO '(Doollaiaa 3-4) "

Chicaao

(0. Modd.. t6-t0). 2:20JJ!I·
New Ycft (Hjll.man :l-0) tt CINCIN·
NAn (11)11&amp; Q.O). 7:0! p.m.
Anp (llonhiaor 9·11) It Plat·

Reversible
Cordless Drill

u.

-(Walk ....~ ,,os pm.

450 RPM. o/o" cordless drill
with 4.8-volt, built-in battery.
Recharges in just 3 hours.
Charger, drill chuck and keyset
included. 1-yr. mfr. warranty.

Pbiltdclphla (Rivera S...) at Allal'ltl
(A""'''I0-9). 7'10pm.
"""""" (Ei1o 2-9) 11 Mana..l (Nab!
hall 9-9), 7:3l , ....
San fnae11co CRoltrl 0-0) at St.
t..oLt (Coomlor 5·1 0), I:Ol P"'·

1"·1v.''
Carbide Tipped
Circular Saw Blade

17171 teo400W

Sunday's eames
-atMonlral,l:3lp.m.
U. olnploa •l'laohlrah.l ,35 pm.
~atAtllllla.2:10

Frost
Bulbs

nslc~e

40, 60, 75 or 1DOW
Stock up on America's #1
selling hght bulb - G. E.
35333.7,&lt;41,868 113255,4102$,30,..

t':S

NewYo.t at aNCINNAn,
p.m.
S o n - .. Sl. LooiJ, 2:15 p.m.
s.n Dlcso .. Chicaao, 2:20p.m.

Cutoff/rip blade for wood,
plywood, particle board and
more . Genuine carbide tips.
12232 127170

lA

AMERICAN LEAGUE

~,;ZFrolt

luterft Dl¥ilbl
WL,.LCB
T""""o .................76 Sl .567
Br.llimtn ...... .........7S 51 .564
.5
Mllwauteo .............71 62 .S34
4.5
DouoiL...................6) 71 .470
13
Nc" YCidt ..............62 72 .46!
14
s .........................61 12 .4.19 t4.5
CJ.J!VEUND .......60 7! .4.11 IS.S

Klllg'

Tum

10' X 25'
3·MII. Plastic
Sheeting
Strong polyethylene 'firm can
be used in home and yard .
·Rolled and ready to. go.
Clear or black.

Wllllnl Dl&gt;laioft
Oakland .................79 54 .594
... ..............75 l9 .560
Chicaao................. .70 62 .no
T0111 .................... 66 70 . ~5
Califontia .. ............ 61 7l .4.15
Kantu aty .......... .60 7l .451
S..alo ................... .$6 71 .411

499110,1 tP102S"J.B

4.l
l.l
14.!1
ll.l
19
23.l

Thursday's 11&lt;01'0
ou.a,o 7,Kanaaa Cty !

Tonllbt's pmes
Totu (1010 buzman 12·10) It New
Yodt(Widonan 1-0), 7:30pm.
~ (T1pui 14·9) ll Toronto
(Cone 0.1), 7:!5 pm.
Soattlo (I'IMUna IS-6) II CLEVE·
LAND (lolooa S-10), 7o!5 pm.
MilwavJr;-. (lotio 12-S) al Dtuoit
(O.IIIc:boo 1+1), 7:3l pm.
• Chiea4o CP~m~Ddez 6·1) at Kuuaa
Cilr (API"'''IHl. 1:3l p.m.
Bo•ton (Darwin 7-6) at OUhnd
(S-Ift 10.1~ 9:15p.m.
Ballimtn (SIIIdillo 14-11) 11 Californlo ~ 12·11),10:3l p.m.

Satunlay'IIIIDH

Teau (Padik 2·2) n Haw York
(Milildlo3-l).t:30p.m.
lollanoaou (Smiley 14·6) •• T-10
(Jilin O..W.I2-3).1 :3l p.m.
Soaldo.(Jolwoa 11-ll) 11 CLIMI·
LAND (Na~:t-10),1 :!5 pm.
Una- 12-1), 4. • ....6-7) • Oakland (l)ai-

TRIPLES - Ocveruut, Bahimoro,
10: An.dmon, Baltimort., 9; L lolwon,

0UcaF (Houab 6-11) at IUnnl City
(Honey 1-0), I:O&gt;p.m.
Baldmorc (Millliru. 13-S) atCalilmtia
(Abbott6-12),10:0S p.m.

Olicago. 9; Loftnn, CLEVELAND, I; R.
Alcmu, Toronw, 7; Lilu.ch, Milwaukee,
6; Sicm, Tuu, 6; White, Toronto. 6;
R.aincl, Chieago, 6; Moliwr, Milwaukoe,

Sunday's games

HOME RtJNS - Juan Gonzdez,
TCIUI, 39; ~ Oltland, 31; Field·
cr, Omroit, 29; Caner, ToJOOto. 29; Deer,
O.lroil, 27; Bolle, CLEVELAND, 26;
Tellleloa, Dcaroi1. 26.
STOLEN BASES- Lisllch, Milwat&gt;
be, 41; Lorton. CLEVELAND, 47; Polonil, CaUfmria, 47; Andcnot~, Baltimore,
~;, R. Hendenon, Oaklu1d, 45; Raina.
UIICoiJO- 39; R. Alomar. Toru~to.ll.
PITCIUNG (IS decldon1)- Juan
Guzman. Toconto, 12·3, .800, 2..29; Jack
Morria, Toronto, U-S, .713, 4.19; Me·
Dowell, OUcago, 19·7, .731,3.14; M'"si·
na, Baltimoto, ll·S, .722, 2.11; Fleming,
S..tllo, ll~•.714. !.07; Appior, Kutw
City, 15-6, .714, 2.41; BoliO, Milwauice.
12-S, .7011, ! .82.
STRIKEOtrrS - Clemena, Boaton,
Ill; Ptnz, Now York. 179; R.lolw""Seattle, 174; Appi.cr, Kan~u City, 146;
.Joie Guzman, TCJ.u, 144; Ryan, Tu11,
142; K. Brown, Teau, 141.
S~ VES -:-Eckersley, Oakland. 42.;
AJUile.ra, Mianetota, 36; Moruaomery,
K.ln1u City, 32.; Olson, Baltimoftl, 31;
Jeff Ruuell, Oakland, 21; Roardon,
1loMn, 11; llauy, Milwaukoe, :zs.

T~atNewYc.t, T:30_p_m.

Minne10taat Toronto, 1:35 p.m.
S..lllc II aJ!VEI..AND,l:ll p.m.

Milwaukee at Dr:t.rtit.1:3S _p_.m.
0Uca10 at K.wu City, 2:3S p.m.
Baltirriorc at Cali!omia, 4:05 p.m.
a- II Oallind,I:Ol ~m.

Major league leaders
National League
BA'ITINO- Sbdlleld, San Dieso,
.3!2; VonSiyko, Pia.bwJh •. 331; KNI&lt;,
Plilladolphla, .l2!; GwyM, Son Diego,
.311; Paodl-, Atlanta, .!II; Bu&amp;lcr, Loa
.!10: QmWtJ. H...- .30'1.
lUNS - Ori11om, Montred, IS ;
Hollina, Philadelphia, 84; Bondi, Pittl·
bur1h, 14; Biaaio, Houaton, 12;
VanSijlte, Plt!lbwJI!, 10: P.,dl-. At·
lanta. 79; DoShid41, Mon...., 71.
RBI - Sh11fficld, S•n Dieao, 92 ;
Dauhon, Philaddohia. 9t; P.,dlaon, AI·
lanta, 87; Mt:Orifl, San Dic&lt;o. 86; BondJ,
l'lltablqll, 79; L Wallter,ltonuoal, 76;
VonSlyb, - · 76.
HITS ....... Pandieton , Atlanll, 166;
VonSiyb, PltllbtqJ&gt;. 161; Shdliol~ Son
Di~o._lS9; Gwynn, San Dioao, 1S6;
lleShioldt, Montreal, 149; Gduom, Ma1·
trOll, 149; t..nltfood, S.. Louia, I~ ; Sand·
bert. Chicaao. 141.
DOUBLl:S- VanSlyke, PI!Ub"'')),
35; Lantforcl, SL Loui1, lot: Duncan,
P!Uiadolphia,l4; W. Clalk, San p,...;,.
co, 33;
Montreal, l2; BeU. Pitta·
burah. 32; Sherfield, San Die1o. 30;
Pondlt~on, Atlan\1 , 30; Murny, N~eow
Yolk, lO.
'I'IUPlES- D, Sanden, A\lanu, 1•;
F~~· tl; Batlal, Loa An.te!&lt;i,
tl;
SL Louia, 10; VanSijlte, l'iuo·
burp, 10; Offum1a, Loe: Anaetea:, 8;
Monadinl, Ph1laololphla, 7; ACO!o, J&gt;ina.
btuP· 7; DoShlolda, Montftll!, 7; Sand·
bert. Chioato. 7.
ROME RUNS - M&lt;ODll, Son Diea~
32: Sheffield, San Di..o, 29; Bona a,
PI""'"""' :ZS: Daulton. Pltiladdollia. 24:
HoJlin1, Philadelphia, lO; L. Walker,
Moooui.».!Wma,U.An.-.19.
STOLEN BASES - OriNom. Mon·
creal, 67; DeShielda, M011lrea1, 43;
R.otNwu, CINCINN'An, 39: Butler, Lot
An1cl•, 39; l.lnkfonl, St. Louil, 31;
Nixon, Atlanta, 34; finley, ~. 33;
8' . llowtal,!!.

on..m.

~ (15 - ) - Gtav!no,
Adulll. 19-5, .m, 2.76&lt; T...u!&gt;wy, SL
LoW,t4-5, .m. 2.o1: Mowo. Chi&lt;oso.

14-6. .100, 2.32; K. Hill. M".....t, 14·'·
.667, 2.67; Swindell, CINCINNA11..12-6,
.667, 2.SI; B. Hunt. San Dioao. 14·7,
.661, !.SI; C...., Now Yodt, 13-7, .!SO,
2.11.
STRIKEOUTS - Cooo, Now York,
214; Smolll. Atlan~. Ill; S. Femondcz,
New Yolt, 162; G. Maddu1, Ot.ie&amp;JO,
1S7; Drabek, Piuabur1h. 149: Rijo,

CtNCINNATI,_t41; Be110•. Sill Dieao.

132;11unlach.-132.
SAVES - t . Smith, Sl. Lauil, 37;
WIIIO!and, Mon..t. 31; D.
ton, 30; Myers, Sm Di&lt;to, 30; 0w11on.
CtNCINNATI, ll; Mitch Wltliama,
Philadolpltia, 22; Dibb1o, CINCINNAn,
17.

-.Houa·

Amerlwl Lllaue

BATTING- B. tdan.ina., Seattle,
.344; Puckett, Minn..otl, .328; M•ck,
Mlnneaoca, .327; R. Alomar, Toronto,
.321 ; nomu, ChlCIJO, .320: Molitor,
Mllwaultoo, .316&lt; &lt;lrilfoy, S..ll!o, .!11
RUNS - Philllpa, Detroit, 94; E. Mat·
tlnu. S..ult, 93; Koobl.ouc~ MUtowota,
90: And0110t1, Ballim..., 17; R. Alomar,
Toronto, IS ; Puckou, Minnetota, 15;
c.n.r.Tomnlo, 85.
RBI- Fielder, Dcuoh, 108 ; lu1n
Gonzalez, Tw.s. 91:.CaRet, Toronto, 9S;
0 . Bdl., Chi.caao, 9-4; Devert.~ut , Balti·
...... 93; MeGwiro, Oakland. 9!: Puclt·
oo,Minn-93.
HITS -l'oodtett, MiMoa«a, Ill; E.
Martin-. S..ult, 171; ldadt, Minn..,..,
165; B1... , CLBVELAND, 163; Moll·
tor, MUwa~ee. IS6: Knoblauch , Min ·
IS~ Feymao, D«zoi~ Ill; DeY·

-•s.
Bal.._, Ill.
DOUBLES - B. ldan!noz. Seattle,

JeaW.. 35; Mallinaly, New
Yort, 34; Jet'fllllia, Xan1a1 City , 33 ;
Yount, Milwaukee, 31; Raim.et, Ten•,
3t; Hall, Now YOlk, 3t.
46; Orlfl'e)',

6.

College football scores
Midwest

19

Bowtina 0..... 29, w..... M1dUpn
SE Miucam %1, Mumy SL ll

Soulbwest

Oklihom• 34, Texu T«b 9

Transactions
Baseball
National Leeaue
CIJ&lt;CINNATI REDS- Called up
lebbJ A7ela 1 pllrher, rrorn Chel.
la~e ol the Southern La au e.
Build ball
Nallonal Buk&lt;tbaU .._..,...
SAN ANTONIO SPlfR.S - Siancd
Dave Happen, ocnter.

Football
National Football Luaue

An.ANTA FALCONS - A..... to
with Andt8 Rilcm, wide r.ceiv..
CINCINNATI BENCALS A..... lO tenne wllh ,Jot Walttr, ofl'tn·
IIYe tKtte. Wal•ed Dafld GrMI, deten"ve end.
DALLAS COWBOYS - A&amp;=d to
wm1 wilb Miehad lMn, wide ruciver,
lclml

«&lt;I tlueo-Y$1rcmtn~

LOS ANGELES RAMS -Waived
Tim Laaer, NMina baclt Plaocd St\lwn
Harper and Daryl A1hmore, o(fenlive
linemen, on inju«Jd reaervo.
MIAMI OOIJ'tiiNS - Sipod Dam
Griul.lineblckec, \0 a two-year contract.
f;lljW ORIJ!ANS SAINTS - Sipod
Jim Fink•, senoral m•••1er, and Jim
Man, COld\, to IJuto.)'Oit c:ontnct

·- -tho

LEGAL NOTICE
The PtJblic Utilities Commission of Ohio has set
for public ltearil)tl Case
No. 92-101-EL-EFC, to
review the fuel procure-

Features rolled
edge seamless
tray. 13" x 4"
pneumatic tire.
Steel wheel and
self-lubricating
bearings. Hardwood handles.

30837-

. ment practices and
policies ol Ohio Power

264ol7 tSWSSR

PHOBNIX CARDINALS - Placed

~e.

linanan.

Activatod Rob Buley, oft'c:nlivc
do:velopnenlal aqwol.

Hockey

Individual daale/11 may llmil
quantities and may not stock
all Hems.
Some stores may restrict hems
to cash and cany terms only.
Sale prices vaNd Saturday,
September 5. 1992.

10:00~.m. on September

9, 11!92.
Alllnieresled parties will
be (liWn an opportunity
IIi be heard. Ftrlher Information may be obtained
by contacting the Coml!llsslon at 180 East

KING
HARDWARE
405 North Second Avenue, MIDDLEPORT

1
0

. Broad Street, Columbus.
Ohio 43266-0573.

Il

:;

~~

Nevertheless, his 10-hit ~ .
strikeout, no-walk effort move~f ·
him back into the league lead ia ;
total victories ahead of T01'01110~ s:,
Jack Morris and Texas' Kevin
Brown, who got his t8tli with a6&lt;2 .
win against the Royals the night
before, McDowell and Atlanta's .
Tom Glavine now share the majot .
league victory lead.
Scott Radinsky got the last four
outs as McDowell notched his
career-high in victories, won for .
the seventh time in nine starts and ··
became the fiist White Sox pi~ ·
to win as many as 19 in a season'
since LaMarr Hoyt won 24 and :
Richard Dotson 22 in 1983.
' '·
The loss went to Luis AquiiTo
(2-4), but reliever Mike Boddicker
was in the most pain. Facing Este~ ·~
ban Beltre in the fifth, Boddicter:
took a line shot off his right shii\ '·
and fell to the ground in obvious'
pain. X-rays revealed a deep bruise ,
but no break.
::.
George Brett was 1 for 4, leay-':
ing him 26 hits short of 3,000.
' '

.. .

Most baseball owners want Vincent ..
out as commissioner before 1994
:
'

"

By RONALD BLUM
held at a hotel near Chicago'.s
ROSEMONT, Ill. (AP)- After O'Hare International Airport,
months of rumors, it's finally clear unfolded calmly. Toronto Blue
that an overwhelming majority of Jays president Paul Beeston was
baseball owners want Fay Vincent elected chairman, and Pittsburgh
to resign.
Pirates president Douglas Danforth
The owners voted 18-9-1 Thurs- introduced the resolution, which
day for a no-confidence resolution wa~ drafted by l~wyers for the
a(!ainstthe commissioner, urging Nauonal and Amencan leagues..
htm to quit. Vincent immediately
New York Yankees manag•~g
repeated he had no intention of general partner Joseph Molloy wd
leaving office before his term Vincent's treatment of Yankees
expires on March 31,1994.
o:-wner George Steinbrenner and
The meeting was adjourned to puc.her Steye Howe were am~ng
Wednesday in St. Louis, where the 1ssues discussed. The resoluuon
owners wiU have 10 decide the next also made references to labor and
step. The Major League Agreement tel.evisio~ _negotiations and franprovides no mechanism for firing a chise slabtlity.
.
commissioner, but the disenchanted
','pte 1100ner h~ res•r.!~·the be!owners say they have legal opin- ter, ~lul~delph.•a Phllhes prestions that Vincent can be dismissed.
dent BtU Gtles S81d.
.
"We did not discuss what we're
The vote was taken by secret
going to do if he's not going to ~lot~ but .several owners and of~resign .. said Chicago White Sox ctals tdenufied the Balu~re Oriowner Jerry Reinsdorf, a leading oles, Boston Red So~. Aonda MarVincent opponent
hns, Houston Astros, Montreal
Vincent elected to a 4 1!2-year Expos, New York Mets, Oakland
term on Sept. 13, 1989, remamed Athletics and Texas Ra~ge~s as
in New York, saying the purpose of etght teams lha~ spoke agamst tl
the meeting was unlawful under the
Owners satd the vote of the
Major League Agreement, the con- Kansas City Royals was unclear
tract that gQverns basebalj.
after the remarks by o~er E~mg
"I believe strongly that a base- Kauffman, and that ~tke lhtch,
ball commissioner should serve a who bought the Detrott Ttgers last
full term as contemplated by the week, did not speak. M~st of the
Major League Agreement,'' Vin- owners contacted sa1d they
cent said. "Only then can difficult believed the Royal~ were the nmth
decisions be made impartially and team supportmg Vmcent but were
without fear of political repercus- not 100 percent sure.
sions...
Cincmnati Reds owner Marge
The four-hour special meeting, Schott left the meebng early. and

her vote was counted as an absteli:. ·
tion . The undecideds as of lasi ·~
week- Colorado, Detroit, San ·
Diego and Seattle- all joined the .
anti-Vincent group as did Atlanlii, ·~,
which previously said it would sup..
port the commissioner.
"!think. now. for the first~ :;
he can see the numbers againsL:.
him," Reinsdo~f said. "Before ·
this, he may very well not have
realized there were 18. Now hi'
knows."·
.'
American Leagu~ presidell,.h
Bobby Brown and National League • .
president Bill White, who called ·
~e meeting over V!ncent's objetuon, read the resoluuon to the COli)-, ..
missioner following the meetinjj :'
during a telephone call.
· .'
''The bafl is in his court. If il' :
comes back to us, then we'll rulj ':
with it" said Jackie Autry of the ·
California Angels. "I don't know
what this means. The only thing fci;' ~
certain is that 18 people want to get'·
rid of the commissioner."
._
- ·

GRAVELY TRAC10R '•
SALES l SERVICE . ~

20t Cctnclor Sl.

Pa•l,..,. a.,

SpriJit •II s-_, lltrl·. ,;
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~~aFJ"£ KINOS- Acquilod

'

."

••

""""·

NEW JERSEY DEVILS - Tndod
Neil BndJ, caner, totbeOU..wa Semien
lor future conaid«aliont.
NEW YOIUC. RANGERS - Nomod
Dan~
ooadt.
PITI'SBUROH PmOUINS - Sill"od
Tom Bam..o, loaken4er, to • fivo-yeu

•lllan•

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~

~

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GRAND OPENING

•••

. ~~

Get a carry/DB case and e.ttra
cham free wltb tbe Stibl 01$.

-~ ~
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' ••

PLUS SYSTE

We're not downtown,
We're not in the mall
We're in the station brown,
Just upriver from town.
Drive a little, enjoy the view,
You won't be sorry if you do•

.•.••
•..:...

NEW &amp; USED COMPUTERS

SEPT. 3 thru SEPT. 6

scheduled to begin at the

going to be most disappointed/ ~
Lamont said Thursday night after
McDowell suuggled to a 7-3 victory over the host Kansas City Roy- "
als to give him the America~~
League lead in total victories.
~-·
It was the only AL game Th~-!­
day.
"I know Jack would be disappointed, 100," Lamont said. "B,I!I ,,
he's not the kind of guy to talk:,
about tl much. I think there ought
to be separate awards for starters
and ~elievers. "
..,.-;
McDowell (19-7) gave up twe ,,
hits in each of the fii'St two inningl,
but only one run and Lamont fmaJ,.,
ly lifted him with two out in tilt ,
eighth after Juan Samuel's RBI siia-&gt;

Pat CODachcr, ld\ winJ, from the New
Ieney Dllvill fortuau.ocn:idmdcna.
MINNESOTA NORTH STARS S!Jncd Ducy WU:eluk, pltondcr, and
Todd Plit, ~:~~r~ttz, 10 mul.l:l.yur euunCh.
Namod PaW }mud playa-001c:b or tho
Xalamu:oo Win~of
the International
Hodtcy Loa....
'
Mike Torchia,
aoalte~n4ot, IO the
nadian Olympic
!Oinl. A"'"""!..,.. Bt.lt, - · lnxn
the Hutforcl Whalen !or Mad J...l«&lt;l •

Commission olllces at

and r'elalld mat-

no-out situation off Brian Barnes
(5-5) in the sixth, but settled for
only one run on Brian Hunter's
sacriftee fly when Kent Bottenfield
retired three batters in a row.
Bottenfield finished the game,
blanking the Braves on three hits
for his fii'St save.
Montreal's 14-hit attack also
. included a RBI double and two-run
homer by Tim Wallach, his seventh
this year, and a two-run double by
Gary Carter.
Atlanta's other run came in the
second inning on a run-scoring sin·
gle by Mark Lemke.
Atlanta's Steve Avery said
there's no secret to Montreal's suecess.
"They ' re just playing good
baseball," he said. "It's as simple
as that. Tonight they didn't hit
everything. but when they did it
was down the line or in the hole or
something."
Pirates 9, Giants 3
At Three Rivers Stadium,
Orlando Merced drove in five runs.
Doug Drabek ( 11-10) allowed
six hits over 6 1/3 innings- only
the second time in his last 13 stans
he hasn't gone at least eight innings
- to improve to 8-3 lifetime
against the Giants. Danny Cox got
the next five outs before Stan
Belinda pitched the ninth.
White Sox 7, Royals 3
If the season ended now, Gene
Lamont believes the American
League's Cy Young Award would
go 10 Oakland reliever Dennis Eckersley.
He believes it, but he doesn't
like it. After all, the Chicago White
Sox' manager has been watching
Jack McDowell have the greatest
season of his career.
"If Jack is not at least very,
very close in consideration I'm

HodttJ U,ut
BUFPAI.O SABRES - s.,.od Doug
Macdonald, crmar; Richard Smehlik, dcrw....,: and Ywi Khymlov and Vik""

ters. This hearinm Is

~~.

the Reds found themselves a~ many
as 7 12 back during their longest
losing streak of the season. Their
only hope now would be to ~eep
their five games left with Atlanta.
"Stranger things have happened," O'Neill said. "I know
when we were in their position in
1990, we wanted it to end. But
there's no reason to give it to
them."
In other NL action, Montreal
bombed Atlanta 11-2, and Pittsburgh beat San Francisco 9-3.
Chicago beat Kansas City 7-3 in
the American League's lone contesL
Expos 11, Braves 2
Perhaps it's as simple as having
confidence.
"Once you've played wen in a
certain 'city, the confidence is
there," Montreal's Marquis Giissom said Thursday after the visiting Expos continued their mastery
of the Atlanta Braves 11-2.
ItwasMontreal'sfifthvictoryin
six games in Atlanta. The Expos
completed the season series with an
8-4 edge on the Braves.
"That's just baseball," said
Grissom, who had two doubles,
scored twice and drove in two runs
as both teams lost an off-day to
make up a rainout exactly one
week earHer.
It was the fifth victory in a row
for the Expos, who trail Pittsburgh
by three games in the NL East race.
Despite the loss, Atlanta still commands the West with a 6 1!2-game
lead over Cincinnati.
The Expos jumped on Charlie
Leibrandt (11-6) for six runs and
seven hits in the ftrst three innings,
and the Braves never seriously
threatened to catch up.
Atlanta did have a bases-loaded,

Natloo~

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a.s

Tbu!'lday's scores

,,,M.WJIH %"

Tough, heavy wall
constwction stands
up under sub-zero
., · temperatures or
hot steam cleaning.
Tight-fit lid.

l

3

CINCINNAn (Bolcher 11-12), 7:35p.m.
H""""" O. ),... I·Sl at Ma1U&lt;ol (K.
Hilll4.7), 7:35p.m.
l.ol Anaelel (J:evin Gtaaa 6-13) at
l'llllbwJh (fcmlla 13-1~ 7:3l p.m.
Philadelphia (Sc)lilllna 11·9) at At·
lanta (OiaWte 19-S), 7:&lt;0 pm.
San Fruciaco (Willon 1-14) It St.
Louio (0[;,...1-1~ I:OS p.m.

32-Gal. Trash Can

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Allioli ...,.............71 Sl
CINCINNAn........n 61
Son Dicso ..............70 62
"-""' .................6! 70
Son Fnnciooo .......!9 74
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64 .m

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Nt\&gt;YCidt ............. 6t 71 .462
Phllaclelphi• ..... .....Jl 78 .405

1/) /hiS

SilVilliJS

BasebaU
ROSEMONT, Ill. (AP) - The
National League, which will add
expansion teams in Florida and
Colorado next season, will shift to
the same schedule format used by
the American League.
Beginning next year, NL teams
will play 13 J!ames against clubs in
their own division and 12 against
teams in the other division. Since
1969, NL clubs have played 18
games against division rivals and
12 versus other teams.
A draft of the schedule was sent
to all clubs and the Major League
Baseball Players' Association. The
schedule was designed so the
Giants can play in either San Francisco or St. Petersburg, Fla.

:•HEATING
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!•HOT WATER
i•COOKING

Eutent Dlvllloll
W L 1'&lt;1.
l'l!raboiiU ..............n S6 .579
Moooa0il ................74 59 .SS6

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NATIONAL LEAGUE

SERVI!iTJIR
Super Savings Saturday

Sports shorts

•

In the majors...

· Chleap. ................6s

Come

but beat the relay to let O'Neill play by walking Bill Doran.
Branson came to bat trying to
score the game winner.
"Lately I've been struggling avoid one thing - a double-play
real bad," Branson said. "Maybe grounder. He fouled off seven
luck is starting to catch up with me. pitches before slapping a fastball
Maybe it's catching up with the softly back to the mound.
Young went for the double play,
team."
The Mets weren't surprised that but Branson - a left-handed hit!U
the odds finally caught up with - was able 10 beat shortstop Dick
them in the ninth. They'd won their Schofield's relay Ill ftrst base by a
last 116 games when they took a full step. O'NeilltoOk off for home
lead into the ninth, a streak·stretch- as soon as Young .threw to second
ing to Sept. 30, 1990.
and scored easily.
"It's tough losing, but you
"The runner just got down there
know it's going tQ happen one faster than I expected," Young
day," Young said.
said.
The Mets were in command
O'Neill actually made a mistake
through seven behind Dwight by not brcalting for home immediGooden, who pitched his finest ately, but Branson's speed made it
game since returning from a sore tum out all righL
shoulder last month. He allowed
"My job was to get caught in a
just three singles and struck out a rundown so they can't get a double
season-high nine, leaving with a 3- play," O'Neill said. "When he hit
llead.
11, I didn't know what to do . I
Barry Jones gave up an RBI sin- stopped. As soon as he wheeled to
gle to Barry Larkin in the eighth, throw to second, I went"
and Young (2-10) opened the
It was a modest win for a team
Reds' ninth by walking Reggie that's wasted a week full of
Sanders.
chances to make a move on
O'Neill's double to the gap in Atlanta. The Reds were just 3 12
left-center tied it and Joe Oliver's games back when they headed for
sacrifice moved O'Neill to third. New Yor1c last weekend.
The Mets then set up the double
The Mets swept four games and

Scorehoat.. d
Tum

One Day Only

The Dally Sentinel-Page-s

Cincinnati edges N.Y. Mets 4-3 to trim Atlanta's NL West lead

Friday, September 4, 1992

M~morial

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~

StibiOll w/16"
Bar &amp; Ciuln,now only

·~995
this IS the petm saw lOr the serious \\OOdcuttrt
Another case for buying a Stihl. N6w, durlllg
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Stihl chain saw prices start at under $200.

There are a lot of good reasons for buying a
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ST/HC.
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POIIEAOY

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WillY'•••
PT. 1WII'
11

Pt. Alllnlladww;

•..
••

t

'd

b
~

~

�.•

. I.

8 The Dally Sentinel

Pigl

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, September 4, .1992

~upport

Friday, September 4, 1992

Football '92!
Catch All The .
Excitement!

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Ea1ttm K•ntucky
• Furman
• Gl.orgia SoUitwrn

Dairq

28
26
27

38
30

Memphis Stale
Miami, FL
Mississippi State

992-6611

• Texas Oc:h

Sat:,~5
27
.

• Artlansu

Jii\I:IY
. .EPOIN.TS EXPRESS
•I

24

'AirFon:e

.,-.

;~

-

Thurs., Sept. 3 - MajOr Coll~es • DIY. 1·A

·..

28

..
27

26

33

28

31
31
30

,."'

Stato

Gltn'Dhng

TMWI"'M Ctllllanooga
Gardner-w.bb
NtwHaven
CI'IIIJ'I'fl: Sll.t•
• Au1Un IIY
• W•tetn Kentueky
l .. tty
Florida 4 I M•
St. ClOud

...

....
..
.
,, ......,.
..,.
26

SWM innNO!a State

23

28

21

T•Uorthlad Stat•

31

27

..

30

27

33

28

27

",,
"

.."
"'

"

ArUn~at · Montlolllo

·-~

' Nortl'l•n Arizona
' TIUIA&amp;I
P1airi1\l._
' Southtrn lllinoi1
' Ealt Tenne1'"
W•t Chiller State
M1t1 Hi ll
Mil10url We&amp;tern
Clarion

• T""'

W.t Lt.t~r
Junl••
• 81. Jotln Fllh•r

For,..,
Buttllo u. '

- ..
. -...
22

21

81. Franclt, PA
Central CoMIIC'IIcUI
' LOCk HIVIfl

o...a

Other GomH -Midwest
Aahllnd
Augutlll'll, so

27
38

lkllltr
'cano~ .

WI
' Centr.l! Slale, OH
• Chl&lt;lgo
Colorado Min•
• Owla

27
22

Dol~-

• O..llon

' Oklit110n, NO
' Eut c:.ntr1l Oklahorlll
• Eur.U

F.,.

For1 Hl)'l
Orand V.llty

nr.., ..~ ..
• Iowa w..•r•n

.......

• Manc:Mit1r

' Roi•Hwllm.n
· SIQinlw Vlllty
'SE OW.horna.

' Sla.11 Falll
• saum Dlkota u.
• St Arrb101•
• llfl'in
VJIItyCiy
• Wlyt11 Stat•, MI
' W61coMin·River Falll
Wttoantln-Siout

ca....

• Ch&amp;rltlton Southern
' CIOtk

Clinch Valier
Orlna Still
EutTMU
• Emory a t11nry
e.. angel
Findlay
Gullla«&lt;
• l-4ampton
Harding
' Howatd Payne
JICbonvl~• S1a11
• LMngltan
' Mar')"'lllt

..

10
10

lotercy~UIII

Mllllapt

• Nortolk
• Nonh Alabama
OIIYtl. IL
' Cklachila
Prnbwterlan
Soulh«n Arklnau

"'..
10

'Th~Mor•

· w.~. oe

W•t Vlrglnll SlaM
• Wlnaton·SIIIm
Wolford

"'217
"7

28
33

"'22

27

..,.
21

Trinity, IL
M\houri·Ro!la
!MinH &amp;.ned~ln•
E1rlhM1
• St. Franclrl, IL
Wilcol'llln·SII¥111'11 Pojnt
Wltcontln·Eau Clair•
Carroll, MT
Cameron
Mornlnllfldt
LMQ~ton

Aultln
W.yn1 Slatt, NE
c.,tral Oklanorn~.
MlcJ..Amtrica
Oolfto

.... .....
.
26
26

17
24

,

23

28
28

,.
.,.

..
23

' C..on·Ntwmln

13

21

26
20

24

..,.
28

,

27
26

..."
23

.....
,..
..
26
27

33
22
27

Friondo

=hlngton U.. MC

Atkanlu Ttch
Concordia, NE
Nortl'l«n Stall
Nonhwallln, lA
Mt, St. Jat~ph
Huron
lndlanapolll
M!nntiCIII·Morril
• Marvillt
Htndnon
• l ivlngllofll
FIYt~tl¥1111

' ltHMt:Cr"
Methodist
Uorril Bro.n
' Tule\llum
• T•n.,.....MIItln
• Central Arkanau
CumblllanO, KY
• McMurry
• Kentlltky Stat•
• Oa'4'1d10!'1
J.C. Sm ~h

,..,

Sui Rc.1
Alabama A &amp; U
Kno1
T•nn••att W.leyan
• Bethany, wv
' Alabama-Birm!ngha,,
Vlrginir. Stal•
Central Millourl
' Caml)belllvUII

sw 91!)1111

• Falrmonl
Mldwut11n
Cumblrland, TN
Trantan·
' W•t Virginir. TICI'I
Ellzabllh Cl!y
• Elon

.
,. .....
"
27

01hor Gam eo -For Wut

• Ad.,. Stat.
EHI«n Ntw M11ico

Humboldt
' Montana TIICh
• Nonhtrn Colorlldo
• San Oligo u.
San&amp;a Clara
' St. Warp, CA

"'7
17

6

10
10

22

27
22

"
28

•

•

"'107

..

"'

..

NW Oklahoma
• Ntw W•xlco Highland•
JamtiiOIII'n
W11111n Stall
HlyWIICI
' Chico Stilt
San Francltco Stll•

lll.

Wt have the
Serta you want
in the size you nttd
at a price you'll like.

7

ANDERSON'S

10
10

..•

Po111eroy, Ohio

992·3671

13

17

·• St.
e,..
.. St••
JOitl)h'l

DISCOVER WHY
PEOPLE SAY, /t
...t If !!!:IJ
JJ~

21

To....,

21
27

....
,.

"'7

'"..........

BIDHIIII

I
IJfP!•

8

.,"'"'

Other Gomao- South • SouthwHt

• AngtiiO Stt11

\0

• Mldlll!d
OMolaW•IfYan

Mldlutr.y

27

' PitllbYrg

• 'Jq)ar1110
• KNrnty
• North«n Mlefligan
Nonh C.nlrll
Fo.t V.llty

27

26

' Mkhlgln Ttcn
• MlnnlltOia·Dululh
' Mlnol
' Mi110url ScMhtrn
' NE MIIIIOUII
' NE Otlllhorna
• Nlibfuka w.tlyan
' Nlbru~·Cmlhl
' NWMIMOurl
Onawa
• Peru

-

33

17

'Loru

•
,12•
,"7

10
12
21
7
21
10
21

.."'
..
..."'
...."
22

• Hofllrl
MMI401d
' Stli~J.-nb.lrg
'( Wlllilm Patnon

,.
"',.

' Nonh Carolina Ctn11a1
AbliloM Ctvilllan
.....ippi Callege

• Montana Sial•
W•tG.orgia
Bethunt..CIIDIIfNn
Murray St11.1

· a.-

7
10
14
21
27
10
7
tO
to
t3
13

"'7

"' .
.,...

" Conllnd
' Edinboro

u

SWMiuourl
r, ..., .... Stet•
Howard
' Nietlolll Still

33

."":::,•"'ca u.

21
14
17
10
20
17
13
14
14
10
7
13
20
7
14
17
20
8
10
• 13
15
21
17
22
tO
t3
7
t4
7
6
15
21
10
7
17
23
13

....
33

' c.lllomla Slltt, PA

WARNER

915-3301 or 985·3303

Peoples

Bonk
J C__,..T LOCATIONS
MEMBER FDIC

5th STREET

UOie SIIUT JACKSON AYE.
. . . . . l[t..

77l-S514

l't. Plea-t, W. Va.New HoY.,, W. Va.

675-1121

882-2136

Your Local

STIHJ.:
Dealer
!lriHL

~··

., ,.

SAlES - SERVICE - PARTS

RIDENOUR SUPPLY I

21

"'•7
22
8

First Southern Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. LamarO'Bryant
Sunday School-9:30a.m.

Worship ·10:4.5 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneiiday Services - 7:30p.m.
Middleport F1rst BapUst
Comer Sixth &amp;. Palmer

Pastor: Rc'Y . James A. Seddon
Sundly School - 9:15a.m.

..
..

Silver Run Baptlst
P•stor. Bill Liule
Sunday School· 10 un.
Worship - II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesd•y Services - 7:30p.m.
Mt. Unloo Baplist
Putor: Joe N. Sayre

13

21
10
13

SALES • SERVICE
INSTALLATION
furnDCn
AN' CtiMition•'
Hiolt !ljid-r
h•gy fil•in!l lltat "''"P'
lopoin All Makw

27

•

17

10
21
10
7
7

Sunday School- 9:45 a.m.

Evenina: - 6:30p.m.

Heat Pump
XL 1200
Super Efficiency

Wedn esday Services - 6:30p.m.

Btlhlellem Bap1151
Pastor: Rev. F.trl Shuler
Sundty School • I 0:30 a.m.

Wonhip - 9:30 a.m.

."'

Thund&amp;y Services-7:30p.m.
Old Bethe Fret: Will BaptJst Church

23

28601 S&lt;- Rt.7.Middlepon
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
EveniJt&amp; -7:30 p.m.
Thunday Servia:• - 7:30p.m.
Hlll5kle Baptist Church
SL R1. 143 jull off RL 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Aaec, Sr.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.

13

....

24

7

22
13

10

,..

Wonhip-ll a.m.,6p.m.

7

•
•
"'10
.."••
,
12
12

llWliNGS-COATS

Fisher
Funeral Home
aun nSIIII •
o-r/Opon~tor

•tDIIPOII

8
10
8
0

992-5141.

CROWS
Family Restaurant

"

""
"7
18

22
17
17

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-5432

•
"'21
"'"

Frl4ay lUthi an4 Sun4ay Spt~lall

lAKED PORK CHOP AND
DRESSING
SALAD, lOLL •••
$ 25

21

•
7

"'"'

CHOICE OF POTATO

20
13

5

7

•• NEW YORK JETS........lO
Jet fans may have forxotten last bla win over Falcons in 1989.. Jobnny Hector ran for two IDs, NY whipping
Atlalltaat Giants Sladium 27 •7.. .only sixth meeting in 20 years.
**BUFFAL0_.. _.27 L.A. RAMS ....- .. 13
In last meeting three years ago, Rams beld :ZO.I61ead with 1:22 left. ..Bill QB Frnnk Reich passed to Andre Reed
for 1D illlinal16 secoods giving Bu(falo 23·20 victory.
CLEVELAND-..... .30 UJNDJANAPOUS ..- ...14
Not Peces•ary to say that Cciture anxious to forget last fall's ].]5 seas&lt;lD ••• they would also like to forget 31.0
sbellacking they took from Browns in '91 (31..0 at the balf1)
DETROIT........17 UCHJCAG0---16
Teams battled 'til fmal game of '91 seasoo, Lions edging Chicago to win fust NFC Central title since 1983 ...teams
split last fall, Bears winning 2()..10, Uoos winning 16-6.
·
••HOUSTON...-..26 PITfSBURGH--.17
Home·s1anding Sreelets gave Oiler QB Warren Moon headaches in first meeting last fall, imercepting him S times
to beat Houston 26-14. ..Oilers ripped Pitt in 2nd game, 31-6.
KANSAS CITY...... ..21 ••SAN DIEG0.--..20
Chiefs loolcing to exrend winDing streak over Chargers to live. . .KC nudged SD 14-13 in opening match-up last
scuoo, then in another close one, Chiefs won 2()..17 in overtime.
L.A. RAIDERS.... -..20 UDENVER .. --.17
L.A. bas held "ltJidc:r..lip" lJirt:r Brmcos. beating them last 5 times tbey"ve met .. Raiders nipped Denver in L.A.
16-13, then.slid by them again la~er, blocking-IJG as time expired.
·
MINNESOTA---26 ••GREEN BAY-...-.24
Teams plitill '91, valapllllyillg We trailing 21-14, shutting down Pack, winning going away 35-21. . .in 2nd
•t dDg, Pack took ldvaolage ofVlkc mistakes to win 27-7.
••MIAML-....24 NEW ENGLAND.-..-17
Dolpbins have beaten Pata slull'lighl over past three years, winning by 10 points in each game last fall 20.10 30.
20.. .Miami QB Dan Marino passed for grand total of 594 yds.
'
'
.
'
••PHILADELPHIA.--..23 NEW ORLEANS...-..21
NFC West champion Saints open with tougbic on road .. .in matcb-up last c&amp;n. won by N.. 0 . 13-6, Saints' defense
foo:ed 6 fumbles, intercepted S passes, and sacked QT live times.
SAN J'RANCISC0-..-.23 uNEw YORK GIANTS •••• _.20
In MOnday niJII!swoa·lJIIII111' list fall, NY's Mall Babr.klda:d 35-yanl FG in fmal S secoods to give Giants 16-14
· .
victory...cookl be the identical saipt for Ibis coolest.
••SEA'ITLE-..-.20 CINCINNATL--13
Seabawts woo 3rd straight over Bengals last fall. . .and- 'twas 5th straight season loss for Cincy.. .Bengals
liDP~Ied five.time$. losing 13-7 before disappointed home cmwd.
.
'"TAMPA IAY.--..21 PHOENDC.-...17
Cards lead ICIIea wldl Bua, ~Bay WilulbtJiut JCI~ Ia ~ Ia ~989. ..TB QB Vmce Teslaverde .
t11aew 1D tiaU iiiiDIIIh•• eM, tuca willillalow- 14-12.
(M....y) WASRINGTON--..31 ••DALLAS.--..30
Teams played two nail·bilers last fall. RcdatiDa rallying from 21-10 dcllclt to edge Cowboys in Dallas 33·31. .
·
,Dallal relined favor ill DC, baading Skins lint dcl'eat 24-21. .
•

11----------------1

Chester, Ohio

f

Wonhip- 10:30 1.m•

Sunday School · 9:30 o.m.
Worship - 10:40 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedne~d•y Services-7:30p.m.

HEATING
AND
COOLING

7

00 AD.ANTA.--..l4

f

Rulland First Baptist Church
Sunday Sthool · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 o.m.
Pomeroy First Bapllsl
East Main St.
Pastor: Dr. Lee Morris
Sunday School • 9:30 un.

Racine Flrst Baptlst
Pastor: Steve Oea'Yer

FOR IOIDIY •nd MDIDIY, SIP liMBa I aad 7, 1112

CHESTER, OHIO

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.,
Wednesday Service -7:30p.m.

Worship · 10:1.5a.m.

TIE BOB HARMON PRO FORECAST
Baum
Lumber

PaSlor: Mark
Saturday Service ·7:30p.m.

Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

7

r

Worship · 8:15, ID-JOII.IIL, 7 p.m.
W.mesday SeMc:cs • 7 p.m.

llelrw1low Rl4fle Clattrdo of C1tritl

•• , Ul~ ••

Othor GomH - Eaot

s-toy Sehool · 9:30 .....

Kmo Cltordo aiCIIrllt
Wonhip-9:30 a.m.
SundaySehool · lo-JOLm .

For AD Your Prescription and
Sundry Needs See Us"

Ol&lt;lahoma

I

Llb"'J AssembiJII Cud
O.dding Lane, Mas011, W.Va.
Pastor. Dan S. Eaton

253 NORTH SECOND
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992-2635

-In

Mlddltport Claords II Cltrlsl
Sill and Main
Pastor. Alllattson

992-6669

106 N. 2nd, Middleport

- . , 7 WltlbitleCinudl ofCiarisl
33226 &lt;lliloboo"s H&lt;me Rd.
992·3147 .
Sunday Scbool - 11 a.m.
Wonhip - 10a.m-.6p.m.
W-..fay SeMc:cs • 7 p.m.

MIDDLEPORT

992-5627

It's Not Too Early To
Order Your 1993
Gra~uation

Announcements.

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m .
Hope Bap&lt;lst Cllapel
570 Grant St., Middleport
Pastor: David Bryan. Sr.
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 11a.m.,1 p.m.
Wednc.day Servic:ea · 7 p.m.
VIctory Bapllst
525 N. 2nd SL, Mi&lt;ldlepon
Pastor: James E. Xoesee

Worship - 10 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.
Faith Bap1151 Church
Roilroad S&lt;-, Moton
Swtday School- 10 a.m.
Wo~~ • II a.m.• 6 p.m.
Wedn
y SeMoes · 7 p.m.
F.,..,. Run Baptist
Pas10r. Ariu1 Hun
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
'Worship- II a.m.
ML Moriah Bap11st
Founh II. MainS&lt;-, Micldlcpon
Putoc Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m.
Antiquity Baptist
Pastor: Kenneth Smith
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhi p - 10:45 a.m.
Thunday Services · 1:30 p.m.
Rulland Fr-ee Will BapiiSI
Salc:mS&lt;Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening -1 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 1 p.m .
Aslt S1reet Freewill Baptist
Middleport
School- 10 a.m.
- II a.m.

Catholic Cburdt
161 Mulberry Ave .• Pomeroy, 992·5898
Pastor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz
SaL Con. 4:45-S:IS p.m.; M1u - 5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. · 8:45-9:15 a.m.•
Sun. Mass- 9:30 un.
Daily Man ·8:30a.m.

Church of Christ
Pomero7 O.urdl ofChrllt
212 W. Main SL
Pastor: Andrew Miles
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worlhip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
W~e1day SeMoes - 7 p.m.

Pastor. ltd~
s...Joy Sehool· 9:'10 a.m.
Wonhip · ID-.30 a.m.• 1&lt;30 p.m.
Wednesday SeMcos • 1&lt;30 p.m.

7Jon Clurdt II C~rist
Pomeroy,Hania&lt;JnvilkRd. (Rt_l43)
Pastor. Jmajm pastor
s...Joy Sehool · 9:30 ...,_
Worship· ID-.30 a.m .• 7:30p.m.
W.a...day Sesviccs -7 p.m.
BradiiiFJ Cllwdt f1Ciui51
Pawr. r ... Runyon
s...Joy School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - ID-.30 Lm.
Tuppers Plails Clltudlll O.risl
Paaar: R-. foster
s-lay Sdlool· 9 o.m.
Worship • 9:45 '-'"-• 6:30p.m.

o..ter Clurdlll Cltrist
Pa5tor: Oris Stewart
Sunday Sdlool · 9:30 un_
Worship· Io-.30 LmW-ys.r.ia:s · 7p.m .
R•tlaotl Clturdt II Christ
Passor. !iu&amp;aiC E. Undawood
s...Joy Sehool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip·io-.30un.• 7p.m .
C1tords II Christ
MillerS&lt;-, Mason, w .v._
Sunday Sdlool · 10 a.m.
Wonbip · lla.m-.7p.m.
W.a...day SeMc:a ·7p.m.
-

-onl

C..rdl of Christ
124 a. Co. Rd.
Paster. o...t Stump
s-lay School. 9-.30 a.m .
Wonhip · ID-.30 a.m .• 7:30p.m.
W.mesday Sesviccs • 7:30p.m.

s

Sl_ Itt.

Su&lt;assRoadO..rdt ofCIIrist
Putor.looq&gt;h B. Hootins
s-lay Sehool . 9 a.m.
Wonbip · 10 o.m.• 7 p.m.
Wednesday Sesviccs · 7 p.m.

LlbtrtJ Christiao Cllurdl
Dater
P1$10C Woody Coli
Sunday Sdlool· IOe.m.
benin&amp; · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service . 7 p.m.
l.aogsvllle Cllrisllu O.urch
Sunday Sdlool . 9:30 ._...
Worship· ID-.30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
W.a...days.Mce7:30p.m.
R•klck Crowe Chwft
Pastor: Otatles Domi&amp;an
Sunday ldlool- 10:30 a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m.,7p.m.
Rtedsvlllt Claurdt ol C1tritl

Pastor: PIUlip Stunn
Sunday School: 9:30 o.m_
Worship s.m.:., Io-.30 Lm.
Bible Study, Wednesdoy. 6:30p.m .

Christian Un 1on
H..,_ Clotrdt aiCitrislln
cwtsdu tlnioll
Pastor. Theron O.dlam
s...Joy School · 9:30 o.m.
E't'minJ -.7 p.m.
Wednesday Semca • 7 p.m.
Hartrord Clturdt of O.rist In

Christi• U•ioa
Hanlool. W.VL
Pastor. Rev. David McManis
s-lay School · II a.m.
Wonbip • 9:30 o.m.,7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Ser.;c.s - 7:30p.m.

Church of God
ML Moria~ Cllurdtll Cud
Racine
Pastor: Rev. James Satterf.eld
Sunday School · 9:45a.m.
EYenln&amp; - 7 p.m.
WcdneWy Services -1 p.m.
Rutland Clturdt II Cud

Pastor: Jom F. a.u..n
Sunday School · 10 LUI.
Worship- 11 a.m..7 p.m,
Wednesday SeMca -7 p.m.

SynctDO Clltudl of Cud
Apple and Second Sts.
Pt-. Rev. David Ruuell
s-tay Sehool and Wonhip- 9:30 e.m.
Ev&lt;nin&amp; SeMca·7 p.m.
Wednesday SeMca • 7 p.m.
O.urdt II Cud ofl'r&lt;&gt;ph«}'
OJ. WhO. Rd. oil St. RL 160

PIRor. Par Henson
Sunday Sdlool · 10 a.m.
Wt:nhip - II a.m.
Wcdncs4ay SeMca -7 p.m.

a..-

Pastcr. Gasy Hines
Sc:hool - 9:30 l .m.

Pine GrtWe Blblt Holln• Church
1/2 mile off Itt. 32S
P11tor. Rev. O'Dell Manloy
SWJday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip . 10:30 a.m.• 7:30 p.m.
Wednetday Service-7:30p.m.

Po11eroy
Paster. Eunhae (G,.ce) Ku
SUnday Schooi · 9:1Sa.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 Lm., 6 p.m.
Wednetday Semces · 7:30p.m.

WtsloJan Bible Hoil..., Church
7S PurlS&lt;-. Middleoort
Pastor. Rev. Roy McOtny
Sunday l&lt;hool· 9:30 Lm.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service: -7:30p.m.

HyseH Run Holiness Church
Pastor: Roben Manley
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service-7 :30p.m.
Harrisonwille Holiness Chapter
Pastor. Rev. John Neville
Sunday Sdtool10 a.m.
Worship- II Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wednetday Service • BO p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
R-aanlud Chur&lt;h of J..., Christ
In Latlel' Day Solnts
Portland·R•cine Rd.
Pastor: William Roush
Sunday Sdtool · 9:30a.m.
Worship ·10:30a.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

Lutheran
StJohn Luthenn Church

Pine Grove
Pastor: Laura A. I...each Shreffler
Worship - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School· lfr.30 a.m.
Our Saviour Lu~eru Church
Walnut lfld Heney Sts., Ravrmwood , W.V1.
Coi&gt;aston: Revt. Ricltoni &amp;.

'Patricia Bonds·Krua
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonbip • 11 un.

St Paul Lutheran Church

Comer Syc1m0re &amp;. Scoond SL, Pomeroy
Pastor: l.aUJ"' A. Leach Shtdller
Slmday Scltool- 9:4S a.m .
Worship . II a.m.

United Methodist
Croham Unl1ed Methudbl
Wonhip · 9:30Lm. (I Sill. 2nd Sun).
7:30 p.m. (3nl .It 4th Sun)
Wednesday SeMce · 7:30p.m.
ML OUve Unl1od Melhocll51
Off 124 behind Wilkt:svillo
Putor: Otarles Jones
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Se.vicea - 7 p.m.
Mags Coopendve P.lrlslt
NortlteaJtC1uller
Alfftd
PasiOr. Sh&amp;IUI Haunnan

Sunday School· 9:30a.m .
Wollhip · II o.m.. 6:30p.m.
Chester

PISIOr. Sham H&amp;usman
Worship - 9 1.m.
Sunday School· 10 .....
Thunday Servi.ces•- 7 p.m.

Joppa
Pas10r: Brenda Weber
Wonhip -9:30a.m.
Sunday School·I0:30a.m.
Wednesday Services -7:30p.m.

Loog O.Uom
Putor: Rev. Seldon Johnson
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services -7:30p.m.
lteodnl11&lt;
P11tor. Rev. Seldon loltn100
Worship • 9:30a.m.
Sunday School-10:30a.m.
Wednesday Servic:es -7:30p.m.

Tuppers Pill., St. Paul
Pastor: Sh1roo Hausman
Sunday School· 9 Lm.
Wonh.ip · 10 a.m.
TUCiday Semces ·7:30p.m.

Central Cluster
AsbuiJ (Syroc:use)

Pastor: Deron Ncwm111
Woohip • II a.m.

!I '

608 US\' MAIN I'OIIIIOY, OHIO
H2·2JS9

. ,.....

. PIESCIImOII SHOP
271 thrill
$ac...

.l•• i,.rt,

Oltlt

"2·1075

, .,,

t.CIIIit

I

Salan Center
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School- 9:lS a.m.

Wonhip - 10:15 Lm.
SnoW\/ lilt
Putor: Florence Smith
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip- 9a.m .

Bethany
PutCM": Kenneth Baker
Sunday School· 10 a.m.

Wonhip ~ 9un.

Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.
Cannel
Putor: 'Kenneth Baker
Sunday Scltool· 9:30 s.m.
Worship - 10:45 Lm. (2nd II. 4th Sun)
Morning Star
Putor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School · 9:45 a.m.
WontUp - 10:30 a.m.
Th11nday Servioes-7 :30 p.m.
Sutton
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m. (lst &amp; 3rd Sun)
F.asl Letart
P1s10r. Roa;erGra(e
Sund•y School· 10 a.IJl.
Worship - 9a.m.

R1clne
Pa.stor: Roger Grace
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip - lla.m.
Laurel ClifT Free Methodhl Church
Pastor: Peter Trtmblay
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday SeMoes -7 p.m.

RuUand Bible Methodist
PasiOr: Rev. Ivan Myen
Sunday Sthool · 9:30 a.m.
Evening - 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.
Cooi•IUe Un11ed Methodist Parish
Pastor: Harold B. Alloway-Priddy
Coolville Churt'h
Main II. Filth St.
Sunday Sthool· 10 o.m.
Worshi~ -

9 1.m.

Tucadly SeMces -7 p.m.
lkthel Church

Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School - 9 1.m.
Worship · 10 a.m .
Wednetday Services - 10 a.m.
Hockingport Church
Grand Sired
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
W011hip • 11 a.m.
Wednesday ScM~ - 8 p.m.
Torch Church
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

Nazarene
Racine Flnt Church of Ihe Nazarene
Putor: Thoma• L Gstu, II
SI.Diday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 o.m., 6 p_m.
Wednesday SeMce1 - 7 p.m.

Middleport Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Rev. Uoyd D. Grimm, Jr.
SWlday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wcdncaday SeMces - 7 p.m.
Reednllle Ftllowthlp
Church fltht Nuarene
Pastor: John W, Doogla1
Sund1y School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 s.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servioc1 • 7 p.m.

Pomerof Church f1l the Nazarene
P1110r: Rev. Thc.na• McOung
Sundoy School· 9:30 o.m .
WoniUp · lfr.30 o.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Serviee1 . 7 p.m.

F«est Run
Putor. Deron Newman

SundoySchoai·IOo.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
ThuBday Servioes · 6:30 p.m.

New Haven Church or the Nazarene
Pastor: Glendon Stroud
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedncaday Service• · 7 p.m.

Other Churches
E•dtlme House uf Prayer
(at Burlinaham church off Route 33)
PaslOr: Rolx:rt Vance
SlDiday worstUp • 10 a.m.
Wednelday service - 6:30p.m.
Trinity Congregatioo•l Church
Pastor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Church - 9:15a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
The Salvation Army
liS Buuemut A,e,, Pomeroy.
Swtday School · l0:30 a.m.
Wonh.ip • 10:00 a.m. ,7 :30 p.m.

Middleport Communlly Church
S1S Pearl St.. Middleport
Putor: Sam Andenon
S1111day SchooliO 1.m.

Evening - 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:30p.m.
Fallh Tlbernacle Church
Bailey Run Road
Paswr: Rev. Emmdt Rawson
Sunday &amp; hooi · IO:OO a.m.
E,cning 7 p.m.
Thursday Service • 7 p.m.

Syracuse Mission
1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse
Pastor: Roy (Mike) Thompson
Sunday School · I 0 a.m.
Ev_w.ing • 6 p.m.
Wcdnescfay Service - 7 p.m.

.

Haul Community Church
OffRL 124
Pastor: &amp;!tel Hart
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.

Worship · I 0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Dyesvllle Community Church
Sunday School - 9:30a .m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Chrlstian Fellowship Center
Salem Sl., Rutland
Pastor: Roben E. Muuer
Sunday School. · 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 11 :15 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wcdne1d1y Service · 7 p.m.

Morse Chapel Church
Sup.: Mike Matson
Sunday school · 10 a.m.
Worship · ll s.m.. 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.
Faith Gospel Church
Long Bouom

{:arlclon Intel dcaomlnallanlll Cluarch
KinJsbury RllOd
Pastor. OydeW. H!mdenat
Sunday Sdtool - 9:30 Lm.
EYtninJ - 7 p.m.
.
Wednetday Service . 7 p.m.

Freed,.. CaopeiBald Knob, oo Co. Rd. J 1
P11tor: Rev. Rcsu WillCord
Sunday Sehool· 9:30 Lm.
Wonltip-1fr.4S o.m.• 7 p.m.
Wednetday Semce • 7 p.m.
White'• Chlpet w....7ao
Coolville Rood
Panor. Rev. Phillipltidmour
S~day

School - 9:30 un.
Worship • I0:30 ua.
We&lt;mosday Scmce • 7 p.m.
Fairview Bible O.urch
Letan. W.Ve. Rt 1
Putor: J~mes L£wia
Sunday School - I la.m.
Wonhip • 9:30 o.m., 7:JO p.m.
Wodnc:sday Setvit:e - 7:30p.m.

Coj•UJ Bib!&lt; Cburdt
P&lt;ineroy Pike, Co. Rd.
P11tor. Rev. Blaa:kwood
Sunday School • 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip 10:30Lm., 7:30p.m .
Wcdne&amp;da.y Service - 7:30p.m.
Spiritual Fakh Church
Stat&lt; 338. Antiquity
Pallor: A. Stewan
Sund1y School· 10 a.m.
E"""'a·7:30p.m.
ThurJday Setvicc • 7:30p.m.

Ca1•ary Pll&amp;rlm C.. pel
Harrisottvilk Road
Putor: Rev. VictorRo1uh
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wodnad1y Service -7:30p.m.
Stivemtll&lt; W,..d aiFaiUI
Putor: David Dailey
Sunday School9:30 o.m .
Evenina- 7 p.m.
ThuBday Service-7:30p.m.
Relokln&amp; Ufe Cllvrcit
5011 N. 2nd Ave .• Middlepon
Pastor: Rev. Michael Pmcio
Sunday Schoai · IO a.m.
Wednetday Servic:es · 7 p.m.

Pentecostal
P....-.IA-7
SL Itt. 124, Racine
Paaor: Wilfun Hollack
Sunday Schooi · IO a.m.
E"""'a -7 p.m.
Wednetday Servic:es · 1 p.m.
Mlddlepclrl Peatecaola1

1lun1Avo.

Pattor: Re•. Oa.rk Biker
Sunday Sdlool· tOo.m.
Evenin&amp; • 6p.m.
Wednetda Servic:es 7:30

Sunday School - 9JO a.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 1.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Presbytenan

Mt. Olin Communlly Church
Panor: Llwrmee Bush
Sunday School - 9:30 1.m .
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service -7 p.m.

Mlddleporll'nll&gt;rterlst•

United Faith Church
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pus
Putor: Rev. Roben E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship · I 0:30a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 1 p.m.
Ecclcsla Fellowship
128 Mill S1., Middlepon
P1stor: Chuck McPhenon
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
,Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.
Full Gospel Ughthouse
33045 Hiland Road. Panoroy
Pla\Or. Roy Hunter
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evtninl7:30p.m.
Tuesday&amp;. Thursday · 7:30 p.m .

Neue Settlement Church
Sunday Worship . 2:30p.m.:
Thunday services · 7:30p.m.
Soulh Bethel NewTestlment
Silver Ridae
Pastor: Duane Sydenatridf.er
Sunday Sdtool· 9 e.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

..

Swtda)' School- 0a.m..

Wonhip · 10 am., 4 p.m. (2nd&amp;.~ s....)
Syroa110 Flnl IJftll&lt;d Prttllflritn
Sunday Schooi·IO a.m.
Wo~hip • llo.m., 4 p.m. (lu .t ltd Sun.)

Seventh-Day Adventist
S.notls·Day A d - ·
Mulbeny Hts. Rd., 1\&gt;tp,-. Roy Lawinsl:y
Suttrday Servic:es:
Sabbath Sdlool • 2 p.m.
worship • 3 p.m.

Un1ted Brethren
ML H..,...'t1salte4 11&lt;-..a
1• Cllrlat Clt•rdt
T•m Community oil at Bl
Putor: R-. Sonden
Sunday Sehool - 9:30 .....
Wonhip · I0:30o.m..7:30p.m.
Wcdnetday Servic:es -7:30p.m.
Edeo Uoll&lt;d llrelltreoln C1trllt
2 1/2 mi1ea nonh II Reedsvill•
on Stale Rcuc 124
PallOr. Rev. Roben Matl&lt;ley
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship - 7:30p.m.
Wednclday SeJYicel - 7:10p.m.

a.;.,.,,

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES
204 Condor St.
~-ror,

Chesler Church or Ihe Nuarcnc
PaslOr: Rev. Herbert Grate
Sund•y School - 9:30a.m.
Wonh.ip - lla.m., 6p.m.
Wcdne~d•y Services · 7 p.m .

RuUand Church ~the Nuarcnc
Paator: Samuel Buye
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship ·10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
.Wcdnclday Services - 1 p.m.

Heath (Middleport)
Putar: Frank Smith

OH.

992-2975

PomeorO'(

112 Nertit s.c.IIYO,

Thunday Services - 7 p.m.

FbtwoodJ
Putor: Keith Rader
Swtday School • 10 a.m.
Wonhip - lla.rn.,6p.m.
Thursday Services • 7 p.m.

Wonhip - 9 a.m. , 6 p.m.

M••.
Ph. tfJ.21tl

SMIS I SliVKl

Rulland
PasLor: Arthur Cnr.bl.ree
Sunday Sdtool · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.

Tuesday Services -7 p.m.

John F _F•tu,

SNOUFFER ,.
HIE &amp;SAFETY

Sunday School- 9:15 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 1.m.
Wednesday Services - 6 p.m.

Syracuse Church ~the Nazarene
Pastor: Rev. Glenn McMil1111
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
We&amp;.e•dr.y Servicet • 7 p.m.

En1~rlle

Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School • 10 a.m.

83 Mill Street
Mlddlopott. Ohio 4&amp;7eo
te141 892-eel7 - IIIB·OOKSI
CHURCH SUPPLIES • BIBLES

'1. .

Rock Sprlnp
Putor: Kcilh Rader

Portland First Churdt ot the Nazarene
Putor: Willillll Justis
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:40 a.m., 1 p.m
Wcdne1day Scrvicet - 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

&lt;.\\\1(( S.ruf

1\ ~

CHESRR
915·3307

Holiness

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-~ \ MEIGS DRE
CEI1ER, INC.

Mlntrmlle
Putor: Oeron Newman
Sunday Sthool · 9 a.m .
Wonhip • 10 a.m.
Pearl Chapel
Plstor: Rorenc:e Smilh
Sunday Sdlool· 9 Lm.
Wonhip - 10 a.rn.

Now Lifo Clturdt II Cud

255 Mill St.
Middleport
992·3345

TV &amp; APPLIANCE

cr... EpisCopal Oturch
326 E. Main Si., Pomeroy
Pastor. Rev. Dr. Roy C. Myers
_Sunday ldtool111d w?nhip - 11 a.m.

Sunday School· 9:4S a.m.

QUALITY PRINT
SHOP

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Episcopal

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

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992-5141

Mitltllo,ort

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

992-54.32

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Established 1913

716 NOiTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

FURNITURE I HARDWARE
Homtlilt Saw\

Craw's Family Restaurll'lt
"Fu111l1' KniiMf Fill' C!14AII "

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EWING FUNERAL HOMI

FISHER
264 Swth 2tttl

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992-2121
106 M...ITY AYO.

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214 E . Main
992-5130 Pomeroy

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Veterans
Memorial Hotpital

115 I. ,._lttl lr.
nMIM

P_,

�P111 8 The Dilly Sentinel

ly ROGER MUNNS
AI
I PreaWrlter
DES MOINES, Iowa - The
myslely !I
lllilsilg (IIIIUboys
is a «h;ade old, IIIII die lnil is cold
Bla tile piill is IS k1t as ewr.
"TIIii yeir is really tough,"
said Noreea Gosch. "There' s
soilldllilla lbout a full decade, all
~ llatiola an: doiag interviews
a1ld .-y wut 10 know, 'Do you
1 um bel',!low yodelt?' " •
Iilrly liB Sept s. 1982, Johnny
Goscll, !Mn 12, ·vanish~ while
dci~ a laid fi Sunday newS·
p1p1n a few blocb from his bome.
Tlwre has beea 110 sign of him
linec, ielehl p 1M Golches believe
he - ~ IS oltwo years ago,
bued OB die s• TelliS of a convictca child m'
Aaother routh, 11-year-old
16 Mlrlip, ctisappeared.about
tWC&gt;' )'eats after Johuy vanished,
He, 100, was delivering Sunday

to grieve and put our lives back
togedler," she said.
Ernie Allen, president of the
National Center for Missing and
Exploited Children in Arlington,
Va., said the publicity sulrounding
the search for Gosch helped change
the wiy missing children cases
were handled.
Before the early 1980s, police
were slow to pursue missing children on the assumelion tbat most
were runaways. While that assump.
tion remains valid, police now
re~d with vigor, Allen said
'The Johnny Goscb case is one
of a handful of cases which helped'
to change a whole country," he
said.
The Gosches bave devoted their
lives to finding Johnny, the
youngest of three children. They
bave held bake sales to l8ise money
for private detectives, followed
their own leads and prodded police
to try harder.
The Gosches remain convinced
tbat convicted child molester Paul
Bonacci bas information about the
case. Bonacci, 24, is to be released
from a Nebraska prison in October.
Bonacci has said Gosch was
taken by pornographers who
altered his appearance and petSOJI·
ality. He said Gosch was alive as
recently as two years ago.
West Des Moines Police Lt.
Gary Scott said police checked out
Bonacci's story and didn' t find

3

I

*

1.,.

F•i

new.._..

Tllenl has beell 110 sign of Martill. His pan:llts have not talked
; . :ic:t ahoat their ordeal.
both JQUihs vanished on
S• lw)S. die CISCS IJ'C not offiCial·

anything. But Mrs. Gosch said
Bonacci knew things that only a
person involved could have known.
" I'm fed up with the rcsistllnce," Mrs. Gosch said. " We
bave aood informatioli from Paul
Bonac;ci, but ~ police won 'I even
talk 10 the man. Theit nasc is out of
joint because we got die infonnation first."
Mrs. Gosch tries to squeeze
away thoughts or what her son
might be ljte if he is living. "I try
not to lhiDk about that pan of it too
much. I stick with the whodunit
part, .. she said
John Goscb, Johnny's father,
said: "If he bas gone through 10
years of pornographers and
pedophiles as we've heard, I hope
he isn't alive."
"But he is still our son," Gosch
said. "We'd love to have him
back.••

-Names in the news-

SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) Country music star Garth Brooks
roped in an auendance recoid at !he
New YOlk State Fair.
Fair spokesman Joe LaGuardia
said 16,672 people showed up for
Brooks' concert Wednesday night,
surpassing the 16,172 mark set by
Canadian rockers Loverboy in
1983.
Brooks, who also perfonned at
the fair last year, grinned and spent
much or his time collecting roses
and gifts thrust at him by fans.
"This ticks the hell out of last
.
. .
year. This is greaL What are you
Th~ .wi!J.be a pubbc dinner at , guys doing tomorrow night? ''
!he ~·or C!bZens center on Sept. Brooks said to his fans.
10 w1th servmg from 5-6:30 p.m.
The menu will be baked steak,
MANILA, Philippines (AP) mashed potatoes and gravy • green A woman identified as an heir to
beans, cole ~w, roll ~d beverage !he Eli ~ ptamaccutical ronune
for $3. Pie will be available at an has offi
to help Imelda Marcos
extra c~e. .
.
Hy the body or her husband, liusled
Followmg dinner there will be a President Ferdinand Marcos home
music of the 40's, 50's and 60's
'
played by The Classics. A free wiU . - - - - - - - - offering will be laken for the musi· ~ W~RLD
cians. The Big Bend Cloggers will :
present a short pro$ram at 6:45 E-o
·
.
p.m. also. The public IS invited

1y lioted.
Mn. Goecll said it is worse not
to know what happened than it
would be to find he is dead.
"Wtl'r'la IICYer had 1111: opportunity

Skin testing
clinic slated

from Hawaii.
Mrs. Marcos, reputedly one of
the world's richest women, Slid she
could not raise funds to rewm the
body because her assets are frozen
by. coun orders in connection with
coiTiiption allegations against her
family. .
Marcos was deposed by a 1986
revolution and died in exile in
1989.
Elena Yee told a news conference Thursday she would cbaner a
DC-10 jet to fly Marcos' remains
for burial in the PhilipPines.
Mrs. Yee is the w•dow of Herbert B. Lutz. His fii'St wife was the
late Evelyn Lilly, the only daughter
of Eli Lilly, the !ale former president and board chairman of the
giant U.S. pharmaceutical firm.

Dinner planned

Connie Karscbaik, R.N., will
cOilduct a skin tating clinic; at the
S)AMC Yft Slllion on Tuesday,
Sc;;;ll!rll &amp;omS II 6:30p.m.
is cliaic is for people who
liaillllleir orpnizllions in boodls
spoasored groups like booster
clubs. PTO's, cllarch groups and
any adler persoa involved in food
seJ wice. In ICCillllance willa Meigs
Codty BoMI ol Health Policy. it
is JIIDIIdoi) for all food handlers
to have a cliirent tuberculin skin
()uestions

CINCINNATI (AP) - The
children who ncod health CIJ'C and
social services the most are not get·
ting help because agencieS don' t
cooperate with each other, a report
by the Mayor's Commission on·
Children says.
The report released Thursday
did noL identify the agencies it
accused of cn~ing in IWf wars.
Demand for serviCes also outstrips
what the agencies can afford to
provide, the report said.
Poverty, drugs, unaffordable
child care, the shortage of affoidable housing and 1ac1t ol programs
and oversight for 73- and 14-yearolds vicwm~ many of the city's
young people, the report said.
''I think we bave some monumental problems facing children
out there that are going 10 require a
comnlibnent on the r,u:t of the city
and other entities, ' said Mayor
Dwight Tillery, who appOinted the
commission in March with City
CourJCil' s approval.
The commission was told to
document lhe status of children in

sllould be directed to

LOS ANGELES (AP)
Actress-singer Nell Caner was in
satisfactory condiliOP after under~oing surgery for the secOnd time
10 two months to repair an
aneurysm in her brnin, a hospital
offiCial said.
Miss Carter, 43, underwent
emergency surgery in mid-July,
said Ron Wise, a spokesman at
Cedars-Sinal Medical Center. The
second aneurysm was found then,
and doctors operated on it Thursday.
An aneurr,sm is an abnormal
blood·fdled dilation of.a blood vessel ihat can be caused by diiCI!~ in
the vessel wa!l. If an aneurysm
bursts, death can resuiL
Miss Carter won a Tony Award
in 1978 for her performance in the
Broadway musical "Ain't Misbe·
havin"' and an Emmy in 1982 for
a TV broadcast of the show. She
starred in the 1980s-era NBC corn·
edy "Gimme a Break."

ALMANAc

1M Meigs County Tuberculosis
Ol6ec. 992-3722.

Mother's smoking linked to
DATEBOOK
Sept. 4, 1992
behavior problems in children
BJ lUNDA C. COLEMAN
Ar r~W Press Writer
CHICAGO - The more
cigarettes a IIIOther smokes, the
more bebvior problans her childrea are 1itely 10 have, researchen
ay.
WOIIICn who smote at least a
pact a day have children with
twice die lllit ol e111m1e behavior
.problems - s1d as IIIXiety, dis·
obedieRCe or oonHict willa others
- Wlljldd willl chi1dm1 or nonsmotm. die rc dlcas say.
Refrailliagl'ronl smoking only
durins pres•ucy dido 't help,
ILWicliRi 10 tile Sl1idy published in

ble, given the limitatiQns of the
data.
"There's thousands of toxins in
cigarette smoke," any one of
which could affect behavior in children, she said.
•
Surprisingly, Weitzman said,
smoke exposute rivaled other
major stresses on children - very
low binhweight, poverty, chronic
illness, parents' divorce - in being
linked with elevated rates of seri·
ous behavior )nlblems.
"When you add llaese up, they
cluster together and multiply each
other," Weitzman said.
For example, a boy born weigh·
ing less than 3.3 pounds to a mollaer who smokes at least a )liiCk a day
was eight times more likely to
show exueme behavior problems
than a normal-weight boy of a non·
smoking mother, the study said.
If that high-risk boy also had
asthma, his likelihood of having
extreme behavior problems was 19
times higher than the nonnal-risk
boy, the study said.
Weitzman's team said maternal
smoking during and after pregnancy may alter brain structure or
function, with long-tenn effects on
children's behavior.
Smoking also might alter maternal behavior in such a way to elicit
problems in children , the
researchers said. Or the findings
could even mean that mothers who
smoke are more intolerant of children's behavior and more likely to
report it bolhersome, they said.
Weitzman cautioned that the
study does not prove maternal
smoking causes behavior problems
in children, " but it very StrODgtr
suggests there is something there.'
The researchers sifted out
effects of 16 lraits that (lli~ht bave
skewed the results - rangmg from
the child's sex, binhweight and
heallh status to die mother's selfesteem and use of alcohol during
pregnancy.
More study is needed to confirm
the fllldings, Weitzman said

SepteMber's l'!dilaics journal.
Oli1clren ol PICk-a-day molhers
who -*eel .tier die child's birth
had publt::.IIS jut as oftaiiS chil·
dren olpack-a-day women who
1motcd during pregnancy and
afsclwanl
SliiOkiaB 1tss than a pact a day
also - linl:led 10 de\lled rates or
behavior problems, but the rates
were not u high as for heavier
noters. die R'IC8thcn said. They
used cilia ftoill a Labor Dcplltment
1urvey in which mothers of 2,256
younpecn ages 4 10 II were inter·
viewed,

"We arc aware of no other
study 10 dale that bas investigated
the ielaliouhip between maternal
.tiJIOkig IIIII behavior problems in
c:hilclral." said die llllhors, led by
Dr. Midlrl Weitzman, usociate
chair !I pedir:tr'a Mille Urivenity
cirltadnh School of Medicine in
NewYort.._
"It does DOt IIUJlflse me at all
thai tliil asaociation ex isis," said
Dr. Loniae Stem, an associate
clinical professor of pediatrics at
die University California, Los

or

~· from biased observers,

IIICII u IIIOdlen, have problems,
1he caucioned Thun:l2, by telepllole fluR Newhlll.
· . But she
lllid !lc m dlc.s appear to have
Uled IS relilblc methods as possi-

Procrastinators' Club may
.discard prompt president
•

I'HILADBLPHIA (AP) -

'
Thursday, and his announcement

The

PuuM' , n• Cllb..., waco

....

olectl .... fiUi I 1- he wu I

da7

eartJ Nki•l an announce·

Lea W-. IIIII peailk:11t of the
cl1b siaco 1111 election In 19S6
' I F I .., ~ JDtiTOIIICI 10 nomi·
udal a new olf'JCial, called The
AIIOCiated Prell oa nursday,
I'' Pins it wasFridlly.
He w I f 10
fiiiCe, he said,
diM ..
wi7P lie tile 20th

.._,ow

:c. t::r.ol =::!d
Wllel

I Be Lale

:.fc:ed thai it was

~

on Satruday's annivcnary was premature, Wus was· disconcerted.
•'lforrOq, .. he said.
He needn't fell' for his job since,
as be pointed out, procrastinators
won't hear about the anniversary
until it's over.
Waas also said that on Monday
the club wiD announce members of
a committee to plan the anniversary
evenL Anyone with ideas on how
10 honor the occasion should COD·
tactlhe committee "ilomelime this
year,.. he said•

(

Thdau is the

248lh da~ of 1992
and the 77th do~

a/summer.
.,

.-

.

Ul.'l tll'.'liiiUt
: ;. :.:-: :-~~ . .;.:.:
. ·: •.-:• .:-':.' :.:-: ····~ -:-:-; ~-:­
--: ··&gt; .·.·, :.·-: ·~., .·.;. :.:·

. . . . . . . ...

··-~ ..... .-.·.-. ............... ,IY_..

.··.·

TODAY'S IDSTORY: Oa IIIII day In
1833, 10-yur-old Barney Flaberty an·
swered .a olaAIIIed ICijn Tbe New York
Sun to oen papers 8lld wu blred, thus
becolnlnc the first "newsboy" In
America.

TODAY'S BIRTJIDAYS: Francoia Cha·
Leaubri&amp;lld (1768-1841), DOvelilt·Freocb
diplomat; Mary Renault (IJO&gt;litS),
DOYe!iJt; Riebatd Wright (lt01-lt60),
DOftliat.aort story wrller; Cnl&amp; Claiborne (lt20·), writer, Ia '12; Mltsi Gaynor
(liSO·), dancer, is 62; Dllwa Fraser
(lifl-), swimmer, is ~~; Tom Watson
(1949·), golfer, is U .
TODAY'S SPORTS: Oa this day in lt~l ,
Ill-year-old tennis oensat1011 Maureen
Connolly won the U.S. Open.
TODAY'S QUarE: "I would burl words
inlo the dartaeu and .wall for 18 echo.
U an echo IIOIIIIded, ao matter bow falnl··
ly, I would !IOIId other ~ to ten, 1o
march, to !i«ftl.' - Rlcllard Wright
TODAY'S WEATHER: 0o IIIII day In
1981, IUider 11101tl1IIUIIIIY lklel, a dust
devil !lipped a Cei1aa IJ2 011to two fuel
trucks at Pulllam Airport in Flaptall,

____

Ariz. Tbe plaae wu destroyed, bul no

..,lire resulted.

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

IIQIJIICit, TilE IIUIIID CIWIIID.®

TODAY'S MOON: Day after ~
llrst quarter (Sept. S).

LOS ANGELES (AP) Emmy-winning documentary producer Arnold Shapiro scOJed several cou~s in gemng his "Scared
Silent' documentary about child
abuse to television.
For one, the documentary is to
be shown on fuur networks. It was
to be broadcast tonight on CBS,
NBC and the Public Broadcasting
System, and on ABC on Sunday
night
·
In addition, the producer
secured the services of Oprah Win·
frey, herself a child abuse victim,
ashost ·
" Things just fell right, "
Shapiro said. "We all believe in
the cause, and we all know something needs to be done about it."
Shapiro won an Bmmy for
"SCI!red Straight," a documentary
about youth ill jail.

~

Friday, September 4, 1992

Report: Needy children shortchanget4.

Missing paperboy mystery
reaches lOth anniversary

te8t

Friday, September 4, 199~ .

PomeroY-Middleport, Ohio

CBS' 'Age Seven in America'
-A vision of the future

lhe city and recommend changes in needs or our kids ·- the 37 percent
services from the public· and pri- who are in poverty and have a rnul·
vate sectors to improve the condi- tiplicity of problems - and,;!al~e'
lion of children.
them in a couple or months, SBid
The commission headed by Wehling, who is vice ~ident of
Episcopal Bishop Herben Thomp. · public affairs for the PJ'octer &amp;
son Jr. of Cincinnati is to make rec- Gamble Co.
ommendations in OcLobcr. But
Cincinnati ranks 16th in the.
those recommendations will be just nation in child poverty among
a stan, commission member Robert cities with populations of 100,000
Wehling said
or more. The city's infant mor1ality'
"You're not going to take the rate or 12.2 deaths per 1,000 live,
births exceeds the national average
Fonner teacher sentenced rate or 10 deaths per 1,000 births; .
SPRINGFffiLD, Ohio (AP) The primary cause, low birth· .
A former high school teacher weight, ls preventable .wi_th ade,~
accused of having sexual contact quatc prenatal care, SPCCialists say,,
with male students has been sen- But nearly one out o(five pregnant.,
lellced to 18 months in prison.
women receives no prenatal care
GregofJ! S. Reck, 39, who bad wilhin the critical first lrimesler.
taught at South High School, was
Crime and CI1ICk use in Cincinsentcnced Thursday.
nati are increasing to levels foun4
Clark County Common Pleas in other Ohio metropolitan areas,
Judge Douglas Geyer sentenced the report said. And tbat is flooding&lt;
Reck to 18 months for attempted the juvenile judicial system.
,;
Ernie Ramirez, a spotesrnan for ,
corruption of a minor and six
months for contributing to the the Ohio Depanment of Youth Serunruliness andor delinquency of a vices, said diat about 6S percent of .
minor. Geyer ordered the sentences the 2,105 yout!L'I incarteratcd in hiS.;
served concurrently,
depanment's nine juvenile institu~ .
Reck resigned March 6, citing lions are froln utbln aieas.
,;
medical reasons, after police told · "We still aren't meeting th~
school authorities they were inves- needs of all kids, because our pOp- '
ligating student reports of impro- ulation is so large," Ramiiez said. .
prieties involving him.

By SCOTT WILUAMS
AP Television Writer
NEW YORK - Children are
realists whose perceptions of the
world are brutally accurate, if tempered by dreams, myths and fears.
That's why !here is something
terrible and wonderful in tonight's
CBS special, "Age Seven in America.''
It's an hour spent willa 17 American 7-year·olds (which can be
pretty wonderful and terrible in
itself), full of their views and opinions on issues like race, poverty,
marriage and the future.
The kids are from all pans of the
country - Los Angeles, New
York, Chicago, suburban Lincoln,
Neb., and rural Dublin, Ga. Their
economic status ranges from poor
to affluent.
There's Louis, who lives in tem·
pqrary housing ror homeless fami·
lies in New York City's Lower
East Side, and !here's Alexis, who
lives in urban splendor on !he city's
Upper East Side.
In L.A., !here's Julio, who's
from El Salvador, and Selina,
adorably " tooHess," whose family
emigrated from Vietnam and
(.laina.
·~ Two or Chicago's children,
LeRoy and Kenisha, live in the
tough Roben Taylor Homes pro·
.iect; three others, Douglas, Vickie
and Mike, live in a comfy Polish

O'DELLS

neighborhood two miles away. It
might as well be a million. Eric and
Brandon live in arnuent suburbs
(Eric has a personal computer in
his room).
Joey, being raised as a Jeho·
vah 's Witness, and Edie live in
rural Georgia, and Ashton lives in a
cozy suburb of Lincoln, Neb.
The producers in~end to revisit
the children at seven-Year intervals.
It is a splendid idea for a docu·
mentary series, and it is not new.
Back in 1963, British director
Michael Apted put together a similar film called "7 Up," fQCusing
on 14 Brilish 7-year.olds. ·
Apted (who's made movies like
" Gorillas in the Mist" and "Coal
Miner's Daughter") revisited the
children and made additional documentaries at 7-year intervals, culminating in this year's "35 Up." •
h has been a truly remarkable
docum'entary series and, happily,
Apted is the producer for lhe
American version.
hs executive producer, Rod
Caird, and director, Phil Joanou
( " State of Grace" and "Final
Analysis"), follow Apted's formula, wid! intimate, face· to-face inlerviews mixed with scenes from the
youngslers'lives,
"Age Seven in America" is
vastly different from its British
cousin.

· The highest mountain in the conllg·
uous Uniled States - Mounl Whitney
(14,494 reel) - is localed in Sequoia
National Park. Cali!.

somelhlntl.

AGAJHJ

TREATED LAma,
PANELS
4.79 2'xB'
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Celebrates
birthday

992·5500

GRAND OPENING
Of Vi'ra Furniture's New Locationl
•No Deposit for September
On Rent·To·Ownl
•Free Balloons for the Kids
This Week Only!

·'
.~

.,
'

~

,•

,,,'
)'!

RENT-TO-OWN

PIIWEII

CAITUN RENEE TILLIS

Birth announced
Angela Larltins and Gary Tillis
announce the birth or their first
child. Caitlin Renee Tillis, on July
10 at Pleasant Valley Hospital in
Point PleasanL .
She weighed nine pounds and
7.4 ounces and was 23 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are
Melodic and Randy Forbes,
Pomeroy, and Delmar and Deana
Larkins, Middleport. Maternal
great-grandparents are Wanda
Wolf, Middleport, Margaret
Eskew, Pomeroy, and Charles
Faulkner, Kansas.
Paternal grandparents arc Dar- ·
lene and Jerry Ttllis, Harrisonville.
Paternal great-grandparents are
Lena and C.C. Howard, Pomeroy,
and KAthlene Tillis, Rutland.

SOFA All. CHAIR

lWIED POTATOES &amp;GUYY 1111111

$495

PER WEEK

PER WEEK

$19

95

UCK

send a long, self-addressed, stamped

envelope to: Co-Dependents Anony·
mous, P.O. Box 33577, Phoenix,
Ariz. 85067-3577.
Dear Aan Laaders: I'm a 24year-old male in good physical
condition, 6 root 1 and 190 pounds.
My problem is that I perspire under
my arms something awful. I'm not
rererring to ordinary perspiration,
Ann, I mean my shirts get soaking
wet.

I've tried every exua-dry
antiperspirant on the market
and nothing helps. I still drip
like a faucet. Can you suggest
something? - SOAKING WET IN
MINNEAPOLIS
DEAR MINNEAPOLIS: You
may have a condition known as
hyperhidrosis. There is a solution,
but it requires an operation to
mnove the sweat glands. Oleck with
your doctor.
Dear Aan Landers: This is a
"thank you"letter to all the telephone
operators who must lake strange and
sometimes abusive calls.
,
My husband, "Sam." has been in
a nursing home ror six years. He is
mentally ill. Sam cans me collect,

UPPER RIVER ROAD

The tuesday Meigs County
Ladies Golf Associatilin will have
a year·end party Sept. 27 at 3 p.m.
Members are to call Velma Rue
' by s~ 22 for reservations.
Wmncrs of Tuesday's play were
No~ma Custer, low gross: Joan
Ch1lds and Becky Andenon low
net; and Nonna CUSier, low pu'u.

Last nigh~ I received this call~:
"Hello. Is this number ---·?" "Yes;
I replied The man went on, "I'm the
supervisor. A man calling collect i&amp;o
very angry and says he is going 10&lt;!
ltill you."
••
I replied, "That man is my..
husband and he's mentally ill. He's '
in a home and would never hun me.
But 7 do want to thank you and aU :•
the other ielephone opei8IOJ'S who'·
liave been kind. •
Please, Ann, let everyone know
how wonderful these people are••;&gt;
MZ. IN SANTA MONICA
d
DEAR MZ.: You just did lind IJ
tbankyou.
.
'
DEAR READERS: Many pcqple:;
wrote to let me know thatlhe author, ,
of that wonderful poem, "Slow Mel ;
Down, Lord," is Wilferd Peterson,,
ol Grand Rapids, Mich. rm happy
to give him the credit he deserves. :1
Planning a wtdding? What'sq
right? What's wrong? 'Tilt Ann'
Lalldtrs Guidt for Britks"' wil('.
rtl~~ your tuU:Uty. Stnd a ulf-' ;
addrtsud. long , busintss-siu
envtlopt and a chLclc or monty'J
ordtr for $3.65 ( rhis includes~
postage aNi luvulling) to: Brides,
c/o AM l.antkrs, P.O. Box 11562,
Chicago , Ill. 606ll -0562. (In ,
Canoda, send $4.45.)

GALLIPOLIS • 441 4428
4 mlltl out 1411n c.nteniiY
· on LINCOLN PIKE
448-3158

-

"

ing," she said.
'
Mauer said Oxford Develop·:·
ment was distressed to learn wbat
had happened. He said that next
season, the company will remind:
clieJits who bonow the suile how Ill'
behave at baseball games.
·,
"It's against the law to take.
your clothes off in public. We dO&gt;
apolo¥ize and we reassure every-1
body 11 won't happen again," said,
Jimmy Sacco, general manager of,
Spectacor Management Group,;
which runs Three Rivers.
He said the box, one of 115 at 11
the stadium, was cleared about five .1
minutes after management received
the complaints.
f
Pirates ~esman Rick Cerrone •
estimated '99.9 percent" or the .
13 ,099 fans at Wednesday's garne t
were unaware of the striptease. He
said the Pirates learned aboul the
incident after Lhe box had been
cleared.
In action on the field, the Pirates
beat the Giants 3-2 . The party 1
goen saw about balf the game.
~

farm, Joshua Ervin winner. Each
winner received a hat £rom the districL
Winners in the hay show, in
order of placement, were class I,
· 7S percent alfalfa: Virgin King,
Roy Holter; class 2, all grasses:
Brian Windon, Roy Holler, Macyn
Ervin; ·claas 3, 49 percent or less
legumes: ·Brian Windon , Roy
Holter, Virgil King. Winners or the
hay show received a cash award
from the Meigs County Fair Board,
and flfSI place winners will receive
a plaque from the MS&amp;WCD at
their annual meeting and banquet
on October 20 at Meigs High
School.

Return Jonsthan Meigs Chapter,.1
Daughtm of the American Revolu-,,1
tion, will meet Sept. II at th ~ 0
Meigs County Courthouse at 1:30
p.m.
,,
The program, ''The Courts and
the Constitution,'' will be an intra- b
duclion to Constitution Week, Sept. ·~
17-21 The presCIIIer will be Meigs.,,
County Court··or Common Pleas
Judge Fred W. Crow Ill.
:
Dessen at Craw's Steak House ~
will foUow the meeting. Hostesses .,
are Mrs. James O' Brien , Miss,2
Eleanor Smith, Mrs. Dale Dutton, ,,
Mrs. George Morris, Miss Lucille
Smith and Mrs. Wendell Cleland. 1;
,rj

Cocaine use leads to :,_
drummer's death
"
••

Superman will die fighting to
save Metropolis from a superlunatic called Doomsday, a new
villain who is an escapee from a
cosmic insane asylum, Carlin said.
"Doomsday will emerge from
somewhere in America and just
stan walking," he said.
"The fight will be taken to
Metropolis, during the course or
the stories," Carlin said. "There
will be a lot of dead! and destruc·
tion around MetropOlis as a result
. of the fight ... Supennan is going
to die at die end. But he is going to
die saving as many people on Eanh
and in Metropolis as he can, which
is wbat he's all about"
DC Comics, publisher of the ·
four Superman comic books,
wouldn't comment furlhe,r.

LOS ANGELES (AP) ...;;
Cocaine use, not an allergic reaction to a pesticide, was responsible
for the death or Jeff Porcaro, diummer for !he rock band Toto, a
ncr's spokesman said.
IJ
Porcaro, 38, collapsed Aug. 5 11$'he was spraying pesticide in th e!
garden at his suburban home. His'
manager, Larry Fitzgerald, had said"&gt;
docton believed Porcaro had suf.l1
Cered an allergic reaction to the'~
pesticide Dursban.
Bob Dambacher, spokesman roafl
the Los Angeles County, coroner,J
said Thursday an autopsy foun~~
that Porcaro's death was related tol
hardening of the aneries stemming\
from cocaine use.
Porcaro was a rounding member'
ofToto with his brother, SteVe, anda
four others. The group' s hits&lt;
included "Hold the Line" in 1977 '
" Rosanna" in 1982 and "Africa•~ .
in 1983.

coro:1

DOMINO'S PIZZA· ·
811 W. MAIN STREO•POMEIOY

992·2124

\l

. '"

l' '

:~ b

m
~

s 99

Jd

1A
df

" I
'\ I

b

.n

PICIUt'er;,
DH.MIY ,,

SYUCISI,OI.

KYLE MICHAEL WOLFE

.,''

DAR to meet

LARGE
FAlLIUIITa~
PEPPERONI
All Colon 6 FOI 10
HIIUID'S IIEIIIIOU
PIZZA

'

Tracie iacks, IS , Coiumbus,
She was welcomed home at the
retumed recently from a Teen Mis- · Columbus International ~ by
slon that began June 20.
many family and friends. Two .
'She was trained at Menitlsland, "Welcome Home" parties were
Fla. From there she trav~led to I.:il· held in her honor.
uiut Trasher Orphanage at Assiou~
She is the daushter of Erinc and
El)'pl . She afso spent time in Sally Jacks, granddaughter of
Cario. Her ,last $1~p w~s Centre Ronald and Betty Jacks, Columbus;
Evangilique Valansm tO Saxon, and the great-niece of Ronald and
Switact!and.
Pauline Davis, Dexlfl.
·

Linda Powell, who was m a nearby
·box. "When she removed her top
and rubbed her chest in the face of
one of the men- that's when I
lost it"
She said teen·a$e boys in her
box yelled at the stnppers and took
photographs.
"Their moLhers and fathets
were trying to slOp them, but what
can you do?" she said.
Ms. Powell said the party was
the "main attraction on !he whole
level, three to six boxes. .. , Everyone was watching."
About a dozen people, including
the strippers, were ejected from
Oxford Development' s box by
security guards after complaints
from fans in boxes on both sides.
One of the suippers, identified
O)lly as Shelley, told KDKA-TV
she thought the fan reaction was
"kind of ridiculous.
"I mean, I understand that there
were little children on both sides of
us, but it was all in good fun. There
was nothing, you know , sexual
going on. It was just drink serv-

Ladies Golf Association
meeting Sept. 27

Jacks returns from Teen Mission ·.

Below Slwrllarnorllll Bridge

[

Birthday party held

NEW YORK (AP) - An Madonna.
unprecedented $100 million deal
Warner Bros. will pay the rock·
with Warner Bros. Records malces er $10 million per album - plus ·
Prihce the highest paid player in . royalties ~ and make him a corpopop music, surpassmg megadeals rale vi~e president for artists and
cut by Michael Jackson and r~pertotre.
.

LIMPS

16IS

Sam:

Will Doomsday be the
end of Superman?

Warner Bros. to pay Prince a high price

$199

SUNDAY,sEPRMIEI 6~ 1992

Hot Roll
S11111ll Drink or Cot!M

OILY

$10'

The following were winners or
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation
District
(MS&amp;WCD) contests held
The
Middleport-Pqm eroy
during
the
Mei$S County Fair.
Branch of the American Associa·
The
winner
10 the soybean guess
lion of University Women
contest,
with
3,753
beans in the jar,
(AAUW) will meet Sept. 22 at 7
was
Joe
D'
Augustine.
He received
p.m. at Lhe Racine United
a
$10
check
£rom
the
MS&amp;WCD.
Methodist Church. Tara Grueser,
Winners in the mystery farm
who attended Be Wise Camp, will
share her camp experiences. All contest were Monday, Gay Johnson
members and prospective members rarm, Bob Graham winner, Tuesday, Tom Hamm farm, Nora East·
are encouraged to at~end.
man winner, Wednesday, Paul Bair
farm , Christi Hoffman winner;
Thursday, Delbert Smith farm,
Greg Bailey winner; Friday, Clif·
The Racine United Melhodist ford Wooten rarm, Greg Stewan
Women held their annual picnic winner; Saturday, Vernon Nease
recently at Star Mill Park with 45
in attendance.
Rev. Roger Grace gave the
blessin~ before !he dinner.
·
Robm Reiber and Christine Hill
had games and Rev. Grace conducted bible quizzes.
Food, games and fellowship
NEW YORK (AP) - Could
were enjoyed by all.
this be the end ror Superman?
The Man of Steel will meet his
mau:h in a four-pan series of comic
bouks scheduled to reach dealers
Nov. 18., said Mike Carlin, editor
A party was held recently for or DC Superman comic books in
the trade magazine Advance
Kyle Wolfe who celebrated his
Comics.
third birthday with a "101 Dalma·
The series will piu:h Superman
tions." He is the son of Diane
into
a fight to his dead!, he said.
Wolfe, Lelarl FaUs.
But
Carlin
was coy about whether
Guests of his party included
dead!
for
a
Krypton
native is final.
Carol PJipe and Joshua; Linda
"Never say we wouldn 'I kill
Teaford and Derek, Dale and
S
upennan,
never say we wouldn't
Darin; Mindy Patterson and Cody;
bring
him
back,"
Carlin told the
Monica Hill; Amy Campbell and
November
issue
of
the Madison,
Brittney; Corissa Hill; and Heath
Wis.-based
magazine
that comHill. Later guests inc! uded Don
bines
a
catalogue
with
interviews.
Richard, Mary and Cory Hill.
It began hitting comic book Stores
this week.

Racine UMW meets

~u;:'s~wm.hihca~ton.

Cash 'n Carry
SOFllliD
CHAIR

SUNDAY SPECIAL

on problem
several times a day. When I'm not
in, my answering machine picks up
the coilversation between Sam and
one of those telephone angels.
Often I'll hear the operator say,
"Don't cry, Sam. She11 be back. • Or
"I know she11 come to see you soon.

Ann

By JEFFREY BAIR
Associated Press Writer
PITTSBURGH- Baseball may
yearn for the next Mr. October, but
two candidates for Miss September
have been exposed at Three Rivers ·
Sllldiwn.
Trouble is, the two strippers
who bared !heir chests in a privaLe
box did so in fron I of dozens or
surprised fans,
The nudity had the suite's
owner, Oxrord Development Co.,
looking for answers Thursday. The
real-estate company apologized to
fans who were at Wednesday's
Pirates-Giants game, where an
Oxford client threw a bachelor
pany in its box.
"They are very embarrassed, as
well they should be," said David
Matter, Oxford's executive vice
president. "And frankly, I don't
feel sorry for them." '
He would not identify the clienL
Witnesses said the women
danced and undressed to their Gslrings shonly before 9 p.m.
"I think they should be
ashamed of themselves, " said

AAUWtomeet

Jacob Tyler Mozingo, son or
Eric and Rhonda Mozingo celebmt·
ed his first birthday recently a
Mickey Mouse theme party.
Cake and ice cream were
served.
Joining the party were his
maternal grandparents, Russell and
Marvin Mozingo and Joe and
Monna Andreoni. Also attending
were Sandy and Kelly Napper,
Ronnie and Ronnie Smith, Ann
Sp,ires, Randy, Nicholas and Rusty
Mozingo, Bob and Pam Whanon,
Jenny, Leroy and Heather
Kessinger, Scott and Annette
Debbie and Zachary Borah,
and
Kelly.
were James Mash,
Rod and Dianne

AT UPPER RIVER ROAD, GAUIPOLIS

I .

Dear Aan Landen: This is in
response to "Married But Loneaome
in Wisconsin," whose wife was no
longer interested in sex. Some
women lose inrerest in sex because
they lose interest in the man they
married. I know because it ha;lpelled
tome.
My husband was a heavy drinker
and ran around with other women. I
came from a family that believed
women stayed married no matter
what, so I took the lousy treabnent
and knocked myself out trying to
please him.
Final! y I round Co-Dependents
Anonymous and began 10 focus on
getting emotionally healthy and
stopped trying to get my husband's
attention. When I declared my
independence and enrolled in the
local community college, he got the
message and insisted that I llay
home. 7refused. When he realized I
was serious, he agreed 10 go with
me for comseling, something I had
been begging him 10 do for 10 years.
The reason so many women are
cold is because of !he rejection
they experience after years of
trying to make things right. I
learned this and a whole lot more
at Co-Dependents Anonymous.
Knowledge is power, and that
group changed my entire life. - A
NEW WOMAN IN FLORIDA
DEAR NEW WOMAN: Thanks
for a five-star testimonial for
Co-Dependents Anonymous. Aellm·
endy that organization turned your
life around. For those interested,

........L·

Soil and Water Conservation winners

I•

7\

BUNK BEDS

BI'OWll and bls Holiday Ian team wiU perform at
the Cleveland National Air Show over tbe week·
end. (AP pboto)

,,

"But I.Jt&amp; Uunber Yard In lbwn"
634 E. lUll ST., POIIEIOY, OL

.

• GOING FOR A SPIN - Team leader T, J,
· Brown tools over Cleveland Thursday in his
: Pitts Speelal biplane as the lbree oilier memben
t or bis aerobalic team ny iaverled in fOJ'l!lalion.

O'DELL LUMBER COMPANY

NORTH BRADLEY, Mich . · "The oPPosite party can't afford
(AP) - Running isn 'I quite the 10 buy an ilephant, but I can afford
word 10 describe Hugh Sullivan's to buy 4 mule," he said
He began riding Ruthie on
campaign for re-election to the
county commission. He' s greeting Tuesday and said he ex~cts to
cover about 3,000 miles through
voters from the back of a mule.
Sullivan, a Democrat, said his his districi in Midland County,
moun't, Ruthie, was the closest about 140 miles northwest of
thing 'he had on his fann to a don· Detroi~ before Election Day.
"I'll be riding her every night
key.
from door 10 door," Sullivan said.

Buttel'lld Llmu

What's terrible about !he Ameri·
can version is the realization thai
some of these beaoliful American
children might not make it to lhe
next filming .

Man perpl~xed by

Strippers, partiers ejected at Three Rivers

Candidate mounts mule in re-election bid

Malhld PolatoM l G111vy

don't!"

VInyl Siding

"Everything New. ~ .Nothin6 Pre-Owned!"

TODAY'S BARB
BY PIUL PASTORET
Tbe bca says people who bave notblng
to do work !larder at It llwllboee of us
who are actuaUy trytnc to accompllib

Julio, for example, remembers
how differen t El Salvador was
from the barrio of LA "The houses are uglier in El Salvador," he
says through a translator. " In El
Salvador, Lhey kill you with big
guns and here wid! smaller guns. ''
In affluent Chicago-land, young
Brandon and Eric understand racial
differences.
"I think I get !he brown color of
my skin from the slaves," says
thoughtful, mature Brandon,
"because my great-great-granddmother and grandfather was a
slave."
" I thought that was really
stupid, making black people
slaves, " Eric interrupts. Brandon
looks at him, frowning.
" White people whipped
slaves," Brandon says,
" I know it, I heard all about
that," Eric says.
The three Upper East Side ~Is
discuss their ideas about marnage
and whether you need to be married to have children. "Well, "
acknowledges one, "you have to
BE with a boy to bave a baby.''
· Her friends chorus, "No, you

White Double 4"

HEV£R

SCRAPE
OR PAINT

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-9 -

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

d!
l!ft '

.nl

�~rlday, September 4, 1992

~~~:!~~~~~------~--~--------~----!P~om~M~OYt-:M~Iddle~rt~,O;h=l;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;rr~=:=:=::=~~~~~~~~
Giveaway

Pomeroy,

.'

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

lovable kiUena,

11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SNAFU® by Brure ll&lt;•:tlli&lt;'

HelpWanled

51

Household

Easy Worit' Excellent Pay! As·

'

~i

Chovy oto~or. $20; ... 11
lZolllulbarry.
Exni- rollor, $110; Ameor
lonlzor, $110; Culo oloctrlc or·
ond otand, $100; 114-lll2·

•• Ou1lity Assurtd Co•tncto,.
20 Yr. b:p.
CaU II, 614-742·2321

Days

Words

llt7JIIn

1

ltil!l11111M..

1

3
6
10
Monthly

15
15
15
15
15

SETJERBYCIESIGN

Over 15 Words

Rate

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

$ .20
$ .30

$ .42
$ .60
$.05/day

Pet. for Sale
Mwicallnllru.menll
Fru.11.1 &amp; Vegela.ble1
For Sale or Trade

Quality Hi EHide•cy
Air Co1ditioners, Heat

F \1\\1 Sl ' I' I'Ll ES
1.1 " F:' m n.

Now Water Heaters.

Pumps, f1maces &amp;

3-- Announce menU

11- Help Wanted

4-- G1veaway
5-- Happy Ado
6-- Loet and found

12- Situatioru Wanted
13--- ln1urance

q p

32- Moh1k Homea for Sale
~ Farma fOr Sale

34- Butane•• Bu.ldmp
3S- lob &amp; Acreage
36- Real EaLale Wanted

·1H \\'PORT\ I'IO'i
71- Autoa ror Sale

72- Trucka for Sale
41- Houae~ for Rent
42- Mob.le Homea for Rent 73-- Va111 &amp; 4 WD'o
43--- Farma for Rent
74-- Motorcycles
75-- Baatfl &amp; Motora for Sale
44-- Apartment for Ren t
76-- Auto Paru &amp; Aeceuorieol
~ furn1ahed Room•
177- Auto Repair
46-- Space (or Rent
'
.
47- Wanted to Renl
78- Camp•ng Equ1pmen1
48-- [qu•pmenl for Rent
I '
:-;EHVICFS
49- For Leate

\IEHUI \\IJISE

14-- Bu11ineu Train1ng
15- School• &amp; fnatruction
16- RadlO, TV &amp; CB Repaar
17- MlK'ellaneous
18- Wanted To Do

Sl- Houaehold Gooda
52- Sporung Gooch
53- Anllquea
54- Masc. Merchandise

•

'

Bennetts Mobile Home Ire:a:tirtg

S::. •

New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614·949·2101 • 949·2160
or 915·3139
(No SIIINiay Calls)

2112192/lfn

Plumbing &amp; Healing
Exeuating
,S4- Ele&lt;trical &amp; Ref,rig.,rati&lt;&gt; ~

182-

183--

55.- Build•ng Supplies

8&amp;- Mobile Home Repa1r

87-

Upholstery

OUR NEW
STEEL INSULATED
RAISED PANEL GQAGE DOOR
fxJ-$275.00 16K7-$450.00

INSflllE~Y. HP..$200.00
With 2 T111111111Ht.111

OPENERS

Read the
CLRSSIFIED RDS
Public Notice

·telecommunication services

·•• 1n llt•n•tive oper1tor
'Hrvlco provider throughout
Ohio oncompaaaing all ita
88 count!•. Any lntorealed

person, firm, corporltion, or
entity that can ahow good
cauao why lhio application
ahouid not be granted
ahould lile with tho
Commlaaion a written otate-

2

In

Memory

The family of Vida
Green wl1hea to
acknowledge the
klndneu of our
neighbor•. friends
and family during the
recent lllnen and
death of our beloved
wile and mother.
Words cannot ex·
prell h9w much your
cards, llowert, phone
calla, food, transportation, vlalta and
sympathy meant to
Ul.

,

Special thanka to
the etaff of Meiga Co.
Senior Citizen• Cent.er, 1tlllf of Overbrook
Nurtlng Home, staff
of Fl•her Funeral
Home
and
Rev.
Che1ter le,m ley. God
Bless you all.
Walter Green and
family.

WILSON'S.ARMY
SURPLUS

Public Notice
ment detailing the

County Rd. 19Peachlork Rd.

reasons

on or before September 22,
1992.
Unleu
the
Commission receive• 1
written stalament to th•t
effocl and an accompanying
request for oral hearing on
such issue, this matter

will

be decided on the boola of
the information contained in
the application and the affi.
davits aubmitted by the
applicant Further information may be obtained by
contacting tho Public
Utilities Commiaaion of
Ohio, 180 Eaot Broad Street,
Columbua, Ohio 432660573.
(9)41tc

992-7093
Mon.·Sun. t om-8 pm
See ua tor your hunting
and back to ochool
needa. llsH'o largool
aeleclion ot military
aurplus items!

8117 pd.

5

38904 Leading
Creek Road
Middleport, Ohio

614·992·7144

8/31/92 tin .

S11all Dozer Work

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

992·7553
POMEROY, ON.

8·11-'92-1 mo. d.

Quality
Stone Co.

Call 614·992·
6637
St. Rt. 7
Cheshire, OH.

112111n

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

•~n•n~'•

Paw ..~..,, .•

BULUDOZER,BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTAL.I.£D
UMESTONE-TRUCIONG

little shadow,
Maw

Maw's

little

free Eslinates • low
Rales for Se1lors
No Job Too Small

Mommy's little angel

LINDA'S
PAINTING

has

turned "13".

&amp;

Happy Birthday

and I I,.ove You!
Maw Maw, Paw Paw
&amp;Mom

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

FREE PEPSI
RKDVE AFREE 12·PACK OF PEPSI WITH
EAcH WINDSHIRD INSTAlLED AT EITHER Of
OUR LOCInONS: RIPLEY OR MASON
low Thru Odolltr 31, 1992
fiiiCIIUIIU OIIAIE

CUAI SUDIL...............•41.50 PlUS TAl
DIIRD SUDUS.............•53.00 PLUS TAX

INnRIOR &amp; EXTERIOR

UNLIMITED SESSIONS

FREE ESnMATES

Mo•'s of September
and October

81211/t211 ..... pd.

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC
lox894-Walier Alley

(COST INCLUDES INSTALLATION)

MASON AUTO GUS$
(304) 773-571 0
(OFFER GOOD FOR SHOP WORK ONLY)

s3soo

CALIFORNIA
TANS
949·2823

IAONE, 01110

Rldtt Small
£....,
PARTS ·&amp; SERVICE
Mawers • Chail Saw'

614-949·2804
•:

Tf'"

i •

~

.

[!]
• N.. 1--..,:.·~!!!·
-=

J

.... -··

...... .

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
LICENSED ond BONDED

PH. 614•992-5591

12-5-tfn

MICROWAVE.OVEN
••d l~::~r~··
lrl.. ~It Ia Or w.
Pic~~

lEN'S APPLIANCE

SEIYICE .
992~5335 or
915·3561

f,_ hat Ofllca
217L.._.It,
t'OMIIOY,OIIO

AcNII

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

•New Homes

•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FlUE

ESTIMATES

985·4473

667·6179
2-7-92·1fn

SHRUB &amp;TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAl
•LIGHT H~UUNG

•FIR EWOOD

BILL S.LACK
992 •2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
I _ _ _ ___;!;!::!!;!!:(!
••

s.1urc11r, tth, toso s.conc1
Av-. x-La. Mona Cloohlng,
Chllr Twin Wicker HNdbolrd,
lilac, Momo (Rain -71hJ.
S.turdly, lkrrirfay, t:OH:OO 1
IIIIa On 1114 Out Part.., Baby
n-. w-n, Ilona Ckllhlng,
--·Mile.
S.pl 511t, tth, ...m.·5D.m. llloc
h-. + CIOIIIN, 1101' S.Cond

11

....,.,,H..,e,.,:IP.,.,w,.a:;,.n,;.,:ted..:__·"''
,..,
'AVON' AU AREASI Shiro youro·
limo whh ... You'll iovo tho
cornpony.1400oll2-1358.
,/"

,.......

14

12&gt;1110 llobllo Homo, 2 Barf.
"""""
Good
CondRionl
Wallhlr, Dryer Hoolc..tJp, Quail

Business
Training

Rwlnin
Nowi!ISoulhellltm
Billlnna College, St&gt;otng Valley

Piau. Coli Todoiy, al4-446~367n
R111.fiD-*1mB.

1,8

Wanted to Do

Will Babph In lly Homo. Fon·
Cld In Pl1y Aru. Rtltrencll

Avtlloblo. Rodney Arol. Coli
114-245-5887.
EloR TREE SERVICE. Topping,
Trimming, TrH Removal, ~
Trimming. FrN hll1111tesl 114·
3§HV5TAftor 4p.m.
'l*&gt;r;oo Po~oblo Sawmill, don'l
llfu~".:
lo lito mill l•ot
'!" 75-1l57.

._

Mill Pauii'B Day Clrt Center.

Sill, oHordablo. chlldcoro. M·F
&amp;Lm. • 5:30 p.m. Agaa 21\-10.
- . . , anar
- · Dropolna
wttcome.
11t ~fjl 1224. New In·
1an1 Toddler CliO, aM-441-6227.
llobllo homo _ ....... ,, hook·
upoo ltlctpl oloctrlcJiomall con·
ll:ructlon jobs, odd obs, paint·
lng, plumbing, Ole. Vory
·,_.,.blo rat.., IM.fll2·5387
anwthne, ar tutte menage.
WJQ - n homoloffk:a, uc
........... 304.a75-1621 lltl
11:110 Pll.
WIU do gtnll'll houu ctunlng
.., •. wlikJr or one lime basis.
Hl¥t txperltnce • retmnces.
Contact Pauli Qhbrfde· after
5pm at 114-11&lt;111-2447

Financ1al
Business
Opponunlty
,•
JNOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
that you do bual·
riHs with pooplo you know, ond
NOr to aond money through tho
mall until you have lnv111Tgatld

.....,.,.ndo
tloorofmlng.

Building Manufacturer
S.Joctlng Smoll /Lirga Builder
IDoalof ln Some Opon :t.r•n.
Hltf1 ProiH POIOIIIIII. Accopllng
OriiY Dulllllod. 303·75~
32o0, Ext. 2401.
'iNDING ROUTE: Got Rich
Qujck? No Woyl lui Wa Hovo A
Gopd, St11rlv, Alfordab'!,_But I·
..... Won1 La1t. t .....284·
Mttal

v.r.rJ.

lng Route: Locol. W• Have
N-It MochlnN, lloklng A
St114Y Colli lncoma. 1·

OFFICE SERVICE
AND SUPPLY

112

~.a&amp;H313.

w. ..... SlfHI

Po••r11J1 01. 45769
31

&amp;Notary ServiCe•

KEVIN'S UWI OPEN MON.-SAT.
MAINTENANCE ,
9·??
949·2391or
1·100..137·1460

, lawn Mowtng,
fertilizing, W..ctlng,
lnd hiding.
Shrub ilnciTTrlmmlng • Rtmoval
R-1116~1

' Frao-

.._
toll~

=::r.:-tc..·~:

.... Tllol, 1:00 Ill 7?

aOod ololiiJ!ItiP. por boa, n1..
ilraoa cfOihlrif 3 tor $1. Uta of
-l)'lhlng yooo. 111 -~~~ ......
a,Pallo111-,_
llemli hag tthold,

CURIO
.BARN

&amp; VIcinity

An nou ncemPnl s

=========I
3
Announcements

2.21 -

Ffftllhld

~~To

~~- 0141.

·

...... 114 ..... out Jorlcho Rd.
'

&amp; VICinity

1114-441-4!72.

- - - - - - - - - 2 pco wfdo _..., top, I cor-

45

FurniShed

Rooms

=i•t.,,
-1111. 200. 114 441 4031 ·a14-448-

Si_,.,::i
_,.. rooma Whh cook!~.
...

Bmol Fumlohod 3 Cotl!lloln Town, a- To ar-y
Arid ~" " - And
Quiot.l14-441.
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent ,.

2 lad oam .._... MaiM,
Ap.
i1of1!&gt;111 I Rol.,onco RaquiiOd,

I ' oom l'lnCit holM, No-· 1114-44NI2l
IG' I I* tat. DR. FA, LA 2•adroom t,.....wM .,.~o~,
2Rulllnd,
112 - Jillouthoal
..... romodo
1
. ol4-1'42 or 114-lll2wllldlng. 104-IIWI10 or -.. ·"'
fronl 2421.
,3....
217. 2 ••d - . I ...It, IIIIo
I , _ lloull,
acro;s::
· ' (!;.
.,.._
~~ 1I:OO ..:_d,
;;~=-=-·- :nt,---,M-Ipolto.
.....,....,-=3 . . . , _ Troiitt' .,.....
I 'It old. 4' •-.:.2 - · 2 Wollr Plicl, 110 POlo - .

u.. ::'d

=

i:•
:,"'C.uteW..,._,Cut
w1:C: .,_..,
~~~
~

~""·

Roflro-·
R••
I.Nvo - .
..
Mollllt Homo. Air,
.....,..., fiOfl IALE Portor ~roo, 11&amp;0 P1ua ::'::
ILWTIFUL ......DIDooil I14-44N11t.
a t - bllfl,
toUlNI15.

1:1..1~ 3'1ong, SIO.

,
11- ""waoro
Blvd. or 1 N.lllln 91.
0no bedroom - . Ill Firat

:1'1 ·~:.r.IIIJ: ~

tltingj.
,yanf - . ..... 3,4,5. -

MiddlePort

11

758 Socond Avonuo, Gallipolis,
614-446-2144.
VI'RA FURNITURE AND AP, PUANCES
114-44~428
814-446-3158
RENT·2.owN
No DopoaR ·GRAND OPE/liNG
Nolhlng P-nod Or Uud,
Evor.
Bunk Beds Complete $5.88
WHk; Sola And Chair $10.93
WHk; Lampo $3.31 WMk;
Raelln- $5 52 Waa~;. Dlnalla
Wilh 4 Chalra ll25 wHk; Or
Toblo With Bonch And 4 Chllro
Wllllt~hlnft Hlllcll $20.19 Wook;
........
•
"
R...
,...alor
.,1.22
Waak·
W11h11 &amp; ..._ Sal S16 85
-•~
•
WIIk; EIICI~"
·~ Rongo Wllh
Gl111 Door $11.22 \\'Mil

21' RCA- oolor TV; HI;
-•1 1 n ,_ eu~2133.
or .,.,.,
•~•
341 Lincoln
StrOOI, ~-·
llldd'-1,
a. ~~~~~~::•::o·--..,..,..--,-= ::::
Ohlo.::___=---:-:---:----:c·"'SI~
room WI_ , n&amp; 1 TV 211Cu. FOOl Hotpoin1 Chill

I

- · -atotlloo,
· allll2-10,.
goodbaby

Pomeroy,

4br, 2 ......
•••ment.
:I car

UHCI Wuhor &amp; Drvor Salal $75

&amp; Up, All Said With Wor11nty.
Tho Wuhor &amp; Dryer Shopfl",

-oorn

'&amp;~"· Ji,~

Pt. Pleasant

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; RJRNJTURE. 62
Olivo Sl., Galllpollo. Now &amp; Uud
lumhura, haotoro, Wootam &amp;
Worll bootL 114-44.11-3159.
UHCI W11hlr &amp; Dryer Sot, 614·
388·1033 Aftar a P.ll.

111-,

3 -oom houla, S2711. com- =---=---....,-....,...--,...,:::_.tid,
rot I dip No R_,. lor ron!· woak or monlh.
,...I
~·•- ~11
~rl'lf at ..-!mo. Gollla Holol.

Homes tor Sale

T. .'a c. &amp;14-251-123&amp;.
RutUc bunk bedl wfmatlrtllll
~oo
-- 30•5-2808
" · or bolt Onft,
- ·~
•
Sola &amp; Chair, In Good Condf.
tlon, Porch Dock For Sola Al10.
614-446-73l1.

m•

·

CHECK OUR SELECTION
AND PRICESS FIRST
a.11-'12·1-.

......

..

RalrigaratorocFrHZOra, Washor,

D~'"a Air condlllonor, Color

r

qu

'"
aH
IIIIUL
HIYICI

1·1121odroano,,2 lolha, W&amp;D
Hookup, $275 Monlh, Dopoah,
Ulllllloro, 2 lllloo N. VInton, S.R.
110. 814-38a..toaO.
2 Bedroom A~rtmont,
L.oeatld
~
llohlnd Holnr Clinic 01 WNI
Vl'lJinla, 304-1711-44111.
2 b clroom Air cond, - - •
flo« ~;I &amp; clap rwqui,:d;",;;
pota,
5-5112.
Corport, Yard,
2 Bod· -.. ~
$3&amp;Mio. 7 llln From Oaf.
="e!"tS:J~hono: 614-446'
·
2 Or 31odroom Aponmont, Par·
tlolly Fwnlahad $350/llo. Pluo
Dopolil Jnclucloo W.tor, Sower.
Troller Lol For Rolli, $110/llo.
Walor, Sower F-urnlohad. BOih
Locltod At: Hannan Troco
School Dlllrlct.ll&lt;l-251-6138.
2bd rm. 1pia., tot1I ~-_,tr1c, •plloncoo fumlohad, lound;'y
room toolthiN lo IIChool
In lown• .p;,n.;;tiono ovalloblo
It: VII'- OfMii Apia. Mt or
callll1441124711. EOH.
...p,
3 """" &amp; both WID ~ fumlo~ ..;
stove, ,.,
.neg, vary etlan
~~no~· $165. mo. 304-675or 75·11112.
3 room apl, IIIOYI &amp; ,., fur·
~ leo ~borhood do
nI• h-· n na
• P
&amp; ral roqull'8d,
11-1090.
3 Room Fuml-, Can1ral u-•
~
IAk, All Utilltloa Furnlohod;]dEa·
pt Eloctrlc, 011 Straot Pa ng,
81Htl 2602. ,

Aportmont
In
Syrac:uoo, CASH AND CARRY • Solo And
1182 - - 14110, 2 bod- $12Shoo. pluo utllltlao, depoait; Chair $11111; Lompo Starting At
SIUS Eic!!; Toblo With 4 Cfialro
CIA, lotal..'::.i uncflr. a14-1112.S132 aftor 5:30.
penning, lh20
wood
PARTIIENTS
•·T
$121 Sal; walhor &amp; Dryer 1591
'"'"IFUL
B~·
porch, h20 olurnn owning l
A
~
Sot; Rolrlg111101 $311; Eloctrlc
railing W/acroltl, avarylhlng axe BESUt~E~Pf!.~.ES .~!koJACK!I;!lllko And Gaolra~H Avolloblo.
concl, one own.. 304-171-SM8.
~·
on ••
Locatod • Uppor Rlvor Road
11om $1
. Wotk to oliOD • - . 811.., Brldao Plaza Or 4
11111141:. 2 -oom. 2 both, movloro. Coli a14 418 2581. EOH. lllloa Oil 141 In Conlon&amp;!\' On
gu fur. • atovo, 114-1112-am. :.~ ~F.umlahod Apo- !J"901n PI~..
1187 14172 On Ranlld Lot. Hall Far Jlorli, Upiotalra, Wllw Fur- ' cWood:;L:.CIN:_:nd:cr:_lo_bod
_,__
w~
/3~bul
~
ft~-n
Pump And 9 1 - Building In- nlllltid, Very Cl- 11 Codlr dioworo $!GO 2 olnalo nttcludod.I14-44N708 After 41\11. . 91., 114-36MII3.
- $25. - ; 3CJM7II.3I31.
· - Sk I mobl ,___ 2
:;::_==:.::.;:::.::~::::,,.1...
no
lo ,_,..,
l'um._ Apo~monl 1 Bod- Aulornotlc ......... m to $215•
batha,
bod""""'• wuhlr, ~1 • 2t 112 Noll Gaiiii&gt;OIIa, oloclrlc dryoro $7510 $1111· I gaO
dryer, rolrl .. rolor I llovo, 304- ......,.., Ulllltloa Pold. 6M-446' dryer IIIII; llodrtc a gee ; 11W311l
441t Aft., 7p.m.
171 to SIS; uPrlgltl $115;
IHI 14170 Radman 2 Barf. Fumlohad Apa~manl, Smlll 1 chill typo _ . , $110; portobla
- . 2 Bathl. Undlrplmlng ...,,..,, $181 UlUhiN Pakl, dllitw..._ 1110; we alto lllock
$17,11111.1114-441·1t2l
70t Fourth, Galllpolla. 114-44&amp;- now and uold opptianca po~o.
•-e Aft 11 7
Dolbolt SWiahtr'o ~ App.m.
l&gt;lilnCI&amp;, Rand &amp; Porclt
Looking For A Doli? Conaldor A - ·
Pr..OWiood llobllo Homo, lai'IIO Com~ly Fumi11tad, 1br, noll SI.Kanougo,l14-44&amp;-ll17:1.
•··t ·•
S.loction ~ ....., Down, to
ry, PIrid ng, · - ' ..r.
Froo s.t:tlp And Dollvery. 1.- ........." dopoolt roqulrod. aM- 52 Sporting Goods
4*11338 Hloro 7p.m,
5111-8710.
Fum.- &amp;"''
of a.mo,
,... lor ronl, nl &amp; Complolo
Lallr golfoatclubo,
uold Lady
very
33 Fanns tor Sale
clap, ronl pl.. utllhiN, :JOoH7'5o lhtlo. mOkoa nlco Chrlotftlll gift,
6$12.
304..71-1211.
32 Aero Farm, 3 Bldroom W/lanment, a.n, Glrage With Fumiohod Eltlcloncy $17Mio.
Tobo- Lolmonl. 114-211-1:112 UtilhiN Paid Sha10 Bath, 807 Don - - 357 llulum I IIIII
barrlll, hunt ~'!!..•!CIIIInt
Alllr4:DO.
Socond Aviii1UO, Galllpollo, 614- -gun,$31M1
......~51.
44H41a Aft or 7p.m.
Business
34
Graclouo living. 1 ond z w53
-:.__A:..::.;nt::lq;::u:..;e:.:s:__ _
Buildings
room oponmonta 11 Vlltoao llonar
lild
RJyoroJCio Buy .,. &amp;oiL Rlnrlno Anllquoa,
Good Commorolol Building For Aporlmonta In lllddlopOII. From 1124 E. lloln 91roo~ on Rt. 124,
LilaH, Hlah Trlfllc A-. ~ $1111. Coltl14-1112·771t EOH.
Pomeroy. Hotn: M.T.W. 10:00
1.111. to 1:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00
R~"'To: CLA 231 c/o Go~
11po11t Dolly Tribu'!,.i25 Third In lllddloporl. N. lhirdAvo. 1 BR toi:OO p.m. al4-1112-2521.
turnloltad a.-nrnonl. Dopoait &amp;
Avortuo, GolUpolla, urr 41631.
........... - -·
54 Miscellaneous
35 Lois &amp;Acl'llllgt
Mlddupor~, Ohio, ,...., st 1
Merchandise
bedroom lurril&amp;=
IIIIth1
H
100 ft wlrlo • troilor lois, .-kl, dip &amp; rol,
2·2581.
10 horaO com-.:111 JIIIYIIr
Mpllllo at-., many on blk
mower with aqulpmont, $1500;
top
Jl'lblla wotor &amp; Cornptotly Fumlohod mobllo 1D71
Font LTD, nooda oopalr,
home,
1
mil•
alow
tow!l
ov..-ara IYIIIalllo, 113,100. lo
1
$300;
114.f4N1151.
$4,800. 304-57J.2814.
lookina river. No Palo, CA. 61411 aufllc: faol _ . . Eloctrlc
Acroogo IVIillblo for homo 446.0318.
1ro1t 11M nlrliorot.,. lroazor,
conltnoction on Roybum Rd, Ono
furniohod $200.
reaaon.bll ,_.riel~ water, ptuo oloe1_Bord..n Fumhwo, - color, good cond.,
soo; aM-1115-4440.
Information moltod on ~-. 304-atw.....
304.a75-5253. '
.. $350;
One tum'ed., One untum'ed: 11180 Honda 70 3 111118 200 l:p.lndor 3 ~.
Rontol property, 4 1011111 units, ooch 4 room&amp; &amp; ..th. No polo, Trone,
Com o, Ridlotoi MOO.
$211,100. PoHiblo lond contract, quill. Rot. I Sw:. Dop. 114-446114-Me 44&amp;
·
114-HU7U.
11444.
'
11111• Kawlllkl KDIO, Ludwltl
Bmoll Furnltltad Aportmonl, _,. drum, hord - · ltond:,
Controily L.oeatld, UliiHioo Plid,
Rentals
Downololrt, $185/llo. 114-44&amp;- Ollckl, :104.a75-4312.
2 ·14" flag. - · For
01144.
Chal- m, Tiro Chaine,11183
L·
41 HOUB8S IOr Re nt
78-15 Haw $30, a1&lt;1-211o1111,

=:c,~~~~-·

Laminating, COP,y, Fax

NIW

Crook, $2,1100 1~44-11111. 114241-a'll$.
1D71 nowly ro..-lld 12150 2
bod_, inolllto homa, $4,000.
OBO, new floeft, carpel, panlllng, &amp;14-36HI34 or 304-67557211.
PI rk Vlltlt •• bod7.~
1"'"
tOIII tloe, 1 blln, $5,100.
cond, 3Q4.6'1U1108.

2 Bad_, Hauoo, Very Nlco, 3
lllloa From Town, Chy khoolo,

Real Estate

(614) Y92o6376
Office, &amp;choor a: Art

ave111ge body, very ~
mechinlcally, rww thea, 114-

For Solo: Couclt i Chair, Ton
.cotor In Good Shlpol $100

:111.:;:2·:-'7733::=·-..,...,.,--=7""
::
1U'T Plymouth Voyager L£ b:collonl CondMion, LoW llllolgo.
Loodod, $7,500. 1~4&amp;-11158.

roU+wa~

~~A!,;,;, t:'lpoll~

Splnlol Pupa.

$SO, &amp;~134.

Full-oiZI bod aprlnga, mlt1r1U;

DoUIIo'o 111ft Shop, Sopt 3 4, Top Pold: AU Otd U.S.
5th. I To 5. Homo lnl. Girtl Bika, Colnt, Gold Rt:.ft Sllvor ~j
Gora~: 4th" 5th, M. RL325 Wanlod: froot frH 11-..ora·
.,...
Paat Vlnlon Park, 181 On
Loll. Two Nlnlondoo, Go moo, 1n ,..,.. "' ,...lroblo cond IIOQ '
1oya c - ClolhN, 11on, ...
H L....._•Joan
e•rontood
W011'111W HouMhokl tl~ma,
._...,.._
3D4-511-25H.
Lilli• Bird Ciao, luolooll
Coril&amp;, Homo lnl. Cocklr Employment Services

73

===...
=::·::"":.:Ha=:,:::c:-'c.:w:.:J:.._·- -

-

::=~"!'nar: ·~:

I.NVI IIM-1~711111.
AIM t or - · AN --upo. 3 p.... dlnollo, 140; tan
Col ••• 2:00 p.m., :104·773- - · $35; • bod, ·
N51, 11..on WV.
matt-, boll ajlol-•MO;I141112.-.

42GolionHOIW-_t~or:,.S21;

11· CobT.Y.IIO. ,......,..,31.
11 odd 1o1 .,..... Potrlclon Pit·
~Mobile Home P1rk, Rt. tern Wlllgliica,. oNna, all 7
..,,, lindor now ~· pco w-. - . $100. 304Lois, SU; ronlllll, $235; 111$110
114-112-2117
........
~ __, - r -a~ 7t~RPII ~h
p floOIWJtOriOinolh
.,_ 101 - ..,.
loulh Pocll
lth lloro
Jllllvllto ., Rt. 3, iii Ill 3133.
And- S71, e-.1:140. _

46

Space for Rent

01

Tro11or loll lor ront In Rlelno, Air Aalo, Air IIIII - . lntomo114-1112-MII.
1...1 Cob OWer, 2 T•~~O,
11177 ford .,..,. Trucfl, 11,1110
11141• 1111

=::::r"l:t:' ::,~,::0

5I

HOUHhOid

=vlnp

Goocia ...
~-:--=---.;::;;,;:;:~+-::-::--

=

~-,!». 0111 "::'~
. . _ _ M IUp.

iOI~·~~~~~[~~
Ita 10111111 - . -

On AI VJn;ll Co,.. noll; ..... 11UIIII2l
1
llock. 11.110 O..llcillohan
, 114-441-M
lla 1M for otorogo, ol
iliola. •
GOOD USED APPLIANCES ::-..=.=.~m~-.
Carrlplatoly Raooo••- 2 Full Totlf E~tc~rlcN S lo droom WI"- d.,... rofrtgorol•
..... I ...... ltrfroorl.. ~·~ . . _ lea, C - No ,._. Ilk- ~- 71 Cll* 6 - .
bib,
H!C: Now Cor!ll.pvoilllllo ~..,
l.::-' Vli:ii-. Ci1114-4*mtl, 1- 1111• lllko, 304 .a :mtl IIIII
..-.llllly.l14 4(NJGII
- . l.ooolod: Addllon - .
e:oo Pll.
114417-lQI.

::':"".:.:.e.:.r:-z::,.-:

1100-4-•·
~''

•-loa

plato,twin
$45; bolh uc:ellonl
$85,
bed, cond~
comtlon, 1!14.fiM181.
G-ral EJoctrJc bolllo gu fur·
..... Sloo, 114 8'13-5321.
G - Nutrhlon Producta
fllturing Amino Acid Body
Building wtlaht loU R fat
bumar 1ormllu. Avalablo .,.
clulivoly at Rita AJd Pharmacy.
Tho- way 10 rlol.
Girtl 3 apood ~in 11r:ollont condition, I ht bluo In
color,$40;&amp;14-lll2
.

Vans &amp;

4 WD's

~~~~·::::~..!~\_.._~

Firm. t14-381113t.

rt'

= ==,

S40; 6M-1112.setl4.
Folding Blcyclo, Exaollont Con-

~h~~=~=

~ aalo:

i:""'

. - - - - - - - -.. I Kid&amp;, Aduk Clolhoo,llorol

45633 ST.IT. 124
*AONE

(Foraarly £ajf

• Weedeaters

I~~·

Speclllltlee, Typlna.

·SPECIAL

Ahar 6 P•· 614-985-4180

,.

"1\r

Suppllea, Office
Furniture, Advertlllng

• L•r Ut 0./r For Ye~~~*

..., SUDIU...............•60.00 PlUS TAX
ltfH2 CHm 1·1500 thru 3500
IIIIlS ~UCIC SliDERS 1100.00 PlUS TAX

INI2 1 mo. pd.

co.

"Tal•ll• , . Out 0( , , . ,

R&amp;C EICAYAIING
BULLDOZING

Plck·Up To- Full Size. Filly
Dollora, 614-311M1114.

FIVII Iron wtt.ls, one 54'", two
38". two 21"i 5 new mttal potts,

roln • llltlno.
S.ttifdl~:· \ 11112. 1
=.pr1ng1 J1oH,"";.::0~'
Clothing, heN uhokl hiii\&amp;,boollo, Ole.
'
Garage oolo: roln or ahlno,
N. Chlllor, 11om 241, tum
'
21187.
at R-ro Supply onto S
~:'--:--=-:---:--:"- nor Rd. Cold RI.7J 112ml. Sign ,·
Loot: 2 F11111llo Boo!IIOo, 11-5.
;:·
~: Rt 160, &amp; 554, 114-llla11141.
Labor Doy lllo: Sept. 711 331M'
,--.,..,.,-,-,----:--~-:--:-:--:- Child..,, Homo R01d. 81m-"
Loot: 11111lll lomolo IINgll, black 4pm. Slgno will bo at Big WhAI
whh tan 1111- loat noor onc1 Lawat Cliff Rd. WIN hlvo,
Pogovllla. Rtward, 114-81111-aGII. leola, guno, knifoo, ClothN, loll'
of mioC. oncf car, 111016hrl. goro:.
Yard Sale
don ti11Ciar, aollll14.fll2·71'13. • •
- - - - - - - - Movlni.Romodollng Solo: S.PI,·
3, 4,
now
-pot, clollolng, furnltu,., mlac.:
GallipoliS
Donvlioo, Rl. 325, Co2 Briar
&amp; VIcinity
Rldgo ROlli, 1 milo.
·.
Saturday only, Sopl s 8:00,7~
1 on Sr.
1131 Chltham Slroot, Sllwday, - a lOUth of RIOclovllo
S.pr, s, a, 71h. Chriltmao 124. Somathing for ... ryono. ., ,
Doi:orotlono, Dlthoo, La. Size.
Womono And llano Clothoo, Saturday oNy. lllcroWvt':,
Unicarno, Aulomallc Wahors kll.._ apptlo,.., dro.-a;
And llo10.
clolhlng, .,...., Roln or llltlno.:-:'=-:=-::-:---:--:-=- 300 Wllzgoll91raot, Pomeroy. ,·"2 F:".:r Friday, s.tuntar, ~~-~,
Lin
011 Lolta, Rio Grando, S.turdly, Hpm, S.R. zu;
Chair,
DlahN,
Tnmk, ChNtor, II Paulino RldlnoUr'a,:
Houuhold, Toys, Chlldr.,. ..,_ 11om tha Nazoronjo;
Clothing.
Church.
, 1~
7
::202=3=cn2-,:;:tha-m--;A.-._=-=Sopt=-. 4- Saturday, S.pl. S. l.ols of ochoOfl
Slh. Towalt, Unono, ....._, clalhoo ond mite. Baum Addh
Ckllhoo, Dlthoa, $1.00 Or Undor. lion bohlnd Sllal-y.
; 1
S.pl 7111, Labor Doy Salol 2211 Saturday, Sapl. IIIII &amp; ~t, ~
Eaatorn A._ Loll21, S.pl. 71h. Googlolow, Roell!
From lluo Fountlln, R1.7, IPIIngo Rd., Otd f3, Counly Rei,;
llona!W......, lop Clolhlng, 20.
''
::;l.ols~ll::'loc"'::::l=:-::c--:-:-c:-:::- ~tutdly, S.pt. 5th" 1~m t1111'
23 Plno Su•~ S.pt 3rd, 4th, co. Rd. 11, 36436 .....,. FOI1t. ·
Rh.
Loft tum all SR 33 flom;
:••:':':•• ::::,..~---.,:::~_-:.-:R:-d.,.,-=~=-=
to Athena. Lata of niOI•
- · "'!"',.1 ~- 01
cltlldron • clolhing (low -~
IIUaaJ Sopt 4th, 5th. 11-7
&amp; lolo of mile. Mama. Rain can-•
Dloltool Table, Chllnl 1 Too Much cell.
'•
To Ulll Rain, Shlno.
.
S.pt. 1-5, 36008 Sl. Rt. 143, ••
' 3 f'lmiliN: Salunfay, Sept 5th, mlloro toward HarrftanvUio on
11-5, On Roccoon Rood t1 MIN rla ht.. Baby M-, clolhlng, _
Out 218, Baby Mom~. Rahlng E· ml10
gul-nl, Clolhoo ur All Slin,
,
Elc. F - T110 S1gno. Rain S.pt, 111·7111, t:OCH:OO. Tcol,lr,
Concolo.
lddo clolhN, mloc. homo. lo1.1,,
S.lom SIINI, Rullond.
• ,•
3 FamiiJ Solo: Rain, Shlno, lidwell. A-. Antiq- Dlohoo. S.pl. M Homo lntorlor and,
8 1 - Lolo Hou......., lomol rnon, I 112ml. out Loodlng
CrHk Rood all Rl. 7. Trailer
S.pll-7111. '
ri9ht, t :OH:OO.
' '
3 FlmfiY Yard Solo: 135 Porno S.pt. :lnUth. 4M IIMclt StrNI,
MICicllepOrt, Ohio.
' ..
To4.
·
- · · - · · llojll&lt;llh ... 5th. I
3 FamiY Salunfay, 115, 7:30-? 8
Public Sale
Baby llirl Clolhoo, llilcolo
&amp; Auction
· Plko
2nd CJaclc-.
Ho&lt;lll, PlkO
Lol
-vlllo
Rick PM,_, Auction Compooiy,;
End!·
lull limo ly&lt;:lionw, cornJIIo!!lo
4
FamilY:
Conlenary 1udlon iomco. Uc.n.ill.
Town'-' Ill, Sopl Slh, II-? IOH,Ohlo " W•t Vilglnlo, 30(;
Lois Of Evol)'lhlng Prlcld To TIW785.
~Soli.
581, R-y S.hrnlay, 1-3, llloc 9 Wanted to Buy .: ;·
CIOihoo,
looko: looko: looko: 1Jaodo
ALL Yard Soloa lluat Ba Pold In 2nd R110, llought 2nd SoN.•
Ad¥1nco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. Thoophlluo, 801 m, Galllpoll!o,
tha dly bofoiO lho ld 1o 10 run. Ohio ~ a14-44.11-7282 '!!'
Swldly odlll.., - 2:00 p.m. 1GP.M.
!.
Frldoy. llonday odhion • 2:00 Don' Junk ftl Satlllo four - ·
p.m. Saturday.
Workl~
~ Conley, WV S.pt 4th,
~R'o,
S.pt 5th. ~ Clolhoo, Et~. ~12 :1:: Guitar ~;
Crofta, H a - Christ mao Or·
c,
nalnlf14:, OW., 0:00-1:00.
Uud Mobile Homta. Call 114·/
Carport Solo: Frldoy, Saturday, 441-0175.
,.
11-5, ~ - n Stroot, Spring Wo od T0 a
Vallo~" Color T.V. ConiOio
nl
uy: Junk Autoa •
•
~v p
With Or Without 11o1an. eon·
l.:oc.
'· . on-. Llghlo, Larry Uvoly. 114-311-1303.
,

PI-Ing Replacemt11t
Roofing
Windows

992·3838
8141'

now

CarJIIIIIry Electric

887-8109

dream,

who

NORTON
CONTUCTING

FREE ESTIMATES

Bolaro 6P•· Loan Menage

~

;jj

QiJAYMAR

$25.00 Per Hour
RUSONIILE UJU

Door Plus Ope•er

nv~)~ng

SMALL DOZER
WORK
DRIVEWAY WORI
ud LIMESTONE
DUIYERY SERVICE

PurcllaM of
Receive FREE

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

CHARLIE'S

HAVE R£111ENC£S
76

IISTALLED PRIGS

,

'

Read the Best Seier

~IIOpo&gt;ll

-•1

85- Ceneral Hau lang

(Cl"9SIFI!D

LEGAL NOTICE
Nolie• lo given that
Cleartal Communlcallona,
Inc. haa filed an application
with tho Public Utilltiea
Commioolon ol Ohio (Case
No . 82-1255· TP·ACE)
roquaoting outhority to furnish intr•lllte interexchange

.....,, Olio

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

p

Found: a....,, malo Cockor
Soanlol, w/ collor. Rt. 33 nNr
lloillll Alhena Co, line. lloHIII·
1181.
Found: Witch Comor Of Third
And L.ocuol 91rNI, Galllpollo,
Cotl a~ Doocr[ption
And Day Loot Roqull'8d To
Rocovor Witch.
;;LOS,:;ST::C:=c'::=O::~::.,::,-•-,J:,-Im-:H0711"'1R=-:d
....
or 111-2173.
LOST Chi.- Pua. tan body
wlblock loco MMllomor, 2300
block of JiH.nOii Avo, 304-675-

Tr1ilar, 4,000 lb. Clp. 114-446lliOO (d) 614-441-1607IOJ.

J:t

WJ-, .._

1391 SaHord Sd!tGI Rd.
Cal (6141446-94i6 or 1-800-872-5967

Wanted to Buy
Live.todr.
64-- Hay &amp; Gra1n
65- Seed &amp; Fert1hzer

HE:\IT\1.:-;

GET RESULTS • FAST!

9- Wanted lo Buy

(561575859-

s.

- -----=:-=-::::=====-----1

Aucbon

\'iCI \I.

21- Bu•ineea Opportunity
22- Money to Loan
2~ Profeuional Servicea

Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days Wlll be
charged for each day as separate ads.

1- Loet and Found
II- Pobhc Sale &amp;

Fl~

••nd

and laddar, US;
atilt Clbll, Mi puth snow pk)W,

DMr

BUILDERS

RATES

1112 Font hill ton oJckup, $400.
or belt offer, 304-a'IS-1212.
tm Dodgo o.so How nrH,
Shocko, GOod Condbionl $1,200,
&amp;14-38M7!11.
11711 GIIC 71100 MriN dump
truok, 361 onalno, now bod, front radial nr., must I
drive to apprKlale, 11+'JII2-210:1
or 614-lll2-2421.
1H2 Si.. ra 311,000 IIIIo&amp;, Ggll Mil-, 814 U6 8011 Allar
6P.II.
For Solo: Haavy Duly Duat Axlo

Common:lol aohauat lan, 1110;
mopla toblo, 1110; gu circuli~
Jna.hootar, $78; - · $25.
13lluttornul, P - .
Compocl dorm aiD IOirigoriiOr,
lib n1W1 uad aM' - qUirtU,
$65; 114-lllz.:lt31.

ROOFING

e-11

72 Trucks for Sale

I

WI DO
AND EVERflHING UNDERNUTH
GARAGES • ADDITIONS • SIDING

•The Area's Number I
Marketplace

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Mlscallaneous
Merchandise

Goods

sombl• Prod~tl :AI Hornl. Clll
Toll F1oe, 1-800~67.a566 EJt
Jl3

54

The Dally Sentlnei-Pa

~~;;;;;;;;;~;;~~~~'~"~"•~·~,...~·~~
55

Building
Supplies

Block, brick, - • ol.-o, win·
Mntela, ttc. Claude Win..
t.., Rio Grande, OH Coli 114245-N1.

dowl,

63
Livestock
A
Y 1
nguo aarl ng Hollor Solo,
Tr,::..,For 5 To 8 llonth Full
B
Horolord Bull. 814-4460405

1981 Bronco II, Loodld, Aaklng:
:::•l:::,500=,6:.;14;:.;~;;:41;:.;o0731:::::.·- - 74 Motorcycles
...,.,..,...,......,.....-:..:......:...._ _
1964 Honda 3 whoolor 200 Big
Rid, lite start, ahlft drlva,
~

reverse, •••ooo. ••c cond, 304-

•
I75-20X.
Groin Iori Hwolord 1t.11r1 tll87 250 ~ ....,. $2,000.
BOOibo.; ono Angul Hororora Good condHion. I.Ot1 now ;••·
Cron bull, good lllock, 304.S7"~"382
10001..., lt4-1112·'llllll.
~ or 304-67!1..29 ·
Guamooy •··Inger April &amp; 1t00 Honda 300 Fourtru 4
56 Pets far Sale
B,_, Swi;r, Full ~ Blooded. whMiof,Aiccond,:I04.aJH130.
6
~~'!,";~ ~
..~~~is~ I~U~=cr:k I
1 '::Chow~~:-:-blao=k=~--:-- $800. 14-:J71.231Z.
SUrrv, S47!1i, IM-44a.a707.
I
okl .__pu6p.._ __••Tl1 • •
.
H•d Dllperul Sale: 5 IRIUrlncl
• v
•
·•
• •·-· ~·-~~ •
crooabrld cowa and -~.,..
··
_
Hayward Dlalomlo Earlh Pool Groom 1nd SuppJy Sho-Pol Anauo Holler, Hollloln cow duo,
75 Boats &amp; Motors
llltar, lhp, m. 304-671-88t3.
G....,Jng. AH loioida, ofyloa. 61Q:1.2513.
' - Pal Food Doolor. Julia R-•-o-• Hota-•n bull, _
for Sale
Hub oil llzaa. $1m•lovltory, W·"' ~·'JIIM ••1J.0231
.,.., •~
••· uorci- blko
· coN
-·~
·
monlh1, colt 11.. ~--1.
17ft Grurnon canoe $300. 080,
~kll knllo, $30; 814-ttMm. 2 Famalo Amorlcon Eskimo
- - '~
304-a?ll-3156.
Spitz PuPPI•. BNutltul &amp; 1n111- 64
Hay &amp; Grain
J.C. Hlaalno Pump O..n, 12Go. llaont $75 Each 0 1 0 114-44&amp;- ~=~~~;;;;.;=-, 1m llborglua a.. bOlt, 304$125 Fliin. lhlca Doorotlyor 11127.'
• · •
iii...lum Allallo hoy, rolla &amp; 81H531.
12Ga. Pump 2 Barrola $225, 614oquarwo. Morgan Form, Rl. 35,
31 233
For Sola: 11110 C'-ckmala Ski
9-2 '
~~odlg::C lllln - . t roun' 304.f37.2011.
Boot, 22 Foot, "225 Evlnruda
J.C. Ponnoy Porlablo Sowing blocll ~. to, 1 coppor ond
llolor1. Jocllploto, Elcollonl
llachlnai Ukl Haw $40, Phone:
•.. Olch; 114-742·27&amp;0.
Transportation
Condnion, 614-2lllh1311.
,
614-388 • 462.
2 "-ranlon Pupo, 1 llootho
Old, 1 Malo, 1 Fomolo, 114-441o
Procroft 1500 boo&amp; boat, lraller,
Jenny Und BabJ Bad, Cor Bolt, 1647.
70hp T&amp;T Joltnoon, $2,800. 304·
Boys Ckllhl~ Sin: 1-6, Glrtl
675-1080.
:lr-31, 614 446'81155.
AKC Brittany Sponlol Champion 71 Autos tor Sale
Kld'o elolhoo ll·12, 1.,.. $1~i Bloodline, E1&lt;1llont Condition, 1167 CUIIHI Suprorno, now 76 Auto Pans&amp;
bab•
owl$5; •rodlo
Eacoilonl
polnl, 65,000 orialnol mlloo.
,2
~lull
.,.. and rv ",,_....lt
.. With KldK, SIOO. 614· Bast
oft.r, 304482~498 or 304Accessories
tu-o, - . • - ; at&lt;f.387o 1:-=~-::-:.-·-::-=:-=-:-::-7721.
AKC Chow i AKC !lhaltlo pup. 882..2478.
Uood &amp;
KILLS FLEASI
PIN. two 4ff Pwthon anakoa. 1978 Olda 88, PI, PS, Air Con· Budgll Tronomlulona,
otanlng at $1111; fronl
Buy ENFORCER FIN Killin For ._Pu:-;;;:oipp::.y:::P.:;aloco:;:::...:6;;.~...:.,;:41..:o0404.:.:..::._ dhlonlng, Now nrao, Runa, 10bu11t,
wheel drive lltartlna at $119.00
Patl, Homo I Yard. Guorontood 1 AKc R'ac,~,;rort BNglo 1Jn. Look&amp; Good I $tOO. 614-446-lllll7. 814-245-56n, 614-311-2263.
EIIICIIval Buy ENFORCER At: trolnod,
Pol Or Broodln" 11J711 ea..ro C~ovy, motolllc
New gaa tankl, or. tan truck
Tharn11 Dt&gt;lt Canter: 171 •- Call St
Sl 1
•
McCormk:k Rold, Galll;olla.
;;_1• 1• ~ 1'.~'......~P1 .!!.on 114- bluo, 305 v.e, outo, ... cond, whMia, ralfiltora. floor mala,
• · - -~,.
~~· 304-882-35611 lftor 3:00 Olc. D&amp; R Aw.:o:lptay, WV. 304LadiN l..ong Blocl Gonuina AKC R111Jiolorod Chow Chow
372·3133 or 1
2n'1321.
Lllthor Coa,l, Slzo: J8, Brand Pupploo, All Fornolohi-3Block, 2
Now, lloko Nlco Gift, $55, 814- R·•, " - Eoch. ...
•••z
1D78 Chevy Comaro, motolllc Running boordo lor t11112 Chov
367-7264.
- •••~
~
bluo, 305 v.a, outomallc, o1c. 4 door, S-10 Blazer, in box, $100:
AKC R Jot·-• Ch
COIIG, $2000, call 30W82·3516
304-882·3579 INYo mn-.
,houH olr cond PuppiN.l:urront
'II" Chow aHor 3pm·
Ph•ow
i Sloolt
.. . D.P. IIAIOIIO rowt- m1o
'
,.
•
••
...
..00
· - •21••·
1Vo~ood
0
chint
•• · 81•--~
.,. Ford ••-,
_...
• 75. :IOU75-31111.
Tronsponlllon,
614-446-'
.
Llllhtr boola $150; Nbbor AKC
R'lllllarld
Goldon
Campers&amp;
bocOo, $11·, lnoV1o camora Rllriovor .,.... 2 matu. 1ot 11J711 TOI'OII Corolo, Good Work 79
ohott and -""'d. $150. 304· Cor, Body R;ah, How Battary
Motor Homes
PIVIoctor, IIIO_LFord lltl!11tor, 882-2483oftorapm.
GoodTI 100
e·•••••••o
S15i &amp;14-1112-1-.
' ~~-- •
'
1161 Concord HT campar/
lloo Jmpll "Un, 112"drivo, •-· AKC roglltorod NorwiiiJian 1171 Old1, good IIIlo.-. $800, trailer,
$2000, 080, 614-1112-2185
•
,..., Elkhound pupa, allvar l lolk, call6144112-5162 oftor 4:30pm.
or 814-1112-3025.
~~":Jc::"t.::.h.:I~M,=: $100. 11&lt;h, 304-131-3268 or 937·
¥i73.
21123.
1980 Ford llullllng, &amp;Cylinder
· ::---..,-------,- Englno, Allomallc, Runa Good, 1984 Vlkl~ Pop-Up Campor
SIIIPI a, Still Contalnod, $1,500,
~-:--na-vor-uood--:"o:
12-vo-cH::-1c:00o:-wa-,.ft DoUble R:p,iotorod Au1t11ll1n $11111, 114-441·1025.
olron duolaound $100. :J04.475. :l'Z~Jio...•lo 7 llootho, $100. 11111 Cllavy SWB I Cyllndtl, 614-:168-11151.
8813.
1110 Kowa11kl 750 LTD With 1961 Ftaotwood 35ft campor,
Farrlng
With Bogs; 1938 II'IVIItd Ina lhln 4,000 mil•, 2
Nlco I' Bor Sholvoaln Back And Dnogonwynd Cottary: CFA p.,.
bedrooms, alupl I, microwave,
5 8., Stool&amp; Llllhor, 6l4-446o lla111 I Slamoao Khtont. 614- Plymoulh.l14-256-1710, 614-256· AJC, awning, like new, $13,500.
11158.
3613 ~.
411-3844 Aftor 7:00 p.m.
814-367·7816.
•Panooonlc Poroonol Computor, Floh Tonk, 2413 Jockoon Avo. 1181 Datsun Wlgort. air, runs 22 A. C01chman Pull Camper
IBII -dblo. 8401( Ull. Polnl PIIIHnl, 304-675-2063, groot, high ~'":B;• $500; 304· Fully Soli Conlalnld, AC,
llna Tropical lloh1 birds, 882-34118 or
..2478.
3.5in. dillil d~vo, ••Pinlion full
Awning Very Good Condllion,
amoll onlmalo ond &amp;Ujlph•.
lllola, onhlncod koybOird,
$3,500 I).B.o . 81&lt;f.381.116111.
1983 Cutlau, auto, .tr, AM.fM,
monochrorno monhor, Dol HaH Chow
mother full drive~, aood cond, 11,000.
Nomad 31 Ft Camper For Solo,
llotril printer, a14-667-3&amp;40 ollar bloodod Rod
,JSQ.304-175- OBO,
75-"'ll211.
Good Condition, 113,400 Caii6146pm.
2382.
1983 Uncoln Town Clr, Excel· 256-11D7.
PlootlcAndllorloiCulvortllnch Puppy PalM:• P.t Shop. lent Condition, One Owner, Air
ThN 10 Inch In Stock. Ron l.ocltld In G.C. Murphy Co. Gal· All Power N. . Tlr11 &amp; Battery
E
J k
Ohio
lipolll. o.-nlng 11001\. 614-441· Sll- With Block Llllhor Top .
Services
vono, ac oon.
. 1-1100- 0404.
53H528.
S3,oao..en •" 3511.
Rat Tarrlar Pupploa, $35 Eoch, 1883 llonto Corio WIT-Tapa,
114-245-55117.
304.a75-7523.
81
Home
Raalotorld Ph lui pups, ahota 1t64 Pontloc 1000, $2&amp;0. 304·
Improvements
Rongo 30" Goa LPN Natural Eyo ancl wormed, rudy In 3 w•kl. 885-31100.
.....,1 Ovon $lorogo Spoeo, Ex· now taking dlpodt, 114-62·
Barnen Home lmpJov•menta.
1181 Chry.W LaiW u Ia $800. Room Addnlona, Goragn, Ell·
aolllril Concltion, $100, 114-44f- 7821.
304.al'WII94 after 5.00 Pll.
1358.
larlar l Interior Palntfng, Experienced, lrwurecl Located LoMusical
Royal bluo lllln formol, tN !fT
1981 Pontiac Aero Gl; N, PW, CIIIy. &amp;14 ••s asee.
longtlt, onglo&lt;UI loco bOitom,
PL, 1!'101 Alll1'11 Cl-to, &amp;unInstruments
roof, lOOk&amp; &amp; Nnl IJI'Nt, $3,500.
worn once, t1z1 liV; $80, 11+
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
tv:l-3423.
Bundy Cfarlnll: In cue, exc•l· linn. 304-675-1101 ovonlngo.
Rugs for Nil, 1 112 yorda, lint condhlon, 114-lll2·1800 attar 1188 Pontloc ParllioMO Stallon Unconditional lifetime gu•ran·
IH, Local reflrwncn furnished.
Wlao!t, All Power AccHIOrlat, Free ntlmatn. Clll coiled 1·
$10.25; 614-lll2..2468 .. al4-11112· ,ep_m_.
31123 bot- I:OOom-12:00 Conn Tromborto Good Condl· Norf Rllflol_n!~, $2,000. After 614-231-04~, day or nlghl,
tlon, Uud Two Yooro $100; Coli IP.II.II4-44N71&lt;1.
Aogen B1111n1nt Waterproo7p.m. And 9p.m. 1111 Dodge Omoi GLH llodll 5 ling.
Saara romoto oontrot looP, $30; BllwMn
P1Nao: &amp;14-441-7538.
sl'""!, With StiiOo, Exaollont Cunls Home knprovemtnla:
S.orollr hockoy.._$7!1: m.,•, leo
okltaa, $20; ai4-..2-23D7.
Conn Trombone Wllh Coso Condouon, 114-44.11-73118.
Vure ElperllrtC8 On Older &amp;
UMd 2 YNra, In Excallent ConNewer Homes. Room Addlllona,
Sharp Comcordar 12 Power dillon, $300, Call Aftar 3:30P.M. 111111onto Corle SSL E1callont Foundation Woft(. Roofing~
CondRion, M,OOO Or oaot Ollor. ICIIct.na And Bath1 F,.1 ~
Zoom, IM..25a.1770 Or 114·2511- 614-44M306.
114-44.11-7851.
1058.
Umatttl Reftrencn, No Job
Conn Trombont, Good For A
1188 Dido Dolo II lrouaham V· Too Big Or Smaiii614·367-G$16.
T.V. And VCR Cari I.No Than 1 BO'llnnor, 1110, 614-3116-80011.
I, N; Loodod, Euollonf Cond~
y.., Old, 112.114-31111-11811.
Davlo Sowing llacltino And
Snlra Drum Uka New, 614·379- tlonlt1t ua 4223, 114-411·lll79.
Vacuum -ctuner Rtpalr, Fr•
Tandy DIIP 2100 24 Pin Printer 2111.
Pick-Up
And Dollvory, Gooran
1187
Dodge
Chlrgor,
Sporty,
·~311.
cr..k Road, 814-446&lt;0214.
Want to buy uud plano for $2.7110. 304'671-7!llllf.
T.._... JSQ. SN,. rug church, 304-71W332.
JET
1188 Fkoblrd lllc:k, Aulomoilc,
$100.
Anllquo
olorollon
IIOiora,
ropolrod. Now
Haw
Polnl
Job,
Haw
nroo,
Now
ochool dellil $1~ Blcyc1H $100. Yamaha CP 10 Eloctronlc Plono
l r.. buln moton In otock, ROll
- h.. Pori+POI $80. 304-t7'5o With Grol&gt;hlc Equollw For E1houll, Low IIMII~i\ A1klng: EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1-aoo.
2111
Salt, Good For Band UM. $150, Mt!JOO. 114-441-ooDI a or 4p.m.
53J.II528.
llof'.
614-245-1316.
T.. IO&gt;r31J30 cablnolo
Ron'a TV S..lco, apoclallzl~
wAwo 1Jidlng - . , 11om old Yamaha S.nphono Llko Now, 1181 Ford Proba GT Aaklng: In
Z.nhh 1lso MrVlclng moll
O.J. llorrltoil lllcn, hO. aach, $eGO Paid: $800; Bloating M,IOO, 114-441~131.
other br1nda. House calls, also
304.aaa.3251.
Tromborto Uko S2IIO Pakl: 1•- Pontloc Grand Prlo, somo oppllanco npolro. WV
t400; ean &amp;14-2H-1300 For Ad- - ·
304-5784:1116 Ohio 114~4&amp;.2454
Throo Whaol Potlt liko Uko dhlonal lnlormotlon, E&amp;CIIIont Loododl114-441.0l3t
- · MS. a14-317o01138.
lniiNmonla For laglmlng 11110 Did&amp; Cutlou Supremo. Sept~ Tank Pumping $90, Gollli
Tobocco91icko,ti4-:J71.2111.
BandStudontal
Auto., Air, AII!FM, ~ tour Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES;
~~... 4 ::.~~ conc1. Jackson, OH 1-800-537-8528.
SA.Iht~'!.""'D'ro~~~ •~~~
$7,700. OBO,
·
Utility 8tdg Spl: 30'140'Kt'
It -, •
-Polnlod StMI Siding &amp; Roollng '
With
FIIIUIO&amp;
And Coun1or. &amp;147t
Comoro,
Z21,
A
-1
1hopa,
3&amp;0
448-a:IU P.ll.
hklotrlormanco, 12100; 114-1112· I ·15'18' Sliding DOor, H' 9oi
vlco Dool, $5,1M EIOCIId. 11an
1104o.
Horoo lldgt. 1-10o.352·1045. •
Two
"
'
hNtoro,
ns
-hi 32" alumint.m otonn .._,
AUTO INSURANCE
Will build polio - · dockl
114;l14--.
61 Fann Equipment
Davl..OUickll tcrllfled ~. pul up vJft;l'
siding a&lt; lrollof skirting. eM.'
Two -11an
."
$1SN.,
Inti- ' -Nlfltlnrf.
$35 l14- 1 Row NH SUpor 717 Chop.-r, Whllo 1188 Comoro v.a, lluhl 2454152.
11Q.4
,• .,.....
'
Good Condition, 114-379..25117.
¥art HI 11111!1 Good Cora, Will
;;;-;:-:
llalnlltnod N,IOO; Whho 11111 82
•
Bmo~o I.Nrnlng 11t In- 180 IIF D'- Sharp~65 IIF SUnlllrd
Convort. A·1 Condition,
Plumbing &amp;
7 -tional t ~~rp;~irH,-- 4 CJI, ER 20,000 llliN, llult
Heating
w-$'11.304.a7H41!.
Rubl&gt;lr, Pllnl, al4-286- S.llfSI0,500, 114-446...22Afttr
Ylllllollor • - ' • blkl, gooct 11522.
5p.m.
c;~~ ~~"P~,;'J
=ons'zfO..:.n~....
Fann Hand Sltoao Wogan, 72 TruCks tor Sale
GoiUpol~g&lt;.lo

1

N;:, :.::::- ·:-

"2'r. -

puC,

-=--:---=--:---

......

·'•

l'n'!!.!~~n.

211
"';::-'=-=-=-=--.-:-

';=

WoiOr Holter -12. 40, :lOGo~

=

$2,500. 30U75o112S:

IM-i4

For Slit: Corn Pfcfctrl -kiN 1188 Font :::1.341, 15op., :lop.
ion _ . . ond 40 Gallion •nd 01 ~.. F - H ~aolo, 11ft.
um bo1, good
Naturol 1J1L y_. oholco. ~
·..-or tlroo &amp; body, runa good, SIIOO,
'$111.11 Wonul~arfl &amp; Tllomal WltRa~ ~ndnt HI:;:,::- Hol
~ 114-247&gt;42t2.
Hardw110. IU Ul 0885
~
• 1 ,_.,
llonut1 Sproo~wa. -~~. 1170
olckup truck, 11,071.
Wolghl - h wllh woJohto, CuKipockoro, Mil Dlako, Olho• Good
, ~1111.
good- $11. :104.a7W831.
Farm E·~~-11, - · · Frorm
llochlnory, Jockoon Ohio a14- 1170 Ford 100 P.U. 302 V.a, Aulo,
WHITE'SIIETAL DETECTORS
211111144.
'
Tr~n~, lonG Bad, R - Hhch
lkirl Allloon.L,1_210 llacond
W/Bau, ToOl In, AIIIFII CU.
, _ Gal.....-. Ohio, 1114- Font Troctor NM Good Condl· oo1to, Good Condition, Run1
44HM
11011, Pltond14141 1137.
Good. 114-44HI:II.
Wh-lor 37A W,gun, Johrl Gntin Dill 1M; 4 C1f10or ...._ 11111 11
m; 22111. rflll,
Row Corn ..... 114- Comlno. I - - 4 ...,.....
14
sa;
M- Two Klllbfo arovJtr boiM, flo~ - 10
r ' -·.
two 304-112-3441
•· •
$211, _ . , . , .
15'.
Whillc 1 linlad plo!o gtiN .., Farm, 30l-13U011.
oftori:30.
42111' - · 140. nlco.
1171 1).110 Chovf 1 112 Ton
:IOM7Ioll04.
63
Llvellock
Truok. Wllh Groin 110&lt;1, E a Wor .. un•, -PIJMO lllot "J-:l:-w--:Otd=-:p-,..--:B:-rod~P""ot~lld-: Condlllon,I14-24U125.
Colt Mar I P.ll. IH. 114-211- lllllllllfttal Herd lull &amp; 3 p,.. 1171 Chow- 314 Ton A 1111.
a-• a•--~~ lull~-~ F Twit HKclt 4 WD E1octrJc Bro•·
;:.::::.:._,,....-~~.,..-,:-:::-=- - - -•• or ~ 400 Enalow - ..._:::
Zonllh
..... ..., Solo, Ill. 1114- Spring
s.rvi.., I14-25M402 "" ,1111~,1100.~_!11~4
:!4~~'!41\~.-...,..·
Ml-71113.
toriP.M,
_

&lt;;::;'l.

--Jc.
,
c..--....,

::211:.:..:,-IOI:=t--:--::----:c:-- -

,,

·=·..

~

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ ,.;,

84

Electrical &amp;

~

~

t.

�Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy~lddleport,

U.S. poverty: Beyond the statistics
EDITOR'S 'NOTE - Associated Press writen Jim Andenon of
Los Angeles, Jocelina Betts of
Jackson, Miss., and Denise La~
of Swnford. Conn., caunbuted 10
the following repcirL
By Tke .USOC:iated PI-as
The statistics are striking
enough: By government count,
more Americans were mired in
poverty in 1991 thiln in any year
since 1964.
Those offiCially categorized IS
poor- less than $13,924 in eammgs for a family of four - numbered 35.7 million, equaling 14.2
pereeot of the population, up from
13.5 percent in 1990, the Census
.Bureau reported Thunday.
But behind the numbers lies a
still more sobering story: The reality orliving poor.
Here are brief looks at three
faces of poverty in America today.
Less than a year ago. she regul&amp;Qy held lavish dinner parties at

Ia llome ia Sllmfonl, ConD. This
wcct. Mn.. loews aDd llu JbJee
childlea bave eaten plain pasta
eYCrf lli&amp;IJI..
Mrs. lAews. who asbd tbat her
first name not be used, fell from
middle-&lt;:llss living into poverty
wllcn sbe IIIII Ia hgslwMI sepnted last Nowwtla.
The budest part. sbe said. is
Idling Ia childrm they CID'I bave
designer ck"' ,llicydcs IIIII other
lumries .... iidiuat
for grdCd in c .... • •H id, the SlllC
with the llllioo"s bigbesl per capita

cllikka.

income.

"They're in the middle of a
bakery and thet can"ttoucb the

cake,.. MB.loews said.

be in," she said.

cleaner at a community college.
"I'd rather work titan get that
liule money they give you," she
said. "Those people at the welfare
department won't help nobody."
Her situation isn't unique in
Mississippi, the state with the
nation's lowest per capita income.
Mrs. Hopkins, 33, said she, h~
husband, Wilbert, 34, and their ftve
children, ages 5 to 16, gel by on a
$200 weekly paycheck from his
construction job, as well as food

She lives on $1,054 a month $842 from Aid to Families With
Dependent Children and $212 in
food stamps. She said her husband
refuses to pay child support, but
she basn 't gone to court demanding
it
.
Mrs. Loews said she is trying to
get off welfare. She went back to
school in May, and hopes Ill complete a paralegal course in about a
year.
For now, she said her parents
make her $275 monthly car and
insurance payments and her landlord dropped her rent from $1,000
to $400. She relics on social service agencies and her church for
clothing- and sometimes food.

stamps.

They live in a four-bedroom red
brick house in the small town about
20 miles southwest of Jackson.
Holding her 16-month-old
granddaughter as she sat on her
faded, brown sofa, Mrs. Hopkins
said she is not bitter about her life.
"It's not that hard to me," she
said. "If you do what you can for
(the ramtly), you can make it.
There's no need in complaining.
You just live and deal with iL"

Mrs. loews bas woRed since
she was 16,1111ioly a a Sllcswoman and papbi: ldisL Sllc M.lll oo
Jacqueline Hopkins of Raywelfare wben it bec:ame clear Ia mond, Miss .• was once turned
job would not brio&amp; in oeuly down for welfare because her husenougb _ , t o PlY the bills.
band made too much money. She
"It's cleindiD&amp;. YOII'R ia this sees no reason to try again now that
positioa you thnapt you'd she has been laid off IS a pan-time

ddlled "Slave City" by a Selma attorney who
lias ro.pt to uve tbe conditions improved. Tbe

•-lltr o1 ,_- Americans bas reached a 27-

The Weaver teunion was held at
the West Virginia State Farm
Museum on August 23.
Following a picnic lunch, a
shon business meeting was held.
The following offteerS were elected
for next year: president Marcus
Weaver, vice president Aaron
Weaver, secretary-treasurer Maxine Rose and assistant secretary
Dora Weaver. Next year's reunion
will be Aul'ust 22, 1993 at the
West Virgirua State Farm Museum,
shelter #2.
Gifts were j!iven to the youngest
presen~ William Martin, and the
oldes~ Alton Roush. Traveling the
greatest dfsta~ce were Mr. and
Mrs. Gorden Wilson, Belona, N.Y.

yar !liP- CAP Photo)

FRIDAY
ROCK SPRINGS - Pomona
Grange meets Friday, Rock Springs
Gra~f!· Potl~clt meal, 6:30 p.m.
Reg
meeung, 7:30 p.m. Athens
County Pomona Grange will install
offiCerS. Meat and drinks furnished.
RIPLEY, W.VA. - Libeny
Mountaineers perform Friday at
Skateland in Ripley, W.Va.

Recreational Area, Cheshire.
I'Wur:k dimcr IIIII pncs
RUTLAND - Rudud Fire
Deputmenl and Auxiliary will
,..,
r-:.....• ~~-'-y •
r ... a street •IOM.I•aa.....-~
11 a.m. 10 10 p.m. • doe lin: station. ~ .......,the
day, indllling pncs IIIII ilod.
RACINE - Carmel United
Mf'tbodist Oudt_will paent the
Gospel l..aJIIICil, Sabtrday, 7 p.m.
Rev. Kmty Bab:{ iDvi1es the public.
ATHENS - Guthrie-Story
reunioa, Sllllday, Athens County
Fairsrounds. Poduc:k at noon.
Brins duirs lnd llblc seui:e. Relatives md friends ia'*d.

LONG BOTTOM · Faith Full
Gospel Church , Long Bottom,
preaching and singing Friday, 7
SUNDAY
p.m. with David Dailey and the
TUPPERS PLAINS - Babr
Dailey Family. Pastor Steve Reed
inviteS the public. Fellowship fol - Rllllion for clcsa:whnts of Abnbam IIIII Mlay WJI lllhr. Smday,
lows.
VFW po1t. ~Plains. 10 a.m.
with
lunc:h around 110011. Friends
SATURDAY
and
reblivcs
iDvilal.
REEDSVILLE · Olive Township Fn DeparUnen~ chicken barCHESHIItE - Fife family
becue, Saturday, II a.m. Games,
horseshoe pitching, car smash, reunion, Snaday, noon, Kyger
more. Live afternoon entertain- C"reet a.., Hoase.
men~ 4:30p.m.
RACINE - Jobosoa family
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.- reunioa, Sunday, I J1-11L. Sta- Mill
Liberty Moun~. J)Clfonn Sat- Pllk.
urday at the seruor ctuzens center
RACINE - Raciac: Volunteer
in Point Pleasan~ W.Va.
Fue Dqa•;; s • "• ~
HENDERSON - Gallia Twirlm Sunday, II LDJ. H0111emade ice
Western Square Dance Club, QQIII avlilll* by ladies ...liary.
dance, Saturday, 8·11 p.m., HenPOMEROY - 4211d __.Ours
derson Community Center. Herb
mmion, S.-lay. Pa
Of SeDior
Shelter, caller.
Citimts Bgilc!i. ., oooa. Cany-io
PAGEVILLE • Scipio Volun- dimcr a I p.m.
teer Fire Depaanea~ chicken barRACINE - Gospel l..aJIIICD or
becue and 1r8CUlr pull, Saturday, II
Grccnwik
will pafonll S hy, II
a.m. to 6 p.m. Cost $4 for adults
a.m.,
SuttoD
Uaited MeWidist
and $2 for children. TniCtor pull
Ctun:b.
Carry-ill
fellowsltip meal,
weigh-in, 5 p.m., pull at 6 p.m.
a-s, 800 for children, and 1100, 12:30 p.m. Rev. Kenny Baker
1,000, and 1,100 for adults. 'Fifty invites the public:
pereeol payback.
POINT PUASANT - Annual
railroad
pic:aic aad I I ion, SllltSALEM CENTER • Star
1:01
Grange and Star Junior Granac day, 11:01 .... ,
~
MEET Saturday, 8 p.m., JfiDJe . p.m~ Kaudel Part. . M
W.Va.Pa
4..tfua_.,_
hall. Installltion or ofliccn, founb '
de~ obligation, fillll plans for i ea clli •••. Di&amp;iuiCNiw iuvieed..
ch•cken barbecue on Sept. 20.

=C II

Potluck supper.

.

HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Masonic Locl&amp;e meets
Saturday. Work in muter miSOII

LETART, W.VA. - Q
lnd
cqree. Visitors invied.
Am t [lo I .....,. aiilliion.
,l.erln,
,MIDDLEJ'ORT- Ruffles and Sunday,O• .'1 C
W.VI.I'I
I
•
Flourilltcs BatOn Corps will bave
· pnclice Satwday 11 lla.m.to pmLOTI1UDGE - Smorpsltonl
pare for the Catfish Festival in
dinacr, Sunday, DOOD to 1:30 p.m~
· Middleport. All members lllend.
SS for nits, S2..SO for cbildJen.
NO:
irniilld.
CHESHIRE - DescendanU of
James Claudious and Cimerion
DEXTER - Dnid GaltJ.tl will
Cicero Hoffman, annual reunion
Saturday noon at Gavin Plant be ~pe1ter at tile Old Dc~ter
Oturt:'-. Suodly.l'llb!ic ilviled.
f

WEI

Tommy Weaver Showed some old
pictures and a history or the
Weaver family.
. Auending were Maxine, Brent,
Jeff and Tara Rose; Toby Cunis,
Ben Petrel and Joyce and Tiffany
HoUon, all of New Haven, W.Va.;
Allbn and Inez Roush, Marcus and
Dora Weaver; Aaron, Evelyn,
Brandon and lillian Weaver, all of
Letart, W.Va.; Mary Brown, Point
Pleasan~ W.Va; Ron and Barbara
Dowell, Leon, W.Va.; Owen and
Virginia Weaver, Nashville, Tenn.;
Gorden and Juanita Wilson,
Belona, N.Y.; Erma, Chester and
Cecil Martin; Wilma Abbot and
Honey and Derik Martin, West
Columbia, W.Va.

w•
IJl

illS

o•
o•
0

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~,.,"rMOA .llny Lewll

GALLIPOL.IS · Brice Beaver
reunion, Sunday, DAV Building.
Gallipolis. Relatives and friends
invited.
POMEROY - AA meeting, Sunday, 7 p.m., JTPA building,
Pomeroy.
MONDAY
RIPLEY, W.VA. • Liberty
Mountaineers perform Monday,
Sbteland, Ripley, W.Va
POMEROY · Belles and Beaus
Western Square Dance Club, dance
lessons beginning Monday at 7:30
p.m. Partnet requested. Dale Eddy,
Marietta, instructor. Call992-7477,
992-7261, 985-4162 for informa·
lion.

K-

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FURTHER REDUCTION 011
SUMMER MERCHANDISE

C!l

Calaga Algtbrt: In
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Hlro'a 10 Y01r

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ON THE 'T' IN MIDDLEPORT

•7:30 (!) ~ lulil ... 1'111
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Yellow Freestone Peaches
Bushel.........................•t2.98
112 Bushel....~.-~.....~.. -'6.98
Peck (114 BusheD.~.......13.98
112 Peck (118 Buahe1)...'2.49

SYRACUSE · Syracuse Fire
Deparbnent Ladies Auxiliary, organinrima! meeting, Tuesday, 8 p.m.
at the fire department. Anyone
interested in joining the volunteer
organization is encouraged to
-oo. Further information may be
obtained by calling 992-6503 or
949-2238. Officers will be elected.

1/2 Bushel.....................'9.50
Peck................................'4.98
112 Peck." .......................'2.79

POMEROY - Ohio Eta Phi
Chapra-, Beta Sigma Sorority, will
bold iu fint meeting of the yeaR
Tuesday with a picnic at 6:30 p.m.
il the IIIW-o.t on Court Street in
Poncoy. Members CIICOUfl&amp;ed to
paydua.

For Plum Jelly 1: Pft•mu

MANY COLORS TO CZHOOSE FROM

6111-JNCH POT
5 49 or

2

POMEROY - Meigs County
Boud of Elections meets TIICiday,
4:30 p.m., board offtee, Mechanic

6/$13

8-INCHPOT

5359 or 3fS10

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

SIR«, l'o!neroY·

------- .
• f/4 Mile North ofPomeroy·Maeon llridge. Muon, WV

REEDSVll..LE - Olive Town·
sbip Trustees meet Tuesday, 7:30
p.m., Shade River State Forestry
Building.

' END OF SEASON
PRICES GOOD TilRU
(

Phone (004) 773-Snt • 713-5900
• 2400 Eastern Avenue (acrou from K Mart), Gallipolis, QH
Phone (6141 446-1711
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1111 Tllalpln
D"OIJI
I:II(J)IIalt:OO (2le (TU,WI!,TH,JIR)
Cll&amp;tlo Cocw41whl1

Pecllc..----·----..*-'3.49

Now Ready For Your Fall Planting

BLUE DAMSON PLUMS

RUTLAND • Rutland Villaac
Counc:il meeta in regular session
Tuesday, 7 p.m., Rutland Civic
Center.

I

=.
,
.
.
.
........

CD(WII~

(Til) TlloroughbNcl

Stoagoo

1111e ~~Pilei Progrom
1111•
, 11-..~y

iJS Pro F - l Wulclr
1D D (J) e 8Hmoll and tho
RHl~Q

()). (TU) Scored 81lont
Fxpnlng and Ending Child
Attuoe
'
()) e (WI!,TH,PR).P-,

~IIHt

.:!.a

.

Tour

~

".....

c.ddyohactc

1111 (MO) Batman
4:00 (J) (TU,WE,TH,FR) Throe

0 (FRIWIIard Scon"1
Amltour Hour
2:05 (J) (MO) Mljor L.Mguo
l•tbiU
2:30 (J) e (MO) MDA Jerry
Llwle Llbor Day Tllllhon
(Cont.I
()) ~WI!,TH,FR) IIICiglt
CZl
) !mllnlldarr Studio
Cll
I Art or Wllllrn
...._IIIII A W111111
(l) ~) Quit In • Dory
(l)
) Country

CD (MO)IIIIuro
CZl (TU) MllloMt .,..,.~ ln
llontere, ley

1:05(1) I DINin of IIINIII
1:30 (2le (MO) MDA .llny
Llwll Llbor Illy T111110o1
(Cant. I
(J) ~WE,TH,Pit)(!)
...,.. .

BusheL..- ....- ..---'10.98
112 Bushel--------15.98

QIU.,W0-IDHoertWitll
BhiiiiWtt:30(J)e (MO) MDA.....,
Lewll ~ Dey Tllllhon
(Cant.)
CD (MOl Pllrro '-J'o
c-dllYtnCD
New Yortc"e Mooaler
Chi..
CD (WI!I Gollrntll c-tng
CD (TH) "--Dup!w
c-a lor Fllllly IIIII
Frllncll
CD (I'll) Modllur Jot~Nr'a

Mlclulay Culkin I;J

Ill (FR) lneldo tho PGA

e {TU,WI!,TH,FRI
DMLhtoUve
ill Iii a e (TU,WI,TH) AI
tho WOIId TUma
lllle (MOl Tiny TOOIII

Ntwi/MGM,WIIh

0 Wlotol&lt;ld lla'"!!IJ

11J (fRISct•-

Dlgeot

I

1D

a Welkll'l Cly Chnlnlctla

8

10:00IJle I!JIIIvad by tho loU

111

·~())New Gerdln

CD

IIJIJoyoiGirdonllltl

ll!ITopCird
Ill (WE) NFL Y -

~BonoCD
I WaaiiYoortctng lor

ill
1111
(MO) Cllrllllcl
and l'rllndl

(COni.)

Qllle,...

Macintosh Apples

Stanley Prune Plums

I

o.y

0 runt&amp;aana IOdl

(!)
Ill!.

Peck. .........._........_...........*4.49
12.79
112

=·

Home

12:00(1) ::,W!,TH,FR) G.rolcto
(I)
(MO) !IDA Jeny
Llwto Llbor Dey T1l1tllou

·

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

Bartlett Pears
Bushel.........................114.98

Hall'lland Cooking

CD J,FRI Cleo 1111111

AFTERNOON

•·I:GO ()) (MO) MDA .llny Llwto
~ ~Ttlltllolo(Conl.)
Cll (TU, ,TH,I'III

Naw is the time to enjoy all your favorite fruits at the peak of their flavor.
You can eat them fresh naw or can or freeze them for later. ·

CD (WE) Fruget
rmot
CD (TMJ- Adernl:

0
Till Judge
Ill
Fit
Ql Crier I Co
1111 Pilei Pnlgram
11:50 (I) (MDI MOYlE: Nlllonll
Llmpoon•e Anlnlll HouM

0 Augll Doggie IIIII

•

Gourmotc-~

,

,........

•
•

Pyle

PGATOIII
0 (MO) Batman
2:00 ()) (TU,WE,TH,FR)
llwlchl!f
CZl ~) NIICill Wcxturhop
CZl
) Joftlclnl" Art
Worklhop
CZl (W!) Lip alcttttlcg Willi

, . ENtam CoolllfY
iiJI Clllolc Con CIII~IIIOol
0 (MOl MOYIE: YOIII!I

oc.-._..
lp a111C1nt1r
.....
.• eQIDiop

(J)(FRimogeo
1111111 IIJie (MO,FR)
Tonnll (Cont.)
l!lle (TU,WE,TH,FR)
Dortcwtng Duell
0 (MO) MOYIE:

D (FAlin_ tho hnlor

__

l!lle ...._ 1onc1 "'·
T.-,

iiJ ale (TU,WI!,TH,FR)

P1lntln~
(TH Adlm Smltll

(!)

II) (MO) MOVIE: Airplane!

Aeldlnlr
CD (TU) HHIIh am.rt

DlocfJbrJMI

()) e (TU,W!,TH,FR)
lloaciiiD= ~

•

CZl (MO) 8awlng Connoctlon
Wltllllllrlly Adlma
CZl (TU) lnapir111on of
p-~
CZl (W 81rlp Qullfllltl Wltll
Kl,. Woad
CZl (TH) Woodcorvlng With
Rlctl lui&amp;
.
CZl (FR) VIctory Glrdln
11118 a e (TU,WE,TH)
lnd tho haullul
1111e (MOl Tom a Jerry
Kkll
1111e (TU,WE,TH,FR) GaoMr

(TU,WE.THJ· a a ·a •
(I'IIITII) (I'll) Till Judge

(I) e

I

. .• • t , p

~plloel
CD
( ) c-tng ot tho

o

luane-N-ute

3:05()) (TU,WE,TH,FR) Tom 1nd
Jerry'• Funllouu
3:30 (J) (TU,WI!,TH,FRIIavod by
lhl IIIli
CD Miller Rogoro'
Nllghborhooct
!!l (MO) Pllnlilltl Wltll Glry
Mnhall
(!) (TU) Amllllcln lntoroehl
(!) (WE) tnaplrlllon of

1:30 1D D (MO) Ml)or L1111111 .

City
nda

iiJI ~DIIII

' 1:41 (!) AM WH!Mr
: 7:00 ()) (TU,W!,TH,I'IIJ

ah-rv

IIJ Peld Program
lllllldlrerdA111 Fly Fiahlllfl Vldlo
Magallno
llllllw./HII0 Pro818roi;J
1:011 ()) wcw , _ 1:30 (I). (I) • 8aotlljuiCI Q
CZl Body Ellctrlc
(!) Kuplng Up .-_ncol
IIIID NIWI
1111• TAZ·MANlA [J
101 Clpblln Plonellfid tho
IIJHol
Plo~~ , _

ScoiWCIOW lnd Mra. Klllfl

I

lllcl•... foat • • • •
lnter\'llwl with cOechll IIIII
players from Notrl Dlml,

\11.

(!) Mer 10 Docombor
1111• Bobby'a WOIId Q
~· Galflllcl ancll'rlendl

0 (TU,WE,TH,FR)

()) ...........

ChamPionship from Laguna

~Body-

IIJI"~rGldgol Q
D

f

Loo.iaYillat Ohio Slate (L)
Ql EYIIII IIIII ND'IIIII
1:00(J)lllroll..._~

-

8:00 (J) e Mr. Clrtoon
® IIDDNIWI
(J). Dallcwlllfl Ouclo

111• U.S. F1n11 Riporl
l!ll. WCW Pro WNIIIlltl
Van Hammer. Sting and
Nlkltl Kolofl.

D CDIIUfPDDM PI

=.':c:r'rU1;.':J!1

0 Hoy, VIlli, lfl E -

De~llla-Q

Ba1Chlll'lltll

l!lleGun~MN•

F11~o'1M -

Bob's Late Summer Fruit Harvest

HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Senior Otizens will hold
a blood )RSSIIlC clinic Tuesday, 10
a.m. to noon, at the townhouse.
Potluek dinner followed by meet·
ing. All members urged to attend.

•••In••• Mornlrng

w-

·•

=

c

Grimm

QII........ Uonlll
CorreepanHnta{Newa
7:00 Ill e iiJI Todly Q
(J)Lirry-•
llleConcom
(J) Till Conlllllc1lon: Thl1

(FR) MOVIE: Don, Look
Back: 1'11111ory of Leroy

1I :00 Ill e (TU,WE,TH,I'II) Mooury
Povlch
(J) (MO) MOA .llny Lewll
Llbor Devr;•lelhon (Cant.)
(J) (TU, TH,PR) Joon
R'*t
()) e (TU,WI!,TH,FR) Bally

(J)

iiJI Abbott and Col1lllo
D Glory Dloye

Story

Ill 1111 a e (TU,WE,TH)
Pliolll Right

0 Illy Ill Rllllllto.l With
.-...R=t'lan ·
•
: I=» Tom ..ici ...;,;,

rmance

TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Garden Club meetS Tuesday, 7:30
p.m., social room of Middleport
Presbyterian Church. Members
mng any items related to the history of the club.

'

1D 01a1ntJ Fit

•

tion.

CHESTER - Labor Day celebra·
lion, Chester. Barbecue at ftre sta·
tion, 11:30 a.m. Parade at 1:30
p.m., antique tractor show, garden
tractor pull.

(TU,WE. TH,I'II) Good

()) •

ce Ulllo Monnald

(I)

~.TH,FR)~
Court

=~:;;;,A
.llny
Lewll Llbor Dey Tlllthon

.

Z!tm

1111• tJie Cholcel

Survivor
(J) (WEI MOYIE: .,_l
(J) ITH-I.,.MOVlE: Uvlng
Proof:
lhlnk Wlllilml Jr.

10:30CD......, I Frlencll
Ill Ill a • &lt;MOl ..... to
thoFUIUNI
iiJ e (TM) Flmlly Fllld

NBC

Deyl ol Our Uveo
0 (FA) Munter, 8IMr Wrote
11 Miller a Compolny
1D (MO) Mol- Truck

III':::JaUve
0
Jllbnon
0 (TU,WE,TH,PR) Bonanzo
1:05 1D (TU) MOVIE: Boll

10:05 (I) (TU) MOVIE: Night Crill
(I) (WEI MOYIE: l'ftl

ml! MOVIE:
MOVIE:

111e Now1
1111e Tom a Jorry Kld1 Q
Honoon'1 Muppet
D Flotoft Holl
Ql D1yllnak
0 Archil and Frltndo
1:011 (I) Bonanoo
1:30 ()) Mlnort1y lulln111 Report
(I)·~·
Lind of tho
Loot
(!) No
co Ukt Home
1111• -,"1 woc~c~
1121 ~ Ooooo 1nil
Ill
Ou1dooro Willi
Woyno l'lareon
Ql Sporting LH• With Jlm

()) ....._Ill Llnl1

DlgMI

Court

~.£.Fllld1

~~~I luMy I rw.ly

D I I TlloroutlhbNcl

e

(I)
W

1:00 (J) U.S. form Report
()). (J). Now
Advonlunoe of Wlnnlltho

QIDaylmk

Vok~l

Fllld CMI!Iftge
iiJ (TM) For Y01r Hultll
Dey
iiJ Baly JIUy Replllol
0 {TU,WE,TH,FR) DIY-

:=g.~

Frllnd1

1:30 (J) e BaiYdoy Roport
® Bob Nowlllrt

ID (TU) Surftlltl
ID (WE) NASCAR Rocllltl
ID (TMJ Four-Moon IIIICh

iiJ e (TU,W!,FR) Fomlly

Pyle

0 Augla Doggllend

I JI.

Chll~

~
'i Club Wltll Pit
Ralurtlon

ID (MO) Sporte Rlpoltefl
Ill 8porll LlhiNlght
' 5:05 (J) (MO,WE,TH,PR) 0aoMr

Ill New./Sports ~Up

l!lle Coral Rldga MiniWith D. Jome1 Kor•lldy
NIWI
iiJ 0 Plld Progrom

tlrtlftth

~

0 (TU)PIId=
0 (WE,TH)MJ
lim
0 (FR)W._ .....,

IPS:,.~ Sky::;~

1111. Sporte Quell

101 (J) e (TU,WE,TH,FR)

CD Limb Chop•o PlaJ·Aiong
(J). Ylcldl
illldll a • (MOl MotMr
GooM and Grlmrn
1111 1111 (TU, WE,TH,FR)

DeCNNNew.
ill (2le (TU,W!,TH,FR)
NBC Nlw.lllunrllo
D llodiMln Motloro
0 Tocloy With Ma111yn
•
; 1:05 (J) I Love t,uor
'
'
: 1:30 ()). (TU,WI,l'lt,l'll) .....
•
1111• T..nae• Mullni Nlftjl
•
T""'"
a • CIS llomllcg .._

Tentative plans were made for a
spaghetti dinner in early 1993 for
another youth project to benefit
Meigs County.
The yearly financial report was
presented by post
office. A
discussion was held on post
finances and were deferred to the
executive committee 10 be funher
discussed llld then presented lO the
total membcnhip.

--·
-

Nlghl Ida

thoPII-~. i
aeAgn

I :OO(J)New.Wdly
(J) Clomlf Pyle

I"""'

()) e (TU,WI!,TH,FR) Mooury

0 (TU.WI, ,FA) NBC

It was announced at the recent

RUTLAND - Grover family
reunion, Sunday, noon, Firemen's
Part, Rutland.

flmily

111111 (MO) Tom
Kldl
1111• (TU,WE,TH,FR) AncfJ

(J) (TU,WI!,TH,PR) Perry

aaAo~

~·~=:s'and

S:DQ (J) e ttomalhapplng
IlliG CNNNew.
II) Allrod HltollDDCic Hour
Ia 8portl LIIINlght
5:30 (I) Till M.......
IlliG All Wllklnd Report
IIJINIC=
Ia Nowl
Thll

Flortdll Koy1.

.0 -llligllltho Zoo

MORNING

•

IIIII Yoot
N,_

,AM

B Daytlrtak

M

7:01 (I) llunomobl '
7:30 ()) WOIId T - o

"Polbnllifl

EIPN
CNN

SAT.. SEPT. 5

Wille

lid dill
tllllody8lllpllltl
10:00())e (TU,WE,TH,FRI

~ Dey Tllllllool (Cant.)
IDe (TU,WE,TH,FR) WOIId
NIWI Now .
IDe Clttulftocl Televlllon

Turtleo

meeting of the American Legion
Drew Webster Post No. 39,
Pomeroy, that the membership
drive is now 70 pereeot completed.
A steak dinner will be held Sept.
IS at the post home on West Main
Street in Pomeroy to kick off the
last ~ve for members. All present
members are urged to bring a
prospective member to the meetmg. Contact one of the officers if
inviting a prospective member so
insure the correct amouru of food.
The annual fund raiser for post
activities such as Boys State,
American Legion Baseball, Boy
Scouts, Awards Program and
Scholarship Programs was kicked
off.
The post is now conducting a
fundraiser in which $300, $200 or
$100 will be presented 10 a winner.
The winner will be announced at
II a.m. Dec. 10 at the Meigs Coun·
ty Courthouse. Contact any
Legionnaire for further informa-

Ceii!MUI

NASH

0

0 (MO) MOYIE: itulng

5:00(2le (TU,WI!,TH,FR) liON

Millers meet Aug. 15 in Middleport
The 52nd reunion for the
descendants of Helen Miller and
the late Herben Miller was held
August I 5 at the home of David
and Shirley Bumgardner, Noble
Summit Road, Middlepiit.
Before a basket dinner, a prayer
was given by Jim Reed. The afternoon was spent swimmin~; visrting, taking pictures, showmg pictures and reminiscing.
Helen Miller, 94, was the oldest
in auendance, and Nancy Smith, 10
months, was the youngest Travel·
in$ the farthest were John and JeaJI
Michels and Jacque Ziebell, Gran_d

••
•

M

WEEKDAYS

nia, Jim and Roberta Cox, Galloway; Wilma and Nortl)an Styer,
Waterfield; Dave and Dorothy
Sayre, Antiquity; Gene Payne,
Montgomery, Ala.; Irene Payne,
Pinellas Park, Fla.; Jack Welker,
Pomeroy, and Evelyn and Paul
North, Gallipolis.
Dale and Kathryn Hart. Gilbert
and Audrey Hart, Travis Hart. Rob
and Lil Hart, Linley and Mildred
Hart, Margorie and Rod Grimm,
Ronnie and Linda Orimm; Dan,
Donna, Danny and Dena Sayre;
Lorenc Pyles, Aimee Pyles and
Mark, Sharon, Kim, Nathsn and
Matthew, all of Racine.

Rapids, Mich. Others present were
Elizabeth Ohlinger, Kathryn Smith;
Ed, Janet, Craig, Brenda and
Megan Venoy, Pomeroy.
.
June, Brenda, Helen, Hillary
and Patty Rose; Vicki and Tony
Glaze, Reynoldsburg; Carl Pullins
Jr., Columbus; Wilma Acord and
Merle Ohlinger, Hebron; Michael
and Sandy Ohlinger, Albany;
Bruce. Cindi, Thaddeus and Brandyn Bumgardner; Jim and Jackie
Reed, Peggy and Danny Bricltles,
Eileen Bowers, Larry and Terry
Haynes, Bridget and Morgan Powell and Jacob Davis, Middleport.

Cllicltt •

USA

0

GS

Sayres re-unite recently in Racine
The annual reunion of the'
descendants and friends of Manin
and Emma (Roush) Sayre was held
at the Star Mill Park in Racine on
Augustl6.
Attending were Connie, Jerry
and Todd Bradley, Gallipolis;
James and Ann Sayre, St. Cloud,
Aa.; Bev, Olivia and Zoe Cunninghatn, Cottageville, W.Va; Jack and
Betty Jo Rush, Grove City; George
and l&gt;orothy Sayre and Brooks and
June Sayre, Syracuse; Doris Rogers
and Sharon and Maxine Camp,
Columbus; Bryce Sayre, Eau
Claire, .Wis., and David, Bethany
and Julie Sayre, Jackson.
Brian Sayre frQIII the C[SS Sylva-

IJ)

hiS

-=
-.....
-'""'

WIAZ
WQN
TIS
WIYX
WOUI
WCHI
WPBY
WINI
WVAH
WOWK
WTAP

ID
11)8

SATURDAY

,.g
".......
,_

IW:UO!!

$;!!11!!!!1
al.
ID

American Legion
reports progress on
membership drive

Community calendar
Community Caleudar items
appear two days !Iefort aa eveat
and the day or that event. Ite1111
must be rmi'Vtd wtD in ad.,._
to assure pubHcation in tbe c.olendar.

'

Weaver reunion held recently

For months now, Gloria Leon of
Los Angeles hasn't received child
support from her ex-husband. She
dOesn 'tlmow where he is. And she
doesn't expect to find a job soon.
Mrs. Leon, 47, a mother of
three, gets by each month on a we).
fare check or about $550 and food
stamps. Her eldest d,aughter left
school at 14 to get a job and help
the family.
Since 1981, she has raised her
children alone in a one-bedroom
bungalow that COSts $425 a month.
At first they slept on the floor.
Sometimes she had nothing but tortillas, milk and beans to feed the
lcids.
She occasionally receives free
food from a South Central Los
Angeles relief agency where she
volunteers 10 hours a day, five
days a week.
"I feel better because I'm helping other people. But I'm tired,"
Mrs. Leon said. "There are too
many hunrry people. Too many
come here.y,
She once worked as cashier, but
has no job training.
PUMPING WATER- Rosalyll Walker, I,
pumps watu into a plastic bottle lleld by Ia sister Anasiatia, 5, Tharsday ia Sd-•, AIL ~
or the block houses on their side f'l .., sired
bave rUDoiog water. They liwe i• aa area

••

Friday, September 4, 1992

Ohio

Slturdliy/NIW1

=·-

EVENING

1:00(2).
1111.
CllCIIIIIHtnCIIIIDIC

·'

tll New ••rlaNO S1eriOJ:1

!

·(!) Wild Amlllca Steroo. 11

lllle ...,
0....-.tlon

iiJI

"* w

1'111Nn1
Ill Kkll

II) Countubtlle

D EIPN'I llpMIIWIIIl
NHAA Spoci11
Ill WOIId Toellt
0 llordlrtowll ::;1
1:011 (I) wcw 8atuniQ Nlllhl
WIMIIIna Johnny B. Badd.
Marcus AleXInclor lllgwoll,
Z-Man, Shllnar Br&lt;llhlll. Am

Anclorlon lnll Bcllby Eaton.
1:30(2ls IIJ NIC N1w1 [J

1D _,... oltho lll&amp;t 1

~-

(ll Wild Amlllol Stereo.
(!) Anterk:M VIC ID w

Q

.,

....•
...

..
,I

"
"

Stereo.

IIU,:--::;~

8 III • .,...ICII
Olllwt-

7:GDTY.
~

WIIMI ol

........-.z·a..-

CZl ! ........ II Pope Sino.
ID·-.
(!)1.1_101 . . .

1111.

0 ... TNt: Till

............•·

Nn19
luQ
Oe WIUIP 1111
Allor~...,~ PI II ring

thor:nwnrr 11n

an

-....,

""*'d DcM~···O!'*
Caldt

!. -Na:' ...

'·
••

�TUESDAY

SUNDAY
. . . . . . . IJobOy Athon.
lpGrtaw.atiJ

a

8NIIwi/On llllllenu

MORNING

ID lnspaclllr Gldgal
10:05 (J)IIIppr Daya
10:30U..,TIIIJ.WIIII Will David

5:00~=-=
IIJ !IIOVI!: Cl*lla Chin It

the Chua (1 :30)
• 8pcNI8 LaiiNiglil
5.-05 Ill . _ , _'
5:30 w elllic Ntghlllda

.Ill.

"-••1
,_

~ C1aan1ng Up Taxlca at

11J

r.;-

• • L,lfa Cholcal Q
IIJ) • Andr Glltllth

5:35,(1) Gamer Pyla
e:oo
TV Chapa!
(J) Whlll 8hldGw
(I)WorldT-

w•

TGftlght

Program

IIJ). Newt Conflrlnoa
IIJ Ablloll and
ftljlwa/HIIItiiWI

c:-

o Nawllahl ·a

8:30 I]) e Mullc and the Spoken
Ward

Ill h Ia Written Willi 0aooga

Vlltdaman

a e Mlnollty llualnaaa
Raport

®e K·TV
0• Waalilngton EdltiGii
II) W*- leak, K rill I!IPN'a SpaoldW...
NHRA Spec:ial

•-/Strll-

Elll
Ill Day of RutorltiGn Willi
KlaniCII

J-IR'*7:00 (J). R- Scloullar Willi
1M Hour of PGonr Q
(!) Mlrac:lal TDdar
(J) Tont and .leny'a
FunhOUM

(I) • Pilei P!oallm
lamar , .Fftancla Sterao.

\II
Of D

11'1 YDII' llualnaaa
IIJ) D Qamar Tid Armllrong

(IJ • In Focua

De"""""
•••••,
IIJ
cartoon l!lprua
QJ NHRA TGdaJ DMslon
Three raoa results from
Beec:li Bend, Ky.
• ...-.Sundly
1111 llllllli:tar Qldgat
10:35 Ill MOVIE: Urllan Cowbclr
lPG) (2:45)
t1:ooweAtl® utaatrta• Dl lllllllelo •
Fa,_
(!) . . . . Oriti 1V Q
!lle Pilei P•ogrrom
!!J NIIIIJ ala DupNa CoMa
tar
Md Ftlanda
a e Nlahl Caun D
MOVI!: TM ~rtp to
IIOUiilllul (P(l) (2:00)
• lnalda Wlnalon Cup
.
Racing Budwelaer 500 from

F..,.,

Bristol, T111n.

11:311(2). Olllaaiiiii ...... Q
(I). NtiiOIIillikMI
(l) 1Mak PNO'Iawa

~-~:"-Willi Will David

(I)

..;{W'&amp;H, htlng Wll

• • John Cooper Olilo
Slit. football.
De Pilei Program

{PG) (2:00)

1111 Coral Rldga M-illtllll

With D. J - KIMICIJ
7:30 (J) Qamar Tid Annatnong

(II. World TOI'MMiOW
(J). Vlawpolnt

\II !lamar aFriancla s-.

iacNN® •luclcl..fl'HaN and the

=
.
,
_
.
,
: .... ::r:m
=
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1111. SNidl

.

D lloclr8haPina

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7:35!1) Fllntl-

8:00~~1:;1
. tlleCoraiRI~
With D• . . _
(!) Seaama . _ . D
!ll e V1ctorr of Filii
!!J Sanaa of SG'd rn, In a
showoTunHy. ~n
worl&lt;era march on
Washington and join In

singing songs of protest,
pride and fraldom marking
Solidarity Day 1991 . (0:30)
Qll D It Ia ..,_ Willi
Gaooga Vandemln
oe Mr.lal\adacal!l
1D. E..ngahllc Ooinacll
IIJ .....,_, Tllln MdIIJ Jam
D EUI'Gflllll WlillllwaiM
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GIDIJireak
.
1111 lnlpaclor Qldgal
1:01 Ill Alntl-1
1:30 (J) Plopla to Peopla
(I). Robart 8ciM*r With
the HCIUI of Po- Q
!lle Dar ot 111-*Y
!!J Lallor Dl Fraaclclm Tile
powerful lnHuence of the
trade union movements on
the Infant demooradea of
Poland, Soutto Alrk:a and the
Philippines are dooumantld.
(0:30)
9l D F1r11 EclltiGn
IIJ) e Harry and the
llllldarlana

iiJ. ~ UglilloGuM

0 In ltaiCh Dillie Lonl'a

w.,

Ill car-. Eapreaa
D lnlldl the llanlclr PGA
TDII'

8 Newa/Travel Qulcla
(I]) lnapactor Qadgat

1:35 Cll CaJIIIIIn Planet and the
PlanalaaraQ
I:OO®Neona
!Il
~.e~·· Pllr-Aiong
Stareo.
(J)
and Nina Clull
With !meat Anglay
(I) !111h Aavealad!

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iiJ e

ltvarfy Hlllb•aa
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With Lerrr Jonea
0 Quaat.lllparta Lagancla
·Bob Blearnon's long jump
reoord stood lor over 20
yura. HOlt: Jayna Kennedy.
II TIIICicln' UIA ISCA'I
Grand Finale frOm "'-'lx.
lnalda the PGA TCIUI
8 MDrilll Nfn
1111 lnap ociGI Qa Jgst
1:05 Cll Ollllgan•a llllnd
t:30(J)e WGrld T-1010
(I) • 1'1111 LoCIII

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IIJ f111!o w... on Pit RoiCI

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E*DIIII'

• TIIICicl
Tplaaabll Tanlgllt

a

• ......,... Money

D lllspeclllr Ga.gll

... llllflllllr Daya
10:00 (J) . . . .,..,., Voloe Dl

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CapaiMMI
(J)II8r ltardl
(I). On .,.,.., ......... ICr

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8teoilly '
.
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(J). In TliuDII Willi Cliirtll

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a

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dlpa from thelong-runnlnO
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W Motol • uh '12 Stereo.

II.~~

s-.

TICt•IOiagr Willi

1:00~a::-r. ~~~~
•a Stereo.

!lle Collaaa Foolblll .
Morahaad ~tate at Marshall
(T)

.

!!J lradlhlw an

••

Hom 1 c
a"*~.i Lions at
ale
NFL
Baarw; Rams at Billa; VIkings
at ~ers; Salnll at Eagles

~.MOVIE: Aillldlue (PO)
(3:00)
D. NFL Footbal Detroit
Lions at Chicago Blearw (L)

iBrowns
NFL Foolblll ~veland
a! Indianapolis

Colts:

New Yortc Jats at Atianll
FaiOons; Pittsburgh Stlllera
at Houston 011111 (L)
QJ , . . ._ " " ' Tile
Basamaater Florida
Invitational from Palatka. Fla.
D NAICAR AICing
Mountain Dew Soulhem 500
from Darlington, S.C. (L)
G1 NewaDIJ
Ill L!fe Goa• On Stereo. Q
1:20 !I) CHIPI
1:3011) Tllla Wilkin la-1
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QJ Buell,...,.~·

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San Diego Padres at Chicago
Cubs (L)
·
til • Runawar With the
· Rlcii•Fanooua
(!) T11vel1 In Europa With
RICk 1118vee; Stareo.

!!J Myaterrf A man getalnto
the literary world th!:O!!IIh an
old friend. (PI1 of 2) (,II
• AmetiCan lpGrta
CaveiOida Tile NHRA Moper
Parta .Mile-High Nationals
from Denver, Colo.
Glllaon,IW... In Al'lllw
Ill MOYIE: Nel- ~.
Mr. Alllaan (2:00)
2:01 Ill Major Laague . . . . .
Philadelphia Pllllllea at
A~anta Braves (L)
2:30 (I) ..........

.,_

!Il Careb ••• rra

3:00 W
til

l"lliiiJ
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l.llaat'tlla ofM RICh

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3:30 (J). Paid PrGgram
(!) Adain ....
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QJ HillA lodly DMIIOI'I
ThiN raca raau!lli from
a-li Eland, Ky.
4:00 (J). NI'L ......
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Seahlwkl (L)
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final round from Franklin,
Wla. (L)
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(JJ .... QM.-Kara

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Q

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... In RaviiW
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drug det!!ra· (PI 2 of 2) IR)
Stereo:Ji!.
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his macho oplnlona on the

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.................lnlll
ID Thll'a My DD11
7:00 (J). IIJ ...... llapCift •
D1clalan '12: A Daya A look
at the final 12 w111&lt;a of the
~ raoa. (1:00)

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II In bad oondltiOn alter the

~=~~"'::.£
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emotional. Holt Oprah

;~i\':~~:9
..
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·~~ 10 Mlnulla

e ...... Till Alnlllrltn..nlidlll

..... Babnan and the
olllciala of Gotham CHy
battle a zoologist wl1oae

.......... 8polta

CenlaaU Tha annual Workl
Champlanshlp Swamp Buggy

A-• ara taatulld.

QIIII'L PllmeTime
8 World TGdaJ
Maniac ......... Q
7:30 !!J eo.- DNgaiOra: '111111
Md Now Tile unique roll of

u

the nalghborlloocl pharmacy

Is examined. (0:30)
IIJ). Pirie• Lewla Annie
apanda too mucli time at the
day:I""r wltl1 Kublac.
s-.
Ill T
u.s. Open, man's
3rd round and - · • 4th
round from F1ushli!i
Me1dow, N.Y. (L)_Q

• lltwi/IPGI!IIIildar
D Rln Tin Tin, K-1 Cap Q

1:00 (J). 1111 W'-a VlciiG
PIIOI)Ie 11y to cap!Ura a mall
thlel; parante 1PJ on thalr
n~r.(A)StlriO. Q
(i) • .(I) • Aftllflc'l'l

l'unnlllt Homa Vklaoa

Amataura m1u thalr ouea; a
boy recite
.
IIIII grata

wordl. (R) StlriO.
&lt;D !!JE...... at
Sterao.
Munlar, 8ha
W"* JalliOIIOives the
murder of a 5Lfrug

••D.

envlronmllltll and -IDIIIIC
baowftte qf IJIIHIMQ and

g~Uva plantL 10:40)

IIJT

(Cont.ID

QJ C 11'1111' Oi kiM Marie
Chlstnuttllalill oil the coaat
of Grande, Fla.
10:40 llllnNnt Rapier
11:00w• &lt;lle • • De
Ill Newa
Ill MDA Jany Lnla !Allor

oar T~Mt~oM~ Jllly Llwll,

Luza Glbbona, Ed
McMahon, Frankie Avalon,
Sally J-y Raphllllnd

othara Introduce live
parlormanoalto blnaflt tht

Muaoular O,ab ophr
AsaoolaUon. (3:00)
Ill NIIIMrk !arlit

==~~=·Q

Grand ~ from "'-'lx.
atpa IICI8 Nllwi/IIIOIII T....
et.er
Uvea With ..,

a• •

11:1501'-15
11:3111]). MDA .1arrJ Lawta
LaiiDr 0., Talellicln Jill)'
Lewis, Luza Gltlbona, Ed
McMahon, Frankie AYIIOI'I,
Sa1y Jeaar Raphatllnd
othara lntroduclllvl
parformancR to banafit 1111
Muaoular llJitropliy
Alaodatlon. (3:00)
Ill Pilei I'IOgllni
(!) Alllll TV Stereo. Q
!lle 1c1 n us ~oan··

.....

..

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In Clncln.llll

8llewt/lnlldll ll•lnlll
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12:00 (I). llliiA ..., Lewla
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RlapoMI
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a NI'L PllmiTirnl

12:30 (J) woltd Tomuuoa

(J). Alr•laaoo 111111181111
IIJ). iup IIIIOf

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Larry.lonaa

1:30(1)• !lle"--co'a
l'lio II II Plopla A 8111' Trek
apooltaatlna c:lolraollra
battilng~ Twlnlde. (R)

StwiO.

Eleanor lnvllll
Roc'a Old glrlfrtaold 1D dlnna!
and~ toll put,
Stlrao.

II).

.....

DlllolilllllanQ
1:00 (J). 11J IIOVII: 'CNINIIIIII*'Irla

the Moll' NIC lllldly Nlglll

~::::.=·
l.lilllf' Dar Tala.. an...,
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Sally Jeaay Rapliill Md

olhera ~live

~ 10 biMIIt lhl

MUiallal' D,alrophy

AUoclltlon. (1 :00)

DelwiiiCICJCII
OPIIcl.....,_
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.......
.....

1:00 Ill D 1'1111 PtPI'a~agrn111on111

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....

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llnlll111
Musical
perlormanoaS br WlnUa~
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plua appaaranoea br Franklin
Graham and Dr. RaJf"OIId
Darnacllan. (1 :00) Stereo.
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Ql lp a "II'Canttor
8MDMr!IM
ID Lite Ooeto On Stereo. Q
7:30(J). ~~~~

D ..• •

II) TIMII U.S. ()pan,

man'&amp;
and
4th rounda
frOm flulhlng lllldow, N.Y.

- ·s

12:01111 ...... Caun Q
12:30 W MOVIE: Tile 'CJIII r
(2:00)
ale !ll •
Q

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a lpGrlaCenllr

tD .....---,.Hill••
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t11 111r 11n11111urr ,.._

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Ruldoao, N.M. (T)

Ulalll.-n

81n1Mt ra•cs '12

bacomll axotlc dlnon to
get money. (Rl SIMao. D
(I). !ll e Young lndih
Jonel C'war IIIII Wille
traveling down the Congo
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(!) (J) ...... 1111:
In
II a,..,., 1tr 11:00) Stwao.

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f

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1111 MOVIE: . . . ., (2:00)

1:01 Ill MOVI!: car- (PGJ (2:15)
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s
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klllara. (R) s-. Q
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ltetlnllraelallil
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JI.IIIIMCIWaa (2:00) Stwao.
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(!) (I) WlioWtl TIICII tor
Arrilllcl? (1 :00)
• • De~~u~p~~J .,_,
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(R)StlriO.D
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t:311•• De Da•1••111
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VaMU~. (R) Stereo. Q
10:00(!)-1:;1
(!) (I) Ra.-a In Chine
(1:00)
SeDellll'*n
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singer makN toll annual 'IIIII

~cu.-. ~;~

prliCIIOIIIOkl parpelmld br
Charla a-. (1:00)

........

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Chlrlla a- l Kenny

Rogan fall prey to I

tiJThiRIII~

7

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t' IT. .

.......

1:30!1lD ......,... Dllil Rloll

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·
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7:01(1)MijarLI=II l I
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and
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1111 llloli IIIII n Q

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11010 ~; 111011111:11.
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Tllil ..
llrodllr and .10n1on oome up

t.OO ()) e 0 Chilli Clift thinks

Jollnnr Ceraon wll use hla
jOkla on the Tonight Show.
(R) Stereo. ~
(I) e (J) e namallont Anna
and AI e:oft1)ll1e their
1111-mlnute wadding plana.
(R) Stereo.
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eniMI the literary world . (PI

a

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~llghlli
!:

Shit 8lortel
IIJ).
Lanny
and J.T. tal tar the aama gill;

.7:00 ~- 0 Wlilll of FOliUM

Dluy

Stereo.
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ii'Granc1011apr,Uve
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(R)
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olllll -and
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Code lA iawn It born

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Tanlghl
(J) • .y ... , ... Lite
Wliaal Dl PGIIUna Q
I'IJIIIIy l'llld
'
t1J ]'1111111 U.S. ODin. man a ·
quarterfinal tram Flushing
Maadaow, N.Y.IL) 1!1

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S.... .., Q.
Yau Itt YCIUI Lite
(II e WhHt of FGituna Q
IDe FamiiJ Fauci
IIJ TIMII U.S. Opan. men's

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Ona from Belgium.
8 Cn~~~llra
7:31 Ill Sanlorcl • Son
1:00 (J) e O U-'-1
Mraterlaa Saarchlng lor
Noah's Ark IR); a atrangung
deatto aiattemptld murder.
Stereo.
111
MOVI ·Human FMI4nga
(2:00)
tile !ll e lnlldl

=:=t!':
Coulllr and Dave Thomas
taka a aatirlc lOok at the
prolulllon of raallty-typa
showa aaenon tele'ltalon.

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(P(lt 3) (2:00~

• Latrr King Uvel

_ ....... Hopa tar

....

4:05(1),. " - r - 4:35 Ill Allin the Famllr

lnlllan .
Mullcal
parfarmanoaa br Wlntiay

..

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;:;:pi,. Otto
- ' " lllllh tht ~
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U.L Open Lell Night.

11:311 (J). 11J TGIIIgllllliOIII Willi
·
Jay Lilla Stno.
(J)IIIOVII: Tile .........

11

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12:30 (J) MOVIE: Night Chill
(2:001

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12:35 (J). 0 Lal8 Nigh! With
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1:00 (J) •

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U.S. Opan from

Fluahlng Mea~, N.Y. (R)
Q1 Cliaclconcl Flag lndyCar
tram Vanoouver, Cinada.
18 llio1011&amp; TII!!J
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1:01 ale
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1:30111 ...........
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Nallonala from Norwalk, Ohio

~ Nawllllght Update
Ill Paid.....,_

1:$1 (J). 0 Later With 11Gb
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II NIIIIIWIII Now Stereo.

2:05 (J). Homa lhopplllll

a

11J 81lnMid Alter

George's car bra1ka down,
ha andr. catch a ride. (R)

Storao.
(I) e
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ln.,nlw-1 Stereo.

I(.
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televlllonaaanlducator.la
axamlnld and the troubled
ourrloulum of corn-TV
Ia dlaoualld. (1 :00)
91 e o • aooa ---..
Roads-. D
a:Jl.llllrDia-,-...,.
Billy
rnee11 an older woman: Jane
and Mlchlel encourage
Sanely and Jake. Stereo. Q
.......... Now
18 Latrr ICing LlveiMPIIIFatlllr Dowling Mr•-•
1:30We 018alnlald Jerry Ia
afraid hla ooma1011 nalghbor
will awa1.; Elaine lUte. (R)
S-.
(1).
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B

llhlvlar

Donny OOIIIiders

telling Pate ha Ia attraclld to
Wencly. S!Meo. Q
10:00 (J) e 0 Lew • 0r111r A
15-JIIr-okt boy olalms to
have acddentally allot his
friend. (RjSIMao. Q
(J)(I) e (J) 1t111ano

t

W-lpaclal Da'ltd

...,
Lilla Sltr!!! "
tile Chllrl.liJ· .,.

••IIIDI.ad
ClllldNn 1iJ

Willi

12:00!1le..., llp(,ngar
De,........ c.w.·
Crlllll Time Alllr.PIIIM
Tillie 511rao 1!1
II) Till tiiiGfiliier
QJ 11 t ... 11Dw
ltaabll Tonight

a

8=::'''

D

1111
12:01iii=~Q

1..__"' ......... 8o........

-w-•...:

(2:001

•-IR) •

(I])
Pragranl
0 .......
!ley~,......,

a I'au olllloi llldng National
Anala from Durango, Cola.

(T)

G1 1na1c1a PG11ca •a
111:a())e 0 LelllllglllDavid I.e....,..
m~~~
Cillt piKr"')(2:DD)
,.. Aflllltl
CoUit l:jl •

:i I =:"'

1:00 !lle ......, Jonw

!e• ~~
W

r..-JiftO\

II) Tannll U.S. Open from

Flllll*ig .!o!tadow, N.Y. (R)
8 ....... TII!!!J
ID loodaiiDMII:jl
1:01 (I) e l!nteoUI"-nt Tonlglll

~'ir£

1:30De .._....
QJ On 811Qe

a Pro ICnalbDanllng llid

a1 Dl dlilll From Chicago.

IH. (A)
G1 Nelllllllglit Updalt
111 Pilei Program
1:35!2le 0 LaiM Willi 11Gb

CGetM

(I). MGnMI WilliS
,
1 40 QJ • CIIN Newt
2:0D!Ilei~Newt11Dw
Slafao

®e

:....., ........

Till ea. of thelha a•na
lilt (2:00)
De Now ft Can It TGid
(I)
Spacial
Q
•
CU»
IIJ)
lnaldlDanca
the PGA TCIUI
orld
WortdiOMt
UpJ 11
8
8
7DD
Club
Will
Pat
7DD
Clull
WliiPII
111
111
Raba
- .-abl1oa
R n
Letterman, Candice Bergen.
Crulu. (1 :00) Stereo.

'a"

1 .......

a

10:0S!Il Claah of the Champklna
10:311 t1J TIMII (Cont.) Q
la0n818ga
11 :00 (J) • Ill• !Il !lle
111e D. IIJ Newt
(J) TIIIIIGI.-,-*1
o e Nlahl Caun s -. Q

==~==o ac-rw

anci.Mn.King

11:311(J) ~
(l)

Phipps, Blv Shea and the

•

Rab11'110n ·

.CrooklndCiile,
casaul Tartlgllt
8 lpGrta Tonight
1D I a • - Md Mn.King

R• .=.•'\~~~~
. ..a

Stereo. C

==:=--~

Q

Ff"

(L)

~ lllo"*?::teo

...........
11:311 !2le 11J TCIItlghllllow Willi

•• Dalanla

Monitor
~-~
. . . . .~ Stereo.
·~
• --

2:01!2leHoma ""'••'•
IIJ NIC lllgllllda
2:10QJeUpta111MnM
2:311 (J) Dlririll...,

a lpartaC.-

81parta LataiiNNIIfllllil4
2:35!1) MOVIE:,. 1.a1

p~
rr ...

3:0011) IIIOVI!: OlllurnMI
(2:00)
alklnllllll
Up CioN

e era.ullla

1D.......,
. _ Pr-11111
...,.

FRIDAY

D 7DD CU» Wllh Pat

o -:.a
11..._=.
·

~~:r=

:19......
Vlnnll,llabbr. Bl-:ilrad

.....

0 My TWo llldl

Man ofllnlnaa (G) (2:
MOVIE: 1'hrM

laCIUIIDinoa

Q

QJOnlltlge
.11:00 Ill • til ale !Il !ll •
• • oe

..........
•
b ....

=~~~
...., Tonr and Angall'a

Sllllo.

(J) .....
(l) Mel 1 .. If lloiJIR

II) TIMIIIConL)

~y·a
wldcllng lll'lvea. (A)
0e11o1t 'Oglll at CliiCaQO

......... (A) llno.I;J

s-.

• Cruililll.
7:45 Ql CGIIJI I'Fcaoooltb
..alll San
Otago Slatl at Bllgham
Young (L)
LoQO(J) e II Dll"'ll""•"'"•"'nt WCMid

Will

10:GOIJie • ...... F!lnldl
and IMJ:ih ODIIIMti adO!!!!na

Stereo~Q_

• Ovamlgllt
3:45. 111101100111 Q
4:00(!) MOVIE: DCic

;;g))n~ltTGid

iiCMid:Ji
1D 7DD Clull With Pat
llalll10:30 (I) Waat 'IIJilniiiiDIIbaDk

.... ewsln6.

......

Sllrao:

(!) Whr TlleM Klda Love
8chool? (1:00)
!!J Uncltr l'lrl StlriO.
r~xMlddla Agaa

7:30(2)~1:;1
(J)
....

Allldn~l-.(R)
liillllft\
fnlma

~ 10 gel Clllla. (R)

f!~"P:.ia~ Live

D Lite Ooeto Oil Stereo. Q

UI!Jle D...,_OnloiDr.

w.

storm hits the gang'&amp; plane.
(R)S-.Q
10:00 ()) • 11J L.A. Lew Van
OWICIIa anarr over
Slfulntta' auggeation to

Tanlgllt

5\Mo.
(J)....

Now Stereo.

1:30 (J). IIJ Wlngl A raging

===-

Ec:dyfng.

-

tereo.
3:00 11J MOVIE: laat Sellar (R)
(2:00)
QIUp CloM
IBCroullnl
Ill Pilei Pnlgram
3:05 Ill Clunamolc8
3:30 (!) 1Gb llewhalt
Ql NAICAR Racing
Gatorade 200 from
Darlington, S.C. (R)

rn..,..,_

Fatloerllawllng MMrnatetettl4"11"'

tiJ My TWo Dada

ii"i'~ Polce concu:t.

l1!l*

8

l!£
r~.

MOOIId job.

• Lerrr ICing Uvel

il:"'llil . .With
~Next

lniiiiiii'CII
~ (P(l1:11 (2:30)

~

. (J) .......

.Q

Oriti
l:il
e e DeCIUII'weQ
II). Mitt Qrttllth
tiJ Cal 101M l!lprua
Ql UpCIDH
D New ZC11111 S -. Q

ir7=0Sift

~-.~..2,._111

(I) • Cl) e CalsC.
l'latbal Miami at . (L)
CZ&gt; Alll7l
Ullilll s.rao.

PJ'

~ ...~

L-OG (J). 0 lloMtn GIIJII " drMma of I . _ In which
hlr held ""' belli trozan,
l'lglll108: Tile

1D Young lllcllfli Q
I:OI!Il MOVIE: Once Upcln a
Time In 1111 Waat !POl 13:30)
1:30 (I) • (J) e ACIOIII tar 'filii
Jill lies about baing lnvttld to
a party~to ba bJ - . .
s -. Tommy and hla
IIJ) e
girlfriend Inspire Martin to
Gina on a date. Sttreo.

......a.
:· [EIJl.=s
m...,. TV~

rwraollcl bull; IIIJIIIICIQ•
laltoppld. (R) Sllllo.

lllltD•
D IWA'
u~
- •.._,
...-1TC_..,
:"' 1'fie
Widen
De
Tlllllglil

Brooklyn Tabernacle Choir,
plua IJIPUIIIlC8!. bJ Franklin

8WarlciToct.y
D Rill Tin Tin, K·l Cop Q
·1:30 (J) e 11J NIC Newt 1!:1
:
(J) NOW n can It TOIT

c ,,

2:35~•wlfNewaNow

u,.,.T

Qllnaldllhe IIIIIDr PGA
TCIUI

...

ChMilran .,.

I •-

81parta Latei!Wit

;Q·

1:00 (J). (1). (J). • •
aeoNeon

o:~'ft: ... s

3:4118 c:NN IIIIIDDIIpulal Q
4:80 (J) liiOV1I: 'filii Gil •
Go
I2:DDI
0 eliiCMI!: 'I'M WIIIWI

~eaun
(I)Dl~~
(!) .!!J

a 8porlaCenler

~ ·

EVENING

QIUp·cr..
8C11 It;

IBNewtO.erRiglol
Nil !I) 110¥11: ...., Ca bq
,,..
(2:oo,

2:05 (J) e Haone &amp;happing
Ill NIC Night Me
2:10111. Up to the.._
2:30 (!) Dennla Miler

11:35.(J)e 01 Tanlgllt Show Willi
Jar Lilla
Q
tile Chilli
·-Willi

THU., SEPT. 10 •

One

praotk:al joke 1J81Pib ated br

director. (1:00)'0
II) My Twa Did{
.TIUICoal:lt\
Call Ia l'aatbsl
1-c:arwlltlrd

•

(J)CIIa1Min~
~Iquiri
1V

IIIII

Ill TOO Club Willi Pat

~- Arilnlo Stereo.
• u.s. Open Lat. lllglit

1:00(2) e

D Up CIDH
11!1 New ZCIIIII "
.,.
I:SI Ill Anclr Ollllltli
7:00~· 01 Wliaal of FOliUM

THURSDAY

I:,~ Newt Now

. .• Pilei ........
. 3:30 Q1 NI'L YIM Ill Butlllo

8W~Updata

i

· education crlala In Amarlca.
Guaall: Robin Willems,
Garth Broolca. Wltoopl
Goldberg, Arnold
Schwarz~ lnd 04herw.
(2:00) Stenoo.

=

==-Aidng
R.,..._

a

IIJ)
- - · l!lprua
II)~

NaWIIIcour
......
!lle ~ ... """

1:40111Je CNN Neon
2:00~-~NewaNow
tereo.
IIJ) •
IE: 8loDCI 8polt
(2:00)
1111e Now 11 c.n .. TGid
II Club Dance

a

~ ~~TVStp. l:jl
w ...-• ......
.II'
-~.!,!t=d~Q

r

It cl)ollllto ba theiCIIOol
~ ldltor. SII!*J.
De.., 0n1111n: Hipa
...~··:~~~ the IIDml Mualcal
r n c e • br Sandi Patti,
T a = .~. plu~:r'
appear1111011 bv Dr. C. Everan
Koop. l1 :00) Stereo.
QJ Crook Md Chiou
Chaclconcl Flag lndJCar
from Vancouver·
•
==N=.."'
L-05 Ill MOVIE: Till Flnll
eGo •lduwn (P0)(2:00)
1:30 Ql
Laagua lallllltl

(I) e r!"e · - Newa Q.

Coetaa
til • MGnMI Wllllma

(I) ..........

De llacllta 11c11oo1
'12 Holt Slnbad lOoks at the

'

1:30~t...«u:;:~

8 NeWINight Upc181e
Ill Pilei Pnlgllm
1:35 (J). Ill Lltlr With 11Gb

til • !Il !lle
Ill. 1111. Ill Newa
11J New Milia Hammar
• Crook Md Chill
18 lpGrta Tonight
Ill llcaNctow Md Mn. King
11:0&amp; Cll MOVIE: Llltll W (2:00)
1t:30wK•L
(!) TG the
SIMeo.

s-~e Ful llouM
(I).
Michelle 1111 out to find a
wile lor Danny ao aile oan
have a mom. (R) s~
(l) (I) W... In 1111 W
Ia
~ S.MIIga? Stereo.

a

·=...
D

11:00 w •

IBc-atlre
,1:00 (J) e 0 Qua- Leap AI
and Sam llmultanaoualy leap
to dlllerant worlda.'(R)

!llfqueN

1:30 De ""'-"

QJ0n811Qe
II Major I Ugtte !tttbiU
(L)

(L)

1:30!-~:tllllfll:-•llltnt TOIIIIIM

Go 111111 AIIIIIIIIGI (2:001
Qlllan 111 'hulli Ct 111 1111
• Lerrr ICing Llvel
4:30QI IIIII •a•l!lltl

• ,,..., ;;.r... Will

lt!Yaur~

4th round lnd - · s
quartlrftnals from Aushlng
Meadows, N.Y; (L) Q
.
II It a Stllr Sttreo.
Ql Major Laague ltleiNoU

tiJ ,.., l.lnaldlr .
lai'Uiillr.JI I Will
Cliarlla eMil X Kanny
Rogn fall piiJ to I

~·
ereo.r-Tonlght

u.tlllillll to
With - MGJMS Q
IIIlO De lleacile: 111 A
jockey Ia lnJufr.' whln
thrown from a horse . (A)
Stereo. I;!
8WGrldN....
Ill 700 Club With Pat
RDbetiiGn
111-.30(!)-~
II) TIMII ConL) Q

I•WhMiofF~
Tlllnla U.S. Open,
'a

o•
a • Pllflct 1o1n

i.D.!vanlnii ...

look blok at=~ eG-yw
~and •
muaiC:
'ltldeo In toll honor

(J)eY

........

(I)

f~:r.:~- Tanlglll

•a

12:$1(2). 0 Lal8 Night With
Dlovld LallwiMn
(I) e CIHowot Alf8~
1111e Nlglit eaun
1:00 (J) e JeMr Jonea
IIJ). Rnhlde
De PMect acII) TIMII U.S. Open from
Fluahlng MlldOW, N.Y. (R)
8 llhftlla Toct.y
Ill 11Gnttt1o.... SIMeG. Q
1:0&amp; Ill NaiiOMI Qeagnoplllc
!xplolwr

Wllh-Marn~

Chicago Cubs at Pittsburgh
Pirates (L)

1n~~c~e Polllca

1:aow• (i)• !lle • •
De
Ill Clllrtea ':-~ Q
~
. .R:=t.!:
.
s -. Q
""
II) Till Rill Oil a seustsra
IMidl the PGA Tu
8 WGrld TCidar
Ill Aln Tin Tin, K·l Cap Q
1:05 !Ill LGvl Lucr

o-

eo9

a

IIJ)
10210
(Seaaon l'rlmlllw) Brandon

•

1D llonMu
12:05(1) ..........
III.Night
Q
12:30 Ill MOVI!: ~ (2:00)
IIJ) e Love ClloleCIIOio
II) !ley ... , , ThMier

Star~ to Amtrlcl
(!) u

f)) . . . . LIIIlle

e e .lllgiiiCOUIIQ
12:10(1) IIOVI!: UriiiJI QCoDIIIIIDIIDDJI
(PO) (2:45)

.........,
II)TIIe

e ._, ' -

-NINO

.....

.......... Now

1:30(1)e Ill. CGKII Hiytlen
wanll hla ~lltance
relattonalilp
Cllrlstina to
Ind. (R) Stereo. Q
10:00 (J) e 0 llatiiiM NIC ThD
paraonal side of HIHIIJ
Clinton and hat' ci!!!Qhter
Cl\elua.Ste~
tile !lle
to
Elbemea Kathleen 'ltalts
Colin alter learning 1\er
ax-lloyfrj!nd Ia married.

~ :~Next

~

Clime

~~~~~~==~~~~~•
WED.,SEPT.8 •
g.:,.~,~~
A•U.I. DpanL.ai8Nifll

TlmeAr
Stereo.

B

=-i--

a

12:00(1)
• ...,
D ••
,._.

II Pt.iNNIIII ~
Ill Young lllcllfli

(I)teteo~
•
• Raauno..
e.cky's college pllna n put
. on hold due to llnandll
!Doblama. (R) S!Meo.&amp;
(I) Cry l'nllll 1111
(1:00)
........... Now
a Lerrr King Uvel
Fatlier Darilll Mrallrtea

tiJc-lbpNu
QIUpCioy
IDNewZCIIIIIQ
7:00 ~ e 1111 WhHt of FGituna

•EIIIe............_ T•••-

Ill• You Itt Yw Lite
WliMI Dl ,.._ Q

SATURDAY

1•• Mitt
De ca Newa Q
Glltllth

'*'

Caun Stereo. Q
MCICIIIM

R:

m~qumDritirv

!ft:,r-•
12:00 ale m• ,....
l:o~ .......
on.;..._.,

W MilA Janr LMI:Ibar

(L) .
11 Puliu4rtswa

!fj•

11:311 we o Tartlgllt .._Willi
..., .._ Stlrao. 1!1

.

Ill llallllan
7:01 Ill a-Ir ,....
7:30We IIJ Jnp:Mrl Q

II .......,.

L

e U.L Open Ullllllgllt

Tanlght

• Mcllllflnl

llactng
1D Rln Tin Tin, K·l Cop Q
1:30(J)
Ill NBC~
(J)
IICM ItT
(I) e AIC Newt ~
Wild AmetiCa S~reo.

.
I...........

II

r.:.r.

L

: :::::?::;

!Z,

IIJ)

1:05 Cll MOVIE: ChlrAutumn (3:00)
1:30(1). (J).,.....,~
Sttve makes a deal w1t11 a
blues singer to nrenade
Laura. =reo.
~m
111e
,
• MllorLngue
laaeiNoft Cincinnati lleda at
Houston Astros (L)
1:00 (J). llllltuonallll
Doubla Dicky and Taaa
proMCIIte a couple; Sean
an embarraulng caaa.

silft~~te.r:,.Q

11:30!Jl t;~;;
Ja..,...
ArMrolclllll SII!*J.

-·Willi

• Truokl Md TIIGillr
PGonr

the Clown baeornaa a
aua::. (R~
s
-.
.
Ql Mllor
. Saillblll
Bolton Rid Sox at Dakland

GIPalmaHaft.C

m::a~-5'

EVENING

!fl

Ql' ' ITCIItlgllt
81parte Tartlgllt
.
D I a1.• • MCI Mn. ICing

10:311(!) Myallrfl A man gatalnto
the llteraly world th~lll
Old friend. (PI 1 of 2)
(I) Wldftowaa Willi
,..,.. lAdy Bird Joltnlon
. and Joy Harjo explain the

• IWon/WCMid Reparii'INII
!...
D John Oalaan

Hamar

0$':.-.
I:SI Ill Alll/tt GriiMI
7:GOWeNIIWI

•

TUE., IEPT. 8

l:aow• Ill• &lt;ll• a e
D . Ill Newa
Chllln OritilV
In Chi~
......
m
Ralnbo

(J)

aooompanr 1 apacial poeoiaw
ot tht naw ...... QaDI
Troop. (2:00)
QJ CroCIIc Md a..
8 111110r Lug .. ~··~ulbballl
Bolton Rid Sox at T A8rllllrt or Toronlo Blue
Jays II Kanlla Cftr RoJala

...,

Hadln

bat crasture. (0:30)
tiJ My 1'WCI Dada

BIU:r:.~Q

a::-·1111

lllglll

11:10 .....
w•
o
Till MIIGitDI'=oa:flllilooanWIIIIII
.
RL~liM ::-a·Q
• Cllllll811d CliMe

=One~-,;,

OJ e llllnay'a QaDI TniDp A

o

axperimanlll formula
prodUOII I biZIIII mtniCing

(J)

It:

10:3119 Tlllnla (Coni.) Q
!Il • • De

iW.:.CU:~· Q

for Rita. (A) Stwao. 1!1 . ·
• Tile llatiNIIIII""''h'
Baaamattr Flortda
lnvllllionllfrom Palatlcl, Fla.
• ~ .. the Wlilll"-'
1D In tGUOII Willi Clolllaa

IIJ) . . . ,...

World ol tOIIIi:tDr ella

10:10

1111-Atr Wll and Carlton

SIXUII, plifllcal and

lll!.'f: AIC :::.cW

L-05 !Ill Love Lucr
1:30We ONICNewtQ
(1) ...... .

7:SI(J)S.illld a loll
1:00 (J). dl ........ Pllnca Dl

lnd pravantlng the three
major typal of child abuM:

OllalniiiiiiJakeQ
1:05 Ill wcw ,Main 1!Wrasdllll Barry Windham,
Dualln Rhodes, Cactua Jack
and Till Barllarlan.

dealer. (R) Stlrao.
II). In IJvtng

~"'=~;the

. AbUaa Mettooda 01 atopplng

......... '12

0

.

EIPOIInll and !ndlng Ctlld

a 'nab·' Tonight

(I)

a
II bclllt'ta WCMid ollpaacl

(I) . . . . . . 8lllnt:

8:00 (J) Wild, Wid Wwt
tile !lle.NIIWI
(l) LRmlilllln......,
l!duCIIIGII Dli 1'11111!:1
(I) AN You ltlng iiived?
0 Slllcll • !bert
tiJ ltr•Mt Really
QJ Trucldn' UIA Satart
Trlalhalon from Ocala
N111onal Fomt In Florida.

1:30

vaoatlon. Bud and Kelly gat
trapped In a amwatorm. (R)

8 Camllalgn USA '12
10:DD(!) Newa Q

(PO) 12:00)
Ill MOVIII!: 111n1 Md 1111
,.-_ (R) (2:00)
(i). (J). uta GoaoJ On

• Nawt/ICIIIICe and

~ ....Mullin Mln'l' CIS
J:fdlr Movie (2:00) Stereo.

Stereo.

EVENING

De Tlilt '- the NFL
0 lt'a Yu li•lnns
IIJ TIMII U.S. Opan, men's
3rd round and wome9'• 4th
round fromN.Y. (L)
Mlldow,
QJ Cslsbrttr
. Marie
Chutnuti 1111111 off the COlli
of Grande, Fla.
NFL ClanlaDar
• Ne•aDar
Ill Tile Wallona
12:30!1)e 0 NFL Live
(I) e WICIIP In Cincinnati
(!) Clalllc Car 8hGp Stereo.
(J). OutUikN Fram 1111

!Il

.lclillllll

Pllnat and 1111

Pia

~::J..:a'r.£

~~ =·iVIE: 'Da Yau

·

Topalca E - from the
Super Chavr Show at
Hasrtiand Park In Kanau.
(1 :00)
Ql Raoclng . _ . Arrilllcl
Allington Million from
Arlington Heighte, Ill. (L)
8 laltjPaln•
5:0&amp; Ill Tom Md Jerry'•
Funlla,_
1:30 a&gt; Twllghl

I:SI Ill

12:00 (J) .lparta 8undly
W MOVIE: Tlilt lathe Waat
Thai W11 (1 :30)
(I) • John • li&lt;llllllDI'~III'il' Tile
Taletllll t 8hilw (0:30)
(lJ Computaf Cl\1 011 Clll

:::.7-:a'r~~

stenoo.

• Plrlormanca Show alii:

z-

omcllwe

!lle

L

Sundly,llllwa

AFTERNOON

8Dio,.,....

I111Ah.....,_,
prtparlng tar the

(I) Mc;lollllllllln
II). MO'Il!: ~

Ill Callapa

D~

but and=x:up ~In.
lll'lfllll room.

alation's an.........,, tht
gang baeornaa trapped In an
alevetor whare they ramlnd
Donovan ot toll 1110011111 aa
program dlractor. (1 :00) Q
• WlrNnl Bobby Alliaori.
5:00 (l) Learning 1n a-te.:
l!cluaallan an

.,._.,.,

=~

~......_TIIellra
A woman goaa on liOIIder

11J WICJIP

1111 lnap aatar Geclgat

111 Jlmmr swaggar~

g: frOm

Ql NAICAR 118!=1ng(Cclnt.)
lUI MOVIE: I'd hiler ..
Rlcll (2;W) ·
4:311 (J) laat Dl .lor of l'llllllrlll

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PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

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1 1 1• 1• _ 1• • 1• 1•

FORI I I I I I I . I I

V~J. 27, No. 29
Copyrighted 1992

~ .,

PHILLIP
ALDER

TtlrSe

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By Pbilllp Alder

(

~

If you have read Allan Falk's "Spin·
gold Challenge," you will know what
to expect from his latest book, 'Team
Trial' !Zookeeper Publishing, $9.95,
212·866-5860). You are faced with 64
difficult problems covering all facets
of the game. After each set of 16, you
lind out the results of your teammates
and "!!n see how you scored.
The book has drawbacks. You al·
ways know when the key play has to be
made, whi~h makes finding it easier;
and if you read a lot of bridge literature, you will recognize most of the
deals. However, If you study the deals
and review the analyses, your game
will improve.
Today's deal, taken from a 19'H artide by Terence RA!ese in The Bridge
World magazine, is one of the ·easiest
in the book. Against your conLra&lt;:t of
four hearts, West leads the heart 10.
You win with the queen and cash the
heart king, East discarding a low
spade. How sbotild you continue•

l

;

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0 •

North's three diamonds was a trans-

Nonll

Wes&amp;

H

Pass
Pass
Pass

s•

••

East

3NT

p,.,

Pass

Pass

Pass

'--------------'
choice of games; you "'lected four
hearts.
You have 10 tricks: one spade, live
'hearts, three diamonds and one club.
But you must retain control while
drawing trumps and knocking out the
diamood ace. The answer is to duck a
club after cashing the heart jack. II
East wins and returns a spade, you II·
nesse the jack. Later, you ruff your
second low club In the dummy, draw
West's final trwnp and play on dia·
monds. You have all aults under controland muat end with 10 tricl&lt;s.

flu- •re lnvilbl ,. -

ard-pay _ .
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37
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being
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1 o- wl1hou1

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food
6 Dllc:INICttla

11 CotH Into
light
13 ActrtllRydtr
14 SftlalllheHtr
15 Songftt
110r.....td
110M
17 c.-or

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
1

THIS I~ 'rQ..JR OWN
PERSONAL- [;lAI L-'Y

I

" BEFORE 'rQ..l READ
IT...

HOROSCOPE.

biiCkb~d

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51 Army
COIIIIIInd
jtWdL)
52 tal gutal
53 Decambar
vllltor
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., _ ..... . .

BARNEY
WHAR'S THAT
CHICKEN-THIEVIN'
HUSBAND OF
YOR'N?

HE RAN
THAT·A·WAY,
SHERIFF tt

'=-

8 Perk tor wild
IMIImllt

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mutUftl

10- Paula

12 ActOf J110n

ESTHER ALLEN GREER .
RIO GRANDE - The public is
invited to the dedication of the
Esther Allen Greer Museum on the
· University of Rio Grande campus
on Saturday, SepL 12 at 2:30p.m.,
the first activity scheduled in a
weekend celebration of the opening
of the newest addition to the University scene.

OUT TH'
BACK DOOR!!

which signs are romantically perfect lor PI8CEI (,..,. 20-llarch :10) 11 negoUatyou. Mall $2 plus a long. self-ad· Jng a deal with another today, keep your
dre0800,
stamped envelope 10 Match· expectations
within
reasonable
BERNICE
maker.
c/o
this
"'"""aper,
P.O.
Bo•
bounda.
Each
time
you
get
IOITI01hlng,
BEDEOSOL 91~28, Cleveland, OH ~~101-3~28.
you'll have to give a lillie In return.
UIRA (hpt. 2J.Oc1, 2S) Ac11vl1les that ARIEl (lllrch 21-Aprll It) In order 10
please you today might not be as equal· achieve Jmpo~ont objecll-1odoy,-you
Jy appealing to your companion. Yet might have to di-Jata youroalf
neither ol you will have a good time If from co-worl&lt;trs who can't omulato
you try to foist things upon your partnor. your ambition and drive.
SCORPIO (Oct. IM-IIov. 22) Spend time TAUIIUI (April 20-Mer :10) You 11touk1
relaxing and enJoying IHe today, but do rather welt Jn competitive Jnvotv.- ·
don't do so In 1 man-1ha1 wtll cauoe .. men1a.today, provldtd the game 11 :
you to negloct reoponelbiiJUas and du- greater tllgnlflcance 10 you than
ties to which you should attend.
tcOrt. Play It Jooaely.
IAGmAIUIII (IIIII. ZS.O.C. 21) Per· . Gl- (IIIJ 11-.luM :10) Joint vtn·
sonal golno "" poulble today; you'll be tureo look promlllng lor y'ou
,
1ept. 1,1112
both Jnduotrlouo and clever. Yet you· therolo olso a pooalblllty lor 00::'~:;1
hoi mlghl ytold to u1ravagan1 whims which tiona. Try to mllnllln per11y ol
vwr circle ol tiOCIII contocta could ;;,;1 could dlmlnllh your retuma.
with w h - you 1111lnvolved.
IUbllanllolly expanded In liM yoar·•CAPIIICOIIN (Dec. 22....... It) Try to ·CAIICIII (~1111111-.lulr 22) Unleoa
lhtld. However, 11 might b e - natto! k- tmotlono on an even koel today,· and your malo oreln accord on both
_,.Involved In bu- doallngo l · aa that you don't make sudden mood : ·major ond minor palnlolodoy, 'JJHie
w!lh your .-.round frtondl.
swtngs1ha1 could cauae lrlondl to fool ' mutual vllue wiN be ~. ·Each
V11Q0 (Alii. II lapL Zl) Hyou're,..! uncomlo~able In your pr-.
' ;must be 1o1111y supportlvt ol thl-.
· quiNtllomiiiUt:floiOelOdlybltwUn j AGUAIIUI (.1111. 20-ftll.1t) II you're' LIO (""" 11-Aug. 2S) H you•,. wtlh
· Ill lllttlll• -lndMdulll you lllco or lorlhrlght when r-1Jng lavarolrom · ..,_,.,odoy who lln'1u rnal-'1~ : 1
. wlllt -you 1011 ;tllg taG 10. choOM' lrltndo todoy, what you Uk lor will bel ·fortunata u you .,., be vwy
:11M rom-. KIIOW - . t o look ~ ro-, granted. However, n you're coy and how you ..,_ yourMII. Thougtttleoa
,and you'N lind n. Tlto Allro-j o1hlrl1hlnk they aro being manipulated romarkt could -.nd _,.._
GriiPfl MI1CIIImll&lt;er Jnstanlly reveala or uttod 1 you'N be denied.
. ...
•
.
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.
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'
·~

.~

SHOULDER TO SHOULDER - More than
4,000 football faos packed the stands at River
Valley High School Friday night for the season

opener against Point Pleasant. (Times-Sentinel
photo by Kevin Pinson)
\

vinced. Sieve Johnson, whose chil·
dren auended Southwestern last
year, called the consolidation "fool·
ishness."
He criticized the board for not

Laking more time to study lhe issue
before making a move. "They don't
know how 10 spend lheir money,"
he said.
Johnson had nothing but praise

During the dedication, Mrs.
Greer will be recognized for her
contributions and commitment to
Rio Grande, Dr. Barry M. Dorsey,
Rio Grande's president, said. At the
same time, the University will for·
maily accqll the building.
Follow10g the dedication, an
afternoon tea will be held on the
Campus Green. At 8 p.m.. a special
presentation of "Russian Cabaret"
will be shown in the Christensen
Theal!e of the Fine and Perfonning
Arts Center. The performance is
free and open to the public.
The museum will officially open
to the public on Sunday, SepL 13 at
2 p.m. A display of works by artists
from southern Ohio and West Virginia will be the first show in the
museum's two-floor gallery and
can be seen until OcL 9.
The museum's regular hours
following'the,grand opening will be
1-5 p.m. daily, except Monday.
Mrs. Greer and her first husband, Don Allen, maintained a lifelong interest in Rio Grande. Don
Allen, a Rio Grande native and successful businessman, served as a
member of the University's lloRrd
of Trustees until his death in 1959.
His seat on the board was mled by

.-

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I am

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Ray Shllll&lt;ty.

1

nolurll ham. I llkt to

ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs planted on innocent people's prop·
County Sheriff's Department erl)', making it hard to l!ace the
burned marijuana plants near the growers.
However, Soulsby added, "Even
Meigs County highway garage at
Rock Springs on Friday, the result though you don't make a lot of
of lhe county's marijuana eradica· arrests, at least you Jake (the marijuana) off the streets."
tion efforts.
With the help of the Ohio · The sheriff's department made
National Guard, the Bureau of an arrest earlier thts year that did
Criminal Identification and Investi- not result from eradication efforts,
gation, the Ohio Attorney Gener- but sheriff's deputies seized
al's office, the Ohio Division of $200,000 and nine pounds of mariNatural Resources and the Meigs juana, according to Soulsby. The
County Sheriff's Department, case is currently J.l!'nding in coUrt.
Friday's martjuana burning is
6,425 marijuana plants with a street
value of between $6.4 million and lhe fourlh or fifth of its kind this
$19.2 million have been destroyed year, said Soulsby. The sheriff's
this year, according to Meigs department destroys plants when
there is no arrest made, leaving no
County Sheriff James Soulsby.
Soulsby said the sheriff's reason to store plants for use as
department has not made any evidence in coUrt.
Eradication programs are funded
anests as a result of the eradication
program, because most of the by a federal grant, and Ohio, which
plants are found in remote areas or
(Continued 011 A-2)

~

for football coach Jack James,
however.
"They do have a good football
team, I'll ~ve lhem that," he said.
(Continued on A·2)

Accident
at mine
kills area
resident
Officials stumped
on mishap's cause
GOING ON DISPLAY ·- One of the art·
works to be displayed In the grand opening of
the Esther Allen Greer Museum is bung in the
gallery by Jim Allen, left, assistant professor of
art at the University of Rio Grande, and Stan
his wife, who became a trustee
emeritus in 1985 and later a Fellow
of the University.
Artists whose work will be featured in the gallery include William
Kortlander, Marilyn Poeppelmeyer,
Donald Roberts, Mary Manusos,
Robert E. Lazuka, Eva Enderlein,
Daniel S. Williams and Brad
Schweiger, all of Athens; Earline

Sporny or the Marshall University art department. The public is invited to a dedication of the
museum on Saturday, Sept. 12 at 2:30 p.m.
(Times-Sentinel pholo).

Allen, Peter Massing, Robert Rowe
and Stan Sporny, all of Huntington,
W.Va.; Linda Einfalt and Frank
Herrmann, both of Cincinnati;
Keith Williams, New Concord;
Gaile Gallatin, Zanesville; Philip
Gearherut, Wheelersburg; and Ron
Wright, Marietta.
Saturday's presentation of "Rus·
sian Cabaret" will feature three

professional actors from the fonner
Soviet Union in an evening of song
and entertainment drawn directly
from the Russian nighJclub scene.
The museum, which also houses
offices, classrooms and the University Archives, was fonnerly known
as Allen House. Buill in 1884, it is
the oldest existing building on campus.

Eradication effort taking
marijuana off the streets

.ASTRO-GRAPH

.

"I lhink everyone should be
proud of them," he said. "They did
an excellent job. The county really
came together."
RVHS Vice Principal Tim Scar·
berry was pleased with lhe turnout
and saw it as an acceptance of the
consolidation.
"!think lhis is a great sign about .
how they feel," he said. "This is the
place for the county to get togelher
for lhe first time and see what's
going to happen. Win or lose,
we're going to stay."
At half time, with the Raiders
leading 16-8, Southwestern High
School graduate Adam Simpson
said he was definitely a Ratders
fan.
"We're looking good, we' re
looking solid," he said. ''Truthfully,
I was against-it (COtlSOlidation) a1 •
first, but llik~ il now. It will be a
lot better sports program for the
kids."
But not everyone was con-

Museum dedication
slated for Saturday

48 Actor Bruct

18 u.. lllrtl1lly

MAI&lt;E SURE NC:l8CC1Y'S
READII'4G OYER 'IQJR

TOUCHDOWN :_ RVHS football fans jump to their feet after
the Raiders score their second touchdown In the second quarter of
play Friday night against Point Pleasant. Pictured are, from left,
Adam SimpsOtt, Jimmy Massie and Kevin Staten. (Times-Sentinel
photo by Kevin Pinson)

40 ~ lnd olmullc
43-lntMpan
45 European

cHitriM

Whether for or against consolidation, over 4,000 people turned
out to see how the new school
would perform in its first public
appearance.
They ftlled the stands on both
sides. People were also sitting on
the grassy banks rather than try to
find a cramped seat in lhe tiers.
Board member Steve Jagers said
after the game thai RVHS had
passed its ftrst test with "flying col-

ors."

The World Almanac:" Crossword Puzzle
ACIIOII

cars parked in the field across from
the school. And they were still
coming.
Gallia County Local School
Board President David Woodall
said he arrived at ten minutes
before 6 o'clock and all of the
choice seats were Jaken.
"I think it's great," he said. "It's
nice to see everyone sitting on the
same side of the field for once."

Opening lead: • 10

fer bid. Three no-trump offered a

80s.

14 S.ctlon1, 92 Pages
A lluHimodll Inc. Nowspapor

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, September 6, 1n2

Vulnerable: North·So··th
Dealer: South
Soutla
2NT

P•rtly cloudy. Highs In Jhelower

The first time
By KEVIN PINSON
Times-Sentinel Staff
CHESillRE - It was 45 minutes until kick off, but it still took
over 20 minutes to crawl through
the Little Kyger Road traffic from
Route 7 to River Valley High
School.
About ten minutes before game
time, Gallia County ~heriff's
deputies reported more than I ,200

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Along the river .............. 111-H
llusiness/Farm ............... DI·H
Classified .......................1)2-7
Deaths .............................. A-3
Editorai ............................ A-4
.Sports ............................. Cl-6
Wealher ..........................A-2

Thousands greet RVHS grid debut

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FOOTBA£.L
6AME
TICICET

UMWA chief Richard Trumka extolls
health care breakthroughs- A-4
James Sands traces the history of an
institution: Kanauga's Drive-In- A-5

Caddie • Tempt • Ebony • Ossify • SPEED
The teen had ~tten savaral traffic tickets so when
he came home w~h one more his Irate father scolded,
"There is more to life than Increasing ~·s SPEED."

VIIFE!

Bucks edge Louisville 20-19- C-1

Have a safe
and happy
Labor Day
holiday

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75 cents

MARIJUANA BURNING - Marijuana
plants burn near tht Ohio Dtp1111111ent or Transportation garage In Pomeroy, tbe result of marijuana eradication efforts by the Ohio National
Guard, the Ohio Attilrney General's office, the

Obki Division or Natural Resources, the Bureau
of Crlmlnalldendflcadon and Investigadon and
the Meigs County Sberifrs DepartmenL ffimesSentinel photo by Jim Glauner)

By AP, Staff Reports
WHARNCLIFFE, W.Va.- An
Ohio man was killed when a heavy
sheet or metal fell on him, a Slate
official said Saturday.
David A. White, 38, Gallipolis,
was the 12th worker to die at a
West Virginia mine this year,
according to the state Office of
Mine Health, Safety and Training.
The accident happened Friday at
a Mingo Logan Coal Co. Mine near
Wharncliffe, said Terry Farley, a
spokesman for the Slate mine safety
office.
The accidenl occurred just out·
side lhe mine as workers tried to
unload and move longwall shields
he said. The shields are used to
protect miners from rock falls
inside the mine.
White was a longwall foreman
atlhe mine, Farley said.
"Somehow, we don't know
how, one of those shields crushed
Mr. White," Farley said.
Calls to Mingo Logan Coal Co.
went unanswered Saturday.
No o~r injuries were reported,
Farley sa1d. The U.S . Mine Safety
and Health Administration and the
slate mine safety office were investigatin~ lhe accident.
Wh1Le, the son of James A.
White, a coach at Kyger Creek and
Point Pleasant high schools who
died in 1967, and Jennie White
Ashley of Cheshire, was well-'
known locally as the owner-openi.:
tor of White's Karate School in
Gallipolis. He was a member or the
First Baptist Church of Gallipolis
and had a~parently relocated to
Chapmanville, W.Va. He and his
wife, the former Lu Ann Folden,
were the parents of four children.
Services will be conducted
Monday in the Willis Funeral
Home, Gallipolis. For more details,
see A-3 of today's edition.
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