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                  <text>Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

hi' . DB Sunday nmes Sentinel

September 8, 1982

Harry Clark retires :

Slowing economy spurs decline
in end of week market activity
By CHET CURRIER
AP Bns'ness Writer
NEW YORK - Stock prices
Slgled Friday in the slowest trad·
U.S ollhc year, regislerin$ a wary
response to unexpected new evldeatc ol weakness in !he economy.
Activity tapered off to a near
standstill in the afternoon as
inn•on got an early start on the
lo!ill..abor Day weekend.
the ·Dow 1ones average of 30
industrials dropped 10.27 to
3~1.93, fmishing the week with a
. . gain ol14.32 points.
• Declining issues held a slight
edJe lllllldvanccs in the daily tal)y
011 the New Y01t Stock Exchange.
Big Board volume came to an
estimiiiCd 124.34 million shares as
of ol p.m. EDT, down from 212.54
million Thursday and the lightest
. lOIII since 76.82 million were trad·
ed ill a post·Thanksgiving session
IMtNOY. 29.
The Labor Deparunem reported
Friday morning lhat nonfann pay·
roD employment fell by 83,000 last
month, rather than posting the
sharp inatase econom1sts had been
expecting.
'WitiKJut a temporary surge from

a government summer jobs proGlaxo Holdings climbed 1/2 to
gram, analysts said the drop in 29-314. A Food and Drug Adminis·
employment would have been even tration advis&lt;wy panel recommend·
mere dramatic.
ed llpp!Oval of the company's drug
The news was taken as a suong Zofran for use against post-operasign that the economy was still tive nausea.
·
struggling to gather forward · Digital Communications Assomomentum as summer · draws ciates, whktt warned !ale Thursday
toward a close.
that its earnings for the current
II sent inrerest rates tumbling in quarter would fall short of analysts'
the credit markets as lraden con- estimates, tumbled 3-1/2 to tS-3/4.
cluded that the Federal Reserve
Bank stocks managed only a
was moving to ease credit condi- mixed showing on the drop in
tions further.
interest rates. JP. Moraan rose 5/8
Rates on short-term Treasury to 60-1/4 and Chemical Banking
bills feU more than 20 basis points, added
1/2 to 33-1/4 but
or hundredths of a percentage BankAmerica lost 1/8 to 43-7/8
point, in some cases to below 3 andCiticorpdropped 1/8 to 16-3/8.
percent. Prices of long-term govFederal National Mongage rose
ernment bonds rose almost $10 for I to 66-1/2, and Federal Home
each $1 ,000 in face value, lowering Loan Mortgage was up 1/8 at 42their yields 10 around 7.28 percent.
7/8.
But brokers said stock-market
Amerada Hess, subject of a ratinvestors' response was more ing downwgracle by a brokerage
equivocal, influenced by worries fum, dropped I to 47-3/4.
about economic growth prospects.
The Nasdaq comPQSite index for
Among actively traded blue the over-the-counter market slipped
chips. Merck rose 5/8 to 48-7/8; 1.44 to 573.44. At the American
General Motors gained 3/8 to 35- Stock Exchange, which had an
1/8; Philip Morris slipped 1/4 to abbreviated session because of a
84-3/4. and International Business rue at a nearby building, the marMachines lost i/8 to 86.
ket value fe11.2S to 384.85.

Ohio Lottery

Cowboys
defeat
Redskins

CHESHIRE - Harry K. Clark ·
retired Aug. I as a purchasing:
assistant in the Stores Depanrriellt ·
at Ohio Valley Electric Corp.'s ·
Kyger Creek plant, Plant Manuer
Nonnan H. Tm:r announced.
Clark joined OVEC in 1954 as a .
guard in the Personnel Depanment •
In 1957 he transferred to the
Stores Department as a stores attendant In 1980 he advanced to
storeroom supervisor and in 1981,
to P!U'Chasing assistant
A member or the American
Legion in Pomeroy, Clark is a Mid· ·
dleport native who served in the
U.S. Army from 194S to 1947 lind
frQm 1950 until 1953. He and his
wife, Frances,vreside in .Minersville.
•

Pick 3:
353
Pick 4:
6767

Super Lotto:
6-7-12-22-23-43
Kicker:
260513

Page4

n. Ylage of O.slllre wl WI

MYSTF;RY FARM- This week's myste11 farm, featured by
tbe Meip Soil and Water Conservation District, is located somewhere In Melp County. Individuals wislling to participate In the
weekly COII~t may do 10 by gness.IDJ. tbe farm's owner. Just mail,
or drop orr 1our guess to the Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
P0111eroy, Ob10, 457", or tbe GaiHpolis Daily Tribune, 825 Third
Ave~ GaiUpoHs, OhiO, 45631, and you may win a $5 prize trom the
Ohio Valley Publishing Co. Leave your name, address and telephone number wltb your card or Jetter. No telephone calls will be
accepted. AU contest entries should be turned In to the newspaper
office by 4 p.m. each Wednesday. In case or a tie, the winner wiD
be chosen by lottery. Next week, a Gallia County farm will be featured by the Gallla Soil ind Water Couservatlon Dlstrid.

Its r9fir Sept............
• T•slay, Sept..._ I, 1992

Vol. 43, No. 115
Copyrlghled 1982

1 Secllon 10 Pogee 25 oonll
A MuiUmodill lric. -poper

at 6:00 PJI. Octoller's ......
wllle Wl•ltsr. . .
...... lllg.. of • ...,
OdoMr 5, 1992 at 7:30P.M.
Public llvlttlf to attiiiiL
Thallk you,
LolsM.Silyder

Army plans to open
another tent city for
Andrew's victims

L----..;a..t:::.:~·TrtasUr;;;;:;;;•iloill
· •.

Producers can apply for loss relief
GALLIPOLIS • Secretary of
Agriculture Edward Madigan said
that the $755 million in emergency
funds for agricultural disaster
announced recently by President
Bush can apply to program crop
tosses incurred in 1990, 1991 , and
1992.
This is in addition to the $995
million disaster assistance for
1990-91 !=lOPS announced by Madipn Jlllllaly 2, 1992
The application period for disaster claims for fall seeded program
~ ~nted in 1991 and harvest·
ed 1n 1992 ill begin September 8
and end October 2, he said.
The application period for producers with losses on other 1992
aops, and b producers with losses from 1990 or 1991 crops ho did
lot previously receive disaster paymelii!J for those losses, ill begin on

October 13 and end February 12,
1993.
Disaster assistance is available
on a per farm basis for any two
years of 1990, 1991, or 1992,"
Madigan said ''The original program provided t995 million for
either 1990 or 1991 No, relief iU
also be provided for fall-seeded
program crops elanted in 1991 for
harvest in 1992.
"Producers ill be eligible to
apply for assistance for 1990. 1991
or !992losses: however, if producers received assistance for any of
those years they may not receive
further assistance for that crop
year. Producers ho receive payments for fall-seeded program
crops will only be eligible for assistance for 1992 crop losses."
Producers with qualifying gross

revenues of less than $2 milliOn per
year may me claims for losses of
participating and nonparticipating
program and non·proS~Bm crops.
"Pr(Kiucers with crop insurance
must have had losses greater than
3S percent," Madigan said. "Producers without aop insurance must
have had losses greatec than 40 percent. Producers with 1992 crop
losses may be required, under certain conditions, to purchase crop
insurance fer 1993."
Madigan said producers intending· to file for assistance should
begin to assemble their records
now. so they ill be ready hen the
official application period opens
and they should contact their county Agricultural Stabilization and
Conservation Service office for
additional information.

ON
NOWI
RUTLAND ROYALTY ·Adam Lambert,
lett, was selected Prince Rutland, with Tyler
Barnes and Jamitha Willford selected Mister

divulge terms of the agreement
until his membership had a chance
to vote on it
"I can teD you both sides arc in
complete agreement," he said in a
telephone interview.
He said the metal stamping
plant would go back on full-production starting Sunday morning if
union members approved !he con1!3Ct offer.
Gerald A. Knechtel, vice president of personnel for GM North
American Operations said in a ,
Slatement: "After nine (lays of
intense bargaining we and the
UA W were able to reach an equitable solution to the local problem

Unit plans zoning workshop
MARIETTA - A workshop on

rural and small10wn zoning will be
held on Friday. September II from
1-3:30 p.m. at the Washington
County Career Center in Marieua.
The workshop is designed to
introduce citizens and planners

·Timber...
(Continued from D-1)
Consideration must be given to
: proper spacing between potential
· crop uees. A crop tree IS one that 1s
· to be grown to maturity and not
· removed befcre the final harvest It
· is usually selected on the basis of
its size, quaUty, and location with
respect to other liees. Crop trees
are straight and tall; they arc valij·
able species free from serious
• defect
Trees selected for removal
would be trees damaged mechanically or naturally, trees of poor
form diseased uees, trees wi1h
· multiple stems, trees that are lim by
with a large spreading crown and
trees that have excessive defect.
Some trees called weed 1rees that
have little or no sale value should
also be removed. Some of these
species include muscle wood, black
Jlllll. ailanthUS, CIC.
Keep in mind that cutting and
removinl trees from the woodland
risks dainage to the residual stand
• and soil compaction or other dislllTballces, depending on t)le type of
: equipment used to 1ransport har; vest£d material, may result Felling
} should be done with care to avoid
· bRaking lOpS or main branches of
crop trees.
An acre of land can produce a
, cataia amount of tree growth. One
• 1!1-.e pb .of TSI and thinning i.!
: io obtain the correct number of
. treeS per acre to most effectively
; lllilize the growth capacity.
:
If you would like more infonna; &amp;ion or a consultation with a
' 10rcs1cr about your woodlands, call
: 446.-8687. All SCS and Gallia
l SWCD programs and services are
; offered on a nondiscriminatory
' blsis wit!Mlut regard to race. color,
: !Wionll origin, religion, se~ . age,
: nwital stabiS, or handicap.

•

who are not zoning specialists to
the basics of zoning. There is no
registration fee and no prior registration is required. It will be spon·
sorcd by the Ohio Plannin$ Conference, a statewide assoc1ation of
professionals and citizens interest·
ed in orderly development.
Topics include an overview of
zoning, historical perspective and
Ohio's zoning laws and resources.
Concurrent sessions will be held
for people interested in zoning in
smaller municipalities and rural
areas. Topics will include procedures to establish and admmister
zoning and zoning experiences of
local municipalities and 10wnships.
Speakers will include Robert
Eichenberg, planning director of
the Athens County Planning Commission: James Cobban, Ohio University geography professor; Terry
Jacobs, office of local government
services. Ohio Department of
Development; David Allor. director
of the University of Cincinnati
School of Planning; Don Buckley,
director of the Clennont County
Planning Commission; Melvin
Stedman, Athens roning inspector;
Bob Badger, Marietta city engineer; Roben Nau, Buffalo Township (Noble County) trustee, and
Joseph Clark, Buffalo Township
Zoning Commission ~dent.
Moderators will 1nclude Vijay
Gadde, Buckey~ Hills-Hockmg
VaUey Regional Development Dis·
trict, and Ray Schindler, retired
OSU district extension community
development specialist.

at the GM Lordstown Fabrication
Plant .
"As is customary, we will not
be releasing details of that settle·
ment pending ratifiCation by local
union membership."
The strike halted paris produc·
lion 11 the Lordstown plant and has
led to at least 42,900 layoffs at
other GM plants.
The automaker bad closed nine
plants by the end of the night shift
late Friday because of a ·lack of
parts. The P.lants are l~ated in
Oklahoma City; Wentzville, Mo.;
Flint, Mich.; Baltimore: Orion
Township, .Mich.; Sprin~ ~ill.
Tenn.; Lansmg, Mich.; W,lmlngton, Del.; 111d a plant adjacent to
the pans plant in·Lonlstown.
The company said it was unsure
when the rune plants iclled by the
strike would be reopening.
"The strike was unfonunate, but
allowed us to resolve a number of
key competitive local issues within
that plant," Knech~ said "Just as
importantly, this agreement docs
not impinge upon our ability to
meet our restructuring lllrgets while
providing job and income security
and addressing other needs of the
employees at that operation.''
. The company saicl almost 2,000
Ohio employees would be laid off
if the strike continued through
Tuesday.
GM and Locaf 1112 negotiators
reached an agreement Thursday
averting a walkout by the local at
the GM assembly plant at Lordstown scheduled for Friday.

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P'olicies pertaining to the elementary basketball programs and
field trips for students, kindergarten through sixth grades, have
been adopted br the Meigs Local
Board of !lducauon.
According to the new sports
policy, all students are eligible to
participate in basketball when the
program fll'St starts, but in order to
stay eligible, they must be passing
in math, reading, English, and one
other subject
If they are not passing in the
required subjects then they will not
be permitted to particiP.'!te in practice or games. Eligibility will be
checked on a weekly basis. The
rule applies to both basketball players and cheerleaders.

FLORIDA CITY, Fla. (AP) Each morning before dawn, a line
forms in a sweltering blue tent,
where canvas cots sit on a gravel
floor. Here are the s.ick, the
stunned, the ailing - the victims
of Hurricane Andrew.
Some of those heading into
Peggy Mankiewich 's makeshift
clinic have broken bones or bruises
they've ignored since the storm
two weeks ago. Others have infec·
tions or illnesses developed from
living in leaky, rubble -strewn
homes.
The hurricane has created a dou- ·
ble health care emergency: sick
people who need help and an ailing
medical network too weak to treat
all of them.
"The whole health care system
in this community disappeared,"
said Dr. Ricl!ar4 Ott, pr~ident of
the Broward County Medical Association. "Doctors' offices were
wiped out. Even if they weren't
damaged, they were out of the loop
because phones weren't wcrlcing."
State officials say most doctor's
offices in this community, about 20
miles south of Miami, were
destroyed, and at least half those in
neighboring Homestead.
.· Deering Hospital, in south Dade
County, suffered about $4 million

damage, including the loss of major
medical equipment, a spokeswom.
an said. It is expected to be closed
for about two months, though about
20 doctors are offering limited care
from trailers outside.
To fill the gaps, IS temporary
clinics and three Veterans Adminisb'ation mobile buses arc operating
in hurricane-battered communities,
saiil Mike WiUiams, chief of emergency m¢dical services at the state
Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services.
Six clinics are being run by
Humana Inc .. a national for-profit
health care company. They are
staffed by volunteers such as
Faustino Gonzalez, an internist
from West Palm Beach.
"How could I not come?" said
Gonzalez, an immigrant from
Spain who was examining a fourmQntli-pregnint farm worker in
Florida City. "We got su lucky,
those of us who did not get hit I'm
in this countty 23 years. I know it
sounds corny, but it's a way of paying back everything I've got in
America.''
Hundreds of other medical volunteers ·from across the country
also have fanned out across hospi~ls and clinics in the stonn-ravaged area. Some say the hurricane

A RaciQe.man was cited after a two-vehicle wreck on Ohio 124
Salurday aro.und 4:SO p.m.
,
Accordin&amp; to a report from the Oallia-Meias Post of the State
Highway Patrol, Roy L Bailey U, 18, 50330 Ours Rd., Racine. was
westbound on Ohio 124 and suuclr. the rear of a farm tractor driven
by Joseph A. Swain, 58,46870 SR 124, Racine.
. ·
Bailey and Swain were transported by the Meigs Couilty Emergency Medical Service to Veterans Memorial Hospital where they
were treated and releucd.
Damage 10 Bailey'~ 198S Chevrolet~~ and Swain's 19S2
Ford fann uactor .was listed as heavy and disabling.
Bailey was cited by the patrol for failure to maintain assured
clear distance and failure to ws a safety belt
·

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t:tiT4li"HI·I
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superintendent's office and
approved before a trip is taken.
The policy states that funds for
the activity trips may come from
donations, principals' activities
funds or fund raisers, but that sbldents j n grades kinder11arten
through sixth cannot be rcqui,!ed to
take part in fund raisers in order to
qualify 10 go on a field trip.
Repeated trips 10 the same location arc diS(;auraged and students
in the lower grades, kindergarten
through second grade, are not to be
on the bus more than for a 100 mile
radius. The policy excludes reachers who take students on a field trip
after the school year is completed
when they are not considered Wlder
Meigs Local's jurisdiction.

Card, who is in charge of the
federal relief effort, headed to
Washingion to brief President Bush
and members of Congress about
the situation in Florida and
Louisiana, as well as Guam, which
was hit by Typhoon Omar last
week.
In Louisiana, Agriculture Secre·
tary Edward Madigan was to
review farm damage today and
Marilyn Quayle, the vice president's wife, was to have lunch with
Red Cross volunteers and relief
recipients.
For some people in 1hc zone of
destruction, there was a sense that
the crisis was passing and that it
was time to resume their lives,
however altered they might be. ·
In hard-hit Cutler Ridge, Bob
Beolet mowed his front lawn Sunday and then moved his neighbor's
lawn Monday. "It's beginning to
look more like the old neighbor·
hood," he said. Down the slreet,
garbage crews loaded debris into
dumptrucks and conlraCton nailed
tarpaper over holes in rooftopl!.
New federal and state a1d centers opened, handing out millions

of dollars in food stamps, disaster
grants and interest-free loans.
The Salvation Army appealed
for volunteers and asked people to
donate items other than clothinJt.
Spokes man Jim Minter said tho
tons of clothing being shipped iQ
are much more than is needed by
s10rm victims.
:
He urged that people sepd
money, as well as baby items, cspc:cially diapers and baby food. Card
suggested construction material,
medication and insect repeUents.
The Army Corps of Engineers
said it had installed plastic roofmg
on nearly 1,100 homes and was
malting another 16.2 million square
feet of plastic roofmg available. .
An estimated 18,000 United
Way volunteers helped with the
cleanup over the weekend. Much of
the work fell on·the 27,000 military
II'OO(IS in the area.
The tent camps began to take on
the characteristics of real cities,
with amenities that included a bal:·
her shop at the largest one, Harris
Field. It had 1,2SO residents Monday night and Red Cross volunteers
were 111r11ing people away.

has, ironically, made i1 easier for
some people to get medical attention.
"We' re seeing a 101 of relatively
poor people and we're convinced
they're getting better access to
health care than they did before the
hurricane," said Ou, whose association has been among the volunteer
groups working in the area.
.
Mobile units also have been dispatched to those reluctant to seek
help: elderly shut-ins who won't
leave their homes, fearful of looters; fann wolkers who don't speak
English; illegal aliens scared of
immigration authorities.
. Though many of the 250,000
people left homeless by Hurricane
Andrew are living outdoors or in
shelters, and tons of garbage have
accumulated, the area has been free
of mllior health problems.
"What we're seeing is primary
health care problems - runny
noses, sore throats." 'Williams said.
"Ir an orthopedic surgeon or a
b'auma s~ want to come down
here, they re going to get bored
very quickly."
Many in'juries are related to
rebuilding efforts or life in dam·
aged homes - chain saw cuts,
nail$ in the feet, dehydration, infec·
. Continued on page J

MONDAY'S GOAL· Volunteers beJ.ln to
put tbe root on the bouse they were building
Monday for a Reserve, La., family whose home
was destroyed when a Hurricane Andrew relat-

ed tornado bit the area Aug. 25. The volunteers
began work oa the project late Friday. Tbey
were bopine lo have It finished late last night.
(AP)

Bush, Clinton cast race as
choice between hope vs. fear
WASHINGTON (AP) - When
they're not busy wrapping themselves in Harry Troman's mantle,
President Bush and Bill Clinton arc
casting their newly opened fall
campaign as ''a choice between
hope and fear," each claiming his
stake to the more positive choice.
To George Bush, "Governor
Clinton waniS to scare American
workers so he can slip into omc.e
with the failed tax-and-spend poli·
cies of the past. ·
"We can do worse," Bush says.
"You can't trust Clinton and Gore.
They have nothing to run on but
negativism and fear."
Not so, says the Democrat:
''This tlection provides Americans
their clearest choice in a generation: a choice between hoPQ and
fear ....
"We arc running on vision and
hope," he says.

Those were the. mess.iges Bush
and Clinton trumpeted Monday on
what has been the b'aditional Labor
Day kickoff 10 the fall presidential
campaign.
But this year it was just another
full day in a campaign that Bush
said "has been going on about I0
months too long."
Their running mates also debet·
ed in absentia, IIIJUing job opponunities versus cnVIl'OOmenial protec·
lion.
AI Gore, in Labor Day speeches
in Detroit, said, "The only lime
Bush and lVice President Dan)
Quayle slltrt thinking about your
jobs is when they are scared that
their jobs arc on the line."
Quayle began a three-day 'Western swing. He acknowledged California's economic troubles but predicted voters would, in the end, be

uqable 10 support a candidate about
whom they had "grave" characla'
questions.
After concentrating Monday on
key battleground states in the Mid·
west, the presidential candidates
and their running mates scattered
today. Bush was 10 address B'nai
B'rith in Washington, while
Quayle con1inued his battle for
California; Clinton campaigned in
Connecticut while Gore toured
Texas' Rio Grande Valley.
Clinton , in former President
Truman's home 10wn of Indcpen- ·
dence, Mo., said "we tried it their
way for a dozen years now . In
1980, America had the hiKhest
wages in the world, and now we're
thirteenth. For more than 10 years,
most Americans and most people
lisrening to me today have worked
longer work weeks for less money
to pay more for the basics of life."

...----Local brief__, Ohioans celebrate Labor Day, say goodbye to summer
.
.
Racine man cited in wreck

SOLUflONS

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The policy states that the administration of the basketball program
will be done by elected coaches.
Each building will pick one coach
to he on the committee and problems arising in any school will be
directed to that committee.
In order to participate in a basketball practice or a game, a student must be in school for half of
the day with an excused absence
for the other half.
The policy further limits practices to I 1/2 hours twice a week
and to school days.
Field trips now musrbe correlated to educational objectives.
according to the new policy adopted by the Board of Education. An
application must be filed with the

HOMESTEAD, Fla. (AP) The Army announced it was open·
ing another tent city for refugees
from Hurricane Andrew, even as
relief officials claimed to have
turned a corner from crisis to
reconstruction.
Military officials said Monday
they would open a tent city at the
Miccosukee Indian Reservation on
the fringe of the Everglades. The
Miccosukee tribe's huts and trailers
were badly damaged in the s10rm.
The five existing tent cili es
filled up suddenly over the Labor
Day weekend as authorities closed
shelters in schOQis, which are being
readied for the delayed beginning
of the school year next week.
After the holiday weekend,
which saw thousands of volunteers
head to hurricane-ravaged sections
of south Florida to help clean up,
officials proclaimed a new phase in
the mass1ve stonn relief effort
"I'm not ready 10 declare victory," U.S. Transportation Secretary
Andrew Card said, "but we've
made dramatic progress and we're
continuing to move forward. The
community spirit is rerrific."

Hurricane's legacy: Sick people
and an ailing health care system

See Puzzle on Page D,2
ACROSS
I. Predict 5. Cable 7. Plateau 8. Amuse 10. Oalh II. Cheerful
13. Racket 14. Coping 17. Delivery 19. Flat 21 . Satin 22. Concern
23. Tany 24. Satisfy

and Miss Rutland, during Saturday's annual
Rutland Street Festival.

Meigs board adopts new policies

GM, local reach tentative agreement
LORDSTOWN (AP) - Nego·
tiators from GeiiMII Mo10rs Corp.
and United Auto Workers Local
1714 reached a tentative contract
agreement early Saturday ~fter a
nine-day slrike. both Sides satd. .
A ratifiCalion vole by the strik·
ing 2,400 members was scheduled
for 2 p.m. today m Youngstown,
said Local vice president John
Fredrick.
Neither side would elaborate on
the terms of the agreement
Kef issues in the strike were the
hiring of non-union workers and
GM's plan to close a tool-and-die
shop where 240 people work.
Fredrick said he couldn't

Clearing tonight. Low In midSUs. Wednesday, sunny. High In
mid-80s.

PrietO apply 11 po~lclpa11ng llortollnd dtlltrl

Sal• Pril:ll End 1/21/92 bcepl WMit
..~

.

. · 11 The Alloclated Press

. Oh1oans saying soodbye to
liummer had to conrend wilh spotty
rain; hilh humidity and tempera·
tures In the low 80s while celebrat·
ing Laber Day.
·Intermittent downpours were
blamed tor a smaller-than-usual
crowd at the annual Rlverfest fire •
works display along the Ohio River
Monday night. Police estimated
that crowd• lining the river bankS
in Cincinnati and Newport and
Covingtllll, Ky., clidn't qwle add up
to the more than SOO,OOO who

watched in previous years.
, Cincinnati police LL Tom Streicher said 137 alcohol- and drugrelated arrestS had been made on
the Ohio side of the river by midevening. Newport police officer
Paul Bardo sa1d the crowds were
relatively quiet on the Kentucky
side.
lWiicr in Cincinnati, Democmt·
ic ~tial contender Bill Clin·
ton and his runnins mate, Tennessee Sen. AI Oore, l!tcnded an
AFL-CIO picnic at Coney bland
lliiiUSCment perk.

In Toledo, 25,000 rubber ducks
took to the water 10 raise money for
a variety of charities. Participants
in the Great Maumee River Duck
Race depended on the current to
sweep their ducks to viciOiy.
Tens of thousands of people
watched aerial acrobatics on the
last ~Y of tile Cleveland National
Air, Show. No one was hurt when
an F-16 jet was forced 111 make an
emergency landing.
In Lordstown, the Ocner~l
Motors stamping plant was back in

business after a nino-day lltrike lhat
crippled production nationwide. ·A
United Auto WOlters official. Aid
the union hopes the strike that
ended Saturday will set • ·]IOiilive
~ for national conii'ICI nego~~~.
lionS next year.
.
Parades feature' aspiriJia oflicO,.
holders 1nd lributes to worlcen
altiiCied spectnn in 1 numb« o1
communities.
The Slate }ijghway Patrol llid
at least 19 people were tilled cin
Ohiow~i£':jys during the Libor
Day
•

�''

Tuesday, September 8, 1992

.commentary
.

'

'

The Dally Sentinel

.•

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, September 8, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Cooler temperatures expected arnund Ohio

OHIO Weather

'

Crime causes trauma centers to overflow

funding for juvenile justice pro- Dr Raben Bass, tlle District's new
WASHINGTON - By 9:30 on
grams. funding that Congress has di;ector of Emergency Medical
a r~ent Saturday night, the only
fought to restore. But there's plenty Services, who has won wide praise
public hospital in the murder capiof congressional culpability, during biseighl-month tenure.
tal of the countty closed its trauma
including the failure 10 pass the
A total of 60 of Ainerica's 370
care doors to new palieniS.
best trauina care legislation ever designated trauma cenrers closed in
A half hour earlier, the emerinvented. It's called the Bntdy BiD, the fLve years prior to 1991. Since
gency room staff at D.C. General
and it would simply establish a most trauma patients are young,
scrambled to ready the operating
room for a new wave of arrivals: D.C. General wind up. "But it national waiting period on handgun and the bulk of gunshot and stabROBERT L. WINGETI
three young men who had been bothers me that the trauma never purchases so they don't get sold to bing victims (abQut 80 pen:ent) are
Publlsller
uninsured, trauma care ts causmg a
wounded by gunfire at a nearby . SlOPS, that hospitals such as D.C. felons.
General
and
us
need
to
close
down
Since
the
Senate
last
acred
on
financial hemorrhage for most hasintersection. By 9:15, the men were
because
we're
overwhelmed
by
the bill, some 17,000 men, women pitals. Communil_y ho.spitals ~e
safely behind the door of an operatCHARLENE HOEFLICH
PAT WHITEHEAD
ttauma."
and
children have been killed by shutting down thelf umts, leavmg
ing
rocm,
which
is
run
by
doctors
General
Manager
A"'etmt PllbBsber/Controller
At the same lime that this city's hand$W!S. That includes 489 mur- public and teaching hospilals to fill ·
and nurses with the awesome effiweekend Wl!tfiors were closing ders m Washington D.C. last year . the void.
ciency of an auto assembly line.
U!Tl'I!RS OP OPINION are welcome. They obould be le11 than 300
down
the public hospital, the FBI and 293 so far in 1992.
"The last thing you hear as a
When a patient who had overwords. All lellal are subject to editing and must be oigned with nUDe,
was
weighing
in with what aitnost
You
couldn't
convince
residents
complaint
by physicians who handosed
on
narcotics
was
rushed
into
llddreaa llld lelepllone number. No unsigned letten will be pub!ilbed. Lett&lt;n
seems
the
obvious:
Violent
crime
is
who
are
caught
in
the
ni~tly
crossdie
uauma
patients is that they
the
emergency
room
ar
9:30,
this
sbould be iD JOOd tate,lddlmiag ilsues, not penonaliija.
out
of
·
c
ontrol.
The
latest
annual
fire,
but
Washington
ts
actually
haven't
paid
their bill.'' says Dr.
state-of-the-art trauma center had
FBI
surveys
show
t!tat
~
ju~e
lucky.
There
are
five
hospitals
in
Nabil
Atweh,
director of trauma
reached its threshold and sent word
arrest
rate
for
violent
cnrne
m
the
the
62-square-mile
city
classified
care
at
Bridgeport
Hospital in
out to emergency services personUnited
StaleS
surged
'}.7
percent
in
as level one 1rauma centers. Com- Bridgepon, Conn.
nel all over the city that D.C. GenMore often, trauma surgeons
eral was closed for the evening. the last decade, or that the violent pare that with the state of Virginia,
Pallents would have to be rerouted crime rate overall reached a record which has five certified trauma complain about the senseless street
high last rear.
.centers serving the entire stale, or violence that keeps trauma centers
to nearby h&lt;ispitals.
In thts election year, when with Houston, where one trauma busier than ever. "We have some
find the drive down U.S. Roote 33
Dear Editor:
"When we're full, you don't
The following is a letter written · to Pomeroy a most interesting and have lime to be frustrated," says 1. Republicans are trying 10 wm law center is responsible for a 620- people, we call them magnets,"
says Atweh. •'They seem to have a
to Governor and Mrs. Voinovich enlighrening trip through the past Duncan Harvid, a trauma surgeon and order into a "wedge" issue, square mile area.
"We have more trauma centers predisposition to attracting shrapon June 15 of this year. As of its and pre~nt of Appalachian Ohio. at Washington Hospital Center, it's ironic that the Bush adrniniatrapublication the author is unaware If you honor Meigs County by its where some of the overflow from tion has ~tedly sought to slash in D.C. than most. staleS do," says nel somehow." Harvie! says that
addition to the tour we can assure
he sometimes has patieniS who recof any response.
you a genuinely appreciative recepognize him from earlier visiiS to the
Dear Governor Voinovich:
trauma unit.
It has recently come to our tion from the friendly residents of
U.S . urban warfare wouldn't
auention (through an article in the the "Heart of the Valley".
If, on the other hand, you should
pale in comparison to some of the
Athens Messenger) that you and
civil wars in the Middle East. But
Mrs. Voinovich will be leading a decline our invitation for whatever
Atweh, who began his surgical
"See Ohio First" weekend familiar· reason (and in li~ht of Meigs County's
recent
reJeCilon
as
a
new
career
in Beirut and then continued
ization tour through Southeastern
prison
sile,
we
are
not
particularly
to Brooklyo, N.Y., before settling
Ohio for travel journalists from
in the most receptive of moods for
in Connecticu~ St:eS one mitigating
Ohio and throughout the nalion.
In reviewing the itinemry for the answers not in the affirmative),
OPERA~R,
difference. "Brooklyn in many
aspects had many similarities to
tour . which stopS at some wonder· please don't feel compelled to send
Beirut, except that the war was
ful sires in our region or the stale - a statehouse underlin~ in y~ur
it becomes obvious that your staff stead. We simply haven t the tune
ongoing, rather than S!Xlf!ldic·" .
has provided you with misinforma· to waste playing host 10 and chitWhat Atweh never wttnessed m
.
chatting
with
powerless
bureaulion and that a grievous omission
Beirut was gunshot victims as
has been made in the final deternli· crats sponing disingenuous smiles .
young as 1I donning bullet-proof
and briefcases full of appeasing
vests, carrying beepers and packing
nation of your tour destinations.
It is inconceivable that a 10ur of platitudes.
weapons that are so expensive
We ask simply thltt you view the
Southeasrem Ohio - especiaUy one
some police departments can't
with a planned visit to the Ohio materials we have sent and that you
afford to buy them.
River • could be conducted without give our proposal serious considerOver Labor Day weekend,
a stop in the very "Heart of the ation. Please, do not write us off as
Atweh is bracing for an onslaughL
Valley", Meigs County.
ignorant hillbillies or fools. The
"Labor Day is a nightmare. The
Meigs County and Pomeroy, the last Governor to grace our fair
alcohol level in general goes up.
County seat, exude the very county with his preseuce was Dick
Anybody with a gun will be much
essence of Southeastern Ohio: Celeste during his second successmore likely to use it." he told our
rolling farm land, wooded hills and ful bid for the S!alehouse. That
associate Jan Moller. "To me. part
rugged ravines, miles of rich flood "visit" was perceived as exactly
of being a trauma specialist is tryplain, endless S1reiCbes of virtually what it was - blatant dection year
ing to lobbr legislatures about the
untouched river frontage, hilly politicking. In this season of voter
problems o ttaunta care, and many
curvy, bumpy, narrow roads (inad· discontent it is a wise man who
of them are not just a machine that
equate for industry and prisons - recognizes an opportunity and
we need. Many of them are laws
perfect for tourism) and the epito- seizesu~ it
that we iteed Oike) gun conb'OI."
We tt known that this letter is
me of the nineteenth century river
Copyright, 1992, Unitoo Feature
written by individuals who serve in
town.
Syndicate, Inc.
Pomeroy (as evidenced by the no official capacity nor hold any
accompanying brochure) is stngu- position of authority in Meigs
lar among Ohio River towns and is County. We are but concerned resia "must see" for the adventurous dents of an economically
and inquisitive traveler. It simply depressed, though strikingly beaunAs part of -my determined effort I line him up with country music got TVs and radios, they can't bear didn't gel it. Then Bush talked
cannot be dismissed offhand from a ful county who wish only to to bring you campaign news you stars and ghostwrite articles lite that stuffl"
about Clinton as a "hard dog to
tow that claims 10 visit Southeast- receive a fait shake in creatinJ a can use. I have traCked down and the one we did f&lt;r Country AineriBecause of his annoying habit k off the pcxch."
em Ohio and "see" the Ohio River. beuu environment in which to live interviewed the media maestro in ca magazine in 1990. Yes, that was of speakin' in fragmeilts and let1'ays Bobby Ray: ''!thought he
Meigs County is, and has been and raise our children.
charge of President George Bush's me who come up with all that stulJ tins his mmd flit hither and yon was mixing up a rhetorical phrase
for many years, one of Ohio's
The inclusion of Meigs County Good-01' -Boy image.
about how he listens to Reba with while be is talking, Bush also tends we •ve been drilling him on poorest and mOSI ovedooked coun- in the Southeastern Ohio edition of
He is Bobby Ray Bowman, a 'my dog Millie' laying by his side. to mess up the phrases Bobby Ray 'Will a tall dog drink out of a rain
. ties. We ·are now in the embt)'onic the Governor's "See Ohio First" 41-year-old laborer' who otherwise
"You think it's easy, trying to tries to pound into his head.
stage of developing a vtable tour is but a small step toward that 10ils the oil fields when the lll81ket keep the Bible-totm in line at the "Remember that thing he said in barrel?' - but apparently that
tourism trade. What a shot-in-the- reality, but a very imponant step, is up, and works as a highway same time you're trying U&gt; woo the 1988 about 'Hee Haw ' being his wasn't it. We go on over to Branarm it would be to that fledgling nonetheless, for all the residents of maintenance specialist when it is likes of Tanya Tucker, an unwed favorite television show? We son, Mo., the new mecca of country music, and Llie president does
concern if the Governor of Ohio Me~s County.
not His expertise is removing ~ mother of two, or Lee GreenwOOd, worked on that one for weeks. He the dog-porch thing again. He tells
Smeerely,
would simply acknowledge Mei's
armadillos from the hi$ftway.
who's on his fifth wife? It tires the kept callin~ it 'Haw Hee.' And that the crowd: 'So you tell Gov. ClinCounty as a point of interest m
Roger and Mary Gibnore,
Bobby Ray's task ts 10 make a mind,I'U tell you.
hog call thing Bill Clinton does - ton and that gridlocked Congress, if
Southeastern Ohio by including it
Pomeroy
"And after all this work, what 'Whoooooooo. Pig! Sooooooooiel' you can't run with the big dogs,
white-bread Episcopalian who
in this "See Ohio First" tour.
.S. 'ro announce the inclusion owns a $2.2 million mansion on the does Bush do? He goes up to Con- We try 10~1Bush to do it, it stay under the porch.'
Ai further inducement we have of PMeigs
County in the "See Ohio coast of Maine look and sound like necticut, which he did in August, comesout • ~
,
•...
"I'm standing there trying to
included with this letter the Meigs ·First" tour pleaSe contact Paula a genuine country boy to people and he tells them people he is a
Bobbr Ray
.
y cited the figure out what he's tallcing abou~
County, The Heart of the Valley 1'111K:ker, Executive -Director of the wbo reside south of St Louis. Bush native son.
dad was a senator clog schtick Bush was on right after
video, described by your own Meigs County Chamber of Com- helps out by claiming a Houaton from this swe, be says. 'We grew the Houston convention. The presi- but then something happens that
Development Director, Donald merce at (614)992-5005 . To hotel room as his permanent resi- up down the way' - referring 10 dent flew to Woodstock, Ga.• for tells me it really don't make any ·
Jakeway, as the bestiOIIrism video announce the rejection - oh...don't dence (it's for tax purposes, but the Greenwich. Or be stopS off around an ~ with Newt Gingrich, difference. When Bush starts bab- · ·
in the State. Mr. Jakeway. himself, bother. As with the recent prison staff brings out the family pictures Dallas-Fort Wonh, like be did last and 11 was pouring rain. Bush bling on porches and dogs, this
has stated that the video is used in site rejection, we'll know Meigs the few nights a year Bush is December, and he has some chicle- ripped off hts Cleves &amp; Hawkes good ol' boy turns to me and
his department as an instructional County is not included when we there). The problem is, says Bobby en-fried steak with some of the tie, threw it into the crowd, and smiles and says, 'Hails Bails.' that
Bush boy is all right, don't chew
1001 for other counties inrerested in· hear about it on the news.
boys and talks about jobs. And he started ranting, "If you want 10 see thank?'
Ray, Bush keeps screwing up.
producing their own tourism video"I work my butt off trying to offers to pay, and he pulls out a a rainbow you've goi to take a little
It may be of interest to note that
"It's times like that, makes it all
tapes. We ask that you please take while our esteemed Governor once make this man look down home. I wad of twenties and says, camel'&amp;'l rain." He was really repeating a
worthwhile."
20 minutes from your busy sched- again ignores Meigs County be is drill him on driving trucks and eat· rolling, 'I'm loaded.'
countty music lyric be had heard,
(C)I992
NEWSPAPER
ule and view the videotape. We're leaving Friday (Sept. 4) for a 21 ing pork rinds. I advance hiJ bob"Now what the hail does he said Bobby Ray, but most people ENTERPRISE ASSN.
sure that after doing so you ' II day tow of Southeast Asia to court white quail hunts down in Beeville. think, the people down South don't
underslalld why Meigs County and the leaders of Kovernment onrl
Pomeroy should be included m lhe industry in six foreign nations.
tour.
They get 21 days and we can't get
Pomeroy and Meigs County are a couple of hours! It seams our
located a mere 30 minutes from George (Voinovich) has taken a
Athens and one hour from Mariet- lesson from that other George
Then: are real · differences ..
If you think of the presidential - - - - - - - - - - my feUow ~Dilcrs in that journalista. Be assured your entourage will (Bush) on how to ignore the home- campaign of 1992 either as a soap.
between
the president and his chal·
tic vineyard, the Republicans
Ienger
on
domestic
issues,
but
little
front.
assembled in Texas expressly
opera, a country song or the lead
.
story in the National Enquirer, it George Bush and the Republicans believed that good women stay at distance between the two of them
when
it
comes
to
the
specifics
of
.
i
helps. Otherwise, what has been tripled the ante. The legions of the home, raise the children, say "yes, .
,
going on is utterly inexplicable, an Religious Right, up from their sir" when their husbands speak tbeir economic plans. Generalizations
and
va{Ue
promises
take
the
·
'
absurdist play in which the lead deathbed of 1988, ,neered and and vote for the GOP. All other
place
of
detailed
programs.
It's
not
characters talk past each other, and snarled their way through the ·oop women are aodless whores who are
the set, constructed for .drama, Convention in Houston liko so individually and cpllectively easy to be enthusiastic about a
By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Tuesday, Sept. 8, the 252nd day of 1992. There are 114 days clashes with the nonsense down- many Count Draculas. Pat Roben- responsible for drug addiction, high new-boy challenger when he .. !
stage. Or perhaps what we have son lives! Jerry Falwell, b9m apin unemployrneat and the disintegra- doesn'! seem to be any more will- ·' ·
left in the year.
been enduring is simply a try-Oiil for politics! To mangle 111 old iiike. tion of Yugoslavia. It's OK for a ing Ul bite the fiscal bullet than the
Today's Highlight in History:
One hundred years ago, on Sept. 8, 1892, an early version of "The tour through the provillcea during the Christians assembled at Jlolu- woman to get a good education, known, though shopworn, incumPledge of Allegiance" appeared in "The Youth's Companion." It wentt the dog days of summer, witb ton knew that Jesus CIWiit believed Marilyn Quayle sCented to be say- bent. The economic game plan
" I pledge allegiance to my flag and to the republic for which it stands; September and October finally in forgiving hiJ enemies, but .theY ing. It's not OK for her to use it to Ross Perot offered from the polili·
cal grave continues 10 be the
get llld hold a job.
offering a finished produet for the also !mew that He was wrong.
one nation indivisible, with liberty and justice for all."
unmatched model against which
;
As
has
been
frequently
noted,
voters' verdict.
George Bush, who worked in
On this date:
the
offerings
of
both
the
president
'
Whatever else it has been, this subservient harness with that for- George Bush, exuding the aura of
In 1664, the Dutch surrendered New Amsterdam 10 the British, who
and
Gov.
Clinton
should
be
judged.
:
~
past month has been a vivid mer adulrcret, Ronald R~. for Jimmy Caner in Republican drag,
renamed it New Yode.
As for international affairs, the , ;
gave the high lign is nevertheless tunning as Harry
reminder
of something the great eight long
In 1900, Galveston, Texas, was strUck by a hurricane that lcilled about
campaign
offers less a dialpgue
reporter and writer David Halber- and "family values" became the Truman. But Truman "gave· 'em
6,000 peaple.
than a duet Bill Clinton is terrified
In 1921, Margaret Gorman of Washington, D.C., was crowned the first stam once noted while he was cov. party's officialrnctif .:...:. if only for hell"; the president is giving us of
being outflanked on the patrio,
whoppers.
not
the
least
cxttaordia
few
weeks.
It
wu
a
little
awkering the bloody conflict in the
Miss America in Atlantic City, NJ.
.
tism
and
nationai
·
~CCurity
front,
•
Congo 30 yean ago. "0. thing iJ ward, since it came llrnollln 1111· llllY his CIIIIJIIip 's repealed insis·
· In 1930, the comic strip "Blondie" fltSl ~·
'
having
warcbed
previous
Demo.
.
dem with open aBoptiona about reoco that Bill CUn1011 as governor
In 1935, Sen. Huey P. Long, the "Kingfish 'of Louisiana politics, wps certain,'' he WIOie I friend. ''If
possible sexual escapade&amp; by the of Artanw was responsible for cralic candidates be eaten alive on · ·'
go away from the Conao for a
shot and mortally wounded; be died two days later.
In 19S2, 40 years ago, the Ernest Hemingway novel "The Old Man weeks. and then come bact, nodt- president in yeara go~e ,by, but 128 tax llld fee increues. Let it be that soore. As a result, one
1 ,,
ing will have clwtJed, except ror modern politics iJ a lham•oa pro- . said clelrly, 10 that no one bas to is being even more hawkish
and the Sea'' was.first published.
1o 19n. 20 years ago, the lnlernational Olympic Committee banned the wdne." After a loitl worting fcalon llld..tbe ~ Ia • oqUally • •yone'allps: Tho cblrge is a Saddam Hussein than the presidenL · l
Vince Maltbcws ..dWayne Collett from further competition.for tallting v8CIIIion in a televilion-fille zone in ahamelea ~P· You •'I it. we'll tnowiDg lie. Wonc thiD lhll, il iJ a
(C)1992
NEWSPAPER l
to CICh other on the victory stand in Munich during the playing of the Maine, upon retam I find Halbcr- show or print it, end the devil Ulke cynical lie, not leasl beeauiC aever- ENI'ERPJliSE ASSN.
I :
"Slll'-Spangled Banner" after winning the gold and silver medals in the stam 'a comm111t doubly appicable tbe bindmost. That'a tho b1111ner al very sood reportera have demonHodding Carter m, former State . I
under which die men and women strated iiS lack Of lubslance 011 ICY· . Department spokesman and award- ·· i
to the pm~ldendal race. •
400-meter run.
Bill Clinion, "the Arty of tbe or the modem Ainerlcan media go etll occasions. But the Bush carn- wiMing reponer, editor and pub- •. •
iii 1974, Prelident Gerald R. Ford granted an uncoildilional pardon to
.
plip defilady ~ to uac it. Usher, is president of MainS~. a · ;
.former President Rldtard M. Nixon.
.New Covenant" 11 one waa off to wort CICh day.
AJ
belt
I
cOuld
IJIIIenilnd
froin
IPJIIftlltly 011 tbe old pttlllbo dial Washinpon, D.C.-based televisiOn ·' '
In 1981, civil rights acliviJt Roy Wilkins, former head of the NAACP. dubbed him after bil acceptanee
speech.- used Biblical aBusions, 10 teldina die ~...-• put out by the belt lie iJ the Bil Lte.
died in New Yorlc at age 80. .
·
producuon company.
~

111 Coart street
Palllenlf, Oldo ·
DEVOI'ID TO 1'111: IN'l'UI8TIJ or THI: Ul08-IIMO!f AREA

By Jack Anderson
and

Michael Binstein

!Mansfield l79"

I•

IND.

" lcolumbuJIIB1'l

82'

Nu response, yet!

Area d.eaths

!MNdl" bVEN

Joseph Spear

Campaign has become absurd drama
.Hodding Carter Ill

Today in history

r.ears.

.

daJ: :;
&lt;

"

South-Central Ohio
Tonight, clearing and much
cooler with the low 55-60.
Wednesday, mostly suMy with the
high 80-85.
Extended forecast:
Thursday tbrougb Saturday:

Mildred G. Fish, 75, 95 Rainbow Drive, Bidw'ell, died Tuesday,
Sept. 8, 1992, at her residence.
'Born Feb. 6, 1917, in Morgan·
ton, S.C., she was the dauJhter of
the late John C. and Cordelia Smith
Waters.
She was a retired employee of
B!&gt;b Evans Farm's plant, Bidwell,
and a member of the Trinity United
Methodist Oturch, Evergreen.
Surviving are: a daughter, Jewell L. (Martin) Hash, Bidwell; a
son, Howard L. (Donna) Fish,
Kingston; 11 ~randchildren: 26
great-grandchtldren and seven
great•great-grandchildren.
Also surviving an:: four sisters,
Jewell (Robert) Evans, Gallipolis,
Doris Kibler, Circleville, Bette
Davis, Kingston, and Helen Allison, Columbus; two brothers,
Howard Waters, Westerville, and
John Waters, Tempe, Ariz.
ShC was preceded in death by:
her husband, El.. Fish, on Iune 22,
1986; an infant daughter; a stepson, Max Fish; a step-daughter,
Becky Brown; and one great-

'Mr

J:

---------Weather-------- .

THAT'' RI6UT

Putting the country back into the boy

0

Units of Meigs County Emergency Services answered 15 calls
assistance over the Labor Day
llllili!•li!lllllllll•llli . ·for
•
' , weekend.
.
·
. . On, Saturday at 5.02 p.m.,
·
,Racine unit .went to State Route
124 for a car/fanit traeiOr accident.
' !toy Bailey and Joseph Swlun were
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital (See related story) . At 8:43
Chance of showers and thunder- p.m.• Racfue squad went to Horse
storms Thursday and Friday. Fait Cave Road for Ronnie Eakins, who
Ol! ·saturday. Highs in the 70s was treated but not transported. At
Thursday and 65-75 Friday and :. 11:07 p.m., Tuppers Plains squad
Saturday. Lows in the 60s Thun- went to State Rou!e 681 East for
day, cooling into the 40s and low Harold Smith . He was taken 10
50s Friday and Saturday.
Cam dell-Clark Memorial Hospital.
On Sunday II 5:51 p.m., Racine
squad responded to Eagle Ridge
_ _ _........... . Road for Pearl Lee. who was taken
·to Veterans. At 6:38 p.m., Racine
Ruth Powell
squad was sent to Third Street.
Ruth Mildred Powell; 84, Emma Lyons .was taken to VeterCoolville, died Monday afternoon, ans. At 7:31 p.m., Middleport
sept. 7, 1992, II St. Joseph Hospi- squad went to Deadman's Curve
tal in Plrlcezsburg, W.Va.
.Road for Casey Edwards, who was
Born in East Liverpciol, she was taken to Veterans. At 11:29 p.m..
a daughter of the late Jasper and Middleport squad lOOk Edwrards to
Lulu Congrove Newlun. She was a Holzer.
On Mondayat2:54 p.m., Racine
housewife.
Mra. Powell is survived by six squad went to Bashan Road and
sons, Harry, David and Robert. all treated Bruce Deeter. At4: 14 p.m.,
of Coolville, Randall of Belpre, Racine squad went to State Rou!e
Delbert of Reedsville, .and Charles 124 and took Helen Williams to
or Long Bottom: three daughters, Veterans. At 5:01p.m., Racine
Frances Bellamy, Atbens, Betty · squad took Lavina Hayman from
Kiser. Racine, and Nettie Young, Basban Road to Veterans. At 6:20
Tu~rs Plains; one sister, June p.m., Racine squad was sent to
Gl'\lfin, Long Bottom:.and several Dorcas Road. Linda Lewis was
grandchildren and great·graildchil· taken to Holzer Medical Center. At
7:34p.m., Columbia TGWIIShip unit
dren.
Besides ~~earcnts, s~e was went to Point Rock for an auto ftre.
preceded in
by ber hUSband, Mary Mullins was the owner. At
Cbarlea P. Powell in 1944; a son, 8:43 p.m., MJildleport squad went
Roy, in 1970; and five brothers and to State Route 7. Lona James was
taken to Holzer.
twosisttn.
Graveside services will be
At 1:10 a.m. on Tuesday, MidWednesday li 11 a.m. at Sandhill dleport .squad went to Lincoln
Cemetery .in Long Bottom with Slreet; Euda Pinnell was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital. At 9:17
Rev. Sieve FUchs officiatirig.
Friends may call at Wbite' s a.m .. Pomeroy squad was sent to
Funeral Home in Coolville on Minenville for Alice Brown. who
was taken to Veterans.
Tuesday rrom 7-9 p.m.
In lieu of flowers, memorial

:t::t:t::c:

-----

PIALTOtl.

Squads respond
to 15 holiday calls

W. VA.

Letters to the editor

~Tllr6A

The Dally Sentlnei-Pag&amp;-3 .

Mildred G. Fish

grandson.

Services will be held I p.m.
Thursday at the Trinity United
Methodist Church, Everpeea, with
the Rev. C.J. Lemley officiating.
Burial will be in the Ohio Valley
Memorr. Garden, Gallipolis. The
body will lie in swe at the church
one hour pier to serviCes.
.
Friends may call .ll the McCoyMoore Funeral Home, Wetherholt
Chapel, Gallipolis, Wednesday
from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.
In lieu of flowers, memorial
gifts may be made to the Trinity
United Methodist Church Building
Fund, c{o Box 97, Vinton OH
45686.

~~t:.Sty1t~F:::t to the
Ruth Schramm

'

Licenses issued

Stocks

l:f

. .cam..--pi!-.., -

'=·==

-=40

car ran off a Norwalk street and hit
a tree.
McCONNELSVILLE - Mary
Schwab, 15, of McConnelsville,
when a pickup trucic crashed along
Ohio 376 in Morgan County.
SUNDAY
CATAWBA ISLAND- Kertta
Schulenburg, 10, of Hudson,
pedestrian hit by a car on an island
road in Ottawa County.
SPRINGFIELD- Charles G.
Pruitt, 52, of Springfteld, moiOrCyclist in a two-vehicle accident on a
city street
JACKSON - Anthony Ritchie,
26, of Nelsonville, in a one-car
crash Ohio 278 in Vinton County.
CANFIELD - Gregory L. Desper, 18, of Canton, in a two-vehicle
accident on U.S. 224 in Mahoning
County.
BATAVIA - MichaelS. Stidam, 26, of Milford, in a two-car
collision on U.S. 50 in Clermont
County.
NAPOLEON - Robert 0 .
Force, 32, of Napoleon, when his
motorcycle crashed along U.S. 6 in
Henry County.
CINCINNA11 - Terry Morton,
25, of Cincinnati, pedestrian in a
hit-skip on a city street.
SATURDAY
S• • •
COLUMBUS - Brenda Cre.
means,
26, of Westerville, when
Continued from page 1
the
car
in
which she was riding was
lions, bug and dog bileS and respistruck
by
a motorcycle on a
ratory problems from generators.
Franklin County road.
Medical workers who want to
volunteer can call the state Department of Health and Rehabilitative
Services at 1-800-952-7909. HospiVeterans Memorial
tal workers can call 1-800-624SATURDAY ADMISSIONS3365. Interim Healthcare, a nation- Mae Della Reuter, Pomeroy.
wide provider of lenlporary mediSATURDAY DISCHARGEScal care workers that is helping in None.
Florida, isatl-800-937-7665.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Robert Carson , New Haven ,
W.Va., and Carrie Neal, MiddleBy The Associated Press
Labor Day weekend traffic accidents claimed 25 lives in Ohio over
the weekend, including seven
pedestrians, the State Highway
Patrol said. Six of the fatal acciden IS involved motoo:ycles.
One fatality occurred when a
driver apparently fell asleep at the
wheel, crashed through a construetlon site fence in Cleveland and
into a 200-foot-deep hole.
The '-'atrol counted holiday traffie fatalttles from 6 p.m. Friday to
midnight Monday.
The dead:
MONDAY
CLEVELAND - Kevin V.
Thomas, 27, of Cleveland HeighiS,
when his car crashed through a
construction site fence in Cleveland
and plunged into a 200-foot-deep
hole. .
SANDUSKY Stephen
Lynarczyk, 38 , and John M.
Musial, 18, both of Garfield
Heights, when they were struck by
a car while standing on Ohio 2
entrance ramp in Erie County
checlcingtheirboat
NORWALK - Richard E.
Leonard, 57, of Willard, when his

HUfflCQne
.
,

Hospital news

. . . . . ...

Goody~·:::::::::::::::::.~

Afternoon highs Monday
included 108 at Lake Havasu City,

•,
·

Auiz.

;

Temperatures today were forecast to be in the 60s and 70s in the
Northwest, northern Plains and
Great Lakes stares; in the 70s in the
NMheas~ in the 80s from the midAtlantic staleS through the central
Plains; in the 90s in the Southeast
and southern Plains; and above 100
in the southwestern deserts.

'
·:

FINDLAY - Arthur 1. Carroll,
26, of Ada, when his motorcycle
ran off Ohio 235 in Hancock County and ran into a sign.
COLUMBUS - Robert J.
Tracy, 51, of Grove City, when his
motorcycle cra shed along a
Franklin County road.
MECHANICSBURG - Ronald
Callison, 34, of Mechanicsburg,
when his motorcycle crashed on a
village streeL
COLUMBUS - Gary Swartzlander, 32, of Madison, ir. a onevehicle crash on Interstate 71 in
Franklin County.
COLUMBUS - Craig J.
Fitzgerald, 27, of Columbus, passenger in a two-car crash on a city
Street.
CLEVELAND - Verretta
Saulsberry. 40 , of Cleveland ,
pedestrian hit by truck on a city
street.
DEFIANCE - Jason M.
McCullough, 20, of Bryan, in a
one-car crash on a Williams County road.
CANTON - Tiffany M. Taylor, 8, of Canton, pedestrian in a
hit-skip on a city street.
FINDLAY - Patrice M. Bowman, 38, of Findlay, driver in a cartrain crash on a city streeL
TOLEDO - Marjorie A.
Roach, 67, of Toledo, driver in a
three-car crash on city street

...

FRIDAY NIGHT
LIMA- Jeffrey L. Gordon, 26, · '
of Delphos, in a two-vehicle crash
in Allen County on Ohio 65. ·
RAVENNA - Gregory L.
Black, I0, of Euclid, pedestrian hit
by a car in Portage County on Ohio
14.

pan.

Paul Sdlers and Mae Reu!er.

sing Friday at 7 p.m. Pastor Sieve
Reed invires the public. Fellowship
will follow .
DAR to meet
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughters of the American Revolu·
tion. will meet Sept. II at the
Meigs County Courthouse at I:30
p.m. The~· 'The Courts and
the Consntuuon," will be an inunduction to Constitution Week, Sept.
17·23. The presenter will be Me1gs
County Court of Common Pleas
Judge Fred W. Crow III. Dessert at
Crow's Steak House will follow
the meeting. Hostesses are Mrs.
James O'Brien, Miss Eleanor
Smith, Mrs. Dale Dutton, Mrs .
George Morris, Miss Lucille Smith
and Mrs. Wendell Cleland.
Cookout planned
The Burlingham Camp of Modem Woodmen will hold a putluck
cookout Saturday at 6:30 p.m. at
the southbound roadside park on
Route 33 near Darwin. The camp
will furnish hamburgers, hotdogs
and condiments. This will be the
last cookout of the season and
everyone is wdcorne.
Sorority to meet
The Preceptor Beta Beta ChaP.:
ter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, will
meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at
Grace Episcopal Church. Maida
Mora will have the program.
Hostesses are Nellie Brown and
Lillian Moore.
HlllreuDion
The Chapman and Myrta Hill
reunion will be Sunday at Star Mill
Park in Racine. Bring a covered
dish. Dinner at I p.m. All friends
and relatives welcome.

Lottery numbers
lfUO

his home. "It sounded like a train
- that's when we got everybody in
the basement," he said.
Another tornado touched down
brieOy around the nearby community of Montello, Wis., knocking
over trees but causing no signficanl
property damage, the National
Weather Service said.
The cold front produced stron~
thunderstorms and some large hail
Monday in Kansas, Nebraska and
Missouri. A tornado touched down
near Marshal, Mo., but no damage
was reported, the weather service
said.
Parts of the Nonhwest got a preview of winter Monday. Wisdom,
Mont., dipped to II - brealcing its
record for the date by 14 degrees.
SeaUie tied a record with 45.

Twenty-five people killed on Ohio
higiJ,ways over Labor Day weekend

_Meigs announcements__

Buckley reuulon
Ruth Gauude Schramm, 93, of
The S6th annual Buckley
Middlepon, died on Monday, reunion will be Sunday at Du Pont
September 7, 1992 at the Pomeroy Parle In Washington, W.Va. beginNursing and Rehabilitation Center ning 11 1 p.m. with a potluck dinShe was born in Muskingum ner.
County, dau~ter of tbe late Frank ·
Rawlinp rewilon
and ClaraScigal Hoffer. Sbe was a .
The Rawlings reunion will be
tailor inZaneMIIeand was a mem- Sunday at Lake Snowden in
ber of St. Nicholas Catholic Church Albany, A picnic diMer begins at 1
in Zaneavi1le. She auended
Sacred p.m.
.
Hean Catholic Oturch m Pomeroy. .
HomecomiDa
Surviving ere a daughter, Mra.
Homecomilig ll the Zion United
John (R~ary) Lyons, ~fiddle- Brethren Church in Shade will be
port; four suters, Flora WIJC _and Sunday with services from 10 a.m.
Louis~ Saad, both .of ~v1lle, to 5 p.m. Singers will include RevRosa Blake or Phtlo, Ohto, and elations and' George. Dinner is a
Elizabeth
Schrack ~f Hawtitls, 1'1.:30 p.m. i.E. Sayre is the speakMarriage licenses have been
Texas;
four
grandchtl~n, John er. Pastor Floyd Ross invites the
issued in Meigs County Probate
Edward
Lyons,
Middlei?Orl, . public.
Court to: David Eugene Ellis, 40,
Thomas
Lyons,
Lapeer,
Mich.,
Danee planned
Pomttoy, and Rebecca Ann Kloes,
The Pomeroy Senior Citizens
41 Pomeroy; Kenneth Harry Linda Cramer, Middleport .and
Bernard
Lyons,
~larkston,
Mi~h.;
will
have a dance Saturday from 8fayne, Jr., 50, Pomeroy. and Lois
12
great-grandchildren,
three~11
,p.m.
Smokey Mountain Drifters
Jean Payne, 50, Pomeroy: Kenneth
great
grandchildren,
and
several
&gt;
with
Alvin
Chutes, fiddle, Odie
De wayne
Browning, . 27,
nieces
and
nephews.
·
Chutes,
blnjo,
Pan Trine, guitar,
Reedsville, and Tamara Sue LeachBesides ~arenta, she was· and Arman Maze will provide
man. 21, Part.ersburg, W.Va.; and
by her husband, music. Arthur eoruWtt will be the
Roger Wayne Gambrel, 25, preceded in
·Pomeroy, and Christina Marie Wil- Bernard, in 1963; a granddaupter, caller. Bring snacks for the snack
Debbie Miller, and 14 brolhc:n and table. Public invited.
son, 26, Pomeroy.
sisten.
. .
.. .
Pllt COUICilors to meet
Mass of the Cbrtstlan Bunal
The Pan Councilors Club of
will be held 11 II a.m. on Thursday Chester Council No. 323 Daughters
The Daily Seutinel
at St. Nicholas Catholic Church in of America will meet at the .hall
Zanesville with Rev. Walter E. Wednelday at 7:30 p.m. HOSiesses
Ptoblllhed ..,,.. •Rem-, M011day
Hoinz officiating. Burial will be in · are Boily Roush Inzy Newell and
......... ~ tllc-tSI. Pwwioy;
Mt. Olive's Cemetery in Mary Jo BarringU.
Ohio b)' lllo Ohio Vallq Ptitiltehtoc
Zanesville.
H~n aln1
~·sollimodt•
"'·, ~1.
Ohio
46
I'll. 1181-IIM.
d111
Friends maf call at Fisher
Faith Full Gospel Church in
poelep pol el P
UJi Ohio.
Funeral Homo m Middleport on . Long Bottom will have a hymn
Wednelday from 710 9.pm., and at .
··
Me=br ·Tha W i•W Pnll, ad the
Ollto
~r
•'"&lt;:''!!...,
Nelleet
the
church
in
Zriiville
one
hour
_.,
alalift, Jlruhut
78S 'l'birll - - .
· 10 tbe ICrvioe. A · •• will be
""''!lin. Newiik 10017.
it 8:30 p.m. 011 w~·u '
.
tbe funiliral bllme.
Am Ele Power ...................32 lfl
I'OITIIA8TIR:- _ . . . _ ..
Tho DoRy lallool, 111 Coan 81.,
Ashland Oil....................... .23
~ ~~~~· 46'1411.
. .
AT&amp;T................................42 1(2.
'IVIIICIIP110N JIAl'll
B8nlc
One... ........................ 43 1/4
CLEVELAND (AP) - There "
Bob
Evans
........................ .18 7{8
was one ticket sold nantina liD six
0111 w.t. ................................- .......1.80
0.. Moath.............................................
Cbirming Shop................,.29.3/4
numbera drawn ln'SIIIW'day nlaht's
ODI Yur.................. - .......... ,,,__,,tuJO
.
Super
drawing,
the
Ohio
lot=--~
18
IDIOLIIOOPY
. salu.
PIICII
o.o,......................................---21 C.t. ~e j~~e~t fot WedneSday's
Sf}
Xey
Centurion
..................
.19
~{4
1 1 Dwollll...,.topi,Jihi-.1- , Smuper Lo,Ito drawinalli worth. $4
• .., -Ito ...... - l t o Tho
lilllon
I.anda Bnd.. .........................27 318
Dm1r ...IIMl • 1 Ill-. olx " 11
Pldl3 NDIIbmt
Umiled Inc....................... 23
=~·en.llwDIIooP-- I
3•5•3
Mallirnedii Inc •..•..••.....•....26
'
Ru
lteawtranL ......... :......... 3{8
No ...
pOrlldllod Ito
(three, fl....e, ibree)
Reliance Blecaic................l9 3/8
...... . _ oerrtor ....too to
Pick 4 Numbmt
Robbins&amp;Myas ................15 3/4
~
~7~7
S~y's Irac...................... 18118
(six,
seven.
six,
seven&gt;
Star
Bank ........................ :..32 1/4
18 w....................................- .... l2U4
Super Lotio
118W................,....................:._ ....l48.11
~7- 12·22·23:43
Wendy lnt'l. ....:..................lt S{8
Wonhingtolllnd. ...............21 1/1.
uw.....ch;bdd;-·o.;u-;..*"·11
(six, seven, twelve, twenty-two,
Stock
reportl are !be 10:30 ·
........................
;....................................
twenty-three, forty-~ion
•a w
w.....
,.....................
Tho jackpot is $4 - . .
1.111. quolil ~by Bluat,
u w..~aa.... ,......................... ............ · . Kicker
EIIIIIDtl Loinrl rl ~polll.
2-645·1·3

Nt•- •

Sunset will be at 7:56 p.m. Sunrise Wednesday will beat 7:12. .
Around the nation
A cold front pushing up the
Ohio .Valley produced .showers
today as it headed for the Nortbeasl
Rain fell early today in Indianapolis and Pittsburgh, and forecasters said the front would produce showers and thunderstorms
later today in upstate New Yorlc.
On Monday, tltunderstorms produced a tornado that damaged 17
homes in Berlin, Wis., about 75
miles northwest of Milwaukee,
authorities said. No serious injuries
were repor!ed.
Robert Radliff, 31, said the IOrnado Ulre the roof from an apartment building about a block from

.

.•
•

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Friday, Sept. 4
DISCHARGES - Mrs. Rodney
Dailey and daughter, Mrs. Tracy
Carpenter and daughter, Lisa Craycraft. Mrs. James Lewis and daughter.
BIRTHS - Mr . and Mrs.
Joseph Walker of Point Pleasant,
W.Va., a son.
Saturday, Sept. 5
DISCHARGES - Mrs. Mark
Hall and daughter.
BIRTHS - Mr. and Mrs.
Patrick Tackett of Vinton, a daughter.
Sunday, SepL 6
DISCHARGES - Frank Johnson, Mrs. Josepb Walker and son.
BIRTIIS- None.
Monday, Sept. 7
DISCHARGES - None.
BIRTHS - Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Peters of Gallipolis, a son;
Mr. and Mrs. Lenard Sides of Gallipolis, a son.

.. '
·.

..

.•

-.

'

The Problem

NAIL FUNGUS
The Solution

·

FUNGI NAIL®

• Learn a new skill
. • Increase your tax knowledge ...
• Convenient times &amp; locations ··

---1

•·:

Try .hi111fc,aimplc, olrcctivo remedy for 1 ...
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1ua .....,., N.uer~J~:talhick,iplit, diacolara~naill . Two poWwiWW!-ftinallapll
lishl infection Oft toenails end rancomoib
W work 10 eliminate lhc aclual funau.
Easy 1o apply u nail ~~Qiilh. No p~ri~

tionnCCCIIAry.
Do You Us~ Artificial NaDsl
Then uao Fu1111 Naue to prevent the nail
funau• uaoc;iatcd with anifrc:ial naiJJ.
Avii•"'- or your ph~~~m11zy ot hovo
IJHim nqtocf Krllfl., Lektotadu,
1771 .f.W. UL, M/11111, FL. 33174

\'

H&amp;R·BLOCit

'

...

'

.
.

' .
.. .,.
• &lt;

For More Information Call:
(304) 675-1632

~

-~

............................................ .. •''
,..

�\

The Daily Sentinel

:Sports
In the NFL .••
.
PI'PA
&lt;10 7
14 3
00 00
00 00

17

ljl

cl1M!l.AN1l... o 1 o .1100 3 14
H""""' .............

0 .1 0 .1100

24 29

w-.Derwor ............... I 0 01.000

KlnAI City.......
LA.IW&lt;Ioo• ......

Son ();"o ..........

17 13
1 0 01.1100 24 10
0 I 0 .000 13 17
0 I 0 .000 10 :M

St.aD.I.e................ 0 1 0 .CXKJ

3 21

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Eul«nW L T Pci. · PI'PA

TWII

01.000 23 10
01.000 IS 13
0 .1100 14 31
0 .000 7 23
w......,.,. ........ 0 1 0 .1100 10 23

• DaUu
I 0
Philadelphia....... 1 0
N.Y. Qi&gt;nu...... .. 0 I
Jlh...U.. .............. 0 I

. Central Dhillon
Chioago.............. 1 0 01.000
MinnooiU .......... I 0 01.1100
Tampa Bay ........ 1 0 01.1100
DcttoiL .............. , 0 1 0 ,000
cn..n Bay.......... 0 1 0 .000

:l7 24
23 ljl

7

Zl

'ZI
20 23

)l

w.......1-0 01.000 20 17
...............
s.. FrsnNoo .... 1 0 01,000 31 14

AIWI~a

L.A. Rams ......... 0 1 0 .000 7 40
New Odean1 .... .. 0 1 0 .000 13 15

Sunday's !ICOI'tS
1ndimspolial4, CLI!VELAND3
OUcs 27, llcuoit 24
Bulf%40 Loo ....... Raa!a 7
Mim- 21, o...n Bay ljl,
Philaddollia ll, Nn lldoano 13
A!Wiu :lo, N"' YarrU•17
Piuabwlll29.-:14

ar

CINCINNATI21,-3

KmwCityl4,Sm!Mao 10

Tampollsy23.-~

San Fnnciaco 31, Now Yoot Oiaru 14
Denver 17, U. "-loo Raidtn 13
New EnaJand Ill QMmi, ppd., bt.ltri·
cane, rachci!Wcd 0cL 11

Monday'ucom
Dalla 23, WullinpolO

Next week's pmes
SuiMIIJ

,•

.·
,•

Allantlat Wuhiftato\, I p.m.
ClLK:qo •t Now Odcw, 1 p.m.
Dallu•NewYO!kOiantl, 1 p.m.
Grcon Ba}' at T~mp~ Bay, 1 p.m.
1M Anaelea Raid• 11 CINC[NN'An,
I p.m.
Mim.IIICMI •t DarviL, l , ....

Solulc It Kansu Cit~, p.m.
Buft'do at Sm Francueo, 4 p.m.
lkwtDn 11 lndiiMpoUI, 4 p.m.
New Enliand It Loa AnJCICI Rams, 4
p.m.
New Yoli.Jets It f1WabwJ11,4 p.m.
S.n Dieao II Ollnvw, 4 p.m:
Pbiladi!JJhia •tfbomP., I p.m.
Mooday
Miami u CLEVELAND. 9 p.m.

In the majors...
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EUllm DlvWon
Tum
W L Pd.
Pinsbwah ..............79 S8 .571
M,...;} ............... 75 62 .547
Chicago. .................69 67
SL lA:Juia ................ 61 61 -~
Now Ym ............. 6l 'tl .463
Philaddphia ........... S4 81 .&lt;100

GB
4
~.s

.m

10

15.5
2A

Watern Dt•lll•
Allan!&amp; ................... 81 55 .596
CINCINNATI ........75 62 .547
San Di.qo ..............74 62 .S44
Hounon .................6S 72 .474

16.S

S111 Franciaco ........60 71 .438
lol Anarla ........... SS 12 .401

21.5
26.5

~5

7

Monday•ssrores

Pl......,

SL I.A:IWII, Mo.tNal 7, 10 inninp
au..., 6.
s. 11 inninp

AIWI1&amp;7,Loo-l
CINCINNATI iO;lla.U&gt;I 0
Now Ym6, Pbilo4o1phis l
Today'snmes

Lo• Anaelea (Ojela 6· 7} at Atlanh
(Ldbrandll1-6),l,10 p.m.
S1. Louia (Ciadl;t 3·1) at Monttul
(Hames S·S), 7:35 p.IIL
New YGik (Gooden 1--11) at Phi.JHdphio (0....02-J), Hl p.m.
Chica1o (Boatie 5·7) at PituburJh
{llrabok 11·10), 7:15 JUl.
CINCINN ATI (Hammond 7-9) 11
H&lt;MIAOfl (lboniaob ~~ 1'35 p.m.
San Dicto: (Btoeail 0.0) 11 Su Fran·
ciaa&gt; Ill""" :J.7~ Ilk!.! ~m.

Wtd..-.y'scames
SL Louia

(Hill\5·7),,,

\Ma.().{J) at Moataal
5
~rn.

New Yorlt (Fem1ndez 12-9) at
Philadelphia (SdUUina 12·9), ,,15 p.m.
ChiciJO (C..tillo 1-10) 11 Pittlbur&amp;h

(fomlin ~~~~ 7:!lJ'"'·

C1NCINNA11 (Beldln 11-13) 11 Atlanta (GlavW: 19·6). 7:40p.m.
Houatut (I. Jonc~ 1-6) at San FnnciJ"" (Res'"' o.O), 10:05 p.m.
San Dieao (Grea RurU 2-6) •t Los
Anselce (Kevin Orou 6-tl), 10:35 p.m.

AU.:Il,E. .. aa9
laoluolr:y 21, c...
.
Clomlan :14, Jloll SL 10
Iowa SL 3.!, Oloio U. 9

Major league leaders

Pi!Ubwll! ll, KlooiO -

Eularoii¥W..
L

PtL

Gl

Totanto ..................79 !t
BallinuJnl ...............77 60
Milwaukll .....,.,. ... 74 63
New Yld; ........,.....6S 73

TUIII

W

.572
.562
.S40
.471

-

4.S

71

.467

t4 ..S

Detroi1 .................... 64 73 .467
CLEVELAND .......63 74 .&lt;60

14.5
15.5

B~tcn .................... 64

w.-. Dt.ldoft
Otkland .................10 57 .5114
Mim-. .............. 76 62 .551
Chiceao. ...." ........... 72 63 .511
Tosu .....................67 73 .479
Califcnis ............... 63 75 .457
~City ........... 62 75 .453

s...~~e ....................56

12 .406

L5

14

4.5
1
14.5
17.5
18
lA.s

Monday•a...,.es
MiMOI(Itl4, S01all2
M i l - 2. aJ!VIIIANil 0
Califooaia 3, Ooillaod 2
New Yo.t6, Ba•i • 2, ll inninp
BMIO!Il, TauO

'
•'
•

••

Todly'III-

Dr&lt;roil (1'..... 11-l aor1 Kin1 4-l)"
Chicaao (McDowtll 19·7 al!.d Hibbard
11&gt;6), Z.l~p.m.
New Yori (S..Dd'etlln. 11-9) u B.W.m.,. (llhr&gt;oloa S-4), 7"' p.m.
Seaalo (Oaat 2-4) .. (Mao

"""*
am p.a.
c.LBVILAND
J.:l).

•

(A•auona5· 14)
.,..,..&lt;05,....

It

M l l - caToi'OIIIo (1.,-_ 1·13) 1t .lauu Citr

,

(Aqujoo )4~ . ,, -

a-(Y-~J)aT... (B-..

,

IJ.I),I:st,....
Otkl... (Dow• S.S) at Calif0111la

•
I

(Finlor ...

,
•

--lS.1la&amp;Mlll'"-aoor•
(Ta.... l4-iO),l:IS,...
II•• Yodl (Y(Icriaou 2·0) 11 laid·

1

:

•

''

m 1o-Js,....

,......,.,pill.

-(S-15-IIli!~p.dl.

. ·-(Iloilo 13o5),1.i5 ••
CLEVILAND (

T.....o;jg,AlbawSL 0

Natlonal League

'-10) at Jolll..

Sahuday'slameo

BATTINO - ~hcfficld, $an Dieso.
.33S; VanSlyke, PinaburJh, .329; Knak,

Toledoat.AaBall SL uX....
BowliDI a..t at Ohio St.
C. !&amp;Q... a&amp;lliobi&amp;ao SL
E.Midrlpta&amp;LouioiioaToch

Phil~dclpltia, .324;

Gwynn, !an Di~~·
.314, Pendlewn, Atlanta, .309; CaminlLi,

HOUlton, .301; Grace, O:Ueaao. .306.
RUNS - Bondi, PiiUbouJh, 89; em.
10m, Montlal. II; Ho11iD1, Philadolphi&amp;,

87; Biaio, Houtt011, a.; Pt.dlr:tan, At·
ilnu, 81; VaftSlyi.e , Pittlburalt, 81 ;
DeSI!.ielda, Mofttreal , 79; Sandbera,

au""',79.
RBI- Otu.l~on, Pbila4c.lp~ia, 9~;
Shcf'f\eld, San Diego, 91; McOrifl', Sal!.
();'1", 91' ~ Atlanlo, 19, &amp;n.U,
PittsbiUJb, 83; M11my, N•w Yock., 79;
V...S1ykc, P i - 78.
HITS - hndleton, Atlanta, 170;
V...S1yte, PiUibursb. 166;
s..
Dieao, 163; Gwynn, San Dieao. 160;
Gnce, Chicaao. 154: GrisJDm, Mmucal.,
Ill; Sandboo!, OU..go, 151.
DOUBLE'S -VanSlyke, Pinsbw&amp;h,
39; W. Clark, San Fnncisco, 3S; Duncan,
Phihdclphia, 15; LanifOJd, St. Louil, 34;
BoU, Pi&lt;•bu.Jh. 13; Oris...,, -u.a1,
32; Pendleton, Atlanta, 32; Mumy, New
Ym,l2
TRIPW - D. Sanden. Allan!&amp;, 14;
F'~y! H~ 1~~ Butlct,l..ol Anadet,
11, Alicea, SL Louil, 10; VanSlyke, 'Piuabut&amp;h, 10; Offerman, Lol An&amp;clu, I ;
Sandbq, Chie~ao. I.
HOME RUNS - McGri!', San Di.eao.
3~; Sheffield, San Die~_.
10; B_onda,
PiiiObouJh,
Doo~~on,
• 25:
HoUina, Philadelphia, 22; L. alker,
Montreal, 20; Kuroa, l.ol Anaclot. 19;
Pawllaon, AtlanLI, 19.
STOLEN BASES -Grissom, Mon·

s-

auo.,r..

Miami. Obio a t -

W. Midlipl at Tow Qriaian

Ohio college
football scores

t:real, 67; OoShitldJ, MonlftW, 45; Butler,
Loo Aoplol, 40 Robcru, CINCINNATI,
39: L•nk fo rd ~ St. Louis, 38; Bia&amp;io,
HOUlton, 35; Nu.on, Allanta, M.
PITCHING 116 d.,.;,u..)- Ol.vinc,
Allan!&amp;, I~ • .760, 2.70; Towilbwy, SL
LoW&amp;, !S·5, .750, 2.05; Moopo, Clri"JJ,
14-6, .700, 2.37: K. Hill, 15-7,
.612, 2.64' Swmdoll. CINCINNATI, 12-6,
.667, 2.56; B. Hut11, s,a Dieao, 14-7,
.667, 1.54; Cono, Now Yoot, l:J..7, .650,

2.18.

STRJXEOlJTS -Cone, New York,
214; Smd.EZ, Allmta, 192; S. Fananclcz,
New York, 164; 0. Maddn, Chicaao.
163; Rijo, CINCINNATI, U4; Dnbck,
Pinabwah, l49; Benet,~ Dieao. ~lB.
SAVf.s - l...r:ir; Smuh, SL Low., 31;
Wcuoland, Monlrul, 32; Myen, San
IM&amp;o. 32; D. Jona, Houstal, 31: Chad·
ton, CINONNA11, 25; Mitch Wi.l.lia.m,
Plliladclphia, 23: Dibble, CINCINNATI,
18.

Ohio higb scbool
football scores
Sunday's scofts

MaD"' Calh. 42. Vanluel4
Tiffin Cal- 32, Oibtoobwa 0

Saturday's""'""
Brid-7,11ollainoSLid!n'sO
Boodlwood:I9,Ciolaftd2

CanllllC&amp;Ib.42,Caa""' T..W. 20
Cin. Colanio 21, CiD. PUm:U·Muioo
0

Cir!. c...., Doy

13, CJlmoo.Maulc
0.. SL I...... 21, Atroa BuchlcllO

0

CroCitMllo 2P, f-.o\2
Do1... :19,Mahoml9
Doy. Wbir.:!IJ,Ealoa 26
Deuoit Catlt.. Ctdt.ral 36, To!. St. ·
JoU'aO
E. Cl.......,. Shaw 42, Warnruvillo 0
Erie (Pa.) Ca\hedral 17, Youna.
MOCiley 14

FilhorCIIh. 21, BU&lt;I&lt;cJOTnil 0
llnbam 6. W. Uboay-Salom 0

American League

llamillonBadinl5,Cia. ~6
Hal'k"' 22, Gadiold Ills. Tnnily 0

BA TTl NO - E. Martinez, Seattle,

.347; Puckett, Minnesot-a, .327; Mack,
MiMeoo&lt;a, .124: Thomu, OUoaao• •122:
R. Alomu, TDftll.to, .322; Griffey, Seatllc. .311; MolilOr, Milwauk-. .311,
RUNS - E, M•ninez, SMttle, 9S;
Phillipa, Detroit, 9!; And. .on, Blltim&lt;n, 91: Knoblauch, -._!PI), R.
A.Jomu, TotUato, 90; ThOIDia, Chi&lt;:•ao.
U; CatW:r, Tcwmto, Sl.
RBI - fi~dor. llouoi' 101: Carw,
Toronto. 101; I-.n Oonzalca. Tca.u, 98;
G. Bell, Chiaao, 97; Dcvcroau1, Balti,
more, 96; Pllcken, Minaeaot•, 95;
Thorri••· C.lcaao. 93; McOwire, Oaklond, 93.
HITS - l'u&lt;bo. ~ 179; E.
Martinez, Seattle, 177: B1cqa, CLEVELAND. 169; Mack, Minncaot•, 161;
Molitor, Milwau.kec, 162; !HYcrCIIIl,
s.ttimore, 159; R. Alomu, Tort1Dto,l57.
DOUBLES - E. M1aiacz, Scaule,
46; Oriff'J', ~ulc, 37; Mauina\y, New
YOlk, 34; Jeffeua, Kansu Clty, 33; Hall,
New Yodt, 32; Yount, Milwallkoc, 32:
Reimer, Tuu, 31; Joyner. XMau City,
11; Wonficld, T&lt;a'Oillo, 31.
TRIPLES - Dc\'tteaw., Baltimon,
10, Andonon, Bahimcn, t; I.
Chiooao, 9: Ldlon. CI.EVI!I.AND, a: R.
Alotnu, Toronto, 7; 6 an tiM wilh 6.
HOME RUNS - Jvu Oonulez,
Teua, 39: M&lt;.(Jwjft, OoldaM, ll: C....,
Toronto, 30; Belle, CLEVELAND, 29;
Fiolder,lloonMt, 29; T-.llralod, 2t;
lloor,llouoil, :17.
STOLEN BASES - . - _ Q.EV!.
LAND, 52; Liala&lt;h, Mii.....U., 49; An·
dcnon, Blldmox. 49: Nlllia, Cllitar47: R. HllldcrtGn, Otkland, 45; L
Alomu, Tonmto, 41; ltaU., Chicaao.
40.
PITCHING (16 dcciliou) - Juaa
Guzmon, TOnlnlo, !J-3, .112.l33; lad!
Monis, Tcronto, 18-S, .113, 4.18; Muai·
na, Baltimore, 14-5, .737, 2.14: Mcl&gt;owdl. Clricsgo, 19-7, .731, 3.14; B.oio, Mll·
waukee, 1).,, .721. 3.10; K. Brown,
Ten, , 18,8, .692., 3.25; 0...., Bt~~tal ,
1H,.6!12,ll8.
STR.lKEOlTI'S - Clemc:na, Bottm,
19~ P=, New Yod!, 1116; R. Johnaon,
Scan.lc, 1&amp;2.; J~~~n Our:man, Tti'CIIM, 149;
Appier, K.anau Cily, 149; 1- G.lzmUI,

J-

Tex•. 141; Ry-.1eau.

)• .

SAVES - Eckorolor, Oakland, 4%;
Aguilera, )l!eercu,, 37; MonlpmCJ1o
Kan,.a Cily, 33; Ot.c., ~damon, )2;
Jeff Ruuell, Otkba4, 21 ; Rurdoa,
801ton, 27; Henry, Milw... -. 26.

AP college

football poll
The Top T'fm\t)' Five~ in lholu·
Jociltod Prwa J99l coUcp r~ poll.
with fir'lt· plaee vote1 in ptrenthuu,
"""""' lluou&amp;h
l, -..1 po""' buod
on 2S pQ.ma for I fint pJaca ¥Ok tbrou&amp;h
one point for • 25Lh p!K:e ¥Ote, and tan1;.
m1 in the praeuan pou:

s.,..

Team
W-L-T
1. Miami (4l) ............. HH
2. Wadlin.... (9) ...... 1·0.0
l . Nouolliomo(&lt;) ..... .l ·O.O
4. Florida,_.................~
5. F1otida SL (1) ........ .1.0.0
6. Michi&amp;on (I) ..........0.0.0
7.TosuAAM(l) .....:Z.O.O

,._ W...
U%5 · 1
1.469
2
1,312
3
1,261 ' 6
I ,260
4
1,256
l
l~ll
7

I.Alsboma(1) .......... .l.Q.O 1,101
9. Syncwc: ......... ~...... 1.0.0 1,061
10. Pau&gt;Sl ................ .l·O.O 939
1l.Nol&gt;nska ............... I.Q.O 175
11 Calondo .........,. ....1.0:0 141
11. Oklahoma ..............I·O.O Ill
14. Gocqia .................1.0.0 734

9
10

I
11
12
ll

Emp 2J, Cir!. Twoin 7
lAb Calh. 56. Lakewood SL Eclwud

'Vall. 7

Marion Hll'diaa 3-4, Marioa River
Wi•dltLOWD Fcnwitk 24, Day,

~7

2J, Nowllury 0

..... -

lolorpo 4Uiarioaa 14
Nnul! Caob. %7, MapWJoO
Orqe 13, Normandy 0

IUo:hmalrlllla. 21, Ud.... 011112
s. ..... '2. Lioboa 15
Shak.lbo. ll, Owlel 0
SroubooYillo Cad!. 33, Col. Marion·
Fllllklin 0

Tots-7,mJria6
Tol. SL Francia 20, Uma Sr. 7
Wam~~

7

Kennedy II, Wma~ Howland

Whoc1ina (W.Va.) Linsly 26, Clay·
14

mODL

Transactions
Autoradng
BOBBY AWSON MaTORSPORTS
-Piled Hut Sukklin, dlivcr.
TEAM MCLAREN Si1ned
Miehacl A.ndruti, dri~r. to a one-year

-

B...ball

MLB - Amomcod lhe tuigrutittt of
Pty Viaca!.t, oammilaion.a-.

A•rkl• Lnaue
CLEVELAND INDIANS - Ro·
ullttl Mike Oi~her, pltchtr, f'rom
Coltrado Sprlltp vf the Amtrk:lln MlldiUO.. Sent Scon Scudder, pUthtr,
.. Colorado Sprtnp oa • ~hDUiliUon

Is

awL

MINNESOI"A TWINS - Recalled
Pat Mahome.a, pitcher; DerU Puka,
........ and Till)' 1"'1"""' lhinl baso-.; from Portland of the Pacific Cout

~NTO

BUJE JAYS - Roealled
..., MacDonald aad David Wc.alhen,
_.,.,., and Dominao Martiacz, fint

--.n, em. SyraCUM of the latcma·
lioool !.up. I'IIRIIaaod die......., ol
Dwa l.iolon. pi-. !'rom Syncuao.
NalloMlw 1..
ATLANTA BRAVES - Ac,ivatcd
Alojan&lt;ho Pu\o, pild&gt;or, fran llw ll..lay
dial bled lilt. Purc:bucd the contract or
Mule Davia, pildtcr, frcm Macon tL the
S..dt AllsnlioiM ....
CINCINNATI REDS - Activated
Ore&amp; Swindell, pilcllcr, from tho lS·dty
diao\lod lial.
HOUSTON AS TROS -

Recalled

Ryan Rowen, piKher; Scootot Tucker,
Cl\;hor, tnd Mi.ke Simma, ou1fielder,
11om Tut10n «IMPadfJC: C:O.t L..ps.
LOS ANGELES DOOOERll - Atti·
....0 Don ..w-, W!cldoo, r... !he
!S..y diaoiW liA
NEw YORit MilTS- A'""""' B"'

·pn. ~~ from lbe lS..y dilalloolliaL
rmSBURGH PIRATES - Pur·
cn..llhc CCin\RICl or Dave am, out·
lloWor,l'rom ll&amp;l!alo ot lluo Amorican Aa..
!

:

1

aod&amp;Wln,

SAN 011!00 PADRES - Re&lt;:aUod
Pnnk SanJnara on11 Dou1 Br..:ail. ~
Vopa ol U. Ploilio

"'·,_Las
Leoau•

14
15. a - .......-......1.0.0 684 13
1~ UCI.A ...................0+0 l53
16
17. Calilomla ..............1.0.0 513 "
18. MJu;.,jppi S.. .......I-M ll11 21
19.N.CamllUIL .....~ llrJ 11
20. T••
..._ ......1.0.0 351 22
21. Slanfooi ................O.I.O 2J,I 20
21 Ollio SL .................1.0.0 273 17
171

2l

:M

165
114

Olhtrt recti~•• ..... , hn Dieao
SIOIO SO, Miaailaippl 13, Boo""' Colltto
29, rw.. 21, Michia• s- 22, Soulhom
C•ll9, X.n111 If. Pitt•INrJh 17, Air
foroo 16,1o•• 16, North Carolina 15,

Touo 10, IJiinoU l,lndilaa I, Baylor 7,
Arimnl s, R~~~pra 4, a...u.1 a.- 1.
Memphis Sla10 2. Looia&gt;illa!.

MAC standings
Celli.
Owul
TWLT ... WLT
AU. ......... I 0 • 0 1.0110 1 0 0
BllSU......... l 0 0 I.Oilt 1 0 0
Tolarlo ........O 0

Mlnl.......o
B.USL .......O
c. Mich. .....o
E.. St. ......0
Oltlo ...........o
E. Midi. .....0
Mldt .....o

w.

0

G

I

0 0

o o .ooo o o

1

o o .ooo o
1 0 .1100 o
1 o .ooo o

0

0 0 ,OIJt 0 I 0
0 0 .011 • 1 0
0 0 .G110 0 I 0
1

I
1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

After no-confulence voJe. by owners,

.Vincent steps down as commissioner
of cable TV superstations that
broadcast basebaU.
Vincent, 54, urged the 28 team
owners 10 maintain a sttong role for
the commissioner, but said he
doubled they would.
"The commJSS' ft·~ has to look
out for the fans, and the owners
don't want to hear me speak that
idea," Vincent said from l!is Cape
Cod vacation home. "I think
they'll change lhe office to a very
lhin shadow of what it is ... and it'll
be too bad.."
Owners had been expected to
vole on whelher to fue Vincent at a
meeting Wednesday in SL Louis.
Vincent had argued that the
Major League Agreement, the con·
tract that governs baseball, prevents a commissioner from being
rll'ed. He had retained an auorney
and promised a.court fight, but
reconsidered after talking with
friends, including President Bush.
w
·

"I lhought hard about it over lhe
weekend," Vincent said. "I consuited with good friends and got
loiS of advice. ••
An executive council made up
of American League president
Bobby Brown, National League
president Bill White and eight
owners will decide what happens
next. They planned to meet by 1ele·
phone today, said Philadelphia
Phillies owner Bill Giles.
Vincent's term was supposed to
1ast throug h March 31, 1994. He
will be paid the remainder of his
$650,()(J()..a.year conlract.
Jerry Reinsdorf, owner of the
Chicago While Sox and one of
Vincent's sttongest critics, said he
was relieved the battle had ended.
"It was the only sensible lhing
he could do," Reinsdorf said in
Chicago. "It was his best inlerest
and in our best interest."
Reinsdorfhas said he would like

to see the office res•ructured to
make it a chief executive officer
reponing to the 28 owners as a
board of directors.
_
Kenesaw Mountain Landis, a
former federal judge. was named
the first baseball commissioner
after members of the Chicago
White Sox threw lhe 1919 World
Series. Landis quickly assumed
wide powers to act in lhe besl inlerests of the game, including banning
some While Sox players for life.
Vincent was deputy commissioner and took over when his
friend, A. Bartlett Giamatti, died
during the Labor Day weekend
lhrce years ago.
"He accepted lhe job as com·
missioner of baseball in a most dif.
ficult time," said Baltimore Ori·
ales owner Eli Jacobs. "While in
office, he has been an unselfish
decision maker, not once failing to
act in the best interests of base·

Cincinnati hands Houston 10-0 defeat

n

23. Virplia .................1·0.0
lA. Gocqia Toch ........0.0.0
25. Bripnl Y - .... 1.0.0

KanNe City s.T - •. 12inainp

14

Miami.Obio29, w.. v· · · 29, llc'

Laol

AMERICAN LEAGUE

\it:

Olkland (Stc.wut. 10-9) at Califomia
(Lonplon 12-12),10,35 p.m.

ni•.

S.n. Dttco 7. San Fnacilgg S

Sa~

MidUpo 19

man 12-ll),lolSp.m.

Central.,..... .

Piusburall .......... 1 0 01.000 29 :M
CINCII'lNATI... 1 0 01.000 21 . 3

Bowlin&amp;~ 2P, W.

199~

By RONALD BLUM
NEW YORK (AP) - After a
summer of battling major league
owners, baseball commissioner Fay
Vincent decided his tenure was no
longer "in the best interests of
basebaU."
Vincent, who had promised to
fight owners all the way to the
Supreme Coun, resigned Monday,
four days after owners urged him to
slep aside in an 18·9 no-confidence
vote.
"I've concluded lhatresJ·gnau·on
-:- not litigation - should be my
fmal act as commissioner •in the
besl inlerests of baseball,' '' Vin·
cent wrote in a three-page leuer to
owners !hat he made public.
His resignation ended a three·
month struggle wilh owners over
how much power he had over
issues incl~ding coUective bargain·
mg, reahgmng the National
League's two divisions and conttol

Thunolay'• ICOI'I

llcuoit (Gullicklon 14-P) at Chic&amp;JO
(Pcmand .. 7·8),1:05p.m.
Toran1o (Cone 1-l) at X.anus City
(AI'PU.ll·7), 1,3s p.m.
Ba.ton (Derwin 8·6) al Tuu (Ouz-

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

EuionTum
W L T Pel.
Bof!olo............... 1 0 0\.(100
lndW..poU. ....... 1 0 01.1100
Milllli ................ 0 0 0 .1100
Now &amp;.Bland..... 0 0 0 .1100
N.Y. leu ............ 0 1 0 .000

Tuesday, September 8, 1992
Page 4

Tuesday, September 8,

o
o

· ~----~~--------~----~------~

rell Green (bottom) in the second quarter or .
Monday night's NFC East battle in Irving,
Texas, which the Cowboys won 23-10. (AP)

ANKLE GRAB - Dallas running back
Emmitt Smith (22) fmds himself the victim or an
ankle grab by Washington defensive back Dar·

Dallas beats Washington 23-10
defensive game plan was geared to
By DENNE H. FREEMAN
IRVING, Texas (AP) -Joe tar~el him.
'We tried to stop Emmitt but
Gibbs was worried about the Dallas
Cowboys having lhe world champi· we couldn't," linebacker Andre
on Washington Redskins' number. Collins said. " But he did a really
good job of cutting back. They
They stiU.do. It's No. 22.
didn't
pull any tricks. He just
Emmitt Smith ran over and
up the yards and got the
picked
around lhe dazed Redslcins to carry
flrsl
downs.''
the Cowboys to a 23 -I 0 victory
Smith scored on a five-yard run
Monday night
and
caught lhree passes as Dallas
Inspired by a girl of Rolex
watches before lhe game, his offen· domina1ed all three phases of lhe
sive linemen cleared the way for game, offense, defense and special
139 yards on 26 rushes and a 1eams.
Issiac Hoi! blocked a punt for
touchdown. It was the fifth consec·
safety
and Kelvin Martin relllmed a
olive 100-yard rushing game by
punt
79
yards for a touchdown.
Smith against Washington.
The
Cowboys
sacked Redskins
Smith has scored seven lauch·
downs in his las1 five games quarterback Mark Rypien 1wice.
He was sacked only nine times all
against the Redskins.
He went into the game averag· oflas1 year.
Rypien hit 20 of 38 passes for
ing 5.9 yards per carry against
208 yards but was hounded all
Washington.
"I don't know what it is about night by a Dallas rush aided by
the Redskins," Smith said. "I've Charles Haley, obtained recently in
got great players around me. Thai's a trade with the San Francisco
what I attribule my success to. It 49eJS. Haley had a sack.
felt like I carried lhe ball400 times.
Rypien escaped only once, hitIt was hot But I ~uess it got too hot ting Gary Clark with a 30-yard
for the Redskins. '
scpring pass.
Gibbs said before lhe game "we
"I don't want 10 lalk about the
can't seem to find a way to stop game or nothing else," Clark said
Smith. You don't like it when a afterwards.
Dallas quarterback Troy Aikteam and a player has your num·
ber."
man lhrew two intercertions but
Afler the game, Gibbs said stiU managed to hit 18 o 31 passes
" You jusI have 10 say it was a heck for 216 yards.
"I was not sharp," Aikman
of a job on their part. Dallas is a
said.
"But the best part of the night
heck of a learn. All you can do is
was
the
way Emmilt ran lhe ball.
brag on them."
Gibbs has anolher number he
doesn'llike against DaUas. He's - - Sports shorts;-Auto racing
below .500 coaching againsl the
CLERMONT, Ind. (AP) Cowboys, 11-12. Dallas head
coach Jimmy Johnson is 4-3 Teammates Ed McCulloch and
Cruz Pedregon earned a sweep at
againsl Gibbs.
"We felt like we could bea1 the· 38th annual NHRA U.S.
Washington," Johnson said. "The Nationals at Indianapolis Raceway
team we are mlily worried about is Park.
McCulloch claimed the Top
the Giants in New York on Sunday.
I lhink we will get better as time Fuel title while Pedregon was the
Funny Car winner. Olher winners
goes on."
include
Warren Johnson in Pro
The Redskins seemed fruslraled
Stock
and
Dave Schultz in Pro
by Smith's success because the
Stock Bike.

Washington knew what we were
going to do and we stiU did it."
The Cowboys have defeated
Washington at least once a season
since Johnson became the coach in
1989.
"Emmitt is the cause of it all,"
Redskins defensive end Tim John·
son said. "He's short and you just
can't get a hold of him."

The Meigs varsily and reserve
golf learns are continuing 10 do
very well afler picking up up wins
last week against GaUia Academy,
Fon Frye and Point Pleasant.
Meigs defeated Gallia Academy
at lhe Meigs County Golf Club on
Tuesday evening. The Marauders
shot 151, coming away with a 13
stroke victory. Meigs golfer Jay
Harris was the match medalist,
shooting a l-over par, 35. Other
. Meigs scores were: Jay Cremeans·
38, John Bentley-39, Jason Hart39, Adam Ktawsczyn-41 and Chris
Knight-42. Gallipolis scores were
Jamey Barcham-39, BiU Tawney·
41, David Wright-42, John
O'Brien-42, Bill Armsttong-42 and
Eric Rotlerick-46.
Thursday evening saw the
Marauders travel to the new
Arrowhead Pines C.C. in Beverly
to face Fort Frye. Meigs came
away with a IO·SirOke victory,
shooting 161. The Cadets finished
at 171. John Bentley of Meigs was
maiCh medalist, shooting a 2-over
par, 38. Olher Meigs scores were:
Jay Cremeans-41, Jason Hlrt-41,
Adam Krawsczyn-41, Jay Harris·
42 and Chris Knight-44. The Meigs
varsity improved !heir, record to 9-2
overall.
The Meigs reserve leaiD aaveled
to Hidden Valley Golf Club on
Monday eveninJ to face Point
Pleasant. The B1g Blacks came
away with a 163-187 victory. Point
Pleasant's Jeremy Vickers was the
match medalist with a 2-over par,

38. Meigs scores were Reggie
Pratt-46, Benny Ewing-46, Richie
Gilkey-47 , Scott Whiliatch-48,
Jason Taylor-49 and Travis Grale·
53. The Meigs reserves are now 0·
2 overall.

•

It wa·s enough to make the
Astros run for cover.
"He was on top of his game,"
Asttos manager An Howe said of
Rijo. "He started wilh off-speed
stuff and then he shifted gears and
came with the hot stuff. Anytime
you give him an early lead, he gets
tougher."
Rijo's food-inspired slow slart
didn't help lhe Astros. After Eric
Anlhony and Ernest Riles got second inning singles, Rijo retired
eight in a row until Eddie
Taubensee doubled to break the
string in lhe flflh.
"As far as Jose, you can't throw
any better," Reds manager Lou
PinieUa said. "'You look at his last
eight or nine starts, !hey are equal
to anyone in baseball."
Greg Swindell, pitching before
his hometown crowd, came off the
disabled list earlier Monday and
pilched an inning in relief.

Swindell had not worked in relief
since April15, 1987, when he was
with the Cleveland Indians.
"I wanted to pitch lhe ninth too,
I felt good," SwindeU said. "Bul I
knew if I tried I migh1 jeopardize
their plans. There's stiU some pain
but as long as I can tolerale it, I'm
OK.''

Barry Larkin said he'd be back
in the lineup tonight after being
forced to leave the game in the
fourth inning when he was hit by a
bat lhrown by home plale umpire
Terry Tala.
Tate tossed the bat out of the
way of a play at home plate; Larkin
was slanding in the on-deck circle.
"It's just one of 1hose lhings
that happen, thank goodness it
wasn't !hat bad," Larkin said. "I
was jus1 sitting there and he just
slung it at me. It hun. Yeah, I plan
on playing tomorrow night'·

"Cal was the key to this game,"
a Labor Day crowd of 41 ,348,
It's the batter's box.
said
Yount.
including
his
family,
cheered
his
"In lhe box pretty much if you
But
Yount 's quest helped
everymoveona
1-for-3
day.
have your mind elsewhere your
Eldred,
100.
''I will go uR and try to get a hit
chances are pretty slim," or getting
"Aclually it takes a litde bit of
every
time up, ' he said. "When it
a hit, Yount said Monday when his
the
steam off you," said Eldred, 7·
happens
is
out
of
my
conttol.
fourth-innin~ single off Cleve·
since
being called up July 15.
I
"You
just
hope
the
rest
of
the
land's Denms Cook pulled him
"It's
just exciting. It's awesome
guys
aren
t
distracted
and
are
able
wilhin two hits of 3,000.
when
you
sit down and think only
to
concentrate
and
play
their
game.
"It's going to happen when it's
17
players
have done that (reached
That's
the
main
concern
here,
what
going to happen.~· YOunt said after
3,000).
For
me just getting started,
we
do
as
a
team.
I'd
bale
to
have
the Brewers beat the Indians 2..0 as
it's
just
unbelievable."
!his lake away from that.''
Eldred has not given up a run in
But Brewers manager Phil Gar·
ner said Youn l need not worry 58 J.. J of the 62 1·3 innings he's
piiChed !his season. On Monday he
about being a dislraction.
"We're happy for him. We're gave up only four hits in seven
excited for him. It's just a great innings.
personal achievement. Robin
G~g Vaughn hil his 191h homer
league:
would be lhe fust to tell you !hat in lhe second. Yount singled in the
!.Jim Wikoff, Shade, OH 122.0 he's not playing for 3,000," Gamer fourlh, stole second and went 10
third on a passed ball, scoring on
2. B. Hannum,Chester, OH 107.5 said.
"We're pulling for Robin too, Paul Molitor's single.
3. D. Winebrenner,Syracuse 106.5
but
we've also got a pennant race.''
"I'd love to see him get his
4. Ralph Sayre, New Haven I06.5
Rookie
right
-bander
cal
Eldred
3.000th."
Indians mana2er Mike
5. Don Wilson, Middleport 105.5
Hargrove
said.
"Robin and I were
knows
all
about
a
pennant
race.
He
6. George Bums, Clifton
104.5
rookies
together
in 1974 . He 's
won
his
sixlh
saa1gh1
game
Mon7. Clark G~tene, Hurricane 103.0
day,
dropped
his
ERA
to
1.30
and
always
been
one
of
my favoriles.
8. Pete Grinstead, N.H.
99.0
has
only
allowed
two
earned
runs
I'd
love
to
see
him
gel
three hits
9. Charlie Lesler, Evans
97.5
in
44
2-3
innings.
just
as
long
as
we
get
more
runs
10. EariJohnson, Mason
97.5
than !hey do.''
95.5
II. Elmer Click, Mt. Alto
12. Harley Rice, Reedsville 94.5
13. Herman Kna,PP, N. Haven 94.5
14. Carroll Noms, Syracuse 93.5
15. l.ew GiUand, Masoo
90.0
16. Sonny Chandler, Gallipolis 88.5
17. Roy Crawford,Millwood 82.5
NEW YORK (AP) - John 34-minute run, Co'urier had over18. Jack Young, CouageviUe 80.5 McEnroe
sees the writing on the
19. Lawrence Crotty, P.P.
80.0 wall, probablJ because he can't see powered the 33-year-old McEnroe
20. Luther 'lUcker, Mason
79.5 lhe writing on the ball when il goes 6-2,6-2,7-6 (7-1).
Allhough Courier, winner of the
21. Jim Roush, N. Haven
75.5 whizzing,past
Australian
Open in January and his
22. John Ferguson, N. Haven 75 .5
"This IS a pretty clear indication second straight French Open in
23. Milt Max wen, Chester
73.5 that Jim has outplayed me and that June, used his powerful serves and
24. Harold Clark, R'wood
73.0 the top guys are clearly a step blistering groundsuokes to blud25. Jack Nugent, Vinton, OH. 70.0 ahead of me," McEnroe said after geon McEnroe, he was gracious to
faDing to top-seeded Jim Courier in the crafty left-bander who's won
Submitted by a fourth-round match at the U.S. seven Grand Slam titles - three
Bob Greene, Ty Roush Open on Monday.
Wimbledons and four U.S. Opens.
"I have nothing to hang my
head about," McEnroe said. "I
"At his peak, I don 'I think !here
played as hard as I could. He just
was anybody that could beat him ...
outplayed me, simple as !hat.''
on
grass,'' Courier said. ''I am sure
McEnroe plays a touch game,
we
are going to miss him when he
chipping, taking the net, using
is
gone.
you just don' t replace lal·
angles. Courier is raw powrs.
ents
just
like that. There are some
PJ . Chad wen and Nathan Baloy
And when Monday's match on
other
players,
surely, bul !here will
led lhe Meigs Marauders to a fust· lhe hardcouns of lhe National Tennever
be
another
John."
place finish over Athens and nis Center finished its two-hour,
Alexander last Thursday in a three
1eam cross county meet at Lake
Snowden outside of Albany.
ChadweU had a career best time
of 17:00 in lhe 3.1-mile course, and
Baloy finished in second place
behind his teammale with a career
best time of 17:20. Olher Meigs
finishers included Bobby Johnson
IN SYUCUSE, OHIO
in fifth place, Phillip Edmonds in
sevnenth and Crockett Roush in
eighlh place.
The Lady Marauders fmislted in
second place behind Athens. Katrina Turner finished in sixlh place,
Healher Franckowiak in eighth and
Elizabeth Downie in eighlh. Also
scoring for Meigs were Susan
Grueser, Mary Grueser, Lori KeUy,
Kristy Dill. Kelly Sauerfield, Ali·
son Gerlach and MisSy Wilfon~.
The·next meet for Meigs wiD be
•EAP., NOSE &amp; THROAT •ALLERGY
next Saturday at the Warren Invita·
•HEARING AIDS • HEAD &amp;NECK SURGERY
tiona!.
Melpuoa
For Your h••"~
country ate
Sc~ 12-at Warren Invitational
ScpL IS·at Olllipolia InV!rational
Medicare &amp; UMWA A$slgnment Acce1pted
Sept. 24-at Jackson Invi1ational
Sept. 26-at Lancaster Invitational
SUITE 112 VALLEY DRIVE1 PT,
OcL 3·1l Rio Grande lnviwiollll
OcL 10-Siemwhecl Run

Wikoff ahead by 14 points
in senior golf league action
MIKE BARTRUM

Bartrum named
Marshall captain
Pomeroy native Mike Barttum
has been named one of six captains
for the 1992 Marshall University
Thundering Herd. The captains
were selecled by in a vote by lhe

team.

Joining lhe 1988 Meigs graduate
as captains were quarterback
Michael Pay1on and guard Phil
Ratliff on offense. Defensive end
Bob Lane, nose 18Ckle Bryan Liuon
and linebacker Donahue Stephenson are lhe defense's captains.

FALL HARDY MUMS
All Colors 6 FOR $1 0
HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
SYUCUSE, OH.
Southern Photo's

GUARANTEE
NO ADDITIONAL P'UNTI

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Racine Hydroelectric Project, located at river mile 237.5
on Ihe Ohio River, is owned by
Ohio Power Company. This projecl is licensed as Project No.
2570 by the Fe&lt;!erai Energy
Regulatory Commission.
The Project is operated in close
coordination with the Corps of
Engineers as a run-of-river
hydroelectric facility.
Public recreational facilities at
this project consist of an
overlook area with' parking
facilities, comfort station, picnic
area, · and fishing pier. They
may be I'IIBChed via State Route
338 in Meigs County, Ohio. The
facilities are open to all
members of the public at all
times without discrimination.
Additional informalion is
available from Ohio Power
Company's Pomeroy Office
local ad at 110 Mulberry
Avenue, ·Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,
telephone 61 4-992·231 7.

and uncharacleristically walked
four.
It was the third time !his season
he's walked more than two batters
in a game.
Brian Williams (7 -5) walked lhe
bases loaded in the first inning and
Hal Morris scored the rll'st run on
Glenn Braggs' grounder.
· BiU Doran tripled and scored on
Rijo's single in lhe second and Rijo
also scored on Barry Larkin's single and the Reds were in control
· with a 3..0 lead.
It was all Rijo needed, but he
and the Reds kept battering the
Astros. Morris' single produced
another run in lhe fourth and three
runs scored in lhe flfth on a sin~e
by Bill Doran, a sacrifice by R1jo
and a grounder by Dave Martinez.
Rob Mallicoat, the Asttos' fifth
pitcher, gave up lhree runs in the
ninlh on Martinez's two-run double
and a single by Chris Sabo.

Milwaukee posts 2-0 win over Cleveland
MILWAUKEE (AP)- There's
one place where Robin Yount can
go these days to escape and forget
about l!is chase of 3,000 hits. There
are no reporterS, no teammates and
no questions awaiting him there.
It's a small area where he's been
so many times during his 19 years
with the Milwaukee Brewers. It's a
place where he has excelled, where
he must concentrate and then react

a

Meigs golfers keep winning

By MICHAEL A. LUTZ
HOUSTON (AP) - Cincinnati
pilcher Jose Rijo had better luck
wilh Houston hillers than he did
wilh his meal the night before.
Rijo arrived a1 lhe Astrodome
feeling sluggish Monday after eat·
ing at a Japanese restaurant, but he
showed no signs of illness on the
mound, pitchin$ seven flawless
innings and leadmg lhe Reds to a
10·0 victory.
" I lhink it was something I ale
last night, some meat," he said.
"Maybe I ought to eat that meat
before every game. When I firsl
went out there, I thought I'd get my
butt kicked.
"I felt slow. I just didn't feel
like I could pitch, but lhe more I
pitched the better I felt."
Rijo's teammales helped him
feel beuer with 13 hits and an early
lead in Cincinnati's fourth victory
in five games. Rijo struck out six

Jim Wikoff of Shade, OH., has
opened up a fourteen and one-half
point lead as the RivCJSitle Senior
League enlers the final monlh of
the 1992 season. Wikoff's 122 total
leads Bill Hannum or Chester, OH.,
who has a 107.5 tally for the year.
Hannum is in his first full season in
the league and is a retired Meigs
County bus cmf.loyee at Easter Local High Schoo .
Jim Roush of New Haven, who
has been in lhe league since the on·
set, has finally been on lhe team
that won for the week. Charley l.es·
ter, lhe league tough man contest
winner, was heard saying, Even a
blind hog will triP over an acorn
sooner or la1er."
Roush's eight points for the
week has vaulted him into the top
25 for lhe first time in his senior
league career.
The seniors are now looking
forward to their last four weeks of
play as w~ll as their Annual Senior
Round-up on SepletTiber 29. A pic·
nic will be held after play on the
291h and all senior league par·
ticipants are invited to atlend. As in
the past, !here will be plenty to eat
for IWJch, some liquid refreshment,
a closcst-to-the·hole contest, and
awards ceremony, and perhaps a
few new $8fRCS for lhe fellows to
!'Y· There 1s a rumor that perhaps a
h1dden video camera will be in the
· area with a microphone to pick up a
little of the golf language that has
been created by !his year's senior
edition.
The club championship wiD be
held over the Labor Day weekend
for S4 holes of tough competition at
Riverside.
FoUowing is a list of the top 2S
point tolals for the 1992' golf

Meigs sports calendar
2 · 11x14s 4-8x10s
4 • 5 x 7s
32 • WALLETS

16 • GIANT WALLETS
NEGATIVES

"FREE"
IIDUPII-Y
l'tiTWII
WIIA&lt;
Cll.llllf

BUTTONS AND BOWS
100 E. MAIN IT.
INPOIIEAOY
Tllul'lljly, 8tpt. 10
2:00 PM Ul1:00 PM
"TODAY'B lloEMOR1ES...
TOMORROW'S TREASURES"

I

Today
VARSITY VOLU!YBALL·Feder·
al Hocking 11 home
SEVENTFI GRADE FOOTBAll.·
Point Pleasant 11 home
Wednesday
VARSITY VOLLEYBALL-at
Eastern
JUNIOR HIGH VOLLEYBALL·II
Vinton County
nunc1ay
FRESHMAN FOOTBALL-II Yin·
ton County
GOLF.TVC Meet at Alexander
VARSITY VOLLEYBALL·81
Millrs
Friday
VARSITY FOOTBALL-at Vinton
County
Saturday ·
CROSS COUNTRY-at Warren
Local Invitational

Courier gives McEnroe exit
visa in Round 4 of U.S. Open

Meigs harriers beat
Athens, Alexander
in three-team meet

MEIGS COUNTY KlUTE CLUB
WILL HAVE BEGINNING KARATE CLASS
STARTING SEPT. 8 - 6:00 P.M.
'AT CARLTON SCHOOl

Instructors are Mlck Howell and nm Jenkins
For More lnformatJon Call

614·992·6839 or 992·6170

.JOHN WADE, M.D., INC.

'·

VINCENT RESIGNS - Baseball commissioner Fay Vincent,
shown at a game during spring training in Chandler, Ariz., resigned
Monday arter 8D overwhelming no-confidence vole by major league
owners. (AP)

Johnson wins various honors
in Dallas karate tournament
Mike Johnson of Reynoldsbmg,
son of Charles "Bunky" Johnson
and grandson of Eillcen Snyder of
Middleport. recently won the silver
medal m grand fashion durin$ lhe
U.S.A. Karate Federation Nauonal
Championships in Dallas, Texas.
The win now puts lhe younger
Johnson, a senior at Reynoldsburg
l'!igh School, at number one in lhe
state.
Johnson , 17, has also won an
all-Ohio 1oumament at Westland
High School in Columbus, and also
won lhe Gold Metal at the Universily of Akron at the U.S.A. Federil·
lion Atlantic League Champi·
onships. That region stretches from
Florida to Canada between the
Atlantic Ocean and the Mississippi
River.
Johnson's accomplishments are
even greater considering he recent·
ty has endured lhe trauma of his
fathrs's exlended illness.
The elder Johnson stated, "I
would like to thank everyone for
!heir prayers and well wishes dur..
ing my slay in the hospital. I'm
really proud of Mike's accomplishments."
The "Tiger's Den" Karale club
of Reynoldsburg just relllmed from
1he U.S. A. Karate Federation
National Championships in Dallas
where Sensei Bob Krammer sent
four students, including Johnson, to
compele.
In claiming the silver medal ,
Johnson had to win 1wo consecu·

MIKE JOHNSON
tive fights 10 get to top seated com·
petition, who had not yel had to
fight in the tourney.
Already having been defeated
once in the double elimination
tournament, Johnson came back io
beat the top seed from ColoradO.
Johnson now was going for his seventh conseculive match and a
rematch with lhe competitor from
Colorado. Through! the opening
segments, both were lied wilh 2 1/2
points. However, Johnson barely
losl out in the latler stages of the
championship boul to claim the sil·
ver of the Green Belt division.

Several Bengals get summonses
to appear in Seattle rape trial
CI~CINNATI (AP)- Several
Cincinnati Bengals have been
served wilh summonses in a lawsuit filed by a woman who claims
15 current or former players ,
according 10 newspaper and broadcast reports.
The Cincinnati Enquirer and
KIRO·TV in Seattle reponed Sun·
day the summonses were served
while the learn practiced Sa1urday ·
for their game Sunday agains1 the
Seattle Seahawks. KIRO reponed
lhal six players were served wilh
papers. The reports did not identify
the players.
"I believe ccr1ain legal procedures took place, bul we're not at
liberty 10 discuss 1hem ," Joe
Musara. coon securily officer for
lhe U.S, marshal 's office in Seattle
lold The Enquirer. "They're slill
under seal for a few more days.''
The woman, identified in court
documents as Victoria C., accused
15 currenl and former Ben$als
players as having raped her m a
Tukwila, Wash., hole! in October
1990.
Victoria Vreeland, a lawyer for
the plainliff, said the players'
names were likely to be available
in public records on Tuesday, the

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities Com·
mission of Ohio has set
for public hearing .Case
No. 92-101-EL·EFC, to
review the fuel procure·
ment practices and
policies of Ohio Power
Company, the operation
of lis Electiic Fuel Component, and related mat·
rers. This hearing is
scheduled to begin at the
Commission offices at
10:00 a.m. on September
9, 1992.
All interested parties will
be given an opportunity
to be heard. Further infor·
mation may be obtained
by contacting the Commission at 180 East
Broad Street, Columbus,
Ohio 43266-0573.

first business day afler the Labor
Day holiday.
Docwnents were filed in Victoria C.'s civil lawsuit Friday in U.S.
Districl Coon in Seattle, but Judge
John Coughenour ordered them
sealed 10 preven1 public access •
The Enquirer and The Cincinnati
PDSt have reported.
Bengals general manager Mike
Brown acknowledged that a deal
had been struck thai would keep
lhe players' names secret until aller
Sunday's game, The Enquirer
reported.
"I know whal's going on, but
I'm not goi ng 10 comme01,"
Brown said.
The Bengals flew in10 Sca1de·
Tacoma Airport on SaiUrday, then
were bused 10 Sealtie's Kingdome
for practice.

State Auto's already
low premiums can be
1educed even more by
insuring both your car
· and home with the St\lle
Auto Companies.
Let us ten you just
how much your savings
can be.

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lDiuJuce Servicea

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687

.I!J

$tate Alllo .

Insurance Companlea

..

�Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, September 8, 1992

Pomeroy-UI

r

Tuesday, September 8, 1.992

Mother should no longer allpw
qer 11-year~old to sleep with her

BlLLETI:\ BO .\RD
BULUnl BOARD DIIDUIE
4:30 P. M. DIY BEFORE
PUiliCAnOI

•

=

Dellr Aaa Lladers: I have a thst buttOnS or zips up the back.
ulf-Md/'qud, loltf, looiMss.sbe
Wluu CG/i yo11 gi~ IM ptrson envelo~ Gild 11 clreck or 111/JUY
38 anc1 has 111 ll·yeilr-old wlw 1ras everything? Ann Lalukrl order. for $4.85 (this includes
SOli. "Enuull" has lhaJed he( bed
booklet, "Gems," is ideal for a posttJgt Gild lituuUIII8) /1}; Gems,
wiilll IIIII' 1011, "Josh." ever since he nightslillld or coffee table. "Guts" c/o .AM l..twlm, 1'.0. Box 11562.
isacolltctionofAnnLtwitrs'most , ChiCago, Ill. 60611 -0562. (I~
Now Bllllnl has fOUIId a boy· requested ~ms and essays. Send a Canada, stnd $5.87.)
frieiMI, IIIII lhc -~~ privacy. Sbc
hal IOid Josll IIIII he must start

friCnd who has never been man'ied.

I

s'* •

KIDS' BOWLING LEAGUE
STARTING SAT., SEPT. 12
3:30p.m. at
POMEROY BOWLING
LANES

--w.c.

slc:eJ~in&amp; in his own .bed in his
own room. Naturally, Josb feels
di;,alced llld is upset about the new

HEART TO HEART MEETING
THURS., SEPT. 10, 7:00P.M.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Dining Room
Speaker: Sterling Maxfield
Topic: Wok Cooking
Oemonslration

&amp;I~ Emma invited a 1().
aid from Josh's class to
spend die ni&amp;hL The two tids wm
ye~r,ald

SIIIJi *clto sleep next 10 each other
inJheir sleeping bap on the floor in
Emili's bedroom. Aftu a while,
Josh aqJ1
Emma's bed. In the

no

mOnlinJ, the liule aid asked whe(e
he had dislppend Ill, bul Josh lied

and said he was right next to her all
1M time. I doo't know where Emma's
head is to allow two children of the
opposite sex to sleep next 10 each
other 111 lhis age. She says they are
much 100 young to have any
notions about sexuality.
I have grown children, Ann, two
boys and two girls, and I wouldn't
peimit the oldet boy and girl to camp
out together when they were II and
13. Am I nutty on lhis subject, as
some people have suggested? What
kilid of advice can yoo give? Emma
won\ li:aen 10 anylhing I say, and
I'm llllly concerned. •• A GOOD
FRIEND IN INDIANA
DEAR GOOD FRIEND: Emma
m~ have popcorn wbm her brains
belonJIO have kept Josh in her bed
foi II )'1111'S. And that she invited a
girt froiiiiChool to sleep over with
.Jolill is mind-bogling. Where is the

••
",.

"

p
'

'

•

•

#.

girt's IIIOIIICI'!

.,

Emma needs 10 talk 10 Josh's
pediatrician before the boy is
tllqrouply smwcd up. You are a
goOd fricad to take an inlmSt in
this kooky woman. I hope she
apjlreci~tes your friendship and

'

!I

WED

...

·~.

s

.'

IGHT
••

.~

,,

..,
I

"

•

Dear A. . L11ders: We arc
wriliDI ill raponse 10 the Icucr from
t i l l ( - in Sial Diego who feared
th3l her brother would seriously

injUre lhcir 66-ycar-dd mother.
Tfl8ially, abuse cases among the
elderly are skyrockeling. Tbm has
been a SO percent rise in the last 10
years. Thll 66-year-old wanan is
on~ one of an estimated U million
o1c1er Americans who are abused
evtizy ys by family members or

Public Notice

-ord.

Daacrlptlon for the lbove
lrocl being the rHulta of o
aurway modi by Rlch•d·c.
" ' - R s N 0 5161
_,..w, · ·
·
•
dllld 12·11·77.
DEEO REFERENCE:
Volume 211, Poge 151,
Molge County Dead
Recorda.
.
Thlllbove claacriblcl rMI
lllale Ia ldlndftld In the
, _ . ollhallltiga County
Auditor by Paroal No. 180047L
Sold rul Niall wu
ot: $4,0110.110.
.~C::.not be
1.
1••
- 1
lila lhln two-lhirdll
the appr...., value.
JMIIHil Soullby
Sherif! of Melge County,
Ohio
1, Ute

Public Noilce
jact prior to tho dill lplclfted In the preceding
•onol Fundi: lltiaa
County Commlallo,... w111
undarloke tho projeoll
daacrlblillbova with Com·
munlty Dovaioprnonl Block
County Rd. 19Gront Fund lrom 111• &amp;bola
Peachfork Rd.
of Ohla under Tille I of the
992·70113
Houelng ""' of 1874. Melge
County Comml11lono11 ore
Mon.-&amp;un.lam-&amp; pm
certilylng to the Sbole of
SH u• lor your hunting
Ohio thol Molgo County
ond back to achool
Commlaslonarlllbnnlng
nnda. """'• largaat
Rouoh, President, In hlo
IOiactlon of mllltory
olflalll capacity •• prHI·
1Urplllllt.mal 8117 pel.
dent conoenl to occopt the
jurlaclloUiln of the Fodaral
Court• II ony action I•
brought to anlorae raaponFUTilE •••
elbllllllln rollllon to MV~
GIIIIIAL
IIIJICI
ronmanlel review, cltclllon
milling end octlon; end thll
'-:.t.~_t.-lhllo raponolbllld• hava
20%-30'1!o~....
bean aallallod. Tha legal
allect ol lila cortlllcallon Ia
upon Ita opprovol. Tho
fr• Esllitatlll-)'42·2$60
Molge County Comml11lon·
ara moy uoa the Block
For •Pawi• Oaly
Gront lunda ond tht Slate
will hove aollaliod ita
Pro..... Dlt Gra I I
rapaonolbllitioa under lha
liy CMIIW
National Environmont Poll· IAND'f SIOUIIUTlHOUII&amp;
cy Act al 1811.
Hew~ Now l11111, WY
Objecllon to lbe Stole
Pit.
304-882•3421
ReluH of Fund: Tho Slate
will ocoopl obfoction to Ita
epprovll only II on one of
tho following oblecllona: (a)
the cll'llllcodon Ia not In
flct IXICU!Id by the
Clrlilylng OHicer or other
olftcer of lho opplicont
approved by the Stall or (b)
that appllcanta.envlronmentol review record lor the
proJect lndlcelad oml11lon
of 1 roquk.r cltclelon findIng or alap oppllcobla to tha
protect In lha 111vtronmenta1
review procHe. Objection
muat be propored and aubmltt.r In occordonco with
tha roqulred procllfura (24
CFR P•t 58) ond may be
tldclrHud to the StalL
Objactiona lo tho rol111o
afluftd on beaoa olh• than
M
lhoao allied abova wnl not _2_ _1n__
em_o_,rv_ _
bl conelder.r by tho Stall.
No objecUon1 recelv.r oltar
Octob• 8, 11112 will be conaldwed by lha Slate.
Monnlng Roullh, Praaldonl
Melge County
on his 47th blrt~day
Com mill lone,.
Sept. 8-45
Courlhoua•
Pomeroy, Ohio 45169
Aug.23·87
(9) I, lie

All-•

WILSON'S ARMY
SURPLUS

-••ISatlt.....

Or-•

127

WH().().Q-0

can help
yw?

CLASSFIED
ADS

Jack F. King Sr.

MORRIS
GARAGE DOOR SERVICE .
f.'m!n TRY OUR NEW
IBIIllJil STEEL INSULATED
RAISED PANEL GARAGE DOOR

MICROWAVE
aadYCRUPAIR
AU liliES

lri11It " Or We
Pllk !!!- .

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or
915·3561

Jou

1--------

Office

With 2 Transmlttara

Willi PurcltaH of
Door Plus Opeaer
Receive FREE · Seal Trim

BISSELL &amp; BURKE

CONSTRUCTION

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

FaEE ISTIMAYES

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

985·4473
. 667·6179
H·92-lln

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

614-949·2801. 949·2860
or 985·3839

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

(Ho Sunday Calls)

2112.192/lfn

LICENSED ond BONDED

PH. 614·992-5591
12·5-tln

~JAYMAR

Quality ·
Stone Co.

Air Colditloaers, Heat

Np'o:'w!::~~:t~rs.

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Call 614•992•
6637

·Quality HI Efficieacy
1111Jen~1ettsMobile
1391SaHordSchtiRd.

!RACINE MOWER

,,
..,
"

and resources to handle the
overwllclming tiSCloads We have
ii'MJPduccd legislation 10 extend the
same protection 10 older Americans
which was afforded America's
childten in the landmark Child
Abule ~lilll and Tiealmenl Act
of i974. Among its provisions, our
bill would provide additional money
to swe agencies to enable lbem to
invt•is* reported cases of elder

•

"
,..

,.

••

'..,."'
•l

abuse.
Our legislllion has been incorpo-

I.

'"

rated into the Older Americans
Act. which hopefully wiU be signed

f·:

•••

...

illiO law laler lhis year. -U.S. SEN.
DENNIS DECONCINI AND U.S.

'·

REP. MARY ROSE OAKAR,
MEMBERS OF CONGRESS,
WASHJNGTON, D.C.
DEAR SEN. DECONCINI AND
REP. OAXAR: The legislation you
haw delcribcd would be a boon to
our: ICilior citizens. I can~ imagine
an)!ooe vocina against it Let me
know when it becomes law.
Gem of the Day: To those who

ESDAY

think women II'C srnaner than men:
Show me a man who wears a shirt

Spike Lee
provokes debate
NASHVILLE, Tenn . (AP) -

..

Filmmaker Spike Lee's call for stu·
dents to skip school to see hi s
movie " Mak:obn X" has provoked
a debate among educators over
how to teach the Black Mu slim

"w

Two incredible hours. 120 magical minutes when yGI!IICITillle ••·en 111 a
store. fllll of furniture--where all furniture items are marked 581. O"H WI
don't mean "up to" 50% off. We mean HALF THE REGliM lDEim
PRICE! In, fact, this offer is so spectacular, we canoot!JsMiw ..ns~•tja
lon~er than two hours. So, after that time, the doors willtJeb•at-•else will be admitted into this sale. But we'll be takingoulalsblll . . aatomers who are inside--no matter how long h takes1 Bliru Jllll' • \ ....,....
MasterCard! Or, use our convenient credh terms! .No:p:ta•
II
final! Get here early to get in line so you'll be sure Of ,
- ••••
.before this super sale is over!

le&lt;lder's legacy.
Raymond Winbush, psychologist and assistant provost director
of the Black Cultural Center at
Vanderbilt University, said the call
shQuld raise black consciousness.
i•tt wiD show that black people
cari mobilize," Winbush said.
Others disqree and say a oneday brealc from the classroom isn't

enouah.
"Don't get me wrons. I'm not
an uti-Spite Lee person," said
Joseph Baldwin, chairman or the
psychoJo&amp;Y ~ent at Florida
A.lM University. "But I believe
we need to have 1
agenda of actions, and nor JUSt one day.
What's going to happen a week
aflclthe movie?"
I;cc says his rum, due in the·
llliCI'S on Nov. 20, represents Ameli·
can history that students are not

lonf·term

·G

"

2

y

at 50% 0FF

••';1
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..,. .
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,=~q
;~~
'lP

---

Pill DILIVUY

nasrrup

n•IIIIIDIIL

OLD 1!1111

·
MO-

... _

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'jl

"v
I •
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·•

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~

'-----=:...:.:...=
CHARLIE'S .

WI ao

fiOII...,

Illicit"'

I

I

,,

prop••-

l·

Gcapolls.OWo

aoonNG :'.

AND EYERnHING UNDERNUTH
GARAGES • ADDITIONS • SIDING

I

,,

TROMM BUILDERS

.,

• A Quality Assured Ca•tracto,.
20 Yr. Exp.
Call AI, 614·742·2328
81171tfn

SHRUB &amp; Tiff
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING .
•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992-2269

WHALEY'S
PARTS

Spedolirlng hi Custom
Frome R~lr
NEW &amp; USED P RTS
ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS

992·7013 or
992·5553

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

1·80G-141·0070
OHIO

NOWDPEN

CURIO
BARN

n~~!~ng

;)I
38904 Leading
CI'HkRoad
Middleport, Ohio

614·992·7144
/92

HOWARD
EXCAVATING
BULLDOZE~CIOIOE

end TRAC

WORK
AVAILASI.E.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES ond
TRAILERS!~

L.ANDCLEAR

•

DR1VEWAYSINSTALLED
LIIESTDNE-TRUCKIHG

FREE ESTIMATES

992·3838

t9 ., co.

LINDA'S
PAINTING

.,•• "'" , . 0.1

. ...

or lOLL FREE

USED RAILROAD TIES

992·7553

.

~-

614·949·2804

.....,

_.,..&gt;OJ

.

Home

~~st~.~Rt;·~7~~!lr::::~~(~(6~14~,4~4'"~'~·~~·~·~1-8~00~-·~,2~-s~,6~7~~l ·
CLINIC

1--------

,
'·

INSTILLED PRICES
9Jl7-$275.00 16!17-$450.00
OPENERS INSTIUED-Yt HP-$200.00

PUBLIC NOTICE
To:Em.,.H Gllmoro and
AoronCII Gllmoro, II Hvlng,
Never oday goes by
Cheshire, OH.
whoM acldrau 11 urilcnown;
that aren't
thounknownhelrl,dl'l'-,
Public Notice
legataae, edmlnletretoro,
misse a1d loved.
eiiCIUiora, ondlonulgna of
Wile • Joan King
Emmett Gilmore end
PUBLIC NOTICE
Chlldrea • Jack Jr.,
Aor- Gilmore, II do·
TO: Thelma A. Gruoaer, II
-ald.
PubliC Notice
living, whooo addreaa Ia
Jeff, Jennifer &amp; Jula
Vou . . hereby noMIIad
unknown;lheunknownhelro,
P.O.Ioxi94-Walw Alley
that your raol-11 alluatod
LEGAL NOTICE
devl-•, legatoq, admlnla·
RAOIItOIIIO
11 200 Condor Strllt, Pomtrotoro, exocutora, and/or
I M
=~:-•ndmorolullyd•
No-tothoPubllcol
aaalgna or Thelma A. 2
n emory
(lor..Jr
!atlo IWp Small
below, hal lilln InSlgnillconllmptiCII on
Grueaer, II doceesed.
_ _ _ _ _..;...._ _
biiHI
.,....., by .,. eppniprlell Enwlron- Mid NoiiCI to
TO: Jeaao Gruuer, illlv·
PARTS &amp; SERVKE
Vlllgt
0111
I+
Mid.,.,_
lhl
Public
of
of
lng,
who11 las I known adSHERIFF'S SALE OF
Ia Lovlag Memory of
25; l9112 draao I• 1905 MI. Vernon
lure
eltuelld
*
hll
Fundi,
Soptamblr
Moweu • CHit Saw~
REAL ESTATE
~-The Malge County Com· •..
p 1 PI
W
The Slate of Ohio, • __ , dll'*n loa d.lo bl ._. million••· Mtigii County -onuo, o nt· eaunl, eat
• Weedeaters
oure and 111111,. Md uld Courthouaa, Pomeroy, Ohio VIrginia, and whose proaenl
Mtiga County
etructura llnotona 1M 1m- 45711• To All lnteraated addreu Ia unknown: tho
No. 12-CV-67
m.r1111 health, uloty 111d
G
d unknown helro, devloeeo,
SOUTHBANK
1
Born: Sept. 8, 1965
wetlerelo
the
dtlzono
of
lila
Agano
aa,
roupa
on
•
PlalntiH
~.. on or lbout Oct a, 1::::~g:~ admlnlalralora,
:
TYret
Vlllege of Pom. .y. FurtMr, 1812
~
d
and/or aaalgna ol
Died:
A~g. 10, 1988
W1111:er Alii,.
....,..
lho defective and unula
• tho aoova nama
Gruesar, II deceaa.r.
DWIGHT P. MEDLEY, etal
condlllon of uld llruckNe county will "1ueet •
You 110 hereby nollllod
Dear Dave,
j t
[!]
Dah!MIInla
rale- of lunda rom lho
10 1111 State of Ohio, Department
In pu,.uence of en Orcltr polll an
the rill oatllt ollult.r
We lust wanted to let
~ • N • ·I-~.·""'·..z.•
of Ballin the obovo Mtillld public heallh, ur.ty lnd of Dlwlopment unc* TiHel
103 Cherry StrHI, Pom·
you
know
that
your
I ..
i
oetlon, I will oller lor ule II weiiJre allho -munlty.
of the Houalng . ond eroy, Ohio end more fully
Th. .tore,puFIUIIniiOthe
always Ill our thoughts, I
5-l4-92·l~
public oucUon, al tha do or euthorlty
Ylll.r by tho Ohio Community Development detcrlbod below, hu bean
of tha Court Hou11 In RavtMd Code Seollon 715 ""I ol1874 (RL ta-383) lor lnlpecledbythupproprllll
hpedally on spedol
Pom. .y, In tha abovo end Ordlna- No. 4• 7 of... lhlllo.owlng proJect
VlllageOifldolnnd lhealruodays hke this.
nemed County, on lotondoy, V::Cie 01 Pomwor.•_,, 111
VIllage of Pomeroy, rura altual.r th•oon hea
otlllad
, ••_.. a...,.. ""tlvlty. .
been determined 10 be lnSeptember 28, 1192, at
We miss you so vll'y
10:00 A.M. lha lollowlng
rn
lh.t 11 The project lnvolvoe the cure and unule lfld uld
~-cri~""'
r"l
......
,
eiiU·
atrualure
It
not
,_...,
or
...
lid
1
h
alructuro
lhreotona
tho lmSMALL DOZEI
much and lust wish we '
.... .....
,.,.
rehlblfllllldwltlrln~~= ...mo uon o 1 ouaa on
atad In Townehip of
-• 210 Eaol Main Slroet In tha m.rlate heallh, l!lfety and
1
could sH you one more
ChHtw, County of llelg1, dey• lroon the llat
·
Vlllege of Pom•oy ond tha wallaro lo the dtlzona ollhl
DRIVEV:a\
flou
11111
end Stele of Ohio ond lion dill of
notlco lhen demoliUon of o houaa on Vllloge ol Pomwoy. Further,
time lust to give you a
and
LIMESTONE
rteacrlblcl ulollon to wll: tho VNiege ol P - y wiM 263 Waat Main Slrlllln tho the defective end unaale
big birthday hug. Our
Beginning ot the eoulh· 0 '" 11 "ld llrUOIUN to Ill Vllloge of Pom•oy In the condition ol ·aald atructure
DEltVEIY SEIVICE
1111 comer al Frecdon 23, remova:ESCRIPTION .
County of Melga.
po111 on amergency lo lho
S...l Dour Work
memories of you will be
$25.00 .....,
~n:,•L~~· J;.;"!,sih~~j~
Slluol.r In lha VIllage al .:.~H ~'!ot!~::;! public ~~/!:'· lllety and
In our he!lrts forever.
IWOIIAIU
lAID
Coonpony"a Purcho11; Pomoroy, County of 111111• mln.r that eucha requHI
Happy
Birthday
Dovel
by the Ohio
thane• Wilt to William ond Sll.ll of Ohio lnd ~·· for r...U. of lunda will not
Blgga' corn• In tha conlar partlcul.,ly bounded lnd conlltula IIi ecllon llgnlfl·
Code Section 715
Love anti miss you,
POMIIOY,OH.
ol a brook; thenoo north to dlacrlbld •• lollowe: Being .-tty afiecting the qullllty
No. 427 oflhe
Your
Famly
and
Friends
8-11-'92·1 mo. d.
of Pomeroy, you ere
tho center of Shodl River; en thll pert ol Lot No. 41 of the hum• envlron111111t
thence down c.onter al (IMing on the 1111 olclt) ond oftd .,cordlngly, ....obova
notified lhat II uld
Shldll Rl-lo IICiion Rne; aoiMidlng blick from Condor n•!ll• county h• .declcltd
11 nol ramoved or
thence eoulh on aale IIC· Straatettho wldlh 01471121 not to prapere on
lhlrty (30)
Real Estate General
lion llna to tho ploca ol dlaiMcooiiOOiaiiMdbllng Envlronmantol lmpect
from tho lUI publica;
beginning, containing thirty· IH of Lot No. 41,1ylna Et1tol Statement under the
dala al lhla notloo lhen
thr11 (33) ocru, more or lhll part told to A. "' 11• Natlonll Envlronmentol
VIllage of Pomeroy will
IML
.
conviiJ.r to Honry Wlnllr by lmpecl Sllllment undlr the loo,uae 111d structure to bo
Property Addrau: Rollte dead of Jacob Billtl, Admin- National Envlronmentol removed.
t, Box 114, Twp. Rd. ~. lotratorwlththeWIIIInneled Polley ol1161 (P.C.I1·110).
DESCRIPTIOI'I
Alcina, Ohio 45771.
ol Henry Ohlinger, dll.r
The reuono lor auch ·1
Slluoled In lho Counly of
Sold premlau eppraleed Decomb•17,1873,racorded declalon not to prep••• Molge, In lhe Stall of Ohio,
otf40,500.110ondcannotbl lnVolume41 Page551ollhe euch etotement lfl 11 lol· end In tho VIllage ol Pornaold lor laae than 213rda of Melga Counly Deed Recorda. Iowa: All ol tho above proand bounded 1nd d..
that amount
Also a rlghl ol way lor In- j - 111 ReconllrUctlon ol
u follows: Being 1
JomH M. Soul1by, gra11 end egrue over lh115 Public FaciiiUn and •• pari ol lol number Elghleen
Sharlll fool elley lacing Condor ouch . are cllilgorlully (18) In Pomeroy, doacribld
Molge County, Ohio Slraal; and acrou a rlghl al . ....,dell.
11 lollowa: Commonclllg on
LAmtr, Slmpaon l way 11tendlng olong tho 1111
An Envlron-.111 Revilw Cherry Slraol Silly (10).faat
Rothlun, Attornaya ol loll 5, 6 and 7 to tho W111 Record r11poolng lhl pro- lromthecorneroiCIMrryoftd
RlckD.O.BIHia,AIID11111J Una ol the lboVI deacrlbod poled proJect bu blln froniSirMis,lhencorunnlng
for Plolntifl premiNI.
medii by tha llbo¥1 nem.r olong uld Cherry · Strllt
992-2259
(I) I, 14, 21_3tc
REFERENCE DEED: Vol- county whlah doiumonta Twonly,IIX (28) r..t tnd II·
_ _ __;.,;..;.._;,;--'-; umt 157, Page 77, Molga the environmental rwilw of tending btok lrom Cho..y
608 EAST MAIN
POMEROY. OHIQJ
LEGAL NOTICE
Counly Deed Recorda.
the proj- Mil -luUy StraallllhewldlhoiTwonty·
NEw USTING- Momlng Star Sub.• 4yi-.Old log home wilh
Tuppen fllllnl· Chlotw
Audllor'e Parcel No. 18- alii forth the INMn• why alx (28) faa~ Sixty (80) INI to
4 bedrooms, alrim cbors, largo front porch, pom1a-pa~e
Wallf D1a1r1o1 •
00601
auch atatomont If nol lol number Nlnaleen (I 8), the
windows full basament with 2 ear garage, shower &amp; utility
Tho laat publicllllon will required. Tht Envlronrilan- .. ld pramlsu odjolnlng the
Saolod bide will be
ApProx. 5 acres on paved road. Includes Elee. heat
Mid-"" by tho be made on SepL 7, 1e92. Ill R-d lo on Ill• litho Telegraph lot so called, tho room.
pump· &amp; CIA.
. ·
$89,!100
Tuppere Plolne·Choeter THE VILLAGE OF POMEROV ~ Md Ia ovlllobltlof above cftocrlliecr promiHI
Water Dlolrlct •I thalr (8) 3,10,17, 24, 31, (8) 7; lTC public enmlnellon end
· lho umolot or parcel
VACANT LOTS- Just out of Racine. Nice wooded
Dlalrlol olftca located ot
copy upon ,.....t 11 Mtige
to Thooacreage.You cen buy one acto or up to 5 acres. Several lots
38511 Bar K Rold, juet .off - - - - - - - . . . . County Comml11lonore,
George
available. Cal for more deiailsl
s.R. 7 ond whoH mellict ·
PubliC Notice
Mllga County Courthouaa,
1 and wife, by
edclllll 11 3HI1 Bor 3D -~===:-:-::~:--- Pom-eroy, Ohio 45761 dur•
bearing dale ol Augual
FARM- Bell Run Rd.· I 1/2 story lramo home with 4
Rood, Re.r1vlllt~ Ohio,
NOTICE OF IIALE
lng normal b•ln•• hou,. 251~ 1873 end recqrded In
becJrooms. LCD water 208.61• acres most is timber with
45772, at 2:00 t".M. an
By virtue ol ., Order of 8:30 1.111. • 4:JO p.m. Nq fur. Dead Book 41 on poge190 ol
some fenced and 25• tillable. Has nice big barn and shed.
Free gas wilh 6 producing oil &amp; gas wells on the property.
Septlilllilf 14, 11112 cov· Sale l11ued out ol lha th• Environ-tal review therecordooiDeedsoiMolgl
$125,000
wing lhl pointing of both Common Piau Court of of euch proJect Ia propoa.r Counly, Ohio, Sao 1110 dead
1111 Interior ond axtarlor lor Molga Coun'Tton.~· In the lo be aondualld prior to lhll from Mary Nlggemeyar, dated
COMMERCIAL BUILDING- W. Main St. Pomeroy was
one 100,0110 galon olor~~~~t o - of The
National Relu11 of Fundi.
November 201h, 1811 and
once
a gu station. has I bedroom apt. upstairs. A great
wltlr tank which Ia loatad Bank, Plaintiff, egolnat · Publlo Comment of recorded In D"d Book
location
-for business in 1 heavily traveled area. $11,000
on a.R. 7 naor lhl Coolvflll Delmor Greely, 11 ol., Funclng: All lntaraal•d Number 106 on poge 318 ol
lnlllrOMIIIII.
Defllldilnll, upon I Jllllg- egenolll. IIIGUfll IIIII I*· therecordsoldaadsoiMilgt .
POIIEROV· SDrlng Ava.· 3 bedroom home with fireplace,
Addlllonol lnlormolloR m111t tlillifil rendered, • - cllll!grlalng with thle Counly, Ohio. 1nd being tho
large modem l&lt;itchen, fireplace, basemen! with I car gaand epoolflcltlon• moy bl being C... No. U.CV.130 In dllollioft . . Invited 1o IIUb- oerno proporty convoyed by
rage , enclosed lrool silting room nice looation. $34.900
olltllntcllt lha alllclal... llld Court, I wlft olllf !of mil wrln.n --~~ lor Julluo Ep~ and Morg1rot A.
Dtatrlcl, Hill Bor :so Road, ull, etlhlllont door ollhll -lda:iillon loy the Cotllty Epple to Juoe Gruner by
THIS IS NICEI 1988 24 x 42 Skyline manufactured horne
Reedovllle, Ohio 45772, Court Houee In Pomeroy, ollloigl, County Com• doirdbolrlngdateo1July23rd ·
that has 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, cenlral air, fireplace and
phoiiiii 4·MUSII.
Ohio, on tha .21th dey of ..._..., Courthouila, Poon· 1821 •nd recorded In .DIId
appliances. Asking $29,!100 Owner may accepl reasonEaoh bid 111 u1 t be llpllmb•, 1112, It 10:110 -y, Ohio 45711. Such Bookl3311poge120thtrtol.
able offerl
onalcud In., w•l•lo- o'clock A.M. lhl tollowlng COIIIIIIInta lhauld be
REFERENCE DEED: Vo~
EXPERIENCE &amp; QUALITY GO 'HAI'ID IN HAND... PUT
ty...udMCIHIIod_. lendiMdlln-ola,towlt reoal,.d ot tha obove umo 141, Page 121, Malga
YOUR NOIIIJI THE HAHDI OF PROF1!S9IONALS
opoiiMI...-1
_ ..
..... .. , laal, ,._
on · " hfllt C.Unt'fOMd Rocorcla.
THAT WILL GET YOU RESULTS-CLELAND REALTYI
lull n - ol111ery JIIIIOII, I, Range 12, Iutton October e.1•
Auditor'a P11cel No. 1.11ftrm tnd/or Bid Bond In lha Townthlp, Melgo County, ·
All euoh oommanbo •• 006118
HENRY E.'CLELAND...........................................982-61 81
luU - n t ol-'t propo. Ohio, Mdloting f*1 of One nnl•.r.wll bl ooneldorld . Tha 1111 publlctllon will
TRACY
BRINAGER ............................................14t-2431
Ill to lhl11•18ollon of tho Hunctr.r Acre ·Lot number Md the County wll not bl made on Sopl. 7,tet2.
JEAN TRU99ELL ..............................................1411-28~
Dlllrlci s-d • 1 guonnty 1201 being •ore fUlly r.....t rll-ullundll or THE VILLAGE OF POMEROY
DFFICE...............................................................t92·2258
thotllhelrldll __,lad, a dmrllldlllolfon:
take any odmlnlo~dve (8)3, 10, 17,24,31,(9) 7;eTC
oontriOl will blenlarld lnlo
Comi!Wlolng oto point 1n lOtion on lh•
pro-

David Mark
Talbott

have "W•ere-staff

gcltins in achool.

U:

Public Notice
the narth-1 oom• olaold
Section 3; thence E11t
along the north llno of elld
Srction I, 1320 r..t mora or
la11 to o polnt • thenco ·
South olong o 1lne ond
poulng tha north line of
ulcl Ona Hunclr.r """ Lot
Numb• 1208 11 1320 laot
mora orleu Pl!l•lng tha
grMior8 notthlo11 property
aornar ot 1782 r..t more or
lue 1 total dlalance ol2070
IMI more or 1111 lo an Iron
pin In .the grMian 1111 property line ond tho rut point
of beginning lor the lond
heroin dllcrlbld; lhence 8.
a· d•SII . . 22' 28" E. ~ong
tho gn~ntore -~ propef!Y
Una, 281.73 IMt to on Iron
pin In . tha' gronlore
aoulhlat property corner;
th-a I. II dtgr- 48'
00" W. olong the gronto,.
aouth.. property line ond
puling M Iron pin II f7 .58
IMt Mil .,...lng., Iron pin
II 118.11 IMt 1 totel ell·
1i1M1 ol271.00 IMt 1.,. roll·
r...d aplko In lha grontora
aouth-1 property corn•
Md the meting conllrtlnt
of County Ro.r Number 28;
....,.. N4C ~,... ar 20"
w.
lllbng the grontore wHI
property tine end the exill·
lng oontorllna ol County
Rood Number 28, 114.51
1111 to 1 rallrotd apikt;
thence N. 53 dlgr- 08'
40" E. olong a llna and
1
1
1
paaa ng on · ron p n 11
273.53 r..t Md p111lng M
Iron pin 11415.Nr.t o tolal
tflollnce of 474.57 1111 to
lhe point of beginning Md
oonllllnlng u 73 ICfH.
Subjecl to 11 1ago1 high·
woyl ond ....menlll or

All-

nunins·home care givers and
con-artists.
The llbulc Clll range from theft of
a SOcial Security check 10 violent
physical auacks, includina rape and
mw:der. The situation is a nalional
dispKC.
Adult Protective Services is
~iled 10 investiglle all reponed
cases of abuse. Unfortunately,
bee..,. of [deal constraints, many
not

PubliC Notice
ond Ita parlormonce
.r o bldll th1 t a
oecur · n
~II
rejected, .the gunntll w
be promply retllmld to
blddlra. On the bid thol d
_.,.t.r, auoh Bid Bon
will be fiiUmecl to the ouc-lui bidder upon axecu·
llonoltheConlraet.
Th•• will be 0111 lank
lnapectlon tour on
Soptembor 9• 1882• Tho
lnapecdon tour wllllllva ot
11:110 A.M. from the Dlllrlct
Oflloo. The tonk will not be
drllned lor tha lnapection
oftd direction• to tht lank
·c ., be given ot MY lima.
Tha Tuppara Plolnl·
Choeter Woter Dletrlat
r"lrill the rlgh~ to wolve
lnlormlllll-. to re'-t ony
,..
ond 111 bldl or 10 eccopt
auch bid that wNiblat_,.
the~~~ Plalne.QIIIIIf
W.W Dlelrlat
By· Horold H lllaaaiOII,
Prllldanl ~llhe s-d
of Dlnctora
(8) 27 30· (9) 2, I, 4111
• '

181

SIIIU lisll:ninJ.

Ill¥' do

NOTICE OF AVAILABIUTY
TO THE PUBUC
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRCoAHiuSmPObuRTI~!"l"lo
• ~·
The Ohio Deportmont ol
Traneporlellon
(ODOT)
hereby notlftll 111 ln-1·
ed peraona thol the propoe.r Stoll Tr_,orrldon
Improvement Progr1111 •a
requlr.r by the lntermodll
Surloct Tronaporllllon
•·t of IIIII will
Efflcl""""
_,_,""
be avollablolor review end
com111ent In tha Pl•nlng
and Daalgn Englnoar'e
Office In 110h of the twolvo
ODOT Dlalrlot o·lflcaa and
thl Bureou or Plennlng In
Control Office looot.r In
Columbue, Ohio during nor·
mol bualnall houro from
September 1, 11112 to
Septamber 18,19112.1n llddll ion, the pion will ·b e avel~
able lor review ond com·
mont II MY ol ihe oldlln
(16) metropolitan piMinlng
orgonllldon olllcM during
regulor bull- hoon. Tha
ODOT Dlatrlct Olllcl llri·
lng your .,.. II loclted at
Box 651, Mualdngum Drlvo,
Morilttl, Ohio.
Any comment• to be
oH•.r ehould blln written
form Mid trMamltled to:
MrA.Thctl~omau•
~Chton,
·Ohio
nt of
TrMillportation
25 South Front Str11t
Columbua, Ohio 43215
WriHen com menta mull
be recllv.r by tho clo11 al
bueinO.e on Saptamw 23,
19112.
JERRY Wfli.Y
DIRECTOR OF
TRANSPORTATION
SEPT. 8,11112

The Dally Sentlnei-Page--7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

..

Of,.,,

-1.11 u. Dt '' ,., r..•

INnRIOR &amp; EXTERIOR
FIEI ISftMAlES
HAVE RIFEIEIICIS
6 p... l..awe Mttsqt

hi••

45633 ST. RT. 124
RACINE

'.

.-,

OPEN MON.·SAT.
9-"
• • 8117/Pd. ..
,.

SPEl:IAL

·.·

UNLIMITED SESSIONS
Months of September . ., ,•
and October

$3500

CALIFORNIA
TANS
949·2823
KEVIN'S UWI
MAINUNANCE

.

949·2398 or
1·800·837·1460
Lawn Mowing.
Fertilizing, Weeding,
and Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal
R•ldonllal J. Cam-1

Af1• 6p.&amp; 614-985-4110

FrM EIIIINII•
6-21-'lt:l~fn

112:8tll2n mo. pl.

,•

lORTON ·
CONTUCTING
C.penlrf Electric
PI.UIItg Rlpltl1111111

OFFICE SEIYICE
AID SUPPLY

112W. ....

.,....

. Roofmg

.. .
·'
"

•' ~

''

Wlltlowt

,..
''
'' '
'

.

Freebllttlotes·low
Rates for Sellars
NoJaUDts-11

~- '

_,_.,..

·'
t

�ia~ge iJ

n,e_DeilY Sentinel
SNAFU® by Bruce Seattle

3.

44

·Announcements

,...,.... Nrt Ago.114-'·

4

-=:

Giveaway

~ Coho Clood Only: I Kit·
1- I W-, 1 Cot I llonl....
.,..._'1340 Aftwl P.IL

I COlt !llloft Holrocl, 1 llonlhl

Old. 114 441 03~ .

Clllco .... 3yno. Old, 1144112-

,.llt.

,...--"""""--

011, 1 yoor

0no flmalo -

F

...

" I'

wo•poo~t; f\!lt;"' ="-~l"t;

1111
lrolnod;
M 1112~·~·~~~~•ld~
1440. , ~.,.,.~ ~--~ve:go:t:the:car::keya:~ln:my:~~o-:ck:e~t.:
won't leave me behind like last 11me."
~·~toc~'t~~hl~l&lt;~,
..:so~y~ou~-J Aport...,~
PuPPioo .. g..,_, """""

-..,win Ill -um olzo dog;

I14-WI.-.
.
To Good - : 12 Wwll 01c1 _11;,...:.H;,:I;.;:Ip::....;,W;;.;:I:.;;nted;;,:;;
. ;,._
..... Kllllhl, Yory Ployflll, Sano

AI~, -

to GivHwoy. CIU

..._ , ~-

..,.
I yr old Gwmon lhlohonl mix,

=

""'~~:"J~l!;'
Ell..-

31

':
Alao

Ul1531.
Far Sill In Chlohlro VII.
II
IIIII, • Roomt, I llllh, Lg. Flat
LOt By Owner, 8-3:30 P.M.
Phono: 114-441:81t711 Aftor 3:30
P.ll. 1--11425.

I,._ ,,._'I'Zil
--------

=---="on:. =...·

.1111
: LOST ~ Pllfl ltn bodY PAYROLL CLERK llonufoctur-

~ 2117.

.
Ftmall

011 - - Ad., 105 Ann Dr,
Go''P ''"' s ,.._Old, 3 Bod·
- . Grsy VInyl Siding, 1 112
- . 2 Cor Oarogo, lArgo Doell,
Pu;: l:lty "Sc:hoolo
t:'sbiOO. eo ........ 614-44&amp;-

on, .............. -

J:'':

: Loet: 2
a.GIN. ~.=.,·,~··fl!'r tor
: ~: Rt. 140, • ss-t; 1,.., ;...........,
21111 _....:\';
o . ; , ; , ; . ; . : . : _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ II f J II
~~"d Gilt:7
V; rd Sal
dklllll lhould p n nn 1n1
omundna
poyroll
- : d In IIIIer,
llhould
..
'
Ia
...
Gallipolis
•rv .., 10 ~wy, ...," '"'
.......
- Ollolllll I ••. Vlclnlty
_..,dllltdtlo_.
: A"'U,.,..,Yoni-:-.,..,.~
. . ...-.,,.:So
.....P,-:olcl=kl plllo tho 114&gt; .,....,.,.., In •
. ActnMa. DEADLINE: z:cao p.m. 'M'-t 'II .,__,._ .. -....,
• lho ,., .......... odlo ,., run. .......,.....h - - • ~ ocllllon
2:00 p.m. Bond
c.a ... of
• F~ldoy odltlon , 2:00 PI IIIII !_loglllor, 2011
• p.m
lloln II. -..., WY

. .

I

Pomeroy,
MlddJepon
I VIcinity

Z4H7I5.

1111'1 ,_ly ,_loci 1Zlc5D 2
-~ h«M, $4,000.
080,
corpot, ponot~. 11W17-'/IIM .., 304-675-

rww-.,

;I ;a.

Sol A""' AI AroM, Col l14-

1171 Plrll VIlli, 2 boclrooms,

t• 11'!

.._

eo-.

.tfi1utloft
"'tII
-~ ..

'!'\:_.._

.

" ,,

. ..

Pt. Plelsant
I VIcinity

·-

-~ s.11. ...,. 1,1 , '"'
112 II

«

0

Alhllllc ....=... cCall

~

112·-

.

drytr, mrlgel'ltor &amp; stove, 30C·

175-3311!
tftl 1411V Roclmon 2 Bod- . 2 Bol..._ Undorplmlng
$17,700. 114:441·1t27.
Looking Frlr A Doll? Conlldtr A
....O.noclllollllo Homo, lArgo
Sollcllon, Low Monty Down,
F100 Sol-Up And Dlllvory. 1-I00-

14

5M-5710.

zate 18

n Avo, 1:30 till ??

Wantecl to

Do

33 Fanns for Sale

Wll ~lly F.,..
cod In
ArM. - . . . . . 32 Aero F•m, S Bodtoom Houu
..--------lAvalArol. CoU W I -, Bom, Gt'"l!IWilh
4,
R~Jia!A
114 ~ 5117.
Tobacco Lolmonl. 614-2151·1312
!•.• .• ~. ;· ' •· AiJCI~
iiR 'IIII!E' IIEIMCE.
I;A.;;;IIor.:.:. . ;4:;;.;DD.:.:
.----.·
""
' !rJoMI!nl, Trll RomoYII,
34
Business
,__._~
Froo Elllmotool l
Atw4p.m.
Buildings
1111 tlmt - -· ...,p~o~ci 317'
f"CCIon
Olorpo Porllblo !lowmlll, don' 1-::-"":'-::---:-~~-=­
IM,Ohlo 1 Will Vl""•lo, 304- -~~to lhl mill jull Good Commorclol Building For
~ -·
'...
11
l.Nit, High Traftlc Area, Send
"~••-·
Cl
1 ·
A•ponN"To: CLA 238, c/o Gal·
1111• Pluto'• Doy Clro C1n1or. ilpotls Dolly Tribu"!~,825 Third
9 Wanted to Buy

Clot'll'lftor.:mico, A_,
llbllloo &amp; m1oc

" ,

·~

-1. Uc-

:=·

i'oj:'i

Av1nue, GllllpoUs, vt145631.
5 30
2 10
·~:- · IIOclghl lnd Sold.
Uud !!~
p.m. Ago• ~ • 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
'
'ind
_,_., oftor IChool. Drop-lno
:Theopftlhll, lca:-731. O.Uipollli, WIICome. 114 446 8224, New In-,
48131. 114-441-7212 I· lint Todcllot eo... 6-6-6227.
Aerugo IYiillbll lor homo
.

Sill, •ftordlblll, childctra. M-F

·

aoou: • -:

..._ 11
construction on Rayburn Ad,
~ ~ • •
Mobl.. home work, llv.l, hook- 11111onablt rutrtcllons, wtler,
"UNci Mobla. Homo, Call 114- Upl (txotpt tltc:tric}. small con- Information mtlltd on request,
: ~11.
IINCIIon jobs, odd )obi, polnl· 30W75-5253.
,
lng, plumbing, lie. Vory I~===---. Wanted To Buy: Jft Aut081 rtaon.ble Filii, 614-912·5387 Rental property, 4 rental unhs,
•1¥Mh Or Wit~ Motad. Call •nyllrM, or tuv. mKUge.
121,500. Poulbleltnd contr~cl ,
14
381
;J;etr! l.lvtly. l
- ·
Wontod To Do: Blbyallllna In l14-fl2:573Z.
:ToP l'rlcll Pold: All Old U.S. ~ Homo. Hovo Nuru Asolo1ont
{tOino. Gold Ringo Sllvor Colno, Trolnlna. Locotod W'nhln Chy
Rentals
•GOld Colno. II.T.S. Coin ShoP, Umllo.l:oll614-441·1221l.
I --------~"181
•' SOOOnd · - Goittpc&gt;lll.
Will clAn horMJotncu, ..-c 1·

roloronca, 304-1175-1621 1111 41 Houses for Rent
tmployment Serv1ces II :DO Pll.
Will do llllntral houN elunlng 3 bedroom houll, $275. com~ or on• 111M blalli. qulr.d,
plltiiY rlhOYIIod,
111 &amp;JtH•rson
dop r•
an I weHJy
inqul,.. 1700
11 Help Wanted
H.lvo uporionco ' ,.,........_ Blvd. or Z21i N. Moln St.
~==~==:-:-::::::I Comact Poult oftor 5pm 11 614· 1::-::'--::'7..;_"-:--:-7-.,.,-IAYON' ALL AREA31 Shari your 1141..:1447
3-4 Bodroom, 2 Bllh Homo,
limo wfth uo. You'll 1ovo lho
Locllod On Goorgn Crook
' m-m 1 - -~...
Dot»tH &amp; RoforlhCI Roqulrod.
- ..... ~. ,--·~-Phono: 614-446:1104.
ACCOUNTING CLERKIIanuiiC:
turlngd:.:loclttd one hour
One bedroom houH, 936 First
~
p......... ...-.....Avenut,
Wasl'llr,
Dryt r,
,_,
on, - - - · · · 21
Business
Rolrigorolot, Dlt»tll, RlflrlnHuntlngton lo . llaldng on ...
rl
- s.fZOO. 614-446-4038 614-'146·
COIIIIIIrio dlrll. '"'-od ....
Oppo unHy
161

- --------1

- · lhould pou111 lhroo
y.ra u~enc• In •ccountlng

INOTlCEI

Smtll Fumllhed 3 Roam Cot·

"' rllllod lllld, lhoukl llo ~~~~ OHIO VALL£V PUBUSHING CO. '""' In Town, Cion To Grocory
MOIInled, po&amp;Mu tape!ience

wfth doll onlry, 10 lwj 1o PI'·
tonll comput.,., Individual
........ oloo nhlbll • commit·
mont &amp; olldlcollon to complltl
'"" Joll npocllonlly
poctc1
otmoophofo.In •Soilry
whh 11porilnco.

rwcomm.nds thll you do buaJ..
hill wllh pooplo you k -, ·~
NOT to Hnd money tlvouah the

com-

moll ""'" you hiVI lnYOIIrgatod
1hco olflrlng.

C.1 etl'll
Palnl Plouonl Rogillw, 200

IMI.
G.....,. Stc... 4000 sq. ft . full

91nd f'IIIUmt to

I•••·

Box

Arid

LlundtfY,

42

Mobile Homes

Prlvtte

Qulol. 614-'146:2602.

And

for Rent

• Elm 51,000 Por WHk • Locol
Poy Phono Routt 1-IIOO.ZZ6- 2 Bedroom Nur North G•llll,
Stan, Fridge, Wiler, Trash Fur-

nllhed, 1200, 1200 Dtpostt,

llaln 91 1 Paint PINoont, WY blllmlnt, povod porlclng. Somo lhllorlhCH, I14-311-11686.
251110. •n oquol opportunhy tocatlon for over 3D y..,.. Want
2 bedroom trailer W/112 acre lot,
omploytr.
to tnjoy our rttlremenl. Mteon 2 1J2 miiM out N1w LIINI Ad,
County.
~82·3300
or
SIJil:
AVON I AI Arooo I Shirl_,
Rutland, ga. hut.l. NmOdtltd
Spooro, SOWlS-14211.
dip. 304-682·2211. Aile '"' 1 - . 814-1112-210• .. 114-1112·
owrwr.
242l
llollpllllr IIOidocl. 1D;30pm__!M
7:DDom. CIU ofttr 4pm. :JI)W15- Vondlng Routt: Loco!. Wo Hovo
Tlw N - MochlnN, Moklng A 2 ~-... 1 Both, Stilt
:1132.
Nlco Stoocty Cloh incomo. 1· Roulo 218, uolllpotlo. 614-251IOD.ei13-8313.
1001.
Clr11flod llolarc&amp;~~d llochlnlc
Paid V.CIIlon,
World~ --;:~;:--:--:-=:--- I
Wotll Tanning 1o•
2br Unlumlohocl Clblo, .Air,
CondHiono, Sond R..,mo To:
P.O. 8o1 342, Oalllpcllo, 011 Now oommorclol-llomo unllo, Cloon And 0utoc. ~- ·
~ hgg 00 • -mpo LollAolo ..... Olllo
414111.
M;dN'j ·,.r~nt• ' tow -;i
~
or'o
DENTAL ASSISTANT_.. To $11.00. CoM tocto.ro :AEE NEW
.~....., 1
- •Jain Dlntll T11in. lluot .. Wllf..
-S B j oom Tr1llor SZZMio.
lnt To Worll Honl. WMI Troln. - - - . .
Wolor Plld. Na Poll Altowod,
Dopoalt, - · Roqulrocl.
~:.J'J:.':.oc:o.:'!~:
Real Estate
1t+ZIH'n~ Loovo -~~~ ·
- Plloo, Sullo t101, Qollipolla,
OH4M31.
TOial Ellelrtc, 31 Bedroom
31 Homes for Sale
Homo, Nlco, Cilln No
- · Locllod: Add*n ANI
'
2 loci....,. homrr. lond conroct. 114417'101.
·~
~
~·nt
II'- &amp;
~
~
44 Apanment
DIIIHIIIIW4a.nt5
for Rent
2 Bodroomo, Rt. 140, Korr,
mliooo I,._.,T, l14-44 1 Aoor1mon1 Rio

:':':'11o .,

•• .., ••*•

Poril;-.,..._,102.

""

-·

I

3 11oc1room ronch homo :Grondo,lb~;'1441Ne41.;;=-;p;~;;-i;;=Pi:
1DDx20011 101, DR, FA, LA ~"";:~~~·
wlflrtpltcl, t1rg1 kttchen, 2
' ·.•-. .•
llllla, - gorogo, now 1-112 B•-•'"11!.:'..._ WID
Lonol B~ok l1'on1 II II., tm
' Dopollt,

110, 1M 311
=""'
· 304-11Zo3310 ar liZ· BUt~·~-;;·
;;2~--~;N.;;Yinl;;t;lor:On,~llod
.R.
,_:c..:.,=-,==-===:::
a

llAUTIFUL HOUSE FOR BALE
- ~ A101 Lol ' 114
Pall T1oloo, LPN ar 11A. nar~·d llaln II. Pl. W. Yo.
tor ,..,aiel- omae ....,_. Compllloly -•lod: 2 Full
Attn: ....... 3 Llrgl lodroomo, Now
L-.P.O. 1011 7?1, New
llVAC, Now Clr:o4c Avolloblo
WYJS2M.
' ~ooml jilltr. l11 .41..:1205.

.,. oil v.- ........HI-.

'

441.4)331

.... 7p.nL

..

, _ oport_,.. II Yllllao
llanor
nl
R...,_
Apoft- kl ..ljdltport. F Sill. CIIIM«&lt;-'Illt EOH.
alt. N. tNrd Aw. 1 BR

:.:::!!7

,....._;:r=:s.~.1'""'

.,.

z Bolli-~~. Locolod
Blhlntl Ho11or Clinic Of Will
Ylrglnll; 304-41-11
•
Z ~ d - f t Nr cond, gounct
lloor op1,;;! 6 dop -'riel, no
PliO. :lll4oi75:M1
I

a--

-- ~
·~. loW
• - ~• ~w~l. mllllgo, 4WD .....~ ~':':"d
• - body, vory
mochinlcally, .... · - · 114·

NO, Tl-IEI( PICK VOU UP
IN A GOLDEN CHARIOT..

SILVER, IF '(Oil
COME IN SECOND

WZ·T733.

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

11117 PIY...,.h Voyogor LE El·
coliln1 Condition, LoW IIIIo.,.,
Loodocl, $7,500. 114-448:fl5a.

T

~
, .,

MIIIC811aneous
Me hand I
rc
..

=

61

'mot"".,""!'- •na....

·- ~
·
wllh
314 ... mator
30(-1171:41:11.

R1glll od Conlodllo Buell, I
111r1 old, $121; -7102.

::..::.:::~=~II,
64

11'-'4"'4'-'41_4_172..:...;_ _ _ __
WHITE'S IIETAL DETECToRS
,2 pco top, 1 ..,.. · Ron All'"":/(p ~ ~~~0 SOCond
Ohio, 114-.
CJ..1~ S' long, SID. - - - Go

Dioa.t 114 4113444, 4!0 Rllr

··45 Furnished

-

IIU&amp;
o•bawt

Supplies

e1c u•*•·

1171 Clda •• PI, PI, Air C....

"''U. ...

56 Pel8 for Slit

~=i"'AI
"'=-.~
......
Food ~."'l::iie
Webb.CIII14 Ul DJ:IL

~--

I TV =01.:.:11.:.:
. ,-------,-.,--304- Big lo-ll couch, llmoot

lounGI
1124'400
Ha..,., WY.
,_; $1DO,I--62Zl
Sl p'ng rootM wilh ~·
-lrlllor
A11'-"-11po.
Col ~ft• 2:DD·p.m.,
304-773-

MII,IIIIMnWV.

Choir ' - . ...... blko,
w.ter bib. 304-182·27'M 1ft1r
Country llollllo Homo P1111, AI. I:DDPII.
33H., undlr nn rn~n.gement . Commorclol o1hlull• ton, $10;
Loti, 185; home renl•hi, 1235; maple 111&gt;11, UQ; goo clrculll·
114-n2·2117
lng-h•ttr, $75; nc:llner, $25.

46

Space for Rent

Trail• lal1 tor rtnt In Alelnt, 132 Butt.,nul, Pomaroy.
114:1112-NH.
Double Back Boat seat, Ntw

$1DD, Nlco Looking, &amp;14-2516106.

Merchandise

Five Iron whela, one 54'\ two
38", two 28"; 5 INIW mltll pasta,

51

340; 614·1112:5664.
For Salt: Electric Stove, With
Doublt Oven, S75; Frost Fr•

Household
Goods
h12 Clrpot, $60; Mollohan Fur· Gibson Rafrlgerslar, $125;
Upright Rtvco FFIIeur, 111. 114·
nhuro,l14-44-.
3&amp;8-9548.
Bolly crlb1 llroltor, high choir,
Formtl
floor length dreu, blue
i&gt;lafPih, rockor, owona, cor Mil.
lntor-locklng woclclfng ~ng. (silk) whitt (lact), alzt 1110,
sm. 304-1175:1582 or 30(.7J3.
$1000.~41.
5165.
!Iovings On All VInyl &amp; eo,
In Sloc:IL 55.DD Up.-.. Full-olll llocl op~ngo, mlltrOII;
$85, twin ron ......, llocl, comrpell, I'M-44a.11M4.
plolo, $45; both IICiiilnl condi.
tlon, 614...gg2-318SI. ·
LAYNE'S RJANITURE
Comptoto homo tumllhlnao. Gtnesls Nutrition Produclt
Hour~~: Uon-Sat, t-5. •~ toaturlng Amino Acid Body
0322, 3 mlill out Bulovlllo Rd. Building, wolght loll ond Ill
F~ Delivery.
bum11 tormur11. Anlla~t IX•
New Round Oak Toblo, !Claw cluolvoly 11 Rill Aid Phormocy.
F111, 2 Lu-, ~ Oak Arrow. The Hft war lo dill.
Dock Cholro). $7M. 011! China Gravely Mower, Dual WhHI,
Clblnoto, Stirling: S1U 114- Electric Start. 30.. Grue Mowtr,
411-4311.
Surry, $475, 614-441-81V7.
PICKENS RJRNITUAE
Happy Jock TOI!Ikolo: Liquid
NowiUIICI

~

"='
hold fum/thing. 112 mi.
Jlrricho Ad. Pt. Pt. . .nt, WV,

food suppltmtnl contains ,...
aen11al n~rienta to tllmlnllt
dull cool• dry okln, lhlddlng1 &amp;
llchlng. r-or doat &amp; Clltl. R&amp;G
FHCI &amp; Sply, 81f.fl:Z.2114.

CIII304-4175-141D.
Solo I Choir, In Good Condt.
lion, Poreh Dock For Solo Alto. Jonny Und Blby BICI, Cor Sill,
114-441-7311.
Boyo Clo1hln1J, Sill: 5-6, Glrlo
2T·3T,I14-55.
SWAIN
AUCTION I FURNITURE. 62
KILLS F~EASI
Olivo St., Oallipcllo. Now &amp; UHd Buy ENFORCER FIN Killorl For
turnhure, hNltl"', Wtlttm • Pttl, Homt a Vtrd. OUirlniiNd
Worll -1.114-441-3159.
Effoctlvol Buy ENFORCER AI:
Thorn~•
o~h
c.nter: • m
Utocl Wolhor I Dryer Sol, 114- McCormick Rood, OollljjOIIL
311-1033 Aftorl P.ll

Y..lng Coli 1ton1 now In stock,
Utocl Woohor I Drvor Solei $75 Sidoro Eq•lpmont, Hondoroon,
&amp; Up, AU Sold With W1rr1nty. wv, 304-675-'11121.
Thl
&amp; Dryor Shop)ll,
754 SKond Avonuo, Golllpollo, Lodltl Long Block Gonulno
Loolllor Cool, Sin: 78, Brsnd
114-44ZM4.
Now.....llah Nlco Gift, $55, 114VI' RA FURNITURE AND AP: :MI7-nl4.
PUANCES
114-444421
Nlc• 8' Bar Shllvo In Bac~ And
814-441-3158
I lor Sloolo IAIIhor, 114-448:
RENT·2~WN
3813 $1DD.
·
~
No Dopoalt • GRAND OPENING Ponooonlc Poroonol Computor,
Holhl.. p,_nocl Or UHCI, IBII compotlblo. 64DK RAil.
Evor.
3.51n. dllll d ~vo, ••panolon
slott , i nh•nced ktybotrd,
Bunk 8tdl Complttt 15.88 monm:hrome
monltDJ, Dot
Wwll; Solo And Choir $10.83 llalril prlnlor, 614-867-3140 ohor
- .· ""- $3.31 Wllk ·, •pm
Rocl"- 55.52 W••~i. Dlnotll • •
WMh ' Chllra f7.25 w•k; Or PIU11c And Modll Cuivo~ &amp;Inch
Toblo With lonch And 4 Choir~ Thrv 10 Inch In Stock. Ron
w·~-..
......w.. Hutch
$20.18 · bono, Jockoon, Ohio. · Rohlgorotor
$11.22 - ; 5SMl2a .
·,
E~~lhl~-:.
Aoduco your Wllnhl:loki"Now
a - Door 11uz Will&lt;.
Shlpo
Dill Pion'
.. • Hrdr••
Wolor Plllo.
Avolioblo
Fru1h

w...,..

:::t'

":;.a:

CASH AND CARRY . Solo And
Chllr t1tl; L.alnpl SWrtlng At
111.11Eoc:II.J!: With 4 Cholro
tal . .;
I llrY!f 55111
MD Qu
AvaiiiMI.
!Mi
lilt: Eloclrlc
.._.., · Rlvw Rood
. _ lllvor Bridal Plozo
4
IIUII out 141 In t.nl~n~ry On
1...- Plllo.

111ft!~

or

Pho•mocy.
Royal blue u tln foriMII, lei
longth, onglo-&lt;:ut loco bottom,
warn onco, llu 'Jte; 110. 1141112-3423.
Hugo lor oolo 1 liZ rordl.
$10.25; 114-1112·2411 or 114-1112·
3923 1111-n I:OOIIm.tz:OO
noon.

trundlo bod w/3 bul~·ln Shorp Camcordor 12 Powor
$!DO. 2 lingle mon- Zoom, 114..:156-177D Or 814-251Ill ta. - · SOWTI-3131.
IC
1.:.:
058
.:.:·..;__ _ _ _ __

FRANK AND ERNEST
PALIND~OMt

MtETII'IG
TO,.,IGtiT

G,OUP

ON Ttttlfl NEY.T T"P

p A&amp;.lNPilOMt

-

SotltTY

1

A DANIS'H AMUSEMENT
PAll!:: TIVOt.-1.

r-

l L.ov• IT I

AKC~"'-·

llall
raa Only 1 IAIIll14:3»'11101.
AKC Roalll- llllalo Uno
lrllnocl,
4ood .... Or
580 Coil ..... .......... ~~

·-Ina

..

• e

I

I

o

TI"AVE)

9-8

TH' UTTLE Q.JV IIA'IS Til'

NO AUS.Y! \"01.1
PRAB0N IS 11151 HE WANlll MWsf KILL THE
TO '1'1\KE II" - 1

~I

1111 Cluyllor law u II $800.
oaw 5:00 Pll
1111 lllrcury Grond llorqulo,
30ZVol, Aulomotlc, FUll - ·
Enalno Ea-nt, llocly Good,
10(1;0110. 1:1,300. f14-44f:'1211.
1111
Portolo,_ Slollon
Wogon, AI Aar:
)oo,
Noli - 1 Tlrlo, $2,000. Aftor
IP.IL f14:44H7lll.
11111 C1rto 58, Eacolllnl'
Cotdloh, 11,000 Or Bnt OHtr.
~liM

Dnlgon..,..l Clftory: CFA p.,.
I s - . Kll-. 114-

llano

411 3144Aftw7:GG,....
Floh To... 241S Joe"- Avo.
Paint P-nt, 304-41JI.ZOI3,
lui llnll T......... lloh lllnlo,

tm111 anJmlll and ltipptl•.

-lac

In

Musical
lnstrumenta

Conn TNO t I • Wlh C.M
u.d 2 y~ ~ ,, lent eon..

:rn,:.

s:-.11.

Col -

Lucllotg - . Stlcllo,
llond, """·
......
. . . •.,4Colo,
41111..- 1

- . . -.-NT.I2.

--l.lb-.114-3712111.

Wont to lluy -

ahurclh,J04.17J.Im.

p11no 1ar
'

YIIMha cP 10 hceranlc Plono
With GroDhlc Eqo•llll• Frlr
~ Good Frlr Lloo. $ISO,

•

411311.

Farm Supplies

Home

video In his honor
accompany I epeclal provlew
ol ihe MW Hilla Gool
Troop, (2:00)
• Crooll Mel aD ..... Ltlpellllbll
llo81on Red Sox II TIXIS

Ringen or Toronto Blue

(L)

Oalllpol~m'"

6-

:::b' 5-4054.
17;700. 010,

=IIIIIF ~.....~~~~ Ill!!,
_,.,.

eo ~··• Plum~?~na
Fourth ond Plno

• a, ,..

=:;.

84

Electrical I
Rlfrlgeratlon

~RIII~dlinnt~lolf"';;.,;:-c;aa;n;;tl;jolloli;j
-ololon.

Clmlra V-1, Uuttl
Pori II lllloo, Good Core, WoU wiring. ,_ ar .....,._
~~~- u...llolnlalnocl ' $3,1100j Whllo '"' Rldonour Elcoclrlcll, ·

!~~Coo:!~....,~:..
_:·__o.,•.,·,·
114
3• • • loll,~~
110 I I F - lhlniLIII .. - - . .... Conclllon, IID4-175-1711.
-·1
4 Crt. EF1 20,0110 Mlloo, IIUII
- . lhorp;
~Tirol
. . . " Wf ttO,IOO, 114 441 4122 After
·c:rooro
- New
Now lpro.
85 General Haulng
\
114:100

=-· ---.

0

AUTO INSURANCE
0111 114-112-81177, Dovlo:Quickot·

1t7l ChoYRIIII 114 Ton ANN
Tno HMcll 4 WD Elcoclrlc Brokl
~jilt 400 Enalno, How nroo,
t1,100. 114 441"1"1.

87

Upholatery

tm GIIC 'IDDD Mrlll dump ii•••••;;;ror;;:·;-.~uijiiphii'Goli;otie.,.iii.,~;-;.,;;i,~o-;;:

truck. Ill eng~,., n.w bed, nn
f1onl rocllol llroo, mUll 111 1

1,..

1ng trt-r
f7 11111. 111o
In lurriftun "PhONIIrlllg.
Col SD4-1'111-4114 ..... It'll ...

dt1vo to 1=1111,114-111Z.Z8DS
llmlloo.
04'114-JQ

e

you develop from step No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED
LEHERS IN SQUARES

'·~

NOR111
+J 8 54
.AJ92

1-1-11

+A5

+K63

PHILLIP
ALDER

WEST

EAS1'
+QI7

+10632
'Q 10

•au

tKQJ

+tD642
+U?

+Q lH2

SOUTH

+AK

Powering
to a pairs title

'KB75
+9 87 3
U84

Vulnerable: East·West
Dealer: South

The winners of the Women's Pairs
at the Pan American Championships,
beld in Corpus Christi last June, were
Juanita Chambers and Marinesa Leli·
zia. Both have won many national li·
ties, and Chambers bas gained two
world championships. They scored
more than 80 percent of the match·
points on today's deal from the finaL
The three-club rebid by Chambers,
South, showed game interest and
asked North to go to four hearts with
good clubs. Letizia's actual clubs were
not p-eat, but she knew her partner
would squeeze the maximum number
of tricks from the cards.
The play began: diamond king
ducked, diamond queen to dummy's
ace, spade to the king, heart to the 10
and jack, spade to the ace and the dia·
mood nine ruffed with dummy's heart
nine. Now Chambers knew East held
the club ace; otherwise West would
have had enougb points to open the
bidding.
Declarer ruff!!'~ a spade in hand.

,.1.

Soo..
Pass

Eul

W.tl
Pass

Pus

Pass
Pass

Pus
Allpua

Opening lead: +K

bringing down East's queen, and lt!d
the diamond eigbt. West ruffed .with
the heart queen, hoping to promote:.
trump trick. (It doesn't belp to dllcard
.the spade 10.) After om-rufflllg with
dummy's heart ace, Cbamben led tile
spade jack, ruffed and overruffed.
South cubed tbe heart klDI, ber
ninth trick, reducin&amp; everyone to thNe
clubo. U East bad tbe A.(I, a club to t)Je
kin&amp; would win. But Cbamben read
tbepoeltlon perfectly. Sbe led berclull
eigbt, forcing West to cover with the
10, wblch she ducked in the dlllllllly.
When West returned a low club, de:
clarer played dummy's six and made
her contract.
·

tiiMwNtwaQ

0 MOVIE: 11111811 (2:00)
L-GI (() MOVIE: GMua (PG) (2;15)
1:30 !lle 01 •m cm 111o1110111
and Six waH 111 night 1o gel

lla
ae •
llcl&lt;ets
SIIIIO.

•

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
ROU..ING-INA~54.T

&amp;IG- PIL-5 CIFt\IUDDY',
YUCKYSOO.

concert. (R)

Mlfor Did Gen.

Craig holdl I press
conlarence 1fllr !Ming pain
kUiar1. (R) Stereo. Q
t:00 !lle 01 MOVIE: 'In the
IIMt lnlwlll ol the
Cltlld1111' NIC Mandel Night
J1,1te MoviH (2:00) Sino.

i'Night
Z e FOOiblll
(() • uc Morldar
Walhlngton
Rtdtklna at Dallas Cowboys

~7(1 : 00)

• • 0 . Murphy.......,

to

Eldin agrees 11\tnd
Lamaze cllao with Murphy.

IR)s-. c
• Dlnlll shire: TenntiiH
Emil ......

til ....., ICing Live!
1:30 • • 0 . Dlolg11111g
w- Anthony lalla In love

BARNEY
HOW'S SNUFFY
FEELIN' TODAY,
LOWEEZ.Y?

.THEM YALLER PILLS

SHDRE STOPPED
HIS SHAICIN', .
DOC!!

The World Almanac 00 Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

with • Cllbutlntl named
VI_... (R) SleriO. Q
1D:OO(I)Ninr;l
(
Cll (J) IIIMII1 In Cl1inll
(1 :00)
o • Notthtm
1 ae
far a•.,.. A flmoua Russlan
lllngor mlka hll IMUII visit

AMWer~PriWIDIII......,

35 Bllll-andQir1k: HUCI
36 Bring up
37 Ahtlld
12 wda.)
40 Powdorol3 l.lw (1.11.)
« Coin opening

1 NIGht btlott
4 Lubrtcatld
I Mrs. Poron
12 ActorCl1artty
13 Modlly
14 Ellmllly

48 Chtmleol

(abbr.)

15 ColleQI deg.
18 Hoopotor

gldOUPI

~ ~lh TMCIIIOr

knprov~m~nts :

Plumbing 1
Heating

82

lltiD Olclo CUlloM SuprWo., Alr1 AIM'II, Quod lour
onalno. •
Exc cond.

61 Farm Equ-.....
...........

!raveling down the Congo
River, Indy tn11t1 Albert
Schweltzer.(R) s:'~

loci! b.ck at Goofy's 10-ytar

F100 Ollimotll. CAll colllcl I·
614·23U488.· doy or nlgl!l.
Ragon -mont Willing.

'--1114-441.073\

&amp; Livestock

~-~iJ~ s.r,otnii..

Gfe Dllney'a Qool 1'100(1 A

tM. local rtfwencH tumlthed.

1_,....

INII l'ord CiT Allclng :
... IIGII, 114-441-G731.
11ft Ponlloc Groncl Prbt,

1:00 !lle 01 Frwlh l'riiQ or
lei-Air Will and Carlton
biComl tiCOIIc danctra to

Jays at Klnaos City Royals

cunla

'

the

( omplete the chuckle quoted
by hlling in the missing words

By Pllilllp Alder

Motor Homes
IHI Concord HT Clmptr/
1r111or, $2000, 080, 114-1112..:1185
... 114-112~21.
1114 VIking Pop-Up Clmpor
Sl-1, Sill Contohwd, $1,500,
114-311-1711t.
Z2 Ft. Coochmon Pul Clmptr
Fully Slit Contolnocl, lC,
Awning, Yory Qood Condhlon,
13,5001l.B.O.I14-31f.llll.
Nomod 31 FL Clmptr For Solo,
Good CondHion, $3,400 Coli 1142151·1187.

YNrl Ellporlonco On Olclor '
Newor Homn. Room Addhlono,
F....... lon Worl&lt;, RooiiRfl,
Kftc- And Blthl. FrM E•
limlllll RlforiRCH, No Job
Too Big Or Smolll 614-317-D511.
Civil Sewing llachlno And
Vocwm Cloo- Aopolr, FrM
Plck.UO And Dollvori Oaargoo
Crotll Rood, 11• MH34.
JET
Z-21.' 301, I Spood, III.DDO Alrlllon ........ nopolrocl. •-. co .PIIrer, New
I rHuill molon In llooll, ~
$4,300.114 ••• 4122.
EVANS, JAC1(SON, DH. 1 537-1121.
1117 lluda An Runo • Drlvoo
Ron'l TV Somco, -'lllzlna
Good,
-·
..... In l&lt;lnllh oloo ........., IIICNil
roaf, I ~
I~"''·
Needa
lnt1rior,
...,. V.ilclal~ n,ooo or otlwr ......... ..... lloo
Troc1o, 114-211-lllru.
oomo ol&gt;llllonco riPIIn. WY
1117 POftiiM Flrllllrd. T-topo, IID4-875-2* Ohio 114-441-2414.
PW, PI, PI, ~- t4000.. 3Q4.I7S. Sopllc Tonk P"""'"' tiD 011111
1211.
Co. RON EVAHI INTERPiiiSES
IIIII Flroblnl Bllell, Aulomotlc, Joe-, OH 1-.uTAIZI. '
New Polnl .loll New TIIOO, Now UtMMy Bldg _Spi: 30'li4D'ol'
r...uoti ...- 'liuo1111o, Aoklng: Pllntoclll111 S1r1!!111 &amp; Roollng
f:;~· 14-44!.- onor 4p.m. 1 ·15'11' llldlna DOor, 14' ~
vlco Door, 55,110 lroclocl, Iron
lldgl. HIJO.su.-.
INII Dodao Dynoll1y 4dr, Alaomlllc, lioctr!C Trunlc, ANr Will IMIUd polio OOYIIO, ......
Defroll•, Crul• CDntral, Ntw
- . ""' up .m,i
Tlrlo, ~L ~•.ooo 1111... El· ...
01110111 Condition! 11,800. 114- =~ t r - ....lng. 114:

--

~ 2•b Stereo.
ra
CnleattN
·~
Olletman

ca,_ and a~ music

n,...,

!it

and _ , . , •• 4th round&amp;
!rom Aulhlng Meadow, N.Y.

Plena to celebrate WiH's •
~rthdly lall apart. (RI Stereo.

Home
Improvements

'

IO

Iill •Ttnnlt
l'll1tly Feud
U.S. Open. man's

ie OeE"'*'IIIhlde

Services

MliOO,

18

BRIDGE

lldt1tlt:
..
Mol1teNJ ley (1:00) Sino.

,_'f!'!..moto,
304-

Room Addhlono, Gm1111, El·
torlor &amp; lnllrlar Polnlfng, El·
porllncocl, lnourocl Loea11d l,o.
cony. 614 441 81518,
BASEMENT
WATERPROOfiNG
Unconditional llfttlmt guaran·

I I I

and

•

Tonight

(l) (J)

...._

Bar..U Home lmprovemenla.

7

1

·-'-·...J.'--.1.-..L.-..L
. ...J.

ol~-r;a

olontt CtwiiiiC~

ALLEYOOP

a.1111 Or 114 4t14m.

1113 Uncoln Town Cor, EICIIAKC
llofllllRolrliYit 2 ....... , . Ionl Condftlon, Ono Ownor, Air
- • ond .....,.... 51110. 304- AI - · Now Tlroo l 8oftory
RZ..:I413dwlpon.
SIIYir With BIICII Lollhtr Top.
$3.0110.1-.3151\
1114 _... 10110, 1210. 304-

I

money

Loafer • Blink • Royal · Quorum • YOUR BOOK
A famous author arrived in court and was sworn in
by the court bailiff "Do you solemnly swear to tell as
much of the truth in court as you would in YOUR
BOOK?."

Campers &amp;

AKC Aoglol- Chow Chow
Pupploo, AI FMIIo, S Blocll, 2
Rod, $110 EociL 114-211-1447.

of church and

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

T:II(J) Sonlord l Son

-·. . =n.
79

government," grum·

separation

(() •• v:t
Ill Your ur.
WltMI ol FO!IUM Q

Runnlna lor 1112 ChoY,
door, lo10 Btozor, llo~r,I10Ct.
304 IO:Z.31711oovo motNgo.

=~ct.~·

,

MILANY

T:OI Ill II!MIIy liB Bu
T:30!1le 01 JnpMiyl Q
Cll MDA Jelly L8wla 1:.bor
Dly T....._ JCont.)
~~-Tonight

1111 lonlll, ... ton ......

Mc. DiA Au1o
SJ'Z.SII33 or 1

"Our

bled the speaker at a pol~ical
rally. "is based on not only the

I

S CE RT

Olltnten

B"""' Tronsmlloloftll..Utocl I
r1bllllt, llorllng II • .., Iron!
whlll d~vo llonlna 11 ltttDD
114-2-77, 114-3Ja.ZZIS.
-

I

II

1~

. 1. 5 1. 1. .I'

ra •• ..,., ..

875-tDIO.

Auto Pans I
Accessories

I ll

ANSWER

P~.

0

Procroft 15DD bill llol~ lrlilor,
'IOhp TIT Johnoon, $2,8110. 304-

76

I

~ UNSCRAMBlE FOR

~ ... Wilt

C1aa1 OUII

~

...........
CGood,
yEnllno.
Ala-.A...,

...::a,,

""cookl
WMil ar

IIN4ll.
1117 .. _ . . Coupo 1St
Clov... MI Engliie, 114 RZ 3215

..tonna.Nown-.RLooU «&lt;odiii00.1M4W IAJ.
1171 Clmi"' Chivy, ........
1111
. 1114V.:iz
::.~
alor"""!',
S:oo

:--.,-:..::.:::.:::.:,..._ _,... Aluminum Porch Glkltr, llaW..
R-hlr-·-ormonth. Ina Roclcor 115; Antiquollorting I I . - . Galllo Holol. Toblo 130; Old P~
111
Pollc8rde. $5 lUp. •

••••o.
ll~oom

orl=

r;a

!!!iFS'
1.15: ~Nod

71 AutostorSIIa
1117 Cut- s u - . Jllllnl, 11,000
mlloL
lllltaflw,IDWa
....

I 1 I I

T:OO!Ile~~~n

IIIIZCoblo-1
11 I 82 Kowoukl .Ill Sklo
15D ax • $60 Ovor lnvoiCI
Prlcoo Anywhoro
Flnondng A-ble
Flnl Wlntor Slongo Fno

Trar.sportat ion

·11 RULPYE
2

~-n~~r-~~r-

1:11 Ill Antlr Clollftlh

...-..,118On

cam llllgo. 30WJ&amp;.

·-1171. 114-441·1240.

Air Alii,
AirOWr,
llh · ........
tloftll
Coli
2 Full
Tonb,
tm Ford Dump TNCII, $1,500

Rooms

Wlncloooo tlnlod . - ~
42X41" .........
I;:SOW75-::.,:::,:111
=1H=·-=-.,....,-Zlnlh 81- F« Solo, ...,114311-TJU.
55
Building

::: :~t=... .~ ":..l

~z~rn?:.:.rw!:; ~:S::.:~'f~~~':
1'1111, No Pill. $221 ,.... lin ·~ p•-

-

Hay I Grain

12 -

1

zs

1114 S-..llor Pontoon 11ocot.
24 Flllorcury 40 HP llolor, LAw
Houro. Wlntlrod Undor CoYit,
Woll Clrod Frlr. $3,800. 1 1311 Aftor 5:30.
HAMILTON WATER SPORTS
ProctoMIIo,__OIIIo

tht
be·

r--:-:=-::---:--,;~_ state, but the separation of

[ii!:~[·
Q
OnelV

· 304.a1s.2111.
·
1814 Hondo S - r ZOO Big
Groin Drili ..00; ~ Rod, ...~. ohoft d~v.,
Plontor, MOO. 114- , . _ Sl,DOO, ••c oond, 31)4.
875-20111.

11100.11W711..:1312.

o•bawn
1:01 !Ill Love Lucy

l!l

.-1, 8,DOO mii'M, ulclng 11,200.

Fann Equipment

8 Wlllld TOIIIJ

we~~~n

b~~;;~~;~;;;;;;;;;~ ~=.,--:-::~~==-=-1g82 Hondo Nlahl Howk TID, nc
54

~:."=e"fta':.~ Q

•

•

low to form four simple words.

CAXET

we ~mA ..., ~.n~~

uo !lle ONtC ..... Q

$T.SDD.I14-4".o731.
ten Bronco II, l.oldocl, All!lng :
74 Motorcycles

'"' " ....."'

....

WOlD

0 four
Rearrange leH•n of
Krambltd words

_I

(()•
•• o•
Non

73 VansUWD's

~~'"1:,~~~~

r.:...."r.'.. '::':r'm.~

•

1.111ot Day TllllltonitCont.l

l14- 2 ·14" !log. - · Frlr 1113

Groc:louo living. 1 ... 2 ......

MON., SEPT. 7

Dally

IIIAI DAlY
PUUUI

EVENING

••noo

~.-:;~"?="In':!..

1t

I

Utll lioo

a:

' . . _ , - 1:1111poo FtidiY. Ohio Arlit IIIII
I
......., oclllloft 1D:oo-.m.
Frlr ...... _
......y.
c:ooa... ,._And All1l
1111-1111. Lll
-•
~ lllwd., Rodrlo. ·-Pwi-TIIIIoAnd
Pwllara CIDon In ' .

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

Sporting Goods

114417·7'1115 If .No - ·
Complllly Fumlollocl Loon lloc•g· 114-317-71111.
1 milo ...... O'llft
I
•
1M2 Wlndtor MI7D1 2 bld- ......
looldna rtvor. No Polo,
114- I Plool diriMio, $40; ton
IOOIM, CIA, lOIII - · undor- ue 0331.
recliner, tu: queen el• bid.
--"'a, 8120 ~&lt;Mod wood
jado, -a.zo llumn owning I Ono lum'ocl., Ono unlum'od: - · 11ox oprtngs, •ao: 1141112-111011.
&lt;~ling w1sc:n111o, IIYifllhlna ••c - h 4 ...... 1 both. No poto.l =:,:==,n.:.:~
,...-----­
42 0 11 ~ Wllor Hlllw, 125;
_.... ... - · 304-1'15:5148. . _.... a.o l
1!18'1 14172 On Aontod Lol. Hoot · 0444:' - · Soc. lllp. 514-441- 18"Coi04'T.V. $8Q. 81W17-0111.
Pump And Storoao Bullclna ln~ 1b d
od II odd lol , . _ Potrlclon pot.
cluclod. l14-44f.t70f Aftor 41'.11.
7th
INI SiiYIIno mobllo h«M, 2 11oft
... lar Lll.
Bll-3980.
1111111, 2 - . . . , wnhtr,

= I C11 Of AnMricl II A ......
Wlilch
; AI Yonl Soloo 8o Paid In I
' ....... Deadi&amp;N: 1:OOpm the
' dor - . lhl od 1o to run, Frlr C'!!logi lol I

.5-...

52

~8'(~?

~~~~mlitr.
· ~ flllC..Y ...

1:i':

10111 ellc, 1 bmh, $5,500. good ;.;.:.:..;_;.:.:.:;..;_==.::...-_.... 30(-11Ul506.

-- --0~

!lond I Porch
St. Kanlllfll, 114-448:111'13.

Television
Viewing

• '""'~ '«&lt;Il WIIQIOC¥. a'l' MEW ""'

(l) . . . . . OnelV

..._NO;
11oc11
typo-liD; portoblo

t&gt;lilncoo, -

I'll\ (,OfW. TO FLY '100
ro LONtOl Rl1. ,_

...

The

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Don w...... 3S7 llallum • :118
John : - '1• "'~";':M:_IInl
-Com
gun,
'
Smol Acitylono &amp;
211,101t
Anti
Tanb -h ~- H~ •
:::C::"'c=-:-::=--::-=-:-:
53
ques
- . "" ~•. · -· •
63
Uvestock
11111 Hondo :100 Fou~... 4
whlllw, nc concl, SOW111-ItSO.
Buy ., R.,_ Anliqllll,
• v
Old p
a-• ~~
1114 E. llaln 11~ on Rt. 124, T.V. And VCR Cl~ Llll Thon 1 • •W
uro •- ~
IIOfDRCYCLE INSURANCE
·-•
YIW
Old,
$12.
114-3111811.
I I - . . Honl BIAI A 3 Pin
II au WZ-BIITl• 01v1·~~
~•~01
- . , . Houro: II.T.W. ID:DO
-lloNAWIIII BuD Cllvll F04' Cl •~
IJ1I. ID I:GG p.m., Sundoy 1:DD t·...c.. DIIP 21DD 2~ Pin Prlnllr IDrlha Somco, 814-21111102 A~ ..;
ln..;
IU..;
rl_nc_o_
.. - - - - to 1:00 p.m. •-·~21.
·J~H.
tcir 1 11:11. ·
Fumlohocl "'""'mont, Smoll 1
75 Boats I Motors
...,_.., $111
P•ld, 54 MIIIC811•neous
~ Whlll """' au.. uu ~ ~ Holflr Solo,
for Sale
- ~.- _ ........ eu-•••- ...
, 51
•• - - • •
~~ •
1 - h Full
••• ~~.
,..._. ~
Merchandise
,
-~.
~ • o
4411
UDD. oao,
.:,::.::.::A::.:ft.::•...:.7p.m;=·..,..;.-,-.,---, 1,.,....,--:....-..,..;..:........,... T...... Stlcllo, ltwnl-211t.
040l lui. , , . _ 11a GMnln
304-175-31!11.
Complllly F.,._, lllr, nut 10 harM commorclll gr1voly
to Llllrory, porldng, hill, olr, mowor with 1ljulpmont, $11100; Utocl 4 1on S,_ air- Gu1":""Y.wt~ ADr11 I 1171 llblrglou Bon lloll, 304.
....._ ....... .......,.114- 11111 Ford ~ , rop~lr, conc1,...
rv.~.. .-1,$1 1rwn
-. u11 lloodocl. 175-1131.
11

~~~~~: =~=...~

-lo211110..\n_.__,

.

-

t300; -8-21151.
32 Mobile Homes
Fumlohocl II* lar rtnl, ref I 11181 KowMokl KDIID,' Ludirla
clop, rent pluo utllllloo, 30WJ5. ..,... drvm, hord co-. llllnl,
to r SaIa
1112.
otlclco, 304-1175:4112.
•
12110 llobllo Homo, 2 Bod· Fumllhocl Ellloloncr I17SI1Io. 1NI Clnlury Truoll Toppor, 114100m1,
Good
CondMionl Ullllloo Paid 8hore Both, MrT I:IIZ::.:-1=21::::•:__ _ _ _ __

:===a==='=:=: ,.,. -'""""'"
0

----

Homes for Sale

8y D11n1r. Sp 1d e All Brick
Coclo'*y
s """""'""'·
Dining-. rul Fin. a.- . FP IW, W /1, Sl- CIA Z
+ C. a.-, Co. Wllor, Gr11n
El-ry-/Qollpollo s .o. &amp;14-

To: C 231. o1o CJol.
goccl wllcll dog, 304-iTW917.
Dolly T......._ iZI T1llnl
, a.l - 011
6 Lost I Found
~
llpolll,
4M:n.
Holrllvtlot
-:
Pold
Found: Brown 1n11e cocker v.cat\OM Oeuranettd w.g..
. Soonlol, WI Ociilor. Rt. 33 - r
: llolall•lhlnl Co. IIIlO.

·•-loco,nomo-.2300
• blocllotJo-Avo,~

-L

- - - --

sr-111
sm-. ""'" utiUIIoo,
::l-.s132
.:.::::= = ll:fto
::::.r.::
5:.::
30.:.:
. -~
BEAUTIFUL APARTIIENTS AT
IUOGET PRICES AT JACMSON
ESTATES. 131 ........, Plkl
hom 11e2imo. Willi to ohop &amp;
· Cllll14 us 2511. EDH.
Fumlohocl Aporlmont 1 loci~•• 21 112 Noll Clollltlollo,
.......,, Ulllhlll Plld. 614-441- Aft• 7p.m.
Fumlohocl
AI
'
.SOOOnd
Utlllloo Paid,
Both,
Ill
Avonuo, Clolllpollo.
$138/llo. l14 411 SIMI

1992

1:00

--.or

·~

. ._:.... ... -::::---.

TUesday, September 8,

1111 l'ord FIOO,_III, lllp., ZIP,.
..... 1.............. llor, """"
!1100 I bodY, runo good, $11011,
114-247-42112.
1870 l'ordiOO P.U. 302 V-1, A.-o,
Trono, Lona lllrl, lhllll HHch
Wilou, ToOl 8o1, AIIIFII Coo=~ Clood ~hlon, R•no
•11t ttl 1121.
1m c.ao ChiVy 1 112 Ton
Truc~WIIh Grain Bod, Ellcolilnl
Conclklor, 114-ZoiUI:ZS.

•xc

HoiUr

1992

72 Tl'Uckl fOr Sale

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Household
GOOds

~od At: Honnon Troco
Sc:hOot Dlllrid. 114-Ut em.
Hlrdwk;k 1110 ..ow, ookl,
cond, $1DD. SOWTWI1l.
=.•pia.~-tr.,~.:; "Hot
,-,-':
.P
;..:olni
.,:.:.:,::
Wo,_:-:.,:::::..:,::
HII::vy:....,DuiY
_ .
raorn lociiMioo. to IChool • : Hoi Paint Dryo; lt(;
In lolm. ~IOno ovllllblt :'l;""wh= .::;....
II: YIHoae
Allie. ll4t or llodol S1911; l(onmaro , _ ·11·,
caiii1441Z-371t. EOH.
Frlaldolro Dryor NoW 'iodot,
I , _ 1~10 hooll-11p, W; Uprlghl __ ,,...., ...;
Movo, Ill
very c - RthlgorotOC' lido 1 Slclo $211;
:'i.::'l~1£....... 30W7S- ::::..~..*:; ~':~
•
Rolrigorllar a I Wllw 1111• , _ lpl, I rei '"' • SO nllhocl, ,... ~· od, dop Eloolric -AI ';'ii
0 I rol-lrocl,
IOIID.
flom Ill. mApp 11o-·-.
11 Vlnl 11- .
3 Room FumilhM, Control :._ 114lAir, AI Utllllioo Fw•-. &amp;·
H00-4
. . Ellclrlc, 011 Stroll Porlclng, ""'-lc 171 lo 1215;
81.:.:4.:.:44.:.,1210=2.: , _ _ _ _ _ ~ ctryWI, 171 to $115; I gu
.:.:
d..,•••• oloclrlc' gu '""iN
m to Qo; uprlghl -..IN;

Wonlod: lady ~ To

Tht

51

=""'

LIM, O!oo -On Ono.

Near

Apanment
for Rent

2 Or 3 Bod.- Aportmont, PI!'
l!llly Furnlohocl S350i11o. Pluo
l)opOolt lncl- Wolor, ·
Lo1 For Ront, $1Mio.
lor, Sowor F..,._, llolh

FrM AM 1'1111 u...
1·7'11 alt :liN

~

TUesday, September 8,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

lulftl

48 Dtoert grean
~pot

11 E a•
18 Colonnode
20 Pro- (lor
the Urno

5 t Anglo-Saxon
Ieifer
52 Organ tor
hearing
53 Ammonia
cornpo11nd
5o4 Wklt 1hot

25 Cltlrp

55 Operate

27=-.r
31 South Dokolo
capiteI

56 DIIICOI

btlng)
21 Long llmeo
22 Tltfotl eevlt'

lllzl

Jeanmllrt
57 - Frencloco

32 Flrol

DOWN

33 UnQtrll

34Goonllolrd

2 EltctromoUvtunlt

3 Oppolllte of
ICtO
4 Lout

5 Coplto
6 Bar lor piling

1 Some ltllm

to~..J:· Q

l!..~x
Ken":'
prey to
Rogert

Iaiii

I

PIICIICII lOki perpelrated by
Cltat111 Chill. (1 :00)
taWIIIId Now8

0 7110 CfuUWIIIt Pit

R-Cib ulnn 'iJ

ASTRO.QRAPH .

anger. Virgo, treat yourself to a birthday achieve It There 's a possibility yoor vic·
gift . Send for VIrgo's Astro-Graph pre- tory could have-a hollo• ring.
dlcllons tor the year ahead by maNing PISCES (Feb. 20-Motch 20) You might
S t .25 plus a long, salf·llddresaed, find yoorself In a situation today that Is
stamped envelope to Astro-Grll)h, clo similar lo one yilu mlamonaged In the
'BERNICE
lhls hiWipaper, P.O. Box g1428. Cleve- pastil you react lmp•lslvely, you might
BEDE OSOL land, OH 4~ 101 ·3~28. se sure to slale make1tte same mislikes u before.
ARIEl (MMcii21·April1t) Rllflardless
your zodiac sign.
LIBRA (lept. :as-Oct. 23) Be 81tra cau· of the Intensity of your curiosity loday,
llous In yoor financial aHalrs loday, "' do nOI pry Into things an usoclate
peclally If yoo get Involved In an ar· •ants to keep secret Respect anoth·
rangernent th81 has far·reachlng or's piivacy.
eHecls. A wrong move will be hard to TAURUS (April....., 20) Before you
unravel.
attempt to pull oH something lmpres·
SCORPIO (Oct. 2+11cw. 22) Don't use slve loctay where your career Is conheavy..f1anded tactics today with lndl· earned, be certain you have the key
vlduala who come •nder yo.. authority. people behind you. Unllde&lt;l, you might
You'l get better rOIYIII dlleulllng tall.
lhlnga rather than dlct=.lthnatuma · · QEIIN (.., 21-.luM 2D) If co-W«&lt;Iers
IAGmARtUI (Notr.
· 21) yoJ • aren'! dealt wl1h dlplomottc.lly loday,
Bept. I, 18112
mighl be 100 touchy lor yoor own good · there • a poealblllty you mighl Cl'llllto an
.
today. Be on guard against liking com· lncldenl lhll could hiiYII serlooa
Through selected events or circum· ments made by olloers too serloully · rlllllftcltlons.
ajances. greeter emphasis than usual ' oYou could makea big lido over nothing: · CANCIR (June t1...1utr ~)Try to stay
mlghl be placed on your leadership ' CAPRICOIIH (Dec. 22-JMt. 11) Try to on lomllar lurl loctay. Don I become In·
·qualities In the year ahead . You won 't stay current on llnanclalobllgallons you volve&lt;t In things you know little· aboul,
have to seek the mantle ol authority; II ' have loward olhell. 11 roo fall behind, especially If they could COli you money
there's a chance someone mlglttcall In milmanoged.
co•ld be lolsted upon roo.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-llept. 22) Think twice one of your marl&lt;ers at an Inconvenient LEO (.lilly liS-Aug. Z2) Individuals you'll
before criticizing· others today. Al· j time.
be Involved Wllh today, will be taking
tho•gh you mighl feel your JUgg81tlons AQUARIUI (Jen. ID:Fob. 11) Be car· their cues lrom you. II you're arrogant
are constructive. the targels ol your · tlln lhat an. oblecllve you're presently or over~)&lt; auertlve, be prepared lor elm·
criticism could resent II and respond In striving tor Is worth !he effort II takes to liar trlllmtnl.

,,

1D-.20 (() MOVIE: lltunlay Nlgltt
, . _ (PG) (2:30)
10:30 ill Tllltlll JCont.) Q
11:00(2).

Cll • •

o• Ill

Non
(I) Tile 1101111-lllle Nlllllt Court Sino. Q

IIJ .............

• Croolllltd Cltatt
ID IIIIUITCIIIIgM
tlllpcllla Tonight
0 8atNWGW lltd llri.King

.
I·==U.T ....

11:311~

=£.Journal

Arlllllo IIIII Stereo.

-

• u.a. Open ...... Night

.

··- ·· --- '

CELEBRITY CIPHER

I a.,. ..... ,.._,--~
EMIIIIIWM . . . . . . . . Iror ...... Todlr'eOW:I. . . . . C

Ollllbrly QpMr o;JI CA ••• . . CltllldlrMI.

o

11:11 !lle
Tonight 111ow Will
- .... Stereo. []

' OFCH

PFM

OMFTRKHit

......

12:00(1). (() ......

~:.~
ill~-....
• Dlnett-.....: T•Ml 11111

UH

CIIIH

C II H

IH YKC

TYI

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F

JIH'II

IHYKC

XIIKYGGFRICIIIa . •

Emlll'onl

BllawMII•

o ......

12:018. Night Court Q
12:30 (I) MOVIE: 1'111 AgltiiOi'

•

UHMIYMX

UYMVLN .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I think comedy can make a chanQt. II' I 111&lt;41' till
lu t free apaaoh 111 lorm." - RoHinne Arnold.

•

..
..•

.......

'''

�·'

By The Bend
.

The Daily Sentinel
Tuesday, September 8, 1992
Page-10

,\

•

;f

Ohio Lottery

Braves win,
hike lead
ov~r Reds

Pick 3:
173
Pick 4:
0531
Buckeye 5:
17-26-28-35-36

Page4

Vol, 43, No. 98
Copyrighted 1992

Low tonight In mkl·60s.
Thursday, rain. High In mid-70s.

2 Secllons, 12 Peg•• 25 conti

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 9, 1992

A llulllmodla

Inc. Newspoper

Council offers $35,000 for old junior high
STREET FESTIVAL CRAFTS • This eran
display, owned by Jan Turner and Margaret

Meigs board accepts Pomeroy's offer to buy structure

RDey or Fairborn, was one or several displays at
Saturday's annual Rutland Street Festival.

The building which has dozens
of broken windows and is sur•'
rounded by high weeds and debris
Pomeroy Village Council's was described as an "eyesore to
offer of $35,000 for the Pomeroy Pomeroy" by Board member
Junior High School building was Randy Humphreys. He said that
accepted Tuesday night by the was one reason he is in favor of the
Meigs Local School District's sale.
The building has not been used
Board of Education.
Meeting at the Bradbury school, for academic classes since lhe conthe board voted unanimously to sell solidation of lhe Pomeroy, Middlethe building "contingent upon pan and Rutland Districts into lhe
agreement between parties of Meigs Local School District in the
late 1960's. Mining classes were
details being completed."
held
in the gymnasium of lhe buildThose "details" presumably deal
ing
for
several years during the
wilh adjacent land, a reserved park1970's
and
at that same time anothing area, and rent concessions for
the offices now occupied by the er section of lhe building was used
Meigs Local School District in as a Senior Citizens Center.
For the past several years
Pomeroy Village Hall.
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff

Community
calendar
Community Calendar Items
appear two days before an event
and the day of that event. Items
must be received weD In advance
to assure publication in tbe cal·
endar.

MOTHER'S REVENGE • Not really, but it
could be any mother dream, as Susan Knight
!brows a ball in an attempt to dunk her daughter, Heather, on the dunking machine at the

· Rutland Street Festival on Saturday. The Meigs
Cheerleaders were fe1tured on the machine
throughout the day. By the way, the throw was
su1:cessful and Heather did get wet.

'Honeymoon in
Vegas' tops for
second week

TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT • Middleport
Garden Oub meetS Tuesday, 7:30
p.m ., social room of Middleport
Presbyterian Church. Members
bring any items related to the history of the club.
RACINE • Southern Junior
High. Boosters will meet on Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the junior high
school.

•

PIE AND CAKE WINNERS • Lori Barnes, len, was the winner
or tbe pie baking contest, and Dorothy Leach was tbe winner or tbe
cake decorating contest held in conjunction with the Rutland
Street Festival on Saturday. Sharon Riffle was second and Donna
Jenkins, !bird, in the pie baking contest, with Susie Drehel won
second place in the cake decorating contest.

HARRISONVILLE • HarrisonviUe Seni&lt;W Citizens will hold
a blood pressure clinic Tuesday, 10
a.m. to noon, at the townhouse.
Potluck dinner followed by meeting. All members urged to auend.
SYRACUSE • Syracuse Fire
Department Ladies Auxiliary, organizational meeting, Tuesday, 8 p.m.
at the fire department. Anyon~
interested in joining the volunteer
organization is en,ouraged to
auend. Furlher information may be
obtained by calling 992-6505 or
949-2238. Officers will be eleeted.

POPULAR ENTERTAINMENT~ Dee and Dalllas p1rovided
their ever-popular style of entertainment for the Rutland Str·eet
Festival on Saturday. They wDI also perform for the CatrlSb Festival in Middleport on Sept. 19.

SOLD TO POMEROY • Tbe $35,000
offered by Pomeroy Village Council for the
Pomeroy Junior High School building on Main
Street bas been accepted bv the Meigs Local

RUTLAND - Rutland Village
Council meets in regular session
Tuesday, 7 p.m .. Rutland Civic
Center.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Board of Elections meets Tuesday,
4:30p.m., board office, Mechanic
Street, Pomeroy.
YOU

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) U.S. Senate candidate Mike
DeWine says he was not surprised
that !he Sierra Club endorsed Sen.
John Glenn for re-election because
the environmental group usually
endorses Democrats.
But the former congressman,
through his campaign manager,
accused Glenn of trying to use the
endorsement to distort DeWine's
record on the environment and
diven attention from his own campaign problems.
Curt Steiner reacted Tuesday

IMAGINE

REEDSVILLE • Olive Township Trustees. meet Tuesday, 7:30
p.m., Shade River State Forestry
Building.
SYRACUSE • Syracuse Board
of Public Affairs meets Tuesday 7
p.m.

RACINE • Racine Village
Council meets Tuesday, 7 p.m ..
council chambers, Star MiD Park.
REEDSVILLE - Riverview Elementary PTO meets Tuesday, 7
p.m., school gym.
PAGEVILLE - The Scipio
Township Trustees will meet Tues·
day at 6:30 p.m . at the Pageville
TownhaU.
KIDDIE TRACTOR PULL • Brooke Bolin is pictured here as
she makes a successful pull in the lightweight class or tbe kiddie
tractor pulls at Saturday's Rutland Street Festival. She went on to
win the division with Jamitha Willford who was second. B. J.
Kennedy was tbe winner in the heavyweight class with Zachary
Bolin, second.

Man injured after snake
bite during church service
FORT WAYNE, Ind. (AP) - A
man was bitten by a poisonous
snake while handling 1t during a
chureh service.
Roy W. Vestal, 34, was struck
on one hand Sunday while attempt·
ing to remove the timber rattler
from a box at Hi-Way Holiness
Chureh of God, conservation offi·
cer Dean Jenkins said.
Vestal was in serious but stable
condition Monday at Parkview
Memorial Hospital.
Members oC some fundamental·
lst Protestant churches, especially

in Appalachia, believe the Bible
directs them to handle poisonous
snakes as evidence of their faith.
They cite Mark, Chapter 16: "'They
shall take up serpents and if they
drink any deadly thing, it shall not
hurt them.''
Some stales outlaw the practice,
but Jenkins said Hi-Way Holiness
would be in violation of Indiana
law only if snakes were illegally
obtained or were an endangered
species. He said the snake that bit
Vestal is common in wooded areas
of lhe Southeast.

POMEROY • Meigs County
Showcase meeting. Tuesday, 5:30
p.m., Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce Office.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Meigs Athletic
Boosters meet Wednesday, 7:30
p.m.. Meigs High School. Public
mviled.
POMEROY • Pomeroy Merchants Aasociation meets Wednesday, 8:30 a.m., Bank One conference room. Bring 35 items for welcome bags for Stemwbeel Festival.

IT WOULD MAKE IF

THI YOUNG PEOPLE

after lhe Ohio chapter of the Sierra
Club announced its endorsement of
Glenn at a news conference and
joined him in criticizing DeWine's
environmental record.
Sharon Tinianow. who heads
the 15,000-member Ohio group,
likened lhe Republican's record to
"a textbook in hypocrisy."
She said DeWine voted to
weaken bills protecting lhe environment but in the end supported
them so he could try to "have it
both ways."
"The people of Ohio should not

--Local briefs----.
Thefts probed by deputies

IN THII COUNTIY

IHOWED THE

Meigs County Sh~ff James M. Soulsby reponed on Wednesday
that a 1984 Mazda p1ckup truck reported stolen Monday morning by
Randy Dudding of Pine Grove Road, Racine, was recovered abandoned on Tuesday near Portsmouth, by the Ohio State Highway
Patrol.
Dudding reported that the truck was taken between Saturday and.
midnight on Monday, and that someone told him !he vehicle was
seen in Alhens. When he checked, he· found that the vehicle was
missing.
On Sunday moming, Terry Yeauger of Collins Road in Pomeroy
reported the the depanment that her 1981 Monte Carlo was missing.
The vehicle was located a shon time later, abandoned near the 7-33
CarryouL Investigation is continuing.
Soulsby also said that a motorcycle reported stolen by Mrs. Mike
Warner was recovered on Pine Grove Road. Deputies will interview
a subject with regard to the tbefL
Howard Barber of Reedsville reported on Tuesday !hat someone
had taken the electric meter, electrical box and support blocks from
a trailer silt near his residence. Investigation will continue, Soulsby
said.

IAMI

ENTHUSIASM ,01

THI VOTING aOOTHT

MIDDLEPORT • Middleport
Amatuer Garden Club picnic,
Wednesday, 6 p.m., Gladys Cummings, Route 143. Each member
brin~ an old pro,_.m book. Roll
call 1s a garden up. Bring a birth·.
day card.
POMEROY • Representative
from Congressman Clarence
Miller's office will conduct an
open door session Wednesday 11
a.m. to 1 p.m. in the court house in
Pomeroy.

School District Board of Education. Built in
1929, the gymnasium of tbe three story building
has been used as the Pomeroy village garage for
the past several years.

Sierra Club endorsement
no surprise, DeWine says
CAN

EMS units answer jive calls
Five calls for assistance were answered by units of Meigs County Emergency Services on Tuesday and early Wednesday.
On Tuesday at 10:38 a.m.. Rutland squad went to Woodyard
Road and took Helen McCall to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
3:12p.m., Rutland unit went to Meigs Mine 31 and took Roger Carpenter to Veterans. At 6:32p.m., Racine squad was sentto Bashan
Road. Leora Young was transported to Holzer Medical Center.
At 12:07 a.m. on Wednesday, Tuppers Plains squad went to Rice
Run Road and transponed Jam1e Brannon to St Joseph Hospital. At
Continued on page 3

Register and Vote.
•

lnternltional ~ssociat i on of Clerks, Recorders, Election Oflicials and Treuurers .

Athens County severe behavior
handicapped class; and Esther
Scragg, an aide for a visually handicapped student and also to transport that student to school in Rio
Grande.
Employed as substitute teachers
were Debbie Davis, Deanna Carpenter, Kimberly Maynard Van
Matre, and Elonna Wolfe.
The resignation of Jamie Blaettnar as junior high cheerleader
advisor, employed on a supplemental contract in August, was accepted. Also accepted were the resignations of Diana Ash, substitute aide,
and Marta Blackwood, substitute
teacher.
Other Busioess
The board accepted the bid of

Peoples Bank, Middlepon, for a six
percent interest rate for I0 years on
notes totaling $123,800. The
money wiD be used for energy conservation projects in lhe elementary
schools of the district. The first
project will be installing a new furnace at the Pomeroy Elementary
School.
Tuition rates for the school year
were set by the board. They are
$923.70 for in-state students and
$2,888.48 for out-of-stale students.
Accepted as tuition students for
the year were Kevin Arnot~ Todd
Perry, Vanessa Harless, Regina
Rider, Stacey Hubbard and Morgan
Malhews. Approved for early graduation were James Powell, Lorri
Bumem, Becky Games, and Lon-

nie Sroufe.
At the request of Bonnie and
Eugene Althouse of Scipio Township, lhe board members approved
transfer of the Althouse children
from lhe Meigs Local School District to the Alexander School Dis·
trict. The family resides near the
Meigs/ Alexander line close to
Alexander fagh School but miles
from Meigs . igh School. Health·
problems o one of the childrea
was a consideration in making the
decision to approve the transfer. .
It was also voted to release from.
local attendance Jason Ervin, a
Meigs High School junior, who
will move to the Athens Coun\y.
home of his grandparents.
Conlin ued on page 3
·

Poll reveals Bush gaining ground;
Clinton remains 12 points ahead

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
romantic comedy "Honeymoon in
Vegas" swept moviegoers off their
feet for a second week on a pace to
be the nation's top box-office
attraction during the four-day
Labor Day weekend.
The film was projected to earn
$9.1 million, including estimated
Monday ticket sales, industry
sources said.
The Clint Eastwood western
"Unforgiven" was expected to
hold second place with projected
earnings of $6 million in its fifth
weekend.
The roommate thriller "Single
While Female" was third with $5.1
million and "Pet Sematary II"
dropped one place to founh with
$3.6 million, according to projec·
lions.

POMEROY - Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter, Beta' Sigma Sorority, will
hold its first meeting of the yeaR
Tuesday with a picnic at 6:30p.m.
in the" mini-park on Court Street in
Pomeroy. Members encouraged to
pay dues.

RACINE • Big Bend Farm
Antique Club meets Tuesday, 8
p.m., Southern High School.

Pomeroy Village has been using
the gymnasium as a garage for its
trucks and other equipment. Plans
for use of the three story building
built in 1929 have not been
announced by Pomeroy Village
Council.
Personnel
Teachers, aides and other personnel to complete staffing for lhe
new school year were employed
during !he meeting.
Hired were Jennifer Couch, Pennee Knapp, and Shirley Van Meter,
tutors for a homebound students; Jo
Ann Wildman, a reader guide for a
visually handicapped studen~ Josie
Morton, an aide for physically
handicapped students; Curtis Holliday, to transoort a student to the

II

"

..

tolerate this type of duplicity," Ms.
Tinianow said.
Steiner said DeWinc's record
was being distorted. He said Glenn
used the endorsement "to continue
what may be the most negative
campaign ever run in Ohio by an
incumbent. Poll after poll has
shown John Glenn is in trouble.''
The Sierra Club endorsed Glenn
when he ran for re-election in
1986. Ms. Tinianow said he "has
championed the cause of environmental protection for 18 years in
the Senate."
Some DeWine votes that Ms.
Tinianow criticized involved
amendments that she said would
have weakened the Superfund law,
a 1986 enactment that helps fund
the clean up of toxic waste disposal
sites.
She said he opposed compensating victims and allowing citizens to
enforce in court their right to know
about potential heallh hazards from
exposure to chemicals or other
wastes.
Steiner referred questions about
the Superfund deliberations to Nick
Wise in Washington, a DeWine
aide in 1986 who is now a cam paign adviser.
Wise said De Wine joined mem . hers of both parties in trying to
make sure lawyers would not wind
up with a disproportionate share of
Superfund money. The funds are
supposed to be used to clean up
sites, he said. ·
He said a recent study showed
that of the $15 billion appropriated
for lhe Superfund to date, lawyers
wound up with 80 percent of it, and
only 109 of I ,200 Superfund sites
have been cleaned up.
·"That's what DeWine tried to
prevent, and John Glenn voted to
let it happen,'' Wise said.
The Sierra Club held its news
conference at a clolhes recycling
plant "to demonstrate that more
JObs and a better environment ~o
hand in hand," Ms. Tinianow wd.
The plant employs 300 workers.

By WENDY BENJAMINSON
Associated Press Writer
President Bush is struggling to
persuade voters he is as devoted to
domestic issues as to international
affairs, while warning !hat his foreign policy gains will be wasted if
Bill Clinton becomes commanderin-chief.
Bush was trying today to
reclaim the mantle of the " education president," traveling to Pennsylvania to sell his America 2000
schools program and praise a manufacturing company's adult education classes.
Bush's recent adherence to a
daily theme is part of new cam paign overseer James A. Baker
III's attempts to focus the president's message.
Republicans spent the day Tuesday demanding !hat Clinton "come
clean" on his Vietnam-era draft
status, suggesting he wasn't decisive enough to lead during an international crisis and ridiculing him
for incorrectly describing Patriot
missiles.
An ABC News-Washington
Post poll released Tuesday night
showed Bush $aining ground but
with Clinton sttll 12 points ahead.
Clinton had 53 percent support

compared with Bush's 41 percent
in a poll of 621 likely voters. The
Sept. 2-6 telephone survey had a
margin of error of 4.5 percentage
points. A week ago, the same poll
showed Clinton and Bush at 56-36.
Clinton also was focusing on
domestic issues today - his campaign strength - after speaking via
satellite to the B'nai B'rith convention that Bush addressed Tuesday.
The Democratic nominee left
Connecticut and New York to tour
his native South today, where he
would discuss welfare reform in
Jonesboro, Ga., and address the
Southern Baptist Convention and a
town hall meeting in jacksonville,
Fla.
Clinton made a nostalgic visit
Tuesday to Yale Law School,
drawing rousing applause from students at his alma mater. One student who held up a Bush-Quayle
sign was roundly booed, but the
Arkansas governor urged his supporters to sto~ .
"AcademiC freedom," he said
with a grin. "Even at Yale you
have the right to be wrong."
At Pennsylvania's Norristown
High School, Bush was to discuss
his America 2000 plan for improving lhe nation's education system

by lhe tum of the century. The plan
seeks to make American pupils tbe
world's best in math and science
and reduce the dropout rate to 10
percent while giving parents wider
choice in choosing public or pri;
vate schools.
·
Aides said the president also
would highlight other education
initiatives his administration haS
pushed, such as lhe Lifelong Learning Act legislation he submiUed to
Congress last March. That proposal
would widen access for adult workers to grants for continuing education.
Later, in Collegeville, Pa., Bush
was visiting Unifomi Tubes Inc., a
manufacturer and exporter of precision tubing used in industry.
Clinton's running mate, AI
Gore, toured Texas' Rio Grande
Valley, where he pleaded with
largely Hispanic crowds to help
sway Bush's adopted home state to
the Democratic ticket.
The Bush campai(!R. intent on
its theme that Amencans cannot
trusl a small-state governor to lead
the nation's foreign policy, seized
on Clinton's comment Tuesday that
the Patriot missiles used in the Persian Gulf War "go through doors
or down chimneys."

Cremeans, Malone spar over jobs legislation
By JIM FRE!i:MAN
OVP News StaR'
Candidates for lhe 94th District
of the Ohio House of Representatives exchanged shots yesterday
and this morning on the issue of
jobs legislation.
Frank Cremeans , Gallipolis,
Tuesday announced his suppor:t for
a jobs package pending in the Ohio
Senate and called on his incumbent
opponent to get to work for jobs in
Ohio.
Cremeans, a Republican, criticized his Democrat opponent,
Mark Malone of South Point, by
saying Malone should "end his
summer holiday, return to his fulltime job in Columbus, provide
proper leadership, and show he is
interested in jobs for our district."
In response, Malone Wednesday
morning called for an end of "playing politics with jobs and our future
in southeastern Ohio."
"I am amazed that my opponent
would stoop so low, so quick in
this race," Malone said. "There is a
bi-partisan effort in !he House and

FRANK CREMEANS

Senate to act on job legislation. My
opponent is trying to create a light
where there is none."
"Duri ng my nightly door -to door campaigning, and through my
daily attendance of each of the four
county fairs, I've found the issue of
jobs to be one of the top concerns
of the citizens in the 94th district,"
Cremeans said.
"This package will have the
immediate impact of creating new
jobs, as well as long-term benefits
of increasing invesunent in Ohio's
industries, and making Ohio more
conducive to long-term -business
expansion," Cremeans said.
According to a press release
from the Committee to Elect Frank
A. Cremeans, the job package
includes: a "job creation taX credit"
to employers who expand their
work force, a tax exempt1on to
businesses who invest in new
research and development machinery, a taX credit for companies who
increase exports, increased incentives for urban enterprise zones, a
provision to rapidly mcrease Ohio

MARK MALONE

highway project and another to
establish a task force to increase
inltrslate competitiveness.
"For too long, companies look·
ing to open new production plants
have crossed Ohio off the list
because of government regulations
that hun business. This means less
jobs for Ohioans who want to
work. It's time that we increase our
competitiveness, and open the
doors for real
. growth in Ohio ' "
Cremeans S3ld.
State Senator Stanley Aronoff
has scheduled dales for fuU Senate
consideration of the package for
September 28 and 29, Cremeans
said.
After the package's expected
passage, it will be referred to tbe
Ohio House. To dale, Speaker Vern
Riffe has not commiUed to calling
the House back into session to consider the measure, Cremeans said.
"Both Republican President
Aronoff and Democratic Speaker
Riffe have agreed to put politics
aside on jobs legislation. I am
amazed my opponent would try to
play politics with this issue," Malone responded.
"Politicians have played politics
with jobs and our future for too
long. It's time we put politics aside
and try to do what's best for our
families. Enough is enough," MaiClne added.
Malone said lhe House passed ·
the Economic Recovery Act of
1992 (H.B. 808) on June 30. The
bill is pending in the Ohio Senate
where Senate President Aronoff
has also expressed interest in tbe
biD.
A press release from Mark Malone's office said the Economic
Recovery Act would c:reare 14.000
jobs. The measure does liot ldd 1ny
additional costs to tbe stile ~~
because it simply speeds up 1oc:a1
construction projects finance4 by
Issue Two, previously apjlrovcd bY
voters statewide.
.. . . ·
.

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