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                  <text>Page-12-The

Sentinel

EASTMAN'S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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SEVEN..UP ..
· 2 U~

:
J- ',

Sent mel News StaiT
Commun11y Development Block
Grant proJects totaltng $99.355.85
were approved for su bmi ssion to
thc state when the Meigs Coumy
Commtsstoners met in regular sessron on Wed nesday.
Prtor to the announcement, a
pub ltc hcanng. was held on th e
appltcatwns, wtth Boyer Simcox
and Donna Russell, both from
Buckeye Hills/Hocking Valley
Regwnal Development District in
aucndance, as we ll as Alice WarnsIcy and Ruth Ann Sellers of the
Meigs County Council on Aging,
an applicant for CDBG funds.
Twofundin
projects
disqualified
from
g in were
accordance
wilh
CDBG g01dehnes. ReJecled was a

Election board to close

lEAF SERIES
I&amp; II

The Meigs County Board of Elections will be closed on September I~ so that '!Iff members may auend a district meetirtg. Those
planntng to regtster to vote on that day may do so at the Meigs
County Public Library in Pomeroy.
-

CAKES

99(. .

· .· 12~1

or Picton.! Enort.
~­

•

WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi·
At a rally Wednesday in Middent Bush is renewing his no-new- dletown, NJ., Bush won cheers in
taxes pledge, buying television response to his most adamant antitime and making a high-profile lalt vow of the 1992 campaign seaspeech in an effort to persuade son.
Americans he can lead the counuy
"We do not need to raise laltes
to economic recovery.
in this country," Bush said. "I
Officials billed his address found out .the .bard way: I went
today to the Detroit Economics along with one Democratic tax
Club as a major statement of eco- increase and I'm not going to do it
nomic philosophy. Some said he again. Ever. Ever."
might also mix in a few tax breaks
Two years after his famous 1988
for small business.
campaign pledge of "read my lips
"It will be very substantive on -no new taxes, " Bush signed a
jobs and the economy, on what deficit-reduction agreement that
direction this counuy needs to go," included multiple tax increases. He
said campaign spokeswoman Torie now says that was a mistake and
Clarke. But no dramatic initiatives claims he was forced into a comer
were anticipated and ·Clarke by the Democratic-controlled
aclcnowledged most of the content Congress.
was not new.
Bush has made several spee(:hes
Aides said Bush would outline promoted in·advance as definitive
his view of America's role in the economic statements, from his
world economy and fold in propos· State of the' Union address in Janals he has made on taxes, educa· uary to his convention acceptance
tion, welfare. legal reform and speech last month.
health-care reform.
He has proposed lalt b.reaks for
Cobo Hall, site of today's families, investors and businesses.
speech. was where Bush in 1980 as well as an across-the-board lalt
became Ronald Reagan's running cut and a deficit reduction checkoff
mate and renounced his earlier box on income tax returns. But he
description of Reagan's supply- hasn't specified the amount of the
side beliefs as "voodoo eco- tax cut or how it would be
nomics."
fin81)ced; nor has he explained how
Bush said in a campaign appear- the checkoff box woufd worlc and
ance Wednesday that the counuy what program cuts it would
had been through "economic . prompt.
hell." But he also asserted that
The proposals apparently have
"we're an economic supezpower in not boosted voter confidence in
spite of the lousiness of our econo- Bush's economic leadership abilimy" and insisted, as he has for ties. A Washington Post-ABC poll
months, that the counuy is poised released this weelc showed Demofor a strong recovery.
crat Bill Clinton with a 20-point
The president's campaign team advantage over Bush when voters
acknowledged that the recession were asked who could better hancan't end fast enough to help Bush die the economy.
at the polls Nov. 3. The speech
Bush continues to blame
today was designed to convince Con~ress for the country's ceovoters he is the right man to lead nomtc pt'Qblems. He said Wednesthern into a more prosperous future. day thmgs would be different if
To reinforce the message, the lawmaker$ had approved his ceocampaign bought television time nomic program - particularly an
tonight on NBC, CBS, ABC and mvestmcnt tax allowance and a
CNN for a five-minute taped $5,000 tax credit for first-time
speech in which Bush was to hit homebuyers.
·
the highlights of his Deuoit speech.
"If we had had this invesbnent
"It will focus on the most criti- ~x allowance," Bush iold a quescal things that need to be done to uoner a.t an "Ask George Bush"
malce the counll'y the economic and sesston m FrapPe. Pa., •'I believe a
exponinl! and military superpower lot of compames that aren't in busithat it will become in this changing ness would be in business. I believe
world," Clarke said of the paid it would have stimulated investadvertisement.
ment. •'

One injured in two accidents

299

A minor accident on Nye Avenue Wednesday aftemoon was
inveStigated by Pomeroy Police. ,
.
According to the repon, JeMifer Johnson, 20, Racine, ttaveling
north on Nye Avenue lost control of her vehicle and strUck a utility
pole •. Neither she nor a child in the vehicle were injured. She was
not cu.ed.
Charges of DUI, driving under suspension and failure to control
,.
Continued on paae 3
--~·----'·---.,1 -----.....c---- -~-----1-·-

'

becau se, as submtUed. tt dtd not
allow for runmng water serviCe to
r:stden ces , a req ulfemcn l of
CDBG-funded water pruJC\:ls. A
chtp and seal roadproJCCt flied by
the Lc.tan Town shtp Trustees was
also d•squaltfted hccausc chtp and
seal work ts no~ fundablc through
the CDBG pro~am .
.
Those prOJeCtS whtch were
fund ed were: Rutland Vtllag c,
$36,912.15 for water ltne replacemen t, Metgs County ~~unctl o~
Ag~ng , $24.308 for a Hot shot
van for home-delrvcred meals; Suiton
Town shtp . Trustees.
S21 .391.28, for .pavmg on Court
Street: Sctpto Town sh1p.

$7 ,1 8942, fire e&lt;Juipmcnt; Bashan
Volumccr Ftre Dcpartmenl , $3,120,
fire equipment; Soil Conservation
Service, $6435. dry fire hydrants.
ActiOn was tabled , pcnd1n g
review , on two bid s received for
the remova l of old fuel tanks at the
lnghway garage and their replacemen!. Those btds were received
from D.V. Wcocr Construction of
Recdsvtlle, in the amount of
$44.8 15. and Jeffers Excavatmg of
Pomeroy , for $44,995.
The sole bid of F&amp;L Elcctrontcs
of Hunongwn, W.Va. , opened Ia"
week, was accepted Tor new clcctron ic communications equipment
for the Emergency Services depart-

men1. That equipm ent wi ll cost
$53. 179. and a req uest to finante
part of the purchase through a loan
from Farmers Bank and Savings
Company . Pomeroy, was approved
on behal f of the Emergency Services Board of Trustees .
The btds of Shelly Company of
Thornville on two separate Iss ue
Two paving prOJC Cls were also
approved. Those two bids were for
Leading Creek Road (109,355.40)
and Mt. Union Churc h Road
($39.344 80).
Prese nt were Commi ss ioners
Manning K . Roush David
Koblentz and Richard E j
d
Clerk Mary Hobstettcr. · ones, an

study environmenlal exposures to
By BRIAN J. REED
chemical substances.
Sentinel News Starr
The law would also provide for
The activities of a group organized to defeat State Issue Five on criminal penalties and civil fines
the November ballot were outlined for violations. Civil penalties of up
when the Meigs County Chamber to $2,500 a day per exposure, and
of Commerce held its general criminal penalties of two to four
membership meeting at Overbrook years in jail and up to a $25,000
fine may be imposed. The governCenter in Middlepon Tuesday.
Keith A. Shoemaker, president ment would be exempt from the
of the Shoemaker Company in new law.
"If passed, this law would be
Columbus, discussed the grassroots
devastating,"
Shoemaker said, "and
approach of the Ohioans for
Responsible Health Information, a would spurn local business growth
diversified citizens' group com- and development."
Any business with more than 10
posed of agricultural , business,
consumer and labor organizations employees would be required to
comply with the regulations, he
dedicated to defeating the issue.
The proposed legislation, if said, which includes notification of
passed, would require businesses to every residence within a two·mile
provide labels and warnings for use radius of the business transferring
with consumer products or the or releasing such substances.
Steven L. Story proposed the
release of chemical substances
detennined to increase the risk of adoption of a resolution opposing
the issue, and Executive Director
cancer.
It would also, according to Paula Thacker said that the Ohio
Shoemaker, create a new tax on Chamber of Commerce, which also
businesses that release or ttansfer opposes the issue, has suggested
toxic chemicals of one cent per · that local chambers pass such
pound per year on their emissions, action .
Story updated the membership
to be paid into a s~ial fund. That
tax, along with ctvil fines, would on the activities of !he Southeaslem
pay for the implementation, admin- Ohio Regional Council's highway
IStration and enforcement of the commiuee, especially the addition
law and would award grants to of the Lancaster bypass to the
groups demonstrating a need to Capitol Corridor project.

·David Harris, chairman of the
chamber's dance cruise commince.
announced that the cruise on the
P.A. Denny slemwheeler is sold to
capacity with a waiting list. The
cruise. sponsored by the chamber
will be held on October 8 in con:
junction with !he Big Bend Stemwheel Festival. According to Harris, corporate sponsorships are now
being sought in an auempt to
underwrite the cruise and increase
the chamber's proceeds.
Mary Powell, chairman of the
membership committee, announced
that a "Membership Round-up"
will be held at the Middleport
American Legion annex on October 29. The event will be free to
mem bets, each of whom is encouraged to invite a potential chamber
member. The potluck dinner will
have a Weslem theme, and Gerald
Powell will lead those attending in ·
line dances and other Westem·style
dance steps.
Kathy Adkins of Chester was
introduced as the chamber's new
secretary. Vice President Chuck
Kitchen presided.

0 pposttiOD
• • to State Issue 5
~;~ji~cst-Cu~~:~~~~t~eD~~f~~~ subject of Meigs Chamber

President George Bush
outlines economic goals

--Local briefs:-___,

·
$
SEVEN..UP .
PRODUOS .

.

PRESIDENT SIGNS FOR LITTLE LEAGUERS - President
George Bush signs a basebaU during a campaign stop in Middletown Wfdnesday for Brad Cannon, cneter, and Matt Wolski or the
Nottingham AU·Stars Little League team or Hamilton Square, N..J.
The team was the Eastern Regional Champions in the recent Lttle
League World Series. Next to President Bush is former New Jersey
Gov. Tom Kean. (AP)

SNACK

A.. i'~ IASEIALL
~.
"\..CARDS

•Not

'

By BRIAN J. REED

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

r- ';ii'C ------;ooowm-- ------ ~ r --;.. ~---- -;oo-;wr;------ --il
r- -;.~ ---- -;oonw;;---- ----:1
102

centa

A MuHim&amp;dla Inc. Newspaper

Meigs County Comfnission
approves 1992 CDBG projects

CLOROX BLEACH:

c

2 Sections, 12 Pogoa 25

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, September 10, 1992

Governor ranks
high in approval
COLUMBUS (AP) - Sixtytwo pen:ent of Ohioans surveyed
in a newspaper poll approved of
the way Gov. George Voinovich
is handling his job.
Thec;:olumbus Dispatch aslced
respondents: "Generally speaking,
do you approve or disapprove of
the way Gov. George V.
Voinovich is handling his job?"
Eleven percent of those sur·
veyed strongly approved, 51 percent approved, 26 percent disapproved and 12 percent strongly
disapproved.
In the poll, Voinovich got approval from 83 petCentofRepublicans surveyed, 61 percent of in·
dependents and 42 percent of
Democrats, the newspaper said.
Voinovich received strongest
suppon in the poll from respondents in centtal arid northeast Ohio
. ond his lowest approval rating in
northwest Ohio, where some critics have said he is oat paying
enough aaention to economic
problems in the Toledo area.

Pomeroy Merchants Association completes
preliminary steps for revitalization project
By JULIE E. DILLON
to seek additional donations in the
Sentinel News Staff
amount of $5,000 and that council
The role of the Village of will check into providing the
Pomeroy in revitalization for the . remaining $5,000.
downtown business district was
Musser and another revitalizadiscussed at Wednesday's regular tion committee member will atlend
meeting of the Pomeroy Merchants the next village council meeting to
Association.
further tlisc:uss council's pan in the
Scott Dillon, a member or revitalization process.
Pomeroy Village Council,
Donations for the revitalization
addressed the issue of revitalization project are still being accepled and
being undenaken by the merchants anyone who would like to donate
association.
may do so by sending it to John
The association, through the Musser at Downing -Childs·
ef(ons of Susan Clarlc, president, Mullen-Musser Insurance, in care
wtth John Musser, revitalization of the Pomeroy Revitalization
chainnan, has completed all neces- Escrow Account.
sary preliminary steps for the proSternwheel festival discussed
cess. To this point all money rrused
At the request of the Big Bend
has been by the efforts of members Stemwheel Festival Committee, the
of the asSociation and community association agreed to provide "welpeople that have donated toward come bags" for the boats as it did
the projec~
last year. Those who would like to
Dillon stated that Musser and provide items for the bags should
Mike Stroth, revitalization consul· give them to Mrs. Clark by Mon~t.• a~nded the last village coun· day. Thiny.five items are needed
cil meeung 10 seek funding for the from each contributor.
downtown business plan in the
The merchants will again be dis·
amount of SI0,000. The plan is the playin$ works of local anists In
next srep required in revitalization their wtndows and anyone needing
grant funding from the st1te and the a name and number of an artist
grant application must be submitted should contact Mrs. Clark at 992by an entity such as village council. 2054.
Ac~ording to Dillon, village
The Herbal Harvesters Society
counctl has agreed to submit the will present an herb fest in the
grant but that Pomeroy Mayor mini-park in c011junction with the
Bruce Reed requested additional Big Bend Slemwheel Festival on
infonnation regarding the monetarr. Oct 10. The. sc:t-U{', according to
commitment needed from counctl Dianna Lawson, will be Ute same
and no action was taken. Since the as last year with an lterbed twtey ·
last council meeting, Mayor Reed cooking demonSII'IItion and herbal
has been given the infonnation he displays. In addition to the herb
requested, according 10 Mrs. Clark. fest, Russ and Hope Moore of
Dillon stated Mayor Reed Riverine Antiques will present an
agreed at the last courtcil meeting antique show: ·

-

;

The associanon wm run a group
advertisement in conjunction with
festival in The Daily Sentinel on
Thursday. Oct 8 and all ads are to
be turned in to P.J. Harris by Oct

5.

Other business
Mrs . Clark thanked all who
assisted in the recenl clean-up or
the median strip in the business districl Another work session to trim
the trees and mulch the strip was
set for Sept 26 around 9 a.m.
The next promotion by the association will center around Hal loween with "Moonlight Madness"
on Oct. 31 and exlended business
hours from 6-10 p.m.
Mrs. Clark u"rged everyone to
attend the Catfish Festival sponsored by the Middleport Community Association noting the amount
of time and effort that has gone
iniO planning that festival . Angie
Swift stated a variety of activities
have been planned with many to
focus on the children."
Kenny Utt, reporting for the
Lions Club, stated plans for the
development of a covered stage on
the parking lot in Pomeroy are progressing and that the club hopes to
have the cover completed before
Stemwheel Weekend.
Orftce Service and Supply was
welcomed as an associate member
and the next meeting was
announced for Oct 14 11 8:30a.m.
in the conference ro6m of Bank
One. All members are requested to
au.encl as deCisions will be made on
group ldvertising for the Otristtnas

season.

Strickland
criticizes
mailings
By JIM FREEMAN
OVP News Starr
Congressional candidate Ted
Strickland again Criticized incumbent U.S. representative Bob
McEwen about government-paid
mass mailings.
Strickland called McEwen's use
of laltpayer-fmanced mass mailings
"a gross manipulation of the public
trust, and the moral equivalent of
stealing."
Barbara Briggs. McEwen's
campaign manager, said any
ncwsletler sent must be approved
by a bipartisan panel. Briggs said
the fact that the leiters were
approved by Democrat panel members indicates the mailings arc not
campaign pieces.
Briggs said she was preparing a
complete response to Strickland's
release.
In an appeal to supporters of
Congressman Clarence Miller,
Strickland said "Clarence Miller
was an honest and honorable member of the House who would not
consider using laltpayer money to
fund hi s campaign mail . He
(M iller) warned us about Bob
McEwen and the slippery ways
McEwen would conduct business."
A spokesman from Miller's
office said MiUer does not support
Striclcland. Likewise, Miller has
not supported McEwen other than
to politely "wish him well" in dte
November election.
MiUer was was narrowly defeated by McEwen in the June primary
Miller originally contested the elec~
lion results but eventually dropped
his complaint
,:
Strickland said McEwen's mailing are a Mstiloke saccp for thinn ·
he doesn't want us to know about-:; ·
Strickland said McEwen does .
Continued oa piile 3

�Thursday, September 10, 1992

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON

AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LE1TERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words_ All leuers are subjec t to editing and must be signed wilh name .
address and telephone nwnber No unsigned letlers will be published. Letters
should be in good taste. addressing issues, not pen;onalitics

Bell responds to article
By Edward F. Hell
For more than 200 years newspapers in the United Slates have been
protected and subsidtzed under the canopy of the Flfst Amendment,
enjoying special postal rates, taJ&lt; breaks and antitrust exemptions. Yet in
hts August 12 column published by the Gall ipolis Daily Tribune, Frank
Deaner, execu ti ve director of the Oh10 Newspaper Association, claims tllc
privi leges tllc newspaper industry enJoys are not enough.
He also wants the Public U~lities Commission of Ohio and Congress
to shield newspapers from competition by adopting rules and enactmg
lcgt slation to prevent local telephone companies from offenng infonmation services. That First Ame ndment right was upheld last year by the
U.S. Supreme Coun.
In an effort to circumvent the high court's decision, Rep. Jack Brooks.
D-Texas, has introduced legislation to create a new federal law halting tllc
prov iston of electro nic co nsu mer se rvi ces begun with the Supreme
Coun's lifting of the mfonmaoon services ban. The measure, H.R. 5096,
would also prevent for many years com panies like Ohio Bell from entering new lines of business. The apparent intent IS to codify the prese nt
restrictions dating to the 1982 breakup of the old Bell System tllat prohibtt
the regional phone com panies from manufacturing tel ephone equipment
or providing long distance servtce.
The Brooks bill, which U.S. Commerce Secretary Barbara FrankJin
says she will recommend President Bush veto, ill ustrates why the American people arc so fed up with Congress. At a time the country is strug·
gling to emerge from a recession, some on Capitol Hill are flagrantly protecting special interests at the expense of new jobs for American WiJrkers
and the delivery of inexpensive new products and services for consumers.
In its support of tlle Brooks bill, the national trade group for the newspaper industry - the Newspaper Association of America (NAA) - promotes the notion that somehow the phone companies want to be the only
irifonnation service provider in town. That's ridiculous. Unlike newspapers, the regional phone companies arc highly regulated and monitored by
state and federal agencies. Tbe public telepbone networli: means just tlla~
it is open by law and available 10 all infonnation providers under fair and
equal conditions. Compare that with the exclusive control that virtually aU
of America's newspapers exercise over what they present to the public.
Today, only II U.S. cities have more than one separately-owned, competing newspaper. In the vast majorily of cities without competition, the
monopoly newspapers have waded in to take fmancial advantage of their
exclusive territories: A recent study by Policy Communications, Inc.,
d~mon strates that these monopoly newspapers have raised advertising
rates dramatically. From 1986 to 1991, newspaper classified advertising
piices at daily monopoly papers rose on average between 26 percent to
nearly 46 percent more quickly thWl those at newspapen in cities with a
competing daily paper.
The special interest protection advocated by the newspaper industry
and Rep. Brooks do not reflect concern for the public or the First Amendtrienl Nor does it embrace the principle of competition. It' s p-ecisely the
opposite. The objective of the Brooks bill - and the ·Ohio Newspaper
~ociation ~ is 10 preserve and protect the newspaper monOI?!?ties tllat
have enabled publishers to raise advertising prices vinually a1 wtU.
What this country needs is not a piece of legislation that protects newspaper monopolies. Quite the opposite: a good dose of competition in
monopoly newspaper cities and towns will help consumers and small
btlsinesses reap the benefits of traditional American free-market enterprisidward F. Bell is president and cbier executive officer or The Ohio
Bell Telephone Company.

Letters to the editor
No statement of support?
Dear Editor:
As Arsenio Hall says. "There
are th ings that make you go ...
Hmmm?"
Congressman Clarence Miller
recently dropped hi s legal challenge of his pri~y loss to Rep.
Bob McEwen due to lack of funds.
According to the Associated Press
article, McEwen said that Miller
vo iced support for the McEwen
campaign. However, the same article stated that Miller was unavailable for comment that day.
The nex t day, an AP article

released this starement from MiUer
· "II is with considerable regret and
reluctance that I take this action,
but there comes the time when you
realize the costs associated with
pressing on are prohibitive." There
was no statement of support as
claimed by McEwen.
Does Miller now support
McEwen, or doesn't he? Or, is it
only wishful thinking on the pan of
Bob McEwen?
Hmmmmm? Stay tuned, folks.
Sincerely,
Floyd E. Wright

Berry's World

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, September 10, 1992

The cost of a Supreme Court victory
Ed Cleary , a solo practitioner in
St. Paul, Mtnn., made hi s first
appea ran ce before th e U.S.
Supreme Court this past tenm. He
hit a home run . In R.A.V. v. City of
St. Paul, the court unanim ously
declared that city's " hate speech"
ord inan ce vtola ted th e First
Amendme nt.
Then f1ve of the justices ruled
for the first time that although
some speech is unprotected by tlle
First Amendme nt - "fighting
words, " for instance - govern ment may not select for punishment only tllose "fighting words"
that the slllte considers demeaning
to particular groups. In St Paul, for
example, th e ordinance punished
racist expressio ns but not " hate
speech" directed at th e handi capped.
The dcciston cuts down JU St
about all college speech codes and
most " hate crime" legislation in
many s~1tes because both ou~awed
speech directed against particular
groups. Ju stice Antonio Scalia's
opiniOn in parts of the rulmg
tracked the written and oral argumenJS by Ed Cleary.
Cleary was a court-appo inted
attomey for a skin head, Raymond
Viktora, who was charged with
burn1ng a cross in the small hours

Nat Hentoff
reprehensible act and that there
were a number of non-speech-related statutes under which h1s client
could be punished if the county
attorney proved Viktora had burned
the cross.
All the way to the Supreme
Coun, Cleary's argument was that
the ci ty had instead decided to
prosec ute Viktora under its "hate
crime" statute which was so broad
that tl included all kinds of speech
protected by the First Amendment.
(T he law punished expression
arousi ng "anger, alarm or resentment in others on the basis of race ,
color, creed, religion or gender." A
pro-choicer attacking the Catholic
Church in a sign could be convtctcd.)
At debates in St. Paul, Cleary
kept trying to show that "the ordinance - not the cross-burning is on trial befor e the Supreme
Coun. The tssue is whether communities have the rig ht to pass
unconstitutional laws to suppress

dissent. "
Hardly anyone was listening.
Although Cleary had defend ed
so me highly unpopular black
clients, he was now shunned by a
number of black lawyers and civil
rights activtsts - as well as by
indtgnant white liberals.
Furthennore, he was accused of
costing the taxpayers more than
$100,000 for defending the crossburner. Actually, there were no
public funds available for Vi.ktora's
appeal to the high coun after the
Minnesota Supreme Court had
invented a way, or so it thought, to
construe the "hate speech" ordinance as being constttutional. So,
from Aug ust 1990 to the conclusion of the case in June 1992,
Cleary - and Michael Cromett, a
lawyer helping him - donated tlle
time they spent on the case.
All along, there were threats at work and also on Cleary's home
phone. Said one anonymous caller:
"You can't trus t lawyers. They
should burn on the cross. You're
going to burn on your cross."
The local press, by and large,
stressed the fear and anger of tlle
black fami ly who certainly fe lt
threatened by the burning cross, but
the newspapers general ly provided
lillie understandi ng of the basic

W~Y

YES D?cToR,
:I D1 SMOKE APACK.
ADM . HOW COULD

YOU TELL ?

First Amendment nature of the case
before the Supreme Court. (A
notable exception was a December
analysis by Steven Thomma~ of the
St Paul Ptoneer-Prcss' Washington
Bureau.)
Among tlle local telcvismn silllions KTCA of the Public Broadcasttng System did provide perspective beyond tlle burning cross,
but the constitutional iss ue was
way over the head of the other stations . Gamely, however, they disposed of it with as much aplomb as
the basketball scores. (I've seen a
succession of videotapes of Twin
Cities stations' "reporting" on tlle
case.)
When the Supreme Court granted review, the solo practitioner
asked for help from professors at
the University of Minnesota Law
School. According to Cleary, no
assistance was forthcoming at the
William Mitc hell Law School, also
in tlle Twin Cities, where law professors were energetically involved
buttressing the prosecutor's
defen se of the "hate speech" ordt·
nance.
After tlle Supreme Court agreed
with Cleary, there remained
widespread belief in St. Paul, he
says, that "we have ignored the
feelings of a black fami ly for eitller
fi nancial or racist reasons. Even
members of my fami ly were confronted by people wanting to know
how their relative could do such a
tllin g."
And among a good many white
libe rals, Cleary has now bee n
branded a person under permanent
suspicion. "One of the things l
have learned," he says, " is that
individual liberties may be threatened as easily by well-meaning tiberals as by reactionary conservatives."
Pan of the continued confusion
has been caused by such groups as
the NAACP, which strongly supported tlle SL Paul ordinance. One
of its officials said privately after
the Supreme Court decision came
down that he was relieved. "It was
a terrible ordinance," he admitted,
but he has never said that publicly
because he is a good soldier. Or, as
Tom Paine might have said, a summer soldier.
Nat Hentoff is a nationall y
renowned authority on the First
Amendment and the rest of the BiD
of Rights.
Nat Hentoff is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper_Enterprise
Association.

Youthful criminals should be punished
By Joseph Perlcins
A 13-year-old San Diego gang
member participates in the drive-by
shooting death of Wlother youth. A
13-year-old boy in DeKalb County,
Ga.. rapes and kills a 7-year-old
child. Four teen-age girls in Madison, Ind., bludgeon and sodomize a
12-year-old girl before dousing the
victim with gasoline and burning
her alive.
These are horrible, real -life
cases that recently came before
stale juvenile courts. They bring
squarely into focus the epidemic of
juvenile violence that has beset
cities and towns throughout the
country. They also raise serious
questions about the efficacy of the
present juvenile justice system.
Youth arrests for violent crimes
increased 27 percent during the
decade ending in 1990, the FBI
repons. This largely is due to an
explosion of youth violence toward
the Iauer pan of the decade. Juvenile anests for murder soared near·
ly 50 percent between 1988 and
1990, according to the National
Center for Juvenile Justice. Robbery arrests climbed 35 percent.
Aggravated assault arrests rose 30
pen;ent.
Law enforcement authorities
throughout th e country bear wit-

ness to the emergence of a new too clearly, tltat because they are oppose treating young violent
breed of young offender. These underage, they will be treated with offenders as adults. They believe
hardened, violent juveniles have kid gloves by judges in the juvenile that the primary funciion of juveutter contempt for the law. They justice sysrem. They know that no nile justice is rehabilitation rather
have little regard for human life.
matter how heinous their crime than punishmenl They feel that, by
They would, for instanCe, have even burning someone alive trying a juvenile as an adult, socilittle or no qualms about blowing there is little prospcct that they wiD ety will have essentially given up
away a grandmother if sbe hesirat- face sentences commen.surate to on the youth. It will have coned 10 hand over her Socijtl Security their crimes.
signed the youth 10 a life of crime.
check. They dido ' t think twice
Even in lhe 5 percent of cases in
So be iL While there is much 10
about torturing a little girl and set- which young violent offenders are be said for trying to rehabilitate
ting her ablaze.
· tried as adults, the full weight of young offenders, the line must'be
Meanwhile, the juvenile justice the law is rarely brought against drawn when a youth commits a
system is stuck in a time warp. It them. And in many SllteS a youth- violent crime like rape or aggravataPPf'JBches this 1990s epidemic of ful offender under the age of-16 ed assault or murder. ln soch cases,
juvenile violence with a liberal phi- cannot be SCiitenCed past the age of rehabiliration must take a back seat
losophy left over from the 1960s. It 25, tlo matter how heinous the to public safety.
conli nues to operate based on the crime.
Maybe while violent young
premise that youth are not fully
offenders
are behind bars, they
Alo'IB the same perverse lines,
responsible for their actions: that in many states a young offender will, as they say, see the light.
they do not fully appreciate the dif- with a lengthy record of violent Maybe they will commit themference between right and wrong.
offenses may have that record selves to treading on the straight
But we are not talking here expunged wben be or sbe rums 18 and narrow - which certainly
about the proverbial juvenile delin- years old. Prospective schools, should be taken into account when
quent. The kid who gets caught joy employers, landl~ds ~other inlfr· they are eligible for parole. And
riding in a siOien car ~ busted for ested parties n none the Wiser.
maybe, ultimately, they will
shoplifting or gets collared for list
If the epidemic of youth vio- become productive members of
fighting . We are talking about lence is to be abated, the•juvenile society.
rapists. Drug peddlers. Gangslfrs. justice system must be reformed:
But in the here and now, these
Murderers. With rare exception, Violent youth must no longer be violent young offenders are a dan-'
they are beyond redemption. It is protected by age. If they commit ger t&lt;&gt; society. They should be
time the juvenile justice sy~tem adult crimes - rape, armed rob- given punishments that come much
faced up 10 this.
.
··
bery, aggravated assault, murder closer'to fiUing their cri111es.
The young and the lawless they should be tried, conviewd and
Joseph Perkins is a c:olumnisl
thumb their noses at the juvenile sentenced as adults.
for The Saa Diego Unlon-Tri·
justice system. They recognize, all
Many advocates for juveniles bune.
•

Quayle better off not saying anything

•

I cannot quite bring myself 10
say the vice president of the United
States is a fool, but I will say that if
he could not abide fools, he would
have a hard time living with him-

self.

Who but a fool stands before the
entire nation and criticizes the
other fellow for an alleged lrespass
that the accuser himself engaged
in? Some might call it stupid, but I
take the high road: It is the act of a
fool.
It happened in Kansas City on
SepL 2. Referring to RC:Cnt stories
that Bill Clinton's dead WJCle once
tried to get his nephew's military
induction poslpOiled, Dan Quay!~
allowed that Clinton "has a credi·
bitity problem."
Some may recall that Dan has a
credlbitity problem of hls own. He
avoided Vietnam in 1969 by land·
ing a coveted slot in ibe fndiana
National Guard, perhaps with the
assistance of his wealdty and well·
connected family. Dan, of course,
sees it differently: "I chose to ·
serve in the Indiana National

•
J

of the night in the front yard of the
only black family m a working class neighborhood. From tlle start,
Cleary said publicly that it was a

I

Guard. Bill Clioton chose· not to

serve.''
Let's do a little review:
At the time Dan Quayle decided

Joseph Spear
his home state could make betlfr
use of his services than his country,
he had alr'eady passed his induction
physical. But he wanted to go to
law school, he said. His own father
said the Indiana University Law
School " wouldn't tate him,"
because of mediocre grades, so you
have to wonder aboutlhe Cledibility of Dan's excuse.
But whatever the reason he preferred 10 serve in Indilnapolis, he
said he did ''what any nonnal per·
son at that ·age would do - call
home. You call home to Mother
and Father and say, 'I'd like to get
into the Nalional Guard.' ... Is tliele
anything wrons with ~ng your
mother and father's friends for
advice1"
Bear in mind !bat '"horne" was

the Eugene C. Pulliam family, as in own conclusions.
the .Pulliam newspaper chain, . While we are on the subject,
worth somewhere between $1.2 let's talk about some or the other
and $1.4 biUion. Eugene was Dan's flaming hypocrites slinking under
·
grandaddy . James Quayle and the RepubliCan tenc
Pauick
Bucllanan,
who
snidely
Corinne Pulliam Quayle, Dan's
belittled
Clinton
for
tryfng
to
parents, were the owners of the
"
dodge
the
draft,"
sat
out
the
Viethometown paper, the Huntington
(Ind.) Herald-Press. One of Motbel' nam war with ·a bum knee that,
and Father's "friends" was Wen· miraculously, does not keep him
dell C. Phillippi, the managing edi· from jogging.
Rep. Newt Gingrich of Georgia
tor of one of Grantladdy's papers.
and
Sen. Phil Gramm of Texas
Mr. Phillippi happened to be a
avoided
the war with student defer· •
retired Amty.major general and the
ments
.
.
foimer coma.nder of the Indiana
·
Secretary
of Defense Dick
National Ouanl.
Cheney
also
avoidcil
Viemam-with
. In a 1988 illltrview with Wasb·
stullent
deferments.
He
" had other •
ington Post reporters, Phillippi
.
priorities,"
he
said.
acknowledsed callins Guard olliAnd what about lhe Gipper himcials on Din's behalf. "I'm a close
self,
the -great guru to all these
.oersonai frie,td of the Quayle
.charlatans1
He once claimed he
ly," he said. "And I wanted 5~
photographed
Nazi death camps for
do what I could to help." · · .
the
Signal
Corps,
but that was a lie. .
· I! is ttue tllat the chafses of a fix
He
"served"
just
down the road •
have never been proved. But the
fact is that Dan did not go to Viet· from his Hollywood home ~~ lhe ~
. na/n and served six months of Hal Roach SI,Udio - "Fl. Rtlach" .
to dognoscenti - making propa, ·
active duly in the Indianapolis
gantla
films. ·
·
'I'II&lt;R the decallL tl!aw your

--Area deaths-- r---Local briefs ... ---. -Meigs announcements-Owen Dailey

Roger Grindley

Owen Dailey, 58, of Barringer
Ridge Road, Portland, died Thursday Sept. 9, 1992, at his residence.
A laborer, he was born on Nov.
23, 1933 at Portland . He was the
son of the late Ofa Dailey and Ester
Van Meter Dailey.
He is survived by his wife, Carole Sue Schwarz Dailey, Portland;
two so ns and a daughter-in-law,
Michael L. and Sally Smitll Dailey,
Long Bottom, and Donald R. Dailey, Ponland; a daughter and sonin-law, Melinda and Barry Smith,
Racine; two brothers, Bill Dailey of
Long Bottom, and Elson Dailey of
Portland; a sister, Bessie Crumbly
of East Liverpool , and three gmndchildren.
Besides his parcnJS he was preceded in death by five brothers,
James, Jake, Thurman, Joe and Leo
Dailey, and a sister, Mary Baker.
Graveside services will be held
at I p.m . Saturday at the Bald
Knob Cemetery. The Rev. David
Dailey will officiate. Friends may
ca ll at the Ewing Funeral Home
Friday from 7 to 9 p.m.
In lieu of flowers, the family
requests donations to tllc American
Heart Association or the Lung
Association.

Roger Edison Grindley, 52, of
Lima, died Wednesday, September
9 at St. Rita's Medical Center in
Lima.
He was born on September 22,
1939 Ill Pomeroy , so n of Cora
Grindley and the late Ronald
Grindley. He was a pipefitter, and a
member of the Union Local 96. He
was a past member of the Moose
Lodge.
He is survived, in addition to his
mother, by his wife, Sandra Hennessy Grindley of Lima; a son,
Cllristopher Gri ndley of Charleston
Heights, S.C.; two daughters, Mrs.
Dwight (Lorna) Hill, Rac ine, and
Lisa Grindley of Col umbus; two
step-children, Misti Chamberlin
and Thomas Chamberlin of Lima;
two brothers, Ed Grindley and Ted
Grindley, both of Columbus; two
sisters, Mrs. Dave (Marilyn) Watson of Gallipolis and Wanda Roush
of Columbus; and two grandchildren.
Services will be held on Friday
at I p.m. at Siferd We stwood
Chapel in Lima, with Rev. Way ne
Sharpes officiati ng. Burial will be
in Woodlawn Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Thursday from 2 to 4 p.m.
and 6to 8 p.m.

J. E. Fendersbosch
Joseph Eugene Fendcrbosch, 69,
4 Hillcrest Dr., Gall ipolis. died
Wednesday, Sept. 9, 1992, at Holzer Medical Center.
He was born April, 22, 1923, at
Olmstead Falls, son of Henry and
Mary Saxton Fenderbosch.
He was married May I. 1946 to
Helen Matllewson, who survives.
Also survivi ng arc two so ns,
Josep h Ga ry Fenderbosch and
Michael James Fenderbosc h, both
of Gallipolis; one daughter, Mrs.
Wi lliam (Kay) Bradley of Memphis, Tenn.; fi ve grandchildren;
three brothers, Jack Fenderbosch of
Pueblo, Colo., Roben and Richard
Fenderbosch, both of Olmstead
Falls; and one sister, Francis Mary
Rogers of FL Mead, Md.
He was a retired Kyger Creek
Power Plant employee, with 32
years of service. He served in the
U.S. Air Force in World War II and
was a member of St. Louis
Catllolic Church, VFW Post 4464,
American Legion Post 27, Gallipolis Elks Lodge #I 07, Moose Club,
Point Pleasant, and Cliffside Golf
Club.
Funeral mass will be held Satur·
day at 11 a.m. at St Louis Catholic
Church,with Msgr. William Myers
officiating. Burial will follow in the
Catholic cemetery.
Friends may call Friday from 69 p.m. at Waugh·Halley-Wood
Funeral Home.
In lieu of flow~. contributions
mar be made to the Multiple Sclerosts Society, 618 Oakleaf Office
Lane, Memphis, Tenn., 38117, or
to the Lupus Foundation, Kanawha
Valley Chapter, Charleston, W.Va

Rutland Court news

Continued from page I
have been filed against Keith Scott, Pomeroy, as the result of an
acc ident on East Main Street early Saturday morning. Scott was
treated at Veterans Memorial Hospital for injuries received when
his ve hicle struck a utility pole .

Deputies investigate theft
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported on Thursday
tllat depu ties from tlle department nwesugatcd a com plaint frorn
Clarence Stevens of Langsville, who satd dtat he had two dressers
wi~t mirrors taken from his renta l house , recently vacated by the
tenants. He also discovered two windows had been broken and siding removed from the house.
There arc suspects in the case, Sou lsby satd, who have moved
out of the state .

EMS units answer calls
Five calls for assistance were an swered on Wednesday by unitS
of Meigs Emergency Services.
At 8:34a.m., Tuppers Plains unit took Harold Sedgwick to Veterans Memorial Hospital from Slate Route 7. At8:53 a.m., Middleport unit took Jessica Wright from Veterans to Holzer Medtcal Center.
At 6:24p.m., Middlepon unit went to Dave Diles Park for Melissa Hart, who was taken to Veterans. At 6:27 p.m., Racine squad
responded to Barringer Ridge Road. Owen Dailey was dead on
arnval. At 9:21 p.m., Racine sq uad went to Third and Vine. Keitll
Musser was taken to Holzer Medtcal Center.

area.

'

.
'

Festival queen meeting
There will be a meeong tonight
(Thursday) at 7:30p.m. at tlle Middleport Tax Office for tllosc interested in being a candidate for the
Middleport Festival Queen Contes t.
Water to be off
Water service to all Leadin g
Creek Conservancy Dt stnct cus·
tomers cast of Rudand wtll be diSrupted Saturday between tllc hours
of 8 a.m . and 4 p.m.
Harvest festival
St. John Lutheran Church will

Recipients cut from General
Assistance urged to reapply

The I 00,000 Ohtoans who were Services an nou ncctl tn August tllat
Russell Lewis
cu t from General Assistance March th ey wo uld not noti ly indi vtduals
Russell A. Lewis, 76, of Mason, 31 should contact tlle Meigs Coun - when they reac h the en d of their
died Tuesday, Sepl 8, 1992, in ty Depanment of Human Servtccs term limit.ations.
to reapp ly, a press release from
Holzer Medical Center.
A retired boilermaker with Local Southeastern Ohio Legal Services
667 of Charleston, he was a U.S. announced today.
The GA cuts were made because
Army veteran of World War II,
TONIGHT
member of the Stewart-Johnson of a change in House Btll 298 that
TOM HANKS, GEENA DAVIS
V.F. W. Post 9926 of Mason, reduced the eligibility ume to six
IN
American Legion Post 23 of Point months in a 12-month period.
In order to begin receiving benePleasant, and allellded Salem
fits on October I, people mu st
Community Church.
Born July 23, 1916, in Gib- ap ply with th e Department of
bstown, he was a son of the late Al- Human Services during September
PG
lan "Bud" and Lilah (Edwards) and reques t that the case worke r
postdate
the
application
to
Oct.
I,
STARnNG
FRIDAY.
Lewis.
He was also preceded in death by the release said.
Also, if applicants apply in the
a brother, Edward, and sister, Kathmiddle of the month, that partial
leen.
Surviving are his wife, Dorothy month's benefit will count as a full
S. (Shriver) Lewis; four sons and month toward their six month eligidaughters·in-law, Gary and Donna bility limit
The Ohio Department of Human
Lewis, Raymond and Rose Mary
Lewis, Henry and Doris Lewis, all
of RL 1, Letart, and Marvin and
Carol Lewis of Cleveland, Ohio; a
South-Central Ohio
stepson and daugbter·in·law, Ches·
Tonight,
decreasing cloudiness
lfr and Diana Pyau of Eustis, Fla.;
with
a
chance
of evening showers.
12 grandchildren, one greatLow
in
the
mid-50s.
Chance of rain
granddaughter; two sisters and
ONIIVINING SHOW 7:30
brothers-in-law, Mary K. and John 40 percent. Friday, mostly sunn y
with
the
high
70-75.
ADIIISSIOII $1.50
King, and Lucille and · Edward
King, all of Rt. I, Letart; a brother
SIIOWIIG AI' 9:30
and sister-in-law, Earl and Ruth
The Daily Sentinel
Lewis of Rt. 1, j..etart; and several
nieces and nephews.
(UIIPSill-910)
· The funeral will be Friday, I :30 Publi1hed etery !lf'temoon, Monday
p.m., at the Foglesong Funeral lblVIllh Fridoy. 111 Court St., Pomeroy,
by the Ohio Valley Publiahin1
Home with the Re~ ~ Ho~ Ohio
CompanyJM~alttmedia Inc., Pomeroy,
char and Rev. I ames Lewis official· Ohio ~769, . Ph. 99~·~156. Second elu•
ing. Burial will be in the Sunrise pootqe pold at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Memorial Gardens, where military Member: 'l'fle Mocialed Prwa, and lhe
Ohio 'Newepaper Auociation, National
graveside rites wiD be held.
OIIIIVIIIUIG SHOW 9:30
Adnrtilina Repruentative,- Branham
Friends may call at the funeral
ADIIISSION $1.50
Newapaper Salea, 733 Third Avenue,
home Thursday, 6 to 9 p.m.
Now Yort, N"' York 10017.
446-0923

A LEAGUE OF THEIR
OWN

Cremeans reunion

A THEA

WITH A CHOICE!

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
· Betty Frazier, Middleport; Henry
Durst. Middl epo rt and Harold
Sedgwick, Tuppers Plains.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
- None.

f,] .OO AU. MAnl'lll5. TVESDA"f IAJIGAIN NIGHl

S5 .()(1 AOU l l .. DMI~§.ION EvtNIN(i SNOWS
f,l .OO Sit OTIZE NS UIO ( HILOIIEN 1l •NO UNOlll

'I IIIWAIII CDII WRII I ,11110

lliNDOF (DMI~~~.! IND SUifllll!"
..

. ..

0

" "

•••

•

•

• •• • 0

•• •

• •••••

lWl ~111RHil,UIIlmlH! I!QMM IWIIIIlt

I(ANAUGA DRIVE-IN

SNfAKERS . .
l l8 .l JC t.l ! L•
"'A': ~ fl'

~•:uQD~·

I'IOW

CLOSED

~'

~MOWIN G

•

FOR

THE

SEASON
THANK YOU FOR
YOUR PATRONAGE
... SEE YOU NEXT
SPRING!

CORR-E CTION
WEDNESDAY'S AD SHOULD
HAVE READ

Weather

-*

Strickland...

11\ Vl lcd .

Dcsce ndnn ts of Jame s and
Bertha
Crc111cans wt ll hold thclf
have 1ls annual Harvest Festival on
dnnual
famil
y reunion Sunday at
Sunday at II a.m. with joint ser1-orcst
Acres
Park 1n Rutland. All
vice with St. Paul Lutheran
lamtl
y
and
fn
cnds in vlled. Dmncr
Church. Rochelle Paul wtll be the
at
noon.
guest speaker. Potluck dinn er at
noon and afternoon service at I:45
p.m. Hymn sing and speak e r,

COLONY THEATRE

Rutland Mayor Edward Martin
Continued from page 1·
fined 17 on Tuesday.
Fined were: Doonie TiUis, Rut· not want voters in the 6th congres·
land, squealing tires, $50; Randy sional district to know he voted
Han, Vinton, speeding, $48; Gre- himself a pay raise while voting
gory Hogue, Jackson, $50; Patrick against·a minimum wage increase
Napper, Vinton, $50; Ronnie for worlcing families, went on ten
Spencer, Long Bottom, $48 ; taxpayer-financed junkets overseas
Wilbur Engle, McArthur, $59; and bounced 166 checks in the
Shawn Games, Langsville; Timo- defunct house bank and has yet to
thy Martin, Jackson, speed, $53; pay the money back.
Stephanie Gardner, Pomero)', $49;
Strickland said, if elected, he
Chrystal Powell, Racine, $53; Dan will worli: 10 introduce legislation
McDonald, Rutland, $51 ; James prohibiting unsolicited mass mailDailey, Albany, $53; Scan McKin- mgs.
ley, Middleport, $48; Linda Price,
Middleport, speed, $50; ~obert
Hill, Syracuse, speed, $53; James
Fort Necessity, Pa., a U.S. national
Barnes, Jr., Gallipolis, $50; and
battlefield,
is the site of the first skir·
Jenna Amott, Racine, speed, $53.mish of the French and Indian War.

"Women tn the Mtntstry." Services
wtll be held at St. John .
Services set
Service s at Red Brush Church
of Christ, Bashan Road, will begin
Wednesda y and continue through
Sept. 19 m 730 p.m. nightly wtth
Sept. 20 servtces at 10 a.m. and 6
p.m. Guy Mal lory, Wtnter Garden.
Fla .. wi ll be preac htng . Public

.. .

.

I

RED DELICIOUS

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3 LIS.

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HIT THE DECK.
~"-&lt;:1~~~~61~~';4.&lt;'-&lt;'

With their non·slip
outsoles, K•SWisse
deck shoes hang on in
any weather, so you
won't hit the skids .

What if you could do somethinggood for yourseli.
and at thesame time do something great for our
community1 That's something you could feel good about, right1

I /Of!&lt;-

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The Dally Sentlnei-Page--J

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1·800·776·0553
WEARING IS BELIEVING:

on......Sept 25
~ ~ ,., . .. . . . . ~ ~ ~ . . ' ,.._ Wftll iUH "" 1111\ flrl'pfl 5 GIM

219 N. SECOND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

992·5627

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.

-

.

.,

�Thursday, September 10, 1992
Page

1 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy

Thursday, September 10, 1992

Middleport, Ohio

Friday night will be execution. We
got by wnh some mi stakes last
week. Th 1s week we must execute
from both sides of the ball. We
need to lock in on what we are
doing, stay focused, and take care
of missed assignments. We have to
pay attent ion to detai l and keep
tabs on the little things that win
ball games. It' s been a good week
of practice."
Sparking Southern 's offense last
week was the "one by land, two by
sea" air -combination" of Russell
Smglctcn on the ground and Mike

Evans to Jeremy D1U in the air.
Singleton had two TD's with 22
carries and 209 yards, a credit to
the SHS offensive line and Singleton' s ability. Evans was 7-10 and
one TD combo with Jeremy Dill ,
while Evans him self punched the
ball in from the one earlier in the
game.
Southern must watch the onetwo, land-air combo tha t Waterford
possesses. Shutting down on e of
the two could also help key a victo·
ry.
Tyson Powers passed 19 times

By The Associated Press
Robin Yount ha s joined the
3,000-hit club and George Brett is
on the wai ting list.
''I'm very happy for him. He' s
been a good frie nd," said Brett
after he watched Yount's milestone
hit Wednesday night on the instant
replay screen at Royals Stadium.
Yount was hundreds of mile s
away at Milwaukee County Stadi um, but the two baseball players
arc linked with history thi s season.
Yount reac hed th e miles ton e
first with a si ngle in the Brewers'

for 249 yards, led by Jason Malac's a nice little 5-2 defense, which get people experience and quality
five catches for 147 yards. That make s them a good little football time. I was very pleased, tha t considering last week's game was only
co mbo conn ected three times for team ."
TD scores. Waterford also has the
"We have to be confident, but the second time out against a live
sp&lt;cd and long-bomb threat of J.D. we can' t be overconfident. We defense or a live offense for the full
Pinkerton who grabbed a 75-yard must do the things we can do best." team . To get a good workout, so
TD rccepuon.
"I'm ju st overly pleased with much of the time we have to split
Eric McCutcheon led the WHS the elTon we played with last week. the squad so I was really pleased."
ru sh1ng with 25 carries for 111/l We hope to co ntinue to improve. ' "This could be a great season,
Now is the time to work hard and but a great season stan~ tomorrow.
varils.
· Gaul stated, "Waterford has a focus on winning footbal l. I think The kids arc going to have to be
nKc pass ing game and they have that we definitely will be in for a men tally ready and cut down on
McCutcheon m the backfield. They tight game. I think though, thiu we mental mistakes."
South ern will travel to Watercan run or throw the ball so we have the advantage of getting a lot
ford
for the 7:30 p.m. stan Friday
of
kids
playing
time
last
week.
must be ready . Waterford also has
cvenmg.
With numbers down, we need to

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correpsondent
The Meigs Marauders travel to
McArthur Friday evening to battle
Jack O'Rourke's Vinton Count y
Vikings. Meigs is coming orr a 21 0 loss on the road last Frida y to
Gall ia Academy, while Vinton
County defeated Zane Trace 20-6
m their opener.
Thirteen staners return from 4tst
year's team that finished w1th a 10·

Jumor fullbac k Jason Snider
leads the Viking ground game. The
b · 3, 225 all -conference selection
rushed fo r 702 yards last season
and an average of 5.5 yards a carry .
Joining Snider in the backfield will
be 5-8, 180-pound seni or runnin g
back Dusty Adams and 6-0, 170pound junior quarterback And y
Booth.
Adams carried I~ times 1n last
Fnday's wi n picking up 16R yards

and a touchdown. Booth added 99 hi s third year a1 a staner leads the
yard s 111 19 carries and a touch - Viking charge.
dow n. The Vikings rolled up 410
The Marauders had problem s
yards on the ground, but Booth and getting th eir offense in gear in last
Adams co mbined for zero fo r wee ks loss at Gall1polis. The
seven in the air.
maroon and gold were able to rack
Oefc nslvcly, the Vikings will up only 108 total yards against the
run out of a 5-2 forma tion . Seven Blue Devils.
, ~;~rt c r s return on a defense th at
Meigs will stick with the same
g:11 c up only 39 points all or last lineup that took the fi eld at Galseason. Senior Tim McManis, a 6- lipolis last week. Eric Wagner (5-8,
0, :&gt;SO-pound defen sive tackle in 131, jr.) will get the nod at quarter·
back. Wagner was under pressure
all eve ning completed three of 12
passes for 29 yards. Aaron Drummer pulled in one pass for 15 yards,
Savoy aerials for 46 yards. Jeremy Bryan Hoffman one for nine and
Buckley, the defensive star had 16 Mike Welsh one for three. Junior
fullback Heath Hudson led th e
yards receiving.
Barr concluded, "We ha ve to go Marauders ground ga me with 48
into this game with a positive atti- yards in nine carries, tai lback Mike
tud e. We've had a good week of Cremeans added 16 in six carries.
pracucc and I th ink our kids will be Jered Hill ran the ball well in the
men tally ready for this football third period coming off the bench
with 16 yards in four carries.
game."

Eastern to head south to face Wahama Friday
By SCOTI WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
Dave Barr's Eastern Eagles. (01), square off against West Virginia
nval Wahama (I -I) at Mason Friday night at 7:30p.m.
Wahama defeated Hamlin ,
W.Va. 43-0 in a season-opemng
mismatch, while dropping a 30-7
contest to rival Ceredo- Kenova last
Friday.
Eastern lost its opener to Waterford 24-6.
Psychologically, Eastern has the
edge of knowing that Wahama can
be beaten, and the fact that Eastern
defeated WHS last season durin g
the Eagles' banner 8-2 run.
The faces on both clubs have
changed. However, Barr is optimisitic that his club will give it
their best shot.
Barr said, ''The key to defeating
Wahama begins with out own
improvement as a team. We have
to take better care of the football
and we have to improve our pass
defense and run offense. Wahama
is a physical football team. We
have to show up ready to play."
Rocky Stewart and Carl King
each scored two touchdowns in the
opener at Hamlin for WHS . King
rushing II times for 170 yards and
Stewart 18 times for 129 yards.

Stewart and King had 56 and 39
yards respectively last week.
Ea stern wa s som ewhat timid
against the run last week, but hopes
to have the house in order thi s
week. Eastc m's pass defense will
have to watch th e pas sing of
Tommy Mayes who went 3-5 for
35 ya rds in th e opener and 3-13
last week for 35 yards.
Kevin Barker and Travis Johnson arc the main targets.
Barr added, "The kids saw the
import ance of conditioning last
week. They have pushed themse lves this week . We' ve made
some minor adjustments in technique and alignment that I feel will
help us."
Barr commented on the
strengths of the White Falcons.
"Wahama is a tremendously physical football team . They run the
option very well and they are sound
defensively. We will polish what
we dQ best in our gameplan for this
week and go from there."
Pat Newland was a bright spot
in the EHS line-up last week, racing 90 yards for the initial TD
score. The Eagles had a good fust
half, but gave the baU up on two
interceptions early in the game,
then later gave up another intercep-

tion.

Eastern went 13-30 in the air for
125 yar ds and had 30 on the
ground, while giving up 249 passing yards to Waterford and 400
overall.
Newland led receivers with 48
yards on three catches, while Charlie Bissell grabbed three Chad

5-4 loss to Cleveland. Brett, still 22
hits shy or the mark, was hitless in
four at-bats in the Royals' 1-0 loss
to Toronto.
You nt, hitless in his first three
at-bats , became the 17th player to
reach 3,000, and the first to do it
since Rod Carew in 1985.
While Yount got the memorable
hit of the mght, the Indians got the
last bi~ play or the eve ning, scoring
twice m the ninth inning off reliever Doug Henry (1-3). Steven Olin
(8-4) went I 2/3 innings for th e
win .

The loss dropped third-place
Milwaukee 5 1/2 games behind the
Blue Jays in the AL Easl
Elsewhere in the AI., it was
Minnesota 6, Seattle 2; Texas 3,
Boston 2; New York 5, Boston 2;
Chicago 6, Detroit 4, and Oakland
3, California 0.
Blue Jays 1, Royals 0
David Cone carne home in style,
hurling a five-hit shutout through 8
1/3 innings in Toronto's victory
over a Kansas City team that still
regrets trading him.
Cone, a Kansas City native dealt

Scoreboard

Vinton County to host winless Meigs in Friday night contest
0 record ami the Tri-Valley Conference champion ship return for the
Y1kmgs. The Vikings defeated the
Marauders 28-0 last season .
Vmton County will once agmn
fea ture the powerful wi shbone
offense beh1nd a huge offensive
Ime. The line for the Vikings average 6- 2 and 225 pounds desp ite
flfst team all -di Strict guard Jason
Ne wsom e, weigh1ng in at 185
pounds and standin g 5-8 .

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

Cleveland edges Milwaukee S-4 after Yount's 3,000th career hit

Southern to put 1-0 record on the line against Waterford
By SCOTI WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
With the ~rospcct of having one
of the best )tarts in Southern history, the Southern Tornadoes go to
Waterford Friday night for a bout
with the Wildcats at 7:30 p.m. in
Watenown.
Southern is 1-0 after defeating
Alexander 36-16 last week, while
Waterford is 1-0 after defeating
Eastern 24-6.
Ca utiously optJmistic, but bubbling with confidence, head coach
Dave Gaul said, "The key to a win

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

In lhe majors .. .

K.ansu C!.ty ........62

71

446

20

Seatllr..

S4

.400

26.5

NATIONAl lEAGUE
Team
W L
P!ttsburgh ......... 81 58

Pc:L
S8J

GA

\iontreal ..

. . .76

63

.547

5

St LooU ............69

68

504

Chicago .. ........... 69

69

500

New York

..64

75

460

II
\I 5
11

Phiil.-lelplua ....... 56

81

409

2A

Weslern Division
Atllnta ........ ..... .... 83 5.5
601
CINCINNATI ... ...75 64 540
San Diego

Texas 3, BoslOn 2

85

536

9

llou.s\(fl .............. 67
San f-nnCLK"O ....... 61
Lo~ Angcle., .
.56

72
78
tD

482
.4)9
403

16 5
225
27 5

Today's games
HOUSlon {Bowen G-4) at San Franosco
(Durkc.nll -9), 3:35 p.m .

(SwindcU 12-6) at At-

la.ntl (Avery I 0-9), !1:10 p.m.
San Diego (Deshaies 3-4) al l.o5 Angeles (Hmh.iser 9-12), 10:35 p.m.

Louil (Olivuea 8·8), 8:05p.m.

Adtntt (P. Smith 4-0 ) u Houlton
(Kilo 3-9), 8;35 p.m.
CINCINNATI (Pu1h. 1- 1) 11 San
tnego (llenoo 11·12), 10;35 pm.
Son Fnncioco (Block lD·i) " 1m An·
8cloo (Corulilllli 10.12), IIHl p.m.

Oakland 3. Ctlifornia 0

dcz 7 -8), 8:05p.m.
Tor onto (Guzman 13-3) at Teu1
(Pavlik 3-2), B-35 p m
Seanle (Johnson 11 - 12) II Oaklimd

(Duling 12-9),10:05 p.m.

WLPtLCB

.S40

..f79
.460
.&lt;MO
.457

3.5

:u

14
16.S
16.5
17

lerYC. O&amp;imcd Cedric Mid, U"m~ck..
off waivm from the KJm.u City Chids .

NEW YORK GWITS - Pt.cod My·
ron Guy~on. safety, on injw-e4 resene.
Signed Jcue CunpbeU, afety.
NEW YORK JETS - Placed Johnny

DasebaU

CINCINNATI REDS - Reull ed
Rid Wrona, Cltdttr, fm. N•hYIIIt ol
the Alntrkan Alfodation.

-

MIAMI HEAT - Aped to term•
with Jolin S.Uey, forward, m 1 coatnct

..

0otlond .................12 57

.590
- . . . ..............78 62 .557
&lt;:hiel&amp;•............... :.7l 63 .543
TOI . .....- ..............69 13 .486
.450

6.S

t•.s

19.5

Pllll.ADElPHIA EAGLES - N"""'

.

JdJn Woot.m IOOUt and Dr. O.vid OleenwaJ~~~r- rebbont conmltanl

BURGH STEELI!RS - Ploccd
Eric Orcon and Rllll Campboll, tisht
enda, on injured rael'"tlc. SJ&amp;Iled Je11e
C~ ~nd Tim Jml.m, tiaht en cit.
WASHINGTON REI5SKINS Placed Jdla Branda, Ion, mapper, ut in·
jwod """"~ S;pod Guy Bin&amp;Jiom, mop1"'·

Hockey

Nodonal HodtoJ t.ua•
BOSTON BRUINS - Acq"""' iclf
Ricciardi , defeaiOITian, tram tbe Win-

nipea Jell far a.....tirim•' draft pick.

dol-.
............

EDMONJ'ON OIUlRS - S;pod liD

PHILAOI!LPIUA 76ERS - Nome&lt;!

DCIII.

4.5

on injured raern.

'"(UOd.

the developman af;m:ment with the Cm·
tintmW RukabiU Aaoci.ltion.

CLEVELAND CAVALIERS Sipod Bt'ld O.ulhcty, cane, to a multiyear contract extem:ioa..

et~ d,

Signod Eric KttWI, tight end. Rclu1ed
Patrick Ncbon, wide receiver, from the
pnctice tqt~l d. Sir;n«&lt; Anthmy Prior, dcferuive bac.k-k.ic.k n:runv:r, to the practice

MLB - Nuned Bud Selig, Milwau·
kce Brewen owner, chtiDnan of th e u ccutive COWlcil

~tc\'e MiA d~tor of commW~it)' rela·

w-.01-

ClliComlo ..............63 77

NEW ORLEAI'lS -SAINTS - Pltecd
Vince Buell, comerblcll., on inj~ rc-

MitcheU, tight

Natlanll llalluolbllt AllodoU..
NBA - Annouoood the u.\enlion of

EultmiN'ilkwt

10WII,
10W40,

lOS ANGELES RAMS - Clllmed
Wuren Powen, defens ive end, off
w1iven fr om the Denver Broncoa.
WJJvcd AJVU\ Wol!,ht, ddenrivetlck..le.

Seattle (Fisher 2- 1) at Oakland (Win
9- lJ), \0:35p.m.

BuketbaU

64

a

(Chiamparino 0-1 ), 8:35pm.

AMERICAN LEAGUE

13
75
75
76

serve. Stgned Ma tt VlJlderbee.t.,lineblck ·

go (H..tblnnJ ]{)..6), 8:05p.m
Cahlomia (Abbott 6-13) at Ml!lnaota
(Smiley 14-7), 8:05 p m
Toronto (StouJcmyrc 10-9) at Tcxu

Nation.lll..tape
CHICAGO CUBS ~ Recalled Jeff
Hartsoc.ll., pitcher, frtm Iowa of lite American Auoci1tion.

BROWN S

Clalmrd Tom M)' 1lln 1k l, orrenslu
auard. from the Dallu Cowboys' prlclict IQUtd . rll ud Ctd rl r Figuo,
linebacker, 011 Injur ed rtltnt. Rt llgned John Brown m, wide receiver ,
lo the pncUc:e • quad. Rtltutd Rickey
Jones, wtdt rKther .
DETROIT UONS - Signed Ed Tilli·
son, running back, from ilicii pnct.ice
&amp;qUid . Sii!Jiod Jdln Derby , li.neb•cker, to
their pr1ctice loQUid. RdeJ.Sed Dcm Overton, running h1cll...
INDLANAPOLIS COLTS - P11ced
Tony Wal.kc:r, tineb•cker, on injured re-

Transactions

Friday's games
New Yor:k. (Hilhnan 2-0) al Mon lrul
{Nibholz 12-9), 7:)5 p.m.
PittabuJ&amp;h (Walk 9-4) at Philadelptua
(R;•cn4-31 Bl p.m.
ChiCIJO (G. Maddux 16- 11 ) It s,,

Milwlukce .............7~

CLEVELAND

Chicaso 6, Detroit 4

Karuu O ty (Haney 1-0) 11 New York
(1-litchcocll. 0-()), 7:30p.m.
Dcuoit (Doherty 5-3 ) at Bost.oo (Vi ola
L1·1 1), 7:35 p.m.
MilwauJc.u (Wegman 12·12) at Baltimore (Mussrna 14-5), 7:35p.m.
CLEVEU\ND (Nagy 13-10) at Chtca-

Philadelphia l New York 1
P!n.d:u!"Eh JJ, Ch.icigu 8
St. Lnuis 10, Montretl J
Allam• 12, CINCINNATI 7
Hw5ton 6, San Francisco 4
Los Angeles 4, San Diego 1

Now Yoat ............ ..61
Bmum....................64
CI.I!VEI.AND .......64
llotniiL ...................64

NttJonl l Football League

Friday's games

Wednesday's sco res

Tum

-

FootbaU

TorwlO I, Kmus C1ty 0
QJ;VEL.AND 5, Milw•ultee 4

Tonight's games

64

Toroouo .................. lt 59 .579
BIIW.,.. ...............n 62 .l54

BUL LETS

Minnesoa 6, Seattle 2
New Yolk 5,Biltimfll"e2

Detroit (l-Im :H) at Chicago (Feman ·

74

ONCL~All

WASHINGTON

Agreed to term&amp; .,.,.,lh Brent Price. guud,
on 1 thmc-yar contnct..

Wednesday's scores

Eutern Dlvlslon

On defense the Marauders held
their own agamst the Blue Devils
despite givi ng up 31 1 yards. Two
or three big pl ays kill ed the
Marauders, plus while the offense
struggled the defense spent most of
the flfst three quarters on th e field.
Defensive ends Shannon Staats
(176, so.) and Kevin Larnben (193,
sr.) played well las t wee k, the
strong point of the maroon and
gold defense is at linebacker, where
Hudson, Mike Cremeans and
younger brother Tom roam. Defensive halfbac k Jim Pullin s also
brok e up a Blue Devil pass last
week in the end zone.
Vinton County sc rimma ged the
Bl ue Devil s m the preseason and
pretty much dominated play. In
Meigs can ge t their offensive problems troncd out and can get another
good game out of the defense an
upset could be in the making. Kickoff Friday evening will be 7:30.

.... ..56

SAN AlfiONIO SPURS -Nome&lt;!
Pete: Rtclord, Wci.Jce•rul candilionina
CQidl. and Blltdl ..n:.to&lt;t, cquipnrna
mwp and 'lidco c::oonlinttc~r.

H..-,

IDOl An4aw y.,.

NEW YORX ISlANDERS - Sipd
ZitpDund i'l!!!~ah&lt; win~
VANCOuvi!K CANUCKS - Sipd

Dane lacbcr~ , right wi.na.

to the New York Mets in 1987,
struck out five and walked three
and improved his AL record to 2-1
with his ftrst complete game for the
Blue Jays. Tom Henke got the last
two outs for his 26th save.
Royals starter Kevin Appier
(15 -8) was relieved by Juan
Berenguer after giving up two hi L'
and one run in the ftrst two innings.
Twins 6, Mariners 2
Terry Jorgensen doubled, singled, stole a base and scored twice
and Kevin Tapani pitched 8 2/3
innings as the Twins beat the
Mariners.
Jorgensen, playing his first
game in the majors since 1989, was
recalled from Portland of the Pacific Coast league on Monday.
Tapani (15-10) allowed eig ht
hits, walked two and struck out
five. Mark Guthrie finished for h1s
founh save.
Rangers 3, Red Sox 2
Jose Canseco h1t a three- run
homer, his second in two days for
Texas, and went 3 for 4 as the
Rangers beat the Red Sox.
Texas staner Jose Guzman (131I) scattered eight hits for his fifth
complete ~arne of the season. striking out seven and walking two.
Danny Darwin (8-7) allowed
nine hits over eight innings for his
second complete game. He struck
out seven and walked one.
Yankees 5, Orioles 2
Randy Velarde, Don Mattingly
and Danny Tartabull homered as
the Yankees completed a three game sweep of the Orioles.
Chris Hailes hom ered for the
Orioles, who have los t four
straight , matching their season
high.
Rookie Bob Wickman (3-0)
gave up two run s, eig ht hits and
four walks over seven innings. Baltimore starter Rick Sutcliffe (1512) was foiled in his bid for a sixth
straight victory.
White Sox 6, Tigers 4
Tim Raines and Frank Thomas
hit consecutive homers in the seventh inning to lead the White Sox.
With the score tied at 4, Bill
Gullickson (14-10) retired the fust
two hitters in the seventh before
surrendering Raines' fourth home
run of the year and Thomas' 23rd.
Gullickson, who left the game
after Thomas' homer, gave up six
runs on eight hits in 6 2{3 innings.
He walked two and strud: out one.
Terry Leach (5-4) pitched two
scoreless innings for the victory.
Roberto Hernandez worked the
final two innings to earn his eighth
save.

Athleti&lt;s 3, Angels 0
Dave Stewart continued hi s
mastery at Ana heim Stadium by
holding California to two hits over
seven innings as the A's beat the
Angels.
Stewan (11 -9) struck out seven
and walked one as he won for the
lOth time in 12 career decisions in
Anaheim Stadium.
Randy Ready drove in Oak -

land's first two runs on a pair of
rollers that didn't leave the infield.
Mike Bordick accounted for the
third run with another roller off
California left-hander Mark
Langston (12-13 ), who went the
distance.
Jeff Russell pitched the eighth
for Oakland before Dennis Eckersley came on to finish for his 43rd
save of the season.

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•liWII

MIWII
•

•'

CAPE's success fulfillment

of Sheehan's deferred dream
CINCINNA11 (AP) - For six
years, Steve Sheehan had applied
for football head coaching vacancies at Greater Cincinnati high
schools. After spending 13 seasons
as an assistant, Sheehan felt he was
ready to be a head coach. The problem was, nobody else did.
"It was always, 'You've done a
good job but you're second or third
on our list," ' said Sheehan, who
had served as an assistant at Roger
Bacon, Covington (Ky.) Holmes
and Aiken. " I was always not quite

there.'·

''

So, when other coaches declined
the chance to start a~ from
scratch at Cincinn.au Academy of
Physical Education in 1982, Sheehan was first in line. It was the
opponunity he had been looking
ror. a chance to run his own program and show other schools they
shouldn't have passed him over.
"He said, ' We' ll be a state
champion within five years,"' said
CAPE assistant Bruce Williamson,
a member or Sheehan's original
staff. "From s~uare one, that's
what he thought,'
Today . Sheehan has CAPE
among Ohio's elite programs. The
Crusaders have made seven consecutive trips to the state playoffs,

advancing io the Division III state
final last season before losing to
Mentor Lake Catholic 45-20.
Sheehan also made good on his
prediction - twice. In its fourth
season, buoyed by Carlos Snow
and Vinnie Clark, CAPE won the
1985 Division IV state championship by a 27-0 margin over
Louisville Aquinas to complete a
14-0 sea.~n .

TVC grid standings
Team
W I. PF PA
NelsonviUe-York.. .I 0 35 0
Trimble .................. 1 0 25 22
Belpre ................... .! 0 20 16
Vinton County ....... I 0 20 6
Alexander ..............0 I 16 36
Federal Hocking ....0 I 0 20
Meigs .....................o 1 o 21
Miller .....................0 I 0 19
Friday's sc:ores
GaUia Academy 21, Meigs 0
Belpre 20, Warren Locall6
Trimble 25, Symmes VaUey 22
Nelsonville-York 35, Athens 0
Vinton County 20, Zane Trace 6
Berne Union 19, MiUer 0
Walton W. Va. 20, Federal Hocking 0
Saturday's sc:ore
Jackson 26, WeUston 12

••

IIIIW I
10WII, 1DW40

BAHR CLOTHIERS
MIDDLEPORT
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�Page-&amp;-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, September 10, 1992

Support These
Fine Area
Businesses!

Football '92!
Catch All The
Excitement!

Prescription
Shop

INGELS
FURNITURE, JEWELRY
and RADIO SHACK

992-6669

106 N. 2nd, Middleport

253 NORTH SECOND
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992-2635

For All Your Prescription and
Sundry )\;eeds See Us"

Stop In For All Your
Favorite Legal Beverages.
PLAY THE
OHIO LOTIERY HERE!

St. Rt. 7 at Five Points

Pomeroy

992-6891

.

VALLEY LUMBER
555 PARK ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
992-6611

G C LDS
MULLEN MUSSER
INSURANCE
111 East Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio .
992-2342

THE BOB HARMON FORECAST
Sat., Sept. 12 - Major Colleges· Dlv. 1· A

• A1r Force
Alabama
• Anzona
• Auburn

2f:f
30
22
27

· Baylor

26

• Colorado State

21

Northwestern
San 0 1ego State
• Purdue

• Ea st Carolina
·Florida
Flonda State
Fresno State
'Georgia Tech

24
38
27
24
41

Virginia Tech
Kentucky
• Clemson
• Oregon State
Western Carolina

• l llino1s

30

Koly Cross

• Indiana
'Iowa
• Kansas
• Kent Slate

• Louisiana Tech
Memphis State
Mich1gan

• Michigan State
• Mississippi
Mississippi State
NE LouiSiana
• Nebraska
• Nevada-Reno
New Mexico
• North Carolina
North Carolina Stale
• Northern Illinois
• Ohio Stale
• Olllahoma
• Penn State
• Pillsburvh
' Rutgera
• S.MU.
San Joae Stale
• Saulh Carolina
• Stanford
• Syracuae
"T.C.U.
Tennessee
• Texas A&amp; M
• Texas Tech
Texas E~Paso
Toledo

• U.C.L.A.
Utah
• Vandorbih
Vtrginla

' Wake Fcrasl
' Walllington
AIJbwM Btala
AngiiD &amp;a1

' EM! TtnntUM
' rtorida A &amp; W
• ~~~~ Southern

tnctlanl Sta1

Jadllon Stall
Jan~ WadiiOn

• Ltl'llah
• Llbollr

• Malnt
• Manhal

Mlllkalppl ~Iller

• Monlalla Stilt
' Morthtad Stall
• Now H-h·•

o North CWinl A &amp; T
' Not1hem Atlzona
Nott~n towa

HW l.alilolona

• Ponland State
' RhDda IIU.nd

·Ai:d...

•
•

'*'-1

-

SW T....

'T..-.·ut . . Chaltanq&amp;
' Taxu A I I
' VIllano¥&amp;

•• ~~~Stale
Unloo
o

Wlllllm a, M.,..

-

• l'ount-

TOHO

Iowa State
Ball State
Ohio U.

35
28
23

Eastern MIChigan
• Louisville
• Nob's Dame

24
23
23
21

7

14
t7

Central Micnigan
Tulane
• LS.U.
• SWLouisiana
Middle Tennassee
Pacific
• New Mexico State
Furmlln
• Maryland
ll~nois Stale
Bowling Green
Arkansas Slate
Temple
West Virginia

40
30

27
26

27
22
28
41
45
23

10

13
17
10
12

24
14
14
20
10

7

10

2()

Colaate

40

24
49
27
24
45
25
41

Norih Texas
' Minnesota
At1\ansas
Qregon
Texas
WHtem Michigan
• Georvia
Tulsa
Wyoming
' Nevada-l.as Vegas
• Alwon
Fuller1on State
"Utah Stata
Duke
• Na;y
AcQ&amp;Iachian State
Wisconsin

27

' SoutMrn U.

26
23
23

33

23
26
24
26
28

36

10

17
15
21
10
17
13
14
10

15
14
23

7

23
21

7

21

• Pt&amp;Wit V...,

Kno•vlllt
' ldi.IIO Slaa
S.tftunt-Coolunan
Mu..chuiMtll
Mlrl Hill
Soutn C&amp;loana Slall

2&amp;
2'
2t
XI
'l7
26
2'
23

o

Valelo&amp;ta
lllayalle
Alabama A I W

24
:14

Fetdham
M0111an SIMO
Kutilown
Eateern lllnolt

28

ca

Chico Statt

30
30

Conn..,

I

Troy

211

w·

21

Tuu Southern

2B

38

34

3D
23
.48

"'
30

28

27

"'

CHESTER, OHIO
985-3301 or 985-3303

Peoples

Bank
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MEMRER FDIC
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5th STRUT
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Towaot~

8

23

10

13
to
21
21
21

21

. AIOughl
· Al lred
Central Connocticul
Cor11ancl
Dr~f.r'1 1o n .

PA

' NO:WW

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II"Dia

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,:,:...

13
7

Wul'lbum

\oct
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tMeUM-MarUn
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Bueii.MII

14

..,
8

21

t7
15
10

Grani&gt;llna
SoulhlfnVtah
V.M.I.

· CModol

13

"'

o.tonro Slott

• Hobart

"

22

24
26

Pl~moulh

• Shl(lpensburg
· Slippe r ~ Rock
· Sprlngriel!l
Suaquehan/\a
• Union. NY
Wagner
• WAih rnglon &amp; J1nerao r~
' W•tmintler
• WOIC81111 Tech

'

30

40

34

Haver~

• Ander•on
• Alhland
' Augutlana, IL
• Balo.ar
Baldwin· Wallace
Bet ha n~ . KS
' Butklr

27

W•larn ~ary l aM
SL John Fl1her
• Trenton
' Mor1tCIIII

Zl

21
22
24

· East Strou!lstJurg
' Edinboro
Fetr um
llhaca
· Lebanon Valley
Manallel!l
' ~ o ravran
~ orrrs Brown

23
27
21
23

28
27

,."
27

."
••

Southern Connet11cut
Nonhwood

' Aam _,o

· AltJ.any. NY
JohnI Hopkrn1
· Bulfalo State
Franklin &amp; Mar1hall
• Cheyney S1a1e
Butlalo U.
'Willllll
BloorTIIbvrg
Fa i rm:;~nl

Ame rican tnlernatlonal
• Muhlenb111g
St. Lawrance
• Delaware V11lkly
Hiram
Alleghltfly
Worc•ter Slltl

Other Gamoo - Mldweot

"
26
27
21
27

"'

26

CIP~al

3$

20

Central Mllhodlst
Colorado Mlnet
' Cornell, 14
'Cayton
• Eurtka
• EvantvYia
• Fon HaYt
Hutlng•
' Haillalbltfil
' Hltll6akl
Indiana U., PA.
• lndlanapolll
John Cl.rral

26
22

27
21
22

,.

22
23

28
211
2:1

wancn ....,

ManKato
UIHIIdn
MltiOUrl Southern
• Uuaklngum
' NE Mlttourl
Nabruk.l Wnlayan
' NeOruU.on.l'la
• North Olkola Stale
• Ohio Northltn

OtiOrboln

"'21

..
"'
,.
2:1

33
23

30

' S

45

.."'
26

'WtiUJon
• Wieconaln·laCrotn

Wl aoon~ l n-Pianwllla

Moni'TOUII'I
Franklin
Central Otl\ai'IOI'N.

· Wll l~mJ- 1
OII~ . Mt

Yalpar•o
• Orud V&amp;llay
Northern Michigan

.....

• Er11*1a Stale

211
211

Tnlol

Frlancle
• Wllfanbalg
• OU.wa
Sl. JOiapl'l'l
Bethany, WI/
• Mkt-A.meriea
• Ooana
Buena VIlla

30

23

' Wartburg

LO&lt;U

• MKMwray
' NW MINor..rt

"'

s.JIM•
v•or
MietOIIII

Aurore
Ftrrla

27

P•ru
' Plttlbutg

o40

' IIHnoll BeMdiCIWII

Oonloon
Iowa WMit~an
• Kan• W"la~tn

Kurl'lty

Col Potr

Bluffton

• Eatlham

' MIIIOIKI W•tltrn
EuiT•u
' Wlyne Sla~a . Mt
Wuhburn

• OOorlln

Coo
lWForNI
WlnonaSialt

"'
"'
13

7

11
13
11
13

""
""
"'s

"8

Evonr.t

211
27
3S

..

• Fon allty

• Gardner-Webb
Gullord
• HII11Jden-Sydner
• f.lendarton
' ltnOir· Ahf'll

2:1

30
21

• Uo~ tngaton
l~comln ~

Ulctweattrn

• Ml"""'
w....~&gt;!&gt;~ Coltogo

"'"'2726
31

NE Oklahoma

21

Ouachla
S.nnnal'l Statt

23

,.

• s.w...

21

' W•t Vlfglnll W.II'Yan
Albion

Cai·DIYII
• Colorado College
' LaYtrnt
• Lewlt&amp; Clark
Nottharn Colorlljdo
• PadfiC li!h.,an

A-

'Santa Clara

Sl. Mlll)'l CA

· Union. Y

....... OIIOy

GrMnvlllt
• NOf1h IJibarTa
• H....ln9
ArtuiniU Tech

Tuollogoo

lm*on

W_.lti
Clllomla Slala, PA

' WhMtloo

31

"'21

23

30
38
27
33
33

Po_,.

• Horttwlilgo
Grin...

.....

Son l);ogoU.

Pupt Sound

Wlllamotto

• MenlO Park

"'36 ....,_

' CitrSonoma

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lli!lh l(fldltKJ

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CHESTEI. OHIO

I

10

20
21

10
13

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11

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t9f·SI41

10

tO
14
10
t3
13
10
21
14
21
7
14
2t
10
7
14
.to
20
I

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CROWS
Family Restaurant

992-5432

Pomeroy, Ohio

Frl4ay Mltht en4 Sun4•y Speelall
IAIED PORK ,CHOP AND
DRESSING
SAUD, lOLL aad
CHOICE OF POTATO

$525

Z!

10

PRO FORECAST·

-- --

~n

~-

Dear Ann Landers: This is in
response 10 your Penn State writer
:ovho said alcohol abuse on campus
ts worse 1han ever. Please tell him
10 calm down.
I graduatt.d from an engineering
college in Olicago and lived on Rush
StreeL We tried 10 drink all the beer
in town. and at times I tbought we
did. Our fraternity had plaques on
the ~I allesting 10 drinking fr41ts.
and 11 wasn\ uncommon to attend
late afiernoon classes drunk.
It's now 25 years later. and
among my fraternity brothers and

XiGammaMu
to host a tea
The frrst meeting of the year for
the Xi Gamma Mu Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, was held
recently at tbe Stowaway Restau·
rant in Gallipolis.
The chap1er will host a tea' Monday at tbe Captain's House in Mid·
dleport for the Catfish Fes1ival
queen candida1es. Additional items
10 be used as fundraisers will also
be given away at Jlle festival.
Charlotte Hanning reported tbe
chap1er will present a program on
menopause on Nov. 10 sponsored
by the CIBA Phannacuticals at tbe
Senior Citizens Cen1er in Pomeroy.
The program is offered to the public and is free of charge.

1980s than a dozen years before.
wit.h the most dramatic increases

Ann

among women .

What's worse. bolh sexes increasingly dnnk just to gel tJrunk_ In 1977.
only 20 percent of the men and t 0
ANN LANDERS
percent of t.he women said t.hcy
"1992, Los Angeles
drank
"'juslto get drunk." l n t.he 1989
Timt5 Syndiutr and
Crealon Syndicate''
survey. 40 percent of the men and
34 percent of t.he women said the
same thing. Half of t.hc men and a
college friends there arc corporaJe third of the women report having
presidents. vice presidents, direclllrS, consumed five or more drinks in a
etc .• and not one of lhese men has row on at least one occasion in the
had his life. job or family ruined by pas1 two weeks. according 10 the
alcoholism.
researc hers.
The first years of college arc
II is becoming abundantly
bolll!d to produce party animals. but clear tha1 alcohol is the most
wit.h job responsibility and family dangerous drug of all. And irs
obligation s co me maturity and legal. Prohibition is nol the answer.
sobriety.
We tried it and it was an abysmal
So tell your Penn State writer to failure . We must educate our
let the kids have their fun because lt children. starting in grade school.
will end much 100 quickly. -· A about the damage done by drinking,
FORMER PARTY ANJMAL
and it wouldn't hun if parenJS se1 a
DEAR ANIMAL: According 10 better example.
a recent study done by Harvard
Feeling pressured 10 have sex?
University researchers, drinking How well-informed are you? Write
on campus is at an all-time high. for Ann Landers· boo/del
and
The Journal of the American rhe Teen-ager."' Send a stlfMedical Association published t.he addressed, long, business-size
results of a survey of students at en velope and a check or money
Massachusetts campuses in 1989, order for $3.65 (I his includes
and the findings arc similar to postage and handling) to: Teens.
recent nationwide daJa. The survey c/o Ann Landers. P.O. Box 11562,
shows tbat a higher percentage of Chicago. J/1. 606/1 -0562 . (In
college s1udents got drunlc in tbe late Canada. send $4.45.)

Landers

MIDDLEPOO
992·5627

When The Time Comes
See Us For Your 1993
Graduation
Announcements.

QUALITY PRINT
SHOP·
255 Mill St.
Middleport
992·3345

Thursday, September 10, 1992
Page-7

A surprise birthday party was
held recently for Sisler Pearl Profflu at her home.
Refreshments of ice cream,
cake, mints, coffee and punch were.
served. Happy Birtbday was sung
and she opened her gifts.
. Atlending were Pearl Proffitt,
Nua Wells, Golda Radcliff, Lucy
Taylor, Ruth Bradford, Jim and
Anna McHaffie, Eula Proffitt,
Mike and Chris Proffitt and Janice

Danner. ·

By MARCIA DUNN
AP Aerospace Wri1er
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. It's something scientists have been
wondering about for years: Will
bread yeast ri se in th e weightlessness of space? Every which way
bul up?
They 're about to find out. Astronauts heading into space lhis weekend will sco re a culinary first by
baking bread aboard th e sh u til e
Endeavour.
The two tiny loaves prom ise 10
be the most wondrous of breads.
Bul don't expect lhem to win any
blue nbbons; ground ICSIS wit.h lhe
equipment produced pale, spongy
loaves.
That' s beside the poin t
··we're not making it lo eat We
don't care about fre shness:· said

Gerry Senechal , manag er of the
projec1 for Canada"s Spar
Aerospace Limi ted . "We just want
lO see if t.he bread docs rise . and if
11 docs how it looks."
Endeavour is sc hedul ed 10 lift
off on lhc bread·baking quest - or
Spacclab mission 10 be more precise - at I 0:23 a. m. Saturday. The
countdown began Wedn esda y and
was followed by t.hc arri val of the
seve n-memb er crew, which
includes the first married coupl e 10
fly in space, th e liJSt black female
astronau1 and the first Japanese citizen to fly on aU .S. spaceship.
One of the astronauLs will acu valc the two bread -making cham bers tn a cargo bay canister by
throwing a swu ch. Hcre·s what
should happen:
Water will be hea ted by ba1tery
10 104 degre es Fahren heit and

inJected into a fl our an d ycas1 mixture . A small ro1ary motor will mix
lhe dough for seven mtnutcs; th e
dough t.hen will be allowed to ri se
for a half·hour.
Each chamber will be cranked
up to 302 degrees Fahrenh eit. An
hour later, th e bread sho uld be
done and the ovens wi ll shut off.
The recipe for each loaf call s for
1.1 J ounce of wh il e nour. 0.025
ounce of yeast and 0.64 ounce of
wa ter. There arc no additives, no
suga r or salt. There also are no
exposed he&lt;Jting cl cmcniS and thus
no crust.

Each loaf will be 3 3/4 mches
long and I 1/2 inches in diameter.
" ll"s JUSt to prove it works. h"s
nol like il 's supp osed 10 feed a
family," Senechal exp lained.
laughing.

··sex

WE HAVE AN
EXCELLENT SELECTION
OF FINE MEN'S
WEARING APPAREL.

r•rf.l ,.., ,,.. r•
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OPEN 9:30·5:0•00 MON.·SAT.

8AVE'100

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1

Birthday celebrated
.

n1 SUIDAY and MOIDIY, SIP I IMBIII3 and 14, 1191
DALLAS.".....23
••NEW YORK GIAI'ITS.•...... l7
Cowboys best Giants fiCSt time in seven meetings in opening match-up last fall, 21·16 . .. QB Troy Aikman tbrew
winning TD pass in fmal1wo minu1es...Glarus won second game 22-9.
••DENVER.-....lO SAN DJEG0...."..17
RB Gaston Green helped lead Denver to double viciOries over Chargers last season, 27-19. 17· 14...Green ran for
tolal of 217 yards, scoring 1hree IDs in fiCSt game ... Broncos.
••DETROIT""'".27 MINNESOTA ... - ..17
Lions brolce long record last fall, beating Vikings twice, first time since 1962. . .in opener. Detroit1Illiled 20·3. tben
scored 21 points in 4tb quarter 10 win 24-20...2nd, 34-14.
GREEN BAY.....".27 ••TAMPA BAY.....•..20
Bucs were bumped twice by Packers last season, 15-13 on tbe road, 27-0 at home.: .GB scored winning FG in last
22 sc:conds in fiCSI meeting. tben forced eight Due 1Umovers m sbu1()1JI.
HOUSTON.-"-30 ••INDIANAPOLIS••.•- .• 17
Oilers hosted Colts in last meeting in 1990, but were poor boslS. whipping Indy 24-10, _QB Warren Moon
completing 29 of 37 passes. tbree for IDs.,. .Houston tough 10 beat agam.
••KANSAS CITY...•-..13 SEATILE.•• - .20
Chiefs lead series 15-12 thanks to double victories last season .. .KC QB Stan DeBerg passed fonwo TDs in fiCSt
20. 13 win, tben Nick Lowery picked four FGs in second 19·6 win.
·
L.A. RAIDERS .••.... .24
••CINCINNATI-.•....17
Raiders rou1ed home-standing Cincy 3g.14 in 1991 rnatcb· up, L.A. forcing S Bengal turnovers.. :Raiders held big
28-0 halftime lead.. .loss was lltb out of fiCSl 12 game sfor Cincinnati.
••L.A. RAMS--".21 NEW ENGLAND" .."•.20
In last maJch·up tbree years ago, Rams earned Wild Card spot by beating Pats 24-20 in final gam~ of season . . .L.A.
1Illilcd 20-17 wltb two minutes remaining, but rallied for win.
'
••NEW ORLEANS_"_•.lO CWCAGO." ..."t3
After winning 7 in a row last faiL Saints, playing at bome, lost 10 visiling ~ears 20.17, Chicago rallying witb
deciding 12-yard TD pass in final S4 seconds •.•SatnlS favored.
PHD..ADELPIDA.""...18 ••PHOENIX.-".17
Cards surprised Eagles in fiCSt maiCh·up last fall, forcing six Eagle turnovers, 10 win 26-10... second meeting was
complete turnaround, Eagle defense leadinsto bl&amp; 34-14 win.
00 PmSBURGH.. ••..16
NEW YOJlK JETS.-...14
Steelers lead series 11 -1. .. two years ago in NY, Pitt QB Bubby Brialer tbn:w 21D passes 10 lead Steelers to 24-7
win over Jets... NY olfeme stymied, maldnsjust eigbtlst downs.
"*SAN FRANCJSC0.".-30 BVFFAL0......14
Last time BiDs, 49ers met- in '89- both were division cbampions•.. S.F., p~ying atbome, beat Buffalo 21·10, but
only led 7-3 into 4tb quancr. .•49ers woo S.D . m 1989.
••WASHINGTON-• .31 ATLANTA"--.24
Redskins de-feathered Falcom durins n:sular ICIIOIIIut fall. .QB Mart Rypieti throwing 61D passes, Wasbi118ton
·
rolling 56-17 .. .Atlanta 1oet 10 Stloa In playoffs 011 turnovers 24·7.
(Monday)
• • CLEVELAND••.....14
MIAMI.--·~
.
. .
Dolpllins took Browns apart in tbcir last znt"dilll two yean ago, nmolng up a 27-3 margm atll:ilftime, wmnmg 3013. : .Miami QB Dan Marino pas!ed for two 1Ps. 245 yards... toss-up.

Dear Ann Landers: You've
printed a lot of comments lately
about college kids who drink 100
much . Arc there more campus
alcoholics t.han there used 10 be?
You bet there are. but it slalts long
before t.hey get 10 college.
I've been sober for many years
wit.h the help of Alcoholics Anony·
mous. The faces coming t.hrough
A.A.'s doors tbese days get younger
and younger. The kids are very
sick by the time they reach us and
often in trouble with t.he law . The
ln1emational Conference of Young
People in A.A. now holds its own
huge conventions. and the stories
told there, some by kids barely imo
jliDior high, would break your hcan.
One 14-year-old told me tbal in
a survey of her high school. more
than 50 percent of t.he students said
they'd had six or more drinks on
one occasion at least once in the
preceding week. Nearly 80 percent
said they usually drink three or
more times a week. Even allowing
for bravado. that's a staggering
statistic.
College alcohol abuse is epidemic.
especially in off-campus housing.
rve just moved a couple of miles
farther from the University of
Louisville 10 get away from the
vandalism and screaming 5 a.m.
panies. If sometbing isn"t done 10
stop Ibis trend, I don't lmow when:
ifs going to end. - SOUR MASHED
IN LOUISVILI..E
DEAR SOUR MASHED: Here's
anotber point of view.

IAWI.INGS-COATS

. Fisher
Funeral Home
IIICI fiSIIIl· O...r/o,mt.,

The Daily Sentinel

Betty Crocker would be proud:
Do college students drink too
much? Readers respond to letter Astronauts to bake bread in space

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�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

Shulas join fight against cancer

Oh io Uni ve rsi ty
College of Osteopathic Med1cinc

" We ' ve Got Tigers In Our
Tank ... Bengal Tigers, That Is"
Bengal Head Coach, Dav e
Shula, and wife, Leslie, are joining
th e Am erican Cancer Society as
honorary chairs for the upcoming
1992-93 fund -raising year.
Ohio's 88 Ameri can Canc er
Soc iety County Unit officers are

Family
Medicine
joh n C Wolf. D.O.
Assoc ia tL· Protrssor
of Fami lv Mcdi cl nl'

Question: I have angioneurotic
ede ma. What causes it?
Answer: I'll take a few words
to ex plain wh at angioneurotic
ede ma and a related problem ,
urucari a. arc before I answer your
ucslion.
Bolh of th ese conditions produce swelling of skin and mucous
i:ne mbrancs. Urt icaria is oft en
referred 10 as "hives," a blisterlikc,
itchy swelli ng of the slcin that lasts
for a few ·hours. Angioneuroti c
ede ma also produ ces swclltng of
1he skin, but th e swelling is in
~ccper skin layers and usually lasts
for se veral days mstead of hours.
Becau se the swelling actually
takes place at these deeper levels,
there IS not ary obviOus blister on
the sur face of the skin with
ungioncurotic edema. It also differs
from urticana in that swelling may
occur in mucous membranes - the
skin -like tissues th at line the
jn()uth, throat, bronchial tubes, and
digestive uact.
·- Both angioneurotic edema and
urticaria are the result of a disturbance to th e ci rcul ation in the
affected area of the body. The very
;,ll)all blood vessels in that area are
di lated and leak clear fluid - the
stuff in the blister - iniO the skin.
)f the leakage is only in the outer
·~yers of the skin, a blister forms.
~eakage into the deeper layers of
'the skin ca uses generalized
:~elling, like a "fat lip," without
»e appearance of blister.
•·. Angioneurotic edema can be the
:(esult of an inherited enzyme defi:hency. but it and urticaria are most
•often produced by an allergic reac;(ion. Medications, foods. inhaled
'allergens, insect bites and stings,
:anct substances that contact the skin
:are the most common offenders. In
~ther words, almost any substance
'that can get in you or on you has
the potential to produce this type of
reaction.
Question: What can be done for
JIIY angioneurotic edema?
• Answer: FU'St, let me stan with
:Some important numbers. Even
).Yithout treatment about one half of
the persOns suffering from urticaria

Reunion slated

alone and about one fourth of those
Descendants of Carl, Emmell,
who have both urti cari a an d
Corbell,
Nan Fwzier, Ed, Lena,
angioneurotic edema will be free
will
hold
U1eir family reunion Satfrom their problem within one year.
There are, on the other hand, man y urday at Star Mi ll Park in Racine
people for whom there IS no cffec - from 1-4 p.m. Bring a covered dish
live treatment. De spite our bes t and any information abou t the
efforLs , about 20 percent of those Manley familtes.
who

huvc

Thursday, September 1o, 1992

urti ca ri a

and /or

ang iO neurotic edema will have
repeated episodes for 20 years or
more.
One of the firs t thin gs the doctor
will do is inquire about the victim 's
family history. If no blood relative
has chronic problems with hives or
ang10neurouc edema, it is unlikely
!hat th e hereditary form is
invol ved. This is important because
there is very specific treaUTicnt for
thiS disorder.
The mos t common cau se of
urticaria and angioneurotic edema
is an allergic reaction. If the culprit
can be identified , avoidance of
fu ture exposure is the best way to
prevent new attacks. Some examples of common offenders include
the medications penicillin, aspirin,
ibuprofen (Molrin, Advil, etc.) and
"ACE inhibitor" blood pressure
medications. Common food or food
additive a~ents include artificial
food colonng, seafood, chocolate,
nuts, strawberries, tomatoes and
eggs.
There are a number of medica·
lions that work effectively to
decrease the severity and frequency
of attaclcs. However, for reasons
not yet clearly understood, we can't
use allagy shots to treat the underlying allergic origin of angioneurotic edema as we can with most
other allergies. Your doctor will
prescribe one or more medications
to help prevent your angioneurotic
edema. Unfortunately, treatment is
the best we can offer because we
don't yet have any medications that
can "cure" you of this illness.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions, write
to John C. Wol, D.O., 250
Grosvenor Hall, College of Osteopathic Medicine, Ohio University,
Athens, Ohio 45701.

PTO to meet
Chester Elementary PTO will
meet Monday at 7 p.m . in the
sc hool cafeteria. All parents and
teachers inviled.

delighted to welcome this dynamic
pair to the organization.
As honorary chairs, Dave and
Leslie Shula will be spokesmen for
a variety of fu nd-raising efforts.
They are also dedicated to raising
awareness about one of Ohio's
most troub lesome cancer . breast
cancer.
Dave Shula said, "I want to help
stop the spread of ca ncer so that
another family will not have to suffer like mine did when by mother
died of breast cancer in 1991 ."
Leslie added , "I fell that if my
mother-in -law had detected the
cancer sooner, she may have lived.

NEW YORK (AP) - Ernest
Borgnine , troubl ed by a failing
marriage, says he once considered
suicide - until his life was saved
by fellow actor George Lindsey.
Lindsey, who played the country bumpkin Goober on "The
Andy Griffith Show," became
sueh a good friend that Borgnine •s
life changed for the beuer, Borgnine said in an interview being
broadcast nex t Monday on Fox

TV's "A Current Affair."
The depressed Borgninc left
home one morning during the early
1960s - "anything to get out of
the house" - and just happened to
run into Lindsey.
"I went over to get a cup of coffee at a restaurant and in walks th1s
jazzbo and eight hours later we
were tog eth er agai n, " recal led
Borgnine, star of the old sitcom
"McHale' s Navy."

Annual Bahr family reunion held
The annual Bahr family reunion
was held Sunday .
Allending were Norman Bahr,
Donna Conley. Betty Moore, Vic·
tor Bahr, Don, Lila, Vic VanMeter,
Alvena, Mariah and Orville Hill,
Linda Bentz, Brenda Woodrow,
Brandy and Kesha, Kathy Stone.
Jane Coates, Joey and Amanda,
Lila Winters, Cheryl Sparks and
Cassandry, Henry and Eileen Bahr,
Jeanne and Matt Baker, Pat Bahr.

Anita Zalenski, Mark and Jenni fer
Zalenski, Tarnmi, Jessica, Beth and
Micah Barber, Terry Bartee, Jim
Bahr, George Bahr, BiU Bahr, Evelyn, Kenneth and Russell Well,
Scoll, Barbara, Joshua, Ashley ,
Vicky and Shellie Gillilan, Arvilla
Frecker, Howard and Goldie Russell and Joe Ann.Smallcy.
A potluck dinner was enjoyed
by all at the Tuppers Plains VFW
Post Home.

.

ATLANTA {AP) - Bill Clinton is winning some praise among
blacks for his efforts 10 attract their
votes , which he' ll need to win the
South and industrial Midwe st.
Aides say he' ll do more.
"He's not just talking abo ut
change, he's talking about the
specifics of th e change," said
David Carter of Hartford, Conn .,
who heard Clinton speak Wednesday to the National Baptist Convention U.S.A.
Carter, a graduate divinity student at Princeton University, said
he was particularly interested in
Clin ton's plan to allow college students to borrow money for school
and pay it back through community
service.
"Thi ngs like that will put
Americans back to work," Carter
said.
Clinton's speech to the nation 's
largest Qlack religious denomination carne on a day of campaigning
largely focused on black voters .
Earlier in the day, he unveiled a
welfare program that he said would
help th e needy without offering
endless handouts .
The Rev. TJ . Jemison of Baton

SELENA SPENCER

Celebrates birthday
Selena Marie Spencer, daughter
of David and Linda Spencer,
Racine, celebrated her fourth birth day recently at the home of her parents with family and friends.
Lillie Mermaid and Barbie
themes were carried ouL
In addition to her parents, other
gues ts were: grandparents, Robert
and Aleta Weaver, Elson and
Dorothy Spencer, great-grandmother, Clara M. Powell, Larry, Kay,
Mike, Loi s and Ashley Spencer,
Carl, Carolyn and Nikki Robinson
and Ruth Simpson.
Sending cards and gifts were
Ike, Judy and John Spencer, Tony
Weaver, Bryan , Annie, B.J . and
Mark Robin son , Leona Cruey ,
Catherine Crist, Emma Adams,
Lorene Pyles, Bob and Martha Lou
Beegle, Jerry and Marilyn Powell,
Linley and Mildred Hart, and Frank
and Delores Oeland.

FALL HARDY MUMS

0

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HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
SYUCUSE, OH.

BOSTON (AP) - Seven years
after a national task force warned
about a growing epidemic of
hunger, a foUow-up study says the
problem is getting worse and about
30 million Americans are undernourished.
"When we see increasing
poverty and decreasing incomes,
. it's not at all s"!Prising that hunger
has increased,' J. Larry Brown,
direciOr of Tufts University's Center on Hunger, Poverty and Nubition Policy, said Wednesday in
releasing the repon.
The research, prepared at the
request of Rep. Tony Hall, D-Ohio,
the Democratic chairman of the
House Select Commiuee on
Hunger, estima!es hunger has
grown by 50 pcm:nt since the mid·
1980s.
Brown said the increase in
: •hunger cr~ates the~pot~ntial for ·
more learmng defic1enc1CS among
young children, more illnesses
among the elderly and diminished
productivity for workm.
But the study met some skepti·
cism.
"The numbers are not worth the
paper they are writiCD on. They are
utter! y preposterous," said Robert
Recllr, a policy analyst for family
and social welfare 1ssues at The
Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank.
Rectlr said federal studies have
shown that except for iron deficiencies, undernourishment hits poor
people no more than wealthy people, and the biggest nutritional
problem for poor Americans is
obesity.
In 1985, Brown led a national
task force that estimated 20 million
Americans went hun~. defined as
a condition in wh1ch health is
~ned because a penon repeat·
edly doesn't consume enough
nutrients.
Brown said he has confulencc in
the new figures because ihree different methods were used to calcu·
:late them, and each resulted in a
·tolal around 30 minion.
· · Brown also said the profile of
hunger has ChanJed. "The stereo·
type is that this 1s largely an inner
city ~nd minority problem," he

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Hoffman also said the program
is meant 10 be a supplement to a
diet. "It's not mean110 finance the
whole food income," she said.
The primary calculation method
for Brown's study used various
poverty figures such as estimates of
poor people who collect food
stamps but don't get enough nubients. The numbers also included
people above the poverty line
whose relatively low mcomes make
them susceptible to hunger.
A second method used state surveys that asked people several
questions such as whether they
ever skip meals or cut the size of
meals . The third method used
results from a national poll that
asked people if they knew someone
close to them who didn 't always
have enough to eat.
The Census Bureau teported last
week that poveny reached a 27·
year high in 1991 while household
mcomes declined.
· Brown said hunger could be
eradicated in America for about $8
billion 10 S10 billion in additional
annual SIICIIding.
·
A bill before Congress would
expand eligibility of food stamps
and increase benefits to eligible
households. It would also impose a
10 percent surtax on taxable personal income above $1 million.

Baker restaurant tries again
with 134-foot thermometer
BAKER, Calif. (AP} - Call it
the towering inferno-meter.
Construction has been completed on w.hat's being billed as the
world's largest thermometer, a
134-foot thermometer that towers
above the Bun Boy restaurant in
the Mojave Desert town of Baker,
about 90 miles south of Las Vegas.
Elecbicians are now doing the
wiring in preparation for testing
beginning SepL 15, said Bun Boy
spokesman Jim Deitch.
The height was chosen because
of the 134:degree temperature
recorded in nearby Death Valley in
1913 - the highest ever recorded

r.n~~ '::tf:~ ::.!~t!:r::!ro~.!:

-

!

said.
"Those stereotypes no longer
hold. It's very dnunatic 10 go into
the Midwest and hold a malnourished child in your arms at a family
farm . Hunger is in America's
breadbaskeL"
Dr. Stephen Berman, a pedi ·
attics profeuor and director of
health poliCf at the University of
Colorado, S81d families at high risk
for hunger are those who might
have never experienced economic
ttouble before.
"We Ita~ a situation where you
have people wbo are unemployed
oi wbo go from a well-~ymg job
to a minimum-paying JOb," said
Berman, who also served on the
1985 hunger task force sponsored .
by Harvard University. "It takes a
while for them 10 understand the
system to get fOQCI stamps or other
suJII)OrtS." ""
.
., · ·
-flut Brown wd the federal food
stamp program doesn't meet
dietary needs and often doesn't
reach eligible people.
Lisa Hoffman, a spokeswoman
for the U.S. Department of Agriculture'·s Food and Nubition Ser·
vice, which oversees food stamps.
said some poor people don't get the
benefits because they fail to apply.
But she added: "We think it is
reaching the people who are most
in need."

In 1991; the average cost of a
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (AP)
- The American dream of owning new house in Grand Rapids wu
a liome inched closer to reality for $130,000, not including the cost of
some when a group of builders, the lot. The average cost of an
bankers and residents unveiled a existing home in the county wu
$43,000 home aimed at closing the $80,000.
With S pen:ent down," monthly
gap between housing haves and
mor(aage
payments on the task
have·IIOIS.
"This is not .a novelty house fOitt's home would be about 5500
made of plastic," said Mick a month, including taxes and insur·
McGraw, il devel~r and chair- ance, McGraw said Wed@sday.
man of the group. ' This uses sim- But the $43,000 IICUing price of the
ple ideas from the past ... a smaller house doesn't include a lot.
home that-'s--..
- • to add on10."
And while the houiiC illlelf may
The vinyl-sided, split· level be a dream come aue,linding a Jot
!anch has .SOO·squarc-.feet of fin· for it rna be a nightmare.
.
isbed space on the mam floor and . A 60-t,';· 120-fobt lot in the area

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taken Jesse in that he doesn' t want
the black vote."
"J es se's day has com e and
gone, " said Ruth Stapl eton of
Atlanta . "Blacks are looking for
someone to rescue them. "
Clinton' s program in cludes
expa nded education, training and
child care for welfare rccivients but
accompanying it is a two-year limi1
on federal benefits.
Cli nton's plan would requir e
welfare recipients to work after
completing training. They would
be given comm un ity service work
if no private job was immediately
available.
Also included in the package is'
a pledge to track fathers delinquent
in child support payments and a
provision to adj ust the minimum
wage to keep pace with inflation.
The program would cost $6 billion a year for four years. Clinton
said, with the money coming from
defense and other spendi ng cuts.
He sai d taxes paid by we lfarc rec ipi cots- turned -wage -earners
would eventuall y fund the program
and the costs then should fall with
the size of welfare rolls.

in the Western Hemisphere.
Thi s is the second time the
restaurant has erected a giant thermometer. It wasn't the heat but the
high wind that did in the ftrSl one.
Last Thanksgiving, a 75-mph
wind toppled it. It had been in
place a liute more than a month.
Deitch said this time, designers
doubled the strength of a steel shaft
that runs through thermometer.
"The engineer says it wiU han·
die 150 mph winds," Deitch said.
The thermometer will display
the temperature via a red neon light
that runs the entire 134 feet

·Builders design house affordable
for those making less than $50,000

f

DINING ROOM SALE!

Rouge , La., president of the
Natio nal Baptist Convention, said
Clinton was "amon g friends" in
standi ng before a gro up th at
endorsed Jesse Jackson in 1984 and
1988.
Some black leaders, including
Jackson, have cri ticized Clinton for
spending lillie time courting black
voters since winning the nomination. And some blacks, including
Jackson, have suggested that Clinton's obvious attempt~ to distance
himself from th e liberal Jackson
cou ld hurl th e Democrat among
black voters.
Christopher Durden of Avera,
Ga., said he believed Clinton could
be hurt "somewhat" if black voters believe he has snubbed Jackson.
But Durden said blacks would still
vote Democratic because of the
state of the economy.
Carter stressed: "The Negro
race is not a monolith. There is
diversity within the black race."
He added: "Jesse Jac kson is one
person in the political arena. Jesse
doesn't necessarily speak for me
and I don't think people are going
to be so narrow -mind ed as to
believe that because Clinton hasn't

Study: About 30 million
Americans go hungry

The Chester Church of the Nazarene
will hold its
HOMECOMING on SUNDAY, SEPT. 13
Regular morning services will be followed
by a HYMN SING at 1:30 P.M.
With THE OVERCOMERS, a trio from
Lancaster which includes accompanist
BILLY HALL, formerly of Rutland.

CARD SHOWER • A card
shower is bei1g lleld for Mandy
Wills, who recently bad surgery
at Children's Hospital bt Colum·
bus. 'She is tbe daughter of
Cheryln and Joe Roberts, and
Mike and Karea Wills. Cards
can be sent to: 203 Park St., Mid·
dleport, 45760 or 14476 State
Route 554, Bidwell, 45614.

6

Clinton winning some
praise from black voters

I hope to help raise funds to find a
cure and educate women about this
disease.
Breast cancer estimates show
that, in Ohio, the number of new
breast cancer cases leads- the other
life threateni n$ forms of the disease . The OhiO Division of the
American Cancer Society has
placed breast cancer as a leading
priority in our canc er-control
effons.
Mei~s Unit Office President,
Scott Dtllon, said, "It's really won•.
derful to have tw o such sincerely
committee people leadi ng our
statewtde effort."

Talked out of suicide- by Goober

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I

600 square feet of livlnJ lpiCC.

rciquire larger lots. addinJ a 1\ofty

Twb of the houses arc under
construction.
The houJe wu designed after
the Citizens LeaJue of Greater
Olllld Rlplda, a community adwcacy group, issued a report citing a
criticalshonase _of housins ~or
low· ~o moderate-mcome families
in a ctty oace ranked u one of the
IIIOllt atllldlble houlinS Jllllbta in
the COIIIIIrY· A talk fOitO was pven
the challcnJe of building a home
for under $50,000.
·

chlmt_OiliDthepriceoftbohome.
"Cammunitiel Ilb 10 have big·
ger homos,' ' McGraw said. "It
falll into lbe 'not in my bact yard'
syndnxne." .
FcJr
PaUl Swidwa, find·
ing an
lo home took threo
yem u they looted II more than
100 bouiCL
"Wbell my IMIIend 11114 lll!trt·
ed, we were loaklRs farille kind of
houJina my piRIIU ltllled Ollt with
- the three-bedroom ranch and

!'a;.-:;!

,,

garage for $40,000. We discovered
real futthat it wasn't about to happen," said Mrs. Swidwa.
After adjusting their expectations and learning to do Without, .
they bought a home in Grand
~apids on land contract for
$74,000 about three years ago. A
land contract allows the seller to
retain interest in the property until
it is paid for.
While they were looking, Mrs.Swidwa said she became so frus lllled that she wrote a Ieuer to the
task force and wound up being
invited 10 join it. ·
·
"A lot of people would be
lhrilled 10 fmd a house lilce this for
$50,000,' • she said. "They just
aren' 1around."

=U
JOil arelnao~ ·to ~ lhepldataL
-.... natlon'a ca
•
• nc., the belt way to pi

~mc:u:• ~e:::~ ':,Ia:

NaliGIJal Park Servlc:e. Tiley nm bet-.- the Wblte HOUle the Mall the
laldy eena.r, CapltGa Bill ancl Ar' Uacllll !faUonaJI'e!pelery. Tllere II a
narrated tllur, ud fOil can p1 off or
011 at any of tlie frequent 110p1.

The Dally Senllnei-Page-9 ·

~liNDA'S
~ PAINTING

&amp;

co.

'Tili• Tiro Plli•IM Of Prinflng
-lor U• 0.11 For r.. •

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992-2269

FREE ESTlMAIES
HAVE REFEIIENC!S

USED RAILROAD TIES

4-4-92-tln

81281t211 mo. pd.

MICROWAVE OVEN
and VCR REPAIR
ILL liliES

NORTON
CONTUCTING
Carpentry Eledrk

Bring It In Or Wo
Pick u~.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 or

985-3561

Plumbing
Roofing

Replactlllltll

Windows

&amp;67-8109
Free Estimates • Law
Rates far Se1ion

Across fre• Poll Office

217 E. So&lt;ottl St.
PO MElOY, OHIO

No Job Tao Small
INI2 1 mo. pd.

3/23/921t!n

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE
949·2391 or
1·100·837·1460
Lawn Mowing,
Fertilizing, Weeding,
and Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trimming • Removal
R•ldentlltA CO!n-1

Pipe for Water, Sewage
andGas
Rutland, OH.

•LIGHT HAULING

INTERIOR&amp;EXTERIOR
Before 6 p.m. leave Message
Ah« 6 p.m. 614-985-4180

RUTLAND
MINE SUPPLY

-

742·2656

MORRIS
GARAGE DOOR SERVICE

s~::L ~~:u~~~D 8

B

RAISED PANEL GARAGE DOOR
INSTAlLED PRICES
9x7- $275.00 16x7-$450.00
OPENERS INSTAlLED-Y, HP-$200.00
With 2 Transmitters

With Purchase of
Receive FREE

Door Plus Opener
Seal Trim

SPECIAL
UNLIMITED SESSIONS
Months af September
and October

slsoo

CALIFORNIA

ATTENTION.
\loilill' 1\ l&gt;ouilil'llilil- llotm• 0\\ttt'r'

TANS
949·2823

frM Elllmlt•

&amp;-26-'t2-trn

OH~ WY. ' H.U.D.
Approved M.tlactwotl

llousllg Products.'""""'..,1

0

OFFICE SERVICE
AIID SUPPlY

112 W. ..,. Slrtlt
01. 45769
(614) lt2-6176

,_,~

Oil lee, School • Art
Suppu-. Office
Furnltuntt Advenlalng
Speclllltll8, Typing,
Laminating, Copy, Fa
• Notary SeMi:M

CHECK OUR SELEC110N

AND PAICESS FIRST
1-11-'112-t - ·

R&amp;C EICAVATIIIG

BULLDOZING

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER. SEWER
UNES
BASEMENTS•
HOME SITES
HAULING: Urnestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal

Owality Hi Efficiettcy
Air C01clliolers, Heat
Ptntps, fti'ICICes &amp;
Now Water.Heaten.

=-=

1391 S.H•Hdlool Rd.
~ (6141 446-9416 or l-800·872-5967

liCENSED and BONOEO

PH. 614·992-5591
12-5-dn

WI DO

IDWDPEI

CURIO

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING
~)!ling

RAONE

OPEN MON.·SAT.

9·"
••

38904 Lt•di•g
c....kRotHI
Mi..ltpert, Oltict

CARPENTER SERVKE

-Room Addltlono
-Gil-Work

l/31/92rfl .

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

BULLDO~ 1_!!:\CKHOE

IIIII 'IRA~ WORK
AVAILABU:•
SEPTIC SYS1EIIS,
HOllE~~ IIIII
TRAIL£R SITES,

..floclricalMd Plumbing

-Roofing
-lnt.rlor IEIIIrlor

P•ntlng
IFREE ESllMAlES)

AND MRnHING UNDERNUTI
GAUGES • ADDITIONS • SIDING •A Ou•litr Assured Coatractor• ·
20 Yr. Ezp.
Call AI, 614·742·2321
1117/lln

614·992·7144

8/17/Pd.

YOUNG'S

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Sldlhg
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTlAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-949·2101 • 949·2860
or 915·3B39
(lo

DRI~D ·

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

ROOFING

TROMM BUILDERS

;_a~

BARN
45633 5t RT. 124

Stllllay Callsl
2/12192Mn

UMESTONE-TRUCKING
FREE ES'IlMATF.S

POIIIIIOJ, Ohio

992·3138

9-10-92-tln

For•Pews• O•IJ
Prd I lhtGnt I J
hc.ttWGr-

f&amp;AIIU_.
tDIULIUIICI

'"'"":t·~-­

s.~t •OUIWTTE·YOUNG
127 ..._ , lltw lilY-. W'l

Pia. 304-112·3421

a.•~

WHQ-0-().()
canh~

you?
CI..ASSfiED

&amp; Cooling_
wtolls. Ohl~ .

Bennetts Mobile Home

..tltols.t.H.

Jr.. [.:tolllt•)4:1-D60

I

WANT ADS CET
.' -: ~
RESIIJS
• .

LIE
DIAa!

ADS

Bl"LLLTI\ BO \RD
IULUftl lOAD DEIDUIE
4:30 P~ M. DAY aFORE
PUIUCAftOI
DIET CLASS

The Right w-r to dterooM fat and
improve IMialth. CorN!inalion diet and
axerciM pl.n. 8 weko-2 classolllwMk. Clau baaino Mondly, Sept
14, 5:30 ot Big Bend Holtlh and
Fitneoo. c.tl1192·2848 lot mo10 ir&gt;lormation.

WILSON'S ARMY
SURPLUS

985·4473
667·6179
2-7-92-tln

(drfJAYMAR
Quality
Stone Co.

n"do. ANII'o larg..t
aoloctlon of mllltory
aurplua ltomot

1117pd.

CHARLIE'S

.....

s•an

DOIEI

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Call 614·992·
6637
St. Rt. 7

Cltes.ire, OH.

DIIVEWAY WORI
... UIIISIOIE
tELIYIIT SEIWICE
S..UtourWon
$25.00 .... IIMr
IWOUKIUIU

992·7553 .

Big Kids &amp; Baby

CaU 675-4340, ext. 230 to
re isler

flUE ESTIMIYU

992-7093
llon.-Sun. t .... pm
See uo for your hunting
.nd back to ochool

8-11-'92-1 mo.

Pleasant VaHey Hospital
Downstair&amp; Conference
Room

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

County Rd. 19Poac:hlork Rd.

PMIIOI,OI.

Program
For Children Becoming
Big B~others &amp; Sisters
Tuesday, Sept. 15,
6:30P.M.

BISSEll &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

WHALEY'S auro
PARTS

Sptdlldltg II Custom
F-Retalr
NEW &amp; USED PlRTS FOR
AU lUKES &amp; MODELS

992·701hr
992·5553
ar lOll FlEE
1..00.141-0070

1/2Mn

RACINE MOWER:
CLINIC

P.O. In 894-W..w Mty
RAOIIt OHIO
:
(For..ly !aile I~ s.l ·
EajiM)

:

PARTS &amp; SERVKE
Mowen • Galtt Sawl-

• Weedeaters

614·949·2804

.....

•

~
!

"""''"....,

•

I

••

· N· .•
I

tAIWII,OIIO

7131f81/lf
I

[!J

........, •...•
.,

�Thursday, September
Sentinel
Sc~AFU®

Thursday, September 10,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

by Bruce Beattie

35

Lots

51

&amp; Acreage

GrMn Township 34 Acrtt +

KIT 'N' CA RLYLE® by Larry Wrighl

Household
Goods

72

Primo Building Silo, Woodod, ~T In Stock. $5.00 Up. Mollohan
len K~ler Rtlhort Bonnie Corpoto, 614-448-"1144.
Siutn, 814-448-2885, Votco Mall
513-864·1763.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES

41

Rentals
Houses for Rent

195; Hot Point Dryor S95;
Mavtag W11tter New Modtl

•lr, crul11,

Hou11 For Rent In Country. 614·

42

Mobile Homes
tor Renl

un.

bld-ttner, new

IIJ The RHI Ohoelbutler8

P5'/(~ tATRIC

~ELP

1i81 • • Lolclld. Aoklng:
$7,500, 614-441-G731.
lOU Ford Conv•alon Van
Automotic, Air, T.V., VCR, And
Mony Othor Ex1reot 114-4483695.

74

call 304-675-1157.
Ml•• P.ul•'• O.y Ctre Center.
Slfe, aHordablt, chlldcan. M·F
6 a.m. • 5:30 p.m. Ages 2)\-10.
Befcm, aner tc:hool. Crop-Ins

wlk:ome. 6'14-44&amp;-8224. New In·
font Taddlor Core, 114-44~227.

Wonlld To Do: Bobyolttlng In
r.ty Home. Hive Nurse Assistant
Trolnlng. locoild Whhln City
Umlto. Coli 114-441•1221.

Financial

2 BR portlllly lurniohod 1111ior,
nice ~t. Roush Lane, Chnhlre,
OH. Alao tHiclencr IPII1ment.
304·7'73-5128 Ilk for Bolly.
2br Unlumlthld Coblo, Alr1

Clun And Quiet, Dtpoth Ana
Raflrence, Overlooking Ohio
Rlvtr, In K1nar.agL Fot11r'a

llobllo Homo Pork, 814-446-1602.

Tal1l Electric, 2 Bedroom
Mobile Home, Nice, ClunJ No
Ptta. Located: Addlaon Area,
1~367-1'138.

44
Business

Apartment

OpportunHy

1 Bodroom Aporlmlnt

Rio

Grinde, 114-3.1841.

1 bodroorn

opo~"'""'

In Pt.

PINIInl, W.Va., 1404-175-1042.

2 Bodroorn ~. Located
Bohlnd Holzor Clinic 01 Woot
VIrginia, J04.e75.4411.
2 blcl100m Air cond, gound
lio« ;gtc~ll dep toqllirid, no
polo,
5-8112.
2 Or 3 Bedroom Apo~rtmont. Por·
liolty Fwn- S350/IIO. Pluo
Dopooll lnducloo W.tor, Sowor.
Trollor Lot For Rolli, $90/llo.
W.lor, s - Fttrnllilod. Balh
locolod At: Hannon Troco

SchOol Dfttrict. 114-2511138.

2bdnn. apta., lol:al ellclrlc, •po

plilncoo tumlohod, llundry
room laciiHioo, cioN to ochoOI

In town. ADDIIc.tlonl available

·a,_

2 B.t roam home. land conrect.
112

woy

bttwHn C.nlervllle &amp;

OokHII 614-24S.i315

Houu For Sate: 2 Bedrooms,
Ftmlly Room, Full Baument,
WH~ Fnptoco. IM-448-86!1t.
3

bedroom

r~nch

1001120011 lal, DR,

home,

FR,

LR

wlflrtplact, large kitchen, 2
blthl, double car gar1g1, new

lono1 hoot pump.

B~Ck

ot: Yllllao
Alllo. Mt ot
coli 114-992-3711. EDit
S _ , I both W.O ~..,p,
otovo, rei tumiihed, vory cloon
~l':o no ...... $185. mo. :IOU75ori71·1H2.
3 room ape, ltov. l ret fur..
nl-. nlct ntlahborhood, clop
I rei NqUIIOd, ~S.1i)g(l.
s Room Fum-, Control Hoot

/Air, All Utlillloo Fttrn-1 Ex·
~~ott S1root Po,.lng,

lr011t

w'-'dlng. 304-882·3310 or 882·

R.R

aws-

7

'

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
3287.
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
7 rooms. 2 tun baths, 11'2 bast- ESTATE!Jl. 131 Jacklon Plko
mont. Creb Crook Rd. 3 hoot m.m 11.-.....,, Wolk to ohot&gt; l
movloo. CoiiiM-448-2511. EOH.
sourcta. $45,000. 304-675-5528.
Aroo. Nlco 2br, Stovo,
BEAUTIFUL HOUS£ FOR SALE Contonory
Hillorlcol Areo Corner. Lot • 816 RetriQeralar, Watw Furnished.
lllln St. Pt. P!teant, W. Va. S240111o. No Plla. lit 411 1031.
Camplollliy Ronovotld: 2 Full Fum- AportmMI 1 BodBaths. l Large Bedrooms, Naw ""'"' 2t 112 Noll Dolilpollo,
HVAC, Ntw Corpot. Avallablo miiillo. UUIIllu Pold. 114-448lmmodlotly. 614-446·2205.
4411 AN• 7p.m.
FORECLOSED &amp; REPO Homn FumAport"*lt,
All
Below Market Value. Fantutlc Ulllllloo Pold, Sh.l"' loth, ttl
Slvlngs. . Your Ar11. 1-605·962·
8000 b t H-10189 For Current Socond Avo,.,., Dolllpollo.
$13Mio. 114 411 3145.
Uot.
Gallipolla Ferry, acro11 from Fum- Apo~mont, Smoll 1
Beall Schocl City water, Bid-., S1il Utllllloo Pold,
natu1111 gas, unattachod garage. 701 Fourth, Qolllpollt. 114-4484411 Aftor 7p.m.
m,soo. 304-675-8860.
Home For Slit In Cheshire VII· Camplolty Fuml-. 1br, nox1
lage, D Aoom1, &amp; bath, lg. Flat to Utrrory, porldng, hoi~ olr,
LDt By Ownor, B-3:30 P.M. lllll'tnco doj)ooll '"'~'*""· ~~
Pllono: 114-441.f1178 AHor 3:30 Ill 0331110'"" 7p.m.
P.M. 114-441&gt;0425.
Furnlohod 1p11 lor ..nc. ,., 1
pluo Ulllftloo, 30U75Houu I lot In Roody oroa.
115,000. 304·rr.t-5407 after 5:30
pm or t.tor. 1:30 • .m.
Fumllhld Eftlctoncy 1171/Mo.
Off Raccoon Rd., 105 Ann Or, Ulllloo Pold Sho,. Both, 607
A - Dolllpollo, ~~
GoMipollo, 3 y11. Old 3 Bod· llloond
441-44141 Alor 7p.m.
"""""· Grey Vinyl Siding, 1 112
lith, 2 Car Glrage, lerge O.Ck, Clnclauo living. 1· ond 2 bodHut Pump, Clly Schools _ , lpo~- .. Yllilgl
154,!100. Coli MooiO"I 614-446· Minor
ond
Rlvorolao
4850.
In
Mlddltport.
From
tiN. Coli S14-1112·TIIl EOH.
32 Mobile Homes
Nlco Ono BR Unlumlohld
for Sale
~ment.
Ringo,
Rofrlg.
Prootdod. P~voto Porlllng.
1213 Per M011th Including lot Wotor, Olrbo111 Pold. Doj&gt;OIIt
rtnl. New M' wide mobllt homt, AI raulred. IM-44HJ41 After
Includes dellvtry, complete ntup, ofliltlng &amp; otopo. 1·800·637·
Camplolty Fumlohod molrllt
1125.
homi, 1 mill below town, over10x50 llalltlr, 2 bedrooms, ucet- loOking rlvor. No Poto, CA. 814ltnt condHion, 12500 OBO, 614· 441.0338.
!lt2·787'1.
ono bod-. hlrnl- oport·
1H8 2 BR King moblto. homo. "'""'• lifo...,_ lnd dopoolt,
Heldt eome rtptlr, $2000. 7am- no poll; l14-!lt2.;zt37.
101m l 7:30ptM1pm. 304-895342t
Furnished
45
117'1 C.tnlaae HoUII, 2 Bid·
Rooms
n:aorM, 2 "latha, 12x65, All
Eloet~. U,500. 114-441·1511.
R_,.lor ronl · - o r IIIOIIIh.
It $120/mo. 011111 110111.
11175 Pork Ylllo 2 bod!oomt
1510.
lOIII lite, 1 bllh, $5,500. gOOd I
cond, 304.e71.fi!I05.
1112 Wlndoor 14170, 2 bod·
rooms., CIA, total elec, undlrponnlng, 8120 trutod wood
poteh, 8:120 1lumn awning &amp;

=--

•• =·· ...
·---·-111&gt;
..
---·lit--.
--. ....-.•
: 1t. . . . th

~- 11
7••• 7

111. . . ..

~--0

. ..

_......_

11111Mow,
~

. . . . .I .

!llilllltf,......

.

.....
----·
-

~~~·111l111. 541Pm

~

......~-~

""'

...... m.r.lloor •
!llilllltf ...... ontil 11'1111

•

.

p 7T Slit

"""""*"•
.......

s:r\':2'

r~lllng

wl•cral111 everything txc
cond, one owner, 304-f75-5141.

Now/Uaod
Merchandise
Houoohoid lumlthlng. 112 mi.
Jerrtcho Rd. Pt. Pluunl, WV, King Coal stoves now in stoek
coll304.fl75·1450.
Sldo,. Equlpmant, Hondorson:
Relrlg•rator In Good Condition, WV, 304-675-)121.

Copportono, S100. Colt 614-44&amp;- llatol root ond siding, bakod
6752 Wookdoys Botwoon 8 A.M. onomoland galv. 304·312·2091 &amp;
·=-=5c..
P·..=:
II:...--=----- 1372·9842..
Refrlger1tor1, Fr..zert, Wuher, :;:Pl:.:ot..=:tl:.:cA7n:..d,.,M:-o"'"do-lC-u-1 6 -Inc-h
Ory~r~, Air Condltlontr, Color Thru 60 lnth In Stock . Ron
T.V.'• Etc. &amp;14-25&amp;-1238.
Ev•n•, Jackson, Otllo. 1-aoo.
SWAIN
53H528.
AUCTION I FURNITURE. 62 Solo or trodo, AKC roglstortd
Olivo Sl., Golllpollt. Now &amp; Uud molo BugiH, a mo old &amp; 2112yr

,-.rt-

furniture, hulel'l, Watem &amp; old (running).

15ft Starcratt
lnt•rior, Ures, lights,

bolt\ new
Ulld W.shlr &amp; D~or Solo I S100 relln ohld troller, 45hp motor
&amp; U~,.AII Sold
th Worranty. ~~~ lonnJOC1molotnor f! 2nk800
, lts3•04 75
°n
Work baaiL IM-441-319.

TM wa1hlr &amp; Dryar

for Rent

MiscellaneouS

ShoP@~,

'!'

!Jft

• •

•

•

"U

•

751 Socond Avonuo, Golllpoilo, ~181
_5._ _ _ _ __ __
614-448-2144.
Surl)lue army patltm camllauge
VI'RA FURNITURE AND AP. clothing, pockl1 loothor boofo.
PUANCES
Som Samorvlllo o by Stndyvlllo,
614-446-4428
WV I)Oit oHicll. Frl, Sun, noon •
114-446-3158
1:00PM. Olhor days houro coli
RENT·2.0WN
304-273-1155 (union modo
No Dopoo1t • GRAND OPENING poiHictl buoiiiHI odvortltlng
Holhlng PIWWnld Or Uold, IIJIOCIItHille, Ntc:hn, olgnt).
Evtr. ·
Tandem IX .. trllltr, Will built,
Bunk Bldo CamPIIII $S.85 l'll"ll12". liltbod. 22' tldo
Wook; Solo And Choir $10.83 ~::a $500. 3Q4.112·20eo
Wook; Lompo $3.31 Wook;
Rocll11111 U.52 W•"!i. Dlnollo Tlndy DMP 2100 24 Pin Prlntor
Whh 4 Chofro S7.2S WNk; 0r 814-448-013ll.
Toblo WHh B1110h And 4 Cholro
Wlllotdllng Hutch $20.11 WMic; Thill Whllli Polol Blko Uko
Rotrlgorolor
$11.22
Wook; __
_:.•111=5'c.cs_~,.c361c..c.;-oti:.:38:c....._ _
WuliOr
I
Dryer
Sol
$11.85
·~·•
4 ton 9tiWirt ~
Wltki Et~c:tric
Wlth ...... rner a1r·
Gillll Door~ 1 w
cond, perNct Nnnlng eond,
•• .22
•
ntw motor 1250. 1qulrral cagt
CASH AND CARRY • Solo And bloWir wtth 314 I., motor 175.
304 7
Choir $1"; Lompo Stortlng AIJ .~"';~5-4;1f,311;.s;,;;A;"7o:'iii&lt;hi.
S1U5
Toblo WHh 4 Ctiolro 1·
solo 52, 40, 30
$1211 Sol; w . - l Dryer $5119 ion otectrlc ond 40 Golllon
!-'\ Rolrl~or Pit; Eloclric Noturol . gu. Youre choice.
"""Goo
Avolllblo.
$1U.85 Womoldortt &amp; Thomoo

IIIH710.

T&gt;lOU6J.l , IF I
S&gt;lOULD 6ET A
SECOND OPINION ..

AutOS for Sale

'80 Buick Ro1111. omoll

v;a, ~condition. No ruot .

6:30 (2) •

T~E

iS

DOC10R

paint.

.

.'

T~~ RADIO TALK 51j()~l'\ I
A~£ GOIIJCt TO

Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

e

1121• E.-lftmtnl Tonight

=

·--ylint
'
1111 Life Cion On Stereo.

=.;!i

7:30~~rdyl Q

FRANK AND ERNEST

52

Sporting Goods

Solo: Clvlllln Production
SKB Rltioo, Now Jonnlnao, 3110
Auto Plllloll: I Ammunii'IOn AI
Tho Folrground Floo lllrkll
S..ndly. SN: 3 WWI Wollr
Coolod lllchlno Quno From 10
Till. 114-446-1122.

56

Pets tor 5ale

..
'

lalry·lell wedding arriYee. (R)
Stereo. C
·
(J) Mejor'Ltagut IIIIHbll
Detroft Tigers 11 Chicago
While Sox (L)

•

(l).

(JJ. WIIO'I the
Bon? Tony and Angela's

long-dlsllnce rellllonshlp
~mbles. (Pt 3) (R) Sllreo.

~ r..lh ... WIIO Needl11'11

&amp;;w::,e

st-.

R-..

Joe-

57

Air Axle, Air 5ttf WhHI, lntema-

tlonol Cob Over, 2 Fuol Tonko,
11177 Ford Dump Truck, $8,500
814-t46-8038.
.
AI&lt;C Rogloterod puppies, mintolure Schnauzm, 3

• • o•TopCope

(Sellon Premiere! "
pregnanl olllcar dlaarms a

robber. Stereo. Q

I!D • Tht181tnpnna 0t1o

tOOvea In with the Simpsoni
alter qullltng his job. (R)

Sllreo.Q
II Cnlolllnd ChaM
Ill Pt~ntlllwe Q

1

m~t.,

rudy to go: &amp;14-t92·

1 roJ'r !a:MEMBER SO
lAUCH CORFU&gt;noo mkl
I WA'S ~100 OP.. ~'rOJ"

tr1 FlHlwood Co- 25"
Bulment Model a. FumiCe,
Rool Air, Full iOd, ' ' - s, Fua
Both HOI Wot1&lt; Fridgo, Lorgo
A;;l.,jl,_ll"!!, llic;owowo, Ex·
Ollilnl ~ Coil 814-441-

llltqulo,
3112'U, Aut-tic, F.. - · 3200, Allllr 5:00.
IEnglno ..- . . . llodv Good,
Nomld 31 Ft. Compor Fot Solo,
102;000, 1:1,300. 114-441-'1211.
Good CondHion, $3,400 eon &amp;14·
1981 Oldo Dol1l N Royolo, 4dr. 251-1117.
'
-:1107 V..,
.. -112100,
-14
option,
I
1..711.

~~Z·~~~==
14,300. 114-4N-4....
11fl' Alldl 4,000 OUIIro, 14.300.
114-C41-21Qll14311 ISCM.
1117 Filro GT . l..Aided 1 *"000
1111~-- Condition, 114Aftlr 5 P.ll.
1tl711- R~.Runoi I Driv•
Good, Crullo, "'~,',l;wo: Bunlpood,
-.
_·, 5Ylildoli!!!
13,000
Or
Trodo II44M-1UU
'
··
llfl'
flroblnl. T~opo, .
PW, PI, PI, 11:. 14000. 301-4175&amp;ael.

----Tino,-

1* fiNIIInl lllleil, Aut-Io,

'rtXJ KIDOIIJ'?

1111 YOUIIIIIildtn Q .

'THE: WIA'r'C/&lt;. Cf MY

1:01 (J) MOVIE: Once Upon 1
Time In tht Wnt (PGJ(3:30)

SIG.'J 00 1·\IS Df.SK
1HAT SAID ...

1:30

Hai.IVro.Jkl HAD A

81

.._,.

•'""·

Ford Probe CIT Allllng:
SS,500, 114-441.0131. .

v...

1110 Old8 Cuttl• s.. reme.
Auto., Air - · Quod ....
qlno.
t7,100.010,
.

Benchcran couch and chair,

=~· good ohopo ; 114-IV2·

1

F;um Supplie'
&amp; L1vestock

=

Equlpmenl

115 M F - Troolor, 124 ~

Gina on a date. Slereo.

8:00 (J) •

101 ChMra om thinks

torlor l lntortor PolnUng, Ex·
porloMICI, 1..- locotid Lo-

ACROII
1 - DlneHn:
Out ar AfriCa

IUthar
5 TV co.

CIIIJ. 114 4:41 1581,

Liva:l..

"YWHAYE

220....

Dizzy~ second job.
Stereo.
a Ntt
Now Stereo.
llll..lnJ King U..l

nlck25 ......ntd

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

8011tfntltl

GOWN
1 Goller Halt

28 Nut'llllfl

='

of

uCc.
34

Elpott 10 ..1

2 Moltl'
mounleln
3 Air

.,.,0

4 AclrtN
Dtllorah-

5 Nackpltc:t
8 Signa

7 Sundae

topping

8 Cllurch
ofllcltl

9-toJoy
10 Comedian

Sllutnles' IIUIIII'IIion to

(J).

move. ~s-.
[] Ul/8
Pttme'fime

Sllreo.

(l) WhY

,.

'"'"' Kkll Love

Schoal'l (I :00)

(!) Undw l'ft Stereo.

P.:Ol:,Mlddll •

53l'H28.

RIOfld:-.9
0 700 Club Willi Pal

RQblr11on
111".30(1) w..t Vlrglnltt tlataba ak

301-1714tMONo ~~----

Sopllo TMk PUIIIDIM NO 011111
Co. RON EVANI IHTERMISEI,

·
'

--.011-- ::'
r'i

and J.T. lalllor lhe uma girt:

SIOrm hHS lhe gang'&amp; plant.
(R) Stereo.
10:00(2)• 0 LA. Lew Van
0wan II engry over

· JEST BRING
ME TH'
· WASHTUB II

Aorotlon Mllloro, repoiiOd. I r.buiM - - In llock, RON
EVANS, JACKSON, OH . 1..JOO.

...,....,.,.,~.
Wll
polio - ·
trolor ildlllni-

ltm
51 Penttlt 10

1881ue~

r;J

~ET

56~pert

21 Sllupaldn

1:30 (J). 101 Winp A raging

BARNEY

IIIOfUiitntt

r~i. s- 8loflea

2tl

,.....

54 Loolllll

17 llodlfled

Fllher Dowling 11Mtlvtrllatlleri1M11
.

,

52 Slow mualcal

57111oftllktlllly
58 81l1wtrlnen

e

CU~It

....... ,...

38 OflheAteUc
37 House pot
38 Sltort dllh
41- Krtnall

t1101c1111g
48Didt
&amp;1 Sick

14 Propltetor
15CIH
18 Eap\01111111
org.

I!D. ~Nttlghll Lenny

llng.

Eut

44 klllpld

flourllh

enters lhe literary world. (PI

'THE l&gt;&amp;lMY.

TONIC5HT~

IIAS£MENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondltlonll UIICI.,. guoren·
too. LoOII rolaCwnc:n tuml-.
F- ootlmotoo. Coil c:allocl 1·
114-237-G481, dor or night.
Rogoror Booomonl Wot•-

Vulnerable: Norlh·Soulh
Dealer: Soulh

43 SooMr !han

8Agalnat
11 Aclnn
Fanny12111ualcll

~~~lAman

! CANT WAIT 1-NTIL- I'M
OL..D E?M?JIQ 110 ..lOIN

WH.ATDIO

•Au

The World Almanac 1!1 Crouword Puzzle

laat-mlnUie wedding plans.

. Stereo.

11J Tltlftle (Cont.l
80nltlle

r;J

............(JJ.

11:00 (J). ())· ()). (l)

,.

&amp;

. Hilling

-j~.

AUTO INSURANCE

0111 111 112 R77, DtvJo.Ciulckll
lnouto-. '

61 Farm

~ke

BarMH Home lmprowenwdL
Room Addftlono, Gorogn, Ex·

=ar
It - k Conturv, tllldo onglno,

Room for Two

(R) Stereo. C

Plumbing
I

(J).

w•
(JJ .'liomthaut Anne
and ,... oornpltte their

Polnlod lloOl
I ~
1 ....... Sildlna - · 14' ....
.... Door, 11,110 - · Iron
llldgo.1-IJII.-.

FruHI &amp;
Vegatablaa

w•

Johnny Carson wilt uN hla
jokn on lhe Tonight Show.

~ ~-· ;:Utl;;;;:llty=;;llcla:;:.:.:.:;::=:~:::~~.140'~...

58

us

Well

Tommy and his
girlfriend 1n1pire Ma111n to

Dido Clorro,
N;,
Cntloo, Till, Co-··' RCMI'I TV ........ lp!Odlilllfta
~~.1M, IIW4H371 Allor In Zlnlth •M • vldna MOil
lllftlrllrlndl.-colo,.,............. WY
I* Panlloo Clnnd Prix, ~1-.cmt

+B764SI

Tbe winners of the Women's Teams
Pus
Pus
Pus
Pua
IIUe al the Pan American Champion·
.•
Pus
Pass
ships were Gail Greenberg/Dorothy
Pus
Pus
Truscott, Lisa Berkowitz/Judy Tuck·
er and Pam Wittes/Randi Montin. In
..
Opening lead: • 3
the final, they beat a Colombian team
177-122.
On today's deal, Greenberg was lhe ·
.. ·
only declarer of four to make four I
. ·:
spades. (Tbe same bands were played ·nal, lhe declaren played low from lite :
in both lhe Women's and lhe Open dummy on lhe spade lead. When lite ·:
Teams finals.)
Easts pu.t in lhe nine, the declarers' .
South's fin! two bids described a commumcatiOIIS were iD ruins and :
baiiDCed 23 or 24 points. (Greenberg neither fOUDC! a route borne.) Glfta- ·. ·
upgraded ber balld because of lhe n· ber1 continued ~lb three rowtds of dl- ~·
cellent five-card suit.) Norlh's three . amoads to Wests quecm. . .
.,
hearts was a transfer bid, sbowlnl five bN~ted~lhbad no WllllllliC lead. U ,
spades, and lhree no-trump ollered a s1e ow 1"d' •• ~~last diamoad. de-. ·•
choice of games.
c arer wou uuvw a heart and tate
When Wesl Jed the spade three the heart finesse. Declarer would; ·
Greenberg felt sure lhat East wouldn~ make her game If East held either the- .~
bave a singleton king, so she called lor heart kina or the club ace. West actu· . ·
dummy's jack. After East covered ally mlcbed to a beut and Green- ...
wilb lhe spade king, South won wtlh berl bad 10 tricb: ftve spades, two .. ·
lhe ace and drew lhe rest of tbe hearts and three diamonds.
··
trumps.(AI bolh tabl'!!.~ lheOpen fl·
Cl-••=-•cactw-

SIMQ.

Home
Improvements

··

+AQIO

+Ks

By Phillip Alder

I!D •

-lc.

:;•±'t~ ,_JI'III. $3700.-

.JB

EAST
tK 92
.K9

tAQIO
.AQ732

Women can
outplay men

Jill Ilea about being lnvlled 10
a patty~to be by htt1etf.

Serv1ces

lrnprovwnonlt:
y..,. E1porlont:o On Oldor &amp;
- -.. Room Addlllono,
....
Foundollon Work, Rooll!!g,
1* llodae ,__,_
K~dlont And Botho. Freo EiEioet;tC;''frUi:~ R:i tiiMtMI RlflrtUCM. No Job
Too Big Or -1114-SCI7.05tS.
.,.,_.,., Crulu Conll&lt;lf, 1ho. ""-· 41,000 IIIIo. Ex· Dovlo h!olng lllchlno And
Olllonl "C:O...Mionl et,IOO. 114- Yocu'"" Ctllnor llopo~. Froo .
:,24:=1~41101.:=;.:,..-,,--,..--,..-__ Pldt.U~.~ Dotlvori. Goorgu
1t11 n..u.- Shlclow ....._.. 4 DR CrMk
1 114-441-4214.
Exhollll. Law I I ' - Aoklng:
~.!". 0. 114-441--oflor 4p.m.

temaln and

31127.

0ccu11

HI-, oltht Tltlnl Rtlch

:a""

WI!ST
+s s
5t

SOVTH

e CrauRuu

7:41@ Calaga FoolbttH San
Diego Slate al Brighclm
Young (L)

1·11·12

.,0 8

.QHt

quarterllnol from Flushing
MHdow, N.Y . (L) []
II le 1 Stir Sterto.

•

.;.;;;;;;~fi~~i;;;;:ii;i 1981 llorcury -

Groom ond Supply Bhop POl
a - . . All lriMdo, otvtH.
limo Pol Food Dooltr. JuUo
Wobb. Coil 114 441 0231.
AKC • Roglot•ld !looglt P..,
53
Antiques
plio, Rlvor VIlify KllnriOio, 114Buy or sill, Rlw•lna Antlq~aes, 441-4113C1.
1124 E.Moln
on Rt. 124, AKC Roglotorld Box.., pupo,
Pomotoy. Houro: M.T.W. 10:00 lduk, milo, l -It, 114-1192o.m. to 8:00 p.m., Sundly 1:00 :1137.
to 1:00 p.m. 614-1192-2.121.
AI&lt;C Roglotll'ld Cocklr Sponlol
54 Miscellaneous
Pu~~ S~oo. 114-245-m. A~
til P. .
Merchandise
:::-;;:-~:::::";~7.::---.:-1 Booa.ll pupo. s molto. 304-IT!!12 Go. BIOMllng Automatic, 5454.
Whh 2 BoiTiil, Toppon I Chotl Bluo Eyld Sibo&lt;lon P.....,..., For
F-zor Glblon BonJo Color Solo,S~31IItii7Alor5P.M .
T.V. WHh
l~ii-10&amp;4.
Dnii!O""lnd Collory: CFA p.,.
1i8CI Suntonnor 24 Wollo bulb olorw
I 8 - Kilt... 114tanning bed with tact t1nner. 441-3844 Aftor 7:00p.m.
works tl1CIIIenl 1 aood condl·
Floh Tonk, 2413
Avo.
lion, $1800 OBO. lluot ull; 114· Poiftl
"112·3802.
~-nl, 301-4175-2013,
lull 11no T...., lloh lllnlo,
1ill Concury Truck T - . 114- 111111111 onlmolo ond o,;ppii.;.
W-3285.
2 Cocklllol Blrdo 160, ~go f35; Puppy Poloco Pll Shop.
To~ Llnornon ~nlllly Bon Locaild In O.C.IIurphy Co. &lt;Jol.
$50, Coblo ~mplll $20 Eoch; 0404
llpollo. Oponlnf - · ·-~Infant Cor Soot $11, Toddlll" Cor
·
Soot $25. 114-311-9932, I.Mve Robblto For Solo, ,jney
Mo111go.
Woolp. 114 311 888 ~ 1144BI3 now rogulotlon ola 1)001 11030·
lobi• wnh oloto topo, otill In Roglotorod BOifllt Pui&gt;PIIt,
CIIfona, S700oo. ; 11113 Socha Whllo Robblto AltO, l~e&amp;:1111.
mopM, Nnl like new1 2000ml.,
S200; groy molol oftrco
cloak, Roglotorod Hlmollyon Kfttllkl now, 175; droftlng 10011, 1200, 114-4-. Aftw &amp;p.m:
loblo I limp, compiOto 111, S14-25N287.
S200; 111 oolld oak cholro, $75 ; ~===~---Wilton ~nldonco1 Pooch Fork
MuSical
Rood, 614·1192-loe,.
Instruments
3 Ploco Wielding Sot: 1250 Or
Trodo. 614·256-1511.
Bundy 111111. Exc- condition. 304-IT!!-,.,
78 RPM Recording Ot Orlglnol
Coot Ot s.outh Pocltlc With II II• Bundy Trombono $200. &amp;ww
Drum KM $200 AllOr 4:30 P.M.
tin And Plnza 175, 814-441·124G.
11+441-21n

NORTH
+J8764

PHILLIP
ALDER

~Tonight

WOfld
The day for Whilley's

2111.

IIIII)

• JI062
+J9

r;J

1:00 (2). «J1 Dltltrent

1984 700 1,000 IIBot,
Excoltonl Concltlon, 114-446-

I

BRIDGE

IIJ TtMII U.S. Open, man's

....

Col S14-

PAINT NUMBEAEO lETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

@. Family Ftud

•

.·

~

.

Itt Yow Life
111• WIIMI of F - Q

li~~~;~;,;~

01

.

(JJ •

I!HI~rdw~o~ri"·i'i-'4~4~41~DN5~~~

,.,,
arondl,
2t5,mu

.

r--------, -

c

Stereo. t:;1
IIJ My TWo Dado
SpofiiCentef

•

SCIIAM-lETS ANSWERS
H
Enroll · IglOo • Waltz · Growth • THAT LONG
"You can live to be 100, · the old limer told his teenage
grandson, "if you give up all the things that make )'011
want to live THAT LONG.·

e

Gentmlon

Ie

6 u~~~t:-;s~N~~E tenus I

lhrrlt'd ... With
ChtkhnC
IlliG JIOPinlyl C
I!D Sler TNk: iJie Nut

THE IXAfH OF YOU.'

''oo

Plpoo, win·
--··-·1........_oewor
ek:. Claude Win·

8

NewaHourr;J

(JJ

I

~.

by f1llmg tn the mis.sing words
'--'-....1..-L--'-.....I..--l you de.,.elop from step No. 3 below.

r.~~=~.R.. c
ID III Mltc:Neii/LehrJ

"""'"I:::-:--:-~~~~-..,..­

-

.

.

(J)

Automotlo
wuhll'l $71 to $215:
Uncoln Plko.
lilctric ...,_, $75 to $e5; 1 gu
dryor SIS· -~ I gu rong11
$75 to $8k; upright
$95; 1:;.;.:..:.;.;:;__ _ _ _ __
choot IJPOir- S50; pot1oblo ,.
dllhwuhoreiiiG; wo olio otock
Building
Dtlbort
Utod Apnow
ond Swlohor'o
lllld lppiilnco
oHIIICII, c:omor Rond I Pen:h
;;;!II;;..IKo;.:;;;no;;;ugo:=;::,;:114;;.-4.;.46-:.:..:."11::;73:.·__

I

@UpCloee
~ New Zcmo Stereo. Q
7:00 ~ • «JJ Wheel of Fortune

E)

Eocm

•-If

I I I I

~

1---ri::....;T.Ij,..:...lr.,_;;.l-=...-1.-.1

Q

IIJ C.rtoon Erprwu

Ra:X

• -BrldaoRlvor
-LocotodSltvtr
Plwl Rood
Or 4
Mil• OU 141 In Contonory On

c.n le Tokr

e ABC Nttwa Q.

I!D. Andy O!ltllth

• .
5-3847.
17ft lloh &amp; tkl bolt, tlshllndlf,
1167 CUtlau Suprem~, new martM
radio, trolling motor,
paint, 15,000 orlaiMI milts. 1m Ch1rokH Chl•t JHp, 304·
Belt offer, 304-882~4N or 304- 118.5-3081.
W-24711.
1084 Suntracbr Pontoon Boat,
1167 IIUOIIng Coupo 351 24 Fl. Mercury 40 HP Motor, Low
Citvollnd Englno, 114-852-3285. Houro, Wlnlol'ld Undlr Covor,
Won CoiOd For. $3,900. 614-4461m Ford LTD, 4dr. udan, OM 1365Ailor
5:30.
~II=.-,~~ 1iN Kowoukl 150X2 Jot Ski,
1711.
$2200; 114-8112-11167.
1m eo..... Chivy, mololllo
HAMILTON WATER SPORTS
bluo, 301 ""· ......... cond,
Proctorvlllo, Ohio
l.e14...HtSI
~~· 30WII2-SIII oftor
CloH.Qul On
eta 112 Coblo Boots
1m citow eo-, mo~ontc
111 1112 Kowuokl Jot Skit
·-~
850 ax ·11141 Ovor lnvolco
aontl.~~ ... :104 - :1511
1..ftoot Pr- Anywhoro
Flnonc:lna Avolilblt
Fll'll Winter"'Stonge FrM

-. - v.e,
.........
.

101 NBC

(l) Now H
(J) G Cll

r;J
Newa C

III Squarw One TV Q

;;;:::::::;::::;_ _ _ _ __

v... A..o. 75

8 WOI1d Today
~ Aln nn Tin, K-1 Cop

~

I

meeting one voice
could be heard above the rest.
,_·-'---''--.L--L__..J.
My friend made this obaarva·
r - - - - - --•.., uon, "People who are wroil!l
1L V1H0
usually talk-.... than anyone.
Comple1e rne chuckle qvored

Tour

1111 G 1121e CBS Ntt"wa Q

= ======71

I GVE55 Fl RST
OPINIONS ARE
PRETTI( 60011..
(

.

t1500

1113.
Looking For A DNI? Conoldor A
Pr..OWnod llobllo Homo, Lorge
Settctlon low Monty Down,
F- Sot-Up And Dtllvory. 1·800·

YOU 'VE
GIVEN ME

ONLY IF YOU DON'T MIND
MV BEATING 'I'OU OVER
T~E ~EAD WIT&gt;! THAT STOOL
'(OU'RE SITTING ON ~

I WAS WONDERING,

iAIIbruthod ortwork) 304-675·
3841
:;;:;:;·
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
call 614-V92-66n, Davls-Oulckel
lnouronco ..

11fl' 14172 On Rontod lot. Hoot
Pump And Storoao Building In·
eluded. 114-448-17111 Aftor 4l'.M.
1111 Adami 2 BR, all tltctrle.
down &amp; takt over
p1ymtnt1. 304-675-&amp;897 or &amp;7$..

Special

't/4

WELL . I
APPRE CIATE
TI-lE HELP

avery

HUROD
1---r-~:....,:......:,.~

@ lnlldt the Senior POA

1D Wild America Slereo.

Motorcycles

mlln.

54

ARMUTA

I!D. Full HOUM Stereo. Q

0

penur Indoor $265; 30 Inch

446-43'16.

htul your logs to the mill just

I

•

(l)Sq..-OneTV
III Rtecllng Alln

1i83 Ford Bronco AC, low
mlloolll, 4WO wllock.,.., ~u '::f
IVerlge body, VlfY
mechanically, new elra, 114·
!lt2-7733.

Hours: Mon-Sat, g...s. 614-4460322, 3 mll111 out Buta vllll Rd.
Free Dellvory.

2 Bldrooms, 1 Bath, State
ROldo 216, Golllpollt. 614·2561008.

THU .. SEPT. 10

low to fcrm four simple words.

6:00(2)• wa CJJ• ae
·1121e 101 Nttwa
(l) Chlorite In Chao~

Chino~~~=;==~=;========:_ =.,..--.,.,-~.,.....,...,.,.......,.'82 Kawasaki 1000 lid. Very low

Georgn Porteblt S.wmlll, don'l

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EVENING

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

Electric Rang1 0 To CttOOM
From $95. Sklgga Appllanc11
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448·7498, Or HIOCH911-34!1t.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complet• home tuml t ttlngs.

Wanted to Do

\

nllin, bed cov., and rails,

New Round Oak Tablt, (Claw
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$795 . Oak
Cablnlls,
Starting:
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18

YOUR "·I RON !

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PICKENS FURNITURE

Of

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Refrigar11or, O.posh, Rtfertn• Gu
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!age In Town, Cla.e To Grocery
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mAT \J~ AAAS1'1
TE.It.PER mK
TilER£!

Television
Viewing

NOT f/IY 1. ·1~.

50 ~00 Hrr YOUR ~L Iii Til€ WE ...
DID IT R€N.l.Y ~ 'f01.1FW..IlEm:Rf
TO THROI-l YOOR "·I~ I~ fofTEit IT'?

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sale

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Ohio

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1'" ,

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Trucks for

1992

10, 1992

72 nuckl for Sale

C::.l~J!!, ~~1.0.

11. . . . . .

· lor Virgo 's Aslro-&lt;&gt;raph predlcliona to· peropecllve.
d~y by maiUng $l .25 plus a long, Hlf· PIICEI (Fell. 20-llalch 20) In a
addresoed, slemped envelope lo Allro- lion todll)' lhal requires a teem
Graph, c/O thla 08'lilapaper, P.O. Box ; don'l slap out and try lo lead the
91428, Clevtfand, OH 44101·3428. Be . rade - unless you rHHy know
aurelo slate your zodiac algn.
you're doing. II m)ogulded, you
BERNICE
LIIRA (lapL 23-0cL 23) Usually, your take everyone down lh&amp; wrong path.
BEDEOSOL
logic and sound Judgment are lwo or ARIES (ahrch 21·AptU 11) Be
your mosl admirable aasela. However, carelul today that those you're ln~,Jv8(
you might not ~se lither today, putllng with don't accuse }'Oii ol 1ry1ng to ma·
yourself In a potlllon where lhe odds nlpulale them Into doing l~lngs lor you
are slacl&lt;ed against you.
which you can do lor yourself.
BCOIIPIO (Oct. :14-Now. 22) Because ol TAURUI (April »MeJ 20) II'S best nol
lntenH lsellngs, Scorpios somellmes lo volunl-lo manll(l81unds lor an en·
exproaalhemsetves In an manner w.hlch deavor today In which lrleilda are In·
olherallnd offenolve - even when no Ill . valved. The probabllllles lor something
will Ia Intended. Be carelul you're nor golnll wrong ""'htQh.•·
.
(jully of lhlt loday.
. . . . _ (MeJ 11.Ji!MID) ~· t;en·
• IAGITTARIUI (Now. :p.Gec, 11) n lor. olcllralton qn· your pall could b1 ,...
some re119f1 your obJecll- are untul- qulrecf lodll)' regarding lndMduela wllh
ftlled today, don'l start lOoking around · wllom you're otrtvtng to IICh- a comltpl.11, 11112
lor scapagoa11. Your !allure could be mon objecltve. Oon'l try to make It 1
one-man lhow.
.
Partnershlpo lor non........,erclal pur- due to your _, laully lectlcs.
1
p - should work oul rllher Will lor CAPIIICOIIN (Dec. ~-.1111. 11) A hard CANCaR (.lin 11......., II) If your pr•
you In the year altead. When Hcome1 to lesion In learning not 10 lllk when you -llllon 11 too emotional, an ~
bualneas mallera,lhollgh, you're apllo lhouldn'l mlgltt be brought home to you . teet atrongtr about Ia noi likely Ia
do biller on your_, ,
loday *'*'you're lorced to prove thai . support. 111M what you hll/8 10 uy
VIIIGO (Aug. n-e.pt. 22) The quickest . lhe lrlll llalementa you're making are , upon llc:la 8l1d logic.
way 10 lnhlbll your altrlbuln and ablll- .Indeed lacta.
LIO (.luiJ 22-AIII. 221 HandHng r•
lies today Is to compatre yoursell nega- . AQUAIHUI (.ian. »Feb. 11) Do not. sources, wllllher lhtr're your
or
tlvety to otherl, Be gratolul lor your glfla .. lltct lf1Yihlng lor granlod In your buill-, olhcn', 1'!1tahl no1 be your long 111H Ia&lt;
and use lhem wtlhoul fUr. Gel l)ump ,... dsetlngs loday, even It you're In-· day. II you do gel Involved, though, be
on IHe by underllandlng lhe lnltuences vol.ed wtlh lrltflds. Each could lnler· auralo keep lmpeccallll record1.
UC!-ni"!l you In ~he year ~d. Send prll lhe Ierma from an erronoous.

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officers at the Middleport Masonic
Temple.

Community calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received weD in adVIIIICe
to assure publication in the calendar.
THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Calf!Sh Festival, committee meeting, Thursday,
7 p.m. Middleport Council Chambers.

Thursday, September 10, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Luthetan Church~ annual Harvest
Festival, ~unday, II a.m., with SL
Paul Luth~ Church, at St John.
Rochelle Paul will be the guest
speaker. Potl111:k dinner at noon and
afternoon service at I :45 p.m.
Hymn sin' and 'speaker, "Women
in the Mimstry."
RACINE - American Legion

Racine Post 602 will host the
Eighth District Legion Fall Conference at the post liome Sunday at
9:30 a.m. Dinner at noon. All
legion members and the public
invited.
MIDDLEPORT - International
Order of Job's Daughters will hold
practice Sunday, 2 p.m., for all

LONG BOTTOM - Freedeom
Gospel Mission Church, Bald
Knob Stiversville Road, homecoming, Sunday 'beginning at 9:30 a.m.
Earl Morrison, Charleston, W.Va.,
will be the guest speu,er. Ro¥er
Willford, pastor, inVIIes the public.
DARWIN - Bowers family
reunion, Sunday, southbound roadside park on Route 33 near Darwin.
Potluck dinner at noon.

CROSS LANE, W.VA.- Liberty Mountaineers perform Sunday
noon to 5 p.m. al the Burdette
reunion on Rocky Fork Road in
Cross Lanes, W.Va.

Hill reunion, Sunday, Sial Mill
Park, Racine. Bring a co~ dish.
Dinner at I p.m. AU friends and
relatives welcome.

ALBANY • Rawlings reunion.
Sunday, at Lake Snowden near
CHESTER - Chester Church of Albany. Picnic dinner, I p.m.
the Nazarene, homecoming, SunSHADE - Zion United Brethren
day. Regular morning services folChurch,
homecoming, Sunday. Serlowed by hymn sing at 1:30 p.m.
with the Overcomers of Lancaster vices are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Featured
featuring Billy Hall formerly of singers are Revelations and
George. Dinner, 12:30 p.m. SpeakRutland.
er is Joe Sayre. floyd Ross, pasttl'.
RACINE - Chapman and Myrta inviles the public.

POMEROY - Public dinner,
·Senior Citizens Center, Pomeroy,
5-6:30 p.m. Cost is $3 with pie
·extra. The Classics will prov1de
entertainment. Big Bend Cloggers
wiD present a short program at6:45
p.m. Public invited.

Ohio Lottery

Braves edge
Reds, hike
division lead

Pick 3:

301
Pick 4:
5657

Page 4

Vol. 43, No. 98
C4pyrlghtod 1882

POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta S1gma Phi
Sorority, meetS Thursday, 7:30
p.m., Grace Episcopal Church .
Maida Mora will have the program.
Hostesses are Nellie Brown and
Lillian Moore.

Chief justice candidates
feud; Taft upheld in court

ROCK SPRINGS - Rock
Springs Grange meets Thursday. 8
p.m., grange haD.
MARlETTA • Easter Seal Society of the River Cities, board meet-ing, S p.m. Easter Seal Office,
annual dinner meeting aboard Valley Gem, 6:30-8:30 p.m.

FRIDAY
LONG BOTTOM - Faith Full
Gospel Church in Long Bottom
will have a hymn sing Friday at 7
p.m. Pastor Steve Reed inviles the
public. FeUowship will foUow.

18 ORE HOURS!!

•"•

Wr

•

BE PATIENT - Patience and a little extra
time are required tor travel on Main Street in
Pomeroy nowadays, due to milling and paving
work wblcb began last week •. The work is
approximately bait completed, according to
Nancy Yoacham of tbe Ohio Deparlmenl or

POMEROY - Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, DAR, meets Friday, Meigs County Courthouse at
I: 30 P·lll· "The Courts and the
Constitution," will be presenred by
Meigs County Court of Common
Pleas Judge Fred W. Crow III.
Dessert follows at Crow's Steak
House. Hostesses are Mrs. JB1Des
O'Brien, Miss Eleanor Smith, Mrs.
Dale Duoon, Mrs. George Morris,
.Miss Lucille Smith and Mrs. Wendell Cleland.

Transportation. Wbile waiting In a seemingly
endless tine or traffic, !DOtorists can take consolation in the anticipated finished product, which
will afford a smoother ride ror travelers. (Sentinel Pboto by Brian J. Reed)

By JUl.IE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Starr
Program for the 1992 Middleport Catfish Festival, sponsored by
the Middleport Community Association, was announced today.
The festival will be held Sept
19 in Middleport.
Entertainment will begin with a
tap dancing performance by Barbora's School of Dance at II a.m.
followed by the baton twirling
group, Ruffles and Flourishes. Dee
and DaUas, who perform a variety
of music with keyboanl, harmonica
and voice, will appear atll:30 a.m.
followed by tile recognition·of the
Middleport Festival Queen atl2:30

POMEROY - Hillside Baptist
Church will have a hymn sing Friday at 7 p.m. on the Pomeroy p!rking lot stage. Feawred singers are
·Children of God, The Redeemed
Quartet, God's Little Lambs, The
Partakers, The Joyful Hearts and
Linda Jones.

p.m.
.
.
. Entef!~!inment dunng the afternoon w1ll feature. the Southern
High Cheerl~~rs at!, 1:30, and. 2
p.m. The M•dmght Cloggers w•ll
perfo':"' from l-l :30 p.m. and Denver Rice w!th h•s _ever-popular toilet sea~ guttar, Will tak~ the stage
from 1.30-2 p.m. The Ritz Band, a
DlxJeland style band, will perform
fro~ 2-3 p.m · follow~d by the
mus•c ~.f local countr,r smger Kim
Batey. Gospel Hour ~ill be fealured from 4-5 p.m. w1th performances by Kyger Creek Boys and
Jan and K~thy · The ~·g Bend
Cloggers will make theu appearance at 5 p.m. followed by the

SATURDAY
. RACINE - Descendants of Carl,
·Emmett. Corbett. Nan Frazier, Ed
~and Lena Manley, family reunion,
~ Saturday, Star Mill Park, Racine, 1:4 p.m. Bring covered dish and any
:infoonation about the Manley fam;ilies. No alocholic beverages.
•

: POMEROY - The Pomeroy
·Senior Citizens will have a dance
~ Saturday from 8-11 p.m. Smokey
:Mountain Drifters with Alvin
&gt;Chules, fiddle, Odie Chutes, banjo,
:Dan Trine, guitar, and Arman
·.Maze, wiU provide music. Arthur
:-connant will be the caUer. Bring
:snacks for the snack !able. Public
·invited.
•

'.

6P

:

DARWIN - Burlingham Camp
· of Modern Woodmen, potluck
:cookout Saturday, 6:30p.m., south;bound roadside park, Route 33 near
:Darwin. The camp will furnish
: hamburgers, hotdogs and condi• ments. This will be the last cookout
: or the season and everyone is wel:come.

~a

P WEDNESDAY

;. MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline
:chapter No. 172, OES, Middleport,
-'reception honoring Grand Page to
:Deputy Grand Matron Sue Stan,
:saturday, 7:30p.m. Family and
:friends invited.
: FAIRPLAIN, W.VA. - Liberty
•Mountaineers perform Saturday at
:1aekson County Jamboree, Fair;plain, W.Va.
•

: LOTTRIDGE · Cartha~Th~­
:ship Festival, Saturday and Sunday,
•noon to 11:30 p.m. Saturday and
. :noon to 8 p.m. Sunday. Country
:music, arts and crafts, games,
•prizes, tractor pull, refreshments.
•
•

~ RUTLAND - Leadin$ Creek
:Conservancy District, special meet:ing, Saturday, 8 a.m., at the office.

Two incredible hours. 120 magical minutes when you can be ad:nitted to a
store .full of furniture-where all furniture items are marked 50% OFF! We
don't mean "up to" 50% off. We mean HALF THE REGULAR TICKETED
PRICE! In, fact, this offer is so spectacular, we cann~t leave the doors open
lon9e; than two hours. So, after that time, the doors Will be locked and no one
else will be admitted into this sale. But, we'll be taking orders for all the customers who are inside--no matter how long tt takes! Bring your cash, Visa,
MasterCard! Or, use our convenient credit terms! .No phone orders! All sales
final! Get here early to get in lfne so you'll be sure of getting into .the store
_before this super sale is over!

•

: RUTLAND - Watet service 10
;an Leading Creek Conservancy
:District customen eas1 of Rutland
-wiD be diSM)Ied Salunlay between
:!he hours of bm. and 4 p.m.
; .
SUNDAY
' PINE GROVE • St. John

••

By ASSOCIATED PRESS
Chief Justice Thomas Moyer
and his re-election challenger,
Judge Robert Gorman, are condnuing their unusuaUy bitter campaign
for the Ohio Supreme Court.
Gorman, a Democrat from
Cincinnati, accused Moyer on
Thursday of taking advantage of
expensive job perks while cutting
money for vital services provided
by the court.
Moyer, a Republican seeking a
second, six-year term, responded
that Gorman knows little about the
court and the financial dilemma
brought on by the recession.
Their exchange came during a
busy political day in Ohio that
included a visit to Dayton and
Akron by Tipper Gore, wife of
Democradc vice presidential candidate AI Gore, and some setbacks
for third-party and other candidales
challenging decisions by Secretary
of State Bob Taft that ruled them
ineligible for the baUot
Gorman, judge of the 1st Ohio
District Court of Appeals, criticized Moyer for keepmg "expensive travel perks for himself''
while ordering budget cuts that
affected the court tibrary and other
programs.
He said Moyer has traveled to
the Caribbean, Hawaii and elsewhere while cutting services "that

are crucial to reducing backlog
(cases) and getting the legal process moving.''
Barry Bennett, Moyer's campaign manager, replied that Gorman knows little about the court
and is making "blind criticisms"

because the cuts were reqUired
because of lhe recession.
Bennett said Moyer's trips on
court business cost about $3,000,
compared with budget cuts totaling
S1.2 million. Politicians have made
empty accusations before " bul this
takes the cake," Bennett said.

Residents protest
proposed power line
HUNTINGTON, W.Va . (AP)
- Residents fighting a plan to
string a power line across southern
West Virginia got an audience with
the utility's president
E. Linn Draper, president of
Columbus, Ohio-based American
Electric Power Co., met for more
than a half-hour with members of
Common Ground, a Monroe County citizens group. Group members
had been prolesting outside a hotel
where Draper was speaking to a
coal industry meeting Thursday.
Draper answered the group's
questions and even agreed to go on
a canoe trip with them to view the
area that could be affected by the
power line. He also said he would
take the group's concerns back to
the company.
In exchange, Draper asked the

group not to make it an issue of
coal versus nuclear power.
Draper, a nuclear power expert,
took over as American Electric
president on March I. Some people
i~ coal country feared that Draper's
hmng s•gnaled a shift from coal 10
nuclear energy, despite the fact that
no nuclear power plants are being
built in the United Slates.
American Electric, parent of
Appalachian Power Co., has said It
wants to build the 765,000-volt
power line from Oceana to
Cloverdale, Va.. to handle
increased demands.
. ''This ma~ be the flfSt project in
h1story that IS both bad environmentally and economically," said
Bob Zacher, director of Common
Ground.

Activities are announced
for Sept.19 Catfish Festival Restaurant closes; questions raised

. ANTIQUITY - Faith Fellowship
Crusade for Christ, Route 338,
Antiquity, aU night service, Friday,
· 7 p.m., with Gospel Travelers, End
T1me Singers, United Gospel
Singers and more. Public invited.

•

2 Soctlono, 14 Pagel 25 cento
.AMultimedia Inc. Newtpapar

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September 11, 1992

TUPPERS PLAINS -.Tuppers
Plains VFW Post No. 9053 meets
Thursday, 7:30p.m., post home .
All members attend.

POMEROY - The Big Bend
Sternwheel Association will meet
Thursday at 8 p.m. at the Ca!pen·ters Hall in Pomeroy. Anyone
interested in helping with the festival is urged to attend.

Low tonight ln mid -40s.
Saturday, sunny. High in mid70s.

PIII•Nat

,.all! UP

.,anwna
"' DLII!IIII

··--·

All
items
Storewide at 50% OFF
2Hours
I

ENTERTAINMENT • Sweet Mouataln Soand wiD perform
ror Middleport's Cattlsb Festival on Sept. 111. Members or the
group Include, 1-r, Roaer Gilmore, kaeeUng, Jennirer Sheets, Mary
GUIIIOI'e, seated·, Ron Ash and Tim Glaze. A full slate or activities
Is planned for the 1992 Festival.

r----Local briefs--Local theft reported
An~e

Manuel of Sycamore Grove reported on Thursday evening
that WJthin the last two weeks, her trailer had been entered and that
a 100-amp circuit breaker and an entenainment center taken. No
signs of forced entry were found.

Ja"ell a"ested on wa"ants

8Al ~oc.o~
l'kooo ~A6· lAOS

G,u,,,,,,

Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported on Thursday
that Terry M. Jarrell, '38. Goose Creek, S.C., formerly of Briar
Ridge, was arrested on Thursday altern being stopped for a routine
traffic violation in Rutland. The police computer alerted officers
that then: were three bench warrants from Meigs County Court
, against Jarrell. He was lodged in jail pending a hearing on Friday.
· Jarrell, according to Sheriff Soulsby, owed a fine, failed to
· Continued on page 3
.

music of Sweet Mountain Sound at
5:30p.m. and' the Ohio Valley
Two-Steppe!s at 6 f.m. Entertainment 'for the day wil conclude with
organ and dance music provided by
George HaU. .
·
In addition 10 this full schedule
of entertainment, there also will be
craft demonstrations at Dave Diles
Park from noOll to 4 p.m. Demonstrations include chair caning by
Mary Wise, tole painting by Marllyn Meier, bears by Susan Baker,
quilting by the Middleport Church
of Christ Quitters, and tye-dying by
MicheUe Garretson.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
will be conducting health checks
from noon to 2 p.m. at Dave Diles
Park including blood pressure and
blood sugar moniloring. '
· The Middleport Fire Department will hold a chicken barbecue
at the Legion Park on Mill Sueet
and catfish sandwiches will be
available from the Catfish Festival
Committee of the Middl~ Community Association at Mitch's Produce Stand.
Reservations for spaces along
North Second for craft, game, and
refreshment booths may be made
with Brian Johnson, 992-3481.
Spaces wiD he available on the day
of festival between the hours of
noon and 7 p.m.
Queen Contest
The queen conteSt is under the
din:ction of Meni Amsbary, a former Big Bend Regaaa queen, and it
is open for Meigs County girls
between the ages of 16-19.
To compete, girls must register
with Mrs. Amsbary either by telephone 992-6826 or 992-2550, or by
mail at 34496 State Route 7,
Pomeroy.
A queen. a fust runner-up and a
Miss Congeniality will be selec~
by out-of-town judges. Pub~ic
spealcing abitity will weigh heavily
n Lhe selection of the Middleport
Festival Queen, Amsbary said.
There will be no talent nor bathing
suit competition, but there will be
formal ~own competition.
Jud~mg will take place Monday
beginnmg at 6:30p.m. at the Captain' s House in Middleport.
Announcement of the queen will
come on the day of festival from
the llatbed stage on North Second
Avenueatl2:30 p.m.
Numerous gifts donated by Middleport merchants will be presenred
to ihe queen and her court. Special
donations include the crown by
Ingels, the sash by Mill End Fabric
Shop. the flowers for the queen's
bouquet by the Middleport Flower
Shop, flowers for the otha' coniestaRts by Arthur and Beulah Suauss,
and trophies from Middleport Trophies.
Bob Gilmore, president of the
association, and seVeral O!hcr association members are responsible for
planning the activities.

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
The closing of Pleasers Restaurant leaves another vacant building
in Pomeroy, along with 20 former
employees and questions about its
effect on the local revolving loan
program.
The restaurant, owned by Hill
and Associates and managed by
James HiU of Syracuse, was located on West Main Street in
Pomeroy, and closed its doors after
business on Saturday. A
$148,299.04 foreclosure action was
filed against the firm by Farmers
Bank and Savings Company on
Tuesday. Also named as co-defendants in the suit are Hill and his
wife, Randi, Pomeroy Accountant
Kenneth R. Utt and several area
lenders who are possible lien holders against Hill's Syracuse residence and against fixtures in the
restaurant No real estate purchase
was financed, as the building and
land on West Main Street are not
owned by Hill.
Hill was also the owner of the
Pleasers store on Jackson Avenue
at 24th Street in Point Pleasant,
W.Va., which he closed in April.
At the time of that closing, Hill
said that the Pomeroy store was
kept open because it received more
business than its Point Pleasant
counterpart. On Thursday, Hill said
that a poor business climate was
lhe reason for Saturday's closing.
The biggest thing that hun us
was the economy," Hill said.
"Everything in general seemed to
work against us. We had a wartime,
then the problems at the mines, and
the economy just hasn 'I come
around."
Hill said that the numbers of
employees at the store have dwindled from 34 when he purchased
the business in 1990 to 10 about20,
most of whom earned the minimum
wage of $4.25 per hour. Approximately IS of those jobs were fulltime positions.
Revolving loans
Retention of those local jobs
originally qualified Hill for revolving loan funds from two sources.
He received a loan of$31,500 from
Buckeye Hills/Hocking Valley
Regional Development District in
Marietta, and $4 7,400 from the
county's revolving loan fund.
According to the county's loan
fund administrator, Mary Hobstetter, those programs are both funded
through the Economic Development Administration in the form of
federll monies distributed through
the Ohio Department of Development for the parpose of creating
and retaininJ local jobs. When loan
payments are received back into
the program, they are used to
finance Olher business lOans, hence
the name, ''revolvinJloan".

The loan io Pleasers through financial backers, especially FarmBH/HVRDD was part of a nine- ers Bank and the county commiscounty pool of revolving loan sioners.
funds, in which each counly
"The hank and the commissionreceives a proportional share of ers bent over backwards for us,"
EDA funds, administered through Hill said. "They really tried to keep
BH/HVRDD.
this business alive, and they cerBH/HVRDD and the county tainly are no enemies of mine."
commissioners hold second and
Hill arrived in Meigs County
third lien positions on the equip- from Wellston in 1980, when he
ment at Pleasers, the purchase of became lhe manager of lhe Burger
which was financed through the Chef restaurant which occupied the
revolving loan programs. There- Pleasers building . When Burger
fore, the chance for recovery of Chef closed and Pleasers opened in
loan funds is slim. Hobstetter the mid-1980's, Hill remained as
stressed 1hat no local funds have manager. He said yesterday !hat he
been lost, but that future business would lilce to continue living and
loan applications will be effected working here.
"I hope to stay in the communisince the loan fund regenerates
itself through re-payment.
ty," Hill said. "We really love it
Thanks backers
here and would like for our chilln thanking his patrOns, HiD also dren to Slay in lhe local schools and
extended his appreciation to his;_..:.gra_du_a_~e_h_ere_._
.. - - - :

CLOSED - Pleasers Restaurant In Pomeroy closed its doors
last weekend due to a poor business climate, according to
owner/manager Jim Hill or Syracuse. A foreclosure action was
filed against the firm on Tuesday. (Photo by Brian J. Reed)

Pomeroy youth missing
A 14-year-old Pomeroy youth
has been missin$ since Saturday.
Pomeroy pohce said that Roger
Barnhart, was reported missing by
his parents, Brenda and Pete Bamhart, 212 Rock SL, Pomeroy, Sunday evening. They told police thai
their son left home about noon Saturday, and was last seen in Middleport that evening.
Information on Barnhart has
been entered into official agency
computers, according to Pomeroy
Chief of Police Gerald Rought He
said that it has now been conftrmed
that the youth was in Athens over
the weekend and it was later reported that he was seen in Portsmouth.
The boy has brown hair and
brown eyes, is five foot, four inches tall, and weighs about 120
pounds. He attends So~them High
ROGER BARNHART
School. Anyone w1th mformation
may call Pomeroy Police, 992- 6411, or the Bamharts, 992-6556.

,,

.

'

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