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..." .,..

KRAFT

MACARONI
&amp; CHEESE

STORE HOURS
Mottday~ Sunday
. 8 AM-10' PM

7"!. OZ. BOX

s

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY; OH.
WE RESERVE. THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD SUN., SEPT. 13 THRU SEPT. 19, 1992 :

Ohio Lottery

Expos trim
Pirates lead
to 3 games
Page7

Pick 3:
619
Pick 4:
1602
Super Lotto:
21 ·34-35·39·40-41
Kicker :
730263

•

:e·
'

•••
Vol. 43, No. 102
Copyrlghled 1112

s

$139

Steak/Roast. . . . . . . La.

59

1

·-··-·"LB. $
FLAVORITE ·

Bacon. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .La.

USDA CHOICE BEEF

$199

Round Steak. . . . . . . . . . . .LB.
·CO~K'_S • SMOKED

·10P1cn1c
Ham..................La.
OZ. LINKS OR LB. ROLL
MOUNTAINEER

Sausage. . -........-.. -.. -.
ECKRICH ASSORTED

Lunc:h Meats. . . _a oz.

ECKRICH

$119

•

COCA-COLA
PRODUCTS

99
ACCIDENT SCENE • Three Mason County residents were injured Wednesday afternoon in the acci·
dent pictured above. The head-on roUislon occurred on S.R. 62 around 4:20 p.m. Shown is Sgt. G.L. Clark
ot tbe Point Pleasant Detachment- West Virginia State Police taking information at tbe scene.

$1.69 SUNSHINE
DOG FOOD

.

$ 19

Three injured in head-on collision
Three people were taken to area
hospitals following a head-on collisian on S.R. 62 Wednesday after·
noon, according to a spokesman for
the Point Pleasant Detachment·
WestVu-giniaStatePolice.
Rick Bush, Sr., 38, of Lelart,
Diana·' Bwris, 28, of Letart ·and
Christine M. Gibbeau~ 42, of Point
Pleasant were all injured in the 4:20
p.m. aacident.
The Point Pleasant Fire
Deparll!lent's Jaws of Life were
used to ,CJ:triclile Bush IUid Burris
from his1988FordEscon.
·
d a·
·
Bums
an tbbeaut were both
taken io Pleasant Valley Hospital
where they underwent surgery. A

20 lB. BAG

1
89.(

GENERAL MILLS

CHEER lOS

$ 59

s

69

WASHINGTON(AP) - Inthe
hea.t of a re-election campaign in
whtch he has accused Demlicrat
Bill Clinton.of ~isi.ng taxe~ and
fees and enJoymg 11, Pres1dent
Bush is grousing about yet another.
fee increase.
But this is one !hat Bush waniS
- and !hat the Senate is ignoring.
In his campaign remarks, the
president has left the impression
tiJat the only revenue increase he
has been i!JVOivC!I ,With was the
1990 tax b11l he s1gned - a fiveyear, $165 billion measure that was
one of the larg¢st in history.
But his tiff with' the Senate on
Wednesday underlines a fact Bush

BR~UGHTON;s

2Yo ·Mllk. . . . . . . . . . . GAL.

PHILADELPHIA

Cream Cheese............aoz.
KEMP'sPAIL .

6.5 • 8 OZ. BOX

$189

99(
$ 99

2
(
TV D1nner. . . . . a.s-1o oz.. 69
Ice Cream."_.._s auart

MORTON • ·

s

39

~blientreportedadeerwasthe
~ . of a single vehicle accident
Wednesday morning on Sandhill

Road

·
Apparently Eric D. Myers, 31, of
Henderson. was traveling east on
SandhiU Road 81 5:15 a.m. when a
deer ran into the driver's side of his
199000dge.MyershadnolirileiD
avoid hittirlg the anim~.
Neither Myers nor-htscger,
John Clonch, 29, of enderson.
· 'wed Dam
to the
were lnJ
•
age
vehicle wasestimatedat$800.
There were no cititations issued.

ne~er

r~iling

discusses while
agauikt taXes: ~ has sought doZC!Is
of tax and fee mcreases wonh bll·
'lions "ofdollars in every l;'udget ~
has llroposed smce becommg prcs1dent m 1989.
Bush ·was upset that a Senate
bill fi~ancing federal health programs om1tted a proposal he has
made to charge fees to hospitals
~ ~ursi~g homes receiving feder·
al m~~ons.
" lgnonng t,he proposed fee
~.U!d result1n fewer ~llh ~
fac1bnes bemg mspected, Bush s
Office ,of Management and Bud~et
wrote m a policy statement dehv·
ered to Senate leaders. "The Sen·
ate is 1/fSed to adopt the president's

· JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) Ohio Gov. George Voinovich
expreS.!ed confidence today !hat his
visit wO!Jld paye the way for more
American small businesses to come
to Indonesia.
"The most important tntng
abotit our trade mission ls that we
are breaking the ground for others
to come," Voinovich, who leads
Ohio's first business and trade mis·
sion 10 Indonesia, wid a news con·

so LB. PACKAGE

90

ferencc.
"1 sincerely believe that as a
result pf .this visit, many more
American smaU business groups or
pewle, fa,ticularly from my own'
state o Ohio, will come," he
added.
He said that when he was elect·
ed governor in 1991, his regional
inrerest was in East Europe. But he
then concluded that he should go to
the Association of Southeast Asian

.Local· br·I·ef:s ----.

·

proposal.' '
The. statement seemed to con traSt w1th Bush's frequent attempts
to portray himself as. a president
who wants to avotd revenue
increases -and Clinton as a leader
who would noL
"Who do you trust in this election?" Bush asked at the Republic·an National Convention last
month. "The candidate who has
raised taxes one time and regrets it,
Or t1!e candidate WhO raised taxes
and fees 128 times and enjoyed it
every time?"
Despite remarks like !hat, Bush
repeatedly ha$ found it necessary to
seek higher taxes and fees to
finance govemmentpro~s.

Nations region bec••\se its economy is growing faster than those of
other places in the world. .
. The ASEAN region includes
Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, the
Philjppines, Thailand and Brunei.
"The ~rospects of our people
doing busmess will be more likely
here than perhaps they would be in
some other places in the world,"
Voinovich said.
·
Voinovich's mission includes

14 food
Ohio-based
companies
dealing
in
processing
and packaging
.
•
· machinery, machine tools, and
plastics production and processing
The Meigs County Sheriff's Deparunent investigated an appar·
machinery.
·
ently self-inflicted gunshot wound early this moming.
·
The Sept. 15-18 visit to Jakarta
According to Deputy Jeff Miller, the investigalin~ officer, a can
is the last leg of an ASEAN tour
was receiVed 81 appmximal.ely 7:50 a.m. from Metgs Emergency
tiW ll1so has taken the delegation to
Services regarding a shOOting on State Route 124 ~Rutland. .
Thailand, Singapore and Malaysia.
Burdell Black. 90, was found at his lelidencc, with a gunshot
Ohio is the third-larRest export·
wound in the head, a .22 caliber gun next to him. He was llansport·
ing stale in the United Swes. with
ed to Grant Medical Centtr in Colwnbus by Life Right helicop!Cr.
exportS tolaling $25.8 billion annu·
His condition was unavailable aqxesstime.
·
ally. according to recent U.S.
Department of Commerce statistics.
Its exports to Indonesia in 1991
were valued at $38.6 million, an
Suite Representative Mark Malone (I)-South Point) wiD atterid
estimated 36 percent incmuc from
Saturday's Catfish Festival in Middlcpon. and wiD be available to
the previops year. The ·top three
answer questions regarding s"te govemtnenL
,
exportS
to the country were indus·
Malone will be at the Meigs C01111ty Democratic Party booth,
trial.
and
communications machin·
located neat Snouffer's Fire and Safety Equipment {fOIII 3l0 4:30
ery
and
computer equipment,
p.m.
chemicals and alli(ld produciS, IUid
,.
transpOrtation equipment

Deputtes investigate shooting

GROUND

CHUCK
10 LB. PACKAGE

90

Malone to visit festival

..

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JJ
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By BRIAN J. REED
Sentlael News Starr
D.V. Weber Construction Com·
pany of Reedsville was awarded a
bid for removal of old fuel storage
tanks and installation of tanks at
the Meigs County Highway
Department when the Meigs Coun·
ty Commissioners met in regular
session on Wednesday. .
Two bids for the work were
opened at last week's meeting, and
action was tabled at that time,
pending review by County Engineer Philip Robens. The bid of the
Weber finn was for $44,815. A bid
in the amount of $44,995 was
received from Jeffers Excavating of
Pomeroy.
In conjunction with yesterday's
bid award, the commissioners
authorized an insurance voucher,
required before work on the tank
removal and replacement begins.
The board continued to discuss
a proposal that would offer "freedom of choice" for its employees
on the county's self-insurance med·
ical plan. Charles Riffle and Kenneth McCollough of Swisher and
Lohse Pharmacy in Pomeroy had
approached the board about the
possibility of changing the county's
prescription program from a mail·
order plan to one which aUows customers to use a prescription card at

the pharmacy of their choice. Currently, all covered prescriptions are
purchased through a mail order
fmn in SL Louis, Mo.
Shirley Johnson and Ed Tyburs·
ki, third party administrators with
Medical Claims Service of
Ravenswood, W.Va., met with the
commissioners, Riffle and McColIough, and outlined what action
was necessary on the part of the
board and any phannac1es interest·
ed in participating in the ' 'E~press
Scripts" card program.
Although a one to two percent
increase may be e~perienced by the
county under the new service, the
pian will not effect county employees' co·payments on prescription
purchases. Therefore, their cost
will not change.
.
Roberts and county garage personnet discussed a road abandonment request in Scipio Township.
Jeffrey Latta had requested !hat a
section of Township Road 284 be
abandoned to accommodate new
home construction. That request
was made in August, 1990, and
Latta has since modified hi s
request. Necessary action to
approve Latta's request, and the
matter of whether another site
review and public hearing would
be required were discussed. No
action was taken, although Roberts

M "ller fioun d
~

agreed to investigate the requesL
Mike Swisher, director of the
Meigs County Department of
Human Services, and Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman discussed a
proposal in which the DHS would
purchase a parking area from the
Middleport Housing Corporation
for $30,000. Swisher discussed
problems with parking which have
arisen for both employees and
clients in light of the new DHS
facility.
The space is located at Race
Street and Third Avenue and would
provide parking for 34 cars. AOOth·
er 16 spaces could be developed if
two buildings on the lot were
demolished. Further site review
will take place prior to action on
the proposal.
The board also approved pay·
ment of $350 to the Ohio Depanment of Developmen~ Division of
Tourism. The payment represeniS
Meigs County s share of a statewide study, which will measure the
impact of tourism on local communibes across Ohio.
Present were : Roberts, Ted
Warner and David Spencer from
the county highway department;
Commissioners David Koblentz,
Manning Roush and Richard Jones;
and Clerk Mary Hobstetter.

•lt'\1 on •npe Char•oe

gu~
"

J

• "

b

"
· ·
George W. (DiU) Miller of Middleport was found gul'lty on
Wednesday by a jury in Meigs
County Common Pleas Coun on a
charge of rape.
MiUer was indicted in February

S ia1
lOr Mark Sh ts
. . Sh
has
f Gpecll ' plrosec~ d h
ee
uthgauon.. eelS
recommended
o a 1po 1s tne t e case on
e maxunum sentence of 10 to 25
behalf of the state, and Miller was years and a fme of $10,000.
represented by Pomeroy attorneys
Miller faces similar charges in
Ch ar 1es Kmg
· ht an d Ch nstop
·
her another case, alleging sexual conTenaglia.
tact with different female victims,

~~~~n~ecasebeganonTuesday

completion:allfe·sentenceinves·

~~:.~:ro~~e~: :w~~=:- pla~:n:nn;:d~~S~~~~rf~:~w~: ~~ ~;~;7; ~t~~~~X~~~ :~

Voinovich confident his visit
paving way for small businesses

GROUND
BEEF

s

incomplete.
The Mascn County Sheriff's

ignores prop(Jsed fee increase

RGER
HELPER

Lettuce. . . . . . . . . . . . . . HEAD

hospital spokesman reported both
were listed in fail\ condition
Thursdaymoming. "
Bush was taken· to Holzer Medi·
cal Center. A HMC spokesman said
he was in guarded condition
Thursday rooming.
·
AsSisting at the ~ were the
Mascn County Sheriff's Depart·
men~ Point Pleasant EMS and
Mason EMS.
.
Gl6'1\eii w as driving a 1990
OldSinobile. Both vehicles were lis·
ted as iotallosses.
The state police spokesman said
B
li
ush was trave ng north on S.R.
62 and Gibbeatn was traveling
south. Details of the accident are

BUSh compl azns
• as senat e

15 OZ. BOX

1

A lluiUmoall Inc. Newapapor

Weber firm awarded
storage tank bid

24 PACK
12 OZ. CANS

s

2 Soctlona 1 1• Pogea 25 conll

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, September 17, 1992

20 OZ. CAN

.

low 80s.

'•"

3 DIAMOND
PINEAPPLE

FRESH PORK BUTT

Low tonight In mld·60s.
Fr iday, porUy &lt;loudy. Hlgb In

• ·l

Judge FredW. ~wiD'scourt

Cable TV price regulation
ISSUe ready or Bush's desk
~

•

representatives called a news conWASHINGTO~ (AP) Congress is likely soon to send ference Wednesday to counteract
President Bush a bill that responds cable's media campaign against
to a multitude of customer com- their bill.
" We creared a monsrer in 1984
plainiS about the cost and quality of
and
now we are paying the price,''
cable television.
said
Rep. Christopher Shays, R·
The legislation was expected to
Conn.,
m a reference to the year
be approved today by the House,
cable was deregulated to help it
foUowed shortly by the Senate.
The cable industry has cam· grow.
The cable industry now is a
paign.ed relentlessly against the
measure, saying in newspaper and multibillion-dollar business that
cable channel ads that it would enjoys monopoly conditions in the
raise cosiS that would have to be overwhebning majority of commu·
passed on to customers.
" Some in the cable industry
must feel !hat if you tell the big lie
often enough and loudly enough,
somebody will start 10 believe i ~ "
said Rep . Edward Markey , D·
Mass., sponsor of the legislation in
the House.
He and a group of other House
The Wahama .Band was vicmembers and consumer and labor torious at the Hurricane Invitational

nities.
Th e re-regulation bill would
hold monopoly cable companies to
Federal Communications Commis·
sion rare standards on hasic service
and foster competition, which is
seen as ultimately the best way to
control prices.
The FCC would determine
" reasonable" rates and ensure that
equipment such as convener boxes
and remote control devices are not
too costly.

Wahania Band wins six
awards at Hurricane

Band Festival Saturday, the first
competition of the season for the
White Falcons.
The hand placed first in Class C .
with a total score of 78.6 out of
possible 100. The color guard came
1n first in Class C and second over.
aU, with a score of 88 out of a pos- ·
sible 100. Also placing first was the
~ussion section, judged best at
the festival with a score of 8.4 out
of I 0; and the Wahama soloists,
Emy Zuspan and Carla Sayre, who
also placed first.
Wahama's field commander,
Bethany Roush, placed !biro in
Class C and founh overall with an
84 out of 100.
The judges commented on
Wahama 's continued tradition of
bend exeellence, difficulty of
"!USic, llld the pride and dignitY :
displayed by the band. according 1n ·
WHS director, Kenny Bond.
•:
The White Falcon Band also :
brought .home the boosters plaque
for havmg the most supporters
·
RECEIVES AWARD • Wabama 1111 corps cCHaptalns Kendra present at the festival.
Wahama's
next
competition
is
·
ReJDoldl ud Dan Rous•, and rille captain Allllft Hirbour (I to r),
Saturday,
SepL
19,
81
Vmson
High
:
~~Jictured rectiV!DJ one ot 111x awards 111011 by the White Falcon
It tile Huniclae Invitational Band Fesd\'11 bdd Saturda)'. School. The competition begins it SllowD IDikml tbe praeatation Is a member of tbe Hurricane band, 4 p.m., with WHS taking the field ;
at 4:35p.m.
;
wblle otber bllld members look on in tbe background.

a

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�. ~~~~:~-~~

.:-'COmmentary

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.

tlle ·Daily Sentinel

'

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111 ~ Street

:1"' ' •
---0 ..._
·; DJ:VOTm TO TD ll'l'l'UI81'S. or 'I'D IIJI08-IIMON AREA
,J " •

..• .

.--ror. -

''
ROBERT L. WJNGETI'
Publlllller
PATWBJuBEAI)
Aal lut hblldter/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Geaenl ~auger

LETI1!RS OF OPINION ""' welco11110. Tboy should be !e.. !ban 300
words. All ._. 110 snbjOct to editing IDCI must be si&amp;ned with n1mo,
llddrw IDCIIDiepllaoe number. No llllliiJIOd lettm will be publisbod. Lettm
rllould be ID JOOd tute, llddreuiJic iuues, DOl pmonaliliOI.
-~ : '

:Next on the EPA hit list:
:...·.The family lawn mower
.' .

..

By Randall Eiger
and Michael T. Folie
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has a long record of
, meddling in the economy at the expense of businesses and consumers, but
~·; ri:cendy it administered the "coup de grace"-« maybe that should be
:/ 'cut the grass," because the family lawn mower is the latest target of the

:·;.EP~~:m~:enseless housdtold machine dme to arouse the wmth
of the mandarins at the EPA? WeU, it runs on an internal combustion
angine, like cars, trucks, trains and planes do, and although most lawn
. mowers are smaller than your avemge 747 jumbo jet, at the EPA, an
· · , ;·~ngine is.Ill engine is an engine.
Nobody has good figum on how many power mowers actually are
;.
· ~operating or how often they run. Few people mow the lawn as often as
·• J hey drive their car-unless they have some kind of lawn-mower fetish. In
'-: ·Ole winter, with a few inches or feet of snow on the ground, mowing the
· ·iawn 'can get ve:y messy.
~
, . But abswdity never has stopped the EPA from acting. The EPA even
' lias proposed a study to detc:nnine the possible health effects of shower·
ing. 'Maybe the logic is, if you don't cut the 8f11SS, you won 'I need to take
a shower.
. As this is being wriuen, EPA staff members are eagerly driving to
·· ' work in their cars, flying to meetings on jets and sending reports here and
there on express delive:y trucks-&lt;leveloping standards designed to slalllp
out power lawn mowers.
For your raithfullillle mowa to meet proposed EPA standards. lawn·
' ' mower manufacturers will have to modify their engines--&lt;:hange the
design of combustion chambers and design engines to run on a more effi·
cient fuel-air mix. It is yet to be detennilled if there will be lawn-mower
police dispalChed to do Satunlay afttrnoon spot "breathalizer" checks on
rogue lawn mowers suspected of exceeding the standards.
Perhaps aU this is not such a bad thing. Eveeyone WilliS clean air. But
•.4Cil the lawn·mowcr campaign necesSI!y? Does il justify the costs, not only
•...-'ln' bweaucralic lime and energy, but also those thlt will be imposed m the
:~n.ower companies and passed along IIi consumers in the fonn of higher
~'1rices ror their Toros and Lawn boys? No one has the answer, alld the

.! ~t!='=~:.=,._ics lib the EPA is not thal they're

bad guys To'ilh evil ~· but dl.al they won't sit down and calculate
costs versus benefits. They are more than willing to mandate a tiny benefit

: and force someone else to pay the huge cost-usually businesses and con·
somers.
In a year when a Philippine volcano has lowered the average global
temperature by 2 degrees, and Kuwait suffers lhe effects of oil Ttefds set
afire by Saddam Hussein, the EPA' s focus on lawn mowers is understand·
able. Compared to volcanoes, lawn mowers are easy targets.
Randall Eiler and Mlcbael T. folie a~ l'reelaace writers based In
New York, N.Y.

The Issue:

·.School choice
EDITOR'S NOTE: Tbe Associated Press asks the Bush and Clin·
ton campaigns for their stands on an issue eacb weekday alld assem·
bles their responses.

~:WASIDNGTON (AP) -

Here an: the views of lhe presidential nomi· .
: ·; nees on the questions: Should parents he able to decide which public
• ·• schools their children attend? Should they he ahle to send their children to
~·~ private school at public expense?
:;!~ Bush: •'1 funlly believe lhat parents. not govemmen~ should make the
&lt;~' important decisions in !heir children's lives. That's why my state and
local G.l. Bill for children gives low~ and middle-income ramilies $1,000
scholarships to help send !heir children to lhe schools of their choice private, public or religious. My approach permits the same choice we now
give our coUege siUdents, an approach that has slrengthened all our uni·
versities - public, private and religious."
• • Clinton: " As president I would work with stateS to develop public
·: ·school choice programs like the one I created in Arkansas. I do not, how·
I ' iver, support using our limited public resources to pay for private educa·
·'.~ · lion...
• ' ..

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Berry's World

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ed by small businesses, many of
IIOIDlCS with clarity, wit and gusto. those jobs vanish when smaU firms
. But that's not lhc idea in the go broke.
Nor hall I realized how much
current work. In clean prose, with
serious economists do not know.
The volume is studded with cau·
tionary phrases: "it is not clear
whth
e er ...,n n ... to some ext...a n~t
"economists do not have a good
understandin' of ..."
Of today s essential question
charts that tell slories. Slein and
Foss lay out "A Hundred Key they write: " ... economists have
Issues," (the subtide of lhe book). been grappling with the problem of
They write: "We have tried not to why productivity growth has
malce a book of Republican or slowed down but have been unable
Democratic, conservative or tiber· to come up with satisfactory
al, optimistic or pessimistic data. ... answers." That noted, the)( offer
We have not looked for things thai related material: Productivity did
would surprise the reader,llthough increase mildly in the 1980s; the
rate prior to 1948 was about the
... some things did surprise us."
Me too. I had no idea how com· same as now; the 1948-73 years
mon deflation has been: From 1865 may be a poor benchlllll4 jJecause
to 1940' prii:e ~vels geDelliUy flue· of high post·war demand. ·
Campaign isslies are iUuminat·
tuated downward. (Will it happen
again?) I wouldn't have guessed ed. Jobs in the growing "service"
that Alabama has a l)igher median sector are not typically bad ones;
income than West Germany. Nor they include doctors and lawyers.
that while mosl new jobs are creal· Median duration of unemployment

Ben Wattenberg.

•

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LeT's PUT iT
Tt-liS waY: l.OVe
To Be 63RBa~ BuSff.
VJe Nee.P ~To ~e
HiLLaRY CLiNToN.

Io

has been less llian seven weeks.
More than half.the unemployed left
their 111$1 job voluntarily. "The
underclass" involves I percent to 3
percenl of the population. Poverty
rates an: higher than in Europe.
Stein and Foss are concerned,
not alarmed. by the deficit: mthe
1980s defteits ·neither aborted economic growth nor induced infla·
tion. Nor do Slein·Foss buy the
"debtor nation" complaint: "net
foreign debt ... is only a slalislical
aggregate without any economic
signifiCIIICC." They say lhe rise in
family income has slowed, but data
showing a decline in real wages
"give an inaccurate picture."
They show that America, by
European standards; is neither
overtaxed nor overgovemed, and
that, by many measures, federal
government activity .is n\)1 increasing.
.
·
They deflate large eg~s: "One
frequenUy hears ... that ... economic policy· has created 'x' number of
jobs.... This assertion is misleading
... jobs an: created by persons willing to work at a wage justified by
their own prodoctivity.'
There is'solace to be derived
from· senior wise men who aren't
working political angles. We are
calmly told of the inexorable flow
of the business cycle: "When sales
and orders are increasing, business
spirits become buoyant, at times
giving rise to beliefs thai the
expansion will cclitinue indefmite·
ly. Excesses may develop. II)Vest·
ments that look profitable 'when
fliSt unclettaken tum out to be high·
ly unprofitable when markets
weaken."
Sad, but it WOOcs iiSelf oUI, J!OSi·
tively: "The U.S. economy, like
othe~ industrial economies, lluctu·
ates around a rising long-rup
growth !tend."
In the hothouse atmosphere of
an· election year we should; above
aU, rememher that It is a ttue'fact.
Ben Wattenberg, a senior lei·
low at the American Enterprise
Institute, Is author of "Tbe First
Universal Nation," publisbecl by
The Free Press and a syndicated
Miter lor Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

Helping Mrs. .Quayle sort things out
Perhaps Mrs. Quayle hasn't
been reading the papers.
Her man Dan has been rehabili·
tated an.d she hasn't even noticed.
The Washington Post assigned two
of irs biggest stars, Bob woodward
and David Broder, to sr.end six
months looking into Dan s doings
and they concluded the veep was a
passable president-in-waiting. The
New York Times, Time magazine,
US News &amp; World Repon - they
all remarked about his growth in
the job.
Bul thai's nol enough for Marl·
lyn. "I don't think anyone should
have to go through whal Dan and I
went through in 1988, which was a
pack of lies,'' she told a Newsweek
interviewer in August "And they
continue today and that's not right
It's sleazy and it's very. very im:·
sponsible journalism."
Perhaps Mrs. Quayle is confus·
ing things the media have said with
things Dan himself and others have
said. This happened a couple of
years ago. The reporting on her
husband's activities, she said at lhe
time, had been "an ugly chapter in
journalism," and added: "} only
ask for fairness and accuracy."
I totally agreed with Mrs .

Quayle and was able lg help sort
things out with a Jittl{ quiz about
who said whaL Perchance it would
assist matters to do it again. We

Joseph Spear
can Stan wilb a dean stale 8Jid ask
questions only about things that
have been said since the last quiz
- nothing about canals on Mars or
Hawaii being in the Pacific - all
of which Dan said. No questions
about vice presidents who could
best serve the nalion by going back
to Indiana and maybe ~oming a
divorce lawyer or something which a certain member of the
media said.
Fair enough? OK, here we go.
Name the person who offered these
acute observations and insights:
I) "The president is going to
lead us out of the recovery. It will
happen."
2) "My friends, no mauer how
rough the road may he. we can and
we wiU, never, never .surrender to
what is righL"
3) "Unfortunately, the people of
Louisiana are nol racist''
4) "I believe we're on an im:·
versible trend toward more free ·

dom and democracy, but that could
change."
5) "Turnip. T·U·R·N·l·P·E .
Turnip."
The answers: Dan, Dan, Dan,
Dan, nobody (it was a trick ques·
lion) . Please note thal the medta
did not say any of these things. Just
something to ponder.
Let's move on. Name the person
who s~id or did the following
exceptionally clever things: ·
1) While riding in his limqusine
in a specially cleared Jane, called in
a uaffic report lo a Boston radio
show and said, "My lane'sclear!"
2) Instructed his staff 1~ reail
People mll$l!Zine so they CO!Jld get
in touch wtth "real people" in the
••real world.' '
3) Said, "I try to gel through
Time and Newsweek and US
News, bul it's much more of a
jumpy type of thing."
4) Attempting to demonstrate
that growinJ! up in a wealthy news·
paper publishing family did not
distro his values, said: "I grew up
in Hunlinglon. A small farming
community in Indiana.' Lire
revolved around ramily, public
school, Little League 111d church.
My brother and r shared a bed·

What today's college
We took the family 20-year-old fresh shining optimism we had ourtwo stales and 700 miles away to selves back in the '70s, she will
college, the three of us in the front countenance no objection: Everyseat of a pickup truck with her thing wiU work out Please, please,
belongings piled in the camper
sheU behind.
It was a bittersweet eliperience:
On one hand, she's a great student _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;__ _
and she so wanted to go, and we please, I'm an bona SIDdent and I
were happy to see ber there at thai deserve to gb to a good college. .
beautiful and prestigious campus.
It's impossible to explain to her
On the olher hand, as an out-of· how much the economy has
state student, the debt she and we changed since we were applying
wiU incur malces our hair stand on for college loans a generation ago.
end.
·
It's beyond the comPfehension of
We had tried to ta11c her oul or someone who's never faced a
~oing to school out of stale, show· household budget that she is among
mg her how much her loan pay· the first generation of Americans
ments will be and how much who probably won't equal their
money she might he malcing after parents" economic status, much
graduation in a worst-case see- less better it On the 7QO.mile drive
nario. 1 finished with ·whal I home, however, it's only too easy
though I were compelling stories for us to think about iL
abouta neighbor whose daughter is
Unemploymenl is rising and
using her $50,000 degree to groom income ·dropping faster in the
horses at minimum wage, and . group among which she hopes to
anot.hu bright young man we know he numbered - the college-educat·
viho has sent resumes rerociously ed upper-middle-class crowd since graduating last December but than' in any other socioeconomic
is still working the same minimUm· group in America. or course, that
wage job he worked u a studenL may not even be a worry because it
This month, he had to aart making may he a while before sbe makes il
payments on his college loan.
to thai level.
·
Our impassioned speeches made
More and more companies are
as much impression on her as our hirina two part· time workers in
parents' did on us 25 yean aga. place rA every one CuD-lime work·
How much everything costs and er, to avoid paying beaefiiS. Full·
how far a paycheck wi.ll stretch time employees lucky enough io
means nothin·g to someone who's ~ave health insurance are paying
neva had to streleh one. With the IQOre and more for iL Her falher

Sarah Overstreet

,'

,..

R~cs and supply·side eco-

.I

room. Walked to school."
5) "Read lhe Good Book by a
kerosene lamp and splilmils for
spending money."
The answers: Dan, Dan, Dan,
Dan, nobody (I made thai one up).
The media did not say any of the3e
thinfs either. Is there a patlern
here.
Name the people who made
these perceptive remarks:
I) Dan Quayle is George Bush's
"pit puppy."
2) "I don't know how to tell
you ·this, bul MuiP,hY Brown is a
fictional challlcter. •
3) "Afterwards I went to the
dictionary, and there was potato
like I mPJled it"
4) ~rHe's a human being."
5) "Yes, but shouldn 'I a vice
president have a modicum of additional talent?"
Answers: Patrick Buchanan;
David Letterman ; 12-year-old
William Figueroa; the founder of
the Hit the Tlllil for Quayle Club;
me.
You got us, Marilyn. The media
finally said something.
Joseph Spear is a syndicaled
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

stude~ts .face

and I are afraid of how much our
health insurance will cost us next
year. Our fear for her is that she
may not have any when she's on
her own.
'.
Why does her economic future
toot so blealc when ours looted so
promisin~ just two decades ago?
Pill! of tlie reason is a.body of laX
laws that allows businesses Lo
behave as carpetbaggers. Puliller
Prize-winning
investigative
reporters Donald L. Barletl and
James B. Steele examined how
these laws work by following the
money trail in their boolc, "Ameri·
ca: What Went Wrong?" ·.
Reading their book, I discovered
that just as she better not get sick.
she dare not grow old. Barlett and
Steele found that in the 1980s, our
tax laws allowed American busi·
nesses to remove $21 billion front
employee penllal't,~
· . ·and substi·
tute inferior~ ' that paid
less 10 workers llWI · originals.

Of course, just as with health insur·
ance, she may not have to worry
about corporate raids on her pen·
sion funds, because she )YOII't bave
a pension rund, period.
Hap~ graduation, kids, Ht!re's
a nice stlver picture fmme and·a
$100 savings bond. Ob, and by the
way, here's a·part-time job with no
benefits, a federal deficil dill will '
cripple your paltry silaries for· !he
rest of your hves, and a bill for the
Social Security checks tha,t our
generation will spend qnlil the fund
runs dry and you need it
BiU Clinton says that if elecled,
he will malce college loans such
that no good student will be denied
a chanCe to attend a good college.
Whoopee. RefOIIIl our tax laws and
cure the economy, or you haven't
dQne anything for these sludents at
aU.
·
Sarah Oventreet Is a syndi·
cated writer lor Newspaper
Enterprise Aslodatioo.
.

Today lri history
.1
W1'11_1.._

The Alilloclated Press
·
17, the 261stday of 1992. There are 105 days

The Dally 5entlnei-Pag~

Cooler temperatures forecast for weekend ,

OHIO Weather
Friday, Sept. 18
Accu·Westher• forecast for

Straight· sh~Qters: economic tutors

The economy is the big political
issue. But, shockingly, not all
things candidates say about the
economy are what Casey Stengel
used to call ' 'true facts.' '
Voters should try to sort it out 1
recommend a remlllkable, slender
book about true economic facts:
''An !Uusuated Guide to the Amer·
ican Economy" by Herbert Stein
and Murray Foss (AEI Press). It is
credible and objective, yielding
comfon in hard times.
The credibility comes from the
experience and mission of the
authors. Stein, 76, is a former
chairman of the Council of Eco·
nomic Advisors. Foss, 74, was edi·
tor of the "Survey of Current Busi·
ness." Jointly, they have worked
the tangled vineyard of statistical
economics for a hundred years.,
They are now my coUeagues at
the American Enterprise Institute. I
would describe them as ecleclic
liheral conservative economists. or
perhaps the reverse. In the 1980s,
Stein
publicly
hammered

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, september 17, 1992

By The Associated Press
Showers and lhunderstorms
across Ohio on Friday wiU he fol·
lowed by a blast of cold Canadian
air, the National Weather Service
said. By Sunday , the mercury
might not climb out of the 50s.
The rain was to begin moving
into Ohio tonight Forecasters said
the thunderstorms could bring
heavy rain and gusty winds at
times.
High temperatures on Saturday
wiD be mosdy in the 60s and Sun·
day in the 50s. Overnight lows will
be in the 40s.

conditions and

MICH.

•

IToledo I 79" I

•leotumbusla1o

I

The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 94 degrees in 1955
while the record low was 37 in
1959. Sunset tonight will he at 7:36
p.m. and sunrise Friday at 7:16
a.m .
Around tbe nation
Storms lingered over the Mid·
west and rain fell early today in
Kansas and Nebraska.
Strong thunderstorms were fore·
cast for Wisconsin and northern
Michigan. Scauered showers were
expected from New England to the
central Greal Lalces, while warm

and humid air was expected from
New England to the central Plains.
Sunshine was expected from the
southern Plains to lhe Southeastern
states. Thunderstorms were fore·
cast near the cenlral Gulf Coast
On Wednesday, downpours
flooded Wisconsin streams, and
hundreds were evacuated. Up to 8
inches of rain fell from Monday to
Wednesday, and the National
Weather Service warned the show·
ers coold continue through Friday.
Thunderstorms moved through
northern Minnesota on Wednesday,
bringing strong winds and torna·

does from Bemidji to Duluth.
Minor dama~e was reported. ·
Up to 9 mches of rain soaked
southeastern Minnesota Tuesllay
night and Wednesday momin~ . :
Highs today wm forecast m.the
40s and 50s m Montana; the ~
and 70s in the rest of the northern
Plains; the 80s in the Southwest
and Northeast; and the 90s in 1he'
Southeast, Texas, the southern
Plains and California's interior. :
The high temperature·for ~he
nation Wednesday was 107 at Lake
Havasu City, Ariz.
·

Republicans not rushing to Bush's family leave alternative:
W.VA.

-----Weather----South·Central Ohio
Tonight, pardy cloudy. A slight
chance of a shower or thunder·
stonn. Low in the mid-60s. Chance
of l1lin is 30 percenL Friday, show~rs and thunderstorms lilcely. High
m the low 80s. Chance of rain is 70
percent.

Extended rorecast:
Saturday through Monday:
Turning much conler. Fair each
day. Highs Saturday from the low
60s to around 70. Highs Sunday
and Monday from the upper 50s to
the mid-60s. Lows Saturday in the
50s and Sunday and Monday most·
Iy in the 40s.

Charles Bailey

Helen Kennedy

WASHINGTON (AP) - Con·
gressional Republicans who sup·
pon a family leave biU say they're
not impressed with President
Bush's alternative.
" It may be an interesting sup·
plement, but it is not a substitute
for this bill, " Rep. Marge Rouke·
ma, R-N.J., a leading supporter of
the bill, said WedneSday after Bush
proposed to allow tax breaks for
some companies that give employ·
ees unpaid leave in family emer·
gencies.
On the day when Congress for·
mally sent Bush the measure he ·is
prepared to veto for a second time,
the president belatedly offered his
proposal to provide $500 million in
tax credits to businesses . He

intends to encourage businesses to
voluntarily provide unpaid leave to
workers who need it
But congressional sponsors in
both parties charged Bush had
turned a deaf car for more than a
year to their pleas to negotiate a
compromise on the bill, which won
final congressional approval last
weelc.
Roukema said she was "some·
what perplexed" by Bush's timing.
And both she and the chief Repub·
lican sponsor in the Senate,
Christopher Bond, R·Mo., said they
had not seen details of Bush's new
plan.
''I'm pleased the administration
is engaged in the discussion,"
Bond said. But he added, "Right

now, I think we have a bill that over conservative support and as a
result would cover only about half
should he signed."
Rep. Patricia Schroeder, D· the nation's workforce.
Despite its limitations.,
Colo., called Bush's proposal
''half-baked.,,
Democrats have seen Bush's owo"President Bush's entire solu· sition as providing an opportunity
lion for every PfOblem is, 'Take to undennine the Repoblican presi·
two laX credits and vote for me in dent •s assertion that "family val·
ues" is a key election issue and
November,"' Schroeder said.
thai
his party is the defender of
The bill, similar to one Bush
vetoed in 1990, would require that family interests.
"I'm terribly disappointed, and
businesses with more than 50
employees provide them with up to particularly disappointed because I
12 weeks unpaid leave from their think he undermines his own posi·
jobs to care for a sick family mem· lion on the ramily values rnauer,"
ber or for the birth or adoption of a Roukema said.
Bush charged that Democmts
child.
Their job would be protected for were being "highly political" in
them in their ahsence. But the bill waiting until shortly before the·
is full of exceptions added to win November elections to send the bill
ro the White House.

Artists display works in conjunction
with
Emancipation
Day
celebration
--Area deaths---Charles P. Bailey, 60, of 2232
Sixth Street in Symcuse, died on
Tuesday, September 15, 1992 at
Riverside Methodist Hospital in
Columbus.
He was born on June 21 , 1932
in Chester, son of the late Forest
and Margaret Sell Bailey. He was
an equipment operator, attended
Morse Chapel Church and was a
member of Racine Masonic Lodge
164.
Survivin~ are his wife, Doris
Johnson Bailey of Syracuse; two
sons, Charles Bailey of Abilene,
Texas and Roger Bailey of
Nashville, Tenn.; a dau$hter, Starr
Bailey, Abilene; four ststers: Vir·
ginia Hendrick of Pomeroy, Eva
Teaford, Racine, Marjorie Smith,
Pomeroy and Eunice Matheney,
Columbus; a brother, Elmer
(Avice) Bailey, Shade; a step·
daughter, Judy Brace, Crown City;
three stepsons: John Sayre ,
Reynoldsburg, Aaron Sayre ,
Racine, and Oliver Sayre, Kalama·
zoo, Mich.; six grandchildren; and
II step.grandcbildrelt.
Besides his parents, he was pre·
ceded in death by his brother. John
Qtis Bailey.

Funeral services will be held on
Saturday at II a.m. at Ewing
Funeral Home in Pomeroy with
Rev. Clyde Hmison officiating. a
Friends may call at the funerar
home from 1to 9 p.m. on Friday.
Masonic services will he con·
ducted at 6:30 p.m. by Racine
Lodge.

Helen Gail Kennedy, 87, of
Overbrook Center in Middleport,
formerly of Cheshire, died early
. Thursday, Septemher 17, 1992 at
Overbl'OOk Center.
She was born on June 9,1905 in
Kyga, daughter of the late AUison
and Flora Jenkins Bmdbury. She
was a licensed practical nurse in
private practiCe, a memher of Mid·
dleport Freewill Baptist Church
and a charter member of Cheshire
Chapter 450, Order ofEastem Star.
She was also a member of the
Eight and 40 Club, American
Legion Post 128 auxiliary, and lhe
DA V auxiliary.
Survivins are three sisters: Mrs.
Dale (Mary) Sisson of Kyger, and
Mrs. Wendell (Louise) Roush and
Mrs. Dale (Lucille) Mulford, both ·
of Cheshire; a brother, Comer
Bradbury of Cheshire; a special
niece, Pamela Shaw of Rio G111nde;
and several other nieces and
nephews.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in death by her husband,
Dale Kennedy, whom she married
on December 23, 1926; and seven
brothers: Bion, Thomas, Perry,
Wendell, Clyde, Wymond , and
Philip Bradbury.
Services will be held on Satur·
day at 11 a.m. at Fisher Funeral
Home in Middleport with Rev.
Miles ·Trout officiating. Burial will
be in Gravel Hill Cemetery in
Cheshire.
Friends may call at the funeml
home on Friday from 2 to 4 p.m.
and 6 to 8 p.m.
An O.E.S. service will be held
on Friday at 7:30p.m.

Units respond to six calls
UniiS of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service·
responded to six calls ror assistance
on Wednesday and early Thursday
morning.
On Wednesday at 11:10 a.m. the
Middleport unit went to Overbrook
Center for Mabel Cleland who was
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospi·
tal.
On Thursday at 7:44 a.m. the
Rutland unit responded to Route
124 for Burdell Black who was
transported·to Veterans. He was
later transllDned by Lifeflight to
Grant Medical Ce!iter in Columbus

'I'he Dlil.y Sentinel
(11111'8 Jla.MO)

Pablillatcl enry

thnollh ~

~Remoon ,

Monday

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at 8:44a.m.
At 8:38a.m. the Middlepon unit
was called to Overbrook Center for
Dorolhy Hartenbach . She was
t.ak.en to Veterans.
At 8:59 a.m. the Tuppers Plains
unit went to Reedsville for Tonya
Barber who was transponed to Vet·
elliDS.

The Rutland and Middleport
units. at 9:05 a.m., responded to
Spring Avenue for Everett Preston
Jr., who was~ on arrival.
II

,

Hospital news
Veterans M'morial
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
• Gladys Taylor, Pomeroy; Dallas
Barber, Portland; and Joseph Bow·
land, Middleport
.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
• Paula Hess.

"Ethnic Awakenings" is the tiUe
of the September exhibit at the
French Art Colony. sponsored by
Oscar's Restaurant. The exhibit is
heing held in conjunction wilh Gal·
lipolis ' !29th Emancipation Day
celebration.
The galleries at FAC feature
work by Richard Duarte Brown,
Mildred Slade, and Claudia Jaqueline Turner.
A former student of Columbus
College of Art and Design, Brown
enjoys the freedom of expression
available through mixed-media.
"My medium is whatever I envi·
sion," said Brown. "My fiilit love is
oil paint, but as a child, shoe pol·

Lottery numbers

ish, glue, food coloring, rice and
cardboard were all I could afford,
and for the last 10 years, I instinc·
lively use any pliable substance to
demonstrate my visual impression
and the emotional expression of my
soul.'•
He also says he sees art as a
medium to unify mankind by
showing the ethnic differences
while revealing the ethnic similari·
lies and affrrming that all mankind
has the same basic makeup and
drive.
,
Slade is a largely self· laught
artist who began experimenting
with clay after her retirement She
creates small-scale sculptures of

daily life.
.
"In sculpture class at a seniOr
center I discovered a love of work·
ing with clay and hegan 10 develop
my own ideas." she said. "My work
depicts memories, impressions, and
happenings of the past and presen~
and are executed in the simplo,
down-to-earth, folk 1111 style."
"To me, each sculpture is a
moment frozen in time • a story
unto itself," she added.
With an M.F.A. from Ohio State
University, Turner's experien~e
ranges from exhibitions to commts·
sioned 1111 pieces to stage work. Her
diverse style has been enjoyed by
Columbus audiences in several solo
and group exhibiiS.
Galleries are open 10 a.m. to 3
p.m. Tuesday through Friday, 1·5
p.m. Saturday and Sunday. All
FAC
programming is offered
western square dancers are invited.
through support from the Ohio Arts
Refreshments will be served.
Council.
Program to be presented
Dr. James Dobson and Gary L.
Bauer's "Children At Risk," a two ·
pan video series will he presented
on Sept. 27 and Oct. 4 at 7 p.m. at
the Racine Firsl Baptist Church
wilh "The Battle for the Hearts and
Minds of Our Kids." A supervised
nursery and childcare will he pro·
vided. The public is invited.
Revival
Revival at Calvary Pilgrim
Chapel, Route 143, will he held
Monday through Sept. 27 at 7:30
p.m. mghtly. Rev. L. J. Cherry·
holmes is the evangelist There will
he a special singin$ each evening.
Rev. Victor Roush mvites the pub·
lie.

_Meigs announcements-Homecoming
Homecoming, Mt. Hermon
United Brethren in Christ Church,
Texas Road, Pomeroy. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30
a.m.; fellowship meal, noon; after·
noon service, I :30 p.m . Special
singing by The Glory Land Quar·
tel. Public invited.
PTOtomeet
The Pordand Elementary PTO
will hold a special meeting Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the school.
Dance planned
The Belles and Beaus Western
Square Dance Club will sponsor an
open dance at the senior citizens
center in Pomeror. on Saturday
from 8-11 p.m. BtU Bumgarner,
Gallaway, will be the caller. All

Stocks
Am Ele Power.. .. ................ 32 1/2

Ashland Oil ...... ..... .............23 3/4
AT&amp;T.. .. .. ...........................43 3/4
Bank One...................... ..... 44
Bob Evans ......................... 18 5/8
Charming Shop ................. J l 1/2
City Holding .......... .... ........l7 1/2
Federal Mogul... ................ l5 1/4
Goodycar'f&amp;R .................. 661/4
3/4Key Centurion .. ............19 114
Lands End .. ........................26 5/8
Limited Inc. ...................... 23 1/4
Multimedia Inc. .................26
Rax RestauranL ...................3!8
Reliance Electric ............... .l8 3/8
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 14 3/4
Shoney's Inc.................. .... 18 3,18
Star Bank ........................... 32 1/4
Wendy lnt'1... .................... .12 3/8
Worthington Ind . ...............20
Stock reports are tbe 10:30
a.m . quoles provided by Blunt,
Ellis and Loewi or Gallipolis.

PUBLIC
NOTICE
NOTICE Is
give• that on Saturday, September I9,
~ereby

1992, at 10:00 a.m., a pubhc sale wil be held at I 05 Union
Av111e, Pomeroy, O~io, to sell for cash the following
co latera~

1990 FORD ESCORT LX 2DR 5ttFAPP9199LTI03650
and
1991 SNAPPER TRACTOR AND MOWER n9o 12 HP
HYDRAMATIC TRANSMISSION, 4I" CUT WITH HEADUGHTS
To Farnters Buk a1d Savings Compa1y, Pomeroy, Ohio,
resents t~e r~ to bid at t~ls $ale, and to wltltdraw ,..
above collateral prior to sale. Ftrther, 1\e Farmers Ba1k .alld
Savllgs Company reserves the right to reJed any or all bids

COLONY THEATRE
TOIIGHT

HONEY, I BLEW UP
THE KIDS
PG
ONE MIING SHOW 7:30.
lDIWIOI $1.50
SHOdGAJt-JO

DIGGSTOWN
R
Oil MNING SHOW 7:30
ADIIISSION $1.50

STAR1ItiG FRIDAY
GOlDIE HAWN, IRUCE WilLIS,

IERn STREtP

Hospital news
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, Sept. 16 - Cynthia
Brown , Amanda Coburn, Mrs .
Albert Dettwiller and son, Mrs.
Terry Midkiff and son, Carolyn
· Smith.
Births, Sept. 16 - none.

011 MM SHOW 7-JO
lMIIIOII $1.50

ll,__.
-- - -

SHOWMAJt-JO

RAPID

Streets to be cleaned
The Middleport Fire Depart·
ment will be cleaning the streets in
Middle~rt from Walnut Street to
the "T' on Friday heginning at 6
p.m. durin~ which time there will
he no parking in those areas. Park·
ing may resume when the cleanmg
in completed.

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
BIIUIIIII $1.50
M60923

COME ON OVER TO BOB'S~ ••
HARDY FALL GARDEN MUMS
OVER 20 VIBRANT COLORS!
m

6 1' 2 INCH POT.................... $2,49 EACH
8 INCH POT .........................$3.59 EACH

OR
OR

6 FOR $13.00
3 FOR $10.00

ALSO IEAD'I:

FLOWERING KALE • FLOWERING CABBAGE • FALL BEDDING PANSIES
(Plant Pansies NOW For ltautlful Earlr Spring ltdsl
WEEKEND SPECIALS

BANANAS

39(

LB. OR

3 LBS. FOR s1.00

"'"l'l-

mu"'
GOOJ
" RED .StUN YEllOW FREESTONE PEACHES
,f llRTLm PUIS

./ PRUNE PLUMS
GREA1 FOI HOME CANNING Oil FREEZING

~INnlltecl.

F1i1her, the above collateral wdl be sold In the condition Ills
Itt ~ 10 expressed or implied warrutles given.
For rt10rt ltlformatlon co~tad Scott Sh111ll, at 992-3293.

CLEVELAND (AP) - T~ere
were no tickets sold naming aU six
numhers selected in Wednesday's
Super Lotto dillwing with $4 mil·
lion at stake so Saturday's jal;lcpoJ
wiU he $8 minion, the Ohio Lo!!erY
said.
Here are Wednesday night's
Ohio Louery selections:
Super Lotto
21 -34-35-39-4().41
(twenty-one, thirty-four, thirtY·
five, thirty-nine, fony, forty-one)
Kicker
·
7-3.()..2-6·3
(seven, three, zero, two. six,
three)
Pick 3 Numbers
6·1 ·9
(six, one, nine)
Pick 4 Numbers
1-6.()..2

Rt. 33 (1/4 mile north Pomtroy-Mieon Bridge), Millon, WV
Phone (304) 773-5721

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

Oi'IEOO 7 IliAYl A WUK

2400 Eastern Avenue (acrose lrom KMirt), Gelllpolla, OH
Phona 614 44&amp;-1711

�.

~

'"

Sports

The ·Daily

Sentinel ~

· By DAVE HARIUS
letter wiuners from last year's team
Seniinel Correspondent
that went 6-1 in the Tri-Valley
The Meigs Marauders will try Conference and a 8-2 marie ovemll. ·
and break in the the win column
Casey Nungester leads .the
Friday night when the Man!uders rerurnees for the Buckeyes. The 5host the Nelsonville-York Buck- 9, 200 pound senior fullback is
eyes.
coming off an excellent junior seaThe game will be the first home son with J,I31 yards in 164 carries
game of the year for Meigs and it and 18 touchdowns. So far in the
will not be an easy task as the young season, Nungester has carBuckeyes will roll onto Bob ried 43 times for 311 yards and
Robens Field with a 2-0 mark on five touchdowns an average of 7.3
the season both coming over yards a carry.
Southeasrem Ohio Alhletic League
If Noingester was not enough he
is joined in the backfield by talentschools.
The Buckeyes opened· up the ed sophomore Justin Gail. Gail
season with a 35-0 whitewash over who is a6-l, 185 pounder, has carAthens and defeated the Logan ried 23 times for 148 yards and
Chieftains last Friday evening 33- three touchdowns an average of 6.4
7. · Dave Boston Sr., now in his yards a crack.
Joining them in the backfield is
26th year as the head man for the
Bucks, welcomes back 12 returning 'S-10, 145 pound junior signal caller

Winless Eastern optimistic
in readying for Caldwell bout
Despite being 0-2.at this point in
the season, Eastern head coach
David Barr is optimistic about his
teams' improvement throughout
the season and the team's competitive spirit going into this Friday's
gamngainst Caldwell.
Caldwell, 2-0 overall, knocked
off Old Washington Buckeye Trail
32-12last week.
Eastern 's defense will have to
watch the crafty running of senior
Josh Perkins, who rushed for 197
yards on 16 carries last week and
caught lhRe passes for 21 yards as
well. Pertins brought his running
totals to 381 yards on 21 carries,
while also running back 80-yard
and 60-yard punt rerurns.
Jeff Snedegar, the Redskin quarterback, oflen hits any of lhRe running backs out of the backfield,
choosing Perkins as his main target, while also passing freely to his
tight e~~ds and wide receivers. Bill
Rome, wide receiver, is the main
target from the end of the line,
cau:hing a 20 yard pass last week
for aro.
This dual threat makes Caldwell
a well-rounded, well-balanced
team.
Allhough putting many points
on the board, the Redskins defense
could be described as best as one-

srep behind the offense. However,
when crunch time comes, they get
the job done.
Caldwell had 376 tOtal yards
last week, while Buckeye Trilil was
not far behind with 312 total yards.
BT had 97 yards passing, proving
that a lfaJll can pass against !hem.
Eastern may be able to open up
its passing game, somewhat. Chad
Savoy last week hit 2-11 for 28
yards, while a 1-3 night and 29
yards came from Brian Bowen.
Charlie Francis (1-22), Pat Newland (2-17 and a TO) and Jeremy
Buckley (1 -11 and a TD) were the

Jeff Warix. Warix has thrown 15
passes, completing four for 61
yards and one interception. Randy
Cline, the wingback, is a 5-11. 155
pound junior carries three times in
last week's win over Logan for 39
yards.
. . 0f'1enS1Ve
. 1IDe
' 10r
'
The IDtenor
the Buckeyes would make the
Buckeyes in Columbus look small

with an average height of 6-2 and
weighing in at a whopping 316.
Carlton Polley (6-10, 350 sr.) and
Chris Freer (5-10, 280, sr.) will be
the tackles. The guards will be
Tony Breeze (5-10, 200, sr.) and
Mike Pidcock (6-2, 230, sr.) with
Jacob Brooks (6-0, 205, sr.) at center. The ends are Brian Warren (60, 155, sr.) and Dale Matheny (6-4,

Execution·Tornadoes' chief
concern against Fort Frye
Last week, Southern head coach
Dave Gaul expressed concern wilh
the Tornadoes' ability to execute.
After last week's disappointing loss
to Waterford, the Tornadoes still
express !hat same concern going
into its second home match to meet
FortFryeFridayat7:30.
Warren Local, (1-1), picked up
its first win of the season, 27-0, at
Fort Frye, who droJ)I)ed to 0-2.
Southern will ~ope to execute
both offensive and defensively,
while also attempting to become
more aggressive on the line. Southern could not get a ground game
going, thm:fore, tightening up the
pass defense.
Wat~rford closed the holes to
comi?letely stop the forward run,
leavmg Michael Evans, Russell
Singleton and Tucker Williams just
enough room to get off some horizomal, side-to-side running patterns.
·
Singleton, who gained 209

170, sr.).

the long one.
The Meigs offense ~as bad
Quarterback Eric Wagoer is 8 of
problems getting started this year. 20 in the air for 73 yards. · ·
Juni&lt;X" fullback Heath Hudson leads · Mike"Abby" Welsh is his favorite
lhe Meigs ground attack with 27 receiver with three catches for 25
carriea f&lt;X" 122 yards an average of yards. Bryan Hoffinan has pulled in ...
4.5 yards a carry. Tailback Mike two for 18 yards, Aaron Drummer
Cremeans is used primarily has a I for 16, David Fetty I for 10 and
blocking back for Hudson he has Matt Craddock I for 9.
carried but eight times for 16 yards,
Despite giving up an average of :..:;:,
but both have the ability ld break
(See MEIGS on Page 5)

yards in the first game, could garner just 45 last week. Evans and
DiU combined for 123 yards in the
opener, while that same combo
gathered 140 yards and one TD last
week, the lone SHS score. Evans,
so far this season, is 23-38 for 319
yards.
. S .h
Nick Adams, 1am1e m•t ,
Trent Cleland and Kyle Wickline
had good games last week, bolstering an SHS defense that ovemll did
a good job.
Killer penalties at crucial times
allied to Waterford scores. SHS
had to improve on its four-interceplion, three-fumble night.
Fort Frye has been in a tailspin
the last several seasons after reigoing as one of the areas powerhouses for many years. The Cadets have
potential, decent size and a classy
backfield, but are not the power
they once were.
Game time is 7:30 at Roger Lee
Adams Memorial Field in Racine.

Area high school football standings

targets.

Team
W
Senior Pat Newland has been a Nelsonville-York .......2
key spark in the EHS offense with Vinton County ...........2
two kickoff returns of 85 yards or Trimble ......................2
better for touchdowns, while also Belpre ........................2
doing a good job receiving.
Jackson ........ ..............2
Top Eagle ground gainers have Wellston..................... !
been freshman Jason Sheets, Wes Warren Local ............. !
Arbaugh, Charlie Francis and SOUTHERN .............. !
Shane James.
Gallipolis .............. ..... 1
Barr indicated that his club will EASTERN .................0
stick to the fundamentals, look for River Valley ...............0
continual improvement and do the Alexander ..................0
things it can do best.
Marietta......................o
Barr cited that he has been Athens........................O
extremely pleased with the Logan .........................0
progress of the younger Eagles so Miller .........................0
far this season.
·
Federal Hocking ........0
Game time is 7:30 at Eastern.
MEIGS .......................O

68
55
54
48
47
54
43
43
34
39
28
28
14
13
7
6
6
0

By ne Associated Preu
Mike Tomczak doesn't want to
( reate any quartedlack controveny,
just rtt in. That's exactlr what the
Cleveland Browns have m mind fw
him .
In the wake of Bernie Kosar's
illjury, the Browns signed the former Ohio State quarterback. as a
backup o·n Wednesday in one of
several player moves by NFL
teams.
For now, Tomczak will work
behind Todd Philcox, who will
start Sunday's road game against

'
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In tbe majors ...

--

U,.. SL

T-

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l'kublqh ,_ ........... l4

MMloil ................ ll

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61 Sl9
.. .5.!9

SL Louis ............- ..72 71 .503
Chi&lt;a...............,_..7l 73 .4!13

Now v............._..., 19 ·"''
Plollodo~p~Ua .......-•.59 .. .413

Atllftm ..........." .-"11 56 .611
CJNCINNIITI....- ..71 fi1 .531

77 II .531
............,_ .. 70 76 A'l9

S..D~oso .........._..

-

s.. Frondoco ....- .. 64

12 .431
Loo ............._,, . 17 .404

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Wedlltldly'ucora
~14,R~ ;,9

\

TEE·OF.F 9:00 A.M.'
BLIND DUWING
SEPT. 18
.
·s35oo·Per person

A"-3, CN
TI2
SL Louis 10, New Y""' 4
"""-' 6, l'laollolF 3
-3,S.-l
S.. Oleto 3, Loo Aa&amp;oloo I

ST01.IN BASEl - om.om, Moa·
lftiii. ·'TJ.i·o.sHd+ Mancm11. 4S; Bllller,
Loo~41; ~ SL LoW, &lt;tO;
0 . Sm1tll, St. LollU, 40; Jlobem.
ctNaNMATI, 39; Nixaa. Adla"· 31.
ImlliNO (17 ..........) - Oia.....
Adoal.liD-6. .7f/l, 2.11; T....uou.y, SL
Louir. 16-5•.762, :Z.OOllt.llill,-

16-1,.61i/,:Z.72;S.-.,CNCINNATI,
IU, .6fil, 2.So, ldolpa, au...., 1.. 7.
.667, 2.61; ~ At1oa1. IU. .667,
3.54; C... NowY... l:J.7, .650,2.11.
S1lUXEOl1I'S - COM, Haw York,
114: Small&amp;, Allam~, 197; G. Maddua,
Chkoao, Ill ; S. Now Yotk,
113; Drabek, PhtablltJb, U7; Rijo.
CIN~n. 157; Bm•, Sea J&gt;icto.
145;
• Loo""""'. 14!1.
SAVES - Loo lmilh. Sl. Louil, 38;
Wcuclmd, Moattotl, 35; Myon.t. S~
Di~3;S.i.P.:.:&gt;-. """-. 31;, ':""'25;-.. WillWno.
Philodelphio , :&lt;!; Dibblo. CINCINNATI.
20.

.m.

waukee, 14-S, .137, 3.66; 1:. Brown,
r...., '"'· .fi/9, 3.27;
a-.,

a-.

11-9,.1£1, 131.
STBIEEOtml- R . l - Solal~
203; 0......, B - IPS; l'lloz, N,..
. YGII1.194;l00c0lzmlll,T0U1,l6l;MoDowell, Chica~ 1,.S!; Juaa GuzmJa,
Ton1111o. U3; Jt. 0 Teu~, lSI .
S!t-ViS - BckcnleJ, Otklad, 47;
A(IUilm, - . , . . ,, 37; Moalacaay,
x.u... Cily, 3-4; Olloa, Baldmore, 33:
Jell Ruaell. Ootllad, 30; llalllo, T""'·
to,29;-Boolaa. 'l:l.

Transactions
BosehaU
NoUoo•l t.oqw
CINCINNATI
REDSAnltOll_.
kllla
........
w1lh (a.

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... "'"' of,lhl - ·

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lloldolr, llMIKmnY"""ia!io~&lt;~«,r..m

=:l".:!~7t~.;.'::

FootboU
c~D JIOWNS- Slan&lt;d
N U...lfGIOlltall Lelpe

to.....

Mlb T•Culr. qurilrblel,
Jtlr coatr•cl . ........... Koaar,
qutrltrbtck 1 011 I•J•red uur...
Woloed odlellarr~. dthOIIH ...k.
Slpol .... Doll~ llldda, "'"" pndke
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·ollBI!N BA'I' PACE s- s1,...

Dlllll)' Nooaari, dofcnlive Ullcmln.

RBI - Piclder, Dcaoh. 113; Caner.

•l

All Proceeds Go
Toward
Constru(lion of A
New Lodge
Building in
Pomeroy

Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

Di'J?,

,.; Sbctnlld, San
32; Bt~~~il&amp;,
p· · ~ 2t; llaub. il•de!;i• 26;
Hollla1, Philldtllpllil, 24; L alker,
'Moa.lnll. 22; PtildlMOD, Atltnta, 21 ;
S-Qaao.21 .

American League

Lunch/Awards Following Scramble

~~~~:~;oM't7er

- . r..,...,

BAmNo - H. Mutiaez, Se• Ulc,
.343; hctol~ MinMIGU, .330, Mod,
MinnCIIOla, .325; Molitor, Milwlllkea,
. 32S; Tbam.u, CbiC1p,. 321; Griffey,
S..W.. .3lO;LAiamU,TOI'ODI0, .3ll.
RUNI - PltllliPI, o....lt. 103; E.
1ooa1o, uro; ~
10
961
R.
T
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Miaaololo, ,3, .. . •." llollimoro,
93;

(Inside the TVC)
7 Team
W L PF PA
6 Wellston ........ ............. ! 0 40 12
22 ·Vinton County ...........1 0 33 0
22 Trimble ...................... ! 0 29 0
20 Belpre ........................ ! 0 28 6
Meigs Co. Golf Oub
38 Alexander ..................0 I 12 40
20 Miller .........................0 I 6 28
992·6312
36 Federal Hocking ........0 I 0 29
40 MEIGS .......................O I 0 33
or send $35.00
78 Nelsonville-York.. .....O 0 0 0
66
76
Friday's games
62 Nelsonville-YorkatMeigs
84 Trimble at Wellston
3S080
Run Rd.
36
47
49 Alexander at St. Clairsville (non . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .
56 conference)

a•y

PirCJDNO .(17 docilionl) - Ja.~a
0...W.. T....,., 15·3, .833, 2.49; lodl .
19-5,
4.08; J,IOni·
n~; BallimtR. 16-5, .761. 2.~ McDow·
·.u. 00..,..211-7, .741 , 3.117; BOlio, Mil·

djn j, Pbiladftl.

...,, Loo Aqol-.1; Slllii-

..,r..ns.thlo.

0
5
•
200°
• 510000
1st Prize
2nd Pnze

per101
Larry Thomas

lAuit. 10; J'

!'~\'

.... """"""'n.

DOOR PRIZES:

per

'

QUoOoo, l .
lloiiii.IJNJ - Mdltili'.S..-..

NATIONAL LEAGIJE

Wllllnlll-

SCUMBLE .
SEPT. 19, 1992

Conrad:

the Los Angeles Raiders. But there ing player mows W~y were
was speculation that Tomzcak the Packers, Rams, Pltuburgb
would soon be astarter.
Sreelm andMinneloca Vlldnp.
Asked If he was competing for
·The. Pac!~ers signed defensive,
the Browns' starting job, 'l'omczak '.Jirie!nan Denity NOOoan,'tbe•Rims ·
said, "lam the backup.quarterback ' picte_d up ruthe
· MinJ ,~ AntliqnY
nght now."
.
·'l'hdnipsoa; , Sleekri signee~ Jlflll·
The 29-year-old;.• Tomczak · c~tche~. Alb~ Bentl,ey ~nd the
signed a one-year[4eal wo.tth a V•!clngs bbta111ed runni'!l back
reported $42~,!KXl. i\foriDti swter Keith~.
· ·'
for the Chicigo Bears IJld Green ·
To ltl!lke room fw Tomczak, the
Bay Packers; he was wiived by B~owns placed Kosar cin inj~!fed
Green Bay following a long presea- reserve because· ot a b.rokcll nght
son holdout
.'
inkle.·~ ill Moodily night's
Besides tbe Browns, also inak- loss 19 Miami. Kosar, will miss at
..
· least six wecib.

..

164F&amp;AM
1·8·HOLE GOLF

L PFPA

0
0
0
0
0
I
1
I
I
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
1&gt;

..

POMEROY LODGE

, The Dally Sentinel Page ·11

Browns get Tomczak as backup to Philcox for immediate future

Thursday, September 17, 1992
Page--4

Unbeaten Nelsonville-York Meigs' guest team Friday night

Pomeroy-Middlfport, Ohio

Thursdliy, September 17, 1992

WaivociOC.DlveY, dlltnli.veB
KANSAS Cl1'Y CHIEfS - Sianed
.loa Sta,.aiak. olfaiyeliDaDm. Jltiood
llonldlOnblm,olrltlllve"""''"'""
jUrod re~erve . Siaaod Michael Smith,
ltono.-,lin+d-r.
'""''
oriodco
'
~..d..
. ~~~
~ • .W.., uwu _. r· ·

Toroato, 109; Thomu, Cbi~JO. 103;
Puctea. Wnmau, 101; G. Bell. Ctic:a·
..,,01
100;o..·

,--.t....,
CNva.B•ldmon..97.

Noonan had started for the Dallas Cowboys until being waived
Monday . The 6-foot-4, 275pounder, the 12111 player chosen in
the I~ draft, had stalted 41 of a
possible_67 games in his first five
years w11h the Cowboys and was
there bolh game8 Ibis season. He
w• waived to make room for !he
Cow)!oys'•No. I drafl pick, Russell
MarYland; who had lleCn inactive
with a foot injury.
' 'We are gettiJ~g a player we
feel is an upgrade for WI," Packers
coach Mike Holmgren said. "I'm
hoping he lives up 10 CX)!C!:talions,
He certainly was a'fine player com-

•
'

\

\

•

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)The game sweaters cost about
Why is it not surpri~ng !hat the $250 each. Replicas will cost more
new Columbus Chill game than the $45 the Chill sold them b
sweaters feamre a sideways logo?
last season, although a price hasn't
" It's defmitely pan of our over- been set.
aU style," said David Paitson, team
The Chill may have three sets of
president.
sweaters: white, black and silver.
The Chill earned a nationaJ rep- It's ~tical, Paitson said.
utation last season, its fmt in the
' The silver can be worn at
EastCoastHocteyLeague,forim home and pn the road. That's
offbeat marketing and promotions. important when you have back-toThe new home white uniform back road games and have to worry
has silver icicles that jag out from about laundry."
the right side across the chesL The
logo is on the left side running bottom to top. There is a bLack and silver stripe on the left slecve·only.
"It's different It's 11ot a European-style look," Chill forward
Kevin Alexander said. "!like the
icicles ori them. We're doing,things
different. It goes along with the
Chill tradition."
bod 1 '
"It's a process DO YeSC ID

North America is using,'' said

Donald Duncan of M Spons based
11' ]' k
in California. "It's rea y sIC
Jookin . ''
M s,
g norts is the licensee for
Intemanonal Hockey. League unifonns and will make the Chill rV.r.

seys.

v•

•
••

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K.auill ....

IIUIU

liKIIlW

-

•

'

'"'*·"'

'

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'

'
PASSEs CENTURY MARK
- Marshall tlgllt end Mike
Bartrum (Mei1s '88) sna~eed
four piSRS for 58 yards In the
Tbanderlng Herd's 63·28
knockout or Eastern Illinois
Saturday, includiac a 13yarder. After two cames, the 6S, l30·pound senior, who will
join the Herd In Saturday's
Souther• Confereace opeaer
against VMI in Lalngtoa, VL,
bas eight receptions for 116
yards.

614/992·6614
OR
800/837·1094

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luven on Selected Modell.

,,

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T - IIIII title fMa not Included. Interest
rat. •~)let to b1nk 1pprov11. On the 1pot
llna~ng to qUIIItled buyen.
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LEGAL NOTICE

,,'

Ollio has sel for publ1c heanog

The

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1992 Chevy Corsica .............. $9488
1992 Chevy Cavalier R/S ..... $8888
1992 Olds Cudass Ciera ..... $12,999
1992 Ol~s 98 Regency.......$19,488
1992 Chevy Astro .............. $14, 999

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1985 Qodge Caravon............$4999
1985 DodgeD-50 Pickup ......$3495
1984 Chevy Comaro ............. $2999
1989 Chevy Corsica .............. $6499
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35,000 miles.
1990 Olds
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1985 Mercury Cougar...........$2499

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1992 GEO Storm
Your Choice $8888

Commission of

30" WIDTH • WHITE

$299C)O

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Southern Power · ComJ!ilRY. lhe
operalion of its EleCtric fuel Com·
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··

(Continued from Page 4)
27 pomm a contest, the Marauders
defense has been the stron&amp; point
of the maroon and gold. The 21-0 ·: ·.
loss in the season's farst game at
Gallipolis very easy could have . :
been a 7-0 contest if you tate out : .·.
about three plays. Last week · ·
against a very powerful Vinton ··
County ream die Vikings led in the ....
last minutes of the lint half 12-0,
but a Marauder turnover set up a
Viking touchdown widlless than a . ':
minute left help break lhe J8me
open. The Mlrauder defenac: IS led
by thn;e-year s~ Mike "Skip- · .-.' ·
py" Craneans at lineblcker.
. ·
Friday's game gets under away _~··.
at 7:30 at Bob Roberts F'aeld.
-~

POMIBOY OHIO

1992 OLDS
ACHIEVA S

·:

his third lleaiOil.
.Bentley, a productive pas_s .. "
catcher out of the backfield unul
tearing up a knee last season, . .
signed with the unbeaten but beatup Steelers. .
.,.,
Bentley, 32, in his seventh ~ · · :
season, ranked among tbe all-tune ·
Colts leaders in career rushing
yards, receiving yards and all-purpose yards until being waived by
lndiana(lOiis 011 Aug. 31.
To make room for Bentley, the
Stcelers waived rookie COI'IICiblck
Alan Haller, a fiflh-round draft
pick from Michigan State. The
Steelers planned to add Haller to
their five-man practiee squad if be
clears waivers.
· Bentley required rem~ve
surgery after a season-endmg
injury 10 his right knee in the second game of the 1991 season, but
said the knee now feels line.
The Vildngs acquiled the bigger
back they had been looking for by
obtaining Henderson in a ltade
with the San Francisco 49ers.
Tbe deal was finalized Waines- , .
day when Henderson passed a
physical. Minnesota sent the 49ers . .
an undisclosed 199l draft choice
and then waived nmning blc:k Ronnie We5t to make room on its 47- ..
man rostu.
Henderson, 26, led San Francisco with 561 · rushing and 303
.
receiving yards last year. But with ..
the emergence of Ricky Watters , .
this season, the 6-foot-1, 225- ,
pound« became expendable.
: :

:.·,1•• "'"'·

•'

.

tionainPboenix,~foundhimaelf
~· on the bench at tbe Sllrt of

IM'IIIII''IID•

OPEN WEEKDAYS TIL 8 P.M.
SATURDAYS TIL 4 P.M.
SUNDAY 1·5

.

'

touchdowns.
He never did Uve up to expecla-

Meigs preview...

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

'IIIII . .

•'

Andre Ware in the 1989 Heisman
Trophy balloting. A durable beck.
the 6-foot, 210-pounder le.d tbe
nation in rushing as a scmor at
Indiana with 1,793 yllda and elided
his career widl an NCAA-m:onl68

Columbus Chill uniforms
more European than native

·
·
o one ·m the lHL 1s
gomg
this radical," Duncan said. "It
um - """'""~· "' ' E.
lends itself to people who are creM.-.-...
Ill; Milwallk~~&amp;.
u..,.., CLI!YEan·ve and daring,"
LAND,
110; Molitor,
177;
nns Of
Maot, Min~~!6;o . .
. &amp;1)1;)'1.,.
dco...-I.S A' '.OBLBS "AlDERS _
"In
terms
marlcctin~,
all said
Of it
v-.Tu;
..-.--•
a.
LOs
"'
has
th
..
1
deSi
"
PaitsOR
DOUBW - E. ~ Selule.
Wohed Denid&lt; Ooi..,, mnninJ bod.
e ICIC e go,
•
46; ~s"u1' 31; Ma~, N...
~J:i'e..-,llroltodow.
"We thought it would be nice to
37
~ Clico.., 31;~ ....,.
A-''-nfATh'""B~LBS~tt;"'~·o11"'
translate it to lhe merchandise and
1.,iari,.,
Cbiclp.' ]II;-.
tfo 33;·
Jo
lulu City, 33
·
waivara frot~~' o PboOids ndinda.
uniforms.·
~ _ DO..;...., Blllimono,
PLoeol r.., S.ldfcd......,.
"I wasn't sure about the logo on
u.;w.~ ........
11; L ,......,, ~
·
MLNNESarA VWNOS _ A..,....
the side, but after looking at it a
~"t::';, ~~; -... Cll!Ua~
Edlhf' •
. . . - . , -· - " '
number. of 1\mes it's the only way
7;6uooodwilh~
Sill Fnniolloo 49"' r.. '" oodioolooed
that made sense. I don't know of
KOMI! IUNs - ~... o........
dnlldloi... Wuwd •~ w.... another uniform with the logo run. T - 40; M&lt;GoiN, Ooldoad, 38, C....,
lliolbock.
T....... 32; Fillw, ll«mi' 3l;·B.u.,
PHOBNIX CARDINALS - Pllced
Ding.sideways.
.J
·
~2a~Tcclccon,D«roit,29;
~=~::J::!
''I don'tknow what the reac:tioo
1
STOLllN BASES - . _ ClJ!VE.
-lriiat ""'.,..,.,. oquod. Siaood10
will be. They'll be a pen:enrage of
19
ru
lAND,57; U..ch, Mil••"'""' 52; ,.,.
~:ii;Tur.''':: ;w..,i,. .........
people who mitially won't like iL''
25J
. c~eaoa, Balliman, Sl ; 1\)J.onit, Califor,~,~...,..
Th e team as
. aIso const'dera·nG,.
u ~v·· -- .......~a.,~~oo~.,Dikllltd, 46;.
011 · · - - ~
•
. .1'1. 44_; ~.. ~-'~"'
,.17,T,~~~~','.,·
Wo~...! • placing the players' names on the
•. '.. ~·.i·""·,,',·~
--~--·---·- -------------~-·-·----·~_ _ _ _...... boaom of the back of !he sweater.

••

ing out of college. A lot of times, a
change in scenery really helps."
The~ picked up !heir f~
veteran and second runnmg back tn
three weeks when !hey claimed
Anthony Thompson on waivers
from the Phoenix c.dinals.
To make room for Thompson on
their 47-man roster, the Rams
placed running back Troy Stradford
on injured reserve. Stradford, who
has a toe injury, was claimed from
Kan~m City shOrtly before the reg·
ular season began.
The 31st player. taken in the
1990 draft, Thompson fmished second behind Houston quarterback

.

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5 Shelves, Side ~ Eltry, Miror
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·conlacling the Coinmlsslon at 1~
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43266·0573.

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NOW$6,995

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•

:p~l 8 The Dally Sentinel

..
•

...,
•'

•'

Thursday, September 17, 1992 '

~

Thul'lday, September 17, 199:t

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

By Tbe Associated Press
Marquis Grissom just wanted 10
have some fun.
Grissom homered, lripled, threw
out a runner at the pla~e and alenly
scored the game's first run on a
,pop fly as Monaeal moved within
three games of Pinsburgh in the NL
East with a 6-3 vic lOry at Three
Rivers SJadium Wednesday nighL
''This series is fun . They:re
fus~ we're second and we're ready
10 play,:• Grissom said. "l,ast year
at thts bme we were 20 games out
tryinf to fmish the season. This is
fun.'
Expos relievers Mel Rojas, Jeff
Fassero and John Wetteland corn-

"

'

Prescription .·
Shop

INGELS
FURNITURE, JEWELRY
and RADIO SHACK

992-6669

I 06 N. 2nd, Middleport

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992-2635

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THE BOB HARMON FORECAST
Sat., Sept. 19- Major Colleges- Dlv. 1·A
Akron

PLAY THE
OHIO LOTTERY HERE!

lYE POINTS EXPRESS
and DRIYE·THRU
Pomtroy

St. Rt. 7 at Five Points

992-6891

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55-5 PAll ST.
.DDLEPOIT, OHIO
992·6611

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INSURANCE
111 East Second Stnet
Pomer~y, Ohio
992-2342

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Arkanw
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Arizona
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Lou avillt
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Bal Stall
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• Ball«
34 · Utah Stale
10
• Boioe Slate
26
Pacific
24
34
'Bocton Co~
Navy
7
• CannJ ~1gan
27
Ohio U.
10
Cincinnati
27 • Miami, OH
17
Colorado
34 • Mtnnesota
13
'Duloa
22
Rice
20
East Carolina
24 • Soulh Carolina
17
Florida
24 • Teonessee
23
Fiorida Stala
28 • Nar1h Caro~na StaiB 14
• Frnno StaiB
27
Colorado State
14
'Georgia
49
Fullenon State
7
'Hous1Dn
Illinois
22
21
lndana
28 • Kentucky
20
'Iowa StaiB
24
Tu1ano
14
• Kan... Slate
28
Montano
10
LS.U.
23 • Auburn
14
Louioiana Tech
24 • Soulh'n Mississippi
20
• Miami, FL
48
Florida A &amp; M
10
• Michigan
40
Oklohama State
10
Minis Iippi
27 • Vanderbilt
13
Mississippi State
30 • Memphis Slate
13
• Nevada-Las Vegas
23
Northern Arizona
20
• Nevada-Reno
21
McNee so
14
· • New Mexico
24
S.M.U.
16
• North Clrolina
31
Army
10
Norlhom Illinois
24 ' Mensas Stata
13
Notnl Oame
33 ' Michi n State
10
'Oklohama
23
Sou~
Calilomia
10
• PeM StaiB
45
Eastern Michig~n
7
Pi111burgh (S. 17)
26 'Ru1gers
14
• Purdue
27
Toledo
23
• San Jose State
25
SW Louisiana
14
'Stanford
38
Norlhwesll!m
6
• Syracuse
31
OhioSta19
13
'ToxasA&amp;M
33 • MiS50Uri
7
ToxaoTedl
21 • Oregan
10
• Taxu·EI Paso
28
NeW Mexico Stale
17
•rulu
24
Kanaas
22
U.C.LA
27 • BrigHam Young
20
'Virginia
27
21
=iaToch
e
V~~ginia Tech
26 •
13
' Washington
23
Nebraska
13
• WestVi~nia
23
Maryland
21
• Wiamn111'1
24
Bowti
21
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• Wyoming
27
Arr orce
24
llo(or Collog• • lllv. 1-AA

·o..-anern•'"

Dairq

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Alabama

• f11rrrw.n

'IUHO

253 NOITH SECOND
•DDLEPOIT, OHIO

bined 10 st(and eight Pirates runners from tbe sixth through the
eighth as Pitlsburgh left the bases
loaded in both the seventh and
eighth.
"When Grissom gets on base,
they're awfully lOugh 10 conblll,"
Pinues shortstop Jay Bell said. "He
was dominating, just the way Barry
Bonds ha~· been for us for three
years. He's one of lite three best
young players in baseball."
The Pinues, the division leaders
all bQt 10 days Ibis season, are 25II at home against the NL Ea$1. but
are only 3-5 against the Expos,
Montreal (5) and Chicago (3) arc
the only division reams with ntOre

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Morg111 Slllt
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AngtiO Slllt
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Auttln Pea,
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North r....
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Rlellmond
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W.tern Men11K:ky
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BcMiton U.
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'Mtnkalo
MIMoutl Soulflern
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MIUouri·Aalla
• Monmoulh
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Nonh Dallala s..,.
Nor1h Dallala U.
Nlllf1hwllllfn,

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992-SU2

12

JUST IN TIME - Allulllbclrtstop Jeff Blaae' &amp;ell lite tltrow
· •off to lint bile to "COIIIJ)iete tile doabte·play after ~ CIDcbl·
natl's Cesar ·Hernandez at second btise In tbe seventh Ianing or
Wednesday night's National Leape game In Clnctoutl, wltldt tile
Braves WOD J-2. (AP)

"2-5141

By The As8odated Press
Glenallen Hill thinks his former
ream, the TorooiO Blue Jays, has all
the ingredients to win its first
World Series. If that's the case,
Toronto fans wish Hill would quit
blocking lite path.
Hill, traded by Toronto to
Cleveland in June 1991, hit two
homers and matched his career
high with· four RBIS' Wednesday
night as the Indians downed the
Blue Jays 6-3. Toronto's loss, combined with Baltimore's 3.() victory
over Kansas City, cut the Blue
Jays' lead over the Orioles 10 three
games.
.
Hill, who also homered against
Toron10 in a 2-1 win on Monday,
says he has no animosity toward
his f01111er team. In fact, he's hoping they do well - against everyone else.
"I think the 're lhe best ream in
I baseball and ~ want tbem to go
far," he said. "They have all the
ingredients of a world championship team. Of course, I'm rooting for them.
"Everytimc I hit a home run it
feels great. and it doesn't feel any
belter against the JayJ. They IRaled
me well when I played heft, but as
a Cleveland Indian I'm just trying
10 get our team 10 .500."
At 69-76, that won't be essy.
But the win, combined with New
Yotk's 9-6 loss 10 Chicago, did
move the Indians into fourth place.
Hill hit a three-run homer orr
_, Todd SIOUiemyre (10-11) in Cleve·
land's four-run second inning, lhen
made it 6-0 in the eighth with a
451-foot solo shot off the windows
of the SkyDome's restaurant in
sttaighJaway center.
Charles Nagy (15-10) scaltered
six hits ltlld gave.up three runs over
7 113 inninas. He walked two·IJKI
sttuck out five as Cleveland won
ror the sixth time in seven games .
In other games, it was Bos1011 2,
Milwaukee I in 15
Oak·

13
17

."

7

in lhe ALEast.
Mussina (16-5) walked two,
suuck out four and did not allow a
runner past ftrst base.
Mercedes doubled off Chris
Haney (1'1) to slart the sixth and
later scored on Glenn Davis' sacrifice fly. Davis homered in the

eighth as the Orioles cOmpleted a-:
tliree-game sweep of the sinking ·.
Royals at Camden Yards.
·
Athletics 4, Twins 2
The Athletics all but assured
themselves or the AL West tide as :
Ruben Sierra's two-run single in ·:
the fifth inning broke a lie.
·

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At Jack ~Y Sildium, Gary
Sheffield hit hts 32nd home run
and Andy Benes piiCbed four-hit
ball over eight innings.
Benes (12-13) suuck out four
and walked two before Randy
Myers got the last three OlliS for his
35th save. Myers gave up Mike
Piazza'g RBI ground out in the
ninth.
Sheffield slaked Benes to a 1.0
lead in the fourth when he sent a 12 piiCh fmn Torn Caldio!ti (10-14)
over the left-field wall.
Astros 3, Gllats 1
At the Astrodome, Danyl Kile
(4-10) piiChed six strtJn8 innings.
The Astros scored two runs in
the fi!SI inning against rookie Larry.
Carter (1-2) on Steve FJDiey's RBI- .
triple and Luis Gonzalez's run- :
scoring single.

Sit CA 111Ja
CMVIIJIKI
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Pomeroy, Ohio

DRESSING

17

23

land 4, Minnesola 2; California 2,
Seattle I in 13 innings, and Detroit
4, Texas I.
Orioles J, Royals 0
Mike Mussina piiChed a fourhitler and Luis Mercedes' double
keyed a two-run sixth inning as
Baltimore inched closer 10 lhe lOp

SAVE '50

ltl1ht ••~ Sun~ay sp..lall
BAKED PORI CHOP AND

1~

five-run eighth inning.
Joe Magrane, in only his second
start since Sept. 9, 1990, after
' undergoing surgery on his left
elbow, piiChed 6 2/3 innings and
allowed four runs on seven hits.
Majlf8llC hit a home run in the sixth
innmg.
Cris Carpenter (5-4) pitched
one-third of an inning for lite viclory.
Cubs 14, PhUliH 9
At Wrigley Field, Andre Dawson went 4-for-5, includin~ a tworun homer and an RBI smgle in
Chicago's eight-run seventh inning.
Dawson had a ftrst-inning RBI
double 10 go with his big seventh
inning.
Greg Maddux improved 10 18II.
Padres 3, Dodrers 1

Rtg. 111.95 120·211

Fri~•Y

21

Braves J, Reds 2
Jeff Blauser's two-run homer in
the eighllt inning powered Atlanla
past Cincinnati, the Braves' first
~Yin this season at Riverfront Sh!diurn.
Scou Ruskin (4-2) failed 10 hold
a 2-llead in lhe eighth. He relieved
Greg Swindell, who allowed just
three hits in seven innings, and
gave up a lead-off single to Otis
Nixon.
Mike Slanton (4-4) got the win
with 2 1/3 innings in relief of Pete
Smith, who held the Reds 10 a pair
of RBI ground outs over six
innings. Mark Wohlers got lhe last
two outs for his fourth save.
Cardinals 10, Mets 4
At Shea Stadium, Ray Lankford's three-run homer ofr Lee
Guenerman (2-4) highlighted a

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21

Junllla

• Southern nnec:ticut
' Thill
Eut SUG~Jdlburg
Mon!tt.lr

than Olie victory iti Piusburgh Ibis
seascn.
The Expos, 17-5 on the road
since the All-Siar'break, can close
to two games for th.c first time
since, Aug. ~ 7 by sweeping the
two-game scnes - ltlld the Expos
are 11-0 on Thlll1day$.
Cbri.l ~abholz (10-10) conlinued to dominaltl' in Three Rivers
Stadium and Dillin Flelcbtz homered as the Expos scored three tioles
in the fllSI two inninp against Bob
Wallr: (9-6), who lost at home for
the lim time since May 16.
Elsewhere in the NL it was
Atlanta 3, Cincinnati 2; St. Louis
10, New York 4; Cbica~o 14,
Philadelphia 9; Houston • San
Francisco I; and San Diego 3, Los
Angeles I.

Hill haunts old team in Indians' 6-3 victory

''I w~I•.

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The Dally Sentlnei-Pag&amp;-7

Pirates' NL East lead trimmed to three games with 6-3 defeat

Football '92!
Catch AJI .The
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FOR SUNDAY aad MONDAY, SIP I EMBER 20,21
••BUFFAL0 ......................31 INOIANAPOLIS .........13
,
Bills rolled over Colts twice last fall, 42-{i, 35-7 .. Buffalo ran up 276 yards rushing in opening win, QB Jim Kelly
leading Bills 10 28-0 halftime lead in second, passing for 3 TDs.
••DALLAS .......................~ PHOENIX .............. 10
RB Emmiu Smi1h led Dallas 10 both wins over Cards last fall, running for 182 yards, scQring two TDs in first 179 win .. Smith scored three more TDs in second victory, a 27-7 win.
••GREEN BAY................... .21 · CINCINNATI .....:.....20
Teams have metjust6 times since 1971, Bengals leading'series 4-2 .. in '91 Packers were 4-J2, Cincy 3-13 ..
G.B. lost opener 10 Vikes in OT, 23-20 .. Bengals u~t Seahawks 21-3.
00 HOUSTON ............................l6
KANSAS CITX..........24
In Monday niter in Houston lasl fall, Oiler QB Warren Moon completed 29 of38 passes ror 233 yards,with no
interceptions, Houston winning 17-7 .. Oilers won 7 of 8 at home in '91.
..L.A. RAIDERS ....24 CLEVELAND...-.-·13
Raiders lead series 10-2, including two post-season conleSIS .. af~er losing 8 straigh~ Browns finally won last
'
meeting in 1987 .. bo1h started '92 season on ra~d, both teams loSt.
.
.
••MIAML....- ..23 L.A. RAMS--..--10
Dolphins have won lasuhree match-ups vs Rams, lead series 4-llltat started in 1971 .. Rams 100k 40-7
shellacking from Bills in '92 season opener .. Miiuni should win 4th straight
''MINNESOTA......27 TAMPA BAY,-...... .24
After losing twice 10 Bucs in 1990, ftrst win in iheir series, Vikings came back last fall to win both meetings ..
Minn. won 28-13 at home on ~ngdl of 4 F9s .. won second 26-~.
••NEW ENGLAND••-.17 SEAITLE........-.16
Seattle has won 3 of last 4 fmn Pats, including come-from-behind 33-20 win in Foxboro in '90 .. N.E. held 20-19
·
lead in 4th quarter, Seahawk.! scoring 14 poiniS in last 3 minutes.
NEW ORLEANS..·..-20 '*ATLANTA••• - •• 17
.
Thams met three times last fin ..during acason, Fakoos lost fust 27-{i, then won 23-20 in OT .. Allanla rallied 10
win rubber game (in playoffs) afler trailing 27-20 at lhe half.
••PHILADELPIUA.....23 DENVER-··----20
,
These two put on thriller in last meeting in Denver in 1989 .. Eagles held 21·71ead in 3rd quarttr, Broncos
rallying 10 take 24·2llead .. Eagles won 28-24 after fumble =&gt;very.
.
PIITSBURGH.-.27 ••SAN DIEG0---23 '
Pin looking for 41h straight win over Cbarge(s. beating them on opening day last fall, 2620 .. S.D. llllied fmn 19·
3 4th quarter clefttit, scoring 17 points 10 almost pun it out.
SAN FRANCISC0.-.30 ••NEW YORK JETS•• 17
49ers lead series with Jets 5-1,-NY'sonly win coming nine yeanaao .. S.F. belt Jets in NY in1989, 23·10, 49el1
losing two 9ils in thai pne .. this one mugbt be closa'. :
, '
.
'"WASHINGTON I , . DETROIT
23 ...
'
'
On way to winning Suptr Bowl XXVI, Recltit• won 14111 lltd !Slit ~ov!l' Lions in '91 .. they destiOyed
Lions in seuon opener 4S.O, dlen whipped litem apia in NFc aile pme 41-10.
·
(Moaday alte) •ocJDCAG0~---·..2A NEW YOlK GIANTS..;..17
Last fall, Bean edged visiting Gianll20-17, blocking NYl'O in 1ut leCOIIda 10..-v~ win .. GianiS'had
rallied from 13.0 defteit !0 17-~3 lead, bqt 42-)'llid TO run won glll)e,
~ ·

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�By
The
Bend.
.

The .Daily Sentinel
·

Thursday, September 17, 1992
&gt;.:

'

PIIQ8 8

NOW OPEN

Meigs County Communi~y Calendar

TO PLAY AT n.&amp;liV,M. • Gecqe HaD will provide music
during the Citllsb FatMII• Middleport on Saturday. HaD will
·:provide bis clancHtyle type music begbming at 6:30 p.m. A vari·
ety or activities have beell piiDaed for the day with eveuts spoa·
sored by the Middleport Community Association.

Starting over shower planned
A "staning over shower" will be
~ ~d for George and Sue Slewan of
; ,1151, Broadway Street in Middle·
'- pan. Their home and belongings
were destroyed by fire Saturday
- night
.
All household ilems are needed
and gifts or monetary donations
may be left in care of Rev. Emmett
;

Rawson, 974 Broadway Srreet,
Middleport. (across the street from
the Stewart residence) between
now and all next week.
The Stewarts lived in their home
that was destroyed for almost 29
years.
Further information may be
obtained by calling 992-3423.

Commualty Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and tbe day of that evenL Items
must be received weD hi advance
to assure publication In the cal·
endar.

Meigs County Democratic Party
Headquaners, 220 East Main Sllee't
in Pomeroy at 7 p.m. Democratic
candidates will aaend, and refreshments will be served. The public is
invited.

THURSDAY
BASHAN - Services, Red Brush
Church of Christ oo Bashan Road,
tllrougb Saturday, 7:30p.m. nightly, and Sunday 10 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Guy Malloty, Winter Garden, Fla.,
will be the speaker. Public invited.

POMEROY ~ Meigs County
Young Democrats, regular meeting, Thursday, 6:30 p.m., c.rpen.
ters Hall, Pomeroy.

MIDDLEPORT - CatfiSh Festival Committee, meeting, Thursday,
7 p.m .. Middlepon Council ChamREEDSVILLE • Revival and bers.
homecoming at Joppa United
ROCK SPRINGS • Middlepon
Methodist Church, Wednesday
Child
Conservation League, Thursthrough Sunday. Carry-in dinner
Sunday, 12:30 p.m. Special singing day, 7 p.m., Rock Springs United
nightly and Sunday afternoon . Methodist Church.
.
Brenda Weber, guest speaker. PubFRIDAY
lic invited. ·
TUPPERS PLAINS - TuP.pers
RACINE - Regular meeting, Plains VFW and Ladies Auxiliary,
American Legion Post602, Racine, round and square~ Friday, 8Thursday, 7:30p.m.
11 :30 p.m .. MuSic '?Y. Smoky
Mountam Drifters. Public mv11ed.
POMEROY - AA meeting,
LONG BOTIOM - Faith Full
Thursday, Sacred Heart Catholic
Church, 7 p.m. Call 992-5763 for Gospel Church in Long Bottom,
preaching and singing, Friday, 7
infonnation.
p.m. Pastor Sieve Reed invites the
POMEROY - Meigs County public. Fellowship will follow.
Democratic Executive Committee
meets Thursday, 7:30 p.m., CarRIPLEY, W.VA. - Liberty
penters Hall in Pomeroy.
Mountaineers will perfonn Friday
at Slcateland in Ripley, W.Va.
POMEROY • Grand opening of ·

To place an ad

RACfNE - Hymn sing, Carmel Chapter OES, bake sale, Saturday,
United Methodist Church, Racine, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m .• porch or Mi~­
7 p.m., homecoming weelcend cele- port Masonic Temple. Any members wishing to contribule should
bration.
·
call 742-2544 or 742-2890 for further information.
SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER • Star
GLASGOW, W.VA. - Libeny
Grange and Junior Gfl111ge, annual
Mountaineers
perform Saturday at
hayride and Wiener roast, Satutday,
Glasgow
Fire
Department, Glas6:30 p.m., grange hall. Buns provided. Bring hot dogs and finger gow, W.Va.
foods. Members, potential memGAlllPOLIS -Annual meeting
bers an~ guests ipVJted.
,
· of Athens District United
P()MEROY ·Boy Scout Troop Methodist Wo111en, Sa~urday,
249, Pomeroy, will hold a car wash Grace U.niled Methodist Church,
Saturday, 9 a.m. to 2· p.m., at Gallipolis. Registration, ·9 a.m.
McDonald's.
Rev. Lynene Arthur, guest speaker.

Call992-2156
MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M. • SAT.8-12

• 7 poi.Dt line type only u.ed.
• Scati.acl U not re1poui.hte for error• after far.t day (cheek
for error• fll'll day ad nuu in. paper). CaD ~fore 2:00p. m.
day after publication to make correctio11.
• Adl Lba.t mutt be paid in advance are:

Card of Thub
Ia Memoriam

Hapj&gt;y Ada.
' Yard Sal•
• A cluoifted odvutioemenl placed in lhe CallipoU. Daily
Tribu.M (u:eept Cla..ified. Dilplay, Baline11 Card or l.ega.l
No&amp;icu) willallo appear i.a the Point Plea1aat Regilter and

MIDDLEPORT • Evangeline

Days

~ Trustees
'

;:i: Fourteen trustees from Athens,

:.flocking, Jackson, Lawrence,
i:5feigs, Pike, Ross and Vinton
: counties atlended the OVAL annu·
; tl .meeting, co-sponsored by the
• Oltio Library Trustee Association,
: held at OVAL headquaners on Sa~­
' urday, Sept. 12.
:
Dan Cain, a nationally known
: consultant on non-profit board
' operations provided five hours of
~ uaining on improving local board
; operations. Cain focused discussion
; en fiscal policy, personnel rela: lions, and long range planning.
Charles Blalceslee and Parricia
• representing the Meigs

County Public L•brary, was in
attendance.
Established in 1973 as the fU'St
stale-funded regional public library
system in Ohio,. today OVAL
.administers through local public
libraries a variety of programs
designed to improve and exlend
services to local residents. OVAL
is made up of public libraries in the
counties or Athens, Hocking, Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs, Pike, Ross,
Scioto and Vinton.
· ·
Wanda Eblin serves on the
OVAL board and represents the
Meigs County Public Libraly.

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location. Low 50's.

9 Year•

DRIVEWAY 'WOII

BULLDOZE!! 1_8_ACICHOE
and TRACIU'IUI: WORK

MIDDLEPORT· Rulland St. • Th is stone hou se is in
very good condition and Is very nice inside. Priced lor
lhose of you justataning out. or as a retirement home.
it has 3 BR and 1112 baths. -Close to town . Prtce
Reduced.

CHARLIE'S
WOII.

EXCAVATING

BROAD'WAY, RACINE· This ranch type home has 3
BR, 2 balhl, large living room , utililyji'DOM and cenlrlll
air. T1111 home Is In a gOod family neighborhood clooe
al
.: • to:..•..
•

..

"Any Size AY1lllab~ .

" Polt aoltdlnos"

'!JJaw

HEMLOCK GROVE· This 3 bedroom home is located
on I acre of ground in a country setting. II also has 2
baths, large living room , dining room, kitchen, a~d
laundry area. A new rool has recenUy been addea. Mid
30'1.
.

IN THE .

201U..... Riverllolld
23. . . .

f11111D1len. ·

.FORE" YOU

OPEN SEVEN DAYS A .WEEK

....

.__,_.
-..Ao yau· will never be

HfRfiA!Alf

...

1117111n

RUTLAND
MINE SUPPLY

LICENSED and BONOEO

FIIEE ESTIMATES
HAVE R!fEIEIKES
lelare 6p.&amp;l.al'to lossago
Aflw 6 p.&amp; 614-915-4110

hymn•

rrHido
lapel
togllher
· W1 will elng In IIHveil
togllher
God kMPI uo aUII

IDott

Call AI, 614-742·232.

INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR

a..,ed

W1

·

20 Yr. bp.

"Tahllt P• Ortt Of Poll,
-Itt Us 0./t 111 y,.,•

logllhw

tact
lhantc; 11 tt2'*
.
(t) 11, 17, II

-

-11

o••,;, AJsurtll ,,.,,.,,,.,.

PONDS

SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME .SITES
HAULING: Ume1tone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal

\tJ'

JOIII' ~mlllng

togethw
WI
w.,.

•j

R&amp;C EICAVATIHG
BULLDOZING

~liNDA'S

•-!Uoyourplace.
We w..t to church

Tll• FartMre Bank and

lavlnge Coollpany, Pomaroy, Ohio, !..riM the right
to bid at lhla IIIII, and to
wi.,..._ the allow collallr·
at prior to aale. Further, The
F_. . Bank and Savlnga
Company r••~~* lha right
to rl(ect any ·or all bide
aublllltted.
Furlhtr, the above oollatera1 wil be eold In Hoe condlUon It ll In with no
exprtitMd or Implied war-

.....,.

TROMM BUILDERS:.

WI &amp;/tin

Becau.. no one will

WITH IEADUGHTS

Tl'llllll

........ti

CAliFORNIA
TANS

742·2656

Since It hu ...... Y-

ROOFING.

FrH EatlmatN

n~~)ltlno

Real Estate General

1.12/tln

slsoo

BILL SLACK
992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

Uphobtery

Uaicare Healt• Facilties, lac.

St. Rt. 7
c•••llire, OH.

WIDO
AND mRnfiiNG UNDERNUTH
GAUGES • ADDITIONS • SIDING

•FIREWOOD

BtcauH, DMr, you
w..t o n ' I amjuatw.ttlng, o.,

TAANIIIIISION, 41" CUT

-

SPECIAl..
UNLIMITED SESSIONS
Moaths of September
and October

Call 614·992· ·
6637

Rllldontlat I COinman:lal

General Hauling
Mobile Heme Repair

Huabancl
GENE (PETE) BASS
I 11f1811t my 27111 ami·
v...-y alone

liD

~~~------

Electrical &amp; Ref•dgenotio~

. 1·100.837-1460

In r.-ry 01 My

1111 SNAPPER '!Rf&lt;CTOR
AND MOWER 7280 12 HP

GAWPOUS

CHECK OUR SELECTION
AND PRICES&amp; FIRST
1-11·'12·1 mo.

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINnNANCE I•UGHT HAULING
949·2391 or

In Memory

2

lowlnfl ool-..:

... Sitl

.CHAPMAN SHOES
! . POMEROY'S QUALITY SHOE.STORE
........
....
·.

(614) nMJ76
Office, School &amp; Art
Suppllee, Office
Furniture, Advertlelng
Speclalt~aa, Typing,
Lllmlnatlng, COpy, Fa
&amp; Notary Servlc:ea

&amp;

1112, 11110:00 Lilt. a public
Nle wW be held at 105
Union Av..ue, """'-Y,
Ohio, It M1 lor . .h Boa fol.

iJ!

112W. . .I•StrNt •

,...I'IYI!Mf• 45769

SIZED LIMESTONE·:
FOR SAl£

HOUSE FOR SALE
BY OWNER
12 Year old ranch type house. 3:
bedrooms, two baths, 1'Ia car
garage and breezeway, central ait
and heat pump, many extras. On 2
acres of land.
:·
Eastern.School District. Blacktop·
roads Co. Rd. 28 and 32
•

SHRUB TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAl

PUBUCNOTICE

INFANTS SIZE 1 THRU BOYS' SIZE 6

OFFICE SERVICE
AID SUPPLY

949-2823

NOTICE II hor.byglv......
on.......,, loplllmbw II, r-~~--!'""!"-"1

per ~1100

....

Acreoo Jre• hd Offtce
217Lhc... lt,
POIIEIOY, OHIO

Reminder to merrbers: Bring
supplies for S.H.A.R.E,
675·4340, ext. 387

Public Notice

3
SUff

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

n . .do. Alula largeot
11lecllon of mllltory
aurpluollllnal 1117 pd.

SZiff

99

'799

pot

Exc:ualing

53-- Antique~
54- Miac. Mereh•ndile

Speaker. Steve Burris

18110 FORD ESCORT LX 2
OR. It

...

•

Plumbing &amp; Heating

51- Houaebold Good.
52-- Sportin« Coodo

Room

FP.11 RflllblliiPI•I

•

ILL 1111(1$
lrla111 Ia Or We
·
Pk. Ue-

OPEN MON.-SAT.
9"?? 8/17/Pcl.

Farm Equipment
Wanted to Buy
Liveatock
Hay &amp; Grain
Seed &amp; Fertilizer

Downstairs Conference

IFAPPt~TIOHSO.

•

1.

AREA OSTOMY ASSOC.
MEETING SUNDAY,
SEPT. 20, 2:30P.M.
Pleasant Valley Hospital

as=..
4

OVEN
and VCR REPAIR

CARPENTER SERVKE

ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF NURSING
SERVICES
Pomeroy Nurolng Md Rohobllllallon C.ntar, a 100
bed eldlled nurolng ... r.r, lo ~ a oywlem....t·
10llld, _,geUc lnclviduol lor the ADON poolllon on
our nuralng team. The ..,.lllled 010dldate will be an
RN, II..,Hd In Ohio, wiBo experience In lo"lt'llrm
care, excellent communication akllla, and leaderehlp
obUIU•.
\
We offer competitive aalory ond benefill, ....r ca...,
~ potantitol.
"-ard ,_ume, oumma1lzlng quallllcallono and Nlory hlalory to:
Pomeroy N11r1lng and Rohablllllllon Center
36758 RockiPflnge Ro.od
Pomeroy, Ohio 457&amp;i
(&amp;14) 112-6&amp;0&amp;
Wa . . ., Equal Opportunity Employar

limit 12

...
. 88~.:11

...riJeiStrd-..
Fr• Elllmote.-)'42-2360

YOUNG'S

Truck• for Sale
42- Mobile Home. for Heat 73-- Van~ &amp; 4 WO'•
43- Farmt for ReoL
74- Motorcycle&amp;
4t-. Apartntenl for Rent
7~ Bull &amp; Moton for Sale
45-- FumLihed Roorru
7~ Auto Parb &amp; Auo..ori.,.l
77- Auto Repair
46-- Space for Rent
47- Waated to Real
78- Camping Equipmenf
48- Equipment for Rent
~LI;\ ltl . ~
49-For Le.1e

Bl' LLFTI\ BO \RD

AK!ni.4BR,3-.2--.It
DR
apt. P"'!*fY 4,800 oq. ft. 1111111
l&gt;ldg. .

=~

937-BufTalo

I· I\ \ \ c .I \I

55- Buildi"« SuppUeo

..

:F~

r.u.

247-Letart
949-Racine
7 42-Rutland
667-Cool"Vi.Ue

643-A.rabia Oi.tt.
379-Walnul

\11-.BCII \ \IJI:o;E

13--ln•ura-.e

Tho pttce .... - - .. $61,1100 ....
o- IIMIICIIIII ol 141 10 110% ol ....,._.
--be~ CJIIIIytng polloll to buy wq na 11omt on 3~ ..... In

•......__
-·--

245-Rio Grande
256-Cuyan Dilt.

=·-·.

'"'""'!.t Dhc':~...
20%-3~

Quality
Ston• Co.

1192-7093
llon.-SUn. II Ml-&amp;pm
See uo lor your hunting
and back lo achool

41- Boutell for Rent

11- Help 'IV anted
12- SituatioDI Waated

07
""""
10W80, 10W40
•&amp;W30
MIWII

Pomeroy
985- Chealer
843-Pordand

67&amp;-Pl. Pleuanl
458-Leon
576-Apple Grove
773-Muon
882-New Haven
895-Letart

JU Till aall
OINIW IEIVICI

Q8JAYMAR

County Rd. 19Peaehfork Rd.

45633 ST. RT. 124
RACINE

1-"\B\1 :o;li'I'IH.:-;
S. I 1\ E:o;TOCI\

3- Aaoouacemen\1
4-Giveaway
5-HappyAdo
.6- Lo.t and FoWlld

9-- Wuted 10 Buy

Till . . . . . llrlllllllc, 1WS 12.016
~~~~ . . . . . - - OWSIC-012
~~~~ ......... Cit, IW$19·012
TIIIIIU .. .. act IIIII, •WS20-o1s

367-Che.blre
388-VInoon

Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
. 34- Bwine~a BuildlnfP
charged for each day as separate ads.
35--- Loll &amp; Acreage
----:-;r;w:~~mm&lt;iii~---~ 36-- Real E.uate Wanted
Ill \ '1\ 1.:-;

Auction

5!.'"'"'''"'..

No 111iochecU

992-Mlddlcport/

33- Farm• for Sale

YOUR

4!!"'~' "

~allipo6o

$ 20
$ .30
$ .42
. $ .60
$.05/day

PRIC REDUCED!

25°/o OFF

••
... .

Over 15 Words

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

8- Public Sale &amp;

ALE 2~~

: · FRIDAY, SATURDAY &amp; MONDAY
'

Rate

2-ln Met~tory

attend
·annual OVAL meeting

:~

Words

GET RESUI.TS • FAST!

Buck, Betliany Cooke, )ohn Cooke,
Carl)' Crow, Trevor Depoy, P.J .
Erwin, Andy Garnes, Megan Garnes. Breyden Haptonstall, Robert
Harris, Alex Hawley, Sarah Hawley, Alyssa Holter, Ben Holter,
Kelsey Holter, Ross Holter,
Matthew King, Jessica Marcum,
Joshua Marcum, Lauren Schmoll,
Jamie Schmoll, Julie Spaun, Adam
Thomas, Brandi Thomas, Danielle
Thomas, Heather Thomas,
Michelle Thomas, Ross Well, Ryan
Well, Owlie Young, Derek Young
and Slephanie Young.
Amy Perrin will perform in the
role of "Grace" with Dixie Sayre,
director; Ralph Werry. music: and
Jim Huff, youth direcror.

Gallla Counly Meigs Coun1y Mason Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

RATES

Program to be presented
The youth of Trinity Church of
Pomeroy will present the musical
"Amazing Grace" on Sunday at the
10:25 a.m. worship service.
,
The musical, written by Karen
: Dean and arranged by Greg Nel:-sen, is writlen for real children and
brings out the grace of God for the
children that God has placed on
:· !his earth.
:
The program talks about "super' natural" and "the grace place" and
; "vitamin 'G' ."
: : . The public is invited ro the ser&gt; vice afler which a reception will be
; held to honor the youth for their
: participation in the worship ser; vice.
• Youth panicipating are Jackie

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
1:00 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100p.m. Thursday
1:00 p.m. Friday

Classified pages cover the
following telephone exchanges ...

the Daily Sentinel, rcacbiog over 18,000 home.

RACINE • River Valley Boys at
Carmel United Methodist Church
in Racine, Saturday, 6:30p.m. ·for
homecoming weekend celebratioQ.

RUTLAND - Dance, Rutland
American. Legion Hall, Saturday,
8:30 p.m. to midnight. Music by
While's Hill Band. Public invited.

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thursday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

• Ada outtide the county your ad run1 mull ho prepaid
• Receive dilcounl for ad. paid in advance.
• Free Ad.. : Giveaway and Fou.od ad. under l5 word• will be
rua 3 day• aL ao cbarp.
• Prate of ad for aU c.pilallellen il double price of ad COIL

.

CHESTER - There will be a
. special meeting of Shade River
Lodge No. 453 F &amp;: AM Saturday
?:30 p.m. Work in the Fellow Craft
Degree. Refreshments will be
served.
SUNDAy
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange will hold a chicken barbecue Sunday at I 1 a.m. at the gral!ge
Continued on page 12

CLOSED SUNDAY

POUCIES

SYI!.ACUSE - Wilson family
reunion, Saturday, Syracuse Park
near London Pool.l.Amch
. at noon.

HENDERSON, W.VA. - Gallia
Twirlers Western· Squire· Dance
Club, dance, Saturday; 8-11 p.m.,
Henderson Community Cenler. Jim
Wilbur caller.
'
. POMEROY - Meigs· County
Retired Teachers, luncheon Satur·
day, 12:30 p.m., Trinity Church,
Pomeror. Paula Thacker,'Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce,
will speak. Stat~ Senator Jan
Michael Long will attend.

CURIO
BARN

WILSON'S ARMY
SURPLUS

992·7553
OIL

·FREE ES11MATES

992·3838

"
104 Beech Stteet ~

Pomeroy, Ohio 4576.
"C./I Ue for All Your Building NHde •
~

COMMERCIAL • RESIDENTIAL
~
••
AGRICULTURAL
•
Livestock Bulldl'ngs • Machl1111 Sheela· H~ :
Barns- Carports
:;
Garages ·Storage Buildings. Roofing • ~
Windows • Skiing
~
WV Lie. IWV 1120\SU
FREE ES171fATES

Eojlat)

FlEE ISTIIIATES

985·4473
667-6179

PARTS &amp; SERVICE
Mowen 1 Gall Saw'
1Wettflaten

614-949-2804
•

:rT,_·-~~·~.~··!!.;··~·,2.
I •.

m

lltr

WANl ADS

~

G

• N. , f--.:!"S';:.•
i .,J:.f::

~

,,•
(304) 77W34~

.......... .
ReillcHiellag
Stop &amp; Collflll't

•

JEFFSTAA~

ROBERT BORING
(614) 1112-3541

BISSELL &amp; BURKE RACINE MOWER
CONSTRUCTION P.O. lox CLINIC
194-Wak alley
RAOII£, OHIO
eGar....
IF--'f ~ lltlgo s.al

•Complete

..

WJty HI Efflclacy
Air c.•liotten, Heal
P~~~~~p~.F1nacts&amp;

"""n.

Now Wat•
Bennetts .Mobile Horne
Uti S.llarHclJaoliL·
. Call614)

,_

�,.

17,
· KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlcbt

. SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

32 Mobile Homes
rorsale ·
1812 -

14xlQ, 2 bod·

CIA. total elK. Undlf•
penning, h20 lroolod woad

I'OOml:,

pof(lh, ~~xao alumn •wnlng •

Wll,l,T ~ l'l'f M€t

~.... ~'ttl

.,.

HoUsehold
Goods

11111'!11 - 1 1 , oVemhing IXC
concl; ... · 304-l75-514i.

f'£

...

Television
Viewing

vWEU.? Wf AREII'T 'rOO I'Uo.'fltv.~

__.... ......."'
__
-..---

r.1erchand1Se
51

Ohio

1992

Ohio

fOR~

•

.··~

·,J

0 four
Roorrango

Jon.n of 1M
words below lo lonn f011r rlmple wardr .
~~:rambled

-

THU., SEPT. 17 •
EVJNINO

. ~..,;;;..E..,.L,.;,;K..;;L:..:N;,.....jl

. I I I' I' .

ASK 'fOUR. DAD IF ~E WANTS
ME TO RAKE YOUR LEAVES ...

llE SA"(S TO COME BACK IN

A MONT~ .. ~E'5 WAITIN6 FOR
THE LAST LEAF TO FALL

SOME~OW. I THINK YOU AND
ARE IN TJ.US T06E'f~ ER ..

·1.. W·H y 0 S I .ousAofcutlethe was
blondobviously
who had jeai-got·

I' I' I I

r

!:'

1·,.~=·=·=·=·=~·r:..,

'.· ~

ten all the attention at a party.
"She's
I call
bobsl8d
looks,' got
she what
purred
to her
date,

D I E l"going ........ lastI"
,......,l'Yrl"'AN
l.;.;..,lr-,IT'
""TI_, e Comple!e the. chudle
L -L.-1.'--1._.1..-

L.-1

quoled
by filling in the mis.sing words
you develop from st1p No. 3 below.

SC:UM.lETS ANSWERS

,•

• ·••

Odious • PBg811 • Ouest • Zygote • GOOD to SAY
After a chat with a co-worker, my friend commented,
"Have you ever noticed that peOple who say they want
to tell you eomething for your own good never haw
anything GOOD to SAY."

BRIDGE

NORTH

1-n.n

•ss

• 76

t10 I 4
+AKQIOII

PffiLLIP

WEST

ALDER

+QJI0 8 4

EAST
+Ill

...

. •u

.Q ID U 7

u

tKQJII5

+H761

MOllE
ANIMAtGFAMMA/l

The factor -15
sun block
ft.AMIN60II'Iti

-------w.--........
....,., ___ _ ----&amp;..----""'"'
__
--a.-.~~,

Pti MEal... hly, ~ a t ' '

;tv:=._.... -. ..
0112.

.. ..

T rcns··o~~::·
... . '"' .... ~

~

,_,,,.

AUlD Pills&amp;
liLt II I I

....._=-

lhl Nm!ft9

..,.., OMYthlng eoing diMJ&gt;.
ll!ll,l·uooil • - Loto of lloo
~ ll~~n~..' EYirythlng mull

_Hi _

a

X

a~.~•

•..

~ --

S-11.

lltl_

=...........
.,........
..... -·.

"""'lllrtl
· -Wod.
tddod
cloy,
Silt,
111hlOCh
llvOIJOb
Sol. 111111 liiCI will conll1a10 noxl
. . . IN ~ng lo lOki. AI
~. on UnOoln PIU al
,,~ JuM off '141. 3td tr1l&amp;1r on
left. John E. .loll-.
Yon! Salt: Joy 0... Wod., Thurs.,
Fri. fO.?

.....

Block, b&lt;lok, · winCltildo
..... Rio Ortndi, ·Oij
Call Win&amp;14-

ACROSS

- · llniOit, Ole.

245.fl2\

!I!

·-

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
MY OADeAYS HIS

, .... S.loo 111111 lo Pold In
· · · • Doocllno: 1:00pm lhl
..,.,. IM lid It to Nn,
odlll.,. 1:00pm Frldoy,

r·

sL•

odklon

Qi.C:!fs 1Q6.Ne.Y.I-e.E'&gt;ION
15 SHOT...

~/

IO:DOo.m,

Public Sale
&amp;AuctiOn

Real Estate

oonlco. Uconood
IIH;Ghlo &amp; W111 Vlrglnlo, 301m.ml.

Mt. Atto Auction. Audlon Friday

Don"t .Junk Ill S.tl Ua Your Non-

Woriolng

llo)or

~/

I

Nor,.

Eld

SNT

AUpua

Opening lead: +Q

1------- ---""'"
1

one down.

• -:

West''
live clube. At trick no..·:

: Tbe best declarers allow lor

baving all
·they lead a club IIIII 1 ' - llunlmy's
eJs*t. WHn East dlloanls, they rriUe;
conteatedly. Tbey retarD to bud ID ·
another suit IIIII Iead a oec:md club, II&lt;
1nmi•g dummy's to. Tile ..WI II
Iovertrick, not ooe undertrick.
: .'
, U you wooldn't ilave fllmu ~ IIJrm.;

a

my'sclubetpt,doo'l_,.taonnrdr,:

West will have all five clubl lelllllaJI;
two percelll of tbe lime. But ,..,..
llltould allow lor a 4-lspllt, ftldl will:

occur more than a quarter of tbe •

·
- llwl"" ,. - ..,.,.., .,...;
'"- 10 AIIIQo ~•.io ,.,. or w. s :. ·:.
n.,-culo_..,....,..,.-, ,

=•
11)---•••• - ··

Junior

Cia• Advloor, Applicllnll must hold a valid Ohlo
tuchlng certUk:ale and for
eo~chlri; pc*llona mult m•t
C*'llllc~kln Nquirlmlnll of
Ohio fOr ipCMtl IMCiclnt and

CPR. Poroonolnl_,od ohould

contocl Jim Ctrponllr, Supori,.
london!, Jl!!p Locol Schoolo, P.
0 , Bo:.:
320 Eul Main
Slrelt, Pomwoy, OhJo.

zn.

Appll•ncoo,
Colo&lt;
TY'o,
R•lolgoraloro, Wanted Plf'IOn to live In 1 cara
FrMZifl, VCA'I , Mlciowavea,
Alr Conditioners, GuHar Mlpe, for llder1y man, 304·71'J.S04!i.
Poll VFW In llooon, 1110! lpl, 90
Elc. 114-261-1238.
In sliding doors, .. ft apt.

Read the Best Seller

HouH For Salt: 2 Btdrooms,
Family Room, Fu11 B11amanl,
Wllh Fireplace. 614-446-866.
3 bedroom
rtnch
home
100120011 lol, DR, FA, Li!

wtflrepllet, large ldlehan, 2
bltha, double car garage, new

Llnol hell pump. BriCk front

wielding.
3287.

304~82-3310

or 882·

Fui
i
·
-wl-.
••a•

rDOm lpirtm.ntl Ill: VIllage
BEAI/TIFUL HOUSE FOR SALE Minor
and
Rlv~ralde
Hletorical Aru Corner Lot • 816
Af&gt;l•-e
In
Mhlcloport.
F...,
ltlln St. Pl. PIHHnl, W. Va.

-c . . -.. . . . .
---

21 Lllwlna Hono, 7 $2.110 • r.ch. Aloo,

Old
Uprlalll

Complltlly Renovated: 2 Full till. ~ 114-111:1·7711. EOH.
Bltha, 3 Large Bldrooms, Naw
-~~
HVAC, Nlw Carpet. Available c.mp~o~.,
lmmodlolly. &amp;14-446·2205.
rtwr. No - ·
114For S.io-4bdnn., '2 lfl b•lh 44~-hl~ .
home In Pomeroy, Baa utlful One b 1 J oom lpalt....,... lurriver vllw, ahown by ap~nl· nlohod,
w•ioo lncludod.
ment, 114-ltZ-1723.

·· ...-.. m. ,,.~~1641.

Homa For Sail In Ch11hlra VII· p l l o ; - 1 .
laga, I Roome, I bath, Lg. Fl1t Ont L J oum furniMad apert·
LOC av ~~-w :30 P.M.
Phone: 114-44111-Hfl A"•' 3:30

I ft lumowlck

fw-

-·-.
.
.
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25 - - want

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taMing bed with flea lanner,
Floh 1'lnll, ~- uclllonl, . good -~
lion, 11100 firm. M..t Nil; 114- full 8no 1'loplool ..... lolrclo,
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31 Homes for Sale

6 Sllurdl.y, 7:00 PM. FrlMolgo Locol School Dlotricl
a-lot, - • Ulld ........... Tho
curmtUy NMI~ tpalii. Sal- guoronlood .,.,. Iapllcallono
hom conllltd • P"
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Ed Frulor,
Rl 2 North ~n11 tor a Junior High
School Cht111Mder AdviiOI' and
almen mllll. Llclr'IH No.l30.

IOP.M.

He Sb.'tS HE W&amp;JES HE
O:ULDSAY THE-51\ME ~ '
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oond, $11. 30WI2.aA.

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and Rare, Bought 1nd 9old.
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Ohio 4513\ 1 - 7 2112 6-

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Tlie World AIIJ'anac 11 Crossword Puzzle

Supplies

Big Ytnl Solo, 8opl 11, !1: II &amp;
11. 114 on Jotlcho ""· Fol·
lo•ll•a
Solo, 101 JonM 81, S.ol.
llo-~ 11. Th..._ Fri, Sol. 1:00 •

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Vulnerable: East·West
Dealer: Soutb

Tbere are many contracts tbat declaren misplay witbout reallzlng tl
Often tbey wiH make tbe contract and
think nothing more olll. But once ll1 a
blue moon tbe opposing cards will di·
vide so unfavorably that the declarers
go down. Tben comes the grumble
about bad luck. Yet there are some
players wbo train tbeiiJielves to lind
lines of play that allow lor tbese dia·
bolical distributions. Occuloually
they bave tbeir moment in tbe sUD.
Take today's dul for example. AI·
,ter a standard auction, in wblcb North
wisely did not meolioo his club suit,
West leads tl)e spade queen.
Most players win the lint trick and
without further ado lead· a club to
.dummy's queen. When East dilcards,
tbey stop dead in tbelr tracks, tbe COli·
tract now equally Weless. Tbey can II·
nesse dummy's club 10 lor an el&amp;btb
trick, butlbe nlnth Is lq gooe.
Slightly better declarers play a club
to the 10 at Irick two. This is an Jm.
· provemeo~ guarding against a H
club brealt, but here it stlll results in

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lnftuencea govornlng you In lho year do tho oppoollo.
ahead. Send tor VIrgo's Aalr&lt;Hlraph PIICEI (Fiib. 2fl.ll8rch 20) There's a
predtc11ona today by moiling $1.25 pluo poutblllly you mlghC ba reqtilrod 10
a long, lllt.._,d,_, ICompocf on,. mllko o omall oacrttlct ,lodey on balllll
• 1 lopo to Altr!Hlraph, c/o thla ntWIPI· o t - tor whom you're rooponli·
BERNICE
1per, P, O. Bo~ g1428, Ci1Ye18nd, OH . blo. 0o Hwtlh a omllt, noc a feeling thai
BEDE OSOL 44101·342B.llt ll\lreto 11ote' your zbdl· ~·ro baing lmpotod _ ..
oc olgn.
AJIIII {llln:ll :rt·Aprll 1t) It you r•
UIISA (lepl. D-Oot. 21) let lho one quire a apodal favor , an old friend w11o
you love know how much ho or she Is hat oiWayo como Chrough when n appredatod COday, nos by '!'hot you Uf, 11 tho one 10 go to COday. Juot. blo !rank
but by,.., You ,do. Ootdl lplak vol· lbout J9ur.ntoc1o.
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•
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TAUIIUI
~ 10 llay 10) AmeonlngIC9fii'IO COaL - · 211 II thlngl , ful oo
. m1g11t noc be too tPIIy
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Willi
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etnefy, poi!Choo 'ollarlgll can ba mode llflorlc ~ 111111 kay.
C!ICIIY. IIooo,.,llllyniultbadonUith '
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blllllolklt au: c'irr n very good today
' ' IAQITTAIIIUI(IIow;21 .Doo.l11 Team •. --of,.,.lbllltyCo~mat·
ollorla n llkiiY, to be much more...,. ·coro IOIItlllcllly. Sound Juda"*'l w11
l4pl. 11, 1 •
coalul Coday thin -you 1110111Plln- f11fP you your way around
dtptridelilft,
when you and Obll i I . .
'
Your poatltor ocllltvlng greater ·your mt11t II' 11rtvtng tor 1 mortuat' CAIICIII '(...,.11..luly 21) ,,._ o1
tocogl lilian In your l1tld of endelvor ob)ocCIYe.
·
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loOk vory lloptlut !of 1111 _ . ofiMCI, • CAJOIICORN (Droo. - · 1e) Be llert you IOctay, tllllro a coi-Jed llflor1 co
IlOot ••, In ore!« so fUtllfl your ambl· for an _,..,ley todly that could pro' ' lnduco poltll'lwclhlnga. Hyou -st your
tiona, may ba o priCt lo pay. ,
duct o !IU•tolnod oorn1nt1 rete '1""' a· . wtet, 1111 ~ Will -st.
V111C10 !MI-ll lopl. 21) Tllko you vt long period ol tlmo.·ll'o ilictly to L10 H11J II ~~· II) A1111t- po.
~oti~D ring baCUtyou '-ltlhay Within yourfllldoltlii*IIM.
, ' tllnD*IIId 111 1
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Gtll a JumP on 11ft by undtrleandlng tho on)oyed. Be .XC.....ay Olrlflll yOu Cion'S '
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kind of peocefulneoo about -~ 1 ~llhod ." "- TriC'· ,.,._,
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�Thursday, September 17, 1992

MiddlepOrt, Olilo

.Meigs c0 unty... _::CO=IItln=u=ed..::.:tro=m::.:)181t;8~-::---:::;:;::-:::-;:::::;;-;:;;:~:;;;t.;;:-1,;";·
;· ,..___, .. • .....,.. wt'de chtirch picnic,
1 .m.
ball. Public invited.

RACINE - Descendants of
James C. and Ethelinda Stone
, Moore :MD hold a reunion $unday
ll Sutton.United MethodiSt ChliiCh,
n:U.:--·Bashan
n~•
_. ~•n be
"""u""
,.....__ .....
"""~ ww
acarry-in dinner !1112:30 p.m.
RACINE • Gideon and 'Artimesia Roush reunion, Star MiU Park,
Racine, Sunday.'Potluck dinner at
I p.m.

COOL VILLE - Vanderhoof
Baptist Church, Coolvi,le, youth
revival, SUI!day through Wednesday, 7 p.m. nightly.
POMEROY -Homecoming, Mt
Hennon United Brethren in Christ
RACINE - Homecoming at the Church, Te~as Road, Pomeroy.
Mt. Moriah Church of God in Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
Racine will be sundar beginning a1 10:30 a.m.; fellowship meal, noon;
9:45 a.m. There wil be a puppet afternoon service, I:30 ·p.m. Spe,
show at II a.m. wilh dinner at cial singing. Putilic invited:
12:15 and afternoon service.
RACINE - Homecoming, Morse
Singers include the Jenkins Family,
Chapel
Church, Racine;Ponland
Ironton; Mountain Top Singers,
Road,
Sunday.
Potluck dinner at
Racine. Guest speakers will be feanoon.
!l.ftemoon
service, 1:30 p.m.
wred. Public invited.
willl special singing by The ConHOCKINGPORT -Music bene- querors. Pastor Hap loge~ invites
fit for Glen "Lefty" Baker, Sunday the public.
from 1-11:30 p.m. at Hockingport
ROCK SPRINGS - Hymn sing,
at the home of Kenny and Millie
Reynolds. All bands welcome. Rock Springs United ~ethodist
Church, Sunday, I p.m. Willi HeavFood and softdrinks available.
en Bound Four. Revival begins
·l
·
POMEROY - Jeff Faull, evan- Monday.
gelist, will speak at llle Bradford
RUTLAND - Descendlants of
Church of Christ Sunday through
Wednesday at7:30 p.m. nightly. A Oscar and Charles Reed .Hysell,
nursery will be provided. Derek family reunion, Sunday~ 12:30
Sblmp, evangelist, invites the pub- p.m., Rutland Firemen's Park.
Potluck dinner.
'
lic.

POMEROY - Rev. Eddie Buffington wiU be the ~ preacher at
Naomi Baptist Churth in Pomeroy
on Sunday at 10:45 a.m. Public
invited.

BENEFIT PLANNED • Kenny and Millie
Reynolds, Hocklltgport, are havinc a bener.t ror
Glen "Lefty" Baker on Sunday from 1-11:30

p.m. Baker receatly underwent surgery ai Veterans Memorial HospitaL
·
•

Benefit event planned for Glen Baker
Kenny and Millie Reynolds,
Hockingport, are having a benefit
for Glen "Lefty" Baker on Sunday
from 1-11:30 p.m. Baker recenOy
underwent surgery at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
. The Reynolds and olhet fri~
of Baker have requested those·
•ttending bring items to be used to

raise funds as well as cakes and
pies.
.
All bands are welcome to partiCipate. Bak_er ~ill try ~ be. there
playing hts ftddle wtth hts left
hand.
Refreshments of hamburgers,
sloppy joes, hot dogs, pie, cake,
coffee and pop will be available.

Mock trial 'discovers'
Columbus' true nature

ST. PAUL (AP) '- Ouistopher
Columbus has been found guilty of
slavery, torture, murder, forced
labor, kidnapping, violence and
. robbery 500 ye&amp;IS after his historic
· voyage to the Bahamas made him a
: legendary hero as the man who
"discovered" America.
Tl)e verdict carne Wednesday in
·a mock trial sponsored by the
Human Rights Center at the University of Minnesota Law School.
. The )ury was unable to reach a
: unanunous decision oo three other
• counts, voting 10-2 on a count of
· mpe 9-3 on international terrorism
· ·and 6-6 on genqcide.
Columbus, S41, of Italy, stared
past the judge when the verdict was
-read, as if looking for a distant
~shore to rescue him from his new
."legacy. The once-legendary explor· er (actually an actor, Columbus
died in 1506) was senrenced 1o 50
; years of community service for
: each count, to be spent in educa. lion.
' He wiU get credit for spending
Wednesday helping correct the
myth about his e~plorations.
Praised as a hero to children, the
· story aold in historical ~ts and his
: own jountal paints Columbus as a
: murderous,govemorofHispaniola.
· In his diary he boasts to his
spon501. Queen Isabella of Castille,
~ of the gold he took from the
- natives, cutting orr their hands
when IIley couldn't make lbe pay• !lloeDIS. The prosecution called a
: 'ftin~ woman who said Colum. : bus' tnen killed her father when he
· tried to keep the Europeans from
raping her niother.
'
"He is a symbol of eviltreach·
: ery, brutality and alllllat ~as bad
: in the world SOO yeaiS ago, ~rose' cutor Larry Leventhal said on
~ behalf of the plaintiffs. Peoples of

Those anending should bring a
lawn chair.
.
Band membets include Millie
Reynolds, Hockingport; · Glen
"Lefty" Baker, Reedsville; Carol
Wriston, Williamstown, W.Va.;
Junior Wiblin, Pagetown: Tom
Wriston, Williamstown, W.va.: and
Marion "Buzz" Sloter, Albany. The
band has played at Stat MiU Park
in Racine and at the Pomeroy
Senior Citizens square dances.

~
Sunda~Y·
end Celebralion, '""'""" ..""'""""' Forked Run State Park,
by
Church, Racine, with Rev. Paul Reedsville Church of Christ. In
Sellers. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; case of rain the picnic will be held ·
worship service, 11 a.m.: carry-in at the Olive Township fire house.
dinner, S p.m. Evening services Bring a covered dish and lawn
will feature Rev. Paul McGuire. chair. Special singing. Anyone
Public invited.
• ed Public
wanting to sing is Ptnvtt
•
MINERSVILLE - Minersville invited.
.
Methodist Church, homecoming,
POMEROY - AA meeting, SunSimday. Regular services. Potluck day, JTPA building, Pomeroy, 7
dinner, noon. Afternoon entertain· p.m.
ment. Public invited.

RACINE • Homecoming Week-

·;

l;j;
/

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
112 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio • 992-2955
SALE GOOD THROUGH MONDAY, SEPT. 21

Becton Dickinson Disposable Insulin

•

I

Ohio Lottery

Long Beach
awardedLL
baseball title

Pick 3:
756
Pick 4:
0440

Page4

FOR'JUST

Vol. 43, No. 103

Regents
seek more
funds for
education
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) The Ohio Board or Regents is recommending a $700 miltion boost in
state spending for higher education
but aclcnowledges that such action
probably would require a tax
increase.
The panel intends to send Gov.
George Voinovich and legislalors a
pro~ recommendin~ the spend·
ing of $4.1 billion on higher education during the two-year budget
period starting July 1, 1993.
That compares with total spending of about $3.4 billion in the current two-year perindt.
Raymond Sawyer of Shaker
Heights, the board's chairman, said
Voinovich and legislative leaders
agreed in June that some kind of
taX increase was ncc:essary.
"What IIley didn't agree on was
what kind of taX increases. when
they should take place, and how
much. So there was at least the
beginnings there of an understanding," Sawyer said.
"It certainly is llle case lllat the .
state might require more revenues
to fund a budget like this, and I
suspect other budget proposals that
will be seen - for instance, from
the state school board - unless
l.heii's a dramatic recovery In- the
economy," he said.
Regents Chancellor Elaine
Hairston said Thursday that the
recommendation is the stat1 of an
attempt to recapture part of $272
million in state aid cuts during the
past 20 monllls and to account for
anticipated increases in student
enrollment and inflation.
"Systemwide, undergraduate
student fee income currently funds
more than half of all instruCtional
costs, a record high proportion. The
recommendations we propose
would shift the balance away from
students and llleir parents, restoring·
the state as the major partner of
.,everyJ:lhio.reBiderlt ~lled in our
state colleges and umversities,"
Ms. Hairston said.
Matthew Filipic, the regents'
vice chancellor for adminisuation.
said the amount of llle budget 10 he
recommended at a regents meeting
today would be less than the
amoun1 recommended two years
ago.
Filipic said the reques~ if fully
funded by the state. would provide
a 7 percent increase over the original budget approved by lhe Legislature for the current fiscal year.
"That 7 percent is barely
enoufh to cover the inflation and
enro lment growth that would
occur. Obviously, it is nonellleless
an ambitious request because we
no longer have that fiscal '93
appropriation, but a much lower
amount," he said.

2 Sectlono, 16 Pogeo 25 centa :
A Mulllmodll Inc. Nowopaper .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September 18, 1992

Copyrighted 1992

Perot on ballot
in all 50 states

FACILITY OPENS • The Gingerbread
House pre-school has re-located to a state-of-art
facility, located at 584 North Second Avenue In
Middleport. An open house ceremony was held
on Thursday, and these youncsters and staff
members were among those in attendance. Pic-

tured 1-r, are starr members Tammy HyseU aDd
Jodi Leach; Elida Gilbreath, Joshua Manley,
Cassie Braun, Joshua Leach, Jeremy Manley,
Chelsi Leach; Mra. Shirin Nuggud, owner; Mrs.
Brenda Wyatt, starr member; and Tara Wyatt.

•

Only one Ohio congressional
incumbent responds to survey
CINCINNATI (AP)- A nonpartisan organization surveying
candidates.for office natiomyide
says Ohio's incumbents were
notably uninterested in taking part
in surveys to explain their stands
on issues.
One of the state's 15 incum ·
bents running for re-election to
U.S. House seats accepted Project
Vote Sman's invitations to participate• said Richard Kimball . the

president of the non-profit group's
board.
Neither of Ohio's major-pll,(ty
candidates for the U.S. Senate Democratic Sen. John Glenn and
Republican challenger Michael
DeWine - participated in a 30minute volunlary survey his group
conducted, Kimball said.
"Eighty percent of the candidates nationally partie ipate. They
don't in Ohio. I don't know what's

Clinton lead bigger in
California.than elsewhere
Br The Associated Press
Polls show Bill Clmton with a 25-point lead over President
Bush among voters in Cauromla, the biggest electoral state, and
a nltle-point advantage nationally.
CNN reported Thursday that Clinton had 51 percent support
to Bush's 42 percent In a national poll or I,l82 retistered voters
taken by Gallup last Friday throufh Tuesday. The CNN·USA
Today poll had a margin of error o plus or minus 3 percentage
points.
In California, Clinton's lead over Bush was 57 percent to 32
percent, with 11 percent undecided in the Field Poll of 864 registered voters in Canrornia. Clintoa bad a similar 25 point lead
among those who Indicated.they were likely to vote.
In five major national polls since Labor Day, Clinton's support has ranged from 51 percent to 54 percent, giving him an
average 12 point lead over the presidenL
The non-partisan poll in Califorala was takea Sept. 9-15 and
has a margin of error just over 3 perceatage poiats.
In a three-way race with Independent ROlli Perot, the polls
stiU showed Cllnton ahead, but with 14 percent preferring the
Texas billionaire, both nationally and In Catiromia.
Poll director Mervin Field said bis survey foulld nearly two
out or three Catirorniaas believe the Afkansas governor will
bring about real change in the country's direction, while twothirds believe there wtu be ao chanRe lr Bush is re-elected.

SJringe &amp; Needles
Box of 100t14.99 pCKkage of 10jSi.SS

going on ," he said .
The National Political Awareness Test sponsored by Prqj!&lt;St
Vole Smart asks candidates fo r
their positions on issues including
lal&lt;es, the national debt, uade, government spending, unemployment,
defense, heahh care, education,
drugs, environment, abortion and
gun ConlrOI.
Kimball said 22 of the major·
party challengers in Ohio congressional races took part in the test
while eight declined to do so.
Project Vote Smart had better
results from incumbents surveyed
in Indiana and Illinois, he said.
Ale~ Engs. director of the survey, said incumbent House members interviewed in Indiana had a
27 percent participation rate, compared with 85 percent for challengers. In Illinois, 41 percent of
incumbents participated, compared
willl63 percent of challengers.
Kimball said the only House
incumbent to participale from Ohio
was Rell!'blican Rep. John Boehner
of Hamilton.
Boehner spokesman John
Czwartacki said, "Congressman
Boehner believes any organization
designed to inform the electorate
about their candidates at least
deserves our participation.' '
Some OhiO congressmen contacted Thursday said they either
were una)Yare of the group. didn't
have time to respond 10 the survey
or considered it a low priority
among other duties.
Candidates may provide survey
information until Oct. 23, after
which they will be listed as refus·
ing to participate, Kimball said.
The candidates were telephoned at
least twice and were sent letters
urging lllem to participate, he said.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Ross bring themselves to vote for
Perot's small army of die-hard sup- George Bush."
porters insist their maybe-again
Perot's status as a candidate on.
candidate is still a potential powder all 50 ballOts is locked up today as
keg in the presidential race. The supporters in Arizona - the last
latest spark ignites today with his state- submit petitions.
name being certified on the 50th · Perot has repeatedly said he
state ballot-Arizona.
wants Bush and Clinton to start
But political analysts still dis- talking aboutllle deficit. But if they
miss the potency of any Perot fac- don't, he's leaving the door open
tor. They predict his will be a most- for a possible re-entry.
ly negligible impact regardless of
His supporters hope he'll step
whether the Dallas billionaire gelS back in; they predict his support
hack in the race.
would swell and he could win the
Up to 18 percent of registered presidency.
voters in the latest national polls
"This thing stumbled for a cousay they would vote for Perot in a pie of days, but it has never died,"
three-way race with President Bush said John Townsend, who heads
and Democrat Bill Clinton.
the Perot movement in Alaska,
But far fewer volunteer Perot's where hackers have been meeting
name when asked their preference every Tuesday since mid-July
between Bush and Clinton. T~e when Perot abruptly ended his
polls are unclear oo Perot's polen· independent bid - a day referred
tial vote, but IIley indicate he can to in Perot circles as "Black Thursdraw down Bush's support by 5 to day."
8 percentage points and Clinton's
Supporters such as Townsend
support by 7 to 10 percentage brush off predictions that Perot's
pomts - margins that could be support would wane as Election
crucial in a tight race.
Day draws near and voters thought
"It's about a draw - il seems about wasting a vote on someone
10 be coming out of both parties' not expected to win.
hides," said Republican pollster
.. As far as a throwaway vote, 1
David Hill, who has surveyed vot· think mat's what most of us considers in Texas and oilier states and era vote for Mr. Bush or Mr. Cliofound that Perol drains votes away ton," Townsend said.
at about the same rate from Clinlon
Perot supporters in many states
and Bush , proportional to their arc keeping offices open and loboriginal support
bying members of Congress to take
Perot's impact might be greawst hard stands on the deficit So far,
in individual states, such as in the Perot backers say llley're not
states once considered part of impre~ willl Bush or Clinton.
Bush's hase, like Florida or Texas.
"For a while, they were taking
In a close race iti which a protest their jackets off and rolling up their
vote to Perot drained off points sleeves and appearing at town halls
from Bush, it could make the dif- and acting like they were really
ference and alter the arithmetic of interested m the issues," said Bob
the elecaoral college. Florida and Hayden, who runs the Perot camTexas have 57 electoral votes pai~n in California.
between them; it takes 270 to win.
'But since then, we've seen the
" Perot could complicate Bush's muckraking, politics-as-usual take
life in some of lllese states," said over. People on the street are sayDemocratic pollster Gcofr Garin. ing. 'We don'tlike it We deteSt iL
"All the evidence I've seen shows We want something different," '
Perot's support is corning from dis- Hayden said.
enchanted Republicans who can't

--Local briefs--.,
Injunction sought

. .

A judgment and injunction complaint has been filed m Metgs
County Common Pleas Court by Robert Smith. Pomeroy, and others. against Bruce Reed, Pomeroy.
The suit alleges that Reed used the powers of Mayor of Pomeroy
to damage Smith's tavern busmess, by causmg viila~e pohce to
"inspect and harass his business enterprise and patrons', and other
acts which will be made known In a hcanng.
This action, according to the cmnplaint, caused physical and
emotional distress 1o Smith and hiS w1fe, Carolyn.
An injunction is requested to prevent Ibis action by Reed in his
official capacity, and the Smiths have requested compensatory~­
ages in llle amount of $25,000, and in excess of $25,000 m pumhve
damages.

Judgment actions filed
Judgment actions have been filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Bank One, Alllens, N.A.• Athens, against Steven D.
Craig, Pomeroy, and others, alleging default on a promissory note
in the amount of $3.242.25; and by Akzo Saltine., Charlotle, N.C..
Continued on page 3

O'Rourke pleads guilty to 2 charges
in House Post Office deposit scandal

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: I-_ ___;_R..;..=.eg•....:.$_22_.90.;...0;...nl~y~_.3_.8_9--·----t

'

DEMOCRATIC HEADQUARTERS ·Local
candldlltell aDd partJ olllclals were on balld last
nlabt ror arand openl11 ctremoales at Metas
Coaaty Democratic Headquarters, located at
220 East Main Street Ia POIIleroy. Pktured are
Jaaet HOll'llrd, candidate for county cOillmlsdoner; SHrlff James M. Soallby; Jane Frymy... er, county coordlulor for Ted Strlcklanct, con•

Low tonight around 60.
Rain. Satu!day; dearing and
cool. High In 60s.

Residents trying
to save Fort Meigs

PERRYSBURG, Ohio (AP) Residents and hislorians will !!}' to
save a fort where Gen. Wilham
Henry Hartison battled the British
during the War of 1812.
The Ohio Historical Society
wants to close Fort Meigs in this
Toledo subwb and eight other his-·
toric siteS in Ohio to cut costs. The
sites were ·selected because they
were not geilemting atli:ast 30 percent of llleir annuaf operating costs,
The fort, located on 65 acres
along the Maumee River, wat
restored in 1975. Some buildings·
had been maintained. but most of
the site was covered with grass and
trees.
._
The Friends of Fort Meigs ,
which was formed Tuesday, will·
need to raise $38,000 to keep 1110.
fort open umil April, said Amos:
.Loveday, curator of the Historical
Society.
.
.
He said at least $60,000 then
would he needed by June to keep
the fort open through the end of
July 1994.
Manager Larry Nelson said he
REEDSVILLE - Community- believes the money will be raised.

Conscience and Humanity. "This
•s a ~on who ~~ the condemnauon of~umantty.
.
The genocide ~barge pcrtal~ed
to an lnd~an tnbe numbenng
alnmst 8 million before Columbus
arnved but only 28,000 whe~ the
Spamards were don~. The JUry,
however, agreed w,Ith d.efense
attorney John StWirt s c!atm that
many of the T11~os d1ed aft~r
Columbus had left_m l~OO.and still
more ~ed from diseases tnadvertently muoduced by the Europeans
. On the other counts, the defense
tned to J!ass Columbus off-as a
loyal sub~ect of G~ and country
w~o was JUSt followi:! CJrden and
domg what ~as ncc:e ~.to _bring
glory 1;0 Spam and Christiamty to
the.~bves.
. .
He was a deeply ~el!gto~~
m~n. from humble begmmn~s,
said de~~nse attorney Fredt1yn
SISo~ . He was an ~pwardly
mobtle merchan~-manner. He
wanted to ra1se htmself up. But
most of all he wanted to spread
Christianity."
Queen Isabella appeared as a
character witness but, as tends to
be the manner of. former ~~er~,
her memory had dimmed. S_lltmg m
the hearing room at the Minnesota
State Capitol, however, she
affirmed unequivocally that
Columblis was a hero.
The !rial, timed to coincide with
the 500th anniversary of the Span·
ish arrival in North America, was a
juxtaposition of bolll ems. Leven·thai wore a 15th-century tunic
while holding a microphone;
Columbus, wearing a robe from
1492 and sideburns from "Beverly
Hills 90210," wet his li~s with
designer water as he gave his tesbmony.

\

i.

gressional candidate; State Rep•.Mark MaloDe;
Treasurer calldldate Maureea Heuell)'; COlD·
missioner eaadldate William SllOtlffer; Joba R.
. Leates, candidate for Prosecatln1 Attoraey;
County Chalrwomn Sue Malsoa nd Jerr
Theimtoa, praldeat of the Melp Couaty Y011111
Demoe: rats.

WASHINGTON (1\P) .....,. A federal prosecutor
says House Post Office deposits were held back so
money would be available 1o cash "large campaign
and penonal checks."
n.e statement, which came Thursday as a former
post office official entered a guilty plea in the case,
Indicated that proseculors are Iooldng at House campaign organizations in their criminal probe of the
· mailfacility.
Joanna G. O'Rourke·, the fprmer chief of staff at
the House Pvst Office, pleaded guilty to two misdemeanon and agreed to cooperate willl prosecutors.
Ms. O'Rourke, 52, at times appearing to choke
back tearS, answered the judge's questions in a barely
audiblll voice. As chief of staff, she had wide knowledle of all fKCIS of lhe pOSt offiCe's operation.
l!er 1J1ea to charges of embezzlement arid misus·
ing .JlllbiM:..~ made her lhe flfSI high-tanking post
office official to admit criminal wrongdoiDg,
·•l:::fh five lower-level employees previousfy
pi
pilty 10 drug and embezzlement charges.
During .the past week, prosecutors used an indictment lg&amp;inst Ms. O'Rourke and Thursday's guilty
plea to signifiC8Dtly e~)lllld public lcnowledge about

''

i

•

ihe criminal probe.
The focus of the inquiry by the U.S. attorney's
office the statemeniS showed, has advanced from
petty ihen and drug dealing to a probe of the 1J0S!.
office as a vast favor mill for House members, their
staffs and campaign organizations.
·
.
Telling U.S. District Judge Norma Holloway
Johnson what the government would have proved at
a irial. Assistant U.S. Auomey Wendy Wysong ~
Ms. O'Rourke and other, unnamed people ~
to "cash large campaign and pessorutl checks" at the
post office. The cash was made a~ailable by delaying
deposiiS of postal receipts, she satd.
That statement went further than the grand jury
indictment handed up against Ms. O'Rourke las,t
week. It said she conspired with othels to "perform
personal and campaign services" for House members but did not mentioo cashin~ campaign checks.
Nor did it describe lhe checks as ' large."
_.
Ms. O'Rourke was released ·on personal reco$~
nizance pending a Dec. 9 sentenc!Rg on ~two~
demeanor counts - .each of whtch cames a nwu.mun\ penally of a year in prison and a$100,000 fine~

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