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                  <text>Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Merch~nts participate

in AHA
Food Festival; event continues
Reducing fat the ctiolesterol

inlake is one of lhe focuses for lhe
American Heart Association's
Annual Food Festival currently
underway in Meigs County.
Assisting in the activity by providing information at local grocery
stores lhis week are personnel of
lhe Meigs County Extension Service. Tuesday they were at Vaughan's in Mtddlepon; Tuesday
(IOday) at Krogers; Wed"nesday at
Powells Super-Yalu, and Thursday
lit Big Bend Foodland, Pomeroy.
Sharon Smith, nutrition educator

with the Extension Service, is with
lhe display and asks shoppers "10
pledge 10 reduce the amounts of fat
and cholesterol in their diets."
Consumers who complete the
survey receive a color chart listing
various foods, their fat and cholesterol content, calories and serving
size. Also included on the chart are
ideal weights for various heights
and a way to figure out the amount
of fat that is being eaten on a daily
basis.
Cindy Oliveri, Extension Agent,
Home Economics CNRD/Chair-

Ohio Lottery

Reds still
in NL West
title chase

man, is participating in the program
by sharing a lesson on fats and
cholesterol as pan or a "road show"
being done in seven counties lhis
fall.
"Balancing Mind, Body and
Spirit" is the focus of lhe program
which will be presented on Oct. 8
from 10 am. to n9011 at the Meigs
Senior Citizens Center.
Registration is requested by Oct.
6 at 992-6696 between 8:30 a.m.
and 4:30 p.m. Monday lhrough Friday.
The program is free of charge
and open to the public.

Pick 3:
839
Pick 4:
8658
Buckeye 5:
1-13-19-20-35

Page 4

•
Yol. 43, No. 108
Copyrtghled 1982

·~

Ita~ian

'

REDUCING FAT AND CHOLESTEROLComplete a survey on eating habits and receive
inronnatlon on bow to reduce the fat and choles·
terol in your diet during the Food Festival tak-

.

ing place in local ~roceries this week. Here
Sharon Smith, nutration educator, left, assists
Don Vaughan with tbe survey while Cindy Oliv·
e~, Meigs extension agent, olrers tips on a good
daet.

'Murphy Brown' zings Quayle
for attacking single motherhood
By SCOTI WILLIAMS
AP Television Writer
NEW YORK - Murphy
Brown, who is fictional, evened the
score wilh Dan Quayle, who is not.
The vice president got the worst
of bolh worlds Monday night in the
season premiere of CBS' "Murphy
Brown," lhe Candice Bergen sitcom he injected into the national
dcbau: last spring by complaining it
glamorized unwed molhcrhood.
"What planet is he on?!" fumes
a frazzled, showerless Murphy,
hearing Quayle's remarks as she
tries to cope with her restless newborn, an as-yet-unnamed son.
"Look at me, Frank," she asks a
colleague. "Am I glamorous?!"
"I didn't know if I could raise a
kid by myself," she goes on. " I
worried about what it would do to
him! I worried about what it would
do to me! I didn't just wake up one
morning and say, 'Oh, gee, I can't
get in for a facial, I might as well
have a baby!'"
Frank Fontana (Joe Regalbuto),
her colleague on the equally fie·
tiona! "FYI" TV news magazine,
predicts that nobody will pay attention. Instead, Murphy finds herself
immediately swamped by calls
from the news media.
"Oh, jeez, what is this? A slow
news day?" an exasperated Mur- ·

phy says. "Tell them to go find a
real story."
Indeed, the news media
glommed onto the Quayle-Murphy
controversy almost from the
moment the vice president chastised "Murphy Brown" in a May
19 speech for "mocking the importance or fathers by bearing a child
alone.''
On Monday night, Quayle
watched lhe show - for lhe first
time- with some single parents.
"I intend to continue to talk
about traditional values. Obviously
Hollywood still doesn't get i~" he
said afterward. He referred to the
sitcom as ''basically anolher Hollywood contribution" to Democrat
Bill Clinton.
A day earlier, in a conciliatory
gesture, Quayle sent the fictional
baby a stuffed toy elephant and a
note. The "Murphy Brown" producers said thanks, but they'd
ralher give lhe toy to an real child
in a homeless shelter.
Meanwhile, back at the comedy,
newswoman Murphy Brown rcaciS
wilh aplomb to all the publicity in
an on-air edilOrial in the fictional
"FYI" broadcast.
"Some might argue lhat attacking my status as a single mother
was nolhing more than a cynical bit
of election-year posturing," she

By CONNIE CAS~
Associated Press Wrater
SAN DIEGO - Some wome~
~ppear able !D ~orestaU dea!h until
JUSt after !hear birthdays, while men
seem to do the opposite, a
researcher says.
' 'Birthdays may consciously or
unconsciously be an opponunity 10
sar. goodbye " said David P.
Phallips, one of the study's authors.
"It's a wonderful way to wrap
things up. PeoP.le get together 10
celebrate your life, and you see ret atives you might not otherwise

see."

The study of California death
certificates found that women were
slightly more likely to die or natural causes in the week after their
binhdays than in any other week of
the yt~~t. There was also a coinciding dip in womens' dealhs in the
. weeks before birthdays.
Phillips said the study of
women's deaths supports anecdolal
evidence of people clinging to life
10 survive milestones such as the
birth of 1 grandchild, a wedding,
aMivcnary or holiday.
"Some dying patients are able
to prolong life briefly until they
have reached a positive symbolij:
oocasion,'' said Phillips, a sociolo1Y professor at the University of
California at San Diego.

In contrast, Phalhps saad! the after a birthday than would be
studr ~ound men were more li~ely expected in a normal week It
to d1e an the. weeks before a binh- found a dip in dealhs of the ~me
day lhan dunng the rest of the year size spread over th 20
k
- passably because men are more before the birthda
e
wee s
likely than women to dread birthPhillips spel~tated th 1 h
days.
.
.a t e
Phillips said the study, reported =~:U:end was fo~~ an men
Mo~day in Psychosomatic birlhdays rJ;. a::ki~c:e toek y0 rtoo:ase
Medacane, the Journal of the Amer· liv
d . [" s
. ear
ican Psychoso!"~tic . Society, c.:.~ung aalure to achaeve
focused on statastacs anvolvang
·
women. He plans a more in-depth Teacher punishes
study of the effeciS of birthdays on
men.
students by making
Phillips' findings appears to add
h /'
S
to ~rowang evidence of a psycho- t em ISten to inatra
log~cal aspect to death, said Alben
RIVERSIDE, Dl. (AP) - Bruce
Marston, professor emeritus in psy- Janu does it his way.
chology and psychiatry at the UniThe social science teacher punversity of Southern California.
ishes troublemaking students by
"What is interesting from a bio- making them stay after school and
logical point of view is where is listen lo Frank Sinatra for a half·
that switch, in the brain or whcrev- hour.
er it is, that helps a person will
Janu created lhe Frank Sinatra
himself to survive or decide to give Detention Club Jut year at River·
up and die?" Marston said.
sidc-Brootfield High School.
The study looked at computer."You've got a Frank," he tells
ized California death certificates unruly students.
.
for 1.44 million aduhs who died of
The 24-yt~~t-old teacher said he
natural causes from 1978 to 1990. loves Sinatra's music but realizes
Infonnation wM omitted on people teen-agers these days would rather
who underwent surgery lhat could listen 10 U2, NWA or Madonna.
have contributed to death.
"The kids hate it," he said.
For women, the study found 3 "This is the worst thing lhat has
percent more deaths in the week ever happened to them.''
I

•

Girolami. They came specifically
to Pomeroy to visit Girolami and
the gravesate of Gino's late aunt,
Vidia. .
While in Pomeroy they were
shown around by several friends
and enjoyed a boat trip on lhe Ohio
River to see the town and area
along the river. Gino and Rina slated they enjoyed their visit to
Pomeroy and lhal they would like
to visit again. They slated Pomeroy
was a beautiful town bul that they
found the streets dirty · a sight lhat
would not be tolerated in their
hometown of Pescia as residen1s
!here take great pride in their communities.

In Pescia, Gino is a partner in
the farm of Torello Landi and Company which specializes in shipping
all kinds of products by railway.
Rina is a teacher or the handicapped and is specializing in the
blind, deaf and mute.
Gino and Rina 's visit is one that
their uncle, Guido, will not soon
forget. He says he was thrilled they
chose to visit him on their honeymoon and that he was quile sad to
see lhem leave. Meeting the couple
was certainly a pleasure for anyone
that had the opportunity as was
hearing lhem speak in their native
language of Italian while their
uncle ttanslated.

---People in the news--NASHVILLE, Tenn . (AP) Willie Nelson made a surprise
appearance at the 15th Volunteer
Jam, performing country classics
wilh lhe 11-hour show's organizer,
Charlie Daniels.
1"lle country and rock marathon
Sunday raised $15,500 for AIDs,·
leukemia and cancer research at
Vanderbilt Medical Center in
Nashville.
About30 aciS performed at Starwood Amphilheater before about
I0,000 people. Nelson and Daniels
sang "Blue Eyes Crying in the
Rain," "Night Life" and other
standards.
Pee Wee King, 78, sang "Tennessee Wallz," which he co-wrote
in 1948.
Also performin$ were the Oak
Ridge Rays, Eddae Rabbitt, the
Desen Rose Band, Hal Ketchum,
Pirates of the Mississippi, Paulette
Carlson, Poco, Little Feat, Toy
Caldwell, Suzy Bogguss and G.E.
Smilh.
The concert was taped by the
Voice of America for broadcast
later on its global radi? network.

says. "I prefer to give the vice
president the benefit of the doubt.''
She says it would be possible to
blame the nation's ills on Congress.
the media, the administration, or
her - but that she doubts that her
single molhcrhood has abetted the
breakdown of Western civilization.
"Perhaps it's time for the vice
president to expand his definition
and recognize that whether by
choice or circumstance, families
come in all shapes and sizes," she
says. "And ultimately, what really
defines a family is commitment,
caring and love."
Then, a mysterious man, also
fictional, dumps I ,000 pounds of
potatoes in Quayki's driveway.
Miss Bergen woo "the Emmy for
best actress in a comedy last
month, and the lines she spoke
reflected the words or series creator
Diane English.
Whether Monday night's
DENVER (AP) - Secretary of
episode was "cynical election-year
Defense
Dick Cheney, a former
posturing" or furlher evidence that
six-term
congressman from
"Hollywood doesn't get it," it's ·
Wyoming,
has
been named "Citialmost certain to be the week's
zen
of
die
West"
for 1993.
most-waiChed show. CBS predicted
Cheney will be honored Jan. II
upwiiJds of 23 million viewers.
on
the eve of the 87th National
As TV's third-ranked series last
Western
Stoek Show and Rodeo in
year, "Murphy Brown" already
Denver.
1-le's
lhe 171h recipient or
charges one of television's highest
the
award,
inaugurated
in 1978 10
advertising rates: $310,000 for one
honor
modern-day
pioneers
who
30-second spoL
help preserve the heritage or lhe
West.
"The selection or Cheney gives
us an outstanding leader with
Western roots and one of national
and international slature," National
Western chairman Nick Petry said

Study finds some women fend
off death until after birthday

were married Aug. 30 and spent part or their
honeymoon here. They enjoyed thear stay in the
Big Bend and hope to return someday.

newlyweds visit Pomeroy

Many Pomeroy residents may
recendy have seen lhe Oag or Italy
Oying at the residence or Guido
Gtrolami at 132 Butternut Avenue
in Pomeroy- and wilh good reason.
Visiting with him were his late
wife's (Vidia Cecchi Girolami)
nephew, Gino Landi and his new
bride, Rina
Following their marriage on
Aug. 30 in lhe Tuscany area or Pescia, Italy, a town of about 20,000,
Gino and Rina, traveled 10 lhis pan
of lhe world. They spent three days
an New York City getting the feel
of what Broadway was all about.
From there lhey traveled to Toron·
to and from there they ended their
stay With an eight-day visit with

Saturday.
Cheney, who is out of the country, agreed earlier ro accept the
award, which comes with a new
Stetson and a custom ·branding
iron.
The award was established by
six members of the Roundup Riders of the Rockies, an organization
or ISO equestrians.
Previous honorees include brewer William K. Coors, Kenneth W.
Monfon of Monfort Meat Packing,
Sen. Alan Simpson, R-Wyo. ,
Charles C. Gates of Gates Rubber
Co . and former Denver Mayor
William H. McNichols Jr.
Cheney was born in Lincoln,
Neb. His family moved to Casper,
Wyo., when he was a child. He
began his life or public service in
1965 as an intern in the Wyoming
Legislature.
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Gerald
Ford's autographed jeans were
worth $105 to the Alzheimer's
Association.
The former president was
among more than 60 celebrities to
pen denims for an auction Sunday.
Scott Pansk y, an auction organizer, said jeans were also donated
by actress Joan Van Ark, singers
Amy Grant, Kathy Mattea and
Randy Travis, actor Scotl Bakula
and actress Gabrielle Carteris of
television ' s "Beverly Hills
90210."
But the fund-raiser was a bit of a
bust, raising only $500.
NEW YORK (AP) - Actor
Fisher Stevens said he's a "raw
wound" from his breakup with
Michelle Prciffcr.
Pfeiffer called off their three year, bicoastal relationship this
summer. Some supermarket

tabloids have said it was because
Stevens was caught smooching
with 17-year-old high school senior
Jamie Golightly, who played an
extra in .his "Super Mario Bros."
movie.
"I'm hurting. I'm a raw
wound," Stevens told People magazine. "My nerves are jangling."
Stevens, 28, told lhe magazine
last wcclc thai he and Preiffer, 34,
had other problems.
"There were tensions," he said,
including carrying on a long-distance romance and problems of living as a couple in the public eye.
Stevens' pal, actor Richard
Edsan said the big "C" was a raelOr.
"It was a question of whether
Fisher was ready to fully commit
himself to Michelle, and he
couldn't make up his mind.

Chapter to sponsor
National Hunting
and Fishing Day
National Hunting and Fishing
Day, sponsored by lhe Ken Amsbary Chapter or lhe Isaac Walton
League, wiD be held Saturday from
9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Isaac Walton
Club House on Scout Camp Road
in Chester approximately two miles
beyond the scout camp.
Admission is free of charge and
a free lunch will be provided.
Activities will include demonstrations in gun safety, taxidermy,
game calling, 22-rifle shooting,"
fishing, archery, trapping, canoeing, reloading, black powder, trapshooting and coon hounds.
There wiU be a prize drawing at
3 p.m. for children ages 6-18 and
you must be present to win. Registration will begin at 9 a.m.

IlL 4 DB.

4 cyl. eng., P. ste,rlng, P. brakes, auto.
trans .. air cond., AM/FM stereo cass., P.
seat, till aleer. wheel, cruise control, P.
windows &amp; door locks, rear detro&amp;ter, cast
aluminum wheals.

5TO CHOOSE FROM. ALL.DIFFlRENT COLORS• .

. IPICIIL

'MIS

Brine In your . . . deal on a New Car or Truck and we
will trJ to _.t or Beat the Deal.
fOR A GOOD DIAL.. '
SEE JACK ROUSH or BOB ROSS
Our Service Department Ia Open Mon.-Fri. 8·5; Sat. 8-12
Muffler Shop Mon.-Fri. 8-5; Sat. 8•12

A Multimedia Inc. N-poper

New smoking policy is
adopted by Meigs board

' :

VISITING POMEROY - Gino and Rina
Landi, left and center, rec:ently spent eight days
in Pomeroy visiting their uncle, by marriage,
Guido Girolami, right. Mr. and Mrs. Landi

2 Sectlono, 14 Pageo 25 oonto

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 23, 1992

. ~:.

.. '

Low tonight near 40. Sunny
Wednesday. High near 70.

LASf DAY • Bill Rizer,
rrom l~eftrt,~-;w;;;or;:jk;eddi,in~tibb;eCOihb~io;'v,dj;;"Pp;;jub;jilisi;jbhlin;,g;rCo;;;m;;:p;;;a~was presented retirement girts
ny's ad composition department ror 35 years.
worker Margaret Finnicum, left, ·
Mrs. Finnicum presented Rizer a Bible on behalf
Wingett, publisher, with Fred Hoffman, ri~ht,
offellow employees. Publisher Wingett presentcomposing room supervisor look ina on. Rtzer
ed him a Lawn-Boy mower. (OVP photo)

Meigs VICA Club will help
sponsor Recycle Day Saturday
. Getting someone to accept old
ures and battenes, used motor oil,
worn out appliances, glass and
plastic bottles for disposal or recycli~g can be a pro~lem. But the
Meags Htgh School Vocational
Industrial Clubs of America
MCA) are offding a solution.
. .Sal!Jillay !he i!!'OIIp, in cooperauon wath Metgs County Litter Control, Safety-Kleen, Interstate Batteries, Mid-American Waste Systems, and the AG HJMV Solid
Waste Management District, will
sponsor Recycle Day on the parking lot at the left side of the high
school building.
ResideniS, bot not commercial
estabtishineniS, are invited to bring
items to the school, 9 a.m. to I p.m.
where they will be accepted. Volunteers will even be on hand to
help unload the recyclables.
But there are a few restrictions.
Rims are to be removed from
lhe tires, no refrigerators, freezers
or aU: conditi~ners wiD be accepted,
alummum will be taken, but no tin
siding or roofing, and no paper
products including newsprint and
cardboard will be accepted. Also
those bringing in use motor oil
must veril"y that lhe oil is pure. All
materials will be taken on a donation basis.
In conjunction with Recycle
Day, VICA will sponsor a car show
on the lot in front or the high
school building. Besides cars, there
will be a craft show, games, music
and door prizes. To enter a car in

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stal1'
. Supervisory employees for
transportation and cafeteria were
hired and several policies regarding
student behavior were adopted by
the Meigs Local Board of Education at Tuesday night's meeting in
the board office.
Joyce Vance was employed as
cafeteria supervisor and Paul
McElroy, Jr. as director or transportation, bolh effective Oct. I.
The district is no longer wilh ARA,
a food management company, but
reverted to lhe earlier practice of
local supervision. McElroy
replaces Brent Manley who
resigned as direc10r of transportation effective Oct. I.
A new smoking policy adopted
by the board discontinues suspensaons from school and sets up a
program under the Juvenile Coun
for rehabilitation. As explained by
high school principal, Fenton Taylor, the new policy allows students
to remain in school and receive
credit, while lhe old policy called
for suspensions or five days on the

first offense, 10 days on the second, and then expulsion.
As Taylor explained, two suspensions (IS days) in a semester
resulted in the student losing credit.
The new program provides that
studeniS caught smoking on school
property are referred to Juvenile
Court for unruliness. There the
judge offers a rehabilitation program lhrough the Heallh Recovery
Services which both lhe students
and a parent or parents must attend
and pay a cost of approximately
$40. If the student decides not to go
lhrough the rehabilitation program,
then there is a sizable fane and the
student is assigned to three days of
Salllrday school. Only fust o«ense
students are offered the rehabilitation program.
A violation of the policy a second time carries a penally of five
days of Saturday school, and a
third violation may lead to expulsaon.
Olher new policies adopted by
the board were on dangerous
weapons to include bomb threats
and false ftre alarms, wilh students

to be reponed to the appropriate
law officials; charges to lhe students and their parents to compensate the school for fmes and damages to property, and for any
expenses incurred; and to perq~at
school support organizations to
become pan of the district's liability insurance.
.
The board revised oolicies 011
student assessment which _pertain6
to achievement and abiliues testing, on eligibility of resident and
non-resident studeniS where shared
parenting and additional time i~
required to complete school, on
graduation requirements and diplOmas awarded to include an honors
diploma and passing of lhe ninth
grade level proficiency tests; anll
on search and seizure which allows
authorities to use dogs for drug
detection.
·
The policy on use of school
facilities was amended to permit
disaster use at no charge. Als!&gt;
amended was a policy dealing with
school and parent n:lations. That
policy now includes parent
Continued on page 3

Racine receives $49,000
grant for street paving
It ivas reported that the Board of
The Village of Racine has also given to purchase-new light
received a $49,900 grant for hot- fixtures for the council chambers as Public Affairs, a representative
from Ohio Drilling, and lhe EPA
mix paving of the village streeiS, well as ceiling paint.
A
discussion
was
held
on
the
represeruative,
are ID meet to select
according to Racine Mayor Frank
a
site
for
drilling
a new well.
condition
of
the
village's
1975
Cleland.
Council
authorized
Rizer to
compactor
ll11Ck.
It
was
noted
that
Cleland reponed, at Monday's
it
is
beginning
to
need
repairs
that
install
posts
and
cable
at
Greenrecessed session meeting, that bids
wood Cemetery because of trash
for the project are to be opened could run into large sums.
Mayor Cleland· was authorized dumping. Dumping is prohibited
Oct. 19 with a completion date of
to contact a firm in Canton that and violators will be prosecuted.
Nov. 15.
-No action was taken on request
It is anticipated that the paving sold lhe compactor to the village to
see
if
they
had
any
used
comfrom
the Board of Public Affairs 10
· done by this project will complete
authorize
the exoenditures of
pactorS
for
sale.
the hounix paving of all the village
money
to
have
Jeffers Construction
Street
Commissioner
Glenn
streets.
replace
piping
and
other Pccessary
Rizer
reported
that
one
waler
well
The 1992 State Issue II paving
work is to be done Friday or Mon- is down. Residents are asked to work at the aerator building. It was
day by the Shelly Company. It was conserve water during lhe water noted that any expenditure over
Continued on page 3
noted that this $14,000 plus project emel")!ency.
is funded by State Issue II money
and by village street maintenance
funds. Work to be done on this project includes finishing Third Street
POSTERS GOING UP • Recycle Day at Meigs High School is
to the Fire House, Walnut Street
Saturday and members or a sponsorioaaroup, the Vocational
and Sycamore Street between
Industrial Clubs of America, have been busy putting up posters to
Fourth and Fiflh Slleets.
publicize tbe event. Here tacking up posters are from the left,
Council approved a resolution
State Route 124 near Hading- er, a slip occurred during coRSll11CKandi Bachtel, Jeff Tracy, Autumn Griffith, Shawn Cremeans,
accepting lhe rates and amounts port will be open soon, perhaps tion and workers had ID resolve that
and Todd Perry.
established by the county budget even this weelc, according to the problem before proceeding with
commission.
Ohio Department of Transporta- original project plans.
noon,
walh
show
time
from
noon
to
lhe show, ihere is a $5 fee.
One-half mile of roadway has
A group of Vine Street resideniS tion. ·
been
improved by lhe ODOT proRegistration is from 9 a.m. to 4p.m.
appeared before council in regards
District 10 Deputy Director
ject.
The
contractor widened the
to rental trailers coming into the John Dowler said yeslerday that
roadway
by
cutting back the rock
village. They urged council to the "road closed" signs will be
cliff
which
runs
parallel to the site.
adopt an ordinance similar to Syra- removed as soon as lhc conttactor
The
rock
was
then
placed along the
cuse prohibiting new rental trailers. has given the road its final coat of
Ohio
River
bank
in
an effort to preCouncil indicated an ordinance asphal~ which could be this weelc.
would be tJ"Cpared for presentation
The road, just north of Hocking- vent further erosion. The new madforfarstreadingattheOct. 5 meet- port, was closed in July, 1991, way will be 22 feet wide with four-·
·
when the Maiden and Jenkins Coo- foot aggreagate berms.
mg.
AIIDgethcr, 178,000 cubic yards
Council approved lhe purchase struction Company of Nelsonville
of
rock and soil wen: excavated.
of carpet for the annex and for lhe began won.. The original comptemore cosdy trips to hospilal emer- ing the elderly more than lhe fees
Rock
fill along the river bank
council chambers. Anderson's of tion date on the $1.94 miltion progency rooms.
paid by Medicare for cenain po:oceamounted
to 77.000 cubic yards.
Pomeroy will install. Approval was ject was August 31, 1992. Howev"In the state of Ohio we spend dures.
.....,...,......
-Prohibit an individual from
about $4 billion in tax dollars per
year for Medicaid. It is a huge item. being fired or denied a job based
It is the fMtest growing item in our solely on health conditio!J$. ·
-Extend from'!IICI:urrent 18
budget," DeWine said al a news
monlhs to 36 monlhs the time in
conference.
''What lhe state or Ohio needs, which workers who leave a job can
and what olher states need, is the maintain group health coverage at
flexibility to take that money and !heir own expense.
-Prohibit use of ~enetic tests to
help lhe targeted group of individuscreen applicants for ansurance.
als," he said.
"I think the proposal will save
"We need to have less red ~·
1axpayers'
dollars because it will
If we have less red tape, we re
going 10 have an increase in access, rein in heallh care costs," DeWine
the ability or lhe state to provide said. He did not estimate cast of the
the services to the people who need package.
Dale Butland, director of .
the help," DeWine said.
. lncOIJ!Orlle!l into DeWiRe's pro- Glenn's campaign, said DeWine is
posal is the Bush plan to grant "nibbling around the ed(!es" of the
vouchers !I' tax deducdons to low- problem.
"It does nothing to ensure
and middle-income individuals not
covered by federal heallh care pro- access and it haS no effect on lhe
already ~yrocketing cost of health
1(111115. They would use the money
to buy health insurance from pri- care. Right now, 36 million Amcri·
cans, including more than 1 million
vate companies.
It also includes Bush's proposal Ohioans, have no heahh e1re covCompston, dau1hter or Mr. and Mrs. Larry . •
HOMECOMING CANDIDATES • One or
Complllon; Heather Franckowiak, daupier or .
to let the self-employed, including qe. Under Mike DeWine's p,tan.
the these eenlor &amp;irllat Mtlp Hl&amp;h School wiD
Mr. and Mrs. Myroa Fraacko'lrillk; Kyla SeD· , ·
farmers, fully deduct costs of most of them still wouldn't, ' he
be croned 1992 JJomec:omlna Queen durln1
pregame rutlvitles on Friday night when the
ers, daURbter or Pam Sellen and the late ·. .
health care premiums from their said.
Glenn
believes
that
Ohioans
WOllam Sellera; and Yvette Young, dau&amp;bter or .
Marauders
take
01
Miller
Hl1h
Sehoul.
Pic·
federal income tax. · .
need
comprehensive
health
care
tured,
1-r,
are
ql!eeD
caadldatn
Abby
Blake,
Mr.
and Mrs. Roaer ·YOUIIi,- •
DeWine's proposal also would:
daughter or Mr. and J\1rs. Jobn Blake; Verna
.
-Prohibit doctors from charg- reform, Butland said.

SR 124 near Hockingport
may reopen this week

DeWine health plan
links reforms, Medicaid
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -'States that enact certain health care
refonns would be granted greater
flexibility in spending federal Medicaid money under a proposal by
Republican U.S, Senate candidate
Mike DeWine.
The package outlined .by
DeWine on Tuesday combines his
recommendations with elemeniS of
President Bush's plan to help an
estimated 35 million people who do
not have health insurance.
· DeWine, Ohio's lieutenant governor, is OllJlUSin$ Democratic U.S.
Sen. John Glenn an the Nov. 3 election.
A major component of
DeWine's proposal would give
states a new option under Medicaid, the federal-state program that
prov~ health care for the poor.
States t~at adopt specific
reforms could receive Medicaid
mCJICy in a single blod grant that
they.could spend to deliver services
more ~ciently, free of costly fed•
era! restrictions.
. R:efortns would include requirmg msurers to sell coverage to all
who apply once per yt~~t in an open
enrollment·period, and expanding
use of (ll"iJ!I..-y care dociOrS to provide preventive care, avoiding

.-.

�Wednesday, September 23, 1992

Commentary

•

•

The Daily Sentinel

'

111 Cout Street

.:'

:

Paluror. bblo

. DJNOTa) 10 1D umtltlll1'll OJ 1D DIGS-IIASON AR1.A

ROBERT L. WINGEIT
PubU.her

PAT WHn'EIIEAD
Anlstent hbiiiMr/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General·Man"'er

.
LIITTBRS OP OPINION ue welcome. They should be less lhan 300
· 'wordl. AU· Jeuen n ~= to editiD&amp; IIICI must be signed wilh nome,
lddzlu llld lelepboDe n
. No unli&amp;ned Jetton will be published. Letters
• . lbould be i1J pel tale, llld!aang issllel, out persollllitios.

~. us~ ~s

strategy has
familiar ring for Britons
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Speeial Correspondent
.. , WASHINGTON - Beset by an economic slump. n:-election campaigners couldn't boast of prosprrity or argue that things were going so
well voters ~ldn 't risk change. So political strategists decided on a
negative altema!ive: The other guy can't be trusred.
: The odd$ wrze bad. The poU 13lings that soared after the Persian Gulf
War,had slumped and were running against !hem. Standby issues like
defense and the Communist !hteat had ~; concerns like health care
aild economic security seemed to be boostmg !he challenger.
. That ou~ine sounds like Pn:sident Bush's campaign situation.
. In~, it iJ a description ~ John Major's campaign direclor of the
way things looked for !he Briush prime minister last spring, before his
Conservatives won !heir upset victory. Major's government now is at risk
because of the European monetary crisis which led him to accept devaluation of the pound on Wednesday.
· · 'Plat breac!'ed a Major campaign commiunent comparable to Bush's
1988 vow agamst new taxes, broken two years later.
The political systems ate diffen:nt, of course: parliamentary elections
iilstead of a direct choice between presidential candidates, a month's camPaign instead of a maralhon. Presidents are assured four year terms; a
Jli:ime minister can be toppled by Parliament, which reconvenes on Thursdliy to consider !he currency crisis.
In addition, British public opinion polls before !he April 9 elections
were closer than those that now show Democrat BiD Clinton leading Bush
by margins of 10 to 15 percentage points.
... But the problem issues and !he tactics of Bush's Republicans and
Major's Conservatives lead like campaign sequels. John Lacy, director of
campaigning for the Conservatives, and Mark Fullbrook, his deputy,
lllilced about them at a forum sponsored by The Heritage Foundation.
. · "At the end of the day, the question came down to D'USI," Fullbrook
said.
·• That's the question the Bush campaign is trying to raise about Clinton,
seeking to persuade vottzs that the Democrat would not be trustworthy as
pl'esident The use of the draft issue is an example - the larget isn't a
atferment 23 years ago, it is Clinton's inconsistencies on !he topic Ibis
rear. Another example: Bush's .claim to offer experience and a fum hand
m' contrast to what he contends is warning and wavering by Clinton. And
any topic that shifts tile campaip away from the sagging economy to
other concerns probably works to the advantage of !he trailing Republican
ticket.
·
' "Clinton sayS' that Bu~h is the one who can 'I be trusted, since he
p\'Omised in 1988 then: wtiuld be no new taxes, and n:neged. "I'm not !he
one who said lead my lips, .. Clinton tells his rallies.
To !hal, Bush counters !hat Clinton would impose massive tax increas·
e$\ and that while the Democrats say those would apply to the rich, pl\ddle
Class taxpayers would be hit, 100.
·! "He's goinJ! to end up taxing all working Americans for the same reaipn Ol!tlaw Wtllie Sutton robbed banks, because !hat's where the money
it," Bush says.
·: That, 100, parnllels !he British campaign. A Labor budget proposed a
i§x incn:ase on the rich; Lacy said it would have hit anybody earning
$45,000 or more, and !he Conservatives argued daily that if they lost, !he
l4x burden would soar.
:~ In prior campaigns, the Conservatives had argued !hat a Labor victory
~uld ruin a solid, improving economy - !he Bush campaign primer
..qhen he ran to succeed Ronald Reagan four years ago.
:• But !hat won't work in hard times.
·: "So we had to think of a slighdy different message," Lacy said, a ncg~ve one. "And so our simple, different message was that things are bad
butdon'tlet Labor make things even worse ... you can't trust Labor."
·: Substitute Clinton and !he Democrats for Labor, and !hat has been !he
aush .standby in dealing with an economic situation he acknowledged has
been lousy.
-: "There was no subdety in our campaign at all," Fullbrook added.
(•You can't trust Labor- !hat was our No. I message ... just think how
tid it would have been and will be if they get !heir hands on !he econo-

r4y."

:. That's been a GOP argument,IOO.
·: "If you ate Republicans, I kllow how you feel," Lacy said. "You're
Viorried people." With less than seven weeks to go, Clinton's lead is
~olding in national polls, and in the state-by-state surveys !hat reOect
pOtential electoml voleS.
•: "Everybody lhought we had a terrible campaign, lacklusler," !he Coniervative campai~ said. "But nevertheless, we won."
·: Another parallel: Fullbrook said !he Conservatives argued !hat they
il)ld !he economy at the point of recovery, and !hal with an election man·
ilate for their policies, it would lake off. That hasn't happened, prompting
lliquiet foobiOte:
·• "We still say it"
::
Waller R. Mean, vice president and columnist ror The Assoj:lated Press, bas reported on Washington and national polities ror
JOore than 25 years.
•

The Issue:

~ balanced budget amendment

:: EDITOR'S NOTE: The Associated Press asks the Bush and COnton campaigDJ ror their stands on an issue each weekday and assem·
Jiles their responses.
.
•: WASHINGTON (AP)- Here are !he views of !he presidential nominees on the qUC~~tiOil: Should !he Constitution be amended to requite a
liaJanced budget?
:: Bush: "Yes, tny very fust proposal to Congress in 1989 was to require
)lie government to operate under the discipline of a balanced budget
~endment Businesses operate that way. Families operate that way.
~operate that way." ·
:• Clinton: "I would support a balanced budget mechanism that meets
dvo criteria: it is not an elc'ction-year gimmick; and it provides !he Oexi~lity to invest in our future - education, training and infrastrucwre.''

Letters
to
the
editor
••
~=

•"•

Constitution Week

~0 The Editor. '

•• Co!IPibitlon Week, Sepr.Cmber
0·23 milts die 20Sth annivenary
Of the siping of your United StaleS
Constitution. The ideals expressed
ill thil docu!llcnt are reinforced
C,C. day by die mcceSs of the sysJtm to which it gave birth.
,; Thm are 27 Amendments to
f!1r COIIItiiUtion, duee are dlreclly

related to the rights of citizens to
vote. During this election year, use
Constilution Week to stud~ the
iJSUes and candidates, n:solvirig to
be a citizen who votes responsibly.
John R. Kauff,
President Ewings Chapter,
Sons of the American Revolution,,
119 Park Drive Point Pleasant,
25550
...

wv.

•

Thursday, Sept. 24
Accu· Weather" foreeast for

conditions and high temperatures

MICH.

Quayle should lock up his 'auto-pen'
,,

WASHINGTON - Letters
Vice President Dan Quayle wrote
as a senatcr have twice come back
to haunt him. Both times the vice
president deflected the blame by
claimi~g they were signed by
young slaflers wielding his office's
automatic pen.
The most recent example stems
from a Sept 13 column in which
we detailed Quayle's intencession
witlt the Justice Department on
behalf of a GOP fund-raiser named
Stephen Goo! who was convicted
on racketeering charges in connec·
lion with his role in fiXing drunk
driving tickets. That federal inves·
ligation into local court corruption
was dubbed "Operation Bar-Tab."
Goot was awaiting designation
to a federal prison to serve·a 20·
year sentence (later reduced to 15)
tn 1988, when Quayle sent !he July
7 letter to Justice marked "RUSH
REQUEST/IMMEDIATE
ATIENTION." Quayle asked !hat
Goot be assigned to a minimumsecurity prison because "there is a
concern for his physical safety if he
is not assigned to a penitentiary
with. ..other 'white-collar' crimi·

Minn . ...:. widely referred 10 as
"Club Fed." A Bun:au of Prisons
spokesperson said the Bureau
decided to move Goot to .Duluth

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

two days prior to receiving
Quayle's request Follow-up correspondence 10 Quayle from Justice
fails to note !hat facL
Goot, who was released on
parole earlier this year, denies his
safety ever was imperiled, credits
Quayle with keeping him out of a
much harsher medium-security
prison and surmises that Quayle
got involved 81 the behest of mutu·
al friends in Indiana politics. Goot
says he was a Quayle fund-raiser
and supporter in his two Senate
races, and he met Quayle at least
once.
Questioned by ABC's Sam
Donaldson about our column, !he
vice president suggested the Goot
nal s.
letter might bear !he signature of
Goot was moved 12 days later his automatic pen.
from a temPQmry detention center
Quayle's Director of Communiin Chicago to a minimum-security cations, Jeff Nesbit, says that
federal prison camp in Duluth, Goot's case was routine constituent

work, probably handled iii Indiana
by a "young individual casework:er" using the automatic pen, which
all congressional offiCes have. Nesbit says !hat as a senator, Quayle
personally authorized the use of his
office's auto-pen. But Nesbit also
says that Quayle can't recall any
details about !he Gootcase.
Four years ago, Quayle also
sought to disown a politically
embarrassing letter by using the
auto-pen defense.
On Oct. 22. 1988, Quayle
signed a letter praisin~ !he work of
the National Secunty Political
Action Committee, an independent
political committee that was fundmg some of the more virulent versions of !he Willie Horton TV cornmercials in the fall campaign. Fed·
eral election laws bar illdependent
orgnnizations from orChestrating
their spending activities with presidential campaigns.
Quayle wmte the group extend·
ing his gratitude for a copy of
another videQtaped attack on
Michael Dukakis !hat it was fund·
ing. In his letter, Quayle describes
the group's efforts as "a souree of
encouragement as well as a great
boon to our efforts," according to
The New York Times. A Quayle
spokesman later dismissed !he letter, arguing that it had been written

by an Intern and signed by an auto- :
malic pen.
• :
Automatic pen or not, Barbara ·
Budgin is angry !hat Quayle would :
give his senatorial blessing to ;
Goot's cause. Budgin served as an ·
official of a local Chapter of Moth- .
ers Against Drunk Driv.ing in ~he ,
Indiana community tn whtch
"Operation Bar-Tab" tool: place. '
· ' 'I think that it's wrong that ·
Quayle or anyone else would inter- :
cede on his (Goot) behalf and make :
him as comfortable (as possible) in ·
the time of incarceration," she told
us. "Who knows how many lives .
directly or indirectly will be lost ·
down the road in relation to his ;
activities as far as ftxing,tickets.''
Although Quayle's olftce chalks
up the case to routine constituent .
case work, a canvassing of Senate
offices- including several Repub- .
licans- suggests otherwise.
Sen. ~Jan Simpson's, R-Wyo.,
response was typical. Simpson said .
!he kinds of cases he n:ceives are
typified by the letter of a woman
with terminal cancer asking !hat
her incarcerated son be allowed to
serve out !he remaining months of
his sentence close to home. Simpson forwarded the correspondence
to prison authorities, and the son
was moved to a detention center of
!he same level of security. Simpson
also said !hat he keeps his office's
auto-pen locked in a room and it's
. only employed - with ·!he knowledge of his chief of staff or mail
supervisor - for responding to
mass mailings on a particular issue.
A Democratic Senate staffer
said of Quayle's intervention: "If it
as a Democratic fund-raiser in
prison, we wouldn' 1 touch that
mi\!her with a I0-foot pole."
A spokesman for Sen. William
Roth, R·Del., said !hey too keep
!heir auto-pen locked in a c)oset,
and it is used only with !he permis·
sion of !he senator. Roth's office
could not recall a case similar to
!hat of Goot's, certainly none advocating a change in security levels.
S~n. David Pryor's, D.-Ark., ·
office has a pre-wriuen leuer it
sends off· in such cases to the
appropriate a~ency which simply ·
states ·the pnsoner' s request to
' switch correction facilities, and
includes any correspondence the ·
office may have received from !he :
family, but does not advocate a ·
course of action.
Jack Anderson and Micbael
Binsltin are .syndicated :inuers ·
for United Feature Syndicate,loc.
·

PA.

IMansfield Iss• I•
•lcolumbuslea·

Afrer all !he balloons, bus trips,
hot air and hoopla, !he 1992 cam·
paign has come down to a case of
dueling booklets.
Paul Tsongas started it last winter when he issued "A Call to Economic Arms. " Bill Clinton
answered with a 15·page tract
called "Puuing People First,"
which His Policy Wonkness has
since expanded to 232 pages. Ross
Perot celebrated his withdrawal
from the race !his summer with a
118-page manifesto called "United
We Stand." And now George Bush
has countered with a 29-page
monograph entitled "Agenda for
American Renewal."
You could invest $20 and sever·
al hours to evaluate the Clinton,
Bush and Perot manuals. Or you
can depend on Spear's expert anal·
ysis, the summation of which is
!his: The only one who makes any
sense is the little billionaire, and he
says he is not running. At least I
think that's what he says.
The real problem, which Perot
addresses and !he others do not, is
this: The United States is suffocat·
ing from an accumulated debt that
now exceeds $4 trillion. We are
coughing up about $300 billion in
interest to the folks we are borrowing the money from - a third of
them foreign investors - and we
arc piling on more debt at !he rate
of $300 billion to $400 billion a
year . Some experts believe the

national debt could n:ach S6 trillion off the debt with one hand, borrow
before !he next president finishes a buck with the other. Good,
his term of office. At that point, George.
every penny collected in income
Bill Clinton? He thinks the
deficit is a secondary problem.
What is needed now, he 1says, is
sovernment "invesunent. ' So he
•s fliuing around the country
tax would go to service the debt. promising new programs 3J fast as
The United States of America he can splulter. He wants to create
"manufacturing extension cenwould be bankrupt.
He wants national health
ters."
And who among those who
insurance.
He wants comm'unity
would lead us gives a hoot? George
development
He wants a' 'national
Bush? He mouths concern but
trust
fund
that
would !end everyobviously has precious liule. For
all of hiS whining about a one to college.
And just as you are about to
spendthrjft Congress, he has yet to
scream
"W~ere the hell is the
submit a balanced budget proposal.
money
coming
from, Bill?" he
He has personally presided over a
teUs
you
where
the
money is com$1 trillion increase in !he national
ing
from.
He
is
going
to tax the
debt, and now he asks us to trust
rich. He is goinjlto improve effi·
him for another four years.
flow would Bush mend the ciency. And he ts going to let the
error of his ways? He would push economy grow out of its doldi'ums.
for an across-the-board tax cut and That and a little faery duSt and the
depend on "growth" to get us out
of the mess we're in. Oh, and
another thing: he would let !he tax·
payers hack away at the deficit by
giving !hem the option of dedicat·
ing up to 10 percent of !heir taxes
to reducing it .
Putting it as kindly as possible,
this is an idiotic proposal. Every
dime the taxpayers earmark for
deficit reduction would have to be
made up somehow and the most
popular method in the pastl2 years
haS been to borrow it l.Qp a dollar

Joseph Spear

I

70'
W. VA.

-----Weather----South-Central Obio
Tonight, clear and cool. Low
near 40. Thursday, sunny. High
around 70.
Extended forecast:
Friday through Sunday:

Fair on Friday and Sawrday and
a chance of shswers Sunday. Highs
in upper 60s to low 70s Friday and
in low and mid· 70s over the weekend. Morning lows in the 40s Fri·
day and low to mid-50s Saturday
and Sunday.

No one seriously hurt
in three accidents
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the
State Highway Patrol investigated
three accidents Tuesday. Only one
injury resulted from the accidents.
Melissa M. Oliver, 27, Patriot
Star Route, Gallipolis, was taken to
Holzer Medical Center by Meigs
County Emergency Medical Ser·
vice Tuesday afternoon where she
was treated and released for muscle
strain following an accident in
which her car left the road and
struck a utility pole.
According to the report. Oliver
was southbound on State Route
689 when she dtopped off the right
side of the road on a right-hand
curve and struck the utility pole.
Damage to the vehicle was listed as
heavy and it was towed from the
scene. No citations were issued.
, ,A Tuesday"evening I!CCident on
County Road 53 in Cheshire resulted in a citation for both drivers.
Stacey M. Starts, 16, Pine Grove
Road, Racine, was cited for no
operator's license and no seat belt

Candidates vs. deficit that ate America

and Jane A. Aanestad, 37, Wipple
Road, Pomeroy, was cited for failure to yield.
According to the report, Starts
was eastbound on County Road 35
when Aanestad pulled from a pri·
vale driveway mto Starts' path.
Aanestad Sto!llled and attempted to
back out of "tlie roadway but was
struck by Starts.
Damage to both vehicles was
heavy and disabling and the vehi·
cles were towed from the scene.
The patrol also investigated a
one-car accident Tuesday morning
on U.S. 33 in Bedford. According
to !he report, Amber D. Cumings,
18, Syracuse, was northbound on
U.S. 33 when she lost conuol on
wet pavement and ran off !he right
side of the road and struck a
guardrail and then continued on
over 1rsmall embankinenL
Damage to the rear end of the
car was reported as moderate and
the vehicle was towed from the
scene.

New smoking.. .....::::co=ntin=tl=ed:..::rro:..:::m::..!pelag!:..e

=-1_ _

deficit will- poof- be gone.
Consider some figures . If:
GeofF. Bush does all he promises,
he wtll cut the deficit an average of
$60 billion a year for the next five ,
years. That still leaves an annual
deficit of $240 billion and a debt ·
by 1997 of$5.3 trillion.
If Bill Clinton lives up to his
promise or trimmin~ !he defiCit by '
half by !he end of hiS ftrst term, the .
accumulated debt would amount to
$5 trillion. Economists who do not
believe his rosy economic projections fear thai his fondness for
spending could drive the national .
debt to !hat calamitous figure men·
tioncd above, $6 trillion. Annual :
interest: $600 billion.
..
I'm already planning the book
I'm going to write at that point. ·
"The Derteit That Ate America.'·
Josepb Spear Is a syndicated'
writer for Newspaper Enterprise.
Association.

involvement and participation in
their child or children's scbooling.
Personnel Hired
Employed as substitute teachers
for !he I992-93 year were Sabra
Ash, kindergarten through eighth
grade; Jennie Ashley, 7-12 English
and sociolo~; Barry Haynes, 7-12,
social studtes; Kirk Reed, 7-8
social studies and 9·12 history and
geography; and EUen Waugh, 7·12
math, chemistry, and general science.
Hired as tutors for handicapped
students were GIoria Van Reeth,
Don Wolfe and Debbie Musser.
Daryl Owens, Mike Kennedy and
Betty LoiUs Wolfe were employed
as ~trls' basketball coaches at the
juntor high; and Lisa Pape was
hired as the junioc high cheerleader
advisor.
The hourly student assistant
contracts of Josie Morton, Jo Ann
Wildman, Pennee Knapp, and Jennifer Couch were amended as to
time needed on the job.
'
Doris Munay and Btenda Erwin
wen: put on the substitute cook list
Other Buslaess
Heard at the meeting was a
complaint from a parent about

Berry's World

The Daily Sentinel
CUil'IUUN)
Publloho4 ..,11 eflemooo, Monday
llt.-11 PrtdaJ, Ill Coart 8L, Potililb)\
Ohio ltr lito Ohio Valley Pablilhi.,
CompanyiMvltimedla Inc., Pomeroy,
Ohio ~789, Ph. 11112·21156. Sec:ond clua

Today in history

poo&amp;appolaal~, Ohio.

M.nber. The A1t1cia&amp;ed Preel, and th•

problems encountered by her
daughter while enroutc from her
home to the Letart severe behavior
handicapped (SOH) class.
The parent charged that insufficient supervision during the time
between her dau~hter's two bus
changes resulted m sexual assault
of her daughter last year. Supt.
James Car~enter said that the
alleged inctdent at Rutland had
been reported to !he appropriate
authorities includinf the Meigs
County Department o Human Services.
After a lengthy discussion and a
determination !hat it was not feasi·
ble to change the bus route the girl
takes, the'superintendent and board
instructed the Rutland principal to
have a teacher available to supervise the two SBH students while
they are at his school.
Carpenter said !hat the district
which covers 198 square miles has
hundreds of students making two
transfers a day, the same as the
SBH students.
A request from Rachel Hysell
for early graduation was granted, as
was a re9.uest for the release of
Leslie Mtller to the Alexander
School District
The tuition rate set at the last
meeting was changed in accor·
dance with state requirements to
$986.94 w school year for in slate
students, and $2,982.04 for out or
state students, retroactive to the
beginning of the school year.

Ohto H;E",.orl•tian, Natloul

.
By The Associated Press
Today is Wednesday, ~ept 23, the 267th day of 1992. Then: are 99
days left in !he year.
,
Today's Highlight in History:
Forty years ago, on Sept23, 1952, Republican vice-presidential candi·
date Richard M. Nixon went on televiston to deliver what carne 10 be
known as the "Checkers" speech as he denied allegations of improper
campaign financing.
On !his dale:
In 63 B.C., Caesar Augustus was born in Rome.
In 1642, Harvard College in Cambridge, Mass., held its fmt com·
mencement
·
In 1779, during the Revolutionary War, !he American warship Bon
Homme Richard defeated the HMS Serapis after the American commander, John PauJ,Jones, is said to have declared: "I have not yet begun to
fight!"
In 1780, British spy John Andre was captured along with ~pers
revealing Benedict Arnold's plot to surrender West Point to the Brillsh.
In 1806, the Lewis and Cfart expedition returned to SL Louis from the
Pacific N6rthwest ·
In l84li, the planet NeptuDe was discovered by German astronomer
Johann OoUrried Galle.'
.
·
In 1926, Gene Tunney scored a 10-round decision over Jack Dempsey
to win tbc world heavyweight 'boxing tille in Philadelphia.
In 1939, SiJP!lund Freud, the founder of psychoanalysis, died in Lon·
don.
.~·

..

A special meeting to adopt tem·
porary appropriations was set for
NwYitn; Now Yon 10011.
Sept. 29 at 5:30 and the regular
POiri'MA8TIIR:-- ...._"' • meeting was announced for Oct 13
The DaUy 8elitiael, Ill Court 81.,
at the Rutland school.
PoniiiV)\ OHla 451811.
Attentlinj were Supt. Carpenter,
IDBICBIP110M IIATD
Clerk Jane Fry, and Board member,
..,Curl..... - -...
Randy Humphreys, Roger Abbott,
l)fto - ........... ......... ...................... 1.80
ana M'"'llt .... .......................... ........... .116 John Hood, Lany Rupe, and Bob
.an. Year..................
"''"''""''"--"18S.20
Barton, president.
IINGL&amp; COPY
Aftorlloill

Nt......por 8

'

nloU .., Bnnham

to,

788 Third Ann-.

PRill&amp;
Da~ ........................................- .215 Conlo

nolilooirl.. "' pa)' !Itt carri.
• IMJ' nmR la adft'nce ctincl lo Thl

-·--

Doll1 Stodnel .., • lhne, oix or 13 '
-lllbaoia. Ctwlil will be ,t•en canter

--.-

No tobocripd'"" by moll ponaillod

In

anu when hoft'WI urriet ""'" i•

'

C)

tNIIIY MEA, Inc.

.

anllab!t.

, .......... eo.u.tT
11 Wlllki...........................................I.M

•AW
w.............
............. -............................
143.18
_ ...........................tl4.'18
•

O.lo!••lfol11 Coat,

II Wotb., ............... - .............:......taa.«&lt;
• w-.. .................................... .....Na.GO

aa w............................................$81.40

.'

•

The Dally Sentlnei-Pag&amp;-3

Sunny and cool weather forecast next few days

OHIO Weather

Pag..,..2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
.
Wednesday, September 23,1992:

.

'

Pomeroy-Middleport1 Ohio

Road to close
· Naylor's Run RDIICI in Salisbury
Township will be closed all day on
ThUBday, as well as part of !he day
on Friday so !hat rOIId paving may
be completed.
According to Towmhip Trustee
Ed Durst, the paving project is
funded through the Community
Development Block Grant program. The work is contingent upon
the weather, and lhi- week's rain
may affect the township's work
schedule.

By The Associated Press
Ohioans can expect typical
autumn weather the next couple of
days, forecasters said. Gardeners
were advised to JXOtect !heir plants
from frost.
A combination of high pressure,
clear skies and a rush of Canadian
air created the unseasonably cool
conditions, typical of late October,
!he National Weather Service said.
Temperatures will drop in!O the
mid-30s tonight, posing a tlueat of
frost for all of Ohio except along
!he Lake Erie shon:line and in lhe
extreme south.
Thursday will be sunny.with
low humidity and highs in the 60s.
The record-high temperature for
!his date at the Columbus weather

record for !he date with a high of
87, and Reno, Nev., tied its record
high for the date wi!h 91.
Showers and thunderstorms.
were forecast today for the Gulf
Coast, with scattered showers in
lhe Northwest
On Tuesday evening, rain and
thunderstorm's e•tended over !he
AJiantic Coast, the upper Ohio Valley, the Tennessee Valley, Alabarna, !he centtal and western Gulf of
Mexico Coas~ northwest Texas and
Southem Califania.
More than 2 inches of rain fell
Tuesday in Burlington, Vt., in less
!han two hours. More than 2 1/2
inches fell in six hours in Victoria,
Texas.

Thunderstorms flooded roads.
and triggered a mudslide near Lake :
Morena, Calif. No damage was :
,n:ported, the National Wea!her Ser· •
vice said.
:

Democrats feel Cong. McEwen is

vulnerable ~

WASHINGTON (AP) Democrats are crowing about their
chances of oustin~ Ohio Rep. Bob
McEwen but playmg down Republicans' chances of doing !he same
10 Rep. Mary Rose Oalcar.
Those two incumbents had
tougher primary elections than any
of !heir Ohio colleagues, and both
have been fighting aggressively all
summer.
At a Capitol Hill news confer·
ence Tuesday, the Democratic
Congressional Campaign Commit·
tee singled out McEwen's oppo·
nent, Ted Strickland, for special
auention.
The Democrats said Strickland,
a psychologist from Lucasville, is
in good position against McEwen,
a Republican from Hillsboro who
barely survived a bitter primary
against fellow Rep. Clarence
Miller.
. After redistricting and !he pummelling McEwen and Miller gave

incumbent because of redistricting:
or retirement or both.
The races pit
•
-Former Ohio Secretary of
State Sherrod Brown, a Democrat,
against Republican Margar¢)
Mueller in the outskirts of Cleve•
land and Akron.
-Democratic State Sen. Eric
Fingerhut against Robert Gardner,
a Republican county prosecutor, in
!he state's northeast comer.
-Democratic State Rep.
Richard Cordray against former
Franklin County Judge Deborah
Price, a Republican, and independent Linda Reidelbach in the
Columbus area.
Another Ohio congressional district has no incumbent, but because
of a peculiar situation neither party
includes it on the largetlists.
.

Racine
...
Continued rrom page 1
$1,000 requires an ordinance. An
ordinance is expected to be ready
for first reading at !he next meet·
ing.
Council approved the request of
Fire Chief John Holman to pur·
chase oi I and fillers for the fire
trucks.

Complaints concerning certain
bicycle riders were addtessed. The
Mayor will have the police watch
and cite them to juvenile court if
they continue to disregard !he rules.
Mar.or Cleland again reminded
council of the importance of the
passage of the four-mill renewal
levy. The money is needed in the
general. fund for street light,ing,
police, insurance and other,government operations. He n:p,orted !he
general fund and the cemetery fund
are !he one that need attention.
It was noted that lhere are sever·
al D'USt funds (savings accounts) at
the hand with the interest going to
the cemetery for the yearly lot care,
but with the drop in savings
account interest, the money this
year has been less.
Clerk Carolyn Powell reported
that the $1,000 check has been
received from !he Ohio Department
of Natural Resources for the
matchins grant for turn out gear for
!he ftre tlepartment
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Frank Cleland, Coucilmen
Robert Beegle, Henry Bentz, Ron
Clark, Scott Hill, Carroll Teaford
and Jeff Thornton, Clerk Carolyn
Powell, Street Commissioner
Glenn Rizer and Fire Chief John
Holman.

EMS units answer calls
Six calls for assistance were
answered on Tuesday by units of
Meigs Emergency Services.
On Tuesday at 12:07 p.m., Middleport unit went to Overbrook
Center. Diana Carter was taken to
Pleasant Valjey Hospital. AI 4:05
p.m., Pomeroy' squad went to
Chester Road for Beatrice
Williamson. She was lakcn to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 5:14
p.m., Rudand unit was sent to State
Route 689 for an auto accident.
Melissa Oliver was taken to Holzer
Medical Center. At 5:45 p.m .,
Syracuse squad responded to
McKenzie Ridge Road. Autumn
DeMoss was treated at the scene.
At6:20 p.m., Pomeroy squad went
to State Route 248 and took Doris
Deeter 10 O'Bleness Memorial
Hospital. At 7:41 p.m., Middleport
squad went to Stonewood Apart·
ments. Eileen Snyder was taken to
Veterans.

station was 91 degrees in 1945
while the record low was 34 in
1974. Sunset tonight will be at 7:26
p.m. and sunrise Thursday at 7:21
a.m.
By The Associated Press
Foggy, wet weather shrouded
the N&lt;Jtheast today, and forecasters
called it a sign of things to come.
Rain fell early today in New
YorlcCityandPonland,Maine,and
a blast of cool, autumn air was
expected to move into the North·
east by Thursday, with frost possi·
ble from Michigan to Maine Thursday night
Warm weather was expected
from the northern and central
Rockies to the western Plains. On
Tuesday, Casper, Wyo., tied a

••·,

each other, "We believe we're
going to pick up !he pieces," said
Rep . Vic Fazio, D-Calif., who
heads !he DCCC.
At the National Republican
Congressional Committee, co·
chairman Spencer Abraham said
!he GOP campaign is keeping close
tabs that race, but he didn't say
McEwen is vulnerable.
''Whenever we have incumbents !hat run against other incumbents ... we clearly pay attention to
!hat," Abraham said.
"He still bas a good base there
and is a good candidate," Abraham

said or McEwen. "He's working
hard and I think he's treating it as a
tough race."
As for Oakar, "The primaries
sugRest she's certainly vulnerable, ' he said.
Oakar pulled less !han 40 per·
cent of !he vote among seven candidates in her primary and is facing
an aggressive challenger in a dis·
trict !hat has been redrawn to add
more suburban territory to her
Cleveland base.
"We know she's in a tough
race," Fazio said. "People are
going to respond to somebody
who's fighting back and she is."
. Both parties' congressional
campaign
experts said they were
An eight-week clogging workdevoting
time
and attention to three
shop for beginner and intermediate
Ohio
vacancies
- seats with no
cloggers will be offered starting
Tuesday at the Pomeroy Municipal
BuUding on Main Street.
Stud!nts in the heginner class,
to meet from 7-8 p.m., will be
taught the basic steps of clogging
Concert P.lanned
along with several beginner rouThere wtll be a gospel music
tines. Intermediate cloggers, to concert Sunday at 7 p.m. at the
meet from 8-9 p.m., will be taught Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church
more advanced steps as well as in Pomeroy. Fealored will be "The
routines.
Pa!hfindel'll." The church is located
Paulette Harrison, director of the one-half mile from Big Wheel on
Shady River Shuffiers Clogging Laurel Cliff Road. Pastor Pete
Team, and Jodi Glass, assistant Tremblay invites the public.
choreographer for the team, will be
teaching the Appalachian style of
Sunday school lime changed
clogging with the steps and termiSunday sehool at Hope Baptist
nology used nationwide.
Church, 570 Grant Stree~ Middle·
Classes will be every Tuesday port, has been changed to 9:45am.
for eight weeks and class donation
is $3. Registration is not necessary
Hayride planned
and further information may be
A church-wide hayride at the
obtained by calljng 992-6248 or Sonny McClure farm will be held
594-7181.
Oct. 16 at 6:30 p.m. by the Hope
Baptist Church.

Workshop planned

Highs today were fon:cast to be :
in the 80s across much of the :
Southeast and !he Great Plains; in :
the 70s in the Pacific Northwest •
and the lower Mississippi Valley; :
in !he 60s in the Great Lakes region :
and Northeast; and in the 50s in •
northern New England. Highs in :
the 90s and IOOs wrze forecast for :
!he desert Southwest ·
The high temperature for the :
nation Tuesday was 109 at Lake •
Havasu City, Ariz.
:
:

•

-Meigs announcements-

Hospital news

Party planned
·
A " Hallelujah" party will be.
held Oct 30 at 6:30 p.m. at Hope
Baptist Church in Middleport~
Bible character costumes ar~
emphasized.
Party planned
Mrs. Bessie Graham, currendy ,a
patient at Overbrook Center in
Middleport will be honored witl1 a
wallc-in birthday party given by h~r
children on Saturday from 10 am.
to 3 p.m. Mrs. Graham will be celebl3ling her 90th birthday on Friday.
The party will be at the home of
her son and daughter-in-law.•
Harold and Janet Graham of 36008
Route 143, Pomeroy . .It has been
requested that gifts be om iued,
Refreshments will be served. All
friends and n:latives are invited.

Homecomlc
Veterans Memorial
VSC to meet
Homecoming at Hope Baptist
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS • Church
The
County Veterans
in Middleport will be Oct ServiceMeigs
William Pickens, Racine.
Commission
will meet
II with a potluck dinner following
TUESDAY DISCHARGES . !he
Monday at 7:30p.m. in the Veter;
morning service.
Cora Delong and Anne Davis.
ans Service Office in Pomeroy. · '

Lid'l Doll,'s Dresses
NOW AVAILABLE AT

BUTTONS &amp; BOWS
100 E. MAIN ST.

POMEROY, OH.
992·5177

Originated and
displayed at· Dollywo~d,
Opryland U.S.A., and
Silver Dollar City.
Dolly Parton's cousin is the talented designer and
seamstress in Pigeon Forge, TN.
•Sizes: 3 mos. to 24 mos. now available!
Girls sizes up to 16 will be available soon.
•Colors: Red, white, jade, purple, hot pink, royal blue
and navy.
•They are adorned with ya·rds of beautiful ruffles and
frilly white lace that is machine washable.

The Orielnal SoutJaern Belle
HANDCUFfED IN THE• GREAT SMOKY
MOUNTAINS OF TENNESSEE.
There's no need to travel to Pigeon
Forge for a Lid'l Dolly's, you can
get one of BuHons &amp; Bows in
downtown Pomeroy. If we don't
have it, we'll order It for you!

••-

.

. L._:_
'
."

�•

i

. .

.

Sports

The Daily

Se~tinel
.

·

1

all

· ~yTbt Afl!lellted Press ·
~ ~~:·s ~h Roberts has
~8!~
~===Btp
nine Jts in nine cJnsecutive at1
R

"""""'" ....... now..

.

·

.,He's seem1 thmss dtfferently
thai\ othe! play~rs; In fa~!· the
C '
lfielder doela t

.

--

GB

ilL ....... ...............76 14 .50'1
• t:lric:llo....... ~····-···75 16 ..f91
, New 1'aot ..............61 ll .4113

llS

•. .........a ...............ll w

.543

7

t•

20.5
71

u .QI
.
w-..DI,w.
"\, A\llllll .............. JO 60 .600
~ ...........61

CINCINNATI........I4

.556
.520

1{1

; s.n Diop ..." .........11 n

6.5
12
11.5

.................n 19 .m

"-

• Son -

........61 ... ....
LooAqoloo ... """'"'l 90 .«M

..

2l.5
29.5

ToaiPI'spmn

•

Plw'

1~

?Jl (W...,-..w 6--1) ... Montrul

6-11),7:3$p.m.
~
~~.... 2-5) l l Philldal.' pili&amp;
1:1-11),7:35 p.m.
•
New Y... (OooM 1· 13) 01 S&lt; Lou;.
• (T......, 16-5~ I:Cll p.m.
.
•
(llomloch J.IO)"
IMa•
• (!lwoll..9), 10:05 p.m.
:
Adlru (I l ndt 12·7) 1t San FIVl·
, a-(BiocldO.I~ IO:Cllp.m.
-.
QNCINNA11 (Pup 3-1) at Loe An·
o plol(-4-3~ IO:llp.m.

s..

•
•

TllundaY'•IUNI

l. co_.,.
A - (Oil... ~ at S10 """'"·
5-1), 3:!5 .....
•

hou.aan (Blair ' ·6)

Sn Dlcso

11

• (s..lom 1-4),_4:05p.m.
'
""""""'(llNIIII:I._IO) ot Nonbul

• ~~7:35pm.
:
aDoa~t(CMdllo9-10)atPhib!Wphia
• (0... 5':1), 7:35 p.m.
.New YDIII. (S•krh•aen 3·4) at St
. ..... «»-10-1).1:05 p.m.
•
CNCINNATI (A,.tl I· I) II .... An~ ..... (Ojeda 6-9), I O:ll p.m.

__

•

••

.:

AMERICAN LEAGUE

.,_
WLPU.CB
: T~ ..... -...........19 63 .516
1 Milw..W. .............. I4 1{1 .556 4.5

.- -

...

t\~v'~...........
~ ~
................
" ·~ I'~
~

'

• CIJ!VI!LAND.......71 ., _47]
- DllloiE. ....-.............71

• lkollal .....................67

•
•

17
II
21 .5

ll .~7
14 _...

w-.Dt-

; !loklolol ."""""'"""92 " .609
, Minnelota ..............M G1 . 5~6
• Chioqo.................. ll

8
10.5
20..S
24.5
lA.5
n

"' .. 540

T - .....................71 to .474
.447
tt.oa..................
Goy ""'"""'
.447
:• Selllle
J7' "ll .m
111

, c·•t-M ........-...67 n

iota.:...-.

••
•-

TIMidaJ'IIICOI'tl
New YOlk 6. Olaroil '· 12 iminp, ht

: psNiwY. . 7, Dolftld4, lnd .....
&lt;UVELAND4, a..... 2
T..-&lt;~.&amp;11.....,.3

'

•

.,

Mibnuk• 3, CtUIW• 2
Olicopl. Ootlon43
looNICUyl.s.uleO

1!

TonJ&amp;bt's pmn

DcuU (Doherty'""') at Now York
(llildKoct 0-1), 7:30p.m.
Q.EVEI.AND(N•IJ' U-1 0) n Roann
(l'ayb().O). 7:15p.m.
Toronto (Morria 19-5) a\ Baltimore
(Rh.... 5-5~ 7:ll p.m.
CUfomia (Abbott 7-14) n Milwaukee
(Eid1o4 9·1 ~ I :Cll p.m.
Oat.llnd (Moon 1S-t 1) a1 Chicaao
{MoCIII:iiii0-12),1:05 p.m.
klull: (Fillhet l ·l) tt Kan111 City
(l'ldlri&gt; 9·$), 1:35 pm.
Minnaou (Tramhlcy 2-1) al Te~ u
(B ..... 19-10),1:35 p.m.

Tbursdly's cames
Del;roil (Tan1n1 1)·9) 11 New York
(XMUoritcti 5-ll), 7:30p.m.

CLEVELAND (Sc:udder 6-9} at

s - (llapoal7·91, 7:ll p.m.

Tai'CHitG (K9 1· 13) at Baltimore
&lt;""'""'LII2-I:I), 7:35 PJI!·
CalifOfnil (8Jykv411 1-9) It MiiW IU·
u. (lkoio U-51. 1:05 p.m.

Oikbnd (Welch 10.6) at Ch iu ao
(lllcDowcll ~·~ 1:05 p.m.
s .. ula (Leary 7-9) It Klnlll Ci t y
~ 2-0), l :ll p.m.

Major league leaders
·•

Natlotlll Leque
BATI'INO - Sheff'ielcl, San Dicao.
•312: VOISI)'to, PiUibwJb, .371; Ktul&lt;,
PhUa.aelphia, .325; Robctu. CINCINNATI. .SlO; Ow)'nn, San Diqo, .117:
1-........., .3!l: L. Wall&lt;or, M... .... .311.
RUNS - BDndl, Piuab\lr&amp;h, 1_02;
Oriu~~m M•sraal, 97; D. Rolbn•.
,.,u~t 95: v.,slyie, Piwburtl&gt;,
93;
Olico... 9!: ............ .....
-.J.l;Bp-.91.
Ul - Dtulton, Phil•d8lphi1, 10.5 ;
,_...._, A&amp;lan\1 , 100; S~eld, Slll
~::J::· 96: McOrirt, S•n Oae~96 ;

~. 94; L.Walbt,
ueo1,90;-y,JolowY. .. I9.
HITS - Pendleton , Alhnla, 117;
VonSI,U. PI"""""' 115: Sh.r&amp;old, S'"
fticJO, 171: Oritlom, Mont.rul., 114;
ance, au.... 173; s..ilbcoa.
112; Iatool............ 167.
DO~ - V..S,Iyb, Pi&lt;ullluJ!I.
43; J..aak[orcl, IL l.ou11, 31: OriiJI!om ,
-~!I : W. Clad!, Son fna....., ,
51; Duae~n, ~a .. lphia, 31; Ortc:c,
atoa1o, 36; J. Bell, Pltuburab, 36;

aoc.,•.

-A-:16.
mPL1!S - ·D. -

· A...... l4;

fialiJ, HOWls., 12; VmSlyk .. Pint·
buiJII, II• ltOJ., Loo A...•. II; AI·
IL L..u. 10: Monadini, Pltiltdel·

~ ~,Loo A&gt;\pla, I; Sond-

-- Moalilf,SonDioao.
,.. Sllelllol•. I•• Dill•· 32:
PI= 3D; Dnlloo. l'lliWiipllia. 27:
D.
,l'lliloHiphio, 25: s......s.
Clll..... 25; L. w.... 22
S'roLIIN BASI!S - on-, M""·
uul, 13; DtUicldt, MoatrHI , 46 ;
CINCINIIATI. 43; .....,.... SL
' Looio,G;-. .............. 41 :0.
-ILt.-,41;16lC111,-40.
P1t011111 (II_..., A-., ~1/1, 2.11; T~, SL

a..a•.

Ilia-

~··'ti61,12l:~

:t:l:
~ ~ c::t... v.a,
.... 111: L 11111. II
I, 16-1, .640.

1:1-1:

i,l{l; 0; -

Chietp, lt-11, .63!,
.
• STRJUOUTI - c- Now Yorll,
214; ........ Alloala. 205: 0 . Moot4•• ·
C111-.. 117· 1. , . . , - . Now Yorll.
, liS! Da...t Plllobor1h, 161; lljo,

• U4.

j

., Cllli:ooiAn. ·~a.... s.. DMe•·
~

~

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I56.1AVIIt - Lotllolidl, ll Looil, 40;
..,..., S.. D1op. 36; WOIIIIoM, Mon·
U111, 3$· D. 1-.
!I; Milch

WUU 1

H-.U:

.i ..U...Ipl_l,ia,

Oarlton.

CINCINNATI, 15; Dibblo, CINCIN·

-

•

...m.-.

0111m
n or _. poln.,
ll. TOIIUip\1' Qteao 31. 12. bmaMwn
OtcCDeview lL 1~1. Carey (I)~· ••Noeth Limt ...... R.,.. 23. u ("') -

BARNESVIUE, SoM&amp;floW N -·
em 20. 17 (lie) - ·eatainpn-Linooln,
R-wal9. 19 (lie) -.u- SL Vvt·
,..,.SL Moly, Orwoll Clrml Volley, SW·
livaa Btact Alva 17. 22. Aldlbold 16. 23
(lie) -

Amtn&lt;lo.Q--

15. 15 (lie) - Moonolio s_..dy Vtll~,
Rockfonl Ptdlw•y f4. 17 (uo) - Clncin·
nati Wyomlnl, WHEELERSBURO 13.
29. Montp&lt;lior 12.

Dlolslon V

T-

..._

I. Nowui Ctlholic 02) :1-0........... "..200
~(S) 3-0 ................... .""""".152
!. SL llauy 3-0 ......... ""'"""""""""" 119
4. MoDoaold (I) :1-0 ......................." ....86
5. Ctatl
:J.O . ...................... IO
6. WoooldloLI 3-0 ........................... " ....79
7. M.ui,.. Pleuau(l) 3-0 ....................73
I. nm.,uS..,_..O) 3-0 .............. .55
9. CeduYillo 3.(1 ............................... " •.54
10. Aoict """"Eta (I) 3-0 ...............42

w-

SI'OLEN BASES - ......._ CLEVE·
LAND, 61 ; Uach, Milwaukee, 53; An·
dcnan, Ballimcn. St; Polonia. California, St ; R. Al&lt;mu. Toron&amp;o. 46; R. Hen. . _ Otiltnd,
1Wnoo, au..,., .u.
PITCHING (11 duiaiGM)- Jack
Mom.t, T....... 19-5, .792. 4.01: 1...
Ou1man, Toronto, U ·4, .719, 2.75;
a·w ..... 17·5. :m. ~53: a...
tio, Milwallk•, 15·5, .750, 3.51; Me·
Dowell, Cbie•ao. 20-1, .11•. ! .17; ,x..
Brown, Taw, lt-10, .655, ! .:11; Applcr,

OtMn ......... 12 ........ poiMI::
II. OLOUSTBR "TRIMBLE 41. 12.
Blul!lon 39. 1!. Ciocinntll C-.y llty
32. 14 SwnmitSWioo Llddn.l Hu. 30.
IS (ti~)- Columbo~ 0.0.., bumlle,
Middle&lt;"'"' f..,rlci 26. II. lad-·
-(1)22.19(tio) - - S l . Wcooldio, ~1114 (2) lO. 21 . Ubaly c..(1) 19. 2Z. Daltonll.l3, C~ambi•n•
C...m.wl5. lA. Noltll ._...... Tritcl
13. 25. s,....,... Mdttwi ·~

Konot~CUy,l!-1, .652, ~-46.

Transactions

*'

S11IIKEOiml - R. lohnoon. Sooalt,
115: ec.n.., Botton, 201; Perez, New
Yaot, 201: lol&lt; Oozmtn, T&lt;lll, 170; McDowell, Chic:aao. lSI; Juan GuDnan,
T....... 154: smiley. MiM...... 1!4.
SA \IES - Bckenley, Ollkland, 50;
Apilcra , Minncaata, 40; M~taomery ,
K.aniU City, 37; Ollon, Balumo~. 33;
Henke, Toronto, 31; Jeff R\Wdl, Oakland, 30; Olin, CLEVELAND, 27; Farr.
New Yodl, 21; Reardan., BDMDn, 'Zl.

NCAA Division
1-AA football poll
OVERLAKD PARK, 11:'". (AP) Tho "'P 20,...,. in lho 1992 NCAA Di·
.W.. l·M 1-.J poU. wilh fin&lt;·piaoe
vote~ in parenlhetel, recorda ltuouah
Sept. 20, \otll. poinu and prcviool rank-

.....

P11. Wttk
19
I

!.Y-St (!)~
~ MARSIIAU(I).... ~

11

2

3
4

S. Eulcm Xa.Ld:y...2·0.0
6. ldoho .............. ..........3-o.G

72
61
64
60

6

7. Ddlware ................:Z.O.O
I. ChootoL ................. :I-0-G
9. 1fl'.O.t....... .... :z.o.o

56
S2
47

!. Vllllnovo ...... "....... :1-o.G
4. NoN.rnlow• ...... .. l-0.0

43
10. Middle Tenn. "St~tel ·l ..O
36
II . SW MinouriStatc:Z.l -0
(tie) Nonhoutl..lM..Uianat -Z..O 36

~1,Tcau0, 13iminp

ru.

9. u.... :l-0 .... ".................................
10. BEIJIRE ).0.. ........... " .....................

.-.Douoil.29.

W-L-T

32

13. Furman ......,........... l.l-0
14. WiDlom A Muy ...2-o.G
U. Alcorn SUite .......... 2-0.0
(tie) SW Tetu State ... 2-l..O
17. - . . ................1·2-&lt;l
11. Alabana State ....... I - I~
19. Mc:Ntac Stat.c ...... 1-l..C
:». Florida AAM ........ 2- J..(l

23
18
18
ll
1~5

II

9.S

s

I
9
II
12
1\7
10
19
111

20
\6
7
t\4
13

AP high school
football poll

Dlvlslon I
TUM
Pt.a.
I. Clev. SL lp.atiuJ (I 3) 3.0 ............. .202.
:~.an. -(3)H .....................I34

3. Y-wn8otnlmon(5)3.0 ...... 112
• · C..l&lt;ll McKinley l.Q ............. ...... .. I 09
5. MU!d....wn (I) !-0 ............... .......!fl
6. Ew:lid 3-0 ....... .... ............ .............. .. .15
7. Piquo (I) 3-0 .....................................11
I. Mma..W Senior 3-0 ........................19
9. o,., Cit)" 3-0 ................................. 64
10. Cin. Sl Xavier 3..0 ...........................62
!liMn raal~ 1l ,.. - . polnU!
II. T~QY S5. 1:1. Cin. Elder 36. 13. Cin.
L.Salle 32. 14. LANCASTER 30. U .
Tol. St.. Frmci1 ( I) 29. 16. Pidlcrini'Oft
(I) 71. 11 (ue) - Mouill"' w........,,
o,q.., Clar 22. 19. Moaillon Pan 11.
20. Man•field Maditon 1). 11. Warren

llmlinJ l l

DMstonn

Tam
Pta.
I. foo«&lt;rit (14) 3-0...... .................. .....201
2. Solon (L) :J.O................................. .! 09
1. POR'TSMOurn l.Q ...................... 101
4. Bdoit. WCIIl Branch 3-0 .................... 96
5. Y.......,.. aw.er o) !-O ........ .... 92
Aklat Bllllhtol (3) 2-1 ......... .......... .... 92
1. s....,...;o. (I) 2·1 ................ .......... 79
I . RoylondBuci&lt;CJOl-0 ........................70
9. ......... (2)3-0................ .............. 61
!O. l"CKSON l -0................................. 34

nctl•lnt n •

PQ&amp;nfl:
11 (lie) - Cia. Winton Wood1, Wu:hint·
ton Cowt ~baa~ Miami. Trace 33. 13 (lie)
_ o.-.w., MtfynilklJ. 15. Colum·
buo w....... :14. 16. Sl. Mtryo Mtmoriol 23. 17 (lie) - llillobolo, Will&lt;NJhby
South :ZI. 19 . Norwood (2) 10. 20.
Columbo~ B""*htven 16. 21. U"""""wn
Ltlce 1$. n (lie) - Akn&gt;n Sprin~eld.
Locli ~. Mt- ll. ll
Allubola.llullbud, NU.. McKinley I~
1110n

&lt;••&gt; -

,_

Division ill

-Aller

,.,

I. Me&gt;&lt;orlAtoCttholle(9)3-0..........141
l.IRONI'ON (4) 3.(1 ........................ ..171
3.
(2) 3-0....................101

',·w.

BueboU
A_....
.......

AL - Upheld 1 two-pme.IUipCillim
of Skeetct Buna, Detroit Tifen Ootfidd-

"'·CHICAGO WHITE SOX -

An·
noartCCMI they are morinalhe.il Clua A
l61m from UtiCa ol die Nl• Yad:.·Pcna
Leap 1.o Hictory rL lhe South Atlantic
Lotaue tad their Clm AM...., from
Vanc:ouvct ottho Pleific: eo- Laauc 10
Nulwillc of !he Amsican Auoc:iltim.
NEW YORK Y ANICI!ES - Aclin&lt;od
Tun Bwte, pi&amp;chlr, Inn !he 1S-day ltiaablcd lill,
NlllontiLeo...
MON111EAL EXPOS - A..........
tMy aftl moW, dleir Clau AAA \ella

Inn lndianoodil &lt;i t h e - , _
cittion to c1uawa of the lnt.ernationtl

~BUROII PIRATES -

o4 ~Smith.

AelivM-

pitcher. !nom the 15-doy

dlltblo41ia.

BasketbaU

NaO..II Baalltlllti. "-odatbl
CHICAGO BUUS - AllllounCed
Ulll C1itl' Lnilzrplall, flftUd. hu lipod
(0 play !&lt;O- in 0..... .... 1""·
LOS ANGI!LES CUPPERS - Ac·
qWnod Mm l..U.., _P.III, ond • 1995
tecond·round dnft piCk from Ulc New
Yodt KNcU 1114 Sun1ey R - """"·
from \h• Odando M•F· 1ft o.chenac..
New York *'Cived CJaadel Smidl, fOrward 1nd Doc Riven and Bo Kimble.
auarda, from tM Clippen. Orlando ra·
cclvcd lho Knkb' 1993 fint·roond clraft
pic1: ond lho Clippon' 1993 or 1994
nutd dnl\ 'ct.
MILW:f'UKHE BUCKS - Sian"'
Melvin Robi~Ml, CCI'IW.
NEW YORK KNICKS - Komuncod
the riotlto &lt;o Oaold Wllkinl. JUud.
WASHINO'I'ON BUUEfS - Sipto4
Buck Johnson, forward, to a two-yen

r.,,.

"""" Cl.

COLUMBUS, Otuo (AP} - How 1
&amp;l.lle panel of 1poru wriltz~ md bnJ•dc:uters n~ta Ohio hi&amp;h tc:hool foodNill
teaml' in the rust rcplar-aeason poll for
the Ataoc:lucd Pren, by Oh io Hith
Sc:hool Athletic A11oc:iation divilions,
with won· IOit record and lo&amp;al point&amp;
(fltlt·pi.K.e vctc1 ill parcndusca):

OUten

1943. The maJOr Ieasue ~~d ts
12 ~~ht hits bandyBosDeton. ~ Piwnky
Higgms m I938
1r01t s Valt
Dropo in 1952.
His fust. c~ at No. 10 could
come tomght m Los A~ge~es,
where the Reds open theu fmal
(Set NL on Pqe 5)

6. CALI)WI!Il.(l) 3-0 .........................72

RBI - fiol&lt;ler, Il&lt;IOoi~ 119; Clner,
Toronto, 111; 0 . Bell, Chlc:1~
Thomu, Olico... 105: l'ucbll.
... 10.1: CI.IM!LAND, 102; ~
- • · llallimoN, I 02.
HITS - Puclr:eu, Minn•otl, 197:
B"I'J'• CLEVELAND, 116; Molitor,
Milw•ul:ec., lM; B. Martinez. Seattle,
Ill; Moel&lt;, Min.....,, 119: MtainJiy,
Nraw Y«k, 17•: Daveruu, Bahitnon:,
111
DO\IBLES - E. Mutina, Suttle,
Thomu. Olicolo.39: Olil!ey, s......
18; Mlttiapy, N"' Yotk, ll; Jolferirs,
1WJ.u CUy,ll: v...., Milwtat.., 35:
v...... Obct&amp;o. !4: Plxltca. w, 34.
TRIPLES - Devoreau, Babimoro,
ll; L. Johntod, OUetp, 11; AMentw~.,
Boltim-. 9: l.al\an, CLEVI!L\ND, 8;
R. Aklmar, Toranto,l; Siara, OUland. 7;
RUn., Clict,p, 7; Molitor, Milwaukee,
7.
HOME RUNS - Juan Oonzalea,
Tout, 40; McOwilo. !)otland, 40; C...,
r....... !3: Fioldw, D&lt;lroi~ 32; a.u..
!lJ!VELANI), !I : Doer, ll&lt;:II'Oil, 29;Tc&lt;·

Ttlfft

by Woody Wtllllllls of lhe Reds ~n

1. ·~Calli. (1)2-l ................ fll
I . 0.V.. CCdl'llCIIJL 3.() .. ,_ ..... ,..... ... 61

~ - · 96c 1Wneo, llllco·
••• 96: - · .......... 95: Maci.

UIJ:

hit away from die RICOid when. he
left lhe J8111C with the Reds leading
4-2. He'd already done plenty tJuee hits, two runs scored and one
RBI.
"I'm aware of it now," he said.
The league RICOid of 10 consecutive hilS has been accomplished
six times since 1900. most m:enlly

]. llcoohille(l):l-0............................. 95
4 .u- Mlncboltor:J.0 .............""'""16
5: c.t.mbuo Actdlmy (3) 3.0 ............. 76

34!- - ....
- lllomu. Ooioo
.!29: ...
- .320;·
.325:
Mocl:. ,..,_., .!19: &lt;lrilrey, S..ale,
Jtt R. Alomor, T......, .313.
. RUNS - PhUiipt, Dctroil, 110;
Thomu,IJiicoeo.IO!: E. -Seat·
1lc 100: lt. Alotntr, Toronto, 99;

*'

"•

twice in his fust tJuee at-bats in lhe
secQnd game of the Reds' doubleheader sweep of !:fOUSIOI! Tuesday
mghL He rested hts son: nght ankle
in Cincinnati's 6-3 win in the first
game, and left their 4-3 victory in
the nighiCap with the streak intaCt
after aggravating the injlry.
He didn't realize he was just one

I . Cin. Act. til'ltyt.l!d. (10) 3-0 ..... .21!
2. Wamn kulady (1) 3-0............ .... .11\6

- . -.95;PIIcioa,-.95.

, p ••

Division IV

T,_

BAntHG - E. Mutinez. Soaule,

WL ....
..............19 6Z .519

. -

Scoreboat·d
Amtriclll Lnpe

NATIONALLEAGVE

-' r-

of th
th'
here
.....,!~,?~. hi:g ism~li~ll in
e.~,y~.. m

,;1 •

NATL22

:; ln th,e majors...
'.

bats

right now," said Robens, one shy
from lhe NL record. "At lhe plate
now, the ball looks pretty big, and
when I hit i~ there's nobody standing there"
Robe;.ts singled and doubhid

4. ,.,_.-~....."............. 19

&lt;•&gt;

=1. . ·. . 3-0...........,...
·
• r 1t "';;J"V ..,." ............. ..
7. Htni11oa Iodin()) 3-0 .................... 61
I. WAVDLY (2) ~ ..........................60
9. NIILSCNW.IJI.YOU: 3.(!............l6
10. Miatnt(l) ).0 ...............................53

OdMf'l f'Ktlw ... 12 • mon DGIIII:
11. Girard ••· 11 Germantown V.Ue.y
View (I) 36. 13. Twiltoboq Chombodln
35. 14 (de) ~ ChtltiA Polio Kono10n,
Lima Juil, Nartrn• F•rtJ !1. 11.
y~- 30. 11. Sprinaflol4
J:MIOft l iiiJ6 29. 19. Nawart Uck.lna
Volley lJ. 20. E111p Milllltio. ll. 21
(tie) - c.,u. Cll'ltnl C.U.Ue. Ulka
14. 23. loaarotd (I) 22. lot. BetlviU•
C1eor Put&lt; (I) 19. :1!. UIIJoM 15.

FootbaU
Nollooalf...bd .......
CLEVELAND BROWNS - Pbced
Todd Phlkox, ••rttrbadl, on lnJurtd
rt~ltyt. Slaltld Jarr Fn•dl. quar&amp;er·
bKk. '

NEW ENOLAND PATRIOTS -

Sitn1141 Waltat Sllnley, wido Noeeiver.

Waiva!Tim EdwanfJ.IWmlivecnd,
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS - Sipto4
Louia Uppl, .;,. niCCiw:r, lO • lwo-ycat

""""""
1'11'1'SBIJRGH S'lmBIS -

P1t&lt;od

Elrlardo Webmr, lindMckct, on illjured
....,... Si&amp;M&lt;l.,..,. fool, ............
SAN DIEOO CIIAROI!RS - S""ed
Ch1rlu Wikoo. wicle r«eiver. Wa1Yed
Robert Clibomc. wide ftiOCI.va:.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS - Rosignod Troy Xy1ol, wide rtai.ver. Acti nud David Wilkinl, U'cm:ift linarwl,
from the pnctic.~quad . Placed l.ury
Roberu, defen&amp;ive end, on injured re •c:rvc. Waived Ctuil Ihalcl, li&amp;)lt end,
.00 John Holllnd, d4Ccnlive blct.

Hockey
Nldonal Hoc:bJ Lupe
BUfFALO SABRES - Auipod J&gt;o.
tcr Ambroziak, Chri• Cl anc:r. Juon
Willc:h, Juon YOW!f. Dan Frawley, Jody
O•ae. Tony lob, Rick KowalQ:y, Mike
Mcl.auahlin, Mike Polano, Br~d
Rubednlk. Jod Sanae an4 Todd Simon,
forwvds; OaU Sndl, Dw\d Oi Vita, Bill
Houlda, Sclmar Odclein and Brad PI•·
call, delmaernen; ud John Bradley and
Bill Py1, 101liaa, to Rochcsl.er of d1c
Amcrictn llodtey La..,. R&lt;IUnle&lt;l Poul
Ruthforth and Dean Tih&amp;en, c:«~tora;
Mnthew Bamtby 1nd Rod Hinka, forwank, 1nd llyle Shon., dGIIftKIILIII, to
lhcir junior tumt . R.clcaacd Knin
Brown, ri,tlt wLna; Neil few1ter •nd
Milk Bro..c:tudle, doftnaemcn; Jamie.
Steer, fCII'Ward, and Oret. Drewrty, JOI).ia.
PIIILAili!U'III fLYI!RS - "Sip&lt;l
Juon Bown, WI. winJ.
Sl'. LO\JIS BLUES - Rid&lt;
JWR, Bri•n Pellerin , Kevin Mlehm and

Daol&lt;-... f-.

10 ...... a/ ....
ln.....tiontl ........
SAN !OlE SHARKS - Aloiped Di&gt;ana Jop and C1ndio Scn=nW\, del.,..
mtn; Gord Fnnui. T.im Hanua and
Alooondr llholomoyev,lct\ wiop: lloclr
Wood, Larry Olimb, R.ay Whitney, and
Milt Beald'ait, Clllltt:l'l; and Dan Ryder,
~· (0 K.n.u Cily &lt;i ............
llatolHoo:t.,. ........

DOWIIH Clllli

••u•••••
INSUUICE

Ill S.C1 .. St., P-.y
YO.IIDIPIIIIIt

111milnl11
MISCOim
11a 1161

8:; ':'!:: . \ssotiated Press
Is the Oriole an extinct bird in
the AL East? Thanks to lhe Blue
Jay, it just may be.
The Baltimore Orioles, a surprise contender all season, were
pushed closer to elimination with
Tuesday night's 4-3 loss to the
Toronto Blue Jays.
The Blue Jays' magic number 10
win the division is seven, six to
eliminate the Orioles. With the victory, the Blue Jays maintained their
4 1/2-game lead over seccnd-place
Milwaukee, a 3-2 winner over Califomia.
"It was nice to win, although il
sure wasn't easy," said Toronto
pitcher Duane Ward.
In the AL West, Minnesota's
longshol Twins cut a game off
Oakland's lead with a 1-0, 13·
inning win at Texas. The Athlrtics
were beaten by Chicago 8-3, leav- ·
ing them eight games in front of
the Twins.
The Blue Jays used homers by
Devon White and John Olerud to
beat the Orioles.
Todd Stottlemyre (11-11) gave
up two runs and four hits in 6 2{3
, . ·inl!ilili . '.1\11 ·1 • · '1f11':"':T''' • ·
Rick Sutcliffe (16-1'1) was the
loser.
Elsewhere, Cleveland beat
Boston 4-2, Kansas City topped
Seattle 3.0 and New York swept a
doubleheader from Octroi~ 6-5 and ·
7-4.

Brewers 3, Angels 2.
Greg Vau$hn atoned for a
baserunning miSlalce in the sevenlh
inning with an RBI single in the
eighlh.
Seitzer led off the eighth with a
single off Mark Langston (12-14)
and continued to second on an error
by right fielder Tim Salmon. With
two outs, Vaughn singled home
pinch runner Mario Diaz.
In the seventh, Langston walked
1lm:e batters and gave up a single.
But the Brewers scored only one
run in the inning, partly because
Vaughn was picked off second
base.
,
Dan Plesac (5-4) pitched a
scoreless eighth and Darren
Holmes worked the ninth for his
fifth save.
White Sox 8, Athletics3
Ron Karlcovice hit two homers,
helping Charlie Hough win his
202nd career game as Chicago won
at home.
Hough (7- 11) gave up two
earned runs on eight hits in six
innings.
Karkovice hit a two-run homer
in the second inning and a solo shot
in the sixth. He connected both
times against Bobby Wiu (10·14).
Twins 1, Rangers 0
Pedro Munoz drove Kirby Puckett home from second base with a
two-out single in the 13111 to lead
the Twins over the Rangers, who
once again failed to give Nolan

Ryan any offensive production.
Munoz got his hit after Puckeu
had singled and moved to second
on a,wifd pitch from Kenny Rogers
(2-6). Larry Casian, who came up
from Ponland on SepL 14, picked
up his first victory since Oct. 3,
1990, by going I 1/3 innings. Rick
Aguilera finished for his 40th save.
Ryan, who had missed two
starts with a muscle pull, went six
scoreless innings and allowed only
four hits.

out ror the wide lllrow In the first innlnc ot tile
first game or Taesday's doubleheader ID Cincinnati, wbicb the Reds won 6-3. (AP)

Meigs sports calendar
Today
VOLLEYBALL-Eastern at
home
JUNIOR HIGH VOLLEY BALL-Eastern at home
EIGHTH GRADE FOOTBALL-Nelsonville-Yode at home
Thursday
FRESHMAN FOOTBALLWarren at home
GOLF-TVC Match at home
VOLLEYBALL-at Vinton
County

wantiL''

We Need Room For 1993 Models!
Wa haw 5 ltOck alngle wldea that have to ba IOidl Never
bator. have wa offerlcl these homaaao lowl

CROSSCOUNTRY·MJ~~

JUNIOR HIGH VOLLEYBALL"at Trimble
Friday
VARSITY FOOTBALL-Miller
al home
Saturday
CROSS COUNTRY ·MLancaster Invitational

Vinton Raceway results
The winners in Sunday's racing
action at the Vinton Raceway were
as follows:
Eight-cylinder class - Rick
Bishop, Jackson; Todd Sm1th,
Pomeroy; Paul Schuler, Langsville.
Four·cyllnder class - Bob
Bailey, Reedsville; George Adkins,
Middlepon; Delben Flora, Southside, W.Va.
Powder-purr- Rae Farley.
Ewing10n; Carol Goff, Langsvtlle;
Tina Cotterill, Rutland.
The next race will be held Sunday all p.m.

Sports briefs

Tennis
TOKYO (AP) - Unseeded
Marianne Werdel upset fifth-seeded Amy Frazier, 6-1, 6-4 in the fust
round of the $350,000 Nichirei
International Ladies Champi-

By JIM LITKE
AP Sports Writer
His voice sounds raspy and
there is the hint of fatigue at the
edges, yet Arthur Ashe insists on
talking. A man on a mission, on
many missions at once, is like that.
"So far it's been very uneventful," Ashe said from his New York
apartment, describing his recovery
from a mild heart attack 10 days
ago. "And as these things go, I
guess 'uneventful' is the way you
If that is so, it may be the only
thing in his life these past two
weeks that can be described that
way.
On Sept. 9. the day before he
suffered the hean attack, Ashe was
arrested outside the White House
marching to protest the Bush
administration's policy of returning
ijaitian refugees to their homeland.
Barely a week later - the reason
for this phone call - he was back
tilting at windmills of another son.
What Ashe is doing, in conjunction with the sporiSwear company
Le CO&lt;I, Sportif, is launching a line
of tenms clothes. At fii'St, such an
effort would hardly seem worth
such urgency. And heariJlS one
more legend hawk one more hne of
expensive shii'IS, shoi'IS, sweaters
and warmups would hardly seem
indistinguishable from all the others that have gone before. But there
is no problem distinguishing this
one.
With this collection, the 49"
year-old Ashe becomes the first
celebrity endorser known to have
the AIDS virus, a £act that will not
be soft-pedaled lhroughoutlhe promotioo.
The line is expected in stores by
next Janllliry and attached 10 every
1

By CHUCK MELVIN
BEREA, Ohio (AP) - With
three touchdown passes, no interceptions and a victory in his first
NFL start, Todd Philcox was eager
to seule in for another month as the
Cleveland Browns ' first-string
quarterback.
X-mys ruined it all.
Philcox learned Tuesday that he
broke a bone at the base of his right
thwnb in Sunday's 28"16 win over
the Los Angeles Raiders. He 'II be
out for six weelcs.
Mike Tomczak, signed haslily
last week as a backup after Bernie
Kosar broke his ankle in a Monday
night loss to Miami, will take
Philcox's place Sunday against
Denver. Jeff Francis, cui by the
Browns last month, was re-signed
to back up Tomczak.
"I thought I just bruised it,"
said Philcox, wearing a cast that
covered his thumb and forearm .
"I'm mad, disappointed. I'm just
garment in the line will be a wishing it was all a had dream. It
"Smash AIDS" hang tag, similar was a little painful, but to be hon10 the ribbons Ashe convinced the est, it wasn't th&amp; bad."
pros to wear on their shins during
the just-completed U.S. Open .
Three pen;enl of Le Coq Sponirs
sales will be given to the Arthur
Ashe Foundation 10 Defeat AIDS.
The Ken Amsbary Chapter of
The company, which had Ashe as a Izaak Walton will sponsor the
client for 13 years but never pro- annual National Hunting and Fishduced a signature line for him, also ing Day activities Saturday at the
is asking retailers to kick in another lzaak Walton Clubhouse near
3 pertent from their sales and con· Chester.
somers to make donations using the
The event begins at 9 a.m. and
hang tags.
runs to 3 p.m. and no admission is
There is room for cynicism here charged. Registration begins at
until you hear Ashe make his pitch. 8:40a.m.
"When we sal down 10 put this
A free lunch will be provided
thing together, there was no prece- for aU in attendance.
dent we could think of. We said,
An lzaak Walton spokesman
'What company, what business stated, "We hope we will have
group in the past has laken a flyer something that both men and
of this?' and we couldn't find any.
women from children to adults can
''There are companies, entire enjoy."
industries, that get mvolved," he
The day's activities will include
continued, "and I mean no disre- various displays, demonstrations,
spect by this ... but they get or participation events in gun safeinvolved with diseases that are ly, turkey calling, taxidermy, .22
safe: cancer, muscular dystrophy, rifle shooting, fishing, archery ,
and soon.
"AIDS is differenL Less.differ·
ent than it was two or three years
ago," Ashe said, "but it stiU makes
people very, very uncomfortable.
And the psychology in some ways
is more frightening than the disease
itself."
Some six months after he was
forced to reveal his own 3 l/2"year
ballle with AIDS, Ashe finds himself unburdened of mQSI of the bitICI'IIess he initiaUy felt and swprisingly COII)fortable in this new, very
public stanee. He was uplifted by
the heartening words and leuers of
support, but more important he was
r~lieved to find people willing to
listen.

COLE'S
MOBILE HOMES
Located 5 Mllaa Eut of Rt-33
On Rl 50 Eaat, Athena, 582-1972 or 1-801).466 t687

VOTE AT YOUR OWN PRECINO AND AVPID LONG LINES AT THE BOARD ON
ELEOION DAY BY CHANGING YOUR ADDRESS (IF YOU HAVE MOVED WITHIN
OR IF YOU HAVE CHANGED YOUR NAME, BY UPDATING YOUR
REGISTRATION BY OOOBER 5, 1992.
FOR YOUR CONVIENU, YOU MAY TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR EXTRA HOURS.
PERMANENT BRANCH LOCATION: MEIGS COUNTY LIBRARY
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 9:00 a.11. '119:00 p.m.
SATURDAY
9:00 a.11. 'td 5:00 p.m.
SUNDAY
1:00 p.11. 'td 5:00 p.m.
ALSO REGISTER ON THE MEIGS COUNTY BOOKMOBILE AT IT'S
1

THE BOARD OF ELEOIONS OFFICE WILL' BE OPEN ON MONDAY, OCTOBER
1992 9:00 ..... 'tl9:00 p.ll.

a•y ad.ltloaallnfonnatlon, call 992·2697 or stop by our office at ,1
Street, P011eroy, Ollio.

road trip.
.
Jose Rijo (14-9) was the piiCh·
ing and hitting star of the first
game. He singled home a pair of
runs to brealc the game open, and
allowed just three hits over six
innings.
Houston's Rich Scheid (0-1)
gave up five runs in the fourth
inning.
In the second game, Roberts
doubled and scored in the first
inning Ott Barry Larkin's groundQUI. Robei'IS later singled, then he
~oubled home Dave Martinez for a
3-2 lead in the fifth off Shane
~eynolds (0-3). Larkin followed
with an RBI double.
: Scott Bankhead (10-4) relieved
lfhris Hammond and pitched out of
. a bases-loaded threat in the fifth by
tletting Ken Caminiti to fly ouL
l Elsewhere, it was St. Louis 5,
~1tsburgh 4; Philadelphia 5, Montreal 2; the New York Mets 8,
¢hicago 7; San Diego 2, San Fran~isco I; and Los Angeles 4, Atlanta
·

Cardinals 5, Pirates 4
At Three Rivers Stadium, Luis
Alicea drove·in three runs.
; Pinch-hitter Crai$ Wilson drove
i,iJ the deciding run m the sixth and
Rhea! Connier (8-10) gained his
fifth vic10ry in his last five decisions.
. Lee Smith finished for his 40111
save.
• Danny Jackson (7 -12) gave up
five runs on eight hits for the loss.
PhUlles 5, Expos l
Stan Javier drove in two nms for
Philadelphia and Mike Hartley (6~). the .PhiUies' third pitcher, w~t
three iMings for the VICtory. ,
: Mitch Williams worked the
ointh at Olympic Stadium for his
26th save.
·
Philadelphia led 3-0 in the sec-

2.

Brian McRae hit an inside-the.:
park homer.
·:
Yankees 6-7, Tigers ~
•
Matt Nokes hit two homers and
drove in four runs to lead the Yankees to a doubleheader sweep.
•
In the opener, Roberto Kelly's •
pinch sacrifice fly gave the Y8!1 ~
kees a victory in a 12-inning game :
that lasted four hours and five min~·
utes. The rain-interrupted double•:
header took nine hours and 12 min: •
UICS to play.
:::
John Habyan (5-6) was the win-:
ner in the second game, pitching :
three scoreless innings before being •
relieved by Tim Burke, who ;
pitched the eighth. Steve Farr •
earned his 27th save with a nmless :
nimh.
,
Loser Eric King (4-6) yielded .
with Green Bay as a Plan B free bolh of Nokes' homers.
:
agent last year and started the last
In the fllSt game, Danny Tartab· •
seven games or the season after ull opened the 12th with a double :
Don Majkowski got hurt.
off Scott Aldred (2 -7) and two ;
Before that, Tomczak spent six intentional wallcs wrapped around •
years with the Chicago Bears, Andy Stankiewicz's sacrifice bunt :
going 23-1 I as a starter. In his loaded lhe bases with one ouL John ·
career, Tomczak has completed Kiely relieved, and KeUy batted for :
582 of 1,153 passes, 50.5 percent, P&amp; Kelly and drove in the winning :
for 7,73 7 yards, 44 touchdowns , run.
:
and 56 inten;eptions.
Farr (2·2), the sixth Yankees .
He was a three-year starter at pitcher, was the winner after retir-;
Ohio State, which went 9-3 in each
ing one batter in the 12th.
of those seasons.
"It's an early baptism," Tomczak said. " Righi now, we have
some momentum. Hopefully I can
pick up where Todd left off. I welcome the opportunity . The fans
know me here in Ohio from mv
college days. and they're on a high
right now. I'm sure I'll have their
support. I'm sure there'll also be
people who are skeptical about my
productivity."
When the Browns signed Tomczak, coach Bill Belichick
described him as an overachiever
whose success in the NFL has
probably surprised some people.

Ted Power (2-3) was the wimer
and Derek Lilliquist got his sixth
save.
Royals 3, Mariners 0
Chris Haney pitched his first AL
shutout, stopping Seattle on two
hits al Royals Stadium.
Haney (2·1) struck out six,
walked one and retired 19 straight
balletS.
Randy Johnson (11 -14) lost
despite giving up only five hits and
striking out 12.

Philcox bent the th11mb back
when he hit his hand against a
defensive lineman on a long
incomplete pass in the second quarter. He remained in the game and
threw two more touchdown passes
in the secOrld half 10 Eric MelCalf,
who had also caught one in the rust
quarter.
For the day, Phil cox was I 0 of
20 for 200 yards.
"I did the best job I could using
my left hand to receive the baD,"
he said. " II really doesn't feel that
bad to me. I had a tough lime
squeezing the ball."
Kosar, like Philcox, stayed in
the game after geuing hurt and
nearly rallied the Browns to a win.
The string of qurterback
injuries is not unprecedented for
the Browns, who lost four Q.Uarter·
backs - Kosar, Gary Dan1elson,
Mike Pagel and Don Strock - to
injuries in 1988. Kosar and Strock
were both hurt twice that year.
Tomczak was cut by the Green
Bay Packers following a preseason
cqntract holdout. He had signed

Amsbary Chapter to hold local NHFD Saturday

NL contests ...
Stop in and see ua today. These homes will never be lower. Price
includes: delivery, skirting, blocks, and 20' of material lor each
hook-up.

Indians 4, Red Sox 2.
Roger Clemens dropped his
third straight start and lost for the
first time in 11 decisions at home
against Cleveland.
Clemens (18-11) has lost four
straight stans at Fenway Park for
only the seccnd time in his career.
Clemens pitched his II th complete game, giving up nine hits. He
struck out eight and walked two.
Paul Sorren10's two-run double
in !he sixth put Cleveland ahead 3-

Philcox's broken thumb makes Tomczak
Browns' starting quarterb.ack No. 3

Ashe still a crusader
even after heart attack

LATE LANDING- Cincinnati's Cnar Hernandez comes in· ror a late landing at llrsl base,
as Houston fil'!lt baseman Jelf Bagwell reacbes

The Dally Sentlnei-PagH ,

Jays beat Orioles to get closer to East flag; Tribe tops BoSox

Page-4

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

In AL action,

Wednesday, September 23, 1992

Roberts' hot bat pushes Cincy to DH ~weep against Housto~
l·

Wednesday, September 23, 1992

trapping , canoeing, reloading.
black powde.r, trap shooting and
coon hound demonstrations.
The Izaak WaliOn Clubhouse is
located approximately two miles
beyond the scout camp on Scout
Camp Road near Chester, of£ S.R.
248.
Door prizes will be provided for
those in attendance.
Event schedule
8:40-9 a.m. - Registration by
Henry Barr
9·9:05 a.m. -Welcome by
president Don Collums
9:05-9:45 a.m.- Hunter safety
(45 min.) Dana Alderidge
9:45-10 a.m.- Archery by
Chester Bow hunters
10-10:30 a.m. - Fly fi shing
(30 min.) by Roy Test
10:30-ll:lS a.m. -Coon-

hounds (45 min.) by Denver Well,
Dave Chadwell
11:1S-11:30 a.m. - Turkey
calling (15 min.) by Gale Osborne
11:30-noon - Trapping (30
min.) and John Hetzer canoeing (30
min.) with Bryan Yonker and Joe
Bailey
Noon-1 p.m.- Lunch with
Denver Well and Rex Bailey
1-2 p.m. - Archery (30 min.)
by Chester Bowhunters and .22
rifle shooting (30 min . Dana
Alderidge and Steve Erwin
2.-3 p.m. - Tmp shooting (30
min.) by George Morrison, Russ
Well black powder (30 min.) Owen
Damewood reloading by Larry
Well
3 p.m. - Prize drawing for si•Lo 18-year-olds

Our special
exterior rust
preventive
paint for metal
and wood.
Gloss enamel
finish. No
primer

PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON, W.VA.

•

..•

Special of the Week!

SIRLOIN STEAK

$1.74
WITH FRIES....... $2.44

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY
.. ,, ""' ...... the , _ , . . . . . . . ...

POIEIOY, OliO

(ContinuedfromPage4)

ond on Juan Bell's sacrifice fly,
JAIME WILSON
CHAD SAVOY
DeLeon •s RBI single and Javier's
run-scoring groundout orr Kent Wilson, Savoy tabbed Eastern's top athletes
Bottenfield (0-2). The Phillies
Junior Jaime Wilson and senior has participated two years on Stuadded two more runs in the founh Chad Savoy - were named East· dent Council, basketball and softon Javier's RBI do11ble and Mickey ern 's August " Athletes of the ball in addition to being a one-year
Morandini's ran-scoring single.
Month."
member of National Honor SociMets 8, Cubs 7
The awards, sponsored by the ety, the yearbook staff and an AllNew York scored three runs off Eastern High School Athletic American scholar and an USAA
Paul Assenmacher (4-4) in the Department, are an effort by the Award winner. She is active in
eighth inning to outlast visiting school to promote student athletics school and community ~tivities as
Chicago. With the game tied at 5 in the absence of all-league honors, well as athletics.
and the bases loaded, Dick since EHS is not part of a league
Savoy, the son of Chuck and
Schofteld had a two-run single and this year.
·
Sandy Savoy, is a four-year varsity
Chico Walker followed with an
Wilson, the dau$hter of Beryl football player and quarterback of
RBI grounder.
and Linda Wilson, 1s a three- year lhe football team in 1992. He is a
Lee Gueuerman (3-4) allowed member of the. volleyb~ll squad four-year Varsity "E" Club memone hit over the final two innings. and Varsity "E" Club te-tlate. She ber, a three-year basketball player
Anthony Yoong gave up a two-run
and played baseball two years.
homer to Gary Scott in the ninth,
but fmished for his 15th save.
Ryan Thompson hit his first.
major league homer, a three"run
shot in lhe founh.
Padres 2, Giants 1
Alldy Benes matched his season
high wtth II strikeouts aild had·a
run·scorin,g single.
Benes (13·13) allowed a nm and
five hits in 7 2/3 Innings and
walked one. Randy Myers finished
for his 36th save.
Benes' hitoffLarryCarter(l-3)
drove in Jerald Clark in the foilrth.
Doclzers 4, Braves 1
Tom Candioui threw a five-hitter and Eric Karros had a two-run
homer.
Karros's 20th homer, a two-run
shot in the founh inning off John
Smoltz (15-12), also gave the fllSt
baseman an L.A.-rookie record of
82 RBis.
'
Candiotti (11-14) got his sixth
complete game while Smoltz JOlt
for the sixth time in seven deciEveryone Welcome
sions.
Lenny ~lll'l'is also drove in a
Pastor Herbert Grate
two runs wilh a single in the fifth.

....

Pll. 991·2556

~-?

~~

3" PICTURE
BUTTON
REG .
PRICE
$4.95 .

REVIVAL

W[
TAK[
CH[CKS

CHESTER
CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE

September 22·27
7:00 pnt nightly

6:00 ·pnt Sunday Evening Service

Evangelist Rev. Bill Crane

Will It Preaching and Singing Nightly

D.O. STUDIO

- ·SAVE 50
, •·, ._

ALL AGES AND
FAMILIES

GOOD NI!WS · SCENIC AND BLACK BACKGROUND IN I'OUR PACI&lt;Aoe
WI TAll INI
TUII'OSI

PROFESSIONAL
PORTRAITS
KODAK PAPER

REG $1.lYO.

0/
/0

NOW S 6 95

2 • 8 X 10
2-5 X 7
8 WALLETS
18 HALF SIZE
WALLETS

REG. $14.95

NO.W

seesdtiiY&amp;ry

l
.....__ ___.·.
Will

no!

stick or fade

on

85' DEPOSIT
Ptflonl under 11 muot bt lceotnptnlecl by peront.

GROUP PICTURE S1 .00 PER SUBJECT. PAV WHEN TAKEN
LIMIT ONE SPECIAL PER FAMI~Y
:

'

t

�•
Page 6 The Dally $entlnel

.· EASTMAN'S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, September 23, 1992

... Your Locally Owned
. Low-Priced Supermarket.

Eastman'S

. ooCfd:~tr
Golllpolls • Pt. Pleuaol
Pomeroy • Wellston

Two-For-One
(One Free Admi"iSJon With One Paid Ticket)

Fall Savings Festival

FALL

SEE STORE FOR COUPON

MUMS

$2''

112GAL

m 1 =·• H.ll:.:.
(~11\ !.I•.;JUI

HHllll. \'\ll SJ'Io.CI \1.

&lt;"Oli'O~

127

'

·Woman tries to keep cool when Program focuses on child development i:
questioned about her separation
Thelint*M+•~a pnnledu·

my children 10 doctors' appciDtmcnls
and piano lessons. Thousands ~
moms don' have Ibis luxwy. They
are lied to typewrirtrs, assembly
lines and restaurant lables. Their
lake-home pay is 110 modest- die¥
ANN LANDERS
would do just IS wd1 if lhcy Sla)'QI
at home and c:oiiectcd wdl1re. bla
their sense of pride keeps lhc:m
working.
We single mothers have our
insensitive, knuckle-headed clods
rewards,
the same IS • ..,._ife,"
are entitled to a response? My
but
we
also
suffer from emaustion,
advice is to look lhem in the eye
and say, "I can't believe you asked guilt, stress and the gnawing
such a none-of-your-business-type feeling that because we do IIOl
question, 111 pretend I didn't hear have husbands, our childml an:
being cheated.
it" Then change the subject.
Thanks, Ann, for letting me
Dear Ann Landers: This is my
response 10 the essay "Just a House- sound off. I know I speak for a
wife." I believe I speak for an lot or women, who, like me enormous sisrtrhood when I say we · DIDN'T PLAN IT THIS. WAY
are sick to death of the petty (PORTI..AND)
DEAR POR11.AND: You~duoe
squabbles between homemakers and
a splendid job or leaing us blow
career women.
Miltions of us have no choice. We how the world looks tllroQ&amp;b the
are single parents. In addition to eyes of a smglc worting I!Kiher.
doing everything the housewife You spoke eloquently for millions
does, we spend 4().plus hOUIS a week today and I thank you.
Gem or the Day: Money is an
out or lhe home making a living.
ideal
gift. Everything else is 100
We also do our share or volunleet
work as den mothers, Camp Fire expensive.
Ann Landers' laresr booHe1,
leaders, Little League coaches and
"Nuggers
and Doow: has nor.ryScout leaders. We attend PTA
meetings, starr school carnivals, rhing from rile o/AlrageoiiS/y fowty
serve at pal\Cake breakfasts and ro rile poignanrly iluiglt(ul. SOld a
drive lhe kids to field trips. For us, self-addressed, long, biiSiltesr-me
there is no such lhing as "leisure tnvelo~ ll!ld a check or mo~~q
order for $5 (lhis includes posta,e
time."
and
handling) ro: Nuggers, olo Ann
I am one or the more fortunale,
Ann. I'm a professional who is lAnders, P.O. Box 11562, Chialgo,
able to take time from work to 111. 60611~562. (In Cllllllda, mul
attend school conferences and lake $6.)

Ann

Landers

COOKED HAM
THRU
9/26192

DOZEN

_________________
_.
L
LIMIT 1DOZEN WITH COUPON &amp; $10.00 ADDITIONAL PURCHASE

I OOill \ '\ D SI'EU \I. COl 1'0\

LB

1

I h-1

FOODLAND

L

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

LIMIT 1 CARTON WITH COUPON &amp; ADDITIONAL PlJR(:HAS

99

rr

Paala Hayaes was elected
Valealillc Qaeu at tile recent
meelill£ of lite Xi Gamma Mu
Clgptn, Bela Sipa Pili Sorori •
bdd 11 tile ..,_ of tile grouptys
CIJ\'OY,A.ll.Kaiglll Almaoy.
h - ••
al thai the chapa bad lljllia rcxzin:d a tllrec-«tar

udioloay
eartng aids ~
Audiologist, CCC-A

·,

Millview Clinic
603 W. Union
Athens, Ohio 45701
Ph. (614) 592-2863

~------------------~ •;

nbDg fiollliJarMiNpl,
The JIUIIII's ~ Tea will
be Ott. 6 • 1 p.m. Ill the home of
Linda Bll:s. Mcmbm are to dress
auadiugly.
Tile group voled to sponsor
Mamsta INidsuD in lbe American

EXCUSE US!

HCIII AS!! I iMicm Walt-a.lllon on

Couple announces
birth of daughter

WATCH FOR OUR BIG
7TH

two and
• 'K
. Gn.dpanalS 1R Harold and .
A!frida ~· Woodsfteld,
Rita F·~ Ow sbml, Ky.,

•

ANNIVERSARY
SUPER SALE

SAVE·A·LOT

Rcplar ~·~~ ol the Meigs
Glallly l..ilnry lloiwd of Trusrces
will lie ldd 111 1 JUIL Thursday at
tbclilnly.

•
•

Rt. 62 North

675-1155

•
•

w

Point Pleasant, wv

Join The Fastest Growing Family In Southeastern Ohio

''THE HAPPY HONDA FAMILY"

,•

TRAINING SESSION • Starr members
from the Meigs County Council on Aging
attended a Passenger Assistance Training program at Carleton School on Tuesday. The pro, gram is designed to assist drivers and esc.orts
· working with the elderly and handicapped in
· vans and buses. Meigs County Council on Aging

Reunion held
'

2 Liter Btl.

We AeHm 11M R ht 111 Limit 0111ntiliH • Pit- Ellecllve 1hru SaL OoL '• llfP2 • USDA Food Stampa and WIC Coupana AocaPiad •NOt Reapallllble lor TWogrlphla.l or PlciDflll Errort.
l _ __

The Gideon Roush family
reunion was held Sunday at Star
-Mill Park with 104 presenL
The llOiluck dinner was enjoyed
by all. ltobert HiD had the blessing.
Girts were given to the olilest
man present, Walter McDad01 the
oldest woman, Gladys Shields;
youngest child, Nathan Roush;
largest family, Mrs. Lester (~e)
Roush: traveling the farthest, Mr.
and Mrs. John (Violet) Fisher.

1919 PONTIAC

starr members who attended are pictured ill a
demonstration witlt Bob Wood of Meip llldutries, one of the instructors. They are, 1-r, Wood,
Marie Harris, La Jean Armstrong, Cber)l C..
penter, Kathryn Hall, Renee Fish, Shro•
Smith, Paula Gilbride 111d MiDdy Se,.our.

' 'The more remembering we do,
the beuer,"
DES MOINES. Iowa (AP) RobertS. McNamara, a former sec·
relary or defense who once headed
the World Bank, was named Tues-

day to the World Food Prize ad¥1sory cOWJCil.
The council setS policy ror tbc
World Food Prize, an annual
$200,000 cash awanllhat's billed
as the largest prize for effons 10
light world hunger.

1990 CRX OX

SUNIIRD

-

37,4~9

mil, wh ile/blue, 4 cyl .,
S tpttd tr1n1., 1ir concl.,
AU/FM c..atllt , 1 owner,

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_

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power bfektt, r1ar defrost.

•s.995

1

7995

----..

~~--­
1

6ft5

17,628 milts, gray/gray,
owner, auto., P. locka,
AMIFM, IIH wheel, 4 door,
er llttring &amp; brlk .. ,
qlno.

1

8195

ATTENTION
Area High School Seniors
YES! We are still doing senior' portraits as
we have for the past 17 years. Our "living
color" portraits are done in a top line finish
and are guaranteed for life.
We show you between 10 and 12 previews from which you make your final selection aru1
some of your portraits will be taken in outdoor
settings as long as weather permits. Our ·
prices are reasonable and there's no additional charge for clothing changes.
Call for your appointment.

THE
PHOTO PLACE
109 HIGH STREET
POMEROY
(Bob allll Charltnt Hotjlidt)

.•

COMING OCTOBER 2ND

To meet Thursday

I

•
•

We're Remodeling Our Store
To BeHer Serve You!
We Will Be Offering
New Lines Of Products

Sabaday.

nc aJilllle's odiiCI dlildren are

~

•

Better Hearing makes life Easier For You
And More Enjoyable For Those You live With

Chapter receives
three-star rating

llllllbcla:c.tn.. hf.

'

•

inaeasia&amp; aaacaess and underqaNiiaJI of die pllysical, motor,
liiCIIUJ - _... ... spr.ecb and
lxf!iAiJ! ck:: ' 4' • 111 of children,
as wd as to ldp adaiB n:cognize
J'uiJ!o '•' IIIII ....0\c llleiJ ability
10 llclp J*C&lt;M aad ideotify )lOSSi-

Em. .,elhc.. -.1 Eric,

I
I

All materials for the program ·:
will be provided. There will be:~
instructional presentations, demon-~
strations, discussion periods, hands:·
on activities, and special resource·
speakers, according to Heines.
:
She asks that anyone inlerestcd ;,
in participating contact her at 985· ·:
4163 or call the Meigs Co unty ·
Health Department, 992-6626 for ':
additional infonnation.
::
·•
::

I can hear just
fine, but some
people seem
to mumble...

child....
•• 41RZ1.
Sbc said ETif' j• wiD be on

loa&amp;.

FRANKLIN, Ind. (AP) -Jane
Pauley says her earliest childhood
memory is being dropped orr at lhe
nursery of lhe rural Indiana church
where her grandparents were char·
ter members.
The former co-host or NBC's
'Today" show and current coanchor of "Dateline" showed up
Sunday at the 75th anniversary eel· ·
ebralion of lhe Community Congregational Church's founding .
" My earliest memory or child·
hood is here, in the nursery, which
I believe was behind this door,"
Pauley told an audience of more
lhan 300 people. "Dad putting his
daughter in the playpen, and his
daughter reluctant to let go."
Pauley's grandparents were
charter members of the church
when it was formed in 1917 in
Franklin, south or Indianapolis. Her .
parents were married lhere.
Pauley, 42, was joined at the
church by her husband, "Doonesbury" cartoonist Garry Trudeau
and lheir lhree children.
"Remembering is more than
good; it's importan~" Pauley said.

•

dim MHjli •u•. •. mcflarge.
Tile J!oal will be to provide
iosUllctioa llld pidance to any
iola'CSU:d JIIRIIIS. v.mdparents
u4tJrp i f ill a wide range of

He wriprd eipt pounds and
lllle w r - - - 21 inches

---People in the news

••

The~P.IJtlau.'will~coo-

dUC:u:cl m coa=~oa w~th tbe
Meigs Cady
and Hearing
~Jioic wi~ S~ic Heines,

a ill f".a!ipolis

c :
THRU
9/26192

c:.alioD aad Cllric:llllc_rll ~grar,n
fuadrd ....... dleObio Children s
T~ F..t will be held_Thursday
ai&amp;la • 7 JU1L • die Metgs County
Heablllll:pw

Mr. ud-MB. Gcort!c SmiLh·

OTTAGE CHEESE!
24 OZ. CTN.

ble speech, language, and hearing
problems and oth~t fac~rs which
may place ~elf child at nsk.
. Stress WID also be plae;e&lt;J on the
lm.portance of lhe parent s role m
child de~elopmen~ Hemes sa1d.
Funding IS for the 199~·93 lis·
cal year. The program. IS bemg
offered at no cost, and 1s open to
parents and guardians of all income
levels,

bl:~Ja', R'lir
lhi: birth
~ tkirlllinl dtild. Gb Michael,
oa ~ 2111 allaba' Mi:dical Ccn-

I

VAUD

Wednesday, September 23, 1992:
Page-7:·

.

95% FAT FREE
VAUD

The Daily Sentinel
•

Dear Ann Landers: Two monlhs
ago, my husband and I separated. It
wasn't any one lhing in particular
lhat caused us to pan. We had been
picking at each olher ror about a
year, and it just got to the point
where we didn't want to be together
anymore. He has the house and the
children.
Since we paned, I hate 10 go
anywhere, because I feel IS if I am
playing 20 Questions. I don't know
how people have the nerve, but these
are some or lhe questions I've been
asked:
"How did it happen that 'Chris'
got lhe children?"
"Does Chris have a live-in or is
he paying someone to waiCh lhe
kids?"
"Did you give up the children
willingly or did you get caught
with someone?"
"Are you getting any support
money from Chris?"
"What do you do wilh all your
spare time now that you don't have
lhe kids?'
"Would you Iaice Chris back if he
asked you to?"
"How do your parents feel about
you giving up your children?"
This next question really takes lhe
.cake: ."Do you and your husband still
sleep togelher7"
I'm trying to keep my cool, Ann,
but it's gening harder and harder.
How should I respond to these nosy
people? ·- NEAR THE BOU.ING
POINT IN TULSA
DEAR TULSA: Why do you
feel that these incredibly boorish,

EACH

..

.

By The Bend

1

3495
Cdoor, 5 opood lromomlooolan,
air cond., n ,ooo ,....,
car trade.

'195

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........ .... ---... Oll'ftlll

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1

4495

. . .,...,.,, lUll&gt;.,

groy/groy,

MIIFM 0.1 ., tift,
lnttrmll. wtpera, 11,5" mi.,
•troat, P. tlHr. I
2door.

'4495

ATHENS

CARS

"THE HAPPY HONDA PEOPLE"
810 E. State St. • Athens, Ohio
NEW CAR DEPT. 594-8555
USED CAR DEPT. 594-2114

•
•

�Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

Community calender
WEDNESDAY
ROC K SPRINGS - Re vival.
Rock Springs United Methodist
Church, lhrough Wednesday with
Rev. Wesley Tbalcher. Rev. Keilh
Rader invites the public.

Wednesday, September 23, 1992

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

\

Anne Balderson .in Reedsville. Mrs.
Balderson and Mary Alice Bise
will serve as co-hostesses. lnslallation or officers is planned.

COPYRIGHT 1992 · THE KROGER CO. ITEMS Ar.O PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, SEPT.
20 THROUGH SATURDA Y, SEPT. 26. 1992 1N Pomeroy
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.' NONE SOLD TO DEALERS.

ADVERTISED ITEM POliCY-Each ol these advertised hems Is raquired to be
readily available 1or sale in each Kroge r Store, exceJ)t sa specifically not~ in
this ad. If we do run out of en advertised item, we wll offer vo.u vour cho~e
of 1 comparable item, when available, reflecting t~e ~me sav1ngs or a r.amcheck which will entitle you to pu rchase the advertiSed 1tem at the advertised
prica within 30 days. Only one vendor couP&lt;?n will be accepted per item
purchased.

1992

Beat of the Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich

RUTLAND - Leading Creek
Conservancy District will hold its
POMEROY - Revival, Calvary regular board meeting on Thursday
Pilgrim Chapel, Route 14 3, through at 7 p.m. at the board office. The
Sunday. Rev. L.J . Cherryholmes, public is invited.
evangelisL Special singing nightly.
FRIDAY
Rev. VicLOr Roush inVites the pubLONG
BOTTOM
- Faith Full
lic.
Gospel Church in Long Bottom
LONG BOTIOM - Revival at will have preaching and singing
Mt. Olive Community Church in Friday at 7 p.m. wilh David Dailey
Long Bottom will be Wednesday and the Dailey Family and other
through Sunday at 7 p.m. nightly local singers. Pastor Steve Reed
with Evangelist William Villers, invites the public. Fellowship will
Annamo riah, W.Va. Pas tor follow.
Lawrence Bush invites the public.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The TupTHURSDAY
pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta and Ladies Auxiliary will hold a
Beta Chapter, Beta Si gma Phi round and square dance Friday
Sorority, wiU meet Thursday at II from 8-11 :30 p.m. with music by
a.m. at the home or Maida Mora 10 C.J. and the Country Gentlemen.
leave fo r lunch at The Point or Public invited.
View in Parkersburg, W.Va.
RACINE - The Star Mill Park
MIDDLEPORT • Meigs Local Board, Racine , will be ' , ,·ing
OAPSE will meet Thursday at 7 chili, ham sandwiches, pop and
p.m . at Meigs Junior High School.
corfee on Friday during lhe gospel
sing and on Saturday during the fall
RACINE - The Racine Ameri- festival.
can Legion Auxiliary will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the post
POMEROY - Pomeroy Senior
home.
Citizens Dance Club will have a
dance Friday from 8-11 p.m. with
MIDDLEPORT - The Church or music by Millie and Kenny
Christ Women's Fellowship will Reynolds, Long Bouom. Bring
meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at lhe snacks ror the snack table. Arthur
8 radford Church of Christ. Brad- Connant will be the caller. Public
. bury wi ll have devotions and invited.
Norma Torres will speak on
Women's Health. All ladies arc
ANTIQUITY - Hymn sing, Friurged to auend.
day, 7 p.m., Faith Fellowship Crusade ror Christ, S.R. 338, AntiquiCHESTER - Girl Scout Leaders ty, with lhe End Time Singers, The
· meeting, Thursday, 7 p.m., Chester Headed Home Singers and more.
Public invited.
: Fire Station.

"Old Father Time checked so
lhere'd be no doub~
"Called on the north wind to
come on out;
"Then cupped his hands so
proudly to shout;
"La de da de, da de dum, 'tis
Autumn."
Yep, whether you're ready or
not, it is fall-{don'l ask me what
happened to summer; dumcd if I
know}-and long may it last.
And 1'd lilce to add that if you
remember those song lyrics,
Dearie, you're much older than I,
butlhat might not be lnle.

POMERO Y - AA meeting ,
SATURDAY
t hursday, 7 p.m., Sac red Hearl
RUTLAND - There will be a
Catholic Churc h. Call 992-5763 ror dance at the Rutland American
Leg ion Hall on Saturday from 8
information.
p.m. to midnight with music by
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers White's Hill Band. Public invited.
· Plains VFW Post No. 9053 will
·meet Thursday, 7:30p.m. Members
KANAUGA - Liberty Mountaineers will pcrrorm Saturday at
urged to attend.
the D.A.V. Center in Kanauga.
. · . MARlETTA - Epilepsy Supporl
MID DLEPORT - Ballroom
· Group, Thursday, noon . Call 374dance, Friday , 7-II p.m., Legion
:~ 8876 for information.
Annex, Middleport. Music by
George
Hall . Food and icc avail~
REEDSVll..LE - Riverview Gar~ den Club will meet on Thursday at able.
~- 7:30 p.m. at the hom e or Ruth

.•

lb.

lb.
U.S. INSPECTED WAMPLER/LONGACRE

Chicken Leg Ouarters
ISOLD IN 1D-LB. BACSJ
THIS IS NOT A BUY ONE-GET ONE FREE ITEM!

t.ers ask !hal you pray for our nation
and our f:eopl~ for 10 minutes

between 2 noon and I p.m. each
day. The pastors are asking that
church bells across the county be
tolled at 12 noon each day for the
40 day period to remind our residents to spend that imponant 10
minutes in prayer for our nation.
The highlight of the program in
Meigs County will be a Public
prayer service on election day,
Tuesday, Nov. 3, at the Dave Piles
Padc in Middleport, It will be from
I2: 15 p.m. to 12:30 p.m.
Many of us know well the
power of prayer. Won't you join in
this 40 day prograni-,-only 10 minutes a day-a small investment
with so much to be gained

According to what I read in
Tuesday' s newspapers, Murohy
Brown zapped Vice President Dan
Quayle. Jlianlcly, I was expecting
much worse. I didn 'I think he ~ot
And it's birthday lime again ror
THAT zapped. The "po!ato" thing Mrs. Grace Smith or Reedsville.
did manage to gtl worked into the She'D be marking her 95th on Satprogram and lha1 has already been urday. Cards will reach her at
overdone-it's lilce Quayle's mis- 60579 T.R. 289, Reedsville, Ohio
spelling or the word is a national 45772-9759. I'm sure she will be
scandaL Trust me-he could do delighred to bear rrom you.
worse.
And Ross Perot now says he
It hasn' 1 been anytime since I
made a miSiake in withdrawing his told you about lack Greenaway
candidacy ror President. The bot- being confllled to Veterans Memotom line IS that he is going to be on rial Hospital with a leg infection.
the ballot in every one or the 50
Well, Jack is living proof that
states which will add 10 the already you can't keep a good man down.
confusing political picture. He He and wire, Martha, a former
might have made a mistake in with- teacher in Meigs County, have
drawing but I couldn't possibly been on a fabulous cruise to Alasenhance that mistake by making ka. They boarded the Sky Princess
one of my own in voting for him. on Sept. 8 in San Francisco.
What assurance has lhe voter that They' ve enJoyed all or the sightPerot wouldn't wake up one morn- seeing and m Juneau, Jack had the
ing and decide OUI or the blue lhat thrill of a lifetime ror a fiSherman.
he didn' t want to be President any While on a six hour fishing expedilonger.
tion, he caught two Coho salmonAt any rate, it's high time the one 13 lfl pounds and the other a
candidates put the family values 12 pounder. Jack was quite the
and the aged armed forces ques- celebrity as a result of his catch. By
tions on lhe sidelines and gel down the way, he did have the salmon
to the issues. The national debt, lhe smoked and shipped back to the
poor economy, drug abuse and Greenaway horne in Pomeroy.
rampant crime, panicularly in lhe
cities, cry ror aaenlion. I want 10
Did I mention that I've been 10
the "city"? One large department
know what our fearless leaderwhoever he may turn out to be- store last Friday, SepL 18, was displaying decorated Christmas trees,
plans to do aboullhese things?
And that leads me into telling ornaments or all descriptions for
you about a national program lhat sale with Chrisunas music playing
1s being sponsored in Mei,IIS Coun- in the background. Another had a
ty by the Middleport Ministerial large holiday tree in place with
many boxes apparently holding all
Association.
The program consists of 40 days or the tree goodies nearby, just
of prayer for our nalion and starts wailing to be put on the tree. Now
on Friday, SepL 25. The idea is to what was thai you were saying
lift up the nation through prayer about us having lost the real mean·
during the 40 days between lhen ing of the season? Do keep smiling.
and the election.
Locally, the Middleport minis-

TO PERFORM ·The Hart Brothers wDI per·
rorm Friday at 6 p.m. durlag the Racine's
Annual Fall Festival. Other eatertalnmeat
includes Shammah, Russ and Southera Hills
Singers, King's Harmony Quartet, Faith Har·

Hart Brothers to perfonn ~t festival

Racine's annual Fall Festival
will kick-off Friday evening in the
town with a variety or gospel entertainment including The Han Brothers Shammah Russ and Southern
Hiils Singer;, King's Harmony
Quartet Faith Harmony Quartet
and the j 0 y Singers.
On Saturday there will be a
parade at!O a.m., a pie eating contest and a pumpkin growing contest. Entenainment during the day
will include
and Friends,
Ivan
Pouer Howard
and Silver
Wings,
C
G
s
Cneek Mid
ounuy rass, toney
'
•
die Branch, Big AI and Friends and
the Midnight Cloggers. Those par· · · 10
· th
lei
·
Uc•pabng
e
pump
n
powmg
contest are requested to bring their
h 1 b t
·
pumpk ms to 1 e 0 1 e ween
Sonya's Country Kitchen and the
Gun Shop on the day or the contest.
Those participating in the pie eating contest should register at the

WASHINGTON EXTRA FANCY
GOLDEN OR RED

Delicious Apples

THIS IS NOT A BUY ONE-GET ONE FREE ITEM!
S.
RAEFORD 14-7-LB.

Frozen
Turkey Breast
Pound

..

LOUIS RICH

Turkey
Franks
1-lb. Pkg.

Buy Dne Cet Dne
THIS IS NOT A BUY ONE.CET ONE

fflffiTfMI

MR. and MRS. WILLIAM (MONICA) HARRINGTON

Jordan -Harrington
:: RACINE - Monica Lynn Jordan
=rocarne the bride or William Brice
-!hrrington on July II at the Rcor:ganized Church of Jesus Christ of
::J;.attcr Day Saints in Reynoldsburg
"With Stephen K. Weller, uncle of
~he bride, and David D. HarringLOn,
Srother of the groom, orliciating.
.- The bride is the daughter or Mr.
-f!d Mrs. Leon Jordan, Palaskala,
"and the granddaughter of Mr. and
;.rs. Clarence Bradford, Racine,
~ Kathryn Oliver, Reynoldsburg,
,Ormerly of Pomeroy.
, - The gnoom is the son of Mr. and
;t;lrs. Duane Harrington, Avoca,
Ofbwa.
:• The 'bride, escorted by her
j ther wore a floor-length gown of
~hi te 'satin, styled wilh a wedding
~d neckline, short puffed sleeves
~d princess bodice enhanced w•th
~led and sequined schilliffi lace.
~ full skirt fl1)1 to a .semi-ca~e­
~ train completely tnmmed w1th
,Uhill irfi lace. The satin-buttoned
~k was adaned with a candy box
~w. Her veil was a mod: tiara
:~:overed with slagon lace that had
iicen pearled and sequined, with
~chcd veiling. She carried a cas~c or white and coral roses wtth
baby's brealh and ivy.
:. Jennifer Weller, Atlanta, Ga ..
~ended her cousin as maid-o(~ n or. Bridesmaids were Juhe
ell er, Atlanta, cousin of the
.~

••
..

~-

bride. Krista Harrop, Lamoni, Ia.,
and Tunya Pine, Pawkala. Kaleen
Keitch, Pickerington , was flower
girl. Joel Hawkins, Independence,
Mo., nephew or the groom, was
ring bearer.
Noe l Sherer, Woodbine, Ia. ,
served as best man. Groomsmen
were Mau Jordan, Pataskala, broth- •
er of the bride, Kirk Bjorland ,
Lamoni, Ia., Tim Marshal l, Woodbine, Ia., and Mike Hawkins, Independence, Mo., brother-in-law or
the groom.
Steve Ki nze r, Atl anta, Ga .,
served as usbcr. Guest book attendan ts we re Stacy Hite and Toni
Smith, Lancaster. Sally Hundley,
Columbus, was coordinator,
Music was provided by Larkin
Powell, Ames, Ia., pianist, Noel
Sherer, soloist, and Jodi GIe nnie,
Mondamin, la., soloist
A recep tion was held at the
church following lhe ceremony. On
July 26 a second reception was
held in Walnut, Iowa, ror rriends
and family there.
The bride and groom are gradu- ''.
ates or Graceland College in Lam· '
oni, Iowa. ·
Following a·honeymoon trip 10
Ft. Myers and Orlando, Fla., the
couple resides in Houston, Texas,
where both arc elementary teachers
in the Aldinc School DisuicL

&lt;

An urgent call to All Christiam!
"40 Days of Prayer"

A nallonal effort to unlle believers In prayer for our nallon
and upcoming elecllon. Is our country worth just 10
minutes or your time?
H so, would you join with believers all over our nation In
concentrated prayer? We are asking everyone to pray ror
10 minutes between 12-1:00 each day beginning September
25. We are also asking all churches to ring their bells at
12:00 as a call to prayer. We will conclude this effort with a
joint prayer service at Dave Diles Park on
November 3 from 12:15·12:30.

"If My people, which are caUed b1 My IIIJllle, wiU humbk
lhemselves...and PRAY. .. "
11 Chron. 7:14
Tbe Middleport Mlnlllerlal AIIOdatlon

For mo.,lilforllllllloa caU 992-2914

.

WAID CROSS'
SONS

1·/b. Pkg .

18·0l.

Buy one cet one

Buy Dn'ecet Dne

CUBED

FREE! FREE!
FROZEN 21.6-C" BREADED
POIIT ONS 0 .'AINCED

BH KROGHl

THESE ARE NOT BUY ONE-GET ONE FREE ITEMS!

R

Cheese
Pizza

FROZEN FREEZE•' i-L£EZER

Colombian
Bean coFFee
13·oz. can

Buy Dne cet Dne

Mrs. Paul's
Fish Sticks
23.5·0Z.

Buy Dne cet Dne

I FREE!

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - Wilen
you pay lhe check at a restaurant or
shop, the man to blame is James
Rilly (1836-1918). Riuy, a rest~~u­
rant owner bere, invented lhe cash
register.
He got the idea when he traveled to Europe by sea in I 878 and
spoiled a device for counting the
revolutions or the ship's propeller.
The following year, he and his
brother, John, designed a similar
machine 10 record business ttansactions.

~-------------.,.------..

Sliced·
Bacon

Land oLakes
Ice cream
Light
Bars
16·0Z.
12·Ct.
one cet one Buy one cet Dne

coca cola Classic .

Hotcakes with syrup, eggs and
sausage and an endless cup or cofree will be orrered on October 4
between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m., when
the Meigs Association for Retarded
Citizens holds its second annual
pancake brunch.
MARC members will sell
advance discount meal tickets with
extra values orrered ror family
meals. Door prizes will be awarded, and winners neecj-not be present
to win.
The event is made possible by
McDonald's of Pomeroy, which
has underwritten the brunch. Proceeds wiD be used 10 purchase new
playground equipment ror Carleton
School and to sponsor a camping
trip for enrollees of the Meigs
Board or Mental Retardation and
Developmental Disabilities.
MARC conducts many activities
in support or the agency and its
participants. Membership is made
up of consumers, parents, rriends
and staff of the MR/DD board.
Inrormation about the brunch or
membership in MARC is available
by calling 992-6681 .

this year with prizes 10 include a
large trophy that w1ll be pnescn.ted
to. the elementary school whtch
ra1ses the largest Jlumpkm; and a
trophy and 550 Uruted StateS Savin~s Bond to be awarded to the
chtld m elementary school who
grows the. ~gesl pum~kin.
·
In adiJ!uon there wtll be a HarV~SI F~suval Queen crown~ who
~Ill. re1gn over the weekend s resUVIUes.

PEARL STREET
RACINE, OHIO
949·2550

COUNTRY MORNING BLEND

CAFFEINE FREE DIET coif:; DIET COKE, SPRITEOR

MARC
.
to host
annual brunch

FREE!

FRill FREE!

12-Pak
12-oz. cans

Racine Department Store.
.
Craft spaces are av81lable dunng
the resuval wtth those arrang~ments under the d~r~uon of Bill
Nease at Home Nauonal Bank tn
Racine, 949-22~0.
.
The pumpkm growmg contest
will prove to be quite interesting

"IN THE rrLtPASTRY SHOPPE .
OIL/ FRESH

FISCHER'S MElLWOOD

•

The check, please

PORK STEAK
BEGINNING BAND • Mellsl Stewart, new
vocal and Instrumental mu&amp;lc director with the
Southeru Local School District, Is pictured here
with participants or the btKinnlna band pro·

$1.69

gram. A graduate or Marshall University, Miss
Stewart hopes to build the program in the district.

CALIF. GRANNY SMITH

Music teacher brings experience
to Southern Local School District

With school well underway in
the Southern Local School District,
the development or the mtiSic program there - both vocal tlld inslrumenlal - is in the hands of a new
talented young individual - Melisa
Stewart.
Miss Stewart, a graduate or
Wahama High School and a 1991
graduate of Marshall University,
has beea bined 10 fiU thai run-lime
position left open with the retirement of Roberta Maidens.
Having worked for one year at
.Greenfield McCllin High School in
· Greenfield, Mia Stewan brinss an
imJliCSSive list of quatirlcalions 10
the job. She hopes to develop the
mtiSical programs in the Southern
Disuicl to be ones from which
memoriea can be builL
Her accomplishments include while at Wahama - an All Area
Band member ror three years; a
West Virginia University Honor
Band ntember for two yean; West
Virginia All-Slate Band for three
~: solo and ensemble festival.l

icceiving superior ratings for four
years; marching band, six y~rs ;
and flag corps, five yean. She also
was an Arion .Award winner. At
Marshall University her accomplishments include, over a rouryear period: marching band, symphoniC band, wind symphony, pep
band and na, corp where she
served as capWn. She is a member
or the Delta Omicron Honorary
Fraternity and participated in the
Music EducatorS National Conference. S{le also st.tVCS as a iud~~e at

many marching band competitions
and s~e is currently lhe flag corps
instructor ror the Meigs High
School Marching Band.
Miss Stewan says she has staned a beginning band program that
at one lime this year had 30 participants. She is anxious about the pJ'Oo
gram but says the parents have
been very responsive. She says she
knows developing ·the musical pJ'Oo
gram in the Southern Disuict will
be challenging but it is a goal' she
knows she can obtain.

Quilting class for beginners set

A Quilling ror Beginnm class poster board and a fioe ballpoint
to be tauj!ht by Bunny Kuhl, pen.
..
.
Pomeroy, ts bein' offered by the
The paruc!pants. wtll. do hand.s·omcc of Conlinumg Education at on work ~htch wtl~ ~td them 1n
Ohio University.
unders~dmg the qutlung p~.
The course will befin on Tburs- The bas1c elements or ttad1Uonal
day, Oct, I, at7 r.m. m 131 Jeffer- pattel:'ls as well ~ ~ hniques f?r
son Hall and wil continue for five cleamng and repamng qutlts wtll
consecutive Thursdays at lhe same . be 1aughL
time and location.
Residents may call 1-800-336Tbose attending are to lake to 5699to register.
the ftrst class !tree large sheets of
.,

lb.

APPLES

79c

U.

4PAK 10 CT. CAN

PILLSBURY BISCUITS

99C4PACK
SHURFINE
MARGARINE

STREET CRUSHED

WHEAT .READ

39c 16 OZ../ QTRS.

99~ LOAF.
BANQUET FROZEN

CHICKEN PAniES
51.69noz.

PRICES GOOD WHILE SUPPLIES LAST
JOIN IN mE FUN!
RACINE FALL FESTIVAL- SEPT. 25 &amp; 26
MUSIC, FOOD AND FUN!!!

�P~~ge

10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .

Wednesday, September 23, 1

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

•The Area's Number 1
Marketplace

MT. DEW
PEPSI COLA

STORE HOURS
Mot~ day tMu Sunday
8 AM-10 PM .

2 LITER

RATES

(

HEINZ

4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

(

Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Th11r.1day Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

SPLI~

$149

Ch1cken Breast ...~!~..
PORK BUTT STEAKS OR ,
$ 49
Style R1bs..-.1!. 1
HAM

99%- Middleportl
Pomeroy

BALLROOM DANCE

388-Vinton

985-0...0.r

SEPT. 25, 1992

245-llio Groodo
256-GUyan DWt.

843-Pordond
247-Lelart FaD•
949-Raciae
742-Rudand
66 7-CoohiDe

1

LB.
5•••••••••••••••••••••

YODER'S LONGHORN

Ribe e Steak .......~,.. s499 Colby Cheese...........!.~;.

$199

ZESTA
SALTINES
(
LB.

ROYAL CROWN
COLA
PRODUCTS
24 PACK

$ 59

12 OZ. CANS

Cubed Steak.......o••L.\·.o. 2
BALLARDS BOLOGNA or
C
Wieners.............ll.P.~!fP,...19

s

99

MAXWELL
HOUSE
INSTANl COFFEE

$ 69

1

643-Anbla Diat.

Legion Annex, Middleport, Oh.
Music by GEORGE HALL
Food &amp; Ice Available

$ 89,

BONELESS

Tavern

s

80L

69

379-Walnul

JUST ARRIVED AT
CRIMINAL RECORDS
GARTH BROOKS' 'THE CHASE"
CS $8.99- CD $12.99
New Millie Anivalo from Ex118mo,
Great Whilll, AI B. Surt, Skid Row,
Bod Co., Hal Ketchum ond mol8 .. .
MEXICAN ll.t.JA SHIRTS WITH
HOODS - $18.88
Perfect lor ooollal nV.ts. ldoal for

Public Notice
NOTICE OF SALE
By vlriOM ol an Order ol
Sal• luuod out or tho
Common PI••• Court of
Melgo County, Ohio, In tho
c... of Bonk Ono, Athena,
NA, Plaintiff, va. Holon L.
Conrod, ol al., Dolettdonta,

CALl
TOLl FREE 1-800-Ji4-ROCK
CRIMINAl. RECORDS
411 Court St., Oownlcttvn Galipoia

112-CV-1113 In oold Court, I
wUt ollorlor tale ottholront
door of tho Courthouoo In

~:~~tCORDS

~:.O.:'.r!d~u:.rn;n~.~":':.

Pomoroy,
Molgo
Ohio,
on tho
16thCounty,
day of
~~:::~~~Tti~B~E~~~D~~da~o~1~1o~5~~-!. October,
1192, at 10:00 un.,

TIDE
DETERGENT

PubliC Notice
tho following Ianda and
- - - - - - - tanomMtlll,loca1od atl5851
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT SR 124, Roodovlllo, Ohio
PUBUC AUCTION
OF RDUCIARY
45772. A comrloto logol
Tho Sclrlo Townohlp
On
September
1,1112,
in
l«!!_~~~·~~th~o~r~oo~l
Truoteoo wA be olloringfor
oolo on oldor 580 Caoa tho Melga County Probate 1Court, Coat No. 27571,
Card ol Thanks
bocldtoo.
Biela will bo rocolvod Joanna T. Uwrence and
unUI Ocl 5, 18112 11 G:OO Howard M. L.awronco, Jr., I 1
The family of
P.M. The Scipio Townahlp P.O. Box 37, Long Bottom,
True- rooorvo tho right to Ohio 45743, wao appolnlod
Barbera Betzlng
Co·Admlnlotratoro of tho
ro]tctMty or ell biclo.
would like to extend
To vlaw the C..e backhoe eolato of Howard M.
our
thanka to the
or pllco a bid controcl tho L.awtonco, docuoocl, 1118 of
many
friend• and
prooidant of Scipio P.O. Box 37, Long Bottom,
nelghbora
who
Ohlo45743.
Tol!nohlp Truot-, Herold
Robort
E.
Buck,
ahowad
their
love
D. Graham, 31008 Sllllo Rt.
Probate Juclgo
and thoughtfulnall
143, Pomeroy, Ohio 45761.
L.ano K. N•ulrood,
Ph. 1112-30:13.
through the recen1
Clork
(I) 21, 22, 23, 3tc .
•ickn••• and deeth
(9) 23, 30, (10) 7 3tc
of our mother. Many
thanka
al•o to Rev.
5
HappyAds
Wildman end the
Trinity Church and to
all the doctora and
nuraea from Ohio
Stale Univerally
Hoapkal.
We appreciated all
lhe food, carda, flow·
era, and proyera from
each end everyone of
you. Eapeclally com. !orting were all the
kind word• and •to·
Ct
rlea you all ahared
Isn't it nifly?
Ye•l
whh ua of our mother.
.LUUtY BUNCE
Barbera wee 1 wonThis is the day!
derful peraon and we
50!
The 40th
hope her love of life
Happy Belated
Birthday
and aenae of humor
Birthday
will remain In your
Of Mr. K.
fond
memories aa
from Reva and
Happy Birthday
they will forever atay
the family.
In each of oura.
Dave

!-;=======:.

Bananas ...................~.... 39c
VALLEY BELL •
$ 89
2o/o Milk..................~~.. 1
$

GRADEA

Med. EggL......... 2

DOL

1

i:Cream."
........
t~~.~~~
....s2
BANQUET
(
TV Dinners .......lq;u.&amp;~•••• 99
99

s
129
Ch
P
otato
1ps
.~J.u.. &amp;~·.
-.

REG.

t

10

--~-llrr---

MIRACLE WHIP

111 SHOPPERS VALU GRANULAHD

·SALAD DRESSING :::~
7
lui

~ 1 :oz.

Good Only At Powell'• Super Value
OH« Good Sept. 20 thru S.pL 26, 1992
Umlt 1 Per Cullomer

'

1111

SUGAR

99c

4LB.

III Good Onlv At Powell'•
. Super Valu
Sept. 20 thru Sept. 26, 1992
II OHer GoodUm111
Per Cuotomer .

9 LIVES CAT FOOD

5

4/ Loz.

CRISCO SHORTENING
5 99

1

3LB.

Good Only At. Powell'• Super Vatu
Offer Good lllpl. 20 thru Sept. 28, 11m
Umlt 1 Per Cuatomer

Real Estate General

WITH BLEACH ONLY

s

S

46- Space lor Rent
II- Help Wan...t
12- Situation~ Wanted
13-lnsurance
14- Ba~inaa Training
15--- Schools &amp; ln.atruclion
16- Radio, TV &amp; CB Re:pnir
17- Miacellaneous

895-Letorl
937- BaiTolo

:&gt;- Hoppy Ado
6- Lo.tand Found
7- Lost and Found
~

PublieSole&amp;
Auction

t~

9- Wanted to Buy

ROOFING

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Ctaaning
Painllng

FREE E5nMATES

949·2168

"'CMtiW ·-·

SANO'f IIOIIWTTI-YOUNG
I 27 Ht-~ lltw 11m1. W1

, .. 304-812·3421
Public Notice
•llltalluloU-:
The lotlowlng doscrlbod
real 11lllto oltuot•d In the
Vlllaga ol R..davlllo,
County of Molga, Slllte ol
Ohio, ond being known oo
Lot No. I or McDolo and
Torrence Addition to tho
Vlloga of . . .vUio.
Aloo Lot No. 8 or McDole

ond Torrence AddiUon to

lhl VIllage ol Ae6davlllo.
Roforonce Dood: Votumo

322, Pogo 735 ond Volumo
302, Page 121, Molgo
County Dood Rocorclo.

Tho abovo -rlbad rul

nlllta hoe b - uolgnod
Audilor'o Porcol Numbero
fii.GI4ond301521.
Said promiaN known ••
65851 SR 124, Roodavlllo,
Ohio 45772.
Bald roal •tatalo oubject
to occruod 11182 rill ootate
tax...

REAL ESTATE APPRAIS.
ED AT: $17,130.00. The rool
Millie cannot ba oold lor
loaa than two·lhlrdo tho ·

oppnoiHcl ......

TERMS OF SALE: Cooh or

clotlvory of dood.

Jarnn M. Souloby
Shorill of lololga County
(t) 16, 23, 30 31c

Tr-:t=
20%-30% Dt.::W+:'&amp;......

A!.!IIJ.J ..... .

CHUCK

s

10 LB.

90

,-1~-r.~

-•·tSopt.....;

12-5-lfn

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
GUN CLUB
SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M.

..16/lfn

(zsJAYMAR
Quality
Stone Co.

.4+92-tloo

BISSELL &amp; BURKE

Appmacll

HOIIInt

.'

Clwality Hi EHidency
Air Concltlolers, Heat
Pamps, Furnaces &amp;
Now Water Heaters.

:1:1•

112Jtfn

Bennetts Mobile Home

PARTS

Specializing In Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
ALL MAKES &amp; MODILS

ROOFING

WE DO
AND mRnHING UNDERNUTH
GARAGES • ADDITIONS • SIDING

992·7013 or
992-5553
or TOLL FREE

1·100.141·0070
DARWIN, ONtO

TROMM BUILDERS

7/31f911tfn

"A 011•lity Ass11rttl CollfNc,.,.
20 Yr. bp.
Call AI, 614-742-2328

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

FIIEE ESnMA'IES

985·4473
667·6179

RACINE - Approx. 60 acres. What a beautif~l :placa to
start alarm, just outside town , build1ng sole, utilities. evoilablo 20 ac. tillable, 20 ac. paoi\Jre, and 20 ac. timber.
limbarod about tO yoars ago. Alenific: buy for only
$51,700.

$45,900.

RAaNE- Whale grwat monty maker. Abusinooa alrta·
a, ootabNohed in a building you can rani or buy. Vidaoo,
videoo, videos, over 2,000 lrom Dlsnoy ID horrore or
Comody to Thrillers.
$37,900.
POMEROY - EAST SECOND ST.-DEAD END ST. You'l nood to - to appr.ciala this 2-3 bodroom, 11\
bath 2 atooy home. 1r. walking distanco to llonoo but not
in 1h1 horlrt of town. Could bo used lor amai bulinoss
alto otlhislocalion.
$21,000.
MIDDlEPORT - BEECH ST. - This homo io just wilal
tho nowlywadl nood to gotlllar1ed in. Haolw!&gt; bedroOm•
upttaire with nlca lized kitchon 111d living room down.
$11,900.

DOmE TURNEI!t Broktr.................................. VV2o5692
BRENDA JEFFEHS............................................VV2·3D5e
DARUNESTEWART...........................................982-0365
SANDYBUTCHER..............................................982·5371
SHEAYLWALTEf!~J.Chaohlre ............................387-0421
JERRY SPRADUNU ...............................(304) .8&amp;2-3498
OFfiCE........................................................ :...... I92·2258

992-2259 .
608 EAST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
NEW USTINQ. Red Hill Rd. Solem Twp.· Very nice brick
ranch home wiltl3 bedrooms, 2 112 baths, fu~ basement, 2
car attached garage, fireplace , bams. pond. extra mobile
home hook-up. ASKING $139,500
NEW USTINQ. Denville- Mini larm with 2·3 acres, lrall16
home with 2 bedrooms, pond, bam, garage. shed, chidwn
hoose, &lt;tilled weN, on paved mat Quiet country selling.
$22,500
POMEROY· Blici&lt; ranch style home with 3 bedrooms. lull
basement and allic space on 21ots includes one cargarage
with owrhead atorage and an extra house 10 use for rental
or storage. ASKING $45,000
HUNTING SEASON IS FAST APPROACHING I Here's a
hunting cabin and 20.05 ac:res located on Sharon Hollow
Rd. Cabin is 40 x28and includes woodbuming s10w. Veoy
private! $17.000
CHESTER· I ftoor lrame homo with 2 bedrooms, enclosed
rear porch, new Yinyloiding, Gas FA heat TPC walet'. A
eomlonabio home. $20,000
MIDDLEPORT· 2 story frame home with 2-3 bedrooms,
basement, newer gas furnance, fireplace, some new cabinets. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION! $25,500
CLELAND REALTY • YOUR LOCALLY OWNED
HOllE SHOPPING NETWORK I GIVE US ACALL
TODAY FOR ALL OF YOUR HOllE
BUYINISELUNG NEEDS.
HENRY E. CLELAND........................................... 9t2·61 t1
TRACY BRINAGEA............................................9411-2439
JEAN TRIJS9ELL.............................................. 9411-2660
OI'FICE...............:...............................................882·2251

Au11o ,,.. Pest Otfke

217LioM4ISt.

POMIIOY,OIIO
3123192Mn

11'17/lln

nJ~119

;a

HOUSE FOR SALE
BY OWNER

38904 Leading
Creek Road
Middleport, Ohio

614·992·7144

8/31/92 ,,. .

SPECIAL
UNLIMITED SESSIONS
Months of Septemlter
and October

slsoo

WILSON'S ARMY
SURPLUS
County Rd. 18·
Peachfork Rd.
9i2-7093
Mon.·Sun. 9 an-I pm
Sao uo lor your hunting
and bock to ochool
noedo. Aroo'o larg11t
aalectlon of military
aurpluo ltemol 1117 pd.

lEVIN'S UWN
IUINIEIINCE
949·2391 or
1·100·137·1460
Lawn Mowing,
Fertilizing, Weeding.
and Seeding.
Shrub·and Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal
A-111&amp;-t

Froo-•

11-21-'112.fllt

&amp; Cooling

13915cHordSdtaelld.
~s,OW.
Call (614)446-9416 • HOHn·S967

WHALEY'S AUTO

•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

New Homes • VInyl Siding
'
New Garages • Replacement Wfndows ::
Room Additions o Roofing
~
COMMERClAL and RESIDENTIAL

614-949-2801. 949·2160
or 985·3139
(No S111day Calla)

~--------------~ ~
I

UO~OHIO
(fDI..ty I Ridge s.al

fltitol
PARTS &amp; SERVKE
Mowen • Cultt Sows

RUTLAND
MINE SUPPLY

• Weedeaters

614-949·2804
• .,...
~

••

Pipe for Water, Stwagt
and Gas
Rutland, OHo

Wllll:lt A1111

t

· N·!
•

•

·.'•

211211121tfn '

P.O. Box 894-W•• Alley

I

··

FREE ESTlMA TES

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC

!

12 Year old ranch type house. 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, 1'!. car garage
and breezeway, central air and heat
pump, many extras.
On 2 acres of land.
Eastern School District.
Blacktop roads Co. Rd. 28 and 32.
949-2860, 949-2801 or 985-3839

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

CALIFORNIA
TANS
949·2823

-

lactllacl

t'rad•..-....
0

St. Rt. 7
Cheshire, OH.

•New Homes

lt llltll· () " tl\ 1'

OH.. ft ' H.u.D.

SERVICE

WILLS HILl ROAD - Small homo thai can l&gt;e bought
11 11 or owner wil finilh . Hal a cathedral ca~ong, Ia?
iving room, dining aroa, kitchon, one bedroom, uld1ly
oraa. New heat pump, moody doywall. All new wmng, and
plumbing.
$33,000 finlohod. $21,000 unfiniohod.

104 Beech Street

\lohik ,\ llouhklllll&lt;

Call 614·99 2·
6637

CONSTRUCTION

992·5335 or
985·3561

PRECISION POST FRAME
BUILDERS
.

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SAlE

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

,USED RAILROAD TIES

"Any Size Available"

ATTE~TIO\

SHRUB &amp;TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
BILL SLACK
992-2269

Uphobo.ry

•
Experience
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
"Call U• for All Your Building Need• •
COMMERCIAL • RESIDENTIAL
. AGRICULTURAL
Livestock Buildings • Machine Shecfl- Hay
Barns - Carports
Garages - Storage Buildings- Roofing Windows • Sldtng
WV Uc. IWV 020:143
FR£E ESniiATES
ROBERT BORING
JEFF STAATS
(614) 1192-3541
(:104) 77UMI ' .

PH. 614·992-5591

G111geOnly
Starts Sept. 27

MobUe Home Repair

9 Yearo

froolllllaolt.-!T42·2S60

LICENSED and BONDED

Factory Choke 12

General Haulin1

54- Mi1c. Mei-chandile
55- Buildi"« Suppliel

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

KEN'S APPLIANCE
205 North Second Ava.
Middleport, OH

52- Sporlin8 Cooda
53- Antique•

..,.,. aulldlnos"

·-·al

.' I'B\ II I ,

\HI{( II\ \Ill~ I:
st- u .... hold cooda

ru Till ad
IINIUL SIRYICE

..181'92/lfn.

For •Paws• Oalr
rr.m... ~._..

Wonr.dTo Do

17- Auto Repair
78- Ca111pin1 Equipm... t

47- Wanted lo Rent
48- Equipment for Rent
49-- For L.at

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

2-7·92-tloo

LONG BOTTOM • BASHAH ROAD - If you'no lirod ol
lYing in to'Ml, you wil want to lakt a look alth1s 3 bed·
rocm 2 bath home with largo family room, fi replace, fin·
lollod baMmonl and glassed in porch on approx. 1~

GROUND

1- AuLol for Sate
41- Houea lor Renl
Truclu for Sale
42- Moblle Homu for R~nl
Vau &amp; 4 WD'a
43-- Farm• for Renl
74- Motorcycle.
44- Aparlllteat for Real
75- Boall &amp; Mo10n lor Sale
45--- FurnUihM. Room•
76- Auto Patti &amp; Aec&lt;o..,;..j

GET RESULTS • FASt'!

~Gheaway

882- New Hnen

q p
62- Wanted to 8uy
Li-l&lt;&gt;ek

33- Farm• ror Sale

458-Leon
576-Apple Gro•o
773-M...,n

OFFICE 81~-2886

......

1'1'1 11 ,
,'\ I. I\ t '' I I I( 1,

1{1:\T \1 .:-;

Pick u~

90

r' 1n1 ''

~ Buoi..., Buildinll'
3&gt;- Lou &amp; A....il"
:=-::::--- - - - j 36- Real Eo1o1e Wonted

IlL MillS
lrlat II Ill Or We

10 LB.

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

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

MICROWAVE OVEN
aad VCR REPAIR

GROUND
BEEF

MU1ie&amp;llnllr\lnlenll
FruliA &amp; Vq:etahlu
For Sale or l'r•de

$ .20

3- Announcem entl

Real Estate General

99

6
10
Monthly

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

675-Pl. Plet1ant

HowCI'd LWrltesel

Public Notice

u

LAYS

15
15
15
15
15

2-ln Memory
446~oiUpoUo

7 TO 11

Italian Sausage......~!;..

1

Over 15 Words

Rate

Gallla County Melgo County Ma&amp;On Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

367-Ciw..hire

EKRIC~ FRESH BRATWURST or

Words

Classified pages cover the
foUowing telephone exchanges ...

ALZHEIMER'S SUPPORT
GROUP MONTHLY MEETING
THURS., SEPT. 24-1:00 p.m.
Film "Meet Daily Challenges"
From Alzheimer's Association
Pleasant Valley Nursing Care
Center - 675·5236

320Z.

BONELES BEEF

DAY BEFORE PUBLICAT!ON
I :00 p.m. Saturday
I :00 p.m. Monday
I:OOp.m. Tuesday
I :00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thursday
I :00 p.m. Friday

COPY DEADLINE

KETCHUP

U.S.D.A. CHOICE CHUCK BONELESS BEEF

Days
3

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, CtH.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMR QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD
26, 1992:

Sentlnei-Page-11 .

The

[!]
•
..

·-

""'"'
5· 14·92·tfoo

742·2656
I

'.

.,

-.

..
'

•

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·~~~~2-=~n.
· ~~~~~~;,::;:;;-----------r;~~~~~gr.~~O~hl~o======r-~~;;,;:;:~~::::~~~~======::~
SNAFU® by Bruce Be~~ttle
Apanmtnt
KIT 'N' CARLYLE®
J\ nnou •1c om ont s
44
31 Homti!Or Salt
by Larry Wright

71

for Rem
3 Announc:emtnll

....... ""' In Point

lf4.441.2200.

IIIDUCI: llum all 1M 1'!!1
...., to11o OPAL • - • I E·
¥1111
A - Fruth

for Salt

coli

Cllrlollan

- · ....
Iolii , ...
OldOrOidor.
CII114-31N112.

; ~.....--:.... lc::zJ'-'&lt;!!1}--/I?J

~~~~----~ · ~~~------~

WE HAVE HOMEWORK

IT'S l-IARD TOWRITE A
THOUSAND WORD THEME
ON ''SIT!''

NIGHT ..

·
-.............
ldllon.
:IOU1U224. long hoiNd
.

9-11

6:oo rn u (l) o (I) o ~~a~ m
1121111 1121 News
III Saved by lhe Bell
ffi Square One TV E;J
(!) Reading Rainbow a:;J
1!11111 Full House Stereo. E;J
I!JI MacGyver C
@ Inside the PllA Tour
WOffd Today
a] Rln Tin Tin, K·9 Cop E;J
6:05 (IJ Three's Company
6:30 al U 1121 NBC News E;J
III Stir Search
(l) Q (I) Q ABC News 1;1_
ffi Wild America Slereo. t;l
(!) Square One TV [;I
1111 Uil 1121111 CBS News E;J
1!11 ID Andy Griffith
~Up Close
a] New Zarro E;J
6:35 (IJ Andy Griffilh
7:00 llj U @ Wheel of Fortune

a

(I) Q Married ... Wilh

Children a:;J
1111 mJeopardy! c
1!11 1D Star Trek: The

~·

Ne11
Generation Q
1121111 Entertammenl Tonighl
Siereo . I;J
I!JI Quantum Leap S1ereo. E;J
@ SportsCenler .
Monayllne
a] Lila Goes On Slereo. E;J
7:05 (IJ Beverly Hillbillies
7:30
@ Jeopardy I E;J
III Andy Grlffilh
(l) Q Entertainment Tonighl
stereo. E;J
(I) 0 Mama's Family
l!aJ 18 Wheel of Fortune E;J
1121 1D Familr Feud
12!1 Be a Star Slereo.
~ ESPN's SpeedWeek
Crossfire
7:35 (IJ Sanford &amp; Son
8:00 (2] U @ Unsolved
Mysteries A man is killed by
a ri~Jal suitor : a mothe r's
child is laken from her.
Slereo. C
III MOVII!: Welcome Home
(AI(2 00)
(l) Q (I) 0 Wonder Years
(Season Premiere) Realily
hits home when Wayne's
buddy comes back . Slereo.

..
TtlAT
ON

D~PE-I'I~S
wti~N

IT srAflr.J.

a

g

(!) American E1penence
Slereo. ~

l!ai Uil 021 Ill Hal Squad A

Musical

Bowling Ball, Bag And Shoos,

Sfzo 7 112, Ladlao, Good ConcfJ.
tionl tel. 114-387-0638.

Compor Shall All Aluminum, E1·
collanl CondHion, $110. 114-25e·
ltU.
Comrnodor 1S84 Computar
wlprtnter, Sanyo cotor monitor,
lata ol gamea and pragrtmt,

pi,..., I

114 daca tnd stand tor
MOD ot belt orttr, 114-742-2101
anar1pm.

No~ Rlcla
lanU, ..,. ''"' lruofl
Bundy Afto 8i1, only IIHd oi1 w
lloor mltll
montha, $850, coN IM.ft2o3913 ole. 0 AAuto.
~PitY, WV. 304aherlprn.
372-3833 or t-100-:fn.'mt. ·
Bulldy Trornbone $200. Snaro 79
Campers&amp;
Dnon Kft $200 Aftar 4:30 P.ll.
81-2177.
Motor Homes
Conn lrum~ Nlco now ,_ _. 1
,...
--.
month, wJcue l •nu~l, 304171-3313 aftari:OOPII.
1877 llolor Homo a 11 R. Puu
58
Compar, AC, Only Uoad 4 nmoa;
FNits&amp;
For Solo :

Gooetneek Hitch. Phone: 114·
441-&amp;5i2.

Fhwood For Salt, All Oak, In·

Bruoh hogo, boa - . bock

63

~ollloln aprtna~ng halfara,
.,. lnoPoctiOn. 1-11-

Livestock
·

Building, welghl lo.. and tat Purtlnd SimrMntat B..U. Far
bumtr tormufu. Available IX· Sola, Coli Aftar I P.ll. 11+251clualvtl't at Alit Aid Pharmacy. 8402.
Thlult WI)' to diet.
Raglotarad Gulrtar H - llara
Juttowrlttr (auto composing Oonllol Groll On Tralla, OOOd
machine), Church of Chrltl Bloodl nat, $1,200. 11447e.2832.
Sand Hfll Rd, 304-875·1718 or Social , _ can . 111o1
304-185-3158 .
Alhono Uvtolocl&lt; 9~50
Will,
, Ohio. T
KILLS FLEASI
Soptam=.
AI 1:00 P.
Buy ENFORCER Fill Kllloro For
All
QlnalaMIOnta
W-1
Pet1, Homt &amp; V1rd. Guarani•~
Uvoal6cll kc""od 8tartlna At
Effacllnl Buy ENFORCER AI: Wedn
day 4 P.M. To 10 'P.M.
Thomat Do-tt Center, 176
Haul~vllllabla. IIWI2·m2,
McCormick Road, Galllpollo.
Orl
:u:n.
King wood &amp; coal bumor
wlblowor, $150. 304-675-6648.

1112,

Apanment
torRent

a few pennies spent here
comes back folding money

1 bedroom lpirtmtnl In Pt.
Pl....nl, W.VL, 1·304-171-6042.

2 btdrOOfRI, cerptCed, ·~
Dlllnce• furnllhtd, Mit echool
'ahopplng, ~. mo, Naw
Havon, -2-3711 E.O.H.

WANT

Z IR ..-ad IOifum'ad
garogo apt. WI Nk\;. &amp; atovo.
Wolor furil'ad. tao month. Dap.
req'od, 114-4411-3?17.

ADS
WORK!

plla- lumlahod,
room
laciiMioo
· - loavallablo
tchool
In
,_,,
Apl&gt;flcitiono

2bdrm.

a~,

aplaundry

total ~Irk: ,

ot: Vlllaga 0,_ Apta. IMI
coill1+812-3711. EOH.

0&lt;

211&lt;, CA. W.ahot, Dryar" Hook·
Up, , .. Floor, No Plti, HefeNncaa.lll-4411-1078.

LAYNE'S RIRNITURE
Complola homo lumlahlngo.
Houro: llon-411, t-5. 1~11- Uvlng Room Rug 14~:17, Brown
0322, I milia oul Bulovlllo Rd . Wllh tolortd 011lgns. SSO. Hall
,,.. o.&amp;lv1ry.
Rug 1&amp;1:1, Whlla Bodroom Rug
IIIli 120. 114-44Min7.
Oldlt Lllton Mk:rowlft, Worka
Good Condlion, S$0. 114-4411- Lumbor: Soaoono.~, &amp; Planod,
Moplo, Poplar, Wild Chotry,
4044.
Ia•• board. Casing, Door Jams,
PICKENS RIRNITURE
Etc;. AIIO, 111nch --planer, 24 Fl .
NowNHd
Flatbed, 3 Axle Tralltr, 114--441Houoohold fumlolllng. liZ mi. 8038.
Jarrlcho Rd. Pl. Pl-nl, WV,
Uttll roof and tiding, baktd
call 30W75·1450.
~n~~mll 1nd galv. 304·372-2091 &amp;
372·8142..
Microwave • ttand, good condl·
lion, $50, 114-11112·2111.
Roftlgo&lt;Mor, $75. Goa ot..a,
$75. Of $140 lor both. Ramlnglon Plastic And Mtdal Culvert I Inch
modo! :II 12 gauge -gun, Thru 10 Inch In Stock. Ron
Sf50.
304-'71-S5i3
aftor Evant, Jtcklon, Ohio. 1-800.
4:30pm.
537·9528.
Two Rinp Woddlng Sal: En·
VI'RA FURNITURE ANO AP· gagaman
Ring, Ono Diamond ,
PUANCES
Ladle8 Band, lhi'H Diamonds.
..........,Ia
114-38UI07.
&amp;14-1411-:1181
AEHT·2.0WN
Ulllllr conolrucllon lrallor,
No Dapotll • GRANO OPENING 10'130' wtwlndow, 5150, call 114·
Nothing Preow1wd Or UHd, ~2·21101 anar lpm. ·
Wllar Hllllr Soia S2, 40, 30 Gal·
Bunk Bada Comllilla 55.81 ion alae1rlo and 40 Gallion
Youre choice.
w•: Boll And Chair $1D.n Natul'lll
w•: ... ...,. lUI woo~~; 1111.111 Womoldorft a Thomoo
AOCik1111 P.l.1 Waoll~=lllll• Herdwate. 114 441 otl5
4 Cholq 17.21
; Or
Tabla Willi • - And 4 Chalra
Wlllaltlllng Hu1ch $20.18 Wat!l;
~or
ti1.2Z
Wat!o;
WaoiW • llryor ... $11.&amp;1

E••·

a••·

Waoll; Elaclrtc

Ronga

-Door ttuz wao~~.

,
=

- -no•
a128 AIC,
!lock--. $11,000. Jn.

blodao arid bolo _,., Con
dellv1r, IM .... S-421&amp;.

Products

1 __

111,000. llrm. Family
Prldo llobllo Homo Park 1M 21,
OaNlp alii Ferry, 30M1Wt05.
22 Fl. Coachman, Funr Sol~
Contalnod, Awning, At;, Muol
' " To Apjnclllo. A,500,

Ul 11D1 hliiNlp.01.

I 5AID, '!M
NA5TY
MCNARF.. .

I 'M?ND6&lt; WHO Q.JR Ne.Y
PI&lt;IN0~~5E!C)It'G iO ee.

YOU'VE
HEARD OF
ME":?'

Services
81

Home
Improvements

- - Nlotlrnt guaran··
.... Locol rellrtncoo lurillahod.'
,,.. - -.. Col 1·'
11+231.Q411, clay or nlgM.
11oga10 B'"mont Wotar~.

llnj.

.

ELVINEY- -HERE'S
THAT CUP OF
·FLOUR

YO'RE TETCHEO
IN TH' HEAD!!

:owe

YOU DON'T OWE
ME, LOWEEZY !!

I OWE YOU II

IT TAKES
ONE TO GIT
ONE!!

·.YOU

1871 Buick LoSabre, $750 or
batt olfar, coiiiM-182·:1813 anar
6pm.
Ford Falrmonnt
Futuro, ICyl., Good Running
Blue

Cone!·, Hlah lllloo1 _0roal Wori

Cor. ooOO,lM-441...48.

1811 Z~ rebuiA 150, T·Topo,
1ll-1t42.
$1,100.
1814 Mazda

RXL~full

lnioc-

JET
Aarollon llotora, ropalrod. Ntili
In otock, RON
a r•bulll
EVANS, ~ACKSOH, Ott. 1.10Q.
1137-8521.
Ron'a TV Sorvloo, _...illng

-oro

In llnhh aloo

-Inti

moo!

OCher brlndl. HauN CII.Ua, tiiO

aomo apl&gt;flonco rapalra. WV
304-8~)1111 Ohio 1111-4411-2454 .
5053 or 114-1411-1237 annlngo.
1814 Toyota Tarcol, llondard, Saptlc Tonk Pumoina Ito•Galli•
RON EVANS ENTEAPHISES,
4WD vary good -ion. Co.
U,OOoml., $200; 11+88:1·71121 Jacklon, 0HHOO.S37-8S21.
-"ttL
1815 Cal!llfO Z.21, ... eond,
now llrM &amp; llnlkaa, ole. oil.
llon, l'VK rnllao,

; 114-Ha·

-r.304.e'IMI2t.

1811 llodgo Cltnnl. $1100. PI,
PS, autol. air. Ra- Ll

Olda

Electrical &amp;

84

Refrigeration

· - · $271. :10441'J1.1210.

Ragincy
Brouahlm, cream, tiC Cond,

1881

COVATE

IIIII

I
.I, I I I
P U MMS

The plumber wouldn't ac15
cept payment for replacing a
~ washer in the sink of our RV.
. . . . .
• He said it was the first time a
r-~-0-0:-:c~E:-:v~r:--'1 house had ---- to- --.

l---r.l6;-r.I7'TI-TI-rl--j e
.

.

.

.

l . .- ' - - - ' - - ' - - - ' - - - ' ' - - - '

A

Co mple te ike chuckle quoted
by fd l1ng in the minin9 word1
you develop from step No _ J below.

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS 1

~ IN THE SE SQUARES

12

13

I

I

III

6) ~~~c:~~iER LETTERS I

1•

ITO j I

II

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
• ·"
Mellow - Junto - Eaves · Butter · NOT ME
Affer sending in paperwork and a recent photo for
boat insurance I received a letter informing me they
needed a recent photo of the vessel NOT ME!
NORTH
+JI092
9 K 10 9
tJ86
+a 53

BRIDGE

PHILLIP
ALDER

WEST

1·11-11

EAST
+t
• ?5
tAQ109532
J I2

•5

9 ?7 643
t K 7t
+A Q!0 9

+
SOUTH

....

.AKQ8763

9 AJ 2

Leave it
to them

+K 76

Vulnerable : East·West
Dealer: North

By Pbllllp Alder .
Soulb

There are certain suit combinations
lhal you would prefer not Ia have to
pia y yourself . In these cases, try to
Ioree an opponent to lead the suit for
you .
West opens with a low diamond
against your four·spade conLracL. How
would you try to get the defenders to
help you find the heart queen '
East began with a textbook preemptive opening. South wanted to take
a stronger action than a simple jump
to four spades. but as North was a
passed hand, South decided to hope
that there wasn't a slam in their cards.
West understandably let the adverse
vuinerabiliLy dissuade him from sacrificing, though five diamonds doubled
would have cost only 200 points.
Against this declarer, West was
right to pass over four spades . South
rulfed the diamond lead, drew trumps,
cashed the heart ace and ran the heart
jack. The finesse lost to the queen and
East promptly switched to the club
jack, collecting three tricks in that
suit Lo defeat the contract

I+

West

Norlb

Pass

Pass
Pass

Eul
3t
Pass

+4
'-------------l
Opening lead:

Declarer played badly. True, West
was more likely than East to have the
heart queen, but South didn't need to
guess. After ruffing the first diamond
lead, declarer should play a spade to
the dummy, ruff a diamond, return to
dummy with another spade and ruff
the diamond jack. Now South casts
adrift with a club.
The defenders may Lake three tricks
in the suiL, but what then? U West
leads a heart, the guess evaporates. U
he leads a minor·suit card, declarer
ruffs in the dummy and discards his
heart loser. In both cases, South is furnished with his lOth trick.
@ 1.a. NEWIPAP!R EliTE...... AIM.

The World Almanac ®Crossword Puzzle

s

ACROSS
1 Jeol
5 Tobacco
chaw
9 TV allen
12 Soviet Union
(abbr .)
13 Skalaton part
14 Actor
Brynner
15 Olalrcrart
16 AI I wao goIng to St. 17 - -carte
18 Cry or
affirmation
19 Pod
vegtlabla
20 Bored
exclamallon
22 Send forlh
24 Intend
25 Cablnal
conlenla
27 Given
31 Make muddr
32 Chima
33 Year (Sp.)
34 Hill dweller

Antwer to Prewloue Pu.ule

35 Long

garmenl

36
37
39
40
41
42
45
48
49
50
52
53
54
55
56
57
58

Resign
Fullle
Surpass
Bar Item
Shout ol
dlamlnal
Bright flghl
Tennla player
- Shriver
Trim oil
Snake
Russian no
Wander
- Kapllal
Pleca of
baked clar
By lho limo
--to
Phoenix
WWII area
Went qulcklr
Force unit

4 Golf expert
5 Not noisy
6 Edible
seaweed
7 Chamlcal

DOWN

IUffll

I Dock
2 Plalnlllf
3 Hebrew

8 Slrtloh
9 Indian m1ld
10 Something

9:30 (%) U (!]) Mad Aboul You
(Premiere) Two newlyweds

slruggle 10 lind qualily lime
1oge1her. Slereo. C
(l) Q (I) 0 Coacn Dauber's
role as a big brolher
threaten s his relationship
w1lh Judy. Sle reo . E;J
10:00 C2l U @Law Order
(Season Premiere) A fashion
phologr~r IS murdered.
sweo.
III News
(l) 0 (I)
Civil Wars
!Season Premiere) Eli
defends a slriplease anisl.
Slereo. E;J
CjZl Voices of lhe Eleclorale

a

71 Autos for Sala
liiO

9:00 C2l U 1121 Seinfeld Jerry
explains why he isn 't weanng
the watch h i s~arents gave
him . Stereo .
(l) Q (I) 0 ome
Improvement Jill grounds
Brad lor misbehaving at
school. Slereo. C
l!aJ Cl!l 1121 Ill Real Lila Ghosl
Stories A seance rids a
fam ily of lhe apparilion ol
t11eir disfigured rath er ; an
entity becomes ha rd to bear:
an abusive man's spirit
haunts a home. (1 :00)
Stereo. E;J
1!11 CD Rock lhe Vole
Celebnlies , 1ncluding
Madonna, Danny DeVito ,
Whoop' Goldberg. Tom
Cruise . Ja son Priestley and
Rebecca Oe Mornay,
encourage young PI!2Pie to
vole . (I :00) Slereo. t:;1
1!J1 MOVIE: Sunslroke (2 00)
Slereo. Q
12!1 Nashville Now Slereo.
Larry King Live!
Father Dowling Mysteries

IIA!IEIIEHT
WATERPROOFING

I

E;J

a

BARNEY

Transportation

N

:IM.alJ.iM?.

11111 Poftllac Floro, v.a, IOW72t:n7tnar 4:30.

1881 Orand Prix, uc con)l1
dloh "Parlacl 10" aa Ia 1225. ~~ 30W711-711•2 onor 1...
010, 304-171-4133.

'

I I Nn&lt;oDuceD f.o\Y6E'LF
'TO 1HE: NEW A&lt;.INCI~L.
TODAY.

'*

85 General Hauling

Woocl!umlng Eorth Slovo 100

BatH mototcycit boots, 1111 12,
originally $17&amp;. axe eond, aan
pcJ. 304.f75·3121.

VALUE.')

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

TWo 10 1/Zft. In ltuck comJ*'t 1t 1I2ft. tra...e traUer;
d ha'" atova, rwlrlaorolor, fur·
nr.ce. Ycu ctlolc., SlOOM.i
112-1114.

Selin, Excellll}t Condition ,
$400 Phono: 114-258-D310.

Cornp'at'r r~ nail
......... ~
air,
..-~
.11+

H(IORITY OJER fAA'ILY

(L)

0.8.0. 11Wfl.-.

With

Now II" Scroll oaw. Solollllo

lHE. RX;R ~ lAKE.')

Ford
hardtop
PUofNnD camper, lir~ond.
......... 3Q1.1711.4123• •

For oala: Flrowood. $20. plekup
load. 304.a75-51oe anar lpm.
Nutrhlon

fi:X.ITI(AL
FILM ..

rr CLEARLY 5I-ICIA)S 11-IAT

1- -n

61 Fann Equipment

fuluring Amino Acid Body

A

~1731.

lormallon: lt4-3417-711~.

Gent~ls

rr~

Y - a Rod I 1/Z 1, ooH conlalnod, $1,215.

Farm Suppl1es
&amp; Livestock

boy seeks lhe help of lhe
squad when his sister is
being bealen . Slereo. C
1!11 1D Bave~y Hills, 902'1 0
Now in the ir senior year. the
kids look ahead lo lhe lulure.
Slereo. E;J
I!JI Murder, She Wrole E;J
12!1 Crook and Chase
@ Checkered Flag lndyCar
from lexington, Ohio.
PrimeNews Q
® Young Alders E;l
8:05 (IJ MOVIE: The Sackells
(4 :00)
8:30 (l) Q (I) Q Doogie Howser,
M.D. (Season Premiere) Th e
hospital is flooded with rio t
viclims . Stereo. Q
@ Major League Baseball

a

1m IIOUI'IIalneer true~ camP'!1

Dttk:ioul, ·~· ....

Evant Molort, 1530 Elstern
Avanutb Gallipolis, Ctoseout
Prica n Remaining Hillsboro

""r Truckbado In Slock I 112
Fl. Rag Prlca: $715, Now: 5515,
12 Fl. Rag: $995, Now: 1711.
Prlcoa lncluda llghl Kilo &amp;

=a,

EEKANDMEEK

1-·-

Vegelables

low to form four simple

rn u

tlOW l-ONG ~0
TtiiNIC CIIIILIZ~P
SOCIE iY wit./..
I...AST J

4pc. Uvlng room tullt, real
aood condlllon, $125; 814·m·
2417.
I fool ootofflla dish wl)&gt;olo,
l'lcel'lllr nHdt work, $500 or
bnt orferi 614-1112-2601 afttr
lpm.

letters of
0 Rearrange
four scrambled words

a

FRANK AND ERNEST

lnstNments

0~
- - - - - - ldlrod by CLAY I, POLLAN------

PUZILII

L

@OeSiQ!!.ing Women
Slereo. L,l
(l) Q lns1de Edilion E;J
ffi (!) MacNeil/Lehrer
NewaHoor E;J

. ·- '

QltQ

THATDAILY

EVENING

'~

4

WED., SEPT. 23 •

~

~E.I( . .

ThwM:Itrblrc:l Paww Windows,
PB, PS, PM, For Solo $2,000,
114 ue IOeJ:
18M Clwyofar FlftN Ava, block,
IXCIIIant eondhlon.·$2,800. 30411'1-4131.

Ftl- c-

8

FOR /I..Y
BIRTH{)I.'f
....- ()..&lt;;,T

--·

TALK TO CAIIOY UYE
, . 110 11tl, t2SICIN
e-n Coon. ....,FL, 1h

.
.
,
=

Television
Viewing

Pte.-.
-

·-lo.
DrUt· .

_ , &amp;Jwo.ln

AutOI

13

87

Upholstery
'

::::::::~:::=::-::::;;.:..:....-.,:­

_,.,.. Upholatlflng oorvle·
Inti trt_,r area r1 ,..... Tho
boO! In ,.,..,. .......lairfg.
Col 304.a7JI.4154 lor ... H •

u.......

undersland what 10 dolo make I he rela·
llonshlp work . Mall $2 plus a long, self·
addressed, slamped envelope lo
Malchmaker. c/o lhls newspaper, P.O.
BERNICE
Bo• 91428. Cleveland, OH 44101-3428.
BEDE OSOL SCORPIO
(Oct. 24-Nov. 221 If you can'l
be near your phone loday, be sure lo
leave word where you can be reached.
The aspecls Indicate someone wllh
good news Is anxious lo gel in !ouch
wilh you.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 211 You
mlghl be exposed 10 a series of relher
unique developmenls loday; efler lhe
dusl has sellled, you may discover whal
lransplred was good for you In malerlal
ways.
.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jon. 111 If you
....
run lnlo a slluallon today unlike any·
s.t&gt;l· 211, 1112
lhlng you 've ever encounlered, ·don'l be
Things mlghl break lor you ala very fasl inllmidaled. Your lngenully will supply
pace In lhe year ahead, so be prepared · answers lhal your experience lacks.
10 ~~ awlflly when opportunlly knocks. AQUARIUS (Jan. ~Fib. 111 Commer.she wanls 1o·help you. bul she's very clal dealings you have wilh friends today should wor1&lt; oul prolllably lor all
lmpatlonl.
ltiiiA (Sept. 23-:0cl. ~~ · Associates concerned, especially If a new lype of
·
·
might lose I heir head a when, une1pecl· · merchandise Is Involved.
ed divelopmenls ocour loday, bul not PISCES (Ffb.'20-Marth 201 It's always
you. When faca&lt;l wllh uncertainty, a pleasanl surprise when we discover
.You're apl to perform al your,besl. Try· lhal someone we lhoughl dldn 'lllke us
ing 10 palch up a broken romance? The acluelly does care. This form of revela.t;stro-Graph Malchmaker can .help you lion mlghl awall you loday.

.
e

q'our

'Birthday

ARIES (March 21·Aprll111 Fortunalely,
you possess aplllude for innovallon and
resourcefulness , which you mlghl have
lo call upon lo solve problems al work
loday. The resulls should be gralllylng.
TAURUS (April ~Map 201 If too much
rouline has been lying you down lalefy,
break away loday and do somelhing
diHerent The change wiH have a wonderful effecl on your allllude.
GEMINI (MaJ 21..1- 201 Some con·
Slrucllve changes you've been hoping
for mlghllransplre lodey, and I his may
give you an opportunlly 10 resolve IWO
siluallonslhal have been hung up In lhe
undecided column.
CANCER (June 21.Julr 22) Usually,
you llkolo lake your lime when dollber·
allng, bul decisions could como lo you
In a flash today. These lnsplrallonal In·
slghls mlghl be ~ry helpful.
LEO (JuiJ 23-Aug. 22) Before calling In
an expensive craftsman lo perform
small Iaska for you loday, check wllh
some or your handy friends 10 see If
lhey will help you lor much less.
· VIRGO (Aug. 23-lopl. 221 Keep your
SOCial ac:hedule u nexlble u possible
loday: !here's a chance somelhlng In·
lerestlng could pop up that you 'll want
lo be free lo all end .

(E Learning Matters

Uil 1121 Ill 48 Hours The
growing problem of invasion

~

of privaain today's society .

Sweo. L,l

1!11 11 Hunter E;J

a Wo~d News

a] 700 Club Wllh Pal
Robertson
10:30 ®On Stage
(l)
(ZJ (I)
~ Cl!l 1121111 101 News
ffi Nlghl Court Q
(!]) 111 Night Court Slereo. E;J
I!) Fulure Is Now Hosl
Michael Dorn. (0:30)
® Crook and Chase
Sporto Tonight
a] Scarecrow 1nd Mrs. King
11 :30 III Slreel Ju111ce
(ZJ America 's Delenae
Monllor
(I) 11J Nlghlllnt C
~CD Arsenio Ha11 Slereo .

11:oo rn e

o

o

a

i

Ill 'Dangerous Curves'
Crtmttlmt Allar P~metlme
Slereo. C
~ Am1irng Slorlu Slereo.

I

8

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Ceiebnty CIPher CfYPIOQr-.nt. Ire &lt;nettd from wotatlanl by lwnout P«ll)it, patl Wid ~~
IEfiCtl lllttlf in IM CiJif* ltlndl tor another. TrxUy 't ci!M: G ~~qu.n 0 .

'ALSNY
WPNN,
FVUM

PTUTXI
GNH
LSM

NYPRYM

XPt

ASIUYO

PIITPN

UTIY - TE.'

XPISMUO
IPRPDOG .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "The policeman is lhe lillie boy who grew up 10
be What he said he was going to be.'' - Ra~mond Burr.
Cl 1Rft2 by NEA , inc .

SportaCtnler
Moneyllne

23

r

-- _____n_ __,_______ -

•

�..... ..
·~

.
'·
Pomeroy~lddleport,

Page-14-Th• Dally SenUnel

Wednesday, September 23,1992 .

Oh.lo

Only two new
·.shows break into
ratings Top 20
NEW YORK (AP) -Only two
new 1V shows broke into lhe Top
20 in lhe ratings for lhe fall season:s Jmlliere wedt.
A preview of Delta Burke's new'
ABC sitoom, "Delta," was No. 2.
but Thursday's premiere slipped 10
46th . CBS' comedy "Heans
Afire," starring John Ritter and
Markie Post, was 131h, the A.C.
Nielsen CQ. said Tuesday.
The season premiere or ABC's
"Roseanne" was No. I as usual,
and much of lhe rest of the Top I0
looked like a rerun from last season.
CBS won lhe week wilh a 12.8
rating. ABC had an 11.9, NBC a
10.4 and Fox Broadcasting a 7.1 .
Each rating point equals 931,000
homes.
NBC's Golden Girls, reconstituted on CBS in "Golden Palace"
were 24th. ABC's "Going to
Extremes." at 32nd, was down
from eighlh the week before. .
At43rd, CBS' action-adventure
series "The Hat Squad" was the
last new show in lhe Top 50.
.
In tile nightly news, ABC was
'' • No. 1 as usual, lhis time wilh a 9.4
rating. CBS had an 8.1, and NBC a

Ohio Lottery

Pugh hurls
Reds past
Dodgers 3-0

Pick 3:
964
Pick 4:
1084
Super Lotto:
3-22-26-33-37-45
Kicker:
105318

Page4

'

Low tonight In mid-50s.
Sunny Friday. High In 70s.

e

Discover The Big Bear Br.!nds

·."

Vol. 43, No. 107

Copyrighted 1992

2 Sections, 12 Pages 25 cents

·Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, September 24, 1992

A Mulllmedlo Inc. Newopoper

-.

Dudding is returned
here t~ face arson charge
R~dy Duddin~,the Rac_me man
:--ho t.s alleg~y mvolved ~~ bWT_l-

7.5.

Here are lhe Top 10 shows, their
network and rating: "Roseanne,"
ABC, 24.7; "Della" (special),
ABC, 20.5; "Home Improvement," ABC, and "60 Minutes,"
CBS, (tied) 18.6: "Murphy
Brown," CBS, 18.0; "Murder, She
Wrote," CBS, 17.3; "Murphy
Brown," CBS, 16.7; "Coach,"
ABC, 16.5: "PrimeTime Live,"
ABC, 15.9; "Miss America
Pageant." NBC, 15.6.

,mg h1s .IJ!obtle home, stagmg h1s
own su1c1de and the poSSible lheft
of ty;o trucks, has been returned to
Metgs County to answer a charge
of arson..
.. . . .
Dudd~g has been Jruled 10 Pike
County smceearly last week, wh_en
he was arrest~d an~ ~barged ~1th
auto theft, whlle dnvmg a vehicle
stolen from Athens County. Anoth-

2"d Week To Stock.Up
On .Our ·aest·Br.ands!

er veh1cle, stolen from Pike &lt;;ou~ty, was recovered a day earher m
Athens County, and Dudding may
be tmplicated 10 lhat theft
Dudding's mobile home on Pine
Grove Road burned on September
12, shortly before it. was reporled to
offic1als that Duddmg had ~umped
from the James Rllchte Bnd.se at
Ravens~ood, W.Va. Duddmg's
1987 N1ssa n truck and a note
allegedly written by Dudding were

found at the scene, but it was later
discovered that Dudding had not
jumped from the bridge. He was
arrested in the stolen vehicle two
days later.
In Meigs County Dudding must
answer a charge ~f aggravated
arson. He is being held in the
Meigs County Jail on $30,000
bond. A preliminary hearin will
beheld on October 1.
g ·

•

·.·.
·.
•

_

64 az. Btl.

_15oz.Can

.

.

Light Or :Dark Reel
. Xidney Beans

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LIMIT 2 Per
Family,
Please

JULIE TILLIS

New arrival
Don and Gina Tillis, Rutland,
announce the birth of their first
child, a daughter, JuUe Anne Tillis,
on Aug. 2·1 at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
She weighed nine pounds and
12.2 ounces and was 22 and onehalf inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr ..
and Mrs. Larry G. Johnson, Rutland. Maternal great-grandmolhcr
is Geneva Shumate, Rutland.
Paternal grandparents arc Rev.
and Mrs. Amos Tillis, Chillicothe.
Paternal great-grandmother is
Viola Tillis, Chillicolhe.

-

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11.5oz.Bag

Dinners

Extra Yield

Your Choice of Chicken, Turkey,
.Salisbury, Veal Or Meatloaf

Ground Coffee
LIMIT I Beg
Per Family,

Plea••

-

10ox.Box

Boneless Breaded

Chicken
Your Choice of
Patties,
Nuggets Or
Fillets

68

D sposable
D1apers

''

•

HOME DESTROYED - This home on
Salem Street In Rutland was destroyed by fire
Ibis moming (Thursday). Mike Thacker, a resi-

dent of the bouse, was IJ'ansported to Veterans
Memorial Hospital ud was taken by Lire FUght
to Oblo State University in Columbus.

Middleport home damaged by blaze
A child playing wilh a cigarette
lighter in a closet was the apparent
cause of a frre which heavily damaged a Middleport house late
Wednesdaf afternoon.
The Mtddleport Fire Departm~nt was called to 326 Pearl Street
at 4;25 p.m. and was on the scene
fot two hours putting out lhe fire
which started in the closet and
spread to the bedroom of the two

story frame house. The house is
owned by Harley McDonald and
occupied by Alfred and Cathy
EvansdJrld family.
MrS. Evans, lhe child's mother,
received minor burns trying to
extinguish -the frre arid was taken
by the Middleport squad to Veterans Memorial Hospital where She
was treated and released.
According to Kenny Byer, assis-

New ABLE center opens in Racine
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
A new Adult Basic and Literacy
Education (ABLE) center has
opened in Racine.
The center is located in the
basement of the United Methodist
Church on State Route 124 and is
being operated by Sue Grace,
teacher/coordinator, and Pat Neece,
inslructional aide.
While only II participants are
currently enrolled, four more are
expected to start in early October.
The facility is equipped to handle
20 persons. The Racine center was
opened 10 serve individuals in that
section of the county. There are
classes in both Middleport and
Pomeroy.
According to John Riebel,
Meigs County superintendent of
schools, and director of ABLE,
testing 10 determine academic performance level is the first step in
enrolling someone. Participants are
placed at a level where they can
achieve success and progress from
that place. Periodic testing is done
to chart the progress.
Each participant attends classes
two days a week, five hours a day.

While most referrals come from
the Meigs County Department of
Human Services, some are "watkins". Most are working toward a
high school equivalency diploma
(GED) but some are lhere 10 brush
up on skills in preparation (or
enrolling in a college or trade
school. '
Currently there are 106 men and
women assigned to Meigs County
classes by the Department of
Human Services. Last year 23 of
the participants passed the GED
test. After achieving lhat, welfare
recipients are referred into the
JOBS program where they are
given assistance in job searches.
The local ABLE program, while
sponsored by the Meigs County
Board of Education, is a direct
result of a state level agreement
between the Ohio Department of
Human Services and the Ohio
Department of Education.
As explained by Barbara Cha~­
man, Job Opportunities and Bas1c
Skills (JOBS) supervisor, Meigs
County Department of Human Services, Me1gs County was one of
four counties to be selected to take
part in a pilot program to expand
existing Adult Basic Education scr-

--Local briefs-----.
Clothing needed for family

HANNAH FOREMAN

The Evans family, Pearl Street, Middleport, who lost their clothin~ in a house ~rre Wedncsd~y ~vening. are in need of lhe following
arucles of clothmg. Women s saze 38 pants, size 42 blouse and size
seven 81\d a. half shoes; girls' sizes five to six slim 8-10 and 12
jeans and blouses; and shoe sizes six and a half one ~d sde 12 little girl shoes.
' •
Kathy Evans and her family is staying wilh her mother at 16 Village Green Apartments in Pomeroy.
·

First birthday
Hannah Elizabeth Foreman celebrated her first birthday recently
wilh 1111 outside party at the home
of her grandparents, Dean and
Ramona Knight with a "Winniethe-Pooh and Friends" !heme.
Helping her celebrate were her
parents, David and Belh Foreman;
grandparents, Joe and Evelyn Foreman. Others attending were Joyce
Foreman and David Brown, Jim,
Pam, Amanda and Erin Foreman,
Kevin, Joni, Whitney and Caidyn
Knight, Danny, Kim, Danyal and
Caleb Litchfield, Jason and Rhea
Knight. Richard, Anna and Desiree
Sines, Rulh Ann and Lauren Porter,
NaLIIie and Aaron Falk, Venus and
Lydnsay Roush, Annabell Hudnall,
Jim, Shirley, Healher and Carrie
Lockhart, Helen Riffle. Betty
Dolin.
A special "Winnie-the-Pooh"
cake was baked by Betty Dolin.
Sending gifts were great grandfalher and pndmother Mona and
Rolland Otbbs, Mary and Leslie
Kildlel! and Bertha Proffitt

INJOY '111111 GOOD U.ftNG fLAYOifUL OUPII

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White Or Red Ruby Seedless

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tant fire chief, the fire was contained to the bedroom but there was
damage from heat, smoke and
water to the entire house.
Damage to lhe structure was set
at $25,000 and to the contents at
$10,000.
There were 23 fireme~ and
emergency squadmen on lhe scene,
I7 from Middleport and six from
the Pomeroy Fire Department.

Youth cited in accident

lb. Quarters

A Langsville youth was cited after a two-vehicle accident on
Ohio 124 in Rutland Township Wednesday around 7:50a.m.
. Accordmg 10 a report from lhe Gallia-Meigs Post of lhe State
H1ghway Patrol, an eastbound vehicle dtiven by Myron D. Beck,
64, 50~ W. Second SL, Wel~ton, was stopped for traffic and was
struck m the rear by a followmg car driven by Matlhew W. Clark,
16, of 31277 Stare Route 124, Langsville.
.
No injuries were reported.
·
. DaJ:nage to Clark's 1983 ~ge Aries was listed as moderate and
d1sabhng. Damage to Beck s 1992 Jeep Cherokee was listed as
moderate.
. Clark was cited by the patrol for failure to maintain assured clear
distance.
·

Food Club
Margarine
·~-

Gun theft investigated

LIMIT 4 Per
family ,

The Meigs County SheriJfs Department continues to investigate
the burglary and lheft of guns and jewelry from lhe Thdd Rothgeb
residence on Salem Township Road 178.
Aecord]!lg 10 Sheriff James M. Soulsby, the house was entered
Continued on page 3

Plea&gt;e

I

vices 10 eligible Aid 10 Dependent
Children recipients on a cost reimbursement basis.
Prior to beirig selected to receive
more money, Riebel, Michael L.
Swisher, director of the local
Department of Human Services.
and Chapman verified lhe need for
additional ABE services in the
county. Chapman said that lhe need
dramatically increased when the
JOBS program was implemented in
Meigs County two years ago. At
that time participation in education
and training became a requirement
for eligibility for public assistance.
In May 1991, the Meigs
Department of Human Services
entered into a contract with the
Meigs County Board of Education
to provide 18 hours a week of additional ABE services for JOBS participams.
Last month classes were again
filled to capacity and participants
were put on a waiting list.
However, wilh lhe new center in
Racine, the Pomeroy and Middleport classes now have some available slots due to lhe transfer of students living in the Racine area to
that center.
Chapman said lhat by taking the
class into a new community. ABE
becomes more accessible to those
residents with limited transportation.

NEW CENTER • An Adult Basic 1111d Literacy Education Center opened last week In the
basement of the Racine United Methodist

Commission contemplates
Issue Two modification
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff

Racine Fall Festival
Schedule of Events ·
FRIDAY NIGHT
.Joy Singers
Shammah
Russ and Southern Hills
Singers
.
The Hart Brothers
Kings Harptony Quartet
Faith Hari)Jony Quartet
.... ::&lt;: ;·;,"•

•.::;:··

' SATURDAY
10 a.m. 1Parilae:Followed
by crowninjfQr theJall f~stival
queen,
, ·'+ ':' ' '? . '. . i':
1 p.m:- Big ,'\.1 and Friends~
Pie eating contest
2 p.m.- Pumpkin growing
contest.
.. 3 p.m. - lyan Potte~ and
Silver Wings '· ·
·
4 p.m.;·,~couittrv
5
. 6 p.
p~m·.;
11'· ··;I

~!i~~t!t:J~~fitI
I
\

Church. Here Tammy Freeman, richt, receives
instructioa from Pat Neece, aide:, as Sue G111Ce,
teacberlcoordlutor ut tbe aew ceater, loob oa.

The possibility of combining all
of Meigs County's Issue 2 paving
projects for next year was discussed with Meigs County Engineer Philip M. Roberts when the
Meigs County Commissioners met
in regular session on Wednesday.
Commissioner Richard E. Jones
reponed that he had been contacted
by a representative of Buckeye
Hills/Hocking Valley Regional
Development Disuict in Marietta,
which administers the program,
advising that if the nine projects
filed under round five of Issue 2
were combined into one projec~ it
could improve the chances of project approval.
Paving projects have been submitted to the Issue 2 program on
behalf of the county highway
department, Middleport Village
and the following Meigs County
townships: Lebanon, Salisbury.
Sutton, Chester and Olive.
According to Jones, if the projects are filed on behalf of the
entire county, lhe chances of project approval could increase, especially in light of a new Issue 2 policy rhat gives priority to other
infrastructure projects such as
water and sewer Improvements. .
A meeting was set between
Roberts, the board, township
trustees involved and BH/HVRDD
for next week so lhat furlher discussion of the proposal can take
place. No action was taken, since
the decision of whether the (I'Ojects
should be combined rests wilh the
trustees who flied lhem.
Is:iue 2 project agreements for
round five projects were executed
by lhe board r~ paving projects on
Mt. Union and Kingsbury Roads
and Lcadina Cna: Rilld.
The board approved lease
agre~mont with .the Middle~rt
Housma Corporation f~ a J)lrking
area for ~ Department of Human

Services. The $200 monthly rent
has been deemed reimbursable by
the Ohio DHS. The space is located
at Race and North Third, across the
street from lhe DHS building.
An
appropriation
of
$103,840.74 was approved for
bond retirement on the DHS building. The funds represent an accumulation of monthly rent paid by
the stale for the building to date.
Nancy Hill, program service
coordinator for Meigs County's
Youth Services grant and Tom
Reed from Gallia/Meigs JTPA
approached the board about hiring
a 17-year old boy for custodial

..

.-.•.-.

work at the courthouse through the
youth employment program.
'
The 'commissioners authorized
the hiring, under lhe condition that
JTPA will pay the boy's wages ..
until second quarter funding for the
•
youlh services program is received.
A request for lhat second quarter
funding was also approved.
The commissioners approved an
appropriation of $549.80 into the
Meigs County Parks District's
"other expenses" account. That
money was generated throu gh .
donations and sales of the Meigs
County to.urism video . A $10~ ....
·.
Contmutd on page 3

.

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·.-.
-:

,.--·
".:

Columbus Day dinner
scheduled Saturday
··---.
--•

~

Ted Strickland, Democratic candidate for the Sixth Congressional
seat, will be the keynote speaker at
the Meigs County Democratic
Party's Columbus Day Dinner on
Saturday.
•
The dinner will be held at the

Meigs County Senior Citizens Cenler in Pomeroy at6 p.m. Strickland
will speak during the social hour,
sct for 5 p.m.
Strickland is a professor of psychology at Shawnee State University, and consulting psychologist at
Southern Ohio Correctional Facili~

"•;

~
~

-.·
-

. ~

Stricklana has been the Demo- •·
cratic nominee for Congress in .•
three previous elections - against ·::
William Harsha in 1976 and 1978
•
and Bob McEwen in !980, wherein :;
he received 45 percent of the vote.
'
Strickland has served as sixth dis- :••'
trict state central committeeman .for ••
the past four years. and was sixlh ·::
district coordinator for the previous·:•. :~
presidential and gubernatorial
races.
.
He was born on August 4, 194!,
the eighth or nine children: His
father supported the family as f
steelworker in Portsmouth: Strick·
land grew up in Lucasville an4 _;
attended Northwest High School Contlaaed on pqe 3 · ,:

a

'I

'...

TED STRICKLAND
~

.•-. •,

•

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