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nmt.-..selitlnel

-,

Strickland demands ap-ology·
.over gun control -remark
W..

Trade strategy
one year overdue

OPPOSES GUN CON·
TROL .:.... Congressional eandidate Ted .Str.icllland ~aid
recently th~t be opposes gun
cpntrol and demaaded an
apology lor a remark-made by
. news conference in Cincinnati.
Congressmaa Bob McEwen's
"We've reached the end ·of the
campaign manager concern· road. The property is for sale.·' _
ing his position oa gnn conLeser said Scripps lias received
trol. Ted Stricklan4, right, is
ellis from two interested parties.
He declined to identify lhem but• shown here with his lather,
said one can came from lhe Pitts- · Orville Strlclcland, 88, and a
huntiilg riDe. ·
burgh area. He would not reveal
lhe asking price.
Th~ CODIJ?IIIIY wiD continue to
neg&lt;?ttate wtlh the Teamsters as Varian is presented
required by law, Leser said.
35-y~r service award
Josep_h Moliilero, president of
T~ I..oc:W 211, said lhe_Press . • CHESHIRE . Robert M: Vl!fian,
hal!· played f~ 11!"11~ wtlh aU maintenance mechanic-A at the
- of•,t;-Theemployees li~. .
Ohio VaDey E~tric COipotation's
II' proposal e~ hWJ- , K'yger Creek Plant, · recently
dreds ~f jobs and pr~vtdes the received his anniv!isary award for
reJII!Iining emJ!Ioyees wtth lhe fol- 35 years of sernce.
. ··
.
lowmg wage Jncreases: zero perVarian joined OVEC on
zero~~~ September 20, 1957, as a laborer in
.,..,.. .. ~ ~d.
..ur ould the labor depanment. In 1961 he
--:-·
$II
ne w
transferred to lhe operations dpartdle ~ slow deat~. I!, means our ment 15 a utility worker. In 1966 he
~ISC • some pomL
became a maintenance helper in the
. Press C~. G~neral Manager maintenance department He
J1mmy Man1s S&amp;Jd-the paper has
d
d h · h h
•·
suffered from declinin" advertis· a ~ance t rougn ! e .va~lous
in~ circulation · •
P
mamtenance mechamc classificatilllio, above-av=
lions ~d in'1979, hew~ promoted
tribution coslll.
10 ~tenance ~c-A. .
Yru:1an and b1s wtfe; Max me,
About 600 drivers went 0
.
n reside m Syracuse
.
strilce May 17 after lhe company
·
·
·
tried to estal!li$h a new distribution
plan tllll wcid'd bave eliminated 75
percent of lhe bargaining unit'_s ·
JObs. The company has since
.reduced the proposed cuts 10 45
percent
.
The sttite shut down lhe after' '
noon Press and_morning Post·
Gazette, which is owned by ,Blade
Communications Inc. of. Toledo,
.Ohio, but is printed and published
by lhe Preas Co. under a joint operating llplelllellt tllll ·expires at lhe ·
end of tile cleclde. · · ·:
A message seeking comment
about lhe sale from John Robinson
Block was · not immed'iately
returned Friday. Block is publisher
and ediulr-in-dtief of The Blade of
Toledo, which the family also

.---...,.,='==~"""''"""===~~~~-=~----.

PARKERSBURG LIVESTOCK MARKET, INC.
Mineral Wells, WV
September Ui,1992
Sl'OCK STEERS:
59.QO.ll7.00
300-under
60.()().108.00
300-500
50.()().88.50
S00-700
48.()().78.00
SOO..Over
STOCK HEIFERS:
(i!l.Q0.98.50
300-under
55.Q0.99.QO
300-500
5().()().88.00
S00-700
47.50--69.25
801k&gt;ver
STOCK BULLS:
53.QO.U2.00
300-under
51.()().100.00
30Q.SOO
51.()().92.00
S00-700
Slaughter BuDs
47.50--61.75
360.()()-940.00 '
Cows&amp;. Calves BH
38.50--63.50
Bred Cows By#
310.00--666.00 BredCowsBH
Slaughlel' Cows:
Wah Dressing
-45.QO.S4.50
uiiliiy
38.()().45.00
25.()().37.00
Cannel' &amp;. Cuuer

=first:·

·-

Choice
Medium
Good

94.50-103.00
86.7.5-93.00
78iQ0.85.00

Blue ·
Ewes ·
Baby Calves BH
HORSEScwt -

35.()().50.00
19.()().25.50
45.00-131.50
35.00--61.00
65.()().130.00

LAMBS:

==

High. •

r

~k:Cr:!~·ots~

lhis may be lhe biggest concem·in
lhe industry' .
GrliZing livestock will' be the
topic of several sessions this faD ,
and winter. A specill "Grazing" '
Seminar will be held November 7,
from 9:30 a.m. • 2 p.m. in Wood
bll,l on lhe Campus of lhe Universi·
ty of Rio Grande: Dr. Les Reed,
AnirnaiiCientist at West Virsinia
University will be the k. eynote
1peaker. The focus will be on
dOvelopina management systems
thll flii:Hitate year-round grazina.
Mlrt your calendar.
A twilisht session i.s being
11l•nped on October 15, 6 :p.m. at
t11o Bob HendershQl.Farm, 25995
Stile Roure 159, Cli:IeviUe, Ohio.
'l'IUIICIIion will featlft rotatiooaJ
grazing, fence desian·and warm :

.

.

=far
-~
...........

• PreconditiOJ'lintReceiving
ChQw - highly J&gt;!11atable
gets calves eating fast.
• Helps protect calves
against sickness and death
~due to stress.
~.

-

• Quickly eliminates shrink,
·~ !X&gt;Unds true gain. ·
\

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IQl R&amp;G FEED • SUPPLY CO.

.::.!.

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IH • • N

......

Hl-2164

'1110 _ _ ... _ . , . . . , . , . , ...... " " " ' . - - .

a.-alli:Ju

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1 Section, 10 Pogeo 25 cento
A Muttlmedlo Inc. Newopoper ·

-- . . -

.Navigato:rs ready·for
~n-ew Ohio River locks

''

•

. YEAR BEGINS • Activities at Gallia/Meigs
_ Head Start are Ia full swing. Applications lor
the program ire a ow available from the
Pomero;r center (992-3088), and lour year olds
from pnmarily low-income families &amp;re accepted
in.to the program throughout the year. Older
three year olds and younger five year olds are

accepted as space is available. Here, Susan -Cole·
man, 1 classroom aide, reads a story to 1Myca
· Michaels, Nathaniel Cook and Joshua Nelson
d!l~lng their w~klf. visit to the center. Family
v1sits al the -child '!i bome are also a part of tbe
state and feder•Jiy,funded program. (Sentinel
Photo by BFian J, Reed)
·

HOGGSETI, W.Va. (AP) - A lOws on the river. But when diesel- replaced by fewer, larger ones.
new canal and system of locks will powered boats began pushing Gallipolis is one of the last to be
be dedicated at lhe Gallipolis Dam 1,000-foot strings of barges, the replaced.
and Locks on lhe Ohio River, about 6QO.footloclt at Gallipolis became
In 1980. the Corps decided on
25 miles upstream from Hunting- a bottleneck. .
lhe canal instead of building a new
ton, qn Sat~y .
After a few weeks of fin al lock and dam three miles downBoat owners who want to be dredging and te$ting, river shipping stream from the existing one. Corps
among lhe first to pass lhrough the will have a stra i~hter, faster pas- officials knew the new dam would
GaUipolis Locks and Dam at cere- sage past lhe Qallipolis Dam.
have cost-less to build, but the
mony should apply to the U.S.
"We're at both locations right canal could be finished sooner ·and
Army Corps of Engineers today, now," said lockmaster Pat Worley. would be more economically effi· · said spokesman Thorn Robinson.
"We're setting up in our new oper- cienL
'
Gallipolis was the first of the ations buil~ing. Our shop is over
Construction on the $224 milhigh-lift dams on lhe Ohio River. here (at the new locks}. We're still lion project began in November
- The loclcs on the dam were put in handling trl!,ffie over at the old · 1987.
_service in 1937, although ther. locks. "
Late lhis year or in early 1993,
weren't officially dedicated unlll
W.hen lhe U.S. Army C_orps of . the Corps will advertise for
June 1938. But they quietly ~ng1,neers began upgradm~ the improvements to the dam. Tbe
became obsolete.
nver s !~It-and-dam system m lhe found~tion will be strenglhened
The small locks and the bend 1940s, tt dectded to focus ~ lhe and the eight rollers that hold back
weren't problems when small stretch &lt;?f ~ver between Galhpohs the river will be replaced, Corps
steamboats were pushing small and LouJSVJUe.
officials have said.
Many smaller dams have been

Voinovich, Riffe travel
state with different go~Is
,•

· 4 cyl. eng., P. lleermg, P. bray•. auto.
trana .. air cond., AMIFM llereo cailaeltl), lUI
wheel, crul•• control, P. winilowa &amp; P.
locka, P. driver aeat, rear window defroster.
Loaded.
·
3 TO 010051 flOII

ua ·

""'

· COI:UMBUS, Ohio ( AP) the1 designed whl\n they had· a that the governor is announcing
Republican · 0Qv.
George maJority on the state Apportion- state projects, meeting with newsVomovich and Democratic Speaker ment Bllllr¢ Republicans captured paper editorial boards and attend'
Vern Riffe' are traveling around the board ·when Voinovich and l_ng f11nd raisers for GOP candi;
Ohio 10 try help lheir opposing par• Secretary of State Bob Taft~ who dates. ·
ties keep or gain control of the are statutory members, too1c office
Voinovich began Wedne~y iri
in January 1991. ·
Ohio House.
·
Toledo o.n behalf or Sally Perz, a
Voinovich started visiting
Democrats currently conbOI lhe management ¢onsultant who is
House districts last weelr;, including House 61-~8 . Riffe claims he has cbal~nging Rep. Donald Czarcins·
five where Democratic incumbents ·· quaiity candidates and can 1teep at · lti, D·Toledo, in lhe 52nd House
could be vulnerable as a result of a least a bare majority despite the District
Republican-drawn redistrictinJI new districts. He plans to be on the
plan lhat favors Republican candi- ~!)ad lhe next few weeks also, but
•
dates. •
he declined to divulge his schedule.
Democrats have controlled tbe
·Jenny Camper, Voinovich's
House since 1973 in districts lhat _ press spokeswoman,
said Friday
.

•

.

----~Local

.....

~ Mi&lt;k!lepo~ youth, foimd in a comotose condition behind the
Me1gs Jun~~ High School e&amp;!IY Satur~y evening, was reponed in
good _condition at&lt;;irant ~osp1tal, Columbus, this morning.
Middlepon Poltce Satd lhe Middleport emergency squad transJl!lned David Eakins, 15, of Middleport, to Veterans Memorial Hos'PIIlil at 6:53 p.m. He was talcen from there by LifeFlight 10 Grant at
9:36p.m.
·
Po~ said that Char$es are pending against adults who reportedly contnbuted_to lhe mculent.
·

V6-eng. power steer., power brakes,
-auto. trans., air Ciond., AMIFM stereo 8
track, ti~ steering wheel, cruise control,
rear defroster, atyled wheels wltrim
rings, good tires, extra clean.
-

'

Schools to close .

IPICIIL

Bradbury, Harrisonville, Rutland and .Salem Center Elementary.
Schools wtll be closed on Tuesday, so lhat Leading Creelc Conser.
vancy District can repair water lines.

1..1 DODGE DIKDU Lalli ID 414

V6 eng., P. steering, P. brakes, 5 speed
trans., AMIFM stereo cassette, rear
step bumper, bed liner, all season tires,
cloth interior, lull wheel covers, eXtra
·· clean, siidiQg rear window.

·

·

Grant awarded

Kalhy Haley andJul~ Hubbard, teachers at Pomeroy Elementary
School, wrote a proposal for and have received lhe Manila Holden .
Jeonings Foundation granL
·
. The $3,000 grant is to be ~ to _develop basic elementary materials needed for hands-on pracbce w11h malh and science.

'4811

EMS units answer calls

1171 CuI I·'II .IUPII-1 Dl. •au•a•

Units of Meigs Emcsgency Services answered 15 caDs for assistance over lhe weekend and lhis morning,
On Saturday_at 12:31 p.m., Racine, Pometoy and Syracuse units
w~nt 10 lll1: accident on County Road .35. Mickey Watson, Jeffrey
Gillen, Allee Bustapa, Angelita Carpenter, .Jason Taylor, French
Caqienter and Maty Taylor were talcen to Veterans Memorial Hospital, At 2:52 p.m.• Pomerey squad went 10 Seeond and LY!In and·
~ Ethel Shasteen to Vetaans. At 2;55 p.m .. Pomeroy and Middlepon units respon4ed to East Second Street for a structure ftre at
-tbe_ B~ Teaford Jll ope.1y. Minor smoke damage was reported to

VB ,eng., P. ateer., P. brakes, auto.
trans., air corid., AM'FM stereo 8 track
tilt .&amp;cruise, remota mii'I'Qr, styled
wheals with trim rings, one local owher,
53,862 mllea.

road

..._.•••

Wol•wlto you to our 1993 CustoMer C:olollratlo11
Oct. 9th &amp; 10th. Como I• and r11l1toir for prl111
to lttglwe11 away. Drawlnl fo llo hold Saturday
~
•fttriiHII It :Jt P.M.
.
Rolrosh11onts wll llotenttl•.
· Brlqln ,..,_.1l1d dial oa a New Car or Jraok 8ad we
·
· wiD b7 to
t1ae .,_L
10&amp; A GOOD .... r.:..
.

••ec or._,

sa .rAcs aoua w110a aoa

Our Service Deplrtment Is ~ Mon•.frl. N; Sat. 8-12
Muffler ShlJp'Mon
;-A; Slt"'&amp;;12-

I, ,

briefs-......:.....

Youth reported in good condition

OLDI. CUft.IIIIUPUMI4 Dl.

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-1

........

. ...

Mon., Tues.; Wed., Fri. 9-7 or
Thurs. &amp; Sat 9-3

air cond., AM/FM atereo cassette
w/premium sound, tilt &amp; crulae, rear
defroster , -rear wiper, P. driver seat, GT
cast alum, wheels, new Brldgeatone tires,
35,000 miles on car, local owner.
WAS •
$10,999

· .

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, Oct-a'ber s, 1992

'

IIMI FORD PIOBI ft I DB.
4 cyl. turbo eng., PS, PB, 5 speed trans.,
·

IPICIIL

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See Scott or Ralph Sheets .

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Vol. 43, No.114
Copyrtghled1882

a1
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1989 Ford RongerXLT, air..........S6995
1988 Ch~vy Sl 0, air.,.............. 54595
1987 _Ford longer XLT, air~ .. ••••••• 54995
1986 GMC ~Ton Pickup •. :........S359S
1983 Ford XTon Pickup, auta••• s2795

owns.

The: Teamsters called UJ.&gt;OD
Congress 10 conduct hearings mto
whether the Press was trying to
eliminate lhe Post-Gazette or violale antitrust laws.
"I think that's ridiculous,"
Leser said of the ·union' s claim.
"We-can't get rid of lhe Pittsbmgh
Post-Gazette.
We have· a contract
:.:.froo.:.::m:.:D:;..·.::l_ _ __ _ _ _ __
0 ~~- C; .;o: :n: :ti: :nu:- ;ed'-"_
that runs through 1999." ·
Post-Gazette Editor John Craig _
ncnu-and opJ)onents of lhe issue. season grasses. David Bean, New
said
lhe sale should not affect lhe
Molt of lhe 16-page review centers Zealand Grazing CQnsultant and
joint
operating agreement, 'but he
011 fannina and food, issues tra(li.
Fencing Expen will be in atten- could not say when or how the
tionaUy a{gned with lhe Extension dance. Most of us know lhe host
Post-Gazette wiD .be able ·to pubService. It is not a exhaustive
~L
his
role
_
as_
S.C.S.
liilt
account .or legal .review. O.S.U;
Press Editor Angus McEachran
Extension Service Director Dr.
Edward VoUborn is the GaiDa said aU 210 editorial worlrers will
eith Smith, emphasizes that Couaty Extension Agent, Agri·
remain on duty inde_fmilcly.
Extensioa is not taking sides on the culture. •
iuile bul putting together some
educatiooll
so people
can
mate upinformation
their o'll'll minds.
Stop ,.-----~--------------.....
or can for a free copy.
The Tenth Annual Gallia Coun·
ty Pride In Tobacco Association,
Annual MeeiinJ will be· Tb~y~
October IS, 7 p.m. at lhe Senior
Citizens Center just west of Gal·
lipoliJ. Reservati~ may be IJIIIde
by calling 446· 7007. Mr. Steve
Newton, Director of the Peanut,
Tobacco and F&lt;Ritry Department, t--~'-----,----.,..,
for the American Farm Bureau will .,i •
be lhe guest speKer. His topic will
be "A Look to the Future for lhe
Tobacco Industry". Mr. Newton
has. ~ a lot of leadership in
lti 171111 . ., ..
gelling mformation necessary 10
resolve lhe issue on whether c. not
lobacco pioducers should IICCCPt
lea money for tobacco b'sW for

'·

236 SECOID AYE. · GllliPOUS,,.,H
PHOIE 446·3060
. .

1-l'lld ft•N .. 4 Dl..•

2A.Q0.36.00
2()0.250
21.()().31.50
300-500
. ..
21.Q0.31.QO
Male Hogs
14.()().23.00
Pigs
. 29.()().44.00
GoalS
;m~."--·--------------~
., ~~~e=~~C=al~f~Sa:~~=~F~ri~~·~Oc~t.~9,~7~:3~0~

461316

'

'

&lt;-

Kicker:

GALL-IPOLIS
M8TOR CO. ·INC.

:;"Jl:

VEAL:

.

. Low tonight In 30s.
Tuesday, sunny. High In 60s.

29-30-31-37-43-47

Page4

. ..

ons.~~

Pick 3:
417 .
Pick 4:
5416
Super Lotto:

USDA wu required under the •
1990 farm _bill to n:l~ its long- ::
term strategy for l&amp;ficultural trade ~
. by OcL 1, 1991. The docUment has ·
yet 10 be released, and an agency :
offte!aJ 51)'11 it may never be made :
pu1!1ic.
,"
Rep. Bob Wise, D-W.Va., wrote ;
~.P.!cultare Secretary Edward ,
Madiian on lhe one-year anniver- _
sacy of lhe deadline 10 complain ~
thil he has yet 10 see the strategy. ~
But USDA is able to use wiJit it :
has
IOgether to guide.
its.:.r.n
and put
trade-decisi
,..__....
•
..•

Scripps Co. planning to sell
strike-bound Pittsburgh Pre.ss

after Strickland issued a news
l'elease saying he had received a
high rating from lhe National Rifle
. PITTS.BURGH {AP) - The
Association for his opposition to decision to sell The Pittsburgh
gun conbOI. ·
.
· Press is irreversible because there
Strickland said he received an is litde hope of resolving a 4 J(i.
"A" rating from the NRA, "an monlh-old Teamsters strilce, said
identical rating (o that of ... the head of lhe company lhat owns
McE'VI(en on the NRA's election . the newspaper.
year survey.''
·
Cincinnati-based E.W. Scripps
Ms. Briggs responded with a Co. has owned lhe newSpaper for
news reiC$11 quoting, a J976 inter- nearly 70 years. The decision to
view Strickland gave in which he seD it came Friday, a ~Y aft&amp; 1a11ts
said he does not lilte guns.
broke off with lhe Teamsters union,
She said Stricldand, a psycholo- which represents the Pittsburgh
-gist from Lucasville, "shouldn' t Press,, Co.'s delivery driver:s.·.
~ive s(lonsmen and gun ownLet m~ assure you,lhis ts not a
. .he cited a 1976 n_ewspaper . plo:,:." satd Lawren~e A. Leser,
S
prestdent of E.W.-Scnpps Co., at a

I

dark...

Ohio Lottery

Miami '
Dolphins
stun Bills

WASHINGTON (!J&gt;) - · Th e ~
Agriculture Department's long- ~
. la'lllltrlleiY 10 pOIIIOIC U.S. food
and farm producu overseas is a .
year ovadue. A Houle leader says
failure to publish the blue.Print
leaves farmCn; exporters, business~
es and Congress " tol.lllly in lhe •

From ltlllf aad we reports'
inlei'View in which Strickland
IIone,' keeps. a loaded handgun in
LUCASVIlLE
Democratic
......
.,1
·
"I
-~·"
do
15
6th Congressionll -District candi- _q~ saymg,
..... --Y
his bedroom. II makes him feel
date Ted Slricldand-saLfshe will · . •ngunot.\~ guns and I do not own a safe. It's his right, and no one
should eue lhat away liom him. I
~-for Ill~ from . RcilubStrickland said Thursday that he don't think lhe ~t should
_ . oppopeat s campaign ~does not like guns but supports lhe be interfering wilh any law-abiding
er ~a remark she made about his right 10 bear anns. In a recent p-ess citizen who wishe s to keep li
JIOIIli~ on gwu:c_Jntrol.
release, Strickland said he hails firearm." ·
, .~.
·
'\It's llso a q11estion of basic
Strickland saJd Tburs~y that from a large famJ!y of nine. He
U. ~ . Rep. Bob McEwen s c_am- adiled tllll aU of his brothers own self-defense," argues S~ckland.
p~n. ~anag_er Barbara .~nggs · gunsandhlintonan:gularbasis.
"Many Anlericlm feel safe wilh a
m
.a «!esP•cablc charge when • . "She made a serious accusation firearm in lhe house. there should
abe satd 1n I ~~ws ~elease that about my principles and con - be no n:asoo why lhe government
~trickland was .on J!7ord_as _say- science. It was unfair and below or anyone else should take that
mg he ~d forgo h1s-pnqctples ·the belt, •• he said.
right away."
and consctencc 10 tell lhe voters
"I believe that the Second
In addition, Strickland said there
. what~ want 10 ~·"
.
Amendment t~ '!~~ Consti_tution sl)ould not be any n:striction placed
Stric~la~d 1s opposmg guaranlees an indiVIdual's nght to . on· lhe sale, or ownershiJ.&gt; of any
. McE~en. s b1d for re-election 10 lhe ~e:/ and bear arms," Strickland firearms, or any ammunillon used
6lh Dislnct ~
by sponsmen for .hunting, target
Ms. BngjlS late Thursday
"My 88-year-old dad. who lives sliooling or self defense
referred qiiCSIIons about lhe state·
·
ment to McEwen, who d id not
·

~a::!m~c;o:;::~~y

••

1112

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one apat11ne0L

.,.

•

At 4:03 p.m., Scipio Fire Department went to an auto -fire on
Homer Hill. Jell')' Tillis was _lhe OWI_IC£~ At 6:53 p.m., Middleport
squad was sent tp an area behind the JURior hi~. David Eakins was
taken 10 Veterans. At 9:36 p.m., he was talcen to Grant Medical
Center lry Life FlighL At 7:08 p.m .. Rutland unit went to Wright
Road. MiciJ&amp;d R.ose was talcen to Holzer' Medical Cent&amp;. At 7:47'
p.m .• Rutland sq'uad went 10 an accident on McCumbet Road:
Miranda I.ong and Jessica Hatfield were talcen to Veterans. At
f"''.ll:S6~ P·m .. Pomeroy •q11ad went. to. Butternut Aven!le. John
Umford vias taken 10 Vetmns. ·
·
·
· On Sunday at I: IS a.m., Racine unit went 11J Old Portland Road
and ~ Mike Henry to V~s. At 4:44 B,m .. Racine squad went
to Main Street for Alena Reese, who was tiilten to Vetc:nns. At 7
a.m.. Pomeroy and Spacuse units went to U.S. Route 33 for an lllito
aa:ident. Rran Aupllerger was lre8ted atlhe scene, and Jodie Rope
and James Henry were lalten to VeteranS. At 9:55 p.rn., Syracitse
~~~~tel' Street. Ral:hel ~was Iaten '?Pleasant
At \:52 a.m. on Ma)day, Ril!;ine squad walt to Vine Street for
April Hudson. She was lllten to Vetttans. At 7:45 a.m., Pomeroy
unit went 10 Old Forest Road. Glaia lhle Wis. '!cad on arrival. .

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TOY RUN • The Meigs County Bikers held
their annnal Christmas toy run Saturday. Tbe
group Is pictured bere leaving the parking J,ot in

Pomeroy. ,iU a result or the run, many children
in !be (OUBty will be provided with toys ror
Cbtlitifi'nas they might not otherwise receive.

Seven injured in weekend wrecks

By JIM FREEMAN
· OVP News Staff
Seven minor injupes resulted
from two of five wreclcs investigated in Meigs County Saturday and
Sun~y . by lhe Gallia-Meigs Post of
the State Highway Patrol.
A Pomeroy man was cited after
a one-vehicle wreck on Ohio 12A in
SutlPn TQwnship Satur~y around
7:30a.m.
. George R. Sutton, 54, 42040
Lovers Lane, was westbound on
Ohio 124 and ran off lhe right side
of lhe !Old, lhe patrol teponed. His
pickup lhen came back onto the
roadway and went off the left side
of lhe road before striking a ditch
and a telephone pole.
- No injuries were reponed. Damage to Sisson's 1990 Dodge Dakota
was listed as moderate.
Sisson was cited for failure to

con~~ ~·e were transponed to

Veterans Memorial Hospillil after a
or.e-l:ar wreck on Portland Road in

Lebanon Township around noon
Sarur~y .

According 10 the -patrol, Alice
M. Bostapn,lB, 2715McEiwin SL,
Akron, was southbound on Portland Road and drove off lhe right
"ide of lhe road. Her car went over
an embankment and overturned
onto its top in a smaU creek.
_Bostapn and her passengers,
Mary A. Taylor, 15, Cheshire, and
Jeffery Gillen, 15, French Carpenter, 14, and Jason Taylor, 13, all of
Racine, were transported by lhe
Mei~s CountY Emergency ~cal
Servtce to VMH where they were
treated and released.
.
Damage.to Bostapn ~ s 1980 Plymoulh Horizon was listed as mod·
crate.
No citations were issued.
No injuries were reported after a

Presidential debates to begin Sunday

W.ASHINGION (AP~- Presidenllal campa!gn debates between

.-. rt a·gree·s to hear ·
COu
.P-ar o'c·h.Ia I'sc h00J·· case
.
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one-car accident on Ohio 124 in
Long and a passenger, Jessyca
Lebanon Township Saturday F. Hatfield, 15, Racine, were transaround 4:10p.m. · ·
ported to VMH by lhe EMS where
Lisa M: Pape; 23, 30485 Bashan · they.were treated and released.
Rd .. Racine, was westbound on
Damage to Long's · 1985
Ohio 124 when her car went off the Chevrolet Celebrity was listed as
right side of lhe road and struck a moderate and disabling.
ditch, the pabOI reported.
Long was· cited for failure to
Damage to Pope's 1991 Chevro- conuol. ·
let Cavalier was listed as light No
A Worthington man was cited
citations were issued.
after a one-vehicle wreck on U.S.
Two minor injuries were report- 33 in Bedford Township Sunday
eel after a one-car wreck on Grove aroun d 7 p.m.
Road in Rutland Township around
Ryan R. Augsburger, 20, 611
6:30p.m. Saturday.
Morning Street, was southbound on
Miranda D. Long, 18, 1183 U.S. 33 when he lost conbOl of his
McCarley Dr., Columbus, was vehicle in a iight curve, lhe patrol
northbound on Grove Road a'rid reported. His vehicle went off lhe
lost conbOI in a rigllt curve. Her car left side of the road, stru ck a
went off lhe left side of lhc road. guardrail and went over an
struck an embankment and over- embantment.
tunied.

_

George Bush and Bill Clinton are
s~hed~ledto bel\in next Sunday
mght ID St. Louts. Independent
"candidate ROSS Perot was invited to
participate ~nd will attend, his

. ~~~~e~~nt on Sat~y ~ : r:nce presidC~Jtial ~bate,

set a COCIIJiressed, ni~e-d~y
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timetable for lhe lhree presidential
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WASHINGTON (AP) _ the Salpointe Catholic High School.
encounters and one vice presidenSupreme Court today set lhe ~tage
The Education of the Handi-· tiaJ debale- a series of confronta'
for a key ruling· on government- · capped Act requireNtatcs receiv· tioo! with"ll!e potential for s!wJting
church relations. agreeing to decide ing federal funding to offer all up lhe mce for lhe White House.
wheth·e r _public school districts handicapped children a " free
Each debate will be 90 minutes
·
public
education,"
and
long,
t,alte place be'ore
must pay for sign-language inter" a live audi·
preters . used by deaf children
funds are available for sign· ence and be open·IO all subjects. A
attending parochial schools..
·- lllllguage illlerJnters.
variety of formats will be
The justices said they will
School district officials said - employed.
review a ruling that denied such . ~lhy ~dinpay aU hcosts ~associated
The presidential debates will be
public f~ fora deaf boy who ~· provlmng sue an_mterpeter O.ct. ll in. St, Louis, Oct. 15 in
. attended a religious hiSh school in 1f James~~ public schOOl or Richmond, Va., and.OcL 19 in East
Tucson, Ariz.
.'B
P'lialvatefusedsdlool.
Lansing. Mich.; according to the
At issue is the inherent tension . But
o c s re
to. pay joint statement by Roben Teeter
between tWo separate clauseS of the f«»: sencJi!1&amp; to interpreter iniO Sal· and Mickey Kantor, chairmen of
Constitution's F'ICSt ~endlner!t- pomte High. ·
.
. the Republican and Democratic
one barring 1 government "estab'rhe -Zobresu aued the school campaigns .. The' vice presidential
·li,sbment" of religion and the other district over its refuall, but James 11ebatc was set for Oct. 13 in
ban:in&amp; lhe pemment from •'pro- has been paduated ·from Salpointe Atlanta.
,
hibiting the free exercise" of reli· durin!,thci legal battle, last June. · The presidential debate formats
glut. .
· Thb~ ~restahat~,_a_hl tci 'dbe rt:im • broke down this way:
· Larry and Sandra Zobrelt liked
.or w . u ...y pill a 11gn- · · -Oct. II : a panel of questionthe Catalina Foothille SchoOl Dis- language interpreter .who .helped ets, the format IIUJII had wanted
lrict in 198'7. to provide their son, James for his four years in high · for aU lhe confrontaions.
James, with a sign·lanfW~~C inier- . scl!ool.
:....OCL 15: a single mnderaiOr
prettr to help him in hiS studi~ at
who ~ ~'solicit questionS from a

nonTr:

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Jive audience and ask appropriate
follo~·up ~uesti?ns," a fonnat in
lme With amton s requests.
-Oct. 19: a single moderator
for the. first half, a panel for the

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lhe campa!gnS settled on lhe smglemoderator format.
.
.
All were scheduled for 7 p.m.
except the Oct. 15 debate, which ..
wiD be at 9 p.m., all EDT.'
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GfOUD d

CfeW 0

f

USAir goes on strike
WASHINGTON (AP) - Thou,:
sands of ground crew members
struclc USAir today, disrupting the
·airline's service in dozens of cities
' in dispute over wage.concessions
and work. rules.
Seventy~five pel'Cellt of lhe airline's flightS were talcing off, how.
ever; according to spokeswoman
Nancy Vaushan. s~ said lhe airline was llllking arrangements with
other carriers 10 accept passeng~
. whose fltghts wac cancelled.
The US Air Express and USAir
Shuttle serviceS were not affected,
she said.
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-'C ommentary
The

D~y

111 coart Bbeet
Pamervr, Oldo

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. ·. wvuno TO TD ~or TD...,.,. liMON .ARBA

l'llhlllher

'CHAIU..ENI&lt; HOEFLICH
GeneniMIIIJIKCr

A.......,t l'UIIIIIIeriCoatroller

I..ETI'I!RS OF OPINION are wela&gt;me. ThOy obould be lUI than 300 :

wordo. A!l )Otten are ::1:1 to editing and mUll be liSned with DIIDe,

· oddnou and 1e1opb«ww a
. No unoisnecJ !etten will be publilbed. I..CUen
,, obould be in so00 Wte, lddmuins iiiUOI, DOl penoaolilieo.

..

.:Group pla~s. tent city to
~illustrate homeless plight

ICAN SPANKVU.

•IColumbusl66•

W. VA • .

Wedallday tllrousl Priday:
Sotltii..Ceatral Olllo
W.ednesday, cbance of showers.
Tonisht, clear. Low 35 to 40.
. Frost possible in low· lyi~=· Lows in the 40s. Highs mid 60s to
Winds liglttlUIII variable.
y, .lower. 70s. Thursday ,!lid Priday,
fair. Lows in the 408. Highs in lite
sunny. High in theCIIJPCf 60s.
60s.
'
Extftded forecast:

- -· Area deaths___;,_
Frederick S~ngsley .

direction of Ewing Funeral Home
·
Services for Frederick A. "Fred" in Pomeroy.
Billingsley, 39, of Puneroy Pike' in
Pomeroy will be held on Tuesday Gloria lble
Gloria "Maybelle" !hie,
atl p.m. lit Victory Baptist Chwch
Pomeroy,
died this morning, Monjn Middleport, witb R.ev. James
day,
OcL
5,
1992, at lite residence
Keessee.
~- Billin&amp;sley died 011 Tues- of her nephew, Prank Iltle.
. day, September 29, 1m at Graill
Arrangements
will
be
announced by Ftslter Funetal Home
Merucaf Ceo~ ,in Colwnbus.
Arrangements are under tbe in Middleport.

--Livestock report---

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,.--Meigs
annpun~e.~entsI.Cco to llllke
attendmg brms snacks for the

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repairs

.Repii-s to the mw water line in
the Leadins Creek Conservancy
District have been canceled for
today and rescheduled for tom«·
row {Tuesday). Water custome!ll
should make necessary provisions
water
d · this ·
ur:!or~:.::C conserve
•
Preceptor Bela Beta Chapter,
Beta Sigma P!D Sorority, will meet
T = = at 7:30p.m. at Grace
E·
Parish House. Host , 5
are Norma Custer and Jean. Wr:ay.
''Together We Graw in Health~

Martin Schram

.!t

pro=

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sJ:n.

The
Citizens Dance Club
will bold dance Friday fnim 8-11
· C · S ·
p.m. at the MellS ottnty entO~
Citizens Center. Music will be provided by Smokey Mountain
Drifteri. Public invited. Those -

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Bush, Clinton
resume campaigns

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Tholle whO do lite 11101t good in decided to let off on a trail that fol- broad-brimmed bat IDl still carried other peo,Ple, they put together a
. the wmct are often unaware of iL . lowed the Juniata River Into .the . a a.pet-l,.g. Oite day, Gil~ life of thetr,own. If our oudook and
T1tis -ndy ia true ol manv foothills of the Alle&amp;~ny Moun- as the Quaka' - cross1nJ
behavior is attractive and 'ex!tibits .
of the cieftY;;bo bave beell noati'- tajns. At lite end of the 1J1i1 wu a Bridse someOne grasped his ann · those qualities that we always assooated by tliieir oarisbiooen fci my
and said, "I have found y,ou at ciate with lite rare best moments in
---'---UIIIIIIIII.CieqyllallofE'ame.
laste~ - . _. ~ ~
.!ife, tlt!n_ tho~ w"tchin.a.us ;will - .
There is atill time to sead in
This wu the 1110ry he told Grel· 10co~rate iltose qualtues tnto
~ oomimnm, too. The address
let "I heard you pac1t one day in their lives.
.
11: UIIIUDI Cilqy, P.O. Box 1951,
a clearinJ in Pennsylvania at the
But it works the other way too•
Columbus, Oltio43216-19Sl.
1oglnJ CIIIIP when: be wu aoinl end of the Jlllllila Trail. 1 was 1 ·
I aerved 1 few r-s 11110as beThe fOliC In many of the 1ectera ! to pacit.
·
J.oaer and I relilrned fur an axe 1 man of the Coulll)' Grand Jury in
of nomina,tion tbat readen have
"After a loall:iclll'neY 011llol» luiifleft behind. I heard som~ my hometown. What we ·on the
wrilltlllll far ia: "I doo't think our ·back" -as &lt;f'~y ~ up the
in oar hat. 1 peered jury ~d mosUy were criminal
. pastor lmow1 !low much good he .preacher's ~tory 'be;reacbed
a c:hlnt In the wan aldiiW · c~ tnvplving people wbo - ·
doel." '
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the ... ol dlo , ..... TrilL 'J'Ia'e, your and~~
nclthillll bal c:rime mel po¥llt)' and
He ·may never bow. In oth• · ·nre 0110111h, were 1 few cablu ·
"You weae
· a ltltiiOII, dearadation their whole live•
~ lbe reaill become evideat cllllllnd lloaDd dlo hal in wbil:h . IA' china it eo no one; ~ out· tlwilvah- And from what they see
· ouly IIIIICb ' - · ..
. the lagaa a B• dlo ~ - .. tide, hcird everythin&amp; you said, they put toptlter a~ of their own
·, . -Jn lila boot ''CJeU!na ne Flllh dm1eid. Tile Iogen bid moved ·then tDid dlo other 1oga1 about IL . t1ta 111m1 0111. aqk:ally,to be very
You Neocl," Rev. 1 - Ooidoo oa. (Jrellot's joutney bid been In · Now~ of usll'e p!achcn like much IillO •iaallllOuodtbem.
Gilby ida dlo 110ry of a di*- Vlin.
•
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To realize that "someone.II
· tive Quaker preach~ aamed · "Then Stephen Orellet did a
As Stepben GrelJet discovered, · Wlfdlinl you" ca&amp;ieaa responai·
Stepbea Grellot, who lived .In qiiOIIJ IbiD&amp;. He entenld 1111 llulllld someone 11 watebing us, often . bility.
·
laiJ HniiOII to·lbe bare . when we 1re lellt aware of iL All
It aiiO_proYidel u with • · Pblll4o1phil Ia tile 17001. He .
. ~ waae a bivid-biMwwl hit, [walls . t empty beacbu. After- thruaJh life people arc taklns . derful opportunity , to mate tbe .
alwayJ carried a carpet·bq and wwd, be mOUDted 11!1 bane llld iiOdce of the way we atand up to world IIIli the people In It a 11tt1e ·
alwayulidllletalddloL '
· lilllll.tiO~:· t of·· .._ llfeaod.bowwelelci.Ofailureand ~~.oarPieri'ID.ploll. a:t.:t:
Oftea be woald 10 b)'
But • WM o01 die W
""" diiiiJDOIInemont.
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COICit 10 1111118 OIII(J'IIIIIICl IIISh 1101)'. Y-lller,DOW. old GreJ. ' lf1illll what they ace in us and in ed wrtllr l'or 'Neo!WIIIPII•I... Iller••
to tbuealera.
Then one day he_ let viJ!Iid Loldon. Hudll wore ~
, · · ' . · ··
·
prile A_..tioL
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Tleorge R. Pliigenz

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Making
the
world
·a
little
bit
better
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complex lifter losing two engines.
Fourteen bodies were found
after ·the Sunday evening aash bui

snack !able.
HOI R~_.lanned
.
The Sctpt~ Volunteer F1re
Dejlarlment will bold a boa roast
~ beginning 8l 11 a.m. The
dinner mcluiles rolst pork, mashed .
polatoCS and 81'1yY. green beans. a
roll and drink._ Cost is $4 for adults
8J!d $2 for ch!'dren·. A !fl~CIIlr pull
will be held with wetgh-tn a~ 5 ft•l!l·
and puH at.6 p.m. Classes me ude
800 for children and 900, 1,000,
and 1,100. ~ere is a $4 fee for
adults..There IS a 50 pertCIII pay-

next big civic project is that Will be
attempted in this town," said Anne
Hall, a member of AmeriFlora's
executive commiuee. .
The Columbus 500 auto race
was beld downtown each year friJm
19851!Jl988..lt folded for lack of a
$250,000 subsidy. .'Iii 1989, the eight-month exhibit
"S011 of Heaven: Imperial Arts of
China" required a $1.7 million rescue with.nublic money.
Amerffiora will close Oct. 12
well below auendance expectalions. Corp01111e ,guarantors will.be
called on to bail it out should it lose
money.
· "We have not found that match
for us culwrally - something the
philanthropic community is ready
to pay for and the residential cotn·
munity' is willing to support," Ms.

Court news
Marriage license
A marriage license has been
issued in Meigs County Probate
Court to Samuel Wayne
Somerville: 38, and Regina Lynn
Smith, 31, both of Pomeroy.
,
Divorces proces1ed
An itcbon for divon:e has been
filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court baY S.andra L. Stepp,
l'omcmy, against John Paul s~.
Orient
.
A-divorce has been granted to
Coral D. Davis, from William D.
Davis.

Stocks

Camp 7230 will have a Halloween
Pizza Party Saturday at 6:~ p.m. at
the Woodmen Hall in Burlingham
Th
'll f :.1. ·
hi
e CBI!'P WI urn ..... ptzza, o
dqss, Cider and doughnu~. There
wtll be a family door prtze. All
memben 1re encouraged to attend
and bring a friend.
..
Meetfn~ ca~led

Haber M'""'-1 c-•-r
•..- _,..
Jl'rlda;y, 0et. 2
.
Dlacba
C h ':If' H
at erlne
olman, Elmer
McWhorter, Mrs. Thomas Moore
and soo; Bryan Swann. .
.
Frlda;y, Oet.l births
Mr. and Mrs. Jolnty Ellis, son
Crown City; Mrs. and Mrs.
Saunders, son, Gallipolis and Mr.
~riiJfnald Waush. son,
o~l!..p.
Saturda;y, Oct. 3
No discharges. ·
Salllrday, Oct. 3
Blrtll
Mr. and Mn. Michael Nance,
11011, Chesapeake.

Irvu;

The Daily SeDiinel
(UWtll__,
P,blllbo&lt;l

"''I elion&gt;DGB,

M011day

lloloaP i'ridaJr, II Coari SLP PwiG),

Ohio by lllo Ohio VoDey oblilbl..
Compao~altl-a locjl..~_..,.,
Oblo Cl5ioOjii Ph. 1112·11118.
....
,_...
atP q, Obio.

::-;•&amp;alt..,

v:t 733 Tlolrd 1~17.

...

I'OIITMA8TIIR:-- ~to
Tloo Dal16tttSoaliasl, 111 Covt 81.,
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0"111.
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8111WCaiPTION &amp;ArD

Middleport Department Store

011o wou...........................................f:.~
Claa M-.th...........................,,,,, ........; .M
Olio YUr..................................- ....UO

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·Wille Ollservmg New H01rs Begl-.g

BINClta
PIIICI:

Doll!o-.......................................-26 0..111
8ul

loaoDOidwblzc'"=.tboeoJri.

·--~·- lloTho
=-••lllrM,morll

pl~.he
plane·s two right-widg ·
e~ tore off sltortly af1u ~ ·

· The engines landed in a late.
western Ohio, and 17 ·points in
It was supper time when tbe •
southwestern Ohio.
plane plowed into the croot where
The candidates had virtually the two apartment huildiop meet. a
identical Sbell$1h amon~ voters of blast of igniled jet fuelllJ!d!ing Off
their respect1ve part1es, while a ragi1111 blaze that took four hours
GleM enjoyed a two-point margin to control.
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among lndependeniS. 1
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Pulverized or burned were some
The DispatclJ said Glenn held a 80 apartments, olflcially home io
nine-point advantage among 239 people but tbou&amp;htiO be boaswomen, while DeWiRe led among ing far more. The Slricb:o Bijlmermen by five points.
mcer (Buy'l-mur-MEER) C001p1ex .
Poll participant,s were asked if is known to bouse many illegal
they are more supportive of the aliens. who would not be lisled 011
"pro-life group" or the "pro- OOCupiiiC)I recards.
_
choice group" in the abortion · In the chaos, police ...._ to bold
debate.
back distrsusht residents wboie
Glenn held a 55 percent to 36 loved ones were trspped by tbe
percent lead over DeWine among inferno and people were seen
those who said they were pro- jumping from windows to esriPe
choice.
the flames.
DeWine had an advantage of S9
Mayor Ed Van Tbijil told a .
peri:ent to 32 percent over Glenn · dawn news conference that 209
among those who described them- people were unaccounled for.
selves as pro-life.
·
Shortly after dawn, lines Of .
hard-batted n:scue wb:as c,anicd
stretchers iniO the coolooed-off dis-

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The name lit Prosecuting AUOrney Steven L. Story was omittcil
from Friday's report on the opening of Meip Couaty G.O.P. Headquarters. Story was one of sevCial
county officeholders who rsjSIJ'd
in the ribbon-cubias c:en:mony.

SIGN UP TO
RECYCLE .
IN MIDDLEPORT

CALL JEAN TRUSSEI L
VILLAGE HAU
182-6782
Nllll8d by 411 Grilli,

lin. lurciWa a...

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11

···-:=

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lestable/stackable
bins
provided for ~-:c.:
· collection!
.Curbside pickup of recrclablesl
You can make a difference br ioi•l•
· · ro•r •••a•bors and recrde In , ..
Vll..ge of Middleport!

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.Clarification

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t1tere still alive is minimal," said
Fire Chief Hugo Ernst. He Said it
could take four days to move tile
rubble aside and retrieve lite bodies
because one or the buildings is 011
the verge of collapse.
The_pilot had rqJOitiCd that both
engines -~ one wing cau~ht rue
after takeoff for Tel Avtv from
Schipbol, llllll •1!•1¥"' jel fad itt a
lake before crashing, airline officials said.

(four, six, ooe, tltree, ooe, sill)

llall:d:

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4-6-1-3-1~

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10:00 AM-8:00 PM

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CLEVELAND (AP) ·- There
was onl: ticket sold naming an six
numbers drawn in Saturday night's
Super Lotto drawins, and each
winning ticket is worth
$24,000,000, the Q!lio Lottery said. .
Pick 3 Numbers
4·1·7 .
·(four, one, seven)
Pick 4 Numbers
5-:4-1-6
(five, four, one, six)
Super Lotto
29-30-31-37-43-47
(twenty-nine, thirty, thirty-one,
thirty-seven, forty -three, fortyseven)
· ·
Kicker

No oat.oripil.a by
In
anu • .._.. ltDIM Mrri• 11m11 II

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beg&amp;n.

·~e hope that anyone is il)

Lottery results

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aster zone as the dining for

Hall said.
Ron Poole, assistant to Mayor
Greg LaShutka, points out city suecesses, including designatiQn by
the United Nations as a trade point
center. The city is ainong 16 such
centers in the world and the only
one·in NM!t AmC'lica.
· ''They came. They looked.
They saw. They liked," he said.
Poole also said there are plans
for a carao·hub involving thCRus·siail airline Aeroflol.
Columbus often is forgonen in
the shadows of 'Cleveland and
. Cincinnati, Ms. Hall said. Yet it
has a grnwili&amp; population, and its
unemplo)'l!lent rate is coosistently
below the state and .national rares.
"Even we ldnd of make fun of
ourselves, saying we're a telrible
place to visit but a wonderful place
to live," MS. Hall said
·
A city must try new things, said
George Zimmermann, Slate tourism

.......~wlllbo
...........
JMII ,.n..tllool

Friday

~~ '

Am Ele Power.....:... .......... .32 1/2
Ashland Oil........................ 24 3/4
AT&amp;T.................................41 5/8
Bank One.,.........................44 1/8
Bob Evans ..........,............. .18 1/8
Owming !;hop.................. 31 7/8
~ Holding ......;.............. ~/8
F eral Mogul.................... 5/8
Goodyear T&amp;R .............. :...60
lKey Centmion ................. 20
Lands End..........................27 3/4
Limited Inc....................... 20 1/2
Multimedia lnc ..................24 3/4
Rax RestauranL ...................9{32
Reliance Elecaic.......... ..... .16 3/4
Robbins&amp;Myers ................14 3/4
Shooey's Inc...................... 16 1/8
Star Bank ...........................30 318
Wendy Int'l:. ........ ........ ...... l2 1/4
Worthington Ind . ............... 18 7/8
Stock reports are the 10;30
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
Ellis and Loewl or Gallipolis.

N••m
s
Now
NO..

10:00 AM-6:00 PM

•

tion of the two strickea 10-stoiy
buildings in the low-income com-

director.

Mllllbor: Tho -'-ioled Pnoo, oNt tho
Ohio No-c,r Alooclollcol, N.-.r
Abei11ol..
Bruloam

Mon~ Tillrs. &amp;·Sat•.

'

the search for more victims wu
hampered by lbe precirious CXJOdii.

_ArneriFlora enters final week

Monday} ·Oct. 12, 1992

-.c· ·

•

.

The·Mcip Band Boosttts meetins, scheduled for tonight (Monday) has been cencelcd due to comDAYTONA BEACH, Aa. (AP) munity band practice at the band
- Bill Clintoo set off 011 a bus caravan across Florida toda)', accusing room. The boOSicn will meet next
President Bush of "trymg to tum · ~ ~o:-:&gt; instead.
tbe clock back" on wooien and
Pomeroy ·Chapter No. 1~6.
minorllies just as they were puised Ordtl'
of the E.-em Sw, will meet
to make dramatic pili&amp;.
Tuesdly
7:30p.m. • the Chester
Clinton and runnin&amp; mate AI Muollic 8l
Temple. New officers will
Gore promoted their cdtJCIIIion and be elected A potluck dinner will be
environmentalJiolicies aa they
ate:: . ~.m.
~_!e~~
began the campatgn's final month, · lteld
· AM
tomeet
.
....._;y,
.....-..4
showing surprisin&amp; ·resilience in
Meigs County AMVETS, Otap- .
Mrs, Ronald Waugh and son.
Flotlda and other traditional tee No. 1942, and Vietnam Veter·
Blrtll
Republican s!I'OII&amp;bolds across the ans Win meet Tuesday • '7 p.m. at
Mr. and Mrs. Guillermo Soria,
South.- .•
.
11011• Jactson.
ihe
I;&gt;AfJiuilding
in
Pomeroy.
Before busing across central
'
Florida, Clinton told a predominantly black audience at Bethune
Cookm• CQ11ese that Bush's veto
' of legislation to resister voters
dtey get driyer's licenje8 was .
.
shuttina. out milliool•
"Itllmolt seems lite Mr. BIBb
and the ltepublicans ttre trying to
"iurn the.clock *k on the young,
the women, the ~ Americans
and other minoritlcs in'lltis coun·
try,'-' Ointon sai4 "This president
did not w• more of you to vote.''
But Clinton said women and
blacb Would Ollke thmttic pina
in Consreu this year deapite
Buah 'a veto and UFJed bia youn1
audience to repter to ¥ota before
fast-IIJI)I'OICltin deadllnM. .
· "We arc clian1ln&amp; America, .
even thou•b some people don't
want tt to cbaltF·" ainiCu laid.

wltea

·.,.-bed

·v

A survey conuucteu Dy the
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
newspaper
a month ago showed
newspaper poll showed ~ DemoGlenn
leading
DeWine by 49 percratic Sen. Joltn Glenn is figlitia&amp; a
cent
to
40
percenL
.
.
ti&amp;ht race with Republican cbal·
Glenn,
71,
is
~king
a fourtlt
leil&amp;er Mike DeWine.
·
·
term
in
the
Senate
.
Results of a mail survey among
DeWiRe, 45, has been lieutenant
2,021 resisteted Ohio voters
·
governor
for. two years. He had
shoiJ'(ed that 47 percent of the
served
eight
years in the U.S.
respondents favored Glenn while
House
of
Representatives
•. two
44 percent chose DeWine, The
years
in
the
Ohio
Senate
and
four
Columbus Dispatclt rep&lt;Xted today.
years
as
Greene
County
prosecutor.
Tbe newspaper said 9 percent
In h\St week's poll, DeWine led
said they were undecided. ,
Glenn
in central; west and southThe poll was conducted by the
newspaper from SepL 28 through west Ohio. Glenn led in the north·
Thursday.
.
east li!Kl southeast regions.
They were even in northwest
It bas an estimated margin of
error of plus or minus three per- Ohio.
Glenn had an 18-point advancenlage po
. ints, _!lleaning Glenn's.
actual lead rast week could ·have lage in heavily Democratic north·
been as lan!e as 50 pen:ent to. 41 eastern Ohio. He 1M by nine points
percent, oi DeWine cOuld baye led across southeastern Ohio.
by as much as 47 percent to 44 perDeWine led Glenn by 13 points
in
central Ohio, by 14 points in
cent
. .. .

::!::

~ ,. ,

Berryls World ·

smashed through an. apartment
·

~ beC'itlhNonnaT~, ~~~ pJua party
~- · :'noed ~
Modem Woodmen of America . Hospital news

':em

..•..
.•

AMSTERDAM, Netherlands than~ peQjlle/ cared killed when
· (AP) -The fnatmn finally ovei, · iiD El AI airlines cargo jwnbo jet

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) higher.
.
Direct. livestoclt prices and receipts . Slaughter steers: choice ti(;.00at selected bu_}'iag puints Monday 75.50; select 61.00-72.00.
cou;..mus,.Ohio (AP) - Is
Slaughter lteifcn: choice 66.00- Coluinbus struggling for an identity
by the Ohio l,)epartment of Agri.. culture:
74.», select 60.00-70.1)9.
or trying too bard to be known to
Cows: uneven, 1.00 lower to the wmct7
Barrows and gilts: fuHy steady;
.
demand moderate. .
1.00 higher; all cows 53.75 and . In the past four years, Ohio's
U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs., country down.
capilal has lost an auto lace, hosted
points, 40.7541.75, a few 42.25; . Bulls: uneven, 2.00 lower to an ill-fated exhibit of Chinese art,
3.00 hisher; all bulls 65.00 and' and receiyed lukewarm response to
plants 41.7S4275.
.
.
U.S. 1-2, 21(),.230 lbs., country down.
a horticultural exhibition, AmeriVeal calves: shatply lower; Flora '92. ·
points, 39.00-40.50.
u.s. l-3, 230-260 lbs., cOuntry choice 110.00 and clown. · ""•
And the city ·or 64S,Il0a people
Sheep and lambs: mostly higher; is still one of the lar"esl citi~ in
points, 39.SQ-41.00.
.
Receipts Friday 8,600. ~stimat­ choice woOls 38.00-59.00; choice the country without a :i.ajor profes·
clips 45.00-60.50; feeder lambs slonal sports team, altltougb it has
ed teeeipts Monday 7,000. .
.
- Prices-from The l'rodaCers Live~ 65.00 and down; old sheep 33.00 lried to get one.
and clown.
"You kind of wonder wltllt the
stock Associatioo:
•
Caalc: uneven, 1.00 lo~ to .50

lf our next preside~ truly wants assure they·won't succumb to the oi' the Progressive Policy Institute and Germany, one-and-a-halftimes
to seize coottol of the government lure of grasping· power by gainipg (a moderate Democratic think the ratio in the United Kingdom,
·
that he'll be presiding over, here is tUrf. He should give each Cabinet tank), our federal government loses S&amp;ys Shapiro.
a radical .idea that may be his best secretary a prime mission of cut- some 600,000 workelll every year . Federal ~nel numbers .even
- - - - " " - : " - - - - - due to retirements, resignations and climbed shghtly' during the Rea-and perhaps.only -. hope;
terminations. And every year, our gan-Bush years, even while cutting
.
A Musical Chairs CabineL
federal government hires another · goveml!ient was great fodder for
This is· an idea. born out of a
600,000 to replace them - plus a speeches. We edged up fnm 2.007
pathetic but timc-.tested truth: Cabinet officials enter their offices bub- tiog people and paper, without cut- few more. This is a turnover of million civilian employees in 1981
roughly 20 percent of the federal to 2.155 million in 1991 (slats
bling with bromides about cunlng tiagaovemmentservicetothepub0
.
\VOI'k force annually, says Shapiro, exclude now privati~ed postal
fat, but no sooner do they sink into
lic."The
vast
growth
has
been
in
who
is also a leading e~onomic · employees). ln,1991, federal pertheir chairs than they become
sonnel salary and benefits for ctvilinstant captives, enveloped !Uid the ~le who are monitoring and adviser to Bill Clinton.
int...,.;..,...." by the mentality of the auditing the people who ~ doing
lf our new·Musical Chairs Cabi- iims consumed 7 percent of our
f
· the
net does not replace 100,000 of ·-$1.36 uillion budget
oofi~J; whiclt dicy siL Power,
0 runmns
sovem- those wbo leave, we'll save. about
Could ·wo survive such ctits7
·prestige and greatness in history the work
are suddenly confused wilh bigness :~:~S:ti~~~the $4 billion a year. Do it four years Consider ~he State Department,
·
in a row and we'll save about $16 where we had 25,990 employed as
of buildings and of the numbers of
chief execuuve
.................
'
'
In
two
years,
our
billion. Clin.ton has
cut' of last March. Would our foreisn
people
workin&amp;
inside
them.
So
._.._...
'
.,,,
.
wiH.strilte up the band-w, Cabi· paired 'f
secre~&amp;ries
pl11n1e
into
Cabinet
;: • ln 1942. 50 )'Qill ago, tbc SL LoWs GMdina1s .wOn the World Series,
1 we cut
net officials who've stteamlined - ting by attrition only 1 ,000 jobs policy really l!e ID1
ill be all ed over four years:
all the way back to the 23,400 we
•:tour pmes to ooe, defeating lite New York Y1111kees by a score of 4-2 at turf-buildinta::f:er people-trim- th · d
etr epanments w
·ow
Most of us have become con- had on the job at State in 19817
Ylllkee Sbldium.
.
·
·
ming. They
f« bigger budto
march·
around
to
a
new
depart·
vinced
that our federal government And how about Tteasury, which
•; In '1947. in lite lint tdeviscd White HoUse address, President Truman gets with lite dilliCior rl the Office ment, and anocber round of strelltl·
::ub:d •Americans 10 refnin from CSiiDtl meat on Tuesdays ln1 poultry on of Manuement and Buda:et. who linin&amp;. Those who've failed to cut just isn't givin&amp; us our money's climbed from 123,900 in 1981 to
: ·Thundaya in onlr.r to belp IIOCkpile snin fur lllrVillll people in Europe. . i3. afler all, but a teanunate serving will fail to mate tbe president's worth of good sovernance. After 160,200 in 1991 - would our
cut. They'll get a plaque and a all, we're paying more than $100 recessim have been even worse·if
·: • In 1953, Earl Warren was sworn in as the 14th chief justice of the the same !X*lt.
billioo in salary and benefits to our we'd stayed 8l the old leve17 ,
The only way to change the old goodbye.
::Unilill4 Sta~e~,sui:cee!Ung Fred M. Vinson. .
. . ·
.
All this cutting n.eed not pm- " federal civiliatremployeescannual-- ~ Can we affmd to try a Musical
;. In 1.962, 30 years 11110. lite Beatles' fust hit, "Love Me Do," was fust thinking is with new rules. The
new _,;"""' ·sltould announce lite duce nwsive hernorrha&amp;ing. But it ly.
Chairs .Cabinet? Can we afford not
· •:telead in the Unill:d KiiJ&amp;dnm. . ·
Shrinkin$ for s.trength; The to7
·
;.&gt;In 1986, American Eupe. HIJenfus was CllptUred by Sandinisla'sol· matk-7a'Mulical Chairs Cabi- will·produoe massive savinp.
Accordins 10 fie;; gleaned number of Civilians employed by
Martin Schram a a sy~~dicated
:11ien after the weapons plane he was flying in was shot down o- south- neL He t1tould ljlllOint depltment
Statistics . the U.S. sovcrnment is 2.76 per- writer for Ne'll'l)laper Enterprise
heads fur periods of just two ,an from the Bureau of
N'll3'lglll,. '
- term limits just sltM eOOugh IIi ,by Robert Shapiro, vice president cent of the natio1,1"s entire work- Aasodatlon.
fon:e; that's twice the ratio in Japan ·
·

By The Allloclated Press .
'
.. Today is Monday, Oct. 5, lite 279th day of 1m. There are 87 days left
iii the year.
,
.
•· Todav's Highlight in History;
One ~undred years ago, oo Oct. 5, 1892, lite Daltoo Gang, notorious
for its train robberies, was practically wiped out while auempting to rob a
;·Pair of biDks in Coffeyville, Kan.
·
:· On this dale·
.
:: · In 1813, lite. B~ of the Thames vias fought in Upper.Canada durin,&amp;
··; ihe W• of1812. The British troQpS were 901111dly defeated, and their lndi: · in ally, Tecumseh. was ldUed.
·
-: •'· In 1830, the 21Sl president of the United Slates, Chester A. Arthur, was
. ;; "-a in Fairfield, VL .
.
;: . 1n 1921, the World Series was brOadcast on ~o for the.first time,
· : with apons writer Grandand Rice describing the actioo between the New
:0 Yprt Yanbes and lite New York Giants (wlio woo·the series).
.
~: , In 1937, saying "the epidemic of warld lawlessness is apreadins,''
• 'Pre8ident Franklin D. Roosevelt called for a "quarantine" ol' aggressor

.:

fighting tight race with DeWine ~w!rtL~:~5

Weather

Lil1lit the terms of. Cabinet niembers

bighec.....,.... ·

Scores feared dead as jet crashes into housing project. ~
-

Inc.

and eastern Ydl()WIIIIIWI N•tione!
Pad: in Wyoming, with .as much as
4 inches in
Nearly 2 f/l iacbes ria fdl
in six hours at c.pe Jhrr a• N.C.,
and 1 3/4 incites fell a F10reace;
S.C.
, ·
·
·
TemJlCI'IIIires todly were f~
cast in the .40s in northern'Ne~
Ensland; 50s ilt the East ·
Appa)achians and jnd nonheO:
Rock1es; 60s in the Great Lat~
swes and central Rockies; 70s m
the Southeast, Midwest, central:
flains and Pacific coast; 80s il(
Florida, the South Ceatral Slalelt
and inland Ol,lifomii; and '90s iJi
the southwestern deser!s.
•
The higb fClr the nation s
'
was 100 depees 81 Thermal,~

-

'

Newspap·er pol.I says ·Glenn_

.

_Today in ·history

over the east coast.
.
S.C., and Hatteras,' N.C., and doWn
The Columbus. weather ~uon to 34 in Albany, N,Y. , and.38 in
. ~:Jthe.reconl h1gh for thiS date ~Buffalo.
w 90.1D 19Sl. The record low
Clouds also· loomed over the
was lm 196!1.
.
Datow, MianesOia and puts of
~~ f.Oniabt ~ be 7;(11 p.m. Nebraska, Iowa and Montana. The
Sunnse Tualday will be 7:33a.m;
lest of the naion was expecled to
AriiUIId !be DBtloa
.·
enjoy.ciea' skies most of lite day.
Clouds and run bung ov~ most
The eastern rain was left over
of th~ Bast early ~y. wtth the from a storm system that caused
promise of more rwn as the day gale W.:Qings and heavy surf advi·
llf9III'CSICd. •
sories Sunday night f« North Car· 'fhe monung was COQl m:wJ n!ny olina'seoast and soooda.
~ ~~~ to Boston, With ~gh . The wind completed damage
wmds. m some. Parts. of the IJ!Id- started by Hurricane Hugo three
. Atlanuc swes, IDCludin.g_Wasbing- years'carller. Gusts of 30.to 35 mph
too and the North Carolitill c~. .
and soil .loosened by heavy rain
Temperi\IUres were mamly tn felled many hurricane-damaged·
the 40s lind SOl be!'ore dawn, but tRies in 11eas near Charlotte, N:C.
re11cbed up to 66 _m ~harleston,
Soow fen Sunday over northern

tbe seatch besan today for more
·· · ·

zona believe that Mecham is running in order to seek revenge .on
McCain because he was one of the
first politicians to call for
Mecham 's resignation in 1988.
McCain, who leads in the polls, is
also being challenged by Democrat
Claire SargenL
For the most part, Mecham 's
poiitical career has been punctuated
by inflammatory rhetoric, such as
the following 1990 statement; "I
guess (Martin Luther) King did a
lot for the colored people, but I
don't think he deserves a national
holiday."
.
Jack Anderson 'and Michael
Binstein ire syndicated writers
for United Feature Syndicate,

;r----

I

. .

paignsMan...y poliu'cal o""_.:.
. Ari.......~rs m'

I CAN

~UEYOU.

•

H\ER

&lt;

B;y'l'lle AIIOdl.._, rr..
. Coolllld DIOI!)Y clelr weather
will ~ur in OhiO~~day. High temperatures tliil aflei-.
noon ttre f~ to be. from near
. 60 to the m1d 60s, ftve to ten
degrees below 11VCf18C.
..
The trend, towar~ lov.:er te~7
per_ature.s w1ll contt~ue m Oh!o
tonigh~ Lows are predicted to be m
th~ mtd or upper 30s, and frost
might~· .
.
:
'tuesllay 11 gomg '!&gt; be,Just a btt
wanner than ~ wtth hi&amp;lu from
the lower~ m the northeast to lite
upper 6!Js 111 the lOUth.
.
A ht&amp;h pressure sya~em that
extended-from .Hudlo'! B'ay .t o.'¥
Oltlo V~y ~ dommare Ohio s
weat1ter mto mid~ although by
1ste Tuesday It should be mainly

IND.

1

Pqe 3

Ohio weather to be cool, clear through Thesday

IToledo I s,- I

him io come home, and they also'
h~ him a lett.er from ~is ~fe
Wtshingthathewasoneofthepnsoners that had ~tly beon frted.
~ ~ m~g o_f the Fourth of
July m 1968 - irOnic:ally the same
day his 'ftlther ":as promoted to
commander ill chief of U.S. fon:c:s
inntotheanPac
.n!~rrogatiMcCaon
rooinmw!:hereled
t.
."' .. .
he was g1ven h1s final.chance at
freedom: When McC.am refused
once~· ~ of the 10 ~
broke his pen m two. As Ink spurted out of~ hands, lite inf:e110~
st,ood up, k!ck~ the chair ~m~
h1m and swd: Now, McCain, tl
will be very~ for you! Go back
to your to0111f
.
· .
About~ week;s !Jlter,lbe worst
~ of bis capbvlty be&amp;an, lastmg for lbe next ya. and a half and
. hl:'ving McCain badly scilired '!!
thts day. He was taken to what IS
known as the Calcutta Room,
where they broke h_is le~t arm,
bound both arms behind hi~ back,
and~ his neck between his legs.
M:cC~m· was f?~ced to spend a
weell; m ~ JIOSibon. .
· '\ .
His resiSIBRce ~ such a SllriO!'S ~hreat '!'at hts captors threw
hiDl mto solitary confinemen~ ~
his fellow prison~rs f~llow hts
example. As he sat m soh~ confmement, McCain memonzed the
names of an 335 of his feHow prisoners of war at that camp.
Nevertheless, Mecham plans to
. unseat McCain ba~ on the odd .
. contention that McCain has forBot~&amp;WMWIII17r ten his feHow POWs. McCain calls
this attack. "lite kind of contemp1992.
. tuous lie which the people of Ari·
~
·
zona have sadly come to expect in
any of Mecham's political cam-

WASHING'1'0N .-.. If t1tere was saKI about McCain.
Things got worse when they
a Richter IIC8Ie f« sleazy political · Few people however, bear · learned that McCain's father was
camp11igns, Arizona would be . Mc.Cain s scars- and it goes thetommandetofthePacifJCFieet, .
experien~ins what is known in beyood his nearly six years of tor- which meant that he was ordering
earthquake parlance as ''tbe big
the daily bombing of North .Viet.
One."
namese forces.
lndCpendent u.s. Senate candiA previously secret State
. date Evan Mecham - the
Department cable dated Sept. 13,
impeacb!:dof anthed disgrac_ed fo~er
.
1968, reveals that the North Viet·
governor
state -IS accusmg
· namese lrie4 to "release Admiral
Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., of ·
McCain's soo as one of the three
"selling out'ltis fellow POWs'" by
pilots freed recently; but he had
·aidi.n&amp; a federal sovernment coverrefused." U.S. officials Speculated
up Mecham says McCain has ture and cootioeinent io a 12 foot in the cable that McCain was
"~gly sui)I)Oited the official by 12 foot unventilated cell. spuming the offer "becall'IC he did
·government pii!icy of deceiving Recently declassified documents not want people to think that he
MIA families and the public in by lite POW/MIA Commiuee indi- had been released because of his
general."
.
cate that in 1968, then-POW father's position. " ·
McCain cuirently serves on the McCain could have walked out of
After repeated entteaties by his
Senate's Select Commiuee on the H'al!oi Hilton a tree inan- but captors, McCain bypsssed freedom
POW/MIA affairs, and during his refused sb that he would not leave until other Americans captured
rlecade-long~lvement with the his f~;How POWs behind.
before him were released . McCain
issue in Con
McCain has been
The story of uncommon valor believes that the offcn for freedom
anou!Jpelkerisupporterofreleasing that McCain fec.ounted to us were designed to mate the Norljl
intelligence reports on live POW recently be&amp;an on OcL 26, 1967, Vie111811lese look humane by releassightiap. He also helped negOtiate ·when Naval aviator McCain was ing the injured son of a top u.s.
the opening or a u.s. POW/MIA flying a mission in his A4 Styhawk officer. He also believes that it
investipii011 in HanQi.
off the carrier Oriskany. His 'plane would have increased North VietBut McCain has angered the was sttuc:t by a .North Vietnamese, nam!s leverage in trying to force
fringe element of the POW move- missile and he parachuted into a other American POWs into revealment by questionin' their opera- lake in Hanoi with two broken ins mililary secrets.
Tile North Vietnamese 'Started
· tions and fund-raisms practices. arms and a broken leg. After his ·
''You see there is an honor code capqtre, he was bayoneted and bru· with gentle persu.:sion. McCain
that you never abandon your peo- tally beaten by the North Viet- was told at the time that President
pie to lite enemy ...," Mecham has namese.
Lyndon B. Johnson was ordering
-

•
The Dilly SenUnel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

t.ICH.

vitriol

r

.

OHIO WoJHlot

-it..

Mecha~'s

'

Monday, 9CtOber 5, 1992

PfiG/.-2Dilly Sentinel
Po!Y!eroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, October 5,·1992

•

By MITCH WEISS
Alllociated Press Wrller
. ' TOLEDO - A tent city should·draw allentiot) to the thoilsands of peo:ple who are Iivia~ oo streel8 and in shelters, homeless advocates ~y.
· ·· This is lbe third year that the Homeless ,Awareness Project has spon•$Ored the four-{!ay event, whiclJ began Thursday nighL
.
.
More t1w1 100 groups, including churches and housing ~oos,
·.Ire ~cipating ill "Color ~ .Homeless, Tent City 1m, ' said Ken
~; a spokesman for the coaliuon.
· {)rganiza's hope to raise public aw~~re~~ess.
'
· ""nle homeless are cl06el' to us than \ve realize," said Leslie, the pro.:jllct's former dim:lor. He moved to Kansas Ciiy, Mo., earlier this year but
· ··returned 10 be1p with the evenL
·
· "We're uymg to make it an issue ... When people feel empathy for the
homeless, we want to motivale them to vote," Leslie said. The coalition
·Win hold avocer regi.slration drive.
·
· ~. "Money isn't lite answer. Voting is," he said.
The tent city is set up outside the munjcipal building. The event also
·iilciudes ~. art shows and a raUy. .
·•
~" Seventy works of an done by lo&lt;:al homeless people will be on sale.
.The~ will go to the artists, Leslie said. .
·
·,
IJIOject has raised $40,000 that has sooe into a trUSt fund, l'lhich is
· •Uied to help set people out of shelters and into apartments and houses.
The fimd bas provided bousia&amp; for 200 people so far,lnlie said. .
· ~ "From day one, our goal was to set an example for lite 'nation," he
'said.
.
· HDusing groups ~Y Toledo has 4,400 abandoned houses that, if reba. 'bililated. could ltelp solve the llorn,elcss problem. Several thousand people
Ate 011 wailing lists for public housing.
.
•
· The ~t cstimalcs that 3,000 peOple are living in shelters and on
·~·
uuds more may be ~ving with friends, families, in aamped
·
·quanm- one slep away from being homeless.
• · And the p'Qblem is getlinj! worse because of Toledo's poor economy.
' · In the pat decade, the c1ty has lost thousands of I!UIIufacturing jobs.
·In the last tine ~· more than 15,000 jobs have ~ ~ or ,
.
· moved to cilia wtth lower labor and.utility costs.
· About one-fifth of the 462,000 Lucas County residents teeeive govem;qtent Ul, inclridillll welfare benefils and food sramps. Social smice agen·
'cies s.J they cw c bap up with die dnn'D'V'll food and housing.
~~~the hOmeless Is cqanlzlng Tolcdo,agencies to wOik

\

/

.

By Jack Anderson
and
MichaelBinstein

ROBERT L WINGE'IT
· .. PAT WHITEIIEAD

'

McCain ·a hero, despite

Sentinel •

J

.

..
~

.. ....,

.

.

�-

--

--'-~--

•

!

-·

"----Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

__Peg a 4 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, October 5, 1992

•

Lindenwood, ~\o Gran~e cop _
.races at cross country event . ,

Vikings e(,lge Bears; . Cards .up~et Redskins· 27-24
By Tile AIIOdatetl Prell
·
At aU those places, the action ·minutes to itop the Rams 27-24.
Needed to leave the Metrodamc·· happened late lild led to semc of
The Bears' collapse was the
eariy this week? Too bad. .
the most thrilling finishes in the greatest - or wont, depending on
du'cc
roo_ting

be;i~r:t~i~ :;.,!::;.r::Jn~~ NFL~

touchdo..;., =~~e:;

r(2~3~i~

21-~t~ that made die ·· t iliD ak I C 27. EJway
Vikin~ 4-1 b the first lime ·l im: ..-JldJ
......a 1ritll

the

1977.
pl=a; naturally ,

was

~

aot

=r=.:i:!di~quanm
~h~~~~-~~- ~~~~~~.: ~c~:Oto":=:; a..";!:n~ :li '::~~~
con-

.
; Caught in along line at the
trailed by 18 points in tbc final
cession stand during the final two period, beat the defending Super
minutes at Mile High Stadium? llowl champion Rcdskins 27-24.
You wercoutofluclc.
. John Elway put!Qgetbet another
,· Could only catch the first half_of '. routine fourth-quarter OO!Deback as
the Los Angeles Rams contest With . Denver topped~ Clly 20-19.
Jlan Francisco··at Candlestick Park?
In San Francisco, I he 49ers
. needed 17 points in the last 6 1/2
)hat's not good.

Midviow 40. Lonia Sr. 9
PdJnd 21, SUuthon 14
St. Maryo :19. Moqmaa 0

nool-

--y- __ .,. . . .
w

L I'd. . GB
······- 96 66 .593
4
92 10 .561
1
'''"':. 19 73 .5ol9

a.·Tcnnto

Mil- ......
lcl:tb

Cle

d

t

·-

--- '76 16 .M

:Ill

___ ..... 15 11 A63
.......... 'T.l " .4!1
w... DI.w L Pel.

23

....... 96 ~ J9)

· a.O*Ynct

20

21

GB

ww-ara .......
Cblooao ' .........

90 72 JS6
1111 76 J31
T·········- T1 IS .~75
12 90 .444
~as, ...... 72 90 .444
.......... 64 91 .39!
....... ctiviliaa tillo

6
10
19
24
24
32

c.- . . . . .

.._,.,a.-

Tci. ROc!Fn 12, Tci. Sc:cu 0
Valley!'up44,SbakerHia.l3
W. Uberty-Salem 21. Triad D
'
Wabb J.... ~ 27, Col. WallaiOII 0 ·
W~m~~Kamody 48, Sol- 12
Welbvillo 4~. Weirton (W.Va .)
H 1
6
Y -. Clooney :10, YCIDDJ- 1!ut 0
Youna. Soulh 41. ae. Eut Tech
18
.
.
ZanctvWc·Rotecrans .41 , Marion
C.lh. 14
.

College Sc'ores

·-7.11ewYcxk!

a . - 7 , cto.dand I

T......,3,Doauitl
Oakloaii!O, Mihmlbt 3

~Ciy1.-~

II iarti11p

Calif-4. T - 2
-7.QOC.ao2

·

s....,.,a.-

a-I.HowYcxk2

a.-4.cto..laod3, 13Uminp
TOftllliD 1, Dlaoir. 4
-6,~Cily0

o.kllnd 1, Nlwaakee 1
Tau 9, Clliferni.l .5·
I'
~~

-4_C:W.:r..!.•"'
.....-

--'IIIIATIOf!IAL LEAGUE
Ellll Dh111oa
. W L Pet.
x-Pi111bu!Jh .... 96 66 .593

• Maallal
St. Louit

..... 87 75 .537
...... 113 79 .512

: Chicaao

.:... 78 84 .481

·' New·Yorti
... 72 90 .444
.. ~ .... 70 92 .432
~

~

WatDIYIIIon
. W L Pet.
• ~-Ailmla
..... 98 64 .605
Cincinnati ..... 90 72 .556

. s.. Dieao

.... 112 110 ..106

• HOUIIal
..... 81 81 .500 .
5Ift Fnnoi100 .. 72 90 .444

9
13
18 ,

24

26
GB

8

Now Yoot :Z. Pilubu!Jh I
Cincinnati 6, 5Ift Fnncilco I

Ad.a&gt;u I, S0o D~&lt;ao 0, S Ill in• ninp. nin
· Hou""" 3; Lao AD1elca 2, 13 inninp

The nee was scheduled to begin
at 11 a.m. today:
Rain drenched the speedway
starting before sunrise and continued beyond the scheduled 1 p.m.
Sunday S18rt time.
.
NASCAR officials tried to wait
out the limn, 8lllf even had the 30- .
car fteld roll 0111 ooto pit road. Dick·
Beaty, NASCAR Winston Cun
. series clircctoi-, 8IIIIOUIICcd the decf.
sion to postpone the race at 2:45
p.m.
.
.
The Holly Farms 400 was
rained 0111 in 1989•.

• Pialbu!Jh :Z. New Yod 0
• 5Ift Diqo 4, Allanla 3, 12 innin&amp;l
• . San Francisco 6, Cincinnati 2, 13

m:r.:.w. 6, ~ia 3
dlicaao 3, Mooueaf2
Houll1a! 3, Lao Anaelea 0

s-r..dt
ObiQJJfilb SChool Foot·
ball
·
Salli'*J'•G., llomol"iilo 42, s~ ·a
: J~eoc~roo!JOCI Js, cambia o
Combridp 16, llelloUo 14
· Cantoa McKinley 22, Cle.
OlenvilleO
Cto. Calboli&lt; 16, Sleubenville
CadL 14
a.. Gilmaar23, Pony 0 .
a.. Slllw ~. Clo. Keonecly 8
a .. vASJ 21, a.. CollinwOod a
Col. Academy 10, Louiovillo

· Lebanon results
LEBANON, Ohio (AP)- 06p-

-AauinU6

~ic1 driven by Frank Todd Jr.;
DI'OI.C 10 the top C!lrly and_held on

• · ,t

n nr:e ValL 21, Miftao 13.
D.,bolly 1.4etido 21, ~

to win the $100,000 Ohio Sires
Slakes cblrDpionship for 3-year-old
filly trotters Saturday night at
LebanQn Raceway.
.
The vi~tory . was tbe ninlh
·
sualabt f~Oopsic. The winner
·pai4 $2.60,$2.-40 IIIII $2.20. Loolc·

So. 1onph_.41, _Tiffin .
SL Mmdolin 12, Mohawk

Jllp49, ~- a.-

.

.

·J'

49, Cardinll Slrirdi 0

_,..,..l
l
i
s
a=iln.e.

llle
snaJiniDelroil(

·

New Orleans. (3-2) controlled
the ~ _f&lt;¥40 m~urea, 43 seconds

lild limil.cd .the Ltons to only 187
y8flk. ·

CJiarlerl 17, ~abllw~6

fi

=~::!'~=!::;;:;:;.
around southern Ohio

h""

IOu':'d':~n~a;ec:.~~ ~;~~dw;

As ant' .. 1 d ·1 d '

finished the women's colic e race
firs 'th ·
f IS 2S gA fi
. t Wt • a_wne o
: · .•ve-

~e~c~ ~M-~r~~~

off aght umes m his pl'eVIOUS three

~ Diqo _held Seattle(l-4) to
~ JBQ yards.
'.
Rliden 13, Gluts 10
Los A!lgclcs (1-4) broke a very
un'Raider:like eight-game losing
streak daliDg to Dec. I, 1991, as
Jeff Iaqcr made. ath~~g 54•
yard field g081 m c """~' quar-

, __ .., ~·•

·

are

"'

.

Tam(a Bay (3-2) dominated the
lint hllf, running44 plays to 21 for
~ Colts, but only led by seven ·
poatts..
Jets 30. Patrlols 21
New YOit showed the kind of
dekme mUsing sine~ its two besl
- ~~ ~t.out wtthlong-~rm
lllJUDI'S Ill wiiiJUIIg for the ftrst time
Ibis ,....,_
· . ·
· ~e_Jets sacked Hugh tylillen
-tuneS for 59 yards and held
New Eng&amp;nd (0-4) to a ~uchdown
tlaOiijlb tiRe quarters.
~~ Bla~h~!fd. signe~ this
S
. *rcpmadec 1.~urafieldtegoalsason
raaov y,
uu""
•
_ New Yoat. quarterback Brown141&amp; Nllle lhrcw touchdown ~
· ol1 JlldS 10 Tenancc Mathis and
19 ,_..., Rllb Moonl.

.

'

' '.

$309,203. .

'

~

.'·

..

are

.comg:e

17 1

race,

rt!•

~M; and Campbellsville.(~y~): ~:t~3~t·:;~s:~::S~J~'d: i~~::: =yssa:::i~a:1:J::

A

~~v

,;We kind of hoped our guys
could have done better but considering the caliber of te4m they had
to race against in Lindenwood 1
think they did well " Rio Grande
Coach Bob Willey Slrid. "It certainly gave them something to shoot
for and 1 think the made a commiimcnt and rcaliz~ that compel.
. I that ki d f th team
mg a~ their nh 0
c
w~~
rcac · defl ted
f this women
hu.n ea ~
~de SC:.OOr w ~~\~sour~
P.!!, needto 0 uhes,l . 1·thecy Biddle.
ncoverallsome
m for•
·but
it was Pa 1Rfine race
Renee aild the team "
I di 'd aJ · u1is ~ th Red
or . e . •
n VI u res .
WOili!'D showed that Bonn1e. Ev~s
co~pleted the race se~ond m
1?.25, fo~o-:ved br Debb~e Gray,
mnth, _20.S7. Jenn1fer Byer~ 14th,
22:10, ~nd Teresa Montgomery,
19th, 23.17.. .
Also f'!'tshmjl for t!'e R~~..
w~rc ~hn~ Sm•th, l_htrd,_27..05:
Hidemttsu M~. etghth, 27.34,
Mark Bennett, mnth, 27:41: Coody

')

27th, 2~:0~; M.tchele Dav•son,
30th, 25.34, B~r SimPS;OD. 34th,
26:~; and Whttney Adkins_. 39th,
27:06. The Lady Blue ~viis .fin•shed second ovCfB:D behind CaldweD. Chery_! ~~ of Caldwell
placed fi!st '!I .07.
.
Also m girls races, the fol~wmg
~A:fiS r!lnners competed m the
J'!RIOr high ~a~e: An~ra ~oggs,
moth, 14:02; LtZa Holeski, 68th,
16:37; Kasey Atlunson, 66th,
16:4I; and Lindsay Easton, 72nd,
16:54. Also placing were Ke!IY
Caldwell, 17:04; and Meredith
Mullins• 18·14
: ·
. . . .
. In the high.school g~rls indiv1dua1 race, Carrie Holeski of GAHS
was 24th in 29:48.
Open race results
.
Mark c~. a Uni~ty_ of Rio
Grande semor from Chtlhcothe,
plal:ed ftrst in the open nee at the
mvitational with a time of 16:42.
Cline was a four-year member of
the Rio Grand\: ~ross country and
trl!Ck te8J!IS and was .~ flr5l-place
wmncr m Jhe majpruy of the
team's 1991 and 1992 'season
evcniS.

By RICK WARNER
AP FootbaD Writer
Some Miami fans were upse.t
that the Hurricanes didn't regain
the No. 1 ranking after beating
Florida Srate. It dido 't disturb Dennis Eric:ksoo, though.
"If we don't beat Penn Slate, it
doesn't make any difference anyway," the Hurricailes' coach said.
Despite a dramatic 19-16 vicro:
ry over Florida State, secpndl'll!ked Miami gained little ground
on No .. 1 Wasbi'ngton in this ·
week's Associated Press college
football poll. However, the Hurri- .
canes could overtake the HUSkies ·
witA an. im)XCSSive win Saturday ai
· No. 7 Penn State.
"It's hard for f!1e to think anybody's better (than Miami);'' Florida State coach Bobby BolJ(den
said. "But they'll have their Work
cut out for diem next week. Playing
Florida State and Penn State back
to bac~ is like us playing Miami
and Florida back to back." .
. Wasbington, which replaced
Miami as the top team a week ago,
received 42 first-place votes and ·
1,528 points after bealing Southcni
PUNT, PASS, KICK·Here, Tommy Smltb, Raciae, winner or
Call7-IO. Miami got 16 flr5l-place tbe 11-year okl division o1 tbe local Punt, Pass, and Kick contest
votes and 1,497 points from a demoalltntes bia winning tediDique In tbe puntlllg contest during
By Tbe Associated Press
.son. No batting raCe, no_pCnannt
nationwide panel of spons writers tbe PPK contest at Soutbem Higb School on Saturday. Tbe event,
It
wasn't
exactly
an
exciting
end
nee. Only the nee to the atrport.
and "broadcasters.
c!Mirdlnaled by Carson Crow, was sponsored by the'Melgs County
to
the
National
LeiooJc
1ar
Even the Giants found it hard to
, The Huskies (4-0) lost two ftrst·
Park DlstricL
fCICU sea- be emotional for what may tum out
place votes from· the previous
a
•
;:~r::e the Hurricanes (4-0) '
·
"That's just the way it is,"
M1ch1gan (3-0-1) moved up a
·
·
•
pitcher
Rod Beck said after Sun·
notch to No. 3 after whipping Iowa
·
nado golf team with a strong fm- John Bentley with a 35, Jason Han day's 6-2, 13~inning victory over
DAVE JIARRid
t S
• ~2-28, and Tennessee (5-0) Se
ished vaulted into second place in a 38, Jay Cremeans a 40, Jay Harris the Cincinnati Reds. "Especially
climbed three spots to No. 4 with a . n
orrespo11 en
20-0 victory over LSU. Michigan
~oach John ~wsczyn and the the finalleafue standings. This is a 43 and Reggie Pratt a46. Mei~ when you have ttavcl plans and the
. game goes an hour longer than it's
received one first-place vote and Me.•gs _Marau_der g~lf, tenm won the first varstty ~ that Southern made six birdies in the match.
played
to
a
conference
sc~ule
in
For
Southern
Bralten
McFann
supposed to." ·
·
Tennessee got iwo.
·
thcu third stratght Tri-Valley Conthe
TVC.
·
carded
a
39,
Andy
Fields
a
42,
Pittsburgh
and
Atlanta,
who
Texas A&amp;:M (5-0) remained No. fe~nce golf crown last week by
Mike
McKelvey
and
Mark
Allen
a
begin
the
playoffs
o~
Tuesday
Meigs
clinched
the
title
on
5 after edging Texas Tech 19-17. wmmng the. last \WO conference
Alabama (5.-0), which received one matches. ~~1gs finishes the regular Thursday evening with a six stroke 44, Ryan Williams a 4S and Andy . night, already had c!mchcllthc
division lilies. San DIOgo's Gary
fir~t-place vote, jumped three season wtlh a sparkhng 75 -6 win over ieccnd place Southcm in Grucser.a46.
a match hosted by the Tornadoes at
Last Satwday, Meigs traveled to Sheffield had a lock on the baiting
places to No. 6 after routing South fCCO!d.
,
the Riviera Country ·club outside race.
Carolina48-7.
Jtm Anderson s Sou~ern Tor- the Meigs COUIIIY Golf Course.
Just like the rest of the season a of Huntington to Jllay in the very
No one caught Fred McGriff or
good suong cffoct led the Maraud- tough Huntington High Golf lnviraers to the title. Jay Harris and Jason tiona!. Russell, Ky. won the 18
Han were co-medalist with a 36, hole cvent'with a 396, followed by
sophomore Benny_Ewing fired a Huntington east (399), t,tcigs
38, John Bentley a 39, Adam (405), Vinson (407), Hurricane
.
By The Associated Press
Krawsczyn a 40 and Jay Cremeans (408), George WashinJion (412),
How the top 25 teams in lhe AssoCiated Press' coilege football
Milton (420), Huntington High
Moad October 5
a 43.
poll fared Saturday:
·
' .
Mark Allen carded a 37to lead (428), Pt. Pleasant {442), Paul
VO~YBAU.-atTrimblc
1. WashingiOII (4~) beat No. 20 Southern Cal. 17-10. Next:
. Southern, Bralten McFann a 38, Blazer (444), and Fairland (503).
. RESERVE FOOTBAU..-Tn'mvs. California.
Michael McKelvey and Andy BarboursviUc was disqualified. The
2. Miami (4-0-0) beat No. 3·Fiorida Srate 19-16. Next: at No.8
Fields a 40, Ryan Orueacr a42 and match featured some of the best ·bleJ~lf.OR HIGH VOLLEY.
Penn State.
Andy Grucscr a 46.
high school golfers in the Tri-Srate BAlL-Southern 81 home
3. Florida State (4-1-0) lost to No. 2 Miami 19-16. Next: vs.
Meiss posted a lUill score or · area. The format was 11 pl.l!y five
Tuesday, Oc:tGIIer'
North Carolina.
149, followed by Southern with a match and the teams counted all
VOLLEYBALL-Wellston at
4. Michigan (3-0-1) beatJowa 52-28. Next: vs. Michigan State.
ISS. Belp-c fmished in third with a five scores.
. home
·
5. Texas A&amp;:M (S~) beat Texas Tech 19-17. Next Rice, OcL
167, followed by NeiSCl!lville-Yoat
Adam-krawaczyn carded a five
SEVENTH GRADE FOOT17 . .
(170), Wellston (174), Alexander over par 75 to lead Meigs, Jay a-e- BAU.-Oaliipolis_• home
6. Notte Dame (3-1· 1) lost to No. 18 Sianfooi 31-16. Next: vs.
(181), Vinton County (191), Feder- 1ll\l8fiS added an 80, Jay Harris an
Pittsburgh..
.
·
al Hocking (2JS). Trimble did not . 81, JOhn Bentley an 84 and Jason
Wednel!lay, Oeluber 7
turn in a team scme.
Hart an 85.
VOLL£YBAU.:at Southern
' 7..Tennessee (S'~) best LSU 20-0. Next vs. Arkansas.
. 1n a match last ~on day at
Tbunday, Oetoller I
8. Penn Staie (5-Q-0) beat Rutgers 38-24. Next vs. No.2 Miami.
In a match last Tuesday P,layed
FRESHMAN FOOTBALL9. Alabama (5-0-0) beat South·Carolina48-7. Next: at Tulane.
Franklin Valley, Adam Krawaczyn on the back nine ·at the Chffside River VaJiey at home
10. COioradQ (4-9-Q) was idle. Next: a1 Missouri, Thursday.
fu-cd an even par 34·to lead MeigS Golf Course, Gallia Academy
VOLL£YBAU.-atBelpre
,
11. UCLA (3-1-0) lost to Arizona 23-3. Next vs. No. 18 Stan.' to I victory. Meigs DOSted a 147 to SliJl.pcll. _p~t Meigs by a score of
JUNIOR HIGH VOLLEY. ford.
win the matches, followed by Well~ 165 !0 1~
· BAlL-Trimble 81 home
12. OhiO Stale (3-1-0) lost to WisConsin 20-16. Next vs.lllilloiS.
Sl9ll (IS4); Nclsonville-Yoat (167~,
Jason 'H*t led Meigs with a 39,
EIGHTH -GRADE FOOT13. Florida (1-2-0) did not play. Next: vs. LSU.
So_uthbernl(l( 165)9).BeAIIexllfl( der)(1V70_ , John Bentley added a 40, Jay Har- BALL-at Belpre •
14. Virgillia (5~) beat Wake Forest 31-17. Next: vs. No. 25
Trim e 7 • JR 179 • 111 - . ris a 42, Reggie Prall a 45, Jay OeFridaJ, Oc:tGIIer 9
CICIIIIOII. ·
.
ton Cou'!_l}' (201) and Federal means a 46, Adam Krawsczyn
VARSITY IOOTBAU..-at FedIS. Nebaaska (3-1-0) was idle. Next vs. 01dahoma State.
Hocking (204).
·
slipped 10 Jl 53 and Benny Ewing era1 Hoc:kinl
16. Georgia (4-1-0) beat Arkansas 27-3. Next: vs. Georgia
Other Meigs scores included added a 45.
·
Saturday, October 10
.
Southern.
.
. .
·
CROSS eot.JNmY-Sternwhcel
17. Syracuse (3-1-0) beat Louisville 15-9. Next vs. Rutgers.
run
18. Stanfoa'd (4-1-0) beat No.6 Notre bame 31-16. Next at No.
....
11 UCLA.
"
19. Oklahoma (3-1-0) bell Iowa State 17-3. Next: vs. Texas at ·
Dallas.
.
.
FINAL TRI-VALLEY GOLF
. 20. ~them Cal (1-1-1) lost to No. 1 Washington 17-10. Next:
S'FANDINGS .
. vs. ()rcgoft.
.
.
21. Nonh Carolina State (4-2.{)) 1~ to No. 23 Georgia Tech 16-..
•EAR, NOSE &amp; IHROAJ •ALLERGY .
Team
Points
: 13. Next: vs. Texas Tech.
Meigs ...........................:..... :........SS
. •HEARING AIDS .• HEAD &amp; NECK SURGERY
22. BOeton CoUe&amp;e (4-0-1) tied Welt Virlinia 24-24. Next: at
SOUthetn,,,. ,,;,,,..t••••••••••••oo•••oooo•••42
Penn State, OcL 17.
.
.
Alexander ...................~..............40
· .C1re FOr Yeur F1mll~~ ·
23. G~ T~_(3-l-0) bell No. 21 North Carolina State 16-Belpre ........................................36
13. Next: • MaryiiDCI.
,
WeUSIIln..............:......................26
2-4. Misaislippi Sllle (3.1-(1) did not play. Next: vs. Auburn.
Nelsonville-Yoat~ ......................23
25. Clemson (2·2..o) beat Tennesscc-Chaaanoop 54-3. Next: a1
Medicare &amp;,
Aislgm~t Aecepted
Vinton COllnly .......................... 17
! No. 14 Virginia.
Trimble .........,.................. ,........~ 12
, SUITE ~ 12 VALLEY DRIVE, PT. PLEASANT
Federal H~ .........................~ 1

M ezgs wzn third straight crown

M. etgs•
•· SpOr
· - t.S,.

How Top 25 Fared

DECISION '92''.
•

•

Cal Dave • P. J.
·for More
_992-2155

28:23; Cecilia Cooper, Waterford,
29 :57; and Amy Houk, Campbellsville, Ky., 30:28.
"Overall, we're very pleased
with the way the invitational went,"
Willey rem~rke~. "The Lord
blessed us w1th some wonderful
weather, and the West Virginia
TAC team of Ken DillOn, Dave
Smith and other members of thai
organization did a great job in officiating the cvenL And of course
the sponsorsliip rrom &amp;!, Evans i~
the icing on the cake. Theiq:ooper·
ation-lind help makes this invitll· 1 a c 1ass act aII 1he way
Ilona
around."
•
.
FrQm the university, athletic
secretary Patty Forgey and parJ,
time faculty member Penn.y
Edwards supervised the registration
and posting of results. Students
who assisted the operation included
Lori Gillenwater, Jennifer Harrison, Tricia Holmes, Tina Undsay,
Angela Maddox, Angela Peck,
Ore' Phillips, Lyndell Snyder;
Kevm Stowers ·Robin Stull and
Chris Woods. '

'

the Padres ~r the home. Nn ~tic,
and Atlanta s Tom ~IaVIne fai~ed
SundaY. to break Bl ue for the WUts
title (20) with Chicago's Greg

~:o~.::'::.gamesinSanFran- even.
~~i~-w~adayofg~bye~.
~
forumpirc Doug Harvey, ~

tui:t

11

calendar .

hanging up ·rus muk after 31 - sons. Wh~n games don't matter
tpuch, umpU'CS can be~.
''He c~llcd a strike on me,"
Houston JIIIC~ Pete Hamiach said ,
after a 3-0 victory .~ver the Los .
Angeles Doclaen, and tben he :
lookr;d at me and.~· 'That pitch :
waan 1 ~en c_loac.
. . .
Ozz•e Sm!th wu wondering if
he !"" s,ay1n1 aoodbye to St.
Louis, whiCh may not offer him the
two-year conll'ICt he wants. The
shoatiop got fi¥e llllldlng ovations ·
in the Cardinals' 6-3 victory over
the Philadelphia PhiUies:
"I'd like 10 be here next year,
but that's not up to me;" Smith
said. "I've done all I can do. As a
ballplayer, the only things ,you can
controlarcthethingson the field." ,
In other .._,San Diego beat •
Atlanta 4-3 iil12 innlngs, Chicago :
beat ~ontrca13-21ild Pitllburgh ·
best New Yoat 3-0.
The most significant event of
the day may bavc been the Giants' ·
win at Cincinnati. No one knows
whether they'll be back in San :
Francisc_o next season or opening :
the Flonda Suncout Doane in SL ·
~tersburg.
•
'.'11 hasn't sunk in yet," : : ; er Dnacr ~said. "I'-ve
t
bou·-q lot 1as1 fe
a tIt a . .
. w days.

JOHN W DE, M.D., INC •.

:-

'

.

•

,.

Richardson, 16tl!, 28:39; Jeff · Placinl in the opea race in
Roberts, 19Jh, 29:10; Mark order
J
u,_.,
'
McFann; 23rd, 29:40: and Kuni· · · 16· sS~eTec'-per_....My, ~tta'
hiko Talcayama, 36th 30:48
· : :
.
• ant •
The men's lild ' · , ·
. 17:31: Bob Fritz, c;oshocton,
hedulcd
women ~ teams · 17.45, Bn~ Hays, R10 Grande,
i n~ JC • k d10
A~ Oh' • 17:46; Kevtn Kohls, Cincinnati
~~ ~n~.;
- 10 ~oellcr, 18:27: Pave Fernbacher, .
·
ware.
R1o Grande, 18:37; Brian
Hiahcbool raults
Yaconazzi Rio Grand . 18·42·
Boys' teams from C3aDia Acade- Kevin McCown, Cbe~~pe~ke'
my~ Mei~ !'i.gh schools CO!D· 18:51; Eddie Science, Marietta:
peted m the DiVIBIO!l n race, whiCh 18:52; Mike Schoudel , Fort
was WO!I by the Eastern Brown Wayne, ·Ind., 19:04: Randy Spohn,
fluad· :.t~t~-~ner_ was Jac~.l9:13;
. .
amey
n
"""'"u m . 7.
M_ike -~arter. ~allipolis, 19:I4;
From Meigs, P J . Chadwell fin. Benue Tilley, Rio Grande 19·23·
iahcd lith in 17:57, followed by Mark Schoudel, Fort Way'ne;
Nathan Bal';l. 12th, 17:58; Bill 19:36; Larry Ritchie, Marietta,
Toundas, 34 , 19: 18; and Bobby 19:55; Richard Haft, R!o Grande,
Johnson, 45th, 19:42.
.
19:57; Dan Longcay, Rio ~'!C·
. GAHS runners compleung the 20:19: Ken Holley, Galhpohs·,
course ~nc!uded Er~c _Hortman, 20:29; Mike Tomlin, ChesapeU;oe.
58th, 20.08, Jason Williams. 59th, 20:30: Harry Nch11s, Galhpohs,
20:09;ChadFortJ,60th,20:13;and 21 :03; Jeff Steele, no address,
Jared Ford, 6Jst, ~:14.
21:15: Henry Jacquez, eincinnati
' Donovan_Dav~ of GJ\HS fin- ¥oe!ler,-21:16; Terry R_ay, Ga_l·;
•shed 105~ ~the JIDilOI' ~ bo~ bpolis, 21:24; Jeff Schncnder, Rronee, but )lis umc IJI'as DC?' IDimcdi- Grande, 21 :32: GI'Cg Fra110felter,
ately ~v~ble. In the high ~I Logan, 21 :35; Becky Webb, Minboys mdividual
Aaron Salis~ ford, 22 :12; Tiln E~dniann, no
bury of GAHS placed 21st and address, 22:30; Dcnrus Yon, Bel•
Charles Curnutte of Rtver Valley
22:55; Ron Smith; Columbus
Hiah
School
was 27th • but their
· Walker, GaID
•
rate, 23·22·
. , Kevm
timeswerelilsonotavailablc.
lipoli 24·31· Erin-.w.... GallipoGAHS . Is
· · · 10
·
s, · •
,.,.......,
. . . gu- ~l(aUOg !he lis, ~:33; Jeremy Prall, Gallipolis,
Dlvtston II nu:e mcluded Jesstea 24:48; Dave Walker, Gallipolis,
Su.arfor~. lhud, 22:01: Jean 26:04; Eric Rogers, Rio Grande,

Giants top:Reds 6~2 in 13
innings in season fln~le .· ·

~

$5.40 for finW!IPf tbinl · ·
· The dail double combination ol
1•3 :::r$6.20.
A crowd o( 3;211 wagered

Washington
retains top .
APrating

race

hl

Special
.

.

ed her firsl-place lime 'or 19:06 in
2nd; and C.;J. Starcher, third. The winners will
the 1991 Rio Grande in . 'onal
The Rcdwomen ~lall
' th'
advance to tbe atate l«tlonal at Westerville and
from tbe11e top participants will advance to
a score of 42, follo~ed 6yr.u'~neither ClnciiiiUitl or Cleveland to·partldpate at a
wood in second with 48 Centre
Beagals or Browns NFL game, The event WIIS
(Ky) with 56 and '70 for
chaired by Mary PoweU or tbe Melp Co. Park
lndiinaiPurduc-Fort Wa
District, lmd co-ordlaated by Carsoa Cro,; witb
,The Lindenwood m~~ team .
help from Barbara Crow, aad Mr. and Mrs.
ranked 17th in the NAJA last w~
Brian Zirkle. Mary Powell said, "I'd like to ·. showed why it altained that stand•
· thank all those_wbo beiped_ wltb tbe event, . in when it was named the overaD
lncludln1 Southern Hlgb School and their bead . w~ner of its
with 24 points.
Coach Dave Gaul, tbe parents ror tbelr support,
However the first to f' . h th
•
.
l~ts
c
and tbe ldds ror an outstanding ei'ForL"
course was Rto ~rande s Chad
Benson
. • Whocamclnal26:24
.·
Rio Grande netted 37 pomts for
second place in the men's division
followed by Columbus Srate with
88· Centre 120· JP-Fon W

MEIGS' PUNT, PASS, JQCK WINNERS-·
Tbe Melp County Park DiStrict's annnal Punt,
Pass, and Kick contest was a huge success. Win·
nen of tbe evea were Joebaa McCoy, 8-year old·
Jason Laudermilt, 10-year old; Tommy Smith: ·
11-year old; and Franco Romano, 12 year old
tbe
. ~Doer. J;'icturcd ill no-parti(uJar order
:w1nners and otber ranking participants, who
each received a ribbon and -certificate ror their
effort; Joshua McCoy, Jason Laudermilt, Gar·
ret Kiser, 2nd; Adam Cumlngs,.3rd; Tommy
Smith, Tongy Laudermllt,•2nd; Jamie Buskirk,
third; Joshua Crail, Troy Hoback, Aady Dodo,
Joshnal Dowell, Franco Romano, Amy McCox,

1Sof.~~~2H00y
-~~A
~ t m':"'.......-. e ~ p1c.....

terNew Yoat (1_3) led lO-O in the
.
lint half, bll pvc~ a 6!1-yard ~ ,
pass~ Todd ¥ariOOVJCh to TIDI
Bf!&gt;WD 1n the thud quarter and a
pur of fteld goals by Jaeger.
Colis 24, B-een 14
Jeff Gdef:l!eTovercBaame a podi~r
S11rt to,
ampa y_as In anapolis (2-2) surpassed tiS 1991
Vldllry lilts!;
·
'.
George, w~ had two of his fll'llt
111rec passes m_terc~pted, led the
f_?,~ts. toludi17_pottounts hmdownthe sethcond
...... ,lilt Ill _c
rows
~ ~_!JCashess•e Hester and 14

R'

Grande~~~e:!~~

·Yllds. ending w•\h nme rcception1
tor 142 yards as San Diego (1 -4)
linall)' won for new coach Bobby
Ross.
.
Stao Humphnes, the lowest'*41 NFL quartetback, co~eted

slikenomla llniiiWf 10001111 llllil'll·
in_11 $2.80 and $3. Slblllikh paid

IP•.!ti*l

~ (Ky. I CadL 47, """"""
~

·=

0

MlshA

S~way.

· SundaJ''I GIUIH!I

'
Sl.........
~CarlL

~n

Da~

NORTH WILKESBORO, N.C.
. (AP) - All-daf rain forced the
poslpollement o the Ty10n HoUy
Farms 400 at Nonh Wilkesboro

. phjl...tQ&gt;IIia 3, SL l&lt;u~ 2
Mooueol3, 01~ I

I

The ,University of Rio Grande
steam won 1irst place and
L!ndenwood (Mo.) was overall
W1lll1t.f of the men's nee San.day
in the 22nd Rio Grande Cross
COuntry Jnviiational a1 Stanlc L
Evans Field
.Y •
The eve~t sponsored by Bob
Evans F
·~ lUred
ber f
,
arms, ea
anum 0
htgh_school races and a separate

.

Tile

NASCARrace
rained out

16
17

. _ ...., .• a...

0

·

CANDIDATES

GB

26
• Lao Aaaelel :. 63 99 .389 . 35
1
'
X•WOII divisi.Cit tide ·
J

":!:

snapped mer

"'"

rwd ~r.:':t
i'fJ l:~:."!~J
~ tanl '!I' l-4x )II!Cklllllnll

15•.e

.;.: :w

S~lll Sharpe bed 107 yards
: ame catthcs ror 0~ Bay X2-

~ :S:J.:w~:'.? roolde Vauahn

was

Scot·eboard
.,,.. ... d . . . . . .
.UWUCAN LIAGUE

IIIII _. 4 yads W on
v:C! 1ria':
1, : -

y,n;,:,ts bdi;.::

After driving in three runs, GonBy Tbe Associated J'reu .
· Juan Gonzalez WPi lookin~ for a zalez ended with 109 RBis and an
home run title and Bert Blyleven average of.26(). ·
For Blylevcn, it was the 430th
was just the piicher to give it to
h!lmer h.e' s gi':en up, the sixth
him.
. ·
Blyleven, who' s been on the highest total aD-tune. •:
mound to see more balls leave the • The game also marked the end
park than any pitcher in baseball of Brian Downing's 19-season
today, got to watch Gonzalez's career. Downing, who turnS 42 on
· 43rd shot. which gave the 22-year- Friday, delievcrcd 'a slap single in
old Texas slugger the major ~ the first then dqlarted roc a pinchhome run crown in the Rangers 9- runner.
Bl1leven (8--.12) gave up 12 hits
5 victory over Califania.
Gonzillez, who came into Sun- and Sill runs in 4 2-3 innings.
Kevin Brown (2 J.ll) matched
day's game til)d with Mark MeGToronto's
Jack Maris for the most
wire, finished one ahead of the
viclaies
in
the majors, despite jamOakland fltS4 baseman.
· Just 11 days away from his 23rd ming th.ree fingers on his pitching
birthday, Gonzalez IS the youngest hand knockinf down a line drive in
to lead the majors in homers since .the fourth innmg. The injury fore~)~~
Johnny Bench, at 22 years, 10 Brown to leave aftct stx mnings,
JllOnths, hit 45 for Cincinnati in after he'd allowed se.;:en hits and
four runs, walking two and strilring
!970.
, "Thill makes me proud," said out five.
Elsewhere on the final day of
Oonzalez, who also became the
the
season, it was Toronto 7.•
f.ust in franchise histoly to win any
Detroit
4; Oakland 7, Milwaukee I;
home run .crown smce Frank
Bostoli
8, New York 2; ~
,Howard hit 44 for the WashingtOn
6,
Kansas
City 0; Baltimore 4,
Senators to finish one behiad
Cleveland
3 in 13 innings: and
Bench oyerall in 1970. "But I'm
Seattle
4,
Oricago
3.
just excited. and happy to get the
borne run title. I wentmtb ·the sea- Blue Ja:JI7, Tigers 4
AL East chBiilp Toronto used
sOn with a goal to hit 30 homers
seven
pitchers to prepare for the
and get 100 RBI&amp;."
.

MajcJr ~pe B-ball

=:

.

Na
1 w row
victory until he decided to audi- ' and they will be defiDillc llld IIIey ll* b-" . CiiJbleafthe line of scrimmage and will be permanent," the Cbic:qn
Al C • · • Pad;, 111e a:change a play called '7 coach Mike coach fumed. "I' m not g~ 111 1p 17-10 eadJ ia die fiaaJ
Ditka.
·
put47 playm' futures in the blads 1.,~ W on: s- Fnllmco·s
Bad choice. A poor pass to Neal of one player Who thinks be bMJws
Yo.~~ lid: - . nr: qllr·
Andcnon was .piCked off by Todd more thin I do." ·
W
a • • b • M . alii&amp;
Scott and turned into a 3S.•yard
Minnesota quarterback Riclll · _.39,.._. . :il • tdle*iwe
touchdown for Minnesilla, igniting ~=~wnse:v:
~:.. c;:~:!1-J!!*d
laner capped by Ro- Craig's 1- -.,
yard nin, as the Viki'D&amp;s toiJk a
··v, ms.- · a.·110 na
possession o( firs! place in 1bc NR: -T .. 111J ia 111e pxtrt."
Central.
aill Y-., 'iiiiD
f 20 of
At Phoenix, Washit~~ton also 29 . - b- :an
"TD lab
squandered a large lead in alltmina tJM:. wllea a k j - . 11w1 J"a 1
fashion. Trailingbyl8points.C.- , ...._ _~---paldinals cornerback Robert Massey es' weqow 1ri.. a 1la1l ia my
returned two interceptions for ,blals."
. .
playoffs by defeating DetroiL The
1111
Blue Jays open at home Wednes- ~dc~O.::;::r:a\~
day night against Oakland, where scoring P.8S5 l9 Larry Cenlf:lS with lbftle CW ! ii£ pia M I • • !away
Jack Maris faces Dave Siewart. .. 41 seconds left.
..._. lnable ., r"oio'llkle paws
Toronto got its 96th victory,
"On the second one, l rooildn't scwcullilills. · ·
tying the A's for most in the"AL.
believe he (Mart Rypien) threw the
~ ... Ccwi.. of 6e pme. b)'
Pat Tabler hit an RBI double baD," Mas!iey said afler his TDsol' coaaiUias two foutll-qnaru:r
during a three-run first inning and 31 and 41 yards. " Once I tllew aawocas, ftidl Ya.a fOllowed
singled home a run in the sixth as there was no one in front of me, I .., boda liaa:sbliisTD.-.
the Blue Jays completed their 13th kncw I bac!.anothel' TD,Iild it
Clnclud ~UJ piacd 110
sweep this season.
mcredible. , .
yadsca l l ••oes bllleltams.
Athletics 7, Brewers 1
It was the Cardinals' first vieW'
Ebewllae . SudaJ. it 'was
Rickey Henderson had his ry in I I !lames and left the Red- V - 31. B OW• 1Q; A111n1ia 24,
2,000th !lit and AL West champ skins (2-2) with as many tosses 15 Gn:ca aa, 10: New OdcaDs 13,
Oakland snapped the 10-game winduring tl)eir Super Bowi..-son last D1:1nJit 7; s. Diq:o 17, s de. 6;
ning .streak of Milwaukee rookie- year.
· me Los All&amp;dcs Raidcts 13. tbc
Cal Eldred (11•2).
Earnest Byner rushed for two New YOlk Gala 10; w
...!lis
The Athletics, who With 96 vic- touchdowns as Washington moved 2.4, Tampa Bay 14; ..S .tbe New
tories improved 12 games over , out to a 24-6 lead. The {tedskins Yoat.Jcls30,New&amp;plnd2I.
1991, used 20 players. against Mil- had a chance to tie on the final
DIIIM _. n 7 • ' • · bolla 3waukee in getting ready for the play, but Chip Lohmiller's 40-yJIII 0. aaccl at Veb:UU Swlinm
postseason for the fourth time in field·goal aaempt sailed~ ·• · · ;
·
five seasons.
In Denver, tt was just
c;- - i Cleo ' I, Ho • •
Catcher Henry Mercedes had a caseofElwayvexing~City -.Ift! l i J t i - all.
tic-breaking triple in the seventh -. losers of 10 straight at Mile D y ·
, . . lt
inning and Ruben Sierra added a High - and Chiefs coach Many
LouiS Oli'ftl', wllo"d --=lied .
three-run homer in the eighth, his Schottenheimer just 1-9 apinst 100 awdt of Buffalo' s passisc
17th.
the Broncos. '
•I
, ..- die Bilk Red SoliS, Yank~ 2 .
.
Down' I9-6, Elway threw two . . 1'111..._
Boston capped tiS first last-place touchdown passes in the final n.oo
..l"we- _ . . - b tt.o;a:
finish in 60 years with a victory minutes for his 30th successful )1ICIIS -.1 it.,. llat liae 1 Sllitover arch-rival New York at Fen- founh-qtUII'ta' comeback in his 10- al ta alia&amp; ca *-." _.. Otm:a-,
wayPark.
··
year career.
wbollld ~ · 'Jcti • JCIIliDBob Zupcic had two RBI singles
"No niatter how hard you hit m&amp;owe 103 yadsba•• .,..,.
off-Scott Kaminiecki (6-'J4) and the him, h'e j~st gets up and waitts 111 lie a NR. aa:llida Miami (4-Red Sox added five runs in the-sev- · more," Chiefs defensive end ~eil 0) ' - B Tiln lilr jlilt lllle P'CO"d
enth.
· ·
Smithsaid.'"Eiwayisthebesttwo- lime iu i&amp; aa w
Joe Hesketh (8-9) gave up two - minute quarterback I've ever ll'aJrmsJt,Pw' sit
played agailisL"
Oris NiJ1alilrruns in five innings.
Twins 6, Roy~ll 0
·
The Broncos ~-"2)
a
bachp.
u d
George Brett had hits in his final siring of 12 straig 1 q1181WS wilb- Aadac .U.. c gt rwo TDs as
1wo at-bats, and Kirby Puckett, out a TD wben Elway hit Mark ~ (Z-3} ZP•'•*= e
who's elipble for free agency, had Jackson for a 25-yard scan: wilh loliairmA
an RBI Mlde for his league-lead- 1:55 remaining to cap an 14-play,
Mila-'s•a•ic a-s 111 Rm.
ing 210th liit in possibly his last SO-yard drive.
oo:ued 10 _. 21 :pads. He alto
game for Minncsl:lla.
After Denver forced a put, due1l' a 2-JIIll a:oaiq pass ta
Five pitchers combined !0 shut Bronco• rookie Artbur Na ' eJt taal\" I '
out Kansas City 6-0 and leave the·
Royals with their worst record (7290) since 1970 when they went 6597.
.
Orioles 4, Indians 3 .
Baltimore i:ompleted a 22-game
turnaround from las! seas00 on:Jeff
Tackett's 13th-innlitg sacrifJCC fly.
The Orioles, 89-73 this season,
scored three runs in the ninth after
trailil!g 2-0.
.
Cleveland finished 19 games
ahead of 1991, when the Indians
lost a franchise-record 105 games.:
Mariners 4, Wbltt Sox 3
Seattle's four-run third inning
ended Jack McDowell's chance a1
victory No. 21, which would've
tied Jack Morris of Toronto and
Kevin arown of Texas for most in
the majors.
. McDowell (20-10) lost for third
time in five Slarts since getting his
20th win on Sept. 8.
·
Brian Fisher (4-3) pitched six
innin~s, giving up three runs on
five htts and two walks as Seattle
finished with the worst record in
the AL at64-98.

., exas
. S lugge_
r .G0 nzal ez
·c·_ ovs 199l...,
. . run
. t:z. •tle_
. h- ome
~-

r-.

The Dally Sentinel Page 5

I

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0

"\I

'·

•

.I

�•

'
•

By The Bend
'•

The_Daily

Sentin~l

•••oor

Monday, October 5, 1992
Page 6

i-'

UYIII'S LAWII
IIIIIIEIIIIICE

UCIIE

~Mohicans'

Airport looting ·is not un.usual

is a tasteful work of art

. .SUIDIYS
I:OOP.a.

Ann

R

;__----Names ,jn the news

:

To place

an ad
Call 992-2156

. COPY DEADLINE
\

.

.

,Mo~. thru FRt. 8A.M.-5P.:ll, - SAT.8-12
CtosEo So oA v
POLICIES
• Ad. out.~e the cou~ty your ad runa MUll ~ prepaMI
• Roceiwe dMcounl for ada paid in ad¥ance.
• FJ'e!l: Ad.: Giveawa7 and Found .d. under 15 wo-... will be
run 3 dayt al Do charp.
,
• Price of ad for all e'aplla) a.ue,.. it douLie prk:e of ad co.l
• 7 Poi at liM type oniJ uaed'

• SenJin~ M: aot re~pon~ib~ for error• after Cirtl day (cheek ' ~
for errori firtl daf ad ru111 ib paper). C.ll heforr: 2:00 p ....
d•y aflt!r pu~liulion lo Make corr.ct.ion
• Ad. l.ha&amp;•uL be ,_M:I in .dvance ue:
Card ol Thonluo
Happy Ado
In Me.oria•
Yard Salel
• A:el... if..t od.,....;.o.,enl ploeed Ito lhe GoUipolil Doily
Tribune (exeepL Cla .. irled Dilplay, B...i ..... Card or~Lepl
Nolie•) will alto •ppear la Lhe Point Pleuant Repw and
the Daily Sentinel • .--ehillf over l~,OOO

.

bee••

..

'

..

'·

a.

367-a-h;..
388-o-VInton

985-Cheat.er
843-Portland
247-l..etart
949-Racine
142-'R.~tland
667..Cooi¥1Ue

245-lio Grande
2Sf&gt;.G"7•• DilL
643-A.raLia· DNa.

379-Wal•at •

FRUESn~TES

949-2168
lliiW'Citln.

&amp; TREE

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC ·

REMOVAL

Public Notice

•UGHT HAUUNG
· •FIREWOOD

1tt2 at 2:00 P.•.

lfor•ly EaP .,. s..ll
Ujloo)

PARJS &amp; SERVKE
Mawen • Cltall Saw'
•W.Iers

BUSlACK

openMI thoreon.r for
. nlohlng the m....W__o_ -:;· _
porfunnlng the
ODO!Ition and conlllniCtion

4:30 P. a ·DAY IEFORE
PUBLICAn Oil

lui94-WIIler Aley
RAONE, OHIO •

99~-2269

NEESE RECUIIATION

I

985·4473

1 ·667·6179

H·92·1fto

11Y1i

lrl,

aacl VCR
llLMUES
lila Or We
kk!!J!.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE .
992·5335 or
985·3561

PROJECT

MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
RECLAMATION PROJECT.
NIJMBER 'MG-88.31 .
In accordance with tho
plano ond opec:lllcotlono
propaNd bJ tholleportmMt

RUMMAGE SALE
Senior Citizens Center
Tuesda~~obere ·

Wednesday; Octoliler 7
9:00 to 3:00

r

of N•lur•l

SEAV~=MS,

FOR SAlE

be _....In ... Third Floor

6637

.St.lt.
C..sllire,

~

$3500

HOME SITES and
lAND&lt;; lEARlNG,

. TRAILER SITES.

Call614-99~ .

Conler•c• Room of 1855
(BuNting H) of tho Founlaln
Squora ol'licoo of tha Ohio
Daparlmanl of. Natural
Raoouraaa. Tho United
Sla... Office of Surface
.Mining Roclam••on end
Enlorurnofll lo oupplylng
100% ol the !undo lor thlt
projicL Tho aodmlato lor
thlo proJect • clelarmlnMI
bJ laa Dlvlolon of n.ctam•

FREE SCREENING FOR
CATARACT AND GLAUCOMA
FOR INTERESTED SENIORS
CITIZENS AT
RITE:AID IN POMEROY
TUESDAY OCT. 13
BEGINNING AT 10:00 A.M.

and TRACI\HUE WORK

SIZED UJIESTONE

Dlvlalon of ·Roc:lomallon,
Columblltl, Ohio. Bldao will

UNLIMITED SESSIONS
Months af Seplemller,
and Ochlber ,

BULLDO~t;! ,_BACKHOE

St•eCo.

Aeaauraea,

SPECIAL.

EXCAVATING

Q•lity

-

WPENTEI c:rD\tlt'd

CALIFORNIA
TANS
·-'
949·2823

DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE~TRUCKING

FREE ESTIMATES

Addlllono

Work

.,dPiumblng

.· 992·3838

EXterior .

lion .. $511,720.00.
A ......let m..Ung

. ..

wll be
hold on Thuradoy, Ocklber
22, I~ at 11:00 A.M. M tho

"

Public Notice

Coplao of tha plano, opoclllcotiona; end propoool
forma will ba lorwardMI
from tho DJvlolon of
n.ct
...uon, ~· o1
Natural AMour-, upon
racalpt of a check In lha

Public Notice

NOTlCI!. OF EL,ECTIOH ON

TAX LEVY IN EXCEII OF

THE lEN IILL LIIIITAliOH

NOTICE ·la horobt' givoll
thai In purounH of a

-ntofS13.00madopoy·
ollie ID tho Daparllllant of

Commloolonaa of tho
County of Malga, Pomwoy,
Ohio, paeoocl on the 211111
doJ of Julr, 1ta, .._ wll
be
ID a voto of
.,. poop to of llllld oubdvlolon lila Glrwtlll Eleellon Ia
be halcl In the County of
llhlge,Ohlo,.tlllo....,t.r
.,._of volng .......,. on
lha ard ctar of ........~.;,
11112, the quaatlon of levy&lt;
lnga...,lnuaoooofiM
terl IIIH llrnlllilloli, for 1M
IJonolll of llalga County
tta.lth OapartmMit for the
purpoe• of Current Ex· ·
, . , Ill
lalcl ... baing a ·...,t••
menloflaol1_.

_ , ..... be purchMod wllli

Notunal A-ur-.. ThaA

Roaolullon of lha Board of

OFFICE 992·2886

In tho ulllll MOounL
Plana anct' apaolftoiOIIono
bacoma 1M. property of lha
proopacllvo blddara and no
rafundo will· ba made.
Addltlonlll lnlormotlon mar
ba obtained from tho
Dlvlalon of Roc:lomotlon,
Deportment of Noturol
A-urooa, 1&amp; Fountain
Square, Building H,
Cotumbua, Ohio 43224 (Tal·
oaoh

••lllltleil

n~~~.\llng

.

•Roofing •Siding ::
-Gutters
.'
· •Room Acldltlona •'
•I l!terlor Remodell ·

·
;
Ji'
31904

Leacli•g

Crook load
Mitldltport, Olllo

ophona Number: (614) 265-·

1012).
.
Eaah bid muatbe .,c.,....

Coatact Robert E. Jacll,tl

(614) 992·2866

614·992·7144

penlod tiy • . BID
GUARANTY, mHIIng tho
roqutramanto of S.ctlon
153.54 of tho Ohio Rovlood

10/1/921111

Codao.

'

(8) 211-'92·1

me,;

-RUTLAND
MINE SUPP.LY

Contracklro •• odvlood
In
with lha
ProVloiCNI• 111 lha January
11172, EacuUvo Ordar
by tha Gov•nor of Ohio,
and omondMI Execullvo

-done•

lha~

TOP TO BOTTOM
MAINTENANCE
··· and REPAIR .•

.DAVIDSON'S
. . PLUMBING

Real Estate General

Pipe for Water,·Sewage
and.Gas
Rutland, OH.

NMCI an ax1ra income?
bedroom, 2 balh'duplax

ON
OF

pork. AltO included is an
$28,000

given

of a .
of tho Yllago
of tho VIllage of
puro~n~no•

742·2656

~7111-...!h':;

....... be ....
IDavotoolllla,....

Public Nollce
NOTICE Ot&lt; ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY .. EXCEII OF

'I

I ..:::.

THE TIN IILL LIIIITA110N ~~

"'

..........

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

1

:5=:·

niftY

open until 7:30 o'olook P.ll
ofllllldclaor.
By order ol llio Board of

.. ,.

EllllllloM

· New Homes • VInyl Siding
:
New Garages • Replacement Wfndow$
Room Additions • Roofing
. ·:

of~:r:;:=

NOTICE to horabr glvon
'thai In purauonco of o
Rooolullon of tha vntoga
of
Council of lllo Vlllogo of Don, .for
tho
P•oroy, Po......,, Ohio, SyrHUH VIllage
far the
·p•nd on the lrd cloy of purpooa of currant
Augua~ 1112, ...,. will be
ou........, ID a vote of tho
lalclllix baing • , _ .
paoplo of oalct oubclvlolon
of
- nito
ll[ldollng
laX of 1 milat
at'o
not ·axanclna
mill for ..t1 - dolt. of
:H:app=y=A=d=l=::;
...., ••
~ whloh
_....
~
..
....
_ ..
110.10)
far - h
.
hlllllhd . .len of .,...
It really is
llllllon; far .... ,..,..
Tho Poll• for oold
Etoollon wiU opan at e:ao
o'clock A.M. ond romalll

to 'be 50! .

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

olllllld ••dl\1alon at •
be hald

~aont...

of llalgo .c-ty,

Ohio.
Henry L. Hunllr, CllalrtMn

__. ...

AllaD:Imllh,DlrooiDr
11, t1, . . 41o

PubliC Notice

COMMER€1AL and RESIDENTIAL

992·2259
608 EAST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

· FREE ESTIMATES

614·949·2101 • 949·2160
or 915·3139

.
REDUCED- Sou• SUbclvlolon - Very nlca horne, very

Briclclbomo oanch ~ hOIIMI v.ilh 3 bedroomo, 2 balho, iun bomt 26 x 14 allachod garage, F.P.
CiA.
· RM!uood lo $41,750 (mike M olfiN).
good location!

.

.

'

(116 Sullllay CaDs)

llobRo Homo Only - A 1184

Naohuomobila home. cam.. wiih ..pppoct kilc:han pluo

microwave, doh•....,, front ........ reor
undolpinning. t.oob h NEW.

.

NEW USTING- vacant lot &amp;OxiO localed at
Sl, P~roy.

HARRI80NVILLE -

124 LauiOI

dack,

211

and

$15,000

ASKING 53,500.

NEW USTING- Vacailt loi •o'x 13111Dcal8d on Peaooc:k
'AVo. in Pomeroy.
ASKING 53,100.

MORRIS
GARAGE DOOR SERVICE
TRY OUR JEW
STEEL INSUt.TED
RAISED PINEL GARAGE DOOR

NOWS20,000

CHESTER- E•tabllohad buoinaoa buiding
401&lt;V0+ with aquiPf11811t and fi'M gao t&gt; builting. GnNii
oppollllnily lor oomHRO. Clltodly lor dalailsl
.
•
MIDDLEPORT - Ona noor trlmo llama wllh • rooms,
bath, gao opac. hoot. Aoldng sa.ooo owners ~II accept
REDUCED~

ST. ill. 1Z4 - AbMuftll BRICK RANCH, 3 bodmomo,
I~ ball homo. Hao 1111 bo-t and ottochod 2 car

.......

.IUST.Pe.IIOO

IISTILLED. PIICII
t.7-$275.00 16•7-$450."
OPENERS IISTILLED-Y. HP-$200.00

ctESTEA- I - llaad -A ~tlitla geta•r or
·-homo. Hao 3 h douoms, 1 bath, 1uo1 citturnoc:o
will appoox. 3 4 $32,5011

reuonable oiler.
~

POIZi!ROY - Vary unique atyle 1!-i otory homo v.ith 3
,bodnlomo, lull basenw~t, porch 1lnd oida decking newtr
romodolod.
COlE BEEt $32,500.

..xM:&amp;PORT- Wolilul ..... - A one olaly home In
loWn. Thla e IQCIIR, N bodlaorrl homo 1111 on 2 lola lind
hot •...,... boUR*II. Hao al new wiring and tow utiliiee.
.
.
130,11110

REEDIVZLLE- Very comlortabla I floor block home will
2 bodlolomo, I car garage, roar ociHIIId po.rch, prorltm
building and oollng fan.
·
Aaklng •11,000. .
'
.

With 2 Tranamtu.rs

II W1it• PurcHso of

lrel!or. _ _: _______ II 5711

HENRY E. CLELAND.........................., ................tt2... 191
TRACY BRINAOER............................................toll-2439
JEAN TRUSSELL......................:............:..........141- 2eeO

OFFtc:E........................ ._................................. ,.....H2-225t

\

.r

.•

PCP ROf- LinColn llolghla- CUio oo a Bullon, Naol
•• a l'wl cleocriboo lhio ._ ......_, horne wiih on
oq~ipped ldll:han, Cllrplllt, and part buerMilt. Hao 1
tlooiM lilc-"' a 5QI2881ot. w. $25,000.
•

'·

r

S •.

614·949·2804
..,

USED RAilROAD nES

of:

F EEESTI

HAVE REFIIENaS
ltf.ro 6 pA lowe Messigo
lh• 6,.... 614-985·4180

882-New Ha•aa
895-Leta;t
937-Butrolo

BISSELL &amp;.IUIKE
.COIISTRUCTIOII

LINDA'S
PAINTING
&amp; co.

•llow Homes
eGar•1••
"Ta•ll• PrO Our 01 '""'"•• •Co~oto
- Ltr u, 0.11 ;., r.. '
· Romodoli•l
INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR
Sto" &amp; co:z:re
REE E5niiATE5

GQtters

. 773-M-

r.u.

t9
..

Down..,Outs
Gutter Cleal!lng
Painting

~s·
949·2826

576-ApP!eG.....,

•

NEW~REPAIR

...... tpaeltl
-~ 1IIIIIIIG

6 75-Pt. Pl-n1
458 Leon

Pomcruy

ROOFING

lttlll ...........

Cot......... Ohio 43224
Willi Moncl.y, ~-

~ First birthday

One in four break up with ho1netown
~oney in first college year, study shows

992-)lidd~ : porll

~

~2·7ot3

Mon.--.t-pm .
S.. uo lor your hun•nti'·
ond bock to ochool·
nHdo. AIH'o ,., ... ,
ooloctlon of mlll.lory.
.ourpluo '-ol 1117 ~

SALE

Howtrd L Wrltesel

1111116

Gallia Counly . Meigs CuWIIY Muon Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

County Rd. 18Peac:hfork Rd.

1-26a'V2-tfn

FOUVER
BROIZE

Cla11ifU1d page• cover th.e
. following tekphone e:ccha,agea •••

.

f,.. EIIIIMil•

RREWOOD FOR

TRIM and

Spending time ..
buying happiness

abandonin'

Paper
Paper

..

•SAND ~~~VEL •DIRT
1

A !' .... &amp; Cnr.merelal

ttl..,

l:OOp.m. T~ay
1:00 p.m. Wedneoday
100 p.m. Thur.day
I :00 p.m. Friday

Th~yPaper

446-Goln..,u.

· Fad•rO.b12
· G s;so.IJ
'Sats Sept. 27

I :00 p.m. Monday

Public Notice

Eastern

ana

Mondl)i J'apet
Tuesday Paper
. Wednoodoy Paper

ho••

.

Community calendar.

Di\Y BER&gt;RE fUBUCA TION
l:OOp.m. Saiurday ·

•

p

.._nMowlng,
Fettlllzlng, Weeding,
lind Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trli'nmlng It Remove!

~ r

Dear Ann Lande.ra: I never .
whole b8g.
thouaht I would wind up wrilin&amp;.
So wh,at'sa nvelet to do? F'U'Sl·'
:Byi&lt;EVIN
to you ~famous last words), but
carry your luggage on the plane if
.
PINSON
IOillethinl bappe11ed that ill driving
poasible. This often IIIC8II8 you must
- me nuu.
travelliiJtter. Experienced tralelc:rs
. ~n I .visited' my mother in
have learned it is smart to tllce half
TH Last of tbe Mohicans
Mlam1
recently,
she
save
·RIC
a
as
many clolhea and twice as much
· RitedR
lovely
Spanish
shawl
she
bad
QIOIIey.
··
.
: .• •••(out or five)
purc:hased ia Madrid yean 180· She
Ne- pack valuables (camen;.
; Tweatietb Ce•tury Fox
paid
$500
for
it
in
1970
10
it
must
The
pilfenn
can
cash,
jewelry or implaceaiJie P!Jo: (Now playing a1 the Spring Valley
be
wcnlla
great
dealliiOrO
loday.
go
lluougb
as
many
as400
bags
in
tosl.
ill
a be&amp; yon~ptan to check. If
: CilltiM 7. Chuk local listings for
·
I
packed
the
shawl
in
tissue
paper
.
e
iaht
boon.
In
Chicago,
the
FBI
did
.
IOIIIelhins
is mi•na 111!1 you am
: time)
'
l
.
and put it ill my suitcase. I know I ·a lltins operation and arreated 1'6 certain you packed It, notify the
packed it because my mother was hqpp bandlers. Eight ci them had airline at once.
•• The Last of the Mohicans should
right there instructing me on bow to pn:vious police records:
DBAR READERS: Here's my
fold iL When l arrived hOme and , In Dallas. a sbuule bus'dri- was laugh for the day. Tape this on the
: be hanging in an art gallery.
. Director Michael Mann has shot
unpacked my bag, the shawl was ~when he was csuib.l irying refriserator door. It might come in
. ; a motioo picture so hean·stopping·
not thele.
. to l'llllke off with a passenger's bag. handy on 'lbanksBiving.
·
·; ly beautiful that any frame of lhe
I cannot for tbe life of me ·f~g~~re ·Mt« he was ar'rested, the olfiCCrS · · The suests, seatejl around the
; ·film c:oold be reproduced and hung ·
out what !lappened 10 iL I checked found 43 pieces ofstolen luggage iri table, waited with IIIOIJth..waterins
.oa a wall.
my luggage when I boarded tbe liis home.
.
·
. ·anticip11tion as the lriaid lwought in .
. " Minn has a real eye for natural.
plane. in Miami and it arrived witb
CBSRipOitCdthataccordingtothe . a huge turkey. As she entered the
: ~Qty. as can be seen in lhe film's
me in New York. What's your best airlines, fewer than 1 pelCCIIl of the dinins room, "Beuy' slipped on
many shots of forest .scenery so
guess; Ann? - DUMFOUNDEP IN people .whose bass have been looted the freshly polished floor and the
. ~~you doubt il9811 reaDy coRYE
file 1 complainL Why? B«anse they !Wkey' slid off lhe planer.
THE LAST OF THE MOHICAJ:'IS • Hawkeye (D'anlel Day·
cxast ID a modem society full of
DEAR
RYE:
Fupny
you
should
.,.OO.bly
believe the mimng items
"Don't give .it a thouaht, Betty;
races to save Cora from sure deatb following u ambush by
, toxic wastc and olher polllllallts.
. .aLewis)
ask. Not Ions ago, I saw something were left at home; in the hocel or in said .the hostess, "Just take the
tribe of Huron Indians. (@ 1992 Twentieth Century Fox. All
: • Mo/Uc(IIIJ is based on one of a
rights reserved.) ·
.
..
·
on lhe CBS .Evening News about the homeS of friends they had been turtey back in the ki~ and bring
• five-novel series called "Leather·
looting by baggase handlers at visitbtg. It does not occur to them in the 'other' one.•
; Slocking Tales" by American nov·
airports.
l .could scarcely believe lhat someone in the airport would
Lo~~estJ~M? Take char~ of yoilt
·. elistlames Fennim~ C&lt;lOplr.
with out churning the stomachs of my eyes.
The
soldieQ
take
measurements
·
go through their suitcases.
life and tum it aroiUid.. Writt fo~
· Set in 18th·century America
the audience in the process.
before
firing
the
cannons,
sparks
I
phoned
Roberta
Baskin,
CBS
Does
it
help
to
lock
your
luggage?
Ann
Landers' MW booklet, "How 10
during tbe war between the Fltnch
Qui~tly changing camera shoes
fly
from
the
flashpans
of
the
flint·
Washington
coriesporident,
and
Probably
not.
Looters
have
every
Make
Friends a11d Stop Beinj
.Inc! tbe English, Mo/UcaliS is the
and well'planned angles give the asked for a tape of that show. She'~~ imaginsble duplicate key and can Lonely. • Send a self-addresw/,/OIJI,
locks
ilnd
the
battlefield
fills
with
a
: story of Hawkeye (Daniel Day·
impression of a bloody war without
'oJien a locked bag in a matter of busitllss·sizt enw:lope and a chec/1
·.:Lewis), the adoptejl son of the lhick, fog-like smoke cmued from turning the movie into a Freddy sent it promptly.
·
spent
$liD
powder.
The
sceneS
are
This is what appeared on thai CBS seconds. Does it deter the pilferer if or mpney order for $4 .IS (thi1 .
Mohican Chingachgook (Russell
Krugerfest.
newscast
A hidden video camera tbe suitcase has a strap or rope includes posrage and halldli11g) to:
: MelliS), and his romance with Cora realisuc, you'll swear you smell
The Indians, while not portrayed
gunpowder.
showed
several
baggage handlers around it? Not n:ally. The ·thief can Friends, clo Ann Landers, P.O. Box
~. Muilro (Madeleine Stowe), tbe
According to a press release as positively as in Dances Wirh
riflins
through
bags
at La Guardia, get it off in notbins OaL If it is 100 11562, Chicago. Ill. 6061 UJ562. (II!
· daulht« of an Englisb officer.
'Twentieth Century Fox, eiiht Wol~~ts, are played eccuratelr with
: One of the most suitable-for· from
0'~,
Miami
and
Dallas
airport&amp;. difficult, he might decide to take the Clllltlda, und $5.05 .)
respect to their traditions and
.
.
i bning acencs is lhe bittle of Fort' months of research were IJIIdertak. beliefs. Scanning the credits, how·
en
before
production
began.
And
it
: Wlllilm Henry. Hawkeye and his was a well-spent eight months ever, dQCs ~ot reveal a single
; party, fleeing through the wobds
there ··s an obvious· difference American Indian name. Once
~·fiom a band c;&gt;f Hurons, reach lhe between Mohicans and olher films
again, flollywood has denied this
RADNOR, Pa. (AP) - Tom Prince Edwatd has quite deliberate· Brown, who left Vanity Fair to
fort after datt to fmd it under siege that simply raid a movie cbmpany's nation's lint race the right 10 )lor·
Selleck says be'd like to make a ly bided his time before taking the repllce Robert Gottlieb at The New
.. by theFralch.
/
tray their ancestors.
big-screen venion of "Magnum, filial step," James wro1e. The booJc Yortet. '
back lot warehouses for props.
~ The erupting cannons striking
This movie should take home its ' P.I.,' ' but not bccP,nse he needs to. · comes 0111 Thursday.
· . . The Oct. 12 edition features 111
. The movie also gets credit for
:the fort, along with lhe flashes from remaining tasteful. The film · share of Oscars next year, but.even.
S~lleck, .wbo is staning in the .. ' In an rare step· for the royals, article about Malcolm X wit~
·firing flindocks, create a morbidly doesn't try to "glall)orize" the
more impcir1andy, it will probably
mov1e "Mr. _Baseball,". rejec~ wbo "!''~ comment on their pri· ~ fli'SI· a photograph .of the
'beautiful fireworks display that bloody baldes, nor does it go for · stimulale more than a few viewers
any suga;~n that h1s mov1e .vate hves, Edward was quoted in . slain black lCIIlkr, taken by Richarc\
"llghts up the night.
.
career is
· g. ·
. London's Daily' Mirror in 1990 as Avedon; The New Yorker has ilf
the cheap gross-out; lhe producers . to go to tbe libraty and check QUt a
.; . Complimentary roses also go to have managed to get the point
gteat classic American novel.
"I'm COIIl1llg from a position of denyins he is gay.
.
the past disdained phOIOsrapils. ~
·.the hUkxical researchers who made a_cross thai the war with its primi.
strenRth." be said in the latest issue
James, who .said his book was
For her fll'St edition, Brown, the,·
•MohicaltS more of a step back in uve weaponry and close-quarter .
KeYID Pilllljlll is a staff writer
of TV" Guide. "People don't rislc written with Buckingham Palace's .magazine's first woman editor~:
:lime than a trip to lhe movies; ·
for Oblo Valley Publlsbing.
$30 million on a featme unless they cooperation but not the prince's stayed with the traditional covet;~
combat was
quite .messy
'
. mdeed
. .
think it will WOik."
. insisted Edward spoke the truth and with a drawing of a punter: ·
.
~ of Selleck's co.stan in the has ~ly ~hoseilto keep his pri· spraw~ in a horse carriage driVCJ!~
senes, Roger E. Mosley, said in vate life 10 himself.
by a dasmayed, top-hatted older
August a script was in the works
m... .
for "Magnum: The Movie,'.' and
SALT LAKE CITY (AP)the series' ~~ were willing to The 18-year-old son of John
NEW YORtK (AP)- Sinead
~' c-..."' Cale•da-; Items p.m. 'MeethiS Will lollliW • 7 p.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS • orange make a two-hour film~
McEuen, 1 founding member-of the O'Connor, who angered .ftlillions
·appear two da,. before u event Child Care will be provided.. All ·Township Trustees will meet Mon·
Selleck · llns til keep a hand in Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, bas been by refusing to allow tlie national
Ud tile dil:r vi thai emaL Item parellts welcome.
day at.7:30p.m. at the horn&amp;~ of the televisioo.f: said. One possibility: charsed with stealins and pawning ' anthem to be played during a. OOO·
.
:• • lie received wei Ia adva~~«
clerk, Patty Calaway.
Rhett Butler in the still·uncast his father's $5,000 banjo.
~ courted ~onuoveny agam by
POMEROY • Beginning and
t.o - n publication In tl!e cal·
miniseries "Scarlett."
Andrew T. McE,uen· · was teanng up a pacture of the PQPC on
endar.
·
intermediate clogging classes,
. TUESDAY
In an earlier interview, Selleck · chlqed Fric!aY with theft and was ''Saturday N18ht Uve.''
Monday, Pomeroy Village Hall, 6
After ·the last verse of her
POMEROY • The BiJ. Bend said he has been 8IJI]IOIIChed about released to his fathec.
MONDAY
p.m. &lt;;all 99'1-3578 or 94~·2917 Sternwheel Association will meet tbe part but would' do it only with
Authorities said 'the teen-ager protest song "W11r," .the Irish ·
CHESTER· Olester PI'O, open forinf~. ·
Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at the Cmpen- "an excellent script, bcause tbe and a friend took the banjo from singer said, "Fight the real
boule • the school, Monday, 6:30
ter's Hall in Pomeroy. Firial plans part is.loaded With ptfalls."
1o1m McEuen's ·home on Wednes· ' enemy,'' then held up the 8-by·l2
RACINE • Racine Villa~e for the festival will be compleied.
.
,
day and pawned it for $250 the photo of John Paul n and ripped it
.Council, Monday, 7 p.m., Star Mill Aqyone interested in helping is
LONDON (AP) - As the next day·.
to pieces.
•
Park.
urged to.auend.
youngest of Queen Elizabeth ll's · lohn McEuen, who played witll
The demon$tralion was met with
'
four children, Prince Edward has the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band for 20 silence from the studio audience
SYRACUSE • Sutton Township
REEDSYn.LE •
Alhlet· an ad vantage - he has learned years, lives in the Salt Lalce City Salurday night.
Trustees, Monday, 7:30p.m., Syra· ic Boosters mee1 Tuesday at 7 p.m. from liis siblinss' mistakes, espe- suburboCMurray.
O'Connor refused to allow
cuse Municipal Building.
"The.Star·Spangled B8!JDCI'" -to be
cially their II'Oubled marriages, a
in the high school cafelaia. .
biographer says.
NEW YORK (AP) played during a New. Jersey con·
HARRISONVILLE • Har·
With
Prince
Charles
reoonedly
Romance!
Action!
Drama!
Come·
cen.
She also canceled an earliet
liOBSON • Rev. Karl Noggle,
risonville Senior Citizeris, bake and Chamber, Ariz., who works with 'in a loveless marria,e, 9rincess dy! Conuoversy! The life of bon· al'pearance on "Saturday Nigbi
yard sale, Monday, 8:30 a.m. to 4 the Navaho Indians, will be at the Anne' divOlted and Prince Andrew aid Tr~as it all - and it's Lave" to protest guest host Andlew
p.m., Monday. Sveryone welcome. Hobson Church of Christ in Chris- separated, Edward, 28, will remain prime ~
for Broadway, a pro- Dice Clay and his often venomous
.
.
·
comedy acL
tian Uniol) on Tuesday at 7 p.m. a bachelor for now despite rumors ·ducer says.
CARPENTER • Columbia Theron Durlwn invites the public. be is say, Paul James wrote in
Trump's girlfriend, Marla
Township Trustees, Monday, 7:30 Noggle' will be taking back money ''Prince Edward: A Life in the Maples, caused a boom in ticket
. p.m., rue station in Carpenter.
sales wben she joined the cast of
Canned food for the Indians for Spotlight."
''Such
are
the
pressures
'that
the musical ''The Willll.ogers fol·
Chrisbnas
PAGEVILLE ·Scipio Towl.
lies'." And the fuss has made one
ship TfUSICCS, Monday, 6:30 p.m., ·
RACINE • Southern Junior Sons of the AmeriCan Revolution, of 'the producers think about
Pageville Town Hall.
I can watcli a butterfly
High School Boosters meet Toes· Pomc:my. will be condiiCting srave puttins ~p's life to music.
. "It would be a ~. real crazy I can watch him for hours
day at 7 p.m. at the junior hish. marking services Tuesday at noon
LETART • Letart Township Bob Ord will speak on the tax leV)'.
for Patriot Silas Fearing at the musical; lis~t and frc;&gt;thy, with Dancing on a dandelion bloom
Trustees, Monday, 7 p.m., office
Round Bouom Cemetery, Beverly, danci!!$ girls and lavish sets, sort I Cl!joy him all over the meadow
building.
POME,ROY • American Legion and foDoWing at Harmar Celiletery, of a Zaegfeld·type production,''
Pierre Cossette said ID the Oct. 12 Some time I stop to.watch a bee
Drew Webs~r Post No. 39 will
REEDSVILLE • Olive Town· meet. Tuesday. Dinner at 7 p.m. Marietta, for Patriot Noah Fearing.
issue of New York m~rgazine. Gathering nectar from a flower
· ship.Trustees, Monday,s 7:30p.m. MeetuiB at 8 p.m. ,
.
RACINE • Asrav.e !JIIIfking for "Trump is a naturalwause he's a The Lord gave us a gift
at
the
Shade
River
State
Forestry
· Audrionna RCJiae Pullins recent·
bigger·ihan·life
person."
Wfl
hen
he
gave
us
so
many
pretty
David Reed, a soldier of the Arner·
.
I)' celebrated·her first birthday with building. .
Cossette said be bas spoken to
owen
. PORTL,A.ND .· Portland Ele· lean Revolution at the Weldon
: two parties.
.
·
Trump about buying his story.
mentary PTO meets Tuesday at 7
RUTLAND Rutland Fire p.m. Parents of fourth, fifth and Cemetery in Racine will be he.ld
'· ,Her farst party was at her par·
Now flowers to aorne, not much
Tuesday at S p.m. Public invited..
. cnts' home, Tom ·and Staci'e Department Ladies Auxiliary will sixth graders who .P!an to. play bas·
NEW YORK (AP)'- The 'New Their too bUsy chasing the dollar
in special session Monday at · ketbafl or to.participate m cheer·
Yorker's new editor, Tina Brown, Taking ye8rs off their life
. i !'UIIins. Besides her parents, atlend: 7meet
WEDNESDAY
p.m.
atlhe Rutland Fire Station. leading are asied to attend.
is
mikins h« fll'St bis break with Just tryins to keep up with others
• Hll were her=·andparents,
MIDDLEPORT. The Middle·
; Theodore and Bee Pullins and Final plans for serving the dinner
tradition
at the 67-year-old maga·
port Literary 'Club will meet
· : Dave and Susan
. Others were on OcL 20 will be made..
POMEROY • Post Matrons of Wednesday at 1 : ~0 -p.m. at the zine,
the: usual cartoon Some green, gaeen grass and a big
• Teni and Jusain. Brownins, Shawn
Evangeline Chapter No. 172, OES, home of Mrs. Eil~n Buck. Mrs. .covet for a painbng of Malcobn X. · oak lleC
POMEROY • Meigs Local Band Willl!leet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at B.emard Fultz will review MThe
: Bush, Jean Spencer, Bill Osborne,
"While the great majority of our A cl~ running stream and a robin
Boosters
will meet Monday at 7
; Chuck, Donna, Zachary Pullins,
covers
will continue to be uiirelated' Enjoy i~ this is lhe way life should
the home of Kathryn KnishL.
Mother Boolt" by Uz Smith. Roll
.
l Kelly and Ryan Tripp, Opal Math· p.m. in the high school band room.
.
to
the
magazine's co.ntents, we . be
call yffll be " an anecdote or mei!IC).
Parents
are
urged
to·attend.
! er.
want to ha.ve·the flexibility to For .on this earth; there won't be
BEVERLY • Ewings ·Chap.ter, ryofmymother."
.. ' ,
depart from t!'aq~ractice," said another
: • Sending gifts were Denise, Vic,
·. Michelle and .Mike Laughery,
great·Jial)dmother, Lera Hall,
For wealth and gold, I won't bold
Francas Sanders, Todd Tripp,
For ways of being rich, there are
olhen
·
:-suun, Chuckle Pullins, Nikki
~and Doug Browning.
To hear and see what God J)reJllred
: Her other party .was held at lhe
To me, that makes me ricliCr ihaa
1tlome pf her IJ'IUidmother, Nancy
millionaire.
;HaiL A~ were her parents,
- .
.
• Tom ud Stac1e Pullins. Others
By Frank Diebel
:·aiteadlng were Davis Hati, Ruth, ·
C9LUMBUS, Ohip (AP) ,.... . The study C!illdUCied by Andre~ t.appiless~ Schwebel said.
_
.37496
Leading Cleek Road
Ms~Hurd has a boyfriend in
: LelJbAnn, Marvin Bland, Warne One an four freshmen who leave for Schwebel sbowed tllll couples wbo
New
.
"We
have
decided
to
· "If IDldell'- had a fnn founda·
· · ancf'Monica.Zurcher,ludy, L1sa, college witli a hometown boyfriend depend on eldl other the most ll'e lion in the relationship, it helped keep ·i open and sec what hap·
' '
.
.
ITammi, Dakota Young, Roxann or iirlfriend will eod the relation- nlcilt likdy 10 i1mlk up.
·
· them deal .with the discomforts of pens...
Ru.JIIIId her P1t·~ea1ts, ship by their fars&amp;.quarier an Ohio
Sonic
students
don't
plan
to
lose
Schwebel, a professor of JIIY· sepa11tion," ~hwebel said
·. , Gene 8lld Sally Bland.
· State U,Uversity ~· 8JIYS.
choJosy at Ohio State, also found
•·Some studenls weren't surprised any sleep over the study. ·
: Sending gifts were Curtis Clark,
''I'm just, going to deal with it
But. some students say their Jove• that couple•·who stayed together by the study's.fmdinp. . . •
·Sue Zurcher, Johnny and Janet . can withstand the pressure of diS: tbole who we.e IDOit lllisfied
''There are 10 many people·11m as itcomes alons,'' ·said Jason
: Miller, Stacy and R1ck Keams, tance.
• With their teWionrhip bOfare tliey dill it would 'be i~le not to Plesedell, a freshman from Chilli·
limmy Young, Tweedle Bland,
."Mr boyfriend and I are reslly came to C:.OJIUI. .
meet somebody,' said lenny · oothe wJJo has a girlfriend attend·
Tom, Scoct and Ores .Russell and close.' said Stephanie Watson, a •. Sludeau wbo deJiend on oacb ]one&amp;, a fmilunan from IIIIICIIOWII. ini Ohio University.
fdikt~Marb. .
.
"If someone tells you .thai one
freJbman from Findlay. "He is ather for bappinea are tbe ones
· Lisa Hurd, 1 freahmail from .
; .A "Mlnnie-n.Me" theme was ·fiaruJ.ing to~ here next quaner. who ofteal ~ up,
they Fairview Park, said one ''would out cl every 100 motorists is ~
; tarried out at bOtb IJII1ies, Cabs
behove yoo can look ·but don't . bocome niolt liJ)¥t by I¥ tepa· · have to be really dedicated to )'0111' to have a car accident, you don t
: were decorated by )can Spencer to,uch. I'm 110t going to break up tiOII and Will' ll!m to Olbels to find . boy&amp;iend ·becaa1ee there are a.klt of '* II driving a c.."
·and Sue Zurcher.
With him. He is too good to me." ·
aood·iootins guya IIOUIId.•" • .
.
·- . . , " \
·.

eview

949·2391 or 1
1-100-137·1460

-CLII ·

WILSON'S ARMY
SURPLUS

..

DOor Plus

o,.,..,.I

�•

•

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.

--- - - - - ----

TilE

~llEMTIH.. ~

-..olr-7 CAADI~ 1CW

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li#MY 1'1llJMAA

~10~ .

.•

MON., OCT. 5 · •

tloblle Homes
for Rem

a,.

TALX 10 CANDY UVE
1
u•.I2IICIII
c.- c-. loco FL, 1i +

.. .

Television
·Viewing·

VOTE~ ~

WU:Jt. /#AA.'f

.

0 f011r
Roorranae. loiters · ol the
tcromblod wordo be,

low to form f011r llmplo - da.

, .t i RIUi El

·.·

. 01812 TV Lilting K Ft WOrt'!. Tl

EVENING

.

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111

we (J)e ·••
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. . .
I. 1

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.

lla•dlng RolnbciW Stereo.

1

HI! MV NAME 15 CORMAC ..
I MET YOUR 6R01"14ER AT
CAMP Tl,ll$ SUMMER ...

1M NOT
YOUR
SWE~T

I

oi~~Q

1-lE 15, BUT ~E ­
THINK5 ~E 15N'T

· ID ~li.g NASCAR
!rOll) 'Nc!rth Wilkesboro, N.C.
Cll Wlllld TodltJ
ID llln Tin Tin, K·t Cop Q
1:01 (I) Tltree'l Company
8:30~· ((J NBC INwa C
(!) Ed McMahon'• StiT

6A&amp;600)!

Search
(I) g (JJ

1

2

UNEE V
5

~~-R;.;..-_,E-.r.-V.;...--r:A~~R:I~~~~ make

......
,1..

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•

17

1•

1·

•

.

.

.

.'

preat lures 'out of those

I . ..~omplele

!he chuckle quoted

..

. by filling in the missi ng words
'-..L.-L-..L.--'L-~-' you develop lrom step No. 3 below.

•

e ABC Newa Q

.

., '

I had a date with a.guy that
took his fishing too seriously
for ,my taste. He gazed at me
lovingly and said. "I could

_

PRINT NUMBERED

.. .

LETTERS IN SQUARES

ID Where In the WOI1d Ia

~ . .odlogo? Stereo.

• • oecas~MwoQ
liD. R_,_ Stereo. Q

Boou: Booka: Bookl : Uood

and Aa,., llotight and Sold.
Thoo!lhll,., lox 731, Galllpalla,
Ohio 4563~

10P.II.
oum 'of f1101M!Y In
~- eor.c..t tho DollY son.
· tlnol,
glwo amount
loot,
cllncimlnitlon of bile, arwa In
..... ond-loot
F-.d:

Cllfldr~

=
g

~~ ..... Trek: &amp;Next

o.
aze..

Wantod otondlng tlmbor, top

DrioH pilei, frM 1Mirntll:ll1

llcanood lOgging ccmpony, 304-

8115-3055.

Wontod To Buy: Junk Autoo
Whh Or .Whhoul ........ Coil

221-.

Lotty

SOlo. Eom $1,000 Waokly. t-100-

local Sn~ck /Soda ' Route FOr

Uvoly. 814-388-HO:I.

375-Vand Elll. S.

Public Sala
&amp; Auction

8lck

Plant. Sub df\ielon a, 1,

·-

s. Wwlahl un~ Bench,
...., Clolhoo, 41111.......
·"

1D
0... On r;1
7:011 (I) . . . . , HtllbiiiiH
7:30 (2). GJ

•

Would Llw To Buy Non Worlllng
Waoh«w l Drvft, G.E., Hof.
,IIOint, llalfloa WP soorw Only
Hood Coli. 814-4411-2144.

7:35 (I)

1:00 ~

.,_rwon Aucdon Company,
Gnoclouo Hvlng. 1 !lnd Z bodoportminta II Vlllaao
llonor
liHI
Rl,...ilo
Aport- In ....- . FIDIII
$1111. Colll14.fii2·7J81 EOH.
Complolly Fumlohod Smoll
H - $300/mo. + Utllhloa. Nc

oUCIIon
...,leo. Ucanood
IIIMI,Chlo I Woat Vlrglnll, 304TIM'/III,

!00111

pt, Pleasant
a. VIcinity

73 ,.Vans &amp; 4 Wl?'s
tHI P..110- . . _

Poto. c.i1 8alor8 7 P.M. 114-tatl-

Ccmplolly Fumloliod mabllo
homl, 1 mUe below town over-

=.,rtftr.

a

Nlo PolO,

~AMo

Pets for Sala

0331.

o,_, ond Supply Shop-Pot
Q,_,lng. AH briOI!o, otyloo.
lamo Pol Food Dollar. Julio
Wabll. Col 114-MI-G231.
4 AIIC Roglotorod . Chow PupDioo. ANdy To Gol Vet
ChoOkod, Block ICinnomon. lt4·

814-

:117-G511.

a-

Goo!!,

114 lSI aaAfleriP.a

.

•

,.;;j!

J-

$S,OOO. , R

.. 11

A.-•, XL.._, •:

1N7 Fenl
304-I7W2IL

tll7 Von . . . . . Lltor '
Fuot INootod. Aut....lla 0... .
- · Air~ • • Conditio.!!, '

Aald!'ll:A - Golllpotlo.
At: 11+
'"" ' ••
Thkd

.ROOnNG

O,I,O,I1t ttl 1111, .

Sporting Goods

IIUIES • IDDinONS • SIDING

=::a-

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

TROMM BUILDERS

12 fiiiAIIO,20 ·
12, III!JCII;
guogo
Romlnalon ""' Wlnamootw,
Nll.l_ ~·~I&amp;~ I i ftt, Nil,
Ute;
114'
14.

$213 . Por Month Including lot
Nnl. Nn M" wldt mobllt home,

lncludoo dollvory, ccmpleto HI·
up, okl111ng l otopo. 1.-oo:837·

HU.
1m Llborty

12x50. Nowty
floorw, paneling,

r.modllod,

carpet, 2 BR, atQW

suoo.
2383.

814-367-~34.

.

a

Rtl.

·llolo -

4

I Wooka Old, AKC

45

FumlaiMKI

58

Rooms

814·379·

113114.

Fruits &amp;
Vegetabies

t 112 Botho, 8t4·241-t627, 6t4·

•

MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

240:.. o/o Golllpolla Dol¥
Trlbuno.....e Third AYinuo, Go~
llpoflo, unlo ~31.
"'olo •u,Uollnll"

•

r DON.,.. KNON

.·;-::~f~ PRECISION POST FRAME

1:
e e

il-lE EQUAiOR 1WICE.

wailtad to Rent

Business ·
Buildings

.1USHAID t GIT OUT
OF THAT BED
RIGHT NOW

Roolty. 304-8715-3030 or 304-675-

Merch&lt;md1se

roed, ·1 mil trom Union camp

51

Ground, eiiC 6 water 1valleble,

304"12·:1423 onor 8:00PM.
Ono .. ,. lot &amp; 5 ocrH. Rt. 2 N.

Eckonl Chopol Rd. tovol, city
water, 304-17&amp;.eOC3 1Her 5pm.

HousehOld
Goods

Roll'o TV sar.tco, IPICiollzlna
In Zonlth . . •li:lnu ....

z
~-·-i.-·~

•

$I50t acre. Remote, be1utlful

lond; - · · pootura ond hlllo.
Coli lor good mop. t ..t4·SP31541, Atliino.
·

•A• ~I Ru ad1l

....
-.wv•-,

Triple

:...-r:.~ ~= .

Rentals

I
}

lltNiv

llda

Bpt:

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-

..

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Palnfod ltoil lld!!ltll ...........
t ...... lllldlna -

w.::

.... Door, ll,lto .............
Hono lldgo.l-1111--

84

Electncel &amp;

85 Gtnarlll ti~UIIng

I

Eaanarnr Wltlr llrwloe. (Mil

=
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·
.
----,-·
= v::r
'I Walhor l DIYW Wltllo
"" lot Olhor ....,_ I
nf100lUp.HowPirtllll

"

G••t HI Elfld•cy
» (•JIIUII'I,. llsat
p IIII,'F • - ' .
111w Wil• H111an.

==

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Bennettl MobiDe ~

In

211J.

n..

Ctl (6141

t

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l!oom

Cot·

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rb'nst•.

::~i :·:.....
Cloee To 4JV ~ ~
oaL IM'=' Oak ,_-.1111111111.

1 . . . . . . . . . ,....

~-llolthla; . 111-8B2-iiit

-

Col .....,.... Oryor

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PDI. . I'UIIIITUAI

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Ill n
o'o\1niJ
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Col _ , . filr ... ..: '
tlmotoo.
..

112· 1111.
Jontoho IW. 11'1. P l -. wv,

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tiii:IOW7I-1410.

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choice

1 Dtc. holiday
2 Typo of playIng marble
31tttagt
4 - COIIogt
5 Make a

'

- llcEnllrt
20 Sticky atuff
23Poa-- .

8 Talllttd thin
7 Biblical

DOWN

pronoun

II
1D
11
18

signa are romantically perfeCt for you . not 'implemented properly, they're not
Mall $2 plus a long, aalf-addrellllld , · likely. to produce the typeo of resultl ·
stem~ envelope to Matchmaker, c/o .you anticipate.
·
this _,.paper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleve- . TAUIIUI (April ZO.May 20) Pay panicular attention to detlllatoday, espec;la~
land, OH 44101-3428.
BERNICE
ICORPIO· (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Thore'a a ly If :working on an endeavor that In- i
BEDEOSOL chance that, before thoroughly In-ti· cludH otherS. Someone could make a
gating the facts, you miOht pua on · mlotake while another may compound .
•
some goulp today that could be detrl- 11.
mantel to aomeone's reputation. Be GE-t (Mer 21.June 20) It' a best not :
careful.
·
to v(IIUnt- to manltgll a oltuatlon for :
BAQITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec: 21) You another tajlay - -Iaiiy HII pertains
might be so enthusiastic about a prO- to an area in which you lack expertlee. II '
lect today that you'll taH to determine anything goes .wry, yoo'll be held
the trut coat. Thla could be your eccountoble.
CANCER (.hiM 21-.luiJ 22) In order to
downllll.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22:..U. 11) In order placate your mate today, you might ·
to gratify your embltlona today, you agree to aot:nethlng that Ia oglilnat your
might unconiCioualy do aomethlng at betlor judgment. You'd bo better on
Oct.8,1882
the expenM of another. Before taking trying to hemmer out an ogreament you
Take tlmeln the year'ahead to eetabllah ·action, con alder all ranilfleatiOna.
bOth collld live with. •.
toundatlon
In
every
entarprlee
"AQUARIUS
(Jell.
10-Feb.
11)
Moet
of
,LIO
CJuiJ 22-Atll· 22) Thora Ia·• pcitli·
atrong
1
In which you beCOme Involved. Leaping your thinking will be . pri!CI"'etlc today, blllty something could oceur todey that
· from CIM proleCI to another ~ld tum but aome of the little thlnga yoo'lltake &lt;might Interrupt your work. Therefore, II
out to be 1
of
for granted might cause foul·upa. Be moy be a· good • • to focua on tlllci
coniCioua of delalla ao ...1.
.
which, H lliiCIUary, you can leaVII
ak&lt;&gt;rd with PISCII (Feb. 211 II' all' 201 Keep your undone.
~IIJI..JDyoy!J?Qt~. """"ll! .VII® (A. . 23-lept. 22) You're a
] ~yell-" tadt;JiAiti*-WifftillrM= ,l)relly good lllllf1llllll" of your ,_rcoa,
~:~iai~~~~~~~~~=~: Clfllt
Who lln't 11 ethical ao you are. In ' ,but, on occaoiOn, your axtr--aont
tact, dOI)'I .-me onY,9 M Ia.
1 whims gain the upper h1r1d. Thla could
AR•I CMaroll 21- Aptll 11) Y011r ldeU ,- be one of thole days.
, might be IN~"IOUI today, ~ut Hthey ar•.~ .

'\bur
CBirthday

Thin papor
Tall tale
PeUUona
Entertainer

21--lhe

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progr•
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(2:20)

(!)I

••
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Item

Rdll10:81 (I) MOVIE: The llland jRJ

11:30®

I

30c-t31 Clwlltmn

CIIWO!IdID 700 Club Willi Pal

Tonlahl
. 8CIIIpoltl
In wow aitd
11:=£.

r

. Lovo
p;;._"'''YI"'''llt"'t -29 New T•tamentbook

35 C.lkn

~.:.=!P
H~"Storeo. Q

•

do
27 Jerkl up and
down

glval him Into hia team.
Stereoit£.,
'
glabrlllon:
200 Yra. of Fanner'a
AlmanaC A celebration of the ·
Old Farmer's Almanac. Host:
Willard Scott (1 :00)
ID lotljlllulkltlog NPC Junior
Nationals from Myrtle Beach,
S.C. (T)

( !)

•

26 What auttora

32 Orange-red

-.

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24 Nature
.t odcleu

E!pOI",. Joel pours the

n:ao~•

•

Heart

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Pollet The.hlaiOry ol the
Fourth Amendment Ia
fo4ioWad, from Its orlgina In
Colonial days to the debate
over h8 Pl!rpoal. (1:00)

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SEVERAL 7· ACRE PARCELS:

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61 Hotel•
62 Flohlng lure ·
63 Clwtnlcal

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I'LL Gt\IE YORE
HAM AN' EGGS AN'
HOT BISCUITS TO

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championship en
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46 Japantae
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50 Actor- .
Gula;ar
52 On tho acaan
56 Water craft
56 .UnettracUwa-

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35 Lots &amp; Acreage

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42
44
46
47

Night

THAT 'TO~
THERE ... -

Into bMU:Ihd home. Somerville

BUILDERS

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The Worlct Almanac® Crossword Puzzle

WNittlnll

3431.

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

•

S.vo MJ Child' NBC: MondaY
Movlel (2:00)
Stereo.
(I)
AIC Monday
Night Footbelt Dales
Cowboys at Ph:7.1adel Ia
Eagles (L) Starao.
1111• GeM
llnnm
Murphy ohocka everyone by
hor pleasant attitude toward
the . - boos. Stereo. c:;J
0 WWF Prime~
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'YOU HAVE 10 CRi:)55

WHEPE ITI9.
AL-L. r KNON 15

Commercial brick building,
30xl0, full flnlohod boHmonl 1
acre tot. COuld be conYir1.a

"Any SID Av•n.ble"

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'De..,..tt Chalan· To

27 Aero Form II""' Or to.. , 2
llllao North 01 Crown City. 614·
371-2118, - ··

34

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Philadelphia Eagles
championships; ga~y at
Veterans Stedlum; Dallas
Cowboys wide ..-lvor
Michael Irvin; 1991
EagleajCowbOys dual.
t:OO~e 11J MOVIE:

33 Fanns for Sale
Fuii-Timo Olllco Poollon: Con&gt;PIMDNINd
Not
Sond _
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Farm Suppilc-.
&amp; Livestock

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vaudeville comedian dies lh
Anthony'a ·ambulance. '
Stereo."C
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Georgie Ann's recanlty
P!l'oled father peys an
unaxll8Ciad vlaR. •Stereo. c:;J
ID NI'L IIOtideJ Night .

Rl.fTKS ...

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441-3257.

18111 Clayton N- Ccndlllon,
14170, 2 Bod!OOI!Io, 2 lotho, CAl
SOt-Up, RHdy To llcvo Into.
$17,500. 114-Mti-7Val, 304-675·
3414.

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For SOlo: Apploo: Vol ..... &amp; Rod
Dollclouo, 114-alo 1081.

1181 Shuttz 14x70 3 Bedroom•,

wr RE-"S'UJ51~~ .

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AND ·nim~ING UliDEINEITH

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prisoner Capt. Chales de
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RUIIIM . _ Starao. C

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. James Russell Lowell wrotei· ~~
Pass &amp;NT
All paa
"There is no good in arguing with thl
inevitable. 11!e only argument with ad
Opening lead: + 8
..
east wind is to. put on your overcoat.•
On today's hand, though, careful L..._ __ __ _.:....__ _ __J
·timing leads Inevitably to sweet suc·
.cess for South and inevitably to disap- . ·- · .
.
pointing defeat for East.
· diamond finesse. That's a gOQd line o1
North judged not to use Stayman, play. But it isn't the best available:
becatllle ol his strong intermediates.. Tllere is a path tbat guarantees the
He felt confident that there wouldn't contract any time East has fewer than
an extra trick available iil hearts five clubs.
even if there was a 4-4 fit. On some
,You should start by ~king your four._
layouts, one can imagine that he would club tricks, discardirig a dlamood
be wrong, but not using Staynlan does Irom the dummy. Then you lead a ella·
have the advantage thai it avoids giv· mood to the 10. East may win with the '
lng more IDformation tOthe defenders queen, but what can be return? Whlcb·
about the declarer's band. .
ever suit be selects, it is IDto a teoac:e ~
Looking just at the North-South in the dummy, concedin&amp; 811 extra ·
cards, you can see 11 top tricks: three trick ID that suit and leavinc you with :
spades, three hearts, one diamond and 12 winners.
lour clubl. Tbere are several chances
Always take a sare-trlcllllne II ODe
. for the 12th trick, and perhaps your ts available.
•
first thought is to take a diamond fi.
.,. mvltod "' ,.,.,_, :
nesse. Assuming it loses, you will try .,_ w l'tllllp Alder, Ill..,. of~ on ; - . •
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television station. Stereo. C
(I) MOVIE:.Paii!Ck lPG) (2:00)
Clle (l)e vouno tndlane

Help Wanted

fuU time aucUonNr, com~lll

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By Pbllllp Alder

Cll Cra II lire

Employment Serv1ces
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Scft..p Talk

Real Estate

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·East faced
·the inevitable

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WEST

+976$
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Vondlng Routo: local. Wo Havo
Tho N-IIIChlnao,lloklng A

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Top Pri&lt;:~· Pold: All Old U.S.
COina, Gold Rlnao su- Cclno,

IJ, t:DOem, falrgroundl,
noxt to ccunty gorago.

NORTH
tK 10 .
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Marrle'cl ... With

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. FATHER!"

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cashier.~ank you,' I beamed !~ling very smug unlil

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AOI~gorotO&lt;O,
Frw.,., VCR'a, Mlcrawavee,

Color

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"What · beautiful children you have,". gushed the

IDNewZanoQ
1:311 (I) AnciJ Grifftlll 7:00 ij11.• ·((J Whoef of Follune

Junk hi Sail Uo Your NonWortllng llljor Applloncoo,

Oct

SCAAM-LETS ANsWERS
Inhale· Unfit · Valor· Giblet · FATHER

1D Up ClaM

814-446-7282 . • ·

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Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VICinity

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(t SquaN' One TV Q

Wanted to Buy

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. PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ,;Thora'a nothing you con do about lt. I do think
ecton ere bom. lt'a In you." - Derek Jacob'

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

P4U1 ·10-The Dally Sentinel
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Pilgrims in Ne_w Jersey wait, pray People.in
the news
for .a visit from the Virgin Mary

r

Januszkiewicz came out on his quiet and peaceful as the growing
By LFSUE DREYFOUS
AP Nalloul Writer
back porch. Moments lalt2' this reg- . crowd. A man on crutches lmclt; a
woman and young girl joined him.
MARLBORO, N.J. - The ular guy with a weakness for
faithful streamed in through the cigarettes convulsed and feU to his They all closed their eyes.
The Roman Catholic bishop of
• ' afternoon, toting collapsible lawn knees.
the
Trenllln Diocese has appointed
chairs, CIUCifixes and f!lSIIIY beads.
A sea of about 2.000 prayerful
Middle-aged couples in matching looked on in silence. Afterward, four ·priests to investigate
sweatsuits and families still in their some said they smelled the scent of Jantiszldewicz's clainls. A report is
church clothes. Guys in heavy- roses or felt a cool breeze. expected in four to six months.
In the meantime, the gathering
meW luiirstylcs and old women on "Look! " shrieked a woman.
has
in itself become. a religious
the arms of their children.
" She's coming! She's coming!"
experience.
·
·
They were black, white, Asian Another W01DID wailed. A baby
Even swollen as it was to 8,000
and Hispanic; White-collar IYJI.CS cried. .
last month, the crowd is not boisand others down on their luck. On
And then it was aver, the crowd
Sunday they were one community: breaking up as if after a particularly
ICJOUS. No beer cans tossed into the
shrubs. No music blaring. The
a diverse band of believers spilling gtlO:d concert
.
off Joseph Januszlriewicz's patio
The devout cortle from as far as growing group waits patiently for
, and onto his baclc lawn.
Kansas and Canada in the hope of eight hours and more under the
·
The S4-year-old drafisqtan, who catching a ray of Mary's light, or to · cloudy October sky.
People seem to know they are
has solicited no donations and offer a special prayer. They have
sought no publicity, has said he no proof of the apparition, but tnly guests, that their presenCe is mlru_____. first saw the Virgin Mary after . the curiosity-seekers .fixated on sion enough. They can see the
looks on the faces of nei¥hbors,
returning _fro_m a pilgrimage to proof.
YugoslaVIa 10 1989. After 18
"It's really quite p phenomenon. who hang back on their driveways
with a look of decided disp~.
months of regular "Visits," be has ' There's such a sense of peace,"
· At the city's request,
said, she told him she. would con- said Jim San Filippo, 4S, amorttinue to appear only after nightfall ~ broker who came over from a Januszkiewicz installed 10 portable
toikts at the foot of his lswn, their
on the firSt SWiday of each month.
ne1ghboring town.
.
Word of mouth and a push from
"I could be home watching cost paid for by an anonymous
the medis have since drawn thou- football, but this is my sacrifice. donor.
The Marlboro police do their
sands of )V()IShi!~CfS to this bucolic There is solllCthing to be here for. ·
best
Ill keep order and have gotten
town of 28,000 m oentral New Jer· Something powerful. You can feel
pretty
efficient at it. Tl)ey hav.e
sey. TV ln!cks arrive widl satellite it," he said before leaning back in.
uplinks and photographers roam his lswn chair to read the sports opened a field for parldng ($S ·a
car). Pilgrims follow the bright.
die Jli'OPMY.
page.
Everybody wailed. And waited.
A few feet ·away the pasrcl stat· orange traffic cones a mile or so up
Finally, at 9:30 p.m .• .ue of the Virgin.Mary stood guard, the l1md route.

are

IYour. Social Security I

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RADNOR, Pa. (AP) _ NBC
News anchor Tom Brolcaw may run
for u.s. Senate when his contract
expires next year, TV Guide reponed
·He could run in Montana, where
he now spends a month each year,...the magatine Jeported in itS OcL 10
issue A Senate election is sched·
.
uled t,h~ m 1.994• A I!CII com~
open m his nauve South Dakota m
!996.
· ·.
.. ·
B_r!'kaw de.med any p~hucal
ambibon and~ ~y SSid talks
about e~tending hJS co}ltracl have
begun With NBC. . .. ,
"I love my country too much to
entrust it to me," Brokaw said,
lsughing.
, But long-time news executive
Robert Halmi' are, (I to r), Caitriona Ni . Av Westin, now with Time Warner
Mburd1u or Ireland, Derya Zerrin Berti or
Inc., said there's been "considerTurkey, and Valentina Forte of Italy. No Scarable tallc" at NBC about a Brokaw
lett was ch01tn and ·the search continues. (AP
candidacy.
photo)
·
·

rear,

Wompn. st~ges '.before·
c_rematzon . party
ROCKFORD, ill, (AP) - Ever
had a twinge of morbid' curiosity ,
about what your wake will be like?
Irene "Tippy"l.athom has been to
heJS - and she had a great time.
Ms.. ~m. 72, in-1ted nearly
~,00 r~\allv~.s and fnends. to.~
B.C. or bef!'re cremau&lt;?n
party .Sat~ay m.ght. 'l'be smree
was b1lled m a f11er ~ the "pre·
miere show" before the "grand
finale."
. Ms. Lathom. who· doesn't plan
on dying anytime soon, said she
~=gly, would rather be. alive than
at her wake. "I thiDk it's hysterical.'' she said.
. She even invited her undertaker,
Rick Kellet, wbo seemed happy to
have a:cepted. "I'm' always 'U)i for
a party, and this sounded like a
good idea," he said
Ms. Lathom said her three
daughters got upset recently when
she told them she wanted to be ere-

'.

mated.in Florida•. where she was
living at the time, and that sbe
wanted no wake.
Under a compromise, :Ms. Laihom agreed she would be cremated
in Rockford and her remains would
be placed in an urn atop her mother's grave. And she would haVI: a
wake. but only if she could attend.
. Black baUoons. photos of family
members alive imd dead, and even
a four-foot casket decorated the
room at Polish Flilcons Club, w pa~oers ate, dran~ and remi-'
ni
about Ms; Latholil's life.
Most of the ~·mourners•• a~·
that 'the guest o'r honor, who·married four. times and is known to
we,t~r aBo Perek wig from time 1o0
time, is one ofa ldlid.
·
"I'm not surprised at linytbing
my mom does.•• said daujhtcr
·Sandi Noe. "She wants to see
everybody before she plsses
away."

LO\'IDON (AP) - Queen Elizabeth II made Akio Morita, the
chairman of Sony Corp.• an hon- ·
orary knight.
· Morita. 71, ·was given the awanl
at the British Embassy in Tokyo by
Welsh Seqetary D.avid Hunt, who
is leadin~ invesunent mission to
theFar
•
The knighthood was in recognition of Morita's contril}utions to
British industry, exports and
Anglo- I apancse relations, the
Welsh Office said Sunday.
Morita and fellow engineer
. Masaru Ibuyka founded Tokyo
Telecommunications Engineering
Corp. in I946, adopting the name
Sony in' l9S8.

By FRANK LOVECE
right for me. He supplied the moti· younger, who died of leukemia at
Now there's an enticing title: vation, and in two weeks - I'm age4.
"Cindy Crawford Shape Your not kicllling- I noticed a change · Con):tary to modeling stereoBody Workout" .While you'd be in my body."
types, Crawford graduated as valecrazy to think a mere workout
Her coach is trainer-10-the-stars dictorian ftom DeKalb High
video will· shape your body ljJce Radu Teodorescu, who designed School. She'd already begUn modCrawford's, a liUie proper exercise the workout on Crawford's taP,C. cling at 16. "Just the li!liest bit,"
never hun anyone. Cindy, on the "But I know a. lot of people doli't she sars. "In Chicago, 'for Mar·
other hand, hurts people all the . have the money to go to a ~· shall F1eld and K mart, and then in
time -because she is one heart- trainer," Crawford says. 'That's Japan the summer before my senior
breakt:r.
one of the reasons I did the video,
During senior
I arranged
OK, we're gushing. Yet Craw- because my sisters cim't go 10 a 11 so I had all mommg classes. My
ford is more than just a pretty trainer." Older sisrer Chris, a for- teachers were cool, and I was a
woman,~ even than a celebrat- mer teac~er. works for IBM;
really good Sllldent I had fmished
ed model - her sultry yet younger sis Danielle is in the Peace all the math my high scllool offered
~hable image is this genera- Corps. Crawford - who, aside by my junior year. So I could leave
uon•s beaUly standard, the same as . from modeling, .hosts MTV's school by 12:30, get to Chicago at
'
.
T~ in the '60s, Marilyn Mon- "House of Style" show and has 2, get back at 7, do my homcW&lt;ll'lc.
roe m the 'SOs, Mary Pickford in top-selling pinup posteJS and such see my bbyfriend, and come borne
the 'lOs and '20s, and artist .;.. has a Revlon cosmetics contraet and go to bed."
Charles Dana Gibson's fictional until age 30, reportedly for about
After briefly attending NorthGibson Girl at the tum of the cen- $1 million a year. So it's convinc- western University while still modBOWLING GREEN, Ohio (AP)
tury. You dllll't run agoss cultwal ing when she says, "I didn't do the eling, Crawford dlopped 0111 at age
- Houscli in this northwest Ohio
archetypes every day, you know.
video just to make money."
20 to try her luck in New York.
community rattled and residents
Yet even cultural archetypes
Her video workout routines She soon found hersel.f in Elite
heard a loud boom because of 1
have to look at the future. Craw- seem sensible and ·practical, even Model Management's Lool:: of the
minor earthquake, an associarc prof()fd, at 26 -. past the midpoiJit of though the tape is glossily pro- Year competition, -and placed
fessor said.
most modeling careers - says she duced in the style of a TV commer- among the top IS; Crawford has
No one was reported injured and
had to start worldng out because, - cia!. "I wanted something for peo- since appeared on more thlll! 300
no
was lqlOttcd from what
"I was really taU and really skinny pie of my generation," Crawford magazine covers and in several TV
Univemty of Toledo geologist
and thing sdcrwereih.fine, but then as . ~ s. :·welal!;fCW up. with all this .comnlen:iaJs. .
='edmS~un·ng881
l~~-~~~2earth
5 0~
you get o1 . , mgs stan m9ving v1sua sumu uon, .and without it
Last December, she married
the
· ~ uwu• ' •
aroupd a little bit. My body was we get bored, y'!miiW7"
.
actor Ricbard Gere in a brief Las ·
Richteucak.
·
.
.
Crawford grew up in DeKalb, . Vegas ceremony. Tli couple had
He said he would study more
. cl)angins." .
ClochinJt and ~hie tech· Ill., a college town west of Chica· · known each oiher for four years,
infomiadon about the earthquake
today.
niques hefped minimiZe her rela- go, iii a ·blue-collar family where having met at a Los Angeles party
lively substantial ·hips and maxi- mom Jennifer is now • bank .rcller thrown by celebrated photographer
Russ Needham, a duty officer at
diize her bust for the camera, she and dad Dan is a glazier and elec- Herb Ritts. The story goes that the Eanhquake lilformation Cenler
says candidly. Even so, "I ,.,.uud trician. Her parents have long been Ritts' mother Shirley fixed them
in Golden, Colo., sai.d no earth! had to do aomething if I wanted to divorced, though .she remains close up, but Crawford says that's not quake was detected. He said a
be in control of this weight change. to both. Aside from her sisrers, she exactly so.
, . .
quake would have to measure 2.S
Finally Ifotmd this trainer who was bad a brother, Jeff, four years
on the Richter scale or larger to

rear.

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"Dedicated to enriching and
improving the life of Senior Citizem
in Mason, Ga/lia and. .Meigs counties. "

PAUL BUNYAN COMPETITION· Harry Burnsw0J11i uses a
blah power cbllln saw du!inl tilt lumberJack competWon Sunday
at tbe annual Paul Buuyall Festival Ia Neilonnlle. BUI'IISWOrtb
took 4.02 aecoads to rut three Cuts thr0111h an eipt-lnch p~ or
wood Ia the ''hot saw' event. (AP photo)
•

COJUIBCTIOM

Bill to establish Wright park passed · :too::-::::~:.: · POWEL.L'S
. SUPER ·VALU
what they said sounded like an
be created .to as~ist ~ ~rving explosion at about 6 p.m., said a '
~ rn_ad)llling his~c Sltes.m the pollee officer who declined to give
Miami V'illey associated With the his name.
Wright~. the releaae said
· ·• "It was either a IOIIic boom or
• The bill- inlroduoed Mly 14, an earthqu$c and we dOn't know
1991 and pased the HoiiSC earlier ·any more It dtill time,'' he lllid.
this yet~t. lt pused the Senate on
A military plane that took off
OcL 1.
from Toledo Express Airport may
A final approvill by Congreu have Cltlsed a 1011ic boom, said a
wu needed befoce It could be sent deputy at the Wood County sherto the White House. because, the· iff's office who .declined to give
Senate 1111cnded the bilL
her name.
The bin pll88ed on a voice vote.
"We got all shook up,lhat's all
·
I can rcll you," she said
·

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The Advisory Couucil is an a bealtb education couJSC taught
integral part of tbe Gallia County by a regi8rered nurse; an informaSenior Citizens Center. lion fair, which brought togetber
Representing tbe interest&amp; of representatives from services and
Center participants and tbe COOl.- busl!lesses from tbe COIIIDiunity to
munity, the Council informs and · bel~ tlducate people about what is
advises the .staff and governing ava1lable here for them. The
body, tbe Board of Trustees of the Advisory ·Councils have bad
Gallia County Council on Aging, numerous fupdraisers such as
about programs', needs and con- spaghetti dinners, .chili suppem,
cerns of older persons in the ser- craft and bake sales, ice cream
vice area. Comprised of volun- socials, etc. Programs such as
teers seiving a one year tam, tbe potlucks, selling name badges,
Advisory Council gives seniors an malting a banner and having a
. active voice in determining mat- "blue ribbon" ,recognition have
ters whicb are of vital interest to helped to involve more people,
_tbem. Tbls group meets monthly increase socialization and awareto give feedback and recom- ness about the Senior Program in
mendstions to staff and board, as · Gallia County. We want 10 COOl·
well as plans and implilments pro- mend all wbo have served and are
· grammin&amp;. It serves as a most serving as advisory council mem~
effective channel or cummunica- bers for the excellent job they
lion for the seniors. Cooncils have have done to enhance tbe program
initiated many new programs such for•. older Americans in Gilllia
as the Paths program - Positive County. You are Blue Ribbon
Adults
Healtb Seriously - . people!!!

'

I

Advertisement in tlae' Sunday.nileS·
. Sentinel should •ave read••••

COo.K'~ SHANK END-BONE IN

$.1·,09 ·

HAMS...............
J

· (NOT BONELESS)
'

ll. ·
J.·

· THE MEIGS COUNTY COUNCIL ON AGING (MCCoA) wao ably repreoented dnri"'J
Meip ColUity'o week of celebration at AmeriFiora by ABce 1Vamoley, Aedvlll.,. Direcaor and
ABce Wolfe, RSVP Direelor. 'Handerafled wall h~U~~~nP, qnlllo, pillowo and afp111111 were dloplayed and l(llildi1IJ WM demonotraled.
. ··

Some Social Security recipients
may ·also be eligible for SSI

Care

dam•

1

·Advisory Council at
work in · Gallia County

. GEORGE MILLER of the S..tdle 1\nd Sirloin Clab preea check 10
Bluer, J'rMidentllllll Harry Pn,ll, Viee
CoDDlT Co.,.cll on A,lns In memory
Preoldent, of the
of member,
The prt will be uoed lo help

Prof says rumble
was small quake

.. At long ~t, it will lldp. make
. COL~ US, ~io (AP) :- A
b!ll d!at will e~tabhsh a natiOnal Dayton knoWn to the world as the
historical pa_rk m Dayton in honor real birthplace or •viation " Hall
of the Wnght brothers pasS;ed the said.
·
' .
Conarels on Sunday.
Next year's budget already has
'I1Ie bill esrabliJhes the Dayton $SO 000 emnarked for getting ·the
Avlation Heritage NlliQnal Hislori- · projC:a off the pound.
::all'lrt, Slid a news release frQm
The park will include the 84o R~. Tony HaD, a Democrat, acre Huffman Pniirie Flying Field
Dav1d Hobson, a Republican. on Wrigbt-t'atterson Air Force
IWO ~ the bil,l.
Base, where the Wrights conducted
The park willllonor ploneeJS of many of their tests.
·
1 flight and Dayton natives, Orville
A 13-member ~ission will
and Wilbur Wrighc
,
~
/ ·
·

.

saw

~~~inl~~ee::e

Cindy Crawford's career shaping .up

4

your fatlltl' s inconle and resoun:es
£ """""'"'
By=~~k;'"'
were limited, he could lave quaJi.
Manap~ In Athe•
. fie~ for SSI ~ymen!J while he
GLASSBORO, N .J . (AP) Q.
M
doctor
wants
me
to
have
waited for S&lt;?cial Security 1J.endill;
Robert Hegyes, who played Juan
several
~tic
teSI8
because
of
Q. I was m an IIUIOIIIObile III:CJEpstein on televiJion's. "Welcolne
some
sym~
r
have
been
expedent
~ntly. 11Y doctor tells me
. Back Kotter," is back.
. · ·
'll
Medi
help
pay
that
Medicare
will help pay for the
The 41-r.ear-oldHegyes (pro· nencmg. 1
care
&amp;hysical therapi• but that 1 will
· IIOUllced hej' -yes) is a visiting pro- for
than?
· A.
Yes. Diagnostic icstS.are one . ave to app I y or anY, I'11b'1l'uy
fessor at Rowan College, called
the services covered by Medi· msurance I get first. Is~ ~7 :
Glassboro Sla!C College when he · of
care
medical insuralice. Afrer you
A. Yes and no. Medicare SCIVQ
graduated in I973.
have milt the $100 Medicare medi· as the sec~~ payor where no.
"I'm givin4 something back, cal insurance deductible, Medicare fault or habdlty Jnsur!U'c;.e is .
and I am 8pp'eCiated,' • he said.
will pay 80 Jiereent of the~ pay~ble. ~ut you .mus~ s~ll tile a
. He reed~ a bachelor's degn., charge. You are responsibli for JUiy. c!a1~ wuh. Med1~are fu~t. and
m speech-theater and secondary part of the.$100 annual deductible Medicare will mak~ a ~nd1ttonal
education. He went on to becllllle which you have
met and for the. payme.nt. When a liab~1ty . settl.eone of the staJS of the ABC series remalning 20 1101
percent of the ment 1s .reached;•.Medicare will
that ran frQm 197S tbJoUgh 1979.
approved charge, or the coinsur· recover Its conditional payments .
. Hegyes, married witli two chil- ance amount. However, if your - from the settl~nt amoun~ Condren, is instructinjJ students in income is low enough, you might tact. your Med1care earner for
screenwriting, directini and acting.
ualify ~ help from
State Ill details.
He said be is workmg on two q
of these M:re COSts.
Q: Wil! S~ial Security ~~t
screenplays and developing a com- ~your local social service oft"ICC photocopieS m.~tead of ongmal
edy for Wam·er Brothers· Televi- · about tile Qualified Medicare Ben· doc~ents as ev~~nce· to support a
sion.
" ef!Ciary (QMB) program.
claim?
Q. When my father became dis·
A: ":fo. The person processing
CORONA, Calif. (A]&gt;) - An abled he had to wait S months , the cla1m must cert1fy that he or .
attorney for Larry Fortensky, Eliza- be for~ he could stan collecting she has seen the original document
-beth Taylor~s huiband, has asked a Soeial SCcurity disability benefl.ts. DociiiJients ~an be al~ lll!d the
panel of judges to overturn his My aunt just applied fo. r Soc_JJII . altell!bon will not.~ VISlbl~ m the
1987
drunken
drivingMoore
conviction
LawRichard
argued. .
ecunty disab'l'
1 11y an d 1s gettmg photoeopy. All ongina! doc uments
.
,_
benefits under the SSI program will be returned Ill you.
. Fnday tbat California Highw11y
because she stopped worlring 10
Did you know:
. ·
Patrol officers had no right to stop yeaJS ago. But she did not have to
• about 3.6 million children
Fort~sky because a tip about an
wait for her benefits Ill start How receive monthly Social Security or
enauc driver- anonymous.
come the differmce?
Supplemental Security Income
The officers, Moore said,
A. Social Security benefitS are (SSl) benefits-with a total dollar
paid to people who have paid valueofover$1 billion .
shouldn't have SIOPDed Fortenskv
unless they
for themselves that Social Security· taxes long enough ·
• the maximum Social Security ·
something was wrong. Arrest to be insured under the program, benefit amount for an individual
repOrts said they hadn't
·
without regard to financial need. retiring at age 6S in 1992 is $1,088
,Moore didn't dispute test results ~ program has a !Nilt-in "wait•. almost. 42 milli~ people now
that said l'ortensky was intoxicated. mg period" because 11 assumes that· rece1ve Soc~ Secun~ benefits
· Fonensty, 40; pleaded no con- working peoJ!le arc covered. for
for Yl?ur mfo"!l~on:
test to driving under the influence short term disabilities by w,ork• ~ial Secunty_s firSt ~nthly
and driving with an open conlainer · related insurance and other means.
benefit check was JsSiled m 1940 ·
of alcohol the night of Oct. &gt;26.
SSI payments, however, are for $22.54.
1987. He was given three yellS' madetolowincomcpeoplewhodo
• The artist who designed the
probation, fined $1,178 llbd nOt qualify for Social Security, and original Social Security card, Fred
ordered to aaend an alcohol abuse the program presumes that they do Happel, was paid $60. Almost 360
program.
.
not have resources to carry them million cards based on this design
Three Riverside County appel- through short rerms Qf disability. If have been issued.
~ 1ft expected to rule this
- ~

~=~~y~

SPEAKING PARTS· Three or the 17 Eur· ·
poeu actresaes wllo auditioned for the role or
Surlett O'Hal'll in • ~iniseries sequel to ·~e
Wit• Tbe Wind," were selected for speaking
parts Sanday night. Posing with producer

Monday, October 5, 1892

l·

.,

by Carol IrwiD-Carter
tbe person invoivCc! out use her
Social Security Manager
case to explain the programs.
In GaWpolls, Ohio
Mary; Smith, a 65-year-old
Many people may be familiar domestic worker who had never
with tbe acronym ".SSI." The been married, came in to file for
Supplemental SeCurity Income her Social .Security retirement
(SSI) program has been around benefits. Altbough she worked
since 1974 and currently pays regularly for the past 40.years, she
benefits to 24 72 people in Gallia never earned much money and
and Jackson (:ounties in Ohio. sometimes her employers fniled to
But many people may not know withhold and pay Social Security
that a peJSon can simultaneOusly taxes for ber. Those two factors
get both Social Securi,ty and SSI coupled to malc'e ber Social
benefits. Receolly, I worked on a Security benefit low -only $342
case that illustrates how tbe two pet month. (Let me maire a plug
· programs are supposed to work , for domesdc worters: If you bire .
togethec. I'll change the name of someone to ctean your bouse,

wodt in your garden, etc.. you are
legally require(! to pay Social
Security taxes for tbe person.
Otberwise, that person will prob· ·
ably face tbe same situation in ·
wbich Mary Smidl now finds her$Clf ~ years of hard work and little
Social Security compensation.)
In Mary's case, the Social
Security claims reresentative
talked to her about the SSI program.
The representalive
explained that SSI pays people
who aie age 65 or older, or people
under age ~ with ~ilities. In
ad!fitioo, to qUalify for SSI, a per. ( Co"&amp;lm!.ed on .,..., 2)

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