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                  <text>Sentinel

Community ealend~

Blue Jays
•
one w1n
away
from title

Co••••lt)' Caludar lte••
REEDSVILLE ·Riverview Gar·
appear two da)'lllelare u eveat · de'a Club will travel to the ·Belly
ud tile da)' ot t11at evelaL lteJu MiUs Club in Marietta on Thursmlllt be rec:ehed wei illlldvuc:e day. The group willmeet at the
to - r e publleatloa Ia the cal· home of Maxine Whitehead at .5.
eDdar,
p.m.
WEDNESDAY
SALEM CENTER • Revival at
Salem Center United Methodist
Cb~m:h will be duouah Friday at 7
.m. nightly. Special siJicing ni&amp;hty. Rev. Cbeltcr Lemley, Ed Mingus, Roger Kennedy and Dennis
fal!ght will be the speakers. Public ·
IRVJted,
· ·. ·

f,

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:
280
Pick4:
5778
Super Lotto:
8-13-21-29-45-47
Kicker:
226258

Pag~8

TUPPERS PLAINS • The.e will
be a ,special meeting of Tuppers
Plain's VFW Post No. 9053 on
Thursday at 7 p.m. Regular meeting ·will follow at 7:30 p.m.
Refieshments wiU be served.

DEXTER • Meigs County
Women's Fellowship will hold its
monthly meeting at the Dexter
RACINE • Coffman Family Church of Christ at 7:30 p.m.
Ministries will bold sa:vices at the Thursday. Jennifer Sheets will
- Racine Cburch of the Nazarene speak on the Living WiU. Public ·
Tyree Blvd., tonight through sun: invited
day at 7 p.m., nightly. and at 10:30
a.m. and 6 p.m. on Sllllday. Pastor
FRIDAY
~ L. ~II invites the pubPOMEROY • The Meigs Ceun·
he. Further Information may be ty Senior Citizens will hold a round
• obcained by ealling 949-2668.
and squ&amp;Je dance Friday from 8- II
p.m. at the senior citizens center.
REEDSVILLE • The Meigs Music J)roVided b,Y Country SweetCounty Republican Executive beawts. Public inVIted. Bring snaclcs
Committee; fall ~PJign ilinner, for the snack table.
W~y.Eastem High School.
Soc~ hour, 6:3()..7 p.m., followed
LONG BOTTOM • Faith Full
by dinner ICI'VM by Eastern Band Gospel Church in Long Bottom
BOOSien. TICkets are available for will have preaching and singing
$5 from any officeholder, candi- Friday 81 7 p.m. with Pastor Steve
date or at the Republican Party Reed and local singers. Public
Headquarters, Main Street, invited. Fellowship will foUow.
Pomeroy.
·
TUPPERS PLAINS • The TupPOMEROY • There wiU be an pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053,
Alzheimers support group meeting Ladies Auxiliary, wiU hold a round
Wednesday at I p.m. • the multi· and square dance Friday from 8·
. purpose building (Senior Citizens 11:30 p.m. with music by the
Center). Bill Bias wiJI be the guest Happy Hollow Boys. 'Public invit·
ed. .
.
speaker.

VoL 43, No. 127
Copyrighl8d18U

2 llectlone, 14 PagM 25 _,,.
A llulllmedla InC: Nawa!l'pet

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, October 22, 1992

Housing program receives additional funding:
·· newest vouchers, representing tion.s for assistance have b~en
By JJRIAN J, REED
$134,430 in rental assistance, recetved. and 40 of those apphca·
Sentinel News Staff
brings
the total to nearly $1.3 mil- tions have qualified. Applications
Further fundi11g of rental hous·
are still being received at the office
ing for low-income families lion.
.The rental assistance program on Mondays and Tuesdays, and a
through the Meigs Metropolitan
Housing Authority was discussed requi.es recipients to pay 30 per· waiting list will be compiled after
when the Meigs County Commis· cent of their gross monthly income aU vouchers have been awarded.
Trussell and John Weeks of the
sioners met in regular session on toward rent and utilities, and the
program then pays the rest. The authority's board also requested
Wednesday.
Jean Trussell, director of the program also offers benefits to auxiliary funding for the operation
department, said yesterday that the qualifying property owners, such as of the office through the board, to
authority has received six addition- payment of property damage up to pay operating expenses until the
al vouchers for rental assistance, to $300, guaranteed rent and a vacan· federal monies are received in mid·
be administered through the hous• · cy allowance if a tenant vacates an November.
Community Development Block
ing authority. That brings the total apartrilent before the month's rent
. Grant funds in the amou~t of $500
number. of vouchers received to has been paid. .
date by t~e authority to 56'. The .· Trussell s~id that 70 applica· have been used for semu1ars and

''

RUTLAND" Leading Creek
SATURDAY
Conservancy Discrict will hold a
DANVILLE , Weekend services
special meeting Wednesday at S· at the Danville Church of Christ
p.m. to discuss contract· negotia- will be held Saturday 81 7 p.m. and
tions.
Sunday at 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Denver Hill, Foster-, W.Va., wiU be
THURSDAY
the spram. Public invited.
POMEROY • The Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
REEDSVILLE • Eden United
, Sorority, will travel to the Amish B.ethlen Church will have a soup
Country Thursday. Those foing are supper and bake sale on Saturday at
to meet at the home o Norma Sp.m.
Custer at 8 a.m.
RACINE • The Charles !hie
· RACJNJ:l • The ltacine Ameri- Family and John Easterday wiU be
can Legion Auxiliary will meet the boats for a special dairy activity
. Thursday at 7 p.m. at the post for the public oo Saturday from 1-3
· home.
p.m. The lhle farm is located on
•
I
.
Morning Star Road in Racine.
: POMEROY • The .egular meet- Highlights will be the new West• ing of the Meigs County Public . falia Double 6, fully-automated
: Library Board will be Thwsday at milking parlor.
·
:1 p.m. at the library in Pomeroy•
•
LONG BOTTOM • Smor~tas­
. POMEROY • AA meeting, bord dinner, Long Bollllm Commu: Thursday, 7 p.m., Sacred Heart nity Center, Saturday beginning at
• Catholic Otun:h. Call 992-5763 for 5 p.m. Candidlite night. Cost is $5
: information.·
for adults and $2.50 for children.
Several. meats, noodles, scalloped
MIDDLEPORT • Janet Bolin potatoes, oysters and dressing 'will
wiU instruct a class on dried fltnl be featured. Desserts and drinks
·design Thursday at 7 p.in. for the included.
- Middleport 'Arts Council. Cost is
; $12 with all supplies furnished.
CHESTER • Chester Elemen: CaD 742-2095 or 992·2675 to .eg· tary School Carnival will be Saturday with a chicken dinner at 5:30
: ister.
p.m. and games from 6:30-8:30
MIDDLEPORT
Meigs p.m. Public invited.
:oAPSE Local 17 will meet Thurs·
: day at 7 p.m. 81 Meigs Junior High
KANAUGA • Liberty Moun• Sc;hool in Middleport.
taineers will perform Saturday at
the DAY Hall in Kanauga.

. . ...

Clear tonlg!lt. Low Ia 401.
Friday, IUDDy.HJab....,. 70.

other preparatory expenses.
Trussell said, and the Village of
Middleport, wh.ich houses the
office in the municipal building,
has provided supplies and in-lcind
services to date. The office has
inc~ $645 in debt since it was
established, and a request for $750
was approved by the board to aid in
operali!"g the offi17 until the Federal momes are recetved.
Additional funds were appropri·
ated into the Board of Elections
budget for the remainder of 1992 in
the amount of $6,299.09. In a letter
to. the co~missioners from Director
Rtla Smtth, unforeseen expenses

have been incurred, includ-ing an reimbursable. .
·
increase in monthly rent from $400
A request for transfer of funds
to $50() per month, a hardware ser- was approved for the county hoffic
vice· agreement for the board's · in the amount of $1,400 for sup·
computer equipment, in the amount plies.
.
of $500, and $4,899.09 for state
Jobn T. Wolfe was re-apPOi!lttd
issues advertisements in The Dally to the Rio Grande Community ColSentinel.
lege Board of Trustees.
The board reviewed a Jetter
Kenny Pacer, representing
from Middleport Mayor Fred Hoff- Lanier Worldwide, provided an
man, agreeing to rent parking space overview or the company's record·
on Race Street for use by the ing products.
Department or Human Services.
Present were Commissioners
The board will take no action on David Koblentz, Manning Roush
the agreement until the Ohio and Richard E. Jones, and Clerk
D.H.S. confums that the expense is Mary Hobstetter•.

.

lb.

THE RALLY· Candidates attending the GOP rally Wednesday night, joined here_ b)' Bernard Gilkey, chairman or the Repull·
Iicon Central Committee, left, were rront L-rry Spencer, and left
to rl2ht, Emmogene Hamillon, Robert Eason, Bob McEwen, Frank

Bunch

U.S. INSPECTED FROZEN (4·7-LB. AVG.J

Young Turkey Breast

Fresh Broccoli

~.Names

~·

•

FLAG PRESENTED • A n., wbicb had no'il'll over the U. S.
Capl~ol was presented to CommiSSioner Richard Jones, right, by
Congressman Bob McEwen at Wednesday night's Republican
rally at Eastern High School. Commissioner Jones then presented
the nag to Jim Huff who accepted on bebatr 11r the school.

in the news

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -

: Country singer Patty Loveless has

: had 1 leaky blood vessel in her
: vocal cords sealed with laser

• surgery.

The 73-year-old author moved
to Cornish in 1952, a year after
publication of "Catcher in the
Rye." He has not granted an interview since 1953.

~Harrisonville

happenings

Mrs. Esther Brandu, Jackson,
spent the weekend with Mrs. Lola
ClarL

Wednesday diiiiJC(.guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Allcire were Mr. and
: Mrs. Don Updegraff, Ala.; Mr. and
-Mrs. Babe Whllley, Fla.; Mr. and
; Mrs. Clinton Gilkey and Robert
Day Blizzard, Albany, and Lola
1
Clark,local.
.
Mrs. Juanita-Richard, Dayton
spent the weekend with Vir• ·

Woman, 26, /Jound
ove~ to grand jury

CORNISH, N.H. (AP)- Fire
severely damaged the home of J.D.
Salinger, the reclusive author of
"Catcher in the Rye."
·
No one was inJU!ed in the blaze
Tuesday. Fire Oticf Mike Monette
would not say if Salinger was borne
at the time and would not give
details of the damage.
The cause of the rue was under

: Dr. Robert H. Ossoff, who per·
· formed the operation on the 35year-old Loveless on Tuesday, said
: she should be able to .esume performing in 2 1/1. months.
: The leakage was probably ·
: caused by strain on ber vocal cords,
• the doctor said
.: Her hits include "I'm That Kind
: of Girl," "Chains" and "Jealous
~ Bone."

By .BM FREEMAN
OVP News Staff
A Columbus woman charged
with attempted murder was bound
over to the next term of the Gallia
County Grand Jury after a preliminary hearing Wednesday afternoon
in the Gallipolis Municipal Court
of Judge-Joseph L. Cain.
Diana Whaley, 26, 1169 E. Innis
St., I is accused of shooting Samuel
0 . Hoffman, 49, 4350 State Route
'325, Patriot, twice in the head with
a small-caliber, semi'-auto.matic
handgun.
Hoffman remains in Holzer
Medical Center in guarded condition, a hospital spokeswoman said.
Assistant Prosecutor Mark
Sheets produc~d two witnesses,
Roger Brandeberry, investigator for
the prosecutor's office, and John
Perry of the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation and Identification.
Perry said that two .25,caliber
pistol casings and a sP.ent bullet'
were found in Hoffman s bedroom.
He added that a Beretta 25.-caliber
semi-automatic handgun was found

investi~ation.

Gibson and Gladys Cumings. 'Illey
auendeid Bob Evans Festival.
Mrs. Dye Ball and son, Ariz ·
visited his sister, Frances Young: .
recently. ·
·Debbie Foley and sons, Columbus, were weekend guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Mahr. Wednesday
g-uests were Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Foley Jr. and children, Apple
Grove, W.Va.

2-Ltr.

"IN THE DAHIY CASE"
.,.,.., , ... Oil ..,..llf$11

•
1

(

U.S.D.A. CHOICE, GllAIN FED
BEEF "UNTIIIMMED ·

"IN THE DELl-PASTRY
SHOPPE"

ii'tjier cbliid WHOL~Jf.,'ff,J.f 4-LB. . Fresh
_orange Juice Whole Sirloin Glazed Donu
Bf.Oz.

Charles E. Michael, Jr!, 30, of Spring Avenue in Pomeroy, was
BrJested on Wednesday morning on an indiclment warrant charging
him with involuntary manslaughter in the death of Courtney Jones
of Letart Falls.
Michael is to appear in Common Pleas Coun for arraignment,
according to Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
· '

coca. cola Classic

Polar Pak Ice cream
OPEN HOUSE • Marcia B.
Karr, Spacuse, wW observe ber
101ad birthday oa Oct. 17. In
.celebratlo• of the occasloa, aa
ope11 bouae will be held o• sua.
da7 from 1 to 3 p.m. 11 1M bome
ol Jadp Frederick W. Crow m,
1304 Collete Road, S)'ricuse.

Michael indicted o~ charge

CAFFEINE FRE~ DIET COKE, DIET COKE,
.
·
SPRITE OR
.

FROZEN ASSOitTED FLAVORS

1

zz-oz. oozen

,,.

under the driver's seat in the car
that Whaley was driving. No
ammunition for the firearm was
recovered and the magazine, the
part of the gun which holds the
loa&lt;!ed rounds, was missin$.
The firearm, shell casmgs and
bullet are being examined by the
BCI, Perry said.
.
For purpose of the preliminary
hearing. Attorney Richard Roder·
ick, council for Whaley, allowed
stipulated evidence introduced by
the part of the prosecution: Brandeberry said he met with Hoffman
who indicated that Whaley shot
him.
·
Hoffman was unable to attend
the hearing.
Attempted murder, according to
section 2923.02 of the Ohio
Revised Code, is a first-degree
felony _punishable by a maximum
25-yeors confinement. Use of a
firearm may add another three
years confinement.
Whaley remains jailed in lieu o(
$50,000 cash bond.

--Local briefs---

'•

•
'h-aal.

· 'Wpi PIIICES LIKE THIS...

WnY SHOP ANYWHERE ·

ELSEI"

· ·Man dies from gunshot wounds
The Meias County Sheriffs Del&gt;artment continues to inve$tigate

Arm&amp;Hammer

the shooting death of Doug Clonch early Thursday morning.
At approximately 2 a.m. this-mornmg, Clonch was transported
by Life Flight from Apple Grove-Dorcas Road near Racme to ..
Charleston Area Medical Center, where he later died.
Deputy Jeff Miller, who is assisting in the investigation, ~eponed
that the gunshot wound is believed to be have been self-inOicled,
but was not willing to make further comments about the incident.
Sheriff James M. Soulsby was not available for comment.
Continued C?n page 3

TDDthpaste
4.5-5-oz.

$ ''

••

McEwen tells Meigs GQP faithful 'Our cause is right'

.
•

Cremeans, Virginia Milner Purdy, Richard Jones, Howard Frank,
Paul Gerard, Bob Harten bach, and Sieve Slory. About 250 attend·
ed the rally held at Eastern High School.

'I

:I

'

.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
"Our cause is ri¥ht, it's what
Americans want' said Bpb
McEwen, U. S. Congressmarr'for
the Sixth District, when he spoke
briefly at the Republican rally beld
Wednesday night at' Eastern High
School.
He talked about the low interest
rates, the lowest inflation in 30
years, the peace and growth
abroad, and said that what we don't
need is the "change" which Gov.
Bill Clinton, democrat candidate
for president, is r.roposing at a time
when things are 'coming together."
He called for support of Republicans "from the top of the ticket all
the way through."
McEwen said that he wants to
· be a part of prosperity which will
come ·to Meigs County. He spoke
of· the coming construction of
Route 33 and the jobs that will
bring, and reflected on the "fright·
ening experience" when there was
a threat of closing the Meig*
Mines.
He said that the scrubbers at
Gavin will bring 800 construction
jobs for two years and create 150
permanent jobs employing some of
those who lost their jobs in the
downsizing of the mines.
McEwen presented a flag which
had flown over the U. S. Capitol to
Meigs County Commissioner
Richard Jones. Jones then gave the
flag to Eastern High School with
Jim Huff accepting on behalf of the
school.
In introducing the Congressman,
·Mary O'Brien related a story of
being stranded in France without a
passport and the assistance given to
her by McEwen. "He' s there for us,
and he needs our support now," she
said.
Others candidates speaking at
the rally were Frank A. Cremeans,
Ohio House of Representatives,
94th District; Virginia Milner

Purdy, candidate for the Ohio State
Board of Education, District 10;
Paul Gerard, sheriff; Howard
Frank, treasurer; Richard E. Jones,
commissioner, Jan. 3 term; Robert
Hartenbach, commissioner, Jan. 2
term; and Steven L: Story, prosecuting attorney, all contested.
Uncontested candidates speak· ·
ing-were Emmogene Hamilton.
recorder; Larry Spencer, clerk of
c~urts; Robert Eason, engineer.

A REAL LESSON IN VOTING PROCESS
• While their votes woa't count on Election Day
Ibis year, these PomtrOy lltlh graders have bad
a real lessoa 'Ill tbe electloa process. The boys
aad girls went to the Meigs County Board of

Elections ofYb Wednelday to bear Jane Fr~J•'
er, deputy director, left, explalll bo.w to mark I ·
ballot, berore they entered tbe voting bootb. Pic·
tured here voting are Josh Hooten and Sara
Fife.

Pomeroy fifth graders 'go to the polls!_

'
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Seatlael News Starr
The culmination of a social
The Pomeroy Police Depart·
studies
and government unit on the
ment responded to a minor motor
election
process came Wednesday
vehicle accident on Wednesday at
when
Pomeroy
fifth gAiders went
9:32 .a.rn. at the parking lot of G
to
the
Meigs
County
BOIIld of Elec- ·
and J Auto Parts.
·
tions
offiCe
to
vote;
· Accoriling to a report, Gregory
Voting booths were set up for
Stewart, 19, Pomeroy; driving a
1979 truck owned by limith-Nelson the students and each one voted a
Motoo1, puUed onto the parking lot full ballot after being instruCted in
and side-swiped a 1985 Chevrolet the process by Jane Frymyer,
S· 10 driven by Kelley Klein, 20, of deputy diJector. .
Once
the
voting
w!IS
completed,
Middlepon.
Both vehicles appeared to have the baUot cards were fed into the
locked bumpers and sustained very computer to come up with results.
The"20 boys and girls BJe stulight damage to the p~~SSCnger side .
dents of Debbie Sellen who began
rear quarter panels.
preparing
for. the study_ unit long
No citations were issued.
.

Police probe accident

Jones detailed accomplishments then recognized David Koblentz
of the Meigs County Board of for his years of service and contriCommissioners over the past dozen butions as · a board member.
or so year, including bringing two Koblentz did not seek .e-election.
Gerard, chairman of the Meigs
nursing hOmes to !he county, con.
County
Republican Executive
structing a multi-purpose center on
Committee,
welcomed .the 250 or
Mulberry Heights, seeing a,school
more
attending
the rally. Patt;r
for mentally retarded children
Pickens,
president
of the Republi·
build, developing a first-class
can
Women's
Club,
had grace preemergency medical service, estabceding
the
dinner
served
by the
lishing a helipon, and creating subE~tcm
Band
Boosters.
sidized housing for the elderly, and

before school started. :; ne video· ·vote on Election Day in a special
taped the conventions and then "Kids Voting" booth. The goal is
-"'···te ..
-·A-ts
showed setecr~tl o•rts r.n th" ~r.n- not on1 Y to """""'
.....,., .......
.....,..t
dents. The same was done witA the the election process, but through
three presidential and one vice · the lcids to encourage adults to ~
presidential debates. - ·
out and vOle.
.
·•:
The platform of each candidate
·Similar programs are expectcll
was .eviewed, the election process to be put into place in other coonwas explained as was the role of · ties before tbe 1993 elections;
the Electoral COUege. .
Frymyer said.
·
·
T~e
Joeal rogram was some·
As for the results of Wednclt-:
what
after a \)ilot project day's vote, the young peopl~
call "Kids. Voting" mitiated-by selected 11. Ross Perot/Jam.,
Secretary of State Bob Taft earlier
Stoclcdale for prdldent/vice pre$..;
this l.C::' It is being carried out by dent by a 75 percent margin, an]!
the
gue of Women Voters in gave 55 percent of their vote ~
Montgomery County.
John Glenn for U. S. ScnMor, lliiCI
In that program the students 55 percent to Ted Strickland rqr
have Jegistered, and they will go to repr~ntative to Cong~ess, Si~
the precinctJin which they live to DtstncL
·
.•.

&gt;

�\

.

Thuraclay, October 22, 1992

· ~ommentary

Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thuraday, October 22, 1992

1

•

.

The Daily Sentinel

.

WASHINGTON (NBA) - The
. charges and COtl1llei'Charg came
Pomei'OJ', Ohio
fast and furious during the vice
: DJ:VOTa&gt; 10 '11IB IN'I1CIIBIITII OP 'I'D IIBJ08-IIA801'1 AREA
presidential debate. One should
examine them closely since they
are liltely 10 frame the debale during the campaign's final days. It
appears both men at limes skirted
the facis and came close to outright
ROBERT L. WINGETT
• falsehoods.
• .
.PubUsber
Perhaps the: sharpest exchange
occurred over Quayle's charge that
Gore
- · in his boot ''Earth in_the
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
· · PAT WIUTEHEAD
Balance:
Ecology and the Human
Assistant Publisher/Controller
General Manager
Spirit" -advocates spending .
$100
billion a year· in envuonmen·
LETillRS OF OPINION are welcome. They lbould be less than 300
tal foreign aid.
woJds. All lettm are subject to editing and must be si&amp;Jied with n~~ne,
Over and over Quayle charged,
oddress 111d telephone D!IDlber. No uo&amp;igned letlln will be publisbed. Leum
"It's in ~our book, senator, on .
sbould be in good taste, addressing issues, not penoaalities.
page 304. ' But; as tho popular
phrase goes -not!
.
·
In and around page 304, Gore
does Iaiit about ·need for a massive
effort by the industrialized Western
nations to help the Third World
clean up their environmental probletns. He calls for a "Global MarThe Daily Sentinel welcomes lettelll regarding the Nov. 3 general elec- shall Fund" modeled after the protion. However, in the interest of fairne511, no election letters will be gram that rebuilt post·World War ·
II Europe. He notes the original
accepted after 12 noon on Wednesday, Octobec ~Marshall Plan spent 2 percent of
Individuals should address issues and not pezsonalities.
U.S.
national product- an
Lette~ purely endorsing candidates will not be used. .
• Letters should be 300 words or less, prefe.tably typed. All letters are
J~ubject to ¢iting and must be signed with name, address and· telephone
fiumber. Telepbone nUIRbers will not be published. l'!o unsigned letters
will be published. Lettelll should be in good I8Sie. •

·J)eadline for publication
·or election letters-Oct. 28

.. .

l

'

IIIIOWit t.hal would

be equivalent to
$100 billion today. However, he
specifically says that we could not
possibly afford anything close to

increase woold come from taxing
foreifD CQ]lOilllions' profiiS earned
m thJS country, and the other $97.
billion would be raised from
increasing taxes on those making
. !"ore than $200,000 annl!ally, closmg some other loopholes, and
increasing collection efforts from
current tax evaders. The Clinton
this amount. and that all industrial· J?lan-calls for middle-class tax
ized nations- especially Japan
and Gcmianr ---, would have to reli!Wben are you going to stop
using our tax dollan 10 shut down
share ~ually m thiuffort.
Quayle charged that Gore. and American faclories and move lhem
Bill Clinton were propoiJin' $150 to foreign countries and throw
billion ia taxes. "No, no,' Gore Americans out of work?" Gore
said repeatedly. But in fact, on this demanded. Quayle called this
one QUayle wu generally correct. charge false and "outrageous,"
The CliniOn economic plan calls· countering that the un1·ted States
for raising $141.5 billion in new "never subsidized any country or
revenues over five years through a any company to move from the
COI!lbination of IICW taxes and the United States." On ibis one they
closing of loopholes.
·
, were both'right and wrong.
But then Quayle skirted the .
The Agency for International
truth by asset1ing- as both he and Development (AID) has a progJllll ·
President Bush do at almost every of assistance in Latin America that
campai~ s~ - that, to acc.om- gives large grants for economic
plish th1s, Clinton would have to development. Some of the counraise taxes on everyone making tries getting these graniS have used,
more than $30,000 annually.
part or the money 10 advertise for
The Clinton economic plan American businesses, especiaUy in
and 10
details how $44.5 billion of the the textile trade to 1
~
'· C}
.re ocijalffite.~Cfk;ICQJl1.;1,

1192·

·.:L etters to the editor
.•

...'' .

Where are the real issues?

. •..· Racine Council, where are the
··teal issues that need to be

•:.aildressed?

· .··. Thele should be a need for pro-moting new business ventures.
Whal about the probletn of unem, 11loyment? The population that is
·.. Jucky enough to be etnployed are
.' working outside of Meigs County.
· , ·: I resd that the council wants to
• .pas! an ordinance on rent .control
foi tax payinf.piopetty owners. If
:..the Iaiit is gt)mg to be about flood
··.control. then I have 10 say, "We've
•''Come a long way, baby" since
· •1937. It's really roo 'bad that the
.- same thing can't be said about the
town.
·.." Let's talk about the town's ~w­
. ·erage pumps, with that air quality,
·... who would want to be on any'"booy's property, especially on a
good windy day.
- .What about
control ·on daily
: yard sales of merchandise and
: automobiles. Why aren't they own: ing a real business in town? Let

me

lhem get off my raxpaying welfare
system. Let's get real! Face the real
issues! Let's go after the real criminals. Think about ways to clean up
the drug problems. that die area is
noted for, that includes the growers
and dealers. It should be a constant
battle, not for just an election year.
The town people should work
together for harmony and try to
offer something better today and
for our .future generation. We need
better leaders that are strong
enoilgh to stand up, to offer some·
thing better, 1101 more of the same.
This certainly should be included
in small10wn America.
Give the rown people an incentive to bec.ome interested in
progress. Give tl)em a. voice, face
the real problems. It IS wronl! to
Choose a selected few 10 sit bebind
.doors and mslte decisions. Leaders
sbould be our tomorrow working
for a better future. '
Shirley Miller
Racine

'Excerpts from other
:.. p hio newspapers
!

.,.

By Tbe Associated Press
. Following are excerpts from recent editorials on national issues in
: newspapers across the state.
.
: Tbe Columba Dlspakb, Oct.17:
.
• , .. -It's a strange world. Now that politicians have proclaimed the Cold
: ·War over, RusSia and the United Sla!£8 are scrambling IIi produce and sell
~ all the weapons they can, to just about any government that can afford
· them and to others that have 10 borrow.
i ''· Thisis · 1
·
·
: •. Both ':.Cw and Washington are under cmtinuing pressure 10 reduce
. !llilitsry spending, on the one hand, and 10 assist indusuy in maintaining
; lind cresting Jobs. on the other. Panicularly when conversion to non-mili, tary producuon is difrlcult, those pressures naturally converge in the
: .direction of increased weapons exports.
· · There are, by someone' s recent count, 190 nations on this globe; The
: Pentagon reportedly plans to push sales to I 54 of those nations, for a total
' $32.7 biUion wMh of arms and associated military aid.
..• Interestingly, one shipment of arms 10 Country A may persuade its
; ~Y IICighbor, Country B, to demand equal access to.u good or beurz
' liiStruments of death.
··
; ' · There's nothing wrong with serving a m&amp;Jtet. malting moncy1111d sus: !iining American jobs, but the sheer volume of wcapo0s being channeled
· 'mto unstable situations around the world begs for revitalized efforts at
· conflict rCS!)Iulion.
•
• . Tbe AJI,Russia Trade Uition pf Defense Industry Workers says 20 per·
;: 'Cent of all defense planiS are on the edge of b8nltruptey.
•:
Col. Gen. Alexander Riazhskikh, deputy commander of Russia's
;. :riuclear forces, declared in the military's Red Star newspaper that, "We
:: ; spldiers miiSl, above all, assure stable, gwiranteed oo1ers for the military·
·: •Jndustty. It's 6ssentialto preserve the ccn of military industry."
:· :·~ Post-Cold War competition 10 sell weapons abroad may be pelfectly
:: ;}j)gical, but that doesn't~ it's desirable.
.•
:: :file (Cleveland) Plaia Dealer, Oct.17:
:: ;. ; Voters who cry for "Change!" are ready to seod the most powerful
·:, ·J!Ossib\e message 10 Washingtoo: On Nov. 3, the VOierS seem poised 10
;• ;send Ill least 100 new members to the House of Representstives.
:t : But on Election Day, the housecleaning will only be starting.
·~ Conpesl!' problems are based on an instilutional 'breakdown, not on peuy
:• 'partiSanship or incumbents' personalities.
·~ • Tbe reform drive is being led by moderates of both parties, in both
~ )ouses - and a sensible Ohio ce.ntrist is among. the leading House
• ftformers. Rep. Willis D. Gndison, a Cincinnati Republican, has joined
:. ~ith Rep. 4c H, HamUron, a moderate Indiana Democrat, to lead the
:;: ~ cleanup effort. On die Senate side, a similar ma~thup of )ll'llgiM•: lists (Republican Sen. Pelc V. Domenici cif New Mexico .anil DelllOCJIIic
~ · Sen. David L. Bom1 of Oklahoma) are trying 10 design more efficieot
-: rules.
~; • · Reformers must refine IIUCh iml"!f8nt (if~) JIOCCIICS u repiiC.: • ing longtime House commillee chlitmen; limiting lhc abuse of~ fill·
.•' tiUIIers and House after-houn ''IJICI:illi orders; •• and lrimming the numbrs
~ of House subcornmilleel and smgle-issue caucuses. They mUll reduce
: ~ senators' committee Ulignmentl; demand a busier Senate floor schedule;
•: pod clean up the campaign-fiiiiiiCe sewer.
;. · VOter:s'who hope 10 "clean the House" must demand candidlltes'
•; delaiiJ abootlllelllllining Congress. checting 10 see if there's lmd sub:; 1tance beneath !heir easy election-)'elf sloganeering.
·

Rccendy, NASA sciCntists gave of life, including some pretty told me a year's worth of spinet·
simultaneous commands 10 c.om- imJI!e8sivc scientist!, who research inglers.
pulerS and J1ld.io receiVe.ta tolqin eVIdenceof.UFO sightings.
But the one I've added 10 my
to scan the heavens for signals
. I host a local TV public-affairs reperroire came a while ·after the ,
from life on other planets. They're'
·
cameras slOpped rolling. About a
hopin~ntercept a commumcaweelt.after the proji1'8JII aired, I got
lion,
it and send a reply that
a call from a long-time broadcaster,.
should get back to the senders in ...
a grand old gentleman in bis 70s
oh, say, about 1,000 years.
'
who's a household name in these
The scientists chose an appro- propli!R in Springfiei•~ Mo., and I parts "I saw your interview with
priate day for sucb a launch mVlted some of the MUFON mem· the MUFON people, and told a
Columbus Day, eucdy 500 years bers to .be on my show a couple friend about it," be said. "Could
from the
C~ Colurn- . years ago. I'm embarrassed Ill say I rou ~e me .a dub so I could send
· bus ventured mto this New World.
must have had in mind a stereotype 1t to h1111?"
·
From my own standpoint, it was of the kind of people they'd be,
Perhaps he did have a friend
perfect timing. My friend and 1 are because when they showed up I who was interested in seeing the
fiXing up my bam loft for a joint . was surprised.
show. But since then, I've wonbirthday-Halloween party for her
The grand poobah of the local dered if that may have been a predaughter.&amp;;ncl reaching back into group, John Carpenter, would satis· tense to~ the subject an~ gauge
our memones for some ghost sto- · fy the Repub
. lican National Con- my reactiOn. Once I made 11 clear
ries to tell them. No one loves a · vention's Family Values Commit· . that I believed my guests were
spine-tingling tale 'more thel) me, tee. Carpenter is a psychiatric credible, he told me, "What
nor hopes more than me that none social worker at a local bospilal, they're saying is vecy close 10 an
of those tales ever actually HAP- and an accomplished jazz p1anist experience I had. ... "
PEN to mel
who does an occasional nightclub
The story he told me makes a
I've always kept a repertoire of Jig. He and his family, which · great one for kids' parties, because
ghost slories to tell kids a1 parties, mcludes adopted Asian children, sit he was a kid himself when he says
and over the last few years I've a few~ ~me 1!1 the. South- it h""""""":
begun to add some lJR) stories to west Mlssoun State Umvemty bas' 77{;;;;; 13 years old and had
the stash. That started when some ketball games, and he may be the · c.ontracted tuberculosis. I got sicker
very nmmil-appearing folks in my loudest fan in the building. One of and sicker, and .the doctors said I
city bepn holding meetings of an his jobs in MUFON is to hYJIII(lti· wOuld die. Then one night I had a
internsbonal group cal!ed MUFON cally regress people who CWm to dream - or thought I did - and
-Mutual UFO Netwcrl. They're have been abducted by aliens.
. awoke in a cold sweat. In the
a group of people from many wallts
John and his MUFON cohorts 'dream,' a spaceship took me

Sarah Overstreet

tim«:

Joseph

mc:t.

.·'..

.

'

EMS units answer calls
Meigs Emergency SetVices units answered 13 calls for assistance
on Wednesday and on Thursday morning.
. At 10:33 a.m., Syracuse unit went to Third Street for Emma
Lyons, who was taken to Veterans Mel)lorial Hospital. At 10:5}
a.m., Middleport unit went to Overbrook Center and rook Cora
Webb to Veterans. At II :32 a.m., Rutland squad treated Alfred Ellis
at Smith Run Road. At 12:14 p.m., PometOy units went to an automatic alarm· report at the Haptonstall residence on Beech Street. At
2:11 p.m., Rutland.units responded to State Route 124 and Com
. Hollow Road for ari auto accident.. Diana Neece and Evelyn Neece
were taken to Veterans. At 2:34 p.m., Racine .unit lOCi; Samantha
I . Friend from the station to Veterans. At 5:31p.m., Racine units went
to YelloWbush Road. Connie MatiOx was treated but not transport,
ed. At 5:40p.m., Syracuse unit took her 10 VeteranS. At 8:27p.m.,
Tuppers Plains unit went to Long )lottom and toolt Joanne
Lawrence to .Veterans. At 8:~ p.m., Middlepon unit was sent 10
Oliver ·Street Srun Rayburn was taken to Vetenms. At 10:27 p.m.,
Racine squad went to State Route 338. Tim Powell was transported
to Veterans.
At 1:41 a.m. on Thursday, Racine squad went 10 Apple GroveDorcas Road for Doug Clonch, who was taken to Charleston Area
Medical Center by Life AighL At 5:34 a.m., Rutland and Cflumbia
units went to School Lot Road and rook Wayne Hoyd to 0 Bleness
Memorial Hospital.

voucher

. ,
. . .
twentysol!'ethmgs_ pessJmJsm IS
th~ sobcnng reahty that unless
thmgs change !heY very we~ may
beco'!le the first generation C?f
AIJ!encans tfu!t .does not outstrip
their paren~ liVIRptandards. No«
as many. will own their own homes.
Most _wUI not amass die net worth
ofth~_parents.
Ahcta ~hue).a, a. 26-year,-old
assoc!a.te w1th a San Fr~n~1~co ,
adverusmg r~ •. S!IYS she JS liVIng
proof of the dimini~ fO!tiJ!ICs of
the baby bust g~ratJon. While she
has more educatton and a better
~than her mother,,!" her age
~ mother ~y had ~ house
With the white picket fe~. •
Cachuela lamen.ts, We re the
ones who the American~ was
not handed ~own to. It S h~e a
wu gom~ on, _you amved
• and all that s left~. die beer .at
the boUom of the~
. The~ twcntysomelbings .are
llcularl~ annoyed at ~ generabon
that P!eccded them , the you~g
. Amenca~s who are aow thlf·
tysometbmgs, who entered .the
worlc force a ~ ago, who are
now ensconced m g,ood careers,
who, in 110111C cases, like my friend.
JaDeane, made. a fortune before
~.turned 30. ·
.' ,
They were a me~e~on.
says 29-year-old Dwi , Williams,
who ~ for a we. ·known Hoi·
lywood_director. The1r motto, says

c:,'Y

p
.
• a r•

a~~d and placed me 00 a table
WJt!!in a glass bubble.
. .
.
!Jie creatures on the ship did
medtcal procedures on me and I
was made 10 understand that now I
would~ well, and that for I!Jc rest
of my life I would be healthier and
stronger than normal humans.
When the doctor saw me a few
days after that dream •. he found no
~~~~~ulosiS.I beli ved I
. htha -~~dream e
mJ~ 'Th ve JI beganato hea~ other
· en
. .
.
!:pie =d~~~~~
1
en_a.
C::: c h the same as
~n~~
u:;, the ay the
mm~IOOk o:vn ·
w
CI'C!''But wh~ 'made me really
.
.
· : ·' 1
believ,: the dream m.ght have been
real was II: few Y~ ago .w~ my
car W!JS hit ~ a ,traln at a railroad
crossmg. I dldJ! t hav~ a sc;rateh,
but when the nulroad mvesbgators
c~m~ and looked at my car, they
d~dn t,understand why I wasn t
killed.
_
Happy Halloween. And ~etn
ber: '!"he0 you come to a nulro~d
CIOSS1Dg, always SlOp, look and hs·
.ten.
.
Sarah Overstreet Is a syndl·
cated writer r~r. Newspaper
En~erprlse Associallon.

•'

.
Around 150 attend recent
open house at Eastern ,schools

·-

47 Meigs area residents
donate blood Wednesday

d

(

. J.,

PARTNERS IN EDUCATION • John Karachnik or the Farm•.
ers Bank was on hand along with wire Connie, rpr Eastern's. Open
House activities last week. The Farmers Bank is Eastern High
School's "Partner in Education", a program that unites business
and education to better improve the education of our children. •

__._, Area deaths--

.·

he, wu screw the future, get all
you can now."
·
Well, no« exacdy. It does not
seem to me that the twentysomethings of a decaile ago were any
more self-absorl)ed than their coun1erparts of today. And I would ventu~e that, if roday's twent~somethmgs had come of age dunng die
1980s, !hey would have behaved
very mucll tlie same way 18 the
..generation before them.
,
Every generation .o f young
Americans has aspired to realize
the provetbial American Dream: a
successful cireer, borne ownership,
marriage and children. But whereas
. the twentysomethings of a decade
ago thought it wss possible 10 have
it all (and sooner rather than later
in life), the young adults of the
1990s feel that it will take them
considerably longer 10 aaain their
dmmls if Ill all.
In my mind, this ia the biggest
failing of the Bush prelldency. On ,
his wau:h, an emile generation of
young Americans bas become
hnb!led with a dark and giOOIIIY
view of their country.lf,IOIIIelloW,
Bush is returned 10 office next
month, he should reach out 10 the
baby bust generation, the twen~methings. He should usure
that although they missed out
on the party of the 1980s, he will
take affirmative steps 10 matt sure
that days of wine and roses await
them in the 1990s.

ADMIRES WORK • Greg Bailey, rlgbt, and daughter Julie
. admired one or the displays on hand for the first annual Eastern
High School Open House, held last week at Eastern High School.
The Bailey's were one or many ramily's o,n band to take part In: the
Open House activities. Organllers Indicate' that the event was a
huge SUCCeSS.

community into the classrooms to Education at no cost to the district. Bill Hall, provided dinner music; a
.By SCOTI WOLFE
see "what is actually going on One theme of the state department performance of various class~al
Sentinel Correspondent
Friday evening, October 16, here" at Eastern . The informal ~rant is to gain community tunes.
: .
atmosphere allowed members of mvolvement, one of the goals of
arou.nd ISO parents, students, and
Principal Moore addressed ihe
the community to speak with teach- the e.vent.
members of the community visited
crowd with his welcoming address
Thus, Eastern's homecoming and several classes provided disers
and administrators and view the
Eastern Jr./Sr. High School in celeweek and Friday's activities carried plays and educational literature to
bration of the school's educational classrooms first-hand.
Thomas Smith ,
Guests were treated to a free the theme, ''Together, we can make · those in attendance.
Hallie Zerkle
well-being and open house activiThomas Edwin Smith, Jr., 66, of
bean and cornbread dinner pre- the difference".
Members of the educational
.
Hallie M. Zeltle, 92, of Middle- ties.
South State Route 681, Shade, died port, died Wednesday, Oct. 22,
pared
by the Eastern High School
Guests were also given guided team were on hand to inform t!Je
High School principal Charles
at his residence on Wednesday 1992. at Vetenms Memorial Hospi- Moore dubbed the event as a "huge · cooks and the education ~cam tours of the school by members of public about the program, an&lt;\ ·to
evening, October 21, 1992 follow- tal.
members. The dinner and open · the Jr./Sr. High School student encourage them to sign up for one
success."
ing an extended illness.
The open house was designed to house agenda was paid for by a council, a group headed by teacher of six councils, formulated to bcneBorn on July 28, 1900 in Mason
He was born in Aleron, son of County, W. Va. , ~he was the get parents and members of the grant from the Ohio Department of Nancy Lwkins.
·
fi 1 the school.
•
the late Thomas Edwin and Hettie daughte!' of the late Millard F. and
Increasing parental and commuJohn Karschnik of the Farmers
Marie Dorn Smith. He was a Ida Mae Van Matre Zerkle.
nity involvement in schools is one Bank was on hand. The Farmers
retired mail carrier for the U.S.
of seven components of the State of Bank is Eastern High's partncr.in
She was employed with the BurPostal Service, a veteran · of the son Hardware Store in Po111eroy
Ohio's Effective Schools Grant and Education, a program that unites
U.S. Army during World War II and also with the Griffiih Michael
the Meigs County Rum! Education business and schools to promote11n
and a member of the National Rifle Dry Goods Store in Middleport for
Demonstration Model.
.improvement in education.
Association.
·
Six teachers at Eastern High
Many students helped in making.
sevj)rlll years. She retired from the
He is survived by a daughter, Zerkle Trucking Co. in 1974.
School, and eleven others district- this program a success. Moore and ·
Rebecca Ann Welter, Egan,
wide, have commimed two year's team members expressed a great
She was a member of the Heath
Minn.;two grandchildren; and two United Methodist Church in Mid·
of their time to parlicipate m the appreciation to both the students
brothers, David H. (Barbara) · dleport, Evangeline Chapter 172,
Meigs County Rural Education and adult helpers who tnade t:lte
Smith, Shade, and Mark A. Order of the Eastern Star, and the
..
Demonstration Model and have event a huge success.
(Sharon) Smith of Vista, Calif.
been taking graduate level classFollowing the open house, the
Middler.&gt;fl Garden Club.
Besides his parents, he was prework to improve and modernize athletic boosters sponsored a bonBestdes her parents, she was
ceded in death by a sister, Barbara preceded in death by her brother,
their teaching methods~ Th.e six fire and pep rally to boost toam
• J. Fritts.
•
''higl\ school team members arc Joe spiri~ for Saturday's game against
John W. Zerkle, and an infant sis' Services will' be held on Satur- ter. She is survived by a sister, NelBailey, · Scott Wolfe, Becky Southern.
day at i 1 a.m. at Bigony-Jordan lie Zerkle, Middleport, and several
Edwards, Janice Weber, William .
Funeral Home in Albany with Glo- cousins.
Blaine, and Katie Peyton. '
The Daily Sentinel
ria Steadman officiatmg. Burial
· Team member Edwards stated,
Funeral services will be held
(t18P8111-8101
will be in Alexander Cemetery.
"I'm overwhelmed and very
Saturday at 2 p.m. at the Fisher
Pabli1hed
enry af\elnoon, Monday ,,
Friends may call at the funeral Funeral Home m Middleport with
PREPARES MEAL • Eastern High cook Groce Stout concen·
pleased with the turnout. Over 100 ~ Friday,
111 Coart St., Poouora,,
home on Friday from 7 109 p.m:
parents visited my room and actutrates on her work as a large·crowd eslimated at 150 people turned
Ohio ~y tho Ohio Valley P•~IU.hihl
the Rev. Frank Smith officiating.
Memorial contributions may be · Burial will be in the Riverview . out for Eastern •s Open House and thus kept the cooking staff v!ry
ally got to sec first-hand some of Compauy/Maltimedia Inc., Pome~y.
45789, Ph. 992-211!6. Second eluo
made to Atherui Area Hospice, P.O. Cemetery. Friends may call at the
busy. Stout along with other school cooks, helpers, and educalton
the things we've done, and some of Ohio
JIOitlle pe.id at .Pon~eNJ, Ohio.
Box 873, Athens, Ohio 45701 .
the equipment we've purchased
team members helped prepare the meal for the event.
funeral horne on Friday 2 to 4 and
M. .boT, The Aooodaled Pnn, ond tile
with our fund misers. It's good to ~to
7to 9 p.m.
NeWipaper Moc:iatlon, Natton:aJ
Erma Turnbull
.
.
Adrertilin1 Repruenta.tive, Branham
get tile parents to see what their
Services for Erma Turnbull, 81,
New•paJN'! SaiM, 733 Third ~Due,
students are doing, and the exciting
Carnival
New York. Now Yorit 10017.
of Mason, W. Va. who died Sun·
Chester Elementary will hold its things we do in the classroom."
day, Oct 18, 1992, at Pleasant ValPOSTMASTER: Send oddrou eha- to
Superintendent Richard Smith
fall carnival Saturday. Chicken dinThe Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
ley Hospital, Point Pleasant, W.
ners and pizza ,wiD be avail~ble ~or was equally satisfied, saying,
P'amorvy, OHio 467119.
.
,
Va., will be held at 11 a.m. Friday
sale at 5 p.m. in the cafeteria w1th "Events like this are hard to plan
81J118CIUPTIONLU'II
·,
at the Fisher Funeral Home in Mid·
games from 6:30-8:30 p.m. There . for. No one knows exactly how
II)' Curler or Motorllow•
dleport. Burial will be in the KirkForty seven Meigs County resi· Friend, Billy J. Spencer, Paul F. will be a cake walk, games, dOor many people will show up, but I'm
One Weet. .............. ....... ..................... $1.60
One Month......................................... $11.116
.land. Memorial Gardens. Friends ' dents attended Wednesday's Amer- Msrr, Thomas B. Hart, Janet K. prizes and a haunted house.
really pleased with the turnout By
One
Yur..... ,..................................... l83.2tl
mar. call on Friday after 10 a.m; ican Red Cross Bloodmobile at the Peavley, Virl!il K. Windon, Gerald
SINGLE COPY
'
any
measure,
this
has
been
a
great
REACT
to
meet
PBICI
~I
unul time of the services.
Meigs County Senior Citizens Cen- E. Rought, Gloria K. Kloes, Donsuccess.
I'm
glad
to
see
so
many
Meigs REACT will meet Nov.
Dwily...............................: .............:l/i Cento
ald R. ·smith: David M. King, Carter.
~
Weather
13 at 7 P.:m. at the Meigs County people take an interest in their chilMultiple-gallon donors were: olyn A. Charles •. Roger Abbott, Public
SabKnben not deeirinc to PlY the carridren, aJ1d what's going on in the
L1brsry in PometOy.
er IDlY remit in advance direct to ~
South-Central Ohio
Howard Logan, Pomeroy, 12 gal· William W. Radford, Loretta A.
district"
Daily Suttnel oa a three, 11.1 01' 12
Tonight, mostly clear. Low 40· ion; Lloyd E. Blackwood, Brown, Dennis J. Gilmore and
maDt.h bMW. Cnctit will be l'i•en carrift
Teacher
and
team
member
Scott
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
45. Friday, sunny, increasing Pomeroy, six gallon; Laura Haw· Bcyan S. Shank.
tiiCb week.
,•
Wolfe
commented,
"A
lot
of
good
Oct. 21 discharges - Roger
cloudiness in the afternoon. High ley, Long Bottom, three gallon; and
RACINE - Melissa Justis Bar·
No
IDt.criptioa•
by
m1il
permitted
inPhillips, Janet Tackett, Angela things are going on here at Eastern
anu where home carrier 1en:ice t•
around 70.
Ivan L. Wood, Long BoiJOm. Mike ton, A. Marie Bush. William H. White,
ia.Yaillhle.
.
Adam Litchfield, Ashley and we want the public to get as
Extended rorecast:
Dub!, Portland, was a first-time Hoback, Grace E. Holter, Harry D.
excited
about
it
as
we
arc;
10
see
Mall8•bHriptloM
Saturday through Monday:
Holter, and Joan M. Simpson; Coburn, Homer Baxter, Mrs. Max what nice things we arc doing here.
donor.
ltoolde Mel• CpwnQ'
Grueser
and
daughter,
John
Tilley,
Saturday, chance of showers.
R.S.V.P. workers serving at the PORTLAND - Stephen H. Nease
1s w..u......................................... nt.M
Education i·s taking a different
26 w..u.......................................... kS.I&amp;
Lows in the 40s. Highs in the 60s. bloodmobile were: Dorothy Long, and Michael Duhl; LANGSVILLE Donna Grahrun, Louis Born, Mil· course heading into the next centu53W..U. ................................ ..... .... $&amp;1.76
Sunday, a chance of morning Helen Bodimer, Emma Clatworthy, - Connie S. Jones and Ellis E. dred McWhorter, Mrs. Rodney ty, and we want our students to be
O.t.ld• M.lp Co•aty
·'
Clary
and
daughter,
and
Peggy
showers east half, fair elsewhere. Peggy Harris, Goldie Fredericks, . Myers; SYRACUSE - Darla N.
18W..U.. .................. ,............ ......... a23.40
prepared."
·26 w..u .......................................... $46.60
Lows in the upper 30s to low 40s. Mary Nease, Mary Buck, Aorence Thomas and David F. Lawson; Bole.
While those in attendance were
53W..U .......................................... tss.40
Oct.
21
births
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Highs in the mid-50s to low 60s. Richards, Jack Sorden, Joan Sor· RUTLAND. Marta Blackwood;
enjoying
the
dinner,
the
ljward
winMonday, fair. Lows 40-45. Highs den, William Hoback, Joyee LONG BOTI'OM- Laura Hawley, Carl Canter, daughter, Oak Hill. ning Eastern High School concert
in upper 50s to mid-60s.
Hobacli, Lee Young, Don Young, Jlruce Hawley, Ivan L. Wood, Oris Mr. and Mrs. James Marriner, son, band, under direction of director
Gerald Wildermuth, Evelyrl L. Smith, and James W. Hayman; ThiJrman.
Gilmore, and Velma Rue. Tracie MIDDLEPORT • William R.
O'Dell and Edward Cozart served Nicholson, Diana L . Ash, C.
Veterans Memorial
CHOICE!
as donor attendants, and the can· Robert Fisher, Michael R. Mowery,
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS teen was served by Preceptor Beta Donna M. Hawley, , Mary A. Sor·
- Kenneth Wolfe, Shade; Vernon Beta sorority.
den and Norma G. Wilcox.
Donahue, Racine; and Nelson WatFive units were donated in the
Donors by community were:
. son, Pomeroy.
name
of Charles Murray.
POMEROY • Walter R. Couch,
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES Tommy
The next c.ounty-wide bloodmoRay Reuter, Lloyd E.
· . Garland Gibbs, Robert Roush and Blackwood,~ L. Voss, Howard bile will be held on December 23
Hazel McHaffie.
P. Logan, Hamett Friend, Mark from Ito 5:30p.m.

'Baby busters' look to a ·leaner. future

..

'I

A one-car accident. on Slate Route 124 Wednesday afternoon
resulted in two inj~ries. According 10 a report by the Gallja-Meigs
Post of the Slate H1ghway Patrol, the driver, Diana L. Neace 21, and
her pa~senger, Lula E. Neace,18, both of State Route 124·,
Lan~svllle, were transported by Meigs County Emergency Medical
Serv1ce ~o Veterans Memorial Hospital where they were held for
observabon. ·
According to the report, Diana Neace.was westbound on S.R.
124 when she went off the right side of the road. The vehicle then
cam.e.b!lck onto the roadway, then off the right side again and struck
a u~hty pole. The report listed, the contributing factor as driver inat· .
teniJOn.
The vehicle sustained heavy damaged and was towed from the
.scene. Diana Neace was cited for failure to conttol.

Yes and no. According 10 Congressional Quarterly, in 1982 and
1983, when the issue came before
the Senate for a straight up and.
down vote, Gore voted no both
times. But in 1990, when it had
been modified and its eitlension
had been made a part o( a massive
biparusan' lllJde bill, Gore ............
-rr·-· ed
it as.jlarl of a 92-0 vote.
Gore hit Bush hard on the fact
that the president has not lent his
health-care reforl!' p_la!' to
Congress. Quayle said thiS 11 not
true, that Congress has blocked the
plan. This one is a standoff. In fact.
pans of the Bush plan. punicui!lrly
medical malpractice reform, have
been introduced in10 Con~. and
defeated. But the cential part of the
plan. a
system 10 help low·
Jncome families buy insurance has never been sentiO Capitol Hill,
·. Quayle accused Clinron rcpcatedly of "waffli~g ~~und'~n
major issues. He smg out
tim and school choice as examples.
In fact, in years past. both Clin·
ton and Gore have said tbey .
opJlOSCd abortion. Now, however,
they say their personal opposition
is not inconsistent with opposing
the outlawing of abortion or supporting a woman's right to choose.
Clinron admits he lilted the idea of
school choice, but only within a
given public school system; not
choice to include private and
clil\fCh-sponsored schools or providing federal ·money to help sup]1011 non-public scliools.
It should be noted that Bush
hifflself has reverset' !J.'.:i.le!!' c.ompletely on both issues. In the put
he· supPorted $1rtion and oppOsed
federa:J support of private and
parochial schools.
Robert Wagmaa. is a syndical·
'ed writer for Newspaper Enter·
prise Association.

Hunt'for E.T. is ail unearthly tale

.-

.

Two injured in accident

'

·
·
It was midway through the ing a devil of a time in the Oval
1980s. I wu sitting in Cafe Lux- Office, the f1118RCial markets unsetembourg in New Yorlc City, ~- ·· tied and the American job machilic
ing with my very yoppie friend, ground to a ncar halt, Collins and
JaDeane Ing, a stoCkbroker for a
·
leading Wall Slreet linn, who lii8S
P,e•'~nS
malting about 10 times her age.
'""
ln between sips of champagne
.
and bites of fo1e gras, I asbd he~ twcntysomethmg contem1;10JaDeane whar more a 2s,year-&lt;Jld ranes are not. nearly so sangume
could u1c for. It was very simnle, · abou~ what theJr futures .hold.. .
she replied. "I want it all. Noc)Ust .
L1ke many of the 41 mJihon
a big salary and great - · " &amp;hC • J!letRbers of the baby b!J8l genera·
said. •'But also a fabulous home uon, the young Amer1cans ~m
with a wonderful husband and between 1961 and _1971, CC?ll~ns
sometime clown tbe road shiny, ~ees before h~r a llm_e of dJmiD·
happy children."
.
Jshed oppcl1w1ity· While at 24 she
'Past forward 10 1992. I'm in San .has c:.ved out a (RU)' good career
Diego sipping iced tea with Lisa path ~or herself, she .detects much
Collins, a 24-year-old manager ~Jl81r among many m her genera·
with a major hotel chain. Although ~;
.
Collins is not quite the bon viYIUit
My peers feel the_y ~ &amp;Clli,ng
that my friend JaDeane wu, tho the ~ ~ of '!It
Collins
two young womon confided sttik' saya. ;t'hC&gt;' ~ ~ They
ingly similar life aspirations.
think: .~ s nothmg out there
But what a difference a decade for me., ,
.
makes.
Collins remarks are echoed by
Durinjt the go-ao days of the G~e Parente, a 26-year-old San
980s,
with Ronald Reapn in the Diego Clllbepie&amp;tCW, who Slllled up
1
White House, the stock market Golf i..aJxJr8lories a few~ after
booming and the ocoaomy chum· graduatiag from U~ ~ I
ing out 20 million new jobs, entered..~ollege 10 1984 • he
• •.
•
JaDeane and other ·young Ameri- ~· n. wu exubcranL By the
cw like her were bullish on Amet- lime lleft.m 1989, ~ was ~lot
•ica and optimistic about their per- of. ~miSIII. It was like the me·
'
.
sona1 fulllnll.
b~. wore off and die hangover
;~ •· ThauJht for Today: "Moral illdignation ia in 1IKllll cues two pel\:ellt
, •: mcn1, fOity-diht pm:ent indignation, and fifty pen:ent envy." - VlaoBut in these slow-grow days of began. ·
~!fjo De Sica, IlalUm movie direc:la (1901·1974). ·
.
I . the 1990s, with Oeorge Bush Jiav·
Part of the explanation for the

.v

conllnued from page 1

provide incentives for such relocac·ons.
Meanwhile Quayle accused
, ore of having himself voted for
the Carib~ Buin Initiative, a
program the Clinton camp has singled ootu giving U.S. companies
financial incentives to relocate
plants:
·
· ~·~~g, I voted against it,"

Robert]. Wagman

-

'

r---Local briejs-----

. Charge, countercharge in VP debate.

111 Court Sbeet

.

.,

J

Announcements

A THEATER

. Hospital. news

•

The Dexter ge nuine

.

A

Everything about
it is down to earth.

handsewn moccasin . As early
American as it gc'ts.

'

DISTRICT LAND JUDGING AWARDS·
District Land Judaina Awarda were presented
at Tuesday's a~nual meet1n1 or the Melp Soil
and Water Conservation District at Rutland
Elementary. Plctured,l·r, are; front, Stacy Bumpus, Stephanie Sayre, Jerr Rose, Christie CoopII

1.

I

er. Back, Fred Matson, Chris Hamm, Cllrtord
Smith, Pete Enale and Corey Rowe. All are from
Southern High School except Pete Engle or
.Meigs High School. This year's contest was held
on the Jolin Rice rarm in Olive Township.

.....

!77i·· SHOE
I

MIDDLEPORT,
OH
-.
.
'

.

..

PLACE
992·5627
'\

1

'·

.

.

�. Sports

/ The Daily

.,

Sen~el

'

:"'u~Uay, October 22, 1.992

. BEREA Oh'1 (AP)
I I ~
~ .
sday. The
"
,
• . 0
t nd4mapolis game was ugly. I hope
doesn t surpnse Iay Hilgenberg everybody was embarrassed. I'm
~at the Clevei~d Browns' offen- sure everybody was. There's a lot
Stve hne, hum~liBted by 11 S;BClcs in ofJlr,ide on tllis team.''
~ sesson-openmg loss at IndianapoStnee being manhandled by the
hs, has loolced so much better late- Colts, the Browns' line has
Iy. .,
,
, rebounde!J to become one of the
Couldn t get much worse,' NFL's least porous IUiits. In the last

~

-while the Marauders are coming
off a beartb~og loss of their
own- a 9-0 eonlellt last week to
the Wellslon Ooldcn Eagles. In that
game, the Marauders turned the
ball over six limes- four on fumbles and two on intcn:eptions.
One of the Meigs fumbles came
111 the goal line when it appeared
that quarterback Eric Wagner had
scored, but the officials ruled that
the fumble came at the goal line

1 1 DAVE HARRIS
Selldael Correspondent
The Meigs Marauders will host
the Waverly Tigers Friday in non
conference foottiall action.
•The Maraudcn will go into the
tontelt with a ·2·5 mark overall ,
while the Tigers, under the direction of ltead coach Ed Bolin, heads
into the cooleSt with a 5·1 mark.
Waverly is coming off its first
loss· of the year ,.- a 14-7 loss to
Division III power Wheelersburg

non-con~erence

and Wellstoo recovered in the end
zone. At !I'll point It was a 0-0
game late m tho fint half. The lone
Wellston touchdown was set up by
a Meigs fumble at their own 19yard line.
Waverly features a high powered offense led by 6-5, 210-pound
senior &lt;Jllllr'lerbiM:k Mark Swinning.
Swinmng, who is being sought
after by some Big 10 teams completed eight of 11 against the
·
·

"•

-

Marauders last year tar 102 yards.
.
.
·
.
Junior wide out Shawn Atkins (5-9, than 350 )'llll!s rushmg.
SIX and Iered flillone fonwo.
145), who also returns, pulled hi
Youn-11er broth~r Tommy C!c. If tho~ are to pull the
four passes against Meigs for 68 means will leave his guard JlOSihOn btg upset F~1day, they must tut
yards last season
.
a~d step into tho baclcfield to take down on theu mtstakes, and aomeThe running back tandem or
his brolhcr's P.lace. ~vid .Fetty or one JI!USt step up in.to ·CremC!ID~
Sowards (5-10. 160 Sr) ond Issue Matt Clarlt will ftllm at guard, as piau m the leadcnhip role. Kid(;.
Randsell (5·B,i55, s'o.) bolh return. Fetty played th~re last week for off for Frida(s game is 7:30 ~t
!hey combined to rush for 249 most of the game. On de.fens~. BOb Roberts Field.
·
yards against the Marauders last · Fetty~~ lames Whtte will
season. So'Yards rushed 28 times see action at b~.
.. .
for 1~ and Randsell 15 for 115 in
Also. on the questionable hst IS
the wm over Meigs. .
defenstve back Heath Hudson
•
1f .this was not enough Cor head (anlcle injury) and tight end Aaron
coach Mike Staggs and the Drummer, whl) practiced for the
Marauders, they will .play wilhout· first time on Wednesdsy due to an
the services of Mite "Sicippy" Crc- illness.
means . Cremeans, who Jed the
The Marauder offense continued
The Southern Tornacloes will
team in taclcles as a freshman and to move the ball last week in the square off againJt the Symmes Voljuriior and is leading by far this loss to Wellston. But mistakes by ley Vikings Friday evening ~t
y,ear, will .miss the rest of the sea· · t~e ~uders! including some cru- .Roser L. Adams Memorial Flcld In
son because of a shoulder injury cml miStakes ·tn the red zone, was Racine at 7:30 p.m. A large crowil
sustained last week. · .
the Meigs downfall. Wagner com- is expected for the bo~min,11
Cremeans, 'who missed his · pleted seveti .of 16 in the air for 126 event, which concludes wilh Frrsophomore year due to an ankle ; yar.ds. Dni!Rmer pulled in two for day's game. A paralic throug~
injury, will have surgery Monday 5q yards, Cremeans one for 29, Jim Racine Friday aflemoon will feafor tom tendons. He was also the Pullins one for 26 Breu Newsom~ ~ the Ylrious class floats and the
.
team's leading rusher with more one for 13, Bryan Hoffman one for queen c:aiKiidaa.
,

World Series

Southern to host
Symmes Valley
for homecoming

mcludmg Kevin Mack's two shon
hdo
Mack
touc wn ru~s.
renc:hed the
eJK\,zone standmg.up h?th hmc;;;
NC? ~ks agatn thiS w~k:. ~n
app~eciBttve Tomczak satd. It s
get~g ~be rundanL I hope they .
can
at or another 10 or 11
1 d you.people last week
w~.
~.'?
• to gtve u..,m credit, ancl some people did. Hopefully this week you'll
give them a little bit more."
·.
It's quite a change from two
mont!ts ago, when the Browns realized late in the preseason that
something had to be ~one to keep
~ slow-footed Bernie Kosar from get- ·
ti~g killed. HilgenherJl, the peren- mol all-pro center Y~h~ Wl\S having
contract ~Iffic~lues 10 Chicago,
was acquued m desperation to
shore up the line shortly before lhe
regular season began .
Force~ to lcurn the Browns'
offense on the job, however
Hilgenberg wasn;t able to help
much against Indianapolis. Kosar
was sack~ II times, then had his.
ankle broken when he was saclced
in a loss to Miami the next week.
There were other obstacles to .
overcome. Guard John Rienstra
. had to leave the Miami game
because he had a panic attack, an
anxiety disorder that can cause
chest pains and other physical
symptoms. The week after that,
tackle Fred Childress was arrested
for drunk driving. ·
Rienstra soon returned, and
though Childress no longer starts,
he delivered a key block on one of
Mack's touchdowns a~ainst the
Packers. The whole slarhng line tackles Tony Jones and Dan Fike,
guards Rienstra and Ed King, and
Hilgenberg - is playing with
growing confidence.
The coaches have helped by
installing new plays and blocking
schemes. .
"We've changed our game plan .
quite a bit in the last three to. four
weeks," coach Bill Belichick said.
"We did it after the Colt game,
throwing the ball quicker, and we .
made a couple adjustments in our
protection. That improvement was
pretty noticeable between Indianapolis and Miami. I don't thinlc
they were drastic.changes, but they
were significant."
In Tomczak, the Browns have a
quarterback who is more mobile
. and more adept at play-action faking than Kosar, which might also
explain the reduction in sacl:s.
Tomczak froze the defense with an
excellent fake before completing a
30-yard pass to Eric Metcalf that
set up a touchdown Sunday.
"It's been a gradual improvement," Belichick said. "I don't
think it's been any magic lotion. we
rubbed on anybody's back or
thing. The progress, as it usually IS,
has been slow, But fortunately, it's
been steady."

.

Dl.WC.IV

Reaioe U-J-Wanea ~ttodJ
. n.sotiD. J..S
'
10.0000. 3-CJoYO.
""" c... CalL 19.0000. 4-0... Mllll

~59.1333. 5·~~~ Y'-.&amp;.
...., 51.0000. 6-1-.... 50.0000. 1·
Natlh Limo S. IWip 49.9121. I·Aknm
M•,.t Mlf47.50CXI 9-Budoa. B.ubin

Futureaa-

T•"""

.._,

Allaa&amp;a (Smolta: 15· 12) at ToncllO

-21-6),1:26-

..:~II Allla&amp;i, ~:216 p.m., i/._..
hHaJ,Od.2.J
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p.m., ;r_;,.

•

hllktDJWLTP!o.GFGA
~ ......... ~ 0 2 12 36 211
N.Y.~-- 5 2 0 10 'Z1 1P
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Bull'o~ot.............

4 3 0
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9·S10Uboarillo Ctlh. c.., 47.5000. 10.
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a.p... 11&gt;-t-CAPI! 74.9513. :t.Cin.
66.01100
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59.5000. 5-Bto&lt;&gt;billo 59.0000. 6-WOil
lolfonoa 53.!5000. ,.v.... ur. 49.5000.
l·liiii.UlOWD Oroauwiew 416.0000. 9 ·
Jtoctfoc'd P.ukway.W.SOOO. J()..Cud.inJ·
lai·Linooln 43.5000

Division V

R'lim 17-l·llohaa 1t.SOOO. 2·lndo- ·
pondonoo 67.0000. 3-S..duokJ S&lt; Muy'o
56.0000. 4-McDoalld 60.6666. .5-Nor-

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'

'

]..Liberty Center 61..5000, 4-Columbus

0.0.. 56.!000. 5·HioPvill• 45.5000. 6t

T_:M_

:!11-oi·Lockbnd 85.5000. 2·
Middf.lo- Foinrick '67.5000. 3 (li~)­
lolimw, SL . - , 61.0000. S-Cin. Caun56.0000. 6{;odtmllo 55.0000. , .

'

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9-S. Charlulon SE •1.0000. tO-W .

Hud'oaii\O.wt, 7:-40p.m.
VanctW.lY« at Philt1 ~·~~. 7~ p.m.
DoooiU&lt;PI"l' II&gt;. :40 p.m.

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COLUMBUS, Obia (AP) -

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l!ot\ ltaoa 61.5000. 4-0..villo 62.j333. S-:S.U.ville 60.5000. 6-Summit Station
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Hilltolet043.0000.

In the NHL,,

·•,

.

..

four games, tt
yrelded only one
sack, that commg on a teChnicality
when Mike Tomczak had the ball
knoclced from his hand in a game
two weelcs ago.
·
in Sunda 's 17'6 win over the
Green Bay,~ackers, Tomczak was
not Sacked, and the line also
opened holes for 142 yards rushing

Bill

pointed to as THE games of·the .so much ' young9r than us that
season because of the Nittany they're already looldng forward to
· Lions' dominance. Their record the Big Ten. They haven't really
against West Virginia is 47·9 ~2. been in the midst of this rivalry.' '
Paterno, though, has been head
with Temple. it's 26·3·1, with ·
coach
for 26 West Virginia gnmes
Maryland it's 34-1-1, with Boston
''I'm
not going to say it's all
College and Rutgers. the score is
goodies going into the Big Ten.
19-2.
Penn State first played West I'm going to miss playing WVU
Virginia in 1904..The'BC series and some of the other Eastern
the youngest of the "traditional'.' schools," Paterno said.
rivals, started in 1949.
"It's been a great series," said ·
Tho Lions' true rivalry, with Paterno, who's 24-2 against the
Pitt, is more balanced, with Penn Mo~;~nrain~. "It's not one ·you're
State leading 46-41-4. It dates to anxious to g1ve up."
·.
1893.
.Sports shorts
Against West Virginia since
Tennis
1956, the Lions have lost only
HONG
KONG
-Defendtwice, 1984 and 1988. The 1988 . ing champion Ivan(AP)
Lend!
beat Margame never ended. It was called
tin
Damm
of
Czethoslovalcia
6··1,
when WVU fans stormed lhe field
6-4 for his second victory in the
after the Major Harris-led victory.
Boston College got its'reveilge Hong Kong Marlboro round-robin
last weclcend, beating Penn State at tournamenL
In· other second-round matches,
State College, 35-32. Temple, RutGoran
Prpic of Croatis defeated
gcrs and Matyllmd all missed their
Wayne
Ferreira of South Africa 7·
shots this year.
S,
3-6,
6-3
and Todd Woodbridge ·
"That has to be the biggest
of
Australia
beat Michnel Stich of .
thing that's happened for BC ir
Gerinany
2-6,
6-3, 6-4.
_
quite awhile," Boston College
LYON,
France
(AP)Topquanerback Glenn Foley said after
seeded
Pete
SamP!liS
of
the
United
his team beat Penn State.
·
· The victory has to he inspiration States beat compatriot Jeff Tarango
for West Virginia, McDuffie said. ' 7-6 (7-S), 6-3 in the fll'St round of
"With the end of the series and the Lyon· Open. In second-round
the fact that we've beaten them so . matches, third-seeded MaliVai
often, it just makes them play a lot Washington of the United States
more harder, it picks them up a lot defeated Jakob Hlasek of Switzerland 6-3, 6-4 and Markus Zoecke
more," McDuffie said.
McDuffie believes Penn State's of Germany beat eighth-seeded
younger players already have for- Wolly Masur of Australia 7-6 (7-4)
gotten about the rivalries. Many 7-6 (7-5).
Golr
.
were lured with the potential of
DUBAI,
United
Arab
Emirates
playing in a Rose Bowl game and
the promise of playing in the Big (AP) :.... Carin Hjalmarsson of.
Sweden and Federica Dassu of
Ten.
· "We're done," McDuffie said · Italy shot 3-under-plir 70s to share
of th~ seniors. "Everybody cl~ is the first-round lead in the' Ladies
Challenl!e tournament

ByKELLYP.KISSEL
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP)Penn State and West Virginia call it
quits Saturday on a series that daleS
back 88 years. For the Mountaineers. it's the end of a rivalry.
For the Lions, it' s just another
game off the schedule.
.
"A lot of people use Penn State
as the game of their season. A lot
of people want to knoc!C: us off,
especially the teams that we've
knocked off during the years,"
flanlcer OJ. McDuffie said. ·
Saturday's game is the last road
trip for Penn State to the home. of
an Eastern rival while it's still an
independent. The Lions join the
BigTennextyear.
But instead of thinking about
the end of the "rivalry," the teams
must worry just aboilt winning.
Each team lost last weelc, the Lions
· for the second time in a row and
WVU for the first time this year.
"The last thing I think we're
thinking about is this is the last
time we're going to play each other
·for awhile," Penn State coach Ioe
.Paterno said. "Both teams have a
must-win game.'' ·
· :. West Virginia is one of those
schools with a one-sided rivalry
against the Nittany Lions, Live in
the stateJor awhile and you'll
come to circle daleS on the calendar
for the next Penn State visit.
: The Nittany Lions lilcc !hat fOle
:for the Mountaineers, which is sim1ilar to· the Lions' role for Boston
,College, Maryland, Rutgers and
Temple.
· "Everybody views us a their
rival," Penn State kicker Cruig
Fa yale said Wednesday. "We enjoy
the challenge of everybody coming
:Oftcr·us."
·
:: Games with Penn .State are

contest Friday
0

West Virginia to host Penn State
Saturday in _ !~eir final meeting

The Dally Sentinel

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6 The Dally Sentinel

· Thulldliy, October 22, 1992 .. ·

Southern Cal picked · to down undefeated Washington S~ate
By RICK WARNER
AP Football Writer
Washington State is 6-0, ranked
13th and led by one of the nation's
• top quarterbacks. So why are the
1· Cougars an eight-point underdog
~ against No. 15 Southern Cal at the
: L.A. Coliseum?
·
• Maybe the oddsmakers have
: noticed that:
• - Washington State hasn't
; beaten Southern Cal in Los Ange•
~ les since 1957, losing 12 in a row
• and 21 of its last 22 games there.
~
- Southern Cal is 3-0 vs,,
:&lt; ranked Washington State teams,
~ and 16-2-2 vs. undefeated Cougar
: squads.
~
- Washington State has never
: beaten UCLA and Southern Cal in
~ the same season. The Cougars
defeated the Bruins 30-17 last
1
week.
-· In this case, however,. the past
.

.

~ Cowher
•

might not be the best ~uide to the
presenL After all. this IS Washington State's best start since 1930 and
its highest ranking since 1958.
Tbe key to the Cougars' success
is junior quarterback Drew Bledsoe, who ranks sixth nationally in
total offense with 264 yards per
game. Bledsoe, who could be the
top pick in the NFL draft if he
leaves school early, has thrown 11
TO passes and is completing 53
percent of his throws.
The Cougars also can run the
ball with Shaumbe Wright-Fair, the
Pac-to's second-leading rusher
. with 115 yards per game.
Washington Smte's high-powered offense will be test:t:d by
Southern Cal's improving defense,
which hasn't allowed a rushing
touchdown in its last four games.
The Trojans (3-1-1) ~lready have
23 sacks, one more than they,pad

all last season, and are giving up
only 98 yards per game on the
ground.
This time, good defense beats
good offense ... SOUTHERN CAL
21-17.

: !Th~u~~~!·~Odo~~~~,~~1~~!2~~~--~---------------:~P=~~m~*~o~,.~~~!dd~~~~~JO~h~lo~--~----~--~~----~----_!n-~·~o~-~ly~Se~n~U~~~!P~~~·~7·

;
••

at No. S Texas A&amp;M
Gators have won 15 consecutive ;·
BOSTON OOLLEGE 34-7. .
home games ... FLORIDA 27-17. No. ll Syracuse
Aggies 6-0 for ftrst time since
No. 21 Arizona
. .•
1975 ... TEXAS A&amp;M 17-7.
(minus U) at
Graves is nation's
ing pass.
(P.Ius 3.112) at Calif0111ia
•
No. 7 (ieorgill (minus 13)
Wildcats have great defense ... •
er . .. SYRACUSE4S-14.
at Kentuck;r
No. 14 PeDD St.
Hearst leads nation m scoring ...
ARIZONA 17-14.
- c
GEORGIA 31-14.
Oklahoma (minus 1)
(minus 7) at West Vli'Jinla
No. 1 MJaml (minus 19)
at No. 12 Kansas
Nq. 8 Nebraska
. Nittany Uons have lost two in a
'
at Virginia Tech
row ... PENN ST. 24-23.
Jayhawks averaging 43 points.
(minus 24) at Mlslourl
Hurricanes 9-0 vs. Hokies ...
per game ... KANSAS 29-24.
No.16 Stanford
Tigers havep't beaten ComM1AMI 24-10..
(minus 22) at Oregon St.
William &amp; Mary (no tiDe) •
huskers since 1978·... NEBRASKA
Pacific (no line)
34•24.
.
at No; 24 Vlrpnla . · • ·
Cardinal rebounds frorn loss to
at No. 1 Washington ·
William &amp; Mary is I-AA PQWer,
Kansas St. (plus 19 112)
Arizona ... STANFORD 35-1.
· Huskies .have 20-garne winning
but no inatch for Cavaliers ... VIRat No. 9 Colorlldo
No. 18 Cle- (plus :Z)
streak ... WASHINGTON 55 -1.
GINIA 44-24.
Buffaloes have won seven
at No. 23 N. Carollu St.
Minnesota (plus 31)
Arkansas St. (no line)
Tigers tied school record with
straight over Wildcats ... COL•
at No. J Michigan
at No. 25 Mississippi St. ·
ORADO 38-21.
·10 sacks last week ... N.C. ST. 17Wolverines win Little Brown
16.
Another long day for Ray
BYU (plus 20)
Jug ... MICIDGAN 38-10.
Perkins ... MISSISSIPPI ST. 38-0.
at No.10 Notre DIDle
No. 19 Georala Tech
·
· Mlssls!;lppl (plus 17)
First meeting betWeen Cougars
· . (plus 3) at North Carolina
at No.4 Alabama
Last week: 11-6 (straight); 7-11 1 ·
and Irish .•. N011Ui DAME 45-28.
Shawn Jones third on ACC
Ole Miss 1-13 in Tuscaloosa ...
No. 11 Boetoo Collere
career passing list ... GEORGIA (spread).
ALABAMA 27-3.
TECH28-24.
·
Season: 100-28 (straight); 61-51
(~!nus 24) at .Tllillne ·
Baylor (plus 14)
The EaRles ar_e for real ...
Louisville (plus 14)
' (spread).
at No. 20 Florida

••

T::/lle

••'

week."
.
Will he receive any calls?
"No," Cowher said, breaking
into a smile.
.
Cowher, 35, was the Chiefs'
defensive. coordinator for three
·years and·he knows as much about
their schemes - and Scholtenheimer's ten'dencies -as anyone.
He ,doesn't know how much his
knowledge will help him prepare
- or how much Schottenheimer's
familiarity with .him will help
Kansas City ,Prepare its game plan. ·
Until this season, Scholtenhelmer and Cowher had coached
together for seven seasons, firSt in
Cleveland and later in Kansas City.
"Marty's had a great deal of
influence on me in seven years ...
he's had a great deal of success,
and there's no question he's had a

me,"

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T11111 A &amp; I
Troy
\laldosta
w:a,.lay, DE
Wist Georgia
Wlnllon·Salem
Wotforct

Mrian

27
12

•

13
13
7

21

16
15
16

1&lt;
27
21
13
13

ANDERSON'S

10

I

16

8

28
28

31
2•
32

23 ,
21
22
36
35
27
28
28
31

28
24
30
3328

27
34
32
28

, 27
30

I

•••••

NBIUIDIY _.MOIUY,

992•J671

20
13

"

21

10
7

.7

12

"199
0

6

20

0
12
19

'WARNER'
' HEAnNG

AliD
- ~oou~

·:-....-

1'. . . . . . ..
~

17
10

19
·

Washburn
N&amp;blaska·Omaha
Capital
• Central Missovrl
SE Oklahoma
Northern ColOradO
Mankato
Wayne State. Ml
• Concordia, NE
Mis,ouri W.stttn
, • Southwestern, KS
Missouri Southern
NorthwoOd

Wayne State. NE
East Central Oklahoma
° Anders~
Bamld~ I
o Kenwon
0

Central Oklahoma
Ouachita
• Henderson
Milll
Charleston Southlln
Ll't'\ngston
Virginia State
' CatiiWba

' OultfOfd

Wt11 Virginia Tech
Alabama· Birmingham
Alabama It·&amp; M
Bridgewater, VA
.. Carson-Newman
Cumberland, KV

• West Vlrglrola Wesleyan
IOwa Wtt~yan
fa"f'ltll¥1111
• Wast Liberty
Rhodes
Colorado Collage
Morris Brown
o Lets McCrae
o Mars Hill
° Livingstone
• W•hinglon &amp; lee
Arkansas Tech
• Uissisfippl College
• North Afabama
American tnternallonal
Hampden-Sydney
Kno•vlllt
Bowie
Wingata

Other Games- Far West

0

14

29

31

Azusa
. • Cal lutheran
Cal· Poly
Cal-Davia
ChiCo Statt
La\leme
Ntw Meldoo Hlghlandl
Ocdcltntel
'Pomona
Sacramento Slat•
• Sonoma

14
12
13

23

27
20

• Harding

•
•
•

19

lndiMia Slate

2•
28

• J.C. Smith

•
•

7
17
10
24
24
10
21

16

~ Stile

• Ferris

2•

3

• MatucfiUsetts

2'1

Delta Stall
• Elilabeth CitY

17
23
• 9

20

34
24
20

• Cameron
Kalamazoo
Elmhurst
o E¥angal
o Marietta
MiiSOUrl \lalle"f'
• Starting

28
21
30

•
•

20
t3

kWio

• ltrvwn
Harvard
V.W.I.
Nichols State
~rth Ta•a•
Nonh CltO~na Central

24

Angelo State
o Arhnsas-Wonticelo
Ct ntral Arkansas
Clar11
• DavidsOn

o

16
23

North. .slem

• NW LouiSiana

Thiel
BlOomsburg
Flamapo
Randolph·Macon

o

34

Gtanvllll

11
17

21
21
24

Dthnce

• Fairmont
• FlfTUm
o Fort Valley
o Frostburg
Gardner-Webb
o Gaoro-town, KY

14

Sou'lhern llinois
• Towson

' Bowdoin
Grove Clty

34
38

Eloro
_
EIIIOtf' I Hfi'lry

7

•

lock"Haven
Moravian
• Alfred
Bites
SOuthern ConneC'!Icut
Clarion
Widener

2i

31
28

o

13

Bucknell
North C&amp;rolina A &amp; T

luif"atO State
Albriaht

Other Games - South &amp; SOUihW&amp;St

10
2G
19

Jacksonville St.te
Jldlton State

30
31
30
27
31

23

o

12
10

• Morgan S11te

31
27
24
34
33
24

28

IL

• Doane
• Earlham
Emporia State
' Grtrod Valley
Hastings
Hillselalt
• Hope
lrw:llaroapolia
o l(ansas Wesll"f'ln
• Missovri·Rolla
' Morniogside
o Musklngum
NE Missouri
o NE Oklahoma
' NOrth Olit&lt;OI:a Stall
o Nonh OakOia u .
• Norlhern Michigan
Nof!hwestem , lA
' NW Missouri
Ottawa
• Pittsburg
· • Saginaw Yaney
SW Minnesota· State
• SW Oklahoma
Wabash
• Winona Stall
Wittenberg

HI

• Rhode ltllnd
• Wea1em Ktntuci.y

~ugustana,

• DaYton

20
~ 17

Penland SWI

~lrna

· coe

1~

Furman
~.BA ...

o

•

Bllhanw, WY
• ;-Muhlenberg

•

"
22

20

Other Gamu- Midwest

Saker
BaldWin-Wallace
• Benedictine
Bethany, I&lt;S
Butler

o

• West em Carollr\a
Maine
• Comen

20

~bllaroa Christian

I0

27
28
30

35

N.-Hiiven
• "Shlpp&amp;rlsburg
• Susquehanna
Trinity, CT
o Wllhlng10n &amp; "Jefferson
Waynesburg
• Well Chell1er State
• WiiUam Paterson
• Worcester Tech
o

17
20
12
20
12
17
1
12

PacifiC

' Kent Stale

30
22

U...-,h...1
• Middlebury

7

Houston
BQYior .
S.!d.U.
Arizona Stale
Texas-EI Paso

Springlltlel
Ltbanon Yallt"f'
• California Stile, PA

28

• Lycoming

o

24

27

' hk.:a

20
6
14
6
7
7
13
27
20
6
• 9
20
t0
22
t2
21
10
11
14
7

• Plymouth
Hamilton

34 . ' 'S-ryRDCk

• Junlala
' Kutz.town

I4
21
21

• Norwich

21
21
28
31

Edinboro
Ganf)On
GttiysbYrg
lntbna U., PA

I4
13
19
I9

• Temple

South Carolina
William &amp; Mary

49

·c!rtr.ni:l
• O.laware Valley

34

• Whittier
Menlo Park
' Northridge
o Humboldt
• San Francltco Stat•
Redlands
We&amp;t Texas
• S&amp;n Diego U.
Claremont
• Southern Utah
Hayward

10

Heat Pump
XL 1200
1Super Efficiency

21
17
17
7
27

· 'fo..

"
"1&lt;
20
20
20
20
1&lt;
17
21

1&lt;
18
20

•

20
13
14

•

19
10

17
16
7

13
1&lt;
15
10

"17
0

20
23

UlftlfiGS.COA~
Fisher
Funeral·Home
.ICI R-1 · OwMr/O,...tw
IIIDIIPilr

18

23

12

,.

CROWS

20

Family Restaurant

21

15
6
17

•
'

17

992~5432

"13'

21
21

17

'

17

"

16
2B

14
20

Fri••Y Mltht an• Sun••Y Spaal1ll
lAKED PORK CHOP AND
DRESSING
.

,.,I.

••

MIDDLEPOIT
992·5627

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

QUALITY PRINT

SHOP•

••KANSAS CITY.--....30 PrrfSBURGH....--17

Slleelers lead series 12~5 ...in laslmatdl-up in 1989, Pittjumped out to 16-3 ba1ftime lead, Oliefs rallied to taice 1716 3nl Cf181:ter edge
... Pitt sand final 'i'D, winDing1323-17.
··
• . . .,.. IND'• ou ..,.US

•DMJAM...;.;.......

5

$ 25

SILID, ROll ••d
CHOICE OF POTATO

3

DENVER---.23 ••SAN DJEG0..--17
.
In sealllll pme of seaiClll, Cluqen outplayed Denver, but lost 21-13 •••S.D. out-gained BI'OOODS 355-226, had 27'
1st doWD&amp; to Denver's 12, had 10-minulle plus time ml'OIIessioo.
DETROIT••- • ..l7 MTAMPA BAY---l4
Bucs upset Lioos iD Detroit ooe mootb ago 27-23, eocllitg IS-game road losing atreali:• ••T.B. bad to rally twice,
·
fiDany ICOI'iog17 points in 4th quancr to w1n. ..IIIIOiber 1085-up.
.
"HOOSTON••-...28 CINCINNATL-...10
Last seasOn's Central Divilloa dulliploil Oilers (11-S) boat '91's Central basement-dwelling Bengals (3-13) •..
teams pt in Cincy jUst two weeb ago, Houatoo beating Beogals 38-24.

.

Pomeroy, Ohio

21

•
CHICAG0---20 •*GilEJi'N BAY--17
Bem have cl(lmlnattd Pal:tas almost every year for past 7 years. wiDniDg 12 of 14...G.B. shut oot in first meeting
1a1t seuon, 10-0, dJen lost again 27-12. ..close.
CLEVELAND---17 "NEW ENGLAND.--.10
Browns bold big 8-2lead in sates. ••io meeting in Foxboro last fall, Cleveland QB Bernie Kosar tbrew two 1D
passes, Brown defense bolding Pats seoreleas iD 20-0 victory.
DALLAS-.-24 ••L. A. RAIDERS.-~ • ..11
Teams laslmet in 1986. Raiden winniDg 17-13.. .L.A leads abort sertca 3-1. • .Dallas lost 1st game of season two
wecb ago to Eagles 31-7, Raiden won Istova-Gianta 13-10.

•

992-5141

............ --lOll

Colts swept by n01pmns Iut fill, Jlvllla Miami ••ll'lllht w1os. ••llllly
1n Miami 17-6. totalllDg only 150 yards
011 olfm... dJen 1o1t at boole tC).(; a 9th llnligbt defeaL
DDMJNNISOTA
U WASHINGTON . 34
Redstins bave woo last live mwlags fmal Vlke8 Incllldinl plaJoff game In '82, NFc title game in '87 (17-10,
WubDIIOD)•••Minn,..Dtllelds NFC Central, StiJIIIUIJQliDIID get 011 rack. .
••NEW YOU GIANTS.. u SEATn.E..-...7
N. Y.lelds aertcs4-2, Gianll w1aa1na lutmeed• indullpme in t989,tS-3 ...udtberabowing mudlspark tbtce
·
yeant.r, eldl willlina jlllt oae pme In fint live wceb.
'
"I'IDLADELPHIA-.lt PHOENIX
11
,
Fasle&amp; Dew by Car1Js Ia I'Jiornl• 1ut IDCIItb 31-14, &amp;ale QB Rmtal1 Omll..,..m tbiowins 3 'ID pases. • .Pboenlx
. ended 11-pme losia&amp;llnllk in Octoberwltb 27·24uplet ofRotlsJrlns.
.
(Moaday) '
Bvn'ALO
20 ••NEW YOR~t JEI'S.--11
Billa WVIi 8ch and 9th $1r81gbt over Jell lilt -roo, butllad 10 l'llly ~ 1111114 min nn 10 pull out 23-20 win In N.Y..
·
. .lala' at bomc, Bulfalo woo24-13.. Jell tou1bit home.

•

255 Mill St. .
Middleport
992·3345
I

RIDENOUR'S
·yy &amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE

CHESOR

985·3307

..•

I,

'

• Oklahoma State
Oklahoma

•

.

711 BOB

MEMBER FDIC.
·bCONID STREET JACKSON AVE.
5th STilET
.._, W.Va.

Purdue

23

. IIAaOIS a!!d
IIDIIG MOWERS .

Bank

JipfllWI

foreign Of oomtslic

....•.•

Peoples ~­

Ill.

$11ff

'Kentucl&lt;y .
Nevada-Las Vegas
Nolthwestern
Wisconsin

• Plinotton ·
RichmOncl
•·&amp;.F. Auilin

•v•

CHESTE., OHIO
985-3301 or 915-3303

1897

I3
14

27

• Sam HoUston
• So\.lih Carolina Stala
" 8W Mi110uri
"SWTa.u
• Tt........ Stale
• Ttnnt..., Tech
• Ttxu Southem
Vltlano¥a
• Wabw Slalt
• Wlllam .....,.

Baum
Lumber·

~

Louisville
New MexicO

Mklcll Tanne....
• Monlanl
NE LAMiilnl
• .._ HlmDahire
........."' -

Pen.,.,...

MIDDLEPOU, OHIO

"~
···-

~

• liarShan

NORTH SECOND AYE.

RII

24
31

211
24

LefaJ.U.
• lehlah

.IIIWI
lofeiQn or dQmllsUc

I9

a ...

JaiMt Medi1011

P&amp;&amp;llW

Ohio U.

• Otolalil Soul"-"'
•

2!?

20

28
26

'C h

I4
23

9
I6

• Holr CroU
• tllinole S1ale

992-3322

I

.

Cenll'll Florkla

E.aemWuhlngton

TOHO

13

Ma~yland

24

Eatem~y

••

• Ball State
Kansas State

Other Games - Eaat

A'bl.ny, NY

Bridgewater. MA

14

118(or Colleges • Dlv. I ·AA
:·:m.Stete
·.
;~
;:r::_~•u.

• Oranillna

99i-~·.·

21
17

26
30
22
31
24
41
Z1

' Villlln!a

•

i

7
13

Wyoming.
• Navy

33
19

• Vanderbilt

Pomeroy, Ohio
992-!342

...
1497•••
Co I

!.-

23
24

• Tulane
• Akron
Arizona

30 • Tulsa
24 _ • Virginia Tech
16
Toledo
40
Minnesota
·49
Arkansas Slate
30 • Missouri
14
New Mexico Slate
28
Georgia Tech
21
Clemson
31
Uberty
24
~m Young
23 • MiChigan State
20 • West Vtrginia
• Pittlburgh
24
East Carolina
Rice
24 'T.C.U.
• San Diego State
30
Air Force
San Jose State
29 'Utah State
·Southern Misaiss· · 21
Cincinnati
.
'Southern CaJJa 26
WashinQtqn ·State
Stantoof
42 • Oregon State

• Utah

111 East Second StrHtm·.·
•

21

21
24

• Texas
' Texas A &amp; M
'Texas Tech
' U.C.L.A.

DOWNING C
.MULLEN MUSSER
,., INSU.RANCE

11

33
33
28

Syracuse

.

~ MARIETTA, Ohio (AP)- Pic- where the ball was going. It's a pity
:· tures of Marietta High School's we couldn't have played him in the
: first-team All-Ohio football and backcourt becaus~ he would have
• basketball athletes along with indi- been a good candidate for the
~ vidual state champions in other pros... .
~ sports hang along the wallm the
McKinney's influence steered
..; foyer of Sutton Gymnasium.
·
Christie to. Wake Forest basketball
t Only one athlete is pictured where he played .in the NCAA
•: twice.
Final Four as a sophomore starter
:
Frank Christie, 50, who died and was a teammate of TV basket~ Tuesday at his King, N.C., home ball analyst Billy Packer; Christie ·
" after a brief illness, was first-team finished his Demon Deacon career
•' All-Ohio in both football (1959) with more than 1000 points and :
~ and ~~!hall (!960). .
1:000 rebounds. '
·
: Chrisue conunued hiS success at
In basketball at Marietta High,
· Wake Forest University where he Christie set school single-g!lffie (46
..: was a.first team All-Ailantic Coast points) and single-season (503
: Conference forward in basketball, points) scoring records in his junior
· : captained the Demon Deacons, and year, 1958-59, and won the Central
• waa a star basebaD pitcher. He waa Ohio League scoring title. He aver; inducted into Wake Forest's athlet- aged 24 points per game that sea;. ic hall of fame last winter.
son and scored more than 900
~
"He was one of the fiercest points in his career.
I' competitors we've ever had at
Doug Bentz, now a star at
·· Wake Forest," said Horace Morehead State University, later
: "Bones" McKinney, a former broke Christie's single-season scor~ NBA player who was Christie's ing record.
1
" baslcetbaUcoach.
.
As a .s enior. Christie was a
;. "Christie had the best pair of ·. standout on one of Marietta High's
~ hands of any player I've coached," g~eatest teams . T~e 1959·60
, · · ; McKinney srud. "He had good alh- T1gers, coached by B1ll Ross, were
'
!: tetic instincts and seemed to know COL champs and 18-3 overall. .

• AIAlum

"Iowa·
· Iowa Slate
I

Dlv.1·A
Mil'l:r
10
· SW
Slana
7

2A .

~

VALLEY LUMBER

;
·,
;
•
:
:
:
:

I

s.t..,Ocl24-Malor~-

• Alabama

• Hawaii
• Ullnols
"lnclana

992-6191 .

•
•

,THE BOB HARMON FORECAST

• Fresno State

St. Rt. 7 at FIYI Points

: MU's Troy Brown itching
~ to graduate-after making
~- life hard for(secondaries ·
•

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) recognized as big-play threats.''
Brown, who started playing
-Marshall's aD-pUIJlOse offensive
football
as a youth, says he has not
wizard, Troy Brown, ends his colbeen
on
a
losmg team.
lege football career ihis season .
"I
had
a bit to do with it,'' he
What he's really looking forward
said. "We always had a lot of great
to is the end of his college classes.
Brown, a senior in terms of athletes. I hate to boast inysclf that
football eligibility, .is not scheduled I helped, but I'll say I was one of
the better ones on the team."
1 to graduate until May 1994.
Brown, who returned a kickoff
i . "1 want to get myself financial·
~ ly settled down," said Brown, a 91 yards for a touchdown in a loss
! receiver, runner and kick returner. . to Tennessee-Chattanooga last sea• "I want to find someone to fall 'in son, predicis plenty more fireworks
in Saturday's rematch.
: love with and get married.
"I sec a game of big plays,"
:
"And I want to do something
·• for my mom for gcuing me finan- Brown said. "They had a young
~ cially throuf:h junior college. She d~fense last rw. I don't think that
their defensive backs will be that
~ really made 11 go for me," he said.
:
Brown has 30 receptions for 519 much more mature this· time. I 'can
: yards, an average of 17.3 yards per see big plays, big passes and big
:.1·
• catch. He also has five rushes for . runs!'
Marshall has lost thrcc straight
~ 145 yards and 11 kickoff returns
times to· the Moccasins. But Brown
: for 314 yards.
• Marshall is coming off a 34-13 figures Tcnnessec-Chattanoo~a
I victory at Southern-conference foe will be in for a rude surprise on Its
~ The Citadel. A week earlier, the . first trip to Marshall's year-old,
~ He.rd (5-1, 3-0) demolished another 28,000-seat stadium.
• league power, Furman, 48-6.
"They've beaten us the last
:
Tbe Herd hosts Tennessee-Chat- three years," Brown said. "I don't
• tanOOga (2-4, 0-2) on Saturday.
think they can come ill here and do
;
"If we can eliminate mistakes it again. I don't think Chattanooga
~ we have a good eh;mce to win a
is ready for this kind of atmo' national championship," Brown sphere."
~ said.
·
Brown, from Blackv.ille, S.C ..
., "We destroyed a great team," came to Marshall from Lccs: he said, referring to The Citadel. ·Mcll.ae junior College, where he
:: "We ·have a real powerhouse here was offered a $500 scholarship his
" at Marshall."
first season.
.
~
Brown credits an ability to sense
Marshall assistant coach Chris
~ defenders before they move into
Seelfo spotted him in his second
f his view as the major reason he year with Lees-McRae and offered
~ gets open despite double coverage.
him a scholarship with the Herd.
• The extra attention he receives
''I'm very happy, Huntington's
: has helped Marshall spring open a nice place to be, a nice communi~ other receivers like Will Brown ty," Brown said. ''There arc lots of
~ and Mike Bartrum.
nice people here. They're good
" "I enjoy drawing the attention supporters of the team. I like the
• of the defensive backs and leaving way they stop you on the street and
.. a hole wide open," Brown said. shake your hand. It makes me not
:: "Then we can use other guys not miss home.''

253 NOITH SICOfiD
,•DDLEPon, OHIO .
·. Sundry Needs See Us"

big eff~i on
Cowher said. ings of great competitiveness thai'
to ran the ball," he Said. "They do
"There's no question Marty knows will surface,l' Cowher said. "But
But even if the noise is 8 factor, a goodjob of keeping them ~11
I have understanding of what he's I'm not going to get involved ·with Cowher knows the Chiefs' runoing involv~ ... of fmding a way.'? g\~e
d!Jing, but I'm sure thafwon't sway me vs. Marty. That wiD taice away .backs wiD play an even bigcr role each their share opportumues. ·
hun to change.
.
from the game ... and the ~arne is in deciding the winner. Kansas
The Steclers best chance bf
''If you're doing something Piusburgh vs. Kansas City.'
City's only problem is lhcze's only winning might be. to posses~ tjte .
good, why change? I don't think
Cowher knows it will be a noisy one ball to dislrlbule amons Barry . ball tJte.mselv~s w!lb long.~voa,
they'D tty to trick
hbmecoming: If Pittsburgh sports · Word, Christian Okoye and Harvey combmmg Neil 0 DonneD baJ!The Steelers are tied With H!IUS· .fans didn't get enough of the toms- Williams, perhaps the best three- con~l passing and Barry~ s ,
ton forth~ ,AFC Central Division hawk chop during the National back tandem in the NFL.
runnmF to keep the ball away froln
lead, but It s also a key game for League playoffs,lhey'll have to put
The Chiefs run a one-back the Oiiefs. ·
··
. the Chiefs in the AFC West. up with 70,000-plus chopping and offense, so there's two disappointThat 9!ould mate for a happy
They're unbeaten in three home chanting Chiefs fans.
·- ed backs at any one time. Three · ~gf?F~~·
· garnea. but are .4-3 overall despite
. ·:Tile Cf!lWd [Ioise is a factor,". backs soriletimes aren't better than
.. ~dOll t;thiot II wit!~.~ that
· posses_sing some of the NFL's top Cowher S81d. "It gets loud there. one, but Cowher said the Chiefs IIIC e~· Cowher,said. I m IIOt '
offensive llllenL
It's like when you go to a dome, doing a good job of distributing the gomg to let the enlotiOOS bike ~way
"When I walk into the stadium, · you've got 70,000 or 80,000
ball and the offense.
·
from .~he same. It's too big a
I'll! sure there
be some: feel- . gettins involved and it can
·
they want game.
•
··--·-·
•· -

ust .

Pr•scription
;Shop

INGELS

to take on old boss Sunday . in Pittsburgh's game vs. Kansas City _

By ALAN ROBINSON
.
PITTSBURGH (AP) - Bill
: Cowher returned to his hometoivn
~ to coach the Pittsburgh Steelers.
• Now he returns to his old home: Kans8s Oty- to coach against his
~ old boss and his old team.
He doesn't expect a welcoming
• phone call from Chiefs coach
; Marly Sehottenheimer.
·
• If Cowher the NFL's second: youngest head coach, needs advice '
::· and guidance this week, he'll have
•. to call somewhere other than
·: ~ City. Schottenheimer ma_y
; •have helped ease Cowher's trans1•!tion to NFL head coaching, but
!·he's more concerned this week
::with beating him.
-: "We haven't tallced since early
; ·tast weelc," Cowher said. "We still
~ ~ talk occasionally, but I won't be
: making any phone calls this

Football ~92!
Catch All The
Excitement!

Support These
Fine Are~
Businesses!

.

•
•
•

�•

;faa•
•

a

By-The ·Bend

The Dally Sentinel

;Toronto defeats Atlanta 2-1
:to take 3-llead in World Series
By HOWARD ULMAN
TORONTO (AP) - One- more
win. No more doubts.
The Toronto Blue Jays, known
for fairing in big games, play the
biggest of their lives tonight A triumph brings a title. A loss revives
1hat reputation.
·
· The Jays, in their first World
Series, are quietly confident as they
stand at the brink of taking the
championship of America's nationhi pastime outside the United States
for the first time.
· "It w9uld be ve-ry, very spec:ial
if we would be able to do 11 here in
front of the crowd," said Jimmy
Key, who brought Toronto to this
point. " All that they've teen
throu gh, the heartbreaks that
they've had, it would be gre-at if we
could do it here."
Key's five-hit pitching through
7 2/3 innings, continued bullpen
bri lliance and ju~t enough hitting
from Pat Borders' homer and
Devon White's RBI single gave the
Blue Jays a 2-1 win over Atlanta
Wednesday night and a 3-1 le-ad in
the best-of-seven series.
The Braves helped, making just
enoug h mistakes and . hardly
enough hits to avoid their third
~traight one-run loss.
"We had some opportunities
and we couldn't take advantage of
them," Atlanta's Jeff Blauser said.
; Again tonight, the Braves will
oo fighting to do what's never been
· aone- a win by a visiting te-am in
an indoor Series game. Minnesota
i~ 8-0 at the Metrodome. Toronto is
· ~ -0 at the Sky DOme.
•

•
It will be a reiiiiD of pi• iw•t ~ 1 for 13 ill die fiut lhree
J:1ck Mmis and Jolla Smeltz l1ley J . .el, JOt bis third hit or the
matched zeroes in one of the I"*· p - . a siaale. to drift in Kelly
est Series games cve;r.
Gntbcr, who had walked in the
In last year's .seYCnth game. eip«b
.
Smaltz pitched 7 l/3 scoreless
Gnber .ud in hard, headfirst.
innings for Atlanta. BDI Morris. aaoa die plate and Aid later he
' who joined Tort!llto • a liee 3jpll. · may have suffered a concussion.
did better - pitching a 10-innin&amp; His c-djrim IDd playing swus for
shutout as Minnesola woo 1-0.
lllnilld WIR unknown.
Morris, 21-6 in die regular seaIC'ey gave up sin&amp;les to Otis
son, has struggled in the posUca· 'NixOD, wbo was picked o(f, and
son. He atlo)Ved three runs in six Blauser, AtlaD'-~S lint two hit~qS
innings in losing tbe Series opener. of die pme, tbea n:tin:d 16 straight
"I am going 10 bave 10 cstablisb .beCon: Nixon sillglcd in the sixlh.
my fastball early,'' said Smaltz, Then Key &amp;Qtlbc DCXJ four batters.
who was effective in Atlanta's socTniling Z-0, Atlanta gOl one run
ond-gamc loss. "We need 10 play in die eighth The Braves had Ron
fundamental baseball ..
Gaol 011 third IIIII Brian Hunrcr on
Key outducled Tom Glavioe. finl wbcu Damoo Berrybill popped
who pitched his second axnpletc up 10 Bolden in foul ground. Mark
game of the Series while wod:illg I cmb: llil _a bard ~ off Key
on three ·days rea. Key, surtiog fer !hal caromed to third baseman Grothe finl time in 17 days afll!l' be her, wbo lhrew 0111 I..emkc as Gant
was bypeacd when Gaston went scomL
with a three-man totatioo in lhe
Duane Wan! c$me in and struclc
p!ayofls, was dominanL
Out Nixoll. wbo reached fust ·when
"I'm one oC the guys who has the ball eluded catcher Borders.
been llere through all the heart- Blauser, a righty, then hit hard
bre-aks," said Key. who has been shot down the first base line. John
with Toronto since 1984 but can Olerud "!'as well positioned to
become a free agenL " It's a possi- make a diving. backhand stop and
bility I may have pitched my last beat Blauscc to the bag.
game here. That was a special
Tom Henke retired the side in
moment for me...
order in the ninth for his. second
Glavine allowed just six hits. save. Toronto's bullpen has
two more than in his 3-1 opening allowed one bit in nine scoreless
victory. But two of them produced innings.
runs.
· "I think cvaybody in lhe club·
Borders euended Toronto's bouse is going to want to win it
postseason record to 10 straight right bere," Henke said. "W c
games with a hancr, hitting a solo don't want 10 go back to Atlanta."
shot to lead off the third. Tben
·
·

Craig Janney put ihe Blues converted a feed . by Andrei
ahead 54 a1 4:55 of the fmal peri- Kovalcnko.
od with one of theeightpowcr-play
The Blues are winless in their
goals scored in tb~ game. But Jast.fourbomegamesandhavelost
Duchesne, part of the package of five of their last seven . The
players acquired in the Eric Lin- N~are4-l.l for the season,
dros trade, tied ..the game with his . witb the only Joss coming to the
third goal o~ the season when he BlucsatQuebcconSaturday.

By JOHN KREISER
'\
AP Sports Writer
Denis Savard's scoring touch is
back.
Savard. whose five . lOO-point
seasons with Chicago have looked
like ancient history since his trade
tQMontreal two years ago,.is scorillg the way he did with the Black-

'

Geor·u:n
cou•'Se o·"'er.'S
t!J""'
'JJ
h
lffi
'96
G
to ost go ' or
ames

hilwks~ Hesetupthreegoalsinthe

. first period. Wednesday night to
sl.art the Montreal Canadiens on an

f

9:';~Jd~:&amp;~~~~!~~ti.

Il points in eight games this sean.
· .., "What helps is that I'm playing
in a lot of situations, like I did in
Chicago,'' said Savard, now in his
t~ird season with the Canadiens
sj nce he was acquired from the
J:tlackhawks . •'I ' m playing a lot
and that motivates me."
: Savard made key passes to Kirk
Muller, Vincent Damphousse and
Gilben Dionne in the opening period as the Canadiens (4-3-1) scored
their third consecutive easy victory
of a three-game homestand.
• After scoring only IS goals in
t&amp;cir first five games, Montreal
olllscored the opposition 22-7 on
tbc homestand; including wins of
8-1 over Minnesota on Saturday
and 6-2 over St. Louis on Monday.
;.. Savard, a native of the Montreal
:'ftcighborhood of Verdun, said his
~cce nt switch back to center from
jhe wing also helped hi s scoring.
, "At center, you have the puck
~o re , and that' s my .kind of
~arne," said Savard.
~ Stephan Lebeau, Mathieu
:lichneider, Todd Ewen, John
eClair and Guy Carbonneau piled
n goals in the second rcriod as the
anad iens blew the game open.
~ Pal Falloon opened the scoring,
.!l'hile Ed Courtenay, Petri Skriko
1nd Yvon Corriveau scored in the
hird for the. Sharks,_who've lost
ive in a row after beating Winipeg in their seas~&gt;n-opencr.
. In other NHL games Wednesay, it was the New York Rangers
:. Washington 1; Buffalo 4, Chica·,o J; and Quebec 5.~t. Louis 5.
.~
Rangers 2, Capitals 1
i Alexei Kovalev's goal with 4:04
ft in regulation broke a tie and
, ike Richter stopped 40 shots to
utduel Don Beaupre as the
Rangers defeated Washington to
!Cmain perfect at Madison Square
C;ardcn .
~ Kova lcv , the 19-year-old Rus-

~

l
~

AUGUST A, Ga. (AP) Augusta National Golf Oub;' an
exclusive retreat which opens -ill
azalea-lined fairways to 1bc public
just once a year, for the Masters, is
offering to open its arms to the
world for the 1996 Olympics.
The invitation is part of the
Atlanta Olympic committee's
effon to make golf a medal eYCDI
for the 1996 Games.
Final approval must come lium
the International Olympic Committee and the World Amateur Golf
Council.
"We're trying to send a rncssage that we're for both men and
women's golf," club chairman
Jack Stephens said during a
Wednesday news confercncc held
on the emerald ca~t of clipped
grass at the course s edge.· ''We
have no prohillltion for any mcmber and any type member, and
that's always been the policy of the
club."
Augusta National. has just one
black among its 300 membelS and
never has held a wonien's touma·
menL
Approval of its course as an
Olympic venue must come from an
IOC wh ich is forbidden by cbartcr
from condoning racial inequities.
Atlanta officials are eager 10
demonstrate AuguSta's acceptability by noting the course was .the pee. sonal choice of LeRoy Walker, the
new president of the U.S. Olympic
Committee and a grandson or
slaves.
Billy Payne, chairman of the
Atlanta Co\llmiu.ee for the Olympic:
Games, said his decision 10 push
for golf stems from a long-felt
desire to find some spec:ial way ID
leave an Atlanta and Southern
mark on the Games:
If the proposal is :IPPfllved. golf
would be restored to the Olympic
program for the first time since the
St. Louis Games of 1904. It was

ltian
rookie
No. Iscored
overall.!)is
by
i)le Ra
ngerspicked
in 1991,
ird goal of the season by beating
eaupre with a shon baekhander
fter Jeff Beukeboom's shot was
•oppcd in front.
.
~ The Rangers, now 4 -0-0 at
~orne this season and 9-o-t over
..,_,o seasons, made Jan Erixon's
joal at 14:43 of the second period
and up until Dale Hunter tied the
ore with 8:21 'remaining in regution.
,.
Sabres 4, Blackhawks 1
; Pal LaFontaine, Petr Svoboda
l~d Dave Andreychuk scored
rower-play goals as Buffalo beat
.Visiting Chicago.
'} Daren Puppa carried a shutout
¥~to the third period before former
$abrc Christian Ruuttu scored hls first goal of lhe season at 4:12.
; Brad May scored Buffalo's
Other goal, lhe only one the Sabres
fOred at even strength. •
,
Nordlques 5, BlueS 5
' • Steve Duchesne's ~oal with
left in regulation !1fted Quebec to a tic in St. Louis.

~

t

bt

•

r

.

1

~

part of the 1900 Games in Paris.

Ol7D'pic: golf would make the .
1i1St ~ tbe c:ourse would open in
theSUIIIIIIeCmonths.
It normally is closed from late
May to late Oclobcr. although that
is liiiR out ofttadilion than out of
concern aboutlhe hot weather
affeC:ting gnw and foliage. The
dub was flllliiCd ID give members
Jium the North a place to play golf
in the wineer.
There will be green Bermuda
IJllll ODibe course a1 the time of
the Games. StqJbcos said.
,
••we won't see it in Masters
condition," Stephens said,
although it will be m peak condilion forthallimeollhe year.
"Golf in the Olympics is a very
positive step forward for golf, and
we an: CJttn:mcly CJtcitcd about the
possibility of beinjt a part of the
AtlaomGames "S3id Swan Bloch
joint chairman'of the World Ama:
teurGolfCooJIICil.

Juan Aritonio Samaranch, presi-dj:nt of the IOC. on Tuesday said
the organization would .study the
p10posal.
"The last word is the lOC,"
Sarnaranch said in Geneva. "We
have 10 study it very carefully." He
said no dec:ision is expected until
Dea:mber.
1be ~announced Wednesday

would limit nations 10 a maximum
of lhree players. There would be
two 72-hole toumamellts, one fer
men and ooe fll' wooaen. One tournamcnt would ·be played the last
week io July, tbe other the first
wa* ill Angmt
"We are lbriiied tha1 the game
of soJC would be exooscd to bil·
lionsofpcopluroood the world as
F.l of the patat lpoiU specUICle
ill bislory, 811dl0 have the competilion at Augusta National is a huge
bonus," said Deane Beman, ·commissioneroflbcPGA Tour.

Jays' success causes Gaston's
critics to ·label him 'genius'
By STEVE WILSTElN
TORONTO (AP) - Cito ,Gas- .
ton, his voice thick witll sarcasm
about those who derided him as a
"halfway manager" and now call
· 18
· 100k
hi m a fuII•fledged gemus,
•
ing smarter every night.
Funny how timely hi'ts,
sparlding catches and terrific pitch·
ing can make a· manager's IQ go
up.
If the Toronto Blue Jays clinch,
the World Series tonight in the
Sky Dome, it will end a long period
of doubt about Gaston and proba·
bly secure him anew contract for
next season - something he
wasn't sure he'd get if the team
didn't at le-ast win the playoffs.
Gaston didn't get outmaneuvered in the playoffs by Oakland's
TonyLaRussa,asmanyfaithless
Toronto fans feared, and isn't gw
ting bafncd by Atlanta's Bobby

a

one w·as perfect sacrifice that
·moved both runners up.
Mike Stanton, a left-!)ander,
came in for Atlanta to face the lert•
banded hitting Olerud, so Gaston
sent Ed Sprague to pinch-hiL That
Jed to another intentional walk,
loading the, bases. When Cox went
to the bullpen again for right-hander Jeff Reardon tb face right-han·
der Candy Maldonado, Gaston this
time stayed with Maldonado.

the action, deftly handling his Starting pitchers and reli~vers •. callin,g
for surprise bunts, mov1ng h1s
fielders into the right spots and
keeping everyone on the team calm .
until the job is done.
Gaston's choice of Jimmy Key
IIi pitch Game 4 last night was typl·
cal of a management style that
might appear to some as weak but
is, in fact, successful because it
places a premium on loyalty and ,
trust in his players.
Key, 13-13 during the regular
season, didn't pitch in the playoffs
as Gaston went with a three-man
rotation. But Gaston felt Key
deserved a chance to -shine in the
World Series.
"He's been here just about as
long as I have, trying to get to this
point," Gaston said.
,
Key responded to Gaston's trust
with a five-hitter over 7 2-3 innings
as he started for tile first time in 17
days.
·
Gaston didn't stay with Key a
moment 100 long, though, going to
Duane Ward to end a threat itrthe '
eighth inning- tbanl::s to first
baseman John Olerud's lunging,
game-saving stop of a shot down
the line by Jeff Blauser with runncrs on second and third.
In the ninth. Gaston went ~ight
·away to closer Tom Henke, who
shut the Braves down in order to
preserve Key's 2·1 victory.
Gaston also seemed preny savvy
with the score tied in the ninth
inning of Game 3.
Roberto Alomar singled and
stole second, setting up an intentiona! walk of Joe Cane-r. With tbe
infield back at dou~le-play de~th
and everyone expecung Dave Winfield to swing away, Gaston pulled
a surprise and had Winfield bunt.
Gaston could remeljlber only one
other time this season when he
asked Winfield to bunt, and this

VA.U•'"*''~ I

Sonya 5 C0Un
· try ..t\J.
f'Y1•tCfie n
I

wee·kend$pe(IG• I5
fr•1day Nl•ghf
H01118C01111ng speCIGI

,,

·

0

·•

0

Chil- Cheeseburger- 4 to 7 p.m.

Su.nday Buffet

.·

.

11 a.m. tO, 2 p.m.
Ham • Tr...tey
• Rolst Beef
ura
Potatoes • Uegetalil
' es &amp; Hot' Rolls
Y'
$
All JOU Can eaf 7.95
Children under 12 half price
r.. _
Sonya S Counm1
Xjtcrnm
"'' ::J

.,

'

Soror~ty

to host
skating party

1

!l(Ju;itu. Corner of'I1iirt£ &amp;PtarCStruts

949-2324

.

'

WHY VOTE ,FOR JOHN LENTES
NEXT MEIGS COUNTY _
PROSE CUTER?
COMPETENT
"wHAT'S THE STORY?"
WHY are our schools in the State Lpan
Fund when they should have thousands
of doUars from Delinquent Land Taxes?
.'.'

WHY were all these tax casts
DISMISSED from court?
91
111
111
111
91
. 91
11'1
81

DLT 11
DLT 14
DLT .15
DLT 17
DLT 18
DLT 18
OLT20
DLT21

81 DLT22
81 DLT23
111 DLT24
91DlT25
111 OLT26
91 OLT27
111pLT21 ·
11 DLT31

111
111
111
91
91
81
111
11

DLT 32
DLT34
DLT35
DLT36
DLT37
DLT311
DLT 41
DLT43

81 DLT 44
111 OLT 45
91 DLT 02 I
81 DLT 03
81 DLT 04
81 DLT 05
111 DLT 06
111 OLT 07

81
111
111
91
91
81
111
111

DLTOI
DLT 011
DLT 10
DlT 46
DLT 01
DLT03
DLT04
DLT06

To receive books
'.'

book entitled "My Favorite Book"

published by the Ambassador Co.
of Gastonia. N, C.
11ic book is about giving, learning lessons and growing UJ?.. It
illustrates the beauty of a ch1ld's
wDik and the people who are in it, '
especially thtmselvcs.
Local sponsors providing the
book are the Dairy Queen Brazier,
Fisher Funeral Home, and The Prescription Shop li4.
·

CAU.:

FOR A BEnER .MEIGS COUNTY .
•'

First grade students in the Salem

Center and·Middleport Elementary
'Schools will each receive a gift

•

A Competent &amp; Dependable
Attorney•••
211

A skating p8ny.for families of
the Xi Gamma Epsilon Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority was dis·
cussed at the recent meeting of the
chapter held at the home of Judy
Williams. Hostcs~es were Mary
HudsoQ, Brenda Curfman and
Ronda Ketchum.
The ~Y will be held Sunday at
the Chesier Skateaway from 2-4
p.m. Prizes wit) be awarded for
costumes. Food will be available to
buy at the rink and also. favon and
donuts will be furnished by sorority. Those auending are to bring
money for skate rental.
. Debbie Haptonstall, a member
of lhe gtoup, recently participated
in th~"Arnerican Heart Assocl8tiOD
Heart Walk. A donation was given
on behalf of the sorority to !Jie
heanfund.
It was also mentioned that the
upcoming Health Department levy
was in need of s·upporl for their
endorsement so people of Mejgs
County can continue to be heiDecl.
The next meeting will be Mon- .
day at the home or Dr. Ray Pickens
on Lincoln Hill at 7 p.m. Patty
Pickens will be hostess. Members
will meet to carpool at 6:45 p.m. at
the Pomeroy (upper) )181ting 101.
The Preferentiaf Tea will be
Nov. 9 in honor of the new
. pledges. Susan Well and Jcdy
Gibbs will be hostesses for the tea.

••
•

.

,,Pd. for by the' eandld.te, John

.

....

--

•-uw

INSUUNCE .
11SW.s..l
Pa.roy,OH
.....992·5479 .._.

.......

__......... ......

........ _.. ..... a.... .....

Lentee,

w..t S.COnd st., Pomeroy

. DEAR O.W.: I won't Waste my
lime II' youn_by discussina the
immorality or your relalioubip,
because rm sure it is of no interest
toyoo.
You'~ already decided that if YOI!
can't have a man of your own, it's
perfectly OK to help yourself to
!IOIIICOilC dse's. This rationalizalion
may get you through a cold winter's
night. but I ask you to look at the
relalionship from a purely practical
angle.
•
When you settled for this married
man, you took yourself out or the
pme. I wonder bow many leaili·
mate prospcciS .tipped by beci•IIC
you weren't looking.
You're 48, and one thing is
cenain - you iren't getting any

, for cloc&amp;on. fd lib: to llelr from the
doclon for a c:ban8fl. CID dtey offer
a solution to litis problem that
plagues so many~?
.
·. Gem of the Day: 'Jbey 11Y ibe
world was~ ill lilt days, and it
sure docs loolt il ,
Fu/lng preuured 1/J llaWI lu?
s,..•·•~ ,
How wt~ll·ilfOI'IfVd art yoM7 Wrlle
· · ·
.
. for ANI Uuulus' botM:kf •Sa Gild
younger. I hope you wd! look the Tttll·ager. • Se11d 11 ~elf·
ahead a few ye~s and. think of addressed, long, !Juliull·lire
what your future Will be like five or envelope IJIId 11 clt.eck Of IIIOIIt'J
se~cn years do~ the road. It just order for $3.65 (lllis l11cludes
nughl be better if you learned now postage llltd lraNUilll) ~: Turu,
10 plant your own floy.'ers and c/o AM IAIIders, P.O. Boll 11562, ·
~ your 0"'!' soul tnstead of Chicago, f/1. 60611-0562. (Ill
looldng for roscun someone else's Ctlllllda, send $1.45.)
garden.
..
~ .
De~ ADD Landers: I haYC hit on MAKE IT ARULE...
.
a soluuon for a frustrating problem
·
-- doctors who lceep patients USE WANT ADS. ,
,:
waiting endlessly in cold examining
AHANDY
.
rooms. I hope you will print it, Ann.
These days, patients necx1 a11 the help
TOOL
·
they can geL
I am a management consultanL
I charge $100 an hour for mv
services. When a doctor kept me
waiting a half hour in a cold
exami1Una room. 1 saau:hed a 1101e
on a piece of paper. When he linally
showed up, I handed him the note.
"Whaa's this?" he aWd. I replied,
• A bill for $50 - for a half hour of
my time."
.
When I left. he scrawled, "No
cluqc," oo my bill.- WEST PALM

c-

,

BEACH
DEAR W.P.B.: Very clever. But
what docs the average Joe do -one who is 1101 a management
consullant?
'
Eve-ry day I receive at least 50
Jeum t'rolp readers who canplain
about the long hours spent "~~;Biting

CREMEANS
· ~4th District
State Representative

Paid lor by the Commtn.to EtiiCt
Frank A. CrornuM, Slevin B.

ChiiPm•n, Trea.

Did you realize
that a company
·retirement and social
security may only provide
part of your retirement
needs? You inust provide the
other part through your own
· investments.

Ballet to be presented

H. D. VEST FINANCIAL SERVICES

at Athens H,igh School

KARL KEllER Ill, C.P.A.

The Nutcracker Ballet, performed by Parkersburg Wheeling
Ballet Company, will be presented
Nov. 29 at the Athens High School
Auditorium, 1 High School Drive,
at 2:30 p.m. Advance sale tickets
with Visa/Mastercard at 1-800-

Registered Representative
(614) 992·7270 or (614) 667·60 11
Sewriies oflerad through H. D. Vest lnveslmeht Sewritles, Inc.
433 East Las Coinas Blvd .. Third Floor•lriing, Texas 75039• (214) 556-1651

882-11.48.

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SAVES YOU MONEY

\
.,
SUPERVISOR • John Rice was elected to a three-year term as
a supervisor for the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District at
that group's annual meetlnr Tuesday night at Rutland Elemen·
tary.

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

Save $ $ $ now on new Dining Room Furniture with our new
R.S.V.P. pricts! Whenever you 111 •R.S.V.P.• (Rutland Furniture
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THE
PHOTO PLACE
·,

109 HIGH STREET
POMEROY

-

(Bob anll Clwl4111 Ho.pkll)

. 742·2211

Mill SIREET • RUILAID, OHIO

-- ........ .
I'

I

'place awards during the 1992 Hay Show at the
Meigs County Fair, The plaques were presented
Tuesday night during_the MSWCD's annual
meeliDII at Rutland Elementary.

·'

JOHN -LENTES

-=-===-

HAY SHOW WINNERS· Charles Yost,
supervisor for the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District, presented plaques to Brian Windon and Virgil King in recognition of their first

VOTE for a lawyer who wl collect m•y
for our schools qnd won't have his cases
.·dismissed fir iaept/inproper prosecution.

:'WindlnlU Boot", by Jon lieJbm

Dar AU ...den: I Rlld your
columa ~gularly llld have a
grat mlny Ieuen from *
ling
husbands, cheated-on wivea and
•Oibcr WOIDCn.~
I II1J a 48-yearo&lt;Jid lingle rCIIIIIle
and can tell )'011 that I have not met ·
a dccetlt sinJ)e man in the last 10
years.
I would · love to play by the
rules, which means, "No affain
with married men," but my life
would be very empty wilhout male
companionship. So II present, 11111
involved (monogamously) wilh a
I1IIITied man my own age.
Mr. X and his wife have no
children 11 home. Mil. X gets a Jot
of his time and tonsidenulon and
the security 'of knowing lie will
not leave ~. She bas alovdy home,
. d,a y's annual meeting of the Meigs Soil and· a car and money. There's not a
Water Conservation District held at Rutland . lot that! can "cheat" her out of. InElementary.
cidentally. Yours Truly is his only
outside intmst.
I have doep (ceiings roc Ibis man,
· but I'm 1101 completely happy with
OW' relationship. I 1111 001 thrilled
about bein&amp; a married man's side
dish, but I can't seem to do any
better.
The sad truth is that all the
interesting, atlnletiYC, decent men
in my age group are married. I
accepled the fact a long time ago
that my chances of finding an
eligible single man Ire practically
zero. I know you can't c:ondone Ibis
in pint. but I want you to at least
unde!mnd iL IIIII - 11IE 011IER
WOMAN, HAMPTON ROADS,

;;,.;..;....;...o;:;.;.;....;._ _ _ _ _ _..,._ _ _,;__ _ _ _..,.

Co~ni~.:~~J~~~;;r:~s~ontrolling

Stop in and see our
nesei...-:OD
Of
.,...
A;.U
DaVI•d WiID,ter CoHan,
~es

I

FORESTRY AWARD • Bert and Beverly
Taylor wer.e presented the Forestry Stewardship
Award by Dave Schatz, service forester, at Toes-

Wednesday· olabt In Toronto, ·as Atlanta lirat
baseman Brian Hunter applies the tag oa the
run. The Blue Jays woo 2-1 to take a 3-llead In
the Fall Classic. (AP)

CAUGHT IN RUNDOWN- Toronto's
Manuel Lee (len) liods himself caught in a rundown between first and second base In tbe seventh inning of Game 4 of the World Series

"There was an old woman,
Who lived m· a shoe..."

.-

Thursday, October 22, 1892
Page 9

Woman is tired.of playing by
the rules; sees a married man

r-:::~--:-----~:-:~--:--:---~============:;-,
·

Jolur Hi~tt StwAiot ttrli.st Jo11 Hrrkrr i-s lac~ll ud ·s1uw
Hou se" with whimsiC41 4tlail. £Wf'J co(tap is,.;,,,;
b~ h•nd. St•rtiNII•/•rowN.r SJOJIO.

The Dally Sentiliel

·. ...

a

Montreal, Washington, Buffalo
among latest victors of N~L games

'

..

�•

Page 11)..;...The Dally Sentinel

I

Thur8day, October 22, 1992

Pomeroy lldcleport, Ohio

Community calendar
Co••ua lty Caleudar lte•a
appear two days before u evmt
aud lbe day ol tla!lt eveut. lteliUI
must be received weD iD lldvauce
to assure publlcatiou iD tbe aJ. ·
eudar.
•

ing wifl follow at .7:30 p.m.
RefreshmeiiiS will be served

DEXTER • Meigs County
Women's Fellowship will hold its
monthly meeting at the Dexter
Church of Christ at 7:30 p.m.
THURSDAY
Th ursday. Jeqnifer 'Sheets will
SALEM CENTER • Revival at speak on the Living Will. Public
Salem Center United Methodist invited.
Church will be through Friday_~ 7
p.m. nightly. Special singing ni!htPOMEROY • Pomeroy PTO
ly. Rev. Chester Lemley, Ed Min- will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. Roger ·
gus, Roger Kennedy and Dennis Abbott will speak on the levy. PubFaught will be the speakers. Public lic invited.
invited.
· FRIDAY
RACINE • Coffman Family · POMEROY - The Meigs CoonMinistries will hold services at the ty Senior Citizens will hold a round
Racine Church of the Nazarene, and square dance Friday from 8-11
Tyree Blvd., through Sunday at 7 p.m. at the senior citizens center.
p.m. nightly. and at 10:30 am. and Music provided b_y Countty Sweet- ·
6 p.m. on Sunday. Pastor ThOmas hearts. Public inVIted. Bring snacks
L. Gates II inviles the public. Fur- for the snack table.
•
ther information may be obtained
by calling 949-2668.
LONG BQTTOM - Faith Full
Gospel
Church in Long Bottom
'
RACINE - The Racine Ameri- will have prear ~ ing and singing
can Legion Auxiliary will meet Friday at 7 p.m. with Pastor SteVe
Thurs day at 7 p.m. at the post Reed and local singers. Public
home.
invi~. Fellowship will follow.
POMEROY · AA meeting,
Thursday, 7 p.m., Sacred Heart
Catholic Church. Call 992-5763 for
information.

milking plrlor,
LONG BOTTOM • Smorg1s·
bord dinDer,Lon&amp; Boaom Coalinunity Center, Slllllrday beginnig at
S p.m. Candidate nilbL Cost ii $5
for adults and $2.50 for children.
Several meats, noodles, sc:alloped
potlltoes, oysaen mid dressing Will
be featured. Desserts and drinks
included.
· ·

· RACINE • Mt. Moriah Church
of God, gospel sing, Sunday, 1:30
p.m. with Eden Family, the Dailey
Family, Mountain Top Singers and
Crystal Powell. There will be a dinner at noon before the sing. Public
invited.
POMEROY • SOLOS (Singles'
Fellowship) will meet Sunday at 4
p.m, at the Pomeroy United
Methodi).t Church to· watch and
discuss "Growing through Grief."
Supper follows.

By LARRY McSHANE
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK ~ Sex may sell,
but " Sex" REALLY sells.
Thousands of Madonna fa ns
around th e country handed over
S49.95 Wednesday to become the
first owners of a book displaying
their und ressed idol's fantasies

'

about S&amp;M, bondage and nude
pizza eating.
The recept_ion was even greater
in Europe, where the Material
Girl's collection sold out in France
and caused long lines in England.
Most bought the Mylar-wrapped
book contents unseen. One hundred
copies went in under an hour in

!';

.

..Sex."

COATS FOR KIDS • Batik One In Pomeroy wW again be IPOn·
soringlbe Coall for Kldl PI'OIJIID to collect coala ror children tbls
winter. Aayoae witll cblldrens' coall wbo would like to doute
tbem to lbe project JDay drop them off at Ban 'Oat Ia '-troy,
or aliy Bauk ODe bradl, before Dee. 18. Pielured are Gerl Wal·
loll, cuordlutor ror the pi'OifiDI, aud Steve Duaree.

.

............,

GGIIptlls, ow.

1391 Sallor4 Scloeel ...
' ."(ol (614)

orl-t0H72-5967

RIMiutlon otlhl Vllaga
1~55~~~~=:====
CeuMII of lhl VHiaga of lr----~~~~~~'!'""'~ ---.11
lllddlaport, Middleport,
HOUSE FOR ~
........
Ohio, paooed on Die 11th·
c~ay ot.lutr. l~tz, . _ . . .
BY OWNER
1M oubrrlltlod .10 a voa. . of
.,. paop~a otlalcl aullcllvi12 Year old ranch type house. 3

hal-

PRICE PIEOUCEDI

Tho pnc:e
- l o $88,900 llld
O'Mitr tlnonclng &lt;II up. to 80% &lt;II purchoM
omounl moy be ~ lor quollylng per.
son to buy very nk:e home on 3Y. aaes Ml
Raclno. 4 BR, 3 bolho, 2 goroOot , rwnlod I
BR opl. Property inclldos 4,800_sq. ft. !arm
bldg.
.
'
Cal .614·992·7104101 Awl.

NECESSARY SERVICE PKOVIDKD • ne
Melp CoDDty Healtla Department provides a
variety olllftii!IDII1 aervks to couaty residents
with funds supported by levy monies saell as
that Ia tbe upeomlng election. Wltbout sucb

monetary support . . .J of tliele aervks would
not be poulble. Plctared II Malzle HaDDabs,
Pomeroy, as ..e participates iD one sucb program • a cholesterol screeDIDg. Performing the
·screening is Nurae Linda VaniDwagen.

essay winners named

The- Meigs County Retired
Senior Vo)unteer Program (RSVP)
will honor Yesteryear essay winners with a reception on Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the multi-pwpose .
center (Senior Citizens Center) in
Pomeroy
·
Fifth 8raoo studenis who participaled in the RSVP Yesteryear Program, in conjunction with the
Meigs County Pioneer and Histori, cal Society and the Meigs County
School System,prepared written
repons about their work project
and their visit to the Meigs Museum.
.
,
Essays were judged by ~lif~
retirees who based ·their
ision
on the students' "own words" and
understanding of their' learning
experience.
Trophies will be awarded to the
first and second place winners from
each participating school. In addilion, a plaque will be praented to
Steven Boso, overall county winnee. He is the ·son of Pam Boso,
Racine.
Other winners are: RaciDe; ftrst,
Steven Boso; second, Jody Hupp,
daughter of Steve and Laura J;lupP.
Racine. JUvervlew_, _first, Jai111e

Midd/eport CCL
hosts annual
· Halloween party

.

West Holly.:Wood's Book Soup
bookstore.
·
"Wh
-11 1 f'
at. ~~ Madonna's
md? What
always find
musicyou
or
10
videos or books~ sex," said .
Howard Silvera of New York. "In
this day and age, she's our Marilyn
our Elvis, our whatever...
•
Maybe, but you never saw the
King posing ncar-naked with a
switchblade p6inted at his crotch .
or Marilyn hitchhiking in high
heels and nothin$ else. Which may
~~~;;n~ole pomt, said one buyer
" I wanted to see how far she's
gone. 1 want to see if it's all they
say," said Marielle Scunlio, 2S.,
h
d
~J~~:. up at a Barnes Noble
The collection was doing well in
the nation ' s heartland , too . In
0 1 dp k K
ver an ar , an., the Borders
Book Shop ~ one of the largest in
the Midwest - reported 40 to SO
copies werc.reserved in advance.
The 128-page book was lcept
behind the counter at most stores
. ensuring the curious had no chanc~
to break irs seal and peer inside'.
Customers had to ask for their

hrc..Hof
a..heFIII

.....

~hite •. daugh~er

of Rodney and
Ktmberly _While, Long Bottom;
second, Mt~helle B~cldey, daugh- _
ter of Kevm and Dtana Buc~ley,
Long Botto!~!. llutlapd~ ftrst,
Matthew Jusuce, son of Bnan and
Jackie J:ustice, Pomeroy; second,
Tiffany Pennell, daughler of Robert
and Jodie Pennell, ~iddfel!ort.
Tuppers Plains, ftrst, Alisha
Rojas, student transferred; second,
Tommy Cofa!D. son of Cathy Wilsoli, .R~vllle. Syracuse, ftrst,
Ashli Davts. daughler of Greg and
Blllbara Davis, Syracuse; second,
Jessica Smith, daughter of Barry
811d Malinda Smith, Racine. Letart
Falls, first, Jennifer Morris, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Morris, Racine; second, Daniel Hannon, son of Paul11 Burke, Racine.
Chester, first, William Aaron
Well, son of Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Well, Pomeroy; second, Jessica
~-1nfcu:n , dl:ughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Marcum, Long Bottom.
Salisbury, first. 'l'ricia Davis,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Greg
Davis, Pomeroy; second, Lacy
Banks, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Albert
]Janks,
Pomeroy.
Bradbury, first, Jenni Howerton,

daughter of '(irgil and Phyllis
Howerton! Middleport; second,
Sarah~~. da_ughter ~f Delmar
and Dtana Larkm~, Mtddl.ep~rt.
Harrlsonvllle 1 .ftcst, Wtlham
South, son of William and Rebecca
Foley, Pomeroy; second, Lisa
Crowley, daughter of Martha Harper, Pmneroy.
. ~arents and grandparents JUe
mvlled _to .attend t~e reception
when wmmng casayt.sts are. bonand
their trophies.

Celebrates second

...

.

Wlth2Trll11811.....

Bennetts Mobile Home ~~111g &amp; f~~~~~~

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LIVY IN IXCEII OF
TIE ~ IILL ~ATION
NOliCE Ia haraby giVIII
thai In pur•uano• of a

New program books were dis- nials. Snowdiops and qocus can be
tribute&lt;! by Juanita Wilt
seen early in the spring peeking out
Janet Theiss gave the monthly from under the snow. Anpuals
report on pumpkins stating they sown wi:!l ~t:!bs cover the space
need a large growing space and before and after the bulbs bloom.
well enriched soil. At least five Perennials can be planted and -left
seeds should be planted in rows or to bloom year after year. Another
hills, six feet apart and covering the part of the landscape to consider
seed about one inch deep. For good are trees that can be used not only
growth they prefer full sun, well- for shade but for fruit and flowerBradley Jordan "ill." Robinson,
rollen manure, plenty of wale!' "!"f ing. Ornamental accents include son .of Brad and Serena Robinson,
muk:h around the vmes. Vaneues bird baths, fountains, trellises, lily recently celebrated his second
include Jack Pot. Spirit and Bush ponds, sun dials or benches. Land- birthday with a party at his '
pumpkins. Winter Luxury, New scape designing adds beauty and Pomeroy borne.
England Pie and Small Sugar are . value to property.
A teddy bear pnd train theme
considered better cooking quality.
Evelyn Hollon had the arrange- was carried out in the decorations ·
They should be harvested before . ment of the month using pink and · and a birthday dinner, cake and
frost with a1 least a two inch slem. white dahlias, gum wood and ever. .el'nlslunents were served.
Store them at SS degrees in a mod- green in a green wood vase.
Attending and sending gifts
erately moist place.
For a specimen exhibit, Connie were Brad and Serena Robinson,
The basic prineiples of growing Hill had a bouquet of different col- Grover and Elsie White, Woodrow
flowers and the kinds that can be orcd roses. Mrs. Moo.e showed a Fonney, Mike Still, Jeff, Sonia,
used was the topic of the program dipper gourd and also .passed out Christa, Jeffrey and Tyler Circle,
"Plant Today - Beauty Tomorrown Indian corn to members both Dan, Sheila, Kinley, Danielle and
given by Peggy Moore. The best . grown by Charles Goeglein.
Tiffany Spencer, Vince, Synthia,
The meeting adjourned with the Joshua and Stefan Robinson, Rick,
part is to keep a continuance of
blooms from earlY. spring untilinte hostess serving refreshmenrs to the Lisa and Damian Wise, and Ralph
fall. This can be' done with bulb mombers.
and Wilma Ballard.
mass plantings, annuals and peren-

OPE.EU IUJ111 ._~ IP..S-.oo

AW C.llllolen, Heat
p_,., hi'MCIS'
Now Water Hnters.

PubliC NOilce

:;;:.~;!~~i~-~~ . Yesteryear

POMEROY • AA meeting, Sunday, 7 p.m., JTPA building,
Pomeroy.

9x7-$27S.H 1W-t411M

Glally HI Efflcle.cy

LOTTRIDGE • County. music
night will be held at the Lottridge
Community Center, Saturday, 7
p.m.. to midnighL All bands welcome. Refreshments available.
Public invited.

Be the first on your block with a
naked Madonna;first day sales soar
.

IIISIIWI PIICU

KANAUGA • Liberty Mountaineers will perform Saturday at
the DAV Hall in Kanauga

Gardeners tour herb, craft shop;
regional fall meeting set Oct. 24
·Members of Wildwood Garden
Club toured the herb and craft shop
wl)en tbey met recently at the home
of Connie Hill.
Kathryn Miller presided at..the
meeting and read an article 011 'pine
cones. For devotions she read'"Seasons of the Souln by Helen Steiner
Rice and ··unexpected Miracles."
Far roll call everyone brought and
sh()wed a small dried arrangement
they had made.
The regional board board meeti n~ was Oct. 17 at the Chester
United Methodist Church and the
· regional fall m~ting is Saturday at
the Nelsonville Quality Inn.
Doris Grueser and Kathryn
Miller reported on the Rolland
Flower Show. .
Flower arrangements had been
· provided this summer at the Fa-est
Run United Methodist Church by
Evelyn Hollon, Dorothy Smith and
Pauline Eynon at the Morning Star
United Methodist Church.
Betty Milhoan gave a talk on
medicinal herbs at Overbrook Center.

RAISED PAIEL 111111 DOOI

CHESTER · Cbester.Eiementary Scbool CamiVIi will be Sltlurday wilb a chickea dinner 11 5:30
p.m. and games from 6:30-8:30
p.m. Public invited.
·

KANAUGA • Square dancing
and clogging at the DAV building
from 8-1I p.m. Music by Liberty
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tup- Mountaineers. Public is invited.
pers Plains VFW. Post No. 9053,
Ladies Auxiliary, will hold a round
SUNDAY
and square dance Friday from 8RUTLAND c Homecoming,
11 :30 p.m. with mustc by t.he Rutland Church of the l:'lazarene,
Happy Hollow Boys. Public invit- Sunday. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.,
ed. .

MIDDLEPORT - Janet Bolin
will inslrUct a class on dried floral
design Thursday at 7 p.m. for the
Middleport Arts Council. Cost is .
SATURDAY
$11 with all supplies furni~hed.
.DANVILLE • Weekend services
Call 742-2095 or 992-267S 'to reg- at the Danville Church of Chhst
isler.
will be held Sawrday at 7 p.ni. and
Sunday at 10:30 ~m . and 6 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT
Meigs Denver Hill, Fosler, W.Va., will be
OAPSE Local 17 will meet Thurs· · the ~-Public invited.
day at 7 p.t;n. at Meigs Junior. High
School in Middleport.
REEDSVILLE • Eden United
Brethren Church will have a soup
REEDSVILLE · Riverview Gar- supper and bake sale on Saturday at
den Club. will travel to the Betsy 5 p.m.
Mills Club in Marietta oil Thurs·
day. The group will meet at the
RACINE - The Charles Ihle
home bf Maxine Whitehead at S Fiunily and John ~terday will be
p.m.
the hosts for a special dairy activity
for the public on Saturday from 1-3
TUPPERS PLAINS • There will p.m. The !hie farm is I()Cated on
be a special meeting of Tuppers Morn jng Star Road in R~ciile .
Plains VFW Post No. 9053 on Highlights will be the new West- ·
Thursday at 7 p.m. Regular m~t- falia Double 6, fully-au!omated

~miLIIIaA11D .

- The annual Halloween party for
families of the MiddlepOrt Child
Conservation Lca~ue was held
-~yatu.,
"--·•
.... Rock pnngs
·
Un!ted
Methodist Church.
·
The social room was decorated
with pumpkins, ghosts, etc. and
games were. played with prizes
awarded. ·
Trick or treat bags w'cre distributed and the door prize was
w'1 "[h~~s='mccting was
held to discuss plans for next
month's hobo party with members
of South Cenbal District as guesis.
This will be Nov. 16'a t7 p.m.
Misti Gibbs was welcome4 as a
new member.
, . Refreshments of donuts, chips,
cookies. snack food and pop were
served to Nancy Morris, Linda,
Frank and Vincent Broderick, Ann
Colburn, Westin Fife, Kitty, Jeff,
Keith and Ginger Darst, Jeremy
and Joshua Manley, Kelli, Brandy
~n, !1..1). ~nyl1 ~r. Misti Gibbs,
Caddric, Helen, ClaytOD, Pam and
Amber Blackston, Jackie Buck;
• ~~gan Br=k, f _cggy, Mary
..... Robert

Birth

d

Michael Gunczy did just that _ .
.·
anDOUOCe
five times. He paid patd $270.35 ·
Mr, and -Mrs, Ken (Debbie)
(":thitlthii;IX) to takv·e five copie~ home
Thciaa, Columbus, Mils., announce
wt - 1m to tenna, Austna. His
the birth of 1 1011, Andrew Jordan
frlcnd ordered eight cdpios and
~Theiss Ill) Sept. IS. . •
lulljled two bags out of the B. Dal0t1t« cbildren at borne are Erin .
' ton s on Fifth Avenue.
''and Adam. ,
"We read that the books will
Malerllal grandparents are Mr.
sell out in Euro~ so we decidCd to .and Mn. Cano1J Norril, Syracue.
get them here,' Gunczy said,
Pa~ grandperenta ate Mr.
Most major bookstores in Paris
mid Mr1.1'-m"h Tbeia, ,kine. ·
reported the book had sold out:
Mr. 111d Mrs. Ros• Nbtrls arc
&amp;J'ell-grandplmus.

llldclapcrt, 0111o, llllhl ragutor ...... of volng .....
aln, on the 3rd day ot I
Nowm~~•; 1112. tho • -

=~
.::e::llo~·
........ baing a _ _..

ARNIE'S SPORTS
LOUNGE ·.·
• Presents
FANTASIA

'

THURS., OCT. 22
9pmto2am
TICKETS $1 0.00 or

Public Notice

$12.00 at the door.

304-675-5789

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCElS OF

THE TEN IILL UMITAllON

PubliC Notice

PubliC Notice

N011CE OF ELEcnotl ON
·TAX LEVY IN EXCElS.OF
THE TEN utll LIIITATION
NOTICE 1e heroby given
that In purauance of
Raooluaon oltM a-d
Truolool of
Lalart, Racine,
on tile Srd day 1
11112111•• wllbe
to ·a vola of 111 people
eold oubdlvlelon •t a
Ganarol Elacllon to be hold
In the Towahlp of Lotart,
. Ohio, .. •• .raguJ• p i of voll1.'!::'n, on thl3rd
day of
bar, 11112, lhl
quulon ofllv)'lng a tax, In
...... ol1. . . a.nllliltlsnltalion; lor lhllllll• ollllllgo
County .Board of lllntal
Rollnlatlon tor llo puspooo
of maintaining and Oplr·
allng _....__
Bald lali llllng a r-11
ohn 1111811ng llll of Hill :
a roll not acaadlng I
lor MOlt - clohr of vllualion, which arnounll to tan
cont. ($0.10) lor NCh one
hundred dollera of vlllu•
lion, lor IIY• 15) yaaro.
·
Tile Polio lor . . ld
Election will open· at 1:30
o'clock A.ll. •ncl r1111•In
open unll 7:30 o'clock P.M.
olalld clay.
By order of ll!a Boord of
ElacUon• ollhlgo County,
Ohio.
L . . _ , CINilnwM
b D. lmllh, DlrociDr
Doled Soplanlblr • • 11112
(10)1, 15, 22. 211, ~ID

morurloooondpaoalnglhl
gran-. ~ property
oomar 111712 leoc more or
le10 a lOIII dlotanaa of 2070
IMI more or looo to 111 Iron
plnlnthegrontoro•.. propo
11'1)' tina and 1111-1 PGinl of
baglmlng lor tho land hlraln
daocttbed; lhortOI S. 0 d•
g.- 22' •• E. along ....
grontoro _ , prtplll) tina,
211.73 ,_. to on lion pin In
tho grant-aoulhNot propo
.., - ; u - 8. 11
diltlr•• .a~ong the
grantoro ooull pi'Ofllrly tina
1nc1 paootng an lion pin at
17.18loolond-"'tt•lron
pin at 1R11t.la t0181tlo,lin. otm.ao leocto a railroad apllle In the qrantoro
oouth-t property ondlhlalallngoonllrllnoof
County Rood N-bor 21;
lhotwo it 44 ctea- ST 20"
w. along lhl grontoro prol*l)' liM 111111 ... lldat-

By vlnuo of Ill Ordw of
Bale looued out of lhl Com·
mon Pilla Coun of llllga
c-ty, Ohio, In ... 111111 of
Tho Ho- Hcotlonel 1111111,
Plolnlllf, agalnot Delmer
Grody, II II., Doland•ta,
upon • ~':'ks:•nt U..aln
rendored,
Co•No.t:Z..
CV·130 In lllcl Court, I wll
oll•lorllll,atlhllrontdoor
ol lhl Court Hou• In Pomoroy, Ohio, on lhl20th dq of
Nov111!bor, 1..2, 81 10:00
o'clock A.ll. the follOwing
lando and tenam•to, ~:
ShllllolnSactlona, Town
2, R•'J•· 1 2, Button T -.
•"•r
ohlp, olga County, Ohio,
and baing pert ot One
=~-!:' tu":rm:
oaiJIId 00 folowo:
Coftomenclngatapolnlln
lhl narllt-t oomw ofNid
Slctlon 3; lhlnca Estel along ·
thenorthlinloiNidlootlon
3, 13201eoct~~C~Norioootoa
point; . , _ South 111ong 1
Une end pooolng the nort1t
llneoiNidOnaHundrldAcra
LoiNIIIIIW1201111320faol

·Happy Ads

'

TROMM BUILDERS
•• Ouulify AlsuNtl COIIf~ffi,.

ol .. Oldotlng lali of 2 milia
II a roll not u:Hdlng 2
milia tor - h on• dolw ·Of
Vlillllllon, which lniOWIII to
twenty cant. ($G.20) lor
New Homes • VInyl Siding ·
llich 0111 hundred dol. . of
New Garages • Replacement Wfndows
vlilllltlon, tor fivl (I) Y.. ...
·
Room Additions • Roofing
The Polio lor aald
Elacdon will open at 1:30
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
o'clock A.ll. and remain
FREE ESTIMATES.
untl 7:30 o'clock P.ll.
0 lllcl clay.
614-949·2101 - 949·2160
By order of lila Board of
or 985·3139
Elactlona of llolgo County,
(No
Sundar Calli)
Ohio.
Honl')' L. Hu-. Chllrrt1111
2/12192Mn
Rill
D.
Smllh,DI-klr
Dtotod Soplombw 4, 11112
I"
(10) .. 15, 22, 2t, 4\0

oo· w.

1ng Ollltorflnoofc:-ty Rood

Numw 21, 1114.51 loot 10 a
railroad opllle; u - H. 13
dtgr- Ill' W' E. along a
Una and paoalng an Iron pin
ai27USIMtand-'tlaan
Iron p1n 11 41 LM lMc • lOIII
cllot.noaol4n.I7WIDthe
po1s11 of baalnnlng 111111 oon-

111n1S::I!!n
· · to •• legal high.
war• and •-11 of , _
ord.

.

PubliC Notice
ORDINANCE NO. 1HI-IZ

a:

Roo Subcllvlel

11 orc1o1:'.d by iha
Council of tho Village of
lllclrlop ort ulolowa:
Sic. 1: Thai tha now
elrMI 1Mb¥_, Soulll Afth
Ava. and Soulh Sbdh Ava.
and running north and
.OUIII between Palmer SL
and Wllll•ma SL, 11
roc•dad In the pial In lhl
llalgo County Aacordara ·
olflco, lo harebv nomad
Coven Lilli.
•
,
S.c. If: That thlo
ordinance Ia hereby decltncl to be 111 atftorgenc)'
In that lila plol muat be
approved and racorcleclln •
Umoly manner 10 llloUIIIIII
tho conetructlon of • ho•aa In Ill• area In
N Ice
p11
1111
Public ot
com •no• w
• gr•t
ogroamenl with the Ohio
NOliCE OF ELEC110N ON · Deportment of Oevllojo·
TAX LEVY 11 EXCElS OF monL .
'nE TEN 11LL LMTAliON lac. Ill: Thlo Orcllnonoa
NOTICE Ia llaroby glv• ohlll toke ~filet 111111 1M In
lh•l In purouMol of a loroa from . and altar
Anolutlon of ·th• Vllatlo ..,........,14, 11112..
,
Counoll of tllo VHI.ge of
...~ Ill• 14th ell)' of
1
.R ud•nd, Rudand, Ohio,
1112..
psnod on the 1311 day of Tarltk.ciun.n. Clerk
Auguot,\ 1112 lllara will 1M
......_II. Horto
oubtwltbtt to • volll of 11!1
~•r
n,
people of Nld oubdlvlolon
ProoldlntofCouncU
11c
at a General.,loctlon to be

=-·

11

wanted

The Tuppers Plains-Cheater Water
District Ia now accepting applications and resumes for office personnel. RequlremCN1tt: All ba81c secretarial akllla; ability to meet/deal with
the public; handling money; book·
keeping and comput• experlence li
a must with all general ledger,
accounts payable and payroll all
.comput8rlzed. Excellent working
condltld'na and beneflta. Pay commenaul'lte with experience. Please
send rHumefappllcatlon to 38561
Bar 30 Road, Reedsville, Ohio 45772.

•

=::':u:::-IIIY

f&amp;A Till ••
8111W IIIVICI

L Wrltesel

'~=·-al
20%-30%~
..dtaiOct....
Froa EIIIMiat-742·2160

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE
949·2391or
1·800·137·1460

Lawn Mowing,
· Fertilizing, Wledlng,
end Seeding.
S~rub and Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal
f'III!Mnt ..TA eomrnerc.-1
frME.UmMM

AREWOOD FOR SALE

M
. ICROW'•vE
OVEN
110
. .d VCR REPIIR
IU 111111

lrl.. _lll• Or We
Pick

u

KEN'S APP~IA
'LI NCE
SERVICE
992·5335 Or
915•3561

lormo

.lc,.s ,,.. hot Olftco

Bide lhllll lncluda COlli
lor oM nntovll aqulpm.,~

._..St.
o•

217 L
poroonnal prollcllon equip1'0-Y,
mon~ mobilization, notlftco.
312:w2Mn
don,
oerllllcltlono, dlopoNI, ,,__ _ _ _.;.;;,;;;.;;;,a

oncl •r requited ~onltorlng
lncllorllllllylll. Bldd•uhlll
provide their own bid tonne
and -•turnloh"' ..."bid
dooumenll to lhe County
Commloolon Nllolaclory
l'llld- of ax-llnoa In
.......
......lao I'IIIIOVal. Only •••
polioncsd aboltmllll oon_ , . wll be conalclarod.

IJVIDSON'S
11J 1
PLUM liNG
nu...Wng

..."...

.~·.T'

~

·

'

·

TOTALLY AUTOIIOTIYE ~NCE

I

t

6 I

I

I

e

o••

••

:.C:..""
::=:-:'=~= 614·992·7144
Bulidln,;,-'i2o Eaat llaln
10/1/92 tfa
· BidderIn tho
lo form
provide
. bid
guaronty
ololther
111 "'• tuu
a•aUNty
- t ofbolld
tho contract
or a
Mfllflad ohack, ooohlar'o
chlckortettwolcseclltlnthl
amo~mt ol 10% of lila bfd,
lndaoonlrlclbond/plrlorm111100 bond or IIIIer of cseclll
1n .,. 1u1 amo~mt ot the
con.::-lrooll olthoenwiopl
Dolllllnlng .,. bid muat 1M

1-:======+=:
RACINE MO'WER
I.

CLINIC
lo1 19._w..a.- ••
..-.,_..

RAONE. OHIO

,.ey

(forMiy ~Ridge s.ull

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

CALL

GUN SHOOT
UCINE
GUN CLQI .

lasllaalulldi•l
EVERY SAT.

6:30P.M.

Factoiy Choke
12 Gauge Shot
Strictly Enforced
101/12/Un

.LAND FOR
• sALE
33acres,
Rutland TWp.
25acres,
Olive TWp.
Timber on both
tracts.
Call614-667-3484
or 614-667-31

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

biJH)

Mowers • Qoil
•

FORKED ,RUN .
. SPORTSMAN ·.
CLUB
SUNDAYS
12:00 Noon
Factory choke 12
gauge only

STARTS

CHAILIE'S

~

D.l.'s
FARM TOn

CollciiNt
S..DispllyAL
QUAliTY PRifT SHOP
255 Mill Strelll
Ml dlllp

'rt,

Olllo

e.-..

AakForDola

992·7553

1114-7424CIZO
1lltl-

1011:1112

SHRUB TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

t9

UNDI'S
PAlm•
&amp;CO.
.,., n.,. o.r 01 r n ,

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

HAUUNG ·
•FIREWOOD
INTERIOR &amp; EXT£1101

BILL SLACK
992·2269

IIEtESIIIIAlH
HAVE l&amp;liDiaS
loloro6pa1Mn . . ;

· USE!&gt; RAILROAD TIES

TOP TO BOTTOM
MAINHNANCE
and REPAIR
•Roofing •Siding
-Gutters

•Room Addnlons
•Interior Remodeling
Co1tad Rollert l Jacks

(614) 992·2866
(9) 2&amp;-'g2·1

Aft•. p&amp; 614-915-4110
I

·HOWARD .

EXCAVATING ·
BUWlOZER
and

=='9
HOlE

UMES'IOIE-TRUCICINQ
FREE ES11MATES

992·3838

mo.

•

-

Quality

Stone Co.

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Call

. CONS:rtUCDOI
...wNenu

:t:.=-..

··-····

st., a c•.....,.

614·992~

FIEEEm.atl

6637

915·4473
667-6179

St. Rt. 7 ·
OH.

c••••ire,

Tr-

=
!
•
I
•• ·N·· c

•I ·

W•ltctrAMew

G -. ;
~. ~-··

lifoll!'f--·

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

52100
bclN,

369701111•1...
,_~Cillo

Shop ()peD for
ATTN: Local Croft Shope

and Cr.....

ERml111a.lhl mldtlo m•
- buy'wlloln+trom
Connie.
HlnciC11111d owago,

wraothoandpotpounl

•SAND -GRAVEl, •DIRT

Alla.r4waiMI,
s.u.H,
$40.00• ....

oUMESTONE

•

......,.•.

(614) "2·5449

,.,.,.

3 Announcements
R&amp;C EICAYATING

' BUUDODNG
PONDS

SEPTIC SYST.EIYIS

CIIAIIPION

D.

I

All~·Y•IIIgll

HAULING SERVICE

ouppllao.

P.O.

I

Saw•

HOURS: 10 wn-1 Pill

Qr

I

BISSEll &amp; lUilE

614·949·2804

(10)11, 22

An,one

I

Wetdeaters

. 1111')' Hobot.lllr, Clark

Plnullook ..

I

KEN

POMEROY, OH.

111 &amp;"l2/lfn. '

I

98~01

949·2168

Gutters
Downspouts
_
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

I

FOR MORE INFORIIATION

FREE ESnMATES

·NEW- REPAIR

I

•FREE INSTALLATION• With any phone pure"through Octabar 31
Service rll• from $t1.15 per IIIDIIIh. ·
lnch~deo 180 mlnutea of oll-paak air time.
Leaalngavallable from $15.00 par montll.

SMALL DOZER
WORK
DRIVEWAY WORI
••• UMERONE
IEUVERY SERVICE
·~25.00
..1 Dol•
Work
,., HOur
IUSOIIAILE UrES

PARTS &amp; SERVICE

me.,-::..:~'~'!·=

The eoard of llolgo
c:-1y ComllliMionwo may
8CjiOpl llo ~Ibid or loct ... ""' bid lor lhl lnIOndad purpoiOand .... .,..
the right to aooopl rw raiiOI
any or II lllldo lncllor any
partlhlrool.
Molgo County
Commlolionoro

I

C....k leH
dleport,

lhl prcp:111is IIIII inopac&gt;J!onooonbiOrnngodbyoon-

OH 45711

I

31904 LHdl•l

I le - - ded lhol

~aps:•••-lddoroaOMina

stNIC,'-II'oniwor,
(114) ..N121.

ROOFING

Call AI, 614-742·2321

CElLULAR
_.,.

11..----------------l

NOTICE Ia ...._, given
that In purauanoa of a
RHOiutlon of lila VUiaga
Counoll of tho Village of
Rudand, Rudand, Ohio,
Public Notice
paaed on ... 1311 clay of
Auguat, 11112 Dlera will 1M
. CONONTRTICACETTOO...,
aubnllllod lo a vole of Dla
no
people of Nld aullclvlalon
The Meiga County Comat a Qenerll Election to 1M mlaalonaro will receive
held In the Vlll.ge of ,...... bld8 In their olllce
RuiiMd, Qltlo, .... ,..... locloted In ... Coul'lhoule,
p1aoM of volng lllanln, on I'DIMroy, Ohio ·a 78t until
Ill• 3n1 clay of November, noon on Nowmw 4 , lH2.
1112, lila qu•tlon of levy- The blda wiU be opanad a11
lnga Ia, In • • - of ... o'CIIoGicP.Ilonlhetdalland
IH mill lhnllltlon, tor till r.d liolld IDr the following
b111lllt of Rud111cl Vllaga Community Davllopmanl
tor 11M purpoae of current lliooll Grant llfGIIOI:
...,._
Pro)lot IIi: 11_,., and
Bald tax bllng 111 eddl- cll.,_l of • " ' - llonal tax of2 de at a ra.. lalnlng aiding lhlnglll lroin
not aaolldlng 2 • • . lor - PfOI*II•Jooaled In the
IMh - do. . of Vllluallon, Vllaga of Poma!oy, Ohio.
w.hlall amounta to twenty Property No. 1 Ia locllled at
oonla (SO~ lor Neh one '2'11 Will llallt · - 111111 ·
era of volu• · propll'l'( No. 2 Ia klolllld 81
hundred
lon,lor,... (5)~.
lhl-ofChlrryandEaot
The Polla lor aald Main lllnel. AIIMIIDI-nEiaollon will open 81 1::10 lllnlna mallrtlll hove lblln
o'clock A.M. and remain ldenllllad 11 111- loclltlona
open until 7::10 o'clock Pll. · byprlorlnopecl(onandanaJv·
of lllcl clay.
ala. Coplat of tholnapactlon
a, order qtll!• ao.d ot reporte . . avllllble atlha
Elaclloluo of llhlga County, "-oy llunlclpol Bullclng.
Ohio.
AllabolllnllltohiUbeparHonl')' L Hunlor, Chll1111111 lonlled by tlconMd ancllor
Rllll D. Bmllh, Dlrecklr ..tlftodolbeetoaobo-.,1
lllllod SlplomW 4, 11112
controCioro odhlrlng to all
(10) I, II, 22, 2t, 41D
nm lillY 1oc11, aUIII and
, tedonl Nguilllonollld ohiU

Doocrtpllon lor the above
An Ordinance to Nama
Irati llllsig the .-111 of 1 lho New StrMt In Boley

eurwy mode 11r Richard c.
Gllogow,R.S. No.5111,dalod
12-11•77.
DEE
_ D REFERENC:t;: VoJ.
~ " - 161, lllllgo
County Dold - . - . .
'I'M aboft doc cttbad ,...
- I I Ia ldantll!ecf In lhl
.-do ollhlllolgo c-1y
Auditor by Porool No. 1100478. '
laid ,... 111110 woo opo
prolaod ot: $4,1100.00 T.-mo
of Ball: C..h'
Reol•lltoaannotlleoold
lor looo . .n -.thlrdo of
lhl opprollld value.
" - II. Souloby,
Shorlll olllliao
County, Olilo
(10) 15, 22,11111121, 1•2, STC 1

or:

.,.,_

20 Yr. bp.

or

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC•

The UHimate Female Review

NOliCE OF SALE

AND ·mRnHING
. '
GARAGES • IDDIDOIS •

bedrooms, 2 baths, 1Y. car garage
and breezeway, central air and heat
pump• many extras.
On 2 acres of land.
.Eastern School District.
Blacktop roads Co. Rd. 28 and 32.
949-2801
985-3839

uon, tor tho benefit ot

n
Public; Notice

93 Ford Festtva

=:;

:;.:..,:'o:~~::.~:

'*'a

BOTTOM'PRICES

:".!1: c:::'

WBDO

FORERI
110111 .
·111111118

HAUUNG: Ull'tlatone,

............
UN..-m

PH. 614·ft2·5591

949·2126

LAND CLEARING

WATER a SEWER
UNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES

DI~L~raval and Coal
LlcatiED and IIQNDED

12..5-tfn

I

1l•lll.,l1 ... 1

TAIIIIII&amp;

'25•

�2-The

•

ohio

Sentinel ·

1992

Hom.,

SNAnJ® by Bruce Beattie

l'a ?' - I . . _

a

•

Television
Viewing·

111111.
••

!'"
......Ni ,,_
.......
l.

'!llooot,

I l,...t_.l_

•.=z

C, I_.
=OII~Io.:::t.:.-

33 Fanna for Sale

•

-.--.a-oo. ......... ..
= ....,.,.,....
=-.. -.CIIIl_
...............
lll-4lll•-

t.... ,_.,. ..mad1lul. 2 ..,.,.
• ...., -lna'ooblft. B y -·
=-~R-.c.ctl Dan

44 . _ ; 11om, I mlloo
on lllnnlll Rkbt, Rob.n1burg,
WV.~:Mft.

34

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

,,,

~II

I

•

_p _ _
choooi,t
;' u,_'Pwu'
2

RATS!

I

:e.-.~ \,e-

..,-.~---=

. I, .I I 1· .

MI55~D .·

TI1E

· IT'S
EMMRRASSING
RIDING Tj.IE
ZAMBONI ..

SC~OOL .

,.

6U5!

-~--r.A;--,P':'N.,...A_G~~ ~;

Furnished

54!S

Rooms

.....

----.
----r=
5I

....

17 I I I'

e

-

_ , • .. A v.

COl -

1:00. -

-.-wv.

-ForWI""TIIII',..
TD llonl: - .....
-

~-··Col,._

Rentals

....
- ···-- --_..._,.,..,_!!'
·---.,.... ...
cr ... - .. ._
- _.._
- c-_wa
• - us.
.._,

I

iiP';T-'jMi;;a'k~;
.--. . . _.._
7

·~ .._ eour. a

==

2 ..... Ospat; - -

___ ....,., ...
:.:.~
· ·~··[I

21

FOUND;
big
dog
a' ' h:ll\e.,. ~
Fllbuck ... all lm••«••IJ
~

7

s.-lar -

" A TA&gt;&lt;

Of CQIJ,S'r NOT.

Ct4~t:HO\I

ISN'T GVt:'ON0\1.

Bullnesa ·
Opponunny

•

ALLEYOOP
CHECKING OUT THE ENGINE
ON T'Hi6 Oi.l&gt; GIRL 16N'T
GOING TO 'liE !NIIV••.

ate3GO.

• Z:OO P,IIL

I
1H,
\111'7'
- ' ! -- , Ftl, -Rain Or

Real Estate
~Sale

&amp;Auction

11 .Auto Parts &amp;

c.:: ~

9

AcCIII~rlel

Wlnted to Buy

y-,vara.
........-.
,..., __ _
. . . . wilt M'#,"iu

~

~:::..:~

--I!Sallla

•n
F

I

llllor 1.JPM
W.. . ......
.Usa-

.. c _, ... -

. . . . . . 1211.

. ..... fir ...k or MOl

•

...,_

ww...

......

ICfC...

.......

44

;-~·~

Apartment
tor Rent

I Bod,_

~

-

._,_

........., -

~

it!

=-

I Bod,_ !Janlp

Want to:
PIN down EXTRA

GCIYEIINIIEHT -E8 FroM fl

~,P:;.·~;P ,::;: y!:,':
( 1 ) - - - E a t.QH.

4142 FOr CUrNn1 Aapo L1oL

~

- ~Or

'P!?

. .""":.. I I

..

F

_

79

Clmpera &amp;
Motor Honlta .

-

• IIJifr"\U&amp;'C

;D .....::~

w
no

Place xour r'a•rifLul q4 todqyl
15 _,.., or lu1, 3 Mp,
3 pope,., 15,40 paid in adiUJl?•ce.

...._._

n

I hwJIIm:.

55

• " ••

&amp;4¥'11

..

..

BARNEY
. LET'S SEE··

1'00111

•= -

3._ _ _ _....:.....,_ __
4, ________________

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

_,

'·---------------10~--~-----------

u..._____~----.........--12,_~-----.---.,_. u.__
____.________
14

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

15L·--~~~~~~~·~~~-

I al=ll
al II lo llltoOI

e

111,000. -tn.II'N

1144 F - 14x7V Z B!Pd·
Air, 001 ltaol, WID
~)act. UI-Mr lulldlna1 AaadJ To'
lion lnl tM,IOO. 114'a45-9:m.
.........
11112.
lumllhad,
-"'~tld~lntl. wm flnana~

=:a•• Jllll.-.

__
.
.
.
---····
..,.,...,..........
.._AI

ASTRO-GRAPH

day by mailing St25 plus' a long, self- you'll be Involved with, and Ita benefits
addreaaed, stamped envelope to Astro- might.spill over on .you:
Graph, C/o this ,a.wspaper, P.O. Box ARIEl (Merclt 21,Aprll 111 Someone
91428, Cleveland, OH 4410t-3428. Be who lava you might have extremely
sure to llate your zodiac sign.
valuable advice 10 ollef today. If taken
BERNICE
SCORPIO
(Clot.
24
Nov.
121
You
might
at
' - v-. It could be of enormous
BEDEOSOL be quite lucky today, provided you .b enellllo
you,
·
don't rock the boat or trip over your TAUCCUI (AprlllllsMer 201 Beln'g motl·
own feet.lf you leave well enough alone, vated for pro"table r - lhould not
you could IVIII1 m•e gDDII . things be looked upon u eomethlng dlatutebetter.
lui todey. Lady Luck _,,. to help, oo
· IAGITTAIIIUi (Nov. 2Hiec. 211 Your don't look a gilt hone In the mouth.
greatest Ulel today II your llblllty to T i l l (liar 21,_ 201 You could be
deal with groups ~ complex organlu- . ex.-y luclcy todiJ, but not tiona. In either lnatance, you lhould not Mtlly In material W8Y11. The trMBUree
. be malch8!1 aa,a1n11 anything with which . you'll atore up c.nnot be ItOlen nor c.n
i you can't cope.
·
lhay be cor.-.
.
•
, CAI'IIICORN (l)eco • .12...1an. 11) Your . CANCD (June 21..1u1J 121 A maner
' grup ol what Ia really Important Ia rath· you've been dubiOUa about can be ftnalOCI. 23, 11ft
,
er prolound today. You should be able lzed to your Mtillacllon today, OWina 10
Your potential lor ouccees loomallrger ' So flnd ~tlve u - for whal your sn, a mora favorable eet ol clrcuma-. ,
In the JDIIr ahead then It hu for quita l •llncto reveal, aapeclally In career Go lor the objectlva you dealra.
10111t1 time. However, don't take your manwa.
LIO ·Colulr ..,,.. 12) Try to devote
opPortunillll lor granted; make each AGUAJIIUI (,jan. -~~~. 111 An op- your lima lodiJ to doing actlvltlll you
oria count.
pori unity might lttM today lhtt will WT· • · .,lOY and being wllh people you Hka.
LIMA (hpl. DsOct. :D) The nice able you to help a frfend realla - a l GI'MI penonal.,.._.,. c.n be dtollled
thlngl you're '-lng otht&amp;a IIJ about uplrtlslona. You'll be u happy lor thla frOm bOIIIyou today.,. \ulll dnanred. Your ,...,lrtdlvldull'aaucciiiUyouWOuldbelor · VIIIGO (AIIIoi:D..I•••PILL :D) Your llrtancent beh~ uncler dllllcult clrc:um- your own.
alai ~ axtrtmely _ , .
o t - WIIR'arill · - · Get 1 jump II'IICII (Fib. »Ma oil 201 Baing In aging today. There ara atrong lnCIIcas
on jlfe by lilldeqfandlng the lnllliencM She right P'- at tiM! right time could Uona your cllannola of ....mg. cen
governlna you In the year lhead. Send work out lortunately lor you today. genarata ~ great• outflow.
. lor Libra's Aatrq-Graph predlctlona lo- ~thlna may deVelop with somaane ,,.
·

.................
.._. . . .ur ·~••
-••41r111&amp;

:..

114-112-211 '

"-na For A Doal7 Conaldtr A

Praawnwllloiiii.Homa.Larae
~
..&amp;..
!hnaJ D-,
.....
And Dallvafy.
,_
IIW7tO. .

•

,_ ..... 1111 PI I coclmebll
'-WI-111..-,UI
II lulol, IDCIIIIICI In nlca
......_,, aII, good GOnet., 114-W4111.
·

•

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,

..

T"' '"

~-

+K7 5 4
.AJ85
tJI09 5
+8

• J 10 9
. • KQ3
tAQ76
+A 10 3

By Phillip Alder

from Monterey, Calif.
~ Crooalire
.
7:351]) Sanford &amp; Son
8:00 (2) II II}) OiHerant WOild
Kim gels sick while
dissecling a cadaver;
Owayne§,ans a party.
Stereo.
(!) MOVI : Immediate
Flmilr (PG13) (2:00}
Cil Q I1J Ill Dalla Delta gets
a job offer to be a back-up
singer lor a top performer.
Stereo. Q
CD Listensno to Amenca
With am .Morere r:;l '
ill War File: Chronology In
Europe
,
I])) liD ~m• Major Laague
Beoebell World Series:
National League Champion
at American League
Champion (game 5. ~
necessary} (L} (May be
replaced by rBQ!!!ar
programming) Ljl
(!] 18 Tho Slmpoona
Homer's boss is ill and can
only be saved by Ban. (R)
Stereo. r:;l
[J Murder, She Wrote Q
13 Croak and .Cheoe
@ SuperBouta 1987-1990:
Foreman 's Knockouts
at PrlmeNewa Q
ID Young Rldare
8:05 Ill MOVIE: The Etectilc
lf.......,.n (PG) (2:30)
8:30 (2) D II}) Rhythm and Bluea
A contest is arranged
between Bobby-and a rival
station's Jammin. Stereo. r:;1
Cll Q I]) Ill ADDiil los Two
Edie speeds up a her .
husband's memorial service
to make a date. Stereo. C
1]]118 Martin Martin sear~es
for a way to get Cole out ol
his apartment. Stereo. Q
9:00 (2) D II}) Chaero Sam and
Henri have a contest to see
who is
greatest ladies·
man. Stereo. Q
Cll Q I]) G Homelront Mike
and Judy sneak oH together;
the IndiO head for Detroit.
Stereo._'"'
CD ill Myateryl A countess
is found dead in a church. Q
(!]) 18 Tho Haigllll Stan's
cousin asks for his help.
placing him in a lamlly
dilemma. Stereo. Q
[J MOVIE: The LoOkll)ke
(2:00} Stereo. !;I
13 Naahvllla NOw
@ PITA B!Hiarda Los
Angeles Open, championship

•1o 9

+3

+Q'J96542
Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: East
Soutb

Today's deal was sent in by Richard
Johnson from Houston. It arose during
the Epson Worldwide Pairs event held
last June. Mr. Johnson, who doesn't
say where be sat. asks for an anal:;sis
of the bidding and play.
The auction was reasonable except
for South's bids. His opening pre-empt
was hardly textbook. and it wasn 't}lis
to sacrifice in l!ve clubs. To make
matte1rsworse,Jour no-trump must go
1down. West can win at most nine
tricks: one spade, four hearts, three di·
amonds and one club.
West led off with three rounds of
bearts. Declarer ruffed. played a club
to dummy's king, and followed with
another club to the queen and ace.
West did well, cashing the diamond
ace before switching to the spade jack.
Declarer played low from the dummy,
wblcb allowed East to win with the
spade king and lead his last heart, promoting West's .club 10 as the sixth defensive trick. In duplicate scoring, the
~result was plus 800 to East-West.

West

Nortb

3NT

t+
All pass

Obi.

--

, ..,. _.,.

•

.. .

·- ~ -

.- -

·- ---·-·- -· --- - - . . . ..r- ·· ...~ ~ -

· ·-~· ~

.......... -

'

e

.

'\bur
'Birthday

,.,

1'-----------,J
For his bid of four no-trump, East
:was almost certain to have the spade
king. I think declarer should rise with
dummy's spade ace, discard a spade
on the·diamond king, ruff a diamond,
cfraw the last trump and concede a
spade trick for three down.
. Note that if West leads the spade
jack before cashing the diamond ace,
declarer can afford to play low from
the dummy. When East leads the 13th
heart, South discards his diamond loser and the Contract is only three down. .
In tbe Epson scoring system, EastWest received 98 points out of 100 for
plus 800, whereas plus ~00 was worth
only 60 points.
@ 1-. tEW ...AP'E'PI ENTE....aE AIIN..

The World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
I 12, R01111n
4 Funeral !tam
8 - and
carrota
12 Food additive
(abbr.l
13 ActorJulia
14 Rooter
15- Landara
18 Decorallona
18 Fixed PIJ
20 Polntateteke
21 Pro- (lor
tho time
baing}
22 FIMa (II.)
24 Summh
28 01 aires aft
27 Cut IIIOrt
30 Arm Jolnto
32 Property

41 Lamon drink
42 Mount
(2 Wdl.}
45 Molhorand
lalhof
4g H&amp;Ytl
conference
51 Healing
malarial
52 Scad
covering
53 Smallaalof
thoHttas
5o6 Glnaang

55=..

56

Ul~ganua

57 What laHore
do

DOWN

34Snocmng

35 Not wtde
38Famala
sand pipes
37 Stop working

Answer lo PnYioua hula

311 Some Clrde
40 Otpartt~

1 Dac. holiday
2 Doeon'taxlat
3 Bumabla
4 Brill psalaco

5 Story
8 Ladder parl
7 Hleh note
8Nawtplflertl
1 Lonvllnl••
1D Aleutian

,...

lope (abb'r.)
t7 Flowering
111 Tat
23 Plural of 2
clown
24 Kind of fault
25 OIHerent
28 Mountain

ltjwtd
11 Return ....

27
21
211
31

a&lt;n Larry·King Llvtl

reoort

Ofottlllng
Plaine Indian
Benchae
Paaltanu of
23 clown

33 llualnaM
38111nneoola
CIPital

performance of their top
solos and duets. 11 :00}
9:30 (2) D II}) Wingo Brian
arranges for Roy to sing the
National Anthem at a
baseball game. Stereo. r:;l
10:00 (2) D tl)l LA. Law (Season
Premiere} Benny disappears
during .the Los Angeles riots.

(2 wde.)

40 Who's Afraid
of VIrginia

-1

41 Mountain
creot
42 FlYing
creature
43 Architect Saarinen

Stereo~
Cll
Nawe
Cllil
Prima Time Uve
Stereo.
_

44 Wuttanct-

walcOilllng

abbr.

CD Sneak Prevlawl

41--llmt
(naver}
47 Saa'aabb
and flow
48 llrMt algn
50 A Gartfo·

(IJ Ulldarflie

lllll8 Hunter r:;1
@ BcMiybulldlng Nationals
from Orlando. Flo. (T)
at WOild Nawa
~ 700 Club With P.S

RObartaon .
10:30CD ANva From Ofi C Siereo. C
(IJ WaotVIrgtila Notebook

13 On Sl8gt
1D:35~

MOVIE: Immediate
Family (PG13} (2:00)

•• =· .
rn5

11:00 C2l D

CIJD

CD !ll D

'SUD

~Nawl

a•~

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tareo. Q

VTDLPAVJ

RDLYVJI

1111

aei:be Autq Racing Pro Saab

VJK

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AIIIJIDTCIPIWD

&lt;n

Sarleo from Phoenix
lpoi1l Tonllht
.
Scuct ow and Mra. King

8

11:30 Cll Highlander .
CD John Mclaughlin's One
on One
!ll D .Nlglttllne r:;l .

_

IUDJ

HPLW
UDL

IPJKR

UFRIVJK

UPT

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' . pREVIOUfl SOLUTION: "HIPPY D1ya • Evwythlng -

TVEDR

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IDPJH

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RIDP.IIDAE .
a ahow-butl~ mlrocte.
we wwe wrong. - ~

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Pass
INT

Opening lead: • K

·

team for a concert

'1182 Commodore Ma70, 3bdrm.,

1117 llchultz 14178, 3 BR, 2
bolh, 2 calllna llna, AC, 111
-. Dhapa. Mini
bllndt, uncltrol..,lng, Aaklna

TONIGHT

,_
a PUIIITIIIIE. II
W I -·Uaaol
._

ldtcllon appllanoao, Oloclrlc,
tldrtlna, ona - · gDDII cond.,
11UU.4400.

5. _ _ _ _ _ _ __

'--------------__
a._...._____________..,.;

:..:;

I,

WISHBONE

, EAST

~ Kenny and·OOIIr: Raal
Love Superstars Kenny
Rogers and Dolly Parton

__
. . . ..Col
141711 Haw 11oon 2 Badsoom t lntoan.Ap_l .....·.!liJw=
. .. . . . .
112 lalha. All Haw C:.IJIDI And
Cln
1
A.la.
"
'
ar
W.ll-. Total EIIGtilc. Un- ooii~I.IOIL
'*"""lng. Building, Porch
And Cantril Air lnclucfad $8,000.
Up,, 111
cA.llloor,Jta
- · ·....
IIIY!I!il -I wr
c:.n 114'256483&amp; Or 814-441- 2111'
a.. I'M •• .,..
attz Ahtr 1:00 P.ll.
ml 14x'l!l Sch.,.z 2 Bodrooma,
1 lath, Excalltnl CondMion 3
Porch't 114-448-®44, 114-25111073. •
.

J,_ _______________
2 •. ,________________

ME AN' PAW
ARE PULLIN' TH'

OR ,UH··

AIICTICIII
OIN . . o

=

the

PARIS, LONDON

~·piLtUn'::...,'

1

'rt:lU ro-IT ~ON WHAT
A RHEi'TORI~L., QL.Ise&gt;110N
te., DO "1'01.1 1!

WHAR AM I 601N'"

· 32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

-•d to letnse.your horne.

..

Ser'11ces

Two Bedroom Home For S•l•:
Nlca Foncod In Double Lot. Qal·
llpolla. Call 814-3'111-:ltiZ.

yout' elu1lter
it tine ti!IX ll'Gy... b,y phog,

MORTY.MEEKLE AND ...,...,..,u ~~......--~ .......----.,.;_----x-.,

...

--Ned' ~
Hcc ·
'will ...,. . . . 112 .a.
......... Rd. IlL
WV,

--.-.-..

Homo For In Choohln VI~
t " - I llalh, l,g. Fill
1.01 . ly Ownar, 1-3:30 P.ll.
Phone: 114-44Hm Ahar 3:30
P.ll. 814-44t-o42S:

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S1ereo.1;1

The devil's
advocate

You Bet Your Uft
ll1liDI Wheel of Fortuna Q
@Ill Family Feud I
Checkered Filii lndyCar

· ~-·2:00

8

. wEST

SOUTH
+Q 8 6

(J) Ill

~ Routs: Local, We Ha ..
Tho N-llochlnao,lla\Jng A
NIDa Bloody Caah lnooma. I·

-

PHILLIP
ALDER

nment Tonight

7:30 (2). il2l Jeopilnlfw.
Cll The JaH...ona
Cllll El!!frtalnment onlght

·OUT OF Tt4et, ECONOMY.
guT IT DO~S'N'T S'~~M
TO gr wOfliCING.

1o-,.,_

. . . ,....... "" lid Ia.to run.

+ K 812
+K7

-l=l:. Next

1D Ufe Gaeo On Q
7:05 (5) Beverly HlllbiiHeo

_,. llVS'SIANS CAN l&gt;E51GNAi~ PA,T OF
,.....
TH~IP iAX ' PAYM~NU FOfl T~~

""'JOU
JOUkNW
..........
-with
poDplo
1And
1101'
througn lho
moll unll JDU howi ln-faatod
lhoDifwiiiQ.

ALI.Y... _ _ Ia_ln
AdUIIIUL. Dfi 4 D' -e 2!10 p.m.

:

li·ZI·H

• 7 64 2

~Moneyllne

OHIO VALLEY PIJBUSHINQ CO.

Gallipolis
&amp;VIclnhy

NORTH '
+A3 2

@ SportsCentar

INOllCEI

YardSale

BRIDGE

Stereo. Q
· 0 Quantum Leap Q

F1nancial

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---.....

ihl.;=~ter'oi g

WIU ..,. 1w aldarlr Dr ildl, cloy
Dhltl Cllllr, .,.._.15-IIM.
:

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·

(!] 18 Star T

I
••·2•

(J) Q Married ... With

~----

-Rio-~

IIIIII

SCitAM.UTS ANSWIIS

(i) Q lna1de Edition Q
CD (IJ MacNaii/L...rar

NewaHour r:;1

FOR

Abduct, Qnepa- Smote , Ja(JgBd ·ABOUTthe SAME
I acted as UII'IDire for my SQns baseball team. "Do •
lh!nk I was falr to both tellll8?' I asked my son.
:MeEI"he raplled, 'both teams h~ted you ABOUT the

Gi
Des~ng Women
Stereo. Ljl

-us.-~
r-.na
n

JM..m,

Q Wlnled to Rent

'

0

PRINT NUMBERED ·
lETTERS IN SQUARES

.' f) ~~~~~MBlE

@UpCioM
ID Madeline r:;l
6:35.Ill Andr Gstfflth
7:00\Jjll 1m Wheal of Fortune

- - •. .:=t

can write name

in lhe dust on the COffee table.•
The wife smiled sweetly,

Complete the chuckle quoted
by f•lhng in the rnissing words
L-.1--L.-L.-L.-L.....J
· you develop from step No. 3 below.

~ Sq!IAre One TV Q
ll1l D AoMaMa
~m• CBSStereo.
-· Q
1]]118
Q

2 ..............

"Dear,' the husband cooed to
his wife, "I
my

,--H--U..
, -1-G-A_T__:..,I ::':~.~~:~.why Imarried a college

(1)11 IJJCI ABC Nawo Q

PalltorSale

Is •I' I• I•
•

r

CD Where In the WOild II
~rme~. Sandlego? Stereo.

45

NINADI

. r"r.:'Y_AT""R..,B_E,..,41

the ...
CD Sq~~Are. One TV Q · ·
(IJ Reading llainbJ!r Q
· 1]]118 Filii HOUJI 10J
0 MacG,.,ar ~
.
@ lnolda lila hitiOr PGA
Tour
~ Wo~d T"'!!J '
ID Madeline Ljl
6:05 Ill th...... Company
8:30 C2J II 1m NBC Newa C
Cll Ed McM.,.on'e lbf
Saasch

llo

......

Business
Buildings

low 10 form lcur slmplo

(!) Saved by

-

•

0- lour
Raorranga ·lettari of
xromblad -d•

&amp;:OII&lt;llD (I)D &lt;IJD IIIID
QD!mllfte ·

2

. . 22

TIIAYIMJ
PIUUI

·

EVENING

"? $?
L
.....
......
2 . . . . . . ....

,

THU.1 OCT. 22

s

. . .,. , .

.. - - " - w i t h
IJOftiL Wnton. Cclonlll fann

13

. '"

32 Mobile
lOr Site

�•

Pial 14-Tht o.lly sentinel

-People in the news-·

Beat of the Bend.. ~
·

JERUSALEM (AP) -- Fo~- ·
', ~ HousloD
hu cuUied ill coacert tour of
.... 811dliulopo Cllldle advice rl
docba. - bilcli palllicist said

!DO!!!hs...

by Bob Hoeflich

accolint eveil tli&lt;iugb all blob do
Now TIIAT is special!
have controls in plac:e.
On Oct 9, Amy Abbot~ daugh·
The bouom line is don "I 'give
ter of Cinda Morris Abbott and
your
bank account or credit card
Gene Abbott of Mt. Gilead, was
numbers
10 anyone you don't know
elected homecoming queen at
and
if
someone
wants to verify
Bloom-Carroll High School, •
your
bank
account
njllllber, teD the
Thirty years ago on Oct. 5,
caller
you
will
telephone
the bank
1962, Amy's Mother, Cinda, was
·
and
take
care
of
the
mauer,
·
elected homecoming queen at the
·Middleport High School,
!love the :leoret ballot !)(voting,
Cinda is the daughter of
However,
I don't mind voicing my
William and Dorothy Morris, S.
supJ!Ort
or
the replacement levy
Second Ave,, Middleport, and of
commg
up
on
Nov. 3 by the Meigs
course, Amy is their granddaugh·
County
Department
of Health.
ter.
The local health department
Be not dismayed, "Locomo- does provide a wide range of seriion" on Mechanic St., in Pomeroy, vices an~ !lJese are li:a: or puviled
will again feature ils Haunted for a mm1mal charge. · For ~,
House this Halloween season. The ple, the Colum~ Health Departhouse-more ·terrifying than . ment has been administering flu
ever-will open at 8 p.m. Sunday shots. The charge is $5. In Meigs
and will be open each evening County, you Cl!n receive your flu
through Friday. Admission is $2 shot from the Meigs County Heallh
but you'll probably get ll)ore than Department for $1 if you are a
your money's worth in fright. By senior citizen, 55 and older, or disthe way, if any adults would like to abled and $2 if you fall in anodler
'
assist with the project give Mrs, catcgol)',
So,
It
prob~bly
Would
be timely
Robert (Iva) Sisson in Rutland a
for
me
to
remind
you
of
tbe local
call.
schedule for flu shots. The first
And at the airport in Parkers- ones-this year's shoi covers tbe
burg, W.Va,, a couple of World Texas, Panama and Beijing
War II vintage planes have been strains-will be givm from 9 am.
brought in, One is a B-24 Libera· to 12 noon and from. l to 4 p.m,,
tor an.d the name on the bombay Friday, Oct. 30, at the Meigs
door is that of Victor Bahr, Meigs .. Senior Citizens Centef on Mulben'y
County, who was at one time pilot Heights, Pomeroy. This ICSSion is
of the plane,
for senior citizens and disabled per·
sons. Then on Monday, Nov. 2,
Here's a warning. II hasn't hap, the heallh depanment will be givpened in Meil!s Crmnty yet so far ing !he shots to the public from 9.
a,m, .10 12 IIOOn, Thele shots will
as I know bu11t can.
be
given in the health depanment
There is presendy a scam under·
quarters
which are in the same
way to get your bank account num.
building
as
the Senior Center. Fllr
ber as well as your credit can!
those
missing
the first twO sessions,
number, It has been confined to
flu
shots
will
be
given at the health
other areas up 10 !his point
depanment
quarters
from 9 am. 10
This is bow is wotks, accordinl
12
noon
on
Nov,
Sand
Nov. 12,
10 a local banker:
·
The
dcpartnient
annually
adminSomeone calls on the phone
isters
between
1500
and
1800
flu
identifying himself as a representa·
shots.
tive of a bank. He says he is call·
ing 10 v~rify. an account number
, I'm saving my change in an
and will you please ~ive it to him.
empty
peanut jar these days with
He also waniS 10 venfy your credit
the
ultimate.
goal of purchasing a .
card number while he is on the line,
Lcxus.
According
to the commer,
Once the person secures these
·numbers, it becomes e;15y to charge cia Is I sec they start at only
merchandise 10 your account and . $47,000. Wow! Am I being over
provides a nice _possibility f~r optimistic? Do keep s~iling.
someone 10 tap 1010 your bank
,

TOPS begins new contest
was
Christmu
c•
''Facts
Nonsense"" on
1m

Terri Hill
the best loser and
Donna Jacks was runner-up at the

gsining weight are to llria&amp; in •

extta

reecnt meeting of Ohio TOPS Club
No. 570. Bernice Durst was best
KOPS loler.
Judy Wolfe won the .fruit basket .
Sharon Matson was honored as
Miss Autumn wilh a loss of 20
pounds, She was also tlie best
monthly loser, ·
Peggy Vining was tbe winner of
lhe Harvest Contest.
'"Merry Christmas" is !he.new
c:on1est now in~ Members
- to bring a
·
ornament
or i~a~~ ro jom in lhe IXJIItest Paper
omiiiiCIIIS will be earned by membon who lose, The best loser will
receive aD Christmas items, Those

irem. ·

Debbie Hill presented a
and
mylhs about djc:JjDI and diet foodS,
Open house will be observed
Tuesilay fro S-7 p.m. at the Carpenters Hall in Pomeroy, Anyone
interested in losing weilht is invit•
eel. Call 992-2234 or m-5638 for
information,

..

VSC to meet Oct. 26

wu.....,.

Tbe 28-year-old sinJer, who
married fellow pop alar Bobby
Brown in July,- .tviled ., caned tbe trip - - . . . medical
aupavision, Miri llai-Joeefaaid in
• • • 'hill(

~-··• Tel
Ill~ Jivm two
coaceaain
Aviv dlis weekend
bef"cre 1aundling a

Eui..,.,_. tour,

"The entire European tour is
c:ancclcd,"llid tbe Sl8lemenL
The show's Israeli producers
were notified Tuesday night by
Houston's falher and manager

OXFORD, Miss. (AP) - Best·
selling novelist John Grisham' has
sold the film rights to his new
book, five 1110nth• before it's even
published.
,

Long Bottom holds
community meeting

Ins~rt

11111

•

R.S.V.P. priced. That's Rutland Fumlture Showcaae Value Price,
which mans Rock Bottom Pricea, Everydayl
1

'

r.r•
- •••··~,.
.••~ _
a tre.loTlda
a.,..Ia
cooarby
oak ....
enfte4 forthJa tn I I') ad WWanl.

The Past Mattons of Evangeline
Chapter No, 172,.On!er (If the East·
em ~tar. met recendy at lhe home
ofK.albryn Knight in Middleport
Ben!M McC~ ~ded. and
~the mcetiDg wilh devOtiOns,
HoY! to K2ow ~h~n ou 're
Growmg Old, and 'W~ Our
Hands or Restillg Our "-Is,
~.':! Starr. grand page 10 the
....,...., gran!1 m,atron, was presenteel a IIIOilCIIr)' gift.
·lhlbehomDec. lf~g will be held
at e
e o Emma Clat~fl!!Y

:r

.

.,

CRASH INVESTIGATED- Rodney R.
Ebersbach, 27, Middleport, received minor
injuries In this .one-vehicle crash on Carmel
R,oad in Sulton Township Thursday around 1:15
_p.m. The driver, Thomas J, Eakins, 31, Syra·
cuse, was arrested by Gallia-Meil!s Post of the

State Highway Patrol on a charge of driving
under the influence. Ebersbach was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital by the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service, The crash is
under investigation.

Quayle winds up bus trip;
Issue 5, ad fights continue
•

tint of the year.

••

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
. .}'"ice President Dan Quayle
gi-ee(ed visitors.at the annual Cir•
cleville Pumpkin Show to cap a
two-day campaign bus tour that
spanned parts. of northwest and
central .Ohio.
Gov, George Voinovich accom •
panied Quayle pan of the way but

SBDC to offer extension service

.•

SAVE $JO
$11 MONTHLY"

• Dial clock

lAC&lt;....I

timer

~------~--~-Gaa range w~h 30% larger
poroetain enameled oven and
plloHree ignnion ...$40 less ·
than comparable Keninorit
(Not Shown)

s379·99

.,.

,'

'

2G-In. color TV
• 24-function remote
• On~ ttme, channel, menu &amp; M()R~

WGNAvox·

S13"""""LV'
(P071321)

• 25-function ·HMcts Up" remote control

+On-screen channel and menu

for all oet adjUstmonls
• AIV In jacks for acceenry hook-up

••o •379'' IK"""•'I

I13MONTHLY'

The Meigs County Chamber of Commerce has announced !hat
the Small Business Development Center of Southeastern Ohio has
extended its services into Meigs County:'
R, Douglass Green, assistant direc10r of the SBOC, will visit the
chamber office, located on East Second Street, on Wednesdays
beginning Nov. 4 10 meet with individuals interested in starting a
business or with business owners loolting for assistance,
The free service is underwriuen by !he Chamber and the SBOC.
Green is a CPA and has worl&lt;ed with the consultinl! departments
, of national and regional fmns. He will begin consultmg with individuals who need infonnaLion about starting a new business, who
need 10 develop a business plan or who need continuing assistance
with ·an established business.
·
Appointments can be scheduled by calling the chamber office at
992·5005.

Crow rules in favor of ELTA
Meigs County Common Pleas Court Judge Fred W, Crow Ill has
ruled in favor of the Eastern Local Teachers Association in a lawsuit against the school bOard,
Crow found !hill the board's action 10 overturn a detention issued
by a teacher W;IS unlawful in that it was talcen in executive session.
Crow also reinstated the detention against the srudcnt, who gradual·
ed in June,
The bOard was prohibited from considering in executive session
matters of discipline as well as from having discussions in executive
. session if they result in a change of position or action by school personnel, even if !hal activity does not result in a form!ll vote,
No monetary judgment was awarded by Crow,

Deer-vehicle acciden.t reported
A Ponland man's pickup truck sustained modemte damage after
striking a deer on Ohio 7 m Salisbury Township Thursday around
7:30a.m.
·
· Larry R. Mees, 38, 56739 SR 124, was southbound on Ohio 7
driving a 1986 Chevrolet S-10 and struck and lcilled a deer when it
ran on10 the roadway.
No injuries were reported,
'

Property dispute resolved
IAIAIER'I IPECIAll

OIILT I Ill STOCI- SOLD AS IS

V. B. WILUAMS PINE BEDROOM
·sum Ca•plete wltll FREE Glee• Size
... t 1 (.lilt~ . . lox Spdlp)

..
..
. ,.........
....... .., 5699

Triple dill i U
hlilch llllmlr..

clllllaf •
dices a,
nlglll •

IEG'IAIIJ $1199.95

,

,

95

b'
~~.
to J4ll a d, _.

W.AIIC)pln:
Mon. tllrU .... 1:30-1
Clole II Noon an Tllura.
1t
W ala

742·2211 "

. . . . " .. ...,....

lUll 111111• 1111.1111, .10

1·....37-1217

, A property dispute between Vernon Banels, Syracuse, and !he
V1Uage of Syracuse has been resolved by an entry flied by Meigs
Continued on page 3
·

Rutland residents will vote·
on two levies Election Day
Rutland village residents will . ate $3,281l.79. Six mills.wiD gener·
vote on both a two mill renewal ate $9,866,37.
·
·
levy and a new two-mill levy when
Sll'eel lighting for the village,
~y go Ill the polls on Nov, 3,
· Smilh said, costs about $3,600' a
. Cu!fently the village h.as four year, several hundred doUam· more
mills m effect, two-of which are up ·than two mills generate,
for renewal, If both the renewal
l'assl\ge of the both the renewal
and lhe new levy passes, then the and new levies wiD talce the village
viUage will have six mills on which back to the amount of money on
10 operate the viUage.
whi~h it was operating two years
According to'6andy Smith, Rut· ago when a renewal levy was
land villaJl~ ~!eric, two mills gener, defeated,
·

A bid from Tom Mayle Construction Company in the amount
of $56,000 was accepted by Racine
ViUage Council for street paving in
lhe village. The bid was !he only
one submitted and was over the
estimated cost of$49,913,
Additional funds for the paving
were Obtained by appropriating
money from the water fund 10
cover raising the curb boxes thai
would be covered during the
paving. Money was also appropri,
ated in the street maintenance and
repair fund . The monies had been
certified earlier by the budget commission but had not yet been appropriated.
Since the terms of the contract
called for completion of the project
by year's end, council decided not
to rebid t~e job. Councilman Henry
Bentz will be the inspector for the
project,
Mayor Frank Cleland and Street
Commissioner Glenn Rizer repon-

eel work on the Community Devel-

opment Block Grant project of
tying in the water line from Vine 10
Route 124 and !hen 10 Main Sll'eet,
II was stated that residents of lhe
area of the new lines should get a
break in their fire insurance as new
hydrants will be instaUed,
.
Halloween trick or treat in lhe
viUage was announced for Oct, 30
from 6-7 p.m. Residents wanting 10
participate are asked to turn on
their porch lights, II is requested
that people not drive !heir vehicles
10 follow the children doing the
Irick or treating as this poses a
problem, especially on the hill area.
Council approved the purchase
of door decals for the new com,
pactor truck and the street comm is,
sioner was authorized to get a
needed item forthe dump truck
cooling system,
New lights have been installed
in the council chambers and new
, carpeting has been installed at the

annex building.
The second reading of an ordinance prohibiting installing new
rental trailers in the village was
approved. A number of residents
ha~ appeared and requested this
acuon.
An ordinance.was approved to
establish a capital improvements
fund to handle the Issue II money
which will then be appropriated
m10 the fund to pay for the paving
that was rccendy completed as well
as funds for the upcoming paving.
Approval was given to use. !he
annex .and{or fire house for the distribution of commodities. This was
~ted as a convenience 10 the resIdents.
Attending were council membe~ Robert Beegle, Henry Bentz,
Carroll Teaford, Scott Hill and Ron
Clark; fire chief John Holman.:
street commissioner, Glenn Rizer; .
Mayor Cleland and Clerk Carolyn
Powell.
· •

Meigs voter registration figures up
1,255 over 1991 mark officials say

Earlier, Dale Budand, Sen, John
q1enn's _re~lection;campaign"manIf the incressed voter registra,
ager; ch1ded Glenn s challenger for
"running from the (presideniial) lion is any indication of voter inter•
ticket" because of Bill Clinton's est then Meigs County should have
lead over President Bush in several a record turnout Oil Nov, 3.
As of the Oct. 5 deadline to regOhio polls.
ister,
there were 14,419 Meigs
DeWine denied it.
And Republican Rep . Bob Couniians.registered 10 vote.
Of the 10tal6,687 were RepubJi,
McEwen debated his Democratic
challenger, Ted Stricldand, at Mari- cans, 3,187 were Democrats, and
4,545 were non,declared or indeetta Colle$e.
After Quayle l"eft Lima, he went pendents.
on to St. Marys where he was · The figures show an increase of
cheered by an awaiting crowd of 1,255 registered voters over the
3,500, including 1,200 high school 1991 figures when 13,174 persons
registered 10 vote in the county.
students.
Absentee votes this year are
Later, he attended a fund-raiser
coming
in at about the same rate as
in New Bremen, The pumpkin
in
previous
presidential election
show and a reception in Columbus
years,
according
lo Rita Lewis,
ended the two-day trip,
director.
As
of
Wednesday
839 had
Elsewhere, ·Ohio Democratic
been
received
but
the
official
said
Chairman Eugene Branstool and
that
a
thousand
or
more
are
expectClinton's Ohio campaign directOr,
.
Mark Longabaugh, demanded that ed.
To
qualify
10
vote
absentee,
res,
Bush stop running radio ads that
idents
must
be
62
or
older,
going
K!
ther said include lies about Clinbe
out
of
the
county
on
election
ton s economic plan.
David Yost, spokesman for day, confmed 10 a hospital or oursBushQuayle '92, defended !he ads
and said they will continue,
Bmnstool denied claims in the
ads that Clinton's f'l"!lposals would
cost Ohio 200,000 JObs. He said the
figure was made up, and reminiscent of the Water~ate scandal and
the Republicans' 'long history of ·
dirty tricks."
Yost countered that the Clin10n
campaign "has problems with the
truth,"
In other developments, Cincinnati area business leaders urged the
defeat of Issue S, which requires
warning labels on products that
, could cause cancer or birth defects.
Former U.S, Agriculture Secretary John Block, now a food supply
executive in Cincinnati, said Issue
S is not needed and would be a
mistalce.
.
He said its costs could wreck '
small businesses and increase prod·
uct costs by an average of 2 per·

suffered neck pains and returned to
&lt;:;Q.Iumbus after a 101!1" of a tank
plant in Lima.
Lt. Gov, Mike DeWine, the
GOP candidate for lhe U.S, Senate, .
joined the lOur at a rally in Xenia
after at first saying he had a schedule conflict and could not make the
event at the Greene County Courthouse in DeWine's home county.

Local briefs-----.
• Two 8' &amp; two 6' elemeni,S
for cool&lt;lop pow8f:
• Porcel!lin,enimeled oven

A Multlmeclle Inc. Newepeper

accepts·Mayle bid cfor
street-paving project

wilh Beulah McComas cooking 111e
Christmas dinner. Radler lhaD a gift
exchange, the group will donate to
a worthy cause.
HostesSCS for lhe meeting were
Farie Kennedy, Euvetll Bechtel
and Kathryn KnighL They served
sandwiches, chips, cakes. coffee,
tea and candies in Halloween
pumpkins to Emma Clatworlhy,
Rosemary Lyons, Sue Starr, Vickie
Houchins, Linda Cramer; Bea
Kuhn, Beulah McComas, Twill
Childs and guest, Katie Childs,

. . derby wtll be announced after tbe

2 Secllana, 14 Pegea 25 cente

PoJileroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, October 23, 1.992

Kathryn Knight hosts meeting

UYI

:--=:· ,._

Low llllltcbt Ill 501. Saturday,
raln.H!pla60L

Racine Village Council

Kenmore• electric range

With our new pricing structure, every piece of bed1oom fumlture Ia

today

become

s,

A •B81bie theme carried
IIIII In die clx:GIIIow and rdlesb·
meats of cate, ice - . poraap
chips, clip and ckinb -IICMd, .
Attmdin&amp; wens .....pents,
David and Lea Naw«. IJIDdper·
enll, Hazel and .Diaue Stanley,
great-grandmother; Mar1aret
Hyself, Bonnie Arnold, Bill,
Tammy and Baron Dummitt,
Bobby and B«ly ~,
SendinJ ai!ll were Beverly
Napper ud Dlrin and Roberta
YOUIII- .
Tbe door prize was won by
David Napper.

Pick 4:
9181

Copyrlght.cl 1812

, v11or~~~PRESENTED • Melp County Elemenlary Super- '
Tu
nso PreteDted u overview of the volunteer pro~::..:tio/pen l'lllna•Eiementary School rec:endy. Daring the
C th 1r •r.:,nu ~ encounpd to
acllvely Involved
n e trach~-- a education. The program II a part· ot the Run!
DemilliS uuu GranL
•

Memorial Services
for Florence L.
Smith will be held
floor ~and it was Silted !be- hot ~=-im WOodyard, $ 100
waser llllk was to be replaced,
cash; IICCOIId, Carson ~ $50
Saturday, October
A smorgasbord dinner will be. gift cenlficate from~a: tbir&lt;J,
held Saturday.
Paul Klein, $SO gift
· ca•· from
24th at 2·p.m. at the
A Hallowccn party and meeting
"'
will be held at ihe home of Paul Napa; fourth, Ken McCulloulh, Jr,
Middleport
Hauber 00 Oc:L 28 with refresh- 450 .gift certificate from NaJ?a;
menu to be served. Woar a ,HaJ • .ftfth.MaltMalone.SSOgiftcenifi- Presbyterian Church,
lowccn .......,_ and hrlnn alan
cale from N1p11; sixth; Tim Glaze,
165 N. 4th Street.
EMILY STANLEY
, .............
-"• . g a filet knife and stone: sevenih, Dick
~=,was played at the t~ Knapp, ZebCo 202 rod; eiJ.hlh,
Donations to the
ina.
·
mee
~athan ~h.-~ and pencil set;
nd
·b
•
L .J
.Meigs Co; Council
eCO
lT(nuay
Attending were Ada Bissell, runth, =Midkiff, Crafted heart·
on Aging may be
Mel~)' _Roberts, ~nndon Fitch, ~ese gifts can be picked up
, Emilr'Owistine Sllllley,Ciaugh- Mae McPeek. lllllllta WeUa, SliD· from I
~
given in place of
at y alley Lumber
ter of Steve and Jnlie Stanley, ley Wells, JanlC FilCh, Ruby BlfiW- . • ames
9IJII, to S P~·
· flowers.
Albany, recently celebrated her er, Mr. and Mrs. Harlanci'"llallard.. · m Mi~
Deb:es Hawk JPd Wilma Ander-·
A me:eung to plan next year s
a guest.

173

VoL 43, No, 128

. Alii Ballard presided at the
September meeii.ng of lhe Long
Boaom Conummi1y Association.
The pl:!fe and Lord's Prayer Derby winners named.
. were ~I and officers reports
Winners of prizes from the
were gtven,
,.,._._ Coun
Harland BaJWd reported 011 tbe ••.._,
If Soapbox Derby have

sec••"' bildldto]• her hoale.

'I! .

I

.

Nominations of
officers to be.taken

RUTLAIID FURIIIIUIE'S
BEDROOM SHOwROOM EXTilAVAGANZA
hundreds o(
eh~"' wood hedloom lhllteoo befote.
ThU oue'• .wrereut,

cee&lt;L

Ms, Rogers, 81, who lives in
Rancho Mirage, Calif.. would testi·
Jcih~L
.
• fy by telephone, said her attorney,
Houston's sound equipment Ken Artis, on Tuesday,
The picture of Ms. Roger's is
already - in Israel and most of
tbe tictea bad been sold. Ticket taken from a poster for !he movie
holders willnxlCive refunds.
"The Vernon and Irene Castle
Story,"
·
The card, sold nationwide, also
includes M.rllyn Monroe, James
Dean, Charlie Chaplin and charac~
ters from "Thew~ of Oz," the
Map Couat, Mall Fellow1bip lawsuit
said.
will baYe ..,....., of officen
A call .10 Por)al on Wednesday
on Mon~:~7:30 p.m. at the for comment was referred to preih·
Blilllbd
of 0ri1t. Evay· dent Terence Flynn, who was not
CJIICWelCin his offjce. a secretary said,

The Meigs County Veteran•
Service Commission will meet
Monday ill 7:30 p,m. ln .tbe Vet«·
w Service Office in Pomeroy.

You'T~ HOD

"1992
election
guide

'
MADISON, Wis. (AP) - Gin·
F Rogen bu cbariled a Califor·
nil COIIIJliiiY wilh dancina off wilh
her likeMa 0111 binbdaY card. . .
Tbe acreen lepnd, who 110111111·
ly clwJes $50.000 for tbe 1110 of
her picturel IUed Portal Publica·
lions IriC. 01 Corte Madera, Calif.,
!his wcelc for using a shot of her
dancing with the late Fred Allaire
without ~on,
Ciccu1t Judge Richard Callaway
granted a 1001porary order halting
~es of the card in Wisconsin. He
set a hearing for Oct. 28 10 decide·
whether to make !he order permanent and allow the lawsuit to pro-

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:

ing home, disabled, unable to vote cutoff date oLOct 31 at 12 noon in
on election day for religious rear order 10 be counted.
Another way to vote absentee is
sons, confined to a jail or workto
go to the Board of Elections
house, or on active duty with the
fill out the application and
office,
armed forces.
vote
aU
in the same day,
Absentee voting will continue
.
Absentee
ballots will be sorted
lhrough Oct 31 at 12 noon,
lll!d counted along
into
precincts
To yote absentee. registered vol,
with
the
regular
ballots on election
ers may send a letter or postcard
day,
requestmg an absentee ballot 10 the
As for registered .voters who
Meigs County Board of Elections,
'
have
moved but neglected to
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, with
change
their address with the
their name, address, reason for vot·
Board
of
Elections, there are spe,
ing absentee, anti signed at the botcial
provisions
sci up under House
tom, A ballot will then be mailed
Bill
237,
Those
persons can go to
out
the
office
and
vote
anytime with
Or a registered yoler may call
the
exception
of
Monday,
Nov, 2,
the Board of Elections Office and
including
election
day.
request an application for an absen,
The office hours are 8:30am. 10
tee ballot, Once the application is
4:30
p.m. Monday through Friday,
completed and received back into
and
6:30
a,m. 10 7:30p.m. on Nov.
the Board of Elections office, then
3.
Those
H,B. 237 ballots, howev,
the baUot will be sent to the voter.
er,
will
not
be counted until 10
However, the absentee ballot
must be received back into the days after election day to allow
Board of Elections office by the officials 10 document residence,

cent

Fall Back
It's standard time again.
Remember to set yo~r clock
back one hour at 2 a.m.
Sunday, Oct 25,

EAGLE PROJECT COMPLETED •
Nathan Baloy, a member of Boy Seoul Troop
249, Pomeroy, has completed work toward the
status. or Eagle Scout by supervising the con·

struclion of new picnic ·tables for the park on
Mechanic Strett in Pomeroy. As part of the projed he wpervised the work by J'.J. Chadwell,
also pictured, and bls rather, Fred Baloy,
·,

Baloy completes project

•

project. Fumllng lor the project
slcills which he did by overseeing came lhrough·private donations. l-Ie
wanted to do the project because ·
work on the tables by his father,
Fred Baloy, and friend, P,J. Chad· · other picnic tables in the park had
well, The purpose of demonstrating been destroyed by vandalism aqd
supervisory skills was to show he wanted ~ place where the public
could enjoy the park if they so
leadership,
.
desire.
·
Baloy stated it took approximatelY. ei~hl hours to c~mple!C !he

The park on Mechanic Street in must demonstrate supervisory

Pomeroy now h·as two ne1" picnic
tables thanks to the efforts of
· Nathan Baloy,
Baloy, a member of Boy Scout
Troop 249, Pomeroy, ~as completed the picnic table project 16 earn
the status of Eagle SeouL
The project requires that Baloy

..

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