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•

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We adults need booster· shOts for
diphtheria and tetanus every 10
years. This is important because the
bacterium which causes tetanus,
Clostridium tetani, is present in the
soil. Any wound that is contaminat·
ed by di,rt may bring tetanus with it.'
Even with today's best intensive
care unit eare, about 30 percent of
individuals with tetanus will die
from the disease or its complica·
lions . It is sensible to protect
against the illness with a shot once
every 10 years rather ·than risking
an encounter with the disease.
Adults over age 65 , younger
individuals with chronic diseases of
the heart and lungs, and residentS
of nursing homes and other chronic
care facilities should have immu·
nization against influenza and
pneim1ococcal pneumonia. Even
though doctors are aware of the
significant proteCtion these immunizations offer, only about 30 percent of those who need them are
receiving the shots. There is certainly room for improvement here.
If you are in one of the groups that
would benefit from these shots,
please ask your dociOr about them.
There are immunizations against
cholera, typhoid, tuberculosis, yetlow fever, hepatitis type b, and severa! other conditions that have benefit for a select portion of the popu~
, lation, such as those traveling to
underdeveloped portions of the
world where these diseases are
common. The fever, sore arm, and
other side effects of these immu·
nizations make them less desirable
for the rest of us.
So yes, we adults should have
shot's i'ust like our kids. Talk to
your amity doctor about your
immunization needs the next time
you are in his or her office.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions, write
to John C. Wolf, D.O.;-'Ohio Uni. versity College of Osteopathic
Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
Ohio45701.

Clinic physician speaks to
SCO Chiropractic Associatiof!
Daniel R. Black, D.O., Head of
Holzer Clinic's Physical Medicine
and Rehabilitation Dtpartment,
provided the program for the.
SouthCentral Ohio Chiropractic
Association Meeting at the Chillicothe Holiday Inn on September
17.

The organization's President is
Nick Robinson, D.C. and the Secretary' is Nine~ Kime, D.C. B.oth
practice ~t .Metgs County C~tro­
practic Clime on General Hartinger
Parkway in Middleport.
Chiropractors in the State of
Ohio may now prescribe work
hardenin~ programs and other
forms of tndustrial rehabilitation
for injured workers.
Dr. Black's presentation to the
Association dealt with Occupational Medicine, Industrial Medicine,
Workers' Compensation, Work
Hardening and Out-Patient Rehabililllion. All of these Occupational and Industrial cases are regularly
diagnosed and treated in the Physi-

.

.

'Braves regain
tie for lead in
Nt-West

Hi\NEY
!fie program coli!!lltttee.
AP Science
.
Although the disease may have ,
CHICAGO (AP) - ·An exjleri- been around for hundreds of years, ' ·
mental anti-virus drug.can dramati- current concern aboutt~e tllness
cally relieve the extreme tiredness, eme.rged after doctors m lnch~e
memory loss and other debilitating Village, a ~sort on Lake Tahoe tn
miseries of people severely afflict- Nevada, wnnessed an unusual dus- .
ed with chronic fatigue syndrome, ter of veople \Ytth unexplamed
researchers said Tuesday.
fatigue m 1984:
·
·
Doctors tested the medicine on
When similar cases tu~e~ up
people so gravely ill that they often elsewhere, many doctorS .dismt.ssed ·•
were $ually bedridden, unable to · it as part of a psyc~logtcal ~sor­
get up 10 use the bathroom, balance der, perhaps depresston. For au~.
checkbooks or even watch televi- it was disparagingly called yuppte
sion.
nu.
.
The study showed th~t injec·
Now, the disease is taken senlions of the medicine - Ampbgen ously. In the latest study, d&lt;(Ctors at
- restol'ed patients enough so they four hospitals tested Ampltgen on
had the strength to take care of 92 people whose. lives. had been
themselves and think more clearly, , ruinea by chrome faugue synalthough many still showed ~orne drome. Half received Ampligen
effects of the disease. The medicine ·injections for up to six months; the
is the first to have any proven rest got placebo shots. . .
.
impact on the mysterious illness. ·
Before treatment, the. pauents
Dr. William A. Carter of Hahne- needed custodial ·care. They could
mann University in Philadelphia, not cook, ·shop or reliably perform
co-inventor of A:mpligen, presented the simplest household tasks.
the findings at an American Soci"As a result of Ampligen !heraely for Microbiology meeting.
py, the typical patient wen~ from
Besides opening the possibility needing help most of the ume to
of a treaunent for the disorder, the only needing help now and then for
research also provides clues to its sustained tasks, such as cutting the
cause. It suggests.that viruses are grass," said Carter. "The routine
ultimately responsible for the ill- activities of living completely
ness, but the body's own response turned around by use of the drug."
to the infection may make the
Those in the comparison group
symptoms much worse. ·
were unchanged during the study
The just-finished study was a period.
last·minute addition to the microbiDr. Anthony Komaroff of
ology society's annual meetin~ on Brigham and Women's Hospital in
infectious diseases, and organtzers Boston, an authority on the synsaid this indicated its potential drome, cautioned that the study
impact.'
does not settle several important
''We don't accept late presenta- issues, such as whether benefits last
tions very often, but we did this when treatment is stopped and
becll!!se it was.so important," said whether there are unwanted side
Dr.
Thornsberry of Vander- effects of long-term use of Amplibilt
· vice chairman of. gen.

..

'STUDENT OF THE WEEK - Chad Molden was selected as Student or the Week at Meigs Junior High-School recently for his
work in science and behavior. Pictured presenting his certificate is
teacher, Don Dixon.

Ohio Lottery

'

-- BVl~X~iiEIL-0.

john C. Wolf. D.O.
·Associate Professor
of Family Medicine
Question: My children had their
baby shots and had to have their
shot record to siart school. Having
just gone through this. I began to
think about myself. Should adults
have any special immunizations?
Answer: Immunizations provide
obvious benefits for the indtvidual,
and there are also significant bene~
fits for society. The average life
·• expectancy has increased signifi·
cantly during this century. At the
turn of the century the average man
could expect to live 10 the age of 45
and a woman could expect to live
to age 40. Today the figure ·is 76
years for men and 81 for women.
An. important part of this
increase in longevity is dull 10
immunizations, although nutrition,
pollution, antibiotics, improved
obstetrical care and ot~er things
play ~· Smallpox is the most
spectaculat"'exi!ffi_ple of an immunization benefit. It was once a
feared and often fatal illness.
Today, it no longer exists! Smallpox has been totally eliminated as a
health risk because of the
widespread immunization . ~gainst
it. In fact , since the disease has
been eradicated from the entire
world population , we no longer
need 10 immunize against it.
lmmunizations have become an
integral part of health care. The socalled "baby shots" are designed to
protect the individual against diph·
theria, pertussis, tetanus, measles,
mumps, rubella, polio and illnesses
caused by H. Influenzae b. These
are infectious diseases that are
common in childhood and can
cause serious illness, life-long dis·
ability, or even death. Because
immunization usually ke~ps the
individual from becoming infected
and also prevents the spread of dis·
ease to other children, shots are
required before entenng school. .
Shots don't always produce lifelong immunity. With many immunizations, boosler shots are needed
.to "boost" the body's defenses so
that we continue to be protected.

.

Anti -virus drug-relieves
chronic fatigue sy~d.rom~ _

Ohio University
College of OsteopathiC Medicine

Y. ~
. M_ed"tctne

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W!!$fnesday, october 2, 1991 ..

'Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

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Pi(k 3:018
Pick4: 4280
-Cards: 10.H; Q~C;

Q.D;8-S

Pages ·

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Vol. 42, No. toe
Copvrtgh!M 1111.

Odessa Cart observes

Odessa airi celebrated her 70th
birthday recently at her home on
.Bailey Run Road.
Refreshments were served and
she was presented with a cake.
Attending were her children and
grandchildren, Leonard, Mary and
Michelle Roush, Patricia Imboden,
Chuck Jacks, Jodi and JoHanna
• Imboden, Roger, Kathy, Rachael,
Buddy, Timmy and Jessica Roush.
Out-of-town guests attending ,
were Bill and Patty Buck, Springfield, Freda May Roberts and
Melvin, Crooksville; Mick Buck,
Sis and friends from Zanesville.
Others presenting gifts were
Okey anti Christian Cart, Virginia;
Tommy and Ann Buck and children, Columbus; Eloise Rafferty
" -,,.,...
and family, Fairborn ; Pauline
Haley, Lancaster.
Mrs. Cart also received a phone
ODFSSACART
call from her grandson, Jerry Jacks,
who is serving duty on the U.S.S. Theodore Roosevelt.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Democrats wasted no time in
attacking a newly approved
realignment of legislative districts
that threatens to end their longtime
control of the House.
Speaker Vern Riffe, D-Wheelersburg, and State Democralic
Chairman Eugene Branstool on
Wednesday described the Republican plan as an illegal attempt to
ma01pulate districts for political
gain.
.
Riffe promised to challen~e it in
court and l'redicted he wiU wm.

Meanwhile, James Tilling,
OOP-&lt;:ontroUed
state Apportionment Board that
adopted the plan Tuesday, said
some technical mistakes have been
found and the board wou14 meet.
again today to correct them.
·
Riffe said the Democrats' will
take no le$al action until the
I'Cjl)ignmentts fmal and official.
"We want to see what those
mistakes are," he said.
S,tate Republican Chairman
Robert Bennett and others insist
that the plan w~ done impartially
SJlQ~III!UI flJ: J!le

cal Medicine Department at the
Main Holzer Clinic on Jackson
Pike west of Gatupolis, as wen as
at the Sports, Industrial and Rehabilitative Medicine Center at the
Sycamore S~t Clinic downtown.

Cllrk. ..... ~ J0J O'Brien

J!ack row, MiSsy Neutzllng,
Mlll'tba
Heather Fraacko:wJak, Melissa
Pooler, Heather Hud!on, Jeaall'er Fink, Mirauda Nicholson aad Etjn Weaver, Jllot pictured lll'e
Amle EIUott aud Missy Slsloa.
.
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loiAINJ 'ISI

WELLSTO N • The Board of services will be offered.
.
-Trustees of the Ohio Valley Area
Wanda Eblin serves on the
Libraries (OVAL) held their OVAL Board and represents the
290 N. Second . . . 992-3684
Middleport
monthly meeting at System Head- Meigs County Public Library.
quarters in Wellston on Thursday,
OP£ti.Monday thru Saturday 9 to 5
Sept. 19.
Regina S. Ghearing, OVAL
The group signed cards for Lucille clerk·trcasurer·, reported that two .
Smith, Mary Hauser and Donna prospective insurance consultants
Jenkins.
plan to attend the Scptem ~e r 7.5,
Dian Partlow gave a report on Librarians' Advisory Committee
the legislative meeting she a~nd­ meeting to gain an understanding
ed. She stated that Sub-Senate Bill of OVAL and me Member Library
I62 and Senate BiU 219 should not 'Insurance needs. After this meeting
be supported.
they will submit quotation s for
The group voted to suppon the Board approval.
SPECTACULAR HARDY MUM SALE
renewal or the Meigs County
Pam White, of Jackson was
110ver
Vflwant ~olors"
Tuberculosis Levy.
hired as a.Part-Time Temporary
Attending from Meigs County Book s By Mail Clerk - I. .The
REG. 13.59 EACH
were Rebecca Zurcher, Nellie Hoard also authorized the opening
Parker, Rosalie Story, Pam Crow, of the Extension Services Clerk 4 NOW JUST
Wendy Halar, Gay Perrin, Fern Bibliographic Services position.
Grimm, Paula Witt, Shelia Bevin, Applications will be accepted rust
,.a.. EACH OR
FOR SJ.J. ~OO
Marge .Fetty, JoAnn Hayes, Ann from current OVAL employees.
Webster, Margaret Parsons and
The Board approved the purDorothy Woodard.
(OVER 40 VAJUETJES}
chase of a video camcorder for
The next meeting wiU be held at member use and computer faxmo,.,..., Now For -..utlful Sprfllf B•ds AI
the Racine United Methodist dem hardware.
Church on Ott. 28. ·
Director Eric S. Anderson ·
MeDould'•ln Poatft'OJ D., .t.Jt tall."
•
informed the Board that the Cltaner
P•mr.l
B•N
S.a
Doeu
......... To WltJut•nd
from the State Libr~ry will need
revision and a draft has already
been su.bmitted to that agency for
f11.r6 Iii Flowering Kale ~ Flowering cabbage
. comment
Custer, Donna Jones and Clarice
Established in 1973 as the rust
fi Fall GardenVegetable• Iii Holland Bulbs
•
v- ncr
·
state·funded regional public lib~
"'"u
'
·
Oh
"
d
OVA
A social outing will be held OcL system tn
to, to ay
01
The ll'nlll QulltJ Produ01 You've c- To Expeet.••
17 to the Circleville ~umpldn administers through local public
NOW nA1'111UNG •
APPI.U J'IIOM
Show. Everyone is to meet at !ane libraries a variety or programs
. Wallllll's at 10 a.m. for group rides. designed tO improve and extend
1'D IBINANDOAJI VA'' '1' JN'cti1DING."
The Oct. 24 meeting will be services to local residents. OVAL
• llED DIUCIOUI
•WINUAP. .
• CORTlAND
reverse drawing and each is to · is made' up of public libraries in the
•GOLDIN
DELICIOUI
•ROMIIIAUTT
•MeiNTOIH
b 14 1
'
counties of Athens: Hocking, Jackbring an II y
$ ass ptcture son, Lawrence, Meigs, Pickaway,
frame. Instructions wtU be b)! Jane
Walton.
Pike, Ross, Scioto and Vinton. The
h
d
F'
OVAL
Board
1/4 Mill North of Pomeroy-Mason Bridge, Mason, WV
A,pros ram, "Healt an 11f of Trustees,
, whichh ·
...................... ...
ness, for thpse over 44 years of conskts o one trustee •!1lm eac
2400' E111ern AVII1111 1 ICI'OIIIrom KMart, Galllpolll, OH
age was presented by Joan Ander- mcmbt•r public library board, deter-son.
mines policy, controls fl\Jances ,
O!Pllitl71DAYI A WIEIEIJ(i
and malces final decision on what
~

Six join Delta Kappa Gamma
Six new members were initiated

It the recent meeting of the Alpha

Omicron Chapter, Delta Kappa
Oamnia, when the group met at
Charlotte Rae's Restaurant in Well•
ston. New members are Vicki Norris, Eileen Cottrill, Judith Sowers,
Katherine McCorlde. Saundra Allman and Pamela Toon.
Rebecca Zurcher, parliamentarian, assisted by chapter officers,
conducted the mitiation. Escorts of
new members were Bernice Mapes,
Dian Partlow, Emma Wiseman,
Jean Ward, Carol Eberts and Mary
Ann Hale . Each new member
received red rose and congratualtions of chapter members: ,
Susan Will presided at the meeting and Esther Maerker ~rted 88
members in August. NeUte Parker,
secretary, read a thank-you note
from the family of Gertrude Truce.

a

·
Sorority to h,old socia l outing·
Service projects were d,iscuSsed
_,;n of the Preccpat
the
reeentu~·g
tor Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority, held at the Grace
Episcopal Church Parish House. ·
Service l'"'jects for the mon~
include &amp;CrYing the Bloodmobile on
for
Oc•~ 23 ' and selling souvenirs
F · 1
the 'Big Bend Stemwheel esuva
on Oct. II and 12.
Meaea for the meeting were
H""'
Elclwtor Thomas and Reva Vaughan
were Velma Rue,
•
Corder, Rose SisAnn Rupe, Betty
vera Ci¥1"'· Norma

.

'

DOUBLE WINNERS - Holly Williams and Stephanie Price,
field commaadera for tbe Melp Marauder Man:bln1 Band, captureci.D.rst place Ia Clus A compeddoa oa Satlirday whea lbey
compaect at Cam bridge and ZaneavUle. Tile field commauders,
who also received nrst place at tile .Marietta Ba.ad-0-Rama, are
under tbe direction of Susan Clark.
•
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Autopsy results announced

FALL PANSIES

.

By BRIAN J, REED
rounded by areas sened by 1Ula1
Sentinel News Stan
water companies.- Leu, Leading
The Meigs County Commis- Creek Conservancy District and
sioners approved seven applies- TP-C all serve communities nliar
tions for Fiscal Year 1991 Commu- . Pageville but do not extend into
nity Development Block Grant that BmL
Funds when they met in regular
"Heaven only knows that the
session on Wednesday afternoon.
people of Pegeville need water serThe largest award of funds was vice," Commissioner Rich Jones
that of $26,000 to Salisbury Town- said yesterday. "They've waited
ship for the resurfacing of a portion too long."
of Naylor's Run Road.
./
According to Boyer Simcox, a
Tuppers Plains•Chester Water specialist
with
Buckeye
Disttict will receive $25,000 in FY Hills/Hocking Valley Re1ional
91 CDBG monies. The district will Development District, who was
use those funds to help in installing present at ihe meeting, plans are
6,400 feet ·of water line, providing also in the works for a~lying for
new water service to six families.
Farmers Home Admmtstratton
In !llldition, that project will ulti- gnu:tt and loan 111011iea for the TP.C
matel).' ] osult in aervice•tQ. ll\JL P!P.JCCL...
·· 'a" ·
Pageville AIP.A" wliich iS ooCservect . " 'I1Ie other FYI91 ·COB appliby any J~ater"'service• ~'1ioilic cations approved yesiCnlay were:
because the community is sur- $3,000 to the Bashan Volun-

leer Fire Department for the pur-•
chase of respiratory protection
equipment;
- $18,000 for street widening
and re-surfacing work in the Viilaic of Middleport;
- $12,000 to the Village of
Pomeroy for the demolition of
unsafe and abandoned SlfUCtures;
- $12,000 for a watuline extension in the Village of Racine;
-· $360 for . t~e required fair
housing program conducted for the
benefit of' realtors and financial
institutions within the county.
The projects approved totaled
$96,360, and none of thote awHca- ·
lions approved were approved in
their entirety. A total or
5220,111.52 iD,appli"Mi«wi'ef.elv)!CI1W the cbilunliSioners liiiC "
tit! ~.360 finre 1epr mu •I of
Contlntied on

3

WORK PROGRESSING - Reconstruction
of Pearl Street, wbkb will include wldenin&amp; to
three lane, DtW curbin&amp; and gutter, Sidewalk,
and storm sewer system In tbe area between
Laurel aad Hartln1er Parkway Is well uaderway. Wednesday afternoon a milling machine
was bein&amp; used to remove llfCtlons of old blacktop In prepal'ltlon for reaurfaclng. C. J, Con-

&amp;e•·

tractJna aDd TruddJia or GaDlpolls lw the
era! COIItract OD tbe work which - en&amp;~Mered ·
by Trip~ Ellalaeerlng of Pomeroy. Tbe proje(t ·
is beblaliDanced with an $80,000 graat from the
Oblo Public Woru Commission {Issue 1) and •
$47,696 in local moales. The work is txpected to
be completed In !ale October.

in 3-car accident

Jeffrey L. Halley, 36, of Gallipolis, whose skeletal rem aiM were
'
Only one of nine people
in three
discovered last Wednesday off of Old Ponland Road in Lebanon
vehicles
involved
in
an
accident
on
Township, died as the·iealilt of a ~ wOIDld or wounds to the
West
Main
Street
Tuesday
afterhead, accortlins to Meigs County C~ Dr. Douglas Hunter who J
noon was injured, according to
' recently received the autopsy results from the Franklin.County · Pomeroy
Police.
Coroners Office.
Quillen, Middlepon, driver
According to Dr. Hunter, the date of death was diffiCult to deterof a car owned by Larry Rutter,
mine but, jud~~~~ains, he speculated that Halley died
Pomeroy, was treated for minor
shortly after hts ·
•
·
injuries
at the· s.cene by the
The investigation IS CWTCntly being !Rated as a horilicide by the
Pomeroy
emergency
squadmen.
Meigs COIDlty Sherifrs DepattmenL
·
Actordins to Pomeroy Police,
Janice Van Cooney had stopptd in
traffic preparing to make a left ·
hand tum into the Main Street Market. Her vehicle was hit in the rear
Meigs County Sheriff James M. SoutSbr has rePocted that severby the Rutter vehicle which had
al local area residents have been contacted lly a rej)reaentativo of the
been struck by a car driven by i
Ohio Patrolmen's Benevolent AssoCiation reprding contributions
Bmtda Barnhart. Pommly.
to that organlzatioD.
Barnhart was cited for not mainAccording 10 Soulsby, the request is for $45, but in many cases,
taining
assured clear distance. Rutthe vouP willliOOepl ·a smaDer amount Upon pa)'111e111. die donor •
!er
was
charfed for not having
reeetves a decal to display which lllltea only that a $300 reward will
QUliN HOPIPULS • n.. 11ft IHIIon at
insurance
on his vehicle.
be offered for the arreat and conviction of anyone atlanJlllnl to burMelp
~ Sclloal wiD vie far 111e lllle of 1991
The
Van
Cooney
and
the
Rutlfr
gl..-lze the donor's prernllea. .
Melp
Hf11t Scltool H011ecoalu1 Qum. The
vehicles
had
llallt
rear
end
damage,
Soulsb)' swes that tbc Meip COUIIIy Sheriff'a Depannteoll is in
wiU
be eeleded wb• lite lldlool oblel'ftl
while
the
Blftl!art
care
had
moderno way afftliated with the Ollllnlzation. He swes thai the Buckeye
itl
homeeomlaa
oa Friday evenln1. •The
ate damage 10 the driver's side and
.
ContiDued on Pill' 3
·
0
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•
frontC!Id. ·

roru

• .,...,......,. r ....,....,.,..,

eo-,...,, au

Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Judge Fred W. Crow ill has
certified .to the, Meigs County
Board of Elections that two persons. Paul Gerard and James M.
Soulsby, have submitted to a search
of State and Federal fingerprint
files to disclose any criminal
record, and that neither man has
such a criminal record.
The seareh is required by Section 311.01 of the Revised Code
for anyone who many be a candidate for the office of county sheriff
in the Primary and General Elections of 1992. No person may be a
candidate for sheriff who has a
serious criminal record. A nwmber
of other qualifications are listed in
Section 311.01 for such potential
candidates.
Paul Gerard requested and was
also certified by Judge Crow as
meeting tho~. other qualifications.
Soulsby has not yet requested that
he be certified as qualified to be a
candidate.
,
The deadline for fding petitions
to be a candidate in the May 1992
Continued on page 3

---Local briefs--...... One person hurt

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changes, mainly adjusuitents for GOP-oriented aieas.
population shifts.
T.!!.e l!lan will force more than _
· Riffe, in vowin~ legal action, 20 Democrats, including Riffe and
did n(llist constiltlllonalllaws.
Rep. Mark Malone, D-Soutb Point,
But Democratic lawyers claimed in one instanCe, 10 face each other
earlier that the plan ignored prohi- in next year's Democratic pribitions against unnecessary divi- maries or move to other districtS.
Tilling said the purpose or
s ion pf counties and failed to
adhere to requirements for compact todaY.' s meeting is "to review and
correCt technical and typographical
and contiguous districts.
, The House realignment will errm.••
There were reports of more serienhance Re~ublican stren~th. in
part by div1ding up tradttional ous problems, including one that
Democratic slrongholds and shift- said at least one community was
ing them piecemeal into more left off the new map.

Officials
meet state
requirement

Rugged as the men who wear them.•

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•
.

by computer 10 avoid legal pitfallS · House 61-38, and the Republicans
and that the 99 House and 33 Sell- need to_gain only 13 scats 10 have a
ate districts will survive any legal majority.
.
challenge.
Bennett said the GOP will get
Branstoolsaidhewaswmwrect that many, and more.
that Bennett "could say with a
Senate President Stanley
straii!tt face that the violence this Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, who served
map ijoes to incqmbent Democrats on the board, agreed. He said the
was merely co~~~J~~~ler happen- gain will come because Republistance.''
cans restored fairness to a process
The new map. "just coinciden- that Democrats have abused to contally pits numerous Democratic trol the-House since 1972.
incumbenta ·against each other in
Aronoff already has a 21-12
newly drawn dislricts," he added.
majority in the Sellllte; Those disDemocrats now .·control the tricts underwent· only minor

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OVAL holds monthly.meeting

•

Commissioners approve seven
applications for CDBG fu.nds ·

. •Corduroy collar
'\ • Bi-Swing action back
• Heavy-duty zipper front
• Slash front pockets arid
'-"'•• r-· breast pocket
• Extra-strong, triple-stitched main seams
• J hread bar tacks·al stress points
•Optional: matching lined sna p~on hood
Matching pant and bib overall available.

"'

·

Democrats blast remap plan; threaten lawsuit

• Two waist and
cuff adjustments

,

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Blanket-Lined Jacket
HONORED STUDENT - Jenny Garey was recently selected as
.Student or the Week at Meigs Junior High School for ber work in
reading, lang age arts and behavior by teacher, Mrs. Debbie
Mink.

Hl&amp;b Ia mid 11111.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, October 3, 1991

.,..,;.,..

DR. DANIEL BLACK

.•. .... .. .

.

• Heavy-du ty 100%cotton 12-oz. duck
with plied yarns
• Wind resistant
and snagproof
• Warm blanket lining of
acrylic and polyester

e~IDft ahllowtrs 70 pen:eliL

2505~

Carhartt
' Built better than it has to be.

LwliDIIIPt._a Jlr1dly,

Super Lotto:
1-10-21-32-33-39
Kicker:

Sheriff explains auxiliary,etup

,..,.,dJIJ'f,

q••

-

.....

,

•.

Maralldm will take ou lite lledanl Hw" 1 •·
Laacen Uti kiUolr lor lbe ••• Ia '7:31 ••· ·'
wllb am·- WYlde~ ptt~aa 111111w ....,.
arond 7:00 p.JI. Qu,ea cudldalll, l·f, are
Melaale Qgllll, Valerie Wllloa, toft late7,
AprUHU.ItldOrillyWeaYtr.

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Page-:-2-The Dally sentinel
Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Qhlo
... Thursday, October 3, 1991 .

j

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-.-Tiie Daily 5ent1nel
1'

. 111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

.

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

eMULTIMEDIA, INC.
.
~OBERTL.~NGETT

Publisher
~

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisber/ControUer

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The Associated Press. Inland Daily Press Association and
· . the American Newspaper Publisher Association.

,
;I

LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
worda long. Alllenen are subject to editinJ and must be signed with name,
· address and telephone num\&gt;er. No WlSigned leuers will be published. Letters
' • sb:&gt;ulcl be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Plans for weapons have
long stirred debate
ByWALTERR.MEARS
AP Special Corre&amp;JI!!Ddent
.. WASHINGTON- Wilh his ''just do 11" arms conuol plan, President
Bpsh is eliminating U.S. tactical nuclear weapons that have slirred politi·
c.al and diplomatic disputes for years.- and hoping for matching curs lhat
would help kee~ the Soviet arsenal under cenll'al conuol.
.,;.
. Unilateral, tf partial, nuclear disarmament is a preempuve move
against lhe prospect of a Soviet Union disbanded into nation states, at
le;~St four of which could have baltlefteld nuclear weapons.
Arms negotiations with Moscow have been a laborious, years-long
process. It 1001&gt; nine years to negotiate the 1991 Stnltegic Arms Reduction
Treaty, which hasn't yet been -ratified, and would be phased into f~ll
effect over an additional seven years.
Time frames like those are poindess now, given the ~ong pace of
change in the Soviet Union.
That new reality prompted the drastic nuclear overhaul Bush
announced Friday night, including the son of steps Republicans' used to
dismiss as unilateral disarmament when DemocraiS proposed lhem.
· Two years ago, with the Iron Curtain cracking but not yet down, the
adminisll'lltion wanted -to modernize NATO's shon-range nuclear missiles. a move resisted by West Germany, where most of them were based.
Bush yielded and agreed to put the whole question off untill992.
- Now lhere is one Germany. The old Soviet mililary alliance bas vanJilted, yielding to fledgling democracies. And that leaves tactical missiles
aiined at repelling an e;~Stern invasion that is no longer a practical possibili '
..
~ATO was planning to seek negotiations for lhe elimination of battlefield nuclear weapons in Europe. But Bush said that would take too long.
: The U.S. weapons outlasted their targCIS. So the president is eliminating them and ordering a standclown from alen status - while maintaining
a force of airborne taCtical nuclear weapons.
The Soviet arsenal is estimated at about 12,000 battlefield nuclear
weapons, including artillery shells, short-range missiles. air defense warheads and nuclear land mines. That's well over double lhe .number esti;
maw! to be affected by Bush's decision on U.S. tactical We&amp;J.lOIIS.
. "My flfSt question to l!resi~nt Bush was: 'Is this a unilaleral reducticin?"' Soviet President Mikhail S. GOJbachev said in a Moscow televiSloil interView. "His answer was yes; But in his letter and in our converOtion, the president emphasized that the United States urges us to recip.pc.ate."
·••!rhe emphasis is on the-latter.
·, .,.
:: : "The n:aJ urgency is not our weapons," Paul Wolfowttz, undersecre~ of defense, said in a CNN interview Sunday. "The real urgency is
tliJiir weapons because you have a country that is starting to break apart, a
C3M!ntty !hat faces potential enormous political ~blems in the fuwre.''
:• • :rhc size, mobility 11fld sheer numbers of laC~ nuclear weapons have
~etimes made-lhe question of controlling their possible use a matter of
u;s. political deb81e.
.
:•:in Moscow, the newspaper Pravda'said the U.S. administration seems
"deeply concerned about the reliability of.Soviet control over ils nuclear
arsenal ••
That firs the instant arms control plan in which Bush is writing off
land-and sea-based taCtical weapons lhe adminisll'8lion deems no longer
nec;essary, and urging that the $ovieta match the United States by desuoying their ground-launched battlefield nuclear weapons.
·The Soviet government isn't precluding matching cutbacks, but it
haim 't ordezed them. A top Kremlin diplomat is due in Washington soon
to:::discuss lhe situation.
•
•Brent Scowaoft. Bush's national security adviser, said neBotiations on
shOrt-range weapons could have talcM years. Instead, he said, the pre!tdeht decided to leU Moacow:
:•we want to get rid of ours. You get rid of yours. Let's just do it"
~ Bush also urged that remaining Soviet nuclear weapons be consoliq&amp;t·
e¢ at cenlral loc8tions. ~ also could help to keep them under cenll'al
control.
.
. :•'I have always been quite satisfied that the Soviet Union, through the
cepter, exercised very good conrrol over their nuclear weapo0s ... with
~t to strategic systems," Gen. Colin Powell, chainnan of lhc Joint
CHiefs of Staff, said Friday.
·:•ObYiousJy, tactical nuclear systems are a liUie mon: difficult to catego'rjzc that way, llut I ... am reasonably satisfied that the Sovicrs are as
• copcemed as Wm over these kinds of weapons and how lhey have to be
conuolled."
·
:smpping them certainly would do it

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today
in history
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By The AIIOdated Press
• Today is Thursday, Oct 3, the 276 day of 1991. There are 89 days left
year.
'
.
· · : Today's HiJhlight in Hisnl')':
:'One year qo, on Oct. 31 !~90. West _Germany 8J!d East Germany
elided 4S yean of postwar diVISion, dcc1aring lhe creanon of a new unified oounuy in the heir! or'Europe willl festiYilies that included fireworks
and. the J)el1inl of church bells.
; Oo this dllc:
: In 1863, Praident Lincoln declared llle last Thursday in November

mtlle

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"GITCHA PAPUH HEAHI GITCHA TIMES,
DEAD SEA SCROLLS! ... "

ping tile tidbit about Cianston lllidtng ':d~the chairmanship. Then
Paul
,"Hey,who'sthatgal
Yl
JJI
Cranston's dating'!"
'
As we rePOrted earlier, the foun- Sen: Roben Grabain. The letter, to .
dation for Paul's friendship ~ith Danny Wall, who was th~;~~ head of '
Cranston was laid in July 1988 the bank board, implied thatre~­
when Paul made a $25,000 contri- tors were not gfvmg Florida-SIWbution to a California voter-regis- ·lngs and loans a fiif shake: ':'1_11ere
tratio_n drive - a thinly veiled is a perception &amp;lnong superv~sory
effort to get more Democrars to lhe agents lhat the entire industry is ·
polls iit California,-and 'a pet pro- composed of dishonest people."
.
JCCtofCranston's.
.
Graham's office told us that lhe ·
Paul has been branded a "name letter referred to problems reported
dropper," and accused by some by the whole Florida savings and ·.
nervous senators of exaggerating Joan industry, and !hat Paul exag- .
his access to lhe Senate. But some- gerated their friendship. But Paul ·
ho":' he was able to keep his losing apparently lhought he bad a loyal ..
savmgs and loan open almost two sol4ier in Graham. Fonner bank
years after regulators recommend- board Chairman Ed 6ray told our :
ed that it be shut down. During · associate Jim Lynch about a con·
tho~ two years, Paul treated sena- versation he had wilh Paul in June
tors to the use of his corporate jet I989 about Gray's successor,
l\Dd yacht, and showered them and Danny Wall. "Paul told me that the
others.with campaign contributions only way to get th(ough to Wall
-:- more than $20Q,OOQ in 1988 was through Gr$alll,"_Gray ~.
alone.
'·
MISSING WITNESS - One
There is no evidence that any witness who won't rake the stand
senator personally intervened wilh against former Panamanian suongregulators to keep Paul's thrift man Manuel Noriega is Mike
open. The one document that feder- Harari, a former Israeli secret agent
al investigators found interesting who became one of Noriega's
was a December 1987 letter signed inside circle. Harari knows some of
by some members of the Florida Noriega's darkest secrers. Bitt he
congressional delegation, including . also knows too much about some .
U.S. ·seerets. Harari was Israel's
point man in the Iran-contra
weapons pipeline. He set u)J a
secret network of airfields .and
training bases for the contras.
When the United States invaded
Panama in December I989, Harari .
was there, and could have been
scooped up with other Noriega
cronies. But he was spirited out of
the countty by the Cenlral Intelligence Agency, al\d now he is
nowhere to be found.
MINI-EDITORIAL - . Sen.
Tom Harli:in, D-Iowa, has a qUality
that could make him appealing to
conservative voters in a presidential race against George Bush.
Harkin can boil down the liberal
message into slogans and simplici- .
ties. Call him a liberal Ronald Reagan. He can out-speak, out-stump
and out·slo~an any candidate in the
Democratic. camp. Michael
Dulcakis put the vote.rs to sleep
willl his well·intentioned platform
of social reforms. Harkin will keep
them awake willl one-liners. Bush
would find him to be a more
formidable foe than some of the
GITCH~ JOURNAL, ,GITCHA more staid Democ;rats.
Copyright, 1991, United Feature
.
•
Syndicate, Inc.

of~

~first

"

an"d Dale Tlan AHa

Keeping' the options open __co_ng_.C_la_ren---,ce_·M_i_ller_
As one who was an ourspoken
opponent of lhe acid rain provision
of the Clean Air Act enacted· by
·Congress last year, I'm S01!'Y to say
all lhe cautioning notes that were
sounded by myself and other members concerned with the economic
and social impact this legislation
would have in our region of the
country, are coming to pass.
As many of you will ~.one
of lhe most controvtJ:Sial aspecrs of
the otherwise popular Clean Air
Ac~ and the reason I voted against
i~ was the acid rain provision conrained in that legislation.
Aimed at addressing the damage
done to lhc lakes and woodlands of
the northeastern United States and
Canada, which is allegedly being
caused by the fallout of parpcul~
being carried by wind currents
fr9m plants burning high sulfur
coal in the Midwest, the provision
was challenged by many in
Convess and in the scientific commumty as being premature, if not
unnecessary.
.
The bill went forward, irrespective of the faC! lhat an all but completed congressionally authorized
and taxpayer financed, 10-year,
$600 million srudy on the acid rain
question was sugg~sting that high
sulfur coal was not necessarily the
culprit it was pomyed to be.

The bill went forward because,
like with many otha- environmental
initiatives and concerns, we as a
people tend to get wrapped around
an emotional axle.
We get caught up in what some
have caUed the "save Bambi" syndrome. We let fiction llecome 'fact;
we let alleged problems become
perceived problems. And once such
legislation gets put on the fast
track, on that roller coasrcr of emotion, it is all but impossible to slow
down or derail. So it was lhat the
acid rain provision in lhc Clean Air
Act became law.
Now the aftermath; now the
economic dislocation; now the
threat of new and higher utility
rates; now we in the Ohio Valley
are being asked to bear tile burden
of this well inrcntioned but miscon·
ceived legislation. One can't pick
up a newspaper or listen to a newscast in our pan of !he country anymore wilhout hearin~ about the difficulties this legislanon has created,
or is about to create, for our
region's miners and for our
region's utilities users.
Thousands of Ohio minin~ jobs
are in jeopardy because of lh•s legislation. The area's largest power
plant, AEP's Gavin plant in Gallia
County, is facing a decision that

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been.:

llle Ohio Vall~~¥ t!»'ough Pri!l&amp;Y.· 1888. · . . .
·
. 1 · The Southeast. which has
~3:peratures ;1l~sbow httle
. Sunrise this mo~liing was. at ·poanded by heavy rains the
l
_ o&lt;A. :f!!J! .and!O bill,aetUJlllCrp
1.29-a.m..Sunset-wiii-be- at-'7.,-1-2-twodays,was:~~~~;
· ~~;t~~
SOs f!,~
• ~ l(lnl I
n·~ p.m.
In Soutbcm
;.
day climb mto
upper s and
Around tbe natloD ,
setting beat wave was
to •
low ~Os. ·
.
Rain dampened the East Coast continue. Wednesdafs
was· :
~h pressure bepn to slowly and Midwest early today, while 99 which tied an 85-year-old •
rei . its grip on the state d~ Soulhcm California braced for a recOrd for lhe date. The high of.100 :
the rughL Some clouds sflread mto third consecutive .day of tempera- on Tuesday broke the rewrd sa in '
north~est Ohio while die rest of . tures near 100.
1906.
. •
\
the state was~netally clear. Light
Rai • 11 Washingto D c
While Southern Californians • '
Five calls for -assistance were answered on Wednesday by mits
· d s' hl
p•e
· ·• tried to keep cool on Tuesday .and 1
Will
e P . keep , tcmp~ratures Virgima
and on
Norlh Carolinltn,before
, ·
of Meigs County Ema-gency Medical Services.
from the upper 50s to lhe niid 60s. dawn today. Forecasters said that Wed_nesday Floridians tried to •
At II: 19 a.m., Tuppers Plains unit went to Mount -Olive Road.
Soutli-Centr~
Oblo'
·.
. '111¢ record bi&amp;h temperature for was just the beginning of a storm keep dry. Si~ to 7· inches of.r!lin :
Eugene German was transpQrted to Holzer Medical eeDter. .
.
h
h
,
.
._
'th
lh1s
.date at the CoiiiJ!IbuS. weather that was expected to sweep aero
fell on par.ts of Florida~ causmg ;
~t 3:35 p.m., Racine un~ went to Barringer \ti• Road. Owen
. Tomg t; s owers ,,..e1Y wt
stauon y;as 119 degrees 1n 195~. the Northeast '!Vith 1 to 3 inches of flood•ilg m JacksonVIlle that ·
Oatley was talcen,to Pleasant Valley-+lospital. At 6:38p.m.,
thunderstorms' possible, mainly The record low was 31 degrees m rain in placea.
stranded hundreds of motorisrs,
:.
Pomeroy squad went to Mulberry Avenue. Hazel McCloud was
toward morning. _Low around 60.
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 8:18p.m., Racine squad
Chance of rain 60 percent Friday,
was sent to Elm Street f6r Blanche Biggs; who was taken to Holzer.
showers likely. High ,70 to 75.
At 10:20 p.m., Middleport squad responded IIi Race Street Chris
Chance of rain 70 ptZCent
Rayburn was rransported to V~rans.
·
·
Extended forecast:
Saturday tbrougb Moaday:
BELoRADE, Yugoslavia (AP)
''ore t11a1t 600 people have been "nonsense" and said the army:
Turning much ~ooler through -The f~ navy lliday resumed lcilr;;since fighting began after wants to seize as muc~ rcrritory 8Sj
the period. Showers likely Satur- its blockades of·Dubrovnilc and Croatia declared independence possible. , · · ·
day. Mostly fair Sunday and Mon· Croatia's other Adriatic ports, June 25.
·,
· 14
Ethnic Serbs in Croatia have
.'rhe Tan jug state news agen~y 1
Serenitr House Inc., a shelter for victinls of domestic· violence
day witlf a chance of showers in lhe rejecting new peace ovenures by
from Galha, Meigs and .Jackson counties, will receive a grant in
nonhesst. Highs betwen 65 and 75 lhe brealcaway republic to end the fought to join with Serbia, srud U.N. Secrelary General JaVIa- :
November from the Ohio Deparanent of Human Services. .
Yugoslavia's'llominant republic, ~erez de Cuellar on Wed~esday :,
Saturday, from lhe mid 50s to the country's 3-month-oldethnic war.
low 60s Sunday and in the 50s
Fighting also continu~ to rage and lhe mainly Serb federal army · Issued a ~ew appeal to all s1des to :
The grant, for $17 ,OSO, is earmarked for the victim
advocatt/assistance program,
·
Monday. Lows in the 50s Saturday, around Dubrovnilc and !be strategic has increasingly sided with them. stop fighung.
from the mid 40s-to the low -50s e8st Croatian· stronghold of Vuko- Together they have seized about
The grant follows a Depanment of Hwnan SeNices announceSunday and from the mid 30s to the var on the border with archrival one-third of Croatia's territory.
ment today indicating a significant increase in annual project grants
The navy lifted the blockade r,i
to shelters. The announcement came at a kiclcoff event for Domestic • low 40s Monday.
Sc:rbia, media l'ellO.rted.
In a statement today, the armed Croatian pons soon after lhc late4
Violence Awareness Month.
~
forces said the naval action was cease-fire agreement went into
taken because of Croatian viola- force last month.
Serertity House Inc. can be reached through CRISISLINE at 446·
continued rrom page 1
5SS4 or 1-800-252-5554.
tions of a Sept. 22 cease-rue, continued blockades of army barracks
the funds available to llle board for Roberts reponed to the commis- and atta~ks on military ins lalla'JJ
sioners ·that the Obio Department lions.
CDBG distribution.
A.federal general added !hat the
Contin1ed rrom page 1
Projecrs submitted by Syracuse of Transportation still plans to
Eli Ebersbach lli,...Middlepon. Middleport, $63, squealing tires; Village, Rutland Village and llle assist local officials in repairing Dubrovnik blockade was a direct Primary is 75 days;before lhc elecforfeited bonds on four charges Karen Broadwater, Mason, W. Va., Meigs County Commissioners several roads in Sutton and Letart response to occupation of a mili- tion, which would be mid-Febritwhen he failed to appear in $53, speeding; Melanie Rose, Ne~~:. were turned down due to a lack of Townships. The roads in question tary holiday, complex in nearby ary. However, because of lhe time
Pomeroy. Mayor's Coun condtiCted Haven, $49, speeding; Tammy funding, and no application was were damaged due to increased Kupari and "lhrears" against the · required to conduct the recorCI
by Larry Wehrung, president of Coroette, Waverly, stop sign viola- approved in its entirety. Another traffic caused by lhe closing earlier southern naval base at Boka check and the number of persons
being checked perhaps several in
Pomeroy Village -Council Tuesday tion; Christopher Miller, New application, submitted by the this year of lhc Yellowbush Brl"e. Kotorslca.
Gen. Andrija Raseta, deputy each of Ohio's 88 counties-aU
ODOT bas offered to provide
night.
.
·
Haven, W. Va., $63, traffic light Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Department, was deemed ineligible due to stone and olher materials to repair commander of the 51h military dis- porcntial candidates are encouraged
•
He forfeited $43 for driving left violation.
the damage caused by detoured trict which covers much of Croatia, to have lheir fmge1prints submitted
of center, $63 for disorderly manMilia- was also fined $375 and an insufficient income survey.
·"
traffic; lhe township trustees and de.manded Croatian forces sum:n· as early as possible.
ODOT
to
assistner, $63 for operating under sus- cosrs and sentenced "to three days in
der
or
leave
Dubrovnik.
.
The
finge1printing
is
being·
dohe
county
crews
will
have
the
job
of
Meigs
County
Engineer
Phil
"
pension, and $63 for having an jail on a Dill charge. Others fmed
applying lhe materials to the damRaseta. speaking in Zagreb, Said by the Sherifrs Department and
open container in a motor vehicle. in the court were Ronald Davis,
aged
roads.
Dubrovnik
should be declared an submitted to 'the Ohio Bureau of
Others forfeiting bonds were Syracuse, $375 and costs and three
"open
city"
free of all armed Criminal IdentifiCation and InvcstiAccording
to
Robens,
the
road
Pabicia White, Racine, $46, speed- days on a Dill charge, and $63 and
forces.
He
said
lhe army does not galion by Judge Craw's offiCe. AIT
was videotaped shortly after the
ing; James Flickinger, Albany, $63, costs on expired license; Lois
'
Veteraas
Memorial
bridge was closed, throughout lhe seek to harm the medieval city or such taking of fmgerprinrs should
squealing tires; Darlene Casto, Jenkins, Pomeroy, $63 and 'costs,
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS construction process -and again Dubrovnik,.dear to n:tanY Croats be completed and submitted to BO
Pomeroy, $49, speeding; Bernard rraffic light violation; Mary Smith,
and a major tourist stop.
.
no later than Dec. IS, Judge Crow·
after the brid&amp;e was re-opened.
Romine, Rutland, $46, speeding; Hartford, W. Va. , $213 and costs, - Hazel McCloud, Pomeroy.
WEDNESDAY
DISCHARGES
A
spokesman
for
the
Croatian
said.
·
Roberts
also
reported
that
he
assault;
David
Smith,
Hanford,
W.
Julia Cremeans, Reedsville, $43,
Carl
Roach.
general
staff,
Davor
Domazet,
disand
ODOT
Project
Engineer
Don
failure to yield right of way, and Va .. $213 and costs, assault; and
Johnson would coordinate a meet- missed Raseta's comments as
$50, no insurance; Todd Evans, Danny Morgan, no address, disorHolzer Medical Center
C LONV THEATRE
derly manner, $63 and cosrs.
Discharges Oct. l - Mrs. ing between the commissioners,
9
TONIGHT
..
Richard Davis and son, Brandan township trustees and ODOT offi.
cials
regarding
the
needed
repairs
Don
Johnson
and
Mickey
Rourke
'
Fisher, Walter Harvey, Barry JohnSPRING VAllEY CINEMA
and
how
they
would
be
made.
In
son, Hazel Kuhner, Madeline
44 6 4514
" .
Perkins, Brenda Sperry, Sadie
Other actioa
HARLEY DAVIDSON
IMWit MATIIUS SAnDY I saM'
Williams and John Willis.
He
was
a
charter
member
of
lhe
IAI&amp;AIN
II
GMT
TUESDlf,
The commissioners, by a unaniJeffrey L. Halley
Ravenswood Odd Fellows and
AND THE
mous roll-call vote, appointed'
served in the U.S. Army during
Bruce Fisher of Middleport to the
Jeffrey Lewis Halley, 36, of World War II. He was the owner
MARLBORO MAN R•.•
Oallia.-Jackson-Moisa Board of
Eureka Star Route, Gallipolis, is and operator of George's RestauAlcohol and Drug Addiction and
believed to have died shonly after rant in Ravenswood
STARTING FRIDAY
Mental
Health
Services.
Am
Ele
Power
..................
30
3/4
his disappearance Feb. 8, 1991;
He is survived by his wife,
Fisher's appointment was recAshland Oil .........,............29 5/8
A construction worker, he was Alma McGrew Compston · of
AT&amp;T
..
::
...........................
.37
1/4
.
ommended
by the board's director
born Feb. 11, 19SS, in Gallia Coun- Ravenswood; three daughters, Jean
following
lhe
resignation of cathy
Bob
Evans
.........................
19
ty, the soo of Preston and Elizabeth A. Morgan of Kent, Ohio, Myra E.
Wood.
.
Charming
Shop
..................
20
3/4
Halley of Gallia County.
Smiley of Cuyahoga Falls, and
The commissioners approved a
City Holding ....... ,.............16 1(2
Besides his J'B!ents, be is sur- Bonita C. McCracken of
Federal
Mogul
...................
l4
3/4
rransfer
of funds request from llle
vived by a son, ;effrey Halley.
Ravenswood; one son, Larry
GoodyearT&amp;R
.................
44
1/4
91-92
Juvenile
Court .Youth SerAlso surviving are five sisters: Compston of Middleport; one sisKey
Centurion
.................
.14
3/4
vices
Subsidy
Grant
to the 90-&lt;91
Ka~ Estep of Mannoth, Ariz.; Faye
ter, Dorothy Campbel~ of
Lands' End ......... :.............. 18
grant program in the amount of
Bailey of Mercerville; Beth Phillips Ravenswood; I8 J!T3lldchildren and
Limited Inc.. :....................26 1(2
$544.10.
of Belton, S.C.; Anita Russell of 13 great-grandchildren.
Multimedia Inc .... .............25 1(2
Present other than Simcox,
Gallipolis; Judith Pennington of
He was preCeded in death by a
Jones,
and Robens, were Highway
Rax
Restaurant
.................
1/4
Bidwell..Four brothers: Don, James son, James; seven brothers and two
Superintendent
Ted Warner, CounRobbins&amp;Mya-s
..............
.39
3/4
and Timothy of Gallipolis, and sisters.
ty
Garage
Office
Manager David
Shoney's
lnc
.....................
l7
3/4
Michael of Rio Grande.
Funeral Services will be held at
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
Spencer,
Commissioners
David
Star
Bank
..........................
23
1-n.
He was preceded in death by a II a.m. on Friday at Straight-TuckADMISSION $1.50
Koblentz and Manning Roush and
Wendy Int'l.. .......................8 7/8
brother, Daniel.
448-0923
.
. er Funeral Home in Ravenswood,
Worlhington Ind ...............27 If}.. Cla-lc Mary Hobstetter.
ServiCes will be held I p.m. Fri- .with Tim Vaughan and John Elrod
day at the Waugh-Halley-Wood officiating. Burial will be Stock rep4)11s are lht 10:3Q a.m.
quotes provided by Blunt, Ellis
Funeral Home in Gallipolis with Ravenswood Cemetery.
and Loewl of Gallipolis.
the Rev. Rocky Jeffers officiating.
Friends may call at the funeral
Burial will be at the Providenc\ home from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. on
Cern~.
· Thursday.
Friends.may call this evening at
the funeral home from 7-9 p.m.
Pallbearers will be Todd Estep,
Kirk Pennington, and Don, James,
Michael and Timothy Halley.
Annual meeting
Homecoming
The
Flatwoods United
The Meigs County Pioneer and.
George Compston ~
Historical Society will meet Sun- Methodist Church will have its
day at lhe Meigs County Museum homecoming on Oct 13 wilh speGeorge W: Compston, 77, of in Pomeroy. A potluck dinna- will cial singing by lhc Children of &lt;lod
Ravenswood, W.Va., died on be held at I p.m. followed by a pro- and others. A basket dinner will
Wednesday, October 2, I991 at gram at 2 p.m. The business meet· begin at 12:45 p.in. and afternoon
services are at I :45 ·p.m. Pastor
Jackson General Hospital in Ripley ing will follow the program.
Keith Raida- invites llle public.
Homeroming OcL 13
following an extended illness.
He was born in Ravensw.ood,
The annual homecoming of lhe Women Alive to meet
Women Alive will meet Monthe son of lhe late Thomas H. and United Faith Churth, ROute 7 by·
pass in Pomeroy, will be Oct 13. A day at 7 p.m. at the Kyger Creek
Florence Miller CompstOn.
basket dinna- will be held at 12:30 Clubhouse. Vicki Roush will be the
p.m. and a song fest will be held at speaker. She wiD discuss her grip
The Daily Sentinel
2 p.m. Featured singas include Jan to the mission field in New Mext·
(USPS IIS-960).
and
Kathy, Gabriels, Old Timers co. Bring something for lhe white
·~
Publilhcd every afLernoon, Monday
Quartet and others. Pastor Robert elephant sale and a salad item.
throu11b Friday, 111 Court SL. Pomeroy,
Letart TrusiHI to meet
E. Smilh Sr. invites the public.
Ohio by tho Ohio Valloy PUbliahlng
The Letart.Township Trustees
Swag class offered
.
Company!Multimodia In~:., Pomeroy.
Ohio 46769d Ph. 992-2166. Second elau
The swag arch· class will be wiD meet Monday at 7 p.m. at lhe
poBtiJ'I! poi a&amp; Pomeroy, Ohio.
offered by the Middleport Arts ·office building.
Member: The AJBociat.cd Prcs1 (nland
Council on Monday at 7 p.m.
' Daily Prct1 AaeociaUon and the Ohio
Fun art class offered
Southern JutiiGr Hillb boosters
New1paper Aaaocialion , National
· A creative fun art class for chilAdverti1ing Repre1entative, Branham
The Southern 'Junior High
Ncw1papcr SalesJ.. 7~3 Third ' Avenue,
dren will be offered by llle Middle- Boosters will meet Mpnday at 7
Now YOrk, New Yvrk~ 0017.
pen Arts Council on Oct 12 from p.m. at the junior high buildinJ.
POSTMASTER• Send address chances 1o
9:30 to II a.m.
The public is'invited to attend.
The Daily .Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
PTOtomeet.
Pomeroy, OHio 45769.
Dinaer Dante
The Pomeroy Elementary PI'O
SUBSCRIPI'IOII RATES
. The Middlepon Arts Council is
By Carrier,Or Motor Route.
sponsoring a dinner dance at the wiD meet ~Monday at 7 p.m. in the
One Weck................ ....... .................... $1.60
American Legion Hall in Middle- school gyn\nasium. Meet the candiOne Monlh ......................................... $6.96
One Year...................................~.... $83.20
pen on Oct 20. George Hall will dates running for Meigs Local
SINGLE COPY
provide the m'itsic and tickers may School Board. Also to be discussed
PRICE
Oaily.......................................... ~..25 Centl
be purchased a1 King ServiceStar will be a food booth at the Stem·
Hardware, Miele's Barber Shop in wheel Festival. Everyone is invited
Sub.ICI'ibCJ"' not deeiri ni to pay•lhe et~ni ·
Pomeroy, or by contacting Mrs. to attend.
er may romit .in advance dlre:cL Lo The
Gallipolia Qally T!ib~e on a 3.6 or 12
·Roscoe Wise at 522 South Thin! in
month bui1: Cred1t wtll 00 (iven earTfer
Middleport.
Rep to visit lll'fll
each week.
A representative from CongressGll'deli
club
to
meet
No aubac:rlption• by· mail permitted in
man
Clarence Miller's office wiU
The
Middleport
Garden
Club
•ro•• where home e~nier ••rvi~e il
available.
will meet Monday • 7:30 p.m. at conduct an open door session on
Mall BubtcrlpUon1
the home of Mrs. George Ander- Wednesday from II a.m. to I p.m.:
·
Inside Oallla County
son.
·
at the Me1g1 County Coun House
13 Woeko ................ ,..................... ... f21.84
D at A to meet
in Pomeroy•
26 Woel&lt;l ................. ... :.................... :$43.16
~2W..u ..........................................S84.76
If anyone has any questions,
District 13, DauJhters of Ameri·
Oulotdo GoUla County
concernmg
the Federal Govern-.
ca,
wiD
meet
Saturilay
at
I
f
.m.
at
13 Weou,................. .................... .... $23.40
the Chester LOdge Hall. AI mem- ment IIIey are encowaged to dis·
26 Weeu ............., ............................$-16.150
42 Woel&lt;l ..........................................$118.40
bers welcome.
cuss them ·wilh the represmtativ~~ ·

.

answer Ji. ve calls

Yugoslav navy resumes blockade .

Serenity House receives grant ·

Comml·ssz·on...__

____;,~--

Pomeroy Court news

0111fjicza
• l s•..

Hospital news

--Area deaths--

Stocks

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.Me_igs County announcements

By Joseph Spear

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Weather

Media bash.erjoins t~e press c.orps

'

Rain expected over.Ohio · ~~xt two days_·)~ .

.....-----.;.-L()cal
briefs•. ~--~
.
' . Continued rroni pqe 1 .

EMS

will determine lhe fublre of 1200 company's decision matrix. The
mining jobs alone. Fuel switch or company must ask itself what
install scrubbers • those are the about lhe human costs; what about
basic options the plant faces as it the economic costs to the swroundattempiS to conform with the new ing communities that will 001 only
regulatims imposed by the federal lose the revenue these jobs genetgovernment If they fuel switch, it arc, but will now be faced with the
will mean buying and rransporting ·increased social welfare biudens
huge volumes of low sulfur coal such massive layoffs are sure to
from out west and will meaJ) lhe impose.
. loss of the I ,200 mining jobs I
This past weelc, lhe Ohio Public
mentioned at the local Meigs Utilities Commission, after a comCounty mines that are presently prehensive analysis of the compliproviding the plant with all the coal ance '!~'lions of AEP' s preliminary
they bum.
compliance plan, urged AEP to
If they'install .scrubbers, a tech- keep its options open. It urged AEP
nology that permits the capblre of to delay irs ftnal decision until next
the particulates lhat wo11ld other- sprin~ when the federal governwise exit the stack, it is expected ment IS expected to award special
that AEP could continue to bum reserve allowancea to utility comOhio coal at its Gavin plant, The panies that install scrubbers, a
downside of this ~lion is that lhc mechanism that could make the
costa associated w•lh the installa- option of installing scrubbers a
tion of scrubbers are projected by more attractive and less costly
AEP to be considembly higher than alternative.
·
the fuel swilching alternative.
I, too, have ·urged AEP to not
Therefore, exercising this option forecloSe on the option of scrubwould not only mean ~ter pro- bers, for to do so wOuld go a long
duction cosrs for lhe utilily compa- way toward foreclosing on the
ny, but it would also mean higher future of Southeastern Ohio, 10d
kilowatt cosrs to the consumers that would F.ttJ.Y impair lhe econoinic
subscribe to that system.
and social well-being of our part of
Persooally, I feel there are mer- the state, a region that is already
its to hot'• options, but in my opin- beset with more than irs share of
ion, factors beyond just operating problems.
cosrs should be factored into the

If we were lawyers, we could
disbar him. If we were doctors, we
· could take away his license. If we
were.drug dealers, we could shoot B~chanan, the ruddy-faced right·
him. But we are mere journalisrs. wmga- and one-man media circus,
We cannot seize his laptop. We is not a real journalist. He had a
cannot force hiin to print a truth-in- brief apprentj~p as.an ewtorial
packaging disclaimer in 'every col· · writer, but lhen became an in-house
umn. We have to take him 115 is, media basher for Richard Nixon
and that is a stink bomb of the and later Ronald Reagan. John
smelliest sort and a clear violation McLaughlin of television fame is
of the international rules of:twar- not a reaj journalist He is a former
priest who worked in Nixon's
fare.
· This is not the first time these Wbite House and was periodically
heinous weapons have been wheeled out to tell the press that
employed, eilller. Back in 1989, lhe The Trick was really a moral man.
Heritage Features syndicate signed
The ~ist g~s on. SY,ndicated
up Ed Meese, Ronald Reagan~s colummst Christopher Matthews
thoroughly discredited ex-Attorney worked for House Speaker Tip
Genmil, to write a colllllll\. Merci· O'Neill. Jesse Jaclcson never bad a
fuUy, lhe,syndicate later folded its real job until he became a televioperations and lhe world bas since sion journalist
been spared Ethical Ed's discourses
All theJe people should btr
on the public process. Still, the forced to ·put asterislcs bCside their
ignominX of having to call Ed names to denote the fact that they
Meese -a 'brotha-" j01M181ist for a are not real journalists. If they
while caused wounds that have yet appear on TV, IIIey should be made '
to wear funny bars inscribell cwith
to heal.
· There are many other' examp!es ··the words: NOT A REAL JOURNALIST.
· of suqh unethiclil warfare. Patriclc
.
)

The Dally sentinel Page 3
I

' By The Al&amp;oclatecl
Dry weatber prevatled over
_ and/
_ oor dismembmnent J!Qiic~ in additiog to doc,ats, bumper..stickers_ ~Oh~o~durinJ . the night, but the
3iiil a quarterly magazine.
.
·
·
,.
National WeadKi Smice says !hat
!he Ohio Pat;rolmen's Benefit Association is a ~gitimate organi- will change f6r !he next couple of
zatlon, but Shenff Soulsby stated that he feels-that the BSSA memdays.
bership is more beneficial.
-. '
A cold front will become nearly
'
"
stationary tonight jtlst to !he west
of Ohio. This will keep scattered
. 't·" ·
.
. Un l ...
showers .and thunderstorms over

By Jack Anders..on .

WASHINGTON - When sav- and Alan
D-ca1if:
ings and loan regulators raided lhe
"There's another piece lhat
ruinsofDavidPaul'sCentrustSav- clon'tknow,"Paulsaid."The
ings Bank in Florida, lhey came was cut, you understand. Riegle,
away with a van full of .internal who is .from Michigan, got the
documenrs and a half-dozen taped chairmanship of the banking comphone conversations. In one of miitee when Cranston was next 4t
those conversations, Paul boasted . line for it, under lhe condition that
of ~ider knowledge of lhe Senate Riegle would defer to ~top on
Banking Committee, the congres- the issues dealing with California
sional overseersofhis industry. ' thrifts."
·
The setting was early 1989. Paul
The Senate Banking Committee
was a year away from rock bottom was indeed Cranston's f6r lhe rakwhen federal reg_ulators would ing that year, but he aUowed Riegle
seize liis thrift and announce lhat to grab the reins. When we con•
he bad been using it as a ·~persoll!!i frontell both of lhem with Paul's
piggy bank," and that his "insa- v~ion of events, they denied lhilt
liable vanity and greed" bad con- a~~eal was ever struck. Cranston
tributed to llle thrift's $1.7 billion told us he didn't take the chairmanfailure.
ship because he hBd his bands full .
In 1989 lhe Federal Horne Loan as Majority Whip. And he said, ''l
Bank Bo~ was looking to clamp . have never Rsk~ R:ie~le to defer to
down on thti~ts and their risky me Rn ~ny &lt;;abf~rn•a S&amp;L ma.t- ·
junk-bond investmenrs. It was the ·ter. Rtegle :i,ch•ef of staff sa1d
last thing Paul wanted.
Paul's .claim was "nonsense and
In a recorded telephone conver- absurd on_ irs face."
sation with one of his Washington . Whe~e woula Paul have gotten
lobbyists, Paul was told lhat there h•s verston of lh.e ~eal? The reconds
was little ehance of derailing the s~IZed.. from Paul showed that he
new rules unless a prominent sena- and Cranston exchanged chummy
tor leaned on llle bank board mem- mail. And, in llle same conversabers.
tion wilh the lobbyist, Paul implies
Paul offered his own insight into ·he ~nd Cr~nston sa~ each oilier
two Senate Banking Committee soc•ally. I was w1th Alan the
members, Don Riegle, D-Mich., other night," Paul said, after drW-

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

'S~te Sheriff's Associition conducrs a membership drive each year
for associircmemb¢rs. The.cost of menibership in the BSSA is $25
·per year and members rcce1ve (in 1992) a $3,000 atcidenlal dealh

Did~Fiorid-a--th-rift-ha-ve-·i-nsidec_track ~

Think of Ibis column as a white
How would you like to be lying
flag that I am waving at media in your bunker, half asleep after a
bashers: I want a temPorary truce long day of standini guard, and
until I can me an unfairness com- have somebody lob this stinketof.a
plaint with the Urtited Nations.
headline at you: SIMPSON, INTO
I have fought the good fildtt for BATTLE. Y~,; it refers to Sen.
well over two dccactes and f don't Alan Simpson, R-Wyo., lhe comthink it would be an exaggeration pone cowboy who tnJS!ted CNN's
to say I've held my own. I hav.e , Peter Arnett for risking his life to
L. Felton
became
woman .to be fought honorably, which is not a n;portlhe.J!eWS from Baghdad dur·
sealed in tbo u.s. Senate. (Mra. Felton, a Democrat, wa5 appointed to · compliment that can fairly be paid ing lhe Persian Gulf War.
serve out the remaining~ of 1bomas E. WatsQn.)
.
· my foe - and I am not talking
Simpson says he is writing a
In 1941, SO ye1111 ago, Adolf Hitler delivered a ~h in Berliil in about average citizens who feel book about the press that promises
whlcb he .aid Ruaia had been "broken," and would ' neva- rise again." ·aggrieved by media malfeasance. a~ be ''very different from what the
.Jn 1941, the movie "The Maltese Falcon" -the version starring Their comments and criticisms are preas perceives itaelf to be." It's
HUrnolueY Bopitllld directed by John Huston - opened in New Yll'lc.
always welCome.
not that he scares anybody armed
·1n"lll4'2, Prelident Frln.klin D. R001evelt established lhe Office of
No I refer to the cruel relent- with facrs. But you've got to don
EOaaomlc Stabilization and authorized conuols on farm prices, renrs, less, Professional media baihera - your gas mask and fend off mism~ of lhc Secret Coalition ci siles lhat srneU like roaea eggs and
ril,eiiiiCIIIIIries.
·(II 1944, duriq Wortd War U, U.S. rroops craclced the Siegfried Line
Hairsplitters ' Meatheads and I'm gelling 100 old for iL
nort11 ol AIChen, Germany.
·
Unbalanced ~ and KooksThen
the SCHMUCKS
la 195$ "faploin Klnproo" and "The Mickey Mouse Club" pre- who make their living ltolllping the .,launched stink ~~~ No. 2. I can
mieniiCII CBS lid ABC. mpectlvely.
press. I intend to report the barely talk about ~~ but here goes:
11111160, ''Tile Andy Orif&amp;h Show" premienlil on CBS. .
• SCHMUCKS to the United Nations Oliver North bas become a syndi·
·JD lNI, 30 yeua.-aao, "The Dick Van Dyke Show," also starring for employing instruments of war- cated coiiiiiUiisL Yes, lhc same -lit. , . ~Tyler Moen, !lillie hi debut oa CBS.
fare that were outlawed at tile Sec- tie Napoleon who has been pum• , 1J1 1962, iiltiOOaut WallY. Schim blasted off from Cape Canaveral ond Hague Peace Conference in meling the press for five .years has
i907.
_now been thrust upon ~- Ollie is a
' abcilnl theSJimA VD on a nme-hour flight
·
,
Ia 1974, Prink Roblason was named major league basel&gt;illl's first . I speak of chemical weapons. ~God·'!elp-me-bear-thls·burden)
Specilically, stinl&gt; bomM.
. JOumillist.
b1aCt """• 1 as be was placed in charge of the Cleveland lndialls.
•

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Cranston:

,;

Thuraday, .October 3, 1991

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Page.-4

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· By The Associated Press
·The AL East is over, and Toron· • t~ was celebrating while Boston
lo~ked back at what might have
been.
''This team has been called
choker in the past." Roberro Alomar said ·Wednesday night after
Toronto beat California 6-5 and
clinched its second division tide in
three years .... But that doesn't fit
this team. There are too many new
faces around here."
·
'The Blue Jays, who open the
AL playoffs at Minnesora on Tues·

.

.

S co •·e boa •· d
l'hiladolpllia, 3~ Fnnoo. New Yook. 30;
~ SID l'nacioeo. )I; Lefi'Ub, San
Di'l•· 22; B. Land!um, Pilllbwrsh, 17;

In tbe majors...
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EutemiMva.ton
Tum
W L Pet.
•·l'illlbwJh """" 96 63 .604
SLI....U .......... 84 7S 328
New Yak
....... 76 82 .481
l'llllldelpltia ""'" 76 83 .478
OU..ao
......... 74 8J .471
MO&lt;IliOOI
......... 70 81 .443

Davo Smlih.

Gl
12
195
20
21
2S3

w.wn Dl•la&amp;oa
Twa
W L Pet.
Atlanta
........... 92 67 .S79
Loo Aopl.. '"'" 92 67 .S79
San llicao ........ II 71 509
Clndnaall - · 74 I$ M$
San..........., ...... 73 86 .4S9
._
......... 64 9S .403

GB
II
II
!9
~.21

1-clincbed divial.on dtle

Wednesday's scores

St.l.alil6. Matlftl&amp;l4

-1

HOUI'-1111, SanPrmdlcoS

·

ou..

1, Pllillddpbia 0
Allanf: '· ClndaulJ 3
New Yak 9, PiaoburJJ&gt; 6, 11 imiftp

I

I

Son Dqo 9, lAo An..... 4

Today's games
No I""" ldlodulod
Sl Louis (Towbbwy 1 t-12.) atO!iclao
(Su&amp;clilfo 6-S), 3;20 ~m.
New Yak (V;.Ja 13:15) 111'1tilldclpltia
(Bnnlley :1-2), 7:3S p.m.
Montreal (Nabholr: 1-7) at Pittabwah
(Dnbok ll· l4), 7:3S pm.
H...,.. (!udal 0.1) It AlliD~ (AYoey
17-1~ 7:40pm.
'

Clncblnad (lrcnmlna 1._13)' at San

Dtta• ( M - 7·$), tt:l! p.m.

Lao Anpl• (R. Monlnezl7· ll) • San
F~ (Block 11 ·16),10:3l ~m.

EaolomDI•Ioloo
Team
W L PeL
.a-Torcnw ........ 19 70 ..S60
Booton
.......... 84 74 .S32
D&lt;uoh
........... II Tl .SI3
Milwautco ...... 79 79 .lllO
Now Yak
....... 69 19 .437
Baltimore
........ 66 91 .• 11
cte..wod _ 5I 113 .)41

GB
4.l
7.S
9.l
19.l
22..5
l:U

W4ftera DI•Won
WLPd.
1! ,,,.~ 94 6') $99

14
13
13
12
11

Chieaao
.........
o.tland
.........
T..•
...........
Kanlu Cily .......
Seolllo
...........

--n.

Colili&gt;nlia

73
76
76
Tl
71

_

GB

.l3l
.l22

10
12

.ll6

12
13
14
17

.sn
509

......... 71 81 -491

· - divilioo lillc.

..._

0-~

~aLOI~!,~·n.in
l

TodaJ'I pmtt

~ (Moaio 1..12 OUid

Tapooi
16-9) .. a.J.... (MoDo...u 17·10 .....
Hibbanlll·lll. ~ 1:3$ ~m.
B•ltimore (Ballard 6~11) 11 New
YodlDotro!t
(lolnon
p.m. II Booton
(C:.i ~!~.!:'
'
19-9)
(Monon 6-4~ 7:Jl ~m.
Mllwaukll (Naurro 14·12) at
Cto.olud (liwtodell ,.1$), 7:35 p.no.

1

FddaJ'acam•

Cte.,laod (8lll01u 3-4) at N •

Yorlt (Mlllll·l), 7131 p.a.

Douoll (Aid!N 2-4) It Baltlmoro
(Muoaaa 4-l), 7:Jlp.m.
MUwnll• (,_.c 2· 7) at Botklel
~,.,~ 7:35 , ....

'1'- ( _ , . . 14-1)" Mln·
-ll'loaale OO).I:QI p.m.
~UJWiflll - 10)

at Tun

(B"'i".!!~'ti- J.C) .. Calilm-

llia (l'loloJ 11-9),10: .......
~ G~~Nah 9-9J "s..w.oam·

,.,,..0}",10:l5p.m. .

NadotWLupe

' BATTINO - hdlll•""'· A~aata,
.319; Morrla, Cloclau~llt T.
o..,.., !10 ~ .SI7; oo, Saa
, ......... .SI3; J - II. ....,a, .306;
.....-.an · d' .-. hdDa. Pkii-

LoL-.

.....,JOO;~-. .lllll.

"allNS - .....
112;
Jolualoo, N•• Yolk, 101; laadb.J,
Ciii... 101: lkallla. ~ 1110;

!l":!!.~ f7; ~-II. 1Aaia, "'
}'bMt.
"iJiNew Yolk. Ill; W.
.. p t a, 114; ...._,...
(lUI, A....,a,

•!--~~e&amp;oa., Adaata,liS;

.. . . lA AaiiiM. 111; .... Sl. ......

·e•12:
......111:
cr•&lt;~••••:t!:~oolll•,
•
PMJ,
169; T.
· .,.,..,
Dlaao. 161; S10dbora.
'Of
....
'. il{,;w - Boolllo, Pilokrolo,
~11L l..oW,.40; O'Ntll, CtoclotaaU. H1 Zelle, St Loull, 34; Ia be,
CIMIUIII, 341 Oaal, Atllll\1, J.4;
U.~lol

'IUU!I - L.llf.... SI.IAaia, l l;

T. aw.-, ... Diop, II; P!aloJ, "''- . II; L tlonrot- H_.., 9; Oria·
, - I I W. 9; - -· Allooa, I ; l
..... 111l117.
'
BOMB IUNJ - loha1oa, N•w
Yolk. :II;
Sc F 1
O; Goal! Adaau, 31; lloOrill; Sao
~ 3 ; p.,..., Cbleaao, l ; w.
Claik, laa Pruciuo, 21; 0 1NIIIt1
1 " . . . .......,..... """"""

Jtloa·-

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:11. ITOLIN lAID-~~

a.i. Ttl 11-. ""- 12: D a 1J&amp;,
I'

I 'H; LaoWtol. II. I.Gola, 44;

.-. ....... Q-,_Loo,._.
.CJoo,SI;a...i.N.-Y-.~•·
mc:HIMOi" •d ,_...,
......... I.. ,,., Ulllllllq,
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'I 1
•

ll. Fairloom 18; 16. 1!uclid 11; 17. Cuuon

McKinley 13.

3. SL Mary, Memorial(!) S-0........... .262
4. 11eloi1 W"' BnDch (3) S·O............243
S. Solm l-0 ....................................... .178
6. Miami Tnool.O ............................. l39
1. Uniontown Lake S-O....................... In
I. ,.,.,_lh (I) 5-1- - -61
9. Aban HoiNn 4-l .............................. l!
10. RaylandBuckoyoO.l ...................... S2
Olllw• racelwlna 12 or •or•./iolnto
11. Youn&amp;~town Chaney (1) 9: 12.
Columbus BGeehcroft 43; 13. Louilville

32;. 14. Umo ~hawn,. 24; IS. Riohfield
R...., (1) 23; 16. MuyM!le !!; 17 (tie),
Oolhen, VInton County, Dradc:n Tri·
Volley 16.

Ue~ ·

tcdl, B01tan, 12--4, .750, 3.29; Ericbon,
MinnOIOU, 19-1, .704, 3.%7; l,.anpWn,
C1lifomil , 11·1, .692, 3.0S; Wcam•n,

Mll,..ut..._ ll-7, .612, 2.15; M. M...._
Oaklan.d, 17-1, .610, 2.96; GulUWon,
o.ao;&amp;, 19-9, .619, 3.90; Finley, Colifornia, 11·9, .667, 3.89; Cltmem, 801\0rt,
11·9, .667, 2.54; Rym, Touo, 1:1-6, .667,
2.93.
STIUKEOilfS - Clan...., lloolon ,
231 ; R. Joha1on, Se~ltl•, 226; R.yan,
Teu1, 193; McDowall, Chica&amp;o, Ill;
La.npton, CaU!ornia, 173; Cudioni, .
T_.., 16'7; • - . C1mlaad, to.
SAVES - Han-oy, California, 45 ;
l!cl"'t.y, Oaldaold, 43; Apiloro, Min·
'ncllo«.a, 41; Rcudcel, 801ton, 40; Mont·
JOIMil• Kanau Cl11, 33; Hria.. Toron·
... 3l: otlon. Ballimo!o, 31.

Dlvlslonm
Team
Pll.
I. CAP!! (19) S-0................................32S .
l. ........ ($) S.t-- -- ---.154

3. Bucyruo (2) S-0....................... ........201
MU.Ya (2) l.O .............................. lil
l.(2) l-0 ............................ 171
6. Maotor lAb C.lholi&lt; (2)4-1........ .169
~.

i:~=~Y'..l_:ll::::l~

9. K-'"aAhor4-1 ...........................13
10. CindMoliPWoollMWn(2)l-0 ...71

Othm rtcal'llna ll or more polntat
11. You.apton MooDcy 57; 12. Ut.i.c•
(I) 55; 13. Girard (I) 31; 14. Oud.......
\.ell Indian Vllley V ; 15. Abon St. Ym·
cei.at-SL Mary 24; l4. YwaplOWn Unu·
Uno 21; 11. Twinabuta Chnbcdin 19:
11. SL PW Onhom f6; 19. Springfield
Kenton Ridao 1S.

Transactions

Division IV

waived Guy l..cmanl, CII'\Y:r.
HOUSTON ROCKETS - Si8ned
Cut Hcmn., forward.
INDIANA PACERS - Signed
Randy Wittman and Grq Onnt., flard&amp;;
Ore1 Dr.illna. center. f&gt;oua Roth and
Clifford Martin, forward• : 1nd Sean

TPb.
1. WUI'III Kmocdy (24) l-0.............. 33&lt;1
1 Lenin Cwviow (4) S-0................249
3. Aban - - ( 1 ) 5·0..............239
4. Ccnpbcll-.orialO.I ................. 204

S. BcllvilloOwFodt (1) S-0 ............ 1110
6, -villoC.lholi&lt;: (I)S·O.. :.....l89

o-....W·fotWIII!. .
Lin ANGBI.ES CUPPBRS -

7. Su1m1i1 S11. t:.iddftaHII. (I) S-0 ...117
I. Sp&lt;in!lfiold C.tholi&lt;:(1) 4-1 ............ .l2
9. ll&lt;dwoocl4-1 ................................ .49
11. _
.. EUt

Sipd llllioli'wry, LOS ANGBLI!'s LAKERS - Acquired Sedllo Threttt, anrd from the
S•attle Su.pcrSDniCI for ICCOnd•tOUftd
droll ohol ... in 1994, 199S and 1996.
Waived M)'chal 'Thm~p1on, caner, and

l·•·-----.48

Othtrt: rtetiYiftl 1l or mort polntl:

11 . Toronlo 4.5: 11. Carey (1) 36; 13.
w.............. 3$; 14. Columbuo !lullcy
30; 1l . s • ....- Ganwoy 21; 16. Mui·
.., ElJjn (2) 21; 17. Bloomdale Elmwood
23 ; 11. Mootpollor (10) 19; 19.
Columbi..,. Cn&gt;ilview (I ) II; 21l (tie).
.....b0td.Gate1Millallawbol7.

Waived

S.....,_B.....,,r-w.

NI!W YORE KNICII:S - Tnded
Maurice Choeb,auard, to the Atlanta
Hawb fcwTinl McConnick, cater.
0RU.ND0 MAGIC - Siped Cui•
Coodtiaol, ......

•

T-

SACPJ.lob!Nro II:INOS - SiJn..t
Raady BffiWn. pud, 10 a two-yeu con-

w-..

Division V

Pta.

I. Mitow(23) S-0 .............................34:1
2. McDonald (S) S-0 ...........................303
3. Miildlaowo l'alwiok (4) l -0..........24!&gt;
4. Cintinolli - . . ..... S-0 ............. .2113
Mol- (1) l.O .............................. 181
6. Newul; C:,.lltolic (1) 0.1 ................. 112
7. WO&lt;Ntor..td (1) S-0........................ HJ
I. Marion l'lou*'t (1) S-0............ ........91
9. Wellovlllo(l)4· 1 .............................11
10.11.11. Blum.. s-o .............................

SAN ANTONIO SPURS - Sianed
"""
Tom Oarric:k, au-rd. and Paul MokOW,

-·

Division n

1 s-.;u. (12) s.o .....................316

30. •

~jJRs'iy NETS -

'

'
PtJ.
1. FooiO&lt;il (II) S-(&gt;.............................343

STOLEN BASBS - R. Alomn,
TOlUlto, 53; R. Hmdcnm, Olkland, 53;
Rlin•, OUcaao. 50; Polonia, California,
41; Cu~llll', Detroit., 41; franco, Te1111,
34; Whit' T....,., 3l.

s.

vr.,....

WASHINGTON BULLETS
Siped DaYill
lt'IJIL

___

INDIANAJIOLIS COLTS - SiJned
Jtck LiM, oft•aivt u.ckJo, and Bob
.. tiplM laloaaod Comell Hol·

.....,,...,

LOS ANGBLBS RAIDERS PlaoadMaoo.Wiloan,......,..bacll, on
... pnc:tieo ......
• "MIAMIDOIJ'IIINS - Woived Bri·
tel Soollia, defniV'II end.

Othtn rectl•lnt:ll or ftMN'I points:
11 (tic). Columbi1n1, S1ndusk1 S1.
Muy'o lS; 13. Solxins ~ 3::; 14.
Cinam•ti Coull")' Day29; ll (..). Doli·
anc:oApmtWc (1), Ddplg: St.John'&amp;
23; 17. South a..- s...~11. Fn:mont SL loaoph 11; 19. Unioo Cirf
Miuluioan Vllloy 1l; :10. Codarvillo
14.

.,,

PIIOI!NIX CARDINALS - Sicned

1)1¥1 DlleDoo, ufd.y, an4 Mike Brmnan,
\KkJ&amp;. Placed Jtoblrt MuJoy, dcfO\JiVC
biiCk 011 inj..,. ~

BEREA; Ohio (AP) - This
National Football League season
appears to be another total washout
for Lawyer Tillman, the Oeveland
Browns' often injm;ed wide receiver.
·.
/
Since the 6-foot-5, 230-pound
Tillman was Cleveland's second·
round draft cboice OUI of Auburn in
1989, he has caught six passes for
70 yards.
· He will miss the entire season
for the second straight year 'IIIith a
stress fracture in his left anlde that
he keeps re-injuring, the Browns
announced Wednesday. .

• Hockey

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentluel Cormpondent
The Meigs Marauders will .. be
looking for their third win in a row
Friday evening .when the Federal
Hocking Lancers invade Bob
Roberts Field.
The Lancers head iniO the game
with an 0-5 mark and are still look·
ing for their first win in two years.
.The Lancers are coached by seconct
year head coach Mark Fortney.
Last week the Lancers jumped
out to a 8~ lead in the firSt quarter,
and held.a 8-7 lead at the end of the
ftrst period. But 6 Federal Hocking
turnover~ helped l~ad Con!JUOn
:Valley to a 42-8 win.
: . ~ng the Lancers is 6-l, 175
'JIOtlbd senior quarterback Matt
Harris who threw for 549 yards last
'season. Joining Harris in the back·
fteld is 6-1, 170 pound junior raiJ.
;back Chris Viney and 5-9, 155
pound junior Jason Place.
• The Lancers are the type of
ltam that just need a win under the
belt to tttm the program around,
Jike the- footbaU team the Lancer
•basketball team went under years
:of hard times, but last year they
:oosled a TVC championship tum·
;lng the program around overnight.
.This is the brW: that Fortney and
;his crew is looking for, the win lhat
•will turn the Lancer program
:around.
, Federal Hocking might be visit·
·lng Bob Roberts Field at the wrong
:time as the. Marauder look to even
:It's record at 3·3. After struggling
the fmt three weeks of the season
ithe Marauder offense seems to be

PHARMACY
TOPICS
BY YOUR

SWISHER LOHSE
.PHARMACISTS

VCR-TV
Repair Center

-r.rDaa_...,.
..
NOl111

ltiiNIIEJOTA
STARS AI...... ••••lldtala, loft ........
~"I'm
'a II lhtla-sd •d IW.e,

t.,;.,. YO~ QLANDBU -Hallin
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~I'LYIIU - Io&gt;·

... u.-.-t,r:--....._,
.......... r.:==·
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.....,.!!'=a,._.r..;,...,

FACTORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE
Goldsta~

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Zenith

Funai
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Philco

Emerson
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Shin tom ·Magnavox.
Multi Tech GE
Scott
R(A

Rauarch In Zurich, Swllllrland lndlcataa a correlation lietweitn
migraine end depression. Ueual routa, uy tha scientists, uema
to .~e anxiety dlsordera In the young taana, than migraine, then
depr111lon.
·
·
·

.,t•T.
LOlliS IUli!S - bod 't
cW' =an,aMuQed
p

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

d

'Hiib)'

~.waNCJ!qN c.utTALS- Ito-

. .... J. . ...,,Jaf
r , toCcmwaD af ~· O.udo LoaJuo. Aulanod
1 -...... loll w8 to Bllllmoio .t

~

c

•• ·

"

'•

'

.'•

'

I!

Frldai'•aames

·

~ederal Hocking at Meigs
:Vinton County at Nelsonville· York
'Trimble at Alexander
:Miner 8l linesville Rosecrans
iWellaton
• open .
.

•

..

\1
!i~
~,

.

Senior tight end Shawn Hawley
is Phalin's favorite receiver. Hawley has pulled in 16 passes for 206
yards. Seaior split· end Kevin
Muss.,er ha$· six catches for 179
yardS; while Blake has pulled in 6
passes for 93 yards.
Cremeans leads the Marauder
defense with 55 tackles out of his
linebacker position, while Bloke
has added 53 from his defensive
bact Jl!&gt;Sition.
.
. .
Fnday night is homecommg m
Marauaer land. kickoff for the
gam.e !s. 7:30 with hpmecoming
festivities geuipg under away
around 7 p.m.
·

..

..
·COUNTRY FAlR l:~ .

~~

'\

'\.

. On Co'urt Street
·

,,~

~\

'

· "\~ '

Sponsored by the
. Pomeroy Merchnnls Associntion

1;;

,,.,..,.,
. ~.,~.......... :.1'!-:.:t-:.."lj:t~.. ~'''Ill
',,..!!.~,~~
. ' e~\11\';.1'... . -('~-:.~";
\.,.~' ; (Q_. .. :~':"illi!.~~·{ ~.~~~...,\~Ji!'r.·

~,t~".;:~·r,

.

'
:

.

'·.

senior is 35 of 92 on the year foF
503 yanls.

'

••

•

#:~ SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12 -~~
~~
10:00 a.m. ·4~00 p.m~ · ·
~

.
• •• *.
You'll alWays get good health ad~lce from the pharmacists at...

.. AmooliloD - · Liap.

in high gepr at the midway point of
tho season.
Senior fullback Frank Blake is
coming off of two consecutive 144
yard rushing and four touchdown
performances. The 5·71 !51 pound
senior on the season has canied the
ball 68 times for 434 yards (6.4
yards a carry) and 9 touchdowns.
.Joining Blake in the backfield is S9, 168 pound junior Mike·Cremeans, Cremeans has carried 27
times for 119 yards an avemg~ of
4.4 yards a carry.
Jeremy Pbalin like the rest of
the inaroon and ~old offense
expiQded last,wed: hitting 10 of 14
passes for 169 yards and Jwo
touchdowns. 'ryte S-11, 209 pound

~Jl

Ttitanue moat often develope not from the proverbial ruaty nail,
·but from minor houaehold lnJurlea. Doctors recommend everyone
be Immunized against tetanu1, with a booster shot every 1o
yaara.
.

POMEROY,
OHIO
.

••

One of those experts IS Dr.
James Andrews of Birmingham,
Ala., who's biggest claim to fame
is getting Bo Jackson back in
action from what was believed.to
be a career-ending hip injury.
Andrews has also treated Buffa·
lo Bills defensive end Bruce Smith
for a knee injury and Dallas Cow' .;1
boys quarterbaclt J'roy Aikman for ·
a shoulder and-elbow injury.
·
Dye sai!J Tillman has also been
Down by the Browns 10 Indianapo· (See TILLMAN on Page 8)

!~ :!~ ~~ . (o"'' HERBAL HARVEST~
. d·:.
3. 1o·.
an

••••••

Though lt'a moally femele t11ri1 'who. ar• deficient In .lr,on,
Phyafclan and Sport1111edlclne megazlna repor,ta that many
young melta may also below In Iron, llmhlng •ntrgy 111d eporte
performance. Puberty and atranuoua axarclu may cau" tha
deficiency.
·

HOME ENTERTAINMENT E~TER

391 WEST MAIN STREET
. 992·3524

'
••

three experts in addition 10 Browns
team physician Dr. John Be~eld.

1

WE REPAIR ALL. MAKES

·

Tillman, reached at home
Wednesday in Mobile, Ala., told
The .(Cleveland) Plain Dealer he
remains confident he will make a
comeback.
In regard to the possibility of
having the ankle surgtcally repaired
for a third time, Tillman said: "I'm
going to sit down and talk 10 my
parents about it I'll just try 10 get
this thing worked out and hopefully
it will tum out for the best.' •
According to Tillman's agent,
Pat Dye Jr. (son of the Auburn
football coach), Tillman's hard-tosolve case is .being handled by

TOUCHDOwN:- Kevin MuM (Mi4, oa around) 1'11111 hlto tile
end zone for a toticbdown after puUin1 Ill a niae yerd pass rrom
· quarterback Jeremy Pbalin In last weeks 41-:ZZ Manuder win over
(OveraU)
Trimble. Musser Is the Marauder -d·le)ldlaa receiver with six
;:ream .
W L ~~~ ~! catehes for 179 yards aad two touchdown.s. (Photo by Dorsel
•:Vinton County ......5 0
Thomas)
:NelsonviUe' York ..4 I 171 67
;Belpre...................A I ~~ !~ -~~;;.~~rr(t:;;-Jr-~~~~1;·r·ca~~~~~;tl.::==e··-~i.~
, Melp ................;...2 3
:Wellston ................! 3
·::rrimble .................! 4
•'Alexander............. .! 4
;Miller .................... ! 4 37 '198 ,11
~
:Federal Hocking....O 5 36 143
~
,.
~
•
. ~'I
~
-:'
(Conference)
• ·'ream
W L PF PA
~~iniOn County ......3 0 9S
6
,Nelsonville-York ..3 0 122 , 15
~Belpre ....................3 I 127 26
i:M~ip ....... - ..........2 2 85 110
· 'rrimble ................ .! 2 56 81
&gt;Miller ................... :1 3 37 148
8 75
1;bJexancJer..............o 2
ifederal Hocking..:.o 4 36 143
HERBS • CRAFTS· REFRESt:tMENlS ·:i~
••Wellston·..............o o o o !~
''' Not competing in league
~ I
~~
'
play in
In Th~ Large ~ini Park
•i!
J991

• J(OIIM, . .. ,

loll..._-,;-., ... Ollodo -

•

'•

.:.TVC
'
grid standings
.

There'• 1 mini baby boom going on In the United Statea, with
more .than 4 million blrtha eitlmatecl for lalt year, the blggell
number alnce1864. One reeson 11 thattlte.blblea of the last baby
boom are now of chlld·bNrlng
aga.
.
'
Ill II e Ill 1 :111

••••••

Dol-.

rill'•
A ' w~o~c\;n;- ~ ~

Cincinnati Reds, who lost 6·3. Peadleton'• :
mant thl-Ow aUowed Chris Sabo to-reach rust~
and two ruu to score. (AP).
·

Meigs seeking&lt;
third straight victory in
homecoming game vs. Federal Hocking

iBArn.t! SI!AIIAWKS - Slcn..t

Nad..,.lllookOl'IAopt
BDIIONTON OILERS - Tndcd
~ Stml Smi&amp;h. dcf'neman, 10 tho CUcaao
BlactluwU for Dave Manson, dcfcruomaa, ltld a drat\ cbolce. Traded Kc!nn1
Uu=a·, c.allr, to 1M TCDIIIO Maple
latafcw&amp;bn
'dnrixa
IIAilll'OilD WKAlJIIIS - T...w
Duo Bv11aa, c•w. 1a llle Saa Jote

sweet to go btlCk home aDd y;t in
first place or maybe cliDch it' ·
If diere is a tie, it :will be Monday night at Los Angeles (10:35
p.m. EDT).
. .
E~ in the NL, it was St
Louis 6, Mootreal 4; Houston 7;
San Francisco 5; Chicago I, .
Philadelphia 0; and New York ·9,
Pittsbmgb6in lloinnings. .
· Cubs 1, !'billies 0 .
'Greg MadduJt l,litch,ed ·a three- .
~itter and di'ove m the only run ·
with a single as Chicago beat
Philadelphia at Veterans Sradium.
It was Maddux's second shutout
and sixth complete game of the
seasbn.
·
Mell!l, Pirates 6
Kevin McReynolds hit a thrccrun homer in the 11th inning off
Bob Patterson to lift New York
over Pittsburgh at Three Rivers
Sradium. The Joss cost the Pirates·
(96·63) a chance at wirining 100
games.
OOPS! - Atlanta first sacker Sid Bream
Cardinals 6, .Expos 4
I~ the gdp oo lbe lheJhrow from third base·
Felix Jose-hit a three-run-homer · maD ,'Perry Pendleton In the first luning or
and Lee Smith recorded his 47th
~ednesdey nlglll's a••e agalust thttllost
save to extend his NL record for
saves as St. Louis beat Montreal at
Busch Sradium.
Astros 7, Giants 5
Craig Biggio and Andujar Cedeno esch drove in two runs as Housron beat San Francisco at Candle:
stick. The last-place Astros won the
series 2-1. tying the season series at
9-9.

Tillman's injuries forcing hi~ to .
miss another campaign with Bro~ns

-

'

'

\

By JIM DONAGHY
AP Baseball Writer
After ,several failures coming
down the stretch in recent years,
the Toron10 Blue Jays really don't
care what's said about them. This
season, they're the champions of
the American League East.
They made it official Wednes-. ·
day night with a ~-5 victory over
California at a soldout SkyDome.
The Blue Iays were rolling
along in July with an eight-game
lead. And the margin still was six
in August But a seven-game losing
streak brought Toronto hack to the
pack and inro a race. with Boston
and Detroit.
It wasn't exactly a case of the
Blue Jays grabbing control of the
divillion, but mther the Tigers and
Red Sox collapsing in September.
To complicate matters for the
Blue Jays, manager Cito Gaston
missed 33 games with a disc injury.
During GasiOn's absence, interim
manager Gene Tenace guided the
club to a 19-14' record and maintained a 2 1/2-game lead.
"Gene did an excellent job,"
Blue Jays general manager ·Pat
Gillick said. "But Ciro has been
here a long time and sometimes I
think he's gotasixth sense."
He also has two division tides.
'
TASTE OF VIC'FORY - Toronto's Candy MaldQDado
poun a
When Gaston took over for the cau of beer on teammate Joe Carter (left) iD the locker room followfU'ed Jimy Williams in early 1989, . iug the Blue Jays' 6·5 victory over the visiting California Angels.
he wasn't sure he wanted the job. The win secured lbe American League East title for the Jays, who
And after Toronto's division-win- wUI face the Minnesota Twins In the America11 League Champining '89 season, Gaston was pretty onship Series. (AP) '
•
,
sure he didn't want to stay on as
manager when Oakland prevailed
nandez's moodiness.
tor to the offense atong Wltll t:arter,
in the playoffs.
"Driving in 100 is definitely a Alomar and Devon White. White's
But h~ did stay on, managing
the Jays to a disa)lllOinting second- milestone," said Carter, whose 33 defense in center field has also
place finish last season. After miss· homers are two shy of his career been top notch.
The starting rotation lost ace
m~ 33 games, GastOn decided man- high. "But it's more lhan just that
usually
going
to
win
a
lot
of
It's
D~v~ Stieb in the first half, but
agmg is a wonderful life.
Gllhck went out and obtained
''Maybe three years ago, when I ballgames for a team."
Toronto lacked a reliable bat in knucldeballer Tom Candiotti from
didn't want to lake the job, it would
have )&gt;een time to leave," said lefi field until Candy Maldonado the Itidians. The key to the Blue
Gaston, who returned to the dugout arrived in August, third baseman Jays' survival, however, has been
Friday. "I like the job. Everyday's Kelly Gruber missed most of the rookie Juan Guzman (10-2).
Toronto's bullpen of Tom
a challenge. You really satisfy firSt half with a painful right hand,
and
the
batting
average
of
John
Henke,
Duane Ward and Mike
yourself when you can get some of
Olerud
McGriff's
replacement
Timlin was virtually unbeatable in
the problems."
The major change in the Blue at rust base - was .203 in mid- the first half. But overwork and
.
injuries left the pen vulnerable in
Jays this season came when Gillick June.
But Olerud got hot in the second August and September.
·
made an uncharacteristic blockbuster trade last December, sending half and became a major contribu'
.
Fred McGriff and Tony Fernandez
to San Diego for Joe Carter and
Roberto Alomar.
Carter leads the Blue Jays with
33 homers and 108 RBis and Alomar is batting near .300 with 41
doubles. Alomar's defense at second base has also beea outstanding
and he has 53 steals.
Carter hasn't missed a game,
played above-average defen3C and
brought a feeling of harmony into a
clubhouse that suffereit in the past
from George Bell's timdes and Fer-

Jim stow, delcrtlive md.

... oto... 106;

102; ~~; ...... Chicaa•.

Ita: ........ 1'1..-p, 99; s..-,.

r

11. Toledo SL Jolon'• 36; 12. Piqua Jl;
13. DWiin :ZS; 14. MuulitJd Madiooo 23;

FoolbaU
Na.-tr_n....,..

· Major league leaders

......... Ill; -

..-011111111 rtcthlnJ lZ or more. polnll:

Tum

Collapsing
BoSox, Detroit
helpful to Jays

""'s ihe saf.n~ goes, it's not man (13-7). Scou Bankhead (3~
over until it's over, • he said. "And was the winner for Seattle (~1-78),
now it's over."
which bad never before won more
In other games, Milwaukee beat lhan 78 games. . .
Cleveland 11-4, Seaale beat Texas
Royals 16, Athl~tles 5
4-3, Kansas City beat Oakland 16-5
Danny Tartlibull hit a two-run.
and New York beat Baltimore .!1.3.
lriple that gave him his third tOOBrewen 11, Iodius 4
· RBI season, and Jim Eisenreich
Cleveland set a team record with drove in four runs as Kansas City
its 103rd loss, blowing a tJuee.run got 16 hits and rallied from a fivelead as visiting Milwaukee-scored run deficit. Ron Darling (3-7) lost
four runs in the seventh and five 'in his seventh straight decision for the
the eighth. Chock Crim (8·5) was visiting A's, allowing six runs and
the winner and Darrell, Holmes seven hits in five innings. Steve
pitched three innings for his third Crawford (3·2) was the wilmer.
save. Doug Jones (4-8) was the
Yankees 4, Orioles 3
loser. Willie Randolph went !-for· · Steve Sax homered-off tile left5, dropping his avmge two points · freld foul pole in the eighth inning
10.330. •
against Mike Flanagan (2~ 7) at
Marmen 4, Rangen 3
Yankcc Sradium. Leo Gomez had
Visiting Seattle. clincbed the tied the score 3-3 in the top of-the
firSt .500 record in its 15-year his- inning off Greg Cadaret (8-6).
tory be~ind Dave Valle's two-run Steve Farr got threej)~ts.:.f.!1rJ!is
double m the seventh off Jose Guz- - 22nd save.

By The Associated Press .
Strawberry, who hit his 28th horiler
Ilven the Los Angeles Dodgers and ckove in three runs against the
.&lt;are finding a way to remember Padres. "They've got nothing 10
,19Sl. They':: be jus_t heading for play for oow."
another play .
The Padres beat the Dodgers
• Forty ]Cars ago today, the with perhaps th\1 $trangeal "big"
j)rooldyn Dodgers lost the NL pen- . inning of the season. San Diego.
nant to the New Yak Giants when parlayed two bunt singles, three
,'Bobby Th010son hit his home run mfield hits, two singles 10 the OUI·
"n the ninth innin~. The Giants, field, a groundout and a throwing
;now of San Franc1sco, will have ·emr by fi(St basemaD Eddie Mur· .
'~omething to say about the out- ~ay into six .~uD$:Jn ,tbe e!ghth .
.come of this race, too..
ml\ing to snap a 3-3 de. . · . · · ·
• The NL West is all even after
"That was a tough one for us,
Atlanta beat Cincinnati 6-3 but we're very confident going up
Wednesday night and Los Angeles to San Francisco," .catcber .Mike
lost to San Diego 9-4 at Dodger Scioscia said. "I like our cluinces,
Sradium.
Bven if we had won tonight, we
Los Angeles and Atlanta both would feel the same way. We
. h~v.e today off, then decide the would feel we have to beat San
diVI~On lltle over tbe weekend Francisco Friday night"
owith three games apiece. The
At Cincinnati, Toni Glavine,
Braves will play host to the last- ~iven a six-rurt-lead in the first
place HoustOn Astros. while the mning, became this season's fmt
Dod~~ take on the Giants at Can- 20-game winner. Glavine scauered
dlestiek Park.
five hits over eight innings.
·
"Bring on the Dodgers," Giants
It was a near replay of the secmanager Roger Craig said. "We'll ond-game of the series, when-the
be .ready for them. Maybe we'll Reds scored six first-inning runs,
mnke pm season in three days. It only to w~h the Braves rally for a
.'would salvage spmething 'if we 7-6 win. But Glavine (20-11) made
have a say in who wins the divi- Cincinnati's comeback come up
sjon. We're playing for pride."
short
•
•· The Dodgers aren't exactly _ Lonnie Smith drove in two runs
pleased with what they're hearing for the Braves.
out of San Francisco. .
"We knew if we were even or
"If they wanted to beat us so one· game behind, there's going 10
bad, why dido 'I they beat us earli' be a good chance of at least forcing
er, when it counted." said Darryl a playoff," Glavine said. "It'll be
~

Pb.

I . Cin&lt;inolli~ (12)S·0 ......... 3l2
1 a..eland SL I.,..u.. (24J s-o ...... 347
3. anamlli Moeller (I) 0.1... ...........266
4. TolodoSLFnn... (I)S-0 .............. 22S
S. GfoveCil)' 5.0 .....-.........................163
6. w................ 4-1.. ...................... 130
7. Mattm l·O..................................... l!O
1. CiodMili md .. s.o ....................... 1rn
9. Moiailkln Wuhinsm 0.1 ............... 89
!0. Middlncown 4-1 ............................... 69

AnANI'A HAWKS - Sil!l'..t ond

" - ' Cily I~

O.tlu1

Division 1·
Teat

Bublball

Seaalo", Tew 3

&amp;he Wnl

School Athlet.ic Auodation divilions,
wilh won -loat record and total poin u
(fmt·plaoe votel in puenthca:a):

NatkM\1.1 BukltMII Auodallon

T-.6, Calilomia l
· - l. lloW13

1

ancl broad·

rcplar-~WCJ~~ poll for
the Auocialed Prcu, b' Ohio Hiah

TRIPLES - Molilor, Milwaukue, 13;
L. Johntoli, Ch_icaao, 12; R. Alom11,
Torodto, II; Wbito, Tcrouto, 10; McRae.,
Ka!IIU Ci1y, 9:. Ol•ddcn, MiMIII.ota• 9;
Dtvae:ux, B&amp;ltimOrt,. I; Mack, Miruaota,l; Palonia, Calitomia, I.
HOME RUNS - c.n-, Oo.ldond,
44: Pieldc, Daroit., 43: C. Rill&amp;cn. Balli·
more, 34; Carlclr, Toranto, 3~; Thomu,
Ollc:IJO, 31; Tartabllll. Kanut City, 31;

c~oo--4
New Yak 4, llallbon
3

..

1e1m1 in

writer~

Ofiio high achool football

c11ter1 ratea

BATIINO - Franco, Texu, .34.0,;
BQitQD, .332; Ran4olpb, Milwau·
too, .330; Kaa Os:iffey Jr., S'eaulc. .327;
C. ltipltal, llal1imolo, .326; Moli.... Mil·
waukoo, .32S; Palmcito, Tau. .323.
R.UNS- Moll10r, Milwaukee, 121;
FaJmojro, Touo, lll; c...-. Olilond,
114: Sian, TUJ~, 109; White, Toronto,
109; Fnnco, Taau, 105: Tbomu, Q.ica·
ao. !Ot.
RBI - Fielder, Detroit, 129;
CtniKO, Oakland, 122; Sierra, Texu,
11 .5; C. Ripka~, BUDmon, 114; Caner,
Tontrito, fOI; Ttromu, Chica&amp;o, 107;
Juan OOilu1ez, Tuu, 100; Ken Oriffey
Ir., Soaule. 100; Tuubull,ICanau City,
1110.
HITS - Molitor, Milwaukee, 211: C.
lipan, Ballimont. 206; Palmeiro, Texu,
200; Sierra, :I'c1.1a, 199; Franco, Tua1,
196; Puekou. Miane.ota, 193; S11., New
Yod&lt;, 193.
DOUBLES - Palmeiro, Taxu, 47;
C. Ririt•. Baldmlft.. 4S; Siena, Te,;u,
44; IC'en Orlff'cy Jr., Seattle, 42; ~oed .
BOlton, 42; Carter, Torcnto, 42; Bow ,
Bog~,

Wednesday's ..Ores

·

COUJMBUS, Ohio (AP) - How

nne panol of JpOrtJ

American League

PITCHINO (16 d"ilion•l -

AMERICAN LEAGUE

I •H I

football poll

ou...,. 17; a....,_, At·

Boooo,42.

Friday's games

T..,.

~u, I7.

AP bigh school

home 10 4,001,526, the lirst4-million season in sports hiSIOry: .
At Bosron, 11 was a depressing
end to a depressing season. The ·
Red Sox completed their 5-3 victory after Toronto had clinched.
"We had a Jot ofllopes when
we went ahead tonight, because vie
knew we coUld sray alive," Wade
lloggs said. "But when Toronto
won, there wasn't much you could
do."
·.
.
Joe Hesketh (12-4) was the winner and Walt TerreU (12-14) was
the loser.
.
''We gave it our best shot to
c~h up," Steve Lyolis said "We
got close, bpt we just couldn't get
there. Torontil played well down
the stretch. They deserve it. I wish
them well."
Tony FcisSlls, ' ~o got his rust
save, may have put it best.

--·-.. ,___,

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•

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day night, railled with two runs in Boston."
the ninth inning tO seal things up.
Dave Winfield's leadoff home
Devon White singled off Bryan run in the eighth off David Wells
Harvey (2-4) and scored when tied the score at 4. Dave GalKevin Flora threw away Alomar's lagher's single in the ninth off
grounder to secilnd, Alomar stole Mike Timlin 0 1-6) gave California
third on the next pitch and Joe a 5-4 lead
.
Carter singled past shortstop Dick
''It was good we could win at
Schofieldfor the division ptle.
home and not have to back inro it,"
. "Nobody can say we backed Toronto general manager Pat
in," said Candy MaldonadO, whose Gillick said. "It was important to
two-run homer put Toronto ahead win it before the 4-milliolith fan
4·3 in the sixth. ."We put back a an4 send everyone home happy."
challenge by Delroit when they got , · The game drew 50,324, which
close and we did the same with raised Toronto's season to,tal at

'
·,

.

roronto
beats Caiifornia ll-51o~capture 'AL' East'crown
.
.,.,
'

.

.£Atlanta wins, L.i\..l.oses.to
~create tie for-NL West -.lead ·

· Thursday, OCtober 3; 1991 '
.

'

\

1991

The DaiJy· Sentin~l .
·

'

'

BLUE JAYS REPEAT CHAMPS- The
Middleport Blue Jays flnisbed In fint place tor
the second straight year Ill. lbe Bli Bead Girls
Minor League Tounameat.ID lbe front row an
'(L·R) Erica Bryan, Amy Sarver, Debby Searles,
Abby Ha!'J'Is, team captlln Amber Vining an~ •
Heather Fry. Ia the second row are Brltn•

Bevaa, Midlele Frellcb, Marjorie Bratt011, MDD·
ica Moon aad Amanda Neece. In lbe batk row
are bead CGICb Greg Vlltlnaud assistant coaeh·
es Jane Moou, Stan Moon and Rhonda Neete.
Abselll fro~ t~e photo are players Leah Marrow and Br"t,~ Smith and assistaitt coach Sara
Stamper.
•
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.

\•

Southern's Gaul upbeat about KC .game.
By SCbTI WOLFE
SentinelCorrespondeat
Despite two big losses, Southern
head coach David Gaul is exrremely optimistic about the second half
of the Southern Tornado high
schoolfootball season. Gaul is confident and upbeat about the performance of his troops, especially in
this week's upeoming game with
Kyger Creek at Cheshire.
The last two weeks Gaul Slated,
"I thought we were consistent and
that the Jcids played hard. Oak Hill
has a good ball club and perhaps
we were in~imidated . we made
several mental 'enors. To win you
have to eliminate both physical and .
· ....._ Ph 'call
did
mental mls_.... ysl Ywe
a_.good job; butOakHilljustplayed
gfiOd hard nosed football.~
Defensively Gaul commented,"
We played fairly good defense.
Agam, a couple mental mislikes

"We have to be at our best for
Kyger Creek, but...", Gaul didn't
say, but. implied that without the
intimidation facror his club should
be back in the ring at fuU force. .
''The kids are ready to play. This
game is always a hard hitting
game. KC r~ns a 5-2 defensively
with a_\~trong safety and monster
back. we expect to come out and
run out of our I formation with
some variations. We will run and
throw as always, but this week
we've really simplifyied things."
Gaul did not elaborate to give away
any secrets on his agenda.
Oaul added, ''We must establish
a running game early. They must
respect our run, atfil we must
respect ·their runnin!r gam.e. KC
runs a slot back with multiple variations. Usually with one nght end.
.We will run our usual 5-3. We've
done a lot of work in this
area ... really worked on the funda·
We~:~!~l~~l~~iitf:&amp; mentals, the technique. .. an~ all the
tackles, . but i .fillso saw some little things that will contnbute 10
wrong."
us playing better."

Gaul wants 10 get more from liis
own running game t~is week,
pumping a little extra yardage from
Russell Singleton and Ronnie Wagncr. Michael Eyans wiD 'be back at
quanerback most lilf:ely, although.
TreniOn Oeland did a good job last
week against Oak Hill. '
Jeremy DiU and Nick Adams are
among the leading receivers and
add that aerial threat to the SHS
line-up.
Nick Adams; Russell Singlctoo,
Jamie Smith, Shane Circle, and
Glenn Young, along with Ronnie
Wagner have been defensive stsnd, .
outs lately.
G ~ul choncluded, ''The kids are
wo ng ard. We're looking for,
ward to a bi~ second half and I'm
very optimistic. We've played
some tough teams and we've
shown that we can play."
Fon Frye is .still undeated and
has posted several big wins, including a recent big win over BishOIJ
Donohue.
Game time Friday is 7:30 at
KygerCreek.
·

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�...

•
Pagi!-6--The Dally 8entlnel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, October_3,

Support These
Fine Area
Businesses!'
...

rf

•

.

•

FURNITURE,.JEWELRY
and RADIO SHACk

"'' --'

•

For AD Your Prescription and .
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.
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Sat., Oct. 5- Major Colleges, Dlv. 1·A

WE NOW .HAVE SUPER
LOTTO; PICK 3 and PICK 4

IVE POINTS EXPRESS
and DRIVE·THRU
Pomeroy

'992-6891

VALLEY LUMBER
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992-6611

DOW~ING CHILDS
~ULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE

• Air Force
• Alabama
• Arizona State
Anny
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• Ball State
Baylor
• Brigham Young
Central Michigan
Clemson
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' Florida
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Notra Dame
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Purclle
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Texas A &amp; M
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' Toledo
'Tulane
'U.C.L.A.
• Virginia
'Wake Forast
• Washington
• Washington State
• West Virginia

'

21
40
27
27
23
23
24
31
28
24
28
34
45
28
3t

26

3t

26
23
21
28

38

48
23
24
22
- 27
24
35
33
34·
4t
26
40
28
27
44
17
2t
23
Rice
27 • Texas Tech
22
Colorado State
23
Ohio U.
27
S.M.U.
24 . California
23
Kansas
24
Appalachian State
35
Arizona
30
~n State
24
Virgmia Tech

lhlor Colf1111eo • Dlv. t·AA

Allblml. 81111

Pomeroy, Ohio
992-2342

• Ttxaa Southtr,

28

Alcorn

111 East Second Street

Wyoming
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·
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20

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23

Ctntral FlOrida

• Buclultll
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Connecticut
' O...art
' Euttm lllnOia
• Eaaltrn Kantueky • • ...

22
24
21
23
27
23
26

Comtl!
W.ltrn Ctlolina
Fordlltm
• Yale
N.w Hamp~hlrt
• W.t.fn Illinois
Georgia SoU1hern

• Eall•n Wulltngton

·22

Furman
• GrarT'bllng

31
38

Holycro..

32

Montana

• V.M.I.
Pralrlt Vl.w, TX

1

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·HilYard

• Idaho Stilt ·• . ,_-r~,1 ;t Nonhtrn Arizona
"·ltllfloii'J:tm. ,, · ~·-- ~
l lndiana Stalt

lndllna.U., PA ~"a."
Jickaon S't.lt...- ' ''""-• , ..,,,...,

M-• )

T011r1on

•. · Dtln&amp;l't State
• Jan. Wldllon · r ti'\1\1 23 &gt;~'J• Maaur;tuo~M\11
• l1419h
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Llltny
P.fl''•r'27 . l • Morehead Stilt
1
'Mc:NHH
•!w~ .- ,..1•'"'24 ; NichOIIIStlll

Oairq

Mlidlt Tannelller" •
. 28
~. W•t•rn Kentuc~r
N.vllia·Rtnal ,.. · ~ .• ·• ·• -. 1 ~ ldal\o
' NoniiC&amp;rallni' &amp; T · · ·~··· 27
Noltolk
' NorthNIIM'fl
35
LOCk Haven
' NoniMif'n kiwi
4G
Morgan Stile '
' PlnMiyiYanll
24
Lall)'tlll
• Pfir.celon
28
c~11
RhOde laland
24
• Brawn
Richmond
28
• Maine
' S.F. Aualln
21
Youngttown
S.rntord
37
' SE Wltsouri
' South c.trollna Stale
3-'
J.C. Sm"-"
Soutllern U.
20
• Mttalulppi Vallty'
SW Ml~tour l
24
• Southern Mllnola

Queen
992-3.322
NORTH SECOND A.YE•.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
•

• sw r....

• TenneUM Stale
' Ttnnn....Manln
' Vllanova
W..r Stille

TOHO

17

24

27
33
27

NE Lou .. '-n•
Mur11r S1111
Tennea'" Tech

Boalon U.
' Mon1ana Stilt

20
7
14
21
14
20
tO
13
t7
t4
t3
7
7
24
tO
24
7
t7
2t
t7
14

6

tO
to
22
20
t5
20
t4
t3
t3
6
20
t3
t2
t2
7
t5
t4
t3
t3
2t
17
t7
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t7
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t4
2t

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7

21
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......
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12

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Other llame1 - Eut

• Allred

• American International
' California State, PA
DeliwareiJalley
Edinboro
Ferr1.1m
·Hamilton
lllliCB

° Ku1110wn
0

0

0

0

Alhllnd
AuglJita.na, ll
Balier
Baldwin·Wallace
Bethany, KS
CCIII
Defiance
' E~ la State
• Evarigel
FrleOOs
Georgetown, KY
GrahO Valley
• Hutlngl

Hillsdale
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Iowa Wesleyan
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Men
Missouri We1tern
Moorhead
.
• Mus~ingum
• Nebrasill Wesleyan
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North Dakota State

· North Dakota U.
' Notthll'n Ulchiaan
NorthMitarn. fA
• Ohio Notlharn

7

17

• Alabflima A &amp; M
Arkan1u -Montlcell0
• Caraon·Newman
Central Arkan111
COI'ICOf(l
• E111 Texa1
E1111rn New Max lea
' Elon
Emory &amp; Henry
• Fon Vatttr
Guilford
HIIT'Cidln·Sydner
' Hartling
Mlulllippl College .
• Morehoule
NE Oklahoma
' North Alablma
0

0

0

Ran~ · l.lacon

• warn• State, Ml

47

• Mar'-ttl

25
4t
23
23
23
26
37
28
22
27
22
24
21
26
27
23
28
21
24
31
27
40

Slerllni;l
'GrinneD
• Wilmington
CentrafMinouri
Minourl VaHer
Ottawa
• Evansville
o Saginaw Valle~
Carillon

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Anderson

Doant

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Wlfttnberg
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° Winona Stitt
Hiram
Concordia. NE
South Dakota Stall
South Dakota U.
Morningside
Ftnil
o Benldiellna
Hlldebtrg
'Blurtton

48
28

1

NW Mlnourl

'L.. g1ton
•· Valparalao
Lake For•st

V

St. Olal
o MlnneaotaoMorrll
' Cameron
Millikin

23

"5
33
~

23
21
26
2o4
24

Mcwrll Brown
Soutllll'n ~rk.lnw
Clla'IIOa
' Du.CI'IIII
o Mltl Hill
Central Oklahoma
' Abillna Chri1Uan
Lenolr·Rhyne

..a
33
22

23

o

2t
21

21
26
22
20
"2
24
20
20
24
23
24
23
27

28

40

Mllllapl

Clark
• Sa.lllbvl)'
Bridgewater, VA
~klnlll TICih
o JtekiOnviUI S1ate
Harnplon
' Hll'ldltiOn
NIWblrry
WalhlnQ1on a Lee
o Lambutfi
• Centre
• Vatdoata
Alblny, GA
' llvlngltone
Livlng1tan
• Gtenville

23

23
24

AZun

.."
..
.."
13
7
13
15

S,epiiii'CI
° Fairmont

Ga.relntr-W.bb

f • Fayan..,illl

• PrHby'!trlan

Other Gamo1 ·For Wo1t

16

7

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23
10
13

21
28
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24 ,

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23

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13
17

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Funeral Home
. IIUCI fl·l· O..r/O,...tor ,'

10

'

22

"13

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23
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..
22

7

12

Mtnlo Ptrk
Cai·Divlt
Santa Barbara
HuiT'boldt
Cllluthtran

12
21
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· Sonoma

28
27
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• Sout!Mtn 011gon
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27

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7
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Pomona

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~ Ridenour

~UJP~
Y
CHESTD, OliO
915-3301

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**CINCINNA,TI ........... 24 SEA'ITLE.......... 2S
In Monday niter last season, Senhawks, playing at home, shocked Bengal&amp; 31-16 for thier firat win
of season ... lstloss for Cindy... RB ~crrick Fenner scored 3 TDs for Seattle.
.. CLEVELAND ......
2ll NEW YORK JETS, ......... 20
Jets hosted Drowns in match-up in 90, N.Y. taking 24-7 halftime lead on three rushing
•
TDs ...Browns' Eric Metcalf returned opening kickoff 98 yards for TD, Brownaloaing 24-21
.. DETROIT .......... 23 MINNESOTA .......... 21
Last fall, Liom heat Vikes in Minn. after trailed 20-10 at halftime ... Liona scored 24 unanawere'd
points to win 34-27 .•.Vikings won on turnovers in Detroit 17-7 ...flip coin!
DALLAS.......... 20 .. GREEN BAY...... :.... 17
Pack beat Dallas in final NFL title games in '66 and '67 pri.o r to Sltper Bowls ... when they mel in
'89; QB Don ,Majkowski led GB to aeason aweep, 31-13 at home, 20-10 on road.
.. HOUSTON ..........27 DENVER ........... 20
Broncos may lie walking into hornets' nest in Houston as 3, 1 Oilers hav~·had week.off since,.ate
upset 'em 24-20 ... De~ trails in series with Houston 18-10... 0ilers win.
.· .
.. L. A. RAIDERS.......... 17 SAN DIEG0 .......... 16
Ra1ders beat their AFC 'jl',.t rival twice last year, RB Bo Jackson scoring two TDa for L.A. in
initial24-7 win in San Diego... Raidcrs rallied to win second meeting, 17-12
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.MIAMI.......... 21 UNEW ENGLAND ........... 17
.
Dolphins had problema with Patriots last ~cason, winning two close conteats ... Miami raijied with
.
FG in final minute to wjn first 27-24, then held on in 2nd meeting to win 17-10.
.. NEW YORK GIAI\'TS........... 19 PIIOENIX .......... 17 '
Cards no puahover for Super Bowl champion Giants last fnii .. .N. Y.'s Matt Bahr ki~ked FG u
}\me expired-for (~rat come-fro111-be~ind win 2'0-19 ...Giants won second meeting 24-21.
.
PHlLADELPIIIA .......... 27 **TAMPA BAY......... .-17
In last meeting, Eaglea, Bucs opened '88 season in Tampa, Eagles running up 34-0 h-lftime lead,
winning 41-13 behind QB Randall Cunninghnm ... Bucs held to just 43 yafda rushing.
PI1'TSBURCII........... 20 ••INDIANAPOLIS'....... :..;10
Colts finding it difficult to win a~ they've averaged just 9 points through first four game.a ... favo~ed
,
Steelera, 2-2)lefore taking laat ·we~k off, back on the road again.
WASIIINCTON .......... 17 .. CliiCAGO.'.. ; ....... l3
Bean, Redakina put on defensive ahow l~lt fa II, Washington rallying in second half after trailing
·- at the half 9-0, lo win in laal 2 minut,. 10-9... :possible NFC title preview.
(Moriday) BUFFAL0........... 24 UKANSAS Crp;.......... l1
Cl)iefa' ground game ou tatanding in Monday nite loss to Oilers three weeks ago ... rememberiJl8
·
that Jeta rushed for 168 yards vs ..Bills, Buffalo could be in trouble ...Billa.

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weelcellds in October.
Teresa Zempter and Billlna
r "We really feel we h~ve · the Cooper, the University of Rio
iight weekend for it." Willey said. Grande volleyl&gt;all team's leaders
:'There's a lot of work involved, on of(ense, pooled their talents
but the invitational is a good public T~y to band their counll:rparts
relations thing for the university. It at Shawnee State University losses
~rings in more than 1,000 bi'kh of 15-l,IS·IO and 15-3.
school students and is a wonderful · Zempter, a senior from Minford,
recruiting tool."
fired in 14 lcills against the Lady
~ The open race, started in the last Bears while Cooper;-. a sophomore
(~w years, is drawing a good share from Jaclcson, added 13 as the Redof inlereat from1fllllllirs around 1be women fo"ght back a Shawnee
region, tbC coacn added.
State rally in lhe second game. It
"We find that wilh the fitness _ marked the rust meeting of !K&gt;th
craze being whilt-it is 10day, there's teams since Shawnee Stale beclone
1!. definile interest in an open mce a member of lhe Mid-Ohio Conferfor 'the community," Willey ence. and the win boosled lhe Rio
r.emarked. "It's a beneficial thing ladies' conference standing to S-1.
(pr them, too, because there are a
Zempter added two serving
l.l&gt;t o( road races at this time of the aces, six digs and three block solos
year, but this provides them with and Cooper had three digs and four
ihe opportunity to nm on an actual · block solos to help swamp the
¢,ross countty course. Road race Lady Bears on lheir home court in
~ tend Ill be flat, while here the fJJSt game.
we have grass and hills to chal·
Shawnee Stall: came back in the
ltnge their skill."
second game, but willt Tiffany Neff
, The invitational. begins at 9:30 and Andrea Hedges adding four
c.m. with the college women's kills apiece and Michelle Spears a
'ce, fearuring Rio Grande's Red·
women, Morehead State, GlenviUe
State, Shawnee State and the Ohio

~~~~~~t:~~f:o:?e~~

inen 's race at 10:30 a.m., featuring
iheRio Grande Redmen, Morehead
State, Shawnee State and GlenviUe

t ..

~tate.

N.

MIDDLEPORT
992-5627

QUALITY
PRINT
255 MILL

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~:~!::~~::i~:~~ ~e:~~th~=pty~:

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Rd
• d
S
e
e1eat
~S:We~~v:!c~~~=~
improve MOC standing to 5-1
are nqw conducted qn separate

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bealin&amp;.'::

17 .

20

Chico Slate

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21

Ltwll &amp; 'tlark
Auguatana, SO
' Claremont
o Southern Utah

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rt..rR;n's c•o~ ss countr·v z•nvz·tati·onal

22

SALES • SERVICE
INSTALLATION

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COOLING

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HEAnNG
AND ·

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of 48_yards ~~Symmes Valley ty, mainly i'caing on his 8p!led for 1pitut Nonli Gallia,· hii Jx.1! ~ · · Ia', now allllior~wu onlbat.team . 71 Jlldi*IM'' .North."Gillia rWo
ln the conference oplllier,,lltook off the lime belu;, lboold lilab Bntd- · to tllfll &amp;yheat on defen•e that year. TodaZ::ith a suon1 ' ,.._, • bui,.W. eel JWI! - ·
the cobwebs and pictedup .los bury dial mat:Ttptcllulfec:tive.
aplluta
CIIIIIMPect_. ·. o(fentrive.line' in · ofllim.lolitl plotiOPin IICYOII 1tte111p11 for 23
against the Hill. 1'anior fullback
While pining IIICft ylnlqe by the ipeecl t1i1t JOCIIIoli wi111 tblt' receiveri .in )__obn Conley, Brett ylldl 3 ' t« SouiiJwala.
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Russell Singleton, beJiJ 10 13 yards. land and by air will pnm helpftJI 5-11,15S.poundp• • p Aile, die Lewis and Cliris Simpson, and a
Trace llao nccdlro lldill:owr :
l!&amp;ainst Valley, has started' to get to 'the' Bobcats'. chances, It is Jutes ganJ baa to plat .a blckfield featurill
. 'nsB'ill Potier (96 axiltg .ty in tbe J11111, • o..;·
back 011 ~ afttr Bettini 81 yards imperalive that the defeose · ridflled boclgerow manned by TU. .Cen- Clliies,lelpe.bigb (HI y&amp;Jda), lhe S•JMtdin' troop1 have ICCIIed ei&amp;ll( ·
against the Oaks. ·
' by the running of die Hill:s T1triJl well, 1emny FOrd. Dwayne lfllnil· Hill has die tools to combine a poiDu ln dlaiiCOIId·qtl!lller aD Iiiii- ;
Kyger Creek,' which hasn't - senior tailback ~ill ·Poutr (189 1011, Tom Lambert; Devin Metzger sirong offensiye with a man-eater son and haven't llt uP tbe ICOn- ·
P_as$ed for 100 yards since Chad : y~&amp;, five TDs) ~and Valley's and Kevin Staten, to bloek tbe defense 111 keep young Viking board in tbe cipainJ frline liJJce:,
Johnson went 1of IS for lil yajds C11!11' Cllllley (192 yards, IWO TDs ·· p!OJieSS of the Pirates' dmft horses ' squad at ba):.
tl;ley sand 14 J?Oillllln dleir 44:cl :
.10 help .beat Hann8n Tritce 21.() on · last Week), tighteR liP i" act. eipO- ..,..lel)ilr rtJIIIIin8 backs Cuoy Sta· . 1:1owevet, Valley can't be taken win over HunungtOn VinSOD 011 -: '
. SepL 29, !989, got' ll7 011 S-oJ:..l3 clally in the secondary, becaue 101! llld Darin Smith. · .
lightly, beca\lse the priid!Jc.tion Aug. 31,1990- tbe Wildcla' ~ut· ·
passing from Paul Covey in las! .' worryingahouttbe6'2, 192-Jlclund ·
AaainltJ!ICPiraf,ll,i!as~~e- coming fr~m Cople.Y (52~ yards Yicully. · .
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week'.s 34·12loss.IO Symm~ ya1- Slqleton may cause.l!lemiOforpt · c11oa ouUJde ~ntain1Dtllt and · from at~ 62 cpe~. fi~ TDs) . Eagle•tlh!tct Tim B~,.,.., ;
. ltr. laSt week. This year's BOI:ieais . about -tb~: arm _of quarterback fon:ed the runntnl game iuide. . has stayed on tht lijleWiilg IIJIICe lhe bel 583 yiJ'dl on 76 camca in
w1ll need more of t!'e salite froni }1ielutel ·Evan~, (31-65, 3S7 yard;&amp;. Soulh~ must do the .-e, or ~ belan: A revamped offen- · ~ ~take ICCOIId behind Ol!k :
Covey, not 10 menuon more pro- :sa /fDs, fiJI!I' mL) and !he~~ ~will~ 111 ew:llent 111ot at s1ye ~me~~ hltll as much ~ do _Hill's B1.H Poaer, 1101 blct 10 b~ :
duction from a flllllling game held • talents of wu!eouq Jeremy Dill and gelting his fJJSI l()().yanl ~ of wtth 11 as tl has hid to do w1th a old se1J m last week' a 38-20 w11 •
to .a middle-of·lhe-road 113- yards Nidt Adims, light end Jamie Pror- tltC IICUOII.
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passing game po
sing a.quicker over North Oal1ia. Bebind 1 11a1 ' ·
and one toucbdow~(b Matt ·, lilt and running beck Romtic: Waa·
North'sdefmse has a two-qed ' ltelrtbeat. •
offensive !iDe, Bisaell bas n~joil!!ld
Rhodes) against die v· · .
iter. ·
challenge in Soathwesttrn's
Last year,·Symmes completed a ltlble of n1ning bacb 1hlt hal
One case in point o needing .. This is tbe ~·last~ !'ff~nse. _ starring _the l'l!nniq of 17 jN!Sie8 in 531ries for 258 yards. made. ~rrec.tive use of the b!'1a.;
m&lt;n produl;lion is that of nmning to resume picldng up enough YJcto- Junior wlback Willy Gllbert and- which netted one touchdown (vs. · offoa11ve l111emen such u np1 .
bac1t Phil Brltdbury The 5•19 175- ri&amp; to build a winninl !le&amp;SOII·
· the arm of junior quarterback Kyger Creek) and ooe in~n xan Sreve lllrileu and rigltlllldt- : •
pound senior, who~ o~t of a
North GaDia VI. Soudnnstem
Aaron McCarty. Gilbert. who has (ys. Rock Hill). This year, after fe Iamea ~Diniel. I!IJIIlll&amp; ~ : ·
loaded backfield that had Sean
It's homecomin~ at Southwest- racked up 423 yanls in,each of lhe f1ve games; the Norsemen have have prDYJdcd for them. This ·hiS ·
Denney, Joe Edwards, Jitter em High School~~ and the Hi&amp;blanders' five glll:lleS, avemJes gone .13 of 35 for 258 yanls, which · be~n accomplished io spite of::
Gilmore and .~bb~Gilmore-in the q~~ea~, wboe~ she JS,_I!iQD't be~, _four yards-~ amy_ and lla'l..uied ~:-'~ mcluded.two touch~oWIIJ and bemg held to a .season-low 2~2
·1990 season, ~ad two 100-yard- only one gracmg the gridiron gna. follf touclidoWiis, ailii"Mcatty's ~IX 1ntercep~10nkThe mcreued yards. aiOtal
_. ~tltaUbeiJII­
plus games in the first half of that .Why? The fans ~!om Gage to Pui· 26·for· ~S passing for 329.fll'd$ num~ ~f.p1clcoffs ~ to be an gle-game rushing ·highs of ifiiJuJ ,.
campaign (against Walelford and otto Cadmus will be the welcom· , (second m the confCJeDce to South- ine•ntab1hty grow.mg out of an Trace, Kyger Creek; Soutbei'n llld'·
Southern) This year the closest ing committee for a Highlander em's Evans in COJIJpletiOII pen:ent· attemP.t by Viking field marshal Southwestern - ' against till :
Bradbury has ~ome to 100 yards is squad that; q -the ~ ~aniors last age with a minimum of, SO Mernll Triplett to b~lance the Pirates. .
,
:
the 66 he ~inned in the season week. emer~ed . v1ctonous ~m a attempts) bas netted the H1gh- offe~ more after rel~mg almost SV:'"C 'd ta di
opener agamst Federal HoekinJI:. thr~e-overllme, 20-18 thnller Ianden four iouchdowlts. But 10lid exclUSively on lhe run m past sean. grt S D ngs
But Bobcat fans needn 'I worry agamst Hannan Trace.
and consistent defensive preaure IOIIJ.
(()veraD)
Rhodes is a rising star in the back:
· But good feelinJs don't win bas proven effectiveiy against
HaDDID Trace vs. Eastent
W L PF PA
field and his eva-increasing abili- football games, and Southwestern MI:Carty, who also bas eight inter·
Does H.annan Trace have the Team
Bastern ..................5 0 172 38 .
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mentor Jack James knows that coptions including two against a eye of the Iller?
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41 :
scrappy :Hannan Tmce squad.
The James ganc ·knows the North Gallia ..........4 1 121
t3s
so ·~
Oak
Hill
....
............
3
2
OakHIU;n.SymmesValty
answerrothatq~estion,andthe Southwestern ........3 2 68 113
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Vegas says that after Fnday Eastern Eaales will.btow whe~.
Soulhem ...............2 3 125 171 .
Symmes Valley ....2 l 104 91
Kyga
Creek ......... ! 4 4S' 146
ltV
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play after two weeks. One of lhese inten.sity they showed \n last
Hannan.Tniee .......0 4 32 89
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teams won't be in that number
weeks maralhon.
:,... ~early 1,200 athletes. fr~~ Warren and WesterviUe Nonh.
Clay. Marion Pleasant. Meigs,
Oak Hill; which bas allowid 12
The Eagles, possessors of a
t~~~xKepecn~ ':~~tuVpo~~
.
DMS(BoiO)N n
Miami Trace. Piketon, Raceland, points-..r!ainst tbe same teams sehomven-~~~g-~road~- T
(COIIIerwenceL). PF PA .
'0 . . f Ri G
ys
.
Ridgedale, Riverside, Reick Hill, Synune5 Valley has beaten (~Jga
e to IIUO&lt; uww ....
YIC
eaJIJ
,
. mYCfSity o !' rande Saturday . ~exander, .Athens, Bel]n:e. ~If· Southeastern, St. Marys. Water- Creek and Southern). has a,IQ!id ~over Soudt~ ~ Nuth Symmes Valley ....2 0 92 24
for the 21st. R1~ Grande Cross cle~tlle •.Edgewoo~. Fatrfteld ford, Waverly, Western Latham. chlnce of
Vitinp, but Galha. The Wildcats liope the Oak Hill:...............2 0 . 87 12
fountry !nvJtallonal, under the Uruon, Fairland, G~a Academy. Zane TJlii)C.
tbe last time the
ven1UI'OII into hanger they have is strong _.gtt E
11 .....: ............2 . 0_ 79
26
-~~~ o(~ob I§_V:OS Fann:.. . Goshen •. b!!nlllll •.Mt:iJs. Raceland,
· DIVISION)U ·
tbe land of the NorsemOII, they !0 e~lingWb 10 theu 12-gm4 ~- Nonli qaJ!!a ..~.......l I 56 44
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~~ 0 ibe eve t 15 Roc!C Hill. South Pomt, SL Maryli.
(B!lys)
proved themselves the tou11test mg S1realc.
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.---soutlfwem ........! I 26 S9
J.he. open race, set for 10 a.m., Teays Valley. Wam:n. Washmgton
Adena, Batavia, Caldwen, East-· opponent Valley bad to face but
The Guyan fon:e 'bas foun4 its Harman Trace .......0 2 24 56
!l.htcb allows unauacbed and non- Court House. Waverly and Wheel- em Brown, Fisher Catholic, Fort WOWld up on lhe short end of 1 20- runni~g beck in f~hman Heath Kyp Creek .........0 · 2 18 87 .
;~1gh school runners a chance to ersburg.
Frye, Georgetown, Heatb, Hunling- 14 decision in l989. Valley, Hutchinson, who gained 144 yards Southern ...............0 2 18 92 '
com~ on _
a cro'!l cOlDltty course. ""'
(Gl~ls)
ton ~oss, Leesbur~ Fairfield, unbeaten at lhe time, finished the (out of Trace's 196) and scored .
,
.
,.ose l!lterested m the ~n ~a~e
Adena, Batavta, Belpre •. C~ld- l-ynchburg-Clay, Marion Pleaslnt, reaular season unbeaten aac1 with three touchdowns againSt~ Hiih·
· Oa Fridays qeoda ...
s:an regtster.on t!Je mof!!tng Jt ts well. Eas_tcm Brown •. Fauf1e~d New Boston, Piketon, Ridgedale, the conference cbampionallip in landers. However, the W1ldcats · HannanTmceatEastem
~eld. The~gutraao~f~IS~3. . U~;uon. F1sher Catbohc, Galha Riverside, Skyvue, South~tlm, hand before losing tn the first need to rediscover the paasing · · Soulhem~KY&amp;e''Creek
: Tentauvely, ~e tnvtta~nal1s Academy, Georgetown, Goshen, Waterford, Western Latham, ZaDe round of the playoffs to Shlldylide. game, wbich racked up 12 COIIlple· · Nonb 9allia at Southwestern
~xpected to draw l)llliiCI'S frOm fi~e Heath. Huntington Ross, Ironton, Trace.
Oak Hill qiiiiiU:Ibtclc Allelt Pot· lions in 21 fries for a season-ltigh Oak Hill at Symmes Valley ·
,;olleges and S3 high schools, Rio · Leesburg Fairfield, Lynchburg·
Grande Cross Countty Coach Bob ·
t'
:Willey said. The event began in
WOffiefl
h3Wflee,•
.-------------------------.
J97l as a part of the Bob Evans

By G. ,SPENCER OSBORNE
!!."/!Staff;Writer ·
. ·111e ......way pomt of the 1991
~ - thseason has passed, and it
,..ppears at two things are abun~1ntly clear. the seven-game
nmng streak of Eastern, the
VAC's unbearen fnlnl·nmner, lla'l
vdy gpoCI_dlance 91 running to at
east n1ne g.ames (at least until
andy Cb!lfllla's Eafles take on
:Scott ,BarthQiomew s Oak Hill
5uadfum Week 8), and in the imme·
;tittle IUre,thegllllledul\promises
ilhe m~st tense momen1S •s the one
ieatunng two of last week's van·
bed - Southern and· Kyger
, k.
.
.
• These teams. which have com:
p~eted the Oak Hill-Symmes Valley
fltghunare (from 1987 to last
. ~eelc~s games, SVAC teams that
lay.Oak Hill and Symmes~.
r yu:e versa, on consecutive Fn. ys are a combined 2·30 against
. th clubs) ~ the last two w~,
~ve some thmgs they would lllce
:Jo ~hange about .th.e way they do
~USine_ss on the~ - .
." I~ Southern s · ~ase, tt's the
'II~mlse of th.e passmg ga~e. To
ye the Racme crew credll, Oak
til's ferocious pass rush, ·not to
ention a clock-eating r~nning
(ame, ha~ ple~ty to do wtth the
:rC1'118dc;&gt;es puiiiDg a mere 57 yards
11t lhe ll1r after Southern had rcronl·
ed IQO.y~-plus passing games in
~e prevtous three contests. The
t\lshmg attack, shackled to the tune

'PPen "TQCe h zg• h.l•Jgh t Qif 21st
,· edztion
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WARNER

21

27
27

San DIOao U.

P01111roy, Ohio

' 992-3671

7

20

Whinier

·

12

'ltVImt
K••rnty

• Cal-Potw
• Horw•rd
' Lin llld
• NOflhtrn Colorado
Oocldtntal
Portltnd State
' Atdland1
Sacramento State
' Sa11 Franc:llco Stale
' Santa Clara

We have the
Serto you wallt
in the size yciu llltd ·
at a price you'll like. .

~

22 .

~

:r .

E

..::1
~~~~
..
..
' ·nnri:Ji• -

20
10

21

• Northwood
Canh&amp;Q•

26

• W1ng111

'

7
17

33

~

• Tu•ktVM
'Y irglnll State
• W•l Georg ia
Wilt Llbtrtr
• ' Wilt Vlrglnll Still
Wilt Vlrg1nil W11~an

17
21
17

21

23

Other Game•- South l Southwoot

WO!tord

'
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2&lt;

24
26

37
2t

Wlnston·Silam

17
13

21
2t
27
40
33

3t

7

19

Boo,.burg
Plymoulh
0-111
Romapo
Clntrll ConnectiCut
Slippery Roek
Leblnon VaJIIr
Col..
Thief
_Bttntnr. wv
MIIIIIIYIII
• MuhllnblfQ
Junllla

27

SE Oklahoma
St. Joteph's
' St. Norbert
• St . Thomas
SW Minnt101a State
Texas A I I
' WhUIQII

"

..,

• sr,•&lt;gtlo~

23

.,1\

Tror

..

Bowdoin

24
23
22

' Plftlburg

13

14

·Clarion
• Waatmlnater

24
23
20

24
24
24
26

OIIYII,

' Albrfghl

4G
35

' Hamlin•
• Hanovar

Rh0d11
Sewanee

10 .

25

20

..

21
21

Other Game• • Mldweot

0

o

26

20

' Lowtl
Mkk:lilllorr
o Monttt.lr
~- HaYell
• Shlpplnlbllrg
o Su1quehanr.a
Tuft•
o Wuhtngton &amp; J ar!ar~On
Warnaaburg
• Wilt Gha111r State
Waat&amp;rll Maryland
· Widener

22
23

10
10

.t

S1. Lawrenct~
Southern Conllltl~t
Chefn•r Stale

22

Pqr

i

253 NORTH SECOND
MIDDLEPORT, .0..10

992-2635

. the Dilly Senti MI .

Poriteroy-MicklltpOrt, Ohio

Souther.,, Kyger Creek ldo;k to trashfo.sirig.way,:S Friday· ..
'

992~661•9

106 N. 2nd, Middleport

.lhuraday, OCto,t!Pr 3, 1991
•

rescr1pt1on
·Shop .

INGELS

St. Rt. 7 ot Five Points

1991

Football '91 !·.
·Catch·All The .·
...E-xc1tement.

Stop In For All Your
Favorite Legal

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.e

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SHOP
ST.
I

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MIDDLEPORT

992-3345

The high school races start at
XI:10 am. wilh the Division 1 boys
ftlce. Competition on the boys B!ld
Jirls level 'continues every 30 rrunutes afterward ontil the last race,
Ute boys' individual. is run at 4:10
p.m.
.
..
~ High school teams set to partiCI·
P,ate inc!tide:
~
DIVISION I
:
(Boys)
:: Gahanna Lincoln, Harrison,
J)tckson, Logan, Marietta. Mount
f:lealthy, Parkersburg. Paul B~r.
R. ell Turpin and Westerville
~ss •
.; rth. .
(Girls)
:, ·
'II G b
.. Athens. Circle vi e. . a a~na
J.incoln, Hlqrison, Jackson. Mariet·
Mount Heal~y. Paul Blazer,
ftusseii,,SouthPmnt, Teays Valley,

01

of servini aces fr:x the.._..,
the threat was pui away and the
Redwomen crested to viciOry in 1he
third meeting. Aiding the defense
was the work of Neff, who had four
digs.
"We .played really well on
offense cx'eJJ for the sec011d
game, when we didn't communicllle with each other," Rio Grande
Coach Patsy Fields noted. "I was a
little disappointed with the defense,
but on the whole !thought it wu a
good effon and we served 1be ball
very well."
Now 15-5 on the season, the
Redwomen travel to Concord Col·
lege in Athens, W.Va., on Friday
for a two-day tournament. The
schedule calls for Rio Grande to
face Carlow (Pa.). Guilford (N.C.)
and Concord 011 Fliday and Barton
(Tenn.), Lenoir-Rhyne (N.C.) and
Fainnont Stale on Saturday. The
top four teams 10 emc:rge from pre·
limi~U~rf play advance to the tour·
nameitt round on Saturday.
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CINCINNATI-(AP) .,.- Boomer'
In 1989 the Brown-McGee
Esiason, Eddie Brown and Tim numbers reached a peale of 113
McdeGethe have workhed. toge th er receptions for 2,025 yards and 14
un r e same coac smce 19 86 · touchdowns. Esiason led lhe AIC
But Ibis year, not even that high· in passing.
P&lt;?W~red passing c~m~ina~on is
"Honesdy, I don't see anybody
eliciting for the 04 &lt;;:lllCtnnab Ben· taking anythinf away from us,"
gals. .
said Esiason. " see our own mis·
- Through four gam~. Brown and takes taking itaway."
d e anbd at
Mc&lt;les
'oree 111laveardsacombined 15 catch· h afi'O¥Jhlla'l missedba gam
" 288
·
a1 w1t a sore s ou 1 er, u
'Tm ar from satisfied with hasn't been as explosive this year
myself. I've missed some diff'lcult even when healthy . .He hu five
catches I btow I can make," said catches for 71 yards.
McGee, who has 10 catches for
. "Making things happen is my
H2107usyto~: •.':!-.:0ism~~~peted(ag~
· sat forte," Brown said. "I think I
"' ..... o
.......... .
••
always give 100 percent effort, but
IOuch.down, and after I mJSsed one so far. we're not breaking out lilce
on third down agamst Washington, we rieed10 do."
1
~e next play.wu_a punt re111111 for • Last year, McGee and Brown
a toochdown.
had a hot start. In the first four
"Those turned out to be two games, they had more dtan twi~ u
huge plays. and I take things like maily ciiiChes (31) an.d yards (601)
that personally. 1 try to evaluate lh
•
(nyselfinahardway.'' ' .
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, Thursday, Oct~ber 3, 1991

E~STERN

VARSITY- Eastera's varsity
team bas beea eajoyiag a rme seasoa
under bead coach Pam Douthitt. Pictured are
(front row L·R) Heidi Nelson, Jessica Radford
and Becky Driggs. In tbe sec011d_row are Pe_nny
voU~ball

Aeiker, Katby Bernard, Jaime WUsoa IDd Oar·
rie Morrissey. In tbe back row are Lee Gillilan,
Lisa Goldea, Amy Wells, Tabby Phillips aad
Shelly Metzger.

Their salary per starter is $803,100. 7:20 10 play and led lhe Vikings 10~
But they haven't perfonned like Denver s 13-yard !iDe on a finaf.
a highly paid team. Since losing drive that ended when Hassan',
41-13 to San Francisco in the fust Jones !hopped a fourlh-down pass.;
round of the 1989 playoffs, the Gannon completed 4 of 1 passes·
Vikings are 8-13.
.
for 29 yards and ran twice for ll·
And yet Bums has rarely made yards on lhe drive.
.
. :
moves except in the case of ·, Gannon started. 12 games when:
injuries.
Wilson was injured last season. He· ·
Last year lhe Vikings lost Wil- had a decent seasoo, completing 52:
son and 1989 NFI.. Defensive Play- percent of his J*S1!S wilh 16 touch-'
er of lhe Year Keith Millard for downs and 16 interceptions. But:
mnst of lhe year and fmished 6-10. the Vikings were 5-7 in those'
Millard had a second knee opera- games and he wasn't given much'
tion last monlh and is out for !his of a chance to wiD 'the starting jobseason.
Ibis season.
The offense has been injury-free
"I'll be ready Sunday," Gannon
this season, but the Vikings have said. "I've been paying attention.
scored fewer points !han any team I've been watching Wade, watch·•
except Indianapolis and are ranked ing what's going on in practice, '
24th in passing.
prc~g lhe best I can.
"I know lhe general pertcption .
'I just want 10. go out and play "
of the public is going to be that sman football and not tum lhe foot·
Wade is responsible for lhe situ&amp;· ball over and1ust let lhe other guys
tion, but that's entirely, wrong," make the plays."
Burns said. "We have had dropped
Wilson has completed 59 per.
passes. We've had illegal proce- cent of his passes, but he has'
durc penalties. We've had missed thrown only three touchdowns.
assignments.''
Meanwhile, he has thrown 10 inter- ·
A quarterback controversy is ceptions, including lhrce against
nothing new for Wilson, :who has Denver.
,
spent most of his 11-year career
fighting for the stsrting quarterback
job- with Tommy Kramer iii the
1980s and wilh Gannon in recent
years.
.
'
.
"I'll continue to woric and be
ready, and if I get a chance to play
again, I'll try to take advantage of
it," Wilson said.
· Bums said he began considering
starting Gannon against Detroit
immediately afler Sunday night's
(Continued from Page 5)
13-6loss 10 Denver.
Gannon replaced Wilson with
~s and California 10 visit specialISts.
"The doctors I've talked to
seem to think this
be healed
and that hfll be able to pi
again," Dye said. "My im
·
is we 'II have a collabOration o......,......,
number of dnciOrs re-examine him
FRIDAY and SATURDAY - OPEN 9 AM·6 PM
and determine where to go from
here.
..
Cuh (I Carr~ Sale ·
"The ones I've talked 10 said it
should've healed properly giv~n
the rest period and lhe way it'
been tn:ated."
Each time Tillman has been on
lhe verge of making a comeback,
he's suffered a setback with the
ankle.
The laleSt illcident nccmrcd !ale
in training camp, according 10 Dye.
111111(.SOLID WOOD
The Browns, who have forbid·
DtNtm
SET
. . . ,SM.ftWMf' ,
. SWIVEL
den reporters from talking to lhe
522995
medical staff, did not disclose lhat
' ' IOCIEI
TUlman had suffered what was
believed 10 be a re-aggravation of
the break.
Browns president Art Modell
said, "I haven't given up on him
being a fme player for the Browns.
SWIVEL ROCKER
a.-.D Nlt&lt;tiiiiSI
(But) it's up 10 Lawyer. I wouldn't
95
RECLINER "1;.~
blame him if he said 'Who needs
1.111'1.
this headache?' He's a great, great
95
fDOiball player. •
"He was drafted high and we
' Sot.·~·
$219.9S
had great hopes for him. He
showed brilliance when he first
SAVE
came up for his rust minicarnp and
he's just been besieged by a series
of inJuiiet and re-iajuries !hat has
been very, very depressing to all
conccroed, especially Lawyer."
, ·Tillman ftnt suffered the stress
fracture during the 1990 ~ibition
season. He returned to practice the
w~ of (~; I, but doctors deter·
milled it was fllO soon. Two weeks
later, he had screws iasened in10
the leg and missed the remainder of
the season. He also has a metal
plate in the leg.
... llttoil
The first ml\ior re-aggravation
nccwred in MaY when Tillman was
$4495
jogging while on vacation il) Los
Angeles.
SA¥1
At the time, it was feared b)' the
•u
team that h~ might miss trainiD~
camp. It alsoJihwarted the Browns
plans 10 convert bim to tiahl end.
' The Browns traded up with
Green Bay on draft day ill 1989 10
select Tlllman with the third pick in
the second round. They gave up
their fust-round pick in 1990, tlleir
lhird·and fifth-round pii:b in 19"89
and running back Herman
FonlcnOL They also received Green
Baf's fifth-round pick in 1989,
whtch they used 'lo select safety
Kyle Kramer, who is out1of foot·
ball with i neck iajury. i

ByEDSTYCH
Associated Press Writer
EDEN PRAIRIE, Minn. (AP)
- Minnesota head coach Jerry
Bums may finally be fed up with
the highly paid but underachieving
Vikings.
In his biggest shakeup in six
years 8$ coach, Burns has replaced
three starters, including quarter·
back Wade Wilson.
Rich Gannon will get a chance
to revive the Vikings' sluggish
offense, which has sc;orcd just 49
points in five games and hasn't
scored a 10uchdown in its last 10
quarters./'
"We thought we needed to
make a change," Burns said
Wednesday. "Our point production
hasn't been what it has to be if
we're goin~ to be SOO"'Ssful."
But Wilson wasn't the only
player getting the blame for the
Viking's' 2-3 start. Burns also
· demoted Todd Kalis and AI Noga.
Brian Habib will replace Kalis at
offensive guard and John Randle
will replace Noga at defensive end.
"There arc no sacred cows,"
Burns sliid. "If any of !hem don 'I
do !heir jobs, lhele'll be a change,
and !hat applies to everyone on the
club."
..
According to a recent newspa·
per report, lhe Vikings have the
highest payroll in the NFL. Their
salary per player, iacluding bonuses but not incentives, is $549,100.

Tillman ...

EAGLE RESERVES - Pictured is tbe East· . Guess, Jessk:a CbevaUer and Michelle Guess. In
ern Eagles reserve volleyball squad, Cl!lcbed by · the back row are MarUyn Kibble, Amber Wells,
Pam Douthitt and Don Jackson. Pictured are (L· Wendy Racb, Becky Driggs, Katby Bernard,
R) Jessica Radford, Heidi Nelson, Melissa Michelle Schultz and Cbristlne'Scbultz.

Syracuse tabbed to beat Florida State Saturday
By RICK WARNER
AP Football Writer
Syracuse, which beat Florida
two weeks ago, will go for a Sunshine State sweep Saturday against
-top-ranked Florida Slale.
· The Orangemen are off to an
impressive slarl, outscoring their
fust four opponents 130-48 and rising to No. 10 in the AP poll. On
Sept. 21, they defeated No . 13
Florida 38-21 at the Carrier Dome.
"Syracuse is a good team · !hey proved !hat against Florida,"
said Florida $tate fullback Edgar
Bennett. "We will have 10 be ready
IOplay."
· So will Syracuse.
'
Florida Slale has looked iavincible in its fust four games, iacluding
last week's 51-31 vic10ry over No.
7 Michigan. The Seminoles have
won I 0 straight games overall and

.

'
13 in a row at home.
Hurricanes have won eight
"We're on a mission " -said straight against Big Bight teams. ...
offensive tackle Kevin Mancini. MIAMI38-0.
' 'We know what it takes 10 win it
all.'.
Arizona (plus l6) al No. 3 Wash·
The game pits Florida State's
ingiOn
high-powered offense against SyraHuskies held Kalisas State to
cuse's stingy defense.
minus-17 rushing yards last week.
The last time they played, in ... WASHINGTON 42·10.
1989, Florida State ended SyraNo. S.Oklaboma (minus 17) at
cuse's 16-game home winning
lowaSL
, .
streak wilh a 41-10 victory at lhe
Sooners haven't lost in Ames
Carrier Dome. The Orangemen, 17· since 1960.... OKLAHOMA 28·
point underdogs, would love to tum 14. .
,, ..
lhe tables Saturday and snap lhe No.6 Clemson (miD us 7) al Geor·
Seminoles' streak at Doak Camp·
1\&amp;
bell Stadium.
Bulldogs bite at home. ...
It won't happen. The Seminoles GEORGIA 14-13.
have too much talent, too much
speed and too much at stake....
No.7 Michigan (even) at No. 9
FI..ORIDA STAll! 34-21.
Iowa
Oklahoma St. (plus 37) at No. 2
Early showdown in the Big Ten.
Miami
... MICifiGAN 24-23.

.

.

BASF 5K run slated for October 12
As part of the upcoming Bend
Area Stemwheel Festival on Satur·
day, Oct. 12,1he village councils of
Pomeroy and Mason, W.Va. have
endorsed lhe BASF 5K run which
wiU begjn at Masorl City Park !hat
day at I 0:30 a. m.
The course will be mostly Oat,
starting at city park,extending
through thf streets of Mason,

across the Ohio River on the and prizes will be awarded. The
Pomeroy-Mason bridge, up U.S. 33 first 100 entries will receive a T·
through Pomeroy and finishing at shirt
the Pomeroy levy.
- For further infonnation contact
Pre-entry is $7 for runners and race directors Mike Kennedy at
$5 for walkers. Race day entry is 614-992·7512 or George Nichols
$1 more. Race day registration and at 304·773·5851.
pre-registration packets can be
All entries should be mailed to:
picked up 9-10 the day of the race.
Stemw}lcel Festival SK, c/o Mason
All age groups can participale Town HaU, P.O. Box 438, Mason
. .
·
W.Va. 25260.

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SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12, 199i -10:30 a.m.

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Sex: Male._ _ _ _ Female._ __

Name,_ _ _ _-:-_ _ _ _ _ _ Address'--- - - - - - - - - City
·
·
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.Stat~ .
.
ZiP·:-:. -:--:-In considcnltion of the acceptanceoflhisentty, I waiVe fill' myself and my heus·any and all claims f&lt;l'damages
against lhc sponsors and !heir representatives al)d all race officals, for any injuries received during this even~
1attest and verify !hat I am physiCally fit and have sufficiently ~ed for lhe Stemwhecl Festival 5-K.

Signature ·
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Date._ _ _ _ _ __
(Parental signature required if entrant is under 18 yrs. of age)
Checkeveitt·Run
Walk ·
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$27

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~

•

PACKING IT IN· Tuscaloofie County resl·
dent and volunteer~Morrls Bourrou1bs returns
to his ride after a rian day of searchlnil fJir tbe
whereabouts of Carrie Lawson. Lawson, who
lives iD Jasper, Ala~ wu kidnapped 011 Sept. 11

-

W!&gt;~lUNGTON (AP) - !here wu ividcoce ~ ~ been by Gates; . . · . , ' · •
Robert M. 0... Pl:ealclcllt BUsh's 111formed about.'the d1vers1Qn of : . One 1ntelhgence officii!
•
nominee to bead lhe CIA, .face$ a . Iran , arins sale .. profits · to worked under Gata said his Ubdcr· :
mass of evidence developed in NicaragUa's Con!rl zel)els. or about lings referred to bim u "~e :
three weeb of confirlilatlon belt· lhe involvement of lhe U.S. gov· Supreme Soviet" beeauac of bis ,ings ihat be misled.Congrcu, .cor· ,ernment ill the scheme.
deaire 10 Jl!ll his pcnonal imprint :
rupted intellip~CC estimates and
But perhaps even mM damag· on every mtclligmce .(lloduct deal· ·:
bullied subordinates. · .
ing wu a two-day mnthon .dis· iag with the Soviet Ulllllll.
·•
Tbe nominee was returning cussion of whether Gates bad
Othen came 10 Gates' defense,;;
today to lhe Senate Intelligence presidccl over, or acqUiesced ill. the sayiag he simp!~ appli&lt;!lt IUih lllln- :
· Commiaee to counru thoec ICCUSII· skewing of inldligcnce analysis to dards to intelligence work that •
lions, with his career. hinging on supPM hard· line ~eagan adminis· were resented by some subordi&lt; ·
lhe credibility of his ansWCJ:S and trallon policies - particularly on na1es.
.
. '' . .
. ~
senators growing increasingly the Soviet Union, Iran and . Lawrence Gersbwm, 9Jov1et·.
skeptical,
.
Nicaragua.
. , . ~ilitary anai¥S~&gt; said, "I baVe beard.:
. One Democrat • .Sen. Ernest
A ~ of six analysts re-enact· little or nothing ag&amp;lll,9l ~. Gates:·
Hollings of Sout!J Carolina, said edbelorc' lherclev~lightssome. !hat was provable. There are a Jot ·:
11\e evidence had pll$hed him from of·the bitter battles lhat raged over · of people w~ don't like Mr. Gates. :
favoririg Gates iniO leaning hcarily the draftiug of Reagan-era iotelli· . He ~~es hfe ver.y un~omfo~t- :
· against him. And Sen. Sam Nunn, gencc assessments.
. . able. But Gershwin praised biJn •
0-Ga., suggested !hat in light of the
In a startling public glimpse f?r "~ighly. e~cal beflavior" and :
revelations, Gates would have a inside the veiled agency, opponents
fuU mte~ty. ,
. ·•
difficult time managing the agency on Wednesday accused Gates of
Republicans on the ~~~·ttee :.
if he were confumed.
poisoning the atmosphere at the sooght to tatter lhe credibility of •
· "We have a very difficult j~- CIA lhrough bullying of subordi· G~' opponents, ~ly chal&lt;
mentto make," said Sen. Dav1d nates and "prostimting'' the inlelli· lenpns them 10 pro~ backup f'!l" :
Bo~n. D·Okla., the committee gence process.
·
their ~es and labe1iag !be lelll· •
chainnan, who has been supportive
"I don't think there's an~ mony ~ndhand spcculati!ln.
:
ofGarcs.
.
elation of the f~ling of intim1da·
"If th1s were a court of law, ·
Rep. Dave McCurdy, D-Oida., lion !hat exists in !hat building," three-quarters of thi~,wo~hl ~e •
chainnan of t.Qe House Intelligence said Melvin Goodman, a former lhrown o~t as hearsay, said Sen.
,
and hai noi been.leen Iince. Oil 'Taeada~ =z Committee, told The Washington Soviet analyst who was forcecJ out John Warner, R-Va.
- Biud,alsn from Jasper, shot ID&lt;tkllled.
I • Post that Gates sho.uld_wjtb.draw
FBI olfk:lals suspected Bland or the kldnappln'g. his nominatjon if he cannot dis(AP)
prove allegations that he slanted

1

R~bber

checks also passed
around House
Restaurant
.

WASHING10N (AP) - House · rubber checks of $1,000 or more in
members, unnerved by revelationk the succeeding sill months, the
abo~t !heir check cashing perks, GAO said.
may soon fiad !heir names posted
Referring to the delinquent
on a Capi10l waD as deadbeats who restaurant bills, Roberts said: ''The
stiffed their .ownrcstaurantsystem. farmer who eats in lhe local cafe
The rDfieS' list of lawmakers pays his bill. It's ouuageous and he
was conce~ved br Rep. Pat Robcns can• comiRhend iL"
,
-an overseer o House restaurants
he House members incurred
- who revealed Wednesday !hat the t when they failed 10 pay for"
some 300 current and former food
~onally ordered, or
House members owe more than when they signed for meals served
$300,000 in unpaid meal bills.
to groups of constituents who
Roberts, R-Kan., and Rep. Mary failed 10 pay.
Rose Oakar, D-Ohio, lhink lhe list
Roberts' figures on the restau·
should be posted in lhe main House rant bills listed $255,000 owed by
restaurant on the fust Door of lhe 250 current and fooner memben to
Capitol. They· made lhe suggestion Service America Corp., which
in a letter !his week 10 Rep. Charles operated the half-dozen House
Rose, D-N.C., chairman of the restaurants from 1987 until August
House Adrniaislration Comminee. - when lhe'Bouse Adminisuation
Oakar is chairman and Roberts Committee lOOk control
the ranking Republican on the
In addition, more !han 50 mem·
panel's police and persoMel sub· bers and several committees owe
committee. Rose has not responded $47,000 10 the House for food ~rto the req_uest, an aide, Heidi M. vice liefore Dec. 31,1986, when
Pender, satd Wednesday.
the House also controlled the
Roberts did not release any restaurants. Oakar said the break·
names IJnd would not say where he . down includes 33 current. and 17
objaliied' the fi$Utes.~ He atknowl· Conner members.
· edged in an Interview thai by
More !han SO members owe Serrevealing the iaformation now, he's vice America $1,000 or more,
"taking advantage of the problems Roberts said. He also cited figures
with the {House) bank to focus on that showed Service America last
this problem."
J unc 6 li8ted the debt from current
The bank, operated for House and 'former members at $667,416.
members, was ordered last week by The figure included $129,256 in
Speaker Thomas Foley, D· Wash., bills more !han 90 days old.
to reform ·its practice of cashing
It is not clear whether the names
c~ for lawmakers wilh insuffi. of those owing money 10 Service
cient funds in their accounts.
America would be available for
The General Accounting Office posting. Company officials who
discovered !hat from July 1989 10 ran the House restaurant system
June 1990, House members wrote could not be reachetl f&lt;l' comment
8,331 checks, without ~nalty, on
Ms. Pender, special counsel to
insufficient funds - g1ving them· Rose, said the $47,000 in old bills
\ selves, in effect, intercst·free loans. cited by Roberts could be inaccuEven after the bank instituted a rate.
stiffer policy midway lhrough !hat
People listed us delinquent have
period m an effort 10 curb the abus· produced e~mceled checks showing
es, 134 House members wrote 581 payments lind some bills have no

documentation, she said. "I have
yet 10 ~a legitimate bill !hat has
not been paid," said Ms. Pender,
who has been reviewing the bills.
Ms. Pender said she coul4 not
comment on the accuracy of
Roberts' figures on Service Ameri·
ca.
The Administtation Committee
already has instituted a new policy
!hat requires payment in cash or by
credit card - either in advance or
at the time the meal is served.
In the letter to Rose, Roberts
and Oakar proposed four sleps 10
deal wilh lhe delinquent accounts:
.....Send the debtors a ftnal dunning letler, allowing a 3Q.day grace
period for paymertt.
-Mter 30 days, send the list of
those owing money to a private
collection agency and post the
names in !he main House restau·
ranL
- Ban delinquent members
fromtheHouserestaurantandfrpm
catering privileges until bills are

•

•

•

acting.
' '9
In WashinAton, President Bush
suspended the S8.5.million U.S. aid
~rogram for Haiti and called for
'an immediate halt to violence and
the restoration of democracy ...
Bush said he was "disinclined to

New criminal proceedings are :
ordered by India Supreme Court ~ ·

~~~~:;: o=~ih~~~d6~~

has no role in Gates' confumation.
But the man wbo nominated
Gates 10 head the spy agency was
standing fasL ·
. .
"I know Bob Gates and I know
he wouldn' t slant an estimale for
some political purpose," said Pres·
ident Bush, a roniler CJA direciOr
who 'named Gates his deputy
national security adviser in 1989.
Gates opened his testimony
more than two weeks ago wilh a
few adinissioris of failure and
dozens of answers of ~·I ,can't
recall" in response to questions
about the Iran·Contra arms-forhostages scandal.
.
Since .!hen, the committee had
heard from a. parade of c~t and
former inlelhsencc officials, some
defending Gates and o~rs raising
new questions about h1s career at
!he CIA.
·
On lran.Conua, the inte~encc
committee had assembled a ItS[ of
at least eight instances,Jn which

NEW DELHI, India (~P) The Supreme Court today threw
out terms,of a two-ycilr-old settlement and ordered new criminal .
proceedings against Union'Carbide
in lhe 1984 Bhopal gas disasler,
which killed more !han 3,800 peapie.
The five-judge panel upheld lhe
$470 million settlement reached in
1989 for the world 's deadliest
industrial disaster, but lifled lhe
criminal immunity granted the
Danbury, Conn.-bascd multinational and its Indian subsidiary.
Today's acti.~n frees . up the
money, alrCady paid by Uruon Car·
~ide Corp. ~or ~~bution to vi~·
urns and thell' families.
Under ~ ?£ the 1989 ~­
ment, all cnmmal proceedtngs
were dropped, includiag a charge
of cul~ble holl!icidc ~gainst former Uruon Carb1de chairman War·
ren Anilerson.

.

paid.

-C()arge interest JIDd late fees,
atcumulated dally, ·to the unpaid
accounts.
"We remain convinced that
'\uick action is imperative at !his
ume, •• the Roberts-Oakar letter
said.
Meanwhile Wednesday, Hoose
Republican Whip Newt Gingrich of
Georgia becaine the first member
of either party's leadership 10 admit
he took advantage of the bank's
free float.

G~ said three of his checks
were gtven special handling by the
House bank. In one case, he said,
he was called to sign a check he
had forgotten to endorse. In anolh·
er, a postdated check w4s· held
aside untilthuroper date. The
lhird was an o'til'draft !hat he cov·
ercd wilhin 48 hours, he said.

Military chief stands up.to opposition
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP)
- The nation's military chief on
Wednesday advised ousted Presi·
dent Jean·Bertrand Aristide ,to
remain in exile, defying international pressure to restore Haiti's
first freely elected JRSidenL
, t' "I personally do not believe it's
a ~ood idea for Aristide" 10 return,
sa1tl BriJ. Gen. Raoul Cc;dras,
whom Aristide has accused of lead·
ing Monday's coup.
Cedras, lhe acting anny commander-in-chief, also accused Aris~
tide of ordering the execution of a
leading political opponent only
hours ·before fleeing the Caribbean
nation f&lt;l' Venczuela.
Speakipg to reporters, Cedras
denied lhe militarY" waniS to retain
power in Haiti and reilerated· his·
claim that the army interv.ened .
because of Aristide's alleged ahus·
es, including tJi training of an elile
presidential guard to be under his
direct command.
He said the execution order of
Roger Lafontant was an example of
Aristidc overstepping his authority.
Lafontant was a fooner leader of
. the dread Tanton Macoute mlli•
that supported the Duvalier family
dictatorship for nearly 30 years
until1986.
Lafonlant was in lhe National ·
. Penitentiary along wilh about 1,000
• other prisoners, many of whom
were freed following !his week's
coup. Cedras said Lafontant was
assassinated late Sunday or early
Monday by a soldier acting on
orders from Arislidc. ·
Aristide Dew Wednesday to
Washington from Venezuela to
urge !he Organizati!MI of Ameri~
States to take acuon to put h1m
back in power.
He called for an armed U.N.
force to return him 10 office, wblch .
he held since a big election victory
in December. The U.N. Security
Council has so far refrained from

The Dally Sentinel Pags 8 ;

Gqtes to rebut allegations totjay~. ~ .

~ 8P!!ORS-In lbelr ftJWyearot · Jtandln&amp; jOb. Plctared are Lee Glllllin, Amy
play, eal:b EaStern Senior llati been dolnl( an OUI· " 'Wells,'"tlsa Golden IDd 'l'•bby PbUiips.
· •

Burns' .houseclealjing ~underway .
.in Minnesota Vikings' camp - ·

'

Pomeroy:-Middleport, Ohio .

use. American force" in Haiti, but
said lhe OAS may discuss use of a
multinational force.
Also Wednesday, the 12-nation
European Community suspended
all cooperation with Haiti, including a 5148 million aid package.

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POWER

In its unanimoos decision, the
Supreme Court said "the quashing of the criminal proceedings was not :
justified ... It is a matter rf impor- •
tance !hat offenses alleged in the :
conleltt of a disaster of such gravity :
and magnitude should not rcniain ·
uninvestigated."
·
A copy of lhe 164-page judg- ,'
ment~ which has not yet been ,
released, was seen by The Associ· •
ated Press.
Critics have argued that the set: :
tlement was too low and said :
Union Carbide should be brought';
to trial. They allege the disaster ,
was lhe result of company negli· :
gence. Union Carbide mainlains it
was sabotage by a disgruntled .:
employee.
, ·:
The Supreme Court issued its:·
fmdings afler reviewing petitions.:
from various activist groupa and ·:
individuals challenging the settle· .·
menL
···•'

Monday t~ru Saturday ·
9:30 a.m. · 6:00p.m.

�•
"'l

·•

'·

Thursday; OctoberG, 1~1 . · •

Th~ Daily ~e~tinel

JJyTheBend

Beatofthe Bend... :
by Bob Hoeflich ·

Commualty Calendar items
. RUTLAND • The Rutland
appear two days before au event· Township Trustees will meet
aad.tbe day ol tbat event. Items Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the fire
must be recelnd weD 1D ad\&gt;ance station.
·
·
• to assure publication in tbe cal·
endar
LOTTRIDGE • The .Lottridge
Community group will meei Thurst
THURSDAY
d~y at th~ ,Lottridge Co111munity
· REEDSVIl.tE ·.,IteVival 'at the Center ai 7 p.m. The public is invit.
Fenowship Church of the Nazarene ed.
will be held through Sunday at 7
p.m. nighdy .. There will be specin!
POMEROY · The PERI Group
singers and nursery wiU he avail- will meet Thursday at I p.m. at the
able for preschool, age five and . senior citizens center. All members
under. Rev. John DouglaS invites are urged to attend.
·
the public.
· _
FRIDAY
·: POMEROY • The Pomeroy
LONG BOTTOM • There will
up of AA will meet at 7 p.m. at be a hymn sin$ at 1he Faith Fun
cred Heart Catholic Church Gospel Church m Lon!' Botrom on
ursday. For more infonnation, Friday at 7 p.m. featunng local tal·
ci111992-5763.
ent. Pastor Steve Reed invites the
public.
POMEROY • The Salisbury
Township Trustees will meet
REEDSVILLE · The Olive
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the home of Township Trustees will meet FriClerk Sarah Gibbs.
day at 7:30 p.m. at the 'Reedsville
FireHouse.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Ladies Auxiliary of VFW Post
TUPPERS PLAINS • A round
9053, Tuppers Plains, wiU meet at .and square dance will be held on
7:30 Thursday at the hall. Officers· -Friday from 8 p.m. to 11:30 p.m.,
will be elected, "There will be sponsored by the Tuppers Plains
. inspection..A potluck will follow VFW and auxiliary. The band will
the meeting.
be CJ. and the Country Gentlemen.
The public is invited.
RACINE · Racine Post 602,
Amencan Legion, will meet at 7:30
SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER - The Star
'lluusdav at the all. 1992 dues are
Grange and Star Junior Grange will

i:

Business was
the cy
receive the toys for disb'l'bution to
month of 5eptell!bet for the
C_ounty Emergency Medical Ser- the underprivileged children ·or
Mei_gs CountY. - _Conta.in~rs to
V,Ices-and that's good. · ·
received
conblbuttons to the pro. Normally the. units of the sergram
have
been placed in Several
VIces answer wen over 200 calls a
businesses
and
several items will
month but in September only 170
calls were answered. A lo~ per· be raffled as fund rai~rs in some
haps, but a decline from the past business houses.
In previous years, the bikers
num~er of months. Tliis means
thatJewer of us suffered the tniu· have contributed. 10 the Salvation
rna, the concern, the worry Qf a Army, the Carleron School and 10
member of. our family.being ill or ,Middlepon, Pomeroy, Rutland and
Syracuse Villages. This yeat a
hun in an accident.
·
contribution
of $1,000 will go to
Here's how Bob Byer, director
Racine
ViUage.
of the services, l!as the calls made
So rain or shine the riin wiU be
by the various units logged:
held
but an alternate shorter route
· Columbia, 2; Middleport, 38;
wiD
be
utilized in the event of bad
Pomeroy, 49; Racine, 24; Rutland;
46; Syracuse, 20, and Tuppers weather.
Dropoff pomts for new and very
Plains; II. Also during September
the number of patients transferred good used toys - no junk please
was down considerably with only - are Pleasers Restaurant and
41 made during the month. There Hudnall's Pliunbing and Heating in
were five Lifefli_ght calls in Middleport.
September. The pattents involved
in these included Fred Oiler, Gay
Ora Sinclair of the Sumner .
Johnson, Todd Tripp,-Kenneth Bis- RO'ad is a patient at Veterans
sen, and Thomas R. Cross.
, . Memorial Hospital where. she bas
• undergone back surgery. The room
Remember that Saturday will be number is.lll .
--a bag day for bikers of the area who
will be doing their armual roy run
Volunteers are reaUy needed to
to r.?vide roys for underprivile~ed help get the Sugar Run School into '
ch1ldren during the upcommg shape. Progress is being made at
Christmas holiday season-yep it the school but more help needed in
is upcoming-in fact there seems getting the stDicture into some son
to be such an emphasis on it-yes, of shape. The school abandoned
already.
long ago as a learning location has
Bikers will meet at Pleasers been given to the park dislrict and
Restaurant at 12:30 p.m. leaving several idea.s are being toased
there at I p.m. After the ride every- around on the practical uses fcx the
one will'be going to the Riverboat building once 11 is overhauled a bit
Inn in Middletron where a party The next work session will be at 1
will be held. Admission is a new p.m. Sw$y:
"
toy or $5. There wiD be two bands,
refreshments, and door prizes.
We can all rest well-the replica
In previous years, the roys col- of the Santa Maria has been low·
lecled as a result of the ride have ered into the water in Columbus. I
been given 10 the Salvation Army wanted to set your mind at restfor (jistribution. However, this I'm sure that's been a major con.
year the Community Action Agen- cern for you. Do keep smiling.

Dear A1n LaDders: Son~&lt;: time Schoolro the woman who is fright·
meet in regular session on S8turday ago,, you printed .a letter. from i ened bec••ise she and het husband . -A fifi
al 8 p.m. at the .grange hall on WOII18Jl in Madison, Wis., whose haven't paid taxes in .seven ~
n.
County Road 1 nesr Salern'Center. husband hadn\ paid taxes fOr seven She asked Ann Lllnders for advice. .
Degree work will be ~ormed on years. She was worried !(~at the Inter· FICl,llty ~hers in the law school
candidates preserit. POtlUck~- ·na1 Revenue Sa-vice wouk! catch ujl · . will . repQ~SCDt this couple without
ments will foUow the meeting. AU with them and Wrole to you. You charge. If you 8fCI th!lt coupl.e~ l~•
members and candidates are Urged ~ "Consult a tax expert."
· · · contact Genie ,Campl)elf,, feall(res · :
toa11CR4
· l . .~-~~~ MilarefJ!Ie~St,Q~
' by Susan S. ~her in "Giigoyle," refer you to the right people. after the wonlan contacled the IR.S
the bulletin of the University of. Confidentiality guaranteed' ·
. al ,
· ·
POMEROY - Salisbury Ele- Wisconsin Law School. I thought
."Meal!while, Professor Irish tilid ·reg1o_n office and arranged an·
mentary will h11ve its fall festival your readers might like 10 see what his students that. he WO!IId offer ongomg p~y-back schedule. The
on Saturday. Kitchen opens at 5. happened. •• Z.S.R. n, SPARTA, credit to any· interested students . _second fiiiii!IY found out they had a
begm at 6:30 WJS ·
refund cornmg· ·
p.m. and games
· will
will1'ng 10 help the le"p.m. ,Doo
, r ~will be awarded . ·
""'' wn··. ......
"With the cornbined'belp of the
AdmiSSion IS 25 cents.
DEAR Z.S.R.: Thanks for your Three second·year students signed w·
. S I
I 0 .
sharp eye. Here's the article:
ori: Val Baiiey-Rihn, John Fricke . 1sconSJn tate ourna , eme
POMEROY - ''Great Hair Argu"Last year the anguish that tax · and Kevin Wbittnore. 'they were CampbeU.and the law students, the
ment" and "Legend of Firefly problems C;8D cause was Jlr?ught to joined by a third-year student, Walt . :-n~:a::~ies~le- to help two
Marsh" will be shown at~ Meigs the atte~tton of c?lumn1st A:nn Skipper. Both Val and Walt were
DEAR READERS: Howzit for a
County Public Library jn illmeroy - ~d~ m a~~~ s1gned Womed certified public accountants. Kevin day brig·hle!ler'l What a great place,
on Saturday and Sunday at 2 p.m. mMadison, WIS.
had wo.ted in an IRS offiCe before
and at the Middlepon Library on . "Anne Irish, wife of Charles Irish, going to law Sc:hool.
J
that University of Wisconsin! fm
Monday at 7 p.m. •
pro(eSS?r of. tax·rel~ co~ at .. - · "The-identity of the--letter write~ .proud 10 say I_received Uhonorary_
.
.
the Umvers1ty of WISCOIISm Law remained'unknown for only a shon degree from the U. ofW. in 1985.
RUTLAND • The Bag F1sh School, brought the Ieuer to her while. Genie Campbell got many Iri~~~i~ulh:r::~IC~~
Tournament which was set for,Sat· husband's attention and suggested responses. She refem:d two to the
urd~y at the Rutland Amencan that perhaps the Jaw schooLmight law school. One was the person who ·who signed onro help, and kudos IIi "'
I,e~on Pond has been postpOned offer assistance. ·
Cactually wrote to Ann Landers, the that compassionate features editor,
unullat~?r m the month. The 10~"We contacted Ann Landers' other was a family whose story was Genie Campben. She certainly came
nament IS sponsored by the Me~gs offiCe and learned that the desperate so sad that Genie asked the law 10 the rescue.
~ounty Soap Box Derby Assocla· letter writer was anonymous. The school students to help them: They
Is that AM Lunders collllM you
uon.
Jetter was attributed to Madison, did.
clip/Md years ago yellow with age?
LONG BOTI'OM • Special ser- Wis., becau~e ,of th~ postmark.
'As for the woman who '!ffllte to For a FOPY of her most frequently . •
vices at the ML Olive Community Pro~essor Insh s ass1stan~ called Ann Landers, the law school helped. requested poems and essays, send a
Church in Long Botrom on Satur· .· Gerue Campben of the ~ascoos~n her and her· husband complete self-addressed, long, bJUiness-size
• Stat J
1 h
t d th
'
envelo~ and a checlc or mone)' orday at 7 p.m. with Conrad Cook
, e ourna • w o pnn e
IS ,ederaJ anclstate tax returns for 1989, dtr for $4.85 (this illc/ruks postage
and the Calvary Echoes. Pastor sa~~ (OW: days later: ,
. • which enabled them to deal with and handling) to: Gems, c/o AM
Lawrence Bush invites the
Leg~l aJ,d offered 10 Womed their outstanding tax years. The law '··•· p
who d1dn t pay taxes. Help IS school dropped out of the picture """""'rs, .0. Box 11562, Chicago, ,
offered by the UW-Madison Law
Ill. 606]]-0562. (In Canada, send
$5.87.)

Racine Fall Festival to start Friday
.

' AFTER·HQuRS SOCIAL • Local profes·
1ionaii1Dd buslnell-repmeatatlws were pests
.., , itt a GTE after-hours social held Wednesday
~ •lllgbt Ia the recreatloa complex at tbe Royal
:· : pak Recreation Complex. Gary Bates, Melp
f. • ~trea GTE manaaer, lntroddced telep-ne comO: ; pany per1onnel atteadlag lncludlag Mike
:. • Edwards, outside eaglneer; Gary Leake, .con·
~

.

The annual Racine Fall Festival
will get underway Friday. with a
run slate of activities and entertain·
menL
Gospel music will begin Friday
evening at 4 p.m. with perfonners
to include Darlene and Friends, the
Joy Singers, Russ and the Southern
Hill Singers, the Reflection Trio,
Kings Harmonr Quartet and the
Faith Harmony Quartet. ·
A para~e will kick-off Saturday's activities at 10 a.m. with the
crowning of the Harvest Queen at
approximately 11 a.m. A trophy
will be presented following the
parade to the best marching unit
and also for the best floal For fur.
ther informatioo on the parade contact Kenda Rizer at 949-2465.
Entertainment on Saturday wiD
begin at I p.m. with the Country
Blend Band A pie eating contest
· will be held at 2 p.m. and prizes
include a $50 savings bond for first
place, $15 for second place and
$10 for third place. Participants in
the pie eating contest should registee by I p.m. Participants in the
purnpkin powing contest will have
their entries judged between 2 and
3 p.m.
The Harvest Time Blue Grass
Band will perfonn at 3 p.m. Col·

'

structlon supervlsori Ralph Holt, aupervlsor,
central omce tecbnldaos; Pbll Ramey, division
coordinator; Pbll Belderman, d~trlct manager;
Jeff Jones, public relations director, aad G. Dan
Boone, Soutbera Division Manaaer. Enjoying
the soda! here are ten til ri&amp;hl, Bates, Jim Hill of
Pleasen, Kenny UU, POmeroy CPA, aad Bonne.

'

lowed by Twirlers on Parade at 4
p.m: 8llti the Free Country Band at
5 p.m. The Rarely Herd l!and will
go on at 6 p.rp. followed by the
Midnight Clo$gers at 7 p.m. and
the band, Str1ctly Business at 8
p.m.
Food concessions will be available and there wiD also be plenty of

arts and crafts. For infonnation on
spaces to ren~ the public may contact Bill Nease at the Racine Home
National Bank.
All of the festival's aetivities are
free of charge to the public and will
take place across from the post
office in Racine. Those attending
should bring a lawn chaii.

..tt.cndance.

:; The day's events included a
:~hoc ~t, a 'i~tle ~~
,w sexes, door pnzes, gotcha
.l~ards, and tile annual talent show.
~tnners of the horseshoe tollll'!a·
.J!IC!It w~ Don~ford and J101
:!'.dkins.Mi'chel
'Door '. ·woungest;ere
~hir~tj
1 1
..... !0.
m, y
.
lt. BIIS, oldest; and Roy Bw Jr.,
' :fiJihest nveled. p~tcha aw~ds
.went to ~g'y Vma~g, howling
~fshaJI; Linme Aleshire, car _trou·
~lei_ C~ndy Faulk, lawnmower
4\jjiiilde, W~yne Thomas, I'UIIaway
truck; and Aaron Bryant, wrong
~me. Several other games were
~played.

·:
: ; Attending w~re Shirl Bi~s.
henry and-Madeline Howard, J1m
Phyliss Royster; Roy Bias Jr.,
•
Aleshire· Jerry and Donna
and ,00 Jerry Jr Shirley
Roger amd Peggy' Vining
. and children, Jim, Joe, Kevin and
S Clifford and Olive Bias, Judy
IIICI daughterS, Patricia and
.
·~
-

,,. i:.d

l':ns

:; Pi~ elans were made for the
-sOuandWatcrConservation
liict annual meeting and ban·
ben the board f
·
~tly.
o ~

~1bcannua1mec&lt;ingandbenquet

iem
he held Oct. 22 at 7:17p.m. at
ua~ ~.,A..._,

•r.

. """"""'. .

.

! ~_,e c theack!~'gsdmFFneAr andwalltlcbke·.
-·-~
....,. • $7 each llld
· for
•:-~
•
uuu... Ire
,
!!1. be purchased from Me1-s
~P,'CD Supervllon or 11 the dis. lllct olllco, 33101 Hi~nd Road,
. . ill he
for· .....
.f
w"',CVCRIJI8 W .
v~ ~ Colonial Flag Compa~

-~Lynch birth-announced ·.
.

. l&lt;:eith ~Beth Lynch, Middle-

. ~· 1f!i announcing the birth of
, tl!eu tlurd son, Jake AUen L,yncb,
~n June 17 at St Joseph's Hospital

. ' IR l'arkersbiQ, W.Va.

Meigs Women's Fellowship meet
The Meigs County Women's Hazelron and Charldine Alkire.
Homecomings of area churches
Fellowship met recendy for its regwere announced for Hem lock
ular meeting.with.l5 presenL ~
Jane Hazelton l~d the opening Groye Christian Chfucl!, Satllrday;
song "Wonderful Grace of Jesus" and Rutland Church of Christ, Oct.
and prayer hynm bein~ "Open My 13.
Marge Pui-ten was the evening's
Eyes, That I May See.' .
guest
speaker.
The opening prayer was given
The
next meeting will be held
by Ruth Underw~od. Devotions
Oct.
24
.and Carolyn Fitchpatrick
were read by Debbie Miles.
will
be
demonstrating making
The business meeting was eon·
dueled by Kathryn Johnson and the candy . The Rutland Church of
secretary's report was given by · Christ will have devotions.
Isadora Williams had closing
Olarldine Alldre . .
·
prayer
.and refreshm~nts were
A nomill!lting committee was
served.
selected of Ann Lamber, Jane

: .
, He weighecl seven pounds anll
fLve ounces and was 20 inches
I .
.
~ chil,dren at home are Josh,
age seven and one-half, and Joel,
age three. .
- Maternal grandparents are .
RQger and Hazilee Riebel, Long
Bottom. Maternal great grandmoth·
er is Bessie Cobb, Akron.
. j?ateynal , graildpa~ents .are
Delores Surface, Middlepon, and
the late Harry Surface. Paternal
great grandmothers are Mae Lynch
and Eulah · Odegard, both of
Pomeroy.
. -

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~··&gt;'I'd

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·~-~

"

JAKE LYNCH

...

..,

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Lambert graduates Art Institute· :~:,;
Donna Lambert. Pomeroy, grad:
uatcd SepL 22, from the Art Insti-

tute of PittsburghLEnroUed in. the
Visual Communications Program,
she received an associate degree of
specialized technology.
A graduate of Meigs Higb
School, she-is the daughter of
Clarence and Sally Lambert
· The Art Institute of Pittsburgh is
a two year ttade and technical
school of professional studies with
program majors in visual commu·
nications, interior design, photogra·
phy, fashion illustration, fashion
marketing, induslrial design tech·
nology, and music and video busi·
ness. The Art Institute of Pittsburgh
is accredited by the Accre!)iting
Commission of the Career College
Association.

DONNA LAMBERT

,

Midnight Cloggers to perform

1111148
IWIO .

.....

•!IIIII

for Walt Disney World - Ma~ic
· fonn at the Racine Fall Festival on Kingdom Entertainment Divis1on
·Saturday as a part of the entertain- in Orlando, Fla. Wolfe relocated to
ment during the festival. ·
' Florida in late August and began .
T-he group will perfOrm a 45- his new position soon after.
·minute show at 7 p.m. featuring
In the absence of Wolfe the
roQtines they have performed at group will continue to perf(mll not
Opryland USA and Donywood this . only locally but on tour as th'ey
past summer.
, have done each s~mer, accooiipg
This will be the final appearance to Wolfe.
of the group for the 1991 season.
The Midnight Cloggers will be Rehearsals and b'aining for the new conducting beginner clOgging class\...
1992 performace season tradition- in October but will not he taking
ally begins in October each year at applicatioos for new team memberwhich time new costume designs, ships until further notice. Individuset construction and new routines als who desire information about
are established.
!1' ·
clogging classes may contact assisMidnight Clogger Dirictor tant dire&lt;;tors Margie Wolfe or
Bruce Wolfe was hired recen~ as Betty Smith.
a full time dancer and perfotlller·'··l . _, '· ·
.
The Midnight Cloggers will per-

..

PWS

'""''

~

[

Fnom

UNUSUAL VISITOR ·Paul WIUllms, son or AndreW ud Ama
WUiiams, receatly brought his pet raccoon, Jake, to ,vlsll his rourtb
grade class at Salisbury Elementary. Mrs. Walker, rourtb, firth
and sixth grade teacher, bas had ber rourtb grade students study
dilfereat animals as part or their scleace curriculum.

Canie, Glen arid Kathy Bias and
&amp;randda~htcr, Kristina. Edwin and
lielen Btas and children, Missy,
Shawn, Wendy and }ody, Leslie
and Donna Adkins and children.
Todd, Chad and Tammy, Allen and
Patty Bias and daughter, Stephanie,
Tim and Jill Clark and daughter,
Heather, Aaron and Robin Bryant
and son, Ryan Wanda Trina and
(::indy Faulk ~ daqhter, Hanna,
Randy and Brynda Faulk and sons,
Tyler and Zachery, Betty McKnigh~ Nick McKnight, Kenny and
Janet McKnijlht and sons, Kenny
Ray and JessiC, Jean Delph, Sandy
Hart, Shari Eblin and children,
Chad, Bobby and MicheU, Wayne
Thomas Beatrice Bias Danny and
Martha 'Bias and children, Brian
and Lisa, Brenda Johnson and son,
Jason, Albert and Ilene Price and
granddaughters •. Melissa Pridg_en
and Brandie Adnisky, Barbara Glb·
son, Jim and Glenna Davis, Audrey
Lunsford and children Danielle
and Troy Leonard and Carolyn
Lunsfcxd Boo daughter, Mae BeUe,
Don and Anita Lunsford and
daughter, Phil and Joyce Stanley
and children

Others attending were Jim and
Beuy Adkins and children; Lori
and Jimmy, Violet Jarrell, Beulah
Wright, Michael Beres, Todd
Wolfe, Richard Peyton, Victor Lee
Roush, Joe Roush and Mandy VanMeter and Lori Frye.
The 1992 Bias reunlon will be
held Sept 5 at the Star Mill Park in
Racine.

----Davis' have guests·- - - - -

Roach fami'ly·
h0 ldS feUnJOfl
.

.
Annual Roach reuruon was held
recently for desc7ndants of John
and Amanda Aumiller Roach at the
• Fa~view Bible Church pavillion
· durmg ~n afternoon of food "and
fellowship:
,
10
ble~fn g k~~k:::e~~! gave the
,
:
• Attendmg were Ang1e Laven:
der,, Nathan and Joshua; Tamrm
Ebhn; Rusty Lavender; Ja.ckae
Hoover; Betty Lavender; Amanda
S~e; Mary Ann_ DaVIS; Ju~e ~d
Bnttany Power~, Scott Tnpp, !·
Robert and Elsae roach; Rankm
Roach; Elma Spears Graves,
Zanesville; Frankie Speark Clark,
Rosevill.e; Ruth Jeff~rs ~cCllin,
:t'
Crooksville; Harold and Eileen Jef.
ny. His topic will be "The Many ' fers, Rose~ille; Ra~h and F~eda
FacesofOidGlol'y." 1
RoJK:h. Weuton, W. a.;Roterand
Other topica discussed during M~non ~oac~; M~xlne cary,
the
. . ..... purchasin
Alice Marie Tnpp; Kimberly Cool,
meeang me1llUIOU
s .a Sistersville, W.Va.; John and
~=~the upcoming soil Kath.\ Cool, S!stersv11le, W.Va,;
ThC boatd voied to accept the Ray oach! WeU10R, w_.va.; Bryan
$4 ()()() ,
Weuton, W.Va., Sunny and
, .or muItt·. flora rose-cost- Rolch,
Connie Gibbs: Alice Roach; Ron
share from the llalc.
Lavender; Randall and Dorothy
AdalecbangeofJan.21·23was
announced for the Ohio nA•-u·on Roac h, Ch ester, wv
. a.; Kathr yn
...,.....
Ford, South Zanesville; I osephine
of Soil and WJter Conserva!ion Jeffers, Crooksville; Audrey
Districts Annual Meeting in Spears, Roseville; Mrs. Geraldine
Colwnbus.
Grannan, Roseville; )'o!ellic Ann
·The
next
meeting
will
be
Oct.
Ste wan• Blue Rock ; .-~ggy
n..
23 8
the di . ffi
........;
at p.m. 81.
striCt 0 ICC.
Toylet and Erica Lavender;
dy,
Maclde, nra and James Lavender.

·'

"

" 'l-

I

IOftlign or oomastlt:

Hubbard graduates
Tmcie Hubbard, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Roger ~bard of
Syracuse, is a 1991 cum laude
graduate of Ohio University,
Athens. She received a bachelor ilf
science degree in home economics,
majoring in family studies. Tracie
completed her studies at Ohio Uni·
verslty in September.

Berry's World
WH~T

...

4&amp;··~~
~~~~ !'!!'1~ 111'181llllliiiiiPI

....

$1 09 sa~ price

me·~~:

·a
:25!
p! plug
e4

.

vourco&amp;t

....

lS ·

1t1er rtOate

...... lW

TlUS ONE?
Tt\E LA\ES't

DONALD- MARLA
STATUS!
I
.,, ,, ,,. ,

'-...

!1.99 sale pti&lt;e . .
. ·$ .25 per plug mlr s rebate

•4

1
.....

Um&lt;l6

four cos!

after rebate

....

.

Pill

•

From

$7.99 ..~ p!~ '

;l!·oo rntr's11batt
&lt;om

4\~IH
....

u:·"'-

v

3!~···

Howard· Neison and Clyde Nelson,
Logan.
'
. "

Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Davis, Dexter, were
Jeanette Davis, Collll!lllus; Mr. and
Mrs. Rodney Davis, Tim, Tammy
and Tracy, Westerville; Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Davis, Matt and Doug,
Pickerington; Mr.s Betty Jacks and
son, Rick, Reynoldsburg.
Other visitors calling recently
were Bill and Helena Aldridge,
Sandusky; Mr. ami Mrs. Frank
Moore, Lancaster; Mr. and Mrs.
Jiin Beiger, Wooster; Mr, and Mrs.

' surcrn
• ·
ezgs
YY U sunervlSOTS meet
., .
I

'

••

,...

•

.f!Jias family gathers at Mill Park
'•
.
;. The sixth annual Bias family
!reunion was held recently at Star
;).!ill Park in Racine with 108 in

The Dally Sentlnei-:-Pege 11

.

Joel ·Andrew Lynch .was bon- ·
ored reeeJ)tly with a pool pany in ·
observance of his tpird birthday
hosted by his parents, .Keith and
Beth Lyilch, Middlepoit. ' •
· A baseball theme was carried
out with a cake.
,
·
Attending and brjngiag gifts
were Keith and Beth Lyncb, his ·
brothers, Josh and Jake, maternal
grandparents Roger and Hazilee
Riebel, paternal grandmother
.Delores Surface, Roger II and
Robin Riebel, Jessica, Justiri&gt;Ricbanl
and Diana Johnson, Ricky, ·
.
Christopher, Rhonda Riebel and
Dave Carnahan, Tyson Lee, Tracey
and Ray Smith, Jacob, Ashlee, Van
and Paula Counts, T~ Jeff and
Sarah Swnpen, MarKle. Max, Stefan, Jon and Tami llucll:, Jordan
and Trevor.
JOEL LYNCH
Sending cards were grandmother Mae Lynch, Pomeroy; and Aunt Renee Riebel, Florida.

'

Wife.of .tax evader asks.for help

.

Joe~ Lynch·observes

.'

~uraday, (i)ctober 3~ 199,1
I

Pomeroy-"'lddleport, Ohio ,

.

•

.qc......
.

'Il . . .. 1.t

e a c M 1 by N£A, Inc.
1

.

'

I .

I

'.t

.....

OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
Stolt llouro: 1::10 o.m.IO I p.m, ~-.., Frtdly,
1::10 o.m. ID 7 p.m. Solunllly, ond to.m. 10 1 p.m. Bu-y

GALUPOUS

• I&gt;

-~1:,:.::,-

il.

�' ..
.

.

'01110 .

•

Sy.SCOT'l' :W.OLF&amp;
Sentin.eiCorr,spoad.eat
The fourth annual Southern Ath·
letic lloosrers car show was again a
huge ·success as !)vel: fifty ·fivo
entries and a beautiful da&gt;: greeted
the large crowd that was m atten·
dance. ·.
. ·
·
Ofuidiing top honors in differe~t categoiies were Gene ~~ey,
Kim Neal, Bill PaltOIJ, Chris Pilos,
Warren DeVault; Randy Sflamblin,
Rose PQC, (lary Warren, and Andy
Hill.' · .' , .
~t of.Show m StteetRod was
Kim Neal with his enlry; "Damned
Old Ford'' an early louring ~a~;
Gene. Wh~ey won the ·most onginal for his 1961 Chevy Biscayne;
anq Bill Patton's 1957 Cameo
Pickup won the "~tof Show" for
trucks. . . ,
Chns P1Ios entry was Best
~-...,______~

... Ll-~ ~- :--.-4~

~

. BEST OF SHOW-flcturetHeft to right are,
. Kim Neai, .Wesf Columbla; Gen' WllileY. or
Sbade, and BUI Patton, .OWJ!ers or vehicles.which
were tile "Best of Show'' ,,n qae · ~urlh annual
Racine Car Show. Neal's entry wali a street rod
dubbed "Damae Old Ford'~; a be"u!ll'ul work

OTHER WINNERS-Pictured froat, J.ft ·tn
right, Rose Poe, winner or Racine car show's
Best Mopar, • 1!169 Roadrunner; Gary Warren,
Best Stereo In his 198li 4 ~ 4; lllid Gene Whaley,
'

~

_,_....__.______

----.....

~

whiCh won thai cJivision;(1ene Wbaley'woo the
"Best of Sh!IW" In the M&lt;lsl Original category
for his 1961 Chevy Bist,ayne, while BiD Patton
· pic~ed up the ''Best of Show" harJiware in the
Truck ilivisioli for his 1957 Cameo Pickup,

.

'· (

·,

'

'

::

"Best of Show'' for his l!J86 S·IO pickup. Back·
Chris Pilus, Best Eaglne; Warren DeVault, Best
GM; and
~hamblla, Best Paiat, 1972
Cbevelle.
WIS Aady Hill or Hill's ClassiC
for
a 1956 T·Bird.

from lire cords to clothes.
.
. AI the Cooperative Extension
Servi~~; 91Jil=ll.in Champaigu.Coun.
ty on Wednesday, .women slipped
into light blue body suits criss·
crossed with ribbons 10 mark measuring points.
Volunteers used ruleis and other
tools to record 57 measurements,
including the slope of the shoulders
and the roundness.or the abdomen.
"I thinlc when they get all done,
we'Ubsve ,better clothes," said 79·
year-old ~articiP.anl Orle.na Leis·
chner of Fisher. 11 really IS hard 10
find a one-piece dress tha,l fits in all
places.''
. . .
The $180,000 project IS be1qg
funded by th~ gm:ment mduslry.
Now, s1zmg !S based on me~·surements takeo m the 1940s. Most
of the women u~ for those mea·
surements were m the Army, and
only 2 percent were over 50. ·
Among them was flight .nurse
Elberta Morse of Champaign, who
was measured m 1946. Morse, 69,
decided to be measured .again
Wednesday ~ help older women
fi~,beue~·fiWng clo~.
.
~
I nouced a change mclothes m

'v

.

·I

20·SESSIC)"S .
,
'

•

· Get

nckets Now: $7.00 In Advance

. $10.00 Night of ShoW
Gendemen Welcome Altar )0;00 p.m.

Proper ·
For I

,
·
·: ·

&gt; ··,

RENTALS

the early ' 5.0s after the last projec~!' she said. "I began to,b~ the
, , new juniors. I .:oul,d see the differe~e . They fit me.'
·
Rachel Eggen, specificationsquality manager for intimate appar·
el at Sears' Chicago headquarters,
said the study could help the induslry offer a better fiL
" These women are conscious
about how their clothes look and fit
- their appearance," said Eggen.
"They diet and exercise, but still
the biological clock ticks, and cerlain changes happen as they grow
· older.''
.
The point of the shoulder rolis
forward, for instance. The chest
area narrows, the upper back
widens, and the spine compresses,,
reducing height The derriere flattens, and the abdomen protrudes.
"Some women buy panis with
stretch fabric and elastic waist'
bands and wear them baclcwanls "
said Goldsberry. "It fits their oow
figure but it's an absolute shame"
Goidsberry and Reich will con- ·
tinue· collecting measurements
through January, then they'll ana·
lyze their findings

...

-

·II!

I

Finn introduces
new food product
. .

AVAILA6.LE~

One Needs Some Work

·

Ilia IIDUCIDI

Mal
flmd,n1lr'llo '""aolhpsow11r
'""
nd"""'""'
to~
, S73,9DO
ftoolllnt of op If Jb~ it ~~~~hale .,.,., .mn loo '

'W

~lor qialitylll Jlll'!ll lo bll)'
1111 imt
oi:J./2 acns ll·llidod
3bal I
.,
W:~ I llljlt. Properly 11~11 4,80 111·~1nn
~ 614-992-7104 for lpjl.

FALL OPEN HOUSE
·SAT. &amp; SUt:J., OCT. 5·6
11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
BERRY BASKET
2301 6th Sl., Syracuse, OH.
Bring This ~d for 10% Discoun1

Read the

.CLRSSIEIEP RDS
••

..
PRESENTED PLAQUE·Sten Klaa, lonrilme MC of the
·RldDI Car SlloW IIICI mMJIKh gOM alld cniile·lns ICI'OSI the
a.te Will preseated I p~ue for .Is lftll !effort in promotlna the . .

show.

'
i,

CooAgra said Healthy ChOice is.
the leanest national brand of
ground beef available. It contains 4
grams of fat in each 4-ounce
UDC:OOked serving, cO'Ilpared with
21 grams in the 80 percent lean .
ground beef sold in most stQres,
ConAgra officials said It is 96 per-·
cent fat free after coddng.
McDo.nald's said the ground'
beef in its McLean Deluxe, made
with a seaweed·based fat substitute
called carrageenan, is 91 percent
fat free. ·
•·
·

'

•

When You Tum To
The Classfieds,
~I The
Boon~
Is
Yours!
...

•
•

I

..
A blend of contemporary aophlallcallon ond clanlc
curves. Featuring smooth tailing, ·a luqked back 1nd
gracefully conloured Irma. Comfortable 181llng that
accommodate• guests lnalantly, wllh 1n easy-open
bed hidden Inside.
. NOW
, REG. $989.00

Now that the weat•er bas cooled
. down, why aot heat thiup up a hit
by clearilll your e~Gteta, atlk or
ltuemeat ef tho8e unwated Items
ud adm1Jslog them for llle In
the claulfledar
Aacl, yon CID put that mra
ash to 110011 111e by ehecklng .
·the Clwlfleds for lecal prqe
IIIIa, Ilea mrketa·u• bupiDJ
In your neck of the weeds. ·

•Bench
•Lane&amp;
The Perfect Chairs
TABUS &amp; CHAIRS

•La·Z·~oy

·Samsonite

, Starting ·
. At

Recliners

Sl::w *129oo

To pat tbe Cllulftedl It ftrk r.r )IU,
call
Moadaf-Frlday
. eur ad-riMrt,
.
. II

Call Sentinel

$199°0

. ' FREE ESTIMATES

FOR AU MAKES &amp; ·

Take the pain out of
painting. .
Let me do it for you,
VERY REASONABlE
HAVE R£f£R£NaS

MODElS
992.7013
or 992-5553
01 lOLl FlU

1·100·141-0070,
DAIWIII OHiO •
'

1614) 915-4110

7131 /' lll tfn

8-2d-91 - 1 mo.

NEW -:- REPAIR

Convertible ToPf,
Carp,et•. Headliner
11o Seat Covers and
Minor Auto Repair.
MAIN ST., MASOII; VA.

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting .

).(,034)~

FREE ESTIMATES

773-9560 '

949-2161

9/ 9/ 91 / I

8/ 8/ 81 / l .mo. pd.

USED APPUANCES
90 DAY WAIIANTY

WAIHW-SIGO.,
OIYII-$69 "' , ·· .
IIFIIGIIATOIS- SIGO "'
IANGIS-Got·B0&lt;.-$125
FIHZIIS-S US "" · '
IIICIO OYINS:-$79 up·

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

Stop &amp; Co...ara
· · FrH Estimates
98.5-4473
667-6179

EMILEE MERINAR

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp;SUPPLIES

Po""roy,

OPEN
Tuudlv thru Soturdoy
10:00 am-6:00pm '

TRUCKING AYWIII

21/z MI. ouhidt

1:~:=~~;;11;·14:-':90=11~•

. 742·2451
3-14·'9l·llll

(10) 2, 3, 4, 31c

. ·

0

0

0

0

I

0

0

0

t

0

o

0

,o

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Clntlftii'Y Towtl r • : 3rd,

Coote, -'!"".
c1.,.., 1ron

"-·

·.
&amp; OLIVE STREETS•GALLIPOLIS,,OHIO 45631
u;

.1- .... ~ ,L

•

~I

•..

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

wv.

~

2•!omlr, Tlu.f'rt, Hlnloan••
SA 143; kldo ctolhoe. orlo;

,=

0

0

......

0

«Jt.

Joono, wholot

eur

So. 2nd •
"'rt#1put
bed, ecaut 110
81pl: 10 tilnlugll boi. • .....,;
thing .......,_
•

woodtptta•,
142 Peart It, 11' 1M PI\
, Frlcloy,Ill
ciOihoo,
· mite.
llftcholt
frame. top,
""'' ·
-· - Rd. Th......
F'Md,
_..

0

~::~:6' .

IN JHf..; .
ClACCIFID AD~.

Lay-Away No'!' For Chrit fmatl

~-·

Dool1, WoodOIOVO;

Locatecl On SaHorcl Sclioel .lcl. off lt. 141
1614) 446-9·116 ... 1·11110·1172·"'"

8·8·1 mo. pd.

Pomeroy,

a.hlro Kygor SchoOl).

· MO.LE HOME

BENNE_TT'S

Ustd Woods .........$7.00
· AWARDS
,

0

-··
..

p.m. Sotutdoy.
. ctothoo, toto lotd - . , ltuiil
Big Clorogo Solof COme Looll ~·
m . lit lila 'r
Fuml~n
ctalhlng, Oulna, _ . ,
'
:
DI-eSolow Cll- IIIII, Al.7, JI.Fomlty, Frt-lot Ocl: +I;
South, •otctay, Soluldoy.
q.utlo, drlod n...;
Corport Solo: Frfdoy And Sotut· antktuoo, ololhoe, Jolt If
doy, October 4th And lith. 104, ~:.rboslclt tho Clvlo Conltr,
Kolt'o, c:t.ohl10. (Rood To

Frlcloy, t-4:30.

0

-

Yonl 11110, Ocl; 4 IIIII lllh. 114
Ho-, WV. ·

Flrot Stroot, -

Fd&lt;lay. Monday otlltlon • .~oo 4-Fomlly, Got. 3-4, -

1011/tln

o 0

Yonl ond Cnl Soto, Ocl. I • 4:
FowiMCo11At. 211f7jctalhoa, old Jor-. llllto.

more.

JOSlPH D.JlCIS

~

:n~t:=~~"rl·l'r::
~ er... - .
11 u~
~

·

ALL Yonf 8o1oa lluot 1o Paid in :1-Fomlllol Got. W. I:GN:oo,'
Advonoo. DWIUHE: 2:00 p.m. ::""R:'
ondctot':!::
tho doy blloro tho od lo to "'"· - . . Mloc.
'
•
Sundoy odltlon • 2:00 p.m.

-

I

Fridly ond SotunMy.

' mucll ,blby
ctal I119: .,, 11-. Illoc.,
_, thlrip, 1 wood orofto .:•

CONDmONERS • fiAT PUMPS and
FURNACES FOR MOIIL£ &amp; OOUBLEWIDf HOMES
'
.
0

Lola ol ~ Clolhio.

11364.
I mlloo 0111 211: Ocl. 2,3,4,1.
Bob~ child-. odut' _,.

';:====··~::::;::::;:;;:::==::;,=~=:::
0

~-~~i'p,~:;
' cl • • •
bMIIprllcte,

Lt!VO drum ott. 112 111110 up lit.
Drive In ..._
Olivo Rd. on 101. JOn"' Rd. tw 14
Fri-Sot Got. 4-1. lop
Alllrood In ltd1HtLI 114-.1U- gloll
clothing, loll-

TROMM BUILDERS

0

=

;: W::
ott::..,.:-;;.:'m::-lloc
":.=-=:-~,....-

crcrJo, ts Clift\' •11 ltozor,

ROOFING
AND EYERTHING UNDERNEATH

0

.

Buicltaa Addn, till .....
chltdrwW_.,. ...._. cla••4

Goode.

diamond
"""' " (owotry,
niuolc2-lqo - ..
poNh ~. . . . . . oqulpmont, tt ootcltn Wlnll mot.,.

WE DO

rlghlto bid II thll lilt, and
c.OUNTRY CLUB
lo wllhdraw tho obove col·
Joltrol prior io sole. Further, Golf ,
The Farm•r• Benk ond
•-.sons 161 .... 155 •00
.
S1vIngo Compony. rteorvea
lho right to:Jtcl any or 111 New Grips ............ $4.00
blda 1ubml . b
"
Woods ._............ 122.00
Further, tho 1 ovo Culllt·
S
trol ·wlll be told In the con· · 110111 .................. 14.75
dillon II Ia In wllh no
REPAIRS
erpreooed qr Implied wor· Ulld lroM .........-$5.00
r~ntloa given.
·
·

llloo. l14-317-l'Mtl

Ocl. 1 Eloctrtc cltolo, ctolhlng, -

FREE ESTIMATES

eroy, Ohio, lJt'ltrvea the

or,

Hot'eeholcl

s Fom~ Eliott l Pord1 Sott:

•s1-.

.!,';!

Eloclltc T""llng

=
.. ·-

II. 1, lut..nol, OH.

PUBUC NOTICE
- Ciuttw worl&lt;
NOTICE Ia hereby given
~=
Plumbing ·
lhlll on Salurday, Oclober 5,
~Nootlng
1881 It 10:00 1.111., I public
- lm111or • b..,lor
oale will be hold al 105
Pointing
.
Unfon Avenue, Pomeroy,
IFAEE ESTII\'IATESI
Ohio, lo tell for cuh the fol·
V.• C, .YOUNG Ill
•20 Ye ~ Expe rlef!ce
lowing collateral:
•QuaUty Homco and
1985 Chevy Caprice
992-6215
Air • Pc~r
p
Oh'10
·1
Cliolom RcmodeUng
1G1BN69H2FY211872
• omeroy,
The Farmors
BankPom·Ji
and
Savings
Company,
I'1

Boct l'oniSott, F~ '• .....,

~tobo:;:.:rtll:;:h.: .:ll-..;;1:::::-= -:-:== -oond toto ..... ,
8110: fridor, Lt01t Y..t 8oto ot .v-; 1.._ , , 114. 100 .loJ Drllll, Boden Rood, tiO.OO prlzll

We Gunranice Your Satisfaction

CARPENTER SERVICE

bltdgt, F~ • 81~ 304-m,'IIIL;:

4 Fomlty Yonl

For Old &amp; New Roofs, Shingle~
Repairs, Gutters .
Building aid Remodi!Rng

· - FibOm Adclttlon1

3 FomiiJ Yonl fllle, - . . . ,
mloc,Oil30111--

ctalhoo, Top, lobr f t Hou•hold llemt. SIIUrdlr oc.

·CALL JACKS ROOFING &amp;
CONSTRUCTION
992·2653

YOUNG'S

•

3 Famlty: 41 Honldo A..,uo, Clorogo 8IIO, ZIZS llop4o A...

•Rea1onable flateo
•Quality Work '
t F,.. Eltlmates
•Cerpet Hao Fut Ory
Time '
•High Glo81 on Tile
Floor Flnilh
MilE IEWI~ Ow""
'

FRIIISTIMATIS

&amp; Vlclnlly

-n·•

Is Your Roof Ready for Aaolher Year af Ice and Snaw?
, Maw's The nme tti Find Out.

NQ SUNDAY

Yard Sale

•

•
•

dor, M Fail• !It, -.._
3 Fomlly Vonl.llllt: I Doy Only, Chlidrlno clolhlng,. llqo Frldoy Octal!it 4th, a-.m. I
akJIIilnt, 'Ltlo at
Toko Rooto 7 To Cho- Oo mloc.
·
Ltft At TroHio ~Witch For
SlgnL Some Ant uo Fu:r:::~ Big 21 - - . t:ON:OO, Frl,

INDEPIIIDENT ·
CAIPR ClEANIH
allll nu nao1 CAll

DARWIN, OHIO

Pt. Pleal8!'t

Galllpolls
&amp; VIcinity

Albumt,

992-5800
IT. 33 WEST OF

PH. 949-2101
· or Its. 949-2160

Public Notice

7

lutiG!Id on Nlw
Uma ld.

H yilu're in n~
Mobile Home Nr,t
·. or Accenoricis...
SEE US FIRSTI

I "FrN l!tatlmattl"

, 639 Bryan Place
Middleport,

)81.1117 Of 31H711.

742-2421

W.H. MOBILE
HOME PARTS

lltir lliMtt lullt

'

JAMES IEESEE
992.·2172 or '
742-2251 .

LOST: Ro&lt;UWhtto - Ocl- 41~1 W. C.od I(
Whll tal!. Loll in POllOI' ltll. H Rollcltnco, - · . . . -found will P1J $10 ....... to HT ~. lobJ, ChJt6on
person who ttilclt hOI'. Coil 114- And Ad&lt;* Cla111fntl. ·
. :,

oiUY •SEU oli&amp;DE

8/ 19/ t mo. tfn

Window•
•Roofing
•ln•ulatlon

wit-

BULLDOZER and
BACKHOE WORK,
. HOME SITES,
lANDSCAPING
WATER and SEWER
UNES

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

... _.,...1

oottoot

Owner &amp; 0pll'alor

I-2M11

•VINYL SIDING
•~LUMINUM SIPING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

1144i2'41o!o -

For All lrltds .

992·7451

UsED RAILROAD .TIES

Loot( 2-cato, flmolo. TOIIuo
lhll 1-lilng 1111&lt; ~-.
Rllnh- Ltu Rd., Shlclt Oh.

co,..lete Grooming

JRiE ESTIMAm

992-U69

Qllmo. CoH 114 Nl-3317.

'GROOM
ROOM

.

illl SLACk

Five Polnllt'CIIIttM 1101,

Polilngo., block wlwhlto .......
lng, t-yr old. , . _ lo llo or

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

10/i0/'19

•c•••a
ltmotWing

·1mo.

614-9f2 -6820

H2·533S or 915-3561
Acro11 From l'elt O.lfk•
. POMEIOY, OHO

•Ga"'l'•

Arlo. 304-171..!2117 TIU 4p.m.,
614 111 1281 Afttl' 4:30p.m.

'l'll!·O•Iol

6·6-'91

REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

Found: Grey And Whho AM«•
Cot, Very Lovlo\g, Hat , _
Doclowod. No• 'H-nd Drive

OHIO PAUET CO.

(614)
696-1006

.. -

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and

7a38

CAU

BOB JONES
EXCAVATING
DOZER and
.
BACKHOE
WORK

Pll. 949·210 1
or ln. 949·2160
Day or Night -·NO SUNDAY CALLS

BISSEll I BUIKE
CONSTIUCnO"

Found, I'"Jiwhlto JGUnil oclutl
lomo~ cat In SJIOC-. IIWI2-

~

'::AJ: Reasonable PricK"

BALLET, TAP &amp;
. JAZZ CLASSES
.

for Sale
Great Price!

PH. 614·_9SZ·,Ii69

CUSTOM IUILT
~OMES &amp; GARAGES

992·3524
. 112711 mo.

Hardwood Slabs

Uconoed 'and Bonded

mo.

·'BISSELL
BUILDERS

RENT·TO-OWN
!illmo Brand Producla .
Factory Authorized
Repair
TV· VCR· Stereo · Boom
Box • C.D. Pllyer
Sconner. Typaw~ter
Cordlo. Phone
Microwave
. A~dar Detoclor

FIREWOOD
SELLERS

.
PONOS
.. SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; ·
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SllES
HAULING :
unienone. 0111.
Gravel and Coal

l•rYOU

44"6•3045 . .

1

INTtRIO!I • EXTERIOR .

HfRf!A!Alf

OPEN DAILY 'TIL 5 P.M.~. FRID~Y 'TI~ 8 P.M. .
·

·CORNER OF.

PAINnNG

992-2156
..

FREE PARKING

'

UPHOLSTER,Y

•Rep~emen1

t

..

ROOFING ·

•VInyl Siding

Reap The Rewards...

AUTO PARTS
$pld!lllilng In .
Cun.m Fr- ...air
· NJW. &amp; USED PAIItS .

.l!,oward. L._W_ri~.ts~LI 1 +,.,"

I'NSULATION

Dlarvest A~gain. .

.' WHALIY'S

9/9/tl/2 '""

•New lloiMI

~

pc. set.

0.~

· 992;5315 or

.

Evll'y Sunday 12 Noon
Factory Guns Only

THE DANCE ·
COMPANY
.992-6289

*799

~

21

.,c .

. Pick
liN'S APPUANCE
, . · SEIVICI ' •

9.92-6641 or
691·6164
.
.

·

Begins Sept. J 5

AGES 3 and UP

NOW$699

. ·. .y

SAT. NIGHI
·. 6:30 P.M;

.

AUIIUIS.
lri.-It .. Or We

.CONSTRUCTION ·

.

• . EVElY

UGQvae

0 ]1

FORKED RUN.
SPORTsMAN
CLUB

Bashan a11Qding

a.-.

..

·'GUN SHOOT

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Pomeroy

•

We have the most eye-appealing
· selection of versatile, stylish
sleep sofas. Every sofa featuring
a comfortable Innerspring
mattress.

BED SALE

GUN ·

H.E.C.

Read the Best Seller

·

.

~t.

OVEN

1110.;"

Home Entertainment
Center

t======~-~~~~--.,...

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - ConAgra, the giant Omaha-basec! food
maker, says it has settled on oats as
the best mgredient for creating a
healthier ~bwger, one lhat contains less fat than McDon8ld's new
seaweed-based McLean Deluxe.
Healthy Choice Extra Lean
Ground Beef, which has been leSt·
marketed in nine stares since midAugus~ should be available nation- ,
ally by the end of t.be month,
ConAgra officials Sjlid at a news
conference Wednesday.
The product, which is 89 percent beef, uses a modified oat-flour
fat substitute called LEANesse to
keep hamburgers juicy and
includes some beef siocll: for exD'8
flavor; said Richard Monfon, president of ConAgra Red Meat Com·panies.

10-3'1

9· 6·1 mo.

•

King, Roger Shoults,
Spencer.

Chokt

949·2826

..

•

lncl '

12 Gauge factory ·

.

614-992-3027
.

•DID YOU KNOW

CAR ,SHOW PROMOTERS-Oi-pnlurs for
this year's event lacluded Eric Shoults, Steve

FOinER·
BRONZE .

. Strldly
.

REG. $909.00
'.

. For '$20.00 ·•

Offer Ends Oct. 31

Required
Call

. The Daily Sentinel is in
need of 2 May 27th
papers. If you have one
please call · .
992-2155.

'

This Country-Inspired classic
features a. smoothly tailored
back that's gracefully con,. to.ured. The deeply cushioned
seat and matching corner pillows add a cozy comfort t'o every moment you relax on them.
At night, It converts to sleep
two In luxury!

*598°0 .

. ATIENT!ON Ai.L LADIES I
THE LA$ VEGAS STYLE
.
8URLE$0UE .
All Male Revue Appearing
the.N'ewly Remodeled
ADDISON CLUB
FRIDAY, OCT. 4'-a:cio pm

•.
.

Lifestyle Furniture ".S.torewide Sale
•SLE·EP SOFA SALE -OVER 20 ON SALEStARriNG AT

RACINE GUN •
· CLUB
GUN SHOOT ~
· .. 1:00 P.M.
·SUNDAYS .·
Starting Sept. 22

IAU IIITWAI
.. ·$PitlAL . .

Ttte Dally

.erv1ces .·

Busine

.. ·,

•

·Na tiona-! ~-pFeject measuring women
over 55 designing clothes that fit
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (AP) Experts around the country are sizing 'up the shape of things to c:Ome,
measuring as many as 10,000
women with rulers and ribbons in
an effort to ~evelop better-fitiing
clothes for the 55-and-up set.
The industry project is the first
step toward ready-to-weat clothing
designed specifi~~y for the older
.woman.
.
" Just because' they are older
does not mean they are larger.
· Other things change, like muscle
tone and bone sttucture," said
Ellen Goldsllerry of the University
of Arizona. "But the clothing
industry has absolutely no data
about their figures."
More than 17 million .American
women are 55 Blld·up. Many older
women endure clothing that's too
tight here and too loose there. And
many would be willing to pay a little more more for the perfect fit,
Goldsberry said Wednesday.. ·
She and colleague Naomi Reich
are coordinating the measuring project for the American Society for
Testing and Materials, )Yhich
. develops .standards for everything

·BULLETIN. BOARD

.''
'.,J

Engine iii bis ;1969 Corvette, War- Bob Sayre and Jim MoWiliiams
ren DeVault won the Best GM . were winners l8and0lder. · ·
award for his 1970 Nova; apd , Enttants in the top "forty"
Ran.dy Shambiin won Best Paint included: Vernon Cowen, Steve
for his 1972 Chevelle. Gene Wl1a· Duncan, David Allen, Rose Poe,
ley won Best Interior for ~ 1986 Ed Huffman, Cathie Dotson, Bob
S-10 pick"-up, Gary Warren 'won · Dotson, Mike and Marie JohnS!ln,
Best Stereo for his 1986 Chevy 4 x DiU and.Darlene Smith, Bob and
. 4 and Rose Poe won Best Mopar. Amy Armstrong. DiCk Hall, Atlee
Andy Hill rif Racine was BeSt Ford Whittington, Bobby and Cheryl
ovetall with his .1956 Thunderbird. Fox, Dave Maynard, Jean Arm·
' The lortgest distance award went Slrong, Jim McWilliams, Max HiU,
to·RickSmith from Weston WV in ].D. HAyden, Rick and Linda
a 1969 Cail)aio 454, tra~eling a Cochran, and Mark: Robineue.
di'stanceofl70miles.
·
Others were Robert Morris,
, ~The ·People ' s· Ghoice Award Dave McCoy, Gene Whaley, Butch
went. to Tcxld Cummir!s of Letart Orr, Doris Dee!, Raleigh Robinson,
Falls and his 1965 Ford Mustang. • Bob Sayre, C. Tillis, Williain Au!~
Jeremy Rowe and Rodney Poe Rick Gleason, Tom Smith, Bill
were first and second respectively Lambert, Max Hill, Sr., Gerold
in the model car show, ages 6-12, Maddox, Samuel Terry, C~rrol
Eric Shoull$ and Sean Monrgomety Johnson, Rodney Sparks, Clellie
were winners, ages 13·17; and Maddox, David Byers, and Kip
Grueser.

•

i

, I .

.

·•

1991.

· 1991

Fourthann·ual ·SHSj·cai
.
show ~aidbig .slJcCess

..

'

I

,

1

ald-.-

- . ....... olr -loi..,

�-··

'
Page-14-The

sentrnel
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Pomeroy,
.to'llddlepon
. &amp; VIcinity

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

44 · Apirtment
for Rant .

35 LOts &amp; ACreage

On•

0c1. '-4, ·a:oo.epm, Dorwln, 1
l/2milo on .lAIII W, blcydoo,
~boy

Octobet3,

Ohio

·•nd

two

Television
. · Viewiltl

bedroom

lponmonlo lor rlnl. ·3Q4.t7l.
!1053 or 175-4100.
ono BldrOom Aplnmonr, Living
ACIOII! Fuml-, - c-~
~hchon Wllhlt And
~IUtln Pold. Rollronoo n~
DlpooH Roqulrad. 114-"1-l:ml
A_ftor 5p.m,·

boalo, bllnklro, -•1

-.:tor .

•

1115 CroWn 'lk:iorlai moylhlng
bur oloctric lockl. Nri
Ooodynr tim. Normal miiM,
gocd thopo. 114-441·1110.

THU"OCTI_

lilt ...,
NIIUI

•
'

'.

..O(J)I: Ill• • a e .

1fl5 Dodlll Conan LE71'1,

.IIllVIIIIo,_
cMt COMIII

PB, A[r1 CruiH, AIM'FI C...

Httt, MW TN, C&amp;ll 114-4411800.

.

~llldrgiii!IIN•Q

- ~==
.
ID 'llllfa·-~~~ Dfgell "

·MOM SA'iS I CAN I-lAVE
''(OUR ROOM WilEN 'iOU
60 AWA'i TO COLLEGE ..

., ·.Ij .heard ~ the new
.
I 1'1 1 . dlat? 'lbu don't lose Wilght,
.._N_E_c_s_o_,{l......::...,lbul ~loOk~,... -•
STTYR .

Q 11M Tin Tin. IC'I Cop Q..

VE SEEN'

lllOii (J) ,., ClaM ..,

PIJTTIN61N
A FEWT~INSS
'ALREAD't'..

flll.l'l:..
"'::reo.Q .
~ ~ Onll'lllwtllan

·

rile chuckle q.-d
1'--r.;....r-.L..:...J.....J...
17 1 1 1 I'..J. Q ·-byComplato
fllli;,rn rile millinG _ ,

p,*J'lcaa~~eweo

you

· 81.~7 . .
::;~:Of_,_

·,

• ~:mR~~~f~ae$1

• ~~~~~MILE

!]j I !)Nim of Ja•sllf

l~

!.5i c ••
Uo...a-

Ill

.

I~.Aflwlr a
~Trill: Tfie ----~~

, ~
'•

TCiftlllll

72 Trucka for Sale
1111 Ford Rlriger, 111 t11 Ult•.~

'AUction

HrVIee. Llc«tHd

O~io.

:Wool Vlrglnlo, 304-773-5"18$.

9

sa,ooo
304~1121.
onal~1

·

Chivy

Yoga

body.

;R...,.Iolo prtco, 114-8112·11141

Ulld' Flobllo Homot, Coli 114;. .e_-0175.
:Wonild Ill lunk ond ICIIP mot·
.,, 3Qot..815Jo31.

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

I

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Flllol. CAll oftor 2 p.m.

HIOI3.

--..--..

.....,.., curttlno barbor
ollolr, ordftclal Ciiriilmao tiM,

61 Fann Equipment
:110 Kill- ara.rrr Bod, llkl
- · 11100. -4011.

76

)

Sola bid lnd 2 chtlra, 1150.

lYON • All . , _ taN Florllyn

u.l•~rwn.

A Dlllr Sarorr 01 1300 For
•urrna· FltlclolndiH. &amp;uror
-il. No b[!Orionco Na...

...,. 114-315-2012; Ell.3113. -

• AUSTAAUA WANTS YOU
collont · Par.
BonoiHO.
naportarlon, 407~112.,.llt7,
m. llll.m.·IOp.m. Toll
Ralundod.
aabrolftor Naadad In vrn~on
Aroo. Nald Ra1tfoncM, 114-381.157 Allar 5p.m.
·
111nch llbrorton noodld. Dutloo
Fncludo: Chlldran'o S.rvlc..,
Raloronco Work. Circulation
DUI Ill. Exportonea
chlldr1n and/or llbr1ry
•
ground nocotHrr. Ubronon will
wortc IPPIOllmatoly 20 houro
woolcly "' tho Fl..on
Branch. ApollcaUono 111 •••I·
able ot 1hlll11on Counor Public

fri

wortln\:"J!'

c•r.

Library• .

CABLE TV JOBS

••~len~

No

nte ..ury.

S1t!5Mir. For lnlormallon, calli·
900·7:17-1212. ollonolon 18!2.

. :IDom.f:OOPI"o 7 dayo, 112.8!
1M.
.

CUll paid tor llllckl, c.a 1Iom
wlllo ..... khlil, lor lntormllllon 104-IJS.H31.

,,. -

Chur&lt;h Socrallr'f, houro I om12 noon, Flonrloy lloru Frtday.
Poraonal comiiUiw okllll htlpo
(ul. 304-8714110.

DRIVERSOfR

trOO &amp;Qnut With Flrtt otoparch.

Elm Up To :llf IIIIo. Wookly
S.ttlomonto And · Elcollono
Bonolno Clot Homo 'Olton. 2•
Yloro lxporloneo WHh Solid

Orlvlna And Work Fllcord.

CALL DSI TOOAYI

, ...1).481.12f3,

nnd raoumo ro Oollr lonilnll
PO Box 7288 Pomoro,, OH
45788
Wanild: Elrr- Clllnlng
Peraan Wit

Reterenca. CID

Allar &amp;p.m. Ill Ul 4H:n
wanrld: Pon·Timo lortondw,
For Locol Prtvtll Club. Elcllo
lint Wori&lt;lng CondHion. Fn•ro
And sor .. ~•r Nlglllt
Roply At: CLA OM, alo 01111
Dolly Trlb"!!1 125 Thtnl Avonuo,
GolllpoUo, un 45131.
WE NEED YOU to toke onopo
ohato ~om r-.1 FuiiJPort tlmo.
No axporlonco nee. tall t-to0230-3531 11.118 mln.l ot Wrlio:
PASEP-31 V, Ill S. Uncolnway
N., AuroraiL 10542.

...

Rio Grandi, I lodroom, 1 Lolo,
LR, $ f r1 Dr, 1·112 lolhl,
Vlnyt
, .-cor Go,.... CA,
.lllaml, ,000. IM-24M211.
UnFquo 4-IIR houM on 1a.-o.
Bradbury Rood, ·..,ra r...lldlno,
12
SHuatlon
Aporlmant, -ui11y clopoolt, no
VI'RA FURNITURE
~1100.
---~ .. :nJ: poll, JG4.f71.111:Z.
114-44WIII
:Ill
a:llll
Wanted
•-manto
lor lhl ~· ~... LIVING ROOM: Solo I Cflalr,
..,._,
-~ .JIH.OOL
Fllcllnar,_ 1148.00;
lla 11- Apartmonll.
8uhl Swr..l HOCker, lll.uu; Con.t I
Motion Rood. Dlllanect lor tho End Tobin, IU.OO loi.DFNINI)
lloniOO' Olllzln (12 l ol•rl 1nd ROOM: T1blo With 4 Poclclad
Hondlcappod ,........ Equol Chtlra, 1141.00; Counlry Pine
Vol .... lot .... 14ll'O 14
Business
_.wnKy. Apo Olnlllo With Bonch And 3
home. 3 btdroomt. Ill llectrlo, houol119
pllcotloilo moy Ill plckld up 111 Chllra~, 1211.00; Flalchl,. 2
Training
ropolro, llh- · Bprlna VtlloJ P1ou. sa Jock· Door Hhch 1341· Or - .GO
:zt48.
ton Rllilor oolll~41 4UI.
Bot: Dlk Tabla. Cad2 Whh t
Rllroin
Nowllllloulhllllorn
Buoln... Colllll', Bortna VaiiiJ APARTIIENTS AT Bow
Boclo
Cflalro,
" - · 2 lodrm, IEAIITIFUL
PIW. tall Todoi(, tr+448...31711 ....... rotrll[, •
BU- - PRICES aY ,._.ftu N2t.OO.BEDAOOFI:,Poolw lod~
•
llndtrplnnlng,
13200,
UW ut ~pjb """" Suho (5 II'!:~ 1341.00~ 4
Roglllorlllloft~12li48.
IM-lil2-mi.
I
flvm 11dlmo. Wolll leo '""" 1 Prowor Cllllt, .,4.15; Bunk
movr.. CtiiiiH• 21111 EOH. Bod, IZ:II;_Com[lllil FUll 11oft
18 Wanted to Do
14 ........ 1211iitwo :::; tros.... Ill; 1 po. coder
h
·
li,_,
Ohio.
room Sullo, MH.OO.OPEN:
Ea. ATREE SERVFCE." l H
Lltart, wv. 1WD Mcham ~ pt, lloMir
Thru a.turdl~. 1o
1
Trimming, Tr• FIMnoval,
1m lhul, - · a • • - ,...,._ ond olapollt, ~ &amp;p.m., Bunclly 12
Till
Trlmmt,.. F- Etllmotnl I
30W11440t.
11:1-aNI.
.._
5p.m., 4 111111 Oft A- 7 On
357-"IHT. •
1101111 Mt In cant....,.
Expo- Mothlr Oltilll -lothl, Redmon
~11'01.. 21or, 2 - h • - · llld .. oport, Ohio.
~ DICk, wo1), 1o1;, Ono , _ 1111, ,...,_, 1nc1 llrolrlgorllon,
f114100;
Child tara In Homo Near
automaUc wuherl, Ti-ttal:
SoUihwoltom
...-_ t13,000. 114 Ul IIOIMwt S.l dtpoelt, ,.....2511.
dryoro, UG-1126; goo .........
Rolor..,... Avallllolo. l144llo 2....,. noobl1o homo, 121152 on t::ompia11[y F....- lmoll PD-ftiD;
-ric ra--. UO.
2102.
'
r.iir ICN lo4, - r Chaotor, HouOo, lfo Poll, Ylld, Plut 1150; drop In ~~land 1111
Utllhlll. $211/tno. 114-4464331. bu/11110, 130 dliohOeorgee PortMM llwmlll don't 110,1100.00 obo 114oiiWtllt
haul rour ,_ to lht iiii'rr Juat
·
·
·
110
-h;
range._,
Conoldar A link R..arolmod For rent· I bdrm ~ . Fum llghi, ton 110 -h; All whh o :ro
coii304-IJS.lt57,
lloloFio Homo. 1100 Down With or un.,rn, In Flldilop;rt, 114- da,
g11111nr11d.
w
A.........r
Credit
Frao
Bot
Up
I
892-82211
or
tta-I:F04.
Swlohtra
U..d
=lonoot,
HouM Clllnlng: Chorao ~~ 7 ~ DOIIvary. lltnr From Which To
~--- •·-• 1nd p
...
4 a.- tall llld Ohio Flnanco Fumlllild t A_,. A loth, Job1 Ncol Tht H..... I
- ~
HC -114,
415o.
••
Cillin, No Pol Konouga.IK-441·llt71
·
1
.
- , _ 5~1..
1111
K r - 12xaa, 2 ~oac~.- Dlpoolt Aoq
.. '
52 Sponlng GOOds
·
~
lhlpo,
Fu..ADorl1
Flodt - . a 7 - ... Fir IIIII · room, Wotw Pilei, lim. Vol Filla IIOMIIng Trophy FlaEtot 04 P -. 114411 1113.
Compound 801 wlc- 304llolollo .,_ loti or
IJS-1210.
- ' . priood lo go, 104 411 111'0. Fumlthtd Efllolat!CY• trti/Jno,

*"'·

==·homo,

-Toll
311.

PM.

COIII111d.I14-84N141

HAIRSTYUSI'

NEEDED:
117'0
k
PIUI
_ , PokE \leolll- 114-441-

35 . LOti &amp; Acl'llge
...: "~loft :

FlnJilWI

lli)bum RIH. ...... Wlllf.
RIIH t'

~

21

:wlsliitlc:o&amp; C.:,.
, ........,.. .. NqiiiiLIOWll-

Bull IIIII
Opportunity

au, ,...,

D. Clol1aoll, no

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

=-= --

NOT
- l
..e
h .......
o-, ..

lhl

Anlnllonl llyllna Ilion ""'
Salol Prln I.Gcollon. CoiF IM-

,

Anrlquoo,
1124 L Flaln llroot, POJMro,.,
Houra: FI.T.W. 10:00 a.m. lo 1:00
P:'!',!undor I :00 1o t:GO p.m.
1
·---

Minor

ond
Rl...ra.
Aportmonti In lllddloPQII. From

54 MI--Jianao·us
Marchlndlss

Flocltm I Bodo- Aponmant.
m 44t G31o.
·
""'"" ramodolid a ond s room oponmonro 1n - . , ,
2 llltlla, Equlppod loiter-,
WID lloroHpia. • • • • 1nc1

=-.. . .

Phone 114-

lllri:OOpn\.

~ly

Oullt~

Uke

N-. ·-

00m

ploliarL Ono

63

Llvaatock

AJII[I IIIII AOHA. Cloldlng Br
55
Building
lilly Billy loyou. Would Uio To
Hlro ProlootiOniF auon .. Horoo
Supplies
Tral,.,, 114-2111-1522.
BlOCk, brFdo. F&gt;lpoo, wlf&gt;o Cuotom Llvlllock NauMng, tan
. . . . llntllo, .... Clalldo Wlf&gt;o Haul To Hlllaboro Bolli Dr LO.
1111. Rio Orondo, OH Call 114- colly. Chuck Wllllomo Trlplo
24~-~Gt.

'

Crollt Trucklng.II4-245-IDII.

SltriO. C

.

,_ -

1oorn1, 1 milo - . ._.
=.~r. No""'·
114-

p

6He.'S OOT i.C:lKI~ 1t:JR

A OO::rt:R W111-l NO
e&amp;ee a= Hl.lNCIQ.

=

o.r.r.

.1u11e

64

H &amp;G

JET

I

71 Autoa tor S&amp;le ·
1111 C.dlllac Flab '

Oood

Wo,. cor, Aiklng, 1'100.1-

7212.

~

1m Chivy -

plulll Dlloun
210, 11100 - - lh4o441-8478 ·~
ler I p.~. '

Alllr 5p.m.

'"

ur

u......
'

Call ~M lor t

VIC:IUonlng ~ Is
ceugnt up In f!Mdera, (PI I
ol8)~
.
liD 11111• Trllll of ROlle
O'Neil ROlle goes
held-Eo-head w1111 1 famous,
~hly paid Cleflr* ~·

..._
'"'I"

37 Aclrotl..,.

!Aid In ·
dl1gnoalng
5 Ranch animal
BThrbfnded
armldlllo
12 81111 of
burden
·13 Da•n
goddtta
14 Wlldrtllld
In
16 Concerning
{2 •dl.)
16 Place of land
111mllates
18 Una of
llltcheo
19 Moat
llraemiiMd
21 Cooled II••
23 Yale aludant
.24 Nol
dlacowarld
28- Prnln
33 11 ab'-to
34 Aalen ehlet
. 36 Ttapplnga

38 - St.
Llurtnl
4111rt.ln
llldrtd
42 U.S.Iur
merchant
44 OldToatament boa!&lt;
46 Olympic org.
48 Prlntor'a

m"tu"

49 Youth gt'OIIP

mtmbtr

(2

Wdl.)

54 QUIIUOnable
58WIIdaheep
59 Til
60 ContompUblt
61 EgrpU1n
dan car
&amp;2 Your and my
63 North Ceroll-

DOWII
t Dec:. holld1r
2 TriCk
3 Ulllltld

nacoll~tt

84 Klng .65 hellm1UOn
·aeuaan...no
andthrHtl

raaor1

4 NIYIIpsHy

olllcer

5 Electric

0 Top llanll iloJdng

Lightweight bOut Todd
Foster (20-0, t 7 KOsi va.
Dwayne Swift (30-11. 20

KOs), 10 rounds, from &lt;lftat
F1M1, Mont. (l)
lit LMr KinO Llvll

t:30 (J). 0 TonlgiiiiMw 2tlh

'

•

AnnMIIIrY Numerous clips
of calabrlty 1111e1 &gt;iiWI from
lhe patt ynr IIICI other
memorable Hgl!llnta ere
lelttlred. (1 :30) a.reo. Q
Cl) (J)·A-o.tulhe A grandniOther
della drlrgl out of her own

govermng xou tn the year ahead. Send you.
home. Shireo. Q
lor Libra's Astra-Graph predictions to- ARIEl (lllloroh 21·Aprll 111 A !urn lor
day by mailing $1.25 plus a long. sell· the bener could occurtodsyln acrlllcal 10:00 (I) Ntwl
addressed, st~mped envelope to Aslro, ., area where your eflorts have been aeGraph, clo lhls newspaper, P.O. Box ,. verely hamperocl. Start looking lor op(I) ••T
. Will Dw¥111
91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428. Be porlunllles ln lht tame places y011 prePIOIIIIIn
_.
sure to ltilte your zod!ac' sign.
vloully mel rllllllnce.
BERNICE
lbOUI Ilia hlndllng of 1111
ICORPIO (Oat. 2A-Noor. 221 Conllnue TAUIIUa (A,U ....., 201 You ore
BEDf; OSOL - to be optlmlslle regarding new projeels pr81811lly In a cyde - . good 1hlngo
w~ lnYtltlgdOn.'
Sttreo.Q
·or endoavora In which you'ra Involved. could happen through 11ft frlendthlps
1D Undll' l'lnl Thll progl'lm
Conditions are mora promising' than · you develop. Be nice 10 everyOne you
··I'IOIMIN
l!lljor • • • • • • • • ; you think, ao ju81 keep doing things t.o encounter, regardleaa ot lhalr·atatlon·ln
storlea, loculina on the
•
the belt of your ability. · .
lite.
.
storlel behind me r.dltntl.
SAOITTARIUa(Noor.za:Dec.21) Focus ' GEIIIIIM (IIIIIJ 21-.ltine 20) You're likely
In 1 -mlell blind wttll
all ·rour oflorta and energies on your 10 be much beUer doWii lhe stre!Oh ••
actuiiiOOtlgt of the """'·
moat meaningfuL obrectlve 1oday and 6ay !han genrng ou1 ol the ttlrllng
(0:30)
puriiUtll unlllllri&amp;clilltl.ecl. Your mono bloclts. Oon'l be upaet H early lrenill
ill rD. ICnlll Uldnl
aren't too promlllng.
should be "proceed, nol poslpona."
While IPPfll1ng on Karen'a
CAPRICORN (Dec.. 22-.1111. tt) You will . CANCIR (June 21-Julf 22) II you cari
tlllk
.._, Annl mlkll I
acquire aomolhlng of value from all your 11\oYt aboul frilly today, bolh """'Iaiiy
COidn
I ~to. SltriO. Q
lmportanuncounlersiOday. A bit down and phylk:ally. you'll be happy. EYIII
lh~ Hno, you'ft find rewarding appllca· riound- uolgn"""'!s, like running lr·
'Oct. 4, 1111
tlonslor what rou'velirarned.
randt, could 1urn lnlo p1a11rrn1
ID71DCMWII'III
' ''
AOUAIIIUI (.1111. »FH. 11111 may be t1pertencol.
.
Rirt 11Dn '
~ riH In ltatus, as wall II 11118fke&lt;l lm- will noi to lnlerfore with..,....,;., who LIIO (oiUIJ 23-Aug. 221 You 1rellkllr to
1~
(J)
IIOV1I: 'IIIIIIIIIICI (Ill ·;i ~
provement In material aHalrt, could be , . lltucetellully managing a etlllcal mil· . Ill luckllill today In lrr,....._llllili
In lhe oftlng tor you In lho 'fNI ahead.,. ler tor JOU. As rong ae lhla Individual have malerllll overt-. lntdnc11wllr, .
~1~ Ylrglrilll....- '
Thehardilryoutry,Fheluc:lderrou'llget." -your belt lnterHII, remain on you'nknowhowtoturn•-·•-lnlo
•
CNOillrid a..
UIRA (llepl. 23-0cl, U) You have u- lhe lldellntl.
•
alilk pur11.
111110 draw upon loclay thai might n01 I'IICII (l'ell. ,20-llzoroh 201 Fortuitous VIRGO (Aug. U I apt. II) You ntnII). !II • •
l\t available to thoH competing llgllnal . thlnga art llkllr to hNIPIII lor you to- ' dowocl with romltklble resiliency today
,ou. Frlendl wantiO help you IUCCNd day, but they will be due, In large pert, , IIICI, beeaUH of your_lblllly to bciuoiGe
!!IIIII Couotl!1
'
and 10 doealady Luck. Get a jump on , to lht ellortt of Individuals wllh whom back, IIICCIII 11 r11110111bly cttrllln In
llle by_ understanding the' Influences,_ , you're aaaoclaled. Their luckrubsoH on situations you per10nally oonlrol.
• .Ill) • ~ .Hwl
Q

ASTRO·GRAPH

u~;-LM

· ~·

'J T X

.........

f

ILfl

DAZ

ITXWJI

.

,j

D

ITXytlll
TXZ

~~

11:001&amp;:

..

ACROis

ID Pllller Do•to......,._IIII_III11HI
Felher Oowllng't bi'Oiiw
rmplloatea him In 1
murder.(R) Q

'"

'

MJ.... rt A

a Nuhvtlle 1101r s-.
A LITTLE
AIIN' II

Boptla Tank Pu'""'"" IIIGRCiollla
Co. RON EVANS lNTERP ISES,
Jocklori, OH \--837-8528.
Dlvlt
~VIC
IIIYica,
OoOrllla CIMk Rd. Pone. '""'
=~lwp, ond ' doll vary:' 114-

-n.

I])

SltriO.

. GO EASY ON TH' JUG,
WILFERD·- IT NEEDS

..,,.... .

1110 v..tkiwogon Rrobbll, 4 82
Plumbing &amp;
Door, 4Spold, Allolng liDO. I~
'.
441-7212.
'
Heating
-~~:;,....._;.
1811 a . - Copnco• ca~:.;-..=rng
4-DR
1111/tllul lomly
Clr, like .-, 1V11Y Olltlon, 301
Fourtlo ond Plno'
v..,...... 114-IIU?il
Qoltlpol~:,ro
1811 e~~oyy · 1t1111on w~on,
~11,000 ~~~~11'100 Or Qllor.
114 ue ooav.
84 Electrical &amp;
111:1 Cloevy Clllbrltr, 0ooc1
Refrigeration
ConditionE ti,IIOO. 114-11NII1

Ill

,.....,.cted. s-. r;J

11J MOYIE: I 1D 111'0) (2:00)

··:PARNEY

olhlr IHindo. ~ oalll, oro.r
ll&gt;tlllanoo -Ira. W1l
304-871-aSII Ohio 114-441-2414.

111ee"

An txchlngt tiUdtnt glvft
Br•nciOn 1 good look at 1
Inner-citY llfi. Sino. C

: :

Alllllon Flctor:o. rapllr1d. New\
AIIilla/Qnoo Rolle W.• Fr01 I ...r...ll mot010ln olock, Rott,
EVANS, .JACKSON, ClH. 1-1110-)
Flail I"'" ttl . ., I - Old, 8101011!' Wtth - 1 , !Iofiin 13lLIIU.
' I
owner~ ou1 ollllio, .... Farm, AI. 3 5 , - 1 .
:rG4471-13S1. .
Ron'e TV 8aivloo, -lalr.liia•
In Zonllh olio ""~Ina mooil•
Transportation

1:00 (J) a iiJ CIIHII PI~
Mlldlme Llzora oonvi..Cirta lhat shl'slllso
ctlllrvoyant. Stereo. Q
(I) II) • Fll: 1M Uillllll
StoMe (Premlerl) A
kldnlpplng Clll from FBI

Ill) .IIMIIJ .... 10210

Compiltollobllo Homo lot.Upo I
tlol
llrooOiro;
._
Com-,
_ . . lncludlna:

~Ctll 114 u1 om. ,_ ===ay::-;;:=:::-ra~l=n=-=-

.

Stereo. r;J

- .. Homoo. Room AddHionto,
FCHIIIdalloll Work, Aooii!!Q '
WI- I Siding. Frao ~
tlmollll Alltr.,_, No ·J ob Te&gt;
j
F - tall Solei Solurdor, 0c&gt; Big Or 81Mf11114-4M225.
toblr 5th, lp.m. Alhlno u- D A E Conotructlon Clonor'l(
tock Sileo. U-oak Aacaptod. Controclor, Roollna, Concreto,
56. Pat a for Salt
Hauling
Anlloblo.
Con- Clonwol Rtpolno, cJenarti can.&lt;
tlanmonto Wolcomol 1.14-5112Groom ond 8uP91Y ~ 2W,
IIWIWI31.
olructlon,
tllnltlll · • - · Ftll E..:
01'001111nf. AI ror-., olylo&amp;

1112 Pontloo Grind Prla U V.e
tlr, ouFco, PW, tift, cruloa, AM/PM
....... 104-1714113.

Lol """ lrlillor;ln l'lortclo, :104I'IW4M.
.

SltriO.

1D You Alkld lor It

:::r -- Wotorpr~ '

a

•ro. ' - ' Ulcl,
t:IOOCL l-41d«IINIIFI

ta~n...-olhop

Roglotorld IIOraon Stud Hollo.
can
Only. 114 44Uil71 - - ·

11mo "" Food

a..

llllael'a
Otis'
wont nlghtmllt - I N &amp;
when he hurtl .... back.

Ill) •

3. 4. 4.

The World Alinanac11 Crossword Puzzle

room. Stereo. I;!

.,.

Plumlilriol. Eloetrlcll. lnouq
Cltlmo Aiiooptod. a-1~11. •
c.~ro Homo lmPIO'I...-o:
Ynra
, _ _ On Dldar 1

I.••

gumbo ldlchen OUI of hlr

Flodol
10 ono - - · 'limo
I
s~rv i ces
Modol32lono-laltmodol
- · 1171; 1117 NariiJ 1Mvtd- modo tr,IOO. -h. Ono Flodol
...
3141. Ooll Clrt, - · 114-HZ. 325 two - """"' '12 roll hillll·
Eng bid 1;1,100. Ono Flodol 3211 81
Home
WHITE'S FIETAL DETECTORS
..... ........ wfth lihlllor
Ron Allllon 1210 Socond 12,100. Dna Hollond 711
Improvements
AVIIIuo, CIIA(potlo, Chlo, af4. a-.r, 2 raw head ou,.m
441-4331.
model 13.1100. Ono Now HOlland
. IASEMEHT
•
no •""- a row hood t:~"ooo.
WATERPROOFING
&gt;
wortc pan\olthlrta tr.oo, lob- K111trsllcorvlco
Cantor "'"" Uncondltlonol Ulttlml ~
_ , wloHa 'uritormo 13.00, AU7, Pofnl PIIIHnl
iiid Ripley III. ,Locol Jar-. fumloh&lt;!!l(
leone •s.oo, donlm-Jockll• A01d , ~~.
Frao 114lmoloo. tall collor:l .··l&lt;
U0.00~321.ullwnll1, P-or.
114-237-0411, dar or ~: I'

.

•

1:10 (J) • llll DtH-11 Wolld
Llnl operetet 1 hazardous

,,

iur or 1111.

Lol lor

'

441-NII3, IM-44U:III.

4-t1Uftw 7p.m.
'
Onoclouo living. 1 lnd a 11oc1room oport- o1 Vlllaao

• ..... FilL, 1 ... ,.., a.... - . Cit O.J. Rood,
Olllr OVtr . .. - al4o

OHIO YALLIY PIII,.F- CO.
nc =
thll ~ do bullo

1111-....

7

. . . . . .

INOIICII

'""*•
........ ,.. .... ,__

7211.

•

Loll 1

PMIIOII AI · Ell.
Call
fill.~.

• - 11nn

53
A
~~~nt,l,.:.qu.,.•_•.,....,_

,........, trii,OOO. Call :FOWlS- 1111. carr 114-1112·7llt EOH.
11210- a:oo Alllncl 4::ro

- Dlytl I..,._ .
Boturdor. A "'bra

Eooy Wcrlol bGIIIInt PIJI .U.

""r4 4'fl

Socond Avo, CIIIIFpolle, •

Flaton Coun1J 12• (40
ICfll tlmblrl.'!4d r-., 2 mat11
blrno, Al IIi 11 rnllll 10
WFnflrolcl 10 rnllll leo Point

do=~-­
1 ..., ~

-

UtUhlll Paid, · -

33 Farms for Sale

f:1rr

:Mit

WI- -lc

:.'t

-Will

-

rm~.

tiiCion •

I:O&amp;~~~~::,e ~~~

=·good

u.n:t

Etm To
UGOAI~---· 1119
Floll.
Homo. WcrFo
Evilnlngo, -..cjl. ~ For
Focto, lind !A.... U ,U ., A.
Lowlt ODT, Ill. 1 lor 111!1,
A~. Nollhup, , UH

Nltlonlll from llralnerd,
Mlm. (T)
Qll'ltniiNen
ID TMI'I .., Dog

1m vw _.., 01111por, 11500. SoL till - .
,
=~;,;;,;,;;,;,.;.;:,:,:,::::.....,..:... ,
114-lltHUI
~~~~~~~-11m Llncor~IM,~ ·
1.111 FlodiiiiO Ill:, DF..r T- 1111 conillnod, IIC cond,
'
ltoll ......... Diving
;
Boont, And Llrao Pool .,_ tar, t4.1100; 110 ElF Dlllal t7UIIJ.
$4,210; t N Ford With luoh
,
And Pump. tf4.2N.1414.
Hoa.l1,- Ownor WIH FIMnea. 1111 Wllllbtao, 24 ft. 31,100 ....
tUIIInl• wllh 4.0 two cyl Onar•
Uold Wunftzor IPinot plono. 11'14=~
Clonwotor, 11,800. 304-f3.2131. '
oond. PIG. 114-241- ElF CambFna With CllllcFt lltoch
·'
Hood, 1311. Grain Tololo, 2 " - Ita "Nomod 22ft. SIII-Ccon. '
lllnod, EIICIIIanr CondHFaril'
WolF! bllolnd ... ..., ..,.,. . Wldo Com Hood, ¥try mo~ dilli~ .,._., oloct II..,, Condltlonl 814-37NS40.
:::. ~000 Or .... -'"!_~·;

$26,00.$52,000 111 you,lroln~
provided, lllperilnce .,.,...,., ,

w.... -·:1145.

aualllrState

'

79
.u, ,.., t :oo.e:oo _ , aur.
.,
Motor Homaa
Wldo.....,

....

a.

ll:Jl~r.,l
Star

'

w•;

.
campara &amp;

~con~:;~~

dtllllr wno hu 1 ahOtgun.

SltriO. Q
IIJ Munlir, .... w- Q

ludalt Tranr'x'"- u..d 1
robultt, lllrtlng • 16;
""rto, tl4-2-77, 114-3n

ms.

v.,.

m!M'dlr. Stereo. Q
Ill I]) lnllnfte
stereo~

Wlntl Fllndli'o ltore to leN,
IIICI hll wilh cornN INI.

AcctiiOrleS
,.m'o F•rmr:~lpmtn11 .SR. ·ss,
01111
' t14...a.tm;

INCOME "11 " •

Etm 120041100 WHkly FloMI119
Holldly Troval 8roclouroo. For
Flora lnlonnatlon Sond A Add-Old llomood Envllopo To:
ATW Tr•¥!11. P.O. lox 430710,
Fllam~ FL mN.
W1niMf motlv1tld

•u

.IOU7U42
tU4

I

Stereo. Q

Auto Parte &amp; .

potiiOII, 114-llt2ol002

WEST

Vulnerable: Both
When the dummy is tabled, it is a
Dealer: South
idea to take lime to plan your ·
eampaign, 11 more contracts are S..G
w..t N- Bolt
by hasty play at trick
other trick.
Paa 5t
llbl.
However, it an achlantace If you Pua
Paa Pus
sum up the situation quickly. You
the defenders Jess time for •nalyOpening lead: ' 10
- though, of cou!"'le, they are entitled to request a timeout.
Who is the quickest player in the
world? Two candidates spring to an eJcbt-card suit.
Hoffman foresaw the commtmic:amind: American Alan Sonia&amp; and
Dutchman Hans Kreljns. But my vote tion difllculties. He won the tnmp
goes to Englishman Martin Hollman. SWitch in the dwruny tllld lecl the lpwdl
He is a brliUant declarer •ho Ul nev' jack, tempting Eut to cover. HoWw·
achieved international stardom be- er. when East played lotr;' Hofr..
cause hill bMWlng is relatively ~~e~~k. ooerloclt Ute jack with bil q-.
Today's ltal1d sh&lt;rn Hoffman In top ruffed lila heart queen in the t1wr :oil
form. Ag1inlt live ctu• doubled, West reputed the, spade In-, lad nat•
led the heart 10. East won with the the spade rreven Ia the diiiiFIIIY. DeeJar.
king and returoed the club ·to, on er culted clummy'a· club q - ad
wbich West discarded a heart. How called for the diamotld klag.
Wbatever East retunred after wtawould you continue from there?
Although many would open South's nmc wltb the diamond ace, -- - hand with one spade. the club fit •ouid could get to hand to draw trumjllllld
still come to light. Not everyone •ould run the spades.
e .............,_,.--.
bid with west's hand, but he did have

Ill) • Tile •una -

for S&amp;la
- · Fllnkoto, ~11113.

Pigo lor - · ..... old, ond

-

I
/

12ft YE
llcllom
· Ill UOI~ov,
tra!~
4hp
-·-mote&lt;

=._trpowrlt• plctiiiL 114-

•eon

O'Hannon and Bird dellnlll
rcollle cop who II ICCUNd of

'

75 Boat• &amp; Motora

..
,...
.J

'Quickest declarer
in the world?-

(I)IIOV11:
,_
One (2:00)
h
(I) II). 1'101 • Cont

1882 VW C . - Von, loclory
bulh4n: ole~, . rotrlo.. linli, •.
bldo,I3500.1~JI2·Zi2a
•
~~::-:-.::.-...:.:..:=--·'
1N5 Ford Plcko~~p truck: loldoct:
F-150, Fl..t - 1AI oppnciMoJ
ti,IOO. C.IIIM 411 0311. . f

·I 1

NORTH
• JI

PHILLIP
ALDER

lhln.
Pl~:lt for
Tlleo. Slefeo.

'

r

tKJ8752

7:3111) llnfard
i1J eo.trr au A
young~~ mono

1:00 (J) •

~----...:.·_ ;

.W.nled lo bUy, Standing timber,
Bob Wllllamt l Sona 114-1112·
5448.
Wonild To Buy: Jlllilc AutOI,
s;':"~

•

1

11111 1-10 o.aa1 4 whool drive,
~,ooo mllll, o5,too. 304-87$- ,
...3 or 175·'1101.
'
'
IIIII Hllvy 112 Ton Ford XL '
Hloll Runner blono, 111. r..., rou 34,100 ...... PS. PI, IYO:
Dick. 1 mu. out camp eonter ,,..,, hMvy chrome burn-1
~II, 110. cond. ~~~
IFoocl, II04-t7l-8a33.

wanted to Buy

~1111

mll11. ...-. '

1

~

.KQ54

a~=~=-Q
.. 1 ~~~r ·SIIrto.
ID ISPN'I Ill I I,.....
ec.-,.• .

~e..itrlc:--~,:tl·~·

IAI~~TIA/.L p~6,AM~~I.

1881 ClievY holt Ion pickup, 305 ,'

lRic:k Pelr.on Auction Comptny.
.full thM euctlonMr, comp\111

11 1 1

1

(J). Man11d..WIIII CIIIIMn

JvsT

3 below.

r r t r r I' r I

1

IRIDOI

SlertO. Q

HoPi 'fOII''E SATtfFtEP-- yov'lll
'fil[&gt;fP OUT' THf WHOLE-

rom OHp No.

5C
IIAM-UTS ANSWIIS
•o· t
. !(nolly - VenOm - Nymph - Deacon - YET to COME
One old timer to another: "The point of ·living and
ramaini~ ~ Olllimilt.ilto be foolish enough to bailewl
--tha best IS YEt to·COME.' -

ID'IIre lllrinl
7:05(1) ... lilY ......
f:IO(J)a OJeapr dtl !;II
tD fO h Alw101111a1d
(J) 1-"-11 TOIIiglll

l

FOR

develot&gt;

--...--------

~~ .

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

c:-~ ~ttt:

I$1

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•ao~Uia-ffc§ .

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NICWTHH.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "You cannot . _ , loo ooan bocauM you dan't
know how 100n II may be too lilt." - Thomu Fullor.

a

s-

I

'

'

I~

\

'-

••

"

•

�'

••

'

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.

.~~--------------------~~
SOFA, LOVESEAT

'

-

.

--- -,;

,.EXTRA SPECIAL BUY

599°0
900

$1

SOFA &amp; CHAIR

SOFA, LOVESEAT, CHAIR
Benchcralt1 trtle back. dark
arown.

$)2_37

Reg.$2285.00

RECLINING SOFA

SOFA, lOVESEAT, CHAIR

By Stratford. Black with Beige,
Blue &amp; Mauve
·

BROYHILL
Brown wHh wood trim.

Reg. $1201.00

$675

FLEXSTEEL SECTIOftAL

lieg. Sll6o.oo

s15 7 5

STRATFORD SECTIONAL

wIHide·a·bed &amp; Recliner

Bluel ilh 2 Reclining Ends

Reg. $2717.00

Reg. $2102.00

$1

SOFA, LOVESEAT,
CHAIR

SOFA &amp; CHAIR

ENGLAND .
Wood trim, multl·color.
Reg. $1461.00

589

RECLINING SOFA
&amp; RECLINING CHAIR
BUSHLINE
$79

Green

SOFA, LOVESEAT, CHAIR
Bruanls, Blue Pin Dot
Reg. $1388.00

I

BRUARDS

$6

LOVESEAT, C~IR

Bru•dws with Cllnellatk, Wut ,
w/pJr. dati, throw pillow on sofa &amp;
loveseat $

388.00

.
89

SOFA, LOVESEAT
ENGLAND. Multi-color.

$1973.0~

s944

R

STRATFORD

5599

Reg.$1125.00

SOFA, LOVESEAT, CHAIR
Broyhdl. Blue Flame paHem
wtwood trim. QOSEOUTI
Reg. $2986.00 5 1444

FLEXSTEEL SOFA
Dark blue with green, mauve,
peach (print).

5735

$1392.00

SOFA, lOVESEAT, CHAIR
IRUARDS
Over stuffed, blue &amp; mauve.

England. Peach w/dark.green.
Reg.

5
848

With Wood Trim

5699

SOFA, LOVESEAT &amp;
WING CHAIR

$688

Reg. $1299.00

Black &amp; Rose Velvet
Reg. $12Bto0

$1299

Reg. $1968.00

51099

MANY MORE to CHOOSE FROM
"

DINING ROOM SUITES
1-Maplt China

SALE

5399

1-corner China in Maple
Reg. $662.50
1-Maplt China
. Reg. $ 1001 •00

SALE

1-Solld Oak ·china
Rig. $1430.00
0 k .. ble·Chalrs&amp;Bench

SALE

a .a

$

788

399
$19 9
SALE
'

-

Rig. $ 673•00
Round Table In Cher~v,
•·
Reg. $357.00 · 4 chairs
•

5499

SA' L.E .5

$

Dark Pine Table, 6 chairs
Reg. $883.00 ·

SALE

Map·'11 Table, 6 chairs .

SALE

475
299

$

Reg. \ $599.00
.
•
· .
$
Ch romecrcift Table In light oak SALE
w 4 swivel title back chairs, reg. 1139 $
Chroinecraft Table, oak w/4
SALE "
swivel arm ·c hairs, reg. $1464 · . . $

644

s

I

.

Cal•stylt Tablt, oak wl4 swivel
title back ·arm chairs r • $986

848

SALE

588
.

Cards:

'

1

Octagon Table w/glass &amp; 4 chairs, NOT $199."--· NOW $28.00
Octagan .w/glass &amp; 2 chairs, NOT $149---....... --:..;... · NOW$58.00
3 sets Lg. Sq. Table w/glass; 4 chairs, NOT $249-- NOW $109 eo.
Wlille Vinlfi wHhstoOI, NOr$199"--"NOW$99:00
Brass Vanity wHh Stool, NOT $139------ NOW $78.00 ·
Rechners, on~ 6 In stock at__ _:_____ $125.00eo.
I5 Wing Back Chairs, NOT $399-----" NOW $248 ea.
Almond Day Bed wfsprlngs, NOT $210---· NOW $119.00
Brass Day Bed w/poreelaln bals &amp; springs, NOT $270 NOW$159.00
Red Daybtd w/springs, NOT $270...- - - - - - . NOW $99.00
2 VIdeo Chairs-...""'"""-'"'"""--""--"· NOW $39 eo.
1 Sets of Glass Top Tables-""-""'"""" __..___ NOW $68 eo.
With Frullwood finish &amp; beveled glass. NOT $195 ea. sns ONLY
Maple Tables, set of 3, NOT $1200 eo--·-·--.. NOW $62 eo. set
2 Sets of 3 Coffee &amp; End Tables on Legs, oak, 2 sets only....
NOW$17Ssat
Goad Selection of Tobles._..._""'""'""-"""'"".Fram $50 to $90 ea.
New Shipment of Bassett Mlrrors... "'".;..,__,Reduced 30% Off Retad

Lamps......- ......._ ...........;................_..--~-..40% Off R•tad
3 pc. Wall Unils In Oak Finish, NOT $1200""'"""'""""""-·NOW $488

.

Flat Top. Reg. $320..........."""'""""-"""'""'SAlE $166.00 .
~oil Top. Reg; $343."""""""".:......""-·"·""'SALE $198.00
~oil Top. Reg. $457:......"""'"-'"""""..""""""SALE $288.00
Rolf Top. Reg. $732."'""""'""-"""'"""-"""SALE $488.00

CVRIOS
Reg. $314 ....;_ .."'"".."'"""'"""""""'""""""'..SALE $178.00

ENTER~INMENTCENTERS
Up To

S50% Off

Vol. 42, No. 10?
Copyrlghl8d 1991

THE REAL THING· SOLiD OAK
FLOOR MIRRORS
Reg. $261 "......:.......................SAlE $13

900 .

BEANBAGs-

a

Large King Size
,
Neon Colors • OhiO State • West Va. University •
.
Ohio State University
SIMMONS BEAUTY REST QUEEN PAIR

Reg. $715 ........."................... ~................ SALE $399.00 set

King Size Woad ROtkers, Reg. $300....,_.. _ .._ ............NOW $166.00 .
2-Medlum Size Bookcases (water damaged~""'"""""""-"-'"$33 ea.
Bookmses, all.slzes.....'"--'"""-------·---30% Off
1_:Solld Pine Post~r Bed (~ pt.), reg. $2445--_,......SALE $11 ~.00
1-&lt;he;ry Bedroom~Sulte w/n.s., reg. $2236-..--."SALE $1099.00

BEDROOM ·SUITEs
!·Large White Orle1ilal, storage Ired w/mirror, Rght

.s

o c·

Gold...............,...........................................,.•••$225
85,000 BTU.Yfll.rlll Morning Heater
LP gas,
· li{
I e new..........................................$599,95
Warm Morning Gas Grill, works good.................;....S90.
2·"'aytag Timer Pryer, white..................;...............$99
2·Maytcig Eledronlc Dryer, green,...........;.............$ 135
l·Sears Humidifier, lg. capacity w chemicals
k
d
wor s goo ·...:....~ .......................;.................." ..$50

I

2 Sectlona, 14 P~ 25 eenlll
Alluldmedbo Inc. NtWtpeper

-~- ~~ --~-

~--- --~" k 't·•~-·

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News swr
The general public will be
afforded the chance to lake a closer
look at the opemtion of Belleville
Locks and Dam when the facility
holds an open house this weekend.
The event, scheduled for 2 p.m.
to 6 p.m. Sunday, is the ftrst at the
23~ year-old project si.lite 1979,
when 800 people toured the facility.
Belleville Locks and Dam
looms over the community of
Reeds.ville and was constructed by
the U.S. Anny COI)ls of Engineers
at a cost of $63. million. Construy·
lion on the project began in May,
1962. The Jocks began operation in
196S and the facility was completed in 19.68.
The locks con~t of two parallel
locks: the main lock measuring

1,200 feet in length by 110 feet in
wi~th, and the auxiliary lock measurin$ 600.feet by 110 feet. The
dani IS .a high-lift gated ~tructure
with a top length of 1.206 feeL
In addition to the navigaVon
structure, the project also prov1des
over 60 acres of recreational facili·
ties 'for public use, including picnic
areas and restrllOIIIs.
The Belleville project employs
18 people under the direction of
· Loclcmaster George Connolly. It is
open 24 hours a day, every day of
the year.
Twelve staff members will be
on hand Sunday to assist in con·
ducting the tours, and Connolly
anticipates several high-ranking
officials in lhe Corps of Engineers
to attend the open house.
According to Connolly, Disl!ict
Engin~r Colonel James Van Epps,

.

Chief of Opemtions Ken Crisp, and ·
their wives will attend and assist in
conducting the tours. · . ,
An observation !leek allows the.
public to ~ commercial tows
as they '1ock through~ lhe facility.
On Sunday, however, the general
public will be permitted to enter
areas that are usually off-limits, ·
allowing them to walk around the
enonnous project' (including a stroll
across the 1,200-foot high dam),
and to participate in guided tours ·
and boat rides on the Ohio River.
Boats will continue to iock
through the main lock as sched·
uled, so that the public can get an
"up-close" look at the procedure.
The·Eastern-Athletic Boosters
will offer refreshments for sale at
mmERWAY • Preparathe open house. All of Sunday's tloas·PREPARATIONS
for
Sunday's
open
house are underway al
activities will be flee of charge and BeUeville Locks a11d Dam
In Reedsville. Here,
open 10 the public.
Gary Willford and Mike Burns paint from .tbe
facility's boat in the auxiUary lock chamber.

1-C&gt;ak Flblshed w/nlte stand............ """"""...SALE $399.00
I·Dark Flnlsh·w/night sland......................SALE $499.00
4·Bedraom Suite, oak, mapJe, dark oak finish
Your Choke $599.00
I·Solld Ptna with Poster Bed

Reg. $2674....~.........................~..............SALE $1299.00
!·Solid Pine Floor Sample, as Is, 6 pc.
Reg. S1544,............................................SALE $799.00

2·Gibsan Ref., 14 cu. ft., green. Was $699.95..- ..."'""NOW $499.95
4·Gtbsan I5 cu. ft. Ref~ 7 white, 2almond.
.
Wa $69995
·
NOW~S4995
s
•
-·----"'"""---........
_
•
3·Gtbsan 17 cu. ft. Ref~ grHn. Was S699.95.."""""""'NOW 549.95
Hrlglllatre, 11 cu. ft., 2·almand, 1-wh1te. ,
:
Was 699 95
NOW 5549 95
• cu.
""""'""""'"-"'"-'""""""'"'""'"""
•
Hrlgtllatre 19
ft~ 6-olmand, 2·whlle.
Wi's·S799.95..__"_.. ______..,""'"'"'""""NOW$649.95

s

PAVEMENT COMING UP· Work on Sllte
Route 7 below Hobson damaged In a rock and
landslide there oa May 3 bas llegun. Trame wiD
be maintained one-way W.tll tbe $206,000 project Is cpmpleted In mid-November. The con·
tract for the work was awarded by the Ohio
Department of Transporlatlon to the Shelly Co.
Thornville. Approximately 1500 feet of pave·

ment witt be takea up and fbe base stabllized
before the new pavement Is put down, aCtortung
to an ODOT spokesman. ·When the slide .
occurred, large cracks developed Ia tbe blgb·
way, some areas sunk wbUe others rllised. Since
that time ODOT has monltored,tbe area to
determine u1161erground movement.

State mapmakers fix omission,
Democrats boycott meeting r

Gallipolis Stockyard destroyed by fire
The Gallipolis Stockyard Company buillling on Vinton Avenue
was destroyed as a result of an
early·Friday morning blaze.
When the ftre was extinguished,
all that remained of the building
was crumbled seetions of lhe outer
walls, twisted metJ\1 roofing inateri·
a1 and some smoldering wood.
According to a report from the
Gallipglis Volunteer Fire Depart·
men~ the ftre was reported at 12:17
a.m. when someone called and
reponed the blaze.

The ftre department arrived at
12:21 a.m. and was on the scene
until6 am. according 10 the report.
•However, several firefighters
remained on the scene to extin·
guish smolders.
The report indicated the fire
originated in the empty livestock
pen area. As of 9 a.m. Friday, a
cause for the fire had not been
es~blished, according 10 Fire Chief
Ray Bush.
The building, with value estimated at $610,000 including contents, is considered to be a tota!

4·Ke1Yinator, 14 cu. ft. l·whtte, 3-almond.

Was $599.95.._'"'"""-'"""""'"'-""'""'""""NOW $449•95 .
2-~~vlnator, Iacu.1t. almond. Was S699.95.......~.".. NOW $599.95
.J.A.mlralr 17 cu. 11., a1
monel. Was S699.95"""""'"""NOW $549.95
I·AIImlra 19 cu. ft., almond. Was $799.95 ..-.,_..".. NOW $599.95

COLUMBUS (AP) - The
Republican-controlled state Appor·
tionment Board reconvened 10 cor· ·
reel some errors in a plan creating
new' election districts for the Ohio
House and Senate.
But the two Democmts on the
five-member board, state Auditor
Thomas E. Ferguson and Rep. Barney Quilter of Toledo boycotted
Thursday's meeting, claiming it
was illegal.
Gov. George Voinovich, Secretary of Stale Bob Taft and Senate
President Stanley Aronoff, R·
Cincinnati, approved one amend·
m.ent lhat added the city of Maple

loss. The building, owned by Mary
Williamson, Traer Stewart and
Joanne Stewart. al of Gallipolis,
and managed by Tommy Joe SlllW·
art of Gallipolis, was insuted by the
Wood Agency.
Firefighters responding to the
blaze used an estimated 2SO,OOO
gallons of water to extinguish lhe
fire. Four fire trucks were.on the
scene as well as 24 fircfighteJs.
Oddly enough, the structure'was
built on lhe site of another s1rucwre
'that burned down in the early
1950s.
·

H'eighcs to the plan's legal descrip~
tion.
James Tilling, board secretary,
said the city was inadvertently
omitred from the plan that the fivemember board adopted Tuesday.
Noble County was lisled in the
wrong House district. The board
. made that correction also before
conducting olher routine business
and.ad,ioor!Jing. .
Vmnovich, as required. by law,
was directed by the board to have
the new Sena~ and House districts
published for four co~secutive
weeks· in several newspapers
around the stale, starting Saturday.

. Thi_s is' required by the 'Ohio
ConstJtullon to inform voters of
poSSible changes in the IIIJlleSCntation of their areas.
Earlier, the board voted 10 SWt
lhe clock running Saturday on the
~0 days allowed for lawmakers
whose disaicts were abolished or
who wound up in the same disrrlct
with other incumbents, to move .
into another district
Senators and representatives·
must Jive in a district at least a year
before they are eligible to run for
the Legislature from that district
The new alignment of districts will
apply for the first time to the
November 1992 election.

~----·-.Local briefs------Auditor certifies Eastern deficit

$678,000; Champaign, Wist Liberty Salem, $124,000; Geauga,
Cardinal, $S60,000; GuC~fisey, East Guernsey, $353,000; Licking,
North Fork, $192,000;
.
Lorain, Wellin~, $395,000; Mahoning, Campbell, .$574,000;
Medina, Black River, $367,000; Meigs, Eastern, $35,000; Noble
Noble Local, $461,000; Perry, New Lexington, $979,000; Portage'
Southeast. $497,000; Summit. Coventry, $882,000 and ~pringficl~
$2.8 million; Trumbull, Girard. $256,000 and Warren, $5.4 million.

COLUMBUS (AP)- State Audit!)r Thomas E. Ferguson
released financial forecasts that show 35 school districts, including
Eastern Local in Meigs County, face projected operating deficits
1/lat could forte them 1Al seek state-backed loan$.
.
Eighteen school systems ~steel by Ferguson Thursday already
have received State Controlling Board approval for government·
guaranteed borrowing from private lenders to rcmain OjXln.
•
· Fi!IIIIICial forecasiS certifY the operating deficit distrtciS will have
by ~une 30, 1992, the end of the current fiscal year, if they continue
Registrat;ion deadline Monday
operating and pay all their expenses.
The Meigs County Board of Elections located on Mechanic
John Conley, spokesman for the auditor, said requests to conduct
Street
in Pomeroy, will be open SlllUrday from 8 a.m. 10 noon and
financial f(l'ec8S!S had been received from 62 school districts. There
Monday
from 9 a.~. 10 9 p.m. for voter registration. Monday is lhe
are 612 disaicts srarewide.
·
final
day
for residents 10 register and is also the fmal day for resi"Some of those may be withdrawn. that~s FOJ!lmon," Conley
dencs to change their add!eases.
·
said. ''If they happen to pass levies ... a lot of times the school dis·
Abs~ntee voting will~~ through Nov. 2 at noon. To
trict will withdraw the
the analysis."
qu~/to
vote.absen~. re ·
'IOtas must be over 62 years of
Of the 36 forecasts
. by Ferguson, 35 projected operating
age,
m
the
milirary.
disabled,
Cl' oul of town on Election Day. The
deficits. The Oallia County local school district was dctennined 10
office is ~pen regularly Crom 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p:m.·Monday
have a projected positive operatiq.Miance of$117,000 by June 30,
through Friday.
' 1992.
.
Ferguson said the Cincinnati district had the largest projected
6 EMS
deficit of the 35 systems at $63.5 million. A state-backed loan of
runs answered
S46,61!1illiOn was approved fCI' the sysrem last month. .
On wednesda
its f u.,_ County
Here·; by cbunty., are districts and the amount 'of pro1'ected
y,
un
Emergency Medical Services. answered six calla fCI' lllilllnce on Thursday.
deficits for which the Ohio Dcplnment of Bducatlon said loans
· At 12:31 p.m., Rutland UDiC went to White Hill Road. Evelyn
have not already been approved:
&lt;'
•
•
M ca key was take to Plculll Vall
Athens, Fe~ !:iOCkinR, $225,000; -~~~. ;t::.,:Martin=
':s.:F:erry::,_ __:.c-s-~·~-.:nCon=tin.~lle~ll~!.~pa~~~yJ~H-oso-t"':"'tai_._A_t2-:-36~p-.m_.•

CLOSEOtrr WASHER fl DRYEilAT SALE PRICES

2s• Zenith Swtvtl Floor Model TY, r•te.
·
·
799
95
S Rtma!e
• '""--·-·""--·-...
- ..."'""""~·NOW $549.9$
25"Was
Zenith
SterH·TV. Was $899""""'"'"""""'NOW
$699.95

n: z:~1:h c~~~n!:{:'rv·
r·· steno,'~~~~~;~95~-~~.~.:::fis::::i
WaJi~l95b-"'";"'"$'"'"-NOW $599.95

26"

j

ordi'

·. Quean Beds.............................................$tartlng $33.00 ap

NEW REFRIGERATORS

:
:
·
·

. able prices. The main purpose of the village. Mayor Eber Pickens
.. going into the program at this time exjllained the cost involved in get:
is'to getJlrtces on .a new police tingtheinformation. .
~:
Syracuse Village Council at a cruiser for a fulure pmchase.
In olher business, a second rtad;
meeting Thumtay night set Ott. 30 . Jack Williams reported that ing was given to the gas 131e
as trick or treat night, agreed to Richmond SICeet just beyond Rus· · nance. A donation was acknowlplace a shelter house behind Lon- tic Hills (old Sand Hill Road) is edged for the cemetery from Mrs.
don pool, and passed a resolution sinking. Kenny Buctley agreed to Carl·Moore.
..
to' ~ipate in.lbe.SlaiC purehas· seek adVic~ on bow repairs can be
Police Chief Jil)l Conqolly
ing program. · ·
made and when.
reminded re5idencs that there is a 9
Trick or treat night will be from . Minter Fryar reported that all p.m. curfew for·all children under
610 7 p.m. and the siren will sound new street signs will be placed 18 yems '!f age._
to begin and end activities.
within the next two weeks and that
Council dectded 10 send leuers
It was decided that the damaged the cemetery has been cut again. to Meigs County Engineer Phil
shelter house located in the park He also agreed to contact village Robercs and tile Meigs County
area near the high~ay will be solicitor, I. Carson C~w, regarding Commi~sioners &lt;;o~missioners
moved to an area behind the pool. · updating of some v1llage ord1· requesung repavmg of the Roy
The shelter house was damaged nances. Fryar also reponed t!l;lt the Jones Road ,from Syracuse to Forwhen it was struck by a car. Sal· village owned dump truck has a est Run. It was reponed that there ,
vaging will 'cost $•1,500, it was new exhaust system, asked pennis· is heavy traffic on the road and
reported, with this to inClude new sion to clean out a house owlled by also that it is used a flood road.
posts, concrete, and the Ia bot the village (Conner GuV.ther prop·
_Auending were Frym:. Wolfe,
mvolved.
eity). The house IS used for storage. Wtlhams, Buckley, Kaue Crow,
Dennis Wolfe expressed a desire and Jim PaJYe, council members
A resolution to participate in the to see electric costs for the park Mayor Pickens, Cbief of Polic~
state purchasing program was facilities broken down between the Connolly, and Janice Lawson
passed. This entides the village to pool, tennis coun and ·ball f.eld, in clerk.
'
purchase state .equipment at reason· order to know what each·is costing

Reg. $2,000......................................................$888.00
Twin Bkls.................\..............................Starting $33.00 ap ,

door, coatlnuounleon aven, Was $549.95 w.t·----.NOW S348
4·Sunray Gas Ra_nge, ,lmolld, alass bade with dock, chrome bUIIIII' pan,
black oven door, was S595.9S:-------NOW $368
3-Sunray Gas, 2 almond • I whitt, roll clock hghtln back .-1 and
oven with timer. chrome burner pan, conlln11011 clean, ovtn black. new
d'!r1 also black \rod drawer In front. Was $649.95"-.NOW $388
1·AIIIIIral Gas Rar: almond, dock and timer, hght In avtn, 'lack aven
f~f ~~9i:n9;,-"ai;;,";i';";utomattc dock, bi;;;;;;;;d:,~ S395
Was $599.91 w.t."'"-"'"'""--·---:."---NOW$398
2·Sulll'll#flec. Ranges, gold clock, black oven door.
Was $599.95"------·-NOW $385
!·Sunray Elac. Range, ti!Jiper, clock back, continuous dean oven, black
oven deor and bladi broil drawer.

.·

By KATIE CROW
Sentinel Comspondent

bridge, matching clrest w/door. Reg. $3,000. SALE $1,000
I.Orlentalilark Starage Bookcase Bed,
-

l'"ltt ~·mot•

Locblaster George COIUIOily is plchmd ltud·
ing 01 . . wan. Tile open house is the fint at the
facility since 1979, when 800 people attended.
Tours and )loat rides ere being planned ud ._
public Is invited to auend.

Syracuse council plans Halloween -night

EXCELLENT BUYS ON USED
CLOSEOUT MODELS CAS RANGES
FURNITURE
2·5¥~ Gas, almond, glass back, black o~ door,
.
CR C
Ilk
.$
Was 5499.95 w/lra.r. __ __;,r; _ _ _ _ _ _ NQW $333
TV sta nd w/V ompartment, e new .............. 35· . hS1111ray
Gas Ranges, whitt glass back with dodc. black Ht thru aven

·
$249
20 Cu ft Ches.t Freez· er
• •
.............................. -.......
2 End Tables, cherry, step type, good shape-......$60 pr.
Wooden Table &amp; 6 ·chairs, like new.....,_,..,_........$285
or bl ·• h 1 b akf t
1·
.$15
.a e, • c a rs, re as set, meta type................
Pair Gold Glass Base Lamps, real nice .................$30 pr.
2 GE Dryers, good shape, runs good...................$75 ea.
Ma1tog Electronic. Dryer, works great....................$ 199
(3) Broyhill Clierry Coffee &amp; End Table Set
N W 5599 OO
NOW 5225
ew as
• .................................
Small Black Bedroom Suite, dresser chest, night stand
bed &amp; mirror, like new.~ ...................................$499
" ~&gt;2r0
Hl'de·A·Bed'· blue arint w/maHre•s
• ................ . · -··-"' :J
BlueRechner;goadsha~......................................$125
Zenlli'·""-t....
....:... woad:..L
~~~~~'""
-. lba,was$999-. NOW$418
12" wt'de ak ab"1net w1one,door &amp; drawer......... 3 ~P'
17 .cu. ft. Gibson Si de· by·Side Refrigerator • ,
coppertone
·
$250
. ..•••••••••!••••••••••••••••••........................
19 cu. ft. Coldspot Side·by·Side Refrigerator
.
Gold, like new.................................................$349
17 cu. ft. Gibso~ Top Freezer &amp; Refrigerator , _·.·

A-C;

Belleville
Locks,
Dam
.
·t0-- .· kue Op:ene d -·t0 puu IC
.

FuU Beds;:..;..."""""""""'""""""""""""Starttill $33.00 up.

la•Z•Ioy lelge Rug, reg. $449.00 .........""'"""SALE $288.00
La•Z•IDJ lraWII, reg. $569,00."--""""""'"""SALE $349.00
Flmteelllue, reg. $523.00...;,_"'"""""-""SALE $297.00
Flexst.. lllue, reg. $606.00........."'"""'""-"'SALE $369.00
Catnapper tw.. d, reg. $429oOO............... ""'""SAlE $269.00
Cotnapper, mauve, reg. $457.00......................SALE $299.00

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Fri"ay, Qetober 4, 1991

.

I

Twin pair Bedding; sets only """'""'"""'""""""""$99.00 set
Full Size Set. Reg•.$350...............- ....._"""""'""$199 set
Restanlc Full Size Box Spring &amp;MaH~ess ....- .....$179.00 set

HERE ARE JUST A FIW IXAMPUS

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Room Dividers In oak or walnut, 48" wide or 60" wideOnly 8 Left
Your Choice $148

IA·Z.BOY, FLEXSTEEL, CATNAPPER
RECUNERS SAVE BIG ·

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•

•

RIVERSIDE DESKS

-

Chance of showers
today 70 percent. High ·
in llli!l 70s. . · · ·

.

Bruards, averstulfed sloppy.Joe
2-4 Drawer.Chest.........~ •••••2 For
suite. Bra'f'n. very comfortatile. . .
.·
· '
·
Reg. $1315.00
$788 . 2-5 Drawer Chest............. 2 For

Brayhdl Blue w/Beige. Green &amp;
Rust Print

-··"

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Pick 3:409
. ·Pick 4: 4862

(.

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

$1099

.Ohio Lottery

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...

~·~~---·-,.-~-~~

90 DAYS SAME
AS CASH
- LAYAWAYS AVAILABLE
... FREE DELIVERY
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·· , PageS

·· ONE,,B H'HI
EL SALE
.

Reg.$1949.00

.I

-~ Southern ·
: Volleyball .·

~ FLOOR ·

sc

Norwalk Off White w/lllue
Green &amp; Mauve Print &amp; Stripe
Reg. si828.00 . $980

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SOFA &amp; CHAIR

·-.

7

w Zenith POrtable TV Color, Was.$299.95""'"-""""Now

199.95
20• Zenith Portable TV, color. Was S399.95...- ..."....... NOW 299.95
lentth ~CR, Was $399.95"""""_.'""-'""""-"'""""ow·$299.95

BVl' NOW FOB CHRISTMAS

=fer

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

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