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P•ge-D~unday Tlmes-Sendnel

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Pomeroy-Mid~leport~lllpolls,

October 6, 1991 ,:

OH-Po.lnt Pleasant, WV

Browns lose
17-14 battle
to NY Jets

Cheaper meat prices could
be in -store for consumers.
By JENNIFER I)IXON
AP Farm Writer.
WASHINGTON - · Sha~ply
lo~er farm prices for hogs and?~·
tie could mean cheaper meat pnces •
for consumers this month, especial. iy cool-weather favorites like
rc_&gt;aSts, soup and stew meats, officials say.
·
.The Agriculture Dep~tment
srud Monday that farm pttces for
hogs and cattle tumbl~d again in
September lJ.nd rematn sharply

below last year's levels.
The lower meat prices, however,
were offset by strong prices for
apples and oranges, which ).lushed
up the farm price index sltghtly,
USDA said.
.
But withotit the fivefold
increase in orange prices, the farm ·
price index shows deteriorating
prices for producers, particularly
catde and hog raisers. At the same
~me, the prices farmers paid for
t.tems such as fertilizer and fuel

List of eligible voters
posted for ASC elections

were 3' percent higher in SeptembCr :
lhan a year earlier.
.
:
· The. abundant meat supply ,which has been driving down farm :
prices could, however, translates •
into better retail prices for con- :
somers, said Diet Edwards, a food _
marketing specialist' with the Tew ·
Agricultural Extension Service.
·
The biggest reductions will be :
for items in seasonal demand, such
as ground beef, roasts, round stiak
and soup and stew meat
USDA, meanwhile, said the allfarm products index of prices
increased I point- or 0.7 percent ·
- from August to September. The index was the same as in Septem: bee 1990, at 148 percent of the Jan- uary-December 1977 average.
•
Bob Milton, chief «onomlst for •
the sratistics branch at the depart- ment's National Agricultural :
Slatistics Service, said lhat without ..
the fivefold increase in orange ~
prices the farm price index would ~
actually have shown a decline of 6 ·
pen:ent.
,:

GALL! POLIS - A list of the cannot vote in more than one comnames
of all .known eligible people munity. If an eligible voter has sepwin a $5 prize from the Ohio VaHey Pul)lishing
MYSTERY FA~M -This week's mystery
10
receive
ballots in the upcommg arate farm interests in more than
Co. Leave your name, address and telephone
farm, featured by the Meigs Soil and Water
annual
ASC
commiuee election is one community in the·sarne county,
number with your eard or letter. No telephone ·
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
availablein
the county ASCS special care will-be laken to see
calls will be accepted. AIII:OIIfest entries should Meip County. Individuals wishing to participate
offtce,
reports
David
U. McKenzie, !hat only one ballot is issued 10 that
be turned in to the newspaper olr.ce .by 4 p.m.
in tbe weekly contest may do so by guessing the
·
County
Executive
Director.
Farm- voter.
each Wednesday. In case ola lie, the winner will
farm's owner. Just mail, or drop orr your guess
ers
will
_
begin
nominating
candibe chosen by lottery, Next week, a GaUia County
off to the Daily Sentinel,lll Court St., Pomeroy,
dates for -the ASC election on Octofarm , will be featured by the Gallia Soil amd
Obio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, 825
ber :
Water Conservation District.
tbird Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631, and you may
ASCS, an Agency of the U.S .
Department of Agric;ulture, is·
responsible for farm program
administration . On the lOcal level,
ASCS operates under a farmerelected comminee system. This
'
year's elections wiU be by mail ballot betwcerT November 22 and
Ferrellgas provides you with a long-term
December 2. Voters may also get
commitment to safety and quality service.
ballots at the county ASCS offtce.
GALLIPOLIS - The 6allia
Anyone
ho
meets
the
following
County Agricultural Srabilization
Ferrellgas gives you a lol more than just whal we put in
requirements is eligible 10 vote in
and Conservation Commiuee
your lank You get propane PLUS ...
these farmer committee elections: ·
reviewed community boundaries
'
any individual of legal voting age
for the ASCS community elections
SAFETY
...
We
have
one
of
the
most
experienced
propane
with an interest in a farm as owner,
to be held between November 22
delivery teams in the business. We give you more lor your
operator, tenant, or sharecropper ho
and December 2. "This is one of
money when it comes to safety and dependability.
is eligible to' participate in any
the first steps in administering the
annual ASC committee elections," ·
ASCS program.
SPECIAL ~ERVICES ...Because we value you as a
Several general provisions relate
said David . McKenzie, County
to
ASC
voter
eligibili}Y.
A
wife
Executive Director.
customer, we want to give you better service while we help
McKenzie said that in compliwho operates a farm wiU!-W-busyou control costs. ASK ABOUT OUR SPECIAL
. ance with changes required by ·the
band can vote if her name lSonthe
CUSTOMER PROGRAMS, including our level Paymenl
deed of conveyance. Any person
Food Security Act of 1985 the ASC
Ptan and the Ferrellgas Installation Review.
under legal voting age can vote if
commiuee set boundaries around
ATIEND~ DEALER DAY· Amona tbe
from across
ASC local administrative areas - the 'Midwest and Eastern United States and Canada attending
he or she runs a farm, and a legal
Ferre IIgas
guardian
who runs a farm for a
(LAA that help provide farmers
"Dealer Day" at Bison Trailers, Inc. located In New Parish, Ind.
State Route 35
with effective farm program
child can vote for the child. No perwere Larry and Linda Montgomery, ol Moatgomery Trailer Sales,
Gallipolis, OH 45631
administration through local represon can be denied the right to vote
Langsville. The dealers toured the plant and looked over the 1992
because
of
race,
c'
o
lor,
religion,
senration.
line of horse and livestock trailers made at the plant. Mr. and Mrs.
.Call-us at (61 446-2264
Gallia County is divided into 3
national origin, age, sex, marital Montgomery stand In front ol a new 20 toot gooseneck traDer that
local administrative areas. Only
status, or handicap. ·
is'part of the 19~2 Bison liaeup.
..
LAA number 2 ill have an election.
A person may cast a ballot in
A list of ASC communities. a
any county in which he or she is an
boundary map, and the number of
eligible ASC voter, but he or she
farms within each community are
available 10 the public at the Gallia
County ASCS Office. The ASC
communities in Gallia Countr for
LAA-2 are as follows: Addtson,
Gallipolis.&lt;Jreen, Clay and Perry.
POMEROY - Vane Scott, co·
Awards to be presented during
Other events concerning the
founder
and
general
manager
of
the
the
meeting include Outslanding
upcoming election . will be
Colonial
Flag
Company,
CoshocFarm Family, Goodyear .Farmer,
IIMounced as they occur. Participation in ASCS elections is open to ton, will be the featured speaker at Soil Judging, Hay Show, and Affilall eligible farmers regardless of the Meigs Soil and Water Conser- iate Membership Certir~eates.
TwO'supervisors will be elected
race, cOIOI', religion, national ori- vation District's annual meeting
gin, age, sex, marital status, or and banquet to be held on Oct 22 to serve three year terms on the
at 7:17 at Mei~s High School.
board of supervisors. Candidates
handicap.
Scott's top1c will be ''The Many are Jo~ Bolin, Bill Holcomb,
Faces or Old Glory."
Marco Jeffers, and Rex Shenefield.
· Tickets r~ the annWII meeting Nominations will be raken from the .
FINANCING AVAILABLE.
and
banquet
to
be
served
by
the
floor on the night of the election.
CANTON, Ohio (AP) - City
Absentee balloting may be done
Council, which spent $227,000 to Meigs Future Farmers of America,
buy and renovat~ a former Ohio wiU consist of chicken, baked pota- in the SWCD Office on the day of
Natioaal Guard armory, bas agreed to, baked beans, cole slaw, rolls, the meeting from 8 a.m. 10 2 p.m.
to sell it for $108,000 to Akro beverag!'S and desserts. The cost is or by sending a request to the
. $7.
office and and an absentee ballot
Corp., which !llakes car mats.
Tickets
may
be
purchased
from
will be mailed 10 you.
Councilman Charles Ede said
the
Meigs
SWCD
supervisors
Alan
Deadline for making reservaMooday lhat city expenditures for
Holter,
Thomas
Theiss,
Charles
tions
for the annual meeting and
the site were appropriate. Federal
Yost,
David
Gloeckner,
·ibid
Rex
banquet is Oct 15.
funds used for the project were
intended for economic develop- Shenerteld.
Rower windows, door IOCICS,I
ment, he said.
air, tiH, crulae, stireo,toadld.
Akro's·purchase of the site will
lead to creation of 30 jobs, said
Mayor Sam Purses, who said Akro
hal promised to spend $50,000 on
remodelin$. "Quite frankly , I
'MlUid do this .deal every day of the
week," Purses said.
Schools will benefit because the
3.8-acn: complex again will generate propeny raxes, said .CouncilPower windows, AM·FM
man Arthur J. Cirelli. He said Akro
aterao, door locks, 1111,
could have expanded production at
crulae, V-6 engine, loaded.
ill .... plant instead of buy-

Announce
boundaries
for elections

Ohio Lottery
'
Pick 3:782
'Pick 4: 0854
Cards: K-H; 5:C;
3-D;Q-S
Super Lc;~tto:
5-17-19-25-26-28
Kicker: 070706

Page4

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Low tonigl:tt in midJOs. Tuesday, sunny.
high in mid-60s.

•
Vol. 42, No. 108

Copyrighted 1991

1 Section, 10 Pagn

25 cents
Allultlmedla Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, October 7, 1991.
.•.

.

More than-1,500 on
hand~ fo_
r dam ceremony

ANYONE CAN SELL YOU
PROPANE!

.~

I· •-

the Assistant Lockmaster at nearby Racine
Locks and Dam, explains the locking procedure
to a tour group.

TOUR GUIDE - Larry Circle, center, was
one of several tour guides at Sunday's open
house at Belleville Loc:ks and Dam. Here, Circle,

By B~ll\N J, REED
Sentmel News Starr
More than 1,500 people attended-an open house at-BellevilleLocks and Dam in. Reedsville on
Sunday, almost twtce the number
who attended the last open house
there in 1979.
According to Lockma ster
George Connolly, the crowd was
more than had been expected, but
he was pleased with the numb\'r.
"This is a civil works project,"
5=o~nolly S81d after the open house.
It .s good that peop!e. can see ~~w
thCir w dollars are liemg spent
Those who atten~ed the open
house were g1ven gu1ded tours of
the. sprawling project~ heard cxpla·
nat1on of how the facthty operated,
sa~ boats locking through t_he
factltty and we~e allow~ to wiilk
along lhe dam .'tself, whtch spans
from Reedsville to Bellevtlle,
W.Va.
In. f!!Ct. Connolly said, many of
the VISitors 10 the locks and darn on
Sunda~ carne across the dam from
Bellev1Ue.. .
In addttton to the tours and
demonstrations, visitors were given

short rides on th,e Ohio River
!!l!oanl"the&gt;project s mamtenance
towboat
- A-dozen-staff-members, made
up of Belleville employees and
staffers from other locatiOns,
helped to guide tours, piloted the
boat and assisted in the daily operalion of lhe locks.
"This is terrific," one ReedsviUe
resident said. "It's right here in our
backyard, but so often we lake it
for granted." .
..
.
The BellevJIIe facll1ty da1ms a
n~vtgatton pool ext~ndmg 42 .2
mtles upstream to Wtllow Island
Locks and Dam at Reno. That pool
borders on Metgs, Athens, and
Washington Counties in Ohi.o and
Wood and Pleasant Counttes 1n
West Virginia. Work on the locks
and darn was compl~~ m 1968, at
a total cost of $63 million.
·.
There.are two lock chambers at
the facthty, each mcasunng 110
feet in width. The dam, ~he high
structure wh1ch spans the nver, has
a top length of I ,206 feet and a
1~9-foot ftxed we1r (or barner)
wtth a 130-foot open crest. There
are eight "tainter" gates. each .110

feet wide by 34 feet ·high, se
between IS-foot concrete piers
The gates are individually raise&lt;
- and-lowe-re'd-m mai-ntain a poo
upstream of the dam during lov.
and normal flows, in order to main
tain a navigable pool.
As the flow in lhe river increas·
es, lite gates are raised to hold the
upper pool. Eventually increasing
flows reach a level whc~c the galeS
arc completely out of the water. AI
this time, the river reverts to free
flow .
The basic plan of operation at
the locks and dam is to maintain a
stable pool level during low to normal river flow for navigation purposes.
It is estimated that so far in
1991 ,36 million tons (that's 72 billion pounds) have been locked
through the Belleville locks. The
locking procedure itself requires an
average of 20 to 25 minutes
18 people are e)Jlployed at the
Belleville project, which never
closes. Those personnel are under
the direct supervision ofLockmas- ·
tcr Connolly.
·

Ferrellgas

Annual Meigs S&amp;WCD
banquet slated Oct. 22

GM FACTORY PROGRAM CARS
NO·MONEY DOWN!
TO QUALIFIED BUYERS
- ON THE SPOT -

To sell structure

_:___ $12,888

1991 BUICK CENTURY
SEDAN

$12,888

inglbe~.

lntofnt up ...
CLEVELAND (AP) - Blue
Cross &amp; .Blue Shield of Ohio
repartee! net inc0111e of $4.3 million
for the rtrSt half of 1991, compared
with a loss of $15.5 million for the
lirlt half of 1990.
.
Reserves for protection against
f11turc claims increased by $49.1
1
!J1illlon, or 56 percent, to $136.4
million for the first six months of
the year.
Blue Cross had investment
income of $8.1 million for that
period. compared with invesunent
lllllOIIIC of $6.6 minion for January
to June of last year.

''People come to me
for good rates... ·
they formy
G90d
senice."

Dawn Schuler and Jodi Hayes, Queen Marcy,
Junior Attendant Nicki Beegle, Sophomore
Attendant Jennie Hill, and Freshman Attendant
Tracy Pickett.

QUEEN MARCY AND COURT - Marcy
Hill, center, was crowned Harvest Queen at the
Racine Fall Festival on Saturday. Also pictured,
left to right, are candidates Amber Cumings,

By JIM FREEMAN
.
OVP News Starr
Three people received minor
injuries in three separate motor
vehicle accidents investigated by
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol over the weekend.
According to a patrol report, the
first accident occurred Friday
evening on C.R. 35 in Lebanon
Township and resulted in one
minor injury.
A pickup truck driven by Curtis

E. Price, 31, of Portland, was west·
bound on C.R. 35 and went off the
right side of the road, struck a ditch
and ovenurned coming to rest on
its wheels, the report indicated. The
driver stated he swerved to miss a
deer.
Price's pas senger, James R.
Pauley, 23, of Pordand, was treated
and released from Veterans Memorial Hospital for contusions and
abrasions.
Damage to Price's 1986 Ford

..-----Local briefs-Diabetes Association to meet

•

The South Central Chapter of the American Diabetes Association will meet Saturday, Oct 12, at Woodland Centers in Gallipolis.
All diabetics and interested people are invited-to attend.
··For more infonnation, call Frank DiClemente at 614-446.5500.

Meigs EMA scores well'o
•

M:eigs County Emergency Management Agency Di!C(!tor.Robert
Byer is pleased with how the county scored in the recent SARA
Tnle III Ohio River Exercise.
.
·
Byer reporred on Friday that the county received a score of.41
out of 46 possible points in the exercise allhough only 27 .points
were necessary to pass.
The exercise lOOk pl~ in early September, and was conducted
in several Ohio River counties.

37 YEARS.·oF DEPENDABLE SERVICE!
.,,,. .....

-A
CAUME.

Slaw Farm
ln.&lt;Ur:tna: Con~nk..,.
If&lt;- Clfllc....,. llcM&gt;mi"'ll•lll IIN"o'

open house on Sunday at Be'lleville Loeb and
Dam. Here, the tow "Cincinnati Star" is seen
from atop the da111. Spectators can be seen In the
lower, left-band corner elthe photo.
·

Pat.rol. probes 3 weekend accidents Fire Prevention Week observed here

'

No quotes neede~ - ~~~wAsHINGTON(~· - QuolaS will not have to be imposed on
U.S. meat imports, expected to
tota11,318.4 million r.unds for
1991, bei:auac thlt • 100,000
pountll below tbe lriJget level that
Would nqulnl them. .
Apicaltare Edward Madigan
IIIIIOiiaced dtis week that the United s~a~e~ will not bave 10 impose
quo111 beclnoe AuiUalia and New
Zellud, tbe twO largellsuppliers
rllwpailed J!11111. have qJeed to
limit their exporu to tho United
S..lcr the rest oldie year.

..-

PICTURESQUE VIEW - The breathtaking
view or the Obio River and the communities oJ
Reedsville, Obio and Belleville, W.Va. on either
side of the river was a popular feature of the

·Lake to be drawn down
Lake 'draw-down at Forked Run State Park will take place later
this fall, and those planning to bOat or fish in the lake should take
note.
According to Park Manager Randy Wachter, the lake will be
drawn down seven feet so that dock and beach repair and shoreline
improvements can be made.
·
Wachter expects the work 10 begin around the ftrst of November,
and it should be completed· prior to the beginning of the year. The
Continued on page 3

Ranger was listed as heavy and disabling.
No cilations were issued.
The second accident' occurred
Saturday morning ori S.R. ·t43 in
Salisbury Township and resulted in
two minor injuries.
The patrol repon indicated that
Jacinda D. MuUen, 17, of Middleport, was driving northbound when
her car slid off .the right side of the
Continued on page 3

Three injured
in auto wreck

[Editor's Note : October 6-12 now in light or new state regulahas been declared "Fire Preven- tions. •·.
Those regulations, contained in
tion Week". The awareness camthe
Ohio Administrative Code
paign is sponsored by the National Fire Protectioa Association, regarding local firefighting~· e
the U.S. Fire Administration, the full effect in Murch, 1993, al . h
Ohio Fire MarsbaU's Omce anil some regulations have be in
. local fire departments and EMS effect since they were passed in
departments. This is the first in a 1988.
Speci fically , those regulluions
series of stories focusing on fire
mandate
t~at each volunteer fire
sarety and local fire prevention
department
be · equipped with
efforts.]
expensive turn-out gear and attend
man~ated training programs.
By BRIAN J, REED
According to Meigs Emergency
Sentinel News Staff
Can Meigs County'S' smaU vol- Medical Services Director Robert
unteer fire depl\.fllllents survive the Byer, it will cost each fire dePartment $1 ,600, based on today's eco·
1990's?
That's the question being asked nomic standard s, to completely

Three persons were transported
to Veterans Memorial Hospiral 'by
Middleport and Pomeroy units of
the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service for treatment of
injuries suffered in a three-car accident on North Second Street in
Middleport Saturday afternoon.
Injured were Charlotte L. Satterfield, Pomeroy, and Janet McKee,
Portland, drivers of .two of the
vehicles, and Betsy Heck, Portland,
a passenger in a vehicle driven by
McKee. None were admitted to the
hospiral. Driver of the third vehicle
was John Stewart, Pomeroy. !'fe
was cited for failure to maintain
assured clear distance.
·
According to the report of Mid·
dleport Police, ·Saucrfield and
McKee had both stopped .in trafftc
-when' the-1\Ccident occurred. Stew-·
an, driving a p~lmp truck, failed to
stop striking the rear of the McKee
vehicle pushing it into the rear of
ROUTE DISCUSSED - George Nichols,
the Satterfield car.
center, coordinator ror the 5K Run-Walk, to be
There was rear end damage to
the Satterfield car, front and rear - held Saturday in conjunction with the Big Bend
end damage to the McK~ vehicle, . Sterilwheel Festival, discusses the race route
with Meigs County residents, 1-r, Bruce and Rita
and front end damage to the StewReed and Pam and l)on Vau~ban. Tbe race will
an truck. ·

outfit each fireman in accordance
with the state's new regulations.
For departments who must sell barbecued chicken and host bingo
!lames to raise operating funds, !his
ts not good news.
.
·, Fire training costs are on the rise
as well. General training Courses a
25-hour course in handling ha'z.
ardous materials, various in-services !llld refresher CQurses are now
required for each firefighter, The
cost of lhe training course, for
example, can cost a department
several hundred dollars, as the
average instructor fee runs at over
$400, and materials for each firefighter arc SIS.
Continued on page 3

begla in Mason, W.Va., and conclude in
Pomeroy. To pre-register for the race contact
Nichols at (304). ~73-5851 or Mike Kennedy at
992-7512. Par1tc1pants may also register the
morning olthe race.

like a J!ood nci¢lbc&gt;r. Slate farm Is there.
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Commentary
U 1 CoQrt Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

'MULTIMEDIA, INC.
ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisber/ControUer

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

AMEMBER of Thp Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association and
the American Newspaper Publisher Association.

LE'ITERS OF OPINION ue welcome. They should be less than 300
wordll long. Alllellm ue subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and·1elephone nwnber. No unsigned letters will be published. I.ettm
should be in good taste, addr... ing issues, oot personalities. .
·

Senators will feel softer
impact in district chang~s
By ROBERT E. MILLER
•
Associated Press Writer
•
COLUMBUS -Ohio's new legislativ~ redistricting piM will have
compar~tively little effect on state senators, in contrast to the House,
where some members may have to move to new districts by Nov. 5.
The chief reason is that the Republican-conttolled state Apportionment
Board, which drew the new districts last week, made only mmor changes
in the 33 Senate districts. Republicans already conttol the Sena~ 21-12.
"I don't believe anyone could ever do any better than that, S3ld Senate President Stanley Aronoff, R-Cmcmnau, a board member.
In addition senators serve four-year terms - wnh roughly half elected
every two y~- Md 17 won't be up for re-election untill994.
In the meantime, they will keep thetr own 41stnct numbers and represent the district tharcontains the largest number of the consbtuents who
live in the districts in which they were last elected.
Only five senators, compared with 25 House members, found themselves living in the same district with other incumbents when the new
map emerged last week.
Sens. Theodore Gray and Eugene Watts, l)oth R-Columbus, and
Richard Pfeiffer Jr., D-Columbus, all live in the new 3rd Distnct. Gray
plans to move into an adjoining district. thai has no incumbent.
.
Walts apparently will stay put: Pfeiffer has a.nnounced as a .candidate
next year for judge of a new envuonmenlal d!v!Slon of Franklin County
Municipal Court.
"
The only other senators who face a similar dilemma arc Sens. Roy
Ray, R·Akron, a~d Robert Nettle,_ D;Barberton, who may square off
against each other m the new 28th Distnct, where both reside.
. Other senators had their districts changed but will stay put because
their terms do not expire until 1994. They are being assigned to serve in
·new districts that generally-include the same constttuents.
They are Sens. M. Ben Gaeth, R-Defiance; Neal Zimmers Jr., D-Dayton· Richard Finan, R·Cincinnati; William Bowen, D-Cincinnati; Linda
F~ey D-Toledo· Alan Zaleski, D-Eiyria, and Jan Long, D-Circleville.
In the House the members who decide to move into new districts will
have to do so wlthin 30 111\ys after Oct 5. The reason is that in order to run
in another district. they must live then: at least a year before the Novem·
ber 1992 election.
Some of the House members have indicated they are thinking about
retiring. But others, espcciaily Democrats affected most by the Re~ub.li­
can-drawn plan, say they think the plan is unconstitutional and will be
thrown out by the couns.
. If the plan were disallowed, the. ap~X&gt;rtionment board would ha~e to
com~ up with another one under gwdehnes that ~ely_ would be specified
by the court A court also could step in and do the JOb itself, lawyers sa1d.
•

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Letters to the editor
•

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''Why-county n-eeds- schovl

Dear Editor:
I would like to tell you why
Meigs Co. needs a school and
wQrkshop or Meigs Industries f~r
t1le retarded. Do you know what II
it like ·to have a handicapped son or
dB;UBhter and be told he will never
v1iuc or talk? He probably will not
Jr.le to be very old.
·
t ·There was no help 50 years ago
fQi- the handicapped. Now that we
lltlve a place where they can be
Mlped, are we going to let it close?
JPe we going to vote for the levy m
NOvember?
:· we do thank the teachers and
alSo all who voted for the bu1ldmg
and support¢ in the past yearS. ,
.• We must make a way to keep 11
~-Vote yes in November.
·" Our retarded have equal rights,

some are taxpaying, employed.
Why not volunteer a few days at
Carleton? See what is ~oing on,
you will feel better that mght.
Do you know they work at state
parks, state garage, also do lawns,
rake leaves and raised a garden this
summer, which they arc very proud
of.
We understand we are taxed for
our streets, lights, our schools,
water, sewers, fire departments,
heat, doctor, medicine and E.M.S.
What can we do without? That
is up to you the taxpayer.
This is not an insult to anyone.
It is a caring person for help for all
in need. God Bless All.
Jessie Grueser
Rutland, OH 45775

Traveling Sen. Burdick's:·'yellow brick road'
· FARGO N.D. -In tight bud·
get times cite of the Senate's kings
of pork i~ at it again. Quentin Bur·
dick; D-N.D., 1$ building a "golden
mile' • road here with federal
JPOney. He says it's essenual for
· access to some U.S. Agriculture
Department labs, but the _lab
employees say they don't need lL
The people who do need it arc
othe thousands of Nortb Pakota
State University,football fans who
will someday travel Burdick's road
to reach their new 17,00Q.·seat stadium. You may never use the road,
but you'll pay for it, Md Burdick
will talce credit for it with the vot·
ers back home.
He won his last election here in
1988 by emphasizing his clout in
Congress. So many federal dollars
have flowed into North Dakota as a
result of Burdick's finagling that
last year North Dakota ranked thud
in the amount of federal funds
received _per person.
.
.
This ts-the same Sen. Burd1ck
who tried to turn Lawrence Welk's
boyhood home into a national
shrine with $500,000 m Agr•culture Department funds;
.
You have to hand.1t to Burdick.

Judge Gesell's definitive dismissal of all charges against Oliver
North in connection with the Iran·
conua affair may or may not,
depending on your point of view,
fully "exonerate" him, but its legal
consequences are clear: It is as if
the charges had never been
brought.
It is time, therefore, to consider
what career Col. North should pursue henceforth. He is still a young
man, with a wife and minor chi!·
dren. He almost surely won't -wMt
to resume 'his career as a Marine
. officer: He has been marked for life
by the publicity, both good and
bad, that has rained down on him
thes~ .past five years, and could
hardly expect a normal life in the
Marines even if he longed for it.
No doubt there will be all sons
of tempting business offers dangled
in front of him and in any case he
undoubtedly h~ a Book About It
All in the works that will comrnMd
a princely sum from some publish·
er. In addition, he could probably

~
By The Associated Press
; Today is Monday, Oct. 7, the 280th day of 1991. There aJe 85 days left
in the year.
.
·
: · Today's Highlight in History: ·
.
.On OcL 7, 1777, the second BauleofSarawga began dunng the Amer·
i~ Revolution. (The British forces. under Geneml John Burgoyne, sur·
rendered 10 days later.)
·
On this date'
.
•. In 1765, the Stamp Act Congress convened in New York to draw up
colonial grievances against England.
· · In 1849, author Edgar AJ!an Poe .died in Bal~re at age 40.
1n 1868. Comell Univemty was ~naugur&amp;led m Ithaca, JI!.Y.
.
• In 1916 75 years ago, in a lopsided college football viCIOry, Georgm
Tech defeaied Cumberland Univelllity 222.0 in Atlanta.
. .,
· In 1940. Artie Sha~ _and his Orchestra recaded Hoagy Carmichael s
"Stardust'' for RCA VICtor:
In 1949 the Rejlllblic of East Gennany was fanned.
• ·
.
In 19S&lt;i the Uailed N)llions General Assembly approv~ an advance
~ ' 1ICXIh of the 38th Parallel in the Korean CoaflicL
by-~~9r
Marian Aiwlcnon becamethe fii'Sl bid singer·hired-by the
~uW. 0pem Company in New YOlk.
·: In 1960, Democratic presidential candidate John F. K~nnedy Md .
Ri:publlcln opponent Richard M. Nixon held dte second of their broadcast

~::963, Plesident Kennedr ~ me doC~en~ of ratification for a
o0c1e1r te8t ban ~ with Bntam and the Soviet Umon.

the MOI!on Picture Associalion of Arn«ica adopted iLs film.
1...:a
·
In
"""•
· · from "G" for "genmli" audiences to "X," for
rating system, rangmg
acJult ~ only;
. . ~ Jon
f the u 'ted
· ,• In 1979, Pope John Paul n ~Iuded his weea.· g tour o
ru
Sialel 'tb a Mas on the WashmJIIOII Mall.
.
.
. :• In ;;82 •.tb~ British musical "Cats," featurtng the popula\: song
•

u:i..i-.wv

,~11-,11

"-..ton
B~y .
"'""I

make a mcfre than merely comfort·
able living just by giving paid
speeches -something he has done
a lot of (and become very good at)
in recent years, to help defray his
legal expenses.
.
But I have a hunch that Col.
North will want to do something
more meaningful thM simply make
money. Not even his worst enemy
would deny that he is a patriot,
with a deep; soldierly love for his
country and a longing to serve it.
To this must be added the simple
but thunderous fact that he is, to
many Americans in every staJe, an
auth.entic "American hero.:' as
President Reagan has called hun: a
. man w~o made enormous exer·
bons, w1thout My personal reward,
to do what he and many others
believed was in the best interests of
this country.
Needless to say, he also has
m~y bitter criti.cs wh~ sincerely
beheve that hu acttons were
unconstitutional and thoroughly
reprehensible. But that, as the say-

•

IToledo I 64° I

A

and Da e .ran tt,a

What '"direction now for Col. North?

'today i_n history

·

l

ing goes, is what make~ horse
races.
I believe that the logic of the sit·
uation - both his own best interests and those of the country compel Col. North to consider very
seriously the possibility of running
for public office: probably the U.S.
Senate.
The reasons are simple. First,
there is no other way in which he
can obtain, so quickly and so clearly, a public (as distinguished from
a purely legal) judgment-on the
actions for which his critics have
tried, so long and so unsuccessful·
ly, td 'condemn him. Even more
important, there is no forum that
compares with the U.S. Senate as a
place where he can, in the years
allead, s~ out for the principles
with wh1ch he is identified, Md for
which he has already sacrificed so
much.
Provided his plans are laid
tboughlfully and intelligently, I SllC
no reason why Col. North can~or
win a seat in the U.S. Senate in

William A. Rusher .
shon order. Article I of the Consti·
tution provides only that a senator
must be "when elected" a resident '
of the state in which he runs --'- a
surprisingly generous provision, of
which Robert Kennedy took full
advantage when he established res·
idence in New York just a month
before running for (and winning)
one of its two seats in the Senate.
There are ·plenty of states in the
South and West, and not a few in
the•est of the country;-where Oliv:~
er North is overwhelmingly popu·
Jar. It would be nice if he could
pick one where a hot-eyed liberal :
incumbent richly deserves a lick- ,
in~. (Teny Sanford comes to mind.
His seat is up in 1992, and the vot· 1
ers of North Carolina just re-elect·
ed Jesse Helms for a fourth term in
1990.)
lm.agine what Sen . Daniel
Inouye will think when he ftrst sees '
Sen. Nonh!
.
(C)l991
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

'Official' - and very wrong,_·__B_e_nm_att_:._en_be--=.rg
It is useful to understand very omy.
. economy, or even of Ronald Rea·
simple ideas, even if the manner of
And we do hear ~at the J\rtten· · gan. These arc typically voluntary
their utlerance yields giggles, as can econoll)y 1s mcrea~t-ngly and personal decisions.
when President Calvin Coolidge , "unfair," or that "mequal~ty" 1s
We know that such change in
said, ''When a great many people growing. We. hear ~ real mcome family composition increases
arc unable to fmd work, unemploy- for the non-nch hasn t been grow· poverty . Yet the poverty report
makes no official calculations
ment reSults."
·ing, or growing on1y sluggishly.
We arc more sophisticated these
Let's. look at tt. Is p~verty, regarding the impact of single·
·
days. We can now put forth, and inequality or sluggts~ tneome parentage.
even measure, another startling for- growth really due to a s1ck econo·
Again, it is not because data
mula: "Recessions push income my?
isn't available . Three Census
down and poverty up." And so,
The " official" pover.ty rate economists (Gordon Green, Paul
with appropriate fMfarc, the new counts only income rece1ved m Ryscavage and Edward Welnialc)
Census Bureau income reports cash. But, ove~ the last couple _of have ~ssued research papers relathave been issued. Front-page cov• decades, Amencans begM recei~· ing poverty to f~ily make-up. tr
erage has sent out the word: The . ing ever-larger parts of t~u single-parentage hadn't gone up
so-called " official" 1990 poveny income in "non-cash." Poor pea- starkly, the poverty rate would be
rate is 13.5 percent, up from 12.8 pie get food Sla!"~s, rent supple· down another 2.l .percent. Alas,
percent. Real income declined by ments and Med1ca1d. The elderly that too is only "research," not
1.7 i&gt;ereenL
, get Medicare. Most Amer~cans "official."
But while we effectively mea- now get private health ':3fC mso_r·
Furthermore, a technical change
sure and publicize one truism, we . Mce. There was a sharp mcrease m in· the method of measuring infla·
arc doing a dreadful job regarding employer-funded pens1on plalls, .as don, accepted officially in all cur·
two others, which are at least as well as big increases in Soc1al rent government calculations, is
important Consider these astonish- Security pensions.
only charted as "experimental" in
ingMtions: I) lf it isn't counted, it
Now, the Census·Bureau d~ poverty reports ·that make coml'ar·
doesn't count and, 2) Families with publish a "research" data senes isons over time. Doing it the nght
,missing breadwinners earn less that -includes much ''.non•cash'' way cuts poveny oooth&amp; 1.4 perbread.
income. When poverty IS computed cent.
These simple ideas now mold that way it registers not at 13.5 per·
Pui it all together, factor in
every aspect of the income situa· cent, but at 11.0 pcn:enL (Even in something for pensions, and the
tion. Everyone involved knows it. the research series, pensions tue not . official poverty rate would be cut
But because of government grid· counted as income until decades roughly in half. "Unfairness"
lock and political pressure, they after the money has been earned, would be diminished. There would
end up nearly igriOfed. This deeply vastly anderstatmg iLs impacL)
be no doubt that real income has
distorts the public dialol!lle. •
The change in breadwinner sta- been rising.
. What we do hear 1s that the· tus also a{fects poverty and income
For 15 very .long years M argu·
poverty rate is "sticky," that is, it in a powerful way. From 1970 to meht has been going on about
has remained between 11· percent 1990 the proportion of families whether to change the official,
and 15 percent since 1967. This with children headed by a single well-publicized, poveny rate, par·
"stickiness" is said 10 be Qne proof parent more than doubled. Tbat ticularly regarding non -cash
N: .,.;,~oMo.o.in. the..American econ· was not the fault of the AmericM income, the rev~lutionary ii!ea

being to count what's countable.
There are technical and political
problems. You couldn't find a serious villain if you tried. ·
But there 1s a victim: us. We're
neither going to understand our
economy·, nor act wisely upon it,
until the diddling stops and we
accept simple truths.
·
(C)I991
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fellow
at the American Enterprise lnsti·
tute, is author of "The First Univelllal Nation," published by The
Free Press.

Berry's World

and high temix:raturcs ·

MIC H.

By Jack Anderson

S500,000. He must have kn~wn
there WJIS .only so much P•ggtSh·
·
tl.
ness that his ~ellow se~ators would
tolerate on a s~~leproJecL
lfhe pulls it off, Burdick ~ill
However, tt s. a ~ystery 10 u~ have spent four dec.ades d1stm·
how jllly of Bt!Jdick s fello.w sena guisl!ing himself for little else than
to.rs would have caught him any· · 'llringing home favors for his state.
~ay : .He labeled ~~~ expense Sen. Alan Simpso~, R.-Wyo.: has
faciliues completion.
charged that Burd1ck has deliber·
We t~lked to several of the ately avoided responsibility during
AgriculwreDe~entresearche~ his Senate career. No other senator
and all _of them satd they hadn t took 27 years to get his ftrSt com·
com,11lained abo111 the &amp;l:avel road miuee chairmanship. Simpson once ·
tha.l currently hnks then labs- claimed that Burd1ck shifted from
whic~ . by the way, do some award- committee to committee each time
winrung re~h.
.
.
he was in line for a chairmanship.
ExpansiOn of the. umvemty
Burdick makes no apologies for
means that the road w1ll be useful his lack of leadership or promi·
· in the future, but the 1dca or~- nence. In 1990, a study by Southpayers around the country hMding em illinois University counted the
over hundreds of thousands of dol· number of mentions that senators
Iars to connect a few Ag l~bs 1s get on network news broadcasts,
ludicrou~.
.
and Burdick was never mentioned
. An~. It proves that Burdi7k, 8~, once for four years. His response
1s willing to do_anythmg to mgran· was, "I don't make a nuisance of
ate h1mself y;tth ~e folks back myself trying to get 00 1V _just to
home, 1f tt will -g~l him re-elected. get on there. I'm not runmng for.
He has already mfonned N_or!h presidenL"
Dakotans that ~ will run agam ~~
CALLING THE SHOTS - The
1994 and serve ~n the Senate unbl terrorist groups holding Western
2000 when he will be 92 years old. , bostagc:L.arc financed by Iran, J!!ld
that. gives Iranian President Hashe·
mi Rafsanjani some I~v.:rage over
'them. But the decisions about who
stays and who goes free ane made
1
by the Tabbishi, a Secret, seven·
~OU HAVEN T FO~OTTEN
man council that represents differ·
THAT puR FIN sTRIN(;
ent terrorist factions. The Tabbishi
can't even agree on who is in
QUA~TERBACK'S
charge. The No. 2 man on the
R~TIRED, ~E YOU ?
council is itching to oust the No. I
man. Only the close friendship
between their wives keeps him
from doing iL
MINI-EDITORIAL -What is
it about .David Duke that causes
people to lose their good judgment? Duke is a former Ku Klux 1
Klansman, now a Louisiana guber·
natorial candidate with a white·
rights message. Last month his can·
didacy was endorsed by none other
than James Meredith, a civil rights
activist :,yho integrated the University of Mississippi. Meredith says
he likes Duke because at least he is
honest about his past. A man who
admits to a history of bigolry is
only one· step better than a bigot.
•
He's an honest bigot. That's no
reason to vote for him.
Copyright, 1991, United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

As chairman of the Senate appro·
priations subcommittee on agricul·
tore, it takes some creativity to
re~tore a bMd leader's house or
bu1l~ M access ro.~d ,t~ a foot\':ill
stadium and call tt agnculture.
The site of the latest Burdick
sleight of hand is a strerch of gravel
road through a sunflower field on
the west side of the North Dakota
State University campus. Along
Burdick's mile are pieces of bacon
that the senator has already brought
home- Agriculture Department
research labs on the campus. Bur·
dick says they need a paved road to
connect them.
But those who arc naturally sus·
picious of Burdick's motives-. us
included- can't help but nobce
that the road will relieve congesLion on the campus and will be the
most convenient way to reach the
new Farg~ome stadium.. .
Some umvemty offlClals are
,!lflliOYed abo.ut the half-~aked qual·
tty of Burdick's pork. They had
originally asked for $2 million for
the milt:;IOng_road. Burdick slipped
the proJeCt mto an agncultural
appropriations bill, but for only

.

Ohio under frost

Tuesday,· Qct. 8
.
0
Accu-Weathcr ·forecast for

•

IMansfield I 64° I•

PA.

IND.

•IColumbus I64° I

.. .
The DI!IIY Sentlnei-Page-3 ,

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

OHIO Weather

.

The Daily Sentinel

'

Monday, October.7, .1991.
Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy..;;Middleport, Ohio
· Monday, October 7, 1991

'

·~...

By Tbe Associated Pre5s
All of Ohio was under a frost
warning tonight as t~mperatures
, were. expected to d1p tnto !he low
30s under clear skies.
The National Weather se,vice
said a high pressure system expect·
ed·to pass through the state tonight
would sweep out the clouds,
removing a blanket _that would
have kept the warmer temperatures
close to the ground.
•
Forecaslers said the likelihood
of frost was greatest in low-lying
areas. Temperatures were expected
to drop to the 30-35 range. ~
Some parts of southern Ohio
reported frost during the SundayMonday overnight, when the mer·

.

~arning

lower40s. · . · .
·
.
After the chillyrught, the Oh1o
weather picture for Tue~y !oolcs
much better. South:ovest wmds and
sunslunc ~Ill combme to push tem·
perawres mto the upper SOs to mid· .
60s.
. .
.The record high temperature for
this .date at the Columbus. wea!her
stauon was 88 degre~s m 1941. ·
The record low was 29m 1952. .

~

this evening ·

Sunrise this morning was at E~stern Michigan had snow flu;. ~
7:B a.m. Sunset. will be at 7:05 ries. Rain and thunderstorms :
p.m.,
extended ~ro~ New England 3170SS
Around tbe nation
eastern Vugmia; the Great Lakes 1,.
·Clouds hung over parts of the and parts of Florida. Thunder· :
Midwest and South.
storms in western New York state 1
Fog amj clouds settled over the .produced sleet
1
West Coast, with temperatures of . Temperatures were expected !0 ~
5(/ in Seattle and San Francisco. ·
dip below freezing today. In the ~
Rain caused flOOding Sunday in Southeast, the first frosts of fall !
New Hampshire and Vermont. will blanket the region.
~
~

l

;
: '
:

curyWlinto~~3~Md

· Fire ..

W. VA .

i)
"
Showers T-storms Rain Flurries

Snow

Ice

Sunny

Via Associated Press GrapfWcsNe/

Pt. Cloudy

Cloudy

C199 1 Accu·Weather, Inc.

- -Locul briefs.~ . Continued from page I
lake will remain operi through(\Ut the process, but Wachter advises
that boat lau nching may be difficult due to the low level of the lake.

EM..S units answer eight calls
Units from Meigs C~unty EmergcnJy Medical Services
answered eight calls for assistance over the weekend.
On Saturday at 8:43a.m., Pomeroy units went to State Route 143
and Wolf Pen Road for an auto accident. Jason Mullen and Jacynda
Mullen were 1ransponcd to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 12:27 p.m., Middleport squad went to Overbrook ·center for
Nellie Connolly, who was taken to Veterans. Atl:l5 p.m .. Middleport and Pomeroy units were sent to an auto accident. on North Sec·
ond in. Middleport. Betsy Heck, Charlotte Satterfield and Janel
McKee were taken to Veterans. At 6:38 p.m., Middleport unit went
to Powell Street for Goldie-Lightfoot. She was taken to Veterans. At
10:16 p.m., Ra cine squad went to Apple Grove- Dorcas Road.
Charles Spaun was taken to Veterans.
On Sunday at 11 :04 p.m. Middleport squad went to Cole SlrCet
for Robin Pridemore, who was lreated but not transported.
At 7:54 a.m. on Monday, Rutland unit went to Siate Route 124.
Debbie Lee was taken to Veterans. At 8:19a.m., Rutland squad
went to College Road for Mary Ward. Ward was iransported to Veterans.

Area deaths

Nora Davis

Edgar Judson

Nora M. Davis, 96, Route 555,
Edgar "John" Judson, 60, 4702 Little Hocking, died Saturday
College Parkway, Parkersburg, evening, Oct. 5, 1991 , at her resiW.Va., died early Sunday morning, dence.
Oct. 6,1991, at St. Joseph Hospital
Born in Ritchie County, she was
after a brief illness.
a daughter of the late Simon Md
Born in Guysville, he was a son Pricilla Richards Pool. She was a
of the late James and Beatrice housewife.
Shannon Judson. He was retired
Mrs. Davis is survived by two
from the 0. Ames Company in daughters, Della Hendershot, Bel·
Parkersburg, and was an army vet· pre, and Norma Corliss, Hawaii.
erM of the Korean War.
grandchildren, Md one fosMr. Judson is survived 11y hi s several
ter
son,
Lester Turrill, Little Hock·
wife, Anna .Life. Parkersburg, ing.
W.Va.; twp daughters, Laura Jor-Besides her Pfl(ents she was predon, Cutler, Md Sue Judson, Park- ceded in death by one son, Glen.
ersburg, W.Va.: three sons, John,
Friends may call at the White·
of Heath, and Mitchell and Wayne, Ethridge
Funeral Home in Belpre
both of Columbus: 10 grandchil- today (Monday)
from 6 to 9 p.m.
dren, two nephews, one niece, and There will be no service.
oqe brother, Robert, of StewarL
Besides his parents Mr. Judson
was preceded in death by one sis- Danny Yarbrough
ter, Melvina Barnhart.
Services will be held WednesDanny R. Yarbrough, 40,
day at 1 p.m. at the White Funeral Wadsworth, formerly of Rutland,
Home in Coolville with Rev. David died Friday, Oct. 4, 1991, at Akron
Couto officiating. l)urial will be in General Medical Center after a
the South Cannan Cemetery.
brief illness.
Friends may call at the funeral
Born in Roanoke, Ala., he was
home on Tuesday from 2-4 p.m. ' the son of Glema Yarbrough, Rut·
and 7-9 p.m.
land, and the late·Virgil Yarbrough.
He was employed as a wclder'5'1
Babcock and Wilcox. He had resid-.
ed
in Wadsworth for 22 years.
Veterans Memorial
Besides his mother he is sur·
SA'tURDAY ADMISSIONS vived
by his wife, Eileen; daugh Nellie Connolly, Middleport.
ters,
Tammy
and Dawn, and son,
SATURDAY DISCHARGES ·
Todd,
a\1
of
Wadsworth;
a grand.
\ ['lone.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES - daughter, Caitlyn; three brothers,
Charles Eakins, Middleport; and Harry, Rutland; Charles, Aiken,
S.C.; Md Vernon, Ranburne, Ala.
Goldictightfoot, Middleport.
Besides his father he was preceded
in death by a brother, Fred.
The Daily Sentinel
Friends may call today (Mon(USPS 2t~·980)
day.) from 24 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. at
Published every af\ernoon, Monday
the Hilliard-Cox-Mullaney Funeral
through Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy,
Home,
174 North Lyman Street in
Ohio by th o Ohio Vall ey Publiahing
Wadsworth,
where services will be
Company/Multimedia Inc., Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769 Pb. 992·2166. Second clau
held
Tuesda~ at I p.m : with Rev.
postage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
John C. Phillips officiating. Burial
Member: The Aasociated Preas, Inland
will be in Woodlawn Cemetery.
0Dily r rosa Asaoeiation ·and the Ohio
Contribution~ may be made IO·
Ncwa pnpcr Aaaocie.tion, National
the Akron General Medical Center
AdvCTlialng Rcprcucntative, Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
Oncology Department , 400
New YOrk, New YOrk 1001:7.
•
Wabash Ave. , Akron , Ohio 44307.

Hospital news

POSTMASTER: Send address chanJ:I!S to
The Daily Se nt inel, 111 Court St .,

Continued from page 1
uso." Byer commented, "you've
incurred all of these expenses and
you haven't even fought a fire yet'/
Byer emphasized that he was. in
favor of the reguJ.t~tions themselves,
stating that they were "good rules
because they will protect th_!:_man
onthe scene." However, he is fruslrated at the lack of fmancial coop·
eration on the pan of the state.
After all, it's the state that's handing-down tile new regulations:
Unfortunately, as is usually the
case, it is the job of the local
departments to comply with those
new state regulations • and to pay
all expenses necessary to 'comply.
"The state has mandated these
new regulations but hasn't sent
down the first penny to pay for
them," Byer said. ,"As usual, they
have left it up to these small volun·
teer fire departments to pay for
their rules. How do the small fire
departments survive these new
standards without the finances to
pay for them?"
,
While the state probably cannot
prevent a local group from opera!·
ing a volunteer fire department,
Byer stated that the .liability factor
th at would face .. non-complyitlg
departments and their fire chiefs
will be serious detriments to con·
tinuation of services.
ln addition to the possibility of a
lawsuil against the department and
its chief in the event of a frrefighter
injury, Workers Compensation will
probably no longer cover fire fighters who work on non-complymg
deparlrnents.
The volunteer fire departments
in Middleport and Pomeroy arc
probably the least threatened by the
legislation, but the other volunteer
fire departments in the county
(Bashan, Chester, Columbia Township, Olive Township, Racine, Rutland , Salem Township, Scipio
Township, and Syracuse) may not
have such a bright future.
So what advice does Byer have
for fire departments who have no•
way of complying with the new
rulest
"If you're not in compliance,
don't get hurt," he said.
.
These sweeping changes are not
limited to fire departments, either.
According to Byer, similar guidelines will also cover. emergency
squad units in the ncar future.

Patrol...

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SCARY! • These scary ghosts and goblins
were really just Brownies froni Leta~t Trnop
1004, enduring a heavy rain but enjoying them·

.
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selves nonetheless. Seoul troops, twirlers and
queen candidates, were among the .many entries
that participated in the parade.

TOY RUN • Saturday's rain failed to damp·
en the enthusiasm or drenched bikers participat·
ing in the annual toy run or the Meigs County
Bike~s. About 60 bikers gathered on Pleaser's
parking lot at noon in preparation for their
annual run. Plastic covered toys were strapped

to the fronts of many of the motorcycles. Santa
was on the lead bike as the group went upriver,
across to Route 7, and then back t~ Middleport
for a social at the Riverboat Inn. The toys contrihuted by the· bikers and collected between
now and Christmas will be distributed to needy
children at Christmas.

Weather

Lottery numbers

South-Central Ohio
Clearing tonight with frost likeCLEVELAND (AP) - The
ly, especially in low-lying areas. jackpot in the ,Ohio Lottery's Super
Low 30-35. Tuesday, sunny. High Lotto will grow to $20 million for
in the mid-60s.
·
·' · Wednesday night's drawing, after
Extended forecast
' no one came up with all six numWednesday through Friday:
ber~ picked Saturday night with
Fair on Wednesday. A chance of $16 million at stake.
showers Thursday and Friday.
Here arc the results from Satur·
Highs 70· 75 Wednesday and mid- day night in the Ohio Lottery draw60s to low 70s Thursday and Fri· ings:
day. Lows in the 40s.
Super Lotto
5-17-19-25-26-28
(five, seventeen, nineteen, twenty-five, twenty-six, twenty-eight)

Meigs
announcements

'.

Driver charged
after accident
Ronald Vance, Albany, was .
charged with failure lO maintain•.
assurance clear distance as the
result of an accident on East Mai11·.
St. Pomeroy, early Friday evening: .. •
According to the report of
Pomeroy Police, Wesley Gilkey, •
-Middleport, had stopped for a traf. :·
f1c light, when his vehicle was :
struck in the rear by V8f1CC. There
was light damage "to the read of the
Gilkey car, and moderate to the
front end of the Vance vehicle.
There were no injuries.
· :

st!lcct from mflatiun
• Take~ can· of all yuur pL'r~onal
choic~

in alliance
• Ensures errmhing can be c~rricd
out accurJin ~ to ~o ur ~·ish&lt;:!'

•Is easily tr'Jn ~fcrable if you mm·c

•Isofferee hr thousands of

Subscrlbcr&amp; nol dcsiri ng to pay lhe cani·
cr mny remit in advance direcl ·to The

. indcpenden·l funcr.tl huml's
CAL~

' Calli poll• Daily Tribune on a 3.6 or .12
month baai&amp;. Credit will be given tamer
coch week .

1

BIRCHFIElD FUNERAL HOMl .

;No .aubeeripliona by mnil. permit~od i.n

614·742-2333

Main Sirtet. PO.IDliU

' arcaa where homu tamer 1crv1ce 11
'available.

Rutland, Ohio ~5775

1.,,., (.Birdtliold. Owltr/Op...rw

Mn:ll Subscriptions
Inside Gallia Count)'

13 Wccki................ ,..,., ..... ............... J21.84
26 Wocb .............. ............................ $43.16
,52 Weoki ................:..... ................... $84.76
•
·, 0\lbddo Galli a Coaf\IY
' 13 Weoi&lt;l .......................................... l23.40
'26 Weeb .......................................... $45.!0
62 Weei&lt;l ..........................................l88.40
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Kicker
Portland PTO to meet
Q. 7-Q. 7-0·6
Continued from page 1
The Portland PTO will meet
"
(zero,
seven, zero, seven, zero,
road siriking a ditch.
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the school.
six)
Mullen was lreated and released Dance to be held
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
from Veterans for contusions and
The Pom eroy Senior Citizens Pil:k 3 Numbers
446 4524
- .
lacerations. A passenger, Palrick J, Dance Club will hold a round and
7-8-2
Mullen·, 12, also of Middleport, square dance on Friday from 8·11
!IAIICAIN
I'MTIItEES
~MMY
J
SLIIMt
(seven, eighl, two)
UIIGl!lt NICKT
was treated and released from Vet- p.m. with music by the Happy Hoi· Pick 4 Numbers
erans for head lacerations and con- low Boys of Athens. The public is
0·8-54
tusions. Both were transported by invited. Bring snacks for the snack
(zero, eight, five, four)
the .Meigs County. Emergency table.
Cards
Medical Service.
Trustees to meet
· K (king) of Hearts
Damage to Mullen's 1980 Buick
. The Olive Townshi~ Trustees
5 (five) of Clubs ·
Century was listed as heavy and -- will hold a spec!al mceung Thurs3 (three) of Diamonds
disabling.
d~~ at 7:30 p.m. at the Reedsville
Q (queen) of Spades
Mullen was cited by the pa1ro{ F1.rc house.
for failure to control.
D1abetes Support Group
The third· accident occ urre'
TncDiabetes Support Group
Sunday afternoon at the intersec- ~i ll hold its regular monthl y meetlion of S.R. 7 and S.R. 681 m Tup- mg at 7 p.m. on Thl!rsday the
pers Plains and resulted in a cita- French 500 R'l0m at Holzer Medttion for a Pomeroy womlll).
cal Cc~ter.
.
. .
According to the palrol, report.
. Jod1e Palmer, reg!SLc;red dlellThere is a. better way for
Elton A. Ritchie, 50, of Coolvdle, 11an w11h HMC, will speak on
was northbound on S.R. 7 when ·a nulrition and will provide refreshthose you love.
vehicle driven by Hazel M. ments. ~he meeting is o~n to all
AmnllinA a nmer.tl at thl' tim~ of
Wiener, age unreported, made a pcrsons: mterested m learmng more
death is emouonalh difficult;howe~·er.
left turn from S.R. 681 into his aboutdtabetes .
'by talkihg vtith ynu~ funer.U dirt"ctor •
path .·Ritchie's car then struck
For information regarding_the
Wiener's car on the left side.
monthly support group meeungs
about Forethought Fun~ral Planni ng'
No injuries were reperted. .
con1act Sandra McFarlai\d .at 446·
you make the arrangcmcn~ today
Damage to Ritchie's 1984 Ply· 5500, extensiOn 20, Mary Hamson
before thl' nted an'("
,,.
mouth Turismo was listed as mod· or Bonme·S1mms. 446·5246.
W ith Forethou~ht ~uneraJ Plannin!-:. crate. Damage to Wiener's 1931 Special meeting .
Chevrolet Caprice was listed as
The Leadmg Creek ConservanI
you choose the hmeral mu want and
·mocterate.
cy District will hold a special meetcan e~·en Pl' for it ahead or lime.
Wiener was cited by the palrol ing Friday at 5:30p.m.~~ th~ office
Forethought FuAerat Plannin~:
for failure to yield.
for the purpose ~f mterv1ewmg.
• ProteCll tht funerJl cost rou

Pomeroy, OHio 45769.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By CarriQr or Motor Route
One Wcck ...........................................$1 .60
' One Month.........................................l6 .95

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Ohio

The

San Diego owns Raiders;

Brave_s complete 'worst to first'
campatgn; Reds lose·finale · ·

Tampa Bay slips p~st Eagles
By BARRY WILNER
AP Sports Writer
If you swoon in-September, the
rest of the NFL schedule can be a
long trip through purgatory.
Ron Meyer's journey was cut
short when he was fired as coach of
the Indianapolis Colts last week.
Dan Henning, Richard Williamson
and Sam Wyche had to wince a bit
when they heard the news.
Wyche and Rick Venturi, who
replaced Meyer, probably still ar~
cringing. Henning and Williamson
are all smiles today.
When San Diego beat the Los
Angeles Raiders 21-13 and Tampa
Bay edged Philadelphia 14-13,
Henning and Williamson got their
first wins of the season. Both teams
did it with strong defense and some ,
opportunistic offens~. ·
Wyche and Venturi weren't so
fortunate. Seattle beat Wyche's
Ben gals 13·7, while Pittsburgh was
a 21·3 winner over Indianapolis in
Venturi's debut.
The Redskins stayed unbeaten
with a 20-7 victory over Chicago.
during the second quarter of their NFL game in
JUST ENOUGH - Cincinnati Bengals
Buffalo has a chance to match that
Cincinnati Sunday afternoon. (AP LaserPhoto)
linebacker James Francis, SO, chases down Seal·
6-0 record tonighi against Kansas
tie Seabawks quarterback Jeff Kemp for a sack
City. New Orleans, the NFL's
other perfect squad, had a bye this
week, along with San Francisco,
Atlanta and the Los Angeles Rams.
'
.
Elsewhere, it was Houston 42, ·
Denver 14; Detroit 24, Minnesota
20; Dallas 20, Green I;!ay 17; the
New York Jets 17, Cleveland 14;
Miami
20, New England 10; and
The University of Rio Grande's Morehead State with 22 points, fol - School competed in the race. the New York Giants 20, Phoenix
Renee Peck added another first lowed by Rio Grande with 44, Travis Sprawl was 57th in 14:41 9.
· place finish to her credit for this Glenville State with 73 and and Chris Chapman finished 62nd Steelers 21, Colts 3
in 15:05.
season when she bested 17 other Shawnee State with 102.
It was hard to see any difference
. Winner of the open race in the
GIRLS JUNIOR HIGH
runners in the 21st Rio Grande
in
the Colts after the coaching
Russell's A team placed first
Cross Country Invitational Satur.' men's division, which attracted 25
change.
They were hit by two more
runners from Rio Grande and the with 30 points while Gallia Acadeday.
•
backfield
injuries - they already
Peck, competing in the college region, was Rio Grande's Chris my's A team was second with 50. have nine players on injured
women's race, finished the 5K Smith. Morehead State' s Julie The GAHS B team was ninth wit~ reserve - as Anthony Johnson
course in 19:06. Amy Wheeler of Elliott took first place in the 220.
" } sprained his knee and ankle and
Finishing for GAHS were Say~ Eric
the Ohio State University B team women's open race, which drew
played only briefly
seven runners.
Walker, third, 14:04; Kelly Koby, in theDickerson
' finished second.
second
half
because of a
The invitational, sponsored by ninlh, 14:29; Andra Boggs, lith;
AJso fmishing for the Redwomstrained
hamstring
. And their
• en were DCbbie Gray, fourth; Tina Bob Evans Farms, saw a number of 14:52; Jencie Haner, 12th, 14:59; offense, last in the NFL in rushing,
. Kelley, fifth; Ginger Smith, 12th; high school races on the junior high Blair Simpson, 15th, 15: 17; Jill was held to 42 yards, only 24 for
Crystal Patrick, 17th; and Angie and upper grades level. More than Courter, 19th, 15:37; Kasey Atkin- Dickerson.
• . Cress, 18th. Times for the women's 50 high schools and nearly 1,200 son, 37th, 16:53; Meredith Mullins,
Bubby Brister got hot. He con•' · race were not immediately avail· athletes from Ohio, Kentucky and 38th, 16:56; Kelly Caldwell, 44th, nected on all seven of his second17:17; and Bridgit Darst, 53rd, half passes. including touchdowns
~ : able. Overall, the OSU team placed West Virginia were involved in
first with 34 t&gt;Oints, followed by races in Divisions I-III, as well as 18:13.
of 21 yards to Eric Green and 24
Two athletes from Meigs High yards to Barry Foster.
Rio Grande w1th 39 and Glenville individual races for unattached runners.
also competed in the race. Alison
State (W.Va.) with 50.
Athletes from loc al sc hools Gerlach was 57th in 19:17 and Erin Sea hawks 13, Ben gals 7
:. The college men's race was won
Cincinnati (0-5) came up short
. ··. by Brian Binion of Morehead State posted the following results:
Krawczyn was 59th in 19:56.
~ literally - and matched its
BOYS JUNIOR HIGH
. "(Ky.) at-27:02. First to. place for ·
BOYS DIVISION II
worst start since 1984, Wyche's
Russell (Ky.) placed first with
. , .Rio Grande was Mark Cline, who
Waverly placed first with 89 · first year as coach.
44 points, followed by Gallia points. GAHS placed 15th out of
carne in third at 27:13.
With fourth-and-four at the
·. · Chad. Benson finished fifth for Academy in second with 78. Fin- the 20 teams with 374-while Meigs Seattle 22 in the dying seconds,
. • -the R\l(lmen at 27:50, followed by ishing for GAHS were Chad Ford, High was ninth with 227.
Boomer Esiason threw a short pass
Brant McLaughlin, eighth, 28:37; 12th, 12:38; Jamie Graham, 15th,
Finishing for GAHS were Jakim to James Brooks, who had stopped
Hugh McLaughlin, 12th, 29: 15; 12:43; Brian Bevan, 22nd, 12:57; Lanier, .32nd, 19:08: Jason ncar the first-down marker.
Dave Fernbacker, 16th, 29:34; Josh Blacksmith, 23rd, 12:59; Josh Williams, 8lsl, 20:27; Terry Ray, Dwayne Harper wrapped him up
. Doug Home, 17th, 29:55; and Jeff Sebert, 37th, 13:44: Scott James, 83rd, 20:3 1; Eric Hoffman, 86th, immediately and Nesby Glasgow
Roberts, 19th, 30:31. The men's 45th, 13:54; and Chris Rone, 75th, 20:34; Brett Baker, 92nd, 20:52; helped knock him back.
16:25.
and Jarred Ford, 105th, 22:05.
race drew 28 runners.
A measurement showed he was
Two runners from Meigs High
Competing for Meigs High were inches
. Ovorall winner for the men was
short of the first down and
Nathan Baloy, 21st, 18:47; P.J .
Chadwell, 34th, 19:15; Dave Swanson, S2nd, 19:49; Bill Toundas,
58th, 19:53; Chris Sloan, 62nd,
J9 :S.S ;_,_Philip Edmonds, 70th,
'.
S•turday'a Game~
MaJor Ltaaue Bucball
20:
17; and Bobby Johnson, 85th,
llhUadcl~ia l , New York 0
By The Anoclattd Pr$
Chicaso 3, St ·louiJ 2, Iit game
20:32.
Chicago 1, St. L.ooiJ 5, 2nd game
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Atbnu .5, H01.11Lon 2
I
· East Division
San Franciscn 4, Lol Angda 0

Peck ends race
first at RG's
.
21st cross country invJtational

,

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Jt·Toronto

W L
........ 91 71
...... .... 84 78

8a&amp;u.t
[)euoit

........... 84 78

Milwaukee
New York
BakimOIC
ClcveJ1nd

......
.......
........
:.......

83
11
67
51

79
91

95

105

Pc:l.

GB

.562 ' ..519
.519

1

New Yorlc 7, l'hiladelphia 0

1

.512
.438

20

.4 14
.3l2

24
34

Pituburg.h 7, Montreal 0
Ch.ir:aao 7, St. Louis 3
HoUlton I , All1nta 3
S•n Diego 3, Cincinnati I
f:.()l An&amp;elea 2, San Fnncisco 0
End Reaular StaJon

i

West Division
W

L
1-Minncaota ...... 9~ 67
Chieaao
........: 81 ?~
Te1u
........... 8~ 77

Ookland

......... 14 7!
13 79
Kan"' City ....... 12 10

·s ..

'

'

w•

...........

Calitomil

....... .. It 31

•~Unchcd divi.tion Udc.

Transaclions
Pel. GB
.586
.537
8
.S2S
10

11

.l 19
.s12

12
13
14

.506
.~00

Mll••ubo 11. Botwn 4
DalLimate 7, Douoh J
Oevcland 7, Now Yori S, 12 innina•

, coach..

i National Leaauc

PIITSBURGII PlRATES- D•oppcd
Neal Heatoo and Vicente Pal•ci~. pitch·
ers, and Tom Prince, ca tcher, fr om its

TOIOI'IIO 3. M.innCIOll 2, I 0 innin&amp;s

p011.SCIS00 roller.

J)cuoLt7, Da\Umore I
Tclll -4, Olkland 2
Calitomia 3, Xat11u City I
Chicaao 3, Soaulc 2

bASKETBALL

National Bukclblll AniXlatlon
DALLAS MA VERJCKS-Signed Don·
1ld Hodp, CCI'IItt, tO I ono--yO.u cor\Uict.
MlAMJ HEAT-Sianed Stcvt~ Smith
1nd Kevin Edwuda; auardl.
Mfi.WAUK.EE BIJCKS-Sig.ncd Dilly
Th!'.mpaon, forward .
NEW JER SEY NETS-Signed One

End Rcaulu Stnon

'

NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division

•·Pi"''""'
"'""'
SL LouU ..........
Phll..tolplti•
C!iloaao
Now Ywk
Me&gt;&lt;&gt;U&lt;OI

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

W
91
14
71
11
'T1
71

L
64
78
14
11
&amp;4

Pel.

GD

.60S

-

.411

.ll?

14
20

.481

2ll

90

.471201/2
,44126 1/2

West Division
"............ w
1.·Atlanu ..... .... 94
Loo Anp ' .... 93
San Dioao· ........ 14
San FranMo ...... 7'
Cincinntti ......... 74
H~Uitl
......... 6S
Hlinched dlviJion tillc.

l.

61

Pfi! LL I~S - Ao ·

nounccd that Hal Llnicr, cNch, will not
be rcuined for the 1992 seuon. Namc.c1
Mel Roberts coach, fo r the 1992 s~:J~son.

Califomia S, g.,. •• City I
Scaulc 10, Chica&amp;a 0
Sunday'• Came~
Milwauiot 6. BOltOn 3
New Yorlt 7, O..ollnd4

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.

Amerlnn lAIRUe
DETROIT TIOERS ~Announccd that
Vada Pinaon, Ale AOrammu and Jim
DavenpOrt, coa~hes, wm no1 be mainc.c1
for 1he 1992 IC:Uon. Named Gene Ruth

PH ILADW'IIIA

Mi,nnc:IOLI3, TCIIOilto I

Oakland 12. Tcau ~

, II ,.•

BASEBALL

MONTREAL EXPOS ..:.. Announccd
\h1t larry Dum11th, pi~.ehing couh; Ken
M~eh• bullpen coach, and Raflcl lan datoy, ddcmivc coordiJnwr, wiU not be
rctalncd for the \ 992Jc.uon.

Saturday'• Camel

.' .

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Pet.

.510

69

.S74

78
1'7
13
97

GB
I

.519

10

.463

.4l7

19
20

.401

29

Feitl, cenw.
NEW YORK KNICKS-S igned Greg,
Anthony and John St.trkl, guard1, to multiycu Conu'ICtl,

··ooTBALL
Nallonal Football Lraaue
IIOUSTON OILERS-Signed Anlhony
Young, dcteruivc back.
MIAMI DOLPIIINS - Piaced !Jry1n
COJ., Unebacltcr, M itlJuted reserve. AcLi·
Yltcd Louil Cooper, Uneblclu:r, from in·
ju red retet\'t.

Pn1'SBURGil STEELERS-Aotin&lt;od

BodJne captures
Mello Vello 500

CONCORD , N.C. (AP) Geoff Bodine has left two racing
teams in recent years. But at least
he's left a parting gift cacti time.
Bodine split with the Hendrick
racing team two years ago, but not
before winning at North Wilkesboro in the final months . Now,
he'll be leaving Junior Johnson's
team after a two-year relationship.
But he brough t back the checkered
na~ at the Mello Yclio 500.
'We wanted to win before the
season was over. It didn't look like
we were going to, " Bodine said.
''This has been a·pretty bleak year.
"It was very important to win
before the end of the season. You
want to win all the time, and when
yo u know you're not going to drive
for a guy next year, well, this is
your last chance," he said.
That last chance hlmost became
a disaster. Bodine assumed the lead
from Davey Allison, ironically,
when Allison took a four-second
'pit stop for fuel on lap 317. Bodine
had stopped for gas on lap 258 and
was gambling that his Ford would
make it.

i

WINNINGSEASON-SanDiegoPadres
pitcher Andy Benes takes aiin againsl the
Cinc)nnali Reds' Sunday in San Diego. Benes

Clevelitnd. Jets cornerback James
ered the ball to end the Browns last
to
avert the 17·141oss to New York. (AP LaserPbo·
to)

Blue Jays Twzns tune upfior
.
• h• s •
AL Ch amplons lp erles
·

.
By BEN WALKER
that particular time," Toronto manAP Baseball Writer
ager Cito Gaston said. "Especially
On a day when the Toronto Blue to win the last one to go into TuesJays and Minn~sota Twins tuned day on an upbeat note instead of a
up _for the last lime, the Balumore down note."
Ono!es b1d farewell to an old ball·
Twins manager Tom Kelly said
park and the American League the only games that matter begin
West welco1_11ed anew order.
this week.
And wh1le there weren't any
"There wasn't a great deal we
pennant races to be dec1ded on the learned other than these games
lasalt day of !he regular season, sev- don't mean anything. Show time
er other titles went down to the starts Tuesday mght," he said. ·
final swing. Julio Franco became
Jack Morris will pitch the playthe first Texas Ran~ers player to off opener for Minnesota against
win a batting charnptonshlp at .341 Tom Candiotti.
and Jose Canseco and Cecil Fielder
In other games, Baltimore lost
both were shut out and wound up its finale at Memorial Stadium, 7-1
tied for the home run title at 44.
to De_ug.it. Also, Texas topped
. Nolan Ryan, meanwhile, fin - OaU!rnd 4-2, Milwaukee ·beat
Ished up m style. He reached the Bostolf '6·3. New Yolk defeated
200-stnkeout mark for the 15th Clevelaljd 7-4, California downed
sea1on.
Kansas City 3-1 and, in the last
On Tuesday night, the AL play- game of the regular season, Chicaoffs begin in Minnesota with the go beat Seattle 3-2.
Twins and Blue Jays. On Sunday,
California's victory ensured that
Toronto won 3-2 in 10 innings for every team in the AL West finished
its second victory in three days at at .500 or better.
the Metrodome.
Tigers 7, Orioles 1
"! think it's better to win a
Brooks Robinson and John Uniseries, no matter what it means at
.

GRAND OPENING

J.EBANON , Ohio (AP) Good Lover was the winner in the
championship tace for 3-ycar-old
colts in the Oh io Sires Stakes
Series at the Lebanon Raceway
Saturday ni£hl.
·

rr========-

• ·c•

304·675·1244 for Appt or Information

THE CARD BOX

•
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•

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SAVINGS•••

THE CARD BOX

in tl•e £lasslfleds!

1Yz mile south of T1ppers Plains 01 St. Rt. 7. Look for slga.
667-6092
1.

· •

Open Mon.-Sat. 1o:S

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the ninth inning.
Ryan struck out 10 in seven
innings, raising his season total to
203 . and allowed only three hits.
Reliever Terry Mathews (4-0) was
the wi nner.

'

outs set by Boston ' s Roger
Clemens on April 29, '1986, against
Seattle. The 19 strikeouts gave
Cone 241 for the season as he won
the NL title for the second straight
season. He tied Clemens for the
major league lead.
Cone had a chance to break the
NL single-game strikeout record,
also shared by Tom Seaver and
Steve Carl tori, but Dale Murphy
grounded out to end the game.
Astros 8, Braves 3
Houston snapped Atlanta's
eight-game wiiming streak and also
ended a 10-game losing skid to the
Braves. Houston also avoided setting a club record for most losses in
a season, remaining at 97, the same
as 1965 and 1975
·
Padres 3, Reds 1·
. . ., Hal M .
Cmc
mna~ s
orns went 3·
for~ and fimshed second m the NL
batung race at. .318.A founfi hu
would h~ve r~1sed h1s average to
.320, edgl~~ hun past Pendleton.
Jose RIJO (15:6) allowed three
runs and seven hns, los1?g the ~
ERA IItle to Montreal s Denm s
Marunez (2.39 to 2.5t).Andy

Benes (15-ll) won forihe lOth
time in 11 decisions, aDowing eight
hits in 6 2-3 innings. .
·
Cubs 7, Cardinals 3
.
Andre Dawson hit two home
runs, rai'shig his total to 31, the
33rd multi-homer game of his
career. Greg Maddux pitched a sixhitter for his 15th VICtory~ the
Cubs fmishect fourth in the NL East
at 77-83.
Pirates 7, Astros 1 •
John Smiley (20-8) joined
Atl;mta's Tom Glavine as the NL's
only 20-game winners, pitching
seven shutout innin~ts at Three
Rivers Stadium. The Pirates finished 98-64, the major leagues'
best record Th . 605 . .
· eu ·
wmnmg
P.ercentage was the team's best
smce 1972.
Dodgers 2, Giants 0 ··
The Dodgers finally beat the
Giants at Candlestick Park but it
didn't matter. Chris Gwynn singled
. twice and scored a pair of runs and
left-hander Dennis Cook (I-O)
made the most .of his only start of
the season. Bryan Hickerson (2-2)
was •theloser.

Rio volleyball team de,.f.eats
all
'.J •
comers to wzn tourney crown
.

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•

..

ConslstellJplayledtheUmversity of Rio Grande volleyball team
to its second tournament champioRnsdh1p of th1~ season when the
womendde.eated
comers m
the c
0N v )all
c
11
·
e oncor
· a. o ege 1nvi·
tallo~al over the weekend.
RIO Grande swept all of the
oppOSlllOn ID the round robm rcrelim manes and handed Gull ord
(N.C.) twm losses 10 the final balUe
0: ~~urnament play to net the
c 0, · .
.
I am lst~uper.-pl~~~ With
ourCccor at IS (J!&gt;IDt,
worn~f oac)l Patsy Fl~ld~ ~emarkedd
w~ ~:~~ ~~~ ~~
~0 afl
1 ;nlot orf
0
,
n I·
dcnce. Some people hadn 1 been
play In~ well, but they returned
from this toQrnament knowmg they
can play weii.That will be the key
for the remainder of the season,
because these will be tht pcop!e we
Will ha~~ to tum 10 when were 10
trouble.
RIO Grande O(l?ned play encourag.mgly Fnday w_nh a 15· 6• 15 · 13
defeat of the thir.d-seeded
team ,
4 ·6 was
Carlow (Pa.), wh•chatl
lied for first place 10 ' 15 d~striCt. In
the first of manyrleadership moves
on t!tc offense, Teresa Zempter and
Bllhna Cooper poured 10 SIX kills
10 power the Redwomen to ~lctory,
assisted by Tiffany Neff s five
kolls.
_.Zempter and Cooper each had
three d~gs, wh1le Zemptcr notched
three bwck solos aga mstCarlow .
M1chclle Spears and Robm Sharp
~ach netted a scrvmg ace. '
The Red;-vomen th_en turn ed
thetr attenuon to Guilford and
handed the team losses of 15-5, 13·
IS, 15-1 I as Cooper exploded for
23 J(III S and Zempter added 13 .
~peats was responsible for fove
scrvmg aces, while Zemptcr had
three and Andrea Hedg_es two .
Spears led the defense with e1ght
d1gs and Zempter had seven, whde
Zcmpter and Cooper _each worked
fQr two block solos ap1ece.
The host sch?&lt;JI. Concord, then
Qffcred httle resostancc to the Redwomen, who posted VJCton es of
I 5·2, 15-4. Zcmpter. ~ad 13 kills,
Cooper I I, Sharp four and Neff
three to lead the offense, whole
Spears agam off~rcd e1ght dogs to
the defense. Zcffipter recorded sox
d1gs , two serv mg aces and two
block solos to the effort.
The Redwomen started Saturday's competition with a 15-12, 15·
8 defeat of Barton (N.C.), thanks to
Zempter's 12-kill performance on
offense. The senior from Minford
also provided Rio Grande with
seve n digs and five block solos,

whileCooperwascreditedwithsix
h 1' b
kills and Spears with three.
on l e ost ecause of her unOagspears, a JUnior
· · from St. pans,. mvitatmnal.
~mg leadership throughout the
added three servmg aces and four
"That's not to take anything.
d1gs to the wm ·
a
.
way from anyone, beeause .,..eresa
Next to fall was Lenoir-Rhyne and Billina did an outstanding )ob
(N.C.), 154, 13-15, 15-7. Zcmptcr but Robin really did all the thmgs
posted 19 kills, four serving aces she had to do to help us win •
and six block solos, while Cooper Fields said "Robin Teresa a~d
was credited with 13 kills. SpearS Billina are providing 'super leaderadd ed three serving aces and nine ship for our team. They just won't
digs and Neff netted eight digs.
let us lose."
·
The Red women then went up
The Redwomen, now 23-5 will
against WVIAC leader Fairmo.nt be .back on the road Tuesday at
State but ended up interrupting Ohio Dominican to begin the secFairmont's previously unbroken ond round of Mid-Ohio Conference
string of victories by handing them play. Rio Grande is currently 5-l in
losses of IS-2 15-7
the MOC
·
Cooper netted 10 kills and three B 1 · ·
t 0 • ht'
block solos for the win assisted by
ay or JUmps eJg "
seven kills from Zemp~r. two scrv· in AP weekly grid poll
ing aces apiece from Sharp and
By ARNIE STAPLETON
four digs each supplied by Sharp
AP Sports Writer
.
and Spears.
Baylo~ coach GranL Teaff
The win catapulted Rio Grande cringed when he learned the Seas
into the top seed of the tournament, had broken into the Top 10 for ·the
where the Red women battled
fourth -seed Lenoir-Rhyne and first time since 1986 in the Associwalked away with victories of 15- ated Press college football poll. •
" It's somewhat of a detriment
12, 15-2 in spite of L-R's distinct
in
the sense that now everybody
height factor.
shoot
s to knock off a Top tO
The Redwomen overcame that
team,"
Teaff said Sunday. "An'd it
problem by continuing their detertakes
away
your advantage of
mined, balanced style of play as
maybe
bcmg
the
guy that's wanting
Zcmptcr fired in 10 kills and four
to
knock
somebody
off."
block solos, Cooper nine kills and
·
The
Bears
jumr:ct
three spots to
five digs, Neff tour kills and two
serving aces, Sharp three kills, two No. 8 m Sunday s poll after dis serving aces and six digs, and mantling Houston 38-21 Saturday
Spears five digs and four serving night, ending the Cougars ' IS aces.
game Astrodome winning streaic:
Florida State retained the Nc&gt;. 1
Rio Grande then proceeded to
the championship with its 15-12, ra nkm g for the seventh straight
·
.
15-9 defeat of Guilford, in which week.
Baylor has clim Ded steadily: in
t he Roowomcn struggled back from ·
a 6-12 deficit dur ing the second the poll since upsetting defending
game, thanks to another top effort national champion Colorado ·on
.
from zcmptcr, who had J;i kills, Sept. 1'4.
three serving aces and five digs for
over both games.
FALL HARDY MUMS
Cooper, the sophomore standout
from Jackson. neucd 12 kills and
6%·8" POTS .
three block solos, while Neff, a
sophomore from Chillicothe, pro- Asst. Colors- '1.35 ea.
vided three kills. Spears recorded
11
five digs wliile Sharp and Hedges
each had four.
For their efforts, Zemjller and
Cooper were each named to the
All-Tournament Team, an honor
Syracuse, OH.
992·577.6
welcomed by Fields. However, the
OPEN
DAILY
9-5
coach felt that Sharp, the seller
CLOSED SUNDAY
from Tarlton Ohio deserved to be
'
'

8/'10
HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

Somitliing (jooa's .PI{ways Cookjng Jl t

.

Florida State beat Syracuse ............... 46-14
2 llllaml beat Oklahoma State ................. 4()-3
3 Washington beat Arizona ..................... 54-0
4 Tenneaaee .... ~ ............................ did not play
IS Oklahoma beat Iowa State ................... 29-S
6 Clemaon lost to Georgia .................... 12-27
7 Michigan beatlowa ............................ 43-24
8 Notre Dame beat Stanford ................. 42-26
9 Iowa loet to Mlcblgan ........................ 24-43
10 Syracuse loet to Florida State,............ 14-46
11 Baylor beat ~ouston ................ ;....•..•. 38·21
12 PeDD. State beat Temple ...................... 24-7
13 Florida beat LSU ............................... :.• 16-Q
14 Ohio State beat Wlscondn ................. 31·16
us Nebraska .................................. did not play
16 Auburn loet to Southern Miss .............. 9-10
17 Plttlburih beat Maryland ................. 24-20
1S California beat UCLA ................. ~ ....... 27·24
19 N Carollna State beat Georllla Tech ... 211-21
20 AJ•bamt beat Tenn..ChattaDOOII&amp; .......... IIs-7
21 Ga Tech lo1t to North Caroll~ St ...... 21·28
22 IWDola beat Mlnneaota ........................ 24--8
23 Tezu AMI -b eat Tezu Tech .............. 37·14
24 UCLA l01t to CaUforllla ...................... 24-27
25 Colorado .................................. did not play

1

Limited Quantity Topps D.esert Cards
Tllese were the ones te•t to the troops overseas.

,·

.

SPECW. PURCHASE

____ !

Gonzal~ah~~s ;~w~~~~~· :mc~fn

By Dave Harris
points, Tricia Bacr added 11 points points and six assists, Young two
Miller handed the Meigs and two aces, Crissy Weaver four points and Butcher one.
Marauders their first volleyball loss pomts and five kills, Nikki Meier
Like the .varsity, the reserve
of the season in recent action, but added three points and five as~sts , team also won in two gal)!CS by
coach Rick ·Ash and the Marauders Yvette Young added two points.
scores of.J5-12 and 15-2. Amber
, rebounded and picked up the next
Miller also won the reserve Blackwcl~and Sarah Pullin s had
, · " " ·wins, two of the victories game 15-13 and 15-1 L Amber six points each, Bobbie Butcher
· -were conference wins, also includ· Blackwell· led Meig s with seven five to lead the Little Marauders.
ed was a non-conference win over points and Bobbie Butcher six.
Meigs continued it's winning
Southern
Meigs rebounded to deCcat ways with a 15-9. 15-10 win over
The loss at Miller was the first Trimble 15-1 and IS-6, Young led Sout.hcrn. Once again Baer led the
in 35 regular season matches dating Meigs with nine points , Misti way with 10 points and five aces,
back to last season. Meigs won the Butcher added six points, Baer four Meier had six points and seven
first game by a 15·1 score and pbintsand six kills, Hanning four assists, Taylor added five points,
looked to be m control in the sec. points, Crissy Taylor added three Hanning four points and five kills,
ond match jumping out to a 6-0 points and four assists, Meier two Young three points and Bu1cher
lead and serving twice with a 13-10 points and five assists and Weaver two.
advantage. But Miller broke ser• two points and four kills,
Meigs won the JV game 15-2.
vice and came back t~ post a IS-13
Meigs defeated Wellston in two I S-2, Billie and Bobbie Butcher
win, that loss must have drained games by scores of IS-12 and IS-3, along with S;uah Pullins led Meigs
something out of the Marauders as Baer had II points and four aces to with six points.
,
MiUer won the third and deciding lead the way, Hanning added
Meigs is now 17- I overall and
game !54.
seven, Taylor four points and five 13-1 in the TVC with a on~ game
~~K~im~~~~~~:;:!!:.,_kills, Weaver three, Meier two lead in the standings, the Marauders will travel to Nelsonville-York
on Oct. lOth and return home on
the 15th to close the season with
Belpre. Meigs was ranked 18th in
last weeks Division II state volleyball poll .

OF
•BASEBALL CARDS
•BASKETBALL CARDS
•FOOTtALL CARDS
•
•HOCKEY CARDS
. .,.,.~ •OTHER SPORTS MEMORABILIA

DINO-MITE

Complete Medical/Surgical tare
For Ear, Nosi &amp; Throat Including
Asthma, Allergy &amp; Hearing Aids

:.• i--~--------...:;.:;....;.;...;,;.;.;.;;.;.;.;;;.;;,;,;,.:.;;,..J

.
tas (with a football) threw out the
first .balls, bringing back 38 years
of memories at Memorial Stadium.
The Orioles were 1,706·1,321
overall at Memorial Stadium,
where !hey began playing after
moving from St. Louis for the !954
season. ,
BaltimorC-)IIill play next year at
the new Oriole Park at Camden
Yards.
A crowd of 50,700 saw Frank
Tanana (13 12) spoo'l another part
Tanana al~o won the first gao{~
ever played at Seattle's Kingdome
in 1977 and won the first game at
the new Comiskey Park this year.
Tanana pitched a four-hitter.
B'ob Milacki (10-9) took the loss.
Rangers 4, Athletics 2
Julio Franco went 2-for-4 and
led the · · b ·
dJ

Miller hands Meigs first volleyball loss

NEW AND OLD CARDS

Suitt 112 Valley Drive
Pt. Pleasant, WV;

'

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'•

Lebanon results

Delton HaD, ~omerlmk , from injured re·
1ctYc. Pl:ac,cd Shawn Vincent, cornerback.
on injuml ruel\'e. Signed Dean CaU"'
ire., ct.IIW', and tddcd him to their pracuce
•quad.
·
HOCKEY
NallOnal Jlocby Leaaue
NEW YORK RANGERS -Aarecd to
LC:rnu: wiLh Milr.c Richter, plie.

John A. Wade, M. ·D.

pitchedfiveinningsforthewininthePadres3' 1
victory and finished the season wilh a 15-11
record, winning 11 of his last 12 decisions. (AP
• LaserPhoto)
·
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1

LOSING CONTROL - Cleveland Browns
quarterback Bernie Kosar (19) fumbles as he is
hit by a host of the New York Jets lacklers wilh
just over a minute to go in Sunday's game in

•

)Jy The Associated Press
The filial day of the season in
the National Leatue provided
meaningful moments instead of
· meaningful games.
The. Pittsburgh Pira~ clinched
the NL East long ago , and the
Atlanta Braves finished their jour.
ney from worst to rust on Saturday_
Sunday was a day for the reeord
books.
. At Philadelphia, David Cone
ued an NL record with 19 ~tri~e­
outs as the New York Mets en'lled
their worst season ~ince J983 with
a 7-0 victory over the Phillies.
· At Chicago, Ryne Sandberg
became the firSt Cub second baseman ever to drive in 100 runs or
more in consecutive seasons.
.
'At Atlanta, even though Terry
Pendleton didn't play, he capped
his championship weekend by winDing .the NL batting title with a
.319 average. Now, Pendleton and
the.rest of the Braves 'will prepare
to open the playoffs at Pittsburgh
oh Wednesday night.
Cone (14-t4) just missed the
major league record of 20 strike·

Seattle ran out the c!Q!:k.
Sanders before the fourth quarter.
· John Kasay kicked field goals of · But the All-Pro running back keyed
36 and 31 yards early in the third a 21-point comeback and seored
quaner for the winning margin.
the winning TO from 15 yards with
Chargers 21, Raiders 13
36 seconds to go. Sanders had 70
Losers of eight straight. dating of his 116 yards rushing in the final
bacli to last season, the Chargers · eight minutes ~nd caught nine passturneq to Henry Rolling to play es for 76 yards.
· ·
.hero . He returned a fumble 53 Cowboys 20, Packers 17
yards to set up a touchdown early,
The last time the Cowboys were
then intercepted a pass to secure 4-2 was 1986. Lots of bad things
the win in a surprising place -the have happened to America's Team
R0iders lost at home for the first since.
,
time in four games. this season and
· But out of those stale years have
only the third time in 20 games come heroes, most notably Troy
since Art Shell became coach two Aikman, Emmitt Smith, Jay
years ago.
Novacek and Ray Horton on SunBuccaneers 14, Eagles·13
day.
,
Until Chris Chandler got Tampa
Aikman, the top pick in the
Bay's offense untracked in the 19.89 draft, continued his rapid
fourth quarter, this was an ugly development, hiUing 31-of 41 passgame of mistakes and missed es for 287 yards. Smith, the team'~
opponunitics. The Bucs turned the first-rounder in 1990, ran for 122
baU over six times, but came back yards.
from a 13-0 deficit with five minNovacek, signed in Plan B last
utes to go.
year, caught II passes for 121
Eagles punter Jeff Feagles fum- yards. Horton, a 1989 Plan B
IJied _a snap and Broderick Thomas acquisition, had a 65~yard interceptackled him inside the Eagles' 10. tion TD return.
Chris Chandler, off the bench to
Charles Wilson got his first
replace Vinny Testa verde, threw an NFL touchdown on an 82-yard
8-yard TD pass to Robert Wilson kickoff run back for Green Bay.
two plays later. Then he directed a; Jets 17, Browns 14
s'ix-play, 54-yard drive th ~t pro·
At Cleveland, Blair Thomas
Meed Bruce. Hill·~ game-winning threw an option pass to Rob Moore
5-yard recepuon w1th I :09 to go.
for a touchdown, Ken O'Brien was
Redslsins 20, Bears 7
19-for-23 for I95 yards and the Jets
At Chicago, Mark Rypien threw moved to 3-3. Cleveland couldn't
~pair ofTDs to Art Monk, while win despite holding the NFL's top·
mterccptwns by Fred Stokes and ranked rushing attack to 76 yards.
Kurt Gouve1a m the fourth quarter . Pat Leahy's 28-yard field goal
led to 10 pomts.
1n the fourth quarter was the differNeal Anderson's !-yard run cnce.
assured the Redskins would not gel
The Browns lost cornerback
their fourth shutout in six games.
Frank Minnifield to a bruised
Joe Gibbs became the first shoulder- the sixth defensive
coach with three successive win.s back they've lost this year.
over Chicago's Mike Dilka.
Dolphins 20, Patriots 10
A month-long slump ended for
Oilers 42, Broncos 14
Dan Marino. The Dolphins quarterAt Houston, the Oilers turned back, who threw one touchdown
their anxiety to get back' in action pass in his previous three games,
into a scoring frenzy of big plays got two in I minute late in the secon offense and defense.
ond quarter. He hit on 25 of 38
Cornerback Cris Dishman passes for 321 yards.
returned a fumble by Steve Sewell
In the last two minutes of the
I 9 yards for a touchdown and set opening half, Marino connected for
up another score with a 43-yard 24 yards to Mark Clayton for a TD.
interception return. Safety Bubba then hit Jim Jensen for a 5-yarder.
McDowell recovered a blocked He was 6-for-7 for 112 yards on
punt in the epd zone, had a sack, the two possessions,
EJ. Junior had four of Miami's
blocked a field goal on the final
play of the first half and was six sacks.
involved in II tackles.
Giants 20, Card.inals 9
Ernest Givins had five catches
Rodney Hampton, healthy at
for 151 yards and Warren Moon last, had a career-best 137 yards
threw for two TDs. Houston also rushing. He ran for 101 yards in the
held Gaston Green, the AFC's first half and scored as New Yolk
leading rusher, to 35 yards and grabbed a 17-3 halftime lead.
Jeff Hostetler was 14-for-18 for
sacked John Elway fiv.e times.
Lions 24, Vikings 20
200 yards and the host Giants held
When in doubt and in trouble, Phoenix without a touchdown for
their sixth straight win over the
call on Barry Sanders.
The Lions have learned that les- Cardinals and lith in 13 meetings.
Greg Davis kicked field goals of
son and they taught it to the
Vikings. who had contained 52, 40 and 29 yards for Phoenix.

Scoreboard

Piusburs)l 4, Mo11lmll 3
San Diego 10, Cincinnati 7
Sunday's Games

'l

•

. MASON
1

FAMILY
RESTAURANT

Loca!ed on Rt. 33 beside Mason Exxon and Muon r.tatal, Mason, wv
Sundly thru Thursday, 6:30 am-10 pm: Fridlly &amp; Soudly, 6:30 ... 1i pm

.

I

2nd Annual

Fall Health
Resource Festival

HOMESTYLE LUNCH SPECIALS
Monduy Friduy. II cu&gt;L to :1 p 111.

Friday, Oct. II + IO a.m. - 4 p.m.

MONDAY· Cheeseburger, French Fries &amp;Soup
TUESDAY· Beans &amp; Cornbread, Soup &amp;Salad Bar
WEDNESDAY· Creamed Chicken over BiscuHs,
Soup &amp;Salad Bar
THURSDAY ·.Fish Sandwich, French Fries, Soup &amp;Salad Bar
FRIDAY·
Turkey Club, French Fries, Soup &amp;Salad Bar
.

It's Point .Pleasant Battle Days Weekend, tool
StOp by and take advantage of our free health
screenings. pick up some valuable health-related
lnformauon and enjoy a slice of pumpkin pie ·
·lk a cup of coffee, tea or clderl '

• '

111£11DAY II THURSDAY, CHILDREN 1JNDER 12 EAT J'Uit
FROM CHILDIJEN'B MltNU. ~LUDES DRINK &amp; DESSERTI
UMIT 1 CHILD PER ADULT

m

'

PLEASANT VALLEY

~

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Home Medical Equipment

1011 Viand Street+ Point Pleasant; WV
(304) 875-6100

-

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�•

Ohio

1991

OhiO

D of Aholds practice inspectiotz
· Practice was held for illspt~:tion
at the recent meeting of the Chester
Council· No. 323, Daughters of
A10erica, held at the \odge hall
With JoAnn Baum presiding. ·
Pledges to the Christian and
American fmgs were given in uni·
son and Bulali ~ey, JP.C., read
from Psalm 118. The Star S(l81fgled
· Banner was sung and Kathryn
Baum was pianist for the meeting.
Officially received were Esther
Smith, junior past staie councilor;
OVal Hollon, state credential com· ·
mtttee; Charlotte Grant, state publicity committee; Enma Cleland
deputy state councilor of Cheste;
Couocil.
· Ella.Osborne- was rel'nsta
. ted to
h
~ e lodge at the September meet·
m·

.•

the homecoming court, l·r, In front, Cory Van
Ree!b and Tara Wyatt, crown bearer and nower
girl. Back, John Harrison and Love Batey;
Trevor Harrison and Melanie Qualls; Queen
Chrissy Weaver and escort, John Sargent;
Ronald Vance and Valerie Wilson; and Keith
Hudson and'April Hudson.

HO.MECOMING )lOYALTY • Homecom· '

'rled
••1 ceremoales
ror Melp High School were car·
out Friday evenin1 at Bob Roberts Field in

Pomeroy prior to the Marauder versus Federal
Hocking Lucers footbaU game. Cbrlssy Weaver
was crowned as the 1991 Meigs High School
Homecomin11 Queen. Pictured are members of

"

:

POM~'OY

• "llelovcd" by
Toni Morrison will bC presented at
!he Meigs County Public Library in
Pomeroy on Monday at 7 p.m. by
Dr. Joanna Grosh, Ohio Humanities Council, Columbus, and professor of English at Wittenberg
University. The presentation is a
p:ut of the "Heroes and Heroines of
the Ohio Ri vcr Valley."

CHESHIRE · Women Alive
will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the
Kyger Creek Clubhouse. Vicki
Roush will be the speaker. She will
talk about her trip ·to the mission
field in New Mexico. Bring item
for the white elephant sale and a
salad item.
MIDDLEPORT • The Middleport Garden Club will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m . at the home of
Mrs. George Anderson.

· SYRACUSE • The Meigs County Board of Mental Retardation and
Developmental Disabilities will
meet Monday at 7 p.m.

MIDDLEPORT · There will be
swag arch class offered by the Mid·
dlcport Arts Council on Monday at
7p.m.
REEDSVILLE · The Riverview
PTO will meet Monday at 7 p.m.
Final arrangements for the fal l carnival will be made. Babysitting will
be available.
RUTLA ND - The . Leading
Creek Conservancy Distric t will
meet Monday at 5:30 p.m. for a
special meeting.

SYRACUSE • The S uuon
Township Trustees will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the Syracuse
Municipal Building.
COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP The Columbia Township Trustees
)'I ill meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at
!he fire station.
: RACiNE • Th~ Racine Chapter
!'lo. 134, O.E.S., will meet Monday
81 7:30 p.m. at the Racine Masonic
Hall. Annual reports and election
of officer$_wiU take place.

TUESDAY
POMEROY . The Ohio Eia Phi
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
w1ll meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
Meigs County Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy. All members arc
urged to attend.

: POMEROY • The Pomeroy Ele·
menwy PTO will meet Monday at
'p.m. Meet candidates running for
SChool board. Also 10 be discussed
will be a food booth at the Stemwheel Festival.

REEDS VILLE . The American
Red Cross Bloodmobile will visit
· RACINE • Southern Junior Eastern High School on Tuesday

f;ul)ningham
birth announced

JAMES CUNNINGHAM

f.resbyterian womefl meet
• 'At a rec:cnt meeting of the Presbyterian Women's C~rcle of the
Middleport Presbytenan Church,
members formed teams "?compete
with each other answenng ques·
tiOIUI about bible verses.
.
~ ,Gladys Cumi!'g~. led ·t!te .B•ble
IIUdy 011 the toptc Hospttallty on
flte journey," another program m
lite llildiea on die Acts or the Apos-

ttes. ·

" "Love For Our Neighbor is the
Jl'asia ror Peach" was read by
Ltnnie Haptonstall as the Least
Coin Offering was coUected. Hap-

tonstall also conducted devotions
about "Faith and CoiDl!ge," using a
magazine clipping about 40 to.50
years old. The author of the article
was concerned at that time about
the increasing hustle and bustle of
life and the need for more peaeerutness and allowing ·the Lord to
direct people's lives.
Members .discussed. the church
· bake sale and 'bazaar to be held
Dec. 6 and 7 at the Sears S10re in
Middlepon.
Rev. Kris Treintong closed the
meeting with prayer.

from IO'a.m. to 2 p.m. Tf you are
17 to 20, weigh 110 pounds or
more, you are eligible to donate
blood.
LONG BOTTOM • The Flame
Fellowship Chapter meeting will be
held Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Faith
Full Gospel Church in Lon~ Bottom. Pastor Gary Hines ts the
speaker. The public is invited to
attend.
POMEROY · The Meigs County Chamber of Commerce will
meet Tuesday at noon at the
,Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilita·
tion Center. All members arc urged
to attend .
POMEROY - The Meigs County Board of Elections will meet
Tuesday at 4 p.m. for a regular
busi ness meeting.
.
RACINE • The Racine Lodge
No. 461 F and AM will meet Tues- '
day at 7:30p.m. with work in the
FC Degree. All masons are welcome.

~.:.

·· ·

'DJe Chester ColUiciJ is invited
to the Belle Praire Council's
inspectioo oo Oct; 14 at 7:30p.m.
The next meeting, Oct 15 at 7
will the annual inspection.
~:C~~~~:::;~i·ig be Bette
:s,
·
D~uty of
was appomted at
state session.in August.

'

MONDAY
High Boosters will meet Monday at
: POMEROY • Eddie Buffing10n, 7 p.m. at the junior high. Everyone
9~Uipolis, will be the guest speaker welcome.
u the First Baptist {:hurch of
Pomeroy through Wednesday at
LET ART - The Letart Township
7:30p.m. nightly. The public is Trustees will meet Monday at 7
invited 10 attend.
p.m. at the office building.

. Mr. and' Mrs. Michael Clinning·
ham, Pomeroy, ane announ~ing the
6irth or their first child, a son,
James Michael, on June 24 at
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital
': The infant weighed eight
pot!llds and one ounce and was 21
IIIChes long.
Maternal grandparents are Bill
tii!f Sue Rice, Racine. Great grandparents are Velma Winland,
Racine, and Mary Rice, Gallipolis.
Paternal P,dpanents are lmo·
gene Cunn1ngham and the late
J~es CIUiningham, Pnmeroy.

mg.

The cbarter will be draped in
memory of Bonnie Landers and
members are to wear white. The
kitchen committee and the Good of
·the Oider committee will serve
refreshments at this meeting. ·
The Past Councilors Club will
meet Wednesday at 7 p.m. with
Charlotte Grant, $adie TrusseD and
Mary K. Holter the hostesses. ·
Addenda was held for Erma
Cleland who accepted het commission as deputy of Chester Council
again. Thts was a make-believe
l)oat cruise on Shade River. Betty
Young and Thelma White dressed
as clowns, entered the room with a
wa 1king boat and Mrs. Cleland
stepped into the boat as piloL
Mter the "cruise," Esther Smith,
on behalf of the council, prese~ted
her a gift and read a poem ,
"Because You Are Someone Specia!." Mrs. Cleland spoke briefly
thanking the members for the
addenda.
A potluck supper was held and
quarterly' birthdays were observed.
Those people were seated at a spe·
cia! table with biue cover, caridles,

PORTLAND · The Portland
PTO will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at
the school.

secre:

You'll Come Up Aces With
The C/assifieds
992-2156

',

POMEROY · A representative
from Congressman Clarence
Mille~· s office will conduct an
open door session from II a.m. to
I p.m. in the Court House in
Pomeroy.

People with disabilities should
know that there are a number of
tpeeial services provided by the
Social Security Administration to
· help tbem take advantage of rights
IJIIdcr die Socill Security and Supplemallal Security Income (SSI)
These tnclude special
lntii!DIIion mattrials for the
liad and tbe deaf, and special
ll1lftPII*III for liking claims.
For deaf people with general
quar'"''ll about Socill Security, a
il*lal TDD (teleJ?hone device for
die deaf) Dlimber IS available. The
TDD iJ pnemlly available through
olpaJr.atlona thlt work with deaf
people. In addition, th'ey may
requell an lntelJI~eter for t~eir

•
·
F.!:

! I

I

By Brian J, Reed

1

Choir to
perform
The Community Chorus will
present a program on Fridpy at 7
p.m. at .the Trinity Congregational
Church as a pan of the Big Bend
S~mwheel Festival. The pro~am
w11l mclude patriOtiC, religwus,
folk, river and broadway show
songs.
Members of the chorus are
Debby Grueser, Gay Perrin, Irene
Bailey, Diane Hawley, Anita
Sayre, Linda Mayer, Dorothy
Davis, Carolyn Thomas, Judy
Pape, Brenda Haggy, Debbie Brennan, Ida Martin, John Musser, Joe
Struble, Denver Rice, Mary Skin·
ner, JoAnn Wildman, Dixie·S3Yre,
Betty Sayre, Glena Smil)l, Esther
Frecker, Dottie Musser, Kristin
Pape, Mary Kautz, Becky Depoy,
Alice Globokar, Pat Holter, Roland
Wildman and Milce Wilfong.
Accompanists are Ralph Werry,
organ, and Mary Stewan, piano.
'

hmeroy,

At.L IUDS .
lri111 tt In -or' ••
• Pick Up.
·

In
Custonl f r - lepair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS

FOR AU MAKES &amp;

MOORS

992-7013

Maynard
graduates,
gains honors
1

Cindy Maynard, Langsville, .
graduated recently from Marietta
Memorial Hospital's School or
Radiologic Technology.
She received the Student·
Achievement Award for outstand·
in~ pelfonmance in scholastic an~
clmlcal endeavors atld patient cane.

"'

'

742-2511

ROOFING

Time

included musical entertainment at the band·
stand, crafters and other concessionaires, and
contests._

Children acros$ nation learn about hunger

' hunger, jealousy. not fair.
anger,
snack cakes if North America gelS
ANNANDALE, Va. (AP).With
12
percent
of
the
world's
f1ve cakes wtth on.ly 6 percent of
With snack cakes and pizza slices population, Africa and the Middle the
populatiOn, satd Rafce Wasi,
' representing world grain, freshmen
at Annandale High School got a East should get more than two 14.
hard-hitting lesson on how
inequitably food is distribured in
the world.
"Hey, I only got two pieces and
•she got five," a boy in the MricaMiddle East section of the class·
room said in mock anger, pointing
to a girl in the North American
BUI~LETIN BOARD DEADLINE
area. ,
"You arc now symbolic of the
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
world population," responded
PUBLICATION
World Cultures teacher Michele
,Vilotti. "You are seeing an
inequitable food distribution."
Annandale, which has 1110re
than 15 countries represented in the
"Big Kids and Babies"
student populati'on, 'was one of hun1
·
Class
dreds of schools across the nation
that celebrated the anniversary of
For children becom~·sr
ng
the World Summit for Children.
big brothers or sister ·
Thousands of children spen( the
TUESDAY, OCT. 8
week discussing global and domes6:30p.m
tic hung~r and poverty. and how
.
Pleasant
Valley Hospital
oveCj&gt;Opulation and other issues are
Administrative Conference
related.
The summit, held at the United
Room
Nations at the end of September ·
Call
675·4340,
Ext. 230
1990, attracted President Bush and
To Reaister
70 other world leaders who committed themselves improving the
plight of children around the world
"Heart to Heart"
' by the year 2000. .
Cardiac S~pport Group
The 30 freshmen in Vilotti's
and
first class Friday were stunned 10
Diabetes Support Group
learn that 40,000 children die each
Will meet together
day throughout the world from
i
THURSDAY, OCT. 10
largely preventable malnutrition
7:00p.m
and disease.
Pleasant
Valley Hospital
After distributing the food based
Community
Room
on supply in each of the regions,
Barbara Wiseman, Ph. D.,
Vilotti asked for reaction. ·
Psychologist: Speaker
The words came rapidly: bad,
' '
Topic: "Coping With Lifestyle
"Changes"
1 card ot Thanks
'

BULLETIN a·o-ARD

9 / ~ / 91 / 1

.

•

lite Chllthti, Parenll, slaH of
llanfSOIIvllie O..ltllary, and
Mr. Clyde Henderson thank
nry much Jor yotr :tconl
Me111erlal Dedlcatl11 It

r••

.......

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

'

lonnlt Y111ct 111d family

•

..

'-

- lnt•lor • Ext•ior
Pointing

!FREE ESTIMATES!

~.

mo. pd.

'

~

A&amp;B
••
COMPLRE AUTO
UPHOlSfRY :
Convertible Tops, :
Cat'P,trta. Headlinl" ~
&amp; Seat Coven and ·
Minor Auto Rep.Jr.
MAIN ST., MASON, YA.,

Sept. 22

Starting

12 Gauge Factory
Choke Only

~ONSTRUCnON

1·(30341·
773-9560

FIREWOOD
SELLERS

•New Homes
•Garages
e&lt;:Otllplttl

· iemodtling

9 / 9 / 81 / 1 mo 1 pd ~

Hardwood Slabs
For Sale
Great Pri&lt;el

..

Stap &amp; Compare
FrM Estimates

SHRUB &amp; TREE.
TRIM and

. 1\IMOVAL

CAll
OHIO PALLET .CO •

. -985-4473
667-6179

•LIGHT. HAULING'

992-6461
9·1·91 · 1mo.

•FIREWOOD

illl SLACK "·
992-2269 , ~

ATS INSULATOR®
'

C. .YOUNG Ill ..
992-6215 '

.P-oy, Ollio
ll·t4.'90 lin
"'
. . .. .
'"

BISSELL &amp; BURKE

BALLET, .TAP &amp;
JAZZ CLASSES
AGES 3 and UP

USED RAILROAD TIES

'

1-12-BO·tt

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOW
· We WUI Not Be Undersold

THE DANCt COMPANY.
992-6289'

Announcement :&gt;

•save up to 50% on Fuel Bills
*Increase the Value of Your Home
*Call for Free Estimates

742·2328

',,

9·6·1 mo.

3 Announceme1111

111/1/lfo
BAHAMA CAUISf:

to DAY WAIIIAIIn

CorpiMoto Trip, Ho1o1 Poild.
Tlcilolo Good 1 You. Pt..O
BOIMIO
Orlando
Trip
1231/Couplt,
Umi!Od:
A•~ll"biiKy. 404-3~
·~
I wll nol bo
lor .,,.

"""'"'AIR
CONDITIONERS • HEAT PUrl'S oncl
FURNACES FOR MOBILE &amp;DOUBlEWIDE HOMES

!
0

0

o

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

I

0

0

0

I

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

I

0

0

o

0

I

0

I

0

0

0

'-'blo

,
0

liEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

-•-lhlnmyowno...w
'
L.oo Oldoklr.
: ~.,
No Humtng or Troopo~
Rolllh - ' ' · 3 MlloROICI, HtndenOn.
.•
No Hunllllfl or Tr11po101na lin
Rober1 C. O.rwl t...n 61\ Chv;o~

9U-S33S "' 915-3561
lcrots Fr.11111 Post Offiu
' POMEIOY, OHO

lnton AOICI.

~

'

Rod~co· 9um Oft fol 'Millo You

SIMi&gt;, foko OPAL.bolloblo AI•

t/1/aD/'89 ttn

HOWARD
,EXCAVATING

Frulh Pharmtc)'.

,.l

4

·'

Giveaway

1 molo Borlltr Caltlo 2 ,..
old, purwbrod; 1 -\o IGociO~
Colllo m11, •Pirtd: 1 !"!!It
Chow mix, 0o0c1 HoMoo """-I
I14-2SHCI2l
~.,.

BULi.DOZER and
BACKHOE WORK,
HOME SITES,
LANDSCAPING
WATER end SEWER
LINES
TRUCKING AVAIIAIL£
fiii IITIMATIS
•

:::-~~-~ homo, looglo Sloroo, No Spoob- lu·-·
M30.

·

Is Your Roof Readr For Another Year of lee IIIII Snow?
.
How I The
to Flnil Olit .-

nme

.CALL JACKS ROOFING &amp;
CONSTRUCTION
992 • 2653 . .

e.• UY oSIU •TUDE.
OPEN
Tue1dev thru Seturday

1o:oo •m-s:oo

•

For Old &amp; New Roofs, Shingles
Repalf1t Gutters
B•lkhng and Remodelng

We Guarantee l'our Satisfaction
nn miMAns
JOSIPII D. JACKS

•:J•

F-.d, Springer Sponiot, ~
~hfte. Comlct· 'tMebw,
Elomontary Sc-.
.
.

_ _ _ _ _..;.;._;__ _..;._..;;;;;;;;;;;;.j'nd

21/t Mi. outsl•
lutlcind on New
Lima lei.
5 to 'II tin

___.

.Lost &amp; Found

6

8-28-8:1 1 mo. pd.

pm
742•2421 ·

·~

Toya, :t04-ftMII72.

992·7458
· STEWAIT'S
GUNS &amp; ·suPPliES

,

s eo,., 4 Ntatu, o..r 11oua111

1111Sfl181-

USED APPUANCES

FIIEZIIS-S I2S up
MCIO OVlNS- $7' up

- Rootlnt

9-6-tfn

1127n mo.

UNGIS-Iot-lltc.-$12~ llfl

- Oubrwortl.

-Eioctricol and Pluml&gt;l"'f'
-Conc:nte ¥~~~a~rk
_.

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT
'
ltOO P.M.
SUNDAYS

MIKE lEWIS, Ow""
II. I, lot..nol, OH.

RENT-TQ.OWN
Name Brand Products
Factory Aulhorlzed
Repair
TV· VCR· Slereo • Boom
Bo• • C.D. Player .
Seen nor· Typaw~ler
Cordia. Phone
Mlcrolfeve
Radir Detector
Home Entertainment
Center
.H.E.C.
Pomeroy
992·3524

Wl11111S-$10G '!I
DillS-$"''
l£fiiGIIlFOIS-$1 OG up

' · - Room • , S:llons

949-2168

'/919112 mo.

SOUTHERN MARCHERS • The Southern
High School marching band stopped and played
several tium_b.ers ror the crowd U Saturday ~s
Fall F#&lt;ti.val Parade, in Racine. Other activilies

(·ARPENTER S£RVICE

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

•High Gloss on TiLe
Floor Finish

Every Sunday 12 Noon
Factory Gun• Only

YOUNG'S

NEW -REPAIR

INDEPENDENT ·
CAIPET CIIANEIS
and tiLE FLOOI CUE
•Reasonable Aete,l
oQuolity Work
•Free E1timete1
•Carpet Has Foot Dry

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
Begins Sept. 15

'

Howtrd L. Wrilesel

6-6-'9t

tfn

Niw Grips ............ ~4.UOU .
Woods ................ •u.1111
Irons .................. $14.75
REPAIRS
u~ lr- ............ $5.00
Us.td Wooch ......... $7.00
· AWARDS
e-9-1 mo.

8 / 19/ 1 mo. tfn

mo.

WORK
(614)
696-1006

GUN SHOOT

w

CINDY MAYNARD

7/31/'91

If you're in need of

949·2826

or 992-5553

'

W.H. MOBILE
HOME PARTS

BOB JONES
EXCAVATING
DOZER and
BACKHOE

S~alizing

&amp;39 Bryon

Middleport,

992-5800
RT. 33 WEST OF
DAIWIN, OliO

10-31

· 992~2772 or ' •
742-2251 '

NO SUNDAY

ID

Offer Ends Oct. 31

992-6648 or
69!1·6864
.
.

JAMES litiSEE

Day or Night ..,

Mobile Home Part.s
11r A&lt;cessories...
SEE US FIRST!

CONSTRUCTION

rain .

PI!.. 949·21D I .
or Itt. 949-216!1

FOREVER
BRONZE

CEDAR

•Replacement
Window•
•Raoflng
•lnlulation

"At l"'naltlt Prien"

FALL FESTIVAL
SPECIAL
20 SESSIONS
For $20.00 ·

FREE ESTIMATES

.&lt;

.

161

J&amp;l
INSULATION
•VInyl Siding

CUSTOM IUILT
HOMES &amp;GARAGES

VEIY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

FULLY INSURED

01 IOU FIR
1·100-141·0070
DAIWIN, OliO

'

Take the, pain out of
pointing.
Let me 1b it for you.

o_Bamodeling' andHome Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting •

Ill Second St., Pomeroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEJGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

BISSELL
BUILDERS

FREE ESTIMATES

2171. ........ St.
POMIIOY,

QUEEN CANDIDATE· Candidates for .
Racine's Harvest Queen took part in the fall fes·
tival's parade on Saturday morning. Here,
Dawn Shuler braved a steady downpour of rain

1
·, .

INTERIOR • EXTERIOR .

An•• Fi'elil , .., Office

In Its annual lorecast of representative
average unit costs of five residential
anergy sources-for 1991, the Department of
Energy estimates there will be a slight Increase over 1990.
The five energy sources are propane,
natural gas, electricity, No.. 2 heating oil,
and kerosene. DOE uses the figures In Its
Energy Conservation Program lo project
costs of operating consumer appliances.
The agency prescribes"test PfOI:edure, "lor
the determination of the estimated annual
operating costs and other measures of
energy consumption lor certain consumer
producls." ·

RUTLAND BOnLE GAS

'

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

·to ride in in the parade. The parade was filled
• with interesting entries despite the poor weath·
er, and spectators didn't seem to mind a little

NQ SIIIIDlY

LINDA
PAINTING ·

OVEN ·REPAIR

Electricity Continues To Be The
· Most Costly Energy, DOE Says

Propane ·

PH. 949-2101
· or las. 94~P·IIIH

614-9f2-6820

INSURANCE

Electricity continues to be the most
costly energy source at $24.15/MMBtu
That's up $1 .16/MMBtu from 1990.o ·
Prop11na was listed as $9.74/MMBtu, No.
2 heating oil $9.30/MM~tu. .
·

"FrH IAIImatu''

Owner &amp;-Operator ,

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

' '"l
~· !
aJ

...

EMILEE MERINAR .

AUTO PAm

!

.......

BISSELL
SIDING C~• .

·Complete Grooming
For All lreecls .

renewal for the Meigs County
Tuberculosis Levy.
Games were conducted by Jan·
ice Young and Frances Reed with
prizes awarded.
,
Re(reshments were berved and
f~vors given to those named and
Pauline Myers, Nola Young, Janet
ConnoUy, Dolores Frank, Phyllis
Larkins, Ella Osborne, Marlene
Putman, Gladys Thomas, Nancy
Wachter and Kila Young. Mrs.
Weber received the door prize.

'

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM IIP·IN,I·: ;
•ILOWN IN
INIULATION

'GROOM
. ROOM

~"

Your Social Security
claims interview ii they can ahead
of time.
,
For blind people, llie Library of
Congress (LOC) publishes "Talk·
ing, Books" of Social Security
information • recordings of lcey
Social Security publications. Tflese
materials will be available from
LOC libtaries around the cOIUitry
in October. In addition, blind beneficiaries can request to receive
Social Security notices by tele·
phone or certified mail rather than
regular mail.
People with limited mobility
should note that most Social Sccu·
rity business can be conducted by
telephone, including applying for
disability. Socia'! Security's toll
free number is 1-800-722-1213.
The Athens number is 59.2-4448.
The Athens office is locBJe(l at 221
1/2 N. Columbus Road.
.

fiowers, a cteconited cake and birth· .
day card and gift at each place ror
Lora Damewood, Margaret '
Amllerger, 'can Frederick. Eliza·
· beth Hayes,l.atn Mae Nice, Betty
Roush, Scottie Smith, Bulah
Maxey, Mary K. Holter, Lillian ·
Demosky,Jcan Welsh and.Faye
Kirkhart. , .
Serving on the kitchen commit·
tee were Helen Wolf, Charlotte and
· Everett GranL Sandra White won
the door prize.
·
Attending were Goldie Freder·
ick, Scottie Smith, Martha Durst,
Marcia Keller; Jean Welsh, Thelma
White, Jean Frederick, Mary Jo
· Barringer, Iva Pnwell, Marge Fetty,
Laura Mae Nice, Bulah Maxey,
Mary K. Holter, Kathryn Baum,
Eyerett Grant, Betty Young, Ethel
Orr, Esther Smith, Elizabeth
Hayes, Alta Ballard, JoAnn Baum,
Enma Cleland, Helen Wolf, Mar- ·
ganet Amberger, Lillian Demosky,
Betty Denny, Octa Ward, Betty.
Roush, Eva Robson, Sandia White,
Charlotte Grant, Mae McPeek,
Opal Hollon, Laa Damewood and
Faye Kirldtarl.

SPECIAL ON
·BU'LK .TANK
INSTAL.LATION

WEDNf:SDAY
POMEROY • The Pomeroy
Merchants Association will meet
Wednesday at noon in the confer·
encc of Bank One. All members
arc urged 10 attend.

.

B1 Ed Petenoo
Social Security
Manaaer In Atbens

.· ·Consider this, ..

Riverview· Garden Club holds meeting. Betty Boggs and Maxine . Marilyn Hannum reported from
Whttehead presented a program of the nommating committee with the
fall ~ardening a~ th~ _September· s.ame slate or officers to serve for
meettng of the Rivervtew Garden the new year: Ruth Anne Balder·
.Club held at the home of Mary son, president; Maxine Whitehead
Alice Bise. Ruth Anne Balderson vice-president; Betty Boggs,
was co-hostess.
tary; Margaret Grossnickle, treasur·
Mrs. Boggs and Mrs. Whiteh~d er; Mary Alice Bise, flower fund;
told the Importance of mulchmg and Opal Harris, scrap book.
•
r~ses af~ the first freeze an~ ferMaxine Whitehead reporied
ulize dunng the wmter. Now 1s the from the program committee giving
ume to. have your soil tested at the an outline of the yearbook ror the
cxtcns•_on offtce . Early rants a coming year. A thank·you was read
good ume to plantp.ere n~tals, fro Mace! Barton for the hanging
spnng bulbs and to divtde ex1shng basket and patio rose she had
flower beds. .
received from the club. Plans were
.. For devouons.Gr;!'Ce Weber read made to tour a craft shop at
One Golden G1ft. Roll cal~ was Guysville and eat out at a rcstau·
answered by members showmg a rant at Athens on Oct 24
picture of their favorite se:)son.
The club voted ~~ s~ppon the

The Dally

=
.....

~~~,..,~Whl::.AIIJc!r~ Oocltwod. -

.,._,;_

:;:~-,.~=,,:
LOST - ..._ La~
Lakin. Ploue can

and IHv. T'

. ~

• 11,

Loot: ~· 11o1o 11oo11 Lall, •

!::~'."' Ani, "'n:':::l' :!:':(

1733

·

't- ::."":._,.--

== =~

·

.r~ ·

wtu PlY NO _ _
ponon w. ho
~. ~

t....t

~.....--.-..;.;.·:..·;:.·..:::;;.(. ''--.:...------------~::.:..:.~ :~~~~-em ..."""'•oo: - ~

�· Page 8 The
7

Sentinel

SNAFU®by _!Jruce Beattie

Yard Sale

121115 .lloblll """"· 2 bdrm,
llove, r1frlg. wuher I . dryer,
tilock l ui\dltplnnlna, f3200,
'114-1112-2371.
14 ICI'II1 1111 2 Mclroom
mobllo homo, county wotor,
Lltort, WV, $18,500. :J04.8ta.
3421 lftor a.
11170 ChlmDion mobllo homo,
304-t7WUl or 17J.lll47.

Galllpolla
&amp; VIcinity .
·ALL Yonl-1111101 lo Pold In
Advonoo. DEADUHE: 2:00 p.m.
tho dly bobolho od_,. to run.
Sundly ldlllon • 2:00 p.m.
Frldly. lloniloy oc1n1on • 2:00
p.m.Sot-y.

..

Qlaontlc Yord 1111: Filii T1mo
ThTo 'leort c.tobor 71h l ah
llun•. To ? 1114 FolrviiW Rood·
Chlldron'o Clohloo, Toyo, Knick

.

.

Pt. Pleasant
11

&amp; VIcinity

Help Wanted

Wanted to Do

18

8 Fomlty Yord lll~!"rrwr of
4th, onc1 flolllno,
Hnon.
Oet. 1 and IO. •

AVON I All Artlo I Shlrloy
Georges Pon1ble Stwmlll, don't
Spoo.., 304-175-1421.
·haul your logo to tho mill juot
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Goroao Slit, 2211 Jolflr10n, MAKE 1400 WK, llufflng on· coll304-t!7S·1~57.
lloncJoy l TIIOidoy, Cot. 7 &amp; I , vii- at homo. Ruoh $1.00
winter clolhle, gluiWire, doll•. · S..U.E. e10 to D&amp;A Supplloo, Houoo Clllnlng: Charge ~ll.~' Lola I acre.. IVIIIIb~ tor
P.O. Box 1443, Folrbom, Ohio Job1 Not Tho HolM'. I
new hom. conltructlon on
antJquea, )Mna.
45324.
415o.
. Roybum Rood. Povld rood,
county
water,
rHao,abll
No Ex~rlence NICHUry. A Ml11 PaUla's Dar Ctre C.nter. rt1trlctlon1. Complete Inform•·
Dolly Sllory Of $3011 For Buytna 1111, offordobll, chlldcoro. M·F tlon mall.d an r11qU11t 304-87$llorchlndloo. 114-365-2082, bf. a •·"!. • 5 :30 p.m. Alii• 211-10. 112&amp;3, John D. Oortoch, no
Pomeroy,
3833.
Before, '""' IC:hool. Drop-Ins llngl•wlda lralllrw, pleiM.
welcome. B14-UM22f. New In·
Mlddlepon
Now Taking AppUctUona It f1nt Toddler Ctl'l, 114-446-6221. 112 to 3/f tcrt lola, 10 miiH
&amp; VIcinity
Domlno'o Pluo, Oolllpollo.
th o1 p0lnt p•·· 1 ••1100
Tr• Trimming, TrH Aemovtl. eou
-un · ·
304-111-21114.
AN )'ord IIIII Mull 81 Pold In Ovor Tho Rood Drlvor, Mull 304·773-5165.
Advonco. Doadllrw: 1:00pm tho Have 2 Yurt Con11cut1ve Drlv~
:c
l.al::-:::
wn~h:-:t=
r a:::ll,:r,:--:::
ln-:F::Io-:~d"'•.
1111-~414.
doy boloro tho ld II to run, lng Exporfol~eo, Cloon Driving
SUndly odhlon- 1:OOpm Frldoy, Rocord, And 81 WIIIIIIG To Toko
lllodawhll Subdlvlllon, 2.1
Moitdly ldMion
10:00o.m. A Drug Toot. For Mora lnlormolion Clll: c&amp;O Trucking, 114mllll out Sind Hill Rood, hoo
Sotunlly.

-=

Yord Sot• 115 Oon. Hort pkwy.

446 1114
'
'

evtryOM

Start. $11.88hr • benefits. For

Oct.

8

7·11,

Mmlthlng

Pomeroy Aroo POSTAL JOBS,

for

Business
Oppo'nun"y

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHIHQ CO.
Rtglttered long term cart nurs- recommendl that you do bual·
lng tulttanls. Btgln at $f.S5. n•u with peop~ you know, and
Af.ply at Clro Hoven of Point NOT to alnd money throutn tho
P IINnt, Rt. 62 North ol Point moll until you hlvo lnvoltfgolld
Pl0111nt, 3D4-17WOOI.
tho oft~&lt;lng.
·
•··'·to
I
Nood·"
,
ion
R_,,. h - · no
Alllnt I Styii"G Solon For
lmmodhllly (On A Port·Timo lllol Pnmo Locoflon. Coli 814Boolo)
Trolnlng
Provided 448ol803, 114-446-1355.
Tronoporlotlon troqulrad. eon
Colloc1704-3JII.1721.
Par Phono ROUII. Locol. Priced
For Quick Salt. 1-aoo..cn-1118.
SCHOOL SPECIALIST
VENDING ROUTE: Got Rich
Fulllmo Poonlon . 8 o:m. -4 p.m. Oulck? No Wart Bul Wo Hovo A
Somo l'lollbll Houro And Scmo Good, Study, Aftordob!_l, Buol·

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rlclll'ol-- Compony,
tull ' time IUCIIGMer, oomPNt•ucJion .viol. Llnnnd OhiO,
Wo« Vlrglnlo, 304-m.tm.

9 .. Wanted to Buy
FOR SALE:

Scrop 11et11 And lloohlrwry For
Solo. I~

Evening And W11k1nd Hours

151-.IA-OollfpollL

Employment Services
11 · , Help Wanted

;V~E:;:ND:;.·-------

Ouollllcotlono: Bocholor'o 0.
g101 In Educollon Or Rolltod
Field Pluo 3 Yooro Work Ex·
perflnc. Or CammtniUI'III EJ.
porltnco. Clrtlllod Pronnllon
llpoclotlot Or Ellglblo Fct Entry
Into Clrtlllcollori P..-. Ex·
porllnco In Working Whh Yo~h.
Schoolo, And SchoOl Poroonnlll.

22 Money to Loan

Alii

Commensume

Educotlon And Exporlonco.

With

OUiflniMd .... dQ •=•II
lloo . q•lfr lor NO
VlSAIIIC onCI colfl - -· 1·
IOO.a'/llo2000 Ell. 2824.
pOQ/Dty - -.. phone .,.
dora. Pooptt colt rou to Oldlr.

Will troln. 1-IOG-738.f187 Ext.
1122 ·
$3501DAY PIIOC£UIHQ
PHilliE ORDERS! PEOPLE
. CALLYOU.
NO EXPEIUENCI NECESSARY.
· 1-101 zn 0242.

• EXTRA INCOIIE "91" •

Vlltoao Pizzo Inn now tilling opEom IZOMIIOO -.y lllutng pllcillono lor woft101o. Apply In
poroa11. 3004 .tockoon Avonuo,
PoliiiPt-.
MoM ;
Acf.
For
~
IIMkipoTo:
VOCALIST Noodld For EoATW •Tmol. .0 . Box 00710, toblllhod
Rock Bond. Soma E·
llllml. FL still.
qulpmont - r y. llrouo
fnqulrlOI Onlyl 114-44H110,
'!'&lt;II.TAL JOU'
8--otiiS.
Clllllilolll Arlo.
llort tn.lloftr. • Bonotna. For wo.-.od mollvotod -poroon,
Appl~lon • 'Info, Clll t·211o
lot yior,
324-3P1, 7 Lm. To 10 p.m., 7 UI,Q0.$52,1100
pnwldod, oaporiorli:o pro
Doyo ..
, . _ 10 Dolly Bontiiitl
PO Box 721B Pomeroy, ON
41711

- .A
~~~~=hw•

'1!!!'1.

A Dolly lllllrY 01 . . For
Burittt lllrdllt
1.,.,
-No'-"-..,.......,.. . . bt.lla.

«

AUSTRALIA WAHTI YOU
,.,,

$ t.DANS $
All rypoo 01 loon• Poroonol
Butlntll Etc: Call For FrM
Contutl:atlon Wl1h A Loan

Onlcor Todoyl 1-III0-1112-t410.
Gourontood ROoutll.

23 Professional
Services

Sond Roo"""' And Lonor Br Oc·
Iober 15th To lollndo Filming, Cullom Butchtrlna, 1 dlyo •
Prov..,lon Progrom Ill-, WMk. Clltlo, Hogo, Door, !104Hoollh llocovw Sorvlcoo, P.O. 882·2353.
E.O.E.
Tho llolgo Locol School Dlotrlc:l
II currently 111klng .,.
pllcatlono from cortlllld .,.
ptlconto lor o Glrlo' Junior Hlah
lukllbol Coach lor tho llfl·
1GI2 ochool rur. AppNconlo
mull hold o volld Ohio toochi"G
Clf1ll~ot. ond lor .-:hlna
pooltlono mull moot cortlll. .
lion roqul,.....ll of Ohio tor
oporlo modlclno and CPR. P•·
oono lntorMtld lflould contiCI
Jim Clrpor..r, Buporlntondont,
llolgl local Schoolol P.O. Boa
272. :120 · Eolt Ill n Stroot,
Pomoroy,Ohlo.
-

llnlfkl,

Tronoporllllon,
~
Ext. •' m . to.m.·10p.m. 41"'
Rotunclod.

:"t!.'tor:"!11~~~r:o.::•.!
::~:
11 1 b'•
lot
"Gil W
1 I 304-8'71-3CIO
100

IQ

II ~

'
arll11-4JOO.
llmw Bottom Sub-dlvlolon,

ono ocro toto, 111.

z ltontogo,

price rMuad, city water, 304!71-2331.

:::-'
:-=:'::'::--::--:--::-:-O.J. Whlll Rood, 2 Acr•

· Wooden Building loL Roody To
Build On. Rlllrlc:lld. $7,100.
814-245-11588.

Renlals
41 Houses for Rent

neu. Won'f La1t. 1-wo-2.,.._

lloy Ia Roqulrod.

la1 124, Athtnt, OH 45701.

12,100 CREDIT CARDI

ElceUI,.

21

oppllcollon Into., colt 1•21&amp;-32415387om-1Dpm 7dlyt.

Top Prlcoo Plld: AI Old U.S.
Colno, GokiiU~ 111. . Colno,
Clold ·eotno. II.T.&amp;. Coin Shop,

71 Autoa for Salt .
Oldo .,..... ......, •·
01110111 .......... 0111,-IIIII -!oo_...., 114ot12-

•-h

lllnoot, lllddllpoll, Ohio.
Ono room opt, roloitncoo lnd
dopollt, 304-.215111.
Foi rant· New 1 bdrm opt, tum
or unlurn, In llldcloporL 1141112-lm or 1112-nM.
Fumlohod 3 lioomo I loth,
Ctoon, No Polo, Roloronco I
Dlpoolt Roqulftd.IM-141-1111.

-.moo;

..

Real Estale

2 bedroom hou11 In Maaoh,
$200 pluo ~llhlll, roloronco
ond dopooh. 304-tl11·12&amp;e.
2 bedroom hou• In Point

P1•11nt, depaalt and- NI•~ne•
roqulrod, 304-IJWm.
2 bedroom houN, ntwlr
decorated, Clrpeled, Pllnt,
roitronco and dopooh roqulrld,
no poCO. 304-17Ut62.

Complllly Fumlohod mobil• 52 Sponlng Goods ·
homo, t mill boloW towCA.novor·
·
•
No ~
"
too.'I ~vor.
~to,
·~" · - Brawnlna-TI'OIIItY lllotar
4411-G
CompOUrljl Bow wH~ · - 304North 3rd St,llldclopoll, Ohio, I 171-1210.

~':".: :o;:"",.:~;a':'":t

882-2561.

North 4thfuMiddllporl, Ohio. 2
bedroom mlohod lfll, dopooH
and reference required, 304-112·
2561.
Ono ond two
bedroom
oportmonto lor ronl.· 304-t'f'l.
2053 or 875-4100.
Pomeroy, 3-room, 1·btl.h unfur•
nlohod, upotolro .., Butternut
Avo, 4-roomo, t-bllh unlur·
nlahld, upotolro on Spring Avo.
614-112-51108

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

11'
uu~1
::..;.;..~=_;;•;;.;;,•·- - - - -

~~~%~:"'=· ;.:_~

~=~~'"lhmu~~"'.~....::

-

up. ~~ 1-&lt;*1
oootc
llovo,
, 1_'!1.0 ooolc otovo,
good
~"-sao.
1-tU hlllor
wn.towor,
.... l·floyllg-woohor,
noldo bono, •111: 114-117Room• tor l'lnt • Wlllk or monlh. auto,
avoo
'J:1lJ:~ tt201mo. Oolllo HoteL
1
80.
· Apple Uo, Koyboord Scroon,
SINplng roomo wnh C0!&gt;kfrt1. Prlntor, Scltworo, $1150. 114-441MOI, Laav• MNuge.
Aloo troller · -· All hooll-upo.
Clll oftor 2:00 p.m., 304·'1n- Block And Dlakor, 7 112 Inch,
151151, Ml- WV.
Bond Sow, wtnt• Ctothlna, Coltlllt4-2Y.1014.
46 Space for Rent
CIIIIOior Rlfti,. 1 Co rot, Diamond,
Country Uobile Home Park. 14 K Clold. 0r191no1 Colt: tt,soo,
Routo 33, North of Pornoroy. son: 1400. IM~4W040 .
Lott, renttlt, plrtl, MIH. Clll Coli, Homo Dlllvory. Minimum
l14·992·lll1ll.
Of 4 112 Ton, $58 P• Ton, 114Good hunting 1nd ca'mp 1ItH 311H:I38.
lor renl. Over 100 acrM to hunt
141 ..1 .,..rt .....
on In Maton County. Call 1ny Cockollllo,
nlng jlro, ., por aoz. 114-112·
limo, 304-1571-258e.
;hlllct 112·2805.

45

Furnished
ROOmS

47 Wanted to Rant
Rollrod couplo, IIOIHmOkoro,
no poro, wllh to Nnt ellln,
houu or mobile homl wfrlver
view '15-mllll up or down river

from Roclno In Cilllo or Wo«
Vlrglnlo.IM-MNIDI

Merchandise

2-Story hou• 1n Rllltond, 11

3 Bedroom Houoo, 111
o~vo, Oolltpotlo, Uvlng
Dining Room

Klteheft,

Control Air• ~nyt Siding, Cor·
porod. 2 ""r Ooroao. 'Within
Walking Dlollnco OfTho Pool,
Golf Coor10 ·And Clinic. Glfo
llpollo cny Sct»ot Dlotdcl. IM245~" .
3br A Fromo On 1 Aero Woodod
Lol. S27.5DD Will Conlldor Lind
Controcl Whh Rouonobll
Down Poymont. 114-251-11111.
3br, Btth, Kltchtn, DR, LA,
Boll, Gorogo, Control Air, Goo
HIII, Mid 120'o. lllddloport, 114Gt2ol364,
QOVERNIIENHIOIIES From 11
(U Ropolrr. Dollnauont lox
Propertr. Repouenlona. vour
Aroo C1 805-M2.f000. Ext. QH.
IOIU For Currant Ropo U.L
HOMES FOR SALE BY GOV'T
AGENCIESI IRS F_,...,r11,
Ropoo., SI.L SoiiOUio Avoltobll
AI Borgoln Prlcoo. ,_.,1o151146800 Ext. HRIII For lm-lllo
HOUN And Lind .For loll:' 113
Acroo, Fru .Goal 114 411 Mill,
814-1112·7314.

Condhlono~

GE

Dllhwaahtri Mtra
Relrlgerltor FrMUr; 0..

Rongo, 114-441-ot08.

Corpot 1112 sao l Upl Solo On
All Outoldo Clrpot: SUI l
M.tlt; Knchtn Clrpot, fT·l VInyl
U .tlt &amp; $4.111. Slit On A I Cor·
pot In llockl~ llollohln Clrpolo,
M2 mobile homo lor ronl, 2·BR, il14-441-lll44,
tum., wuhorlctyor, AC, gu
holt, 1231 por mo. pluo Couch Eoly Chllr, Rocllnor
dopoolt/..llhloo, 614-112·5800 &amp; Choir, Twin B!!f0 lltouor, Choot
01 Droworo. "'II Soli AI 0no
~-~821
Group Only, 1280. 814-44t-G117.
14110 2 Br, 1 milo South of
Euroko, on St. Rt.7. No polo, Countr Appllonco, Inc. Good
uNCI tppllancet, T.V. 1tt1. o.»n
roltroncoo. IM-286-IOH.
I a.m. to I p.m. llon ..Sol. 8141fJ70 111 ~trle on prlvttt lo4. 44&amp;·18'!" 827 3rd. AVL 011·
1250.00 pluo utllhlll. HUD Ap- llpoll•, Cl1 .
proved. 304-175-40111.
Electric stove tor lilt, good
Zf&gt;r lloblll ~-. Rotoronco cond., $1511. 114-l'l2·21114
And D-n Roqulr·•. ••• •••.
- ·~~ Flropllco lnlorl wnh Eloctrlc
,:1;8::2:2:;·-::-::--=.,..,._,...,.,.. Fan. Coli 114-441-3111 lhlr
3br Tl'lller, Totti 'Electric, lp,m.
1250/mo. $11111 Dlpooh, 114-317- GOOD USED APPLIANCES
0434 ·
Woohoro. dryoro, rolrigorll...,
lloblll Homo For Ronl: 3br, 2 rongoo. Sko11t10 Applllncoo,
Full Bltho, 12124 Addhlon, Uppor Rlvor Rol. Booldo llano
W&amp;'mo. PI• Utllhllo. 114-317· Ctolt llot~l. CIIIIM-441-7311.
nos.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
lloblit Homo FD&lt; AMI. Compllto homo tumlohlngo.
Rolori!ICO And Dlpooh Roo l;lourW: Mor&gt;SII, 11-5. 114-41&amp;~~· Clll Ahor 2p.m. 1 - 0322, 3 mil• out Bullville Rd.
FrooDollvory.

42 Mobile Homes
torRent

R11ponu.

44

Apartment
torRent

PICKENS FURNITURE
Now/Uood
HOuoohold lumlohlng. 112 mi.
Jorrlcho Rd. PI PlooNnl, wv,
coll304-t714410.
Rtlnbow VaCcum Cleaner, cott
over $1400 1-mos. old. Mult
Sollll $411 WMI dollvlfl !104-522·
11&amp;3

- ... a · Complolo

UooOICoooiTo~.lootOf.

lor. lnllrootld Portloo lloy Vllh
Ovornlghl Whh Full Ulo 01
Rocrullonol Focllhtoo lnctudlna
C.ubhoule
Indoor
Poor,
Jocuul ilou~ ...... Lokoo
'
·~ '""'
"
Fllhlna. Clll Bill, 114-1112+118.

'•
'

.

58

IY ~• llltwctoy, 111.m. to
lp.m., SUndly 12 Noon
llp.m, 4 111111 Oft f1ou11 7 On
llouli 1411n ~-

,

~,.........-~.
,._ •--

IGH,..-.,-vol-,o~,PS,PB, '

If

Yov RiAl&gt; THAT

PREr•Pff'l'r

IMp~OVING?

I

......_NO. :Z CAN'T AfFOflP
TO

8"Y

~­

;
t

i

NEWfPAPf(l.

•

Hoa2t·:- Ow,. Will Anonco.

Now· Aoolltlon wotorbod, ldna
oko, with Ill · - -. 1141112-2201.
RocOndllonod w-ro 1
dryo.., $11111 and up. wa
- I I rnllooo. Tho W- l
Dryorl'-· IM-M~-2~44.
Scnop llltol And lloohlnory For
Solo. • - T - 12IK ootor oompullr
Wlooior ,_,hor, . , _ lnnd
both. 114-1112·515113
oftor 1:00pm.

- .-lor
=·good

Uood WuriMHr
oond.

2.

'

111nt Font TIICior wnh Brond
New luoh Hog, 14,000. 114-441;,17~20;;,.,...,..-,-::::-:,..-:-:--:-Nn Holland 711 hoy - . New
Hotllnd 11ft horblno. Now Hof.
lind 7071arrogo horvo«• whh 2
hoodo. Qohl Orlndlr mixor. Allll
Chat- 2 raw no til corn"""'
tor. All No cond, 304-273-4~18. '

Home
Improvements

.,

I CAN'T FIGGER OUT
WHAT TO GIT
AUNT LOWEEZ.Y FOR
HER BIRFDAY tl

_,

~""

olrucllon, I
tlmltMI

caa., Persian,

.Hlmollyon
. . 1 P,IIL ltlltono.
1'1111
2411 .tocbon Avo.
Point Ploul.-., IIOM'f'l.2011,
luH liM T~
blrdo,
01 .
--·nd•
'

IM 1• 3

::ll

-

- . . eon.

1011, -

E.

JET
Aomlon llotoiw, roprolrld. Now
.......In motoro In II!JCk. RON
EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1.-

Sopllc Tonk Puno&gt;lna "!!c9ollll
Co. liON EVA118ltmRI'ftiSEI,
Jockoon, OH ,_..37-1821.

71 Autoalor Sale

Davll
Stw·Vec
S.W::e,
Qoorgoo Crook Rd. Pono, oup.
pilei, pickup, ond dollnry. 114W-G214.

..'
''
,.

.,

9

u \

Plumbing &amp;
HA...Ing

84

OcLI,1111

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

=

11112 ¥4, - . .. to
..... Cllm. ll4oti2-7IM
Rooltllntlll or -•-Ill .
11114
Co#floO
Flollwood wldng, now or
•,1~
-hlm, JI,OOD - · 131115. Mollor
f.loor
ud
olon•
Aldonour EIICirlcol, 304-t'f'l.
1711.
.
11114 Clll~rty, 4d~r
~!A&amp;., PI,
Upholst
, try
,PI, biro ctunl - · Clll A~ fr1

......
.
,
.
.
.
.
.
:!..=' ~~u~ :_,;t"~~:~
.... ll,'llld -

BERNICE
BED~ OSOL

Corter'• Ptutnbl"ll
ond Hootlna
Fourth and Plno
O:J:~:.O

CondN

~

ASTRO-GRAPH

---::::=-~'....;:----

1m l'foltocod Corlflllo, .Good

==~==s~......,,...

miiN. . . . -

In -

.... wpllohl .....
lor ..... ...

~-·Clll 304-47H114
===;....---:--·-··

.

n1an -

49 Pronunclltlon marl&lt;
53 How much
wood- ... ?
57 Pour down
58 Befuddlld
60 Blohop'o
province

61 Highest point
82 Bryn 63 Bag
Joyful
uclamatlon
65 Mlmk:kld
66 Greek leHer

s•

DOWN

1 Complac1nt·
ly 1111·
lltisfltd
2 Nobltlntn
3You
4 Typog11pher
5 Sombrlt'o,
e .g.
6 Indian ot Peru

f.:.:.llr" Koop, M'll.

Will build polio ....... ... . - roomo, put up ~
tldlna or trlllor oklrtlna. '11.(:
248-6W.

.::,171=::::c::-~-.-.,"'No,...,-.""--::11~tlol
""..,.-. 82

concrete

44 Fota
46 Wilt m1aaurs
48 lledittrr•

MIIr; Jo ttle1 to decide on a
final candidate tor
·

831-11121.

Transportat1on

ce o.~~gn~ng w-

Ltndf

felherllood. Sterao. r;1
. 10:00 (I) NaWI
(%) DC1rnond Ule
Minor-league baaeball
PIIJirl, mambera of lhe
ilakeralleld Dodgers o11he
Clan A li:alllornll League,
nope to aam • position In tho
rntlor leagues. (1 :00) C

"""*"·

S,OOO. ...u
~ 114-

t.30!1t

'·
',.'

Ron'o TV llorvlco, -"'flllna
"'A""tto""lla'O...,.,_....::.-R,.ot""lo--:121="• ..,,,.._- In ZlnMh liiO . . ""'"" moil
other brtndL Houoo OIITo, atoo
Siorolll wnh
!loraon oomo opt&gt;litnco roprolra. WV ,
Flffft,ltl. ~ ~1,
304-171-21111 Ohio 114-441-2414.

Runo Good,
441-Ht'Z

A blind man lrltt to blaCkmail
a -IItty parlshlonor. (R) r;l

IT ALL II

. ;.. f

I

41 Place lor
ll.lrCite .
42 Typa ·ol

prlcklr
22Call - day
24- Jlma
25 lllcJdfea
29 S1uoage
33 Norma 34 Sloping
roadway
36 W11tem de·
••••• org .

aIJI.FIIhlr
urrr Klntl LMt
Dowling MJIIIllrloo

SHE'S SOT

•

39 Llvelr dance

20 FHIIng

highlights of till marathon

D • E Conolrucllon - o l
COntriClor, .Rootktg, CCincnle,

To...

Ill G e MUIPhY llrown
Fr1nk comtorta Mille liter

run from 1896 to 1988.

55

n, .• 110. l.......,..tl2t,
llll2 ~ Loolto Good,

~li'···
~~~
Fciotblll BUll at Chilli (1.) Q
=,:~
w......
(It N11hvllte Now Stereo.
a The Olrmplad Rare fllm
footage and historic

.r·'

·-=:

10~10-

e

t:OO ())
aJ1 'I'U F1J AlfiiJ' NIC
Monday Night ............
(Prtvllw) A lawylt''llamlly 11
s~.'! changing tinnoa In

he breaks up with Murphy's

Avtnuo, OollfpoNo, Ohio, 114- 111.17, Point P-nt iiMI Ripley
•
Rood, 304-41J6.3P.

Drapu•••MI

WHIQ,t OOIJN5Et.OR

-

I Collection
4 Slngtr Harris
• 8 Unit ollllttmlntUon
, 12 - -jOOGll
13 GlnUI ol
frog I
14- &amp;VII
15 Yorkshire
river
16 Annoying
looHng
17 Romarl&lt;able
person Csi.J
18 Actot Ford

Slaiiiart

/

.......131.

· 114411 1m •~
t•l p.M.
1171 Chrvot. ~ :liD ong,
114-111241115 10441711:f8115.

mx

JaCkson

71-ii:'I'RE I=ISHTIHC:!t

+A4 3
Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

The World Almanac®Crossword Puzzle
AniWII' to Prewioua ....az..
ACROSS
37 Tennis playtr

a•

Ill ACMniiiNI ollhe llleclt

t-CW

1

.

'

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

0 kltaap Tall&lt; Reggie

0~

.Q8 6
t K 10 2

-~· ~ ~

(DOn

DeCIDeD TO lA:&gt; 'THAT:'

•

-

sw.o.

Y&amp;I.H, 'THEY l=lN.AJ...I...Y

SOUTH
tA K 1 2

·•--••m-...... _·

MeP- 0oc1 Gen.
Craig setkl till right soldier
lor I
calendar.

l05SEA
MARRIAGe
COUNSaa&lt; .

R:';~~=AL:C,TE'=.t ~~.:.:-c:!$1~

210, NOO -

•·

trip. Stereo. C

3':.'

1 m - Clrto. 11101- muot
- . 11tOO.t..wit llko 1100 OBQ,
114-111-7111 · - -·
1171 Cocl!~_llolto A Good
Work Cor,_,., f700. ,,......
7212.
,

Wrote

ataJ while on an ovamight

THE:Y Clt.l6HT

"'

con:

111 1.4ganc1 or Princa VIllani
1:05 (() MOVIE: Dajll Vu (R) (2:00)
1:30 ()). !IJ llloleom Biolaom
and Slx lxperilttee a hOtel

·•·

•

tQ 10

. On today's deal, you are sitting
- ·,•
South, playing in a contract of lour it would be better to give his parlt)er'l ,' •
spades. West leads the heart three. ru_lf at triclt two, get back oo play al ~· ·
East wins with the ace, cashes the dia· t':Jck ~ree With the diamond ace,~ : ·
•mond ace and returns a heart which g1ve bis partner a second heart ruff t. -1
West ruffs. West exits with a di~mood Idefeat your contract
• ·•
East following suit How do you
However, if East is an exper~ YOII . ·\-:
tinue if East is a beginner? What if he should~- very suspicious _of his play .: ~
is an expert?
Why would East cash the d1amond ace~ -North's two-heart bid was a trans- .apparently lettmg you make an im· " ·
fer, sbowlna at leastlive spades. When .possible contract? Only if be knows : ;j:
East doubled, South •raised" to three ~bat West bas JUSt ~ trump and &lt;.
spades to indicate lour-card support therefore that the thtrd round of
and a malimum. With 4-3-3-3 disttlbu· hearts is going to reveal the positioa 10'.1!'•
lion, this was an overstatement.
. you.
• '
Alter a heart to the ace, the dia·
You should win the fourth tr\ek ill _
mood ace and a heart ruff, you really the du!'l"'y, call for the spade 10 and , '
need to know East. If he is a beginner. ·run 11 ll East plays low.
•
cannot draw any reliable infer·
© 1• 1
4
~ enoces. He might not have realized that
.. •

aPttntallaWI

''•
•'·

. AI09H2
tAl

sarles.

0 NFL Monday Night

,.'
'

•' "

'-----------...J- -

(2;00)

BASEMENT

Hay &amp; Grain

7:U (J)Sonlorlf I Son

Of e MOYIE: ThiY Live (RJ

Campers&amp;
Motor Homes

..

IHtl

Well
Eu1
One of the arts of bridge is knowinl Soot•
I NT
Pass
Db!.
the strengths - and shortcomings Pass
Ali puo
of your opponents. It is particularly 3+
, .r
important at cut-in rubber bridge; but
Opening lead: 9 3
, .~
even when you are playing with your
· ..·
favorite partner, it is advantageous to
know the skill level- of your adver· •

Ava lhlnkl she II pregnant
and Wood ,goes to the
~)lltlllor aurgery. Stereo.

New IdOl
oornrawplcltoro.
Ono
WATERPROOFING
llodol
10 one
SIIOO. ThrN
llodol 323 .,. raw Ia« modll Un&lt;ondltlonot Nllllrno 1\11,...
modo $1.1100. -h. 0.. llodol too. l.ocat .......... tumllflod.
328 ,_ ,_ norrow 12 ro1 hullc· F,.. Oltlmltoo. CIN oo11oc:1 1·
lng bod 13,100. Ono llodol 321 ~~ dly or .-.g~~~.
1wo row norrw wnh -lor R- Boumont Wotplono. 12,1100. · Ono Now Hotllnd 711 ~
· 114-245- chotiPir,. 2 ftiw hood currant
rnocMt 13,100. Ono Now Hottond

64

Cosell '

eenmrn

111

........

EAST

.3t8 7 H3

By PbUIIp Alder

Ao- of Dlaaa•r D
111 111e Ewnlnv 1hada

Services

81

Are the opponents
trustworthy?

• Oulllde the ...... The
Ute and Times of Howard

.IIIIUp

•.

tQJ3

+98 761 2

(It II 1 818r Stereo.

....
.o;a;..

WEST

t6

ALDER

arsonlll telepltones detltl1 or
hla ar~eln advance ,
Stereo.
(%) (!)
lnd the

lor

Civile Alre. Motor Harne, 1171.
Wofl ICfUIIIIIOd; 1110 Coachman
lroltor, tm, aood eonriMion,
olcknooi··Muofool, lllko Ollot:
304~-2213.
•

PHILLIP

ae Family Feud

r:.o~

!

';~

tQJ9

(PO) (2:00)
(I) (I)• MacQyver An

11114 Ford olltlon poriL MOO. 304-471-1411.
Budall TronomiMiano, Uold &amp;
rwbuTR, lllrii"G II ht; A~o
PortL' 114-245-1817, 114-fTg.
2213.
'

79

l=:i
• MoniJIIM

+KJ

to 1 contest. Stereo. C
(I) MOVIE: Haulll'l Mlmoly

$3,410j 111

tt0987 S
•KJ I

I:OO(J)e aJr FNih Pttncl or
Ill All Carlton oriel his
alstera challenge each other

,.

NORTH

De
l!;..ar.,IMIII Tontghl
SW.Oc .

Cll ellrtarrled...Wiih Chilchn
Ill Wheal of FDIIUta Q

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

IlL 1111-.

BRIDGE

Stereo.

61 Farm Equipment

~~~~~-=:--:-::-­
Lito llodol 1ID Ill:, 011011 TI« $1,1110· 110 IIF D1ooo1
$4;380; I N Ford Whh luoh

'

•• i•

,.----:,---....:.- - -

.7:01 &lt;II IIVIfly Hlllbllltl
7:30 I]). 1111 Jeopardy! !;1
(I) To II AnrtOilnCitl
W !ttleltalntnfnt TOOWII

i&amp;JIH $AYf Tfli ~oNO/IIIY 1$ ·

"=

troctoro I lm,_L Buy,
0111, llldo, I:IIN:OO -...,..

Clrttant

Ill Tho Walton•

1171 1ntornotlonll Tronootor II
ooml, modll 411701 400 Cum·
•.
I
cond , ·-•••
m nt, Ill
· -·
·~Turnlpo,. MIIIOI..t Koll .And Hor· 33i4 oftor lpm.
llcun ... Boono, 114-44W442.
1181 Nlllon P.U., 414;~1117 Ford
AI..,, P.U., 414i 1111 Torota
P.U., 4a4· 111115 l i M - B-.
4!~i 1iif Font F-180, P.U.,
F~Jtlll Suppl1es
lon lllnln P.U. Alll!i.
Ford Ronaor XlT P.U-tiiiO S.IO
1. Livestock
BllzorL 414; 11114 C'!'VY P.U.;
11113 .,.10, P.U.; AI PriCed To
Soli B&amp;D Auto Sollo, Highway
180 N. IM-44MI85.

,_luoodllrm

.,.

SCRAM-LETS , ANSWERS
·•·•
Enough - Quash - Dunce - Length - HE DOESN'T
~ars the matter?" one coed asked lhe other.
"Weel; smiled the coed, ·my boyfriend and I are
worklog Q!Jt our wedding plans.- I want one and HE
DOESN'T."
·

=~£Nut

f&gt;IP

. ...

._

...' ...''"''t

. 7:00 'Ill• 1111 Wheal or Fllltune

((). .

,.,jl

' 'h;'"

.

. ~!fr

FruitS.&amp;
''egetables

Wldo-

-

CiS 1Dream or. ra-ra

1
_ 14-115o

Accessories

.,

col::ploll .... chuckl• q.-.1
filling In the miiiCIIG -do
, you develop lr.,. 110p No. 3 .below.

L.-.J.'-.L
. ...J.L-..1.-.L.

·

I:U (() AndJ C1r1111t1t

1110 Chovy Cooilco, loko over
poymont .,_ buy 0111.
3tt7

,,......,4.

~·

·1,h.Er:-.~RL
u y 0
I
. ·~.-r-T::..,.~-te
1 1 1 1 1 -! by

0 New ZOml Q

A~ ..- . 21,000. $1,tllo.
Clllonor a prn, 304-171-1210.

12 Trucks for Sale

:MOD Font TIICior, Whh loldor,
SI,IIOj S40 IIWM~~tlontl With

·

driven around trying
my dog. I ~ and
asked an ole[ gent ij he .had
seen the dog. ·sure; he
laughed. · "For the last 5
minutes he's been .following
I .

to

~~~ardi:'Q
DUpCiaM
'

no ~~ Runo pi, Mao. 114-

Ill-tNt.

I

Is I I

. !I!
~ Anleltoa Sterob. r;l
~...,.One Tlleri11ort

1111 · Comoro R.S., Block,
Loldld, T·Topt, Auto, Air, Tilt,
Cruloo, Cuootto Sl-. Ono
Owner, 11,000 Mini Condh~tttlt.:l2
Por lbiih. 114.. ..,,. •
I"' ' " -~

..Z-t7ft
For Solo: 1181 Aid PonUoc
Musical
Floro, .._ -~~~ Good eon.
Instruments
dhlon, a Bpood, Coli Allor llp.m.
Slgnll Clorlnol, wood, call !104- :.'1;.:.1..;.11;.:.1;:;314;.:.4;;.
. -~---

·~

Man

.._=a.:.::T·r.~~-=:!If!

~.

Cllfl,

:..-:: .

Full

WIMilbrltalll
w &lt;lle Ale 111w1

!I

- M UP B Y

Q

1:01 &lt;II T.O ClaM tar Comlolt
1:30(J)e IIII_ NICIIewl~

1110 Eooort, or, Aalolng,
ttf.PL ,:,..:.--=-=-=-=
$1,000.114-441-G731.
For IIIlo 1m Cldlloc 4-DR

3~.

''':k~.~...=-.;:
RENT20WN
2412711-$41tlt.00,27ll32xll114-441-3158
$1141.00, Prooltlon Frome
Vl'ra Fumlturo
Soli • Choir, 111.10 Wook; Bulldoro, 114-112 31141.
Rocllnor, $5.47 WNk, Swlvlll
Rockor, n .l3 Wook.lunk Bod ~56-_P...:et;.:.•;;...:.;to:..;r..;S:..;a;.;.la;.....,..
Complotl 11.41 WHk, 4 Drawer Groom , ond Buopplyy .1 . . . . . , .
Chait, $3.21 W•k; Pootor Bodo• G~ All - . , olvto
"'"LL
room Buho, 7 pc., $11.17 -k, . '·
r~
lncludOI Boddlna.Country Plr)o •mo
Food DNtor. Julio
Dlnotto Wkh . .. Chlifl, Wlbb. Clll 114-1414231, 1.80Q.
110.11 Wook.OPEN: lloncfoy 352.0231.
Thru Soturdor, ll.m. to lp.m.,
flmoll Booton Tonllrl2 end 3
Sundly 12 Noon TIN llp.m. • 2~d,
ttiD. uch. lloko~
111101 OW ":"' 7 On 141,
34
In Cont"'!"J
_L
ng dogo. ·
·
AMC -Uri · Pornoronlon
SWAIN
AUC'TKIN l FURNITURE. 12 ~Blood Uno. l180.114Olivo St., Golllpotll. Now • Uood
tumttw•, Mtt. ., Wlll.rn l AMC Porrwronlln,. ohoto ond
wormed, 304-47WICI3.
Work boolo. 114-44W181.
AMC'!"t'illorld Cocker spo~11,
VI'RA FURNITURE
114-44W181
l.hooopoo'o,
Toy - - . noo
LIVING 110011: Bolo I Choir,
lhoto
lnd
2111.
.· 304-471l111t.OO~ Rocllno&lt;6o 1141.00;
Swlnl "ocltor, $11. • CoiCoo &amp;
End Tobloo, Mt.OO i'ti.DINIHQ AMC Mglllorld -nllno,
ROOM: Tobia Whh 4 Poddld hod lhoto one~-....., 304-t!l.
Chllro, IMG,OO; Country Plno 2111.
Dlnotto Whh lonoh And 3
Chllro $211.00· IIIIOitlntl 2 AMC lloglotorld lllborlon H•ky
Door Hllo!!, iM'IIL qr ....00 111241171
. ond ""'"""·
'
-· .114Sot; Dok ••blot ....a Wlllt 1
Bow
....
Chlln,
N2t.OO.IEDROOII: -or lotio
, _ SUMo (5 po.l. S14t.OO; 4
~!.. Choat, $14.11; IIMik
•

Bit :t,;:
wO::"~. C:~
In Tho Oollpotlo Aloo.

::,:;:-.:.oz::·

~

.f·
. •./

11~
:.Q:.,.
0 Rln Tin Till, K·l Cop

~':rtb~:.~""::!

Ill:
lloyol, Ful
Oolo Club,
Porrwroy.
Mombor· Jlm'o Form ~1_., SR. 35,
ohlp lncludlna . , . , _ And Wo« OotU
, IM-44W777;

Portablt

MV WAY lACK TO

=

15 Cu. Ft. Allrlgorllct leo Mokor

*"'
5200 BTU Air

LEAVE T"EM TllERE ..
'fi.IE ONLV' Wf« I CAN

'

Plt11 1or ...., ewko old, .,.,
SWolt pot I I - I14-111Z-®IIZ
UP; IIIII .Chovr- Cmollor;
11112 AIIC S.W.; AI Prlold To
Rot Torrlor pupploo, 304-471- SoUl BID Auto Soloo, Hlglnny
11101.
1ID N. IM..._

J.D. 4JO.E winch, 4Jrw.
lloytog Wuhor, Excolllnl Con- old., I WIY bloclo, now - ·
dhCOnfl100. IM-24H42L
all olno. liuohlng. 132,8011. 114-

Chill FI'MI.Il 21 Cu ~ • Olrto
'
· ro.,
4018
•
20" Blcycto. 1

.,'

lo ....Ct.tvroll4
·IIIIMI"-'-"--"'
-a:"rot!!i.r;.;,,
11115
Chovralll Cllefrrt~, lin, Pord
...
l'oltlvo; '!Jil'~ForiLEXP.i,
....

Household
Goods

5I

,. .

. (I) Ylclao Po.-

·
1111 Nlloon Blntro; 11117 NliMft

Roglotorld Bilek And Whho,
1Jv1r And Wllho, Dolrnotlon
flupo For IIIIo. Roody c . t 3td..IM-141-1711
'
.
Boaillorld Schnouzor
R..-.11·-• Htmo•·-n
.. · ••·
'

~·

-~

e.-oo Olllwl
()) • Ill Clle. • ae

_ , . llochl"!, Roko,_ !'"""· 1112 YW Clmpor VIII, llctory
At:. itD,teO. aw-281- buln-ln: oto~, , rofrla., olnli,
bodl, $31100......JIIN3»
11522.
380 Klllbrol Orovlly Bid, lko 11115 Ford Ptct...,tnrck: loodld,
- . $11011. :ID4-t374011.
F-180. Muot - · 10 , _ . . .• .
• ..... troclor ~h ~-. 11,500. eon 114-44MH•.
Boll.
ConCNio • plootlc uptlc llnko,
&gt;N•..
•• Ran Evan. Enterprl111, J1ck- $311. Phonli .._.71-11111.
1117 1-10 Blaar, 414, &amp;..dedi
oon OH 1-IOH3l'.f.821
Tohoo Plckioao. COM 114o2151J.
•
.
- ·
For Solo: cam Plckorll, New 11012, 0r 114-2561ooo.
Grovely Tractor Rolary -or, ldoo 321 OU.. 1 And. • Ptow, euntvotor, snow alido, Plokoro. ~ ,_,_ n 74
Mo
. torcycles
Sulky And Dual Wltotlo. Will l.ovor ~ - · Drlllo, =,...,,.;-,_,.;.,;,,;.;,_.Soli SoporltL 1~1.
Noll
::r Wltotl Dilkl. 1112 Hondo CS.l110 CIIIOiorn.
Utllhy ,_1-: "- - ;1: ' : ' tiroo, now por1o, OllroL
Klac:'.ooood Wood-.,:: Floltl Roldy Equlpmout.
'o l-11-2314
Door; lruo Trim
F11111 ~ AI. 1Z4 And
lloworo, Uood Ono \'-. CIJim. IIIP. Rood, Jocbon, Ohio. 76 Auto Parts &amp;

::l..tullnctudld,·- .-

5:00pm

3br, It AI. 141, $300Jmo.
31 Homes for Sale
Roloroncoo Roqulrld. 114-+16ABSOWTELY MUST IELLII 0024 Allor,lp.m.
Rlduold To Soli: 2 Story 3br
Comtt 1.a1 In Cholhlro, Ohio, Roomy :J.IR noun on Bullor·
PDIMrOJ, blth and 112, fur·
Excollo,.. Conclllon. Fllnonclng nut,
Avlltobll. 104-132-IIU, 1104' nllhed, diPQII~ 11111, rtlnncoo. IIW~8445
132-1170, 814-317441.

Antiques

Smell 1br Aportmont, 1 Court
Slro«, Khchon Whn SIO'io,

1 tltdroom · home daM to
ond hOIIIftll, mlfonco
lnd dopoolt.:J04.i7W165,

3-BR on . Unootn Hgto.,
Pomeroy. 114-1112·788G ohor

53

..,
-,r old FE llyn wotor pump,
complolo whh l ocoorllo rtldy_ to - · 114-1112·
S1U tit•"1:00pm
Buy ., oan. Rlvorlno Antlquoo,
1124 E. lloln II,., Pornoroy.
HiluN: II.T.W. 10:00 un.to 1:00
p.m., Bundoy , :00 to 1:00 p.m.
114-1112·2121.
Old llohloil cldor pr111, 304571-28G4.

56 ,Pets for Sale

...

·"' ...11 ,

EVI!NING

NlcoiJ F,..lohod ~.
111115 Redmon 14170, zt&gt;r, 2 lbr, Alii lo Ubrory, porldng,
lllthl, 20d Dock, WID, AC, cantn~l hi~ tlr,. ,.,.,.net ,..
tl3,000. 1*""110111•1 Sool qulrld. 114-141.0:1311.
11111 Fllml"ll 14170, I bod- Furillohod Entoilner, tmiMO.
""""" 2 bithl, Ill ollctrlc, Dopoolt Roqurlld. utiiMIII Plld
cont,.l olr, u"""-tlng with No Polo, 101 112 Iacono1
blockl thot oxlll. tt7.000. You Avonuo, OllllpoNo, 114-371-2171.
llonl304 411 20011.
Fumlohod Ellk:lonc)', tt65/mo.
2-bdml moblit - · 12152 on Utllhloo Paid, llhora loth 807 ·
1.111 1tere lei, near Chtst•r, Socond Avo, Golllpotlo 1 liU4&amp;.
·'
~.800.00 olio 114-_,
44_11 Aftor 7p.m.
2br lloblto Homo, Clll 114-288· Groclout living. 1 ond 2 bod1780.
.
room oportmilnll at ,~
Manor
ond
Rl
1
lloblll homo noodo loto of Aportmontrln Mldcl~o rt. Frum
~111
~·•
I
"
EOH
t•·1
work, priold to go, 304-4511-11170.
•• · - · ~···· •
·
·
~
Newly romodolod 2 ond 3 bod1/,111(/li(
room ·-rtmonto
In Mlcldllpoll,
.,.....
0 1tt 1, NEA, lftc.
2WIDbotho,
Equl.,..,
khchono.
hook-upt
•. Aefnnce
and ~..!:::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::~
dopooh Nqulrod. p - 11411115"'448 ohor 1:00pm.

Place your
Clao oilied today :
8Jld hold out
· your hand ...

KnocU.

KIT ' N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlpt

Apartment
for Rent

32 Mobile•Homes
lor Sale

·

.0Ctober7 1991

OhiO

•

Your charllooks very encouraging In re·
gard to Improved llnenc:lal condltlona
tor tho 'fMI lhead. II aM goes well. rou ·
shOUld be able to add 10 your r&amp;aou.-. IM you could also spend more ,
than uiUal.
1
LIIIIA (lepl. 2S-Oct. 13) Hyou are fry·
Ina to coCfeCI 111'1 overdue obligation
· trom atriend today, don't beal around
lho bulh. Exprlll youraoll Clearly. but
don't be cruel. Kncrll wnere to look lor
romance and you'H lind 11. The Aatro-

Graph Matchmaker lnslanlly reveals ARIES flllrch 21·Apnf 11) II you have
which signa are romanllciiiJ perfecllor ' volunteered to lake care o1 a critical
you . Mall $2 plus a lona, 118fl, ad· maller lor another, glvo lllhe lime and
dressed. stamped envelope to Match· attention 11 d - -. Don't lOok for
use
hBII· hearled
maker. c/o lhll newspaper, P.O. Box shorlcuts nor
91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428.
measures.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-llow_ 22) Be cognl· . TAURUS (Aprii2IHiaJ 20) Individuals
zant of your BBII·Inlertists today, but you're Involved with will roopect you
also be aware of how lhey are lnterwo- more todiY - 11 you use the power you
ven wflh the needs of olhers. Don't just poaaeaa ludlcloully. OM\versely, II you
look to leather your nest
,
thrOw your weight around. you'lllvoke
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) II you a hostile response.
get Involved In a slluallon with a lrland OEMIII lllaJ 21.,u,. 20) Guard
tOday, either supporllllully or back oil • agllnll tendencies todiY to begin
completely. Having a tool In each camp things you miY nevM Clnlsh. II you on·
will see to 11 that your contrlbullon counler complicatiOns, rour enlhtilldoesn't counllor much.
asm levol could wallle,
CAPRICORN IDee. 22....... 11) When · CANCI!R IJ- 21-.luiJ 22) Don 't lay
socializing with lr'-ndl 1oday, don't teet down 100 rMY Nlelloday thai you will
you have to buy lhofr companionship : lnalal others loflow. Your probabilities
with llt'llnconvenlenl commitment or by lor gtttlnv lhem to comply with your
picking up labs thll should be shared , wl.,_ aro ralher thin.
·
by all.
, LI!O IJulr
22) You n)lght b. .tAOUAIIIUS (J8n. 2H'eb. 11) II lhlngl · !her l,_doulfy generous with thOM
lhat have a direct Impact on your car- : you kMo or IIIIlCh too many llringl to
are Nnnlng rathef IIIIOOihly 11 th'-.llnno, ., whitt you glvt. Both lXI,_ could
don'tlnltlate any un-sary changea•• cause complications. Find a middle
What "aln'l" broke lflould not be liKed. road .
PIICIS IFab. 2Hiarch 201 Your OUI· · YIIIGO (Aug. JS.Iepl. 221 Your powers
look and allllude could have a much ol obM&lt;Yatlon could be qulle lQlla toelronger ellecl on olherl today t'*t • day. Untonurtlt.ly, you m1g1tt tocua on
rou mar r..llze. Try to be upbeal llld · negallvt probabllltlle 1nllead or PQIIopllmlsllc Instead ol vlcfllatlng and . ' live on8i. ~ your lllfnklng.
•doubtlul .

IS-A.,._

.

ali"

Northern Expolttrt
MIOO'- lnd Joel are
lllanded whan lhtlr 2J.Ine
~down . SIJ.reo Q

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Monday, OCiober 7, 1991

Pomeroy~lddleport, Ohio

·Liz, beau
make it No.8
'

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LOS OLIVOS, Calif. (AP) ~
Elizabeth Taylor and ordinary guy
Larry Fonensky rook the plungealong with a skydiving intruder yoder a swirl of airborne reporters
and photograpl\ers trying to
gli mpse the screen star's eighth
wedding.
.
Miss Taylor, 59, and Fortensky,
. a truck driver 20 years her junior,
were at a gazebo altar Sunday at
Michael Jackson's whimsical Nevcrland ranch when a parachutist
wearing a helmet camera dropped
in, landing within 100 feet of ihe
couple.
.
Guards seized Scott Kyle Harris,
a 34-year-old free-lance journalist
from Sun Valley, and took him
away :in handcuffs.
The couple then···exchanged
vows and a flock of white doves
flew skyward, capping a star-studded sunset ceremony performed by
lifestyle
guru
Marianne
Williamson. Jackson, a close
friend, and Miss Taylor's eldest
son, Michael Wilding, gave away
the bride.
The parachutist was cited for
trespassing and released.
The Oscar-winning star of ·
"Who's Afraid of Virginia
Woolf?" and "Butterfield 8" met
husband No.7 in 1988 when both
were at the Betty Ford Clinic 10
kick drugs. She announced their
enga~ement in July with the
prom1se: '·'This is it!"
Exclusive rights to' cover the
ceremony were sold 'to photographer Herb Ritts and gossip columnist Liz Smith, with the proceeds
going toward AIDS research, a
cause championed by Miss Taylor.
"SHE DID IT!" Smith
exclaimed in her column in Newsday today. "In spite of 15 maddening helicopters overhead that totally drowned out the words of her
marriage ceremony, and ·the
parachutist who landed within 20
feet of the minister in the middle of
the wedding, Elizabeth the Queen
took as her consort last evening
commoner and construction worker
Larry Fortensky."
Miss Taylor wore a bright yellow floor-length Valentino dress
and Fortensky donned a white dinncr jacke~ Smith reported.
The 160-slrong guest list reportedly included Gerald and Betty
Ford, Gregpry Peck, director Franco Zeffirclli, Arsenio Hall, Pia
Zadora. Geprge Hamilton, Liza .
Minnelli, Merv Griffin, Quincy i
Jones and "Home Alone" star
Macaulay C6.
Nancy Reagan attended, but her
husband sent word he was detained
by business, Smith said. Miss Tay·
lor's mother, Sara, was taken in a
wheelchair to the front row.
The ranch 100 miles nortl)west
of Los Angeles offered security
and a semblance of seclusion,
despite the dozens of reporters and
photographers who tried to infiltrate by groilnd and air.
Arrivals in limousines were
identifled at the walled gate to the
2,700-acre ranch, then escorted
through an airport-style metal
detector. The property includes an
amusement park and a zoo stocked
with exotic pets such as llamas.
Fifteen minutes before the ceremony, a flccl of media helicopters
lifted off from a nearby airport and
descended upon Neverland.
To deter them, Jackson set up a
score of tethered weather balloons
- some with happy faces - that
floated up to 700 feet in the sky.
But daring helicopter piloiS navigated between the balloons, at
times passing w\thin hundreds of
feet of each other.
·
_ Miss Taylor" ~as 18 when she.
married Conrad Nicholson
"Nicky" Hilton in 1950. After
divorcing Hilton, she married actor
Michael Wilding, then producer
Mike Todd, singer Edd1e Fisher
and ac10r Richard Burton. She and
Burton divorced in 1974, remarried
in 1975 and divorced again 1hat
same year.
In 1976, she married Virginian
John W. Warner, and helped his
successful campaign for the U.S.
Senate in 1978. They divorced in
1982.

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Vol. 42.-·No. 109
Copnlghled 11191

Pomeroy Council votes
to giVe up mini-parks
By BRIAN J. REED
. Sentinel News Starr

-

wiU not
maintain 1he Court Street miniparks effective Nov. 14, That decision was made at the regular meeting of Pomeroy Village Council on
Monday nighl
The larger mini-park is owned
by Pomeroy Altomey J.B. O'Brien
and the smaller by Ohio Valley
Publishing Company. However, the
village has maintained a lease for
$100 a year on the parks and village employees have cut the grass
and otherwise maintained the
parks. Those leases expire on Nov.
14.
Several individuals have planted
herbs, flowers and otherwise beautified the parks in the past several
· years, and the mini-parks have
been the site of several events ,
~:specially during the summer. An
The village of Pomeroy

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HEAVY DAMAGE • Fire damage to the
second story or the home or Patricia M. Hindy,
Middleport, was heavy, and there was extensive

water and smoke da.mage to the downstairs.
Cause or the lire has not been determined. Dam·
age was estimated at $16,000.
-

-

A house owned by Patricia M. cause has not been determined. ·
Hindy, at 161 North Fifth Ave.,
Byer set damage at $12,000 to
Middleport, was heavily damaged the structure and $4,000 to the ~onby fire MO!l&lt;Jay afternQOll.
tents. It was re~orted that Hmdy
According to Assistant Fire doeshave msurance.
.
Chief KC'nny Byer, fire damage
Fueman Don Geary rece1ved -~
was contained to the second floor strained left knee and bums on h1s
of the two-slory frame structure, nght knee. He was transported by
allhough there was considerable the EMS to Veterans Memonal
smoke and water damage to the Hospital where he was treated and
lower floor. The fire, Byer said, released.
started in an upstairs bedroom. The
The fire was reported at 12:14
p.m. and the ftre111cn we!.'? back at

tion whether In loonglng or
fully reclined pos~lon$.

(Editor's Note: October 6·12
has been declared "Fire Preven·
tion Week.'' The awareness cam·
paign is sponsored by the Nation.'
a! Fire ·Protection Association,
the U.S. Fire Administration, the
Ohio Fire Marshall's Office and
local lire and EMS ,departments.
This is the second part in a series
or stories focusing on fire safety
and local lire prevention efforts.)

...:a..,... 'MW&amp;l&amp;

TeUCHIIGDGIIf

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Staff
Have you mapped out an escape
route in the event lhat your home
catches lire?"
If a fire breaks out in your
home, the best chances for your
survival are a working smoke
detector to warn you and your family and knowing the escape routes
out of your house.
According to ligures released by
the Ohio Pepartment of Heallh.
over 4,000 Americans failed lo
escape from fire and perished in
their own homes last year. Nearly'".
200 Ohioans lost their lives and
nearly I ,500 more were seriously
injufe!] from fire in 1990. Over 75
percent of Ohio's fire-related facilities and injuries occur in the home.

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Clerk Brenda Morris pointed out
that the declaration was made in
the CDBG application, but Reed
stated that he felt that a council resolution needed to be passed. No
. action was taken, although Seyler
stated that he would mention the
'need for a declaration to Village
Administrator John Anderson, who
filed the application.
Continuedon page 3

Two local musicians with a
national reputation will be the reathe station at 2:Uj p.m. !'here was lured entertainment at lhe annual
reportedlyanadultontheflfStfloor meeting of the Meigs County Farm
who after smeUing smoke rescued Bureau, set for October 15 at 7:13
~tcfQ!lf•Yllllf-old yoUil~S.ter from.ljle p.m.
Accol'dirig to Rex E. Shenefield,
upstairs of the house and' then Bureau
President, Kendra Ward
called the fue department Neither
and
Bob
Bence from Langsville
were injured.
.
.
will
present
a program featuring
Middleport had two engmes and
music
performed
on the dulcimer
a squad on the scene with II fireand
guitar,
·
men . Pomeroy assis1ed with an
Kendra, a native of Gallia Counengin,e and a squad with seven
ty, Ohio, started her musical career
men.
at an early age. Her father and
grandmother were both dulciJliler
players, and by the time Kendra
was in the fifth grade, she was performing· with the Ward Family
Band.
alternative escape plan with two
In 1977, Kendra acquired· her
e&gt;its out of every room, especially first hammered dulcimer during a
lhc bedrooms.
.
visit to West Virginia, and has
- Draw a ~i mple floor plan of become one of the premier players
your home. identify each room and in the country. She is always in
locale windows, doors, corridors demand as a festival pedormer and
and stairways.
workshop leader, and has published
- Draw black arrows to show two instruction books for the hamnormal escape routes and red mcred dulcimer.
arrows to mark alternative routes in
Like Kendra, Bob Bence has
case fire bloclls stairways or doors. been an entertainer his entire life,
• In an apartmen~ use stairways '· but it hasn't always been musically.
to leave the building. Never use an He was a part of a comedy group
eleva1or during a fire. In a two- which performed a long-running
story house, use bedroom windows weekly radio program in Cine inas an alternative exit to the roof or nati. Since meeting Kendra in
ground.
. 1983, Bob has developed a passion
- Identify and agree on an out· for traditional music. He was
side meeting place where every- recorded four albums with Kcndrn,
body must go immediately after and shares her goals of perpetualleaving the house.
- Once out, story out and teach
family members to never re-enter a
burning house·.
· Make sure each family member know s how to call lhe fire
department from a neighbor 's
house and knows the em.ergency
phone number.
Jacobs also stressed the importance of practicing the escape plan
with the enti re family. Smoke
Continued on page 3

'•

· 1,~~,\:.,\~
Iii'

'

BOB BENCE and KENDRA WARD

ing and passing on this vftal'part of
American folk culture.
Together, Bob and Kendra have
traveled across the country and ·
across the Atlantic, appearing at
hundreds of schools, festivals,
resorts, senior citizens: groups and
even on street comers. Their repcr.
toire includes traditional mountain
music, bluegrass, Celtic music, and
original music.
Mr. Shenefield said that tickets
for the steak dinner will be $5 for
adults and $3 for children . The
meal will be prepared and served
. by the Eastetn Band Boosters.

Tickcls may .be purchased at the
office, located at 382 EaSt Secorid
Strecl in Pomeroy, or by contacting
Jeff Warner at Nalionwide Insurance, or reservations may he made
by calling 992-2403. Others having
tickets for sale are: Rex Shenefield,
Alan Holler, Donna Davidson,
Pauline Atkins, Alvin Tripp,
George Holter, David King, Ziba
Midkiff, Norman WiU, Aaron
Sayre, Nita Yost, Larry Montgomery and Maida Mora.
All members, family and friends
of the organization are welcome to
auend. ·

,......_.......

Supreme Court rules against
Ravenswood steelworkers

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Residential fires arc the mosi
serious fire problem in Ohio. Fire
occurs in an Ohio home on the
average of once every 30 minutes.
Children under the age of five and
older adul~ over age 65 are at the
highest risk of dying in a residential fire. Many of those lives can be
saved with early warning from
working smoke alarms and knowing two ways out of the house.
"One day, without warning ,
your life and the lives of your family may suddenly depend on
whether you know how to escape
from a fire," Meigs County Health
Department Director Jon Jacobs
said on Monday. "Planning to
escape in the event of fue is a fundamental safety measure for every
fam1.,y. " .
.
The' Meigs County Health
Department, in cooperation with
the Ohio Department of Heallh ,
strongly recommends ihat parents,
guardians, ·and other care· givers .
take the time to develop an escape
plan from your home or apartment
and then practice your plan with
home ftrc escape drills.
Jacobs suggests the following
escape plan:
- Develeo a primary and an

award of $12,000 in Community
Development Block Grant funds to
the village_for the purpose of
demolishing abandoned and unsafe ·
structures.
. Bruce Reed emphasized the
need for .a declaration by council
that those areas targeted by the
CDBG application are slum and
blighted areas. According to Reed
the projec1 could be rejected at the
state level without such a declaration.

Ward, Bence to perform at 1991
M!igs County Farm Bureau dinner

Plan escape routes i~ ~ase of fire

Enjoy beautiful design, superb craftsmanship,
solid quality, and exceptional value/

"Art in the Park" event has been
held during the annual Communives~i\y l!~n.ll.~oncert each ..summer,
and for the past two years an herb
fest has been held there. Sant.a
Claus also visits the mini-park for
several days during the Christmas
parade. .
Specific reasons for not renewing the leases were not given at the
meeting, although the village has
faced increasing problems in maintaining the parks. Councilmen
. Bruce Reed and Bill Young voted
to renew the leases, and council
member Betty Baronick, who seconded Bryan Shank 's motion to
discontinue the leases, slressed that
she did lhink the parks were a valuable asset to the community.
Mayor Richard Ser,lcr also stated that he fell the v1llage shou1d
have continued the leases.
·
CDBG action discussed
Council discussed the recenl

Middleport home damaged by fire

B) PLUSH PUB-BACK
REC~ER orlers total relaxa-

. f)

1 Soc lion, 10 PogH 25 cenla
A Muhlmedlo Inc. Ntwtpaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, October a, 1991

•

1
.

Tbe Eighth Annual 4-il: Alumni
and Advisor Camp will be held on
Saturday and Sunday, OcL 12 and
13 at Canter's Cave 4-H Camp.
Th~ camp will get underway at 3
p.m. on Saturday and end at II
a.m. on Sunday.
.
Anyone interested in the 4-H
program, including 4-H advisors,
former 4-H memben, carnpen and
their IIJIOIM arc invited to attend.
The cost is $18 per person which
·includes two meals. lodging and
III8Cb.
Call the. Meiss County Extension Office at 992-6696 for reser-

..

,.I

CHARLESTON. W.Va. (AP) The sl,ate Supreme Court said the
United Steelwork~s union must go
back to circuit court if it wants
access to the confidential divorce
records of Ravenswood Aluminum
Corp.'s chairman.
The Supreme Court rejected the
union's attempt to overturn a lower
court order keeping the records
secret. T·he union · contends the
lower court's order violates 'First
Amendment free SpeeCh rights.
. The decision was issued Friday,
but copies were not made pubhc
until Monday.
Tbe justices said the Steelworkers should ask Ohio County Circuit
Judge CaUie Tsapis 10 dissolve her
injunction keeping the records private.
The case involves. the union's
distribution of material it found in
\)

the divorce files of Ravenswood
Aluminum Chairman R. EmiJ!elt
Boyle.
About 1,700 union members
have been 6ff the job at
RavenswOod Aluminum since Nov.
I in a bitter labor dispute.
· Boyle obtained an order from
Tsapis in August prohibiling the
union from releasing financial
records from the divorce files. He
said the records are confidential
and that the union obtained lhem
·improperly. intending to smear
him.
The union alleges that Boyle
worked out a secret financial
arrangemen't with an Ohio aluminum .plant when the United
Steelworkers struck the plant in
1986.
.
union said Boyle publicly
announced he was taking · ~ · wage·

The

)

'

..

to win concessions from work- ·
ers·, but he actually arranged a
secret $500,000 payment io himself.
Tlic union said the !"aterlal was
in the public record and opeJJ for ·
scrutiny. It appealed Tsapis' decision to the Supreme Court, saying
it did not get. a hearing before
Tsapis granted the injunction.
The Supreme Coun said the
union should have petilioned
Tsapis to rescind the order bj:fore
coming 10 the _Supreme court "and
make • record sufficient for this
court to pass on :~al issues in
any subsequent pr
ing here."
QUEEN CONTESTANTS· The 1991 Big
The unanimous·, unsigned
Bend Sternwbeel Festival will kick-orr with a
Supreme Coun order denied the
queen pal'int on Tbanday evening at 8 p.m. at
union's request "because we cannot
Melp Blab School. Coolestants from across the
decide the First Amendment ques·
county wlll ccimpete for tbe title or Sternwheel
lions raised by the union without a
Queen and tbe pullllc Is Invited to attend tbe
more complete factual record." · . pageant. Pictured, l·r, ia front are, Robin Gard·
CUI

I·

•

,,.'

ner, Aleta Bllllnpley, Michelle Wlltlqton Love
Batey, Melanie Qualls, Amy Searls, Kelly Wla.
ler,. Monica Adams and Jennifer Brookover
Rack, Mindy Harris, Tammy Miller Darcy
Stone, Mandy Eblin, Mist~ Newell, 'connie
Sauters, Carrie Gillilan, M1chele Friend and
Melliq Nentzllng.
·

·~

,

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