<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="11145" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/11145?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-20T18:59:19+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="42112">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/4f4d556c3f7b8b4ac0baac0e8cb3da16.pdf</src>
      <authentication>064fe97f62961c06a1ddcac864ed56f5</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="35153">
                  <text>'

•

.

'
"

· Page-14-The Dally Sentinel

9,1991

Wednesday, .

SCO PREMIUM

Blue Jays, .
Pirates post

SALTINE •.
CRACKERS

Page6

APPLE
.SAUCE

Vol. 42, No, 111
Copyrlghlod 1991

16 oz.

s239

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF BOTTOM

Round Steak . . . . . . . . . . .

LB.

·

$ 79

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

1
Rump Roast
49
1f4 Pork Loin.,. . . . . . . . . s1 ·
--··-·-:··-·LB. .

89(
2

By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - A new "living will" law will
help lift a burden from families and doctors of dying
patients whose views about life support are unknown,
the Ohio State Medical Association said.
" We urge people to consider what their wishes
are on this issue, and talk it over witli their family
and their personal physician,'.' Joseph Sudimac k, the
association president, said Wednesday.
Sudimack joined represenlatives of the Ohio Hospital Association and other health care providers at a
l)Cws conference displaying brochures and forms that
will be available to people who do not have living
wills.

F. F.
PEANUt BUTTER
FUDGE and
CARMEL FUDGE

COOKIES
8.5 OZ. BOX

Steaks/Roasfs. . . . .

LB.

(

BUCKET

Cubed Steak. . . . . . . . . . . .

s

$249

LB.

99

ARMOUR
VIENNA
S,AUSAGE

FLAVORITE

Wieners. . . . . . . ~,~ . . . . . . . . . . .:

The living wilt law, which took effect today,
authorizes adults to specify in writing if they wan•
Jife-suslainilig treatment used if they become terminally ill and are unable to communicate. ·
It allows certain family members or a guardian to
consent· ~ writinj! ~ lhe,wilhdtawal oftrealment for
people Without hvmg wills .. The measure applies to
patients who are in a terminal condition or who have
been unconscious fat at leastl2 months.
The law provides for an appeal process through
probate c·ouns- by specified family members, but not
by the slllte or by strangers.
Slarting Dec. I, the federal government will
require hospitals, nursing homes and olher institutional. health care providers to ask patients if they

S OZ. CAN

5

2 1

Merchants
discuss
promotions

FRESH

2% Milk . . . . . . . . . .

$ 79 BAKERY
1· DONUTS
DOliN
s· 79 S'. 89
1

SU~NY ~ELIGHT

.

· NO. 1 RUSSETT

Potatoes . . . . . . . . . .

15 LB.

FLAVORITE

GALLON

64 oL

--.6:7.5

(

........... 5QUART PAIL

•

460Z.

2.5

BATH-~ISSUE

59

12ROLL

2

136 oz. .

32 oz.

.------.

R,ECEIVES DONATION ·The American Legion Feeney Ben·
nett Post No. 128, Middleport, has donated $1,000 to Ronald
McDonald House. Presenting the check Co Deana Larkins, right,
Swing Manager at McDonald's in Pomeroy, is Post Commander
Dill Gilmore. Gilmore stated the donation is one of many made to
various charities ea~h year.

GROUND
99 BEEF·
s. 99 10 LB. PACKAGE

C1trus Punch . .~. . . .
POTATO CHI ·
· 99( .KEMP'S
Pringles. . . . . . . . . . ~. oz.
2
lce:(ream
STOKELY
· 69( G&amp;W
Tomato Juice . . . . .
Mini Pizza ----.. oz. 4

Deer-vehicle ~ccident reported
. A Racine man's truck received light damage as the result of a
deer-vehicle accident on Bashan Road Wednesday morning.
. Accordmg to a report from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the Slllte
Highway,Patrol, Scott D. Wolfe, 31, was northbound and struck a
deer that entered !he roadway. Wolfe was uninjured in !he accident.
Damage to Wolfe's 1988 Ford F,J50 was listed as light.
The deer left llie scene.

•

GROUND
CHUCK ·
10 LB. PA(KAGE•

Goad Only AI Powell's Super Valu
Ollar Good Ocl. 6 1hru Ocl. 12, 1991 '
U11111 Ptr (us!Omer

...---Local briefs,-----,

'

$1390
$1590

have a livin~ will or dura~le power o( attorney ..
The requ~e.ment does not apply to individual doctors, and patients are not required to have the documents m ordar to receive medical care.
. A hving will is a document in wh ic h persons
aeclare whelher certam treatment should be provided
or withheld. A durable power of attorney is a fonn
that allows persons to ap)loint someone else to make
those decisions .
. S~dimack said th~ forms were developed in con;un~pon WI.th the Oh10 State Bar Association.
. . We thmk the average person can complete !hem
WithOut any problems. Hol\'ever, we encourage people. who have quesl!ons 10 talk 10 their doctor and-or,
the11 lawyer," Sudimack said.

By BRIAN J, REED
opened and awarded earlier this · with the ownersmp of the .compaSenlinel NeWll Staff .
year.
ny, but that those individuals failed
Due to mounting problems, the
According to Commissioner to appear at the one meeting that ·
Meigs County Commissioners Richard Jones, the board has expe- was scheduled.
agreed .to cancel a contract with !he rienced increasing difficulties with
"In view of these facts," Jones
plumbmg and heating contractor th e company, especially within !he said, "I am recommending that this
for the new Department of Human pas! 30 days. Most recently, Jones board declare ParkersbiJfg PlumbServ~ces building when the board said, the firm has not been showing ing and Heating in default and that
met m tegular session on Wednes- up at the job site, now have no the assurity company be advised of
day.
.
material on site and have even our action immediately."
Plumbmg contracts for th e removed material from the job site.
Commissioner David Koblentz
butldmg have caused problems for
"Parkersburg Plumbing and seconded the motion and the board,
the board from the start: the first Heating's unwillingness to man !he by a roll-call vote, agreed to disset of !\ids were rejected in late job in a proper manner is causing a continue the conlract with Parkers1990 because no plumbing bids delay for the other contractors," burg Plumbing and Heating.
were submitted.
.
Jones said at yesterday's meeting.
The ~i~m's bondill~ com,Pany,
· P~rkersbuFg Plumbmg and "We're now at a StandstiU on the by prov1ihng an assunty bond for
Heaung of Parkersburg, V{.Va. was project at a time when we could the contractor at !he time the bid
awarded the contract for the and should be moving ahead."
was awarded, is now required to
plumbing and mechanical WQrk ·.''•'· ' ]o~s reported that the board has provide another plumbing and heat·vhen 'a sec~M i\fauo of llids were attempted ~¥erlll times to nieei ing contractor to complele the job.
'
·
!ly the en~ of the meeting, the
commissioners had conlacted the
project architect. Burgess and
Niple of Parkersburg, who in turn
was expected to contact !he bonding company.
In the only other business at the
meeting yesterday, the commis·
sioners approved a transfer o~
fund s for the dog warden, and
approved $16,300 in funds trans·
fers for the Meigs Board of Mental
Retardation and Developmental
SPECIALIST SPEAKS • Bill Grunkenmey·
Disabilities. Those MRJDD transer
of
the Ohio Cooperative Extension Office pre·
fers were necessary due to recent
sented
valuable information to Chose attendin g
bus repairs.
the
first
session or "Take Charge" on Wednes·
In addition to Commissioners
day
night.
Grunkenmeyer is an economic devel·
Jones and Koblentz, President
Manning Roush and Clerk Mary
Hobstetter also attended the meeting.

24 PAK 12 OZ. CANS

.

2 Sec11ont, 16 Pageo 25 cents
A Multlmodla Inc. Newtpaper

" Whiie you're not required to seek the advice of
an auorney before completing the forms, !hey we !!!1
•mporlant !~gal docu111ent and it may not be a bad
Idea," he S31d.
·
. Sudimack, a ~octor in Columbus, said !he association will Iii~ bvmg will kits available to 1he public
at a cost of $210 cover printing and posmge.
James Casde, president of the hospital association
said hOSJ?itals will be ready to provide patients with
mformauon.
.
" Ou: goal. as providers is to help those patients
and thelf fanulies ond\lfSiand their options under the
law and to make these critical decisions a litde easier
to make,·· Castle said.

Plumbing, heating contract
canceled by M~igs Commission

ROYAL
CROWN
COLA

$129

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, October 10, 1991

Ohio's new living will law takes effect today·

LB.

49c

LOw tonight in 40s.
Friday, partly cloudy.
High in mid 60s.

.e

LUCKY LEAF

ICES EFFECi'IVE OCT. 6 THRU OCT. 12,

FRESH PORK BUTT'

Cards: 5-H, 2"C,
7-D, 4-S
Super Lotto: ·
5-23·28-34-3542
Kicker:438619

99'(

POMEROY, OH

LB.

lliclf4: 9744

I LB. BOX

298 SECON 0 ST.

Le~\~'s._. . . . . . . . . _______.

Pick 3:771

playoff wins

'

STORE HO~S
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM ·

Ohio Lottery

..

-

EMS units answer six calls
Six calls for assistance were answered by units of Meigs County ·
Emergency Medical Services on Wednesday and early Thursday
mornmg.
. On Wednesday at 12:24 p.m ., Tuppers Plains unit went to
Chester Elementary School and took Rodney Crites to Veterans
Memonal HOSjJital. At 5:30 p.m., Ru~and unit went to Meigs Mine
2. Wilham Keifer was transported to Holzer Medical Center. At
7: 51 p.m., Middleport unit went to Overbrook Center and took
Goldie Lovins to Vetemns.
· On Thursday·at 1:15am., Rutland unit went to Slate Route 124
for Ben Barrett, who was transported to Pleasant Valley Hospilal.
At I :48 a.m., Ru~lind squad was sent to Slate Routes 692 and 143.
Tommy Withrow was taken to Veterans. At 3:57 a.m., Po!neroy
~nit went to Smilh Road and transported Weber Wood to Vetemns.

opment specialist for the OCES in Fayette
County. "Take Charge" continues on Wednesday nights at Overbrook Center through October.

'Take Charge' program gets
·underway here Wednesday

The importance of a positive
vision for the future was emphasized as "Take Charge" got underway at Overbrook Center in Middleport on Wednesday evening.
"Take Charge" is a progra m coBy JULIE E. DILLON
sponsored by the Meigs County
Sentinel News Starr
Holiday promotions were dis- Chamber of Commerce and the
cussed at Wednesday ' s regular Ohio State University Cooperati ve
meeting of !he Pomeroy Merchants Extension Service , designed to
Association held in !he conference enable community leaders to examine and select appropriate economof Bank One.
ic
development strategies and to
The merchants will sponsor a
weekend promotion, "l&gt;re-season build a sl!ategic community develKick-off,' on Thursday, Oct. 31, opment plan.
Over 40 people auended the first
through Saturday, Nov. 2 and a
group newspaper advertisement session last night, which was led by
will run Wednesday, Ocll 30 with John Rice, Dave Boothe and Bill
deadline for submiuing of ads to Grunkcmeyer, aUof the OCES .
A motivational film , "The
Dave Harris on Friday, Oct. 25. An
Power
of Vision", introduced the
advertising budget for radio and
program,
and sl!essed the impornewspaper for !he holiday season
tan
ce
of
focusing
and envisioning
was also discussed.
the
future.
Another feature for the holiday
The film explained the imporseason includes members of the
Association worki.ng ·with classes tance of vision to ancient and curfrom Pom eroy Elementary on rent civilizations . such as ancient
Christmas lice projects. As a part Greece and Rome, Spain, England,
of this project, being coordinaled France and the United Sllltes.
"Nations without vision are at
through lh~ efforts of sixth grade
··ri
sk,"
participants we re told last
teacher, Becky Triplett, Associanight.
tion m.embers wanting to particiThe philosophy of Victor Franpate are' responsible for placing a
kl,
who was a prisoner at
six-foot Christmas tree in front of
their business by Nov. 22 fotdeco- Auschwitz Concentration Camp
ration by the elementary students. during World War II was also
·Members panicipating are encour- examined. Frankl cited vision for
aged to provide decorations for the future as his means for survival
. th eir trees relating to their business during his imprisonment.
which. would allow the students to · i hose attending last night's sesbecome better acquainted with sion later "broke'out" into teams to
what that business offers !he com- brainstorm and create economic
munity. A date for decoration wiU development ideas based on devcl·
be announced at a later date.
opment strategies presented by
In other matters, Bruce and Rila Grunkenmeyer. Grunkemeyer then
Reed of Pomeroy, announced to the led the groups in evaluation of their
Association that their famil~ would work. These projects will be the
be interested in leasing the larger · subject of further discussion and
mini-oark in Pomeroy under the evaluation in the weeks to come.
Con ·tinued on page 3
Chamber President Dr. Nick

Ro binson presen ted the resulls a ysis that will be conducled as a part
business inventory survey that he of "Take Charge."
co ndu cte d earli er this. fall and
"Take Charge" continues . for
Steven L. Story presented informa- 1hree more Wednesday evenings at
tion about a community needs ana l- 7 p.m. at Overbrook Center.

Festival schedule
All entertainment unl ess mherwisc noted wi ll be he ld at the levee
area in Pomeroy.
Thursday
8 p. m.· Miss Stcmwhecl Festival P~can1 m Meigs High SchooL
Friday
130 p.m. - Meigs High School Band.
4 p.m.. Food booths open.
7 p.m.. County Choir at the Trinity Chu rch in Pomeroy.
8 p.m.. Mike Farcnkoff and the Band on Ta p and Captains'
BonfJre.
Saturday
9: 15a.m.· Opening ceremony with nag raising at Pomeroy and ~ .
Mason by American Legions.
9:20 a.m. - Fireman 's Parade.
9:30 a.m. - Crafters open.
I0 a.m. - Queen announcement and Captains' welcome.
II a.m. · Food booths open, whistle blowing coOlest, Barbershop
Quartet.
II :30 · 5K Run/Walk Awards.
Noon· Denver Rice with his toile! scat guitar.
2 p. m. . Stern whee) "link" to connect Pomeroy :md Mason.
3 p. m.· Stcrnwheel races.
5 p.m. · Ster:nwheel mce awards.
7 p.m.. Shady River Shufners.
8 p.m.· Crossover Band.
All day activilies
Baseball card show at the Pomeroy'M unicipal Auditori um.
"Herbal Harvest and Country Fair" in the mini-park.
Flower show at Meigs County Public Library on Saturday and
Sunday.
Mason activities
Activities in Mason include the 5K Run /Walk at 10 a.m., a
chicken barbecue and fish fry at !he Mason Fire Department at II
a.m., a pig roast at I p.m., gospel music at 4 p.m. and a teen dance
at 8 p.m. at !lie Mason Community Center.

l

�..

.

.
•

October 1 1991 ·

Commentary

'-

,,.
--

·'

The Daily Sentinel

-

.

WASHINGTON - President
Bush's most telegenic Cabinet
member, Jack Kemp, has a deluxe
TV studio, built by the taxpayers
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS..MASON AREA
an~ apparently designed to inc~ease
natiOnal exposure for the presidential wannabe.
INC. '
But in the eight months since
the studio was built, Kemp has·
never used it. The huge room with
ROBERT L. WINGETI
its
1,000-watl dimmers, black
Publisher
velour curtains, stately desk and
American flag backdrop has
PATWffiTEHEAD
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
become
an embarrassment to the
Assistant Publisher/Controller
General Manager
Department of Housing and Urban
Development. It is locked up and
AMEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association and
almost never entered. The ''QUIET
lhe American Newspaper Publisher AsSO&lt;iatiorc
·
RECORDING" sign in the hall has
been· lit only Jour times for minor
LETIERS OF OPINION Bie welcome. They should be Jess !han 300
projects.
. ·
words long. All Jenen are subject to editing 111d must be signed wilh name,
Throughout
HUD headquarters,
address and telephone number. t(o unsigned letters will be published. Letters
.
employees
are
whispering that
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.
HUD Secretary Kemp built the studio to get his mug on TV more
often. Now HUD, already burdened
by a reputation for mismanagement
and financial scandals, is scrambling to come up with other reasons
to justify the expense.
HUD officially claims the room
was designed to make training
videos to save money. so HUD

~MULTIMEDIA,

Delay of confirmation vote
seen as blow to Bush

employees would not have to travel
to Washington frofl\ fa~-flung
offices. The official line is'lhat
Kemp wasn't even aware that the
studio existed until we asked about
it.
Ttlat is hard to believe.
Well-placed HUD sources told
our associate Jim Lynch that Kemp
had to know. His closest aides
spread the word late last year that
the studio was being buill fqr him,
. The original plan was to outfit the
studio with satellite capability so
Kemp could get instant access to
the networks and orchestrate his
own press conferences.
If Kemp did not actually order
the construction, he must have
heard it. The studio is down the
hall and around the comer from his
own I Oth-floor office. Did he miss
the sounds of demolition when the
construction crew tore out two
walls, the floor and the ceiling?
We can't blame Kemp for
yearning for the lights. He didn't
leave politics and accept the HUD
job because he wanted a secure
pencil-pushing job. When Kemp
took over the scandal-ridden HUD
in 1989, it was the perfect spot for

DyTOMRAUM
Associated Press Writer
WASHJNGTON - The Senate's agonized decision to postpone a
vme on Supreme Coun nominee Clarence Thomas is a major blow to
President Bush and raises substantial doubts that the nomination can survive.

But the debacle also focuses fresh attention on Congress' own short·
comings and its stumbling efforts to deal with sensitive problems.
Less than a week after the confirmalion of Thomas seemed assured,
shellshocked White House allies found themselves scrambling to piece
together a salvage operation.
The task of disputing allegations by a fonmer Thomas aide, University
of Oklahoma law professor Anilli Hill, that he sexually harassed her a
decade ago was turning out to be a formidable one.
·
White House aides were surly and those close to the president were
expressing incredulity over what was happening. To disprove- the charges.
the White House provided reporters with names and telephone numbers of
people who would speak on Thomas' behalf.
"It's a matter of who you believe," said Vice President Dan Quayle,
underscoring the difficulty the Senate will have in sorting out the she
said-he said narure of the allegations and denials.
Thomas supporters conceded Tuesday night that they didn't think they
hiid the needed 51 votes at the time to win his confirmation. "I can
count,·· said a dispirited Senate Republican leader Bob Dole of Kansas.
The week-long delay will give opponents of Thomas more time to
muster their arguments. And the gravity of the charges provide an easy fig
leaf for any wavering senator io cast a vote against him.
Supporters counter that it will also give Thomas a chance to clear his
name. But few were taking odds on the outcome.
Some senators said that along with the allegations against Thomas, the
Senate itself was on triaL
"What concerns me as much as the allegations themselves is the U.S.
Senate appears not to take th~ charge of sexual harassment seriously,"
said Sen. Barbara Mikulski, D·Md., one of two women in the 100-mem·
bcr chamber.
·
. Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell, D-Maine, said the delay was
i[ilportant "to the integrity of the Senate" and to "the integrity of the
Sppreme Court."
• For Bush, who staked so much on the nomination, the delay was a par·
ticularly bitter pill to swallow.
: Despite his immense popularity in the international arena and his high
puplic approval ratings, the president has had a woeful time getting any·
thing through Congress.
: • Most of his legislative domestic proposals - from education, crime
and transportation bills lO his long-pushed proposal for lower capital gai ns
talles- have languished in Congress.
;• And he has had a particularly hard time with his nominees.
· : John Tower was rejected as defense secretary because of allegations
that he was a womanizer and an alcoholic.
: And Bush's current choice for CIA director, Robert M. Gates, is
111arled in allegations that as deputy director he slanted intelligence data to
fit Reagan administration political views.
· The Senate has not yet acted on Bush's nominations to fill two vacancfes on the Federal Reserve Board, nor has it voted on his recommendation to give Fed Cha.inrian Alan Greenspan another four-year tenm.
· The Senate has routinely sat on a range of other Bush nominations,
regularly prompting cries of outrage from the White House.

..

.

.:

Kemp's expensive TV studio collects cobwebs

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

•

Page-2-The Dally ~ntlnel
Pomeroy--MiddlepO'i1, Ohio
Thursday, October 1O, 1. ~91 .

By Jack Anderson
and Dale.VanAtta

a mim with desi!lJIS on the White
House to show hiS stuff as a tough
administrator. He was an instant hit
with his pledges to clean up the
An eerie quiet followed the
mess.
completion
of construction. The .
But then something happened.
The HUD scandal got moved to the srudio was seemingly forgotten for
back pages and then .disappeared. months, perhaps because word
As time wore on, it became appll!- began to spread that it could be
.ent that Kemp's crusade was, a low- . seen as a vain waste of taxpayers'
priority (or a president wno pre- dollars. HUD brass began calling it
a "Training Room." Department
ferred foreign intrigue.
Kemp's advisers •. some of them heads were ur~ed ~ one source
carryovers from his 1988 presiden· said "begged" - to use it to pr&lt;&gt;"
tial campaign, began coming up duce training videos. The room was
with schemes to get their boss in used a total of four times in May,
the news. Agency cameras rolled as June and July of this year, accordKemp joined a police raid on pub- ing to Mary Bruneue. a~istant seclie housing in Chicago a year ago. retary for public affairs at HUD.
The footage was supposed to be She anticipates the room will be
part of a video on the Kemp years . used more this faiL
Now the HUD rank and file are
at HUD, suilable for campaign use.
Then came the studio, which grumblin~. "It's sitting there as a
was kept a secret at first. HUD monstroSity," one employee tol!l
employees, some of whom barely us. "It's an embarrassment. They
have enough room to turn around have not come up with a reason to
in their own cramped offices ....: use it."·
OUTLOOK GRIM - Desperwatched in· amazement as the stu.dio took shape. HUD told us the ate Soviets could·Jurn·back to hardtotal cost was $69,932, but other line communists, or look to new
· sources speculated that the actual fascist leaders, to save them from
hunger this )Winter. There are omicost was far higher.
nous repons that the seeds of faScism are already taking root in the
rubble of communism. The Soviet
Union is flat broke. The government doesn't ~ have enough hard
currency to purchase the basics.
The food distribution system has
broken down and most available
food is liing diverted to the black
market. Stores and restaurants with
private connccti,ons can get plenty
of food, but the prices are beyond
the means of average citizens.
MINI-EDITORIAL - We
warned in the early 1980s that the
bailout from the savings and loan
debacle would cost the taxpayers
$12 billion. We were wrong. The
cost is now estimated at more than
$500 billion because politicians
and regulators prolonged the
inevitable death of the most profligate savings and loans. This staggering scandal was spawned by the
endless quest of politicians for
ways to meet the desires of their
constituents and contributors without acknowledging that there was a
price to be paid.
Copyright, 1991, United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

Seizing the daY---------,--C_o_ng_.C_la_re_n_ce_M_i--;lle_r

The L~tin phrase "carpe diem"
that was referenced .in the recent
movie "The Dead Poel,!l Society,"
appropriately describes the recent
unilateral nuclear arms reduction
initiative put forth by President
Bush. For those unfamiliar with
Latin, the literal translation of the
phrase means "seize the day and
this is just what George Bush did
with h s bold proposal.
Recognizmg the unraveling of
the Soviet Union as we've known
it, recognizing the possibility that
nuclear weapons deployed throughout the Soviet republics, that have
heretofore been under the tight
control of that country's central
government, could now fall into the
hands of dissident local govern ments, and recognizing that we as a
nation arc no longer dependent
on many of our existing nuclear
EDITOR'S NOTE - Tom Raum covers the White House for The · systems as we once were, the President moved quickly to tailor our
Associated Press.
changing requirem ents to th e
changing world scene.
In so doing, he has attempted to

as

stabilize an area of grave con.cern
that is universally perceived to be
one in dire need of addressing .
There are some, however, who feel
the President has moved too quickly, some who feel he has surrendered a strategic advantage that he
needn't have surrendered. Let's
look at what the President has proposed and let's look at how it
affects the free world's defensive
readiness and the free world's ability to help bring order to the chaotic situation that cumiiltly confronts
the Soviet republics.
·
Recognizing that the pace of
change within the Soviet Union is
so rapid as to preclude the possibility of a negotiated reduction, the
President by his actions has tried to
provide his counterpart, Mikhail
Gorbachev. with a basis to take
similar action with respect to the
Soviet's massive nuclear arsenal.
Why would they, you ask? One
can only conclude that the Boris
Yeltsins and Mikhail Gorbachevs

of this world are just as nervous as
we are about the prospect of such.
technology falling into the wrong
hands, that they too want to safe~uard against the growing possibilIty of a renegade incidenL ·
By voluntarily eliminating a
series of nuclear weapons systems
that were the source of great concern to not only our adversaries but
to our allies, as well, .the President
was able to convert what some
maintain was the inevitable scrapping of such systems into a policy
initiative that will unquestionably
enhance his stature with the world
community and more specifically
with our NATO allies.
By destroying the Lance mis·
sile and nuclear artillery shells, by
mothballing sea-based tactical
nuclear weapons, such as the Tomahawk cruise missile, and by eliminating the development of our
mobile, ground-based intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs).
the President has placed the arms

reduction ball clearly back in the
Soviets court and has given the
Soviet leadership a most convenient and timely opponurtity to further advance the arms reduction
process.
The initial reaction out of
Moscow has been favorable, but
cautious. While it ~is anticipated
that the Soviets will follow suit in
some form there has been some
concern voiced by our former cold
war adversaries that the President's
proposal came down hardest on ·
landbased ICBMs, the category of
weapons system in which the Soviets hold a clear edge, while leaving
sea-based ICBM's, a category in
which our country has a distinct
advantage, untouched.
The initial reaction in this country has likewise been positive, and
well it should be. The President has
clearly shown his strong commit·
mcnl to establis~ing a world order
that is based on cooperation, not
confrontation.'

•

Subsidizing
art
is
undemocratic
.
··- ·
· - - -- ·- Sarah Overstreet

Berryls World
..

I

Today in history

•

.
...·
'•

....
•
.

'•
'

..
.·.·.
.

This may sound odd coming thrilled me as much as anything I Helms wants the taxpayer not to
have to pay for anything he consid- National Endowment for Spans to
from someon~ who traced the pal· can remember.
ers
offensive. I think the taxpayer tax me to train athletes? Nope.
I enjoy seeing original art, listerns on her crib before she
shouldn't
have to pay for an,~ peri- How about a National EndOwment
crawled, whose parents could not tening to live music and watching
od.
for the Arts/Grand Ole Opry divistop her from making crayon dance. l want art in our lives:
This
is
a
scary
thing
to
admit,
sion, for the training of future Reba
murals on furniture, walls and even strong, accomplished and. most of
because
in
art
circles
this
kind
of
McEntires and Garth Brookses? No
. all, available. l just don't want you
her father's banjo head.
I loved to draw more than I to pay for it, unless you share my thinking usually brands one as the again .
enemy. And then, no one wants to
There arc those among us -who
loved any of my toys. and, in fact; I feelings.
play
with
you
any
more.
I
well
are
much more sophisticated about
Therefore,
I
don't
support
the
grew up to !each an for a year in a
know
the
fear
that
underpins
the
the
arts
than the rest, and I'm grate·
junior high school. I remember it as concept of a National Endowment
"government
must
support
art!"
ful
for
them . It just doesn't g1vc
·the happiest year of my life. l still Jor the Arts. It's not that I have any
position:
If
the
government
doesn't
them
the
nght to take money from
love galleries and exhibits. The use for its arch enemy Sen. Jesse
support
art,
-the
rest
of
us
sure
•.,Jhe
rest
of
us to suppon their purimpressionism exhibit I sllw at the Helms, who in his infinite wisdom
won't
do
it
and
we'll
all
grow
up
suits,
or
the
pursuits of those they
St. Louis Art Museum last summer would be arbiter of artistic merit.
with no knowledge of culture. have marked as worthy. At least,
We'll lose groun4 to other coun- not in a democracy it doesn't.
tries that put a premium on art.
·I could flO on and on about
Those among us with talent wtll grants to arusts. whose work leaves
wither away because the others will most of us scratching our heads,
refuSe to pay them lo develop their but it's not ·germane to this argu- .
By The Associated Press
gifts. We will become a nati'on of ment. I'll agree that if I have to
Today is Thursday, Oct 10. the 283rd day of 1991. There are 82 days zombie Nintelido-heads.
have my tax money go to pay for
left in the year
· I'm not so afraid anymore. This an, I'd rather it subsidize a great
Today's Highlight in History:
.
may happen for a wh~e right after pe~~ormance of "Madame ButterOn Oct. 10. 1973. Vice President Spiro T. Agnew, accused of accept- governm~nt f~ndmg ~s removed, • ny than someone who puts a Cf~!·
ing bribes, pleaded no contest to one count of federal income tax evasion, · but _I ~on 1 th1nk 11 ::Vtll last long. ctfix m a beaker of unne. I d~n l
and resigned his office.
Artisuc talent IS. S? 1mporta~t t? a think the government has the nght
On this date:
lot of us that we w1U pay foot,Just to take ou~ m?ney for any art,
In 1813 composer Giuseppe Verdi was born in Le Roncole Italy.
like those of tis who can't stand the whether I hk~ tt and Jesse Helms
In 1845: the U.S. Naval Academy opened in Annapolis, Md.
thou~ht of .a diminish~ ~ational doesn't,.or n.c!ther of us do, or '!Oth
. jn 1886, the tuxedo dinner jacket made its American debut at the Pubhc Radio .network d1g tnto our of us th1~k 1t s the greatest &amp;rustic
autumn ball in Tuxe(to Parle:, New York.
~kets any hme th~y have a fund tnumph sm~e Etch·A·~ketch .. ..
In 1911, revolutionaries under Sun Yat-sen overthrew Cpina's Manchu dnve- and espec1ally .whe~ an.y
_And the 1mpresstomsm exhibit I
dynasty.
~f NPR's government fundmg 1S enJoy~d so much last summer? I
In 1913 the waters of the Atlantic and JSacific Oceans commingled in )erked.
thank Its sponsor, the F~rd Motor
the Panam~ Canal after U.S. engineers blew up the Gamboa Dam.
Philosophically, I look at the Compa~y · T~ey certamly won
In 1935, the American opera "Porgy and Bess," with music by arts the same as any other ta~ent, some potnt~ w1th me. .
1
George Gershwin and libretto by DuBose Hayward and Im Getshwin, including athletics. If spons didn't
(C)l991
NEWSPAPER
opened on Broadway.
·
pay for itself, would I want a ENTERPRISE ASSN.

....

.

-

Merchants ...
continuecirr?m page 1 .
.
name ~f ~he Pomeroy Merchants
ASSOCIBIIOn. The Village of
Pomeroy has le&amp;se!l the property in
the p_ast but voted a! It~ regular
meettng .Monday evening not to
renew that existing lease. The Merchants Association uses the park
for a variety of events and the loss
of the use pf the park could possibly threaten those activities. Reed
stated .he would pay the money
necessary to lease the park with the
agreement that the: AssOciation lie
responsible for liability and mainte-

nance costs. Upon· discussion the
group agreed· to check liability
options with insurance companie$
in the Association.
'
Two meetings have been scheduled by 1ohn Musser, chairman of
the Pomeropevitalization commiitee, on the mterviewing of possible
consultants for the project. Those
l)leetings will be held Tuesday 'at
5:30 p.m. and anoth~r on Oct. 29 at
5:30p.m. The meetings are tenia·
tively sche.duled at the Trinity
Church in Pomeroy.

- - Area deaths
Jess Lyons

Stella 'Adkins

Jess.Lyons, 89, of Mason, died
Stella Adkins, 94, of 42235
Wednesday, Oct 9, 1991, in Pleas- State Route~ in Tuppers Plains,
ant Valley Hospital.
died on Thursday, Oct 10, 1991 at
He was a retired operator of the Arcadia Nursing Home in
Lyons Motor Sales and was a Coolville.
notary public.
Born in Wyomin~ County,
Bor~ Aug. 20, 1902, in New w v
Nn 15 18 6 ·•
a. on ..w-v.
... ,ewas
Haven, he was a son of the late the· daughter
of the' late .R.L.
and
Dan and Alma (Roush) Lyons.
Rispia Bailey Brooks.
He was also J)receqed in death . She is survived by a daughter,
by his wife, Freda Lee Lyons, on Bulah Maxey of Tuppers Plains,
Dec. ~I. 1966.
with whom she made her home; a
SurViving are two daughters and son, Earl (Kathie) Adkins of
sons-in-law, Lillian and Lester Ladyspnng,
·
w.va.; a bro th er, ,
Stewart, Margaret and Ben Casto, · George Brooks of San Jose, Calif.;
all of Mas6n; one son and daugh- . several nieces and nephews; nine
ter•in·law;-Ronald and Ann Lyons, grandchildren; 13 great-grandchil· .
Mason; a brother, Edger Lyons of dren; and five great-great grand·
Michigan; two sisters, Mrs. Arthur children.
(Frances) Roush ?f Mason, and
Beside.s her parents, she was
Mrs. Rena McD~1el of Pomeroy• . preceded in death by her husband,
Oh1o; 12_grandch•ldren, 19 great- William Adkins; a daughter and
grandch1ldr~n and three g_reat· granddaughter; four ~rothers afld
great-grandchildren.
·
two sisters.
The funeral w1ll be Sunday, 2
She attended the Chester Church
p.m., at. the Foglesong Funer~l of the Nazarene.
Home ~1th ·the Rev. ~ames ~wts
Funeral services will be held on
offlc1atmg. Bunal wdl be tn the Saturday at 1 p.m. at Ewing Funer·
Graham Cemetery.
al Home in Pomeroy with Herbert
Fnends may call at the funeral Grate officiating. Burial will be in
home Saturday, 2 to 4 and 7-to 9 Sand Hill Cemetery in Long Boto.m.
tom .
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.
on Friday.

RAC official
won't side in
NLRB hearing

GARY KII.GORE

Holiday Inn
has new owner
and manager
The Gallipolis Holiday Inn has a
new owner.
At a recent meeting of the Gallipolis Holiday Jnn Hotel staff,
·Delma Roush, president of E&amp;R
Investment Inc., announced the sale
of· the G'l'
a, 1poI'ts H&lt;&gt;
011'day Inn to
TEACHING F1RE SAFETY - As a part of .
Shank, left; and Bryan iirkle display some ot
Gallipolis Hospitality, Inc.
the observance of National Fire Protection
the apparel and equipment used in firefighting
Tony L. Etnyre, president of
Week, Pomeroy rll'elilen were outtalking safely
to children of the Pomeroy Elementary Schoo.!.
Gallipolis Hospitality, Inc. , sajd
to school children Tuesday afternoon. Here Jeff
"We 'are extremely pleased and
proud to acquire the Gallipolis Hoi- Name contest winner
iday_Inn. lt's~ national reputation as
Clifford Ashiey, Route I.
a Holiday Inn Superior Hotel, Racine, was one of 15 to correc~y
A forestland workshop has been" tive Extension Service. Armand
makes it a natural for our organiza- identify the mystery farm pictured scheduled to help those wbo arc Jackson of the Ohio Department or.
tion. Our sister hotel, The Seymour in Sunday's Times Sentinel as that inter.ested in maximizing the pro· Natural Resources and Pean Weber·
Indiana Holiday Inn, has also been of Delbert Smith, Racine. Ashley ductmty of lherr wQodlands. The of the Soil Conservation Service.
a superior hotel for the last three was selected in a drawing to workshop is for anyone who wants
Then on Saturday, November 9
'years. and we look forward to con- receive the $5 prize from the Ohio to learn more about forest manage- from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. there will be
tinuing this tradition."
Valley Publishing Co. for making ment, to increase timber productiv- a tour of the Vinton Furnac e
Etnyre introduced Gary Kilgore, the correct identification of the ity. wildlife habitat, water quality Research Forest. Air meetings will
the new general m~nager for the farm . The contest is co-sponsored and recreational opportunities.
convene at the Hocking County
Gallipolis Holiday Inn. Kilgore by the Meigs County Soil and
Southeastern Ohio woodlots are Youth Center in .Logan, Ohio.
comes to Gallipolis from Dayton . Water Conservation District and · often neglected as a productive
For more information and regis·
where he managed the. I 50-room the newspaper.
resource. Increased management tration forms, call the Gallia Soil
Dayton Northwest Holiday Inn. He
can ach1eve greater volumes of and Water Conservation District at ·
announced that his wife, Verlene
high value species which cap con· 446-8687.
and his son, Gary Jr., wiD be jointribute to the economic profitability
ing him in moving to Gallipolis in Marriage licenses granted
of the woodlot. Recreauon aesthetthe near future.
Marriage licenses have been ics anct social benefits are.imporThis sale was fmanced by Com- gran ted in Meigs County Probate tant to Southeastern Ohio and can
merce Bank, Huntington N.A . Coun to Charles Eugene Boso, 23, also be enhanced through increased
Two were fined and two others
under the direction of Larry Plantz, Portland, and Mandy Kay Hill, 23, woodlot management.
forfeited bends on charges of phys·
former Gallipolis resident.
The dates for the workshop are ical control of a motor vehicle
Portland; Lal)'rence B.rian Collins,
26, Long Bottom, and Jayne Ann Monday, Oct. 28 'from 7 - 9 p.m. while under the influence of alco· Ritchie, 20, Coolville; David Alan and Monday, Nov. 4, from 7.-9:30 hol or drugs in the coun of MiddleCLEVELAND (AP) - Here are Roush, 20, Pomeroy, and Sherri p.m . Both evenings will featuie port Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday
the selections made Wednesday Lynn Carl, 19, Pomeroy; Michael Hank Bartholomew and Dr. Steve night.
night in the Ohio Lottery:
Allen Clei81Jd, 19, Middleport, and Bratkovich of the Ohio CooperaFined $425 and costs and senAmy Beth' Might, 18, Ru~and; and
Super Lotto
tenced to three days in jail on the
to Joseph Michael Schaeffer, Jr.,
5-23-28-34-35-42
charge were Larry E. Powell •.
(five, twenty-three, twenty- 20, ShiUingt;(ion, Pa. , and Jo EDen
Racine. and Ronnie Lee Dugan;
eigh~ thirty-four, thirty-five, forty- Well, 21, Middleport.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER Ru~and. Dugan was also fined $10
Cases dismissed
·
two)
Discharges, Oct. 9 - Leah and costs on a charge of expired
Meigs County Common Pleas Echinger,
Kicker
Mrs. Robert Gordon and registration, and $25 and costs;
Court has dismissed the following son, Misty
4-3·8·6·1-9
Handley , Geraldine expired operator's license.
(four, three, eight, si•. one , cases: Beverly Morrow versus
Forfeiting bOnds of $460 on the
Willis Leadingham, Brenine)
Danny Morrow; and Emory L. Wil· Jackson,
charge
were Larry E. Powell,'
McGuire, Donald Nibert,
Pick 3 Numbers
son and Associates·, Inc . versus anna
Racine.
and Marvin Allen Oiler,'
Evaleva Pickens, Dixie Roush, and
Hemlock Pipeline, Inc.
7-7-1
Middleport.
Pamela Snyder.
(seven, seven, one)
Divorce granted
fined were John V. Stew.'
Births, Oct. 9 · Mr. and Mrs. an,Others
Pick 4 Numbers
A divorce action has been grant- Ronald
Pomeroy,
$10 and costs,
a son, Wellston. Mr. assured clear distaace;
9-9-4-4
ed in Meigs Couq?$ Common and Mrs.Camp,
Kimberly D:
Rik Perkins, a son, Well· Jones, Cheshire, $15 fine
(nine. nine, four. four)
Pleas Coun to Judy Lee Tyree from ston. Mr. and
only on
Mrs. David Rhodes, a
Cards
Gregory Mark Tyree.
speeding;
and
Kenneth
Mohlei
,
daughter, Tuppers Plains. Mr. and
5 (five) of Hearts
Middleport,
$10
and
costs,
assault.
·
Mrs. Terry .Wandling. a daughter,
.'
2 (two) of Clubs
Point Pleasan~ W.Va.
South-Central Qhio
7 (seven) of Diamonds
-~~~~~~~~~~~
Tonight, partial clearing with
4 (four) of Spades
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
areas of dense fog possible. Low in
446 4524
.
the mid-40s. Chance of rain 20 perVeterans Memorial
cent. Friday, panly cloudy with the
. Charles Carson. a sophomore at high 60-65. The chance of rairt is
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS Ohio University majoring in com- 20 percent.
Sarah McCarty, Rutland; AND
puter science, ·is currently co-oping
Ellen Young, Racine.
Extended forecast:
with the Mead Corporation in
, TUESDAY DISCHARGES Saturday through Monday:
Chillicothe. He is the son of
Floyd Brickles, Tammy Babic,
A chance of showers Saturday,
Charles E. Carson, Sr., Pomeroy .
Edgar Brewer, Martha Collins. and
mainly north. Fair on Sunday and
Cooperative Education is a five Monday, except a chance of show·
Go!Giie Lightfoot.
year program in which students ers northeast Sunday. Highs on Sat·
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
receive a unique fonn of education urday 55-65 and in the 50s Sunday.
· Virginia Pennington, Middleport;
that blends classroom study with Warmer on Monaay with highs in
Ahce Cha~man, Pomeroy; Mary
paid, supervised work . Students the 60s. Lows 40-45 Saturday, 35· Bayles, Middleport; and Linda
alternate periods of study on cam- 45 Sunday and in the 40s again
Eblin, Pomeroy.
pus with on-site work experience.
Monday.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
· None.

Forestland workshop-to be held

Court news

Lottery numbers

Timothy P. Hively

Timothy Paul Hively, II, 19, of
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- A Ravenswood Aluminum Pom~roy, died Wednesday, Oct. 8.
Corp. official testified the company 1991, as the result of injuries susasked union workers to leave the tained in an automobile accident.
premises at the start of a dispute
Bom in Wood County, W.Va..
last November.
he was the son of Debora Barker
Earl Schick, .vice president of Hively Barker. He graduated from
labor relations for Ravenswood the Gallia Christian Academy in
Aluminum, said the request was Cheshire in 1990 and served in the
made minutes after a three-year U.S . Army from June, 1990 to
contract between Ravenswood and April, 1991. Since that time he has
United Steelworkers Local 5668 been employed by Pizza Hut and
Central Interiors of Parkersburg,
expired.
But Schick wouldn't say if he W.Va.
considered the action a lockout
Besides his mother, he is sur·
About 1,700 Steelworkers have vi ved by his stepfather James H.
been out of work at Ravenswood Barker of Syracuse; his wife Patsy
Aluminum since Nov. I. The com· Graham Hively, Pomeroy; one
pany contends the Steelworkers daughter, Samantha Lynn,
walked out, but union members say Pomeroy ~ one brother, William
they were locked ouL
Paul Hively, Syracuse; two sisters,
Schick's testirnonr came in the Debora Henry of Portland and
seventh day of a hearing on Nation· Kathryn Byers, Syracuse; parental
al Labor Relations Board charges grandfather, Homer Hively, Park·
the company engaged in unfair ersburg; maternal grandmother,
Kathryn Byers; and his father and
labor practices.
Ravenswood Aluminum prcma· mother-in-law, Harold and Janet
turely decl@l'ed an impasse, locked Graham, Pomeroy.
out workers and illegally hired
Funeral services will be held at
1,000 replacement workers, I p.m. at the Leavitt Funeral Home
according to the National Labor' in Parkersbur~. W.Va. The Rev.
Jesse Morris will officiate and buri·
Relations Board.
"Was there a lockout?" union al will be in Sunset Memory Gar·
attorney Stuart Israel asked Schick. dens, Parkersburg. Friends may call
"Mr. Israel, I believe whether a at the funeral home 2 to 9 p.m. on
lockout occurred is to be deter- Thursday.
mined by the court," Schick
replied.
Ravenswood Aluminum plans
to call six or seven more witnesses
and complete its case by Friday, . Two were fined and eight others
said lawyer David Laurent.
forfeited bonds in Pomeroy
mayor's court conducted by Larry
Wehrung, president of Pomeroy
Village Council, Tuesday night.
Fined were Shirley Diddle, MidA Scottish Rife dinner will be dleport, .$50 and costs, speeding:
held Wednesday at the Middleport Timothy Imboden, Syracuse, $63
Masonic Temple, 6:30p.m. Enter- and costs, expired license.
tainment will be provided by a
Forfeiting bonds were Brenda
group ·from Columbus. Reserva- Barnhart, Pomeroy, $43, ass ured
tions are to be returned to Gordon clear. distance; Donald Lewis ,
Fisher, 446-3588, or James Clat- Pomeroy, $50, speeding; Randall
worthy. 992-3503, this week.
Roush, Syracuse, $46, speeding;
Delores Bon~. Mason, W. Va.,
$43, studs in tires; Terry Gilkey,
New Haven, W. Va., $46, speed·
The Daily Sentinel
·
ing; Larry ·Rutter, Pomeroy, $50,
(USPS 213·9801
no insurance; Misty Lee, Nel ·
Publilhcd every anernoon, Monday
sonville, $63, operating under sus·
through Friday, 1U Co\lr\ S,, Pomeroy,
Ohio by 'he Ohio VaUoy (\;bli1hin1
pension, and $51, speeding; Angela
Company/Multimodia Jnc., Pomeroy,
Fields, Pomeroy, $63, expired regOhio 4!769cl I'll. 992-21!16. S.Cond clau
istration; and Cheryl Marnhout,
poatsr pnl aL Pomeroy, Ohio.
Racine, $47, speeding.

Hospital news

Weather

Hospital news

1n coop program

Pomeroy Court

GINGERBREAD
HOUSE
Invites You To Their

Dinner slated

Member: The Allioclat.ed Prtu, Jnland
Daily Proia Aa1oelatlon and the Ohio
Ncwapapcr Allocialion, National
Adwcrllnng Rcpreacntativo, Branham
Ncwapapcr Salea, 733 Third Avenue,
Now YOrk, New YOrk 10017,

PRICE '
Daily......................................... -.25 Coni&amp;

Mall Subocrlptlono
tnllda Oallla Count)'
l3 Wocka........ ,,,,, ............................ l21.84

26 W110ka ..........................................J4:l.l6
52 Weckl..........................................ta4.76
Outoiclo Gallta County
13 Woaka ........................................... 23.40
26 w..u ..........................................t45.ll0
52 WNka ..........................................~.40

BALLOONS, TRICK or TREAT BAGS
OPEN 9:30-5:00 MON.-SAT.

!

703 Second St. (Third House on Right From Bric1!1el

..---·------------··-.·
LARGE

PEPPERONI PIZZA

AND' 4 LARGE COLAS

SubiCI'iborJ not dcthing to PlY lhe ean1·
or ti\AY remit. In advanta direct. t.o The
Calllpo1ta Daily Tribune on a 3.6 or 12
monlh ba1i1. Credit wiU be given can1or

availablo.

Mason Store

2 MEDIUM
PEPPERONI PIZZAS

..t83.20

noaa where homt carrier aonice Ia

Of The

.,

Ona MonU.......................................... I6.91l

oach weeK.
. No aubmipUona by mail permiLted In

5th Birthday and
Grand Opening

STARTING MONDAY, OCTOBER 14TH- DOMINO PIZZA WILL
OPEN FOR lUNCH: II A.M. Til 4 P.M. $ 99
lUNCH
SPECIAL: MED.
PillA (1 Item, 2 Pepsi's) 4
..........
__________
____

POSTMASTER: Send odd""' cllanp to
The Daily Se"tlnet, 111 Court St,
Pomeroy, OHio 4.1769.
BVBSCRIPMON RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route
Ono w..k. ........................................... 1.60
Ono Yoar. ..................................SINGLE COPY

Middleport Court

P~!::O~co:Jrpo~• fo~

I
I
Storct
I Pickup or ~cUvery Only
I
I

sa 99
1

I

-·--..,
......... ..,-....
-..,..,
_,, D.IIIDINr ....................
.,..,.,., ...........

I

....... ncl~flrlllt ........ .

I

............ 0......., '*"' ....., 12000. c.n-.•. Our
CII.IDrllt'ln~

.

·-s 99

I

I

II

OlTer sood only

I
I

I

Only

L-------------•----~-~L~

.

ol

'•
~

'.•

•
•

e

Pomeroy A Colllpollo Sto..,.

Pickup or Oehvery

•••
•

.,.,.,, _,. ... IIIII""" ......... .,..,ow...,..
... ...
......... .,..... cv .....

Yllld .............. - ,. Ntt .............. ,....,.,
~

~It

e.IY . . . . . . . .

Chw

-----------··-...1

---nal~--....

'

····~,..,...

'•
•
•
•

·•'

.
I

�..

.

'

Pomeroy-Midcileport, Ohio

Paae--4-l"he Dally Sentinel

-

'

_,/

.

..

·- Thursday, October to, 1991

-COUPON

. FRIDAY AND SATURDAY .
ONLY

~

·

BUY ONE • GEt ONE

EE!

. 20% OFF

ANY LARGE SANDWICH*

KREMENTZ &amp; BLACK HILLS
GOLD

30%oFF

McDonald's® "On The River"
welcomes you to the 2nd Annual
Big Bend Sternwheel Festival. .

All DIAMOND SOLITAIRES &amp;
WEDDING SETS

40%on
SEMI-PRECIOUS STONE RINGS
50% OFF
SELECTION OF.GIFT ITEMS FOR
THE HOME
Including Copperware,
Pottery, Brass, Glass, are

With each large Sandwich* you
purchase, you receive the
2nd like Sandwich

"FREE"

m 1l:.il'''".:.··

wfien you presenfU1is coupon at the·
· Frqnt Counter or Drive-Thru.

Come Enjoy the W~ekend With Us .
.

Offer good only at McDonald's~ of Pomeroy during
· _the 2nd Annual Big Bend Sternwheel Festival,
October 11 &amp; 12, 1991
·urae sandwiches Include Big Mac~, Quarter Pounde~.
tl);;~:,, ,!3
McChlcke n•, Mclean Deluxe• and-FIIet·O·Fish~

McDONALD'Se
.

AUCTION
SPONSORED BY ·

BOY POWER INC.

EXTENDED HOUR SALE
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
TILL 8:00 P.M.

IAL HOURS:
FRI.•SAT. 9·8

D,RESS
SHOES

SATURDAY,
OCT. 1.2th 2 P.M. ·

AND BOWS

5%on

FARMERS BANK PARKING LOT
All PROCEEDS Will GO TO THE 811'!' SCOUT
TROOP 249 OF POMEROY

BANK ONE PUMPKIN
DECORATING CONTEST

Proudly Supported by

.,

Your Bank(rn~€'···
Fn Farmers
"' ,.
Bank

..

992-2136
Member FDIC
985·3385
221 WEST SECOND
STATE ROUTE 7
OHIO
TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO

COLD POP

SUNGLASSES

27C CAN

1/2 PRICE

· Grades Kindergarten thru Sixth· ·
Ist, 2nd &amp; 3rd place prizes for Prettiest,
Ugliest &amp; Most Original
~umpklns to be at Mini Park In Pomeroy by Noon Saturday

·with judging later that afternoon.
Beans and Corl"bread will be served In the Mini Park.
All donations will go to Meigs Co. Food Bank

LARGE SELECTION OF HOLIDAY
OUTFITS &amp; DRESSES AVAILABLE! ·
WE NOW CARRY BABY RINGS &amp; JEWELRY!!

BUTTONS &amp; BOWS

BILLFOLDS

COMPLETE STOCK

By Amity-Men's &amp; Women's

1/2 PRICE

40% OFF

CANDY
. BARS

RUSSELL STO!(ER ASST.

-ONE
BANKe
.

I

Chapma : Shoes

One RECLINER Buy One RECLINER
For $299.00
For $399.00

Get One

FREE

Get One

FREE

. Whatever it takes.~
-FCIC.

POMEROY'S OUAUTY 'SHOE STORE

'\:

COMPLETE STOCK

JEWELRY

B~y

TWO DAYS ONLY
Friday &amp; Saturday
Open till 8:00 Both

-.

20

Lc

0/ ·. .
/O&gt;OF.F All

0·

'\:

· ALADDIN NOW::IHROUGH
THE MONTH :oF :OCTOBER

STERNVIHEELERS
J

REG. 50'

ONLY

33c

NO NONSENSE
HOSE

30% .on

JELLY BfANS

3 OZ. - Reg. $1.15

79C
'

VITAMIN C

By Naturemade

. All S1res-AII Strengths

30%on
•

OFFER
GOOD .
THROUGH

MONDAY/
n2-2na1 . OCTOBER

...
SEE LOC.U -'ftTIST llXmaiTS

WELCOME ·HERBALISTS
. SPECIAL 20" FRESH WATER PEARLS
. NOW $2995 WAS ~·~
113 COURT
POMEROY

KIRSCH RRTICAL
BLIND :SPECIAL .
FREE CIRMOSA® 2000 ·
TRACK OD
WITH EACH II.RTICLE
BLIND PUUHASE
•

llll(lll

~

SAVI S ·
STOREWIDE

•

FRIDAY, OCTOBER
11th
.
.
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12th
.

·MEIGS CIRUT AND

FABRIC SHOP

DECORA,III.~CENTER

~...-..---..-... 14, 1991

J

POMEROY

110 WEST MAIN
992·2284

--

.

'/

)

.
.'

•

�•
•

~ The

SpOrts

Daily Sentinel

GREEDY DOESN'T PAY- Atlanta's Mark
Lemke finds this out the hard way after Pitts·
burgh third baseman Steve Buechele tags him
out at third in the fourth inning or Wednesday
ni hi's National Lea ue Cham · h" S ·
:

I

opener in Pittsburgh, which the Pirates won 5-l.
Lemke, who had a doulile, tried to stretch it, but
Bobby Bonilla's throw to shortstop Jay Bell
gave Bell time to nail Lemke. (AP)

I

Scoreboar(l
Valley Un1vewly School 49 3500. 9
Bowling Green 46.5000 10. Vennilion

In the majors...

46 0000

PLAYOFFS
American League
Tu~e~day,

Oct. 8

Minnesru S, Toronto 4
Wednesday, Oct. 9
Toro ~.to S, Minntso~a 2, sene&amp; u«&lt; I ·
friday, Ocl.ll
Minnc:soLa (EriWon 20-S)at Toron to
(Key 16- 12), 8·37 p m.
Saturday, &lt;XL 12
Minne.tot.a 1\ Toronto, 8 26 p.m
Sund1y, Od. 13

Minnesou at Toronto,4 12 p m

Tuesday, Oct.lS
Toronto at Minnesota, 8:37 p m., U

Region 7 ~ I . Uniontown Lake
75 .0000 2. Columbus Bcechcroft
74 5000 3. Louisv11le 62.0000. 4.
McArlhur Vinton 57.0000. 5.
Por!Bmoulh 56.5000. 6. McConncllville
Morg•n 51 5000 7 Pllukal• Wulms
Mcmoritl46 5000 8. J1Woil 45.5000 9
Columbl.n Easlmoor41.6000.10 Millen·
burg West Holm~ 40 0000
RcgiOil 8 - I St Ma r~s Memom!
87.0000 2 Norwood 77 5000 3 Ltma
Shawnee 64.0000. 4, Marysville 48.5(X)()
S D1yton Dunbar 46 5000 6 Dcftance
44.5000. 7 (uc). Goshen, Dayton CuroU
4! 5000 9. Wdmwgton 39 0000 10
Hamilton Ross 36.0000

necessary

Division ill

Wednesday, Ott. 1'

Toronto

Minnesota, 8:37 p m, tf

It

necessary

National League
Wednesday, Otl. 9
Ptttsburgh 5, Atla nu 1, P1t1sburgh

leads scnes 1-0
Thursday, Otl. JO
Athnu (A very 11-8) u Pins hurgh
(Smll.h 16-J O), 8 37 p.m
Saturday, OcL 11
Pittsburgh (Smdcy 2().8) u Allantl

(Smaltz 14-13), 3 p m.
Sunday, Ott. JJ
Piu~bUTRh n Atl1nt1, 8:40p.m
Monday, Oct. 14
Pmsburgh at All•nta, 3:07 p m, if
necesury
Wednuday, Od. 1'
Athnll at PittJburgh, 3 07 p m or
S 37 p.m , il necenuy
Thurtdtf, Od.l7
Atllnll at Pittsburgh , 8:37 p.m .. tf
nCCCiiUry

In the NHL...
WALES CONFERENCE
Patrltk Dlvlllon
W L T PIB. GFGA

Tum
~cw Jersey

.

3 0 0

6 17 9

Wuhmgton

..

300

613

3 I 0

6 12 10

I 0 I

3
2
1

• N.Y. Rangc11
PittJbwgh

...

N.Y. h!anders . I I 0
Ptuladdphta

.. 0 I I

6
8
7

Adam• Divisio n
. Montreal

I I I

Dot~tnn

I 2 I

3 7 7
3 13 ]J

.. ... I I 0

2 9 8

. ...

l

I

...... 0 2 I

I

Quebec
Hartford
Buff•lo

0 I

4

9

6

12

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
Norrla Dlv511on

Tum
Torunto
••
Mmnesou
. . ...
Dcuuit
Chicago
....
St. Louil

W L T Pls.GFGA
0 I I
0 2 I

4 IS 14
242
I 8 II
1 7 11

0 2 0

0

2 2 0

100

Smythe Dlvl1hm
Vancou ver
. 3 0 0
Los Angeles ... 2 0 I
C•lguy
I 2 0
SanJoce
I 2 0
Wirvupeg
l 2 0
Edmonton
0 2 I

2 10

6 12
5 14

J
B

2 15 11

2 9 12
2 10 12

I

Rcg1on 9 - 1. Guard 85 9000 2
Mmctva 72.0000 3. Youngstown Ursu
line 61 0000 4 {ue). Strtellboro, Mentor
Lake Cttholic 59.0000. 6 (tic). Sll\llhcrs,
Gnadenhutten lnd1an Valley 53 0000 8
Uhmh1villc Claymont 51 5000. 9
Youngstown Mooney 50 (XX)() 10 Jeffcr·
SM Aru47 5000.
Rewon 10 - I Twuuburg Oiambc:r·
lin 76.0000. 2. Akron St. Vin cent -St
Mary 59.3000 J Cutalu Marguetta '
57 5000. 4 Rocky Rtver 51.5000. S. Ml'.dma Bucl::cye 49 0000. 6. Willard 47.5000.
7 (lie) Ducyro1, Oak. Hl!'bor 44.5000. 9
Swanton 43 0000. 10 Rouford 38.0000.
Regton 11 - 1. Ironton 90.!000. 1
Columbus DcSalcs 59 0000 3 Ut1 c1
52 0000 4. Porumouth Wesl49.1000. S
Sunbury Big Walnut 49 0000 6. Prot·
lorvlllt fllrl1nd 45.6000. 7. Columbus
Bexley 39 5000 B. !Iebron Lakewood
35.0000. 9. Thonwille Sheridan 33.0000.
10 ManonRiverValley315000
Rcgton 12 - l Kettcnng Alter
86.5000. 2. C1ncinna t Purce ll Marian
83 0000 3. New R1chmond 62 0000 4
Bellbrook 59.5000 . S. Springboro
58 0000 6. St Paril Gnh1m 54 SOOO 7
Hilll:boro 53.0000. 8. SpnnJficld Nonh·
eutcm 51 5000. 9 (ue) SpMgfield Ken··
ton R!d&amp;e , Gcmuntown Va lley View
48 5000

7

7
7
4

7 17

Wednesday's scores ·
8otta14, Buffalo 4, tic

N.Y. R•nam.5, N.Y.Idtndcrs 3
Wuhington5, Torooto4

Tonight's games
Montreal at Detroit. 7:35 p.m
Pitllburgh at PhiladclphiJ, 7:35p.m
Quebec It MiMcacta,•I:OS p.m
Vanccuvez 11 OU.caao. 1:35 p.m.
Edmonton at St..Lou.iJ, 1:35 p m.
Ctlgal')' n Lot: AnJCle.. l 0:35 p.m.
W1Mipegtt San }OK, 10 35 p.m

Division IV

Region 13 - I. Warren Kennedy
71 7000. 2 Huron 55.0000 3 Chagnn
Falls 51.5000. 4. GatCI MtUs Hawken
49 OOXl 5 U.lr:atn CleaNicw 48 8999 6
Akron Man ches1er 4 1.5000. 7. Perry
40 0000. 8 Avon 31.0000 9 Elyru
CalhoUc 35.7000. 10 Aurora 3S .SOOO.
Region 14 - I. Spf'lll8!ield Catholic
50 0000 2 Manon Elgtn 49 0000 3 (uc)
Carey, Delphos Jefferson 46.0000. S.
Montpeli er 4S.SOOO 6 BcllvJIJc Clear
Fork 311 0000. 7 Bloomdale Elmwood
35 5000 8 (ltc). Northwood , Archbold
35 0000 10. Sidney Lehman 33 0000.
Rcgton 15 - I. Stcubenvillc Catholic
66 0000 2 (tie) H1nn ibli Rtver, Du·
nesv Lil c, Summit Stuion Lteking !Its
46 0000 5 Co lu mbunt Crcuview
43.0000 6. Toronto 42.5000. 7 Ashland
Mapleton 40.0000 8. C1da 39.0000. 9
Apple Creek Wayncd1lc 37 0000 10
Rittm•n 32.5000.
Res ton 16 - I . Wul Jefferson
56.0000. 2 {tie}. Columbul H1rtlcy,
Wheeler~ bur&amp; 55.5000. 4. Amanda a cucrcck 53.SOOO. S. Coh•mbu• Ready
53 00)). '· Porllmoulh Eul 51.!000. 7.
Cmcumlll Wyoming 45.5000. I . Cotl
Cro¥e Dawaon Dryanl 30.5000. 9. Pl•in
C11y Jonath1n Alder 29.5000. 10. Colum·
bus Academy 29.2500.

Division V
RcJlon 17 - l. SanduUy St. Mary 's
53 0000. 2. Dtlton Local44 .0000. ).

Columbiana 38.4000. 4. Fairpon Harbor
llardm&amp; 34 .SOOO S. McDonald 34 0000
6. Wcl lsv tlle 33.0000. 7. Mogadore
32 5000. 8 Fremont Sl Jcuph 31 5000
9 SebMg McKinley 21.5000. 10. 1'irlin
C•lvert 27.0000

Rcaion 18- 1. Bluffton 49.5000. 2
Minster 43.0000, 3. Defiance Aycrsvillc
42 5COO 4 Dclph011 St. John' •3&amp;.5000. 5.
Dola Hardtn Northern 34.5000 6 {tic).
Man• Stc1n Marion Local, St. Henry
34 OCOO. 8. McGuffey Upper Sc1oto ValIcy 32.0000 9 Arcadia 3(.0000 10 (ti~ )
Van Buren, Edon 30.5000.
Rcg1on 19 - l. Newark C1tho!Jc
71.0000. 2. Woodsfield 54.5000. 3.
Malvern 44 9000 4. R~dsvlllc Eastern
41.5000. 5. Sh1dy11de 31 .0000. 6. VInton
North GaUJa 30.,000. 7 Clidwell
22.5000 8. He.alh 220000. 9. SIJ'uburJ·
Franklin 199000. 10 Sugar Grove Berne
Uruon 19.0000.
..
Reg1on 20 - I C1nctnn111 Coumry
Day 61.SOOO. 2 Cinci nnati Mariemont
58 5000. 3 Middletown Fenw1ck
47.5000 4 Manon Pleaunt 45 0000 5
Uruon City Mismlinawt Valley 3~.0000.
6 Milford Ca"Jtcr F1irbanks 38 5()X} 7 S
Charleston Sou thcanern 35 0000. 8.
Ham!lton New M1am1 n 5000. 9
Cedarville 33.0000. 10 Morral Ridgedale

325000

Transactions
Baseball

By ALI\N ROBINSON
AP Sports Writer
PITTSBURGH (AP) - They
were America's Team, but somehow people forgot that the Atlanta
Braves weren"t the best team in
America.
As the Braves · tomahawk·
chop~ .their.way to an improbable dtvtston litle, chopping down
those oh-so-easy-to-hate Dodgers
and going from worst to first faster
than any team in history, the Pitts·
burgh Pirates watched. And waited.
And waited.
,
"Hey, we enjoyed w.atching
them,"' Ja~ Bell said.
And as the country marveled at
a September song of a miracle in
DiKie, many mostly ignored what
was happening in Pittsburgh, which
clinched its division with iwo
weeks to play. Some conveniently
overlooked the fact the Pirates won
a major league-high 98 games even
without t!Je benefit of a tight pen·
nant race.
Ignore no more.
The Pirates gave Atlanta an
indoctrination into the brave new
world of postseason baseball
Wednesday night, beating the
Braves 5-l in Game 1 of the
National League playoffs.-Game 2
is tonight, with 18-game winner
Steve Ave; y facing former Brave
Iert-hander Zane Smith.
It was a choppy start for the
Braves, who seemed out of sync in
a stadium where 57,347 fans- the
largest in Pittsburgh history weren't practicing their tdmahawk
chops. The only thing more scarce
than bright-red tomahawks were
Braves runs.
"We weren't nervous , but we
were anKious early in the game,"

Dave Justice said. ··~ It was ihe frrst
time here for a lot of us.''
Oh, but it wasn't for the Pirates,
who have talked for weeks aboui
erasing the still-unpleasant memory
of last year"s playoff defeat to
Cincinnati.
The Braves had the edge of just
coming off a tight pennant race.
But it was the Pirates who took an
early 3-0 lead. who got clutch
pitclting from Doug Drabek and
Bob Walk.
"I really don't think what they
did took anylhing away from us,"
Bell said. "They're •America's
Team' and played great baseball
down the stretch. If anything, that
made us realize how well we have
to play, even if we did win 98
games."
And last year's playoff loss to
Cincinnati ~de Andy Van Slyke,
Bobby Bomlla and Barry Bonds
realize they have to hit for the
Pirates to win, especially in the
po'stseason.
The Killer B's plus V hit just
.190 against ihe Reds, and Bonilla
~nd Bonds had just one RBI apiece
m stx games. The Pirates' troika
has nearly matched those numbers
in just one game.
Van Slyke drove in two runs
with a homer and double in his frrst
two at-bats. Bonilla had an RBI
single in Pittsburgh's two·run third
inning against 20-game winner
Tom Glavine. Bonds reached base
three times in four plate 'appear·
ances.
··
·
. Pirates starter Doug Drabek limIted Atlanta to three singles. He left
after straining his left hamstring
whtle unsuccessfully trying to
slretch a double into a triple in the
sixth.

Blue Jays beat Twins 5-2 to
tie AL playoff series at 1-1

Nationa l Le111Ue
PIULADELPHIA PJDLLIES - At·
a1gned John Moms, outfielder, and Tim
Mauser, pitcher, to Scran lon -WlikCI·

By MIKE NADEL
AP Sports Writer
MINNEAPOLIS (AP)- By the
seventh inning, the screaming had
stopped and the streaming for the
exits had begun. The Metrodome
mystique disappeared, even before
the crowd disappeared through the
revolving doors.
" They're a good crowd here,""
Kelly Gruber said after. his two-run
single and Juan Guzman"s pitching
led the Toronto Blue Jays to a 5·2
victory over the Minnesota Twins
Wednesday and evened lhe best-of·
7 AL playoffs at one game apiece.
"But I say that now. With two
outs. they all started leaving."
The Twins went into the playoffs feeling invincible at home.
And why not? They had won six
successive postseason games at the
Metrodome - including four in
the 1987 World Series- and then
made it seven straight in Game 1 of
this series.

Barre of the lntemlliond Lctguc. An·
nouncod !hat D1nel Akcrfelds, pttchcr,
and S1l Campusano, ootficldcr, refused u·
s1gruneru and became fret. aaenu

Basketball
Nallonal Buktlblll Auocltllon

LOS ANOELES CLIPPERS
S1gned Rory Spanow, guard. Signed
Jamea: Edward.l, ccntu, to • mc·ycar con·
tract
.
ORlANDO MAOIC - Waived Reg·
g1c Han10n, f«w•rd. T1to Horford, ca~ter,
and Mike MorriJon and Kevin William~,
guuds.

PHILADELPHIA 76ERS - R•·

leased Pctur Gudmunduon, center, 1nd
Mike KeM&amp;dy •nd Bobby Marun, for·
wudt

Football
Nallon•l Foolball Ltaaue
BUFFAW Bll.l..S - Rclcucd Chris
Oldham, cornerback. Acliv11cd Joe
St•y•n.ial, offenaive lin em1n, from the

pracuce rost.er.

CHICAGO BEARS - PI ICed C1p
Boso, tight end, on i~'ured rucr ve
S1gned Kclh Jcnninp, ti I end.

CINCINNATI

B NGALS

-

Cl11med Bcrnud Clad, linebacker, off
waivers from lhc Seattle Seahawk.s.
DENVER BRONCOS - Stgncd Bn·
an Sochia, nose tackle.
NEW YORK 1ETS - Placed M•rk
Boyer, light end, on tnjured reserve.
S1gncd Pat Kelly, tiaht end.
SEAnLE SEA.HAWKS - Signed
Rick Tuten, punter.

Now the Twins go to Toronto
knowing that ihey must win at least
one of three games at the Sky Dome
if they are to return home for Game
6. The Blue Jays will take the
dome-field advantage into Friday
night, when Jimmy Key (16-12)
opposes Scott Erickson (20-8) in
Gamel
"Hopefully, we won't have to
come back," Gruber said. "If we
do have to. we hope to keep the
crowd silent."·
That posed hltle problem
Wednesday. Gruber"s two-out. broken-bat single gave Toronto a 3-0
lead and quieted ihe fans for most
of the game. And when the Blue
lays scored twice in the seventh ,
the exodus began.
"We feed off 1hc fans," Min·
nesota's Kirby Puckeu said. "But
if they don "t cheer for us when
we're not doing well, we can't

COIIlJllaiii."

Sylnin Couturier, forwud, and Tun. W1t·
ten, de.fcniCITian, to Atoatil of the
n•tion•l Hodcy Lcapc.

MONTREAL CANAll!ENS - R•·

called Paul DiPicw, forward, frun fred .
cncton of ihe American Hockey Lcaaue.

Middleburg Hll. Midpark 68.0000 6
Kent Roo•cvch 62.0000 7. Warrt.n 0

Harding 61 .6000. I . Suorttrvillc 61 .5000.
9. Lakewood 60 0000 10 Eutltke North
47.5000.
I (tic) . Mustllon Wuh·

1naton, Toledo St. Ft1nci1 75.5000. 3.
Buberton, 11.5000. 4 Toledo Cemnl
C•tholic 69 0000. S. Mauillon J1ckson
61 8000 6 Toledo St John '• 68.5000 7

Stow W1ltk JuuiL 61.5000. 8. Akron El·

let 61 0000. 9. C1nton MeKinlcy 58 5(X)(}
10 ToledoWh.iuncrSl.OOOO.
. Reaion 3 - 1 Orovc City 87 .5000.

With Deluxe

Reg.:7eg.oo
SALE

599

R&lt;Jion l - I. Younpown Chaney
10.5000. 1 S...,baovillo1UOOO. 3. Roy·
lan d Buckiye 70,0000 4. Richfield Rc,.,.ll.lOOO. AJuun u..hlcJ l2.oooo.

s.

6 R1venn1 .4&amp;.7000 7. Nile&amp; McKinley
o16.ll00. &amp;. Wllftll Howllad 4l.IOOO. 9.
hhdi•on .41.SOOO. 10. Poland SanU11ry

39.AOOO.
Jlqj• 6- I. Soi011.1J.OOOO. 2. Foo·
tort.61.0000. 3. Pll'nY H11. Holy Name
6l.l000. 4 (lie) Lodl
vu.
lop Boy l5.0000. ~ Holland Spdlllfield
lf.SOOO. 1. B.U...oll .~ 1. lfUnllaa

CloY-....,

Innerspring Mattress
Reg, '909.00

SALE $699

.

RECLINERS .......is Low as $29900

Division U

MEIGS AL ...·STARS - The Meigs All-Stars
who had an outstanding year and were guests in
Kentucky for a tournament their are pictured
above. Pictured are (front row, L·R) Mindy
Findlay, Kandi Hysell, Ginger Findlay, Candy
Harmon and Kelly Stewart. In the second row

Frttl'ftlnt
Frtt Dohory
OPIN DAllY

'IUPJL
Frl.1UPJL
446-3045

·

are Heather Davis, Tericia Cogar, Lorena Oiler,
Rachael Halway and Sherry Johnson. Behind
them is coach Sarah Johnson. Team members
not pictured are Lee Henderson, Jacinda
Mullen, Erica Robie, Tracy Fife, Chrissy Taylor
and coaches Stephain Stewart, Bobby Johnson
and scorekeeper Willie Johnson.

yard! in five games), is 'the obvious
target of North's defense, but he, :
who had two touchdowns against
Valley last week, isn't the only
horse in lhe Hill"s baclcfield stable.
Ryan Potter. 5·1 I, 205-pouna
junior fullback, is back in the line· ·
up. He scored one of the south
Jackson battalion ·s five touchdowns in last week's seven-quarter
game.
• .·
The Oaks' run/pass pulse of,
I 98/64 is typical of their offense
this season', and it shouldn"t be
expected to change. against a team
as explosive as North Gallia, which
m the OHSAA computer ratings is
s1xth in Division V's Region 19. •
Junior q uanerbaclc Charles Peck·:
&lt;hould nresent manv oroblems for
an Oak Hill defense ihat may miss
the services of linebacker Chad
Jones, a 6-1, 230-pound senior who
suffered a knee injury in !he battle :
at Aid. Effective trappmg by .
guards Bradd Schultz and Scott
Oiler will be necessary to keep Oak··
Hill ends Gene Hall and Brook·
Morgan. not to mention the interior
of 1he Hill"s front five, from containing the run . Pirate runnmg
backs Casey Staton and Darin
Smith promi se smash-m outh . •
never-back-down foolbaUagainst a ·
strong Oak Hill defense.
.:
Southern vs. H311nan Trace ~
It's Hannan Trace's homecome
ing ibis week, and somebody"s los· •
in~ streak will end. Somebody"s ;
lrrul of tears w1ll keep streaming. .
But the Wildcats must slart :
picking up some productive habits. :
First, they must start sconng in the ·
(See SV AC on Page 9)
·

a

SVAC grid standings
(Overall)
Team
W L
Eastern ..................6 0
North Gallia .......... 5 I
Oak Hill ................4 2
Southwestern ........3 3
Symmes Valley .... 2 4
Southern ...............2 4
Kyger Creek.. .......2 4
Hannan Trace .......0 5

PF
229
162
173
82
140
131
59
38

(Conference)
Team
W L
Oak Hill ..... ...........3 0
Eastern ..... ,....... .. .. .3 0
Symmes Valley ....2 1
North Galha ..... .. ... 2 1
Souihwestern ........ ! 2
Kyger Creek ......... ! 2
Hannan Trace .. .....0 3
Southern ...............0 3

PF PA •
125 48 :
136 32 :
128 62 .
97 58 :
40 100
32 93
30 113
24 106 :

'

J

••

,,

.
·

:
:
•
:
·

Friday's games
Kyger Creek at Eastern
Southern at Hannan Trace
Oak Hill at Nonh Gallia
Symmes Valley at Southwestern

.U.S. recycled
even one tenth

o

Brian Harper (12) in the third inning of Game 2
of the American League playoffs Wednesday
night in Minneapolis, which the Blue Jays won
S-2. (AP)

_....:.·&lt;.....
c~:....nti_nu_ed_fr..;..om....:.P..::ag:.:..e6~)------­

surprised ihat the series is tied . .
"I think this is where we
expecled to be," said Tapani. who
allowed eight hits and four runs in
6 I · 3 innings.
Said Gruber: "They have a

good club. But they"re human .
They're not machines. Not even in
this place. They are playing a pretty good club, too. There are teams
lhat are better th an them sometimes. Even in here."

NEW FOR FALL!

of their newspapers ·
we would save about
25 million trees every year. ·
That's one tip"'from the book 50 Simple Things You Can Do To
Save The Earth. Cablevision will give you a special edition of this
National #1 Bestseller-FREE-for subscribing to cable or adding
HBO or The Disney Channel now.

Plus, we've discounted your
connection to just $10.
And, you'll write your $10
tax-deductible check directly to

LADIES
DRESSES

an environmental organization.
_ Adopt-A-Stream

IN
•PETITE
•JUNIORS
•MISSY
~. •HALF SIZES

_ Rainforest Action NetWork
__ Renew America

Do something good

See Our Other New Fall"
Women's Apparel

CALL

'

HR CLOTHIE
MIDDLEPORT

for yourself and do something
great,for the Earth!

'

CABLEVISION
TODAY! (304)675-3398
l-800-344-3331In Melsa &amp; G.Uia Countice

cV/11
•
Offer t!Mb N&lt;Mrnbfr I, orfrr 110011 m stl\'lttablt artn Qfl!y,

·•
.I

PA
44
• 55
86
154
129
185
152
146

If everyone in the

a fork ball in the dirt,"' Twms manager Tom Kelly said.
Then it was Duane Ward's turn.
Ward. who had been Henke's setup
man until the injury pushed him
into the closer's role, blew only
two of 25 save opportunities this
season.
He got ihe last six outs. four on
strikeouts, in a typically dominat·
ing performance. Ward The Closer
is no different from Ward The
Setup Man.
"Every time I go out on the
mound I have lhe same mentality:·
he said. "Kick some rear end."'
The Blue Jays figured to have
trouble scoring against Minnesota"s
Big ,Three of Jack.. Morris. Kevin
Tapani and Erickson. But lhey"ve
already put nine runs on lhe board
in the games started by Morris and
Tapani.
They had Tapani scrambling
early Wednesday. collecting seven
hits'in ihe first ihree innings.
The Blue Jays almost always
score if their first two batters,
Devon White and Robeno Alomar,
get on base. In Game 2, !hey were a
combined 4-for-7, with four runs, a
walk, a sacrifice and two stolen
bases.
White was on when Carter's
two-strike single.made it I-0 in lhe
first- " the only pitch I wish I
could have back," Tapani said.
Both were on for Gruber's hit. And
both were on again in. the sevenih
when the Jays iced it against reliev·
er Steve Bedrosian.
.
Nei lher Tapani nor Gruber were

Just Arrived-New Shipment Of
'Sofas, Sleep Sofas &amp; R

SOFA

Hudson and Misty Lane. Behind them are coach
Loretta Aklins, Sherry Johnson, Mindy Findlay
Leslie QuaUs, Tracy Fife and coach Sarah John:
son. Teammates not picture are Lee Henderson
Sarah Pullins and Wendy. Clark.
-~

Meigs All-Stars
s.econd of 11
in Kentucky tourney

Toronto ties ALCS ..

COLUMBUS, Oh•o (AP) - Tho

2. Piqua 71 .5000. 3. Pickerinaton
77.0000 4. Oublln.71 SOOO. S. Oallow_•y
WcaLIInd 63.5000. ~ LoncuiU 61 0000.
7. Mantlield S9 5000. I {ue). Colombu1
Broo&amp;htvcn, Wonctville Soul.b 56.5000.
10. Muion lltrdina 55 OOOCl.
Re&amp;ion 4 - I. Cillcinnlli PrinctlOrl
97.loo0. 2. CinclM&amp;ti EW« 17.3000. 3.
Gltlcinnati Moeller 61.8000. 4. Cincinnati
M~ Hotltby 65 0000. .5. Odord T1law1n•
do 6UOOO. 6. Middi41ownl9.l000. 1.
CmLirville 51.0000. I. Cincwltt.i Wett·
· em Ifill• 56.1000. 9. Hltrilort 54.0000.
IO. Cinc:innoli Olen EM 53.5000.

Fmdiay, Enca Robie, Danlelle Scott, Heather

OUT OF REACH - As Toronto's Candy
Maldonado (23). watches the play at the plate,
teammate Roberto Alomar (len ·center) slides in
to score out of the reach of Minnesota catcher

Inter-

computer ratings

Region 2 -

SPORTS-N-STUFF TEAM- Members of

t~is ,year's Middleport Sports·N·Stuff senior
g1.rls softba~l team are (rront row, L·R) Ginger

LOS ANGELES KINGS - A"•gnod

OHSAA football ·

Division I

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
must turn their game up a few
Tribune Staff Writer
notches oo both sides of the ball, as
""Yeah, though I walk in die val- they did in their 38-20 win over
ley of the shadow .of the Viking, I Nonb Gallia two weeks ago. Why?
Will fear no evil, for I must win to The Bobcats• are more dangerous
stay on top fn the svAC. •
than therr 24 record indicates.
That must have been the prayer
The. Eagles' rushing attacli:.
of every Oak Hill gridiron wanior averagmg 302.3 yards per game,
m preparation for last week's three-. has dropped below that average
overtime marathon against only twice (289 yards against
Symmes Valley. With the Oaks' Waterford, 232 against North Gal38-36 win, which came when lia). In both games the Meigs rapdefensive back John Conley made tors barely got out with their feath a ~arne-ending interception of an ers, if you can call winning by 20
Enc Wall ·two-point conversion and 18 points, respectively, doing·
pass followin~ Wall's five-run so by ihe skin of one's talons. In
touchdown run m Ovenirne No. 3, any case, the season-ending· arm
lhe SV AC is now down to two co- injury of junior tailback Charlie
leaders - 11th-ranked Ea.stern Francis. the heir apparent to all·
(according to the AP prep football world tailback Tim Bissell who
poll) and Oak Hill - after a pair of racke!J up a pair of JOO.yanl games
games these two played as different (105 yards vs. Southwestern and
193 vs. Hannan Trace) this season.
as mght and day.
won't
significantly 'hamper Randy
The 6-0 Eagles, who like the
Oaks have ihree conference wins · Churilla"s infantry.
Kyger"'Creelc has the difficult
and no such losses, walked all over
Hannan Trace by a 57-6 count last task of reversing its recent fortunes
week in a tuneup for a considerably on the road. Away from the
tougher Kyger Creek squad that Cheshire floodplain. the Bobcats
they w1U host Friday night for their have allowed I06 points and scored
homecommg gam·e . The ..Eagles 19. On l!efense, the task is simple
y;ho in the OHSAA computer rat: - clog the inside and have defin·
1ngs are ranked third in Division sive ends Dave Wellman and Jerry
V's Region 19, know that they Ramsey force the sweep runs by
either Bissell or Terry McGuire
back inside, while the secondary cornerbacks J.P. Roberts and Jay
t~ams
Johnson, and safeties Matt Rhodes
and Jamie Walters - shadow
wideouts Mike Newland and Jere·
my Cline. Eagle tight end Mike
Smith
can't be ignored, because he
The Meigs All-Stars girls soft·
is
a
possession
receiver that will be
ball team was invited to play in
·tracked
by
linebackers
Phil Brad·
Kentucky this past season and
excelled not only there, but also in bury and Adam Denney.
The offense, whose season high
tournaments across the tri-county
of 211 rushing yards (gained in last
area.
In Kentucky, the All-Stars week's 14-6 win over Soulhem) is
played great ball to receive second 21 yards shy of Eastern's t~am
rushing low (gained against North
place out of I I teams overall.
Gallia),
must open holes against an
Many great sponsors, including
McDonalds, Locker 219, Fisher Eagle defense ihat has allowed I00
Funeral Home; Pleascrs, Larry's or more yards rushing only twice
Satellites, Meigs Decorating, Mag- this season (276 vs. Wahama, 181
num Drilling, Pomeroy Nursing vs. North Gallia). The Bobcats
home, McCiures, Sports-N-Stuff, need more of what Bradbury did
and Let's Gog Grocery helped against the Tornadqes (22 carries.
make the trip possible.
124 yards, one TD) and what
Girls were from Middleport, sophomore tailback Matt Rhodes
Rutland, and Point Pleasant.
(18-7 1) had last week. KC must
Lee Henderson batted 6-13 for also create passing lanes against a
.462, while Candy Horam was crew that has surrendered 100 or
.357, Ginger Findlay 7-13 and more yards pasing only once (103
.538; Chrissy Taylor 10-14,.714; vs. Southwestern) so far.
Sherry Johnson .600; Rachael HaJ.
Oak Hill vs. North Gallia
way .3B5. Mindy Findlay .417;
Last year Nonb Gallia aimed lhe
Tracy Fife .500 in a 6-12 cam- stun gun at Symmes Valley at
paign; and Lorena Qiler .333. Oih· home and won 12·8. Now that Oak
ers were Kelly Stewan .364; Teri- Hill plays the Pirates on the latter's
cia Cogar .400; Heather Davis 1-7; Morgan Township battlefield, IS it
Kandi Hysell .500; Jacinda Mullen the Oaks' tum this yeatl We'll see.
1·6, and Erica Robie .800 in a 4-5
Senior tai !back Bill Potter, lhe
effon.
Oaks' and the conference· s top
The team was well representa· ground gainer wilh 864 yards in six
games (Bissell is second with 744
tive of the Big Bend area.

Hockey

NY R•naen at Wnhington, 7.3)

ReiJon I - 1. Clcvdand St lpti..97.0000. 2. E11clid 76.0000 3. P•inef.;Jie
~twmide 70.5000 4. Mcn10r 69 0000. 5

the same way Minnesota won
Tuesday. They took the lead, got
good starting pitching, ran the
bases aggressively and used nearly
nawlcss relief pitching to slam lhe
door.
Guzman allowed four hits and
two runs in 5 2·3 innings. He was
in trouble several times but almost
always wriggled out of it.
After Toronto manager Cito
Gaston had seen enough - the
methodical, sometimes-wild rookie
threw 102 pitches - he handed ihe
ball to closer-turned-setup-star
Tom Henke.
Henke entered in the sixth
inning with two on, two out and
hot·hiuing Shane Mack at the plaie.
The overanxious Mack swung at
Henke's first pitch and chopped
one right back to the mound .
Henke followed by striking out two
batters in a perfect seventh.
"We swung at a bad frrst pitch
(See TORONTO on Page 7) '

·

SVAC now has two co-leaders

N•Uona' Hoc:kty Luaue

pm.

bt-level poi.nUI):

eading into prep football's Week 7

'

Walle finished up by allowing
one run over the final three innings.
Drabelc won't know until today
if he can start Game 5, as sched·
uled, but said the injury didn't feel
serious and wa$ more like a cramp.
"I wasn't about· to take a
chance," said Dtabek, who was
15· 14 during the season.
Braves third base coach Jimy
Williams did, and it might have
cost Ailanta any chance it had of
winning.
With Pittsburgh leading 3-0 in
the fourth, first baseman Gary
Redus misplayed Mark Lemke's
grounder, which bounced into the
right-field corner. Bonilla compounded the problem by over·
throwing cutoff man Jose Lind, but
Bell backed_up the play arul hi.£
laser dan of a throw beat Lemke to
third.
"'Down 3-0, J"m supposed to be
100 percent sure he"ll make it
standing up. That"s how -sure I
felt.'' Williams said. "I c)ln"t let
that play be that close. It was my
fault."'
The·Pirates hope the play was a
favorable omen. Last year, two of
their playoff losses were aecided
largely by runners being tossed out
at ihird, Van Slyke in Game 2 and
Bonilla in Game 5.
"You've got to play aggressively," Braves manager Bobby Cox
said.
That was exactly the word he
said described Drabek - and
didn't describe Glavine.
"Drabek was aggrcssi ve and
stayed ahead of the hitters," he
said. "Giavine did not"
Justice's ninth-inning homer
provided Atlanta's only run.

American Luaue
CLEVELAND INDIANS - Rc lcncd Keith Hemtndcz, fll'St bucm1n,
and Milo Yodc:, pitc:her.
MILWA UKEE BREWERS - Fired
Tom Trcbclhom, manager.
,
TEXAS RANGERS - E~tcrciled 111
op tion on Nolan Ryan, p11chcr, for lhe
199heuoo

Friday's game

third weekly football computer nllngs 11
ttleucd by 1h11 Ohib Hiah S~hoot Athlcti~
Auocittion (by diviaton and reston. Wllh

'the

Thursday, October 10, 1991;
Page--6

Pirates-hand Braves s~ lloss
in NLCS opener Wed.nesday

_

Thursday, October 1o, 1991

I

•

•

�•

• Page . 8 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport 1 Ohio ·

Thursday, October 10, l991

.
.
--. ---·Fo&lt;ftbaiF'9l! -~-

-~upport Th~se

Fine Area
Businesses!

Catch
. All The
~ _Exc1tement.
.
'

INGELS
FURNITURE,. JEWELRY
and· RADIO SHACK

· .. '

253 NORTII SECOND
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992-2635

For All Your Prescription and
Sundry l'eeds See Us"

Stop In F,or All Your.
J'avorfte Legal Beverages.
WE NOW HAVE SUPER
LOTTO, PICK 3 and PICK 4

lYE POINTS EXPRESS
and DRIVE·THRU

THE BOB HARMON FORECAST
sat., Oct. 12- Major Colleges· Dlv. 1·A

Air Force
'Alabama
Arizona Slate
'Army
Auburn
Ball Slate
'Baylor
Bowling Gteon
' .Britam-Young

21
35
37
24
35
24
20
20

28
23
22
21
28
27

• Ca tlomia
' Central Michigan

• Clemson

'Colorado

• Florida

St. Rt. 7 at Five Points

Pomeroy

992-6891

VALLEY LUMBER
555 PARK ST..
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
992~6611

Florida State
• Fresno State
' Fullerton State
' Georgia Tech
Houston
*Illinois

'lnciana
Iowa
Kansas .
'Kent State
'L.S.U.
Louisville
'Miami, FL
Michigan
' Mississippi State
Nebraska
• Nonn Carolina
'Notre Dame
Oklahoma
' Pacific
' Rutgers
' San Diego State
San Jose State
' South Carolina
South'n MissiSsiPj&gt;i
Southam C&amp;lifom1a
'Slanlord

DOWNING CHILDS
~ULLEN MUSSER
INSURANCE
111 East Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
992·2342
' .

• Syrawse

Texas Tech
Tulsa
'U.C.L.A.
' Washington

•

=ilnStat•
.Cookman
8oiM 811111

c...,

• Ctntral Florida
• Colgate
• Coli.w'nbla

c.-·

' Dtlawart Stall
• Eutlfn Ktntuelly
• Eatltrn Wuhlnglon
Florida A &amp; M
' FUIINII'I
o Gtolgll SoUihlrn
HIIV&amp;rd

H&lt;lr,.Cr001

Queen

'NtwH~hlre

• Nonh.n l:ona
Nonharn Iowa
• NW LOUINne
Prii'Qiton
o Sam Hout~on
South Carolina Stat•
SW Mlltouri

992-3322

SWTe~u

NORTH SECOND AYE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TtMtiM8TKh
WiM'*.m I Wary
Voung110Wn

........

Virginia
Missouri

Tennessee
Virginia Tech
Long Beach State
Nevada laG-Vegas
Maryland

27
22
28
27
24
26
40
28
23
21
24
31
36
23
21
30
41
29
27
27
26
27
31
38
24
21
26
49
31
27
27
23
49
28
23
23

• Arkansas

Ohio State
Nonhwestem

• Wisconsin

' Kansas Stale
Cincinna~

Arkansas State
' Boston College
Penn State,
' Michigan Slate
Purdue

Georgia
Kentuckv
' Oklahoma State
Wake Forest
Pittsburlih
Te)laS

Cal Poft
Maine

New MexK:o
' New MexiCO State
Louisiana Tech
' Memphis Stale
' Washington State
Cornell
· East Care&gt; ina
'S.M.U.
'SW Louisiana
Arizona

Toledo
• .Wast Vi~nfa
Tem,t:
Western ichigan
'No mIllinois
'Wyominil
Utah
Malor Conog.. - Olv. 1·AA
Alcorn
27 • Texu Southern

Ida
' Indiana Stall
• Jamn Madlaon
• lalaylltl
• lah~·
• Mutactlullltt
MIOdlt T.,-,n.uae
• Murra~ Sill•
* NE loull'-na
' Nev.:lt·R.no

Oairq

'Na&gt;y
Tulane
'Oregon Stale
Citadel
' Vanderbilt
' Eastern Michigan
A"=a
'Ohio U.
Texas EI-Paso
Oregon
Miami.OH

38

• Minnesota
• Mississippi

'IUHO

•

f.'
27
27

23
23

21
28
23

31

,.27

20
28

24

,.2421

'Eul Tlfii'IIIIM
Howard
• Montana
' Prairie Yltw, TX
Samtord

••

Penne,ttanl•
· Bolton U.
lblrt)'
W•ttrn Klfltuck)'
Portland State
' Nonn Carollr.a A &amp; T
....hall
W•tern Carolina
' Fordham
• Oanmoutll
WltMr State
Eutern llllnoh
0

37 r......
Budtntll
22
24 . Nor1hMIIern
23
Rhode l1laod
41 ' Aultln PMy
Tenne.... WIII In
21
McNoooo
41
Idaho St••

..

.

30

21
20

21

27

38
23
23

31

21

22

Alchmand
Montan1 S1llt
' ltMnolt State
North Tt~U

.......

7
13
7
17
7
10
6
14
12
14
20
13
tO
17
tO
8
21
13
21
23
17
10
14
20

10
14
17
6

21
17
10
12
7
14
20

21
7
6
7
22
20

13
0
13
13
10
17
7
21
10
22
10
10
7
12

"'
21
22

,.
1

"'

12
17
17
21

10
10
7
13
7
14
14
21,.
7.
23

"

"'
•
,

,,.

1

Nletlolll Stall
' Uorg.tn
' w.itern llllnoll
'S.F. Auttln
• SE M1t1ourl
'V.M.I.
• Akron

St*•

21

8

11

,10
"

21

'Alba7,NY
Alire

• Bowdoin
Cttllral Connactlcut
• Claricm
Dickinson, PA

Other Gamao - Eaal
28
w...rn Conntctlclll
31
• Hobart
27
Amhll'at

Edinboro
• ll'ldlana U., PA
• l!haca

·Juniata

• MUier&amp;vllkl
• Montclair

Ramtpo
" SIWary Rock
Susquehanna
W"h in~on

I Jaffer10n

""
21

cu.,
• Jeraey cu;

"3528
23

Kutrtown
• lOCk HaY*'!

Shlppen1burg

Am~ r lean International
Moravian
Eut Stroudlbutg
Koan

0

21
21

Saginaw Vlllty
Carroll, WI
CuiY*'·Siocklon
OhiO Northern

35

37
21

.

• Ba~wln - WAI Iace
• Benldietlne
Bet~ny, KA
o Bethtl, MN
'.Carlaton
' Canhage

28

28
40

23

·coo

Oa~ton

• Ooine
• F11rll
' H•ldelbiWg
• Hllladale
Iowa Wtlllyan
Kansas Waaleyan
·Kearney
Knot
·Mankato
o Michigan Tech
Midland
Milllkln
o Mluouri Southern
o Ml11ourl Weatern
0
0

Muakl~um

Nor1tt akola S1ate
North Oakota U.
Nonn.tn Colorado
' Northwood
NWMIIIOUII
Soutt'tw•tern. KS
o St. Johnl , MN
o St. Notbtrt
• SW MlnntiOtl State
William Jewell
' Winenberg

35
33

24
23
21
22 .
40
20
21
25
21
31
37
23

26
22

35
31

"27
23

21

30
30
28
35
33

Ouln:l
' llo1ho, KS

Sl. 0111
AuQibu'll
llllnoll Bineclletlnt
lllinolt College
• Dfake
Dana
Valparallo
Onert!eln
lndilnapoiil
'lakeland
• MePhtraon
Wayne Stall, NE
' Grlimlll ...
N.Oraaka-Omal'la
Wlnoni Stilt
Concordia. NE
llllnola Wtllty.in
Mlttouri·Rolla
SW Baplltl
Marletll
' Sl. Clood
• Al.lg..,.lana, SO
Mornlngllde
Flndrar
• c.tltral Mlt1out1
• Ottawa
GUIIAVUI Aclolphul
lawrence
Nonh~rn St1.11
• Mid-America
0

21
Cat.•AIIINVI
Other Gamoo- South • Southwell

• lbiltne Cl\rittlan
• Atkantat Tech
'Clla\Wa
' Central Arkanaaa
Concord
Oavklaon
• Elon
' Err'IQry &amp; Henry
F•num
' GeofJ!etown, KY
Htn IH'IOn
Jacklonvllle Stall
LenOir·Rhyne

.......

OMorehOu..
Morrie Brown
' NOf1h Alabama
' North Carolina Central
' Ouachha
• Savannah State
Sewanee
'Texa1A&amp;I
' Troy
' Tutkegee
Yaldoeta
W•r Vlrtnia WM\eyan
o Western
ar,.land
Wingate
Wln1ton-Salem
·Wofford
0

0

21
21

"23
26

23
26

24

,.23

•
•

31

•

,.24

'
'
•

21

23

30
20

.
24
22
21

24

"'
23
33

Ctnual Okllhoma
Nkanua-UontlctiiO
Pttlbyttrlan
Harding
F1lrmont
Wuhlnron , LH
Mar1H
Hll\'1)dan-S)'d ne~
Gultlord
Shaphttd
SoUih..-n Askantu
Delta Stll:e

.. e.,,,.

Ga~r -Wibb

J.C. Sm~h
Mlloo

22
28

27
27

Fon Vallo{.

Faylt1evl
Ell! C.Rtral Oklahoma
Alba"l'. GA
' Rhod•
Ea11 Texaa
AlabatN-Birmlngham
Clark
• LIYinglton

Wool v"!"'" TO&lt;h

0

rr.J

Rand:m: -Macon
.GitnYIIt
Ktnluek)' Stale
Wilt Geol'gla

W•••

Other Game• -Fer
24
Northrldgt

' Cal-Davit
' Claremont
Colorado Mines
• Eaatttn New Medco
• E111ern Oregon
'laVerMII
Uwll &amp; Clark
lklllold
SIQ'II'Mnto Stilt
• San Diogo U.
San Francilco Stale
Santa Btibara
• Sonorn~
Southern Or:rn
0

'SoulhttnUII

W•tern State

22
37

23

33

21

24
31
31

28
27
23
22

,.
40

28

21
20
17

'Cot
• N.wHaven

28

ll

Pomona
• Fortlewll
Anr:= State
WI n.ne
ClllUiiltrln
' OteQOn Tectl
• Slrron Frutr
• Chico Slate
Whltler
' Mtnlo Park

Haywarll

Sl. Maryt,CA
Wlltetn Oregon
Santa Clara

.....
0

•• ,
••
DISCOVER WHY .
tli
®
PEOPLE SAY,
/lnr • We have the
~lt,.f

7
7
14
10

•7
,•7

• 0~11111

IJ}~I

•

20
20

tate, P"
• o.lawar• V.llly
Muhllnberg
• Grove Ch:y

Cal~ornla

31

• Anderton
Alhland

o

• Franklin 1 Marshall

o.n...
42 • Bit• ·
Othor Go moe - Mldw..t
28
Manch1111r

' W811minatar
Wlttlarre

Au~ul!ana .

27
30
24
22
28

23

Waynft urg
WOlle~ an
WMI hllter State

Ba .,

25

3B

• Svrarthmora

0

• Bloonburg

21

• Plymouth

0

23
22

12
13

_

~-

first quarter, because once again, yards on 87 carries and score seven
for the 13th straight contest, they touchdowns. That puiS him third in
failed to do so in the Eastern game. the conference in rushing behind\.
Football coaches and players are Bill Potter and Bissell. .
I
constantly delivering testimonials
Racine's passing game hasn't
to what gelling off to a good start been iiS usual self, as th ~ Tornacan do for a team's morale .
does put up a season-low 22 yards
Second, they need to run the against Kyger Creek last wee~ on a
ball along the lines of their season- 4-for-12 passing effon. In fact, last
high 196-yard march in their thrce- week's aerial effort was a drop
ovcn.ime, 20-18 loss-10 Southwest- from the S? yards-the-Tornadoes
ern. Freshman running back Heath had against Oak Hill the previous
Hutchinson, whose 63-yard touch- week, and that was a decrease from
down run kept Trace.out of shuiOut · the season-high 171 yards they procountry, should be highly instru''- duced in their 58-12 loss to
mental in that quest. And third, Symmes Valley in Week 4.
.
they need to contain the run, which
This is 'the Tornadoes' last road
is·something that hasn't happened contest of the season, as the purple
in the last three games (304 yards warriors will head back to Racme
surrendered to North Gall ia, 211 to in the coming weeks and host
Southwestern and 303 to Eastern).
Southwestern, Nort h Gallia and
Southern, which has lost its last archri val .Eastern.
six conference games and this sea- Symmes Valley vs. Southwestern
so n, ha s dropped its last three.
Merrill Triplett's Vikings don 't
Granted those losses have come nt have the Daniels &amp; Sheppard twin·
the hands of Symmes Valley, Oak barreHed shotgun in their arsenal
Hill and Kyger Creek, all of whom anymore, but for them, that's a!l
fini shed No. 2, No. I and No. 1, right. Senior runnmg back Chr~s
res pectively, last year. But today, Copley. with 600 yards under hts
Southern boss Dave Gaul has a belt heading into Week 7, is fourth
brand new bag - junior ful lback in the SV AC in rushing.
Russell Singleton.
Valley is 0-2 in overtime games,
At 6-2 and 195 pounds, Single- and Southwestern, with its .1-0
ton has exploded onto the Backfreld mark in such marathons, will probscene like a one-man gang, as Ius · ably need to play at least five quaroffensive line, starring Todd Harri- ters and maybe seven in order to
son and Kyle Wickline, among oth- have a shot at the victory.
The Highlanders must do this to
ers, has enabled him 10 gain 633
stay in the game and avoid a sec-

20

•

••
,10

ANQERSON'S
Pomeroy, Ohio

992:3671

•7
13

WAltNER

•
•

AND

8

13
12
13
8
13
13
21
0
10

,.

23
20

15
12
7
22
14
20
7
10
14
12
21
14
12
7
7
13
7

HEATING

COOUNG

·' TIIAIIE"
. SALES • SE.RVICE
INSTALLATION
Furnoc:ts

Heat Pu~nll
XL 1
Super Efficiency

•• Conditiooon .
Hiah EHidOO&lt;y
En•gy SO•ing Hoot Pumps
ltpah Alllakas

7

20
17

14
21
13

""13
7

"

20
17

12
12
20
10
10
21
21
18
21
1
21
10
10
10
10
7

"
17

23

21

•

22

"10

20

7

12
to
7
21

20

•
to

22

carries for 221 yards in an 18-7
victory over previously unbeaten
Lima Shawnee; Hamilton Badin's
Jason Pate r~n for three' touchdowns and passed for 8110ther in a
33-15 win river Cincinnati Roger
· Bacon; Dayton Carroll's Matt
Leopard gained 220 yards on 42.
carnes and scored three limes in a
28-14 deeision over Lebanon;
Todd Schulte of Delphos St.
John's ran for 181 yards and three
touchdowns, took a kickoff back 84
-yards for a score and returned an
interception 32 yards for another
TD in a 51-10 vjctory over Rockford Parkway; Van Buren trailed
Pandora-Gilboa 13-0 with 6: 15 left
before . saving its Bells for last.
Kevin Betts scored on a nine-yard
run with 6:15 left and on a ·16-yard
run with 3:45to play..._then raced 52
yards for the winning score with

Jn__the SVAC .. ._&lt;:....Co_nu_·nu_ed_f~rom_P_;ag::....e-"7)~--------

Sert!.t you. want
in the size you nttd
at a price you'll like.

IAWLINGS·COATS

~ Dally Sentlnei-Page-8

c

ond straight blowout at home. And
since this is the James gang's last
home game, the posse wants to
make a favorable·impression on the
opposition - Southern , Kyger
Creek and Oak Hill - on the commg road tour. .
.
Ho;ov ?do the Htghlanders plan to .
do thts . The G&amp;G Touchdown
F~tor:y,l;nown _to ~h.e rest of us as
the backfield of jumor ta1lback
WtHy Gdbert and semor fuHback
Kevm G1llman, wdl be looking to
help ~he team rebound from l~st
weeks 41-14 loss to North Gaida.
These two made one. end wne vt~rt
each last week, wah G11lman s
touchdo~n bemg h1s fust of the .
season v1a land (he .caug~t a TD
pass vs. Hannan). Gilbert s score
was h1s fifth.
.
However, the H~ghlanders nce.d
much mor~ pmducLJon fmm the au
game, as JUntor quarterback Aaron
Mc..Carty ,needs to rebound from
last week s season-low fiv~ yards
and get back to the season-high 103
yards he had agamst Easte~ 10
Week 4. Somebody. has .to eep
Valley dropped back m antlctpauon
long enough, de~p enough and
often enough to gtve the Faclor,Y
(they have seven of S~thweste!" s
II TDs) room to P.!l!,k up firSt
downs. If thai doesn t happen,
Copley and c,ompany Will make the
H~ghlanders season fmale some_.hmg worth forgetttng.

1:02left
There are 64 unbeaten teams left ·
in Ohio and six will likely be elimiqat¢ in head-to-head meetings this
we~ .between teams witlj,perfect
records: Elgin-Pleasant; Bloomdale
Elmwood-Northwood; Sprin~;field
Northeastern-Kenton R1dge ;
Cincinnati Mariemont-CAPE ;
Girard-Warren Kennedy; and
Solon-Twinsburg Chiunberlin.
Painesville Riverside extended
its winning streak to.20 games with
a 39, !J,.victory over Conneaut;
Bellbrook won it&amp; 12th straight
game beatins Carlisle 38-0 and hi)S
outscored opponents 235-46 th!s
season; over the last five weeks,
Cedarville' has outscored iiS victims
14 7-13 in five wins; Minster stayed
No.1 in Division V by scoring two
limes in the fmal 8:54 to beat Coldwater 31-27:

Eastern six defeat$ OVCS;
Defenders top Hannan Trace
Eastern knocked off visiting
Ohio Valley Christian Monday
night 15-12, 4-15, 15-12, according
to a report submilled Thurs.day
morning.
The Eagles, missing two serves
all night , were paced by Lee
Giltilan's 10 poiniS and five aces.
Amy Well chalked nine points and
one ace, while teammates Jaime
Wilson, C;trrie Morrissey and Jessica Radford added four.
The Defenders' Meredith Pollard led all scorers with 12 points
and four aces, and at the line, she
went 25 for-30 and-tallied six kills.
Jodie Hager had nine points and
four aces, and Beth Blevins (17-19,
five kills) had seven points and
three aces, while Jenny Hughes (69, four kiHs) had six points.
In the junior high match, the
Defenders won 15-8, 12-15, 15-9 ·
behind Jami Gianechini's 12 point~
and two aces, Rachel Cochran's 10
points and four aces, and Amy Pollard's nine points and four aces.
The junior Eagles were led by 10point efforts from Patsy Aeiker'and
Rebecca Evans
.
oerender~ beat Wildcats
At Gallipolis, the Defenders got
back into their winning ways with a
15-4,15-0 win over Hannan Trace.
Blevins led the offense with
nine points and five aces, and
Hughes added six points . The
match was the last home match for
seniors Blevins, Pam Holley.
Hughes and Cindy Sheets.
In the junior high match-;" the
Defenders won 15-6, 15-6. Gianeehini powered the offense with II
·

points and seven aces. Angie
McGuire and Dara Belville led
Trace with four and three points,
respectively. The Defenders, 17-4, will head
10 Ashland, Ky., to face Paul Blazer's Tomcats.

Baltimore Liberty Union went
1-9 last year and 0-10 the year
before that but is off to a 4-2 start
this season; Ottawa,Glandorf lpst
its ftrst five games but w.on two on
Friday nigh~ beating beat
21 before finding out Paulding
would forfeit a 35-7 decision to .0G because of an ineligible player.
Finally, it must be the blood ~
lines.
Run-and-shoot Houston ,quarterback David Klingler was born and ·
spent his early years in Ada. Now
his ~ousin , Bo Hurley of Upper
Scioto Valley, is following in the
Cougar ace's cleats.' . ··
!
Hurley completed 16 of 37 passes for 204 yards in a 26-24 victory
over Columbus Grove.
But Hurley wasn'lthe only star.
The 4-2 Rams, who had their first
winning season in school history
last year (6-4), had to stop a twopoint conversion try with 39 sec" onds to clinch the victory.

Sports briefs
Tennis
ZURICH, Switzerland (AP) Top-seeded Steffi Graf of Gennany ·
defeated AndJea Strnadova of ·
Czechoslovakia 6-2, 6-4 to advance
10 the quarterfinals of the European
Indoors tournament.
"

Midl •• rt

93 Mill St.

•

Fisher
Funeral Home
. UUCI nlllll • Ownor/Operaler
IIIDOUPOU

.

Hubba-rd .Eagles now 5-l·after going 4-35 inlastfo~r years~ ·
26 yard~ in a 45-20 victory over vania Northview;
Raeshaun Jernigan opened the
AP Sports Writer
Toledo Waite; Barberton's Scot
It's been a long time since foot- Loeffler has· completed 75 of 137 ~ame with.a 95-yard kickoff return
ball fans at Hubbard had any inter• passes for 1,206 yards and 11 m Euclid's 37-0 victory over Lyndest in.takin~ a cl~se look at ~e fine touchdowns so far, including three . hurst Brush; Hamilttm R()ss' Qhris
prmt m Thursdays sports pages.
scores in the Magics' 33-15 victory Coolidge scored on a.one-yard
· - "The-only computer points they. over Akron Springfield; Derek quarterback sneak, caught a 35knew about came from some Nin- · Kidwell completed ~ix passes for yard pass from 'Chris Stringer for a
tendo game,". s~ys .Jan Vasey, a 266 y;trds and touchdowns of 49, TD and returned a punt 65 yards
semorcO-capUtm.
81 and 49 yards in Fostoria's 57-12 for another score in a 41-0 victory
But that has changed. After victory over Napoleon; Defiance's over Blanchester; David Sherrer
gomg 4-35 the last four years, the Mark Walter ran for four scores in ran for three IDs and caught a 43Eagles are 5-lthis·year.
a 57-0 win over Van Wert;
·
'yard pass from all-name teamer
Nathan McBeth ranJor 214 Wince Morris for another i'n
· Much of that is attributable to a
new attitude instilled by ftrst-year . yards on 13 carries and scored 20 Oxford Talawanda~s .-54-17 victory
Hubbard head coach J~ff. Bayuk.
points - on TO runs of 42, 67 and over Lemon-Monroe;
Bayuk has made tl h1s goal to 80 yards - with a two-point conStacey Foshee set a schOol
make football fun agam for the -version in Marion River Valley's record with a 94-yard touchdown
Eagles. To. that end, he has dressed 41-7 victory over Sparta Highland; run and added a 31-yard touchup as ElVIS and has also played Jacob Warrington of Arcadia down run as Piekaringlon moved to
characters named Football Man and picked up 241 -·yards and scored 6-0 with a 40-8 victory over
Transparent Man to amuse his five touchdowns in a 56-22 defeat Delaware Hayes; Mount Blanchard
team.
·.
of Arlington; Marion Elgin~s Doug Riverdale's Steve Stout hit Scott
If the Eagles keep 11 up, maybe Hesson. is averaging 146 yards Bowman for a school-record 94he' II pret~nd to be Bill Parcells in rushing but it was his 20-yardfield yard touchdown pass in a 25-0 win
the_playoffs.
goaLwith I:11 left that gave the over Bucyrus Wynford; Craig
Elsewhere around Ohio high ComeiS a 24-21 victory over Card- · Cook gained only 17 yards on 14
school football, Cleveland Bene- ington-Lincoln; Tyrone "Toddy" carries but accounted for all of
dictine's Andy Kostos carried 27 Price of Fremont Ross rushed for Spencerville's points in a 27-0 victimes for a school record 263 yards 223 yards on 31 c;trries with three tory over Cridersville Perry;
and scored on runs of 17, 8, 79 and touchdowns in a 34-6 win over SylCelina's Tom Mersman had 15

992-6669

106 N. 2nd, Middleport

·Pomeroy-Middle()9rt, Ohio

By RUSTY MILLER

.

·Prescription
Shop

Thursday, October 1o, 1991

...

"2-5141

'

CROWS
Family Restaurant

992-5432

Pomeroy, Ohio

FRIDAY MIGHT SPECIAL!
BAKED PORK CHOPS &amp;
DRESSING

SALAD, ROLL and
CHOICE Of POTATO

..

$52 5

\

TRACTORS and

RIDING MOWERS

Baum

Lumber
CHESTER, OHIO
985·3301 or 985-3303

Peoples

Bank
~
r::;.l.

3 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS

MEMRER FDIC
ISECOND STREET JACKSON AVE.
Sth STREET
MoM, W.Yii'. Pt. Pleasant, W. Ya .Now Hawon, W.

773-5514

1175:1121

882-2136

Ridenour
Supply
CHinO, OHIO
915·3301

•
•

w

\

r

,,

.THE BOB.HARMON PRO FORECAST
FOR SUNDAY and MONDAY, OCTOBD 13 and 14
**BUFFALO .......... :ll INDIANAPOLIS .......... 7·

Buffnl~ scored 57 points to 17 for Colts in double win last season- 26-10, 31-7 , , , Bills' RB
Thurman Thomas ran for three TDs, QR Jim Kelly passed for two TDs as. Colts fell twice.
* *DALI.AS .......... 24. CINCINNAT1 ........... 20
Short series here Lied at 2-apiecc ... Bengals destroyed Cowboys in mosl recent match-up in '88 in
Dallas, Ciney, led by QR Boomer Esiason'sthree TD passes, winning big 38-24.
IIOUSTON ....... : .. 27 **NEW YORK JETS .......... 24
.J ets humbled Oilers in Houston midway thru last season , recovering fumble in end zone for TD,
scoring J.O points in 4th quarter to win 17-12 .. . jets fighting back from early losaea.
**KANSAS CITY.......... 24· MIAMI .......... l7
In 1st round playoff game last January , Chiefs led 10-3 at the half, 16-3 into 4th quarter before
Miami QB Dun Marino threw two TD puMscs for 17-16 Dolphin win .. K.C.'s turn.
**LA·. RAMS .......... 23 SAN DIEC0 .......... 21
In brief se ries, eac h team has won twice ... in '88 Chargers ran over Rams 38-24, ·.. S.D. RB
Harry llmld cn .run for two TDs and Anthony Miller scored on 93-yard kickoff return . • ·
••MINNESOTA .......... 20 PIIOENIX.......... 19
Cards hold big 7-2.1ead in short se ries, winning last four from '77 to '83. , .both teams have been
embarrassed by reeentshutou Is, Vikes 0-26 by Saints, Cards 0-34 by Redskins.
NEW ORLEANS ......... 27- **PIIILADELI'IIIA .......... 23
In December Monday niter two year~ ago, Saints surprised playoff-bound Engles with 14 points in
4th quarter to win 30-20 .. .N.0. QB John Fourcode threw three TD passes in upset.
.
SAN FRANCISC0 .......... 23 **A1'LANTA .......... 20
.
49ers hnvcn'tlct up on Falcons in last se ven yeuro, Atlanta winningjust ·once in 14 meetings.,
.bo th teams had an NFC West holiduy las t week .. .both team.s 2-3 .behind New Orleans.
. HSEAII'U\ ..........21 L.A. RAif)ERS ......... 20
Raiders swept Sca hnwk series last fall, L.A. raUying in Scuttle with 14 points in 4th quarter io win .
17-13 ... in 2n d meeting, l!aid ers took curly 21-0 lead, holding on to win 24-17.
* *WASIIINCTON .......... :~ I CLEVELAND .......... IO
Surprising lri vio : Drowns lead series with Hcdskins 32-8·•.. in '88, Clevelond rallied from 3-0
halftime deficit, Erricst Ry cr running for TD in finoltwo minutes to win 17-13.
(Monday) UJ'ITTSilURGII .......... 20 NEW YORK GIANTS .......... l7
Teams haven't met since 1985, Giants winning nine of last 12 with one tie ••• N.Y.Ieads series that
started in 1933, 41-26 .... teams have never met in post~season playoff game.

MIDDLEPORT
992-5627

QUALITY
PRINT
SHOP

255 MILL ST.

•

. MIDDLEPORT
992-3345

this 111011fh1''
For a free Budget Guide, visit any Bank One.Or .
calll-800-766-1515.We'll get it out to you right
~ Tharway,you'llbe-sure·ro-get-· .
at,least one piece of mail
you're glad to see.
~,$takes:'

-=

786 N. 2ND AYE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
9.92-6491
f,

BANKEONE.

•

'•
•

Cl/991 MNC C»-'ECORPORATfO~

'

·•

lj,

'

�.

..
Page--1 0-The Dally Sentinel

..
Thursday, October 1O, 1991

Pomeroy2..Middleport, Ohio

·Meigs looki~g to make Wellston fourth straight victim Friday
'
•.

By DAVE liA'QRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
The Meigs Marauders ·will be
trying for their fourth victory in a
_. row on Friday evening when they
travel to Wellston to battle the
Golden Rockets.
The game will not coun1 as a
conference. game because it was
not known until late in the summer
if Wellston was going to able to
field a team. The booster club in
Wellston was able to raise enough
money for the athletic program for
thc Jackson County school to con.tinue. Meigs is one of only two TriValley Conference teams to play
the Rockets, the other being the
Vinton County Vikings in the season's finhl game.
·
. · Wellston had to scramble to
come up with a schedule for the
team to play, playing the likes of
Weirton, (W.Va.) Madonna, Twin
Valley South, Portsmouth Notre
Dame an d Portsmouth East, posting a 2-3 record along the way. The
Golden Rockets are coming off a
~ -0 win at Cincinnali Hillcrest.
This will be tire 22nd meeting
between the two schools with the
Marauders having the upper hand
in the series winning 16, losing
four and tying one. The last win for
Wellston was a 10-7 victory back
in ·1976 when both schools belong
to theSEOAL.

If this year's games are anything

pound senior. picked' up 156 yards
like the last two area•fans are in for _ m 22 carries and three touchdowns
a·trcat. Last season the Marauders last week. Smith; a 6-0, 185-pound
rallied from a 29-20 deficit in the fullback, rushed for I08 yards in 17
final six minutes to post a 32-29 carries and three touchdowns last
victory, the winning points came week.
· on a 70-yard touchdown mike
TheMarauders came off a 43-0
from Jeremy Pharin · to Terry rout over Federal Hocking, but he
McGuire with 47 seconds left. The maroon and gold offense didn't
wm knocked the Golden Rockets look as good as it has in past
from the ranks of the undefeated.
weeks. However . th e Marauder
Two years ago Frank Blake
scored on a 12 yard run in the
fourth overtime to defeat. the.Golden R~ckets 2.5-19 : Twlce m the
ByTIMLIOTIA
overume penods the Marauders
AP Sports Writer
had to convert on fourth d~wn
SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP)
plays to force another overttme
- Joe Montana, the three-time
period.
·
This year's edition of the Gold- Super Bowl M\'f who has been
en Rockets lost a few players who sidelined since training camp,
transferred to other schools because finally consented to undergo elbow
of the budget problems, but those surgery Wednesday night.
After two days of criss-crossing
defections did not leave the Rockets short on talent. Three returning the country hoping to find an alterlettermen lead Coach Paul native, Montana, 35, has deQided
that su rgery is the best option. to
Blankenship run-oriented offense.
Mike Rippeth has switched from repair the torn tendon in his right
running back to quarterback, Rip- elbow that has kept him off th e
peth a 5-6, 145 -pound senior aver- playing fi eld.
"Joe personally visited at least
aged 6.5 yards a carry last season.
two
other physicians, besides
fn the Meigs games the speedster
MRis,
where he was physically
had a kickoff return for 90 yards
examined,
and it was Joe's decision
and a touchdown.
after
receiving
(teain physician) Dr.
The running backs for Wellston
are Matt Whetstone and Shane- Dillingham's, his team's input as
Smith. Whetstone, a 5-10, 175- well as the other physicians he vis-

...

.-

ited, that it was no longer necessary "This,is a tendon situation .... It is not been conducted yet, is tJ!at Joe
-fo.r him to go elsewhere," 49ers . nothing more than (Dr. Dillipg- should be able to be back in full
president Carmen Policy said dllr· ham) anticipated the problem to be stride, maybe ~ven stronger, liext
season than he was when he reponing a hastily arranged news confer- . a month or so ago."
ence Wednesday at team headquarDillingh;un will head a team of ed to training camp.' :
ters.
three surgeons who will perform
Al'tcr the 49ers recommended
" ... Ultimately it was Joe's deci- the operation at a Bay Area hospision to go ahead and do what he is tal. Dr. Gary Fanton and Dr. War- surgery over the weekend, Mongoing to do this evening.''
ren King will also participate. .
tana sQught the opinions of two
The surgery, which is described • The 49ers have scheduled a other elbow specialists, Dr. James
as having an 80 percent rate of sue- news conference Thursday that· Bcnneu in Houston on Monday and
cess, will be similar to the opera- would allow Dr. Dillingham to Dr. Ben Kibler in Lexington, Ky.,
tion that ended the career of former .describe the procedure and evaluate on Tuesday.
Pills burgh Steelers quarterback the operation.
Terry Bradshaw. He was 35, 100.
''The overall feeling (on the
Bennett is an orthopedic surThe procedure is expected to 49ers) basically seems to 6e that as geon who specializes in treating
take 45 minutes and Montana is a result of the surgery Joe will not elbow, shoulder and hand injuries.
scheduled to be released Thursday be able to return this season," Poli- Kibler is the attending physician to
afternoon.
cy said. " .:. Th~_ pro!nosis at.th~ · the U.S. Tennis Ass.ociation_and
"There is no suggestionat this pomt, and that IS a very qualified spec_ializes in treating elbow
point in time that there is any dam- pro.11nosis ~ause the surgery has mJunes.
age to the ligaments.'' Policy said.

Rio lad(es net conference win
In spite of a slow beginning, the
University of Rio Grande volley- .
ball team defeated Ohio Dominican
College on the Lady Panthers'
court Tuesday by scores of 18-16,
15-10, 16-14.
The key to the win, Coach Patsy
Fields explained, came in not
allowing ODC to win the first
game. The Redwomen were ahead8-0 when the hosts rallied, but
through strong defense and serving,
Rio Grande lliok the game, giving
them the confidence to take its
opponents in three straight.
"I expected us to be a little sluggish, but we held on and didn't let
them win the first game," Fields
said. "ODC has a super defense
and didn'tlet anything hit the floor,
but I was pleased with the win and
the effort that went behind it."
Offensively, Teresa Zempter Jed
the way with 23 kills, Billina
Cooper added 16, Michelle Spears
netted five , Tiffany Neff recorded
four and Robin Sharp had three.
Cooper added five serving aces to
her season statistics, whiJe Sharp ·
chipped in with four and Spears
with three.
Spears' 15-dig performance
highlighted 1he defense as Sharp

over Kyger Creek and Eastern.
Kyger had previously lost just one
in the league.
SHS players are Christi Maidens, Renee Russell~ Kim Jenkins,
Sarah Duhl, Heather McPhail,
Angie Swiger, Megan Wolfe,
Marcy Hill, Tammi Buckley and
Man;y Mathews. SHS is coached
by 12-year veteran Suzanne Wolfe.
At Eastern the Eagletles are also
about to hit the Tournament trail
under head Coach Pam Douthitt.
Team members are Tabby Phillip~.
Lee Gillilan, Shelly Metzger, Lisa
Golden, Amy Well, Penny Aeiker,
Heidi Nelson, Becky Driggs, Carrie
' Morrissey, Kathy Bernard, Jessica
Radford and Jaime Wilson.
Good Luck in the tournament to
these teams.
Also, on the racing scene Bob
Adams Jr. of Racine again won the
Skyline Speedway championship
for the seventh time in his career.
Congratulations!
. _
Until nm time, I'll s~e you in
the Victory Circle!

N

Thuriday,:October 10, 1991.

-;;;;;;;;;;;;:"=::::::=============::i:::=:::----~. --------,;;..'----....:.-.-__:P::a~ge-=
· 11 . "" l

_Dr. Davis brings legacy of Moore
family letters to county library
Letters entitled "The Courtship
Correspondence (1849-l851) will
be on display at the Meigs County
Library for the next month.
The concept for the exhibition
and the materials for it were provided by Emeritus Prof. Hugh H.
Davis, PH.D., grandson of thecorrespondents, S.A.M. Moore,
Pomeroy, and Lydia Loring Stone
of Belpre.
Moore's letters for the most pan
were written at the "Old Brick", the
dwelling within sight of the Library
at 224 West Main St., today a pan
of the Crow Family Restaurant

N

DON'T MISS THIS SALE!

GrHI Stlac1lon 01

I SIY!ta And Flnlshttl
Lay~w~y

Now!

FT.

MAYTAG
APPLIANCES!
Automatic Washer.........1449
Dryer..............................1~79
Built-In Dlshwasher......1489
Give Mom The Best
This Christmas!

BLOW·IN
-· WINNERS • These students at
POSTER
Chester Elementary were winners of their
poster contest for the annual fall carnival at the

CLOCKS

•SHIRTS

AND

BEAN BAGS

BAHR CLOTHIE
MIDDLEPORT
I

school. Pictured, 1-r, are, front, KeUi Bailey, Jes·
sica Marcum, Scott Needs, Josh Will. Back,
Billee Pooler, Sean Beeker, Stephanie Bearhs.

l..tlyiiWIIy
NawFor
Christmbs!

\

:"r;::;:::::::;::::::;:;i

.."...,,..,

__

ANDERSEN

SHINGLES

Insulation

t4%

UAU .... 1111110

Off

Mf.g.'s

Carnival contest winners named
: · Chester Elementary School will
· observe its fall carnival on Sa1ur. day from 6to 8:30p.m.
\..
The 25 cent admission charge
cnti~es participants to games, door
prizes. cakewalk, a haunted house
and refreshments.
In con/· unction with the carnival,
there wil be a jitney supper at the
school cafeteria starting at 5 p.m.
The menu includes homemade
chicken and noodles, green beans,
hotdogs, pizza, homemade pies and
drinks.
The winners of the poster con-

Chalsie Manley recently celc,
brated her second binhday with a
party given by her parents, Margie
and Roger Manley Jr.
A Sesame Strect theme was
observed and games were played
·with prizes going to Nikki Roush,
Josh and Jacob McCany.
Others attending and presenting
gifts were her grandparents, Ada
McHaffie, Connie and Roger Mrinley Sr., great grandmother, Mar8aret Nunn, Cathy and Erica Han_mg. Trish McHaffie, Charles,
. Dianna, Kevin andKayla Smilh ,
· Kevin, Donna and Maria Meadows,
Tom, Tricia and Tommy Roush,
John, Betty and Johnny Roush,
Dodic and Nicole McDaniels,
·Steve, Angie and S1even Tomek,
Tammy, Jimmy and Daniel McCarty, Dave, Alberta, Andy and Beth
Hysell, Gary and Roberta Acree.
Others sending gifts were great
grandparehts Rich and Dorothy
Roush, Thurman Smith, Ivan and
Helen My ers, Becky and Dave
·Lynch, Roy McCarty, Dwaine
McDaniels, Phil and Rita Radford,
.Dottie, Wendy, Johnnie Sizemore,
Lois and Ray Powell , Robi n,
Steven and Jeremy Hrubuocak, and
Tommy'and Ch'ris Lane.

The Ohio Valley. Draft Horse
and Mule Association will have a
trail drive on Sunday, Oct. 20
beginning at 10 a.m, The ride is
open to the public.
The group wiD rrieet one-quarter
mile south of Bashan on Colltlty
Road 28 where there is adequate
space for trailer and truck parkmg.
For further information on the
trail drive contact Mary Rose at
614-949-2822 or Tim Bearhs at
614-992-7880.
There will tie a potluck dinner
following the drive with meat furnished by the Association.
'

GRANDFATHER

in g.
Cole has been at the center of an
ongoing battle for custody between
Brenner and Brody, who received
custody of the child in 1986.
:
On Monday, Brenner begged
viewers of "The Arsenio HaH
Show" to help hi'm find his soih
"If anyone knows where my son is,
let me know," Brenner asked.

SALE PRICES IN EFFECT THRU
OCTOBER 26, 1991

Trail
ride set
.
·october 20

•SWEATERS

l

O'DELL$

test held for the carnival were
announced this week. Each winner
will receive a ribbon and a cash
awpd from the Chester PTO. Winners. in first, second and third
places were as follows:
First grade - Carrie Crow, Sonia
Frederick and Amanda Fetty.
Second grade - Nicole Grover,
Evan Needs and Whitney Karr.
Third grade- Wes Crow, Phillip
Cook and Heather Foreman.
Fourth grade - Joshua Broderick, Scott Needs, and a tie for third
between Jessica Grueser and

Birthday celebration held

•SUITS
•BLAZERS

•JACKETS
•PANTS

Amanda Fetty, Sonia Frederick. Back, Wes
Crow; John Cook, Whitney Karr and Evan
Needs.
- -

'

16 CU.

from Godey's Lady;s Book which
. serve as decor to signify the mid19th century. The 1949 volume displayed had a place in Moore's
bookcase and appears to have been
one of the first books he acquired
after coining to Pomeroy,
':
The display is significantly
appropriate for ina~gurating the use
of the new exhibition case which
was given by the Library Trustees
in memory of their late associate,
Theodore T. Reed, Jr. There are
many references in the Courtship
Correspondence Exhibit to Darius
Reed and his wife, Ted's ancestors
and goed friends of the Moores.

By SAMUEL MAULL
Las Vegas.
Associated Press Writer
Cole is expected to stay at Bren. NEW YORK (AP) - The 9, ner's home in Aspen, Colo.
year-old son of comedian David
By kidnapping her own son,
Brenner surfaced this !llOming with Brody, Brenner's former girlfriend,
his mother at a Manhattan court- had committed no crime. Her dishouse, a week after both vanished obedience of the court order was a
in the latest twist of a biuer custody civil misdeed and the judge said in
battle.
court that he would overlook it.
Charisse Brody, who fled last
As Brody went into the courtweek with her son Cole, will not house,·accompanied by her mother
face civil or criminal charges for and stepfather-. she denied Brentaking the boy and disappearing, ner's allegations that the child was
state Supreme Court Justice David endangered because of her drug
Saxe ruled after the return.
problems.
But Cole wUI remain in the cus"He was only in danger of-havtody of his father pending a perma- ing 100 much love," said Brody,
nent custody hearing next month, who later read ·an impassioned
the judge ruled. The boy was head- statement to Saxe apologizing for
ing west later today; Brenner, who her actions and begging to retain
was not in court, is currently doing custody of Cole. Cole stayed in the
a two-week stand
at the
Sands in judge 's chamber~ during-the-hear.

HOME ENTERTAINMENT (ENTER

KELVINATOR
FROST-FREE
REFRIGERATORS

CURIOS!

WINNERS • Winne~s in the poster contest
for the Chester Elementary FaD Carnival are, I·
r, .rront, Nicole Grover, Heather Foreman.

WE REBAIR ALL MAKES

Call 992-2403

complex.
The exchange of letters
between the two were preserved
and handed down as a kind of epistelary legacy liJ their children.
· Dr. Davis Jives next door to the
Library in a large white houSe convened into a dweUing about' \907
after serving as the barn and stable
for the Moore place many years.
As for the exhibit, he was assist·
ed with the preparation of rnalerials
and armngement by the staff of the
Meigs Library. While several of the
original letters are included, many
arc copies of the originals.
Also featured are colored plates

·I

·Comic's son returns home safely

FACTORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE

Stop In And Vbft Us Toda)!l .
New Shipments Arrivine DaR)!!

AND

·Selection Of ~

PUBLIC INVITED
Meigs County_
Bureau Annual Meeting
Oct. lS, 1991
7:13P.M.
Eastern High School
Auditorium

• I
1n.

GUN
CABINETS

Of Tbe House
Our Large

·J

Th~ Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

had II, Zcmpter nine and Cooper
seven. In addition, Cooper had four
blocks and Zcmpter four.
The win lOOk the Redwomen to
24-5 overall and 6-1 in the MidOhio Conference, where they con·
tinuc with the second round of
MOC play at home Thursday ·
against Mount Vernon Nazarene,
starting at 7 p.m.

Speedway.
Racer's will be treated to a
S30,000 ,plus outlaw purse, while
six cylinder modifieds and limited
late models offer the support divisions. Race lime is 7 p.m. and fans
need nol worry about staying late
as Lcrnerville always runs the
show off in record time in a professional manner.
WVMS to bost
STARS series
At Mineml Wells, W.Va., the
~arm
STARS late model series comes to
Funai . · Emerson
Goldstar
Sylvania ·
West Virginia Motor Speedway for
Somsung
Symphonic Shin tom
Magna vox
a two day show this weekend October 12-13 .for dual 40-lap features
Soundesign .
KTY
Multi Tech GE
on Sunday paying $4,000 to win
Zenith
Phi leo
Scott
RCA
each. This comes in addition to a
complete full progmm on Saturday
night paying $1,500 to win. The
event IS dubbed the West Virginia
National Open.
STEAK DINNER
Currently Donnie Moran leads
5
local ace and defending STARS
5.00 Adults..S3.00 Children
champion Mike Balzano of ParkENTERTAINMENT
ersburg by a small margin for the
391 WEST MAIN .STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
1991 National Title.
A huge field of cars is expected
992-3524
and admission is reasonable at $10
For Reservations
on Saturday evening and $15 for
' ,,
Sunday afternoon, Action gets
underway at 6 p.m Sat. and at 12 , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
noon Sunday.
· Twenty-eight cars will take the
green flag in both features Sunday
afternoon, in addition to B and Cmain consolation event~.

For The .Man
. ..

and five touchdowns. Hawley has
pulled in i 9 passes for 231 yards.
The Marauder defense was also
outstanding last week limiting the.
Laacers to minus 48 yards Joshing
and minus 16 total yards. Scotl
Peterson and Jim ~ullins each
picked off a Lancer pass last week.
Kickoff for Friday evenjngs
game at Wellston is 7:30..

0

Jn this week's Victory Circle .....
;.
By SCOTI WOLFE
· : I would like to issue a very big
:eon gratulations to Coach Randy
~ hurilla and the Eastern Eagle
::WOtball team for the'ir currem 6-0
:inidcfeated season; their lllh place
-j.p state ranking, and for their bid
11i a playoff berth in Division V,
:Region 19. It appears that the
·Eagles are for real. Bravo on a
· great job! Keep· up the good work!
:· . Also congrats to the Meigs
::Wgh team for their winning efforts
;4 f late. After a slo.w start the
·::Marauders are starung to open
:&lt;SOme eyes.
·: · At Southern twice it has been
:);1ose, but again no cigar after the
• "tornadoes got off to a great slart.
:;9nly time will tell if SHS can
&gt;oouncc back from 1wo big losses to
·:t~o fine teams in Symmes Valley
? Qd Oak Hill.
.
.
;.. , . yolleyball season 1s com1~g !0 a
•7olose and tournament ume IS JUSt
:wound the corner. At Southern it
; 'qppcars that the Tomadoeues are
•.just startin~ to gel.-wuh big wms

in from 11 yards out. Weich. also
set up a~oth·er Marauder score
when he tackled the Lancer punter
for aloss·on a fake punt attempt.
Fmnk Blake leads the Marauder
rushing game with 478 yards in 78
carries, Mike Cremeans has added
152 yards in 32 carries. Quarterback who threw for 275 yards
againsi the Rockets last season is
38 for 99 in the air for 528 yards

Montana to have surgery _on tendon in right elbow

Pennsylvania track to host
last Outlaw show for 1991
By SCOTI WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
Don Martih's Lernverville
Speedway near Sarver, Pa. will be
hosting the area's last World 9f
Outlaw sprint car show of the season on Monday, October 14. ·
This will end the outlaws fall
Eastern swing as the touring professionals are heading west from
the Syracuse Super Nationals to
North Texas Motor Speedway for
the $65,000 to win Fram dash.
Lernerville SJieedway is a great
raci ng facility with fast long
straights, a tacky red clay surface,
:.and one-half mile in length ..
• Two of the season's finest mces
:came here this season when much
: drama interceded with great racing
action. Nearing the end of the race
early leader Steve Kinser blew an
. engi ne, Sammy Swindell heir to the
:lead was involved in a four car
:pile-up, and brother Jeff Swindell
•in the Weikert #29 Beefmobile
.:waltzed in for the win on the last
lap.
In Lcrncrville's mid-summer
event Bobby Davis, Jr. in his own
#4 Gambler edged Steve Kinser for
·Ole win. Both wins were very
:popular as it is seldom a fact that
:a~yone beats eleven time outlaw
-king Kinser.
·
: Lerncrville is a four hour drive
·tram the tri-county area and is
. ·(pea ted north of Pittsburg; similar
.· i'll driving distance 10 Eldora

specialty teams were outstanding
scoring two ·touchdowns and setting up two more.
.
Kevin Musser set the stag'e for
the game w])en the speedster lOOk
the opening kickoff 87 yards for a
tou chdown, the Marauders also
scored when Mike Welch blocked
a Lancer punt fllld Shawn Hawley
picked up the loose bal_I and 11\ll it

CHALSIE MANLEY

SAVE!

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A
firc·tating performer convinced
jurors that police detected
kerosene, not alcohol, on his breath
by giving them a live performance.
Ted Maschal, 31, was found
innocent of drunken driving Tuesday.
Last week, Masehal swirled the
flammable liquid in his mouth and ·
spewed flames skyward, then took
a breath analyzer test to prove that
-kerosene would register.
Thirty-five minutes after
demonstrating his fire-eatinj! act
for a Municipal Court Jury,
Masehal took a breath test that reg• istercd a blood-alcohol content of
0.04. The test taken at the time of
his arrest registered a blood-alcohol
reading of 0.09, O.oJ over the legal
limit.
Maschal admiued he had 1wo beers the night he was arrested.
Planetary power
Neptune, as with the other giant
planets; is emllting more energy than
it receives from the sun. Voyager
lound lhe excess 1o be 2.7 times the
solar contribution. These excesses are
thought to be the cooling from internal heal sources and from the heat of
formation of lhe planets.

In Stock.

•save
35% on
Special

CLASS A

20 year wer~eniy
In your choice of white, green,

Fire eating defense
clears performer of
drunk driving charge

I'm a big beautiful yellow and white cat. I've
been declawed by no choice of my own. For
some reason my owners took me and all of my
belongings to a house on Second Street In
Middleport and left me on the doorstep wheR
nobody was looking. The kind lady at the house
found me and took me inside her home and
gave me food and water and held me on her lap
and assured me that I am safe and that everY.:...
thing will be OK.
Now 1 need to ask for a new place to call home.
I must live inside because I have no way to
defend myself. 1 am a good kitty and I have lots
of love to give. If you would like to adopt me
please call 992-7039
or
Cat Shelter 992-6843

.

3.29 18.99so.

Joshua WilL
,
Fifth grade - Jessica Marcum ,
Sean Beeker and Angi Wolfe.
Sixth grade- Billee Pooler,
Kelli Bailey and Stephanie Bearhs.

D!

'•

List

Over300
Windows

black or brown.

Orden

·

We slack aluminum flashing
In 6, 8, 10, 12 widths.

Manville
KRAFT·FACED

INSULATION
R·ll

12.99

All sizes foll·faced insulallon now In
stock•lnsulale and save$!

I/2wx4'x8' '
O'Dells sheathing
plywood Is 3 ply for exira
slrenglh. Use under
as sublloorlng
or In
home

MOBILE
HOME
UNDER SKIRTING

SHEETROCK

3.89

1/2"x4'x8' · •

2.99
4.49

2b"x60"

I/2"x4'x 12'
Ffrecode Sheel!ock Avallablle.

ALUMINUM
FIBER ED
ROOF·
COATING

24,95 gal.

4/12 Pitch

Perfect tor moblli homes,
or any metal roal.

Up to 2' Overhang

23.99
.._ Chesapea

~'West Winds

PANELING

ltol nol

lodudtd.

4X8 Sheet

ollghlly

'

O'DELL
634 E. MAIN ST.

POMEROY

LUMBER
CO.
992·5500
MON.·FRI. 7•5:30

SAt 8·5
If

''

�.

- ·- - - /

Thursday, October 1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
~·

welcome and refreshments will be
available'. The public,is ipvited..

SUNDAY
,
POMEROY • A spiritual renewal meeting will be held Sunday and
·
Night
will
be
helcLat
the
Lottridge
Monday at the Pomeroy Church of
·
Dairy
Farming:
An
American
THURSDAY
Community Ce~ter on Saturday Christ featuring Doug Martin,
. REEDSVILLE . The Olive Heritage."
from 7
midnight, All bands .
Services will be
·ar
· TQwnship Trustees will hold a special meeting Thursday at 7:30p.m. . RU'I'LAND .· The Leading
Creek,Conservancy District will
at the Reedsville Fire house. ·
meet Friday at 5:30p.m. for the
. RACINE· Parents Night for the purpose of interviewing.
: Southern Junior High football play. ers and cheerleaders will be
TUPPERS PLAINS • The Tup: observed Thursday night at South- pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
: ern High School. Parents arc to be and Ladies Auxiliary wiD sponsor a
round and square dance on Friday
.there at 4:45 for line-up.
from 8-11:30 p.m . with music by
• ROCK SPRINGS ·The Rock the Alvin Chutes Band: The public
: springs Grnnge will meet Thursday is invited to attend. .
·at 8 p.m. at the grange hall.
SATURDAY
POMEROY · There will be a
GALLIPOLIS • Monthly meeting of the Diabetes Support Group sportscard show at the Pomeroy
wi ll be held Thursday at 7 p.m. in Municipal Building on Saturday ·
the French 500 Room at Holzer from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. held in conMedical Center. Jodie Palmer, reg- junction with the Big Bend Sternrstered dietitian, will present the wheel Festi.val. For information
Our Good Starter Remanufactured
·program on nutrition.
call 992-3314.

SYRACUSE • The Meigs Area
Holiness Association's Youth
Rally will oc held Thursday at 7
p.m. at the Syracuse Chlirch of.the
Nazarene. Rev. Jan Lavender will
· be the speaker and there will be a
special guest appearance by Hattie
Mac. Th e public is invited to
.attend.
RACINE • Revival at th e
Racine Church of the Nazaren e
\V iii be held through Sunday at 7
p.m. ni ghtly and .. lln Sunday at
10 :3 0 a.m. and 6 p.m. Rev.
William and Kathy Hill will be the
speakers.
FRIDAY
POMEROY • The Pomeroy
Senior Citizens-Dance Club will
hold a dance Friday from 8 to II
p.m . at the senior citizens center in
Pomeroy. Music by.ihc Happy Hollow Boys of Athens. Public invited.
Bring snacks for the snack table.
POMEROY · The Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters
of the American Revolution, will
mee t Friday at 1:30 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Roy Holter. The program will be "The Milk You Drink

·9 9

Ready-for
·TocJay!

l

I

A,~ AD CALL 992 •215 6

5 P.M• .
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

"

~~···""'~' I 50_discoum for adt ptid In advance. .
- G•vttWIV 'Ind Found adt under 16 words will be
run d8VS It no ch•ge. ·
·

•

.~

.
I.

'

-"

r.

'

Performance
Auto V·Belts

2499 . 499

Fits most '78-'86 Chevy
V-6. 1-yr. warr. 75-2051-3
Othere $3 Off

Fit most '77-'89 GMs
with· AC. 77-2251·8
Oth·ere 10% Off

LOTIRIDGE · Country Music

make comforts during the coming
months.
For the progrnrn each one shared
a doll or a doll story. There was a
variety of dolls from over I 00
years old to newly crafted, from
China to soft sculpture, from crocheted outfits to cotton dresses.
There were stories of favorite dolls
and the role they had played in the
owner's life and pictures of many
dolls. One had crocheted outfits for
many friends and relatives.
The next meeting will be Nov . 7
at the home of Kathryn Johnson.
Devotion s will be by Suzanne
Warner and the Bible word will be
"share." The program will be by all
as they relate their summer vacation.
Present were Ida Murphy, Hazel
Stanley, Kathryn Johnson, Marge '
Purtell, Dorothy Reeves, Evelyn
Thoma, Peggy Bole and gues t,
Chelsea Young.

,.

'

•

13'- l~turenee

15·16171 8-

SUNDAY PAPER

446-Gallipolis
367..:... Cheehire
388- Vintgn
24&amp;- Aio Grande
256- Guvan Dist
643- AratMa Ottt
379- Wiilnot ..-

Area Code 614

ONE 85
Montll Battery

T8UGH ONE 875
Montll Battery

Tougll One
800 CCA

Grp. 26, 26R, 55, 70 &amp; 58.

IVIanv cars. To 675 CCA

75 month warranty.

43!!1 53P...~
HAVOLINE
HD30

AC Brand
Spark Plug

Quilt.
Umlt 12.
37-1447-4

2

74
After

R•b•t•
Gallon. Limit 2.
Winter/summer
protection.
78-8120-4

!IW30,10W30,
1GW40...

SAE and metric
sockets. Carrying
case. 45-5004-2

12 oz.
Inflates &amp;
seals tires.
78-4537-3

118,

Transmission Fluid
37·3094,

9~

1

1

•

'

'

Auto Thermostats

Master Cylinder ·

Fits many GM
cars &amp; trucks.
77-7900-2
Othara 10'K Off

Remanufactured.
Fits moat '67-'80
GMs. 75-1725-3 .
Othen $3 Off

188

P•11et•r• leal
Wile. Hoee. 12 oz.
71·453t·t... 1.1111

19

88
E•ah.

,..

~

Warranty.

Detalla
In •tore.

Raymold
Brake s•o•• or Pads
.'83-'89 Chrysle·J i a a
Engine treatment
#246RR. 2 year
and lubricant.
warr. Shoes sold
ht• Qt. 78-1206-8
~'···~h 75-5603-8/76-6252-1

"'':'Pf

2 49 7

~-PHILIPS

Halogen
Center

4-Lamp Bulba .......... 99
2-Lamp Bulba .; ..... 11.99
Halogen Capauleo ... 9.99

Monro·
Matlc Plus

16

88 .

Each

Krytoll
Spray Paint
Assorted colors
and primers. 12
oz. 73· 1603 ser.

0

REDWING WORK SHOES ..........Sl 0° OFF
GROUP TENNIS SHOES .......... SOo/o OFF

,7

Bleche·Wite
Our beat selling
whftewall cleaner.
20 oz. 73-48115·6

1

'"""'

151n. Tuii·E Tool .lox
Hip roof type.
Lift out tray.
Each. 45-4975·4

47

69

87 GREAT

. VALUE!,

Visual and audible warnings.
21-5033-2
X

NO INTEREST CHARGES FOR 90 DAYS ON APPROVED
'200 WESTERN AUTO CHARGE .TIRE PURCHASE

Pomeroy

210 East Main

2••

280 Radar Detector

992·6254
•

49 NORftl SECOND AD.

191. .18

"

MIDDLEPORt
.j

--:.

·.BOB
EXCAVATING
DOZIR and

Public Notice

PubliC Notice

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE Is hereby given
thai In pursuance ol a
Resolullon of the Board of
Commissioners of the
County of Meigs, Pomeroy,
Ohio, passed on the 5th day
of June, 1991, there will be
aubmllled lo a vote of the
people of said subdivision
al a General Elecllon to bo

held In lho County of Meigs,
Ohio, al the regular places
of vollpg therein, on the
flflh day of November, 19~1,
the quesllon of levying a
tax, In excess of lhe ten mill
llmllallon, for lhe benefll of
Meigs County who are
suffering from tuberculosis
at hoap,~als with which the
commissioners of Meigs
County have contracted ,
and support of luberculosls
clinics.
Said lax being a renewal
of an oxlsllng tax of 112 mill
al a rate nol exceeding 'h
mill for each one dollar of
valuation, which amounts to
five cents ($0:05) for each

1 card of Thanks

THANK YO U.
1
"'
express
bur
sincere
"'e would ike apto
preciation for the man
people who
.,., , their kindnes&lt; and S"P,
"
pq,n during the illness
and death of Von ida
(Bonnie) Landers.
We would like a special thanks to Dr. Abels,
Dr. Zurilli. lo,the doctors
and nurses and slllfr who
·
were on duly
in th e
Emergency Room at
Vet-erans Memorial
Hospillll on Labor Day
evening • Pomeroy
Emergency Squad. Jeff
Jo~es, Ewing Funclal
Home , the pallbearers,
Pastor Sharon Hausman,
Pomeroy 0 . E. S. for
th eir se rvices at th e
funeral home, Chester
Council 323, Daughters
Of America, Chester ~ire
. Department for the din·
ncr after th e service ,
Chester United Meth·
. Ch h p h·
tSl
urc. • yt tan
Sisters of Long Bottom,
Eagles Auxiliary of
Pomeroy, our many
and neighbors
who sent flowers, cards,
and kept uf in their
prayers.
The Family Of
Von ida (Bonnie)Landers

Eslal e

74- Motorcvcles

76 - 80111 &amp; Moton tor Sale
78-·Auto Peru &amp; Acc•sori•
77 -- Auto Rep•ir
78 - Cemplng Equ ipmen'
79-Campms &amp; Motor Homea

BACKHOE
WORK
(614)

V, (. YOUNG\III
. 992-621

Begins Sept. ) S
Every Sunday 12 NtH~~;~
Factory Guns Onllv- lll
/2mo.

No Huntlng-or- T101poa1!111 on

Services
81 · · Home lmpro~tt~menu
82 - P!umbing • H. .ting
83- £.lCI\I'tting
.
84 - Etectricel &amp; Refrig•atlon
85-GenWII H•uling
86 - Moblte Home Aepeu
87 - Upholtterv

Public Notice
NOncE OF ELECTIOi'fOF"
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE Is hereby given at

AUTO PARTS
Spedtillzllfl in

Custo11 p,_ hpalr
NEW &amp; 1150 PAR'IS
FOI AU MAKES &amp;

MOORS
992·7013

- SMArr

or 992·5553

passed on the 29th day of
June, 1991 there will be sub·
milled lo a vote of the
pie of said subdivision
General ELECTIOW lo
held In lhe Township of
Lebanon, Ohio, at the regu-

BULLDOZER and
BACKHOE WORK, ·
HOME SITES,
LANDSCAPING
WATER and SEWER
- UNES --

TRUCKING AVARAILE
fREHSTIMATES •·

01 YOU PID

. WANT ADS
PACK
AIIi PUNCH!

1·100-141-0070
DAIWII OliO
7t 31/'9111n

·'BISSELL
BUILDERS
· CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
·~ 1-nablt Prictt"

PH:-94AJ",;2J'D1
or 111. 949·2860 .

1----------------i
Se"'ices.

lar places of voting therein,
on tho Flflh day of
November, 1991 , tho ques- B~sigess

Day

or Night · · -

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

Stollo Moll! propeny tho fotmor
Dovy ond Hazol Toylor pl1co
without wrtttan, permllllan. ·

•New •-•
•Ga.,... a

tho GIIM McCoy - l t y

t(innplete
lt-dellng
Stop &amp; Compa''
FrH Enilnatea

wlllboproooculld, ·-

excess of the ten mill llmlta·
uon, foi the benefit of
Lebanon Township for lhe
purpose olcemeteries.
Maintaining and
operating
Said tax being : an addl·
Uonattax of one (1) mills at
a role nol exceeding I mill
for each one dollar of val~alion, which amounts to ten
cents ($0.10) for each one
hundred dollars of valua·
lion, for five (5) years.
The Polls for said Election
will open at 6:3P o'clock
A.M. and remain open unlll
7:30 o'clock
saidBoard
dsy. of
By orderP.M
of.lhe
Elecllons, of
Meigs County, Ohio.
Evelyn Clark, Chairman
Janet M. Frymyer, Director
Dated: September 4, 1991
(1o)s, 15,22,294tc

open until 7:30 o'clock P.M.
By Order of the
Board of Efecllons, of Meigs
County, Ohio.
Evelyn .Ctark, Chairman
Jane M. f rycny_t[, Director
Daled September 4, 1~91(10) a, 15, 22, 29, 4tc

Public Notice
Nonce OF FILING
Nollco Ia hereby given
that The f!ooploo Banking
and Trua('company, Marl•
eua, Ohio has filed an apptl·
calion wllh the State of
Ohio, Dlvlalon of Bs~ks, 77
Soulh High Street, Columbua, Ohio, 43266-0549, 10
operate a branch al 97
Nprlh Second Avenue, Mid·
dleporl, Melgo County,
Ohio, through purchue of
on oflfco currenlly operalod
at that .: loaallon by The
Central. Trual Company,
N.A., Cincinnati, Ohio. Wrll·
ten com menta from lnleteat·
od parties reg aiding this
propoul will bo accoplod
by the Division of Banko
until October 24,1991 .
(10) 9, 10, 2tc ·

BALLET, TAP &amp;
JAZZ CLASSES

&amp;28-tt 1 nm. pd.

INDII'ENDINT ·
CAIPIT CIIANEIS
and Till FLOOI CAIE

THE DANCE
, COMPANY
992-6289
9

:=====~·:6·:l:mo::.
•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SII)ING
•BLOWN IN
. 'INSULATION

BISSELL

. SIDING
CO.
llaw I t - lulh

NOTICE OF BANK ASSETS
AND ASSUMPTION OF
LIABIUTIES ACQUISITION
Notice Is hereby given lhal
The Peopln Banking and
Trust Company, Marlena,
Ohio has made appllcallon
to the Federal Doposlllnsur·
once Corporallon, Washing·
ton, D.C., 20429, for Ito wrll·

"Fre,e l!lttimates"

PH. 949-2801
or Its. 949-2860
NQ SUNDAY

USE

PPUAIIICES
DA
•o DAY WAIIANn

N.A.,
OYENI-·579 up
contemplated
all
KEN'S APPLIANCE
offices of 1he above named
SERVICE
bank, will conllnue to bo
operated as branches ol The 992-5335 or 915-356
Peoples Banking and Trus1
Across From Post Olfi&lt;o
Company.
.
POII!IEROY, OHO
This ncllce Ia publlahed
Ho
pursuant to Sacllon 10(c) of . l::;;;:~~~a:;:~.
the Federal Deposit lnaur· f.
onceAny
Acl.person wishing to
ATTENTION
comment on this appllcallon
FIREWOOD
may fllehlslher commento In
writing wllh the Regional
SELLERS
Director of lhe Federal De~oall Insurance Corporation
Hardwood Slabs
it lls Regional Office, 30
for Sole
South Wacker Drive, Suite
3100,Chlcago,llllnola,60606.
Great Price!
If any peraon deslreo to
CAll
proloat' tho granting of this
appllcatlon,suchpersonhn OHIO PALLET (0,
a rlghtlo do so If the protest
Is filed wllh lho Regional
992 ·6461 ·
Director by November 14,
B-1·91-1 mo.
1991.
Jho·non-confldenllal porlions of lhe application are
W.H. MOBIL:E/
on Ole In lhe Regional Office
HOME-PARTS
aapartoflhepubllcfllemaln·
talned by the Corporatfcn.
Thla ftlela avalleble for pub- If you're in need of..
lie Inspection during regular
Mabile Home Parts
buoinesa hours.
'ar Acclssorin...
October 7, 1991
Tho Peopln Banking and
SEE US FIRST!
Trust Company
Marlelle, Ohio
992·5800
The Central Truat
Companr., N.A.
"· 33 WEST OF
.Cinclnnal, Ohio
DAIWIN, OHIO
10) 10,.17,.24, 31;
B/ 19/1 mo. tfn
(11) 7, 14, 6lc

(

o&lt; T101polllna on
Rouoh _ , , 3_Mlill Ciwtk
Rood, I!Ondolocin.
•

4

Giveaway

P-

4 Uttlo Puaaloa Hooding Lovt
And AffactlOn; Will Be l.a'llf
Dogo,
I.Gio Of Prvloc-

tlori,
llhl(&gt;honl
Appoox.Gorman
I WHico,
To G~~d
.
Only! Cll Clulo, 81424WUZ.

•Vinyl Siding
•Replacem.,t
Windowa
•Roofing • ·
. _t!naulatjon

JAMES KEESEE
992 ~2772 or '
742-2251

Malo, 4 Month
Chlhuah•, Pill

539 aryan
Mlddlapon.

A&amp;B

S,.._o0152.
F-

Aultltllln

UPHOLSTDY

Iring H In Or Wt

Cerp,ets. Headliner

Pick Up.
.
KEN'S APPLIANCE

Convertible Tops.

S. Seat Covers and

ROOfiNG

OVEN·REPAIR
AU IUDS .
SE

Minor Auto Repair.

6

NEW -

G tt

992·5335 or
985·3561

MAIN ST., MASON, VA.

1·(3034)•
Acrou fNM P-.t Offlco
217 1.
773·9560
!=~=8=18:1:9:1 1=1 ==~-~~~~~:==:;;:=!

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD
,

,

BILL SLACK
992 •2269

FREE ESTIMATES

698-6864
.

R&amp;C
IUUDOZING

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
. SEWER"LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
· HAULING :
Utn111tone, Dirt,
Gl'llvel and Coal
Ucen•d and Bonded
PH. 614·J~J!;(·Iili9

Golf

lessons (6J ...:sss.oo
New Grips ............$4.00
Woods ........-...... 122.00
Irom .................. S14.75

Po.meroy,

·AWARDS
8-9-1 mo. pd.

' ..

Si!fphord pup-

good ,_,.,

:IOU7S-

Lost &amp; Found

trace• ol white, " " trinclly, 614~244.

,_.., Mole

Sfllnlll DoG.
t14-317.Q32{.

I....

Bilek Cocbr
On BIIZir Rood.

FCH.IId: Red ChoW, opprDI, 2
~.old. Chlthlm A,., 61oWI6-

LOST ono yr Old Pill Chow, 30th
Sl area. CrNm color wtth cut on
ntck, 304-175-181t.

loll: C.po, bOlae with br-n
llnlll!l • ..._n Colllpollo I 218.
614-:ISH'/115,
loll: ulcllo Whho gold Witch
In Dllll&lt;lng lot of GDC on Sept.
13th. 51ntiNIUI YoiUi.
Row•rd.l14-256-1342.

7

Yard Sale

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

REPAIRS

Ured lrcns ............ $5.00
Used WoocL...... $7.00

·614·9q2·6820

30 ' 32 Cltllloo4l!e Thundoy,
Frklly, Sot......;.
Bedroom Suite,

JNne, BooU,

C.Or Stol, ~lila, Crab.
.lolfJ

•

Slreot, Spllng Ylltoj,

, Soturdly, Sundoy.

llfTTDtrfOIIUf •

•••

0

•

f

• • • • • • •

•

0

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

0

•••••

0

•

•

0

•

MOilLE HOME

CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION
992·6648 or

COUNTRY CLUB

EMiijE MERINAR .
Owntr &amp; Operator

!Remodeling 1nd
Home Repair~
•Roofing
•Painting
FULLY INSURED

9/ 9191 /1 mo. pd.
~~=:::;;;;;;;;=~
II
CHESTER

Compleie Graoming
For All Breeds .

.

FCH.IId- Mall block doll, wllh

949·2168 ·

'GRO.OM
. ROOM

USED RAILROAD TIES
8-1

REPAIR

U ers
Downspouts
'"'if""er .Cleaning
\:lun
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

RVtCE

Old Part
Dochlhand,

M4a.
,
Pupplllo To GlvAwa~
Chow And 0..1111n S
.
S1H5HleG.

Haward L Writ11el

COMPLOE AUTO

To

12 1111111 Chicken GlviiW1J.I14-317-71111.

I.NSULATION

•Raaaontbie fl8teo
•Quality Work ·
•Free Eatlmeteo
•Carpet Hn F111 Dry
Time '
•Higii- Gioia -on Till!
Floor Fini•h
MIIILIWIS, Owner
Rt. 1, lut.nlll. OH.

rt

No Hunllng

J&amp;L

NO SUND4Y

AGES ...3· and
UP
··

--------Public Notice

,

written pNmlelllon. t,.IP'

985-4473
667·6179

992·7458 .

No Hunting or T101poulng D)'
on
Rt. 2, Point Ple101nt, whllout

DIN lo

~ ~o~ne~h]u~n~dr:;e~d:d:oil~la~rs;:o~f~v~ali·ljt~en~c~o~n~se~n~lt~o~ac~:q~u~lre~a~om~e ~~W;ASII~EI~I~$~I~OOt.i"'t~

8SIINir..,..a,AI
"''u lltiiiM ·
fOf -rylhingo
vwv
r

..

cwB ·

uallon, for five (5) years .
assets and a01ume th,e Ita•
Polls for said bllllles
will b~
at 6:30

CLAOOifi(O
ADS'
INOI

tD/7/tla

Ann ouncements

tion of levying a tax 1 In

Lifetime ,

(By Converse, Kangaroos, L.A. Gear, K·Swiss)

HOOD FAMILt.. SHOES

Calll14-!92·7104 far~·

'

Puncture
Seal

742•2328

I~==:::: -;:;;;;:;;:::;:;;::;;::;r-==::::::~.

CFREE ESTtJioi.(TESI

71 - Autot for Sele
72- Truckl tor Sate
73- Vans &amp; 4·vyo ·,

41 - Houses. for Aent

APPALACHIAN
CRAFT HOUSE
119 Butternul Ave.
Fri. &amp; Sat. 11 :00 am-8 :00pm
During Slernwheel ·
Weekend.
Register for ~REE door prizes
al our Open House!

5 55'

,...,...

. I;HfuMI

.,

40 Pc. Socket Set

-949·2826

J"

35 - lotl lf AcreaQe
36- Aeal Estate Wanted

· · Pli!E IIDIKIDI ·
l'ortiol IWHI f•ondo~,it' Tho prko las bo"
Rdorod lo 5ft;Mb ( , Sll,IOO anhwur .
linandntai.O)I If-~ K o poRW .amoual ~~~!It
~Yo lor iually[otJIO"'''' ~'I"~ oiro boml
"3·1/! ams lolooae. 4 Bl3 balM: 2 II'IIJI'.
~~od I II apt. l'nporly !III.U. 4,8110' "'· H. lomt

Moat U.S.
cars except
dleael unitl.
Each. Limit 2.

*Save up tcr50% on Fuel Bills ·
*Increase the Value of Your.Home ·
•can for Free Estimates

61 - Farm Equipment
62..-Wanted 10 Buy
63 - livtstock _ _
-e4l-l-ilv &amp; Grain
66- Setd &amp; Fenili.ter

34-Business Buftdings

BULlETIN BOARD DEADLINE
. 4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE

!g.

.

&amp; l1ve~lock

Lebanon , Portland, Ohio,

72~ 1!.!

we wm Not Be Under10ld

. nR ER
BROIZE

- .Roollag
.
.
-lnt•lor • Ex•lor

Pllmlllt

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOW.

Offir EEfct; 31

Plun•b•g I

ond

- concrete work

lion o1 lhe Township ol

FRAM
011 Filters ·

Pay
Mall-ln .
Rebate .... ..,-1,211

-EI.-trlcll

In pursuance of a Resolu·

DELCO!

You

-Guu.rWan,;
.

ATS INSULATOR• ~

.c-

· For $20~00

CARPENTER SERVICE ·
-R'oom Adllllon,
.: ·

Farm Supplies

31 - Homei"fOr Stlt
.
32 - Mobile Homes for Sale
33 - Farms for Sale

BU LLETIN BOARD

:ALL TENNIS SHOES .................. 20°/o OFF

WEARING IS BELIEVING:

Ril~l

...,_ ....
'

·

.

Tran sporlalion

Mason Co. WV
Area Code 304 .

992 - MiddiiiPOrt 675 - Pt. Ple~unt
Pomeroy
458-Leon
- 676 - Apple Grove
9815 - Chnter
773 - Mnon
843 - PorUind
247-Letart Falls 882 - Ntw Htven
949 - Raeine
896 - letert
742 - Rutland
937-Buttalo
667 - Coolville

._
-:;:

55-BUilding Suppli•
'56 - Pets tar S1h'
57-MUIIC-' lntttumtnft
58-Fruit• &amp; Vegetebl•
'59-For S1le or Trade

rhe ..
- ..

42 - Mobila Homes for Rent
43- ferms tor Rent
44- A-partment for Rent
46- Fufnished Rooms
46- Splce for Ren1
47- Wanted.to Rent
48 - Equipment for Rent
49 - ~or lease - .·

( By Florsheim, HushPuppies, Portsider)

K•SWISS

Schoolt S. ln1truction
Aedi'o; TV S. Ca Repiir
Miscett•neou s
Wanted To Do

Choki
L=;~~~

54-MisC. Merchendill

pages,co~-er

Me1gt ,County

.80
.05/dav

53-An&lt;iQues

"

Galhe County

Line Iii llilllt

r

12Gauge factbry '

51 - Houdhold Goa•
12-Spartinv Od• ·

Ernploymr.nl
Services

14- Butineu Tr1in ing

~UEEJ9e'syo~~p~~PER
~:~,UJ!fl-:MtPER

.30

.42

Merchan di se

11 - Melp Wanted
1 2':.... SitUif.0n W1ntad

oEAoii NE~~·· .
MONOAY PAPE~

, Classified

89.00
$1,3.00
· 81 . 30 / ~av

1- Ctrd of Thenks"
2- ln Memory
3-"nnoucemenls
4- Givuway
6- Happy Adt
6- lost and Found
7- Vard Sale {paid in acivancel
8-Public Sale &amp; Auc11on
9- Werlted'to Buy

· Will_1110. app~a.; 1n the P1 . Ple•ent ftegluet end the Galh·
polls D11l~ Trrbune, relch1ng ovtr 18 .000 homeJ

coPV

:·zo

86.00

An no unee men Is

follou:ing telephon-e excha~ies ...-

TOU~H

fESTIVAL
. _S.PfCIAL
20 SESSIONS

·1:00 P.M. ..
SUNDAYS Starting Sept."-22

Ov•r 16 Wor~~t .

·r~~====~=··:":·:..:··=··=·~·~·---··._._-~·--·-----~·

:Pric-; of ~d for all c:aplttlltlnen 11 double"Pnc:e of td cos1 .
7 pomt lme type only uaed .
~Stntin~ is ~ot r.espo·nsible for errors aftl] first ·d~ ICheck
for erranltrt' day ad ru"' in ptpilr) Ctll befOfe 2 :00p.m
diV aher pubhcl'tion to make correction.
•Ads that must be paid In actvlnce ~re
Card of Thanks
Happy Adt
In Merri9riam ·
Yard Salas

'

o:Myer and Partsider, ~atuJ.alizers, Hush~~QpJes) _ 11 _

OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY 9 'TIL

15
15
15

n .oo

conteOutNe runs..broken upd!X_Iwill btChargld

clus lf1ed a~ertisem.,t placed in Th.Otily SentJnell•• ·

·Q'uality at a - low price:
~0% OFF Multi;Rib &amp;.
Serpentine Type Beitl~-

LADIES .DRESS SHOES .............. 25°/o OFF

LADIES HANDBAGS .........~........ 25°/o OFF
'GROUP NURSE MATES ............ 25o/o OFF
(All Others 20% Off)
MEN'S DRESS SHOES ............... 20°/o OFF

3
6

ce_p1 - cl.• sified. ditplay, Busin!\• Card end legal notices )

RUTLAND · The Rascals 4-H
Club will hold their first meeting
on Saturday at 4 p.m. at the home
of the advisor, Donna Smith.
LONG BOTTOM · The Bissell
family wi!l have a chili soup supper
at their residence on Bashan-Keno
Road on Saturday beginning at 6
p.m. The public is invited to attend.

1s
l6

1

10
Mon1hiy ·
· . Meigs, Gll~l! or ,M11.on 'co~l)tiilll rnus; be-; r-e · _

AUTOTEMP__ _ .
Blower Motors

RATE
Words
Rate

Days

MONDAY ·thru FRIDAY"~ A.M. to

WILKESVILLE ·There will be
a smorgasbord dinner at th e
Wilkesville Pythian Hall on Saturday at 4 p.m. Cost is $5 for adults
and $2.50 for children under 12.
Public is invited.

STERNWIIEEL
·FESTIVAL SAVINGS!
( By

!Q. ~LACE

LONG BOTTOM · The Mt.
Olive Community Church in Long
Bouom will have a hymn sing on
Saturday at 7 p.m. featuring the
Gabriel Quartet. Pastor Lawrence
Bush invites the public.

Dexron II or
type .F. Each.

'

CLU.B_

.

'

'

Cet Your Car

-~1~.99
Exch.

Business Se
GUN~ SHQ_OT

Wlnt•r

'

Ohio

A•u Code 614

·circle ofHelping Hands
discuss upcoming dinners
The Circle of Helping Hands of
Zion Church of Christ met recently
at the home of Suzanne Warner.
Mrs. Warner called the meeting
to order and all responded with a
Bible verse having the word journey.
: Ida Murphy had devotions usin~
an article, "One Little Sandwich. '
The author had given away an extra
.sandwich to a homeless ~n and
was surprised when another person
followed her exam pie.
During the business meeting the
group made plans for the Meigs
County Churches of Christ Worn ens Fellowship to be hosted by the
Zion Church on Oct. 24.
· The Christmas dinner was set
for Dec. 6 at 6:30 p.m. and the
Thanksgiving
dmnct
was
announced for the county churches
at Middleport Church of Christ on
Nov. 25.
The group al'so made plans to

water Pump

or Alternator

RACINE - There will be an
open house honoring Rev. Florence - 1 - •
Smith on her 75th birthday on Saturday from 2 to 4:30p.m. at the
10 124.11
Racine United Methodist Church.
The public is invited.
RemllnuTactured. Sold
with exchange. One yr.
BURLINGHAM · Thb Burlingwarranty. 75·3324,69
ham Modem Woodmen of America
will hold a poUuck dinner on Saturday at 6:30p.m. Door prize. Public
invited.

o, 1991

10:30 a:m. and 'I p.m. and oii-Mon· . with Pastor Duane Sydenstrieker
day al7 p.m. The public. is invited \he\spcliker. A pollock diimer will
to auend.'
·
be held .at noon followed by after. noon services at 1:30 p,m. featur. P0MERQY . The Sou!h Bethel _ing the 13e!h_e] Afro,. Methodist
New Testament Church, formerly Episcopal Go!pel ChOtt of Parkers.the South Bethel United Methodist burg, W.Va. The public is .invited
C
Silver ·
will . to attend.
··

...

. POMEROY · The Pomeroy
Group of AA .and AI Anon will
l)leet Thursday at 7 p.m . at the
Sacred Heart Catholic Church. For
information call 992-5763.

""

. .,_

-

·t

BENNETT'S · "::~~=G'

localtd On Safford School ld. off lt. 141
(614) 446-9416 or 1·800-172·5967

Is Your Roof Ready For Anolher Year af Ice and Snow?
Now's The
to Rnd Out.

nme

CALL JACKS ROOFING&amp; .
CONSTRUCTION ~
992·2653 . '
For Old &amp;.New

·

· Repair~

Roofs, Shingles
Gutters

Building ond Remodehng

We Guarantee.Your Satlslactlon

FRIIISTIMAUS

JOSIPH D. JAW

INTERIOR • EIITEIIOR

FREE ESTIMATES
Take tht pcin oul ot
pointing.
Let n do it for you.
VERY IEASONAIU
HAvt REFEIENCEl

(61

915·4110

110/11THIOUGH 10/181
';

"

..

·,

. ...

'

~f

'

'i

'

·"

�•
Page-14-The,Dally Senllnel
by Bruce Beattie

Gallipolis ·
&amp; VIcinity

Th~raday, October 10; 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
46

torRent

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlpt

Rain Clnctle.

Television
,\
V I ewing

71 Aulci1 for-sale

.,., ,.,. ,.

AI,ITOIIOIUI. lAD CIIIDIT

~

OK.--.OWIIIIIMd
~=
1·
100.2a.l ' lM Hrt. ' '

Frldoy Oclobor 111h, At. 160,
Ph_ll Skldmo,.'t

5

HouM, i-3

··

•

Par loll: Rod Pontloo
....... Low - . . . Good· can~ Col Alltr llp.lll;

. . I&gt;Fri.4JY, Sotuidoy, ~ . AddlaM
1ko, 1 Milo Frcom
l
FrenchiLUUI.

.

..

Women~, Sc;tyt, . Taya,
Tik11 Picnic Tlbto, Slide,

lnt1rior, Ml1cl ,

Rentals
41 Houses for Rent
1 SA, lion a iwfrlsl· tum., -new

1fT Wanted to Rent

72 Trucks for Sale

Couple .Would iJkl. To Rill!
Clean, CouniiJ Hou• Qo llalllle
Homo Wlthl~ - 311 Phone Numbor. l14-3...1370, IIM11t.

1177 lll!dgo Qlplomit 111,-........
Oood Condltlolll Call ~·
0711.
.
,,
,· ,-,

Clrpol, w.-.&amp; dryer hookup,
$221 p~~r-ma.,-UOO dip., I mo.
leo-. 142 Fourih Annuo, Ool-

1br, Furna.ta.d Hau11, 735 RHr
Thlid Ave'Jr oolllpotle. 614441-3870, •

441 t3411.

.

51

· ·

11ln

8Worltl rO.,
0 111ft Tin Tin. K·t Cop

SERVICE TWINICIAN
LOOKIN6 AT IT..

•

t30~ii:~;

'..r':J

--

11
HAIRSTYLIST

&amp; VIcinity
Floo Morkollypo Void Soli, Oct.
10 &amp; 11. Mllfor Sl, M-.. WV
8:00.3:00.
Super lorgo Yaid Sale, Golllpotlo
Forry btlow Sldoro, lith thtu
12th. Moet filii limo fiomo.
Yord Solo, Donnll Btllor'rl.oon
Bod en Road, Tute, Wod. ,- hurt,
everything mUll 1111.

Morel Pold Vacotiono.
7267.

No ExperiMct Nece111ry. A
Dolly Salary 01 $300 For Buying
MtrchondiM. &amp;t4-36$-ZOB2, 'Exf.

King ·Colt And Wood Hootor,
Wit~ Bl-~ iJMd 4 YII!J, $1lQ,
114"14f-111D, .

3833.

Phoi\e

1:31 (J)
,

1538 7tm·1Dpm 7cllp.

Ytrd Salt, Thuracley tnd friday,
9:00 lo 3:00, 231i Uncoln Ave,

Rtgllttred long tll'ln

Pomeroy,

ure nu,...

BlrNI (2:00)

(I) II). , _ I

Stereo,
CD
Ill pe of 1111 WCHid

•nd FIIUmt to Dilly Sentlntl
PO Box mB Pomoroy,- OH
45118

Transp01tation

SHuatlon
Wanted

olpoo, win- . llntofo, oto. Cloudo Wlntoro, Rio Orondo, OH Coil 114Block, btldr, -

Cobia
- . : : : . -I .Kl
.......
11ft, lid
AIUII
..
and tublt. •• 1a ••·
•
78 · Auto Pan• &amp;

71 Autos for Sale
11113

'-la -

.SIIreo.
1111 I!J Top Copt Officer
William FrMIIWl IriCk&amp; a

-

Ill.

murder eu~ 11 he triea to

llee. SiereO. C

1119-1
ooana ca-a

Principal Sklnnar diHPPift,

Acc:IIIO.....

~~lor ~unllng hi.

aod
SllriO.

nurwlng tAIItlftt CIIINI at
Cora Havon of Point Pll-nl.
Clll lor oppolntmonl, 304-4175-

Umfiod lo 10

Pu-

Clrlhuah..,
And Boby
lunnleo. Col IM-111241u. ·
CMooo from 3aMdo AKC
Cookor lponlol, AKC Whho
w.. HIGhland Totrlero, AKC
!ooltilh T-.114-6114-4177
~ - o For Sail: "-ol
Sl-. 1 112 Mllll 0.. RL 141,
W.yno -.Joor. · 0813.

E l R TREE SERVICE. T-'ng,
Trimming, Tr• Romovel, HOdgo
Eom $201).$600 Wookly Malting Trimming. Froo Eotlmotool 11'4Holld•r, Travel lrochuree. For 387-!111.'
u- nf011111tlon Sond A Ad·
drnud St•mPid Envelope To:
ATW TraYOI, P.O• .Box 430110,
Miami, FL 331!11.
• EXTRA INCOME 'Ill" '

t321.30447Nllll.

1m 111Mtwood Cldllllc, Good
Cqndltloll, · - ·-1121.
1171 Foid LTD Oood Concltlon,

Runo !Jood,
Afilr lp.m.

i'!Qii. 1144711-2111,

79

IT'S Mf:S fXliii£'STK
fO.K'r' THAT'&gt; IDr
(t.X)R~~

~ r er.ull'a C1ua ~r.

"tm=..,;t;:_:.;:;;.,:lM;;:.":;oem;.;.am::.por:_no_ ~

ownfntiOf AC. ao. oond., izHO,

Orexlllla attracted 10 a
•t . -. SllrtiO. Q'

.'

'

Servtces

D IHRA Modlllld Racing

WHYC:O'YQ.J
AI..WA'¥5\IIf:AR

DIDN'T o:::m; 01..!r~
FUN t-tY 1&gt;0 I &amp;AID .IT.

I n..LAT

TH&lt;\T STL.IPID
FACC'=i

~;11111

1-.

1812R.~ ~~~~~ Brougham 4D
- n . - ,_, .-y .,..
lion, Iiiio, 11111. f14.tB2.
1711

iJ

~
''i-.r Hlfll, 10210
BrondOil ond Brlndo have to

BARNEY

•=•t
din to. Slereo. C

ONE SNEAKY
DESERVES
ANOTHER

Supp'll'"

~ET

Aonllon 11111011, ropo1roc1. Now

-

l......,llt_lnotoa.,A~

~ Omnl, 11.000 Millo.

Do,...,.

~----------

CUll. Cluloot' . .lion

w.aon, .. -..,., • • .. -

oond., ..... 114-

IIB2.azl13211utt.....

tlll7 Chewy - . M..200 rnlloo,
-lnkol,noo--lon,
luton'dc, . . .. 301 - . . .
11117 Horizon 12,000. 1111 11..
ourr LYnx fiiiO. ,. . Cmrlllr
PIIG.tlll CMvtruok • . I'IW440.
.
•

-

Dodao

g::: = . . . .
18,000

Qaar~

_.,
Air, 1111,

-

I

.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Plumblhg &amp;.
Heatjng

Clai=Ohlo
11111

.

~ ~. OT, Aoldng,

N,ooo.-.

•

Cortar'a fllw.nblng
andHMIIna
PNthondPrno

dlllon, 1111.11 Par llonth. IM-

1110 Chivy Conlct, ,,.._
stl7
.

lorvlco,

WIU IKIIId r-.,
potlc oorJIUI·updocll~
Yin
tiding "'. tralor eklrtlng. 1
Z4UU7.

.:..:":.:~ ~

44M1111.-7104.

-Voa '

Crall&amp; Rd. P • •-.
....... pickup, ..,., doiiVO!J. 114441.0294.

Dovt.,., goo~~ 82

oonc1, . ...,....,
till R.I.,
LoociM,

Dnil

84

Elec:trlcll &amp;
Refrlgel'lllon

SOUTH

+7 s

•

'KQ7S4
t K J 10
.A 6 5

Vulnerable: Neilher
Dealer: East

By Pblllip Alder
For many years, Scotsman Robert
Gray contributed to The Bridge World
magazine, which has publisbed ~he
Best of Robert Gray - Book One.·
Most of the material is
., but

Sott~

Weal

Nor~

2, -

2+

••

Eut
1+
' tollpass

Opening lead: • 2
~------------~

too, eapecjally

tbe two cbapters
"Hip frtlr11 Dummy" and "The Jle..
fenders Don't Know." The 40-page
book is available lor $UO from The
Brldae World, 39 West 91tb Street,
New York, NY 1002~ (212·,66-5860).
Cover the Eut-West cards in Ibis
band from tbe book, and plaD tbe play
in four hearts, West leading the spade
two, wbich you win with dummy's ace.
The only daqer to the contract,
apart from an unexpected ruff, is a 4-0
' trump split. And at lint cJartce, it is a
cuea wbetber to start with a low
trump to your kin&amp;, cateriDg to a lour·
card holding in West's band, or to lead
dummy'• J-ck, playinc lor Eat to
have four.
Here the bidding provides
the sign.
.
. ..;

post. For his openina bid, East is al·
most certain to bold the heart ace. So
play on the assumption lhat be bas A10·8-6 of lrumps. l'o hold East to one
lrump trick, you must start with dtlfll·
my's jack. Later you will lqd the !line,
forcing a cover wilh tbe 10. Even later
you will finesse East out of his eight.
Gray calls it the hip'·from-dummy
rule. This is applicable when all of the
following exist: East bas length in the
suit; South bas a card that ca'n be promoted to trick·winning rank (the oeven here~ a com" by Eut from a sltort
boldina 1n111't coot a trlclr:.
:
\D 1111. .......AP'IIIJ IN fLU :SA Ata.

•

The World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

Answer to Pr•vioUe Puule

35 AulholLovin
•
36- Tin Tin
(movlo dog)
39 Chemical

1 Transcribe

1horthand

5 Aulhor Harle
9 Medllerra-

IUIIII

ntan-

40 Comodfan
Lahr
42 Lalt out
44 Famllr
nleknoma
47 1051, Roman
48 Take to 1111
51 Fllh IIIP
55 Look at
56 Mounlaln
fake
58 S.crettry 'a

12 Sounda of
diiPIIIIUrt
13 Cor
14 Coarll wool
15 !krrfiCI
mtiiUIII
16 Orderly
17 Coin of
· Frenct
18 Dilay
.20 Mom or dod
22 Cry ol
1fflrmat1on
23 Aclor Ron 24 Terminating
28 Componton
. of oddo
32 At;Jor -

error

59 North of Ky.
80 ra altualed
61 RelaUng lo a
limo
62 S.ult_llorla
63 Grafted, In
heraldry
64 Editor's note

Totti
33 Dlanlilbtu
vote
\:&gt;.
34' Aclor
Brynntr

DOWN

1 Con•trucllon
beam

2 Antiquity
3 Shi"'Y· e.g.
4 Literary
work a
5 Clolh

htlddrtiB

A con man ...... 011 wttll
money -MMI tor an

837-1121.

Dodao
I l_.t,
Air, Alln'll ~. 11011 Good
~lOIII t3,200. 114 :Ill 12111.
-

to\2
.3 2

Ill ,...., Dcwlng.IIMMtllbletortilloo

EVANS, JACKBON, ON. 1-BOOi

Oood Coriil/llonll~.

1M -

+KQJ96
• J\10 86-

!heir cousin's~
0 MO 1!: CaddyiJiaclr: IRI
(2:00)
ill Me..,_ Now Sllreo.
D Tap liar* lolling
.
M~l bout. Mike
McCallum (41 ·1. 33 KOs) VI.
Nicl&lt;y Wllkill' ~40-~2 ,22
KOs), 10 rounda, from Laa
Vega1 (l)
IZIJ Larry King Uvtl

I "r,tock

Codl111c
Floolwood
.................... oond, futlr
loldeld, to4-i7Mtl7.

Snap-On u.s. Optn
Nollonala from Dartlngton,
S.C. (T)
0 You Allied lor It
. t.G0(2)• 0 ChMrl Fruler and
Ullllt offer to lei Norm tum
lhllr
Into Chten.

SllriO.
(J) (JJ 1'111: The UIIIOICI
Blorlee A myaterloua lerrortll
polsona over-the-counter
medleaiiOnl. Sllreo. E;1
CD Ill MyiWfl Miles
diiCOYerl a body: Alex
c:onllnutl to - Amy. (PI 2

t88t Thunclortllrd, good oond,
,_ llroo, auto trontm!t!!1!!!1
AC, PW, PS, lflo · IOOitaL~.!'
~~-. orul-, 11,000. - ·
2031.

FNitS&amp;
Vegetables

new

0 lllflllld ......,
ill Awh I I ~Shop

1N1 luloll lltgll Unlld, V-4
...o. good con&lt;!, 71,000 11,7110.1~·1021.
.
1811 Plymouth ~ Good
COndhlonl
Finn.. · '1317.

1182-42211 or 1112-1304.

Friddle lnaufil 1111 exocullvl
whirl Whitley works. Stereo.

Major IMrgue
NaiiOnall.NIIue
Chlmplonlfllp Str111: Wilt
Olvlllarl ChampiOn et Eliot
Olv~ Champion (o-me 2)

Home

For rent· Htw 1 bdrm apt, tum
or unlurn, In Mlddtoport, 114-

1:311 (2) • I!J 01110111111 WCHid

iBanbll
I!J.

Motor Home•

OBO.IItW4W4al

Ch~
Lake,
Wlo.(T)
8 Ptlli4tle•a
. , Thll'l .., Dog
1:01 ()) MCMI: Tile M~lloiilliiiiU-MM
of Iobin Hood (2:1101

:lkha"

..

campers&amp;

asulpect.

~ ~s:r~ World

Chi=

z-_,.,kilt-.

FREE Roglototod lon!ltorm Clro

llnflluna

II]) • The

Oclobor Spoolato. two car
goragu
24•24d-$31H.OO, 1111 Foid Flirllno, 2dr, ~
Z4ll2hN41111.00,2'7lr3ZIII1f77 Ford 112 Ton .....
$4148.00, Proololon Pool Fromo $1,200.114 14~4G. .
Bulldtre, lt+fi2.3141.
1flli Corto, nloloor muot
Pet1 for Salf
.
111!1
.......
,.... · - 080,
1-'nooor-7041.
, _ l'onl with • . _ ;
o-n 'ond SUpply Shop Poe 111!1
. . tlroo, tifoo -"""!~ .
ton
414
.,.......,,
- - All ...-. ....... 315kl, ll
actual nillol, ... P11111 R 14. 1100. 304-e'IWioo ·
lome Pol Food Doalor. Julo
·:
Wobb. Coli 1--0231, 1.- ·
1
Dfft Dolt.l
II -nlngo.
lfovo!l, 2-&lt;11, outomatlc,
11WQ.
, _ LIOo16 II,. mountod .., 4 ,
382.0231.
4341Mklar ...
turbo whlllo, • - thon 600 .
~.10 ducb, hall 1f77 Ford LTD, '111;o0o ooluol - ~1 oft• 1:00 PM, - :
304-tU.11112. rnllo!t aood body, S300 linn.
lt4 10!1310
"
Truck llld ...mp 7 ft. Ono ton, '

School• &amp;
Instruction

•

Cana A fllm

EAST

••••

Bridge stories
from Scotland

Idol am Bird and O'Hannort
·· --··to llndhla·tormer IO'It:--· ---····

18 W!lnted to Do

I

WEST

+10832

ttl74
.J10874

r,J

1:00 (2). I!J ColbJ .._
Pam's gradla eliminate hlr
from going to a IChool on
Charmalnt'l Mit. Sterto. C
(J) MOVIE: Lock, llloclc lliid

Wtnted mollv1tlid u•person,

NowlllsouthMotam
Tap Prlcoo Pold: All Old U.S. Rotraln
Colna, Gold Ringo Sllvw Cofno, Bull,_ Colllgo, Spring Valloy
Gold Colno. M.T.S. Coin Shop, PIIZI. Coli Todriy,I~:JI70
Roglotorotlonfi0.411.12liiB.
_151 Second Av.nu., GllllpoiiL

I

ALDER

c

7:31 (J) lllnlonl I Bon

$21,0H5Z,OOO 111 ,.r, trolnlng
provldod, oxporionoe proforrocl,

24U121.

t-800.:156-0242.

7:30 (2). :iooNrdyl

ec.-nr. .

Jlfn Carpenter, Superlnltndtnl,
Molgo Looot Sohooto1 P.O. Box
272, 320 Et.t Mtm 9trul,
Pomeroy, Ohio.

$350/DAY PROCESSING
PHONE ORDERSI PEOPLE 3001. Claoa
CALL YOU.
otudonlo,
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.

PHILLIP

D I!IPN'a lp uiiWMII

10na lnleretttd thould cohtld

Help Wapted

7:05 (J) lllvtlly Hlllllllll

Iill .l'lfttllyFIUd
Ill a at.r Stereo.
CUllom u-oc11 Haullna. Con
Ha\11 To Hliobon&gt; Solei Or LoCIIIy. Chuck Wllliomtl · Triple 74
MotorcycleS
Crull Tnrckl"'. 114-miOII. - ,;_;;-_.:.;,;.;;,;;;.;.;_:.:;_;;,;;.._.;..
1112 Honclo CB-710 CUllom.
Pura lnod -~lot- Umoulln - . ,_ porta, -o.
cow I 0111 pelro, oowo I 1. ·
......... 1--41110.

II·M ·II

.J832
• Q 6 s3
.KQi

Whtll of I'OIIUIII

oporio modlolno ond CPR. Por·

Employment Serv1ces 15

NORTH

S'tereo.~;;~.
w
.-i1Mii~mitolediii...W111t Child.-..

Clf'lltlcatt and tor cotehlng
poofilono muot I1IMI oo~lfloO'
tlon requirements of Ohio lor

12

.....

BRIDGE

(J)Tolll~

1192 IChoot yoor. Applloonto
muot hold o vaUd Ohio tooohlng

Wanted to Buy

Clmlnt

CIJ Enll!!llr- Tanlgltt

currenlly . .kln:g 1po
pUcttlont from certlliid epo
pllcsnts for 1 Glrta' JunJor High
B11kolboll Coooh lor tho tH1·

Rk:k Poo,.., Auction Compenr,
full time tuctlaneltr, com~llle
audlon •rvloo. Lie- Ohio,
Wool 'lllglnla, 304·77U785.

w.:a:=

I' r I' I' I' r I
I I I I I ·I I

SCRAM-Lm ANSWIIS
, _,
T~rban - Ooubl - Water- Spet!Ch - HUSBANO
We -had moved~lo~a~very out of the way "IOWn. I
learned very quickly that a small town is a place where
everyone knows whose check is good and whose
HUSBAND is. not.

IZIJ M01141ytlne
Ill The WIIIOM •

Is

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

of 1 ' - r,J
(J) lllltlm of Ja•lllll

a=r..s

Tho Molgo Local School Dlotriot

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

6 ~~~~~~~( LETT!IS

Holpitll Uve Cell-In (1 :00)

lng ooolltanto. Bogin ot 14.55.
APply ot Coro HaYOn ol Polnl
. Pf1111n1,
R1. 62 Nol1h of Polnl
Ploooont, 30U'If&gt;.3005,

bt by cloth•, ml.c.

LfTTUS ·,N

r~~
0~:;.-:;_

IIPir'-nc• neCMNry. ph. 814.

9:00.?.

• ,.~Hf~s

=Aihtfri

Ploaoonl voleo I poroonalfiy, No
Pomeroy Aroo POSTAL JOBS,
Stsn $11.88hr + benefits. Far
appMCIIIon Info,, ""' 1·21W24-

p

Clrltllllt

w•

nlldld.

IUrveyorll

Yoid Solo, Thuro, Ftt &amp; Sat.
HouMhold ttem1 giiUWirt,
clathlng,'-12313 Monroe Ave.

11

For Sale: Corn Plcklrl New
kiN 323 011- 1 And 2 Row

I .

Ant
l
r
7:00(2). W11M1

..

Toklng Applloollona ol
Domlno'o P1iza, Galllpotlo.

441-3014 11-F 11-5.

9

~

DO VOO '!HI~ YOUR fi..OII..
AAD DAD WOULD UK!&gt;
.
.'IHI!l?

614~46-

Yord Solo, Sat, Oct. 12, Gal·
llpollt Ferry, btaldt Suit
School.
.

8

. . - .-- ...

Otle T....l

IIAntlr~ r.J
DUpCioM
Ill Ntw zono r,J .,

NEEDED:

Gauran!Nd $170 WNk Plus

r,J

1:01 r.ll .Too cro.. r,r Comfort

GQodl

Pt. Pleasant

2

~ ~~=r,J
D
)ilrld DlgMI

~ERE'S A TRAINED

Household

• J ·-

I' 1 I I I

(1) • • ~·
(J) Vfdlo ,......
CD ~Otle T'lfolfltvlo•lljaiOft•

Stereo.

.

L·ECHCI

. /!VINING

I.'OCiit:

Merchandise

llpotll. l14-44~l

.'

Ocl. 11, 11i1
A wall-Intentioned. lnftuenlial friend
Could be lnatrumentalln helping you ad·
vance your lnlereats In lhe rear lilted.
Whllelhe melhoda may be unuaual. lhls
Individual knowa how to gel reaultt.
UIRA (Sepl. 21-0ct. 23) Reolal the
temRtatlon today lo pill along hearsay
that hu ye1 to be verlllocl. If you say
oomelhlng aboul another that turns 0111
to be untrue, yoo'llleel guHiy later. Get
a jump on life by understanding lhe lnfluancaa governing you In the rear

. ahead. Send lor Libra's Astro-Graph'
predictions Ieday by mailing $1 .. 25 plus
a l,ong , self-addressed. stamped envelope to Aslro·Graph, clo this newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland , OH
4410 1·3428. Be sure to state yoor zodiacilgn.
·
SCQIRPIO (Oct. 2.4-Nov. 22) Financial
conditions are tricky today, snd you
musln'l lei your extravagance onset
whal you gain. Your posslbllllleslor ~~C·
qulllllon are lair. bul your Instincts lor
squandering are stronger.
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Two
lmportanl objec:ll- might not be as
easy to achieve today as yoolnlllallr en·
visioned. II you takelhlngslor granted,
•~ could eludt you.
·
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jon. 11) A lack
of imagination Isn't your problem lodey.
The !rouble could retult from being
oversold on one ol your .mora Illogical
COnct[)tl. Be a relllatlc thinker.
AQUAIIIUI (olin. IH'tll. 111 . This
might nol be one of your betlor days for
dOing bullneH with friends. The deal
you get lrom a pal may not be as good
as one. you could get from a alranger.
PIICE8 (Fell. 10-Merch 20) Doing
things on your own could prove 10 be
more affective todoy than trying to do
lhlnga with partners . • II y011t cohorts
1urn oollo be dead weight, yoo 'll have
. to carry their load - as well as your
own . .j

ARIES (Morch 2,1 ·April11l Generosity
Is a noble virtue, bulloday It should be
seasoned with wisdom. There are lndl·
calions you might reward lhe undeservIng while ignoring !hose who are worthy.
TAURUS (April 10-...,. 2G) - Guard
against fhalamptalion loday to gamble
on something at which a friend was

lucky. Thera aren't any guarantees
you'll duplicate this Individual's sue·
cess. In fact, It could prove costly.
GEMINI (May 21.JuM 2G) You might be
overly eager to please everyone you'll
be Involved with today. Disappointments can be minimized. however, If
you realize you can'l be all lhlngalo all
people.
CANCER (June 21.JuiJ 22) usually,
yoo'ra a rather self-rellanl person, but
today you mlghl Insist that olhers do
lhlngs for you which you should be doIng lor yourself. Don't neglect your
dulles.
LI!O (July :ZS..Aug. 221 Expansive. plea·
surable pursulta could end up coaling
you a lot morelhan you had anliclpated
today. Yoo may have a good tfme while
you're spending, but buyor'a remorM
could taka cenlef atagi later.
VIROO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 221 As long u
objeCtives can be accomplished wilh
relatlye · you're apl to do well loday. However, in lltuallonslhal require
patience and tenachy, It's another
story.

orphlnage. (R) E;1
.1:30 (2) • 1!J wtnga Brian thinks
Fay's self-help group will be
a good place to mHt

women.s-.C

CIJ (JJ. AmertCiit

DelaaiYa Portllnd potice

conduc:la maJor cocaine bust
11 a marine. SllriO. r,J
10:00 (2) iii 0 L.A. Law (Season
Premln) McKenzie SlrUgg/tl with lhe

r::1r·· ln•w•nct.

(J).....

.

f..:~Time!M
{%) ar.lt~:CII
Zblgnltw Aybczynlkl

irlllrprett tlx cl4illlcat music ·
compollllanl.
(J) Urtdtr I'IN 'f!tla program
rec:ret~lll

major-

1101111. 10cu11na on 1111
ltorill bahlncl tl'rl hlldllnla.
In I J111n1aU bland wttll
ac:tual foolaga ottlll ~­
(0:30)

IL..Hunllr...Ji

T

KTURU

Ml

XCOU

JXU

J X T Y P , ' T F
WAFTII ;

0 7GO Club With I'll
. 10:111 ()) MDVII!: Robin Mtd Meltan
•

10:30 ()) Wttt Vlrglltllllapalt
. ill CftiGit 111141 CIIIM

TJ

FJLAIIJAI:U

FNWKXMYN . '

. RgbrriiOn
jPG) (2:16)

'. I T .E W ;

E T P U

C

FXMAEG
Ml

C

(OTLU, RJML)

......_... __.., ___

a

'.

C 0 T U L
./' · ME E U L .
.PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I was one of God's chosen people. doing Whll 1
wanted to do In life." - Howard Kael .

.

·-"

0 1tt1 by NEA, Inc.

I

10

�•
-

·, :page-16-The Dally Sentinel

•

Thursda~October10,1991~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'',.

Ohio Lottery .

National
Newspaper
Week
Oct. 6-12

A·D, ·Q·S

Low tonight near 45.
Saturday, partly cloudy•
. High io mid 50s.

•

•

..

Picl&lt; 3:966
. Pick 4: 2755
Cards: 10-H, 3-C,

·'

•
Vol. 42, No. 112
Copyrlghled 1991

.

.a I
2 Secllono, 14 Pogeo 25 een11
AMuiUmedla Inc, Newopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, October 11,1991
5

-

I

) '

Shad_
e River State Forest .
.
closing~appears permanent :

OPEN HOUSE • l'ersonnel of' the Medical
Records Department entertained with an open
house Wednesday afternoon in observance of
National Medical Records Week. Theme for the
week, Oct. 6-12, is "Quality Information: Power
of the '90's." Employees wore special sweat·
shirts carrying out the theme, Refreshments

.

"

•

By BRIAN J. REED
ihe Gifford State Forest in Wash· and where the only remaining •
Sentinel News Staff
ingfiJn County.
_ .
emJlloyee is on disability. Other :
Governor George Voinovich's
Shade River Manager Jim Mill; factlities, including the Barlow Fire
pledge to do "more with less" is iron repof!ed on Thursday that he Unit in Washington County. the :
hitting close 10 home, as the State wtll exercise his bumping rights Barnesville Fire Unit in Belmont
of Ohio eloses the Shade River and will begin wodt as manager at County, and the Stockdale Fire
State Forest headquarters in Meigs Gifford State Forest on Tuesday. Unit in Pike County, will also close
County effective on Friday.
Shade River's equipment operator • on Friday.
According to John Dorka, Mike Pooler, has been transferred
Maintenance of Shade River ·
Assistant Deputy Chief of the Ohio to Gifford. In effec~ only one posi- Forest will be J)erformed through :
Depanment of Natural Resources, tion, that of the manager at Gifford · Gifford State Forest, and arrange- ·
Division of Forestry, the closing is · is being eliminated. The other cost: ments are pending between local :
the result of a decrease in the saving measure is the closing of the agents to step up ftre protection for ,
depanment"s budget and appears to headquarters at Shade River.
the forest. Agreements between
be permanenL
Milliron has been employed at ODNR and local ftre departments •
The two employees who staff Shade River Stale River Forest for are already in existence, and Dorka
the forest will be gone, but the for· 12 years. Prior 10 WOiting at Shade exJJC(&lt;IS that those agreements will ,
est will remain open 10 the public. River, Milliron was ·employed at remain in place.
•
That means lhat all hunting and Forked Run State Park ai a park
Dorka reponed yestcr,day that
other public privileges connected ranger. He has worked for the slate the the local fire deparunents in the
with the forest wiU conlillue.
for a total of 19 years and six area have always provided primary
Administration of the 2,601-acre months.
.· nre pro1eetion for the Shade River
hade,River.State .Forest.will ,be .. , .. A similar.situation.has.occurred ... State ,Foo:sl~with.tbe s~~~~:~~: "·
performed through' the offices of in Perry County's Perry State For- ing only auxiliary stand-by
est, where the mana~er will retire tion.

Alg.15,15

• ~se One in Each Key R~
• Quiet· Reset" Silences/Resets Alarm
FESTIVAL QUEEN CROWNEb • Michelle
Friend was crowned the 1991 Big Bend Stern·
wheel Festival-Queen during that pageant on .
Thursday-evening at Meigs High School. Eigh·
teen girls competed in the paaeant under the

direction or Pam Newell. Crowiiing Miss Friend
is Holly Williams, 1991 Heritage Queen, who is
sponsored by the Pomeroy Merchants Associa·
lion. A formal announcement or the queen and
her court will be made Saturday at 10 a.m.

....

..

·~

ALBERT and VELSIA ROUSH

Couple to celebrate 55 years·
Albert and Velsia Roush will
celebrate their 55th wedding
anniversary on Saturday.
They were married Oct. 12,
1936 in Gallipolis. ·
·
They are the n~·~~~~-~~i
children: Mrs. ;.
sons, Mrs. Bill "~'•nl E_II'IIS()II,

Mrs. Larry (Judy) Flowers, Dale
and Joy Roush, Roger and Janie
Roush, Mrs. Lanny (Becky) Tyree,
and Kenny and Lisa Roush. One
daughter, Kathem, is deceased.
Cards may be sent to the couple
at 33178 Bailey Run Road,

.·

OUOFON~IIl

TANDY®

Tlmei'·Actlvated AnsW111A8f1'1!1'8f
u•' c.-a• reatum lot FGuntl
II AIY Ollllr_Aii•lrtr AI Aav Price I

-

-

DPTIMU

HALF PRICE!
LowlloS15
Per Month•

,:\5

Versatile 24·Pin Printer

speo With 15" wooter

Save s4o

.
5
999

Racine Council discusses use of
CDBG funds for water line tie-in

.

.

Tl e/OayiDate of Message,
• Voice Tel1'!.a mf Calls &amp; Messages 143·12&lt;&gt;
PlusNum..... ro

95
,:\,
99
-

bch

~:,:::.::

• 5' Midrange Oliver • 3' Cone Tweeter
•100 Wans Capacity
tOOsn31

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH

s100 Off

299~~

FIRST STERNWHEELER IN • Late
Thursday afternoon the "Virginia'1 docked at
the Pomeroy levee. It was the nrst of 30 stern·
wheelers expected lo arrive in Pomeroy as a pari·

.

3h.85
. Low Aa $15 Per Monlh *

• Ideal for Business and Pe
• Prtnts Up to 180
rsona1Use

.,

cps

or the Stetnwhee! Festival which got underway
today. The sternwheel races will be held at 3
p.m. Saturday following the 2 p.m. "link" to
connect ~omeroy and Mason, W. Va. al2 p.m.

12H884

MICRQIUT"AII

Portable
eo!or
TVIMonHor

~£4LISt7d

SUNDAY REVIVAL • Tbe
Cburcb of the Nazarene wiU
have reviYal through Sunday at 7 p.m. nightlyand oo Sunjlay at
10:30 a.m. an1f6 p.m. Rev. WilHam apd Kathy HIU will conduct
tbe service.
·

Four youngsters arrested
on vandalism charges
ORANGE PARK, Fla. (AP) Four boys, ages 4 10 6, have been
arrested on felony vandalism
charges after causing up 10 $10,000
in damage to a vacant house by
smearing motor oil on wails and
carpets and breaking fixrurcs. ·
The mother of two of the young·
stcrs said the criminal mtschief
charges were uonecessary.
•'There was no reason for this to
happen. My boys didn't know they
were doing anythint wrong. They
thought they could use the house as
their club ~ouse •.and they were

decorating it," said Lori Collins,
whose 4· and 6-year-old sons were
arrested Sunday nighL
. The boys were taken 10 the Cay
County Sheriff's Office, where
they were released 10 their parents.
Mrs. Collins said Tuesday that
she and her husband had agreed to
help pay for the damages, estimat·
ed at$6,000 to $10,000.
Mrs. CoUins said the boys
entered the ,house, owned by
Atlantic Builders Inc., through an·
unlocked door.

Compact C8 for Driving Safety

eutz.-

49!!

Low Ao 115 ...r Month•

"""· '"''

Compact
Digital
Multlmeter

Cut *50

.24915
,..
2..

33% Off

3995

Alg.

m.u

' Aig. 5US

Low Ao .,. "" llonlh •

• Never Drive "-'lone" Again
• Compact-AIS 'Most Anywhere

• Use to Test Home
And Car Electronics

•Ideal for Van, RV or Boet
• Playa 6n AC or Car DC Power

122·185

Wireless Intercom System

eutzs%
143·207

•lhlnllates 4000
Moet·Uaeful Words
• Wond Time Clock

103-1!&amp;3

29'P
Alg. 31.15

• Just Plug In and Talk
• Saves Tlme and Steps
• FM for Reduced Interference

Check Your Phone Book for the Radio Sheck Store or Dealer Nearest You

PRICES APPLY AT PARTICIPIITING STORES AND DEALERS

•
•

FREE PARKING • Members rl Girl Scout
Troop 1309 were bUJy on T•UI'Iday afternooq,
bauina the . r.arklna meters throuahout
Pomeroy's bus oess district. Pomeroy Village
Coun~U voted o.n Monday lo offer free parking

81111 End1101141t1

•'

~)

'

In POmeroy on Friday and saturday in conjunc· .
tlon with the Secoad Annual Sternwheeler Festi·
val, which bealns today. Pictured are Andrea
Neutzling, Amy Wriabt, ·Mlssy )'leutzling and
jennifer Heck.

Times-Sentinel Staff
Use of the $12,000 Community
Development Block Grant monies
tentatively approved by the Meigs
County Commissioners was dis·
cussed at this week's meeting of
Racine Village Council in cham·
bers at the Star Mill Park building.
The money· will be used for
water lines which will tic in the
area from Vine and Main Streets to
the line along State Route 124 at
1hc high school. This, according to
Council, will comribute to better
circulation of water.
It was reported that the pro,
posed line changes and extensions
will allow several new hydrants to
be installed as well as open up
·some building sites.
Council authorized Mayor
Frank Cleland to file an application
for 1992 State Issue II funds for
street paving in the amount of
$9,130. A pledge of I 0 percent of
the srreet maintenance and repair
fund money as the required match
was made by Gouncil.
The second reading to an ordi·
nance authorizing the National Gas
and Oil Co. to raise rates charged
for natural gas was given by Coun·
cil.
The urgent need for approval of
the twc mill renewal levy for cur·
rent expenses on,the Nov. S ballot
was discussed. It was noted that the
money ·generated will be used pri·
marily for streetlights.
Trick or treat night was set for
Oct. 30 from 6 to 7 p.m. 'with the
siren 10 sound to start and end the
observance. R.esidents wanting to
participate are asked to turn on
their porch lights, and parents are
asked not to follow their children in
vehicles because of the congestion
it creates on residential streets.
Clerk lane Beegle was autho·
rized to send notices to residents
who are 'delinqueot in their trash
service bills. The purchase of two
tires for the police cruiser and oil,
filters and 1ntifreeze. for the fire

department was approved, as was
an expanded version of the reckless
operation ordinance to bring the
penalties in line with State Code.
Fire Chief John Holman report·
ed that he had no additional infor,
malion on the delivery date of lhe
new tanker truck. Delivery had
originally been
ii\_Ju!y.
. expei:ted
.

A special meetmg was set for
Nov. 4. Atrending were Mayor Cle,
land. Council members Robert
Beegle, Henry Bentz, Carroll
Teaford, Jerf Thornton, and Larry
Wolfe; Clerk Beegle, Fire Chief
Holman, Don Dye. town marshall,
Glenn Rtzer, street commissioner,
and Scott Hill, ft(e[llfl!.

r

......y!

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="315">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9606">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="35155">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="35154">
              <text>October 10, 1991</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="83">
      <name>adkins</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1772">
      <name>brooks</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="351">
      <name>hively</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1247">
      <name>lyons</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
