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'

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
Tuesday, September 28, 1993

Pagt-10

Judges secured for Peoples Bank art exhibition
ludges have been selecte4 for
the coming Peoples Collection art
exhibition, sponsored by Peoples
Banking and Trust Company. This
year's exhibition will feature twodimensional works of art completed in U.e past two years.
Worlcs submitted for considera·
tion will be evaluated by Barbara
Bays of Parkersburg, Gary Petti·
grew of Athens and leanne Tasse,
Ph.D., of Marlena. These three will
be assisted by Cathy Finley and
Rose Haas, both of Peoples Bank •
Bays is a part-time teacher at
Ohio University, where she also
obtained an M.S.A. in painting. An
art historian, she is working on her
doctoral dissertation through the

RECOGNIZED • Reed's Country Store ot Reedsville was
receotly hooOred by lbe Melp County Sellools for Its support of
lbe work-study program iD lbe loal&amp;ehools. Here Kirk Reed 1111d
his rather, DohrmiD Reed, store owoer, display tbe trophy presented to them ror their cooper11tion in working with students In
Meigs County.

the area.
Works must be hand-delivered
October 14 or 15.
Announi:ements of those works
chosen for purchase will take place
Friday, October 29. A public reception for the newly renovated bank
and the exhibition will tajte place
Saturday, October 30, from 9 a.m.
tonoon. ·
tion.
,
The exhibition will be on dis·
. The deadline for submitting regplay
through November.
tstrauon programs for the exhibi·.
Additional
information about
tion is Friday, October I , Area
submitting
artwork
for the exhibiartists wishing to submit artwork
tion
is
contained
on
the registration
for the exhibition may pick up a
form.
Artists
should
contact Larry
registration form at Peoples Bank's
Holdren
at
Peoples
Bank, (614)
Putnam Street office or at art cen376-7111,
if
they
have
questions.
ters, galle.ries, ami framing shops in

attend by Pastor D. W. Sydenstricker.

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP)
- The beauty was hers, but the
hair beneath the crown of Miss
America Kimberly Aiken was
coiffed by other hands.
Miss Aiken admitted Monday
that she hired a stylist to do her hair

for the Sept. 18 pageant, despite
new rules intended to make contes·
tants do their own hair and make·

backstage, or its SPirit, because of
her natural look: a bun.
And the pageant president,
Leonard Hom, did not take issue
with what she did.
"I know that the pageant was
saying they wanted a fresher

up.

- But she said she didn't violate
the letter of the policy, which only
banned hairdressers from going

t~e

Parliament supporters
:chased away.by riot police

year
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:Policeman. becomes third victim
·in weeklong crisis in Moscow .
MOSCOW (AP) - Elite paralators l!lld their supporters holding
troopers reinforced hundreds of
the parlialiient building an ultimaporice' surrounding parliam·ent
tUUl to surremler their VfCIIPOIIS and
today as authorities stepped ~p the
leave today, bu t, Yeltsin aides
pressure .on hard-line lawmakers . denied the building would be
who have defied President Boris
attacked.
Yeltsin.
Snow • and rain drenched
A senior police officer died of
Moscow today as police huddled in
injuries today after he was pushed
overcoats, stopping anyone enter·
in front of a car by anti- Yeltsin
ing parliament. Glum lawmakers
protesters during a clash with
and their supporters inside sang
police, the Interior Ministry said.
during the night to keep tht:ir SPirits
Lt Col. Vladimir R;eshtuk was the
up.
'!urd JlCrson to be lciUed ·~ ~onnecYeltsin has ruled out comprouon w1th the parliament cnsts.
mffie since he dissolved the SovietRiot police wielding shields and
era parliament a week ago. He
batons ~oday chased away some ordered parliamentary elections for
300 parli~nt supporters who had
December to end a bitter power
bee.n w~mng peacefully outstde
struggle with parliamentary hardpoh_ce hnes around the butldmg . liners over his political and freePollee chased the crowd mto a
market reforms. He set presidential
nearby tram stauon.
elections in lune.
Police gave the rebeUious legis-

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Man pleads to B &amp;E charge
A 21-year-old Harrisonville man pleaded guilty Tuesday to a
charge of breaking and entering after being arrested for brealcing
into the Vance's Grocery.
,
Curtis Lee Ward was arrested by Meigs County Sheriff's
Deputies Manning Mohler and Scott Trussell around midnig;ht
Monday, reported Sheriff James M. Soulsby. Most of the stolen
items were recovered.
,
Ward apP.eared before the Meigs County Court of Common
Pleas on a btU of infonnation prepared by the Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney's office.
,
Judge Fred W. Crow III set cash bond at $500 pending seRiencing. Ward remains in the custody of the Meigs County Sheriff's
Department.
Breaking and enterin·g is a felony of the fourth degree with a
maximum penalty of 18 months jail and a $2,500 fme.

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gross domestic product showed the
economy was growing slightly
faster than its 1.8 percent estimate
last month. The GDP, the nation's
total output of goOds and services,
is adjusted for inflation and season·
al variations.
Many analysts had forecast in
advance that the April-June GDP
would be unchanged from the earli-

er revffiion. The government originally pegged seco nd-quarter
growth at a 1.6 percent rate, following a meager 0.8 percent
advance during the first three
months of the year.
Initial data for the current quarter has led many analysts to believe
the economy is growing slightly
faster now than 1t did during the

first six months of the year.' But,
some say , it's not going to get :
much better for a while.
" Our view of the economy is
real flat," said Kermit Baker of
Cahilers Economics, a Newton,
Mass., forecasting service. "The
crest of the business cycle is a
plateau and a fairly low plateau."

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By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Starr
How to handle overcrowding ,in
the rust grade at the Rutland Elementary School. was discussed at
length without any action being
taken when the Meigs Local Board
of Education met Tuesday night at
the Rutland building.
It was reported that the class
now has 35 swdents although at the
time school started there were only
26 in the class. Supt. Bill Buckley
attributed the increase to the "transient" census which keeps the
enrollment in many of the schools
going up and down.
After several parents and teachers commented on the problem of
having that many in a class, several
suggestions as possible solutions to
the overcrowding were proposed
both by the board and the parents.
Splitting the class, as suggested
by one parent, is not an option,
according to the school frincipal
and the board, because o thelack
of a room for another class. The
possibility of putting in a modular
unit will be given consideration but
the problem with that, the principal
said, is that it would take up the lit·
tie parking SPliCe which exists.
Transferring students near the
border of areas served by Harrisonville and Salem Center to
those schools was a board suggestion. Adding another teacher or
changing from the part-time to a
full-time aide in the class was also
suggested by one parent. Adding
teachers and aides is a problem ,
however, because the district is in
the loan fund and approval for
additional personnel must come
from the Ohio DePartment of Edu·
cation after all other options are
considered.
The board decided to review all
of the options and then try to come
up with some solution by the next
meeting.
Vicki Ferrell met with the board
to discuss use of the cafeteria at the
high school for such events as academic banquets. She told the board
she had heard there ~a possibility

such use might be discontinued.
Buckley explained the problems of
setting :up the cafeteria for banquets, the fact that students are
pulled out of class to do the work,
and some of the cleanup problems
as exrressed to him by the high
schoo principal.
It was decided that some written
policies and procedures o~ use of
buildings and responsibilities will
be considered as a solution. Several
board members emphasized that
they want the buildings used and
that problems can be worked out
Arrangements were made to put
an old bus up for bid.
Treasurer Jane Fry reported that
$86,620.63 had been received from
Carl Perkins, a fund for vocational
programs.
Personnel
The resignation of Ted Hatfield
as custodian 'at HarrisonviUe, after
21 y11ars of employment, was
actepted. 'Hatfield is retiring effec-

tive ·oct. I, A plaque will be presented to him by the board.
The resignation of lady Taylor
as a substitute teacher was accepted. Taylor has accepted the position of talented and gifted (TAG)
teacher for the Meigs County
Board.
.
David Chadwell was hired as
teacher for the new severe behavior
handicapped class pending his
release from Eastern Local School
District.
Added to the substitute teacher
list were Michael E. Chancey and
Joseph Hall, Jr. Rosetta Jenkins
was hired to transport a studenl'to
the Ohio School for the Blind.
Other Business
In other business the board
voted to change parent-teacher conference day to Tuesday evening,
Nov. 23, and Wednesday morning,
Nov. 24. Buckley said the change
will put the district in line with

CANDIDATES.· Selected by the senior class
as caodidates ror the title of 1993 Meigs Higb
School Homecoming Queen were these five
senior girls. Crownin11 will take place in pre·
game ceremonies at the Meigs-Alexander game

conferences in the other two counties and will alleviate some of the
transportation problems.
He noted that the conferences
fall after the rust nine-week grading period giving parents needed
insight into their children's performance before going to the confer. .
ence. Buckley said that interim ·
reports alro go out after the first 4
1(1. weeks to those students whose • .
academic performance is below
standard.
The board moved into executive
s~ssion to discuss pending litiga- _
uon.
Attending were Supt. Buckley,
Board Members, Larry Rupe·, president, John Hood, Bob Barton
Roger Abbott and Randy
Humphreys, and Treasurer Fry.
About 40 parents anc! staff also
attended the meeting which was ·
opened with prayer by Barton and
an Indian play by the sixth' grade
class.

Friday night at Bob Roberts Stadium. The candidates are From ,t be lert, Danielle Crow,
Heather Hudson, Tracy Fife, Lee Henderson,
and Joy O'Brien. (Photo by Charlene Hotnich)

Pleas expected in Coates case

HERE I

Steven and Jodi Martin of
Cincinnati, formerly of Meigs
County, announcc ·the birth of their
second child, Krista Elizabeth
tin on August 27, 1993 , . ·
Hospital, Cincinnati. She '
8 pounds and 2 ou nces an d was 23
and 3/4 inches long.
Maternal grandparents arc Jack
and Kay Frederick of Middleport.
Paternal grandparents .are Frank
and Ida Martin of'Middleport.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
U.S. economy grew at an anemic
1.9 percent annual tate from April
through June, the government said
today, although many analysts
believe it has strengthened slightly
since then.
The Commerce Department's
final report on the second-qu~ter

PREPARING FOR TOY RUN- Weody Tucker at Pomeroy
Flower Sbop prepares lbe l'ront window ot tbe store in P(eparalioo
or the annual Meigs Couoty Bikers Association Toy Roo to be held
Saturday in Pomeroy. The run is being beld to help provide toys to
uoderprivileged children. Tbe motorcyclists will meet in the
Pomeroy Parking Lot around noon and leave at 1 p.m. A party
will be held at 3 p.m. at the W11tering Hole on State Route 7 realur·
ing Stalfhouse R01d, Bad Habit, tbe StiUwater Baad, Destination
Blues and Cbarlie LiUy and the Poor Side. Admissioo is a new toy
or $5.

LOWEST RATES IN 20 YRS.

Martin birth
announced

Economy grows at 1.9 percent
annual rate in second quarter

,

THURSDAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAY
.SEPTEMB~R 30th, OCTOBER 1st &amp; 2nd

Brittany Nicole Morarity recently celebrate~ her fourth birthday
with two parties.
One was held at McDonald's of
Gallipolis. Attending were her
friends from the University of Rio
Grande Child Development Center.
A second party with a Barney
~heme was given at her parents'
horne.
.
Attending were Clayton Ft~d ­
ley Christopher Holter, lesstca
Hili. Fallon Roush, Cassie Cle~and,
Nicole Writesel, Kelly Rtzer,
Kenda Campbell, James Amos,
shan non and Carrie Morarity,
Sharon Cleland, Alisa Findley and
grandmother, Ann Findley.

2 S.Ctiono. 12 Pa- 35 ""nta .
AMultimedia Inc. Newopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday; September 29, 1993

Mul.dmedltlnc.

NO action taken by bQard on overcrowding problem

of

parties
mark birthday

. Vol. 44, NO. tot

look " Aiken said. "Now, if that
hairdresser had made my hair big
and poofy and something I did not
want ... ."
Anyway, she said, "I don't
think my hair is what made me win
Miss America."

Air Force Sgt. Terrance P.
Smith who is stationed at Hill Air
Force Base in Ogden, Utah, has
been decorated with the Air Medal.
The medal is awarded for meritorious achievement while participating in aerial Hight.
Smith is the son of Darlene S.
Casto and grandson of Philip A..
Smith of 33765 New Lima Road,
Rutland.
His wife, Deborah, is the daughter of Glenwood E. and Sherideon
J. Ginter of CoUinsviUe, Va.
Smith is a 1985 graduate of
Meigs High School.
·

~ Two

Page4

Low tonlgbt In mld -3~ clear.
Thursday, sunny, high In 60s.

insttwneRiaf in organiZing the college's "By Women's Hands" exhibition. Tasse continues to play an
active role in area organizations,
including teaching at the Institute
for Learning and Retirement. She
also teaches other calligraphy
~ourses. Tasse serves as advisor for
the Peoples Collection art exhibi-

In the service

BRITT ANY MORARITY

Pick 3:
294
Pick 4:
0039
Buckeye 5:
1-3-14-18-19

Miss America acknowledges using hairstylist during pageant

Hdmecoming announced
South Bethel New Testament
Church will observe its homecoming Sunday. Sunday school will be
held at 9 a.m. and the worship service at 10 am. There will be a dinner at noon and the afternoon service will begin at 1:30 p.m. Special
singers wiD be The lets and Andy
Englil!h and there will also be local
singeJ"s. The public is invited to

University of Indiana, Bloomington, Ind.
·
Pettigrew, formerly director of
the school of art at Ohio University, Athens, now teaches full l;ime at
the University, His main interest
lies in painting, and he is represented by the Tamenaga Gallery, New
York City. Pettigrew has served as
a)urist for Marietta College's exhibttion "By Women's Hands" and
for the Artsbtidge sculpwre instal·
lations in Marietta, Ohio~ aitd Park·
ersburg, W.Va
Tasse is retired from the art
. department at Marietta College,
where she taught art hiswry, drawing, painting and desi~n . She was

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A Pomeroy man is expected to enter two guilty pleas stemming
from two separate breaking and entering incidents, according to
Prosecuting Attorney John R.'Lentes.
Ronnie Coates, 35, is charged with the breaking and entering of
the K&amp;C Jewelry Store on East Main Stree~ Pomero&gt;:, early Saturday morning. He allegedly committed the offense while free pending possible grand jury indictment for the earlier breaking and
entering of a truck belonging to Banks Construction on Second
Avenue and the office of Williams and Associates Insurance on
Mechanic Street, both in Pomeroy.
·
Charges against CQBtes were dismissed while·awaiting possible
grand jury indictment ·
Coates appeared in county court Monday morning for arraignment and remains confined to the Middleport jail in lieu of $50,000
cash bond. A preliminary hearing is been scheduled for Oct 1 at I
p.m.
In addition, authorities are investigating other incidents in which
Coates may have been involved or have infonnation, Lentes said.

Vehicle damaged in wreck
Moderate damage was incurred 10 a vehicle driven by Patricia
Ervin on Oak Grove Road, Racine, late Monday afternoon when she
lost control and went off the road.
The Meigs County Sherifrs department reported that Ervin was
traveling east when she observed another vehicle starting to pull out
of Township Road 122. She swerved to the left and when she carne
back into the right lane, lost control, went off the roadway on the
right, went over an embankment and into .a ditch in the field. She
was not injured, it was reported.

.(

QUALIFY FOR STATE· When lbe Melp High School marching band took first place at tbe Booanzp of Baods competition in
Zloesvllle, It quaHIIed the band to compete In tbe state marchiog
band flllals. Pictured here wilb tropbies won 11t tbe competition are
band seniors, lel't to right, !'root row, Erin Warner, Arnie Elliott,
Amity Dixon, Marlo White, Joy O'Brien, and Cassie Hubbard;

second row, Leslie Qualls, Anne Rime, Emily Heighton, Tanya
Tbomton; Amie Lemley, and Jared Stewart; and third row Jason
Witherell, Stacy Wellington, Stephanie See, Rhooda Raymond
-Deoise Shenefield, JeDDifer Fink, Dawo Hockman, Heather Hod~
son, Todd Perry, and Daolelle Crow. (Photo by Charlene Hoenich)

.

•

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�'

Wednnc!ay, Sept!mt* 211, 1813

Commentary

I

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•

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .

B1 Tile AIIOdMI 1'1-.

: J.ccu-Weather•f~for

The Daily Sentinel
111 Coart ltleet
PomUOJ, Oblo
DBVOTZD TO 'ID Dn'ZIIB8TII OP 'ID 111:108-IIASON AREA

ROBERT L WINGETf
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

General M•MC•r-

l..ETTERS OF OPINION 1R welcome. They sbollld lie less lhan 300
words. All letren ore oubjoct to editin&amp; aod muot be oigned wilb ~&amp;me,
addreu aod telepbooe number. No uDJiaoed Jeu.n wlll be published. Leiters
obould be in aood tule, oddro11io1 issues, not personalities.

Union leader links prison
crisis, mandatory sentences
By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS -A union leader traees the state's prison system crisis
· to tough-on-crime.legislators who enact mandatory sentences for an anay
of offenses without considerinB the cost
Paul Goldberg, C~tecutive director of the Ohio Ci.vil Servi~ Employ~
Association, delivered that assessment to a legt.slabve commtttee loolcing
into the April riot at the s.outhem Ohio Co~ti~nal Facility. . .
"Legislation demanding tough sentencmg ts the easy polittcal part.
Paying for it is the hard part," Goldberg said.
.
••All toO often over the past decade, elected officials have chosen to be
tough on crime - which we all suppon - but suddenly tum weak-kneed
when asked to come up with the means to pay for the consequences of
sending more people to prison," he said.
.
· As a result, Ohio operates the most crowded prison system in the
nation, has the worst inmate-to-eorrectional officer slaffing ratio national·
ly, spends less per inmate than the national average, and spends less per
inmate, per day than surrounding states.
Goldberg told the Correctional lnstinnion Inspection Committee last
week that putting more people in jail requires more spe(\ding. He did not
offer an opinion about the value of mandatory sentencmg, but targeted
instelid the financial consequences of such a public policy.
·
"I suggest that we wouldn't have the crisis in our prisons today if we
))ad acknowledged earlier the fiseal con~uences of shifts in criminal jus·
tice and sentencing policy," Goldberg Slid.
Mandatory sentences are those that impose a faxed amount of prison
time for cenain crimes.
·
An example offered by the union: possession of seven ounces of mari·
juana is a third degree felony carrying a mandatory 18 months of actual
mcan:eration for ftrSt time offenders.
Sen. Betty Montgomery, R-Perrysburg, the committee chairwoman,
said mandaiQry sentencing has been the subject of long-standing debate.
"I happen to believe very strongly that there are certain crimes that
should have mandatory sentences - rape, murder, DWis, and the like,"
Ms. Montgomery said.
·
But she said other offenders now in prison mighl better be subjected to
different lcinds of punishment that come under the heading of community
corrections- halfway houses, mtenstve pf!lbation,. house arrest.
Rep. Michael Shoemaker, D-Bournevtlle, satd the tough sentences
reflect public opinion.
"It's not popular to go out and campaign for more money for prisons " Shoemaker said. "The public atliwde is, 'Lock 'em up and throw
away the key. as long as they're not my relatives.' ..
.

WASHINGTON - In the small
village of Butko in the Svc:rdloYst
province of the Soviet Union iA
1931, a baby was .being baptized
late one afternoon. It was tradition
to ply the Russian Orthodox priest
with Qlcohol, so the priest was pret·
ty inebriated by the time this
baby's rum came around.
The priest rlunged the baby iilto
the baptisma Jub, then promptly
forgot about it w))en a parishioner
staned arguing with him over some
unrelated matter. Critical minutes
passed. When the priest turned to
the congregalion, the baby boy's
mother screamed at seetng his
empty hands. Turning white, he
fished the baby out of the.rub and it
was soon coughing up water and
crying.
The greatly relieved priest
prophesied that any baby who
could survive such an ordeal would
some day become a great leader in
Russia - and, therefore, deserved
a strong Russian name. He pronounced: "I name him Boris Nikolayevich Yeltsin!"
Yeltsin told us this siQry, with

th is latest battle, Vice l&gt;resident as a reward for that loyalty, Yeltsin
Alexander RuJslroi and parliamen- backed his selection as chairman,
tary speaker Ruslan KhasbulaiQv, or ~er. of the Sppreme Sov.iet
are definitely not of the peQple. . But during 1992, he became
They are holdovers from a commu- increasingly opposed to Yeltsin's
nist regime who have tried to block reform efforts, gradually developfree-market reforms at every tum. ing into Yeltsin's 111th-enemy.
If Yeltsin has his way, they will be
Unlike Yeltsin, KhasbulaJov
~placed, along with the rest of par- loves the hiBh life. An economist
liament, with a democratically by training, 11 didn't take him long
elected parliament this December.
after being appointed speaker that
Yeltsin's chief foe is the irasci- he moved into a lu~unous apansia, the man who could survive . ble, charismatic and power-hungry ment built for former Soviet leader
near-certain defeat time and time Khasbulatov. Since Yeltsin took Leonid Brezhnev. He also has hi~
over Russia's reins, Khasbulatov's own plane, and is surrounded -by
again.
He has proven, in fact, that he long, black-leather-coated image sycophants and a persona) armed
has the right stuff to weather the has become the very symbol of police force that numbers in the
. .
cun:ent political c':isis pitting him opposition to Yeltsin. Iropically,. it hundreds.
:As Khasbulatov rpse through ·
agwnst the predommantly hard-line was Yeltsin who ftrSt gave him his
parliament that soughl to impeach power. Since then, he has beeJJ a the ranks, he became increasingly :
him.
man who will express loyalty to worried about the Russian media, :
Our associate Dale Van Atta has Yeltsin one minute, then privately which he considers a threat r.o:llig ·
position and lifestyle. Last y~. by
spoken with top Russian officials savage him the next
Khasbulatov initially gaif!ed way of intimidation, he sent an
whose conclusion is this: Russia's
future is unimaginable without power whe:t he was selected fitsl armed police force from the pai'lili:
Boris Yeltsin. With him, it is stiU a deputy chairman of the Congress of ment to the newspaper offi.ces-o{ .
hard row to hoe, but one which the People's Deputies in 1990. A YClU Izvestia, the leading liberal daily:
Russian people are prepared to later, Khasbulatov energetically Izvestia has constantly opposed
undertake.
supported Yeltsin during the Khasbulatov, and in return, he has
Yeltsin's two main opponents in August 1991 coup auempt. Partly Jried to shut down the paper by le$islative decree. Ironically, Izvesua
wa.S once the offiCial paper of the .
Soviet legislature. Today, it sits on .
the front line of Russia's historic :
battle to correct .the e1T9rs of l)le
past.
WOLPE ROCKS - He may be
out of Congress, but Howard
Wolpe, D-Mich., is still roc;lcing.
Fund-raiseiS in Washington tend
to be held in Capitol Hill reception
rooms, where gray-haired lobbyiSts
mingle with the powerbrokers apd
young staffers get a free meal.
Not Howard Wolpe. This week
the former Michigan congressrtlan, .
now a gubernaJorial candidate,
• hosts the 14th annual "Roek With
Howard." Insiders describe e¥ellt :
as more fraternity party than fundIH
()f,/1
raiser. Lobbyists seeking to rub: .
elbows with Wolpe better brink ·
dancing shoes: Wolpe. has become
to dancing what BiD· Clinton is 1.0 ·
jogginr all enthusiasm and no'.
grace. 'He's a terrible dancer/'·
one former staffer joked, but that :
hasn't stopped Wolpe from aaain; ·
ing cult 'hero status among CapitOl
Hill party animals.
·
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writers for Uaited
·-----------------~ Feature Syndicate, Inc.
· ·

Finally, Clinton projects $51
billion in higher income taxes. He
assumes that employers will magnanimously raise worker salaries

Joseph Perkins
and wages since em~loyer healthcare costs will dechne under his
reforms. He must have eaten a
tainted Big Mac.
It's called reality, Mr. President.
Check into it
• Even if the president got the
numbers to add up, his proposed
health-care reform would still be in
critical condition. Thai's because it
is based on the faulty premise that
problem numero uno with America's health-care system is that 30some million people lack insur-

ance.

Wrong. The vast majority of
Americans (86 percent) have health
insurance. And the vast majority of
that vast majority (77 percent,
according to a CNN-USA Today
poll) are happy with their insurance. And 80 percent are satisfied
with the quality of health care they
receive.
Ointon proposes to completely
overturn a health-care system that
the vast majority of Americans are
happy with to accommodate the
needs of the comparatively small

. '

!¥...

Highs IOday were ., 1111JC from
the lower .SOl to lower 60s and
from SO to SS in the northeast to
mid 60s southwest on Thursday.
Lows tonight will fall into the

upper 30111atewide.
The a.b owen will continue
ICIDII Jbe 10d Dut COillll' 11Jnight
whik the l'flll of the 111110 clflln.
The clear lkitll will allow Jelll·
peraturfllto till lhllply and there
will be IOIDe scaa.ered frolt. espe·
cially in low-lying areas. The clear
skies will continue iniQ Thursday

~~
•I
I

Michael Binstein

r-------~··------------------------

•

I•

!Mansfield !s3"

' I''

and

Columbus!seo

W. VA.

~

CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are
Tuesday night's Ohio Lottery
selections:
Pick 3 Numben
2-9-4
(two, nine, four)
Pick 4 Numben

()..().3-9

(zero, zero, three, nine)
Buck'eye 5
1-3-14-18-19
(one, three, fourteen, eighteen,

·I :
.

nineteen)

Weather

. .

Friday Tlu'oqb !jU)I(Uly:
Fair on Friday and Saturday.
··,Tonight, mostly clear with a .
Lows
3S-40 Friday, warming to tlte
chalice of frost in low-lying areas.
40s
Saturday.
Highs SS-6S Friday,
Low 35-40. Thursdtly, sunny with a
in
the
60s
Saturday.
A chance of
high in the mid-60.
showera
·Sunday.
Lows
in the 40s.
Extended forecast:
Highs in the 60s.
~ SOuth-Central Oblo

The Super Lotto jackpot is $16
million.

To meet Thursday
Southern Local Chapter 453,
Ohio Associatioo of Public School
Employees, will meet Thursday at
( p.m. at the hi&amp;h school.

I

UATQI&amp;T,

l- - - - - - A rea death s - - - - - -

SWt111tf

SIRf

I

J.,__..,::::;::::=.::===--·---..

Rush defenders need original thought
" You are a radical Socialist
Another thing: Where do you
I want to thank you for all the (almost Communist)." A Salis· get all this "leftist" and "liberal"
cards and letters you've been send- bury, Md., man informed me I am a stuff? I am a deficit hawk. I would
ing. Your cerebral comments have "pompous jackass," and added: freeze the federal ·budget until the
been ... uti ... colorful. Like the per·
national debt is paid off. I am in
son from Blackfoot, Idaho, who
favor of a balanced-budget amendinformed me I am a brash fellow
ment and a flat-rate income lax sys"to be bad-mouthing an outstandtem. I defended Clarence Thomas.
ing personality such as Mr. Rush "Like Rush says, you leftists have I advocate term limits for members
Limbaugh." Or the paJriotic gen- a pervened sense of humor.''
of Congress. I believe in more
tleman from Scranton, Pa., on
"Like Rush says.'' I like that. police, tougher judges, bigger priswhose flag.embossed slationery I Reminds me of Mao's little red ons and· the death penalty. And 1
was informed, "You are small, book full of sayings. It also brings listen to country music. How do
very small. You are scum."
to mind my biggest complaint you make a liberal stew with those
It's so nice to know you care.
about Hardcore Dittoheads: They ingredients?
When your cultured musings are like sheep being herded into a
Never mind, I know how. Hardfm&gt;t started coming in, I was mysti- pasture by a border collie. Has it core Dittoheads are fanatics .
fied as to 'the reason for all the ever crossed their minds that as There's no room in your world for
attention. Then I recalled nominat- free Americans they aren'J required moderates. Anyone to the left of
ing Limbaugh for an Outrageous to chant Rush's buzzwords like a Genghis Khan is a - what's the
Personage award. Acrually, what I bunch of Hare Krishnas running word Rush likes? - a commie-lib.
said was that "right-wing motor- through their mantras? They really
You arc scary people, know
mouth Rush Limbaugh has been ought to try and have an original that? One of my ·sympathizers
suggested ... for simply being his thought once in a while. Get a life, (there were a few) from Waycross,
nasty self."
diuos.
Ga., appended his lener with these
Pretty mild stuff by CurmudThe truth is, I don't "detest" words: " Please do not publish my
geon standards, but you'd think I Rush. When I strip the bull off his name.". A reader from .Las Vegas,
had blasphemed the Messiah . points, I find he's usually talking Nev., who described Rush as an
" You detest the truth - that's why common sense. The problem is in "outrageous, hysterical. bigoted
you detest Rush," opined another his delivery. He greases his points egomaniac (who) preaches daily to
Scranton reader, who also saw ·me with so much venom and vitriol his swarm of brainwashed ditto:
as a threat to the national security: that he tends to tum the stomach.
heads,"' wouldn 't even sign his or

her namec
"Your editorials show that .you
have such hate in your mind; perhaps you need psychiatric help,' : ·
writes a woman from Sayre, Pa.
Hate, you say? Well, how do I
compare to Hardcore Diltoheads?
Here's what my Salisbury, Md.,
correspondent had to say about,Joe
Spear: "Bigot, queer lover, free
speech nemesis &amp; enterpreneur
(sic) of liberal vomit."
· .
Hate? Some of the things you ·
have written about Hillary Clinto!l
suggest a few of you are wily
beyond hate. You are sick.
· .
I implore all Hardcore Ditto• ·
heads not to take til is column as
signal that I don't wish to )&gt;e ·
apprised of your viewpoints. I have .
even arranged for a special mail ·
drop to receive your correspon' ·
dence. Got your pencils out? OK 1 •
here's the new address: 224 West
Fiji Street, Apia, Western Samoa. · · ·
Can't wait to hear from y'aU, so
send your cards and letters to that
address . I'll read every one of
them. Promise.
·
Joseph Spear is a syndicated
writer For Newspaper Enterprise .
Association.
.
··

·a

minority 14 percent who are out· care system. !t must be a real rush
side the system. Nothing could be for the president to sit back and
imagine himself pushing through
more backward.
Really, the one major aspect of the most sweeping reform in Amerhealth care that most Americans ican hisiQry, a program that will
find troubling, and that they want • touch the lives of all 260 million
·
government to do something about, citizens.
The
president's
hie¢
hands,
his
is cost. Over the past decade or so,
health-care spending has run dou- friends in Congress; his cheering
ble the rate of.inflation. 'The result section in the national media are
is that tlle·nation's medical biU has telling him how wonderful he is for
nearly quadrupled in real terms, undertaking this vainglorious
frQm $250 billion in 1980 to more reform. But the liny voice of the litthan $900 biUion projected for this lie boy, the one who sees clearly
that the emperor is adorned only in
year. .
·
the suit with which he came into
That's problem numero uno runaway health care costs. If Clin· the world, wonders aloud: WiU the
ton had devoted himself to that majority of Americans be better
problem, if his 246-page blueprint off?
Hardly. Most Americans can
for health reform had focused on
using marlcet forces to check esca- choose between a host of insurers.
lation of costs, he might have been They select the fum whose coverable to build real national consen- age best fits their needs and their
pocketbooks. They choose their
sus.
All that Clinton has proposed is own doctor and thetr own hospilal.
another b!~. expensive government They have access IQ the latest in
social inittative for which Demo- medical technology.
cratic presidents like FDR and LBJ · Under the Clinton plan, families
have been known over the past and individuals wiU have to acquire
half-century. The American lax- insurance through a governmentpayers are always left holding the run "health alliance." Say you
biU long after these presidents fade don't like the limited insurance
options the alliance offers. Too
from the scene.
One cannot help thinking that bad.
Every l!lan, woman and child in
there is some presidential hubris
involved in Clinton's plan to can- America will be covered by a onepletely remake Amertca's health- size-fits-all healJh plan. Say you

want something different for your
healtH dollars (maybe you don't
want to pay for psychotherapy coverage). Get over it
The government health alliance
will tell you what doctors and hospiJals you may choose from. Say
your family doctor and your preferred hospital don't make the list
Tough luck.
So the president is going to lim il
the health care choices that con-

sumers now enJOY (while in no wa~ ·
improving the quality of care they ·,
receive). The federal govel:Mieni is
going spend more tax dollars, not
fewer, on health care. And the ·
American people are going to 'be
better off?
I'm sorry folks, the president's .
naked. .
Joseph Perkins is a columnist
for Tbe San Diego Uaion-Tri- :
bunc.
· •..· ·

Today in history
By The Associated Press
.
Today is Wednesday, Sept. 29, the 272nd day, of 1993. There are 93.
days left in the year.
·
Today's Highlight in History:
.
On Sept. 29, 1789, the U.S. War Department established a regular army
with a strength of several hundred men.
On this date:
In 1758, English Adm~l Horatio Nelson was born in Burnham Thor"
pe.
In 1829, London's re-organized police force, which became known as
Scotland Yard, wen1 on duty.
In 1902, impresario David Belasco opened his first Broadway theater.
In 1918, alUed forces scored a decisive breakthrough of the Hindenburg Line during World War I.
In 1943, Gen. Dwijlht D. Eisenhower and Italian Marshal Pietro
Badoglio signed an armtstice aboard the British.ship Nelson off Malta.
.
In 1953, the family comedy "Make Room for Daddy," starring Danny ·
Thomas, premiered on ABC-TV.
.. :
In 1963, the second session of the ecumenical council Vatican :rr :
opened in Rome.
,
·
In 1963, the situation comedy "My Favorite Martian" premiere~! on
CBS-TV.
'

witb sunshine over all of Ohio
except the IOthtasL
Early moraiag temperatures
ranaed from around so atooa Litke
Erie'a lboreline to upper 301 in the
IOUthweat, while ICII.tenld lhowen
cootinued over the extreme nordt·
east comer of the state.
Variable cloudiness was to be
the rule across most of Ohio today,
except in the southwest where
mostly 'IIWilly skies were to l)l'eYiil.
Scattered afternoon showers
were to develop ·mainly over the
northeastern half of the state with
thunderstorms possible in the
extreme northeast comer.
Skies overnight were mostly

cloudy acroas northern Ohio and
mostly clear over the central and
lOUth !*II of the lillie.
Record 1ti&amp;h ten!Delll:ttre fOI' this
dlle 96 in 1953, record low 31 in
1942.
Sunrile 'Thursday It 7:27 a.m..
sunset at 7:1S p.m.
Around the nation
While clear skies and warm
Jelllperahtrea covered most of Jhe
IIIIion today, 1 cold front brouaht a
chilly, dlnip mcming to lhe· Great
Lakes region and northern New
Enaland,

.

'the front moved south from
Canada, bringing showers and
thunderstorms IQ the Oreat Lakes

Lottery numbers

IT'S TIME 10

Health-care plan needs a reality check-------,_;,.
As President Clinton basks in
the glow of fawning media coverage for proposi!lg the big,gest, most
expensive soctal mtUattve of the
pasl half-century, I almosl feel like
the little boy who tnforms the
emperor that he is wearing no
clothes.
.
That anyone can take ser10usly a
plan that calls for $350 billion in
new federal health spending, while
also promising to cut the ~efict~ by
$91 billion. boggles, the tmagma-.
lion.
The tortured financial calculations are reason enough Jo pronounce the pres!dent's plan dead
on arrival. He wildly forecasts, for
instance. $233 billion i~ s.avings
from Medicare and Medicatd over
five years. Even Democrats
acknoWledge he 'U be lucky to save
half that amount
He forecasts S I05 biUion in new
revenue from so-called sin taxes.
But higl!er taxes on tobacco ~ild
alcohOl will dampen consumpl101l.
This all but guarantees that the fed·
eral ueasury will not realize the
revenue the Jl!Csident projects. •
The preSident also says he will
me up $47 billion by malcing cuts
in unspecified federal programs. If
the president really had cuts, he
should have put them on lhe table.
We're still wailing for the $100 billion in spending cuts he promised
to get his budget passed.

IToledo I 58" I

.

'

Thunday.

By Jack Anderson

Joseph Spear

"When it comes to mail-order catalogs. you can
run . but you can't hide."

1S dearc• below aorrnal tltrouah
toni&amp;ht, then improve ali&amp;htly on

•

great ~ and flair, durin~ one of
our VIS US to Moscow. In hiS mind
it illustrated his qualities best: th~
fighter, the destined ruler of Rus-

Dear Dittoheads:

Berry•s Wo

Tempcnturel wiD rellllin 10 to

· MICH.

Yeltsin girds for another tough battle

The Dally Sentinel Page 3

Frost ·expected in low-lyingareas tonight

OHIO Weather
Tbul'lllay, SepL 30

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel · ~ :

Pomeroy !ddl!pgt: Ohio

Eli Ebersbach
·Eli J. Ebersbach, 68, Midl)leport, died Tuesday, Sept. 28, 1993,

at Veterans Memorial Hospital in
1'&lt;\m'eroy.
: Born Jan. 29, 1925, in Pomeroy,
son of the late Eli and Freda White
Ebersbach, he was .a member of
Labor Local 1085 and a veteran of
the I{orean Conflict.
. .He is survived by his wife, Bon:nie 'Hawley Ebersbach; four daugh.teis.·Bonnie Roush of Middleport,
'Vicki Camp of Mason, W.Va.,
t~ Varian of Cheshire and~
Ebersbach at home: four sons. Eli,
Tirti, Rick and Rod Ebersbach, all
o( Middleport, and 10 grandchil~~

Clarence Humphrey

Dorothy Ritchie

Clarence E. (She"') Humphrey,
78, of Coolville, dted Tuesday.
Sept 28, 1993 at his residence.
Born in Coolville, be was the
son of the late Clarence E., Sr;, and
Gertrude Louise Wise Humphrey.
He is a lifelong resident of
Coolville and worked as ·a body
shop reJlBirman.
He ts survived by three sisters
and a brothers-in-law, Eleanor and
Orris Patton of Zanesville, Clarice
and Harold Swisher of Atherls, and
Nettie L. and Jack Bums of Park·
ersbur\(, W. Va.; one brother and
sister-m-law, .Edwin Harold and
Marr Humphrey of Belpre: a
COUSID, Fraoces Harper of Marietta,
and several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services wifl be held
Thursday at II a.m. at the White·
Blower Funeral ~me in Coolville
with Helen Kline officiating. Burial
will be in the Coolville Cemelery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday.

Dorothy. M. Ritchie, 61, of
Eagle Ridge Road, Racine, died
Tuesday, Sept 28, 1993, at Mount
Carmel West Hospital, Columbus. ·
Born on July 28, 1932, at
Pomeroy, she was the daughter of
the iale Harry Bearlts and C. Opal
Tolbert Bearhs.
She was a homemaker and a
member of the Pomemy Chwch of
Christ and attended the Eagle
Ridge Commttnity Church. She
was active with Chester Council
323, Daughters of America, and
was a past state councilOI' with that
organization. She was also a mem·
ber of Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order
of the Eastern Star.
She is 'survived by her husband,
Bob Ritchie, Racine: a son and
daughter-in-law, Bob and Jan
Ritchie, Lancaster: two sisters,
Betty Spencer of Pomeroy, an!I
Norma Jean Grinsteall of Belpre, a
sister and brother-in-law, Florence
Ann and Bill Wood of Coolville: a
brother and sister-in-law, W. F.
(Pete)-and Betty Bearbs, Racine;
three step-grandchildren, Matt,
Amanda, and Jared Springer, Lan!
caster, and several n.ieces and
nepbews.
Funeral services will be held
Friday at I p.m. at the Ewing
Funeral Home, Pomeroy. Andy
Miles will officiate and burial will
be in Meigs Memory Gardens.
Friends may ~all at the funeral
home Thursday from 2 IQ 4 and 7
to 9!i.m.
:Memorial services wiU be conducted Thursday at 7 p.m. by the
Daughters of America and at 8:30
p.m. by the Order of Eastern Star.

• '. Also surviving are sisters,
!Ainanda Starcher of Ga11ipolis,
,Joanna Henry of Columbus, Mae
Jeffers of Pomeory and Eva Marie
Painter.
He was preceded in death by
gne sister.
' Services will be held Friday at
11 a.m. at Fisher Funeral Home in
r,fiddlepon with the Rev. Bill Little
offic;iating. BUrial will follow in Elizabeth Hibbs
tlravel Hill Cemetery, ChesltiJe. ,
Elizabeth B. Hibbs of T~mple
, Friends may call ThurSday from Terrace, Fla., formerly of Middle7·9 p.m. at the funeral home.
port, di~ Monday in Florida,
' .
acca-ding to word received here by
'
relatives.
·, eilie Stotts
She was preceded in death by
her
husband, Fred A. Hibbs.
' ;Nellie Blanche Stotts, 73, Chat·
Surviving
me a son, George W,
l~nooga, Tenn., died Sunday,
Hibbs,
Spring,
Texas: a sistu and
!September 26. 1993 in Chat. Wl,cioga. She was a former resident brother-in-law, Margaret and Doug
Low, Ocala, Fla.: a sister-in-law,
of Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Born April 10, 1920 in Point Betty Brown, Montana: three
Pleasant, sbe was a daughter of the grandchildren, Greg Hibbs,
Il\tC Dewey and Hattie VanMeter Chester: Mary Beth Myers, Long
Bottom; and Tonja Hibbs, Jackj(ay.
.
. Survivors include one daughter, sonville, N. C. aloog with several
arolyn King of Chattanooga, nieces and nephews.
epil.. with whom she resided; one Funeral services will be held
son, Elmer D. McDermitt of later this week at the Jennings
n: a sister, Eileen Kay-Coin of Funeral Home, 69090 Nebraska,
ha'ttanooga, Tenn: nine grandchil- Tampa, Fla.
It was inadvenently reponed by
en, I0 great grandchildren, four
Meigs County relauves of Mrs.
ephews and three nieces.
.
: She was preceded in death by · Hibbs that she had recently married
- husband, Homer A. Stotts: one Frank Rollins of Temple Terrace,
5on, ~harles McD&lt;mtiit: one sister, Fla. when that marriage, in fact,
Geraldine Smith, and three broth· had not yet taken place.
er$, Joseph, Dewey and James Kay.
Friends may call 2 to 4 p.m. and
6 to 9 p.m. today at the Crow-HusFuneral Home in Point Pleas·
ant, where services ~ill be held 2
p.m. Thursday with the Rev.
William "Bud " Hatfield official·
ling. Burial will follow in the Lone
oaK Cemetery.

..

sell

1

Co"ection

In Monday's edition of The
Daily Sentinel it was incorrectly
reported that the Cub Scouts won
second place and the Girl Scows
and Brownies won third place in
the Racine Fall Festival Parade Sat·
urday. Cub Scouts won third place
and the Girl ·Sc;outs and Brownies
won second place. The Daily Sentinel apologizes for the error.

Beat of the Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich
I feel sorry for the committee
which worked so hard on the annual Racine Fall Festival They are to
be commended, as are all panici·
pants, for fOI'ging ihead despite the
cold, drenching rain on Saturday.
The festival was successful but
wouldn't it have beat ~ if Sal·
urday bad been a beautiful fall day
so everyone could have just son of
naned around?
Spealdng of Racine, members of
the lbcine Area Community Organization will be staging a yard sale
. Friday and Saturday at Star Mill
Parle. If you'd like IQ contribute to
the sale,lhe.club will be delighted.
The sale both days will start at 8
a.m.
Jim and Carol Adams have
rerumed to their Syracuse residence
from a 12 day vacation traveling
through Nevada, Arizona and Utah.
Flying to Las Vegas, Jim and
Carol rented a car and beaded south
on Route 66. I don't know if they
got their kicks there (that should
bring up the memory of that song
by the Andrews Sisters) but on the
trip, they did see the south and
north rims of the Grand Canyon,
Walnut Canyon, Oak Creek
Canyon , Sedona, Arizona; the
Painted Desert; the Petrified Forest,
Hopi and Navajo Indian County
and Lake Powell on the ArizonaUtah border.
Jim and Carol returned to Las
Vegas for Labor Day weekend
where they were joined by their
son, Todd, of Beavercreek, Ohio.
The threesome visited Lake Mead,
Hoover Dam and enjoyed the
entertainment of the city. The
Adams especially enjoyed a Burt
Bacharach/Dionne Warwick concen. All good things must come to
an end and Todd had to return to
his work at Wright-Patterson in
Dayton but Carol and Jim eontinued their travels heading north to
Salt Lake City, Utah. They spent a
dny at Temple Square leamiOB the
history of the fortttude of Ouistian
pioneers. They were also fortunate
enough IQ catch an organ recital in
the famous Morman Tabernacle
and took. in the International Peace
Gardens.
Special memories of the spectacular sights and other events in
the Zion National Parle will remain
with Carol and Jim. It was there
that Carol locked the keys in the
rental car. Now that's what I call a
"revoltin • development", but eventually parlc employees were able to
get into the car and retrieve the
keys so that Jim and Carol could
move on.

''Me? Become a foster parent?
No Way!"

..

The Daily Sentinel
(USPUU.HI)

••wr

PubliJbtd
lfteruooa, MoDdfiY UlrOU&amp;b
l'rldloy, Ill Couot St., I'Oliiii!O)', 01\lo by tho
Ohio Valtoy Pubilablq Co-y/Multloc., Pamoroy, Oblo 457~. I'll. 99l·U$6.
Se&lt;ood &lt;IMt potlfl8 pold oti'O"*"Y· Ohio.
I

_,The AJrodiUd Prou. oed lite Ohio
New- Alloclllloo, Nllloaal Ad-loa

t~atalive, Bruhlm Ntw~pll* Sa&amp;el,
r75! Third Avt~ue, New Yort. New Yort

'10017.

\

.

'rPOSTMAS'reR:
.
Sead lddreu dwl,. to The

Believe it or not, this was once the feeling
of many people who are now and have
been successful foster parents. Making the
commitment can be difficult. But it can
lead to many rewarding experiences· and
the knowledge that you're doing something
that really matters.
·

A good time had by all? Sure!

.,•4.H69.

..

•
SVIBcaJPTION IIA'IU

llyCom•orM-IIoott

0.0 Weet. .....- .................................. _...•. Jt.60
'Ole Moath. ... :...........................................$6.9'

Quo Y•..··-··-··............ -........-...... - .. Sil.IO
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IINGLECOPY
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PUCI
'DIIty..................................:......-'3!1 Cull

--

•

S..blol
~

tubrcriptloot by !IIIli pormltled lo . home c.rier IOI"''Iccll...uabla.

The Meigs County Department of Human
Services needs caring adults to provide
temporary homes to children of all ages.
Financial reimbursement, training, and
case management are provided by the
Agency.

lllell S.hocrlpdou

lrltlde Molp Coanly
t•

"

'

"

•

Help us make the most important
investment we can· our .chlldrenl Call now
at 992-2117 for informaticm.
•

Forec:a-. aid froct - possible as far u iDUIIoem New J~y
tonigbt, and interior valleys of
southern New EnJ)and could see ·
temperaturfll drop 6eJow freezing .

EMS responds
toUnitstwo
calls
of the Meigs County

Em~rgency Medical Services
responded to two calls for assisJance overnight. Units responding
included: .
Tuesday - 1:30 p.m. Tuppers
Plains First Responden and Syracuse Squad.to Stile Route 681 for
Okra Grogg who was trilnSPorled
IQ St JOICph.'s Hospital; 3:1i! p.m.
Middleport to Rutland Street for a
motor vehicle IICcident involving
Mary Lang who - transported to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Hospital news

7

The last rose of summer is
something. So is that last evasive
fly. You have one too? Do keep
smiling.

OOIUIG lOW I lllai&amp;IL J . POX 1n
•roa IDII'I oa -.w•
Gin CDTIP1CA1'11 AVAILUL&amp;I

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. .....

. -· -· ·· .. ··(

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surse in cold lml~.

I'm a liltle late in advising you Boy home from hospital
of this but pleasant Gamet Ervine,
A 7-reaa:-otd Meigs County boy
P.O. Box 547, Racine, will be hospitalized in Columbus for treat·
observing her 92nd birthday tomor· ment ·of burns was recently
row, Sept. 30. Gamet hangs in released from the hospital.
Timothy Wolfe, son of Timothy
there. She even did tbe Meigs
and
Jo Ellen Wolfe, was burned
County Fair in August
about a month ago when a can
Iva Sisson reports that when exploded in a campftre.
The youngster, a student at
Locomotion, the teen center in
Chesttr
Elementary School, apparPomeroy closed, there was some
ently
received
many cards during
money left in the treasury. To put
his
stay
in
Columbus.
People still
the furids to good use, the group
wanting
to
send
'cards
can send
which ran the center pun;hased the ·
them
to
Timothy
Wolfe,
P.O. Box
complete set of "Hooked on Phon374,
Racine
OH
45771.
ics".
The set was presented to the
Meigs County Lilnry in Pomeroy
for use by educators, groups or
VETERANS MEMORIAL
individuals. As you know, the
Tuesday admissions - Bonnie
series comes highly recommended. Rife, Middleport
By the way, Barbara Wilson,
Tuesday discharges - Albert
who was active with the operation Martin, Pomeroy, and Mildred
of "Locomotion" and was always Smith, Chester.
in there pitching for the young people, died on Sept. S. Barb had
reponedly had a bean condilion for
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
some time.
446-452~
'
Coming on fast also is the birth·
day of Mrs. Sadie Thuener of Syracuse.
Sadie, who spent many years in
the business world of Pomeroy,
will be 88 on October 2. Her husband, Bill, was mayor of Syracuse
for many years. Sadie will be
undergomg cataract surgery on
Oct. II. Cards will reach her at
Box 57, Third St, Syractise.

•Dilly Sn~DII. Ill Coull SL, Pa-.y, Ohio

, ·

and Ohio valley 00 Ttaeldly night.
The front wu fancut to cross
the lakea today, beadiq for the
E.ut Coaat and brinpnJ along a

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Sports

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The Daily

Weclnelday, Sesl~ber 29,1993

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Se~t~el
. PIG•

In NL affairs,

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Phillies beat Pirates to take NL East flag
.
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By The Alloeiated Press
The Philadelphia Phillies are
going to the NL playoffs. Their
opponent, however, won't be deter'
mined for at leas! a few more days.
The Phillies won their lint division title since 1983 Tuesday night
with a 10-7 victory at Pittsburgh
that clinched the NL East. San
Francisco's 6-4 victory over Colorado at Candlestick Park and
Atlanta's S-21oss to visiting Houston tied the Giants for fllSI place in
the West
Both teams are 100-57 widt five

games left.
" It doesn't make any difference.
We swt the playoffs at home, so
that's not a factor," Philadelphia
manager Jim Fregosi said.
Len Dykstra got the Phillies
going. with four hits, three RB!s
and two runs scored, while Mariano Duncan finished it off with a
dramatic grand slam in dte sevendt.
"There's no question; I don't
think we Fet enough credit for what
we did, • Duncan said, "We
clinched and we're there."
Philadelphia completed a

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.... 7·11), 7;:15 p.m.

• Baseball • -

S.atlle (Salteld 0.0) at Cbica&amp;o
(Bolda 3-5),1:0:1 pm.
OakJil'ld (V1a Popp&amp;l 6-.5) .•t Toaaa
( l l - IS.IO),I:3S p.m.
.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
luhniDI.W L Pd.
•·Pitibdelpbia ........96 61 .611
Monbwl ................90 67 .573
S&lt; L&lt;toio .............. IS t.l .S41
C!Ocaao.................. &amp;l 77 .513
PIU!IborJh ..............72 15 .4S9

Twn

Florida ............. ......64 93

N...,Yadt ............. .S4 103

GB
6
11
15.S
24

.401

)2

.34-4

42

WMttn~IM•IIIN

Atlanto ................. 100 S7

.637
.637
.522
.510
.449
.411
.310

S..fruldlco ...... IOO S7

Houokm .................12 75
Lao Aaooloo ........... IO 77

CINCINNAn........71 17
Calondo ................66 92
S.. Diotto ..............60 91
&amp;-dinchocl divilioo ti1Jo

II
20
29.5

40.S

N"'Yadt6,S•LouUI

s

9-Euclid 4-0 ..........................................86

Colorado (Bouenlield 5·10) at S.n

Fronc:itoco (I'ana 3-3~ 4:0S p.m.
Montreal (Nabholz 1·1) at Florida
(H...
od 11·11), 7:35p.m.
Pbiladelpbia (Oroano16-3) ot Pitto·
(Wollt IZ.l·~ 7::15 p.m.
- Routton (Drabek 51·17) at Atlanta
(Olnitlo:I0-6), 7:40pm.
S&lt; Lallia (c..miOr 7~) at New Yodt
(Joaoa 2...). 7:&lt;01'"'·
CINCINNATI (Puah 9· 1S) ot San
DiAolo (Sandon 3-2). I 0:05
C1Uoo&amp;o (lllbbud 1&lt;1-11 .. Lao .....
1oo (Aoucio l&lt;I-1),10:3S p.m.

f'"·

Tbunday•s rames

Montreal (Boucher 1~ I) at F1orida
(II~

9-16), 7:3S p.m.
Pliiloddpltia (lat:bon 12-11) at Plaabluoh (W•f"'! 8-7~ 7::15 p.m.
S:1. I...oWa (W1t100 6-6) at New Yotk
(Hillnwt 1·9), 7:40p.m.
HOUIIOO (Kilo 15-1) at Atlanla (Smaltz
IS-10), 7;10p.m.
Sanl'naeiloo (Swift 20-8)
An·
1 c1ea (C..diatti 1·9), 10:35 p.m.

at""'

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Ealtenl Dl•lllon
TW L Pd.
1-Toronto ...............92 6!5 .586
New Y&lt;D. ......•....... IS 73 .SlR
Balliman ............... l3 74 .S29
Deln&gt;it ................. .. l2 7S .S22
B~ton ....................IO 71
.SIO
C12VELAND .......76 82 .411
Milwaukoc ......... 66 92
..

.411

GB
7.5
9
10
12
16.S
l6.5

WHttrn Dl•ldon

.573

({!

Tex• ...... ............... 83 74 .529
1Wtu City ........... ll 77 .S13
Seoalo ....................79 78 .S03
Callfomia ...............69 88 .439
Minnoodo ..............61 19 ••433
Ook1ond .................67 90 .427
t ..clinchod divilioo title

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Olhen ncehina n or more palnll:
ll.Cin. IDder(l) 48. 12-~tRCA 34.
13-La•ca~ter (1) 31. 14-Tol. Central

Calh. 26. 15-Mow!.t Vc:m.an. 23. 16-CbJIIIcothe 16. J1-MiamisbutJ IS. l8 (tic}
Foltfield, w.,.,.;n. Nooth 14.

Division n

Pta.
l ·FOitolio (l3) &lt;1-0 .............................3S3
:1-S&lt; Mol)'l M.......W (9) 4-0 ............316
3-SteubcaYille (2) 4-0........................ .242
-4-Lcuioville (3) &lt;1-0 ............................:129
S.Day~a~ StcbiMI (I) 4-0 ................. .110
&amp;Beloit w.. Bnnoh -4-0.................. .172
7-Columbua wltleiiOn 4-0 ................ 132
i-Vonnilit11 (I) &lt;1-0 ............................ 126
9-Avan Lake4-0 ..................................98
I ().Colina 4-0.............................. ...........83

Team

Olhen realrina n or more pol•ll:
11-Clydo 37. 12.c.n!id4 36. 13-llelJewe
33. 14·Mtclilon (1) 22. lS-WhJttlnUy oulina 20. 16-Columbul Eutm.oor 18.
17~ambridp14.

Tum

Division ill
~.

I· Y'toWn Unuline (14) -4-0 ................. 314
Z.Hami110n B•din (4) &lt;I-0 ....................2S4
S-ltvn1on (7) ... ·-----..237
&lt;1-0amantown Vu. v.... (S) &lt;1-0 .... ..232
5-Y'~ Canlinal Moaner (I) 3-1 .. .157
6-TwUubttrg C!ombe&lt;tin (I) &lt;1-0 ....... 130
7CBar ViDaaoBoy (2) &lt;1-0 .................. 117
8-&amp;ll.U. (!) 4-0 ................................ 101
9-w,....., (2)4-0 ................................81
1t-Wa•arly (1) &lt;1-1---_.;.--.IS
Othen neelri• 12 or •on pointe:
11-Thora•lll• Silerldaa (1) 41. 11wt. ..l~rlbur!J 4l. 1l-St. Pail Onh~

34. 14-TIJIP City TifF anne 32. lS.Bel-

7
9.S
11
21
22
23

lville Clotr Fort 3 . 16 (tic)-Campbell
M..,orial, O..hat (I) 29. 11-\lf!Arlhur
Vlakm COIInly21.19-Wma~. ChamP!cn
25. 20-Lim• Bath 2A. 21-Bucpw: 22.. 22·
London 21 . 23 (tie)·Mollnt Oilcad,
Uhriduvilllll Claymaat 11. 25-Aibtabula
- 1 7 . 26 (tie).Canton C..tnl Cath.,
New Concord Jolin Olmn 14. 21-&lt;her:n·

6cld McClain 13.

Tuesday's scores

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I 0.Muoillon Pary 4-0 ..........................77

Today'• 2ames

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Twn

I·Ttoyol-0 .......................................... 103

Lao Anadoo 6. au..ao
Salt l'naeiloo 6, Cokndo.

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Division I
:1-Cio. Prit&gt;cclon (I) 4-0 ............ ......... 211
3-Caaton McKWey 4-0 ..................... 2SS
4-Cin. Moellor (3) &lt;1-0 ............... .........2211
S-C..temllo (3) 4-1) .................. ......... 194
6-Ma.illclo w.......... -4-0 ..... .........183
7•Y'-. Auotintawn F&gt;ld&gt; (2) -4-0 .. .152

-San Dioaos. II,
Atllnto 2
CINCINNAn 4

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....

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ...- How a
lt.aW panel of. apona writcn and brotdCIIUII'I ratcl Ol;,io hi&amp;h achOol footbiU
t.o11n1 in the ICCCll\d ol eiJht tCplar-,.....
san polla fur 1M A1Soca1tod Preas. by
Ohio Hip ScbooJ A\hlotic A•oeialion
diriaiona. with won-too J"eCOrd and tot.U
poil1ll (6nt-p1Kc- ;, pmntltcuo);

t.a... S&lt; ....... (29)4-0 .............. 310

Montrell 3, Florid~ 2
l'bilodolpbia IO, Pitbbwah 7 ..

J.-Chi.CIJ0 ..............90

Ohio high school poll

34.S

Tuesday'siCQI'ts

M

- • Football • -

DH: 801too 11, Detroit. 6 (ht); Detroit
1, a ..... 6, 11 ""':'.!!.a..dl
DH; Tcau 2. 0
d 0 (lit); Oaklaod

!O,Teua3(2nd)
Bahimcne 9, New Yodt I
r.unn-. 2. Colilomio I

s..at. s. Chi&lt;lao 2

Toronto 6, Milwaukee 4
a.EVELAND 3, Kaouu City 2

Tonight's games
New York (Key' 17·6) at Baltimore

(Moy«ll-1), 7,3s p.m.

Detroit (Doheny 14·1 1) at Bolton
(Darwin IS-ll), 7:35p.m.
Califomia (Mapne 3-2) at Mimraot~
(llriobon 1·19).1o05 p.m.
Suttle (Bolio 9·9) 11 Cbicato (Me·

Dowell22·10), 8;05 p.m.
Toronto (Ouzmln 14-3) 11 Milwaukee
(Minodao4-5).8 o05p.m.
Odland (Do.,. S·9) It Teall (Dieycr
2·2), 8;35 p.m.
CLEVELAND (Meu 10· 12)
Kontu City (Piohudo 7·8). 8:3S p.m.

It

Thursday's 2ames

California (Leftwich 4=6) at MiMCIIOtl
( 8 - H ), l :!Sp.m.
Toronto (Leiter 1-6) at Baltimore
(Rhodeo S· 5), 7::15 p.m.

Division IV
Tum
,
PtL
!·CAPE (2S) &lt;1-0 ................................:151
Z.Wanrt Konnotly(2)&lt;1-0 .................215
3-B-.!Ile (3) &lt;1-0 ...........................23S
&lt;1-An:hbold (2) 4-0 ................... - ........ 197
S.Abm Mud.- (I) 4-0 ............... IS4
6-Cadix (I ) &lt;1-0 ................................... 139
7-We11aville (I) .. 0 ............................ 119
11-Auron (1) 4-0 ................................ liS
9-Dolphoa lef!cnon 4-0 .... ...................93
10-Sprinafield C.th. 3-1 ............... .........60
Olhtn r«t-lvlna U or _... polnll.:
ll.Qrwoll Grand VoL (I) 4S. 1:1-C..tolia
Mui""" (1) 41. 13-Nootb Uma SoWI
Ranac (I) 36. 14-Plain City Jonathan
Alder (I) :15. 15-J.ucuylllt Val. 31. 1'Bo•arly Fort Frya 24. 17 (tio)-CanlinJ·
ton Lincoln, Venaillet 23. 19.Clinlon·
M.uoie 22. :ZO.Lcuioville Aquinu 11. 21·
Columbu1 Acldny 16. 21-Belpre 14.
23-Bioomdale Bmwaad 13. 2.4-0bedin
12..

Division V

Team
Pt.&amp;.
l·St. Hauy (17) 4-1) ..................... ......3SS

:1-Ncwult Cath. (13) 4-0 .............. ...... 327
3-CoduW!e (I) 4-0 ............................222
&lt;1-MoDonald (1)4-0 ............................220

remarkable
worst-to-first that's basically what it boils down
turnaround - a year ago, they fin- to," Giants manager Dusty Baker
ished in last place, 26 games said. "We were trying to catch the
behind the division champion Braves, we caught lhem, now it's
Pirates - by clinching 10 years to time 10 pass dtem."
the day after they last won the East · Bryan Hickerson (7-S) and Dave
in 1983.
Burba combined to shut out the
Reliever Bobby Thigpen (3-1) Rockies, who had won 10 of their
was the winner.
last 13, on nine hits through seven
The Giants, who trailed the innings. Loser avid Nied fell to S-8.
Braves by four games on Sept. 17,
Pete Harnisch ove!P_owered
won theu seventh in a row and Atlanta on five hits in 8 2/3 innings
11th in their last 12 games after as Houston beat the Braves.
losing eight straight.
Atlanta entered the three-game
" Who' s the best in five games, home series knowing ·the Astros
had some good starting pitchers,
and Harnisch proved it. Harnisch
(16·9) struck out eight and walked
four before Doug Jones got the
final out for his 26th save.
•
Andujar Cedeno's sixlh-inning,
S.Woocldlol4 (2)4-1) .......................... 167
6-Dolphoa S&lt;loltn'a (1)4-0 .............. 163
two-out single drove in Hou~ton' s
7·Howml Eut knox(!) 4-0 .............. 161
ftrSt
run and Steve Finley homered
a.s...baiYilloCath. pl 3-1 ...............109
9-Sarulualty St May 1 (I) 3-1 .............19
in the seventh to beat Greg Maddux
!O.S. Chulala&gt; SE &lt;1-0 ............ ............ 37
(19-10).
"We've won 100 games," out·
Olhan ...t•lnaU ....... polnll:
11 (tie)·Coty-Rawaon, Ullion Cil.y Mitfielder
David Justice said. "We're
t:iaina'ft Vat 36. I:J..Muion Plcuant (1)
confident in our ability. You can't
35. 14-Lockland (1) 26. U-WncaNer
Fllher Calli. 23. 16 (tie)-Maria Stain
gel all the breaks all the time. If
Marion Loca(, McComb 11. 11 (tic)you ·could, we'd be silting here
Canal Winohcatu, Malvern i4. 19-Cin.
CoumzyDay.
widt two World Series rings."
Elsewhere in the NL, it was
- • Transactions • Montreal 3, Florida 2; New York 6,
St. Louis I; San Diego 11, Cincin·
BosebaD
A......... ....._
nati 4; and Los Angeles 6, Chicilgo
BALTIMORE ORIOL!s: Pltn:ba1otl
5.
the """""" of Miko Cook. pitdoer, fmm
Expos 3, Marlins 2
RochCIItcr of the Intematic.al Lcape.
Placed ~~~01141, cudiclder, on
Dennis
Maninez took a perfect
the !Soda .
lUI.
game
into
the sixth innin~ and
CLE:J'ELAND INDIANS: Rooolled
Je.aie Levi&amp;, catther, (rom Charlouc or
became the sixth pitcher 10 wm 100
the lntc:mational l.ea(plc.
games in each league as visiting
KANSAS CITY ROYALS: Aped to
Montreal beat Florida, but it wasn't
tama with Hal M~:Rao, manaacr, oa a
mo-yearcrntractca.\Gnlim.
enough to keep the Expos from
being eliminated.
Nallonal!AMIIO
NL: Suspended Anl1 Boa.e1. Stn
Mets 6, Cardinals 1
~o Padres pitcher, for five r.m- for
Jeff McKnight hit a three-run
~oiofttlo'a A!Oit Col&amp; with • pltdt
homer to continue his outslanding
Sqll.FLORIDA MARLINS ; Roa11od Mild!
season off the bench in New
Lydon, oatcbor, tn.n-....., of the Po·
York's victory against StLouis at
cillcCoutiM
.
SAN DJEOfl'"i.ADRES: Named Ollie
Shea
Stadium. McKnight is 19-for·
Ooulaton aiaiatanl director of sooutina
58 (.328.) as a pinch hitter.
mdployor4.....,._&lt;
Padres 11, Reds 4
BaskelbaU
Ricky
Gutierrez and Archi CianHALL OF FAME : Named Joe
frocco each homered in San
O'Brien. c:hi.cf opentina ~cer, prui·
dal&lt;
Diego's seven-run sixth inning that
beat
Cincinnati at Jack Murphy
NotlonalllaokellNII "'-lallon
BASKETBALL HALL OF FAME:
Stadium.
Named Joe O'Brial chief openlina offi·
Dodgers 6, Cubs 5
cer.
Mike Piazza tied a 6S:year-old
PHOENIX SUNS: Apeod to tenn•
with A.C. Gnel, fDIWttd. en 1 tive-year
franchise record for RB!s by a
rookie, increasing his total to I06
""'"""·
FoolbaU
wilh a two-run single as Los AngeNotional F-ll .....uo
les
beat Chicago at Dodger Stadi·
GREEN BAY PACICERS: SipCid Ja.
um.
Del Bissonette set the record in
IOn McOi11, wide ~a-. 10 their ptiC•
li&lt;oaquad.
1928.
•
NEW YORE JETS: P1acotl PM C!a!·

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,I w~
.~

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~c- .

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CORNELL: Named Brian Smith and
Adun Dercnaow.ti 11iinant wtatlinl

coacla.

DARTMOUfH: Named
men•a •wiRamina c:oach.

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&lt;V.;_.,J

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Baseball
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) Kansas City Royals manager Hal
McRae agreed to a one-year contract extension for 1994.
McRae, who spent IS of 17
major-league seasons widt KansaS
City, became manager in May 1991
when John Wathan was fued.
After the Royals struggled
through a second straight dismal
swt this season. ptinctuated by a
post-game tirade in which McRae
threw several objects, dtey settled
down and contended for the AL
West title. ·
The Royals are 81-17, an
improvement from last year's 7290.
Pro football
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) Gov. Lowell P. Weicker Jr. signed
into law a measure to allow constrtiction of a football stadium if

the New England Palriocs relocate.
Connecticut lawmakets have to
wait on current owners, NFL and
MassachuSetts LegislaiUl'e to see if
dtey can have a professional team.
The NFL and Massachusetts
lawmakers want the Patriots 10
remain, and hope to receive legislative approval to build a new stadium in Boston.

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INSURANCE

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Ill Second St., Pomeroy
YOUR IIIDEPEIIDEIIT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

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Adams, Wolfe fourth,
·fifth in Portsmouth
Raceway Park race

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HOMES TO FIT EVERY LIFESTYLE

High! y touted second-generation
driver Jackie Boggs of Grayson,
Ky. claimed the 30-Iap season
~hampionship race at Ponsmouth
· Raceway Park last Saturday over
Chillicothe's Tony Throckmorton.
Two local drivers cracked the
top five as Bob Adams Jr. and
Scott Wolfe placed fourth and fifth,
respectively, behind another second-generation driver in RJ. Con: ley.
.
Adams and Wolfe claimed top ·
passing honors for the night, as
Adams came from a lOth-place
swt in the field of 26 cars, while
Wolfe started 15th and finished
fifth in the McDonald's/Ander·
son 's/Baum Lumber log wagon.
This was Adams' first vi~it 10 the
fast Ponsmouth oval.
Ve!Cran Delmas Conley claimed
the season points championship
over Barry Bragdon.

,•

"Itt." .·,
.. .•.

Stop out and take a
look at our model
homes and let us show ··.
ou wh we are •.•
"THE VEJIY BEST VALVE
IN TB.I NEW ROME
MAJUCJ:T TODAY"

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NAME BRAND
MATERIALS

...lo..

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•Andersen Windows
•Stanley Doors
•Owens Corning Insulation
•Armstrong Solarian Flooring
•Philadelphia Carpet
•Mastic Vinyl Siding
•1 0Year Structural Warranty

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Smiih and Lindsey two each . In
serving aces, Billina Cooper had
two, and netting one each were
Kellina Cooper, Lindsey, Tatman
and Michele Warne. Billina Cooper
was dte sole player with a block,
and Smith led in defense with ei~ht
digs. Kellina Cooper added stx,
Bums three, Billina Cooper, Lind·
sey and Wame two each, and Tat·
man one.
"Saturday I felt we played hard,
but we are definitely _.tssing Jo
Chapman at the net," Redwomen

Coach Patsy Fields commented,
noting the loss of her sophomore
outside hitler from Oak Hill due to
upcoming surgery.
"We had Wesleyan beat 14-7
but ran out of substitutions and had
no one who could put the ball
down or give up a block," she
added. "We played hard hard but
again we were missing ou1side,
both offensively and defensively."
In the Central State match, Billi·
na Cooper led with 18 kills, two
bloclcs and three digs, while Kelli.

na Cooper notched. eight kills, two
blocks and eight digs. Smith had
fllu r kills and three digs, Burns
seven kills and a serving ace, and
Lindsey and Wame six digs each.
"I was very pleased with our
win over Central State. I felt every.
one played well and our serving
and serve reception was much betler," Fields said.
The Redwomen open this
week's schedule tOnight at
Cedarville, and will host Ohio
Dominican Thursday at 7 p.m.

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Mon.-Thurs. 12·8 p.m.; Closed Fri.; Sat. 10.5; Sun. 1·5
500 f-.t below Pomeroy-Muon Bridge
W.VA.

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The Weather Ch.
USA
Diseovery
Arts &amp; Enter.
ESPN, ESPN 2

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FREE HOI DOGS &amp; DRINKS

night for lhe Chicago White Sox.
Welcome to post-clinching

3-1, with Mount Vernon in first
place (6-0) and Cedarville in second (5·1).
The Redwomen renewed conference play Tuesday at Cedarville
and will host Ohio Dominican
Thursday at 7 p.m.

BILLINA COOPER

to name playoff participants
based On pojnts-pergame averages

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IPEIIIUIE
In'. l-IN
lt:r.l-1-8
BALLOONS FOR KIDS

in the Rio Grande-Lanzera Classic volleyball Player of lhe Week for
the weekend of Sept 18-19.
the second consecutive time this
Th·e freshman from Holyhead, season .
Wales, spurred the Rio Grande
Cooper was last week's top
defensive effon in the tournament, player in dte MOC and Dislrict 22.
ihe ftrSt sponsor¢ event in the pro- Thts week's district player of the
gram's 11-year history at Rio week honor went to Karen Cummings of the College of Mount St
Grande.
J
h
''It's my first American award,
osep ·
so I'm very pleased," MorganCooper; a S-11 senior from·
Jones, who has played school soc· Jackson, averaged 7.38 kills and ·
cer since the age of 6, said. "The 2.38 blocks per game in leading the
experience we gained in the tourna- Redwomen to four wins in five qutment was valuable, and since the ings. She posted a .961 serve perseason comes,down to our District cenlage wtth .69 aces per game, in
22 games, it was very educational addition to handling 82 passes with
for our team to be involved with just four errors for a .951 accuracy.
that ldnd of competition."
The Red women, who started
Tiffin University took lin! place this week at 9·8 overall, surpassed
wilh wins of 3·1 over Lindaey Wil· the .SOO mart for the. season after
son (Ky.). and 2·0 over Indiana dropping their lint five mau:~ of
University/Purdue University·Indi- the~f:orande improved to fifth
anapolis. LW was second after . place in ihe district as this week
shutting out Rio Grande 3..() on lhe began behind •~seed Mount .Versecond day, while IUPUI was third
...,.
with a 1-1 tie wilh Rio Grande. Rio non Nazarene (17-0), Mount St. ·
Grande finished fourth.
Joseph ( 11·2), Cedatville ( 13·4)
Morgan-Jones is one of several and Findlay (11 -5), Within the
international students recruited by MOC, the Redwomen are third at
Redmen Coach Scott Morrissey, OHSAA
and the first on the team from
Wales. He came to Morrissey's
attention after notching an impres·
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) _
sive career widt Holyhead County There's • new __._..,_ in the 1993
Secondary School, in which he was
..
w•u"""
ed th team's pia er of computer ration released Tuesday
·
twtce nam
e
Y
by dte Ohio Hlgh School Athletic
lheA~ltionally, he piared for a Association.
.
club team in his community, TrearPreviously,dte lOp four teams m
odur Bay, and at various times in tern\$ of point totals in each of.dte
his career, he has been a midfield- 20 regions qualified for the
er, forward and defender.
OHSAA's postse'ason slate cham·
"At lhis stage, Kristan is playing pionship tournament.
outslanding soccer for us." Morris·
The top four te•ms in each
sey commented. "He's doing a region still qualify for the playoffs.
great job and we're very pleased but this year they will be deterwith his effort."
mined by an average number of
Morgan-Jones .said that he points amassed in each game and
arrived at Rio Grande this past not on totals.
summer armed only with the uniThe change was made based on
versity's promotional material, not a recommendation of a slate prep
having had the opportunity to view football coach.s association comthe campus beforehand. However, . mittee. The committee wanted to
in t/ie several weelcs he has been at close a loophole in the rules wh~­
Rio Grande, he said he's enjoying by a team might get more pomts
the experience.
from an opponelll canceling a game
He is the son of John Morgan- than if the game had been played.
Jones and Susan Roberts, and plans
"If you play 10 games, the new
to major in sports managemenL

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to Manin and Chris Howard?
A: A trio who played Tuesday

FREE OVER·THE·AIR ANTENNA
with your purchase of our premium pack.

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•111 Couaty Pu.lic Li•r•ry
Moall•y t•ru Frhl•y 9:00 •·m. till 9:00 p.m.
S•tuniiiJ 9:00 •·m. till 5:00 p.IL
Suall•y 1:00 p.M. till 5:00 p.m.

matter baseball quiz:
Q: Who are Rob Butler, Domin·
go Cedeno and Shawn Green?
A: Three starters for Toronto
Blue Jays.
Q: Who are Mike Huff, Norber-

ruJedoesn'th~orhe1pyou,',' said

Henry bomiak, th.e
dinator
ffi
,
of o tctals and publications .or the
OHSAA. "Now, a .team can~?t
benefit from not playmg a game.
Z
. a

coor.

baseball, a time when the end of
the bench gets emptied while the
regulars enJoy some well-earned
resL
Toronto manager Cito Gaston
had everyone checking lheir scorecard irr a 6-4 win over the Milwau·
kee Brewers, fieldiilg a lineup that
included Butler, Cedeno and Green
as well as William Canale, Randy
Knorr and Huck Aener.
"We all knew we were going to
play, so we made some jilkes and
had some fun. It relaxed everybody. We were goin' around and
saymg 'scrub boys ' .and all of
that," said Knorr, a catcher.
Chicag!l manager Gene Lamont
didn't go quite so far, using a hand. ful of regulars along with dte rookies in lhe White Sox's 5-2 loss 10
Seattle.
"We had a different team out
there, but most of those regulars
wiD play 10111orrow. You can't stop
playing and turn it on again,"
Lamont said.
In other games, Baltimore beat
New York 9-1, Minnesota beat
California 2·1 and Cleveland
defeated Kansas City 3-2. In dou·
bleheaders, Texas beat Oakland 2-0
before losing the nightcap 10-3.
Boston beat Detroit 11-3 before
dro.PJ!ing the second game 7·6 in
11mnings.
Orioles 9, Yankees 1
At Baltimore, Ben McDonald
(13'- 13) pitched a two-hitler and
Chris Hailes and Harold Reynolds
each drove in three runs against
New York:
The victory moved the Orioles
within 1 1/2 games of the secondplace Yankees in the AL East. The
only hits off McDonald were sin·
gles by Dion James in dte fourth
and Do11 Mattingly in the sixth.
Sterling Hitchcock (1·2) took the
loss.
Twins 2, Angels 1
At Minneapolis, Brian Halper's
two-ou~ single capped a two-run
ninth-inning rally against Mark

Langston (I S-11 ). Kevin Tapani
(ll-15) allowed eight hits and one
walk in his third complete game of
lhe year.
Indians 3, Royals 2
At Kansas City , Kevin Appier
(17 -8) lowered his AL-leading
ERA 10 2.61 but was oulpitched by
Jason Grimsley (3-4). The winning
run scored in the seventh on a
throwing error by left fielder Chris
Gwynn.
Rangers 2, Athletics 0
Athletics 10, Rangers 3
AI Arlington, Texas, Kevin
Brown (15-li) won his ftfth consecutive decision with a four-hitter
in the opener. Ron Darling (5-9)
took lhe loss.
In the second game, Oakland
scored three runs in the first against
last-minute starter Bt:ian Bohanon
(4-4 ). Former Ranger Bobby Witt
(14-12) got the win.

EMPIRE
NATUUL OR
LPGAS

UNVENTED

ROOM
HEATER
PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON, W. VA.

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UNCHES
- CAPE CODS .
.
BI·LEYELS AND TWO STORIES

ao4-na-soo1

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KRIST AN MORGAN-JONES

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The Board of Elections is open Monday thru Friday, 8:30.12:00, 1:(1()-4:30. The
Board office will also be open .on Monday, October 4, 1993 from 9:00 a.m. till 9:00
p.m. You may also register at our permanent branch location:

For any additional information, Call 992-2697, or stop by our office at 112
Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy, Ohio.

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TEXAS·PAN AMERICAN: Named

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Krislan Morgan-Jones, ftrSt-year
defender for the University of Rio
Grande soccer team, was named
the most valuable defensive player
·

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DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

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Cincli LIRochc.llfl Pacladl. warncn'• aoll
coooh.

Also register on the Meigs County Bookmobile at its designated stops.

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Vote at your own precinct and avoid long lines at the Board on Election Day by
changing your address (If you have moved within the county) or if you have
changed your name, by updating your registration by October 4, 1993.

Hours:

~

By CHRIS SHERIDA-N
AP Sports Writer
It's late September and both
division titles liave been clinched
in the American League. That
allows for a these-games-don ' t·

University of Rio Grande mid-

·"'

MONTCLAlR STATE: Suapondad

In order to vote In the November 2,. 1993 General
Election you must be registered by October 4, 1993

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Sports briefs

Ire You A Resident Of Meigs County?

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WE DID IT! - The Philadelphia Pbillies' Mariano Duncan
(right) leaps Into the arms or teammate Joha Krull after the
PhUIIes' 10-7 victory Tuesday night over Keystone State rival Pittsburgh. The decision gave the Pbillies their first NL Eastern Division
title since 1983. (AP)

John Blanton, women'• tnct coach,
ptndinJ remltl rll Alto imettiption.
STEVENS TECH: Named John
J01eph auiltint aocc:er coach. Joe Soon
tnd Jac:lr. Leahy uailtant baaketball
coachca, and Rob F&amp;ullo volunteer IIIia·
t&amp;nt buketball COJcb. .

~

For the women's ,race, Evans
suolled to her second consecutive
victory of lhe season. The \VOlt of
Egelhoff, Harris, Robinson and
Beyer aided the team in piclcing off
their Centre counterparts.
"Every one of our ladies had a
smart race," Winey said.
· The teams return to action Sat-'
urday at home in the 23rd Rio
Grande 1nvilational. College teams
slated to run include Cumberland,
Lindenwood, Columbus Slate, Bel·
Iarmine and JUPUI -Fen Wayne.

Billina Cooper named
Welsh soccer player, MOC Player of Week
nets defender•award, for 2nd straight time
impaCtS on R10 team· . ~:m~re~~1t':-~:n%::~ .

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Dotn&gt;t (Moore 13-9) " - (Dop-

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Jlm Willon

athletes.
But for the first two miles Benson, Smith, Bennett, Maeda and
Richar~ conlrolled the top five
spots, wnh Cumberland packing
behind. Wenger, Rowland and
Hayes, all freshmen, moved up 10
finish within the top IS.
"I wu really ompressed with ·
how Benson and Smith worked
togedter, and how smart Wenger
ran in is ftrSI college race," Willey
said.

AL nines send benchwarmers into action during final games

?If ••

f.aeld r:llhe American Hock~y Lague.
NEW YORE ISLANDERS: AMitplotl

College

Carrie Tatman each netted a kill.
Lindsey also had two blocks and a
101al of 12 digs.
Billina Cooper led the offense in
the Midway game wilh 18 kills, in
addition to four digs, a serving ace
and a block. Her sister offered six
lcills, a pair of serving aces and two
blocks to the effon, while Smith
had two lcills and Mclaughlin one.
Smith also had two serving aces,
two bloclcs and five digs.
For the Point Park meeting, Bil!ina Cooper had 13 kills, Kellina
Cooper seven. Burns three, and

,lllll;o •

HARTFORD WHALERS: A11iped
Mike Lenarduzzi. aoattendcr, 10 'Sprina-

Alui Lal11, defen•ernln •midfielder,
throuJh the 1994 World Cup.

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IW1fml Wholcn.

Soccer

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Yadt Raqen -........ r.. - , . .
IIIIICI and finod him $500 for a
hi&amp;h·ltictin&amp; incident ilq&gt;&lt;. 2S •pinot the

U.S. NATIONAL TEAM: Sisned

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ICUOII.

TOlONTO MAPLE LEAFS : Sent
Yanic: Pcnauh, ca~ttr, CbriJ Oovcduil,
let\ wins; Ken MeRle, riJht win&amp;: and
Chri.l Sncllta. delenaeman, to St. John'•
of tho American Hockoy League. Anncr.mced thtt Tomu Kuctwcik,left win&amp;.
haalcft. the team.

last Thursday p!Jt Rio Grande's
overall record at 9-8 as this week .
began. '
Against Wesleyan, the Red·
women drew s1rong performances
from Billina Cooper and Kellina
Cooper. Billina notched 18 kills
and nine digs, while Kellina was
responsible for 10 Jcills, two serv·
ing- aces, four digs and two block
solos. Deana Smidt added four kills
and nine digs, Srephanie Mclaugh·
lin and Renee Burns had two JciUs
apiece, and Kristy Lindsey and

In women's results, Robin Egelhoff was fourth in 21:19, followed

by Adrianne Harris in fifth pllce in
21:24. Angel Robinson wu ninth
in 22:27, and Jennifer Beyer wu
12dt in 23:03.
.
The men's race wu essenlially a
two-team affair between Rio
Grande and Cumberland, which
finished 14th in the NAIA Nationals last year. Cumberland. Rio
Grande's coaches noted, planned 10.
allow Benson and Smidt to take the
fust two spots, but to {n)eze out the
remainder with a pack of its own

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Nln..: SuipCDdcd K.eviD Lowe, New

ey...._

•
The University of Rio Grande
.volleyball team won two out of
three matches Saturday in a quadrangular meet in Lyne Center to get
above lhe .500 mark for the first
time this season in action from last
week.
While the Redwomen fell 14·
1'6, 13-15 to West Virginia Wes·
leyan, dtey defeated Midway (Ky.)
17-15, lS-6 and Point Park (Pa.)
15-4, IS-4, 15·12. Those scores;
coupled with a 15·4, 15·13, 15-9
win on the road over Central Slate

34:51.

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· Hockey

Houley, dcfcmanan, to a multi)'Cif con·
tract. Auigncd N1than LIFayette, for·
wird., to Peeni1 of1he hucmaUmal Hock-

Maeda, eighth, 28:03 ; Coody
Richardson, lOth, 28:19; Chris
Rowland, 12th, 28:18; · Danny
Hayes, 15th, 28:33; Terry Ander·
son, 19th, 28:57; P.J. Chadwell,
20th, 29;25; Andy Godwin, 21st,
29:36: Frank Bucy, 25th, 29:57;
Brian Lutz, 30th, 30:40; Jeff
Roberts, 31st, 30:5 I; Chris Holt,
40th, 32:09; Dan Longcoy, 48th,

•.

National HocbyLtaaue

ST. LOUIS BLUHS: Sipod Phil

Camimellsville 116.
The Redwomen netted 31
points, Centre had 36, Cumberland
61, Asbury 97 and Midway lOS. ·
"We beat some very good
teams," Coach Bob Willey commented. "I thinlc we're runnmg as a
team, people are very conscious of
one another and are :A:Prking
togedter."
Other men's results include
Chris Smith, second. 27: 17; Scott
Wenger, fourth, 27:;23: Mark Ben·
nett, sixth, 27:53: · Hidemitsu .

~.;:'

pnaicooqtWI.

Bob McGill, clefcntanan, to Salt Late of
tho tnu.ndioaal Hodt')' Lap

First place finishing times by
seniors Chad Benson and Bonnie
Evans pushed the University of Rio
Grande cross country ·teams to the
top spot irr the second meet of the
seasoo for both teams on SlllUtday.
Benson fmished the men's race
in lhe Centre College Invitational
in Dan'ilille, Ky .. in 27:11, while
Evans completed the Women's race
in 19:45. Overall, the Redmen were
ftrSI in team results with 21 Jl?lnts,
followed by Cumberland wtth 40,
Centre 103, Sue Bennett 108 and

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.. '.. RG volleyball team wins two out of three for 9-8 record
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rey, t\lnninJ back, on injarod ruerve.
S.ianed Tru1 Sado...kl. ti&amp;ht ead. Activat·
ocfVictor Oreea, comeibJck, from the

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The o.Jiy sentinel-Page 5

_Rio Grande runners sweep . events at Centre invitational

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Wednesday, September 29,1893

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

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992-2903

Pomeroy

Your GfEBusiness Service ComesWith
OneVery Important Feature.

After all. your businiJS depends on your ability to ketp in touch. And 11otbin~ is
more important to us than yo11r husiness.

BEST RECEPTION

!'

Bob Wingett
Publisher
Ohio Valley
Publishing Co.
Newspapera

Personal service. In today's business twrld. it 'J practically noneximm. 8111 through GTEs
Customer AdiJ(J(acy Program. it\ a standard feature - and a very important w:ry for us In find 0111 hOll' you
foe/ about your GTE servh1. Through the program. [ol.'a! GTE employm visit mstomers periodically to mak.e
sure our prodt1cts. service. and support mntinm to meet the highest standards ofexrellence- and to do
u·hatever it takes toensure completesati.ifaaioll ll'itb them.

Call For Free Consultation

,.,.

Bill Wagner
Local GTE
Manager

992-6320

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P.'f• e the D.11y Sentinel

Pometoy Middleport, Ohio

Community
calendar ·

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WEDNESDAY

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POMEROY - Big Bend Cloggers will be sponsoring a beginners
workshop from 6 10 7 P..m. at the
Pomeroy Municipal Building. Call
992-7853 for more information.
RACINE - Southern Local
School Dislrict Chapter 1 introductory meeting at 7 p.m. in the Southem High School c;Ueleria.

We Rtd.n F~ l'ood SkiD
&lt;Mntily Rip R....d .

Bll I IR Qualltyl
Bl I I IR lervlcel
BlftiR lelectlonl

BnTIR
TOTAL .
YALUI!

Take Bonte A Big Bear . Hug!
;

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Prlce1 lffecllve ftru Saturday, Octolter 2, 1993

ROCK SPRINGS - Wildwood
Garden Club will meet at 7:30p.m.
at the home of Betty Milhoan.

r-- -- ·- --- ---- · ~ ----------,.
·
2% Lowfat
'i

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EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
Local Board of Ellucation will
meet in special session Wednesday
at 5:30p.m. at the high schoOl. Purchase of the meeting will be to discuss personnel and other other matters.

·Food

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Family
Medicine
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RACINE - Racine Church of
Nazarene will liave a revival Sept.
'29 through Oct. 3 stilrtinJ:! at 7 p.m.
nightly with Evangahst David ·
Myers.

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8832

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Plastic
Gallon

POMEROY - Pomeroy group of
AA and AI Anon will meet at
Sacred Heart Catholic Church at 7
p.m. Call 992-5763 for more information.

J

i
r

U•lt 1 Per Custe~ner With Coupe• Ancl •10 Purch•• 1·
· Valid Thru lunclay, Oct.ber 2, 1993
,
I

POMEROY - There will be a
special meeting of the Fraternal
Order of Polic at the Pomeroy
Police Department at 7 p.m. All
members are urged 10 attend. '

~------------------~-----~
·3 .lias. or More Pkg.
Presh Pa•lly Pack

PORTLAND - Lebanon Township Trustees will meet Thursday at
7 p.m. at the township building.
POMEROY - Free Clothing
Day will be held at the Salvation
Army on Buuernut Avenue from
10 a.m. 10.noon. AU area residents
in need of clothing are welcome.

Ill.

POMEROY - There will be a
spaghetti dinner with the Meigs
High School football team from
5:1510 6:15p.m. in the high school
cafeteria. A small donation is
required for aU you can eaL

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Ground
Chuc.k ·
Gov't l•spectecl
Sllcecl

POMEROY · There will be a
Showcase Meigs County meeting
at the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce at 7:30 a.m. Final decisions regarding all aspects of this
even ivill be completed. Any business, artist, festival or organization
wishing to participate in the Showcase on Oct 17-15 must contact the
Extension office at 992-6692 or
Mary Powell at 992-2239 by SepL
30.

Pork Sirloi
·toast
•·

FRIDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - A round
and square dance sponsored by
Tuppers Plains Veterans of Foreign
Wars Post 9053 Ladies Auxiliary
will be held at the legion hall from
8-11:30 p.m. Music by C.J. and the
County Gentlemen.

Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

has:reco~m~-~:\:!:~~i:n:~:::~
the
Dental Association

mended tliat I dentist
sealants Put on
my teeth. I've only had one cavity
in my life, but my dentist says
some of my rear molars have
developed "pits," and cavities mar.
soon develop. I've seen a lot of
.articles that highly recommend
sealants for children, but 1 liaven 't
seen anything that addresses
whether sealants are necessary for
adults. The sealants my dentist recommends are not inexpensive. He
says it wohld cost about $600., Is
this procedure worthwhile?
Answer: Your question is one
that stretches the limits of my
expenise, so I've had 10 do more
than my usual amount of research
to provide you an answer. I'll begin
by talldng about those evil "pits"
your dentist has found in your
t00 th •
Healthy teeth have a smooth,
hard, protective and
wear-resistant outer layer called
enamel. It is formed as the tooth
grows and can have slight imjlerfeetions. Small "pits" on the chewing surfaces of the back teeth,
along with small lines called fis·sures are examples of these imperfections. When these flaws are very
shallow, they cause no problem.
Larger defects in the protective
layer of enamelfroduce a place for
several types o bacteria (Actinomyces, Staphylococcus, Strepto·
coccus and Veillonella, if you want
to be on a first-name basis with
these little critters) to attack the
tooth and cause a cavil)'. A sealant
forms a protective coaung over the
imperfections that can't be penettated by these decay-causing hac1

teria.

Young children and adolescents
have much more IOoth decay than
do adults, ·so they are a beuer group
10 use in a study of a new product
that may reduce cavities. A 1991

compared indivi&lt;Juals who had
their teeth treated with sealants
when they were children 15 years
before with similar individuals who
had no sealant applied to their
teeth. It showed that 31.3 percent
of the sealant group developed: a
cavity of the fii'St molar, and m the
group that bad no sealant applied,
82.8 percent bad a cavity in that
tooth. This study and many others
have shown tliat sealants reduce the
frequency of cavities . .
Cavities occur more commonly
in children, but adults get them,
too. You said you have only liad
one filling, but your dentist may
have noted that your ®ntal "pits"
have shown signs of delerioration
that could lead to many small cavi·
ties. Some dentists prefer to continue watching this type of problem·
until deterioration becomes great
enough 10 require a filling. A denlist with a more aggressive belief in
preventive care would recommend
a sealant in this type of situation,
since sealants have been shown to
reduce the chances of progression
to cavities.
Sealants ~qe not routinely used
for adults because of the
low rate at which they develop cavities. However, each individual's
situation is different. Your dental
health' may be improved by the'use
of a sealant. Talk with your dentist .
again. You may also want a second
opinion, since - according 10 my
colleagues in the dental profession
- the $600 charge is quite high for
this type of care.
"Family Medicine" Is a weekly
column. To submit questions,
write to Jobil C. Wolf, D.O.,
Ohio University College or Osteopathic Mediclue, Grosvenor Hall,
Athens, Ohio 45701.

Ritchie family reunion held
Presh

Presh

Broccoli

Cauliflower
12
Count

14
Count

Ia.

RACINE • A family reunion for
the descendants of Victor Lewis
Neutzling, Sr. and Elizabeth Graber
Nlmtzling will be held at Star Mill
Park at 5 p.m. Table service will be
provided. Bring a covered dish and
information about your family. If
you have any questions call Nancy
Ncutzling at992-6052.

Cooking

Onions

CLIFfON - Clifton Tabernacle
Church will be having a yard sale
starting at 9 a.m.

311t.

•••

MIDDLEPORT- Overbrook
Center will be having an arts and
crafts show and open house from
II a.m. to 6 p.m. Arts and crafts by
many area craftsmen will be available for sale. The public is invited.

Presh'

Carrots

Presh lop Presh

Tossed Salad

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I lit.

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The Family Of the late Wayne E.
and Mary E. Ritchie was held at the
Long Bottom Community Hall
recently . .
The family speill the day lookipg at pictures of the many past
family gatherings. Swimming and
fishing were also pan of the day at
Forked Run Park. ·
Mary E. Ritchie, guest of honor,
will be 85 this coming March. She
was presented with a wall hanging
made by Carolyn Jones. It was a
yellow rose, one of the many roses
from the floral arrangements of her
deceased son Bill Ritchie.
Mrs. Ritchie, formerly of
Columbus, will now be living with
her sons Earl and Joe at the family
farm home on Mount ,Olive Road.
The farm house is now big enough
for visits from her children, 20
grandchildren and 22 great-grand·
children. The most recent greatgrandchild, a girl, was born on
September 3 to Mrs. Ritchie's
granddaughter, Jayne.
Attending were Mary and I oc
Ritchie; Carl and Eileen Ritchie
Kuhn and grandson Dustin Fox,
Louisville, Ky.; Ken, Nathan and
Jake Kuhn, Columbus; Eugene
"Jack" and Donna Ritchie of
Pataskla; Andy, Dianna, Timothy

and Stephanie Ritchie Anderson,
Columbus; Patrick and Michele
Ritchie, Pataskla; Forrest "Buck"
and Emma Lou Rhodes, John,
Nancy, Eric and Duane Rhodes
Bucher, all of Navarre; Mike and
Sandra Rhoiles Suttle, Smithville;
Bryan, Cindy and Matt Ritchie
Rector, Coolville; Robin and
Samantha Ritchie Jones, Logan;
Brandy Ritchie and friend Bill
Allen, Coolville; Elton and Joyce
Ritchie, Tuppers Plains; Randy,
Beth Ann and Collin Ritchie
Pierce, Middleport; Scott Pierce,
Mason City, W.Va.; Brian, Jane
and Dakona Ritchie Collins, Long
Bottom; Ken and Lisa Ritchie,
Long Bottom; Kathy, Sara and
Samantha, Racine; Arlene Ritchie,
Columbus; April Ritchie and friend
Darrell Henderson, Tuppers Plains;
Melissa, Chris and Amanda Ritchie
Griffin, Tuppers Plains; Josephine
,Ritchie, Long BotiOm; Helen Hall,
Hillard; Carolyn Jones, Kettering;
Jim and Mary Hall and family,
Columbus; Pat, Chris, Jason and
Sara Hall Corene, Columbus;
Byron and Ruby Hall Steele and
grandson Mitch, Columbus; Mildred Wells, Pomeroy; John and
Jenny Thoma, Columbus and Billand Tony Jordon and son, Florida.

In celebration of our 5th year annivel'81iry
there will he an

POINT PLEASANT- The West
Virginia State Farm Museum will
be holding its annual Country Festival, Antique Steam and Gas
Engine Show and Mason County
Extension Quilt Show on Saturday
and Sunday.

lb.

lbs.

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED GENUINE

GOLDEN RIPE

Dole Bananas

Ground Chuck
U.S. GRADE A, WAMPLER/LONGACRE

Chicken

Breast·

QUarterS...Lb.

APPEARING ON VIDEO

®@1]®[3@(;1 \] 011
FOR AVERY

ARTS &amp; CRAFTS SHOW
OPEN HOUSE
Overbrook Center

AlADDIN
IIIDEO

Middleport, Ohio

MINERSVILLE · Return
Jonathan Meigs Chap~r, Daughters
of the American Revolution will
meet for a luncheon at noon at lhe
home of Rae Reynolds.

Saturday, October 2, 1993
11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Arts and Crafts by Area Craftsmen

SALISBURY • The Salisbury
Elementary Fall Festival will open
at 5 p.m. Games will start at 6:30
p.m. There will be raffles, gaines,
food and entertainment Come join
the fun.

Free Table Space Available
For More Information Pleaie
Contact Terri Stous at Overbrook Center
at 992·6472 between 9-4 M-F

.
•.

"
"

Jolm C. Wolf, D.O.

"

THURSDAY

HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Lodge 411 stated meet·
ing will be held. Dinner will start at
6:30 p.m. followed by the meeting
at 7:30 p.m. P..(l.St masons night will
be held to honor these distin·
guished masons. Work on master
mason degree. All master masons
are welcome.

Ohio Universily
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Club~

POMEROY - The Bi~ Bend
Stemwheel Association will meet
at 7 p.m. at the Carpenter's Hall.
The public is invited.

SATURDAY

G~PEL SING SCHEDULED - The gospel r;oup Handl will
be performl111at the Wahama High School Oct. at 7 p.m. Others
scheduled to perform are the Shafer FamUy, the Turley Family,
Reflections Trio, Eternity and Cathy Stebbins. Admlssloo tor the
event Is free with concessloru; available. For more information caD
675-66:Zl.

'

\.

•

.

FROZEN ASSORTED VARIETIES

"

'

•I •

\

$

�Ohio

Taylor
··to talented and
gifted program

Bill'• nre
of"--oad
IIIIIIOUIIIIM

Jody Taylor has been hired as
teacher ftir the lalented and gifted
program by the Meigs County
Board of Education.
·
A certified elementary teacher,
Taylor will be, taking additional
courses at Ohio University 10 gain
her cenification Ul teach lalented
and glfted students. She will teach
on a temporary certificate until
such time as she completes those
requirements.
T11ylor graduated from Meigs
High School and Rio Grande College. Working with her will be
Kitty Hazl~r. the county's talented
and gifted coordirullor.
Students for the program have
already been identified through a
testing program last year.
·
Special classrooms will be set
up in each district for the TAG program. In Eastern it will be held at
Tuppers Plains, in Southern at the
Junior High School, and in Meigs
at the Junior High School building
in Middleport. All TAG students
will attend the class one day a
week. In Eastern and Southern the
program will be carried out one
day, while in Meigs it wiU be carried out three days a week. The
Meigs Local School District agreed
to put more money into the program because of number of students attending school in the district
The county board also adopted a
course of study for the program.
The board approved a bus driver's certificate for Archie Rose.
A special account for funds
received from the University of Rio
Grande to carry out the Rural
Demonstration Project in the county was set up.

RlchMIIIoore

1118 Joined our .wt.

STORE HOURS .
M01day thru Sunday
8 AM·lOPM

Rlclulnl GOIIIM ID Ul
with .12 yra.
experlenMit

Pomwoy Home a
AulD 1nd CU .Auto

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

To place an ad

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD SEPT. 26 THRU OCT. 2, 1993

Van Meter hosts
UMWmeeting
Gertrude Robinson led the
. pledge program, "Missionary Partnership," w!)en Alfred United
Methodist Women met at the
church recently. All members
joined in reading and discussion.
Scripture readings were from Luke
and Malachi. The program
el(ptained and emphasized undesignated giving.
The business meeting was
opened with prayer by Sharon
Hausman. Secretary Martha Poole
and Treasurer Osie Follrod gave
their reports. Nominating Committee Chairman Martha Elliott suggested that present officers be
retained except secretary of program for which Sarah Caldwell
was nominated. The society accepted the recommended slate of officers.
Caldwell reported on the visit to
Pomeroy UMW dinner and mission
report of Hungary by Heidi Hoff.
man which she, Pastor Hausman
and Parker attended. The society
signed a card of thanks to Pomeroy
UMW. Parker reported on the Festival of Sharing at Athens. Fortytwo friendship calls were reported.
Pastor Hausman reported on the
UMW District meeting at Marietta
on September 16. Morning speaker
was Miss Goody Poorhouse.
Florance Ann Spencer had the
prayer calendar and chose Mary
Jean Henry in laity at Anchorage,
Alaska. The society signed a birthday card for her. Parker gave a
report on Mennonite sending of
Bible commentaries to Russia.
Hostess Charlotte Van Meter
served sandwiches, bugles and S?ft
drinks during the social hour. Elhot
asked the blessing.
Present were Charlotte Van
Meter, Sharon Hausman, Gertude
Robinson, Martha Poole, Osie Foilrod, Florence Spencer, Sarah Caldwell, Martha Elliott and Nellie
Parker.
The next meeting will be on
Oct. 19 at the church. Nina Robinson will be program leader and
Osie Follrod will be hostess.

;. MON.

'

Monday Papor
Tllllday Paper
Wednelday 'Paper
Thuroday Paper
Friday Paper
SU!Iday Paper

thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M. ~ SAT.8-l2

.

CLOSED

.

~ · POLICIES

,.

DAY BEFORE I'UBLICATION
1:00 p.m. Soturday

SUNDAY
.

••t

1:00 P·"" MOIIday
1:00 p.m. Tueooday
1:011 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. ThWiday
1:00
. Friday

•: • Adt oatlide the couuty yolir ad nuu
be prepaid
I'" .
dioeoual for ""' paid lo&gt; ad·•-·

a......

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Rump Roast ••••••••••~...
USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

$
$

·i

1

79

(
Quarters ••••••••••••••••~~. 49
.·

CHICKEN LEG

BEEF BUCKET
LB.

Cubed S
SMOKED PICNIC

••••••••••••••
.

$

.Bologna
' ., •••••••••••••••• !~•. )49

$249

79 (

Clauified page• cover th~
follOu!inB telephone e:~echangea •••

992-MI.Wieport/

446-G.WpoUo
367-Cheehire
388-VInton
• 245-Rio Groade
; 256-G..,.ao Dt.o.
' ' 643-Ar.Lia Dlol.
• 379-Walnul

Pomeror

98S..C....... r
84!-Portland
247-IAlan Folio
949-Raelne
742-Rudaod

-·

,'.' 2-ID Memory
· 3- Announcel'itenll
·:~ 4- Giveaway ' ·

.. . ._...

$]19

675-1'1. Pleuant
458-Loon
576-Applo
773-Muoa
882-New Rna
895-l.eloort
937-Ralfolo

c....

$399

.

Ice Cream •••••••\.!:~:~~...

2 $100
~..f.. ~~~~- ~r-~~l!,~t.s_~·=~~:l9.. . .y~.9!!~~~~-~~::~::.::~ .. ....... .
·::

MEDAL FLOUR

:1

I :
::

SUNSHINE

DOG FOOD

I

::

I :

49

::

I:

:II::

G. w. GRANULATED

s

I :: '

SUGAR

I

I

29

:
I '
:·

:
nmU:~~~~:~~.I ::
I I

il ~1:. 1
I

TRIPLE VENDOR
COUPON

-,1,

41211\fn

,I 1
1I I
~1

I .
, I'
________________ ,1 , .

·I

SMALL
WANT ADS
PACK

EICAYITING

Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
Thla ad good for 1
FREE card.
. Lie: No. 0051-342
n/2oWZ'tln

(614)
667·6621

5!1- F•r Sot. or Trecloo

I \1:\1-1 1' 1'111 ~
,\ I I I I ~ II II 1,

4-19-93-lfn

qupon
63-LI...lOck

Arnold's
Plumbing,
Heating
&amp; Cooling

~Hay&amp;GraiD

65- Soecl

a Fortiliur

71- Au,.. for Sole
172-- Truelu for Solo
173-- Vo&gt;m &amp; 4 WD't
Motoreyela

QUALilY WORK
&amp;GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD

&amp;ala ti Moton for Sale

a Aocoooori.,.l

1~~- "'''" Parll
1u·- "'''" Repair

C.mpiDf Equipment

{814) 992··747·41

Pomeroy,

R&amp;C IXCAVATIIIG

BULLDOZING .
POND$

SEPTIC SYSTEMS

LAND CLEARING
WATER I
SEWERUNES
BASEMENTS l
HOME BITES

C...orol HauU.,

Star Mill Park

SUSAN JANE
WEAVER
LIGHTFOOT

Public Notice

On Sept. 3, 1H3 you
departed thle life. You
-ra tha but 1111er
anyone could aver

h-.

The Bolll'd of TiUa- of
Orange TowMiilp r-rva
the right to walva any,
lrregularltlea and/or
lnformallllaa and to releot
and .. blcla.
:
11y . . . , of the io.d of
Truateaa of Orenge
Townlllfp.
.·
To .vlaw the loadlll' prior to
the maellng oon- one of
the following ltuetoea:
Roger Rltohfe, J•maa
Wataon. Robert Mlnlnllo.
Palrtrl•
Clerk
41111
Road
Coohlla, Ohio 41711
(81ze. fT, II, II, to, (tO) 1•
. 3, 4,1, .. 10 to

·: PUBUC NOnCE ,. .
'iNDUITRIAL LOADEH
I ;,_. a-~dR olfAliLEru•- of
·'" oning• Townehlp, Melp
1
C9ilnty, Ohio, offer for s•la
bji eaalad bid one
tnternallon•l lndualr a
&amp;;~r, lolodel 2424. •rial
1'¥!'11Mr 11:1732.
l '1•e•lad blda will b..
ra..eptitd unlit Oolober 6,
I ill al7:~ p.m. wfMn blda
!fill b~nad •t the
~~loadlll' be aold .;_
1;.':1111 no Wlll'rantl• or
. .rantaea axpr11ald or

I'/

•nr

c:.%

You are gone now,
but you will never be
forgotten. We have
mamorl•• that time
can never atul aw-r.
Than ka to all my
friend&amp; who·auppo111d
11111 with vlalla, flo_.
andprayera.
Sieler ThereM
w-r(Vanmat.r)
PNHiay, Graham,
N.C. and Mom l Dad,
Richard and M•gla
W..ver, Bldlord, Ky.

II

. ICM·77NAS

2nd I ocllllon oall Lon Neal
HendiFIOn, W.Va. ~31

Maei&amp;'OIIrd and VIIA;;~P'!'f'

. Shade River Saddle Shop
CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
36358 SR 7

Chester, Oh. 45720
985·3406

IIPLICEMEI'I' WIIDOWS
GREll LAKES - lhe Most
Advanced All Vinyl Replacement
Windows on the Market.
· Why pay hit• tat·ef·ltwn prlete whtn Y••
un 111 It lecally 1n• 1m $$$?
Until October 1st: Buy any replecemant
wlnclow ancl receive FREE - BeautHul
wocxlgraln Interior.
Colors: Light Oak, Dark Oak, Cherry.
Llf1tlma Guarantee.

CHRISTIAN'S CONSTRUOION
446·4514- 1·100..76..4013

Mobile Home Repai.r
Uphobtery·

Guttere
Down1pout1

Gutter Cllanlng
Painting

obtained
from Carolyn
L.
Spealflcatlono
may be
Powell, 527 Filth St., Box
375, Raclhe, Ohio 4snt.
Ph. (114) 141·2415, 141·
2s2o,14e-21120.
Carolyn L. Pow.ll

Clerk/Treaour•
VIllage of Racine, Ohio
(I) 12, 22, 211; 3TC
.

FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168-

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
-New Homes
-Garages
_,.
I
-..omp eta
Reltlodeling

915·4473

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
Box 189

.~~.Wt.ilt't

Middleport, Oldo 45760
(614) 843·5264

12-6-tfn

BISSELL . BUILDERS, INC.
I

101M''

RICHARD ROBERTS

"Ad Specialliso"

New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages e Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL.
RllEE ESTIMATES

614-992·7643

mJay Drlw, GIIUpotls. 011.

lllo S111day Coll•l

448-7812
FIIII/Vvlce 448-7812

SHRUB &amp; TRIE
TRIM 11d
REMOVAL
HAUL.lNG
•-'IGHT
._
-FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992·2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
12-30-92-lfn

2112J92Jtfn

. WATER
HAULING

ENTERPRISES
!.Palming S.rvlcea

•so ,., .....

...l

lntarlor
~1~~~~am
Palm&amp; Mobile
and Aluminum Siding

1625 Gallons

J.Po,"'r Wa~hing

fill UTIIIATII

C1ll
R1lph AI

Le.. htlala, .... 417431

742·2904

985·4111

$0714tltlar1Wt••..

H1 noo.

LINDA~S

PAINTING
'

color TV, deok and choir, comll' ~blnet, old prim. rocker,

oewing iocker, maple hutch, 5 pc. cinelta, table and 2 chaira,
wood kitchen boolh table and 2 benches; ladclar-bllckchai11,
Whirlpool refrigerator, GE 30" range,Amana radarang8, Gold
Star microwave, wash stand, oak cnner. walnut bed, maple
twin bedroom oulta, metal cabinet, onliiJIB hk:hllir, 2 match·
lng wicker pfanlll'l, fern stand, oak &amp;eWing machine, Maytag
washer, GE dryer, Magic Chel wuloer and ctyer oot (5
monlht old). loll of gluawn, 8 pc. aarving tat Currier I

lwo, lllnay dish, - a l ocaJpied Japan figurines and

Dlhlrl, •decoralaehtatueofgkf with ro ... on base, large
glltad mirror, lamps, 18ncy lloor lamp, braso candeholda11,
belli, oewlng machine, 78 NCD!'dl, M&amp;W sweeper, fan, mink
olDie, llneno, &amp;mall kitchen appllancea, poll, pant, granlto
pol, c:rod&lt;wflh lid, oiDnejara, blue jan, fawhandloolo, old tool

box, Allis Chalmer puah m~. pfut much more.

AUCT10N CONDUCTED BY

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.
MABON, WV

773-5785

AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON
TEAMS: CASH OR CHECK WITH I.D.

ot propor!y
. Bondoolln ot;o, Klrolucky,

\

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMIIN.G.

a W..l Virginia Ollie

painting. Let 11111 do II
foryou.
.
VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

614·915·4110
1112/11311 mo.

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE
36970 lall IIIII Road
P0111ray, Ohio
GRAVEL, SAND,
LIMESTONf,. TOP SOIL
&amp;

fiLL DIRT

;Jij
Ml••ltport, Ohio

614·992·7144

1ft

CARPENTER SERVICE

I -Room Adcltlona

Armoun crrnrnts

Work

and Plumbing
l Exterior

Painting
(FREE ElnMATEII)

OWNEI: Joff Wlcl•....
&amp;11

Pomeroy, Ohio

892-6215
..111-N'IIh
IIIIIUCJ; lum oil Ill willie ,_
....._ TIIU CFAL. n•M btt ..
~nolh-- ..

EXCAVATING

R..10nllble Rlltl

JoeN. S1yre

SAYRE TRUCKING

FREE ES'l1MATU

614-742·2138

992·3131

314193t

Limestone
Dirt
Gravel
992·7878

31904 .........
CretkROI.

V.C. YOUNG Ill

LIMESTONE,
GRAVE~ TOPSOIL
&amp;COAL

HAULING

'I

992·3470
HAULING

GENEUL

n~~.tjllng

INTERIOR

FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out ol

LOCATED AT THE YOUTH CENTER ON
CAMDEN AVE. IN POINT PLEASANT, WV
THE ESTATE OF THE LATE MINA JEWELL
AND ITEMS FROM THE KITTY M"DERMITT
ESTATE WILL BE SOLD.
Hide a bed (liko! newl, 3 pc. mah. and table sot, 2 pc. living
room suita, 3 pc.llard rock maple end tabltl"t mah. comer
wholoflot otand, la·Z-Boy recliner, color conoole TV, Zenilh

LUNCH

Life • Medicare • C1ncer • Fire • Hulth •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

-~====;;:::a-;::1.::;6-=ll3=-lfn::; ~~!~!:::!:::=:=:;;~

Stop l Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

8

AMERICAN GENERAl LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSUUIICE COMPANY

Dirt, G1'11Vel and Colli

NEW-REPAIR

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1993
10:00 A.M.

1lllter,

OUR NEWEIT LOCATION IN MAlON, W. VA. II
OPEFIATI!D BY CHAII NEAL.

HAULING: Lln.W~ne,

ROOFING

ESTATE
AUCTION
In Memory

If we don't haYa, " ' een pilL

62-,- Waatoolto !luy

AB11

In memory of my

,-

.lnlriW-

EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES CLUB
IN POMEROY
8:-46p.m.

D.A. BOSTON

r11erveo the right to ralact
any and all bldL

Oc1.1&amp;2
Fr!. &amp; Sat. 8;00 am-7

·'. Public Notice

':li

BINGO

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

The VIllage of Racine Ia
accepting aealed blda for
the rept.o.mant of the roof
on the Flrehouaa Annex
located at Third and Ylna
Straetln Racine, Ohio.
All bldo muot be ..-lved
by the Clerk prior to 4:00
p.m. on Monday,,4 Oetobar,
1883. Bids will be opened at
7:00 p.m. on 4 Oetobar al
the Regular Council MaellnH
Star IIIII Park. Counc I

Commlnlly Organization
Rummlge Sale ·

·

1r TOLL fill

1-IOH4M070
lliWIII, OliO

S.t.

949-2104

PubliC Notice

2

,·

tt2·701hr
992·1151

ClOud Sund8y

PubliC Notice

is now offering
Meatball &amp;Philly Steak Subs
1 Free Bag of Chipl &amp; 1 Free
Drink w1111 purchase of sub.

.

AUIIAIIII . .IU

ttoura N- M-F N

58-FnaloeaV. ..U.Iu

54-- Mlac. Merchandi.e
5$- BulldiDf Supplloo

18- Wonted To Do

.

~----:---COUPON------~ I I~------- COUPON.------:: I~------------ -------

r~ 79( :n: :.~ $2
I

FIAVORITE

w.-.1..

Aulhorlad: Brtgga I
Slnlllon MTD,. fiY1tn,
!.D.C. R..,.lr c.ilter
PICKUP 8lld DEUVERY

57- M•looll..trwn..,.

53--Antiq-

17- Miieell.neotu

Dominos Pizza

,

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

Pn •• s.mc.

Howri L Writesel

Toys ·Tools· Fumftura
Lots of Misc.

$299

AUTO
PAllS

Specializing In CUllom
Frame Repair

Mowen • 0.11 SIWs

52- SportiDf Coodo

Sept. 29·30 &amp; Oct. 1 , 2, 4, 5

•

KEMPS

(

::

~

43-- Funu for Reat
44-- ApartiiMinl for Rent
45-- Furoilhed Room•
46- Spaeo for Ronl
47- Waatodlo Real
43- Equipmoal for Ronl

246 N. 4th Avenue

1~~::~......

GOLD

I; I \ I \I

MOVING SALE

0

SMHEDDS

I:

WlLIII lillY

,•

s1·
a9
2°/o Milk •••••••••••••• ::~••
s
]29
argar1ne ••••••
·

---COUPON"----- -,I I

y

32- Mohilo H.... for Sole
33-- Fanu for Sale
34- Buol- Buadboto
35-LooeaAt-.
36- Rool Eoototo W.iootool

13- 'Inturanee
14-- Bmineu Trainiq
15- ScLoeb &amp; la~truction
1&amp;- Radio,' TV &amp; CB Repair

Auction
: 9- Wanted to Buy

BROUGHTON'S

I~----

UCINE
MOWER CUNIC

7nt

12- SitualioM 'l'aa.ted

: 8- Publie Sole &amp;

Onions •••••••••••• 4 lb./$1 °

Pesp1 Cola.Products:~~.

....

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

PooeforSalo

21- .._, lol:-a
2~ Pror...i..,ol S...looa

11- Help Wanloci

_ 5- Happy Ado
· &amp;-Loot and Found
1~ Loo1 and Fouod

SPANISH

•

II \ \ \ ! Ill
Oppomo

i

Porches,
Patios,
·Sidewalks
992-7878

WINTER HOURS
Sun.·Ttalre.4-10 pm
Fri. • sat., 4 pm-'I

OASSD'U&lt;:IIS
GET REStJLTS ·'Am

CLARK'S JEWELRY
We buy old Gold
Claaa Ring. Wecklng Rln~.
Chaine, Bracelele, Watches any
condition Highest Prices Paid
Clark'a Jewelry Pomeroy .

20PK.
12 oz.

Over l5 Wordl
s 4.00
$ .20
$6.00
$ .30
$9.00
s .42
$13.00
$ .60

w.- .... ataell of __.. -brand tlrae and

CONCRETE

(30., 773·5515

Rate

41- HolliN for Rent

....

WORK

Bulletin Board••.$6.00/lnch per day

MelpCounty Muon Co., WV
. Gallia County
~Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

.
'.
'.

3nl and,. ...., Strtth

$1.30/day
S.OS/day ·
Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.
lhi81neoo Card •• -.$17.001 Inch per momth

667-Cool..ute

LB

Me t Franks •••••••••~~ ••

..

RESIDENTIAL

Ma~~~~~,wv ·

•The Area's Number I
Marketplace·

~

Hams ••••••••••••••••~....... .
USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF
· $ ]99
. ~. ·
Chuc.k·stea.k•••••••••••••
ECKRICH

Word•
15
15
15
IS
Monthly 15

,..,w.,

...

·

ECKRICH

Days
1
3
6
!0

·EAGLE
LANES

(Former Muon L..nn)

RATES

. : • Free Ado: Gheawoy ud Fouod ado uader 15 'WOrd. willho
fUD 3 d&amp;JI&amp;l DO eJiarp. ,
• Price of ad for all eapltalletten ia doul»a. price of ad c01t
7 point line lyp. oody uecl
· , S.at.iaelll aot l'llpoa:.lht. for errort after .f u.t dar (check
for erron fir.. day ad nuuln paptr). C.U haloN 2:00 P·'"·
day after,pu.,UcaUoa to Make cornc:Uoa
'· - • Adl that m\llt be pakl in ad¥mee tr.re:
Cud of Tlwok.o
Happy Ado
"
Ia 'Memoriam
Yard Sale~
• A ciUiifiecl odverU....ol placed b. lbo T1oo Da~y Sentinel
10-r (~Jtcept ClauiW Dilplay, Bwin.., 'Card or Lep1
1\Jollcoo) will allo appoor In tho Point Pr.....o Repoer and
;; lloo GallipoU. Doily Tribune,
oYOr 18,000 honou

229

Bottom Round Steak~~·

I :
Good Only At PoWell's Super Valu
:1 I 1 Good Only At Powell's Super Volu
ol i o
Good Only At Poweil'a Super Valu
lo Oller Good Sept. 21 thov Oct. 2, 1993 11 I • Ofloor Good Sept. 26 lhov Oct. 2, 1993 . :I 1 011111' Good Sept. 26 thov Oct. 2, 1993
,_____ ~~~ ~P_.._c~~r- _.___ ~I
•
umn 1 Par Customer
1 : : ______u~lt ~~·~c_u~~~ ___ ,_

r

COPY DEADLINE

Call992 ..2156

Faithful servants
hold potluck ·
The Faithful Servants Sunday
Schoot ·ctass of the Racine First
Baptist Chruch held its third quarter potluck dinner at the home of
Jeanette Lawrence.
Betty Sayre and Jeanette were
hostesses to Joanne Pickell$, Frank
and Delores Cleland, Ivan and Carolyn Powell, Curtis and Jordan
Lidel, George and Beulah Neigler,
Esther Metcalf, Laura Cozart, Bob
aind Martha Lou Beegle, Linley and
Mildred Hart, George Holman,
Dale McGraw, Lil Hart and David,
Linda and Selena Spencer.
Carolyn Powell gave the blessing before everyone enjoyed an
outdoor dinner. After dinner everyone was entertained with gospel
music and ·singing by Frank Cleland and I van Powell. The next
dinner wiU be held at Frank and
Delores Cleland's in December.

Come Ylllt u•.

4

Giveaway

�The Dally

.

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ACROIS

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MA'W I! 1 THINK

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YO'RE GITTtN'
COLO GRITS FER
SUPPER!!

IT'S HIGH TIME
YOU WENT ON
A DIET!!

•

&amp;NT

••••

24 Ylle ttudent

• ·54

28 c.rtecl bJ
wind

84 EaJPIIM

+Q 10 U2

33 AniiMI'I COlli
34UMopN•

85 Artt builder
ae u.. thrltulr

25 Count1t11

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38 Silkworm
37 EleVIIor

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1 Perlod of

lime
2 Er•

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tmoroutly
3 Cltrut fruit
4 - chlnt
5 Clr1111m·
blert' l lln.
6 Clplltl of
Ukraine
7 Follow

DOWN

311 11144 lnv•

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.......

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moldod
II Two-load

lllolh
10 1111
11 Ouautr of
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21 LAw tltt.
23 Chief
2s Flrtne ....
cara (lbbr.) .
285peechlltt
27 Grind 28 Neat of
llhettanlt

Pus
Pus
Pus
Pass

30 t11, In RUUII
31 Melli tlrlnd

32 Scolda

quandary
is an old one

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.........
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Pus
Pus
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Lowe

Opening lead: • J

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~

Welt

Arnez
60 Entert.lner
- Sumac
81 Courtcne
82 11 milliken
&amp;3 Aclor ...;,

EAST

+QJ

..

57 - nil
58 Slndleldel

20 llllcl

+AK
Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: Soutb

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17 Son of Adem

22:t81•on

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......
,...
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410H-

· 181Wuoo

+101 76~ ·2

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44 Food
48 Greek letter
48 Dutch lo-

12 OtMiel biN
1 13 Downpour
14 Do - ollten
l 15EMJ!tOM

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42 ='l..t

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ALDER

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ol11111wlllcl1,..... lltoglll
loldYIIU._p...II'IIM:ll,
ln'allon. dletlii.liillkwl
- o n , _ , - .. Nlglon.

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I - Are Here

PHILLIP

..

Apart!Mnt
for Rent

4 1 unn or

.

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iv+-t.;_+-f
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Phillip Alder
~--

'll l.lfl

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Acln-. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
tho doJ beiDN tho 1111 Ia ID nm.

W~'f' DOI f.! AVE
THE FEELING TI-l E
SC~OOL 6()5 ~AS

1177 Hon truck, dUll ~
!'..t.OOO actual mlteo, $11100 ,,...
W44Mt.
•

SUndoJ llll"lon • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. llolldiJ llll"ion • 2:00
p.m.

a-.,.

BROKENDOWN
AGAIN?

1m Ford Wllcker Willi!'!.""
Condhion, 12,100, ,,.:

C.0.. 1ft. Tabor, KM!IOM
llollll, 'llnlon, Ftldor 411iurdoJ,

-~77141.

Nice ClllldNn, AduM Clolhol,

54 Old mu1lcel
lnolrumenl
55 In 1 frenzied
lllle
56 Local movie
theater (al.)
511 Mra. In
Mllclrld

'

""'"''". '
''\•

AU Yard SoiH lluol So Pold In

35 Dlmlnl•h
38 Slw-loolhld
40Jewlth
IIIIGUIII
43 Wild oheep
45 Tunhun ruler
47 City In Ullh
49 - MaJor
50 Handle
roughly
51 Hll part
52 Flnnlth ftrtl

CELEBRITY CIPHER

.....,

o-.a, Uvlng -

SU"o,
llony- From J R ' e - .

G..,...

.,_,.., ClpMr OOMIO,.
..........
..,NW 1ft orMfiCI from quotation~ by flmOUI PI'QPte. I)Mlll'ld ~­
Each t11t11t In tb1 apt.-ltencll
Todey'l c:Air.
W.

tor..--.

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...
~ Coelt .,......,, l'1le
lllo!!.
Laltl - - · c:.blnll,llueh-

_... Yard Solo: ( - ICing)
· , 11112 S. Stile AI. 7, ClelllpaiiO,

Yanl

a

PoNti 'a!, lll&amp;rday.

........

ODI.
~ Npm, '"p.~....:.OI -llaplo
on ~• oflor

Wood L.Uo, Roclill.
Oct 111, 2nd, (FrldoJ ......,. -!ling lor ....,..1 101

=-.

'1;.;~Cla4lllng,

IMge

2

-~~~~·-·Ocl. 2 • 3, on Com

Yard -

Rd.. ollh pi- lrom
~-:
llob)o,
1
·QIIIi4J, -plant, IIU:I4 ,..a Rutlond.

. -. F--.
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Open 1211 -.
Sol-o
Cor, Too lleny Tlllnge
Melt I

~

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

··-t

11171 l.lboo1J
12dCI
col ,,...jij.a~o.
Notional Pullllol!lna Firm N- oondltlon,
........ To LaiMil Pollcorde 1111 Br 11woad llobh Home
From lloonf, $8001W1t. Sol OWn
S Sodroonw, Gordon Tub, A~
auction
Uconud
III,Ohlo a- · ·VIrginia,
3Q4. Hourw. 1-'1110-7377, (SUI roiiiiJ SII.Up, ean '*:1!15-1822
llln/18
YN+I,
Wrtto:
PAASE·33T,
77W7II.
111 B. Uncolnwoy, N.Auroro IL AHart P.M.
111542.
.
1H4 RedrMn 14170, 3bdnn., lnollflllng otopo, bloclto,
No Elporloncol S500 To $1110
a,r
- . ...,..nty. laomxuur .... lnend 1 year of frM lot
=t''L....":;t':l.ru".::.~"X euronoo,
HouHouro. '1-40f..,..._ E111.111. rent, Ill lor on1J "TIImo. cd 1·

Rick Pooroon Auction Campon~
tu.ll 111M 1ucllon.r, aompleui

If

rw.

800-8374Za,

I

.

·ar., tDiol -ric mobil homo

2
-.,rnnl~
11401.
..• ,

::t;

lull bathe,
muM .... 814

33 Fanns for Sale
lloxt•l.. ONo, llolao c:-.1)1
Mlo -i - . II beoutt~
=--~, hoy-.,

Furnished
Rooms
Roome lor rent · - o r month.
9114.,'ll .. .,_.Oolllo Hotol.

CONC1ft:.fl._m IPETIC TAIIKB,
-non, t321; Now JET Sot
(N
Bond Fitter Roqulrllll)
11,411; Ron EnM Entei'DIIoH.
•• ,.,_,.. ONo l.aoo.DMIIZI. .

I
1110.
.
Cumll •tlon air aMI llov-.
SIMpl"'l roomo wfth oooid119; ~ oondftlon, 1100. IM-lii2Aloo lrwllor opoce. Allllooll.upo.
Call •"• 2:00 p.m., 304·7735151, Mlton 'NV.
Eteotrlc OOIICIOIO
110•

vi-

46 Space for Rent

..........
-.""'~
~~~~~
tlt2ll.

-.
. $1115;

Mobil homo opo- IDr rwnt
304-1'/ti-IIM.
'

l'liewoucl

p,._.

SNcoo IDr ronl otortlng at

....--•• 514fi2·2117.

~

Wanted to Rent

=~to ronl•2 or I L d _ ,
•In oilon and good-.
I ion, prolor privati Mlllng, IMtllll-l!o121, II ~ ploooo
leave mllllliJI on IIIIChlne.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

!'Ill

Yard Sate: Ochblf 111:, ~1 M,
31
- -KII'OMM
St-, 10111ppor
/Shndder,
HMter,

......

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
3 Fomllr Ylld Solo, Rd
Cain o.o-,, LMn, llpt. --~
1 : -:00.
' Femllr Yard Sole: 1012nc1. 81.,
llooon, Oct. 1-2, 1-??,
clolhoo, toro, mloc. Komo. Rain
doto,Oci.W.
-

Solo, Muon Co.

tlom•l•• lhettw, 301 121:11 St.,
Oct. 1-2, llh, 1-.:00.
Rummogo Solo, :zllll (,..II """tl!lglon Rd., Apple Orovo, Oct. 1•
2-3; Lolo ol ovorrthlna, ono oomo oil. 304471411.
Yard uio: 2m 11ep1o Avo,
Th ... Fri., Sot., ...... - .
...,~ancee, ctochie, Iota or

......

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

- - "·
.. ,.
,.,.,,

75 Boate l Motol'l
ror Sale

~o

=·-· ..=. =··

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DAYS AAE- Ito\
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DATE

'

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....... .
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Acctucirtee

.

..•

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1988, the space shuttle Discovery was
launched with a five- member crew. It
wa s the fi rst U.S. manned space fli ght
since the Challenger disaster in 1986.

.

~

..... ,

HI ! YOU'RE: NEW

·•n ''

AROUND Ha&lt;J;: ,

UH - HUH ... JM
NAME le!&gt; JOHNNY

CARSC::N .

AReN'T "TTLl '.?

TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Miguel de
Cervantes (1 547-16161, writer; Horatio
Nelson (1758-18051, British naval hero;
Enrico Fermi 090H 95 4l , physicist;
Gene Autry 0907-l, singer-actor-executive, is 86; Jeny Lee Lewis (1935-l, mu1
Jsician, is 58; Madeline Kahn 0942-1,
actress, is 51 ; Bryant Gumbel 0948·l,
broadcaster, is 45 ; Sebastian Coe
0956·&gt;, runner, is 37; John Paxson
0960-l, basketball player, 1s 33.

'Tt?U'RE NOT"

Jl:le JOHNNY
C4.R60N!

,

!

1;;.:::;·=-:-....,--- --

--· ~--

"i3

8

PRINT NUMBER ED lETTER S
IN THE SE SQUARES

I II I

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SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

,

A

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-- - -

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.t.,'".l..Roc-,

(if~·b
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........

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. . . - a Utll"ilo, '*3111-3127. llollolu!n Fwn"ura • Carpoto,
At. 7, N. e-ote-l'M4 1112 earCilon 3 Sodroom Hcmo With pot ISO, Vlnyll'.41.
Flroptaco,
Oolllootlo
City
PICKENS FliRNITURE
1'50/llo. llotoroncoo a
NowiUollll
Oopoolt Roqulrad. Wloomon
Houlllllold lurnlohl"9. 112 mi.
lilol Elloto, 11' ••• 31...
.lorrlcllo Rd. Pt. Ploooant W'l

1c-.,

Cflll304-171-14150,

I

~=or•- -~'"

.

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gavro So!olnt lluhll• And
.oauum Cloonor ....,_ Froe
~~~Dol~~
.....
-~
I M 4 M.

I

Colclot&gt;OI

.

~-~ ~

.... .

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CA.

!'il.or
AC,
Ioiii
........
~, no plio, llooon.

52 Sporting GOOd.

I bedroom 1ft0b1tt home for

Box, MOO, 114 441 2SIO.

304

8,_nl"9 MOOR 12 0.. Now In

Box 4465. New York. N.Y. 10163.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You 'll have
adequate dri ve and ambilion today, yel you

viduals who make demands on you r lime
and allempl lo diclale your aclivities .
TAURUS (April 20· Ma'y 20) Disruptive

might attempt to take on things that exceed
your lirnitalions. This could cause problems
in al l of your endeavors.

Thursday, Sept. 30, 1993

developments could be m~de harder today
it yo ur attitude is negat1ve. Reasonable
solutions aren 't likely it you tBnd to think
things can'l be worked out

GEMINI (May 21 . June 20) Don' l ge l

might del iberately do things that buck th"
w111 of the majority. This won't add luster to
your image, it cOuld make you took selfish

involved in petly politics with someone in
your peer group today. This person is more
adroit in this area than you are and cou ld

. inslead.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jon. 19) Limit lamily pro ble ms to Iheir pa rli cipanls loday

end up making you look bad .
CANCER (June 21·July 22) Try nel la let
your ego or lemper cause you to challenge ·

and Fall ol tne T111rd ReiCh

authorit y figures today, especially persons
who have some influence .over your career
Tt)is is a match you can't win.

LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Getting in the last
word shouldn't be too important today if it
jeopardi zes a val ued relationship. This
could be a win th at turns out to be a big

-· · " UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Today you mighl s omeo ne who holds an equally slrong loss .
, VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept: 22) II you're nol on
be slrongly lempted to do something lhat opposing view
oppo ses you r betl er judg ment . II you PISCES (Feb. 2Q-March 20) Strive 10 be · guard today 1~.ere is a possibilily you might ,

.,,..b:,.:· ignore your own coun sel, be prepared to
..-. ~ pay the consequences of your folly. Tryin g
___ ..__
··:::
. · lo pelch up a broken roma nce? The Aslro·

~

'

best today if you're permined to estab lish
you r own agenda. Try to steer clear of indi-

....

....... - . , ......... 53

~.,...

ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) You'll fu nction

work . Mai l $2 and a long. self -addressed ,
sta mped en velope to Matchmaker, P.O.

........

r:-t:=t:' mo. Now """"· ;;::;-::-::::A:-nt::lq~u=es~~auv or 0011.
Antlquoo,

T. . Elootrlo 2 IR llollllo . . _
~ ~-tio. Plio, loth l 112.

o~

one with sti cky fingers to take it.

stand whallo do to make the re lationship

instead of discussing them with outsiders.
If you permit others to intervene. you might
create
something you'll regret.
·
YQU might dissolve a partne rship arrange ·
AQUARIUS
(Jon.
2Q-Feb.
19)
Be
percepment in the year ahead so that you can
.,. .. involved yourse lf in an endeavor indepen· live in gauging yo ur audience today, so
G!i6.'
you don't introduce into a conversation
.- dent ol olhers. This could lurn oul 10 be a ath attopic
about which you feel strongly to .
wise move.

Plumbing&amp;

AMtor .... '

~~

~··

1235.

llobllo Hcmo Pork, 1,...,...1102.

eo..-. 2 -leo
:7'P'- a..
. ........__ Af.

_._..__
-. . .!...-_. ..l.BI&lt;
_ __

Graph Matchmaker can help you to under-

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23· Dec. 21) In order
to express your independence today , you

·sWAIN
AUCTION l FURNITURE. 12
Olin 81., Oolllootlo.- • Uud

:ollwn •

2 •• llroott'tf,

ASTRO·GRAPH

BERNICE
.BEDE OSOL

2 bedroom trail!', ro1 , dot&gt; At
12 N. loault na on iah\,' . lum" ...• ~."'i"C.
H.
plio. ~1011.
rig . ' no Work boato. I
-~ Drwr, Ro~tor,
~- Fum'lilhllll, Air, Color
r.V. F - , Air eon;
Rlvor In~ tho. Ohio dlt""-r, Mlcrow~~w, 1144M-

On Land

.. ·-·"

114o21f.1128."" mootor, 1110,

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

-·-

:

.....: ..
. ·•.:I ..

1124 E. Main IIIMI, on Rt. 12'
Pomoray.
Houra: II.T.W. 10:00
a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
1:00
to 1:00 p.m. 114 iiib 21:11.

s..,.,

more care ful than usua! with yo ur prize . get maneuvered in a position where you're

possessions today. II you leave something
ol val ue lyinQ aboul il might tempt some·

held accounlable lor anolher's mislakes
and debts.

·'
•

\

,n

I.

II
.

11 .,

nnals · Raven - Block · Revolt · LEARN to LOVE
The fell~w asked the lawn expen how to get rid of
the dandelions ~laguing his lawn. "My suggestion " th
eXJM:rl smtled., ·:1s to LEARN to LOVE them."
' e

~=~~~;,.;;..
-~
- ·~
-·

.....,

-=a:·- era,. • -.:

.

1

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

-no,-

BOOK

Sept . 29, 1993

,tt ,.lH

'·

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(

.

·'

:.';'S:O. ~

a-.

the
be·

IQw to form four words

'Wrh . (

1 Acra lot, l 1!2 Acra Lot, 411b
78 Auto Parts &amp;
rnl• out thlghbolft c md R«Md
llvl"'l room eutto lllco , _ lntlllvl- TV pmo eyllom IDr
111100.- Ford
Ou '11M Portable So-11 don, ott 8t AI 'MI. 114 '41 SUI 1Dr ,pc,
olooceromlco.~-201t. ' .... lnaiudoo 11 go- plua
=~ any condhion, ,,...
=~~-~o tho mil jUII more l..,_ion,
tho lntolllvolco modulo tt35 -·At. 17. 304.......,
••
VI'RA FURNifURE
...I.,....._ attor.,.;..
'
Nlco C.O.. Lol, Port cr..~Dito
114-441..,., 5I Or 114 441 4421 .
Wanted To Buy: JWik Autoo Mloo Poulo'a Dar CaN C..r Florida, Hoar Oc..., Wll Tr1111o
POLE 8UILDINQ SPECIAL.
'10 DAY SAllE AS CAIIH
King WoodburnO• "21; Wllh Or WllhoUI IIDioro. Call 11-f I A.ll. -1:30 P.ll. &lt;luoiHJ For Plck.Up Truck Or Travel
P- Bldn
HoliM Fan Now ~oo. ,,...,... 30'140'1'.
Lany LlvotJ. llf 311 1303.
Oalvol.... Roof 111'xll
l.ovtna Care For All Chlldron Trallw, OoGd Concltion 114o OR RENT-I!.OWN (NO DEPOSIT) 11114.
'
OUr 11 Ocel, Port·Timo, Ful~ 2!f.1431.
- · Slide• S' Mori ~· W.ntllllto ~end......,_
W.ntllll To luy: 81endlna Tim- TI-~Fod.-noeAvoloblo
11,111. ERECrio. ltvn ttorooi
OUTSIDE
FURNISHINGS· llxllll Firewood ttl And Up ... 1
~IlFord
............
SEVERAL
7·
ACRE
PARCElS:
- . 1 - SD-1041.
Call
P'Ofinlonnotlon
Or
Villi
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w/ llwlvw h"ch - . $11,100.
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�Pql 12-The Dlllly SenUnel

Poineroy-Middlepcirt, Ohio

Wednelday, September

EXTRA SAVINGS IN OUR MEAT DEPARTMENT

ASSORTED COLORS

DURING FOODLAND'S

Ohio Lottery

Braves
•
regain
West lead

FALL MUMS

s

GALLON
POTS

Pick 3:
899
Pick 4:
·9490
Super Lotto:
12-18-25-33-43-45
Kicker:
224366

Page4

•

Save as much as 10~ lb.
5 LBS. OR MORE- FRESH
TENDERBEST QUALITY

.a I

1 LB. •BUN SIZE • LIGHT •REG. •JUMBO

Ground
Beef

Kahn's.

Vol. 44, NO. 110
Multii!MCIIIInc.

, •••••(1

Meat

lAW
APPll
C1DIR

Meigs Commission opens bids on new truck

Wieners

ments on the copier after the first edged that the roof was in need of
of the year with money from the repair but added that it "didn't get
general fund.
in that condition all at once."
Roush said he thought the
"I feel I am getting the
arrangement was to pay for the runaround," she said.
copier from the sale of copies to
Following the meeting with
which Hamilton responded that Hamilton, the commission
money from the sale of copies goes approved the transfer of $10,000
into the general fund.
from the capital improvement fund
In addition. Hamilton said the and $11,521.84 from the contin·
electrical wiring in the recorder's gency .fund to pay Hackett Roofing
.merce.
The commission took no action office should be upgraded before Company of Middlepon for sup· concerning an interim appointment new computers are instaUed. The plies and materials for the renova·
existing wiring is inadequate, she tion of the highway garage roof.
:for the position vacated by Roush.
Commissioners opened bids on
. The commission discussed the said.
Roush said money that was · new tandem -axle truck for the
. purchase of a copying machine for
·
:the recorder's office with Recorder going to be used to renovate the highway department
Stowe Truck and Equipment
Emmogene Hamilton who recorder's office went instead
explained she believed the commis- toward repairing the roof on the Company of Marietta submitted a
sioners agreed to tak~ over pay- county garage. Hamilton aclmowl· bid for a 1994 International 2554

LB.
TENDERBEST USDA CHOICE

SAVE AS MUCH AS $2.50

BONELESS

'

36 OZ. RICH FRENCH OR 39 OZ. ADC

CHUCK
OAST

Maxwell House
Coffee
'

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399

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MORE AODmONAL
PURCHASIO.

$

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MOUNTAINEER

PORK
SAUSAGE
j ASSORTED

··PORK
CHOPS

SAVE AS MUCH AS 80¢
5 LB. BAG-PLAIN OR SELF RISING

Gold Medal
Flo.ur

1 LB.

ROLL

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9-10 LB.
''

ECKRICH

BOLOGNA

Ill.

ECKRICH

SMORGAS
PAC
Additional
Quantities ..... .

FRANKS

UMIT 1 WITH $10 OR
MORE ADDITIONAL
PURCHASE.

ILB.

MARGARINE
QUARTERS

ICE CREAM

~~~SOFT &amp; GENTLE

BATH
SSUE

99c
VELVET

BOXES

$ 99

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ROLLS

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SNICKERS
MARS FUN BARS

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YUBI YOGURT••••• 3 FOR 99

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PAIL
SCOOTER CRUNCH BARS SJ.29

CANDY BARS
2
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Limit Quantities •

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A coalition of nearly two
dozen business and industrial
leaders from throughout southern
Ohio and northwestern West Virginia have organized to form an
association devoted to the expansion of economic development in
the region.
The fonnal organization of the
Regional Economic Development
Association (REDA) came fol·
lowing a series of meetings at the
University of Rio Grande
designed to explore the feasibility
of promoting the area on a
regional basis.
"The REDA is especially
unique because it is the only
organization which combines
Mason County with Gallia, Jackson, Meigs and Vinton counties,"
said Jerry Gust, of Rio Grande' s
Loren M. Berry Center for Economic Development. "Regional
promotion is essential and we
must 'cross promote' each others'
activities.

ers.
end

• Not

.,

•

for

Pictorial Errore.

and Larry McCorkle. Kessinger is president or
the association and Wiseman is tbe vice president. Executive committee members include
Eastman, Evans, Frutb, Kessinger, Smith,
Wedge, Wingett, Wiseman and Sam Hatley.

•

"The overall goal of the association is to develop a nuclear
group to continue and expand
upon the economic development
process," Gust said. "People in
the separate communi ties of our
area are learning that progress in
one community is beneficial to
people in neighboring communi·
ties. In truth, the people of our
region live in one economic com·
munity."
Gust helped steer the associa·
lion during its formation .
At its September organizational meeting, the REDA eleeted an
executive committee comprised
of Bob Eastman of Gallipolis,
Bob Evans of Bidwell, Jack Frutll
of Point Pleasant, Sam Hadey of
McArthur, Jim ~essinger of Oak
Hill, Jeff Smith of Gallipolis.
Jimmie Wedge of Point Pleasant,
Robert Wingett of Syracuse and
John Wiseman of Point Pleasant
Kessinger was elected to serve

as president of the association
through September 1994. Wiseman will serve as vice president.
The REDA further acted to
become a pan of the university's
recently established Center for
Economic Development • a service agency designed to coordi·
nate and suppon economic development activities throughout the
region.
According to Gust, the
REDA 's ftrst project will involve
visitations to established businesses and industries to initiate
an ongoing line of communications.
"Our objective goal wiU be to
identify opportunities for the
REDA to assist business organizations to stay healthy, stay here
and grow here," Gust said.
The next meeting of the
REDA will be held 7 p.m. Oct.
11 at the University of Rio
Grande.

Progress reported in coal talks,
but company still plans dismissals
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
As a f.ederal mediator
announced progress in the strike
talks between the United Mine
Workers and the nation's tOp coal
producers, one coal company
annmmced plans to fire some strik-

ss
.1993 • USDA Food

NEW COALITION- Members of tbe Regional
Economic Development Association (REDA)
indude, seated from le(t, Robert Wingelt, Clyde
Evus, Jack Fruth, Jeff Smith, Jobn Wiseman
.and Jimmy Joe Wedge; standing from left, Bob
Eastman, Bob Evans, Jerry Gust, Jim Kessinger

Area business leaders form new
economic development association

ILB.

ECKRICH

~~~

$189

$)69

LUNCHMAKERS

FOODLAND

..

$249

ECKRICH

99 C

.'

LB.

ECKRICH OKTOBERFEST SALE

Tackett recommended that a
seventh person from the planning
committee should also serve on lhe
economic development officer
selection committee as a tie-breaker. She also explained the decision
should be postponed until someone
is appointed to fiU the vacancy left
by Roush's resignation from the
board of commissioners.
In other matters, the commission approved paying weekly bills
of $49,276.80 and signed annual
paperwork certifying County Auditor Nancy Campbell to accept
levies currently in existence.
· Present were Commission President Robert Harten bach, Vice President Janet Tackett Howard and
Commissioner Manning Roush.

lage ' s police chief, Jeevan
Vaonkari, said people panicked
after the quake struck.
"Everyone ran out of their
homes. They are afraid that another
big quake will come, .. he said in a
telephone interview. The wall of an
old temple coUapsed, injuring two
people.
The state government S1lid 4.120
deaths had been recorded·•by this
evenin~ and at least 10,000 people
were IDJured.
·

Pomeroy-Mason Bridge to
be closed to traffic Oct. 6

,.'•

PKG.

was left vacant last week upon lhe
resignation of Paula Thacker.
The commission, with Commis·
sioner Janet Howard Tackett dissenting, approved a proposal, with
the possibility of future revisions,
from the chamber which states in
pari that county government and
the business community should
work hand-in-hand to provide a
positive economic development
environment in Meigs County.
It was tentatively agreed that lhe
process of selecting a new economic development officer would be
completed by a committee comprised of the three county commissioners. and three selected representative of the Meigs County Chamber of Commerce.

NEW DELID, India (AP)- A« nentsince 1935.
mighty earthquake desll'Oyed thouThe shock of the quake awaksands of mud-and-brick homes in ened people from Bombay, in
villages across southwestern India Maharashtra, to Bangalore and
before dawn today. ldlhng more Madras, the largest cities in souththan 4,()()() people.
em India. People fled their homes
Debris crashed down on sleep- ' in panic as floors, doors ·and win,
ing residents as the quake, which dows shook.
measured 6.4 on the Richter scale,
ripped through a large area of the
In Gulbarga, 155 miles south of
state of Mahar!lshtra at. 3:56 a.m. Latur, people were up before dawn
celebrating the festival of Ganesh
(6:-26 p.m.·EDll'Wednesday).
It was the most devastating and immersing idols of the eleeanhquake in the Indian subconti- phanHaced god in water. The vil-

'

I

for $62,352 while Tri-State Ford
Truck Sales of Cincinnati submitted a bid for a 1994 Ford LT 8000
for $59,672.
Commissioners agreed to table
the bids until next Wednesday at 10
a.m. pending reVIew of the bids by
County Engineer Roben Eason.
The commission also approved
purchase of paving material for
October from Asphalt Materials
Company of Marietta.
The commission also met with
members of the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce represented
by Dave Bakef who were seelcing
information on last week's meeting
when the commission discussed the
job description for the post of economic development officer which

Earthquake kills 4,120
in India; 10,000 injured

LB.

MILD OR HOT

/

2 Secllona.14 Pav- 35 oenla
A Mul1imedla Inc. Noauopoper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, September 30, 1993

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
In a meeting marked by the final
~ce of Commissioner Manning Roush who is resigning Oct.
I, the Meigs County Board of
. Commissioners opened bids on a
· new truck for the highway depart: ment and met with members of the
:Meigs County Chamber of Com-

Additional
Quantities...

Low tonlgbtln 40s, partly
cloudy. Friday, sunny, blgh In
mid-70s.

The UMW has been on strike
against selected members of the
Bituminous Coal Operators Associ·
ation since May 10. About 17,000
miners are off the job in seven
states, including Ohio.
William J. Usery, in his rirst

public statement ·since being
appointed strike mediator· Sept. 10,
said Wednesjlay progress has been
made toward an agreement following two weeks of meetings in
Washington, D.C.
"We are now at a point in lhese
negotiations where a few of the
subcommittees must meet to further refine some of the ideas that
have been exchanged," Usery said
in a news release.
Usery, a former U.S. labor secretary, said he will continue to
monitor the talks. He said "main

The Pomeroy-Mason Bridge is
tentatively scheduled to be closed
to traffic on Oct. 6 from 8 p.m .
until5 a.m. the next morning.
Announcement of the tentative
date of closing was made today by
District 10 of the Ohio Department
of Transportation and The Shelly
Company of Thornville, contractor
ofthejob.
•
However, it was emphasized
that the ultimate factor in deciding
if resurfacing work can proceed on
that night is the weather.
Mike Lang; con'struction engineer for District 10, explains that
the conditions must be dry and the
temperature at least 50 degrees for
the new deck surface to be applied.
If weather conditions are not
right on Oct 6, the closure will be
postponed until the same time the
next night. If weather conditions
are stiU not right, the closure will
again be postponed until the weath·
er cooperates, OOOT officials said.
Lang understands that all this
uncertainty is a problem for
motorists who depend on the
bridge, but he says "it can' t be
helped". Even though the closure
wiU be brief, Lang said that he real·
izes that many motorists will be

Man gets ·
2 to 10 in
brother's
stabbing

A Bidwell man who stabbed his
brolher this summer was sentenced
Wednesday by Gallia Common
Pleas Court Judge Joseph L. Cain.
Donald R. Berry, 38, was sen·
table negotiations" should resume
tenced to two to 10 years in jail for
shortly.
Coal association officials involuntary manslaughter, a third
degree felony. He was also fined
dec,l,f~i:m~~ntsery •s statement $1,000 plus conn costs.
Berry stabbed his brother,
speaks for itself," UMW
Daniel
R. Berry, 31, during an
spokesman. Jim Grossfeld said in
altercation
June 26 at the victim's
Washington. ,
house.
The
victim was pronounced
At the same time, Eastern As so-·
dead
on
arrival
at Holzer Medical
ciated Coal Corp. said it has susCenter
.
pended between 10 and 20 striking
Donald Berry pleaded guilty
miners in West Virginia were sus:
Sept
22 to involuntary manslau¥h·
pended "with the intent to dis·
char,ge" because of alleged strike ter and a pre-sentence investigation
was conducted.
violence.

inconvenienced.
"When a decision must be based
on the weather, it's impossible to
give the exact closure date, even
though we wish' we could," he stat·
ed.
Originally, OOOT had expected
the work on the bridge deck to start
in August but problems with
scheduling needed equipment prevented The Shelly Company from
meeting the anticipated start date.
The project calls for removal of
existing asphalt and overlaying the
bridge deck with a specialized ,
hiRhly durable asphalt called
Rosphalt

The contract price on lhe project
is $129,379.
One-way traffic conll'Olled by
flaggers has been maintained
throughout construction. Only the
actual application process will
require closure. The bridge must be
closed to traffic while the new surface is applied but plans stipulate
that application will take place at
night, and that the structure cannot
be closed for more than two consecutive nights.
OOOT officials said that every
effort wiU be made to complete the
application process in just one
mght, hopefully Oct. 6.

..---Local briefs----.
Retraining funds made available
More than $1 million in relraining funds wiU be made available
for laid-off employees of Soulhem Ohio Coal Company and Central
Ohio Coal Company.
According to Congressman Ted Strickland, the grant is from the
U.S. Department of Labor and will be administered by the TriCounty Community Action Agency and Guernsey, Morgan and
Noble Community Action .
"This money will provide a variety of unemployment services
including job search assistance, on-the-job training and small business training for a very deserving group of people," Strickland said.
Strickland said the project is pan of the Clean Air Employment
Transition Assistance program, which provides employment and
training services to workers who were laid-off due to enactment of
the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990.

Thefts, vandalism reported
Two thefts and one incident of vandalism were recently investigated by deputies of lhe Meigs County Sheriffs Departments.
Jamie Hubbard, Rutland, reported Tuesday lhat during the night
his vehicle was entered while parked in his driveway. An AMJFM
Pioneer stereo cassette player was reported stolen.
Anna Dailey, Portland, reported Sunday that a red and white
1990 Honda XR I 00 motorcycle had been stolen.
Jeff Hill at the Racine Hydro Plant reported that the men's
restroom at the hydro plant parking lot was vandalized. The sink
was broken and screen ripped from the window. In addition, the uri·
nal staU and toilet seat stall were tom from the wall.

Deer-vehicle wrecks reported
The following deer-vehicle wrecks were recently reported by the
Meigs County Sheriffs Department:
John A. Harden, Albany, was northbound on State Route 143
Tuesday evening and struck and kiUed a deer that ran into the road·
way. Damage to Harden's 1984 Chevrolet S-10 pickup truck was
listed as heavy.
·
John Anderson, Apple Grove-Dorcas Road, Racine, was westbound on State Route 338 Wednesday around 7 p.m. and stnlck and
lciUed an eight-point buck that jumped onto the roadway. Damage to
Anderson •s 1989 Buick was listed as heavy.
.
Christopher Rood, Tuppers Plains, was northbound on Bentz
Cemetery Road Wednesday around 8:45 p.m. and struck and killed
a deer that ran into the road. No damage was listed to'the 1988
· Chevrolet pickup bUck.

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