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                  <text>Pql 12-The Dlllly SenUnel

Poineroy-Middlepcirt, Ohio

Wednelday, September

EXTRA SAVINGS IN OUR MEAT DEPARTMENT

ASSORTED COLORS

DURING FOODLAND'S

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TENDERBEST QUALITY

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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

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CHOPS

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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.

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LUNCHMAKERS

FOODLAND

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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.

�•
/

Thurad!y, September 30, 1993

Commentary
The Daily .Sentinel
111 COurt Street

Pomeror. Oblo

.

DEVOTED TO TIIB INTEIWITS OF THE IIEIG8-IIA80N AREA
.I'UJMI)IA,INC.

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publlsber
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Managor

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETTERS Of OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words. All !etten; aro subject to editing and must be signed with name.
address and relephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. letters
should be in good taste, addn:ssing issues, not personalities.

Clinton broadens
argument for NAFTA

order directing· federal agencies to
buy and use pajler with a ~h content of recycled fiber.
As originally drafted by the

Robert]. Wagman
White Hotise, within six months all
federal agencies m~t begin buying
~aper containing at least 15 percent
' post-consumer" material. The
percentage was to increase to 20
~ent in 1996, and to 25 percent
m 2000. In addition, each agency
was directed to set goals for the
procurement of paper products free
of chlorine, which generates a toxic
cbemical in the whitening process.
The White House began circulating !he draft order to select agencies for their commen~ and proudly
shared its contents with several key
envbn~entU organ~ons. Tbey
sat back and waited for praise to
roll in. Were they in for a shock.
Within hours the draft proposal
leaked to the paper and logging

industries. They-were outraged.
The industry fears any national
move toward recycled paper will
threaten the existence of paper
mills and the loggers who feed
them. So they began a fUrious lobbying campai~.
The Arnencan Forest and Paper
Association (AFPA), which represents paper-makers, met with Kathleen McGinty, director of the
White House Office on Environmental Policy. At the meeting were
repres~ntauves of all the major
paper manufacD.lrei'S.
·
They demanded that the proposed rule be changed to no more
than I0 percent recycled content currently the industry slandard and that the definition be broadened to include not only materials
that had been previously used by
consumers, but also paper materials, trim and waste that had been
produced but never sold.
. As for the chlorine-free goals,
mdustry lobbyists said this was
simply out of the question. The

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON - Trying to iune out Democratic sialic, President
@'~11'&lt;&gt;!tt wo~rn~ $'!11-'TEIIG~tJaM-...ElT.6r
Clinton said !here are trade doo!ll to be opened for expanded U.S. exports
~ULk\~
to all Latin America after, and if, Congress approves his embanled free
lrade &amp;g~"Cement with Mexico.
That broadened argwnent for the North American Free Trade Agree·
ment has been there all along, but it is getting more emphasis as the
administration hunts for a way to tum the worsening odds and get the deal
through the House.
Two of the top three Democratic leaders in the House are against
NAFTA, and the administration faces a struggle to gain enough votes in
Clinton's own party to push the trade deal through with Repubtican support. Prospects are better in the Senate. But the difficult House acts firs~
probably late this year.
Pushing the trade deal 10 days ago, before the White House focus
shifted to health care reform, ClintOn argued that despite the fears of organized labor and the alarms sounded by Ross Perot, NAFTA would be a
plus for !he U.S. economy and would create more jobs than it costs.
That economic case gained him no headway. Neither did an administration promise of retraining, employment counseling and special unemployment compensation for U.S. workers whose jobs may be lost to
cheaper Mexican labor under the trade deal.
There's no new money to pay for it, and the kind of jobs program that
might jllacate some NAFTA opponents could alienate congressional
Republicans the administration can'tafford to lose.
At this point, the NAFTA campaign is a laSk for specialists, deputies
and lobbyists. Tbe president has moved on to his priority issue, overllauling health care, !he landmark he hopes to build within the year. That issue
unites Democrats divided on NAFTA, and if something has to give, it
won't be health care.
So, for example, Clinton will keep an Oct 18 date to raise campaign
funds for Sen. Donald Riegle of Michigan, an ardent NAFTA foe who has
said anyone who "votes for congressional approval ought to be beaten in
the next election. The White House said Riegle will be backing the presi. dent on health care, and that people who differ on one issue can be allies
on others.
That also is !he case with Rep. Richaro A. Gepharot of Missouri, the
House majority leader, with Clinton on health, against him on NAFr('\.
· thill the sexy ads fea~uring these
When Anna Nicole Smith hit dren's Fund brochure.
Gephanlt said separate agreements on labor slandllrds and the environManufacturers' ad campaigns thin, short-haired women suggest
ment don't do enough, and the whole package ought to be renegotiated.
the fashion scene a couple years
The administration argues that won't happen and that the rejection ago, I let out a great sigh of relief. featured women wearing athletic sex with children, or that the image
could lead to a turn toward anti-U.S . politics and, ultimately, policies in (In reality, I was lerting my stom- clothes w~ile they built powerful portrays women as weak and powerless in comparison to .the emergach out. My mother started telling
Mexico.
ing - and threatening -Wonder
Former President George Bush put that bluntly when he went to the me to hold it in when I was 10.)
Woman of the last two decades. I
White House on Sept. 14 to help Clinton push NAFTA. "There's been
Even more exciting was the
some long slanding feeling down below our border, 'Oh, weD, the United thought that maybe the pressure bodies. I hoped that Smith, a drop- don't know if what these models
States will make a free trade agreement with Canada, but wben it comes would ease on teen-age girls who your-jaw gorgeous blonde who also say is true and their fast
to Latin America, to Hispanics, see if they'D do the same thing for Latin feel fat and inadequate no matter happens to wear a size miUioqjean, metabolisms allow them to eat
countries.' ' '
how emaciated they become, espe- would finally give us permission to Twinkies and Ruffles non-stop, or
"For decades we have preached and preached and preached greater cially the estimated 3 percent to 7 be chunky.
if older models like Beverly Johndemocracy, greater respect for human rights, and more open markets for percent who suffer from the menral
But it doesn't look like that is to son and Carol Alt have the real
Latin America," Clinton said. "NAFTA finally offers them the opportu- illness that keeps them virtually be. As popular as Smith is, other story when they talk about weeks
nity to reap the benefits ... "
unable to eat and heading toward fashion houses haven't followed of eating lettuce leaves and iced
He said later that he'd heard from Latin American leaders wailing to starvation.
the Guess? lead. The rest of the tea.
see wbether the United States completes the Mexican agreement "Aild if
If we all see the !55-pound large models are relegated \0 the
What I do know is that the fashwe do, then Chile. then Venezuela, then Argenlina, then many other coun- Smith modeling her Guess1 jeans plus-size pages of catalogs and are ion industry has chosen as its symtries ... are going to want to have more lrade with the United Slates," he and taking home big sacks of non-existent at fashion shows. Out bols that tiny percentage of women
said.
money for doing it, I thought, on the runways and in fashion mag- who are either naturally what the
· Asian trading powers are waiting, too, the administration says, and if maybe we'll all re-think this mad azines are women 5-foot-7 and rest of us can't be without starving,
the free trade deal falters at the Mexican border, they'll move to take obsession we've had for so long taller, weighing less than a good- or who are willing to starve themadvanlage in Latin American markets.
with making our bodies go against sized Labrador retriever. In some selves for the job. A normal
''The real job winner for NAFTA over the long run is that it opens the their natural inclination. Luckily, cases, they look a lot like your kid woman cannot eat even a dribble of
door to Latin America," Clinton said in calling Gephardt's opposition the last half of the 1980s gave us brother. Twiggy, that skeletal waif the five food groups the Dairy
harmful but not fatal to the agreement. He said other nations there want to the healthy look, with models such who made us take up smoking and Council recommends and look like
be tied in to an expanded trade agreement
as Cindy Crawford and Claudia
amphetamines 25 years those models.
"At least psychologically, they believe that we have to do NAFfA to Schiffer giving us permission to popping
What this creates in us is the
ago, lives again:·
prove that we're serious about bringing them in," he said.
look muscled and sleek instead of
I don't know if some of the sense of never being quite good
like the front of a Christian Chi!- naysayers are correct in charging enoagh, and that is a mighty powEDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and columerfuf marketing tool. When our
nist for The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and
dieting fails and we don't achieve
national politics for more than 30 years.
.

Letters to the editor
Support Meigs football
Dear Editor,
The Meigs High School football
program is nearing the middle of
the season. Although it hasn't been
a winning season, the boys and
coaches are putting a lot of effort
into their games. Winning or losing
they need to know they are supported. This Friday is their homecoming game at Bob Rolx;rts field
against Alexander. It would be
great to see the stadium full and a
lot of cheering for the Maraude!ll.
Maybe with some cheering and
enthusiasm from the crowd the
boys' morales will improve.
The high school reserve team
has games on Monday nights and
also the freshmen have games on
Thursday evenin~s . They are hav-

ing good games and need suppon
too.
Also, every Tuesday night there
is an athletic boosters meeting at 7
at the high school. These meetings
are for anyone interested in the
Meigs athletic program.
Also, this . year there are
spagberti suppers at the high school
every Thursday evening from 5:15
to 6: 15 . The football team and
coaches are in attendance at the
dinners. These dinne!ll are for anyone in the community wanting to
support the team. Donations are
accepted.
Good luck to the Maraude!ll!
Darla Staats
Pomeroy

Today in history
By The Associated Press
Today is Thursday, Sept. 30, the 273rd day of 1993. There are 92 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Sept. 30, 1938, British, French , German and Italian leaders ended the
Munich Conference with a decision to appease Adolf Hitler by allowing
Nazi annexation of Czechoslovakia' s Sudetenland.
On this date:
In 1777, !he Congress of the United States - forced to nee in the face
of advancing British forces - moved to York, Pa.
In 1791, !he opera "The Magic Flute" by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
premiered in Vienna, Auslria. ·
In 1846, Dr. William Morton, a dentist, used an experimental anesthetic - ether - for the f'II'St time on a patient in his Boston office.
In 1927, Babe Ruth hit his 60th homer of the season to break his own
•

•

the proper rail-thin waifish appearance, we think perhaps if we buy
the clothing the models are wearing, we'll at least come a linle closer to the way we should look,
When buying just a few items
doesn't make uS feel sufficien~ we
buy a linle more. Always "just a
linle more and I' Ube OK.... "
So how can we save our daughters from assuming our lifelong
burden of feeling inadequate, ahd
perhaps rescue anorexics from
damaging their bodies and even
dying?
We c~uld start by boycotting
clothmg hnes whose ad campaigns
feature Audrey Hepburn wannabes
because the fashion manufacture!ll:
eardrums are loca~ in !heir pocketbOoks: Maybe I I! buy a pair of
Guess? Jeans, even if they are a littie more expensive than my regular
brand, and then write a letter to the
company, tell in$ them that unless I
they continue tn the big-model
direction, I'll be heading back to
The Gap.
Sarah Overstreet is a syndi.
cated writer for Newspaper
Enterprise Association.

• •

How to revive America's Inner cities
Just when you'd think Washington was up to its aspirations, what
with reinventing government and
reforming health care, the nightly
horror of TV newscasts forced officials to face anew the rampant
crime in our cities.
And a strange thing happened:
Uncommon common sense was
uttered, right in our nation's capi ~.
tal.
It was uttered f'II'St by an unlike!y source: former Federal Prisoner
16126-054, who just did time for
security fraud at a California prison
camp. He is financial wizard and
multi-millionaire Michael Millcen
- a most impressive witness
before the Congressional-Black
Caueus.
Tbe next bUill! of common sense
was uttered in a different context
- in unison, no less - by a former adviser to President Kennedy,
a former adviser to President
Nixon, a former professor, a former
ambassador, a former hero of conservatives, whom William F. Buck-

ley's National Review hailed as
1975's Man of !he Year, and a current hero of liberals, who in 1976
unseated Buckley's brother, James,

Martin Schram
to become New York's Democratic
senator. Daniel Patrick Moynihan;
who is all of the above, delivered
his common sense soliloquy on
NBC-TV's "Meet the Press. ' ·
Stitch together the comments of
Millcen and Moynihan and we can
create for President Clinlon a grand
new, reform-minded approach for
our crime-infested inner cities.
The bottom line: Don't slarl by
throwing bushels of tax dollars at
the problem. Do start by revitalizing two strong, support-giving
institutions - the financial markets
and !he family.
M~lken challen$ed banks to
invest significantly m inner cities
and minority-owned businesses. He

major league record.
In 1946, an i~ternational. military tribunal in Nuremberg, Germany,
found 22 top Nazt leaders guilty of war crimes.
In 1949, !he Berlin Airlift, which had ferried more than 2 3 million
tons of supplies to the western sector of the German city in defiance of a
Soviet blockade, came to an end
In 195,4, !he rii'St atomic-powered vessel, the submarine Nautilus was
commissioned by the Navy at Groton, Conn.
'
In 1955, actor James Dean was killed in the collision of his sports car
with another automobile near Cholame, Calif. He was 24.
•

•

said, according to The Washington
Post: "We create legislation and
rules that redline America." We
must change regulations that now
force banks and pension funds to
invest on. the basis of past performance rather than potential, Millcen
said, adding: "You can't have a
strong financial institution in a
weak society."
(A Brief Digression: Millcen·'s
testimony was Welcome and clearly
overdue. On April 16, 1991, I
wrote that by sentencing Milken to
do manual labor in prison~ society
committed a crime of missed
opportunity: "He is a financial
genius; and he should be laboring
today to reshape ... the South
Bronx with the same zeal that he
reshaped Wall Street")
Now hear Moynihan, once the
darling of Democratic neo-conservatives, who approaches the crime
crisis from its other common sense
solution -restoration of !he family: •
"We have had a behavioral sink
in the last 30 years that ... has no
counterpart in our history. ... The
breakup of family inevitably, predictably ... will lead to the growth
of large numbers of predatory
males ... (and) imitative behavior,
like drive-by shootings and carjackings. We saw it coming. It's
come. Now, are we going' to get out
of our denial phase and say: Do
something about this ... '?
"We (must) state, right now, the

principal social objective of American national government at every
level to be ... to see that children
are born to intact famiHes and that
(the families) remain so."
In the book "Mandate for
Change," which offered prescriptions for the new president from the
Progressive Policy Institute think
tank that was his roots, two experts,
Elaine Ciulla Kamarck and
William A. Galston, presented a
chilling correlation between family
disintegration and !he rise of poverty (and all the ills that come with
it). They also proposed eight specific pro-family recommendations
for. the incoming president. Then,
thetr chapter written, Kamarck and
Galston moved on to new jobs in the Clinton White House, where
hopefully they can push what they
published
.
While Washington is reinventing and reforming, surely the Clinton White House can muster
enough zeal to:
(I) Hire the wise ex-cori Millcen - to redesign the refinancing that can rehabilitate our inner
cities and his own reputation;
(2) ·Heed the wise ex-neo-con .L
Mor,niha.n - and promote profamtly policies.
And set about reclaiming our
inner cities, block by block, family
by flUilily.
.Martin Schram is a syndptljd
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
AB~ation.

Storni front to move across state

for daytime conditions and high

Look for an increase in cloud
cover during the day Friday along
with a threat of showers. The best
chance of rain will be over the
northwest
Strong southerly winds ahead of
the front will push temperatures
into the middle 60s north to the
lower 70s south.
As the front moves across the
state Friday nigh t and Saturday ,
there will be a good chance of
showers and maybe a few thunderstorms.
The front will move east of the
state by Saturday night allowing
drier conditions to return to the
area, although a threat of lake
effect showers will I
northeast Ohio into

MICH. ,

industry estimated it would co~t
$13 billion to conven its manufacturing processes, and the. cosll;
would have to be passed on to COJ1·
sumers - including the govern·
ment. In shon, paper costs woulll
skyrocket
;
They were backed up in theu
demands by dozens of senators ani!
congressmen from districts containing paper miUs and paper prod·
ucts manufacturing plants.
:
Senate Majority Leader George
Mitchell, D-Maine, led the charge.
He demanded that any move IP
recycled paper by the federal government include a price-suppott
and aid program for the paper mills
of his state. He also sought to
broaden the def'mition of post-corjsumer waste to include sawdust,
which is already used in paper
manufacture by Maine paper mills.
Environmentalists tried to fight
back, but they were simply outgunned. In August, paper-industry
officials met again with McGinty.
Leading paper-company executives
also had a closed-door meeting
with White House Chief of Staff
Mack McLarty.
All this .has caused the White
House to retreat in total disanay.
The draft executive order has been
revised so many times, and watered
down so much, that environmentalists say it is no longer worth the
paper it will be printed on, recycled
fiber content notwithstanding.
The current redraft has lowered
the content standard to the already
existing industry norm of I0 percent. The chlorine-free provision is
gone completely.
As for !he use of sawdus~ that is
still being debated, but environmentalists say if it is included, the
order will actually do more harm
than good because sawdust comes
from new trees, allowing papermakers to make paper with zero
post-consumer product content
What started as a model envi- .
ronmental order has left environmentalists outraged. This shows,
they say, that even in the Clinton
White House it's big money that
talks.
Robert Wagman is a syndicated writer for Newspaper Enterprise Association.

'''''

' ,,,

lrMa-n-sll_el...,d,....68-.......

IND.

.

' ' ' ' ' r--:---'--,.......,

• IColumbus l1o• I

71°
'

1

Temperatures today were to
reach the middle 50s northeast to
the lower 60s ·south. Toni_glit will
see partly cloudy skies wtth temperatures dropping to near 40 in the
east to the middle 40s southwest.
Skie.s were mostly clear across
western Ohio early this morning,
~owingtemperaturestodropinto

the lower and middle 30s and cause
some frosting.
The temperature in Cincinnati
feUto 31 depees around 5:30a.m.,
setting a re&amp;!rd low for the day. It
also was the coldest temperature
ever recorded in the city for
September.
Over eastern Ohio, skies
remained cloudy and temperatUres
were
in !he
30s and

'''''

Inc.

Weather
South.Ceatral Ohio
.
partly cloudy. Low
, ncar 40. Fnday, partly cloudy in
,the morning. Becoming mostly
.-cloudy in the afternoon wi!h a
·.slight chance of showers. Breezy
:and warmer witli the high 70-75.
,C~ce o~ ~ 30 percenL
Tonight~

Meadows

Dorothy M. Meadows, 66, of
' Hanford, died Wednesday, Sept.
·29, 1993, in Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
.
· Born Jan. 21, 1927, in Cheshire,
_Ohio, she was a daughrer of !he late
Floyd and Margaret Thomas. She
·was also preceded in death by her
first husband, Curtis Oxytr, son,
'Eddie .Oxyer, a sisler and two

:brothers.

She was a retired seci:etary for
'ihe Korveue's Department Store.
· Surviving are ber husband,
Auburn Meadows; three sons, Tom
·Oxyer of Patriot. Ohio, Jeff Oxyer

"

SPRING UALLEY CINEMA

A chance of showers Saturday
and Sunday. Lows Saturday from
the mid-40s to low 50s and Sunday
35-45. Highs both days 55·65. Fatr
on Monday. Lows in the upper 30s
to low 40s. Highs in low 50s to low
60s.

446-4524

GRAND OPENING - Buckeye Home
Health omclally opened for business Tuesday
with an open bouse and ribbon-cutting ceremony at Its Pomeroy office. Buckeye Home Health
pro.vldes services to patients In tbe patients'
bomes. From left are: Rick Gandersman, exeeutive director; Joan Stanton, administrator; Pat

of Glouster, Ohio, Jerry Oxyer of
Laurel, Md.; two daughters, Peggy
Hull of Kissimmee, Fla., Tammy
Halley of Hanford; four brothers,
Don Thomas of Columbus, Ohio,
Jim · Thomas of California,
Raymond Thomas of Missouri,
David Thomas of Arkansas; nine
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)grandchildren and one great- Direct livestock prices and receipts
grandchild.
at selected buying points Thursday
The funeral will be Saturday, I by the Ohio Department of Agn·
p.m., at the Foglesong Funeral · culture:
Home. Burial will be in the Poplar
Barrows and gilts: steady to
mostly 50 cents higher; demand
Ridge Cemetery, Chesire.
Friends may call at the funeral moderate."
home Friday, 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs., country
Pallbearers will include Luke, Matt, points 45.00-46.00; plants 46.25Marlt and Wayne Oxyer, Yancy 4?.25, a few 48.00.
Soned U.S . 1-2, 230-260 lbs.,
Halley and Steve Hull.
country points 46.00-47.00.
Receipts Wednesday 7,700.
Estimated receipts Thursday 8,500.
Prices fiom The Producers Livestock Association:
Cattle: 1.00 to 2.00 lower.
Slaughter steers: choice 64.0070.00; select 63.00-68:00. ·'
Slaughter heifers: choice 59.0064,00; select 58:00-63.00.
Cows: steady to 1.00 lower; all
cows 52.75 and down.
Bulls: steady tO 1.00 lower; all
bulls 62.25 and down.

'·

NEW ROTARIAN- Maxine GaskDI waslndncted lat6 the
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club during a ceremony Monday.
Here, Glllklllud Chuck Blakeslee are shown at her Induction.

Extension agent
addresses Rotary
Mrs. Maxine Gaskill was officially inducted as a member of the
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club·
'by Chuck Blakeslee at the Monday
mght meeting of the club ·at the
·Heath Methodist Church in Mid·
dlepon.
Mrs. Gaskill brings a unique and
possibly record-breaking record of
over 50 years as a Rotarian with
her and now she is an active Rotarian.
, ' Mrs. Gaskill indicates that 'he
, has long held the motto of Rotary
""Service Above Self" in high
,esteem. Mrs. Gaskill indicates she
., wants to be a good member of this
-.

club and may visit olher clubs.
Hal Kneen, county extension
agent and Rotarian, was !he speaker for the evening. He presented
facts and figures on Meigs County
Agriculture. To start his talk, Mr.
Kneen gave a brief quiz to the
Rotarians on products and totals. In
the quiz it was pointed out that
other crops, which includes greenhouse and bedding plants, is the
lar$est agricultural product classificanoo in Meigs County. It is estimated there were 25 percent more
~n houses in Meigs County durmg 1993 than in 1992.
Meigs County has greater agricultural receipts than our neighboring counties of Gallia, Athens or
.'
The Daily Sentinel
Vinton. In 1991, the figures were
(UIIPS lU-HII .
reported were 520 {arms. During
PubU&amp;bed t.Yti'J aCtlraoon, Motda)' tbtoulb · the same year, 300-plus businesses
FrldoJ, Ill Cowl St.. Pomeroy, Ohio by tlio ·, were reported in the county.
, • Ohio VIlle)' PubiJJblq eo..,..y/Muhlmodia
The figures Mr . Kneen was
·
loc., Poowoy, Ololo ~5769, Pb. 992-2156.
using were based on Department
plid Ill Po"""'y, &lt;lil&lt;&gt;
' · Series E.S.O. 1991 Ohio Farm
PnN.IIId
...
Ollio
Income. A total return from other
N• ; I(: 11 Allodlliot, N'adoul AdwttiiiJII
........iatlvo, lruham No"'PIIP" Sal...
crops was $7,272,000 with oats and
73, n1td Ave~ue. New Yor~ New Y«t
hay next with $424,000. Corn
10017,
I
receipts listed at $344,000, soyPOITMAS'IER: Selld dw&amp;• "' Tho
beans at $1 I8,000 and wheat •at
Dolly S.ollaol, Ill C.,., SL, - Y· Olllo
$41,000.
.'
.' &lt;15769.
.
In !he livestock area, dairY prodRJISCIIPI10!1 RATES
ucts led the list wiih $2,403,000,
117 Cam• • Mot. Roule
.$1 .60
canle
and calves were $1,005,000.
Oot-.................... ...........................$6.95
Other
livestock was listed at
0o1 v............................................. - ..$13.:10
IIINOLI COPY
$508,000 and hogs listed at
I'IIIC.
$3S4,c:JO.
,
Dolly........................................,_ 3 5 Ceoll
Total agricultural receipts for
Sui&gt;Jcribon lol tloolrlq "' pay l1oo com. lillY
the county for 1991 were listed at
,.,., In dlttct "'
Dilly S.DIIHI
$12,469,000.
, ooa -~~~or 12 maolh boJIL CndJt will be
Somedmes we fail to appreciate
the continued lmponance of agriNo ...,JetipUou by mall petmlaed In areu
-bomocom....toolamllable.
culwre in !he Meigs County econoMoll
my, Kneen said.
. IMido Millo e....,.
The ladies of the church served
13 - ..............................................$21.14
the dinner. The next meeting will
2IS Weob ..................................... ............$43.16
52 Woob ................................. ,... ........... .$14.76
be held at !he Meigs County MultiOouldo Molp c-'1
purpose Senior Center according to
' 13 w.a.....,...;.....,. .........................".... .$23.40
,, 28 ~ ....................................... ..$45.50
Eugene Triplett, president, who
112 ........................................JI&amp;AQ
~ided at the meeting.

--Tilt-&lt;Ia.-

· CLEVELAND (AP) - Here are
Wednesday night's Ohio Lottery
selections:
Super Lotto
12-18-25-33-43-45
(twelve, eighteen, twenty-five,
thirty-three, fony-three, forty-five)
The jackpot is $16 million.
Kicker
2-2-4-3-6-6
(two, two, four, three, six, six)
Pick 3 Numbers
8-9-9
(eigh~ nine, nine)
Pick 4 Numbers
9-4-9-0
(nine,four, nine,zero)

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Wednesday admissions: none
Wednesday discharges: Bonnie
Riffe, Middleport; Randy Smith,
Pomeroy and Merle Davis, Rutland.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, Sept. 29 - Jeffrey
Lykens, Mill. Doug Knox and son,
Irene Hanson, Bamzel Fife, Julia
Clark, Janet Skaggs, Donna Smith,
Rosetta Patterson, Brenda Saunders, Ellen Boggs, Donald Woody,
Joann Bye!ll and Betty Dovenbarger.
Births, Sept. 29 • Mr. and Mill.
Danny Howard, daughter,
Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs. Henry
McGowan, son, Jackson.

EMS units respond

-----

Tilt

flo...._

,;

TONIGHT
KIM BASINGER IN

THE

R~L

McCOY PG 13 .

....

· STAJmNQ FRIDAY
~

to four calls
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services
responded to four calls for assislance Wednesday and early Thursday morning.
Units responding were 6:I0 p.m.
Columbia Township Fire Department to Slllte Route 143 for a brush
f'tre on property belonging to Roger
Powell; 2:24 a.m . Rutland to
Edmondson Road for Evelyn Might
who was transported to Holzer
Medical Center; 3:44 a.m. Ruiland
to Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center for Sadie Carr who
was transported to .HMC; 5:23 a.m.
Racine to Ponland for Elmer Connolly who was transported to Veterans Memorial Hosptial.

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
ADMISSION $1.50

ENTRY DEADLINE: OCTOBER 11 , 1993

Stocks
Am Ele Power ................... 38 1/4
Ashland Oil... .....................33 5/8
AT&amp;T ................................59 3/8
Bank One ...........................41 7/8
Bob Evans.......................... 18 3/4
Charming Shop ................. .l2 3/8
Champion Ind.................... 14 1/4
City Holding ......................29 3/8
Federal Mogul ...................23 1/8
Goodyear T&amp;R ................ .43 5/8
Lands End ..........................41 1/4
Limited Inc........................22 1/8
Multimedia Inc ..................36 3/4
Point Bancorp ...................... .... 14
Rax Restaurant .....................1{32
Reliance Eleclric ............... .l8 1/8
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 20 !{}.
Shoney's Inc ...................... 22 Ifl.
Slar Bank ...................... .. .. .35 !fl.
Wendy Jnt'l... .... :................ l4 7/8
Worthington Ind................ 28 3/4
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
of Gallipolis.

KANAU GA DRIV E-IN

IS CLOSED FOR THE
SEASON. THANK YOU
FOR YOUR
PATRONAGE. SEE
YOU NEXT SEASON!

ALL· VOU-CAN·EAT SPAGHETTI WITH HOMEMADE
SAUCE MEATBALLS, Go rile Brood and Toned Solod

$4.99

.l

Ool-.. . . . .,_,_ _,_,. . . . . . . . . . . .

COLONY THEATRE

Sheep and lambs: steady; choice
wools 63.00-67 .50; chotec clips
64.00-68.50; feeder lambs 68.00
and down; aged sheep 27.50 and
down.

SPECIAL
FRI. &amp; SAT
OCT. I &amp;2

.

7

Amos RN BSN, regional director or the Pomeroy
orrlce; 'Pomeroy Mayor Bruce Reed, County
Commissioner Janet Howard Tackett and
Chuck Hunter, executive vice president and
chief executive officer or the Bethesda Care System.

Livestock report

Lottery numbers

··

lower 40s. Showers moved throu~h . of Texas, Kansas, inllnd California
northeast and central Ohw and !he desert Southwest.
duri.ng the overnight hours with
The Northeast and the Oreal
rainfall amounts of a quarter inch Lakes, where Marquette, Mich.,
common over the noriheasL
measured an inch of snow WedJICsRecord high temperature for this day. faced the prospect of another
date was 92 in 1953; record low 31 cold day and nighL
in 1963.
Highs were forecast oniy in the
Sunrise Friday at 7:28 a.m., SU11· 40s in norlhem New England, and
set at 7:14p.m.
frost was predicted for many areas
Around tbe natloil
overnight Highs elsewhere in !he
A new surge of chilly air headed Northeast, t)le Great Lakes and the
down from Canada toward the inland mid-Atlantic slate! were to
northern ~ockies today, while be in !he 50s.
Michigan got the nation's fii'St sigClouds lingered over northern
nificant snowf~ this season.
Minnesota, Wisconsin and MichiThe southern central and west- gan, and rain was forecast for that
ern states were due for anolher hot, area, pans of Arizona and Alaska,
clear day, with highs forecast in the where the precipitation could turn
80s, climbinl into the 90s in parts to snow in !he north.
Brisk but sunny weather was
expected for most of !he rest of the
nation, with highs in the 60s and ·
70s in !he Northwes~ !he norlhem
Plains, the Ohio Valley and the
SoutheasL
.
·
The cold, windy weather heading down from Canada was expected to sweep in an arc as far south
as Nebraska by nightfall, and eontinue its southeastern plummet Friday, stretching from Oklahoma to
the eastern Great Lakes.

parts of

Extended lbrecast:
Saturday Throullh Monday:

---Area deaths.- - · ~orotby

The Dally Sentinel Page. 3

/

/

Fashion models should look like us.
Sarah Overstreet

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel :
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio :
Thursday, September30, 1993

Recycling idea squelched by industry
WASHINGTON (NEA) - The
follow inl! is a cautionary tale
meant to Illustrate why, inside the
beltway, good deeds rarely go
unpunished.
.
·
Early in Vice President Gore's
National Performance Review of
federal agenCies, he beard from a
federal worker who was very proud
that her small office was helping
the environment by using recycled
stationery, envelopes and other
paper products. Gore thoughr this
was a dandy idea, and one that
could easily be accomplished governmentwide by simply issuing an
executive order signed by !he president.
The federal government is the
world's largest single consumer of
paper, using some 300,000 tons per
year. Gore pictured the whole federal government using recycled
paper and leading the way for the
rest of the country.
President Clinton thought it was
a terrific idea. In July, the White
House drew up a draft executive

/

•
SUNDAY, OCT. 3 HOMEMADE NOODLES &amp; CHICKEN
S.rvad.with Poroleyod Potataea, Succotoo~ &amp; Hat Roll
Small Drink or ColfH ................................................ $4.49
LARGE BOWL OF.HOMEMADE NOODLES
MON., OCT. 4
Moohad Patltoea ond Gravy
Hot Buttered Ralt.. ..................................................... $3.39
HOMEMADE CORNBREAD AND
TUES., OCT. 5
SOUP BEANS .............................................................$1 .99
COUNTRY STEAK SANDWICH
WED., OCT. 6
Topped with Moahed Patotaea ond Grovy .............. $3:89
THURS., OCT. 7 ROAST BEEF SANDWICH
Topped with Mlahod Patataeo ................................. $3.89
NEW HOURI: OPI!N 10 A.M.-8:00 P.M.

Enter the Peoples Bank Stock Picking Contest.!
WIN $500-just PLACE 5 publicly traded stocks
in an imaginary portfolio and SHOW outstanding
perfonnance over the fourth quarter.
Select 5 publicly·.. aded stocks from our list of companies and place 1hemin
an imaginary portfolio. We'IIJrack the percentage won/loss of all entries for
li weeks and award $500 to the lop performer, $250 to
second place winner and $100 10 the
~
third place fin1sher.
~ ~~

~ ' - -~C ""'a

Rt'Cordthcpnccofcach sJOck
a11he close of busi~ess
~~ ~~ 1.;J1_.,
Oclober 8, 199.l and fol- ~)
~ '
low your porlfol io '&lt;2~
·, \,
· ·_ through December l l,
- i
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. , '· ·
will penodlcaUy
" .~
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:"-•
performance reports ..., :"'"~tr&gt;;.,.
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This contest requires no investment.
The Peoples Stock Picking Contest is sponsored
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M11rietta
Athens
Belpre
Lowell
373-3155
593-7761
423-7516
896-m
Middleport Nelsonville
The Plains
992-~1
753·1955
797·4547

•

�/

september 30, 1993

Sports

The Daily Sentinel
Thursday, September 30, 1993
Paga 4

Eastern seeks third consecutive home win against 0-5 Hannan
B1 SC01T WOLFE
Seoliael Correspotldeat
The Eastern Eagles (2-2) meet
the Hannan, W.Va. Wildcats (0-5)
this Friday night at Eastern High
School, where Eastern ironically is
2-0 on the year.
Eastern scored an impressive
34-0 win over Miller last week,
while Hannan dropped a 40-0 tilt to
Southern.
Although not showing much
offense one week ago, the youthladen HannaD Wildcats have shown
some spam in earliec games.
Ron "Tum" Pike anchors the
backfield and the defense, garnering 19 tackles in a game earlier this

Meanwhile, Eastern is only getseason. Randy Tollivec. the quarterback ~ho had a 7-12 passing ting better as the season progresses.
n1ght agamst Federal Hocking, is a A few cosLiy mistakes cost them
steady ballhandler and is also a the game at Waterford, while a special teams miscue and a penalty
defensive standout
Pike neared the century mark in spoiled a victory celebration at
the Federal game with 91 yards Wellston. Eastern has been in every
rushing and a 70-yard punt return, game with a chance to win. Quite
easily, EHS could be a legitimate
further exemplifying his potential.
Last weell;, however, Southern 5-0 team if the breaks would have
shut the door and took advantage or gone their way.
In the second hall of their lossthe youn~ Hannan line.
Joe Kimble and Ben Baker are es, Eastern has held the opponent
the other Hannan backs. Tolliver's scoreless, an attribute to their abilimain targets arc flanker Johnnie ty to bounce back.
Wallace and split end Stacy · Coach Dave Barr has been folMcClure wo had catches of 20 and lowing a plan that has brought the
Eagles back on the road to success.
30 yards agains!._Federal.

Wiihout becoming extremely over·
confident, Eastern should have a
winning record after Friday.
Last week, sophomore Jason
Sheets was outstanding. The talented running back hit the century
mark, running 13 times for 129
yards and two touchdowns. One of
those touchdowns came on a 53yard reception from Brian Bowen,a
sophomore, who was 5 of 8 for 85
yards on the night.
Bowen, the probable quarterback of the future, was subbing for
senior Robert Reed, who injured
his throwing arm shoulder against
Wahama. Reed has undergone
ultrasound therapy and is expected

to take a few snaps this week, however, his full-fledged return is slated for next Saturday ' s EasternSouthern bout
Matt Bowen, a talented junior
lineman, has tom ligaments in his
knee and was expected back next
week, but that date may be pushed
back a couple of weeks.
Wes Arbaugh h~d two touchdowns and a 13-56 yard night in
the backfield, while Mike Smith
and Pat Newland also had good
games. Newland didn't have his
usual scoring night, but had several
big gainers and scores called back
due to penalties. Newland, however. was again a fme defensive stop-

per.
Randy Kaylor, Ryan Buckley
Charlie Bissell, Jared Ridenour and
Scott Golden had good defensive
nights.
.
Eastern is ranked 24th of 35
teams in the OHSAA football computer ratings.
Confidence.has been a key word
in Eastern's successful season.
Tbat confidence and the hard work
ethic instilled by Barr has made for
a good combination. Putting the
two together Friday could give the
young Eagles something to thrive
on. Game time is 7:30 at Eastern
High School.

Southern to head south ..to take .on Chesapeake in Friday bout
By SC01T WOLFE
Sentinel CorrespondeD!
The Southern Tornadoes (2-2)
will face the Division IV Chesapeake Panthers (1-3) on the road
Friday night at Chesapeake. Southem is ranked 16th in the Division
V ratings in a field of 35, while
Chesapeake is ranked 25th of 35 in
its reg•on, Division N.
Scott Wickline's Tornadoes has
put together a good mix of talented

youth and the experience of talented upper classmen, last week
claiming a 40-0 victmy over Han·
nan, W.Va.
Southern's timing was good, the
aaack balanced, and a good performance was turned in by the line,
both offensively and defensively.
Actually, the 40-0 rout could have
been worse.
Senior Quarterback Trenton Cleland compiled a nice resume with a

7-15 effon for 128 yards and \WO
touchdowns. 9eland gave up ~ust
one mtercep_uon, wh}le g~tt•ng
good protecuon from the hne, a
contrast from an earli~r perfor!Dance where he took QUite a beatmg.
Sout!'ern's Aaron Drummer had
18 cames for 107 yards to crack
the coveted century mark, and also
had two touchdowns. Tucker
Williams had 10 carries for 62

yards and a touchdo~n . Frosh
Jamie Evans had 39 yards and a
touchdown, while Billy Jones
added to the offense.
Defensively, Sam' Shain and
Tucker Williams finished the game
with seven tackles each, while Paul
Smith added five,Jamey Smith had
a fumble recovery, and Craig
Knight had four tackles. Cleland
(3) and Travis Lisle had interceplions.

Last year, Southern claimed a
· dramatic home field win over
Chesapeake in Racine. Chesapeak
lost many of its top seniors from
that experienced team and is in a
rebuilding year this season.
The Panthers are considerably
better than the Wildcat team Southem faced last week, but with their
r~o!"', the Panthers are definitely
w1thm the realm of defeat.
Although young Chesapeake is
'

very aggressive and shows some
quickness off the l!ne and in !"e
backfield. Southern. s vt:teran hne
should stack up qu•te mcely, and
senior members of that c~w coul_d
have an advantage m thelf expenence.
.
_The game could be a pivotal
pomt on the Southern schedule and
would _put the Racme crew at 3-2
gomg mto the second half of the
season.
Game time is 7:30p.m.

Meigs to entertain Alexander in homecoming contest Friday
By DAVE HARRIS
Boston's alma mater - Nefsonville-York- 35-16. In the
Sentinel Correspondent
The Alexander Spartans will game last week the Buckeyes
invade Bob Roberts Field Friday opened up a 35-0 lead late in the
evening for a homecoming first half and coasted to the win.
encounter with the Meigs MaraudAlexander is led by 5-4 , 143ers.
pound senior quarterback Eric
Both teams will head into the Wagner, who was the starting quarcontest with identical 0-4 records. terback for Meigs in 1992 before
The contest will be a non-confer- transferring to Alexander. He has
cnce despite both teams being a completed 22 of 49 on the year for
member. of the Tri-Valley Confer- 340 yards and two 'touchdowns to
ence. Because of the new align- go along with two interceptions.
ment the Spartans are members of His favorite receivers, have been
the Hocking Division, while Meigs Jim Nicholson and Fred Boggess.
is a member of the Ohio Division.
Boggess, a 5-11, 170-pound
Dave Boston Jr., the Spartans' sophomore, has pulled in five passhead coach is staring his third year es for 112 yards and a touchdown.
at the helm of Alexander. The Nicholson, a 5-11, 175-pound
Spartans opened up the year losing senior, has -pulled in six passes for
on a last second field goal 10-7 to 91 yards and a touchdown.
Zane Trace. Alexander then lost to
The Spartan ground game is led
Belpre 52-28 Fisher Catholic 30- by 5-I 0, 168-pound sophomore
20 and were Pounded last week by Matt Ross and Matt Rosier, a 5-10.

225-pound senior fullback . Ross
who started at quarterback for
Alexander last season as a freshman has carried 61 times for 287
yards and two touchdowns an average of 4.7 yards a carry. Rossler
has carried 58 times for 266 yards.
Meigs is coming off a 36-6 loss
at the hands of the Point Pleasant
Big Blacks. The Big Blacks are 5-0
on the season and are ranked in the
top seven in Class AAA in West
V1rginia. Despite the score most
people feel that the Marauders have
improved since the beginning of
the season.
. J~red Hill, the 5-8, 170-pound
JUnior tailback who leads the
Marauders' offensive attack, has
rushed for 235 yards in 53 carries
for an average of 4.4 yards a ClVl)'.
Scott Peterson and Heath Hudson
also are threats on the ground for
Meigs.
.

The quarterback for the maroon
and gold continues to be Brent
Hanson. The 5-9, 115-pound
sophomore has improved with
every contest and has completed 12
of 37 passes for 138 yards and one
touchdown. His favorite targets are
Chad Duncan (5-10, 160, sr.) and
Travis Curtis (5-8, 145, so).
Last week's game with the Big
Blacks was a rough physical contest During the course of the contest the Marauders lost co-captain
Peterson (concussion), Hill (ribs),
Jake Kennedy (hand),James White
(concussion) and D·a vid Fetty
(knee). All but Peterson should be
back, and the rugged 6-1, 190
senior fullback and linebacker is
listed as questionable.
"Alexander is a good f&lt;;&gt;otball
team", first-year Marauder coach
Mike Chancey said of the Spartans.

COCA·COL
SSIC

"The won't make mistakes fu hun
themselves and they play hard. We
must execute and we can't beat
ourself."

Kickoff for Friday evenings
contest is 7:30, but come early
homecoming festivies get underway around 7:00.

-------Sports b r i e f s - - - - - BasebaD
Pro football
DAVIE, Fla. (AP) - Miami
MIAMI (AP) - The Florida
Dolphins linebacker Bryan Cox Marlins agreed to a four-year.
will appeal a $10,000 fine by the $22.45 million contract with Gary
NFL for making obscene gestures Slieflield.
to the crowd before Sunday's game ·
At 24, he becomes baseball's
highest-paid third baseman and
at Buffalo.
In days prior to the game, Cox Florida's best-paid player .
spoke about his hatred for Buffalo. Sheffield, who grew up in Tampa,
Those widely publicized comments will average $5,615,000 a year,
made him a target for Bills fans lOth-most in baseball.
Sheffield, obtained June 24 in
when he walked on the field, and
Cox responded by waving the mid- th.e Padres' salary purge, made
dle finger of both hands at the $3.11 million this season. He could
crowd, shown on national televi- have become a free agent following
sion.
-the 1994 World Series.

PLAY THE LOTTERY
HERE

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AND PICK-UP YOUR
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Team
W
x·Philadelphia ........96

L
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Monuu1 ............ ....91 67

SL Loud ............. 85
Chi..go.................. l2
Pittsburgh .........•..7:3
Florida ......... ..........64
New Yodr: ..............SS

73

T1
85
!l4
103

PeL
.608
.l76
.538
.ll6
.462

.405
.348

GB

l
II

14.5
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32
41

Wet.IA:rn Dlvlilon
AllanUI . .............. 101

57

6:39

San.flancilco ...... IOO

Sl

.633

..519
.l06
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Colon do ................ 67 92' .421

I
19
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HOUlton •............... 82 76
Lao An..... ........... IO 7S
ClNCD'lNATI. ....... 72 ~

29.5

San Dieso .............. 60 99

34S
41.l

.377

1-clinched diVl&amp;lOIS title

:
I

!

)

...,
.

'•.

•

•'
•

Wednesday's scores

Colondo 5. Sm Fnncilco !
MCIIltreal 7, Flonda I
PiusbwJh 9, Rilladelpbia 1

Atlanta 6. Houa\Oft 3
New YOlk l, SL Louia 0 (17 inn.)
CINCINNATI I, Son Diego 0
Qtieago 6, 1..01 Angclea I

Today's games
Montreal (Rueter 8-0) 1t Flonda
(Haugh 9-16), , ,35 p.m.
Philadelphia (Jactaon 12-1 1) at Pitu·
bwob (Wa,...-1-7), 7,3l pm.
Sl. Louill (W1110n 6-6) at New Yo*
(llillnun 1·9), NO p.m.

H....,. (Kilo 1~·1) uAilanla (Smaloz
Il-l 0), 1&gt;40 ~m.
Son Fnnciloa (Swift :JG.I) at Lao An·
aeJe.: (Candica.i 1-9), 10:35 p.m.

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FIRES TO FIRST - Atlanta shortstop -Jeff Blauser (top) hurdies over Houston's Craig Biggio while firing to first base to get
Steve FIDley and complete the double play in the eighth inning of
Wednesday alght's National League game ia Atlanta, where the
Braves won 6-3. (AP)

'

Frtday'seames
New Yo:dt (TIOJ&amp;heder 5·2) 1t Flooda
(Weaohen 2-2), 7,33 p.m.
Houai.OD (Swindd.l 14-8) at CINCIN·
NATI (Rijo 14-1), 7,35 p.m.
Pltuburah (Waa:na- 1-7) at Montreal
Colorado (Harria 11 -16)

(A '.!It 17-6), 7&lt;40 p.m.

•~

Atlan1a

Philadelphia (SehUllng 1!5· 7) at St.
Low. (Oli....,5-2). s,os pm.
OUc.aao (l'nchae.l (0..2) al San Diego
(A.hby 3..10). 10,35 p.m.
San Fnnc:i:ac? (Bud::c~t 2().7) at Lot
An..... (R. MUiineo lfl.ll),I0,3l pm.

•

l

'

l

"It was a big game for us,"
New York's Jimmy Key said after
the Yankees' 8-3 victory over Baltimore gave them a 2 1/2-game
lead over the Orioles and Tigers,
who are tied for third. "First is
done, so second means a lot to this
organization and these guys in here
in this clubhouse."
The Tigers beat the Boston Red
Sox 8-7 w.ilh three runs in the
ninth.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eu&amp;emDivlolon

WLhLGI
.589
.S41

Baltimeft ...............83

75

.S2.S

o.roiL,. ................. 83
o.......................... IO
CLEVELAND ...... 76
Milw•ukce ............. 66

75
71
13
93

.525
.l06
.471
.415

7.5

"You should always II')' to finish as high as you can," Detroit
manager Sparky Anderson said.
"Tbat's what keeps this game hon-

est··
The Yankees and Tigers end the
season with a three-game series in
New York, with second place on
the line.
Key notched his career-high
18th victory, allowing one run and
(See AL OD Page 6)

1

..532
.SI6

9.S

.500
.437
.437
.424

12
22
22
24

Wednesday's scores

Tort~nlO 9, Milwaukee 6
Texu ll, Oakland 6
Kanau City 3, a.E\'I!V.ND 2

•

Today's games

Frtday•seames
OUcaao (Femandc% 11-9) " CLIM!·
LAND (Cluk 7-4), 7'0!1 p.m.
(Tanan• 0.2), 7,30p.m.

(Rhadca 5-l); 7'3l p.m.
Milwaukee (Navarro 10..12) at Bolton

r.m.

Seattle (Jotuuon 1·8) at Minnesota

•

K.anau City (Con~ 11·13) at Teua
(Pavlik ll-6), 8::35 p.m.
Califomia.{Holiemcr 0.2) at OUland
(Jimena0-0),l0:35 p.m.

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LOS ANGELES RAMS ' Wai•ed
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Richud Bud!.anan and Courtney Griff'ut.
wide na:iwn, ll) the practice &amp;q\lld. Reai&amp;ned TMy IWJtlin, wide m:etvet.
David Bavaro, lineblcltcr. W1.1vcd Olvid
WhiLe. l.i.neb.di:ar.
PllTSBURGH STEELERS: Placed ~
Carlton Haselri~~o, guard, on the non·foot·
ball injUl)' liiL

Hockey
Natlonallloekey Leque

CHJCAOO BLACKHAWKS ' Ao·
1igncd Roch Belley , aoaltcn!{er, to
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Lea.t;ITSBUROH PENGLIINS . Si1ned
Bryan Trottier, c:enlcr-auillant coach;
Doua Bro...-n, riaht wina, and Jeff

Daniela, left ""'•·

College

ARMY: Named Kan::n Way auillant
track coach; Scou Fclil!. aaaPu.nt swim·
mini coteh, and Maa Hamptm auiltant

-'ina""'""'

HOUSTON : Named Gate Smith defcmive coonlinau. and Melvin Robcmon
aecmdary cotch.

IDAHO: Named Kellt Cott.ello 111U·
lant Lrai.ner.

LOtnSIANA STATE: Named Mark

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NORTHEAST LOUISIANA ' Declared Maurice Stephen• and Cbadaa
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11 (Bnunmeu 1·1), Ul P·!')·
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(Rhod,.S-S), 7l3l p.m .
Detroit (Gullicklon 13-9) at Boaton
(Oapoan 7-11),1 .3lp
Scutlc (Silkeld 0-0) at Chicaao
(Bd-3-l), 8,(15 p.m.
Oaklsnd ('Van Poppel 6-S) at Tc:tu
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Western Dlvltion
:t.Ch.ic.ago ........... 91 67 .!576

Tuu ......... ............ 84 74
Kanaa~ City .......... 82 'T1
Seaule ................... 79 19
Cllilomia ............... 69 19
Minnuou .............. 69 89
O&amp;kland ................. 67 91

Dnper, pil&lt;her, for lhe ,.._.
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Toronto (A.Lettcr 8-6) at Baltimore

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••
)

FOOD
MARATHON

,

:

FRESH HOT COFFEE .• ICE

Kenny Greer (1-0), the fourth
Mets pitcher, won in his major
league debut, striking out two of
the three batters he. faced in the
17th.
Expos 7, Marlins 1
Chris Nabhol.z (9-8) had a season-high seven strikeouts in five
scoreless innings, and visiting
Montreal turned a triple play as it
clinched second place.
Hammond (11 -12) allowed four
runs in 4 2(3 innings.
Cubs 6, Dodgers 1
Visi ting Chicago (82-77)
ensured its third winning season in
21 years by winning at Los Angeles.
Greg Hibbard (15-11) allowed
nine hits in seven innings. He also
hit a two-run sin~le.
Pedro Astac•o (14-9) gave up
five runs and six hits in five
innings.

.

By The Associated Press
The Toronto Blue Jays and
,Chicago White Sox have poured
•their champagne after winning
:American League division titles.
:That doesn't mean all the races are
·over.
: The New York Yankees and
oit Tigers both won Wednesnight, and the talk from each
,
was about finishing in second
i'place in the standings.

16 different games

Hot Dogs
with the works
2 For SOC

17th inning .at Shea Stadium to

score Eddie Muna)'. ·

;Yankees, Tigers win to tighten
j race for second place in AL East

• INSTANT GAMES

•Friday • Saturday
•Sundy

final indignity in San-Diego's lost
season. Pugh (10-15), a 26-year-old
right-hander, wound up with a onehitter.
"He hit a good pitch," Pugh
said. ''I" tip my hat to him."
Scott Sanders (3-3) gave up
seven runs - two earned - and
six hits in five innings.
Pirates 91 Phillies 1
Dave Clark and AI Martin drove
in three runs each in visiting
Philadelphia's first game after
clinching the NL East. Both teams
played lineups filled with rookies
and reserve players.
Kevin Foster (0-1) gave up eight
runs in four innings in his first
major league stan. Bob Walk (1314) allowed one run in five innings
to win for just the third time in 11
decisions.
Mets 1, Cardinals 0
Jeff Kent, hitless in his six previous at-bats, doubled off Les Lancaster (4-1) with tw() outs in the

I

12 pack

COLDEST

By The Associated Press
With four games to go, the
Atlanta Braves have a one·$ame
lead on the San Francisco G1ants,
.who must play their fmal games at
:Jthe home of the los Angeles
, Dodgers, their most emotional foe.
"It's not how you want to end
·your season at home," San Fran.cisco manager Dusty Baker said
after Wednesday's 5-3 loss to the
..colorado Rockies at Candlestick
Parle. "We plan on coming back
. here to play again, one way or
.another. The race is alive and
. well.''
• ALianta regained sole possession
-,of first place with a 6-3 victory
,over the Astros. After playing
Houston tonight at ALianta-Fulton
County Stadium, the Braves close
with three games at home against
the Rockies.
"It's only one game," said
catcher Damon Becryhill, who hit a
three-run homer. "By no means is
'i il over!'
'l
San Francisco has lost six of
·' nine to the Dodgers this season.
" The two have been fighting for a
ll century in a rivalry that began a
' continent away in Manhattan and
. Brooklyn.
'1
Two years ago, the Dodgers
l!'were ll')'ing to beat the Braves for
!. the NL West title, but lost the flfSt
' ''two games of a season-ending
series at San Francisco.
"There is a little revenge
involved," said the Dodgers' OreI
Hershiser, who will pitch Saturday.
ALianta regained its lead as Tom
.,Giavine won his 21st game, beating
1
Doug Drabek (9-18) despite g_etting
',roughed up early. After Berryhill's
· homer in the second inning, Fred
McGriff and David Justice hit consecutive solo homers to break a 3-3
~·· tie in the third.
Houston stranded 14 runners,
..including the bases loaded in the
" eighth and ninth innings. .
• ' In other NL games, Cincinnati
·~ defeated San Diego 8-0, Montreal
. beat Florida 7-1, Pittsburgh routed
t Philadelphia 9-1, New York out~ lasted St. Louis 1-0 in 17 innings,
·"Montreal beat Florida 7 -I and
·'Chicago tripped Los Angeles 6-1 .
··
Rockies S, Giaats 3
San Francisco wasted two
" bases-loaded opportunities and
;" stranded seven runners. Daryl
'' Boston homered twice as Colorado
;;'beat San Francisco for just the third
time in 13 games.
I S~ve Reed (9-5) picked up the
1victory.• helping to end the Giants'
•seven-game winning . streak .
!Salomon Torres (3-4) was tagged
!for four runs and three hits, walked
·four and struck out one.
:
Reds 8, Padres 0
:. Rookie Tim Pugh pitched 8 1/3
~itless · innings at San Diego before
,Billy Bean singled to prevent a
I

• SUPER LOTO
• PICK 3
• PICK 4
• BUCKEYE 5

99

Braves be-a t Astros to regain
tNL West lead while Giants fall

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Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

\

.

J

I

•

Thursday,SephNnber30,1993

Mismatches fill Saturday's slate of major college football action
•

By RICK WARNER
AP Football Writer
Like a busy divorce court, this
week's Top 25 college football
schedule is filled with mismatches.
Georgia Southern at No. 3
Miami, No. 10 Oldahoma at Iowa
State, Duke at No. 11 Tennessee,
San Jose State at No, 15 Washington, Texas EI-Paso at No. 16 North
Carolina, No. 18 Louisville jil Pittsburgh. Can you spell rout?
Twenty-one of the Top 25 teams
play Saturday, and not one of them
meets a ranked opponent Only two

SpQrts Probe

ranked 'teams are favored by less fust four games. ·
Georgia Tech (pllll 31112)
than a touchdown (No. 12 Arizona
at No. 1 Florida SL
vs. Southern Cal and No. 25 West
S.eminoles have won 11 straight
Virginia vs. Virginia Tech) and
only one is an underdog (No. 24 ... FLORIDA ST. 45-7.
No. 2 Alabama (no line)
Nonh Carolina State at Clemson).
at South Carolina
No. 2 Alabama (at South CaroliTide
leads series 8-0
na) and No. 4 Noire Dame (at StanALABAMA
28-14.
ford) could encounter trouble on
Georgia
Southern
the road. South Carolina and Stan·
line)
at
No.3
Miami
(no
ford are dangerous because they
No
brawls,
no
contest
have standout q~rbacks, Steve
Taneyhill for the Gamecocks and MIAM148-0.
No. 4 Notre l)ame
Steve Stenstrom for the Cardinal.
(min~
9 112) at Stanford
l;lut both teams have been disapStanford
has won two of lost
pointing so far, losing two of their

thret vs. Irish ... NOTRE DAME
27-24.
Mississippi SL (plus17)
at No. 5 Florida
Bulldogs haven't won at
Gainesville since 1965 ... FLORIDA 37-17.
Northwestern (plus 19)
at No. 7 Ohio SL
Buckeyes averaging 39 points
per game ... omo ST. 31-17.
Iowa (plus 22 112)
at No. 8 Mk:hipn
Tyrone Wheatley leads nation in
all-purpose yardage ... MICHIGAN

Baseball's chase for ratings leaves kids out
By HOWARD SINER
Today's questions in the world

..

of sports:
• Has baseball l!lmed its back on
lcids?
It looks that way. Watching
post-season baseball on sunny
afternoons in October is about to
fade into memory. For youngsters
and grown-ups alike. This year's
League Championship Series features the last few daytime ballgames.
The new TV contract accepted
by Major League Baseball precludes any daylight national broadcasts- regular season, playoffs or
World Series - for the rest of the
1990s. The six-year deal with ABC
and NBC begins in 1994.
So these are the final days of

post-season baseball on CBS,
which is completing a four-year
TV pact. As usual, the 1993 World.
Series will be held entirely under
the lights. Games will begin 'at 8:20
p.m. Eastern time.
From now on, the only post-season afternoon teleCasts in big-time
pro sports wUI involve the National
Football League, the Natioll3) Basketball Association and the National Hockey League.
Tfiat's a crying shame, argues
Curt Smith. He's the author of ·
" Voices of the Game," the 1987
book that was hailed by The Sporting News as "the definitive history
of hasebaJl broadcasting."
·
Smith warns that kids are ultimately more important to the furure
of baseball than prime-time TV rnt-

Adams, Wolfe among top-10
in Skyline Speedway action
Forty-two of the llillion' s fastest
Late Model cars, including 16 different feature winners from across
the country assembled at Skyline
Speedway last Friday, where Parkersburg native Steve Shaver, the
defending Harvest 50 champion,
took home the Harvest SO crown
ahead of a hard-charging Bob
AdamS Jr. of Racine.
Adams was hooked up really
weD and was charging to the front
at the end. A few more laps could
have put the Racine driver in victory lane.
Shaver started on the pole as a
result of his win in the dash. The
fastest six cars in time trials were
Shaver, Delmas Conley, fast timer
Rod Conley, Jason Minnite,
Racine's Scou Wolfe and Bobby
HiD.
Shaver's pole start allowed him
to jump into the early lead. A lap
one crash between Bobby Hill,
Larry Bond and Buck Lamb
prompted a restart after Lamb was
released from the squad with a possible broken hand
On ·the restart, it was Shaver,
Delmas Conley, Rod Conley and
Scou Wolfe.
Scott Peltz and Millersburg's
Keith Berner started to move to the
front along with Adams'
CTI/McDonalds/ J.D.Drilling Rayburn.
Jason Minnite spun Adams on

the seventh circuit and was relegated to the tail, while Adams got his
position back.
From that point on the race went
green to checkered at a torrid pace.
Wolfe, nursing· a bent rear-end
housing and axle from the dash,
faded to 12th before coming on late
in the race to fmish seventh.
At the finish it was Shaver,
Adams, Mike Balzano, Berner,
Steve Lucas, Delmas Conley,
Wolfe, Peltz, Mike Smith, Andy
Bond and Rod Conley.
Wolfe's McDonalds of Gallipolis, Athens, Nelsonville and Henderson, W.Va. car made yet another top-10 finish. Wolfe's other
sponsors include Mark's Auto
Sales, Middleport; Baum Lumber,
Chester; A&amp;A Auto Rental and .
C&amp;M Motors, Ravenswood; Precision Automotive in Darwin,.ADdersons in Pomeroy; and Eber's Citgo
in Racine.
Heats went to AI Flohr, Peltz,
Larry Bond and Adams.
Steve Lucas and Berner claimed
the B-mains.
Adams roared to victory in the
UMP modifieds ahead of Bruce
Dennis and Kemp Kelly. Dennis
took the dash, while Hubie Hatfield, Kemp Kelly and Tim Smedley.
Don Ross claimed the Street
Stocks.

AL games ... __.:..&lt;C_o_nu_·nu_ed_frn_m_P..:ag_e5..:. )_ _ __
four hits in seven innings as the
Yankees won two of three games in
Baltimore.
Don Mattingly homered and
drove in three runs to lead New
York's 15-hit auack.
Chris Hoiles hit his 28th homer
for the Orioles, who have lost six
of seven and 11 of 15.
In other AL games Wednesday
night it was Toronto 9, Milwaukee
6; Chicago 3, Seattle 2 in . t2
innings; Minnesota 3, Califoml&amp; 2
in 10 innings; Texas II, Oakland 6:
and Kansas City 3, Cleveland 2.
Tigers 8, Red Sox 7
The win was the sixth in seven
games for Detroit, which was led
by Chad Kreuter's four RBis and
Daniel Bautista's three.
Kreuter made it 6-5 in the ninth
with a two-run double, and Bautista
made it 8-5 with a two-run single,
all off Cory Bailey (0-1 ).
Boston closed to 8-7 in the ninth
on a walk to John Valentin, a double by Tim Nahering, Scou Fletcher's RBI groundout and a run-scoring single by Mike Greenwell.
Blue Jays 9, Brewers 6
Toronto won for the 15th time
in 17 games as pinch-hiuer Domingo Martinez drove in two runs with
a bases-loaded single in a four-run
ninth inning.
The Jays, division champions,
started only three regulars, including Paul Molitor, who had a triple,
two doubles and a walk, and John
Olerud who had two doubles and
three walks.
B.J . Surhoff drove in four runs
for the Brewers.
White Sox 3, Mariners 2
AL West champion Chicago
scored two 'in the ninth to tie it and
won in the 12th on rookie Norberto
Martin's RBI single. Martin singled to score Joey Cora with the
winning run.
Ken Griffey Jr. went 4-for-6 for
visiting Seattle, with a home run,
double, two singles and two RB!s.
Twins 3, Angels 2
Pedro Munoz's single in the
bottom of the lOth gave Minnesota
its fifth straight victory, matching
its longest winning streak of the
season. The loss was the founh in a
row for California, which tied it 22 in the ninth on .Torey Lovullo's

'

two-run homer otr Rick Aguilera
(4-3).
Rangers 11, Athletics li
Doug Strange had five RB!s in a
two-inning span for Texas.
Strange's three-run homer highlighted a four-run second, and he
finished off a five-run third with a
two-run double as the Rangers took
a 9-31ead.
Kelly Downs (5-10) allowed
eight runs and eight hits in 2 2/3
innings to fall to 0-6 as a starter
this year.
Royals 3, Indians 2
George Brett capped his 20
years in Kansas City with an RBI
single in his final at-bat at Kauffman Stadium.
Brett, who announced his retirement over the weekend, tied the
game 2-2 in the eighth, and Kevin
Koslofski's single in the ninth won
it.
It was Brett's 1,59Sth RBI,
tying Mike Schmidt for 22nd place
on the career list, and his 3,153rd
hit. He took one final lap around
the stadium in a golf cart and
kissed home plate when it was
over.

ings. He makes his case in the
• Which NFL CO$Ch always
October issue of Reader's Digest in wears a tie on game days?
an article titled "Where Have All
"Dapper Dan" Reeves of the
the Children Gone?"
New YCJdc Giants.
The idea is: if kids can't stay up
He's the .only one who always
to watch baseball's most important gets dressed up to stalk the sidegames, the &lt;;lreat American Pas- lines.
time might not have mucb of a
Reeves, who usually wears a
future.
suit to wodt'on Sundays, appears to
Until 1970, the World Series be a throwback t&lt;_l the days ~f
was always played during the day.
George Halas and V mce Lombl!J'di.
That meant unforgettable OctoFa that matter, Tom Landry ber afternoons- Don Larsen's who used to coach Reeves when he
perfect game in 1956, .for example played for the Dallas Cowboys - of watching or listening to the was also latown as a jacket-and-tie
FaD Classic.
man.
By 1985, the World Series had
• Why does Dapper Dan dress
turned into a nighttime-only made- the way he does?
for-TV showcase. It was promoted · "I just feel comfortable," he
by the Lords of Baseball as a rat- says.
·
ings bonanza. Which induced CBS
• What are the chances of a
to pay about $1 billion for its full- "four:peat" in-theNBA?
season package.
Excellent. Pro basketball's
Last year, Toronto won the experts
are still Bull-ish on Chica.
world championship at 12:50 a.m. go.
Eastern time. As Smith points out,
They're counting on Michael
that was too late even for one base.- Jordan to lead the Bulls beyond
ball executive, who admits that he their "three-peat" to a fourth
had fallen asleep: "I feel embar- straight NBA title. At this point,
rassed," he said, "but I shouldn't the talk of the town in the Windy
Baseball should feel embarrassed.'' Citv is "four in 94" and "five in
Beginning next season, ABC 95:(·
and NBC will split 12 regular-seaA typical pre-season prediction
son games in prime time - none is offered by "The Complete
before midseason. They will alter- ·Handbook of Pro Basketball"
nate on the All-Star Game, the LCS (edited by Zander Hollander). It
and the World Series.
picks Chicago to defeat the
There bas been one small con- Phoenix Suns for the second year
cession. For the rest of this decade, in a row in the NBA fmals.
the World Series wiD begin no later
Writers Fred Kerber and Scott
than 7:20 p.m. Eastern time. But Howard.Cpoper explain:
most of America's youngest fans
"Never, ever bet against Jordan.
still won't see the end of those Unless golf is•involved."
games.

UAB dumps Norseman mascot
By JAY REEVES
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) Gimme a U! Gimme ·an A! Gimme
a B! Gimme a politically correct
school mascot!
Complaints have forced the University of Alabama at Birmingham
to sideline the symbol of its athletic
teams, a rough-and-tumble Norse- ·
man who drew fire for being too
mean tcio masculine and too white
"He was - I hate to use th~
word- too Aryan," UAB sports
information director Grant Shingleton said Tuesday.
It was at a January basketball
'arne that officials introduced
'Blaze," a moustached, caucasian
warrior decked out in bright green
with a silver bau!e helmet. His job
was to promote the school's athletic teams, the Blazers.
. ~ut the complaints began pourmg m from students and UAB fans,
and Blaze's career burned out
before football season. There were

no organized protests, just lots of
calls to university offices, plus
some ribbing in the local media.
"Some people objected ...
because it was too white or too
male or too violent or scared liu!e
childr~n," Shingleton said.
.
UmvefSlty spokesman M1ke
Ellis said of~c~ "felt it was ~st
to be respons1~e to~ complatnts
rather than letung the Issue fester.
"I think our main concern was
it w~s a white male figure who
d1dn t represent women on camPI!~
.. . ?r ll!C ethnic m1x on campus,
EUJS S81d.
.
So after spending two years and
$20,000 developmg a mascot, UAB
w1U now replace Blaze w1th ... who
kn~':"s what
It !';II g_oes back ~o t.~e name
Blazer~ Shingleton S81d. How do
you pack a mascot to repres?~~t
·somethmg that IS rnther abstract.

Thursday, September 30,
1993
.

No. 9 Penn St.
(minus 17 112) at Maryland
Nittany Lions lead series 34:1-1
... PENN ST. 44-24.
.
No. 10 Oklahoma
(minus 19) atlowa St.
Sooners are 8-0 at Cyclone Stadium ... OKLAHOMA 45-17.
Duke (plliJ 27 112)
at No. 11 Tenaessee
. Teams have split last ~ix meetangs ... TENNESSEE 44-14.
Southern Cal (plus 1 112)
at No. 12 Arizona
Trojans win defensive struggle
... SOUTHERN CAL 14-13.
Bosto11 Collqe
(plus 7 112) at No. 13 Syracuse
Orangemen have won six
straight over Eagles ... SYRACUSE 24-17.
No. 14 Texas A&amp;M
(miaus 12) at Texas Tech
Aggies often have tough time at
Lubbock ... TEXAS A&amp;M 32-28.
San J011e St. (no line)
·
at No. 15 Washington
Last
week:
17-2
(straight):
9-&amp;
San Jose is 0-4 ... WASHING(spread).
!
TON42-6.
Season:
64-13
(straight):
40-24
Texas El•Paso
:
(plus 38) at No. 11i N. Carolina (spread).

.

·~

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G11orgia Savthern

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29
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Eastern Michigan
Iowa

Miulssippi
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·Nevada
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Nonh Carolina State
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Boston College

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San Jose State
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Virginia Tecl1
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Yale
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Prairie View
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Bullalo U.
FIOJida A &amp; M
Mesa
W!l'slilfn Illinois
Easlern Illinois
Cornell
~Oflh Carolina A &amp; T
• Tenneasee ·ChaUanooga
James Madison
• TennctUM ~lat•

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NW louisiana ·
Montana Stale
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Fordham
Holy Cross
• Brown
Nor1heastern
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MotliiMad State
Jac:kson State
• Mississippi Valley
Cal Stale Chico
Murray Stale
·KnoniUe
Charleston SoultMtrn
San DiegO U
Furman
JacksonviUe State
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15
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17

12

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13
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15
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• Evangel
• Canhage

24
20
35
31

Sl. Cloud
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St. NOfbert

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• Sagklaw Valley
• DePauw

31

26
22

t4E M6seoutl
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24
20
30
27

24
28
29

21
41
22
24
27
30
28

33
24
26
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31
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Wayne stale, Neb .
Westmar
Wheaton

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• Alma
Northwood
Bethlny, Kan .
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WOOiter
Winona State

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North Oakola Stale
" Notth Otkello U.
Olivet , Mic:tl.
Ottawa

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' Hope,

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Aurora
Youngslown
" Weber Statt~
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Ashland
Augustan. , tfl .
Benedict! ne
Elmhurat
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F•rria
G.-and Vallay
Hanover
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28
22

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12

Navr .

Washl~ton Slate
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Western Michigan

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10

T.C.U. ,

ClnctMati

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Alabama·Binninghlm
Appalachian &amp;ale
Au!llin P.ay
Boston U. ·
Cenlral Conn.clici.A
C•n1r•l Florida
Ciladll
Colgate
Connac:licul
Dartmouth
Davlclson

Paso

2Q

34

20
23
24

13

20

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Waal\ington I Jellefson
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' WilMS
• Worcester Tech

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Southern eom.cticul
• M-lhe!Wt
33
Edinb:Jro
28
• d•lilornlt Stat•. Pa.
42
• lock Haven
27
• Splinglleld
23
• Gettyaburg
30
Manllleld
27
Plym.outh
2-4
Colby
32
' Bloomsburg
26
• L.eblnon Valley
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Stlpp«y Rock
34
• Albr~tw
21 · Bethany, W.V.
28
• Bates
3e'"
Oit;kln~e~n , Pa.
37
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34
Cheyney &amp;ale
23
F•nurn
26
Juniata
28
Delaware Yahy
28
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27
35
28
22

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SW Baptist
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Heidelberg
Arkansas Tech
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Northern Colorado
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Tabor
• Hiram
Beth•l. Kan.
Nanhw•llern, iowa
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Concord
East Central Oklahoma
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Win.ton·Salem
Wofford

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20

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40
28

38
27
24

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14

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North Alabama
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• Occidental
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20

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' Nof1hern Arizona
Nonhern Iowa
' Pennsylvania
' Princeton
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• Aichmand
Sam Houston
Samford
• SE Missouri
Sou th Cafolina Stattil
Southam U.
' St. Marys, Calif .
' Tennessee ·Martin
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' Troy
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• vanaerbilt

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·'"' · · · Pomeroy,· Ohio· -.,.

Other Games - Eaat

Abanr, N.'f.
• American lntematioo•l

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Sports briefs
Boxing
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) Florida boxing officials are investigating an accusation of fixed boxing matches, including fights
involving actor-boxer Randall
"Tex" Cobb and former football
player Mark Gastineau.
Don Hazelton, Florida Athletic
Commission executive director, has
been lookinR into allegations
described in Sports Illustrated for
several months and recently turned
the probe to the statewide prosecutor· s office.
Journeyman heavyweight Sonny
Barch told Sl he threw a fight
against Cobb on Sept. 15, 1992, in
Fort Lauderdale. Barch accused
Orlando-based promoter Rick
Parker of arranging that fix and 11
others including several involving·
Gastineau. former New York Jets
lineman.

Football93

INGELS

Todd Smith was among the
leaders early in the race, but suffered a flat tire and had to restart at
the tail. Smith carne ur through tile
pack, but his bid fel short as he
placed third behind Doles and
Goff. Smith's great run placed hi~'!
ahead of Jim Dixon and Rick Blake
of Reedsville.
•
Rocky Davidson led the initi!ll
laps, but lost a wheel early in tiie
race and Morehouse of Newa(k
suffered a flat
Among those suffering flats ·6r
wheel problems were Smith 1
Davidson, Morehouse, Blake, DOD
Ratcliff and Bradley White. Onty
five cars fmished the feature.
••
Paay Sorrell claime the powdir
puff race over Tina Cotterill and
Doris Maynard.
---'
Vinton Raceway will host tl(e
Annual Hog Roast festivities Sunda Oct 3
'
Y·fhose ~ttending are asked Co
bring their own non-alcoholtc
drinks and a complimentary
potluck dish. Admission will be $6
for anyone ovet the age of 10. The
points trophies and cash will lie
awarded after the racing program. :
Also scheduled are microsprints and a Jive band to entertaih
the crowd after the racing program:.
F
'nfi
·
0
·· 38S-%~ :3ss:~· call 61 ~­

·~

The Dally Senllnei-Page-7

Support These
Fine Area
Businesses!

Vinton Raceway results
Although the track was muddy
due to the heavy rains Saturday.
Vinton Raceway Park. ran their
program without a hitch Sunday
afternoon, where Ginny Adlcins,
John Powell, Adrian Doles and
Tony Roush posted wins.
On a track, whllfe good tires and
good traction meant the difference,
Ginny Adkins and Frank Rot~sh
posted heat race wins in the four•
cylinder bombers. Tony Roush and
Donny Yost finished second and
third to Frank Roush, while Delbert
Flora and George Adlcins foUowed
Ginny Adlcins across the stripe.
Reedsville's Rocky Blake, one
of the heat race front runners and
winner of three consecutive reatures, hit the #11 car on the last lap
and was dropped to the rear of the
pack.
Tony Roush, in the T-55,
claimed the feature in the fourcylinder Road Hogs over Blake,
Frank Roush and Joe Smith. In the
four-cylinder Bombers, Ginny
Adkins claimed the win over Middleport's George Adkins, Flora,
Brian Bailey of ·Reedsvjlle, Bert
Flora and Meigs Countian Delbert
Roush.
Wayne Maynard and Ben CotteriU claimed the heat wins in the
eight-cylinder Road Hogs. Maynard bested John Powell and Scou
Williamson, while Cotterill defeated Rick Bishop and Tony Jacks.
CotteriU led most of the feature
event, but broke an axle in turn
four and had to leave the track.
John Powell inherited the lead and
rode his mount to victory over
Williamson, Jacks, Maynard and
CreyPayne.
In the eight-cylinder Bombers,
Rocky ''The Wild Hare" Davidson,
posted a heat win over Adrian
Doles in the "Crazy 8" and Jim
Dixon. Kevin Morehouse of
N~wark, in his first appearance at
the track, best Pomeroy's Todd
Smith in the TNT Racing, T-7 and
Delmas Goff, agent 007.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

,~

.

Miners lost 52-0 to Hawaii last
wetk. .. N. CAROLINA 49-7.
Oreaon (plus 1l 112)
at No. 17 California
Battle of unbeatens ... CAL
FORNIA 31-21.
No. 18 LouisvUie
•
(minus 17 V2) at Pittsburgh '•
Panthers are pitiful
"
LOUISVll.:LE 52-10.
'·
Ohio University
(no line) at No. 21 Virginia .
Bobcats remain winless ... VIR:~
GINIA 48-7.
No.23Auburn
.
(minus 7 112) at Vanderbilt -:
Tigers off to best start sincjl1988 ... AUBURN24-14.
.
No. 24 N. Carolina St.
(plus 1) at Clemsoa
Wolfpack rebounds from loss to.
Nonh Carolina ... N.C, STATEn14.
.
Virginia Tech (plus 2)
at No. 25 W. Virginia
.
Hokies upset Mountaineers .• :
VIRGINIA TECH 21-17.
•

34-10.

... .

..BUFFAL0 .................... 26
N.Y. GIANTS ......... 21
The last time these two teams met, the Bills began a forgettable slreak: their 20-19loss to the Giants in
Tampa early in 1991 was the first of three (or more?) straight Super Bowl defeats .
..CIDCAG0 ................... 23
ATLANTA .............. l9
The Bears have won four straight over the Falcons.dating back to 1985, including a 41 -31 win last year,
Chicago's biggest offensive day of the season. Both clubs are fading in their divisions.
**DALLAS ...................... 30
GREEN BAY.......... 27
An imponant early game for both teams, who last met in '91, the Cowboys winning 20-17. Dallas will
be fresh after a week off and probably mad as hell after spending It contemplating its 1-2 record.
**DENVER ......................21
INDIANAPOLIS ... 14
The most recent Broncos-Colts game was a 27-'1 7 Denver win in '90. Anything can happen with
Indianapolis, but only if the Colts were playing at home would we have the courage to pick, an upset.

DETROIT ......................... 20

••TAMPA BAY " .... 10

MIDDLEPORT
992-5627

When The T'une Comes

See Us For Your 1994

Graduation
Though they both had more weaknesses .than strengths in '92, the Lions won't be wallowing with the
Buccaneers this year. The proof that thenvere moving up was a 38-7Iate-season trouncing.
Announcements.
**KANSAS CITY ........... 24
L.A. RAIDERS ...... 23
Jeff Hostetler seems to be bringing the Raiders to life, which could mean even more trouble for the
Chie~s than they had with L.A . in '92, losing 28-7 after winning 27-7. The AFC West is tight.
NEW ORLEANS .............31
..L.A. RAMS ......... l7
In winning their fifth and sixth straight over the Rams last season,the Saints took a close one, 13-10,
255 Mill St.
Middleport
then handled L.A. easily in December, 37-14, building a 37-0 lead by forcing six turnovers.
992·3345
PIDLADELPJUA ............ 28
••N.Y. JETS ...... :.... 21
In their four game over the past 21 years, the Jets have yet to beat the Eagles. Sure, the Jets can beat the ',~·----------------1
likes of New England, but this game may show whether their upset .o f Miami was a fluke.
SAN DIEGd.-................ 26
**SEA'ITLE ........... l4
The Chargers weren't exactly awesome in their opening 18-.12 win over the Seahawks, needing six
John Carney field goals. With all the new AFC West frrepower, S.D. can't afford to let up here.
..SAN FRANCISC0 ......33
MINNESOTA ......... 27
Driving toward the 49ers' end zone late in the game last December, the Vikings were stopped at S.F.'s
35 and lost a heartbreaker, 20-17. The 49ers have won five of the last six in this series.
WASHINGTON .............. 27
UMJAMI ............... 24
(Monday)
A Redslcins win would be something of an upset; this is the Mong time for Mark Rypien to be absent
from the Washington lineup. The 'Skins were 42-20 winn'ers the last time they met Miami, In '90.

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�Thursday, September 30, 1993

·.

by Bob Hoeflich
As I mcmioned the other day,
there are still some good people

around.
•
:
:
:

'·

The Daily Sentinel

By
The
Bend
.

Beat of the Bend...

I would have my head in the
sand if I also didn 'I acknowledge
that there are also some bad ones.
Margaret Bailey of Pomeroy
reports that every. year since 1956
she had made a gmve blanket during the Christmas season for her
son. Billy. feeling that was the least
she could do for her lost child. For
the past two years, her labors of
love have been stolen from the
grave at. Beech Grove Cemetery.
The other day, Margaret visited the
grave site and found that flowers
placed there on Memorial Day had
been removed.
Whoever said it takes all kinds,
was absolutely correct.

her 98th birthday on October 5.
Mrs. Fischer gets along quite well
at her home with a linle assistance,
She resides on Morning Star Road,
Racine, and you may send cards
there. She loves hearing from you
folks .
The Emergency..,.gent Care Center at Veterans Memorial Hospital
is desperate for sm~ll new t~ys
which are given to children commg
into the center. The toys seems to
reduce some of the traumatic experience that the youngsters ~Ot~e­
times undergo. Everyone w1shmg
to help out can leave ,their ~~na­
tions with the Women s Auxthary
in the hospital lobby.

Just because Locomotion, the
Pomeroy teen center, has closed
Thanks to you readers who are don't give up on that excellent
helping Beth A. Wagner, 1316 haunted house which was a HalWest Mulberry SL, Lancaster, Ohio loween season feature at the spot.
All of the costuming, lighting
43130, dig up information on her
genealogy. Beth is delighted that so and props ~nvolved in th.e Locomofar she has heard from four readers tion display has been gtven to the
and is getting excellent !nforma- Southern Junior High Boosters.
tion. If you, too, are farntliar wtth Mrs. Rella Day of Minersville,
Beth's ancestors, drop her a line.
active with the boosters, reports
that_plans are moving ahead for
The Big Bend Stemwheeler Fes- staging the haunted house in a new
tival Committee has received sev- location. Boosters are in the proeral comments that a display of cess of locating a suitable building
fueworks on the evening of Satur- and checking out other details
day, Oct. 9, would go well to wrap involved. The haunted house is
quite a drawing card and I feel conup the festival.
The committee likes the idea but fident that it will be continued.
is handicapped by the lack of funds
The Clinton heallh care plans
for such a display. If any individual business or organization would seems to be a center of allention
like to kick in a donation so that the these days. I hope you're getting
fireworks· can be a feature, dona- more out of the reports than I am.
tions can be' sent to the committee So far, I'm batting zero. However;
at P.O. Box 541, Pomeroy. If the when I hear the term "rationing"
·. display does materialize, the fire- used in discussing health care, it
. w,orks will probably be set off at scares me. I guess all .we can do
until we get the real lowdown is to
: the levy across from Pomeroy.
keep smiling.
Mrs. Susie M. Fischer will mark .

~-•

An open bridal shower was held
• recently honoring Angela Goody,
• bnde-clect of Michael Mayer, in
the Trinity Church social room.
Hostesses were . Mina Swisher,
·· Lesley Carr, and Beth Mayer .
Games were played and prizes
awarded 'to Irene Bailey, Martha
Strub!~ Marie Hauck; and Jane
Walton. The social hall was decorated in mauve and flowers fer the
· occasion were provided by Art and
. 'Beulah Strauss and Pat Holter.
; , Attending were Donna Frazier,
; mother of the bride-elect, Lindh.,
Mayer, mother of the prospective
·,groom. Lois Burt, Edna Slusher,
:·.Irene Bailey, Scottie Hayes, Lorena
, .. Arnold, Evelyn Lanning, Dottie

Thursday, September 30, 1993

Page-8

Meigs retired senior _volunteers .honored
Enrolled volunteers in the Meigs Beegle, C. E. Blakeslee, Marjorie ·
Retired Senior Volunteer Program Brewer, Teresa Byer, Ora Carsey,
(RSVP) were honored for their Garnet Ervine, Lula Hampton, Kercommunity achievements of the mit McElroy, Nan Moore and Mae
ast ear at the 20th annual Weber.
·
~·v Y recognition dinner held . Fifteen year awards were preat ~e~gs Multipurpose Senior sented to Florence Adams, Anna
Rose Fitch and Delmas Kerns. .
Center.
Special recognition was given
Ten year honorees recogmzed
to the 10 volunteers who have were Clara Conroy, Helen Fisher,
remained active throughout the Jackie Hildebrand, Mary Loudner,
twenty years. T~ e y are, Lore Ita

Marilyn Powell, Lillie Randolph: grams in Oh.to. II has re!llamed a
Eva Robson and Octa.Ward.
vttal educauo~al expenence for
The Rettre&lt;! Se.ntor Volumeer Metgs C?unly s ftfth grade .stuProgram ":'as ~ntuated m 1973, dents . Ahce Wolfe, RSVP Dt~ecunder thy direcnon of Pearl :Welker tor. states the program has provtded
Cushner, and has rematned a 70,000 hours of volunteer servtce
slfllng, integral pan of the Met.gs over the past year by volunteers
Senior Center a_nd th~ commumty willing to share ume and tale~t
at large. RSVP s Yest~ryear Pro- wnh thetr netghbor, non-profll
gram was recognized m 1989 by agencies •. schools and commumty
Governor Rkhard Celeste as one of organtzations .
the top ten .mter_ge_nerauonal pro-

'Let Justice Roll Down Like Waters' essay contest theme _
Ohio oun ·
Je
.10 Southeastern u h 1~ ar! ~fed
gm~es.~ ~i:s for the 1993
~ su8 1 m~. en Oh ' o Peace Prize
J~ lac t~n he~ and principals
.
og~·n· ~e receiving inform 15
. coun .es
.
·

°

n:tanon ~d ms~~~~~~o~.~~T~~:
s~on on ts year .
' ,
uce Roii .Down Like wa:~ihe Old
The theme, a qu~tr
d
Tes=nt eophekn °}' washu57.I
1
by
n Utht;!
g ~· ~d ts as

~h~~~na f~rf:~onlfo~~g r~lev;;ce
.
·.
m our soctety.

Original poems•..stories, essays,
drawings, and mustc by area youth
will be submitted to a selection
commiuee which will choose 10
entries for publication in the
antho~ogy. Each of the. ten au.thors
or arusts whose work ts published
win b~ awarded $50 and will be
recogmzed at an awards ceremony
on Dec. 5,1993.
This is the 13th year for this
program, which was begun by the
Athens Friends Meeting and is now
adminstered by the Appalachian
Peace and Justice Network. Every· ·

one can participate by_ encouraging
young people 10 subm11 entnes and
by subscribing 10 the anthology.
Subscriptions are $10 for individilals and $50 for organizations. .
Enties and subscriptions should
.

.
I~ an 7ffort to provtde our readershtp With current news, the GalliJ?OiiS Daily Tribune. and Sentinel
wdl not accept weddings after 60
days from the date ~f the event
All club meeungs and other
news articles in the society, section

Hauck, Julie Spaun, Karen Morris,
Cherie Williarnsonlutd Caitlin. and
Martha Snuble.
Those unable to attend but sending gifts were Raymond and Judy
Jewell, Jerry and Susan Well and
family , Theresa Slater, Chester and
Annie Knight, Deloris Powell,
Orella Hysell, Sarah Gibbs, Maida
Mora, Cinda Harris, Dorothy Hendricks, Art and Beulah Strauss,
Robert and Delores Burton, Maye
Mora, Chuck and Nancy Jo Saltz
and family, Becky Thom(ison, Judy
Caruthers, Sharon Stewart, Carla
Carter, Vicki Carter, Bob and
Wanda Fetty, and Walter and Mary
Grueser.

PubliC Notice

Mf •d .. bide.
don' on Tuoadoy, November
_ ~ order ollho Baerd ol . 2, 1993 at 1:00 p.m. In tho

FOR SALE

The Board of T...,.IMo of
Orange Townahlp, Melp
Co'ointy, Ohio, ok lor • •
by ooalod bid one
International lnduatr a
Loader, Model 2424. S.rlel
n...,ber~732.
•
Sealed bide will be .
accepted until October t,
tea at 7:30p.m. when bide
will bo opened ot tho
r.guler meotlng.
Tho loadot' wl be aold •a
lo" with no worrondeo or
au.aront101 oxprooood or
flll!'lllcl
·
Tho Boord of TruoiMo of
.Orongo Townohlp rooorvo
tho right to waive ony .
lrrogulorllloo ond/or
lnlormollUoo ond to reject

I' 1

Trulloea ol Orange
Townohlp.
To view the !older prior to
the mMiing conboat one of
the following truot..o:
Roger Ritchie, Jamoo
Wotaon, AobO!t Morcinko.
PatrldaColowoy, Clerk
-Guthrie Rood
Coolvl..; Ohio 45723
(t) 26, 27, 28, 2t, 30, (tO) I,
3, 4. 5. I. 10 !p

bll Notl

PU C
C8
pUBUC NOnCE ·
Public Notice lo hetoby
glvon to tho rotldonta of
Olivo Townohlp that tho
Olivo Townohlp Zoning
Commllllon will hold 1
Public Hoorlng on tho
Propoood zoning Rooolu-.

D. Krlooo, 16010 S.R. t 24 ,

Roedoville, Oh. 45772.
Olivo Townohip Fire Sllltion, (9) 30,11C
R-vllle, Oh. lor tho pt~r· - - - - - - -pooo o1 hearing and conolciPublic Notice
oring public ~ommont on
tho propoood rooolutlan,
The Vlllogo of Pomeroy
and following _will hold . a deolreo to recolvo ouled
Rogulor mooting of tho bldo 11 tho Ctork'o office.
cammloolon. Prior to tho 320 Eaol lhln Street ,
hoo1lng, tho public ' moy Pomeroy, Ohio lor the
review coploo of tho pro- property IOCIIted In tho C. W.
poood rooolutlon ot tho Dobney'o Addhlon to the
Commlooion'o
Rogulor low.n ol Pomeroy, Lot 148.
meeting on Tueodoy, Octo- Bide moy be oubmlllod until
· ber tt, 19113 ot 8:00 p.m . .at 12:00PM EST on October 4,
tho Olivo Townohlp Fire 1993. Tho Vlllogo rooorvoo
Station In Reedovillo, Oh. the right to reject ony or oil
Coploo moy oloo be . bldo.
requooted prior to the hoor•
Bruce J. Reed,
lng by contacting tho folMayor
lowing oflicoro ol tho comKathy Hysell,
mlaalon: Ellen Shelburne,
Clerk
Rl. 1, Reedovlllo, 45772 or 19) 24, 29

&lt;

v'

Wl71 7HE

l
1

must be submitted within 30 days
of occurrence All birthdays must
be submitted ~ithin 42 days of the
occurence.
All material submiited for publication is subject to editting.

EROY

•!

••'

INCREDIBLE PURC

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•
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20% OFF

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Here is a selection of our very best. The fine
detail is difficult to show. Visit us. We'll find the right
cross at the right price.

STERNWHEEL BOAT

FABRIC SHOP

110

WEST MAIN

992-2284

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METAL
STORAGE CABINETS
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Wardrobes,Utility Cabinets, China
Cabinets, .Base Cabinets
REG. $139.00 TO $259.00

510910 5

209
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l'",

.. Vinyl Floor
·-...
-.- Covering
,

LLOYD /FLANDERS

Highback
Spring Base

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RUTLAND FURNITURE CO
742-2211
Four Miles off St. Rt. 7 on St. Rt. 124 .

1-800-837-8217
In Downtown Rutland

SS99S

2 Year Warranty

I

STERNWHEEL BOAT TICKETS ON SALE

992-2054

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3 DAYS ONLY FRIDAY
• SATURDAY • MONDAY
•

NOW

,.;~,~~~" c€Jtofof[l ~I!~~

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WATCHES

IHAND PAINTED PORaLAJN JEWELRY AI Under 52501 1

NEW MERCHANDISE
ARRIVING DAILY

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Property transfers

$2195

FROM

POMEROY

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The Rutland Church of the Seminary, with a concentration in
Nazarene will host Steven and theology and missiology. He was
Deborah Hofferbert Thursday at 7 ordained in July 1985 at the Southp.m. and invites the public to west Indiana District Assembly.
Mrs. Hofferbert received the B.S.
attend.
Steven and Deborah Hofferber! degree in music education from
were appointed as missionaries for Trevecca Nazarene College m
the Church of the Nazarene tn Nashville, Tenn.
The Hofferberts were in full1985. Since 1986 they have served
on the Brazil South Council, teach- time ministry from 1973 until their
ing in the seminary in Campinas, appOintment as missionaries. They
Sao Paulo (SIBIN) and directing hav e served Churches of the
the Theological Education by Nazarene in Indiana, Michigan and
Extension program (ffiiN). ·
Missouri.
.
The Hofferberts have two chilRev. Hofferber! received the
· A.B. degree from Olivet Nazarene dren: Daniel Steven, 12, and Sheri
· College in 1973. He also stud1ed . An n, 7. I
: four years at Nazarene Theological

BIG BEND 5TlRNWHEEL

CHARMS

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Church of the Nazarene
to host guest speakers

Ray Barber, parcel, to Nicky
: Ray Barber, Olive.
Ivan L. Wood and Evelyn
: Wood Agree &amp; Ease., to Columbia
. Gas of Ohio, Inc. ad Columbia Gas
· Transmission Cmp., Chester.
:
Robert ·E. Landers and Margaret
: A. Landers, lot, to Charles E.
- Wheeler and Martha Kay Wheeler,
: Pomeroy Village.
· James H. Smith and Faye H.
- Smith. lot 12, 1.2A, to, Larry L.
. Haase an' . enna Haase, Sutton.
· Jack A. Morgan, Sr., Trustee,
: Wanda M. Morgan, Trustee, Jack
A. Morgan, Sr. and Wanda M.
Morgan Family Tf1JSI, parcels, to,

Public Notice

.

..

Terry L. Downard, Bedford.
Violet Millhone, parcel, to Jerry
R. Bibbee, Olive.
.
Patrick L. Lawson and Juhe
Lawson, tracts, to Austin .Glen
Lawson. Columbia.
Four Inc., parcels, to Albert R.
DeWeese, Letart.
Elizabeth McConnaughey and
David C. McConnaughey, parcels,
to Janice Lochary and Margaret
Jcan McDonald, Bedford.
D.C. Bauman aka Deleth C,
dec'd, cert. of trans., to Edna Bauman, Olive.
Vemeda Harting affid, to Vena
v. Marcinko, Meigs.

Public Notice

PUBUC NOnCE
IHDUITIIAL LOADER

'

be sent .bY 0~1. 31, 1993, to
Appalachtan Ohto Peace Prize, 18
N. College, Athens OH 45701. For
more information call Karen Affeld
of the Appalachian Peace and J~slice Network at 592-2608.
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News polzcy

Musser, Debbie Haptonstall and
Garrell, Dorothy Sheets, Mary
Kautz, Evelyn Strauss, Donna Carr,
Barbara Riggs, Lauren Adkins.
Pauline Mayer, April
Nazarewycz, Ila DarneD, Charlene
Slater, Martha Slater, ~orma Jew-.
ell, Debbie Gilkey, Kelly Gilkey,
Brooke WiUiarns, Stacy Basham,
Sheila McKinney, Marge Leonard,
Bernice Riffle, Carol Kennedy, Jo
Ann Wild111an, Mildred Ward,
Dianne Hawley, Gay Perrin, Jeanie
Nease, Pat Holter.
Alice Globakar, Barbara Hudson, Ruth Durst, Kristi Durst, Carolyn Korn, Shannon Korn, Jane
Walton, Linda Darnell, Melissa
Darnell, Dorothy Reeves, Marie

The Dally Sentinel-Page-9

Public Notice

Bridal shower held for Angela Goody

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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1S Patterns
12Ft. Wide

,,tt\~\. s4!?
Yd.

Chairs

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En4tF

CIIIHUtl

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ANDERSON'S
DOWNTOWN POMEROY

s79QO

Fall &amp;Holiday Fashions
ARE NOW IN AT
BUTTONS &amp; BOWS

YOUR PROFESSIONAL JEWELER

FANTASTIC FALL
SAVINGS
ALL DRESS FLATS

OVER 300 DRESSES IN STOCK

25%oFF .

•

Sizes Newborn to .14•

NNIE~

BOYS DRESS SHIRTS &amp; PANTS
In Beautiful Fall Colors
Christmas Outfits for Little Ones
Just Arrivedf

NEW!
TURTLE FUR COATS &amp;
ACCESSORIES NOW AVAILABLE
BAND UNIFORMS DRYCLEINED
FOR •s.so

BUTTONS &amp; BOWS
100 E. Main

992·5177

,;

Pomeroy

IMATCHING BOWS 1f2 PRICE I
CHAPMAN SHOE·S
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POMEROY'S QUALITY SHOE STORE

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�-:.Thursday, September 30, 1993

Thursday, September 30, 1~

Poineroy-Middlepc)rt, Ohio

Counseling could help make situation livable -;
~Ann Loden: My brolher

~ hill enchanlina wife

from
dtff~rent ra_ces, culture~ ~nd
relJa!ons. Unlit ~ ye~r. their lives
consisled ol
work schedules,
•. ne~er-en,dt'!B. parade . of my
Slslcr·m-law.s YlSltinB relatives, and
countless lrips 1 broad to
her
.
see
family.
A visi~ in their borne could get
baked chtcken_ for break~ast and
pancakes f~ dinner. Nothmg e~er
went ICOOrdin_g to schedule. Despue
mooeyandchild.gre)XllbJems,_thcy
managed to ~ve the sweetest,
best·bellaved child I know.
Two slates away, our parents ale,
slept. wodted, thought and prayed
the "right" way. Although th~y
o~ly, love my !"'other ·and ht·s
family, they couldn t make any sense
of the way they lived.
Last year,, bocb ~y parents and
my_ brothers famtly devel~ped
:fnous money lrouble .. My stster·
1h-law suggested they hve ~ether
the way her people do. Ignonng my
protests,_they sold their homes, paid
off thetr debts, rented a place
toBether ~ s~ house hunfi!Jg.
. Almost tmmedtately,
obVIous
hit the fan. My methodical parents
and my capri~ious bro~er lire in
conslallt confliCt. My S_!Ster·t~-~~
refuses 10 ~ from a sht;trt vtStt
t~ her famtly . The chtld has
mghtmares and tantrums. I have
propose_d that they shop for a
two-family house, and my. brother
~- a~. but the suggestion of a
dividing wall bas deeply hurt and
lie

cr:rauc

!he

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O'Brien, Megan Clark, and Leslie Qualls; sec·
ond row, Erin Warner, Heather Hudson, Dawn
Hockman Jennifer Fink and Sarah Anderson;
and third ~ow, Nilkki Bell, Tabalba Swearingen,
Annie f'ink, Cindi Roush, and Tara Erwin. In
tbe corps but not pictured are Megan Evans and
Katie Saunders.

FLAG CORPS WINNERS • Tbe Meigs High
Scbool marching band flag corps not only took
nrst place in their class or competition at the
Zanesville band competition held Saturday but
were also the overall winners for the day. DisplayiDI their trophies here are the nag corps
members, left to right, front, Arnie Elliott, Joy

~=~~tw:C ~~~=

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS

"1993, LosAncd..
Timet Synd.late
C•nton Syndlcot&lt;''
insulted our parents. My brocber
feels guilty ancl wonies about his
marriage and child. It's a mess.
Ann,plessewarnyourlt8delstbat
any decision 10 live together must
be based on compatibility ·- not
wishful thinking. Wam lhem that
good intentions cannot overcome
ethnic differences and bad
chemisuy... STANHOPE, NJ.
DEAR STANHOPE: "Familiarity
breeds contempt" is the adage that
comes to mind. While this is not
always the case, it happens oflerl
enough 10 mention.
.Since the economics in this
instance do not bode weD for a quick
solution (separation), perhaps
counseling, especially for the child,
could help make the situation
livable. Plesse suggest iL
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Dear Ann Landers: I've consid·
ered writing you for many years on
various subjects but never got around
to iL Something my husband said
last night prompted me to fmally tell
you bow much fve enjoyed reading
your column each· evening just
before retiring.
' As usual, "Joe" was watching the
news on TV, and I was reading the

of different wives who approved or
disapproved of the niclmames !heir
husbands called lhem. I have always'
called my husband "darling• or
"sweetheart.• Although be lovcs~~~e
and is a wonderful husblnd and
falher, he bas never WICII terms of
endearment.
•
After 16 fabulous years of
marriage, I realize tbil is just bis
way, and my feelings don't get
Nevertheless, efler reading your
column, I decided 10 try one iiulre
time. I asked him, "Why don't )'!lu
e - call me by a pet IIMie?" HiJ
rcsponsc was immediale ·- "I lOve
yOu, Lassie..
•
We held hands and laughed
we fmally feU asleep. _ LEARN·
lNG TO LEAVE WEU. ENOUGH
ALONE
DEA~ LEARNING: Whati a
darling man you have! 1 hope Y!lll
twoenjoymanymorcfabulousyelrs
toBether. A letter like youn is 8 rtaJ
upper
,
of the Day: The rooster nUty
crow but it's the hen that delivers
the g~.
1
Is life passing yoM by? wan~! to
improve yow social .sldlls? Wri~for
Ann Lt:uukrs' MW boolckt, "HOM/, to

youths involvement with the juvenile coun and maintain them in
their families, DeWine said.
The program will use interactive
video programs to train families 10
effectively address problems
through role playing and creative
problem solving.
The agencies to participate in
the grant are Hocking Valley Community Residential Center, and the
Juvenile Courts of Athens County,
Meigs County, Fairfield County.
Lawrence County, Pike County,

fong, and Chad Molden; second row, Eric Pat·
terson, Jamie Williamson, Cassie Hubbard,
Aimee Lemley, and Shawn Fife; and third row,
Jared Stewart, Amanda Well, Ryan Baker,
Todd Perry, Ryan Rowe, and Dorothy Leifheit.

PERCUSSION FIRST PLACE WINNERS •
In the Zanesville Bonanza of Bands the Meigs
High School Band took rorst place in the percus·
sion competition in their category. Making up
the section are left to right, front, Mike Wilfong,
Alison Gerlach, Amanda Musser, Melissa Wil·

A potluck supper preceded the
recent meeting of the Friendly Circle of the Trinity Church attended
by 15' members and a guest,
Pauline Mayer.
The program was presented by
Maidie Mora. Her topic was "Our
Growing Heritage" from Psalm 16
verses five and six. She pointed out
that Labor Day and Election Day
. are important llays of our heritage.
She read an article written by a
woman about her idea of heritage.
Heritage is handed down to us from

the past and grows. She said we
must give our heritage a place of
honor in our hearts. The prograni
was closed in prayer.
, The offering was taken and
Mora gave the offeratory prayer.
The business meeting was
opened by· Pr(lsident Gay Perrin
who asked that everyone keep the
"Second Harvest" in mind.
Reports were made on visitation
to the ·sick and shut-in. It was
decided to keep this as a project of
the circle.

Compiled by:
Emmogene Holstein Congo
Recorder, Meigs County, Obio
Marilyn S. Burke, entry, to
Michael T. Burke, Orange/Chester.
Michael T. Burke, parcels, to
Alvin Tripp and Barbara Tripp,
Orange/Chester.
Jack Spires, lots, to Charles E.
Wheeler and Martha Kay Wheeler,
Middleport Village.
Evelyn C. aka Evelyn B.
Strnuss, lot, to Michael C. KeMedy
and Carrie A. Kennedy, Pomeroy

Village.
George Brickles, 1 1/2 A, to
Donna M. Cheadle and Jim T. Farris, Scipio.
Tiny Moore, parcels, 10 Danny
E. Grueser and Deborah L.
Grueser, Beford.
Clarence J. Stevens, dec'd, cert
of trans., to Agnes R Stevens,
Salem.
Clarence R Stevens, dec'd,
affid, to Agnes R Stevens, Rutland.
Robert L. Rudolph and Esther
C. Rudolph, parcels, to David Alan

Rudolph and Mary Camille
Rudolph, Olive/Orange.
Roy L Holter and Patricia T.
Holter, right of way, to, Tuppers
Plains • Chester Water District,
Chester.
Thomas Eugene Schwab, by
trustees and Margaret L StorySchwab, by trustees, 112.08 A, 1/4
inL to, Steven Lewis Story and
James David Story, Bedford.
John Junior Smith and Anna
Lee Smith, Tracts, to Wheeler Cle·
venger Oil, Pomeroy Village.
Harold A. Rainer and Blondena

To place an ad

Call992-2156
MoN. thru FRI. 8.t.M.-5P.M •• SAT.8-12
CLOSED SUNDo\Y

POLICIES
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"Me? Become a foster parent?
No Way!"
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.

nderful For
Weekends Or
Workdays
Superbly crafted Oxford in buttery soft leather is prized for ·
ns lasting good looks and oulstandmg comfort Three-eyelet
tie has Dri -lex lining to wick away moisture
and keep your foot fresh and dry. Shock
absorbin g. mini-lug bottom provides
traction and support .
BRIAR

•Black
•Brown

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.

~-

C.,d of Thank.
Happy Ad.
In MCJnoriam
Yard Sale.
• A duJifiecl adw:rlilement placed in the The DaUy Serilinel
(except Clauifaed. DUplay, Butineu Card or l.q;al
Noticu) wUlallo appear i.o lhe Point Pleuanl Regiller and
the GaUipolil Daily Tribune, reachin« over 18,000 honlu

1
CLARK'S JEWELRY
We buy old Gold :
Class Ring, Wedding Rings,
Chains, Bracelets, Watches any
cond~ion Highest Prices Paid
Clark's Jewelry Pomeroy

246 N. 4th Avenue ·

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Help us make the most important
investment we can- our children! Call now
at 992-2117 for information.

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lage.

Richard Michael Young agd
Linda A. Young, parcel, to, Patrici~
J. Robinson aka Patricia J. Halley,
Salisbury.

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A tetanua booatar ia recommended every 10 yeera. lmmunlzatton'la
wlde•pread, but people over SO may be under-protactad; tblly
represent about 70 percent of all caae• of the d l - , which can&lt;tie
fatal.
"'·
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A Harvard analyala of clinical •tudlea lndleatu that atopp!Rg
amoking can· reduce heart attack rl•k by 50 to 70 percent Ellercllli~g
raducea rlak by 45 percent; maintaining ideal weight lower• h b'f' f5
percent.
'

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The latest word on caffeine and pregnancy; three cupa of coffee' 1
day are safe, a lederal study declared.
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Poatmenopau•al women •hould lncreaae their milk Intake In wtnter.
.They need the vitamin D to protect their bene• when there'a ~~·
•un•hlne, 1 etudy at Tuft• Unlver•lty In Boeton found. Vltjlm~n
•upplements a111 helpful, to.

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N. Second Ave.

992·5627

CHESTER ELEMEr~TAF~Y
FALL CARNIVAL SAT. OCT. 2
DINNER SERVED 5-6 P.M.
DOOR PRIZES, GAMES. BINGO,
&amp; HAUNTED HOUSE 6·8 P.M.
FUN FOR EVERYONE

'

Fred Rider and Verdi Ridet,
3.8945A, parcel, to Don R..
Starkey, Sutton.
'
Robert E. Landers and Mar~t
A. Landers, IOOA lot #306, to
Harley R McDonald, Pomeroy ViJ.. -:

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sa

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·111. H2·IHI
llrvlle ••4 u;. OM.

IOOp.m. Thwsday
1:00 p.m. Friday

RATES •

D•ys

Words Rote

1
3
6
10

Over 15 Words
$4.1)0
$ .20
. $6.00
$ .30
$9.00
$ .42
$13.00
$ .60

15

15
15
15

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loP1lintlrm Servlctl
Interior &amp; Exterior
Paint Mobile t:t_olmelll
and Alurrilnum Siding
loPc1wer Washing
fill EIIIIIAJEI
507M, lltlaJ 1Wiel4.

NOTICE OF INTENT TO
, · RELEASE FUNDS
D•"": Soplilmblr 23, 11183
•
Buck.,-• HIIIHiocklnll
Volley
Reatonal 0... Dtalrlct
Aouta1, Box ztl-0
Marietta, Ohio 45750
•.. ·.~ •II lntareotad
!;: Aganaleo, Groupe, ond
i- Peraona:
:- On or about October 15,
li' 111113
BH-HVRDD will
t: rolea~• rovotvlna loon lund
I! monlao for th.o tollowlng
project
Chlpm.,'o FIMCI Store
345&amp;2 SA 124, RuUand

~"'

Purch.oeelnv.,tory

to;

II haa been determined
r,, lhet ouch requut lor
~ rei•••• ot lunda witt not
cQnotltuta an octlon
~· 'liltecttna the quality of the

t•

", ~·n environment •nd
~ 8Ccordlngly BH-HVRDD hat

&lt;; decided not to prapora on
:1
Environmental Impact
+,: -'l$(etemant under the

t

Mtltlonol Environmental

b,licy Act of 11161 (P.L 11·
180).

An Environmental Revlow
Record r•a•rdlng the
-;pn~poud project hll b"n
~ _ . by BH-HYRDD which
•' ·document•
the
•: 'environmental review of the
;• project The Envlronmanttt
•! Review Record I• on lilt II
• 1 . the •bove •ddr••• •nd

a
:•

between the hours of 1:30

·: e.m. ond 4:30 p.m.
'•
All lnteraetad •ll"nclao,
:: .lroupa

and

{)•reon•

" · ttlaagra'elng with th •
;. • ~clalon are lnvllad to

.·:.

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Public Notice
•ubmit written commenta

Limestone

Dirt

lor conaiderotion by BH·
HVRDD to'Routa 1, Box 2111D, Marietta, OH 45750. Such
written commenll ahould
be received at the ocldr••
specified on or before

October, 14, 1993.
All ouch comment• 10
received will be conoidered
and BH·HVRDD will not
relo111 fund• on the
propaoed project prior to
the dote apecllied In lhe
proceeding oentenc:e.
Vijay S. Gedda
Planning Coordinolor
(9) 2911c
Public Notice
Tho VIllage of Roclne Ia
eccepllng sealed bids lor
the replacement of the roof
on tho Flrehouoe Annox
located el Third and VIne
Streelln Roclna, Ohio.
All bids must be received
by the Clerk prior to 4:00
p.m. on Monday, 4 October,
1993. Bide wlll be opened "
7:00 p.m. on 4 October at
tha Regular council Meeting
at Star Mitt Park. Council
reoerves lhe right to reject
any and all bids.
Speclllcotlono_ may be
obtained from Carolyn L.
Powell, 527 Filth St, Box
375, Racine, Ohio 45771.
Ph. (614) t49·2485, 949·
2520, 949-2920.
.Carolyn L Powell
C!erk/Treaourer
Vlllage ol Racine, Ohio
(9) 12, 22, 29; 3TC

--------------1 . Card ol Thanks

••

t·

I am so grat,ful to have the
opportunity to thank all m~
friends in Meigs County for
your prayers, love, gifts and
kindness during my recent
illness and recovery.
Beth and Don Stivers

Church 81, B-11.
Oryor, MlcrawovoL Bod.

room Sutle, Table/Chairt, ~uml­

turo, Bronc! Clcthl!&gt;g,

~

a.,..., CI'I.H.I, Toya, Band Saw.
4 Family Yord Solo:

lope

30th,
So«h

Hubblrd Avonuo, Koneugo,
Frl, Sot, Ulllo B~ Of
EwOO}Ihlngt
41

OH,

I Family: Gar~~p Sale, H Hilda
Drive, Frklly, Slturday, 8-5, End
Ta-. Coffoo
Sola,
Chelr, Home ln1ertor, Complete
Awon Capo Cod Sot.

T-.

We have a large otock ol oeveral name brand tire• and
II we don't have, we oan gel iL
OUR NEWEST LOCATION IN MASON, W. VA. IS
OPERATED BY CHRIS NEAL.

Gravel
992-7878

Public Notice

538 Unwood. Rlo Gnondo, Oc·
tobor lot A1M1 2nd, 1-4 P.M.
Colle, Mfec. HouMho&amp;d •ems,

Toyo.

Aero.. From Addbil'- Sehool,
111, 2nd, Ruga, Top, Nlca
Clolhlng, Helloween CoMuiMa,
Yord C.olts, Many Othor H.,..!

......

7f1/1roo.

8-&amp;-tln

All Yenl $olol Mull 8o Pold In
Advonco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
tho •r bofl&gt;ra tho od II ta run.
S..ndoy odltlon • 2:00 p.m.
Friday, llondoy od~lon • 2:00
p.n'l. Saturday.

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

LINDA'S
PAINTING

••

INTERIOR

n~~~plng

(mcmltl~r

319041.e••l•t

CnekRo..
•••teport, Ollio

614-992·7144

CARPENTER SERVICE

Painting
(FREE ESniiATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

.t.Elltarlor

992-6215
Pomaroy, Ohio
t-111-f2.1tl

Blll'a Tlnl

EXCAVATING

Richard Moore
hi• joined our ltaff.
Richerd COIIIH to Ul

BULLDOZ!'.~ 1 ~CKHOE
ond TRA~ WORK

AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,

with 12 yre.

HOllE SITES and
TRAILER SITES.

experience at
Pomeroy Horne &amp;
Auto end C&amp;A Auto
Come Vlelt Us.

- DRI~~~=r'rLi.Eo
LIIIESTONE-TRUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

992·3838
R&amp;C EICAVATING
BUlLDOZING

Comtr ML Tabor, K..,.rone
Road, Vinton, Fridliy ..a.furday,

Gluawart, Uvtng Room Suite,
lllny llemo From JA'o - .

LANES

~

(Former Mason Lanes)
3rd and Pomeroy StrHIS

Mason, WY
13041 773·5585

11121113/1 mo.

WICK'S
SERVICE

36970 Ball Run RDGCI .

Ocl- 2nd, From 1.,'1, In c.n.

WINTER HOURS
Sun.-Thurs.4-10 pm
Fri. &amp; Sat., 4 pm·? .

,., llllilg,.,.,., lllllllowli!O

GRAVEL, SAND,
LIMESTONE,-TOP SOIL
I FILL DIRT

Friday 1ol $olUidoy 2nd, 3
Family; inlanto To 3 Todtl••
Adutt, Mlac, 1· UUa On O.orgt't
Crnk 011 Of Bullavlllo.
Friday, Saturdoy, W, 242"Mig.
nollo CBohlnd Cl,.,..) Toyo,
Misc.

Announcements

Friday, Saturdoy,

W,

2 Mlln

Out Routt 218, From Aoult 7. Up
On HUI On Alaht MatomHy

-992-3470

Clolhn, Baby Clothoe.- Home
Including: Strotlo!j Wolkor, Car·

3 Announcements

rltf'l,

OWNER: Jtft Wlcbnl11111

Ceiling

MIR,

C~ttwt,

F - In Chriol Chlfltlln ShOoo.
·
DotingSiMiol
- · "Holplng
ChrloI
;Cia=--:-:-=:-.
"7:--:-1--=-2n-:•--:-t--:-5
1~.21 lion
find Chriollon
·-·-. .
Ponnon:"'ean ~-t00.9:J0.7ml. 1218 To - .... 1111 Lon on
Bladon AOid, 111 Howo" Rlghl,
Tokon from my homo Sl!ll 21, 33111.5 Tlrn; 1 lJig 15" &lt;ihromo
- 1800 su- Dollarw, Hl - · · 15- Tl,.., Sl•oo SrowhHo gold woddlng ringo lomo; 4Ton Hoot Pump With Air,
wtdllrnonc:te
Md
nlntendo Dlshwuher; Household ltemt;
g-.
If plono call 304- Clolhn, Womono, ·llodtum
372·2445.
Mono 30·XL, Bnya 8o10;CJirlo, In~

tiAULING

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL, TOPSOIL
&amp;COAL_

lant.

4

.

Giveaway

Reasonable Rates

Joe N. Sayre

SAYRE ·TRUCKING

2 Doge: 1 F-lo, 1 Malo.
F.....le: 112 Chaw , 112 a.rman

ShophMd; Malo: 112 Chow, 112
Amorlcln Eoklmo, 114-251-1117,
81M46-3647.

614-742-2138
3141931 mo.

2 FM\.1 .. Khtlftl Free To Good
HolM. 1 Uatrt Gray,1 Charcoal
With Whho Strlpoo, 8 Wook Old,
6~2318 .

2

Whho Mollo, 1 Wh~e fog'!~
llttor Tral.-.d,

Kilton'!..

Homo unty, 11&lt;1-:aes.am.

3 klttono l mother cat 304-7735413.
4 pupplu, 2 11\1 .. &amp; 2 tamale,

614-192·11134.
8 Wootc Otd Puoo/01 Shephard,
Collie, Huoky "lllkod, 814-448-

BILl:. SLACK

01161.

U.rgo 2 Family Solo: Boby,
BoYo. Mat•rlly, Clothing,
Slave, O.k, Auto Plr1t, OCt
111, 1M, Oc:l 2nd 8-4, Brick
School AOid, llohlnd AddavUto

992·2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
12-30-92-lfn

"12-5-tfn

tenary Ac:rou From Thl Jumbo.

Kldl dothn, Craftt, Unlf«mt,

•LIGHT HAULING
ofiREWOOD

PH. 61C·t92·5591

lol:a Clvtii:IMI trema,

Silk i l - . Coolt Aogfltor, Fill
Cabinot, Much Morol
Ellelo Yard Sell: tManUil King)
11112 s. Slat• AI. 7, Clonlpolls,
Oc1 111, 2nd, (Friday &amp; Setur·
dayt 11-4, F..nHuro" Clothing,
Dtahw, Appllancee, t.lc.
Fl .. Family Yord Solo: s.t..csay,

POIIIeroy, Ohio

SHRUI &amp; TREE
TRIM•••
REMOVAL

· PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER a
SEWERUNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Llmeatone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
u-•od .,d Bonded

Nlco Childron, AduK Clolhu,

EAGLE

614·915-4110

of Raven.wood
announce~

Othor Good Thlngo!

FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain
of
painting. Lat me do It
for you.
VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

lh

Beglnalng Od. 3

Carport Soli: Friday . S..ndoy 7·
5, 1110 Second A~«~ue, Oal·
llpollo, Ch•lomu Doc:omlons,

out

Factory Clloke,
, 12 pge Oily,

11124192/lfn

to

Oc:l 1ol, 2nd, 4th. I Mille
AI. 7.

304-n:l-5533

-Room Acldldona
-GutWWork
oEieclricel•nd Plumbing

Lie. No. 0051·342

w.-.
4,

7f71 mo.

2nd Location call Lon Neat
Hendoroon, W. Va. 304~75-3331
U.tercard IIIII VISA occopted.

EVERY SUNDAY
AT I P.M.
RACINE GUN CLUB

EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES
CLUB
IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Ea~y Bird
S100 ,Payoft
This ad good for 1
FREE card.

s Family, 111 Tlml: Sotunlly, f.

ou,., CJuHar, Knl-. lv., Mloc.,
Friday, Sat ..clay, 7113 At. 7,

GENERAL
HAULING

GUN SHOOT

BINGO

clay.

3 Family Yenl Solo: on Oclobor
111 4rd". Ffom .. , 3 Millo Will
Of ChMhlro ·On St. At. 554,
Alln, Shlno.

South.

ll/28/lln

Public Notice

loono Noor North Ga~

5 Family: TUpperwara Clothl1,

(II) 30 Uc ·

QUALITY WORK
&amp;GOOD R-UES
DAVID ARNOLD
(614) 992-7474
POMEROY, OHIO

F-.

985-4181

l:LASSD'mDS
GET BESIJLTS • FAST!

ARNOLD'S
PLUMBING,
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

2 Fomlly:

llo White Wllh . . . Roll
lllny M- To tt-o.
Stlta Route 110, F...y, S.tur~

......, ... 457'4*1

Monthly 15
$L30/day
$.05/day ·
Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.
Business Card ......$17.001 inch per momth
Bulletin Board .....$6.00/inch per d•y

PU8UC NOnCE
Speclll -ng of .-.HA
a-doiDtreolota
· llalgo llatropotltn
Houalng Authority Board ol
Director• will m..t In a
• ....,... -lion on SepL 2t,
111113 •t 4:45 pm In the
lllcldtaport Vlll"'l" Council
Room II Vlllaga Hllit lor the
pur...,_ ot contldorallon of
portlctp•tlon In the Ohio
Dept. IIRDD Caplt•l
Aaaial8nca Progr•m and
other buolneoo u moy be
nec. . .ry for the o.,.llllon
of the llelga Houalng
Authority.
"-!TruaHII
lleigo Houtlng Authority

992-2156

U.ft Fori! Road,

11f, 2nd, 1: 3rd, BuN Run Roed,
Vinton. Clothing, Boob, Mlac,
Lolo 01 Stull!

Porches, .
Patios,
Sidewalks
992-7878

ENTERPRISES

ar.tO 1tc

M. Rainer, parcels, to David ~.
Nevil it and Erma J. Neville, Salif-'

Expernnental AIDS vaccine will be teated In clinical trial• •ponao~
by the National lnatitutea of Heahh. The vaccine wa• not prod~eil
from live Hill or infected human call•.
'""

P,

ORTHOPEDIC

~

'" t

I . ...._

....................... . '98

••'
r
z
:

BY YOUR '
SWISHER LOHSE ~
PHARMACISTS lu :

I'IIUCIIIPflo.e

MATTRESS OR BOX SPRINGS
FULL OR TWIN SIZE
REGULAR ............ ., .............. '7B
FIRM ..................................... '88

'•

•
t

·sHOE PLA

Sept. 29·30 &amp; Oct. 1, 2, 4, 5
Toys ·Tools· Fum~ure
Lots of Misc.

-~-

:

• • •

Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thursday Paper
Friday Paper
Paper

Public Notice

The Sternwheel Festival w··s
discussed. Donations of food, l::
money and time will be apprecialed. Arts and crafts will be sold. :
Suggestions for gifts for elder!)'
and shut-ins for Christmas ar.e ~
needed.
i .,
The Friendly Circle endorsed
the Senior Citizens one mill lev\o
for fiv~ years to be voted on in till
Nov. 2 election.
•·
The business meeting was·
adjourned by Perrin.

...

The

•

• Adt o.aLiide abe county your ad runt IIIUII be prepaid
• Rec:eiYe dilcouat for aU paid in adnnce.
• Free Ad.: Giveaway and Found ada under 15 word• will he
run 3 day• a&amp; DO cbarp.
• P..ice of ad for aU c,apitallet~ra a. doub~ price of ad co.t
• 7 point liae type only used
• Senliael Ll not raponaible for errora after lint da)' (cheek
for error• fLr1l day ad runaln ~per). Call before 2: :00 p.r..
day after publication to make correction
• Ad. that mutt be paid ill advance are:

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION_
I :00 p.m. Saturday
I :00 p.m. Monday
I :00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday

DEADLINE
Monday Paper

COPY

oct AI. 35, On
ClolhM, Tooto.

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE
WORK

949·2104

Washington County and Gall_il
County.
~
"llle FAST project will providi
training and supervision for juv~
nile courts in eight counties," Mohr
said. "These trainees will provicte
family counseling and family advefcacy for approximately 160 delinquent youths!'
,:
The Office of Criminal Justicp
Services awards these grants fro111
federal funds received from t~
U.S. Department of Justice, Offic;s:
of Juvenile Justice and Delinquen.
cy Prevention.
·:

BY AUDITIONS ®

ABli PUtei!

CloMd Sunday

Canada. stNl $5.0SJ

TOPICS

AutMrlad: llrlgga •

742·2360

Houra Ill- U.F N Sat.

PHARMACY ~·;
FIRST PLACE WINNERS· Danlelle Crow and Kristen Dass~l·
va Meigs High School Band neld commanders, took nrst place m
saiurday's district competition held at Zanesville.

PP£1(

I • Ttpple~ l•~~tell 114 AIMI Ul Foilvlow AOid,
lldwol Th&lt;ndly, Soto 30th,
FntlstiMiu
Friday Oct lol, Sol, 2nd, W .
Lewellts•
1ol Tl-: Sal..dof .., YIO Milo

ll

PICKUP llld DEUVERY

Malee Friends and Stop Being
Lonely." Send a u/f-oddressed,/of!.g,
biASiness-siu ellw:l~ llltd a cltec/c
or ·money ortkr for $4.15 (this in·
eludes postage aNl halldUIIg) 10:
Frieruls, clo AM Landus, P.O. Btk
ll562, Chicago, Ill. (i()6J UJS62. ~

bury.

Mnen·O..S.ws
SlnoHon IITD, RjM,
I. D.C. Repair Center

Geril

Meigs County property transfers

-SMALL
WANT ADS

w....,.,

wili.l

Friendly Circle of has potluck supper

UCIII
IIOWD CUIIIC
WILIII ALUY
hrb .. Sanb

m,..

Ohio University receives grant for program
Ohio University has received a
$65,791 grant to increase family
intervention and advocacy for juveniles in eight Southeastern Ohio
counties including Meigs.
Announcement of the award
came from Lt. Gov. Mike DeWine
and Gary· C. Mohr, director of the
Office of Criminal Justice Services.
The Family Advocate Skills
Training (F AS1) will increase the
number of juveniles receiving
appropriate family intervention and
advocacy which will reduce the

Gallipolis
&amp; VlclnHy

Scl»ol.

Monday Oct. 4th, 10.S, 3 Piect

~

Tul&gt; EndOOUN, Pull Down Allie
Sial,. StDrm Doors, Clothes,
Chow /Gorman Shepherd Pup- Mloc, Stito At 160, Hlnorowlllo.
piN, Aloo Clonnan Shephard
Mother, Vory Clont!o, Any Or AU, Ocl- 1·3 ~~- Toke Ito To
Korr, Tum \..in Up Ov• Hilt,
614-258-Uis&amp;.
,
FIIIMia Collie, ~~~. hill Ill
- . . 3 , ..,. old, ••, good

'\'erDOD

lemporomant, 114-1'124802.

Right.

OpMi Houu 120 State StrMt,
1st, 3rd., Fumlture, Sltellht

Dllh, ea,, Too Mony Thlngo
Mention I

RICHARD ROBERTS
"Ad Specialtieo"
l22 Jay Orin, Gttlllpolla, Dh.
446-7812
FaxNolca 446-7612
-1-4-tfn

Arnold's
Plum.ing,
Heating
&amp; Cooling
QUALITY WORK
&amp;GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD
(61 4) 992·7474
Pomeroy, Ohio

Howtl'tl L Writesel

ROOFING

NEW-REPAIR
Guttare
Downspout•
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168
S.1G-113·1fn

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

6

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.

FoWMI: Blaqk doa, pooolbly Lob,

hal collar, IM""l-5831.
So... 30th, Ocl 111, Oct 2nd,
New Homes e Vinyl Siding
G1rage S.le: Old Chum Dolls,
Found: moll 801ato dat, P-h Toyo,
Antiquo Dloh11, Rocking
New Garages • Replacement Windows Fork Ad., 614-112'5811.
Chi~, llrgo Aocord Cablnal",
Lost: Angora Kid Looko Like A Toolo, Typowrllor Table And
· Room Additions • Roofing

oNew Homes
-Garages
-complete
Remodeling

Sheep ArOund VInton, Ohio, 814·

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
~MEE ESTIMATES

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

388-954~

LHI::
Black Ub F•m~la,
Slftc:hos On U.ft Loa, l.oo1
YlclnHy Of 141, PINH Call 6144441•7930,

614·992·7643

915·4473

(No SuiMioy Callsl
- 211~

r------0---------. 11;:=============::;===:
Shade River Saddle
II

•D ZERS .
•BACKHOE

•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

D.A. los'ON

EICAYAnNG
(614)
667•6621

4-19·93-lfn

little Kyger AOid, Ac0011 From

Kyger Creek Pllnt, Thst LMd1
Tolllvor Valley High School.

Slolo Aouto 71 Acrvoo F"""
Raybums Mmoo, Friday &amp;
Soturdoy.
Vary U.V• 111 Time: 2 Mil•
Wool Of Choohirw On Sloto
RO&lt;III 554, 1011, 1012. Clothing

Thru Adun, U.ny Olhtr
IIMI·1031.
~~~,~~-ow--n-o-nd~wh~~~~~B~o-xo-r, lnt.nla
llemal
moll, "Aibo~-. Co. Ad. 25, 114·
11112·71118.
Yanl
-1783 Mloc
-~ng
Ridge Solo:
Clothing,
~omo,
1 1100
111'
'
~~,-~~ kore'ei bt.r.,.':~ 1
,...' Oclof&gt;or
- a y. -•rd.
:n~:,::~..!f.·~.:;:;
'--:purobrwd Engtloli SP'Inger IShr-, KoroMr10 Hoot•,

:;:r,

CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR

ep1niet, ehortohaiNd, llnr and
whit•, grar nylon colt.r, Ant~

and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
36358 SR 7

lost: Black. white 1nd brown
mtle INgle, wtlring ftt1 collar,
Bur Wallow AldiJtl, rewtrd, 614-

Ch1lr, Much Mor.t 1st Houu On

2nd,,.,_

Mite.

qultya..o, l14-114t-21ea.
'--' reword lot Norweglon
Elkhaund toot In Hlrrl•on•lll•
~~i. 8 montho old, 614-1142·

Pt Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
3 !amlly yord u!o, 2110 Madison
Avo, Oet 1 • 2. 8:00 dll 7:00 Pll.
~ : Ba.- Hilund. Block 3 Family Yard Solo, Baden Ad,
=lo /Ten, N Found: 114-3117- Cain llrocory, '--&gt;, &amp;opl. 311-Z,

Chester, Oh. 45720

985-3406
318/lfn

•

'•

.t :OO-t:OO.

------

�Pomero~lddleport,

12-The Dill Sentinel
Pt. PI Ill I ri
I

32

BEATTIE BLVD,TM by Bruce Beattie

V1c1n1tJ

Mabile Homll

1m.__,---

. 44 .

Thursday, September 30, 1193

Ohio

~rtment

tor Sale

·==

p·-.

Ono
kl Dl ~II ..
..cwbda ....

-

11112-22il.
'
-:-45:---::-~~~-Fumllhed

•
- otwlp.m.
1117Ciw00d - . ....... ,

t

1

..

ACROSS

,...;~

--~-1111 •
r cd ......., Home. 8tortflf

ro.odr lol,tJp, c.u 114-246-1122

Altoi'IP.II.

11M Redmln Mx70, lbdhn., In-

oklrtlnt
.,..,
..,..,.,.

-••.,.
ln-

810po,
~.om.,

......... onc1'1 r- of 'holal
rent, .. lor ..., ttnrmo., ... 1·

~3br., lab!_ ... mobil ....... 2
tutt botl'lo, CA, . ~
mu.t .... tl4111"01.
-'

•••PI'J.,
Alootn rooma
_ _wlh
c.u .... 2:110 .......

. , . . . ,..
. 0#--y
- ... 1~
·11M a.m:Ur Ollla a
lrouglt-., PI, Ill, PW, ......,.;
- . ; Cllmolo Ccoonl, ~
AIIIPIII
-..-_ Etc.
,_
, Cno

814-7'/S-

46 Space for Rent ·
lllobll .....
304-17541114.

Wontlna 10 - - 2 01' bodllo-, 1n oloon ond fioad --.di-

llon, proW prl\loto Mttlng, 114-

w,..,

~'

1111 Qrond Pltl LE. good cond. 304.a7W72l

• -

.. - . . . . .

-

..

.... _

21;171 ......

, n:;Gli.J::;.

.,

50

18

wanted to

2 LaCS For loto: ...._.._•IY
1 Aero lal, &amp; 112 Aero Lot, 4110
mile out Nolgh- ood Rood
011 81 Rt 141.
lor
....,.1.
- carr. lc4, Port Chorlot1o

•--a..•

Do

"'H·

E&amp;R TREETrM
SERVICE.
Tttmmlng
R..,..ll,

Trimming: FrM &amp;UIIIOIHI I
811'711TAft or Cp.m. ·

F~HoorCcoon,WIITrado
.Up TI'IICk Or Travot
For
Troltor,
211-1431.Good ~tlon, l14-

=

SEVERAL 7- ACRE PARCELS:
Count
S 1om ~
IY,
• boo uti
aero.. Remota,
lend; - . . pooluro ond hllla.
Coli lor good~ mop. 1-114-11131145, Atllino,OH.
Troltor lc4 For SolO, 114-2MIM8 After I P.ll.

lllu p-·· Doy Coro Ctnlor
J1.F I A.ll. -1:30 P.ll. Ouolhy
Loving Core For All Chlld1'111
Our 11 Oool. Port·llmo, Full·
ll.,..l. Foci. - n c o Avoltoblo.
Coli "" lnlarmlltlon Or Vlolt. Infont /Toddtor IM 441 1227. p,.
Sc-. . Sc-oge.
B&amp;A
Sc-.· -..224:

Publl!: Sele

&amp;AuctiOn

:=•~'l::t..~ ~;i.m~

Dlooblld Or Eldorly. 11 Y•ro .
Eopo-, Eoc- Roloron-:
- · 114-218-1011.
Trl Slllo TrM SoMoo- 1-:r.nt•

:

~=:t·
1.: =~
112.a312. tf no . . . .,, lean
m•••• on machine.

Rentals
41 Housel for Relit
3 lodroomoJ.I.Dcated: Rt. ~ In
Contonuy, ."~~olorinco

I Doj&gt;ooH, 114-441

•

=-01~-=:r garoge,

;s;;:j:=::-;;=::--:::-;;:==

4 - - - I n Golllpctlo,
13110111o. Roforoncoo, Dopoolt
lloc!ulrod, A¥011oblo Oct 111, 114441-7181.
'

Goods
2 Aoamo 01 ·a,_ Cortlot 2
Groon Cholnl, Uko -114-4"411071.
VI'RA FUAHITURE
114-44141110r--ZI
'10 DAY lAIIlE AB CASH
OA RENT4.0WN (NO DEPOSIT)

car

Go Korlo- 3 HP &amp; up, -lol.an
F U R - : · t HP, In -k, If- Eqlllpo
~
~~-.
mont,
• - W'Y
,. -2110:
. . 114-lll2-2411 01 114-7112·
Fon
Rooking Choir Ill;
Arch Woy'1i t121.DO
Golf· Ctubo Eocotlont Condition,
1-1
P41rono, CU..
-~~:rotrln- Sot ... Filii tomlud lot, l'(ltlo 8"11, $210.
Ill
O.O.n 8141 Sol; 4 eu ue 4503. · ..
Diowr
144.11; Cor lod'o.
Bllllk 8od'a,
Fui Good flro-loroolo, 114-11112·
Uno Of Saut-om 211S or 114-11112-1707.
S1orU.., AIUO.OO· lnclono 110"1'
SllopO·-; I ~ llortlna AI lntotll.rolon TV ganw oyot. . for
11.011. 2 .._,lono -ldo 'luto . ool• 1 - 11 piiiO
Allctlon Or 4 1111eo Cut 141. : tho lntolll¥oloo IIIOdulo, ft35,
()pori I A.ll. To 1 P.ll.llon -lot.
cotiiM-141-31111oftar 15pm.
Klnt Woodbumor, $121; Whole
HaUoo Fon Now $100, 1 1114.
Lo.. Soot Cho!r1 1200; Dlnotto
Sot $1110• - - . . .,~..

""::UC.:Iron

WEIG!-tTLIFTik):;, D/E'TS,
leMJJS, .HI ,..:.tk)G ...

.KQ98753

..-

Ga~.

Business

Opponunlty
INanCE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHINO CO.
ncomnwndo that ,.... do blool·
, _ wlh poopto you k,_ ond
Junll ...., onr condition, 11411112·71153.
.
Oorogo , lolly
- . aurtolno, Olloc. oil Wonted To Buy; J101k Autoo
- . Oct. 1, z, 4, 712 Hlah St.,
Wit- - Col
•ddll par1, Otdo. 11M12-7MI. Jllth
IMry Or
Uvoly.
IM-311-1303.

-hoo.

-·

~-~11Z,'"m­ Wonted To luy: ll..,.lng limlwlaCWI Tupplrl Plalna ber I Pille, Con Sllil lm... c Oli ... Antlq-, A- modlotly,
Good P.-, ......
'.. • tkwl,
2
cllolro,
...
ond.
.
T.. Pold: AU Old U.S.
Gold Rl..... Sllv« Co1no,
Oct. 1 • z, 1:»
s.-oo.lMcam.r•
., a.c.o Colno,
Gold Colao. ILT.Io. Coin Shop,
. . llldgo Rd. Flnor ..... 1St - . . Avonue, Gottlpctlo.

•=

=:.r- ..,.,

___

potcoo, Wontorl to buy:

~ -Oct. 14, 1:00-5:00,
~..,Diu hp~1 .Co.

~ 1111

IIOid OIObllo

411 (171

olgno. """"'ng,

Employment Serv1ces

!Jon1o -

CoL 1-2, 'Z ....... .

-:-:--:-:-:--:=--::---:--

... - · 1.ouro1 cu11, 11
lillie.
llouoohold
goodo,

Help wanted
.-:,.::VON:::::I-All:;:-'':::•::-::. -::,1::-o:::,'~oxtro~
,....., ot wont o ~~oltllor
~- Ccl. 2 &amp; S. SR 124, _, col llottlvn.
·2145
-.1-ot1-.e112-IUI.
...,._

porte,.,,

~ . - 0.4 to W. ono 10Domonotrotoro-...To
... !IP 1A ..... Loo Sol TOJO I Ollto For Clvtolmoo,
No ~~Or Dlllvortna,
....._
dlltl1 ~
enow
.... CUolllno,
cloiHnl. · 1100
Kl lu
Colllory I~
~2114
.II.

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

- - Oot-1-2, Frl I
..... ............. 112
oll124
...........
-.2000
- . 1w
w hoolor, ArlnJ,
lo1n, 112 •
IOiNIIJ, boddlna,
..... curtllnl, dllhle, .,.");
tr TV, _ , . . ,
riMioe, au p m. ·
G1or11 8ole-lliottond 1.oa1on HaN,
..-y 1 Solunloy. ~"'"iii
...........,
•· - . -~~. fomlly yord .....
ond Sol"!dof, Oct. 1-Z.
• • """""
-trom
r :110,
I t.111Ohio
~
""' - - ' " - Hoi. Inclothing, lnfonl cor - ,
ond ioolng, todtoo ona
mono loon ·~·
w•'-TV'o, - DP Rn
wotgm boncll, 110. All
- , 1ooi1 quality, nomo brond
-.
0
8 ndlu
11
""'"
"" to
- · 4 tomlly, lalory,
Gl..arythIna. .,._ to IIIII. 1:011-? Friday
lriillotur•y.
In Ruttonrl, tho - - of 1_.,
o.- 1111., Ccl. 14-3. Clothlnt,
---olmloc.

AVON I AI - · I Shlltoy
"""" ... -.e75-1421. .
AVON CHRISTMAS Sotlo AI
Wortc Or Homo. Avo- II_...
Houtly. Pluo F...ootla •
aauntal Doer--To-Door Opllonal.

Lorvo
~

y, ·
woldlngi!::.1nrolllod
......
.,
_....,
Oo&gt;onlngo IIIH
ovollobto In lollllilntor - · •
olortlna Oct. 11th. Col 1 13l'-1141ort14-713-31111.
1.oco1 lno ..onco Agency hiring
-rolory.
!iii computer
proflclont, pootor ......,_
bockg- iond r~l:g, to boo

$ "

I

9

- Sotu
- . .y,yonl
...
2mt. .....
!ram

llut- on Umo Rd. Bolly
1 _ _ , alotlloo, tumltcn,
-0ot. 1 1 Z . - !ram .......
Roo dnllo. Good, • ...,
- - Rolnc-.
,..., Ccl.
,:00-5:00,
-..,._,loalo
R
.
.
Rd.,
Lono
Oil. Troltlr on rightoft
loohon lid., I mlloo llolgo
MIIIIOIW O.dln oft Rt. 7. M..C.
- . roln - l o .
Oct II 1-2, I:OOom-7 1311 Collogo 1111. Uttlo of o-.ythlna,
_ .. - . pfct~~M, lO 01~
foniJIIIIOri""' With ol1roo, rain

•.z.

1-'1112-4'131.

EOE.

For •

pnc:llc.l, no-nonHnM

ed.-tkin
· - - In
lwo thon ond
onojob
yoor,
aorioldor
trolnlng ot Tho Alllltl Educotlon
Ctnlor. a.-. 1ram
molnl-nco o10o mochonlco,
1
-nt:
lng,
poralogol,

._rial

=--.... - -0. . .

-plcotlono
- -·
-

1nt
liP"
t 4th.

--7377,
M
..
.

z.

=

:-='

--

.• l,bl-811'7211.

.·

mako ony such preferenco,
ln*atloo or cbcrimlnatloo.•

This noWIIj)- wtl net
lcnowtng!1.._t
~ ... ~. nt f oat tat

es a
which is In 'llolaUcn of tho

Buvu

-ma s orr

.......

l-4pn, na "'
t0114;i,;I2.;~~A.!~~~
• • '' A•-· P"""'""'. 1o1oo -tlon .t.nlllblo, c ~I glrto _...._ boyo IIUior Elporlonoo Hat ~!rod
...- . - ·
lut Doolrod. lond RooumeOct- 2 II Dowld Rolo,. m To: CLA417 010 CJol.
Rodno.
G1rto Npollo Dolly T""""!1.121 Thlnl
0-4, olzoo ,A""""· Golltpatlo, ""41131.
10-11. mono liP llrQO olllno, :Ill~~ 1 ~
• Joorw. ..,. loolil • - 1.,. Wonted:
or .o
ond mfoci •2 Nlahla A
Col 2

....,.WI' Oct.

""',... •"'• oiwon~~~ng 1n
ttw newspaper Is IUbl&amp;c:t to
tho F....,.l Fllr Housing M
of 1968 which- lllogll
to adYonloo ·.,y preference.
ln*atloo or ~natloo
based on race, color, ralglon,
sex famllalllllus or naliol\ll
Ol1gln, or ony lntolltloo to

::r.c-~
-oliO,
11110: c.&lt;:- Tho Adult~t!;

'Center, 1o800437~508 or .....
7IWIIL
&amp;po..- RNo- Cwti&gt;IDok
·'Contor , _ hlo o lull tlmo poottlon onllobli lor tho :1-11 ohlft.
PI- OPIIIY In 11 m
Pogo St,lllildloport, OH 48710.

Bulo¥Uio Rd.

houl•,

gordon tub, cotNng lono, prl¥olo
ootllng, 1250/mo,, t14-lll-4211.

42

.....,_

PICKENS
. FURNITURE

Rent

Hoc !told fumlo!tlng. 112 mi.
Jorr1c11o Rd. Pl. P l - . WY,

Homo,
You Poy Utltllloe, Dopoolt R• ooii30W11-141G.
;:'~ In Poltor Aroo. 114-3112 • 3 ...._

aox, sago, ,.....,...a11o.

31 Homes for Sale
3 bedraam home In Rutland,
lof, ganlon, cottor, out·
bulldlngo, lmmodloto olon, Sll,SOO OBO, 114-1112-2502.
5 bodroom brick homo, 1 112
both,
llnlohod
buomont,
...ctrk: heel end 1lr: 2 car

pl'llge, nlc• ntlghboittood on
nlcolo¥ot lal. f&lt;!r oppt. 114-446-

1387.

FOR SALE· 2 bedroom how1,

3 bod"'"'" mobile ....,. lor 53
Antiques
ront, IM -ric, 1 child, no ~~:'-:'::::"":~~:-::~=
=~.Tz~ mo. - HI-, lilY or oolt. Rl-'no Antlq1110,
1124 E. lloln 81-t. on R1. 12}..
Totol Ellctrlc 2 BR llobllo Homo - . . ,. Houro: II.T.W. 10:w
For R..., No Polo, 81th • 112. o.m. to 1:00 p.m., Sunday 1:011
to 5;011 p.m. 114-11112-2121.
114-317-llt38.
Tr•Uer For Rent, 114 318 8030.

TWa bodroom lrollor In Roclno,
Apartment
fer Rent

101wot-

'm'o ......lio!":

Sot ofllcOrogor golf ctllbo wllh
Volt boa, llloi now, 110 botto Incluclld,l321,1-I.ZOn
I Pc. Cok Dlnono, Ptotlonn
Rocker, - . Roc-. a Doole,
c . - -8nrdor Fumfturo, 114441-1171.

::...~~-~~~11yf.;
304~71-71121.

,

Doa
BEAUTFUL APARTMENTS AT Trolnoro, Bob-Whllo Cuoll &amp;

4411

304-1711-3433.

F11n11ohod, 3 Roamo I Both,
Ctoon, lio P_olo, Roloroo- &amp;
Dopoolt ......,._

-~--­

A«entlon:

Hunter.

A

tract,.:t

..,.loo

Ento-

55

old,,_..

• llooale Puao; 2 Turbyo, 1
Cott,li'Wu.&amp;ll7.

Building
Supplies

-l

I Foocior Colvooi'o ApprCII. 400
lbo. Eoch 2 Hot ... 4 ......
114-211-1414.

a
- ondAlllur~"'02op
Pot
Oooamlng.
olvtoo.

Two Hamp Olno, 114-24!1.a773
Bob-d•

Black, brick, ptpoo, wtn- · llnlolo, .... Cloildo Winten, Ria Gr1nde, Ott catl 014-

56 . Pets for Sele

VJ~nS

II 4 WD's

21•

.lulo Walib. Colli

2 AKC Registered Toy Paall•a.
2 lttoloo, ~h Block, 114-441·

64

Hay &amp; Grain
-::;::::::;:;=:::-~:-:::"::"':-:=
Allollo/Orooo Hoy rollo. 125.
Form, Rt. 38. 301-l:llL

=on-.

1023.
AKC Miniature PlniCherw, 4mo. old. 304-171~444.
Com burning polloi ol-, hooto
2000 0!1, ft., ro1a11 tt700, ootclns
AKC
Rllllotored
F""'!.~t $1000. Morgan Form, Rt. 31. 304'
Slborlon HUoq 2 Yooro UCO· 131'2011.
~~.::rl"
Loll(' . . 080 To
Homo 114-4411-1127.
Hay, oquiro boloo, $1.10 &amp; up.
AKC Roglotorod RoltWotloro,
Tollo Dcicbd, Dow CIOwo
RemoYtd, lhol:a 1: WOf'IMd
$200, e't4-2st 1111.

R-lor puPII!oo. AKC rogle-

- . Gormin '

For Poy

, -IIIGI.

wmplon

blooclllrwl1 nc. llfnperlllnlnl, I
wko old, only 3 moloo &amp; 1

:'3Wi

...... loft, hOd Pllffl
podlgroo lnciiHiod. 6 4
oftor lpm or onytlmo -nda.

Fioll Tonk, .2413 ......_ Avo.

Point Ploooont, 304-f7S.2013,
luU llno Tooplcol floh blnla,

omoll onlmolclond oupptlori.
For oo!O- Rog. Boolon bulldog, 1
old, 114-MI-2084,
HAPPY JACK ALOE BAN

"*""•

chlcka acratchi!'Q, kUla riMe,

ond ooothlo lrrltottHI okln lor
clogo. Pump oproy. P l odcir,_RIO FEED I SUPPLY, 11411112~11.

304~75-311110.

75 Boat1 &amp; Motore .•

tor sale
11 Ft. looo T-or Wltll 10 HP

wot-

Complolo oupor ll~olzo
doybod
only
UMd 3 rn0nthl, ....
' •
,..
"'
- .

WON'T BE
TO SCHOOL
HE'S GOT

WHAT SORTA
RASH?

Auto Parts &amp;

Accessories
8 - Tnnomloolono, ~ 1
robuln, oil typoo, olortlna o1 Sll;
114-248-1177, --~

.

HE SAYS IT'S
TERRIBLE
KETCHtN' !!

AND SI-IE CAN LOOK
Ar ME LIKE I'VE
LOST M't' MIND!

REACI-t OVER AND
TO~CI-t I-tER I-lAND..

I

MA'&lt;eE 11LL A5K TflE

TEACflER IF I CAN

MOVE M't' DESK OUT
INTO TI-lE 1-lALLWA'(

Nttvecle
- -+-+--+--1 '·43Grlln

45W. .o
47 Equlplllent
48 A continent
, 411 - -biter
51 Toward ,

il llrt-+--t-

lltelltr .

53 Slngor ·-

fltzp(lld '

54 Actor .:.. · ,

«&gt;.._....,..,...,...,, .......
Sept. 30, 1993

. MORTY .M EEKLE AND ~~i-r~n==-""""'"'---,
• MISS Ml.IDSERIS LeAVING
•

TO TAKE: ANOn-IER

[EAQi!NGJ06 IN ARIZDNA.

6HE:S0veRAT
MY HOUSE
I&lt; leHT t-OW...

TODAY'S HISTORY: On lhis
!962, James Meredith became the
black person to enroll at the Unive•,· l
sity of Mississippi. After rioting bn:•ke I
out in protest, President Kennedy sent
·:federal troops to the area.
fTODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Deborah
TRYIN6l0 GET N!:&lt; 0/&gt;.D 10 :Kerr (192H, actress, is 72; Truman
!:&gt;W&amp;!R 'THAT Wi:'L.L Neva&lt;. tCapote 0924 · 1984&gt;, writer; Robin
NCtv'f:.10 ARizct.JA .
' Roberts &lt;1926·&gt; . baseball star, is 67;
Angie Dickinson 0931· ), actress. is 62 ;
Johnny Mathis (1935 ·), singer, is 58;
, Marilyn McCoo 0943·&gt; , singer, is 50 .

I

I

llll'"'!o

Home
Improvements

." lt

()~

IIASEIIENT

~

. .

standing the influen..ces which are govern-

,

.:·!,

ASTRO·GRAPH

51,000 mile•• 114-112-t71t.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

self ol debt lirst .

ing you in 1he year ahead. Send for your

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) Persons who

Astro·Graph predictions today by mai ling

are usually supportive ·of you might no! be

$1.25 and long. sell-addressed. stamped
envelope to Astro·Graph, c/o lhts newspa-

as lorcelul on your behall today. plus !hose
who are againsl you might be a bit more

a

8, Hke new condiUon, Mw ,,,...,

per , P .O . Box 4465, New York, N. Y.

vehement than usua l. You're on your own

10t63. Be sure to slale your zodiac sign.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) ·II won'l hurt
your image today if yet 'less up to situa-

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Make a lisl ol
you r duties loday and try lo eliminate them

tions you feel you can 't handle. It could
arouse associates ire, however. if you pre-

in an orderly fashion. It you let things pile
up, they could ewceed your abilities to han die them .

lendtobeablelodosomelhingyou can"t.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 2t) lnslead

GEMINI (May 21-June 201 You co uld .
make both parties angry today il you let

of Heating fun , compet1tive activities for yourself get caught in an ar,rangement
what they are. which IS merely a game, you l where you'teel comp-BIIed to side with one
mighl be incl ined to take things far more friend against another.

seriously than you should .
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) Success is
CAPRICORN (Die. 22-Jen. t 91 Respect possible today ~ provided you rely more
the laleniS and abilities of others. bul don 't upon yoursell and less upon Lady Luck.

Plumbing &amp;
Halting

Groclouo hlng. 1 ond 2 Froomon'o Hillin~ Cootlna,
12111 Unhopo 2 Bod-. Goo _,. oport- 11 Vl- luiGIIIItlo ...._, . .; ~71.
lao. 1180
ond
Rl¥wolilo 1121.
Hoot, Uko Throut~h Cut llonor
Cor11flod, Ro--., Cammoi;
For SolO: Eloclrtc LowrotrOraon
S7,!110, Froo loi.Up, 114-441- Apo~mMto In lllcld-. F.alol. 114-211-1111.
'" .
0110.
FoU Ctooroncol 11113 World $200; Phono: 114-.f4e.:ll51:
1202. ~1114 ...2-1111. EOH.
iEncYato!IOdlo Pluo 2 Vvtumo ·1von1ngo: 114-211-1112.
12170 mobile ..... lor .... 3
Dlctlonoryo 14" lovo: $2411 ...not.C
Plo
Electrical&amp;
Oldo ~Oil- IIIIo, 84
Eeey Tern. Mllrgaret Pierce ~onn 11
no For S.le•. -..omJ._'!.II -ric, $11000,
ropolrod, UIO. R44712113.
304-17W77I.
• ; Toko Dn amon Prt-. Boo
304-112-.....
Refrigeration
.
'"-ly. 1-3-MM,
1m 12111 A~lnaton llobllo Complotly FllrTIIohod Fltcwood P,.,.,.. For Winter. UMd 8,.,. Drum Stand &amp;
Homo Dn 112 Acrol..ond, 1 IIIIo homo, 1 milo bolcNI Golllpctlo,
ovorloolclnt
ctnr.
Dopool,
No
~ Proetlon,leo Pod~ Oaad CondlFcom Rlvor Volloy High - · Poll, CA, lifo!, 114 441 osii.
256-1311, ei4-317-7021 Evonlnga, ~.II. 114-44
CoM Aftor I
114-N7-71111.

.....

•.

K

Serv1ces

-And

- -t--t--f

ending
311 lowbeller
; Hoclgll
41 City In

I

1~m
ZIL.ooFt•.t,d~•llot"' t~

82

.

38 eom,..iuwe

a

Cempers&amp;

=-

1M1 Ctdo CUIIOoo ...1orow

35

Ships that pass in the night, and
speak each other in passing,
Only a signal shown and a distant
· in the darlrness;
So on the ocean of life we pass and
peak one another,
On/y look and a voice; then dark·
ness again and a silence.

I

WATERPIICCFINO
''"' Comora, rod, Y-4, ollloonotlc, . ..._..._ Ulotlmo guoron$2300, 114-11124317.
too. ~I rofon,_ f u - .
C.U 1-100-217-oml Or 114-231'
1V11 Buick Skvtirk, lor porto, 0411 R_. Wor.._nng.:_e..
colll14·7112~422.
tobllohod 1m.
,
1111 Pontloc Onnd Pcll. 304- Curt• Home lmr,ovementa. No
~140 oftor 4pn.
Job Too Bla Or molt, Yooro Eobn otctor IN-r
1877 Cllovotto Runo Good,
AddHiono, Foundotlono, .
Choop, Coli Aftor I P.M. 114-441·
-ng. KMchlno /Bolho. ln0243.
ourocl, l'rM Eoll. .too. 114-8171877 Font Gnnodo, 4dr., 302 Y· 0111.

1110,114-211-tm.

. =·~=

320-tal'

:.

IO!Ib, ono ton truok
n1otoro.RAlita, Rl-. WV."'"''·
J101-

·

-N1118M.

signal
intercepted

~rHomes

81

-.

..

•

Transporlatton

7 Tollow ochlr

Tile deal occurred during the Ice- lhl!lr+-;. Lldd .
landic 1.ir Pairs Cl\ampionship, held
se GoHn'"ore.
last February in Reykjavik. The win· L..,_...._,_...
57 Dtnce 1tep
5eMIIIcenler
rs, Larry Cohen from the United
ebbr. ·
States and Zla Mahmood from Paki·
CELEBRITY
CIPHER
stan, benefited when Zia successfully
~CipMrCI)~, OWM . . CNitedJrc.nqe l' :1 •bft.mcJulpeopli,l*l.nd~.
unscrambled both Nortl\'s and West's
EechlltlwlnltledptiW . . . . . . . . . . . . ,~._.J ...... U.
messages.
East traded on the vulnerablllty lor
' G ' Z
F J C I
IMTGOE
I I
L I
his one-heart overcall. Wilen West
raised to four hearts, Cohen, North,
' 9-JO
I YX
CHGMGIJVK
IYGOEC
I Y VI
under pressure, jumped to six clubs .
(·
West made a Lightner Slam Double,
W X X H
DMXVIGRGIT .
ZT
;.::.::..::.:.:.::;.:;::..;~~ljiP~:::--;:-:---':\''"":;;---::::~=-;:-::::-:-:;:;;:--;------;:.--;:
asldnR
lor
an
unusual
lead,
normally
f'
0 1 the first suit bid by the dummy. And
GOIVDI.'
4CGOEXMl
tl' . here, as you can see, the diamond ace
and a diamond ruff defeats six clubs .
ZGOYXKKX
CYIDWXL .
However, Zla was also listening.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Ma1Urtty lo lite lblllty to control Inger lnd Mille
And Zla assumed that Cohen, lor his
dlflecectCOO wllftoul ~~~- end deotructlon."
Ann ' - -· .
' '
sudden leap tO siz clubs, bad some
erance lor diamonds. So Zia retreated
WOlD •·
to six diamonds: an unbeatable slam.
T::!~~~,
S©\\c{llA-lt~tr·
s
·
Dummy's spade l011er was discarded! 1
- - - - - - 1~111~ ~y ClAY I . POlLAN
at trick one, while declarer won with
OLl&gt; MACDON AL-0
ReOrranl)e lett•rs of
the heart ace. The diamond king
0 four
HAl&gt; I'IOTt-IING
acrambled worGs
trick two. Declarer unblocked the club
low-to form four words.
ON M~!
queen before continuing with the dia·
mond queen. East won with the ace
It E T H E L
.
.
and returned a heart, but tle&lt;'larer I
ruffed in the dummy and led winning
· BORN LOSER
clubs. Whenever East ruffed, South
,.Til£ Bt:1.b ~ IT TO YOlJR.
,. W~'i 5T~V£. TO 1\0\IE.V€. NE-W 'I . '\.JI-\1\T ex:£~ 001~ THE:
could overruff and return to dummy
·
U~T
OF
ROJTit-1£
OOTI€.!&gt;!
with a spade to the ace.
7
~EXI'EC..TCD Ac..ca-\Pl..l ~ "?
:i:; l.£.VW OF PRQDUC.TIVITY
BACE L

FliiiAo
1114,_~ Yooro Otd1 Ezaol.

lont Condltoon, 1200, • ......._

DOC DOESN'T
KNOW BUT"

TflE~ . ONE DA't' I CA~

'

101:1.

-.0110
114 441 OOtt

I Tllttcl

At the end of today's. deal, I expect
West felt Uke Longfellow's theologian:

Wonted to buy. griU ond bumpor
for 'II Font ln&gt;neo U, 114-ll:lo

79

&amp;Scon

kill

28 Apple !*t .
30 Account • ·
31 Tennlt PleYfr

-

37l4133 Of' 1-aoo..m:tsa,

3looll MOOple
4 Buttor equoro

Opening lead; • 5

1117 HOUSE - T HARBCUli
MASTER W Ft. :rwln Englno,
- - RJbollfgo, Loriilod,
Ub CoridHiori. 11.1110!,. 1·
IIOH37-It28 Or .,._7&lt;13'11
lllko.

-

1 Billion (prof.)
2 Winglike

PllllUp Alder

Musical
lnetruments

-;;11:-11:-.: - " ' : " " : - - - - Drum Ill lor Promlor
Etoatrlc _ . ... .rbrolor, MO; booo vlnt.QO dnn 111
t' llum. broko, tl15: Konmaro ·lnd gnoyL~• COli 1,.!
141-3011oftor .,...

::.:::. :::::.nog.=._

•

b~ HP

1877 light bluo Font Pinto
...-gon, 4 cytlndor ongiM 4 opood otondanl
tranomlooian, 2 door, All rodlo
wllh Fll aomrootor, 13,433
original mltoo, S7110, coli I14MI-30IIoflor lpm.

luck FltwJI'!ac• ln.ert, $250;

-BARNEY .

-...onc~o....
Eoaio
Ffolrc1- · NOOO 010,
11ot:illll

76

47Proflt
50 Mike lice
52 Iced .;..
55 WIIMn't
t'lllrllnl
5e Flllt't br11U..
lngorpn
511 Tttroe-lotd
ololh1
8D Bllro .,P.nmoutltod
81 Actron Nogrl
82 Boont
83 African fox
84--evon

Pus

........., 12,100, 114-317-717l •

$3,

71 Autos for Sele
:;;-~:;::--;;:~~~~=
'7t Dodao Doll drog car, runo
Drool, 1~11112-3871 doyo or It+
148~11M ovonlnp

,

Bla Boor, oiiiL ..,_
1112 Yomohl 30oJ.III
der.....,.,..
21
J ,3.

1tlllt. fT -

-

44 r.:;:r.takon

48Pio--

..

1112 Font Explotw XLT, 4WD,
4dr., outomotlcJ..... O¥ordri¥~,
_ , looded, 21...., mlloo, 114112-1137.
:-.,.:--:
.Mo-:--t-o_rc_y_c_le_s_ _
...
•
11111 All 2110, runo ucolloll\,
•..-,, 614-182-3311.
I
1112 Sllv« Wlna GLIIOO,
loclory '"''"""' _ , . INigo,
trunk, gojMI tlioo I bonory, loW
mhNgt, 11000.114412.nlt. !
lululd 0nn:.rc
1113II~
1110
IJU
Wll
•
122

2131.

Wotalllll I 8onch ... 114-371144J.

!JOi':

!!0IOIW
-R1. 21. ~
.....
~on1o Forno,.

naoo.

Ring Nook Phooo- F01 Solo,
Coli Aftor 5:30 P.ll. 114-367-05111.

CONCRETE SPETIC TAHKB,
1,0110 Go lion, ~I; JET Bol
(No Sond Rnor Roqillrodl
tl,481; Ran EVIna Enterpr1M1,
Joe.._, Ohio 1-.&amp;17-1121.
CUmbuotlon otr cool olovo,
,condRion, 1100, 114-7112-

411 lllno, ~ $701111. , _
Dooro 110 - . ttOOO. Formol
NO d-1, 13100. I Poq- 1-11
ldckor - - _,

IFoll Fonl- Haflond Solo. 401
Dloc blnoli ttO,IItiO. 411 Dloc blno
~
hitch •
WI o-•
ma, $11,100.
1"111 l q - boltor, $10,111111. 140
Round bollr, OlrtO f12,200.
. . Round boltor, outo wrop
demo., .,3,300. 141 Round
Slrotlor, bobybod, wolkor, high- bouor, llyd. wrop, ttO.IDO. 40
clutl~ cor oool, otolng, pfoypon. Foroao -or, 100CI RPII,
304-o7~141.
:101 Slurry oanodo!,
1000gol., 11400. lrlflon I'
Stroll or, bollybod, wolkor, high- IIOcfcir. , 1111111. 44130 Font
chair, c. 111t, ewing, pl1ypen.
Ut., ld u...,
304-e75-4141.
. $11
· Koow
Contor,
Vonlr 81nk Cololnot With llorbto Milo Rt.l7. 304-111-31111 •
T,., Ul; Yanfly llnlc Fonl Jublloo Tractor, Paint,
T.. Ul; Ouoon II• wat- · Elccollont Cond-, 2 I 3 Gong
c:amplolo
-.
llodlclno PI-, 114-3l'W272.
POLE IUILDINQ SPECIAL.
Coblnol,l1 4 4111411'
WATER LINE SPECIAL: :w4 Nh 30'140'1'. Pointed IIIII Sldoo1
200 PSI 111.11; 1 Inch 200 PSI Oolvol...,. SIHI Roof, 1l'1t
$32.50; lion E¥1111 IIIIa....-_ Stool ltldor.._!, lion Doot.
oloo.._, Chlo,1~ . 11,111. ERE..,oau. lrvn H...o
WATER STCRAOE TANKS Bulldoro 1 *»412-1048.
.A11o-H And -Ground FDA 63
llv
k
Appn&gt;oed For Pill- Wotor. "7.===e-:-lt~O~C:-:-:--=:::::­
Ron Ohlo
Evono1-IOO.Ul.eut. Jock· 1 blllr.:Js.;2 y_..
eon,
1
3087 • •
.m.

o
.
utt

e-..,..__

for Sale

MerchahdiH

1 - - Gorogo Aporlmont In 1112 5hlt pootl¥o traction Go
OoiNpatlo, Port'! Fuml-. No . Cor1, Wftoon Hartoy D o PolO, Phono: li4 441 0131, 114- ,
jocbt, q - . oiH
441-1214.
on podootol. 304-1756113
1 Eftlcloncy Aportmont Acr- ::s;:;;-·:--,-':'"::-:-===From Unl¥or011y RIO Orondo. All 2 Kina 1 coal bumoro
UIIIMioo Pold, UOM!o. Dopoolt 304-«18-7113.
'
Roqulro4 114-388-IMII.
~=~·
=
=:-::==:-:::2 w-..rnlng Fir...-, ln1bdrn~. oportmont In Poonoroy Good Coildltlon, 114-448lor ront, l~oll811.
::3M=''=::::--::-:-:::-::::---:::--1bdrm. oporlmont d-ntown 24'dil'l10'· ..,. 3' on1ry - ·
llldd~, c-.! hoii lolr, ol ono 11110 olclng ~ g,_,
Ill lift~ lncluclld, $250/mo., 111111 orocted prtco, '"'1011; -41x»~poolt, , _..2217.
ono 3' onlry - . .,. 12110
1-rm.
""
oport,_,
Sortng olldlng
prtco, 11111111;
- · olhor
fll'll-alzn
- ond
Avenw, Pomeroy. t17flmo,.
.
s-odop., no polo, 614.all'-3013 "PPIono ovolloblo. Proclolon
onor 5pm.
Fromo Bun-. 114-112·
3541 lob 01 304-7T.WS41 Joll.
1br. oportmont, Pl. Pllooont,
Hoborl "·'
fumlohiodL!WJ aloon, no polo. 300
-•·
~
304-e75-,....
dor,
, $'t
wlh lrolllfL 3
1011 chain holll, $200; MW YIC2bdnn. •phi., tal•l .a.ctric, ·~ lor nlng torah • regul.. cn,
plllncoo fumlohod, loundry $171• VIctor oombfnotlon
roam lociiRioo · - to ochoOI tore' :wll" -··•~.,. a·• In town. Aif.{c;ilono onlllbto 112711.n · " ·~- ; ~-ot: Vlllogo roon Apto. 1148 or
Cllll14-ti2·3T11. EOH.
110,000 BTU Hall Noturol Ooo
Ful'nlee, 10 • R-o. 11,111, S••:
Fumlohod
Eftlcloc1cy:
1107 11.011, lnolollolliln A..lloblo,
Soconcl, Oolllpol!'!!.!f!oro Seth, 114 t4t 1308.
·
UIIIHioo PokJ, t t -. 614-4414410Aft.,.7tdl.
h11 uuaad1n lt~bkfa,

HouH In Muon, WV, Horton Sl. IUDOET PRICES AT JACKSON
3 bodroomo 1112 bothl, full ESTATES, 1138
Plko
-mont wilomlly roam, hou• ln&gt;m UOI/mo. Wo
ohap &amp;
complotoly corpoted, tiOxZOO lal, movlel. Cllll14 '141 25M. EOH.
, ..... Cllrport, Pltlo, ........
Eftlclroncy oportmont, roloronco,
pp .... cond, 3iM-T11-IIaa.
d-'t. no pota. 304~"11o1112.
Roboto: $1,500 Cooh Robello On
Aportmont 1 BodAll Sl119lo In Stock, Fumlohod
room. 120 Fourth AVMUe, Galllo-ln Stito ~"- Pc4nt llpollo
$210JMo. UUIItiOo Pold,
pt. . .nt, WY, 304-871-wuu.
114 441 4411 Allor 7 P.ll.
'lory- Zllr. homo, ·In town, F~~mlohod
full booomont, 1 cor garoga, UtiiNioo
Pold, ll!o Faul1h
yord, nrRoolty,
por- Avon110L Oolllpolo, u ••
llolly flrionco. Aftor 7 ~.Itt.

32 Mobile Homes

Mlecellaneous

1180 OMC C10rro 11\IDici 1180
Ot-lo;
18op. lponlol
·mountoln blkoi _Cockor
puppy,--; 114-7'12-2441.

112 Krein country, Racine .,...,
double pono tiN-In wtn- . , full b o - , 1 !'"'buildIng, oooy lo hoot Nor oil fur·
nace, W,OOO, e14-M~2MO atlor 1:30 p.m.
Apol1mont for ront In Pi.
How. tor ute or rent, abr., 1 PI-nt, 614-112-5118 oftor
112m1. Nonh Sholl Ptont, At. 2. lpm.
304~?1~532.

54

colll14-tl2-5811.

44

73
._lt.tJc oar ltereo power amp, - - botor!l.:' ~rob,
wl
•·new, "5, 014-112- -oq.....ollollo
tlltlll. Dci01z
2314.
171. toddlr, tlltlll.- 10 Wllltl, Ukl

3C!447UUI.

Mobile Homes
for

11403.

Som 11omor.r11o-. ormy 1ioo
bortl oom11o11110, booldo londy¥1110 Pool Olfloo. Fri-Sot-lun,
........... doyo • llouro.

Roll -•.114-441-3144.

2 bedroom trolloril rol I dop, Rt.
12 N. Loculi R on right, no
SWAIN
polo. 304-f75-10711 ·
AUCTION &amp; RIRNrruRE. 12
2 Bedroomo Fumlohod, Air, on.. St., Golllpctlo.- • ~
locol Yondlns Route: $1,200 A Coble. ~ tho Ohio fuml ..o, hootoro, Wootom I
Wook Pc4ontllil. IIIIOISotl. 1 - Rlvor In Konouga. o.-11 &amp; Wook -.,,114-448-3111.
1$3-Vond.
R1farence R~l.ilred, Fo.t•'•
FFroo
llabllo Homo Pork, 114-446-1802. Woollng-o
~or With 1oo llokor &amp;
Real Estate
2 8 drooma,. CA, Rentor s.• 11o
. 30" Eloclrlc Dn Lond Conlrocl. 2 llacb 1100 For Bc4h Will loporoto,
From Bla loor. -8-1401 At- 114-241-1109.
tor 4 P.ltf.
2br.,
AC,
tot• 1'-ctrlc, 52 Sporting GOOCis
wuhwldryar, no pete, MalOn. Browning AIIOOR 12 Go. Now In

;;=:;:::;on;;:.,:;-:n::u::::;d;:
ll.w. Qur readers are hereby
1d;-;:lor::--;;2-:0::_::;;H
In _, homo, 114-1115lnlormodthat all-lingS
:1441 o•• 7pm.
advonlsed In this n o - r
are aval-on anoqoal
lo job roorly In I monthl. Troln '
In vortouw lonno ·ol woldlng- ·-·--•"u•nl•ly•bul-•._ _.

1o:OIIom-3:00pln. lrint roo..WW:
,arm Famttv IMurance MCond
. of Horih lronch ilonk Ono
liuttdlntl. Jo.- Avo., Pl.
P l -.
•
IIUkor wonted
nportMICO
protorr.rl, but wl(l troln. ....., to
oor colo.
Pl. P - Roalotor, lox R-n,
,.,_ ....: .,. ..,_ on 200 M.an ltr.i, Pt. ,.._,.,
_ , Rton Rd. off 143, Oct. 1, Z, WY ZUIO.
4, I, ._ floln or -;:;Nor:::;:lonot::;;;Pt::;u-:;;:;L;:;;t!::-;;R;;;"":o;N~d
,._,....... ~....,...To
- .., .
-···-··• F..., Aomo. . - Sol Own
1
~lutlon
- I:DII-?
Ccl. Houro.
1-2, , _ , .-~~~
. . lotior*y,
lltnt1l Y l Writ ~••
·=~
111 I . U. caiMiW,
N.Aurora IL

--flirt. '

moll 1111111 ,.... hovo In-~
tho ottorlnl~I Poy Phono Routo: S1,2oo
A W•k PotonUol. Priced To
Sol. 1-100·481 '11:12.

.fumlolllngo.

Schoole, MIOfllo. Referena•
Dopool ROQIIired. Wloomon

304-7T.H1SI.

Rd. to; -

.=.,:--,

NOT to und . . _ tliniUCihi"lie

...

3&amp; ao..ro111

lldlnMr

42Evenkrg

PU8

croeaba
wllh IK)CIIUI_fie,
-Run-.bMno.
IOU pick, Holt
lluo Lob, Kontuclcy 1211b. pull; 114 · · - ·
.
Wondoro,l- . ,

-F-. .

34 lllefortunee

37 Coltlpjaltr
llbllr.
38 Olljlct of
. devotion
39 Florce
40iilllllcourH

I+
6+

410 Fl.nMU lraatar; PIE ~•.•

- re.

Clftlor

29 Beltllltul
JOUngmln
33 Looked et

Nor tit

•vv

--·---=

2$ llecllcll

+Q
Vulnerable; North-South
Dealer: North

ooldng - ·

G::.

. litem

.... J

oloni

lnltrumentl
FOR SALE· 1m ........ lllckup,,·
NOci'• ,,.._
Conn trumpol, aoM condition,
W«k lruck,
14- .
•
=3;;.·--- - - - - - 1250, 114•112.2077.
72 Trucks fOr Sele 58
fl"\lltS &amp;
1172 Clifty 3/4 ton :1110, 4 bolt
V"' tabl
•In, 41pcf,
dl4 .....c~,
elle
es
......
""""·
bodJ
......... hiO..
112 Runner BeliM, Pldl: Your 304-e1Hell.
Own, '7 A B - . CUc11nboro
$4 A Pock,l14-4*"451111.
1177 1-ton II'IICk, duOt wlleil,,
11,0110 ocluol mlloo, $111110, 114Appllo· )\111 off Rt. 143, ono milo 112-3MI.
.-uth . 01 Corpontor. Rod ond
&lt;lo*n DollaiOYo opptoo. 0pon 1m Fonl Wrockor Whh Winch,
Socur•yo Gr!fY.
Good Candl11on, 12,11111, &amp;14311'77!8.
.
F01 oole- fl"'!!pld.., ono milo
10111~
of .,.._, Plotno. 1114 S-10, ollto., ohort bod,
Howlnf C.-II; ti.JO/oo. lor ttiiD. 30W11-2MI.
• •:
exln large, fl.~. for ,...,
1111 :11,~ ton 414 Chny lllck'U!l;

bronze
20 Sholfttlker'e
looll
21 Frrtne 23 ConllrUCUOII

sour&amp;
•Qu

·,

1.. 110 Tahoe, 47,000 mllil1,
loeded, 1\.to tranemtaiOn,
P--pklno
For2 Kl. . ~
F - 200 lb.
Ollndlon llaht-. bod-·
Cern, Whllo P ............ Oounla
:foW"IS-3073
~no:·
Of All Kind, ll. .two Ptompldno
· - 1 1 1 1 o - - 1110 Ford Ranger XLT Wllopplf,
¥1Uo On iliilo 211, Jalln C. .IMdlcf, uklnsfiiSOO, rmat MU.
~~":i~4~ spooc~ a . ~e.
304-111-2473 oftor lpm.
· •
Chowotol, Fonl, Dodgo. plclc""
lllxed
Up..._ 8hor1 or lang. Nil ruol .
Lumbor For Hay lolor, 1100,
Farm Suppl•r'
.....754281.
:
t14-811'70SI.
&amp; L1vc,;tock
lloak Troclot 1tlllt Dc&gt;dgo Tondoni 210 ~ E,.lnll 40
-F!Mw Choln
·
Comploto
lttiiOic Sntorn, Ft. Log Trollor, 11 "FI oliumlnu\)1
1"11 llochlno, llohogany Doole,
Dump, I'M 441 1031.
•
Flihennln'a w.dtri:, 114-388- 81 Fann Equipment

,__,.,.And

G- Loatlonl21-oo FrOm
Houoohold Choroo, Go¥1n Plont , In Goltlpctlo Ctly
Ctoonlng, Duotlng, llotllllnt School Dlotrlcl, Dopoolt •
Floor, lnqutro At: Box 100; c/o I4IOIIIo &amp; Utllftleo, 114-3111-3127.
Qd.:r.lo Dolly T~-. 125 Ctoon 3 lodraam H - With
~)1. AvoniiO, Golllpctlo, OH Flroptoco, Oolllcnz

Remad•lad .2 Mdnom

llotol-

-or -.

Will Do:

Financial

For lole- Antique Gholoolounilo
In 11-nt aondNion, liDO, 114:
11112-2711, m&lt;lot to opo
-loto.
For Solo: I OIJOI', Coli
114 411 1111.

OUTSIDE

Charming, Older 3 ladroom
Home1 ~~ ~ AMIDdaled,
Dllllacnea Double

Mllrchahdlse .

18 lJftlb
ill Homen

• AIO Z

AE.t&lt;l:JBICS •

~~
~~~~~~~~~~~==~~~~=====isdud~-;
~, ~ ~ ~
51--H-o_u_u~ho~ld-:--- ~54 Mlscellaneoul
S1
Musical
:='.,2drl¥,.
::_ yo "' ·-~
ond

CfiiM

• 13 Pelvic bonll
14conelrlctor
1511-ol
wllklng
111 Wolle!

·~lOSS

44,000 111..., Uke Hew ._..,
Very Nlcell14 ttl 3257.
:

1'• J I '
' .....IL-l

111124421, If no . _ joloooo
._" m·x·g• on~
·

•·•·II

.K10 76S

Good. tiiO Firm, 111 ,,, 0412
7-11 P.ll.
•
1H7 GL -.u W"l'!flo Air, T111
Cnoloo,- CooL -ol Clnly

Wanted to Rent

12 ActrMt-

EAST

":" .

IOmo Woill But A.,.

-

Ml/mo., 114-112·2117.

cut

II TV llllft

.J64

~~14J11.114-4414221
I. • P.il'.
• _
1H7 llc!clgo Choraor For loll;

·lor ront.
.

.

bleltlt

5 Long CIMp

.AKIOIIIU

...
lonl To
' ........

laoillont

Spocoo ~ lor ront llortlnt · ol

47

...

NORTH
' .... 2

·-:a
......... -J:&lt;odlt-

~

,..~

11111,-WY.

1 Slrlln tor

PHILLIP
ALDER

- - ..... - .. month.
II - -· Cloltli Hc4ol.
114, 1110.

.

NEA Croaaword Puzzle

Roome

~Ed DC4... 1112 ..... al .....

3 II d OOIM, O.nten Tub, Af..

AUtOS for s.le ••

11

for Rent

OOIMIIIori. Mil ,..iij.attO.

- - - - .__2
";:~--.
... -.....

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wri&amp;flt

'

1993

P.:icinds could prove helplul to you in the

y'fi,T ahead both careerwise and socially.
. Their-input might help you get a beHer !ob
or introduce you to that 1n group you ve

credit them today with assets they don 't When you r.eed her the most she might be
possess . Th is could cause you to fee l ; cozyingup toyouropposition. . .. . .

unnecessarily inadequate.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Tell 11 like tl tS
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Persons today, even if it presents yo u in an unat·
who usually accept what you say ve'!latim traclive light. II you boast or eKaggerate,
might chall~nge your statements today. there's a strong poss1b1lrty your slatemeniS
Don" I spread It on too thick and make sure will not be believed.
,
yqu have the lacls to back you up, ·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You mighl not
PISCES (Feb. 20.Morch 201 Today ff you 1be as sharp a horse trader today as some·

, been wanting to join.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) You have the
a\jility lo see both sides of. an ·Issue and
f!l•~ can be an enormous as~el. Today,
: .-ever, il you ledlously weigh and. bal· feel required to make a choice between , on~. with whom you'll be do!ng buslnes~ .
. ante things. you"II become lnellectlvel y paying an old obligation or buying' some- ThiS person could end up With the farm 11
thing new. you'd be wise to lry to nd you r- you're not careful.
· indecisive . G'et a jutnp on life by unde r·

·•

rr

II

1 1

I;
I r

C II E E ll
~
1

Overheard at airport : "Mod·
-~ ern airline travel is great. Hthe
·~
weather is bad you can be
flown faster than sound hunr\~:-:-.-:H~V:-:--L-:::-O-:L-....., ~~~~ ~! ~iles from where you
11
t;

I I I I ·1 1G

Complete the chuck le q uoted
by folhng in the m1ssmg words

yov develOp from step No. 3 below

A PR INT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
.~
THESE SQUARES

A
V

I

UNSCRAMBlE lETTERS TO
GET ANSWE~
•

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
omm
Menace • Juror • £aves · Pauper • PAJAMAS
I had forgotten to empty my sons pockets before
washing his pants and almost ruined my washing
machine. The only time a
I boy has nothing in his
pockets is when he's
his PAJAMAS.

�Page-14--The

Sentinel

Community calendar
Community Calendar Items
appear two days before aD event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received in advance to
assure publlcatioll in the calen·
dar.
THURSDAY
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.
POMEROY - There will be a
special meeting of the Fraternal
Order of Police at the Pomeroy
Police Department at 7 p.m. All
members are urged to attend.
PORTI..AND - Lebanon Township Trustees will m~t "f!l~day at
7 p.m. at the townshtp building.
POMEROY - Free Clothing
Day will be held at the Salvation
Army on Butternut Avenue from
10 a.m. to noon. All area residents
in need of clothing are welcome.

School at 7 p.m. with the Shafer
Family, the Turley family, Reflections, Eternity and Cathy Stebbins
to perform. No admission.

ihe public.
RACINE - Descendants of
Edward and Anna Dill will hold
their third reunion at star Mill Park
at 1 p.m. Bring a covered dish. All
relauves and friends are ipvited.

CHESTER - The Chester Elementary School Fall Carnival will
start with dinner from 5 to 6 p.m.
There will also be door prizes,
games, bingo and a haunted house
from 6 to 8 p.m.

0

•

SYRACUSE - Syracuse First
Church of God will hold its homecoming starting with morning services at 10:30 a.m. followed by a
lunch provided by the church ·at 1
p.m., an afternoon service at 2:30
p.m. with singing and preaching
and outside games for children.
Preachers will be Jewett Hosler and
David Russell. Everyone is welcome.

POMEROY - The Bedford Volunteer Fire Department will hold a
bake sale at Kroger from 10 a.m. to
noon.
SUNDAY
LO"ITRIDGE - Lottridge Community Center will be sponsoring a
smorgasbord dinner ·from noon
until I :30 p.m. Cost is $5 for adults
and $2.50 for children under 12.
Carry out is available. Everyone is
welcome.

ANTIQUITY - Descendants of
the late H.A. Fred Hayman and
Gamet F. Polk Hayman will hold
their ,21st reunion at the home of
C.E. Hayman, Sr. The reunion will
begin at 10 a.m. followed by dinner
at noon and games in the afternoon.
All relatives and friends of the
Hayman family are invited.

HEMLOCK GROVE - Hem lock Grove Church of Christ will
hold its annual homecoming starting with former minister Hal
'
POMEROY - There will be a Doester of Chambler, Ga. preachspaghetti dinner with the Meigs ing at the 9:30 a.m. service folHigh School football team from lowed by Sunday school at 10:30, a
5:15 to 6:15 p.m. in the high schO?l basket dinner at noon and an aftercafeteria. A small donatton ts noon service starting at 1 p.m. featuring 'The Born Again Believers"
required for all you can eat
of Gallipolis. Minister Chas DomiPOMEROY - There will be a gan and the congregation invites
Showcase Meigs County meeting
at the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce at 7:30am. Final decisions regarding all aspects of th~s
even will be cplhple~d. Any b~st­
ness, artist, festival or organizauon
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 Sept.
30.

REEDSVILLE - South Bethel
New Testament Church, Silver
Ridge, will hold its homecoming.
starting with Sunday School at 9
a.m. folioed by worship service at
10 a.m., dinner at noon and afternoon services at 1:30 p.m. featuring The Jets, Andy English and
local singers. Pastor D. W. Sydenstricker invites the public.

PROST ATE SCREENING • Sixty Meigs
County men went through prostate cancer
screening Wednesday at the Meigs County
Health Department. Dr. Scott Blair, oncologist
from Riverside Hospital, Columbus, associate
director of the Cancer Institute there, Dr. S. K.
Vaidya, a urologist from Point Pleasant, and Dr.
James WithereD, Pomeroy doctor, donated several hours each to assist ~tb the screening. Here

lr

Dr. Blair, standing, uses a prostate model to
educate Jose Delgado, center, and Douglas
Enoch, about the disease. Veterans Memorial
Hospital provided all the lab work for &amp;he
screening, and the Meigs County Council on
Aging RSVP pro~ram assisted by registering the
participants, domg routine height and weight
checks, and escorting the men to hospital for the
blood work.
·

· FRIDAY
LONG BOTTOM - The Faithful
Gospel Churc~ in Long Bot~om
will have a servtce at 7 p.m. Fnday
with Evangelist David Dailey as
the speaker. Special music will be
provided by local singers. Pastor
Steve Reed invites the pubhc. A
fellowship will follow.
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 will be by C.J.
and the Country Gentlemen. ,

of the yea_
r
THURSDAY -FRIDAY -SATURDAY
SEPTEMB'R
30th, OCTOBER 1st &amp; 2nd
'
ftl'al!
• 'TIL 9

POMEROY - Grace Episcopal
Church will be serving dinners
from 5:30-6:30 p.m. prior to the
Meigs High School Homecoming
Game against Alexander. Menu
includes soups, salads and desserts.
All welcome.

SPECIAL PRICES
ON ALL HOMES
DURING SHOW

'

LOWEST RATES IN 20 YRS.

SATURDAY
CHESTER - The annual Chester
Elementary School carnival will be
held Saturday at the school. Food
will be served from 5 to 6 p.m. and
the games, haunted house, and
other activities will be held from 6
to 8 p.m.
HARRISONVILLE · Harrisonville Lodge 411 stated meeting will be held. Dinner will start at
6:30 p.m. followed by the meeting
at 7:30 p.m. Past masons night will
be held to honor these distin guished masons. Work on master
mason degree. All master masons
are welcome.
RACINE - A family reunion for
the descendants of Victor Lewis
Neutzling, Sr. and Elizabeth Graber
Neutzling will be held at Star Mill
Park at 5 p.m. Table service will be
provided: Bring a covered di~h and
informauon about your famtly . If
you have,any questions call Nancy
Neutzling at 992-6052.
CLCFTON - Clifton Tabernacle
Church will be having a yard sale
starting at 9 a.m.
RACINE - Star Grange #778
and Star .Junior Grange will meet in
regular session on at 8 p.m. at the
Grange Hall. Potluc~ refreshments
will follow the meeung. All members are urged to attend.
MIDDLEPORT - Overbrook
Center will be having an arts and
crafts show and open house from
II a.m. to 6 p.m. Ans and crafts by
many area craftsmen will be available for sale. The public is invited.
POINT PLEASANT - The West
Virginia State Farm Museum will
be holding its annual Country Fes·tival, Antique Steam and Gas
Engine Show and Mason County
Ex1ension Quilt Show on Saturday
and Sunday.
MINERS VILLE - Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapler, Daughters
of the American Revolution will
meet for a luncheon at noon at the
home of Rae Reynolds.
SALISBURY - The Salisbury
Elementary Fall Festival will open
at 5 p.m. Games will start at 6:30
p.m. There will be raffles, games,
food and entertainment Come join
the fun.
GALLIPOLIS - A gospel sng
will be held at Wahama _High

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