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•

'
nm• Sentinel

Johnson .
assumes
new duties
(iAll..IPOLIS - Ann Johnson
has acccpiCd the position of mortpac 10811 originalor for Bank One
m Athens. Previously manager of
the Gallipolis office, Johnson has
been with Bank One for almOS!. 11
yean.
·
··
She has he ld vanous
poSibons,
including assistant retail services
manager, Athens branch adminis11'1110r and customer services super·
visor. .
"I thoroughly enjoyed working
with the people in the
Gallipolis area and· I know I'm
leaving the branch in good hands
wilh John Cornell and Debbie
Rhodes," said Johnson.

By MARYBE'QI NUiLEY
. AP BQ!aess Writer
NEW YORK - The stock market ended the week neat neutral
Friday after switching gears several
times durin~ a session in which
program trading drove share prices
rmt down then up.
Several measures of market
activity managed 10 post modest
~a ins, though. ·The Dow Jones
industrial average edgel11.11 higher to 3,584.74, giving it a small net
change for the week: up 3.63
points.
Advancing issues held the lead
over declines in the .late tally on the
New York Stock Exchange where
stocks rising in price beat those
declining by a margin of about 4to-3. Volume on the floor of the
Big Board came 10 243 .25 million

..

ANN JOHNSON
A graduate of the Ohio School
of Banking, Johnsen resides in
Wilkesville with her husband Mike
and her son Micbael.

GALLIPOLIS - Bank One has
announced thai John L. Cornell Jr.
has been promoted 10 branch manager of the Gallipolis office. He
will be responsible for branch
administration, in addition 10 his
current business development and
commercial lending responsibili·
ties.
.
.
Cornett was previously with The
First Huntingt011 National
Bank, member Key Centurion, as
assistant 10 tb.e president and bank·
ing officer. He was involved in
strategic planning, marketing, cus·
JOHN L. CORNETI JR.
tomer relations, community activi·
ties and special projects.
his MBA in marketing and finance
Prior 10 thai, he was director of from Washington University in SL
ma!keting for Gallipolis
Louis. He is a 1974 graduate of
Parts Warehouse, where he was Gallia Academy High School and
responsible b m!lflceting, advertis- is currently a member of the Gating and sales promotion. ·
lipolis Rotary Club.
·
Comett'reccived his bachelor's
Cornell resides in Gallipolis
degiee in marketing and manage- • with his wife Marty. and
melll from SL Louis Universil1 and children Steven, 10, and Anne, 7.

Ballots now available
for ASC panel election

Quaker State to
focus on lubricants
On. CITY, Pa. (AP) -Quaker
State Corp. will spend more on
advertising next year and concentrate more on its lubricant business,
the company chairman said.
Herbert M. Baum, who was
named chairman and chief execu·
live off'tcer in June, told New York
financial analysts he will use
aggressive marketing to reach
financial goals and create ''the new
Quaker State."
Baum, the rmt outsider 10 lead
the company since it was fouaded
in 1931, rejuvenated sales and
developed new products at Campbell Soup Co. following a successful career in advertisin~.
·· He plans to put h1s marketing
savvy to use at Quaker State, the
country's second-largest retailer of
motor oil after Pennzoil, based in
HousiOn.
"We face a marketing problem,
a great deal of which can be solved
by the right creative execution 10
customers," Baum said in a telephone interview.
Baum said the company's
spending for advertising alone will

In the first six months of the
year, Quaker State reported profits
of $7 .78 million, or 29 cents a
share, compared with a Joss of
$58.98 million, cir $2.17 a sb8rc.
Figures ·for 1992 have been
restated 10 account 'for the disc:on- ·
tinuance of Coal operations and the
adoption of accol!nting standards
concerning retiree health benefits
and income taxes. Those items
amoiDited 10 a loss of $64.14 million, or $2.36 a share, for the first
six months of 1992. .

inodities, was only 4 percent higher
By ,JENNII1ER. LOVEN
than a decade earlier, the report
A•clated.l'l'eu 'Writer
WASHINGTON -;.P'c\lPlomaY said.
Anolher important indicator for
think their
· bills 808i' each
year, )!ut 1~gurcs fro~ the farmers, is the farm value share of
Agriculture Department d1spute the total food dollars spent. Last
year, 26 percent of lhe retail price
that notion.
.
Food prices were only 1.2 per· of all foods went 10 farmers~ down
I percent.
· cent higher in 1992 than in 1991 less than half the increase of the
. year before and ihe smallest jump
For $2 10 $3 an acre, farmers
. since 1967- -- ..,. · .
may be _a~Je 10 stop Jl!'ecious soil
Prices in grocc:ry stores climbed and f~bz~s from disappearing
the least - at 0.7 percent - with down tmgabon furrows .
. restaurant prices rising 2 percent,
The Agriculture Department is
IICCMiing 10 a re~w of food costs studying the use of a white powder
: by USDA's Econo111iC Research called polyacrylamide, or PAM, 10
· Service.
. ·
·
srenr topsoil erosion and warer pol- ·
· Some foods in I!IOfel wm actu· lution caused by ninoff.
"Sediment Joss has been
ally cheaper in 1992 than a year
earlier, inchiding meats, poultry reduced by up to 97 percent and
: and eggs. Price hikes grew the water infillrabon by about 25 per. most for processed fruit, cereals, cent during our tests, which started
· bakery items and dairy products.
in 1991," said Robert E. Sojka, a
· Large supplies and a weak econ- scientist with the Agricultural
· omy are the ,biggest factors in the Research Service's Soil and Water
· dramatic slowing of food prices, Management Unit in Kimberly,
· the report said.
Idaho.
Consumers ~)egan 10 noticeably
"The PAM treatment also keeps
change their spending habits with fertilizers and other chemicals -'the 1991 recession by more aggres- as weU as the soil - on the fields
sively shopping for bargains and where they beloog," l)e said.
avoiding pricey restaurants and
Two or three more y,ears of
higlt-enclmenu cholces.
study are needed 10 detmnil\e 'the
Consumer spending on food . effect of PAM on soil· and water.
. rote alighdy in 1992 -' to $477 But water· treatment facilities'
· billioa on faoil from U.S. farms: nation~ ,already·use the powder
· Sixty-one percent of the food IO·rc~ .lediment.
.
: spendin&amp; was in IIIOreS.
Sojka and fellow soil scientist
~vcr. the prices .of food rose Rick ·D. LeriiZ have tested PAM tess than thole of other c:onsunter which is added 10 a crop's irrigapcoiUII llld .eMca 111111 speixling tion water - on com and edible
onl'ood u a ~tage of dispos· 'besil ftelds. :Jbey believe PAM can
able iricorne bu dropped conlis· be ~ 10 save soil on·millions of
tallly over ~~decade, accord· acres of furtOy.'·irrigated erops or '
iilg 10 tbo ft!P9It
on fidds witlt ~p slopes.
The difference ,between what
~AM is a po!YIJ!Cf tha! is n_on. fllliiCII pt·for their products and 1011c and rionunlatlng, satd screnltow ·much consumers pay for it, . lists at Cytee . in Stamford, Conn.,
,· which USD~ call• the farm-to· which makes me powdec. .
· retail )lricte.~ J1!112. pCiiCent in · · Sojka,and Leritz also believe
1992, 111e ~ liiCI "in IDIIIY, ' that PAM coul4 provide an inexyan.
. ·
~e. simple solution to erosion
'lbil reflects biJhcr labor 8lld ~lem$ in ~ve!Oping countries.
acMrliiiDI COIIU in the ~ Indus- .More than 2 billion tons of soli are
· try; the report, 'lid, . · w~ off the world's croplands
Alld Jhie 1~ wlire, or !liC · each year.
price1 flnn&amp;ll,.
. for JR' aJIII· , ·
.
I '

818
Pick 4:

1759

SuperLotto:
1-6-8-30-31-32

-Page4

'VoL ol:4, NO. 117
.Multi.,.... Inc.

BUY ON THIS

$16 9

37

.,

'

PER MONTH

Includes: Delivery,
Warranty &amp; sten10.
*HURRY, ONLY ONE AT THIS PRICE"
15 Yra., t.75 APR

'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Somehow, the setting seemed
appropriate for a legislative hearing
about clean air and dirty coal.
Legislators and utiliiy execu·
lives met in a room thai featured a
mural depicting the state's early
industrial strength.
Among the artist's scenes: factories belching clouds of black
smoke from furnaces long since
cold in the face of a changing economy and tough federal clean air
standards.
The head of the state agency
charged with overseeing taxpayerfinanced research into ways of

,,
'·.

'
r}

RIVER RACES - Stemwheeler captains
dodged raindrops saturday afterDOOD IS they
raced tbelr bOats down the Ohio River at the

&amp; Year

:"·*· -,

Big Bend Sternwheel Festival Saturday afternoon. Here two sternwheelers approach the
Rnlsh !IDe.

Junction of U.S.
33 &amp;sa&amp;bet-

weef!Logan&amp;
NeiiiOflvllle.

.Sall:eM:OO
Sundaya

Gen. James Hartinger, retired
Four-Star General of the United
States Air Force, will be guest
speaker at the U8th annual meeting, of the Meigs County Pioneer
and Historical Society to be held at
the Meigs County Museum,
Pomeroy, on Sunday.
Gen. Hartinger, a native of Middl~. served a long and distinguished career in the Air Force,
during which time he received
many awards, among them the
highest· peacetime award, the Distinguished Service Medal.
A
will be held at 5
10
society members and

I Jt=~~~o~ppo~rtu~~ .vi~,~ wilh
t
formed Historical

'TEXAS BOB' - Cool, rainy days are
perfect days ror eating, or cooklna; cllUI as
demollitrated by the turnout In Saturday's
Cook·olf at the Big Bend Stemwheel
Entrants were required tci ,display

their ingredients and here :Texas Bob (Bob
Arms ol Pomeroy) displays his ''secret IDgredients'' which include such bizarre Items as
. muskrat, ullmander ,and copjl!l'head. Arms
tied for third place In the IDdiVIdual class.

.Man jailed or felonious assault

Society Singers will open the program at 5:30 with a musical _presentation followed with devOilons by
Norma Lee. This will 6e Mrs.
Lee's 13th year 10 have devotions
for the Historis:aJ Society's annual
meeting. A short memorial service
for deceased members will be pre·
sented by the Rev. William Mid·
dleswarth, and Gen. Hartinger's
speech will follow. A reservation
dinner at 6:30 and the society business meeting at 7:30 will conclude

.,

arrested about 8:30 p.m . by
A Pomeroy man is confined 10 ed there and released. 1
the Middleport jail pending an ini·
According 10 Pomeroy Chief of Pomeroy patrolman Scott Jtll'las. As
lial hearing in Meigs County Court Police,Gerald Rought, the alterca" the officers were leaving Pomeroy
for alleged felonious assault, t10n occur-red on the lot at the village hall 10 take Clark 10 the
a~sault on a police officer, and · Marathon Food Mart, West Main Middleport jail, he jerked loose and
escape.
S't., Pomeroy, about 5:50 p.m. Fri- ran from the officers. He was
apprehended several minutes later
Steven Clark, 19, Wetzgall day.
Street, allegedly hit Troy
After McDaniel was hil he on Second Street in Pomeroy.
Officer Jonas went 10 Veterans
McDaniel, 30, of 663 North Front re1Umed 10 his home in Middleport,
Memorial
Hospital for treatment of
St., Midc!leport, in the head with an called Middleport Police, and then
ax handle.
was transported 10 Veterans by dte a neck sprain sustained in the
.
McDaniel was ftrst treated at Middlep&lt;lrt emergency squad for apprehension.
Felonious
assault
is
a
felony
of
Veterans Memorial Hospital, then treatment of his injuries.
the
first
degree
which
carrjes
a
transferred 10 St. Joseph Hospital in
Middleport police alerted
penalty
of
18
monthS
10
five
years
Parkersburg, W. Va. He was treat· Pomeroy officers, and Clark was
and up to a $2,500 fine .

·,

•

Health service receives commendation

, . .. . · .· .. 3.da~ only~..
an awesome .opport~n•tY to.get .
twice as much for ytiur dollars!

aNi)e®

L

Health Recovery Services, a non be commended for its commitment
profit agency providing substance to providing quality care 10 the
abuse prevention, intervention and ~le in its commurtitY."
·
'We are extremely pleased to
treatment services to Southeast
Ohio since 1975, has been accredit- have achieved this distinction,"
ed with commendation by the Joint said Kenneth H. Pickering, execuCommission on Accreditation of tive director ofHealth Recovery
Services. "Receiving accreditation
Heallhcare Organizations. ,
This is the highest level of with commendation is an honor
accredi1alion awarded by the Joint that will inspire us 10 continue to
Commission, the nation's oldest improve our services to our clients
and the commiDiity ."
and largest accrediting body.
He.alth Recovery Services
"Receiving accreditation with .
c·ommendation is a significant (HRS) is partially funded by the
achievement, one that recognizes Alcohol, Drug Addic\ion, and
exemplary performance by Health Mental Health Services Boards of
and .
Recovery Services," said Dennis Athens/Hockil1g/Vinton
Meigs/Gallia/Jackson
counties.
O'Leary, M.D., Joint Commission
HRS has three divisions 10 pro.'
~resident. "The organization should

You. can'ttop the comfort, quality and sly I~ of an
Action recliner. And you can'ltop the price unless
you get one free. Choose any of the styles sl)own .
Pay the regular price ... gel another of equal value
.FREE! There's a catch. Offer ends soon!

If you don't need two, tell your
neighbor or bring a friend and
.· s.hare the cost and the savings!

:'Cloud Walker' takes
.:BEF chicken flying contest

••

742·2211
, · . .. : 1
Four Miles off st; Rt. 7 on

'

Rt.124 .

'

burning Ohio's high-sulfur coal
cleanly said afrer the meeting she
sees a revival ahead for the mining
industry. ·
Jacqueline Bird, director of the
Ohio Coal Development Office,
said coal still faces difficult times
in the short· term. mainly because
or federal laws enacted in 1990.
"I think you're going to see
more consolidations. Unfortunately
you 'II see thai some of the smaller
ones, the ones that are on the margin, may not make it," Ms. Bird
said.
But she expects 10 begin seeing
practical commercial applications

' RIO GRANDE~ Ohio (AP) Cloud Walker didn't exactly live
liP 10 its name, but !h.e winrlcr of
the 22nd International Chickeh Flyiilg Meet did manage 10 stay aloft
for 318 feet. 5 inches.
~ Cloud Walker's ownet. Judy
:&gt;tewart of Galloway, collected· the
$100 1rmt prizC in Saturday's con~st, ~ of the Bob Evans Farms
J!estrval in this southeast Ohio
IOWP.
I
: John Salyers, also of Galloway,
dwned the second• and lhird·place
eptries. Silver Pullet flew 309 feet
t;I inches to olace second and

.

•

from research on which the state
alone has spent $80 million over
the last eight years.
"I do see a renaissance for lhe
Ohio coal industry post-2000,"
Ms. Bird said.
Rep. Jack Cera, D· Bellaire, a
member of the coal ofrtce's techni·
cal advisory' board, is not as (Jplimistic as he was before the 1990
laws.
Cera said federal timetables for
reducing air pollution forced companies into using anti-.pollution
coal scrubbers instead of emerging
technoi!~Ries that will offer a better
Continued on l'ale 3

Gen. Hartinger to spe.ak Sunday

.

Open
Mon•..frl.
8:30-8:00

.AhiTinnn

•••InC.,._._

.----Re ·atta o.n the river-- Coal research head sees
post-2000 mining revival

HOME

..
Set Up, Skirting, Steps,

Famous quality
luxury built

1 s.cuon. 10 P~p~~ 35 ..,to
AM 11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohlo,Monday, October 11, 1993

'

.

Located at

Pick 3:

a

14170 3 BEDROOM

review ."

•

finished ~ wCelc up
. Active Big Board
ed two new j)lfcrings.
topped by . American. Expre11
exchangeable notes, which cl~
at 36-7/8, compared 10 their offer·
ing price of 36-3/4. The noleS.may
be exchanged for common shares
of 'F irst Data'. that are held Jiy
American Express. · .
•
Another new offering, Detroit
Diesel, also climbed on its first day
of lradin~. lt fOS!C 10 25·1!8 rroin its
initiill pnce of$20 share. •
::'
Stocks turned in a record-setting
session in ):..ondon where lh.e
Financial Tlml!s-Stock Excharigi::
I ()().share. index rose 16.2 P,Qin"~
or 0.52 peltent, to close at3,108.6;
above Wednesday's nccord close of
3,100.8.
...
The week -long rally continued
Friday in Germany and the buyini
enthusiasm spilled over mt&lt;i
France, helping stocks in Paris to;
close mostly higher.
•
In earlier Japanese stock uading:
the 225-issue Nikkei Stock Aver.r:
age gained 1P.01 points, or 0.56
percent, 10 close 8l 20,378.64 oti!
the Tokyo Stock Exchange.
··

ing n:quirements is eligible 10 vote
in
these farmer committee elections:
any individual of legal voting age
with an interest in a farm a·s
owner, op:raiOr, tenant or sharecroppe,r who is eligible to partici·
pate in-any"'ASCS 'pro~ram. No
person can be denied to vote
because of race, color, .religion,
national origin, age,' sex, marital
status or haJI4icap. ·
. The following to.wnships will
vote for aepreaentatives in the 1994
ASC
·
elections in GaDia ·COIDity: Greenfield, G!l)'an, Harrison, Ohio and
Walnut. It: .you feel you are I!" ,eligible vottt and have not rece1ved a
• nominating petition, please contact
the ASCS offtee at 446-8686. ·

Think fOOd prices..soared
in '92? ·Just check again

..

shares as of 4 'p.m ., down from roD jobs in August.
T)re data virtually met expecta·
255.44 million in the prcviOO!l sestions and put to rest fears 10 the
sioo.
Tire seesaw session started with bond market that accelerating
stoCks shooling hig!ler as the bond growth might fi!D irillation.
On Friday, concerns about quar·
market staged a· raUy that rocketed
terly
corporate -earnings rcporta due
. prices up sharply and d!'ove down
mterest rates: The buying binge sho!'lr undermined lite rate-related
sent lite 30-year Treasury bond up optimism. ,
Waves of computer-guided sell-·
about 1-1/4 poinls, slicing its yield
ing
programs knocked stoCks lower
to S .92 percent. Interest rates
around
midday, temporuily cliprecede when bond prices Jise.
ping
more
than 25 PQints off the
Bonds rose ir) nespons~I IO a gov·
Dow
industrials.
Bl!ying programs
errpent employment repoFt that
subsequently
took
over and helped
indicated the economy continued 1o
the
marlcet
recover.
grow slowly in September:
·
Among broad market indicators.
The Labor Department's report
the
NYSE comp6slte inched ahead
showed the nation's unemployment
by
0.37
to 255.81, triinrning its Joss
rate held steady at 6. 7 pe{Cent in
for
the
week
to 0.48. Standard &amp;:
September. Payroll employment
Poor's
500
stock
indeJt gained 1.13 .
grew by 156,000 jobs in September
to
460.31
but
slipped
0.98 in the
following a d_ecline of 41,000 pay·
week.
The Nasdaq composite index
moved up 1.78 10 764.27, bringing
it 0 .99 above the week~ earlier ·
level. ,.
AI the Americ;m Stock
Exchange, the market value index
rose 0. 75 10 a record 464 .70,
exceeding the prevjous peak of
463.36
reached A&gt;n Wednesday. It
increase fnlm about $17 million in·
1993 to $30 million in 1994. He
said the marketing budget would
likely be two 10 2-112 times advertising expenses, meaning it· would
be $60 million 10 $75 million.
Baum said in the next three
years the company will try to
achieve at least 10 percent annual
earnings growth and realize a 14
percent average return on equity.
Quaker Stale employs about
4,000. Baum said he has no plans
for layoffs, but "anything that
doesn't add value is subject to

Ohio Lottery

Baseball
·playoff
results

Wall Street en·ds week with modest' gain

Cornett new
branch chief
at Bank One

By LISA COLLINS
GaDia Countr ASCS
Executive D~rector
GALLIPOLIS - ·A 'list of the
niunes of all known eligible people
10 receive ballots in the upcoming
annual ASC committee election is
·available irt'th'e county ASCS
office. Flll'lllers began nominating
candilWes for the ASC election on
Oct. 7.
ASCS, an agency of the U.S.
Department of Agriculture, is
responsible
for flll'lll program adminisuation ..
On the local level, ASCS operares
under a farmer-elected committee
system. This year's election will be
by mail ballot between Nov. 6 and
Dec. 6. Voters may.also get ballots
at the county l\SCS oroce.
Anyone ,who meets the follow-

•

OH-Polnt

vide drug and alcohol prevention,
inrervention and treatment services
to Southeast Ohio-community
services, which includes prevention
and community education and
intervention programming; outpatient services, which provides out·
patient clinics in Athens •. Hocking,
Vinton, and Meigs counties; and
residential services, which offers
residential treatment for adolescents at Bassett House and for
women at the Rural Women's
Recovery Program.

Two injured
in accident

A Plains woman was Cited for
failure 10 control following a onevehicle accident on U.S. 33 in Bedford Township eatly SIDiday morning, the Gall1a-Meigs Post of the
Goldie flew 1® feet 10 inches 10 State Highway Patrol reported.
Cathy A. McPhail, 24, 21 Main
take third·. Sl!lyers received prizes
St., along with.pasSeriger MaUitew
of $50 aitd $25.
·· '
Fifty-eiglli chickens were. R. McPhail, 2'7, also of'21 Main
pushed from dte 10-foot high plat· St., we~e injured in the crash and
form before a crowd of about 1;$00 . takerr 10. Ve~'s Memorial ~·
pital by the Pom!l£0)1 Emergency
people.
Eight people,· including mem- Medical Service: Both were treat·
bers of United' Poultry Concerns ed and released.
According to the accident
Inc., and Protect Our Earth Trea·
s~. protested the flylns conteSt. report, Md'ltail was drivi!lg north·
They distributed pampl!lets and west on U.S. 33 when she fell
asleep and went ~ the left side of
held signs. ·
The event was cruel to the ani· . the road, strildns a ditch.
The vehicle sustained light dam·
mals, said Ritchie Laymon, an
age
and was towed from the scene.
organizer of the demonstration.

QUEEN CROWNED
Jennl Hill, rla•t. WIIB crowned
f993 Southern Hleh School
Homecomlae Queea during
halftime at SHS's homecom·
lng ll"'e aplnst Eastern Hll!h
School Saturday night. Hill,
dauahter of Marvin and Jan
Hill, Racine, was crowned by
1~92 Homecomln1 Queen
, Me110 Wolfe. Servln1 as the
holletomlns court, above,
were (from left) Jenlfer
Cu.mmlna; sophomore atten·
dut; JeanltDU, 1993 Home·
comlnJ Quen; Amber
Thomas, rresbmu attendant,
aad Tracy Pickett, junior
att~ndant. Also shown are
Nicole McDIIIiels, Rower girl,
and Dustin Brlnager, croWII
bearer.

the annual meeting.
This year's meeting will incorporate some of the activities and
ceremonies of earlier meetings. A
ceremony of early meetings was
the annual "Massing of the Colors". All patriotic societies in the
county were invited 10 participare
in the ceremony. This year the
society will line the entrance 10 the
museum with flags and the musical
presentations will be patriotic. The
society inviteS anyone who parbCI·

paled in the annual "Massing ohhe
Colors" ceremony and knows how
it was conducted to call the museum at 992-3810 and share this
information.
The Meigs County·Pioneer and
Historical Society is reputed 10 be
one of the oldest, if not the oldest
Pioneer Society in the Staie of
Ohio, according 10 Margaret Parker, president. The OrJanizational
meeting was held on September 7,
1876, and there has held an annual
meeting every year since. .
The records show that 17 men
and two women (Amy Whaley
Kingsland, 1937-1946 and Marg~t Windland Parker, 19114--~­
sen&amp;)· have ser.ved dlo- Seciety-115
president. The' fmt president was
Stillman C. Larlcins.
Tl1e early constitution limited
membership 10 rersons who had
been a resident o Meigs County no
less than 20 years, over 50 years of
age, or who was the wife of a
member, and lhe cost was 50 cents
annually. The present Constiwlion
makes no stipulation 10 residency,
age, or gender, only that members
have an interest in Meigs County
history and pay an annual membership fee of $7 .50.

�., .. ..

•

Monday, October 11, 1993

I,

The o.IJy

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

• - . w j . J ...

•

Commentary

Pill• 2 The o.Jiy Sentinel

Cold front may bring showers;-cool

OHIO Weathct
/ Tuesday. Oct. u

PomerOy Mlddlepqrt, OhiO .

fo~tfor

Monday, October 111 1 -

The work wedl: will sot off to a

conditions and

~I but sunny start.

MICH.

1

.

The Daily Sentinel

•Pentagon's brownie recipe needs re-inventing

PA.

IMansfield ls3• I•

...

with Uncle Sam, I:Oillpanies fnt ·while, lOCI to Jrcat Jen1ths to detamincd by the Active OxyJCD
have to crack PentaJOD·speak:· specify the ICCCplablc size of the Metboc1 (AOM) in Method Cd 12:.
57 of the Coaunaclal flats and~
"The texiDJ'e of the brownie llha1l walnllll in the brOwnies.
be firm but DOt bird."
•'Shelled wain.a pie!:es shall be c:haplcr in ·the Official and Tcntao' CllleiJed:
-- ·· ·
of the small piece size cltssifica- tivc Mctbodl ol the American Oil
:.
Thc Pentagon's official fudge
tion. shall be of aligbt color, and Cbemisls Sbcicty...
, brownie m:ipo.
·
shall ·be U.S. No; f of lbc U.S.
I
In all, the 22 PIP of specifil:a-1
S. . . . . for S~ J3oilim.Wal·
1 lioaa for rbocolate covmd brownand UDdMcd in 1990, went 1bnluall!
flU
DUll. A minlmiDD of 90 pcltelll, by
1
ROBERT L WINGETf
10 dirr-t llyen. Harvey Xacnd,
ies and oaiiiiCII c:ooties arc more
lll.'
t
·
•
weiJbt, of the pieces aball pus
Publllller
. than an OYerwriltell recipe. Offi.
lrdC
fhroU&amp;b 1&lt;4/16-iDclut!wz neuOund tho director of public a1faira a1
ciala describe It as a rallying ay for
.
bole screen and 1101 more than 1 Army Natick Relearcb, beYe~
mcnt and Bniln~enter';
Vice Preaident Al Oui's NadoaaJ : : After be~ by in111r11etin1 ·percent, by wei1ht; shall pasa
MARGAREl' LEHEW
X()llined 1bat the .
11 11M:
.
Performance
Review.
During
one
:
.
tbe
reader
•
to.;!?'
CUI
in
large
.
ihrough
a
7116-lncb
ctirmplflr
rOund
~r
:;;; precise bee- ntionl
or lbo poop's !!!C'!dinp, thae i'
bowl 011 bigb
unlil Jiabt and
three-year stora1e life. Whit.
JII,PI of diilbclid~ the spccifi.- ' fluffy," the llpCCifications tum sur- · Accorllin1 to resulation
UrrnDts OF OPINION 1r0 wek:cme. lboy lbould be lou lllaa 300
Ceho!!l were dislributcd.
! JC11.
.. 3.3.B" , the "moiature count of Keene· agreed that the speclfica•
· lions prob,ably I!ClCDl • 'completcl1
......
All lollon - llll!lect 10 edldaa llld IIIUII be lipod wilh - . · One NPR cfficlal told us be lit"Pour baUer into .
.....
oddnN aid tolepboDe Dumber. No 1lllliped leU.. will be pubillbed. Leltln ,
- at a rate the oatmeal cooties 1ball be not'
inane to the IYetagC periOD," be
_......._,..bolD_....
oddaeain&amp;U... 1111t-·".....
·
ally slipped Ida forebeld wilb hil l that will yje]d IIIICCaled btownies more than 3.5 percent" .Cif the
~-.------!"""~--.11 Pl1m when the file was puseil to .• which, when cut such as to meet cookie bat. The .oatmeal, mean·
Slid there- andonal.
"If you don't write everything
him. •'I said, 'bow in· the world ' the dlmenslm requirements speci- . ,.while, bu to ''bave 111t11111 rolled
r could we ':fi~.fOIIen to this fled in fOI1illdon 3.4f, will weigh •Oil Oavo~ and odor and shill be exactly to the • •.. ~holly il
·
approaimiiOly 3S grams cocb.'.' . clean anll flee' fro111 buniccl parti- loin&amp; to ·~ a c:omc!r·.IC! that 1110Ypoint?'" the
Dealins with •uch directives, ·! Utllha ftleipc. '"'bb! dla!fminns clel, rani:id, muaty, 11011!'· or other can save 1 penny.'·' liaid Keene;
"You have to mate tbCm so tight
cYCD wbeu it 1:0111e1 to sweell for
of the costed brownie shill not · Wldllllillblc·flaYDnllld cxkn."
8lld detailod 1bat coatt.c:ton can't
troop rMioas, underlcorea bow sour ex*~! 3-1/l incbel by 2-112 inchthen there's the cooking oil:
cut a coroer Oil it.''
!he experience can be for the pri- es by Sill inch."
''The lbonllliina ibl1l have a sta·
But Pllll Lader, the diiector of
Yale sector. Before doing business
.ReJulation "3.2.S.3", mean- bilityll!,DI!l_lcls...!!!ID 10()~ as
ROBERT E. MD.LBR
miiJllll"'ll"' • the Office /:1 Man110 tilled l'ftll Wrller
IJCmcnt and Bud1et and· a key
member of the vice. president's ·
COLUMBUS, Obio (AP)- Stltc lawmakers sent Gov. George
· NPR, thinkl that eacuse is bllf•
Vm-icb • emeajtiDCf till dalil!lcd to pemlize pen:nll who buy new
bWd.
.
can or o!her bia-JiWt IUms while IIDOfiDIIheir child-lllppolt oblip"It's not mllice or bad judg1ionl.
ment," Lader told our ..acialc Bd
The bill, whi:h will taU effect as IOOIIo I I the J11V0r1D sips it, al8o
Henry. "It's a cultiuc wblcb tries
coafomu Obio'llsw witb.fedeq) l'ellllatioas llld IIYCS the state $100 _
to sto~ somebod).' from doin1
mnJion Ill clrikl-11"1:' pJblida !hal ft Olherwise would lose.
IOIIIOihinB bad and ibcaefore maka
Rep. Raymalid inel, R-Peny, the biD's IJIODIOI', won final passage .
it impossible for anybody 10 do
last weelt. the House w~::28 with Scnale llllendmenlll.
.
anythiDJ espec~1y good; Every
Rep. Jae Campbell.
ll!d Otbm who YOied 10 reject the
~ovemmcntal) iction; specifica5u It? chaaloa "k!''tted cdminislratiop ~Mms dial the bill faced an OcL '
uon and IU~ilor was .put into
31 dl fi• They llld tbe bill DCcdii!IM work.
place to JIYOid or copoct IOIDelhillll
UDder the popollll. a child-support agency may not report unpaid
WIOII,. Elch one ~011 msde ICDIC
cbild-IICIPilt obliptioa• to a credit bumlu unless the bureau requests the
indiYidllllly,
but the qpepltl of
inbmllioa.
aU
this
II
duplication
that lalols the
Credit bJnlas seldom !llllkc such requests as a llU!lla' of conducting
whole
l)'llelll."
·
their routine JmiJWJS Sines said that It a result, "Many deadbeat J.llllCIIlS
To untie that lmQt, Llder 11ys
....._.die cncb 8lld cscspc wi!h sPotless records, despiJc tbelr nonpayOift.....,..
.
OMB is ttying not to create new
1rnots of illl own. He believeslbar if
The bill, oo-lpOIISORid by more !han SO Ji!ousc members of bo!h parOMB starts unleashing brownieJiel. permill chilit-lupport eDfOI'CCment agencies to report delinquent parstyle specifications on preeisely
enll to credit bureaus on their own initia!ive.
·
how to re-invcnt govcmmenl, fedSines.iaid lhlt closing the rcporling loophole has been effective in
eral
agencies are only 1oing 10 swt
other lWei!. Alaska and Nebraska, for instance. reported a 20 percent
re-inventing
red tape;
ina: m Ill collec:liaJs after !hey tightened their Jaws, he said.
"We
are
not going to give speHe il opdmistic that tbe new Jaw will make a sizeable dent in !be baclccific
directions
to what every agenloJ of delinquencies .tbat transWe iniO hundreds of millions of dollars
cy
has
to
do,"
said Lader. "What
owed to depMwlent cbildlen in Ohio.
we're
going
to
ssy is. 'we need
of not btmg able to buy a car a take out a loari because
downsizing
by
this
time and here
of a bid · l'llinl should have a signifiC81!l impscl," Sines Slid.
are
the
kinds
of
JOOls
you CID use.
The~- of Human Services ca1culales that more thin 700,000
You
piclc
011t
what
is
relevanlllld·
Obio
1ft! owed 9011lewhele between $500 million and $1 billion
Ill
k'IUIJIIOit. .
.
.
OMii will keep monitorinJ,
encouraging, sharing auccea stobill'mui•• several othc:r provisions that are needed 10 comply
ries, and occasionally &amp;Cjllding'
Wiih federll regulations. For instance, 110111e of !hem cllrif'y the IUJhority
you.•••
to ordnr waae wilhholdlng without !he court involvement and set procaCOVERIN~ AMERICA
durnl for......,;....;,. withliolding and refundinl any ovCI]IIIid 81110Wlts.
For·Gore and Lader, this i1 a:
·
~
Wlil-t
~SitiiJE
·
·
Jack
)
urden,
Wilmington
(DE)
N~
Jourifaf
'
simple recipe tor the joti of JtinMa. ~~the bill Iilii to addresS other problems Wi!h IJie c&lt;ilvenling government
lecdoa BylleiJI that include clarificaJions of procedures for contempt of
coun I*' 'llCOIIings.
WASHINOTON - Inside the
PcnUtp. it's !mown • fila "MIL,..uar,OIIlo
C-44072C." Ak six months 8lld
WVOftD TO 11m 1H i&amp;it&amp;81'1 01' Tlllt IIZIQ8-JIUIIOIII AllEA ! m wot1r: holll'll, the final product

111 Cout ltleet

By Jack Antle
. rson .

IND.

::::e~'::..":~

a-

hael Bms
• · nn

bole--..

.

~~-high JempcaaiUre for

A .weak low pressure system Ibis dale at the Columbus weather
passinl just to tile south of Ohio sJation was 86 degrees in 1928
tonight will provide for mostly while the record low was 24
cloudy side.. A ·few showers may degrees in 1964.
drill acniia·the southern and eastSunset tonight will be at 6:S8
em sections of !he awe.
p.m. Sunrise TUesday at 7:39 a.m.
Lows tonight will range from and sunset will be at 6:56 p.m.
around 40 over ~ norlbwest corAround the aatlon
ner to the middle 40s in the southThe season's first big chill
east
.
gripped most of Eas! early today
On Tuesday,.a weal cold front while milder weather moved iniO
will slide across the s.Jate. Skies !be Midwest and Plains.
will remain mostly cloudy. A few
Chilly weather was expected to
showers will be possible over hang over much of lhe Northeast
southern and eastern Ohio. Hishs and Great Lakes states despite sunon Tuesday will be around 5S to 60

Sentlt-

P-,:11 3

te~peratures ·

shine, with temperatures as much
as 20 degrees below normal in
some areas. Rain was expected to
move into lbc region by nightfaU.
A cold rain also was forec:lW to
fall over much of the Southeast
later today.
I! was 27 degrees early today in
Albany, N.Y., 31 in Pittsburgh and
32 in Cleveland.
Milder, dry weather was forecast across most of the Midwest
and central Plains, with clear to
partly cloudy sli:ies. Showers were
expected to fall on much or the
West and Northwest, while the
Southwest stays dry with cooler-

tban·nonn.Jl tempcnwra.
Scattered thunderstorms were
expected in Texasllld Florida.
On Sunday. the cooter weather
moved into the East while milder
weather prevailed across -the Mid·
west and PlliRI. Showers fell on
parts of the centnl Plains, lower
Missouri ValieY.IDd West Coast.
The nation s high temperature
Sunday was 97 at Lake Havasu
Ci ; Ariz.
.
'today's highs were forecast in
the 60s for mlih of the Southeast.
Midwest Plains and Northwest
wi!b .mosdy 50s and 40s in the East
and 70s in the Southwest and West

Med.

._____.._. _-_-.
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M .....

New law Seeks Out
deadb eat Parents

"""'led

Bl

ran

"The=:

'=::.•

Turning federal judges into ward heelers

Berrts World

Before becomi.Dg a Ninth Cir· however, he should be disqualified hive been faint signals fi'Olp the to appoint someone in the Justice
cuit Court of Appeals judsc in acccxding to a recent lead ediJoria1 White House that th~ president Department wilh the caccptional
1985, John Noonan bad an exll'IOr· in Tbc New York Times. His might, from time to time,lllllllinllc skills required to dctermme the'
dinarily distinguished .carecr as a record as. an eapert not oJI)y on for the lower federal couns some- depth of a ca.n didate's moral•
legal scholar, law professor and
one who C811110t be depended 911 to integrity in these matters. ·
·.
historian. In 1971, for instance,
.
vote 1he right way on abortion
The precedent having' been set'·
invited by Hirvard Law School to
'JJ
cases.
of a nresident officially extracting:
give the annual Oliver Wendell
Sbould Bill Ointon ac!ually lift
litiCai-Conclitions from iudaes, a.:
Ho~mes lecture, Noonan's "Per- American constitiitional Jaw but on the Jiunus test for the lower fcderll f::turc president could have no •.
sons and Masks of the Law". was all lepl systems, ancient or mod- courts, he would - according to compunction insisting on a range :
then issued as a book that gets 10 ern, would be irrelevant - as The New York 1imes- "commit of other commiunents from thoic,;
the very essence of judging and would hiJ continuous warning, in a poli"cal sellout of incalculable who would be our judges. And~-:~
being judged.
his teachilll and writing, that the dimcnsioas." The president !f.llUld ting them. 1 wu on a telcviSJon't
Noonan writes there "of the law should nounistake the masks it be "doing a grave disservice to panel with one law P.rofcssor,&lt;•
neglect of the pi:nc?n by legal case· places on litigants for the human American women by betraying his whose specialty is civil liberties,::.
books, legal hisUJrics 11!11 treatises. beings enmeshed in the court sys- C!"DJIIII~
· ~ise to defend abor- when he said that he would;:
... Neglect of persons ... bad led 10 tem. (It is as if Noonan bad wriJten uon
.
promise anything a president asked".
the worst sins for which American "Bleak House.")
If
president heeds the indig- bim to do in return for a I!C8t &lt;111 the:::
lawyers (and judges) were accountNoonan, according to The New nant advice of The New York bench. Just like an old-time alder-:1.
able."
York Times cdi!Orial, is not fit to Times - as he makes more and man. He is not alone.
:~
. On the bench, Noonan has been be a fcderll district or circuit court more appointmems to the counsJohn Noonan remembers one of•t
characteristieally independent In judge because be refuSes to pledge litigants in !hese 1cases will not be his law professors asking him: :•:
1992, the Suprcl!le Court of the unwavering fcclty Ill Roe v. Wadi:. in much suspense before the offi- "Are you p,ro-plain~iff or pro- ::;
United S!atCIJ.IUblicly castigated Noonan has been very spec;ifically cill opinions are released. Every defendant?~ • But, sa1d Noonan. :•,.
the Ninth 'Circmt for riot getting on criJical of that decision creating the new federal judge will have sworn ••without nowing more, how••:
wilh !be execution of Robelt .+,lton constitutional right to an abortion. to be JrUe 10 the IJOlitical commit· could you favor the plaintiff or the::.
Harris. Some of Noonan's col- Indeed, .when be came before the ment he· or she lias made to the defendant?"
:~
leagues bad wanled to 'JIIII!tHanis Senate Judlciaey Committee u a prcsidcnL
According to the increasingly ; ~
another hearing. In an Op-Ed piece nominee for the Ninlb Circuit, the
But, 11ys The New York Times, P«;&gt;litic~l~y correct New York : ~
in The New YOlk Times, Noonan only organized opnsition came that commiunent must be more TIDies, 1t tS not necessary to know ,._
noted mordandy that the Supreme from pro-abortion-ripts groupS. In than political. Before getting oo lbc m~ in abortion cases. One loyalty ;~
Coun bad decided "it is intolerable view his qualificaliODS, however, pa!h to the federal bench, each can- oalh·fits Ill such cases.
;~
foraFecleralCountodelayanCKc· theconuniueelctlhatJIQcsy~z· didate has til have "a fortbrigl!t
"SeniCIICefirst-vcrdictaftcr- ·•:
cution to decide a 'coitstil!ltioual
The president bas already
• record of legel and moral SllpJJQrt wards," said th~ Queen as Alice ::question. ~ Al!OII Harris wu · coed 1bc integritY of the Supreme. for the constltulional right io abor· looked 011lllastoDishmcnL
~c
a casualty of Ibis decision. Wu the CQurt by pledging lhathe will only ti011."
Nat Hentoff is a nationally ~
Constitution, 100?'.'
nominate potential justices who • How does a willing nominee . renowned authority on the First •·
Were Jolm •Noonan to be con- have publicly and clearly embniccd show a recprd of moral support for Amendment and the rest of the Bill ::
sidered for the federal bench now. Roe v. Wade. But recently, there Roe v. WadeHI may be necessary of Rights.
::

Nat. Hento-FI'

· ~

-~
~"54_;, .: :
b\1
C

1-

HEA. IM.

•ts it true that the first people to · wear their
caps the way we do were baseball catchers?"

•.

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'

or

U.S.'s original goal in Somalia now obscure ______,- - - - - - -·\:
s 0111aUa Is living, disastrous
proiitdill you can't make policy by
ma4dliaa throuJh. Lackinl a
colaereat 110n10 ot direction or
ob~vc. WubllllfDn hal manto~ 1110 worst of aU pos
111o 'woitdiil'la'ill initial .s~
lui
Tile dilluiet which ·
.,.,_. dlio .l!taY ItaDger company
Ia t
n• ..._ dlil monlh was a
dilic!t ~ It's dille for .Congms
_. 11!f I* "-.t to wake up IUill
wcQabW, llllderJtaDdablc
dilc I!M a IJePininl, a mid• ·
,
iildlli.... . ·
Wllea Preslcteat Bush sent
• •l!rtcaa 1r00ps· lb Somalia· in
..,..II • •, 1110 ICt a ~:!:.c .
D

wl••··
a

=

.... •he!'• _.,. · ·
, .
Tbl&amp;oll wu emer1ency relief.
A , ikr ~ woa1c1 parantcc
clvillllll .,. 111 to tile feediq·CCD·

ae,. ••'IM:te! by,_·lnteraatiollll.
....... a

p11

wblcb Wll

~

4litW llr a.. tribal factions
......,• • ..., • • d r i Wll'.
Aj., r 111 ; _.II; diD Uailld
·N~
aiid liiOild npla
' tl!9 ~ ± • Jl,lll •ejulllll iloilli..

•"*'

Aidid.
• the jJolicy menu. At one poinl, we
achieved.
At that poinl, Aidid wall on die seemed to bet everythmg on a
It took the U.N. lodger than offensive. He ambushed and deci- "summit conference" of tribal
~xpected to take over, but by.May mated a Pakistani unit, which in ·WII'Ionls that promised a ccssc-fll'C
turn made him public enemy No. I and pro~uced nothing. In late
u ,.r,.,_.-. rr
in !he e~ of.U.N. Ocneral Stpe- Augusl, Secretary of Defenae I.,es ·
uOuuJ,If '-''"
tary BCIQb'Ous-Ohali. .Hil fighters •Aspin was l!ent out to ,announce
repeatedly stood off American and
Am¢can ,IIOOpl would come
it wu 011 the~
. A amaU contin- U:N. forces in locallm! but 'iniCDSe · hoJD,O- when lhree objC\)tives bad
gent Ill Americ:anl wu lel't hehti!cl battles. And Jut week,he ell but · bceflscbicved: violcnca quelled i}l
Wider AaMirii:an COIIIIOI in a quiet wiped out an entire I 00-man MOJ&amp;4ishu, Somali warldrd~
sQike foi'ce llld lbout 3,SOO IJ'OOPI Ranger unit' and cleltroYed three stripped of their heavy weapons
In various lo&amp;istics uni11 were American helicoplm.
. and an ·e rr=:. . nationll police .
placed direcdy under U.N. (:010·'
At any tilDe between;May and force~
That~ week,
IIIIJid. Outlidc of_lhe capiJal ~of ~y October,lbe Ci.JIIIlll ~- the.
. t dispi!Cbcd 400 'Aimy
MoP:disbu, rchef effona were tr111011.could have done one of sev-, .~and an uncllicloae(l ilummh"""'"-'d dJrouCboUt Somllli.
erallbinp. Jt could bave deCided to beir of DIII10liDCl from the ati-lerBllt somedlin1 el110 was &amp;110 . declare Yictory llld Cbi!IC home. It rorist I;ielra force ·to SoillaliL ''11ieit
happenina. The U.N. c~fort could bave decided 10 folloW What ~but Qbvious lliiCt: Aidid.
chliriae!l fOCIII, wilh the ldYice and is :no,... basic American 'militliy Almost simu!taneous[y, ,it
.consent of the United States. doctrine llld llllld Ia ~ widely advenised that the relief
"Nat!oa-buildin~~wu now the force ~ pacify, the iituation. ft effort~ a IIJCcess ailci that enlerbnzzwoid. U.N.
· beciD'e, C!" could have pat mcilt of ill~ . Seney food diatrlbution woilld he
aemedto ~ direct panicl• · :J~·mi":'
indiJ~
~~s::c:n::·-.~~. .
~ts ln &gt;the civ war, cboosiDI pen...1.L:~
' ·.
.llidbe,...-....a ....... ~~toriidel !Jctween mpal'l'bJe altna- - - ,__, ............,
tivcs and comlq .town ~~ . What t did
was exJem' withdrawll. At ro.ughly 11\e llliiC
one of dio wMriD&amp;
• porlzC, vacillate and waver Too time, he announced a .•'modest.
elan leaden, Mohamed Farah ~Y coots and oo recipe underJay·" increue" in Ainciiclil force• in

as the initial "objective had been

'"""*aer Jll

"*·

was

.rt.:=ruteJv

4:'

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.,

Somalia. Ill his speech to the U.N. It is nonexistenl, at least to the .: ::
naked eye. It il "'"""'•lism sone : :.
~nerll Assembly, thi: president
claimed thai the.United Slatcl bad mad, ed hoc decliiiiii&amp;Di8sttuend- .
gone in "with our eyes open. I ing as long-ran.se planninJ. ~- ·
think we did essentially what we na is not Vietnam, but the decision- .
meant to do. I Jilst !hinlt we under- mlkin.l proc:esssmella very much .
estimated the dilficulty of setting in like Wuhjngton's in tho mid- "
·19608.
..
moti011 a polilical ~"
ll'is
.~t
tlm~
for Congress to ..
· Robert Oakley lhinb Wllhin •
usert
illclf
more
forcefully.
A !10!1· ·
ton has peoffthe IriCk. A rou~!.
·minded career foreign lttYice ;;?fi. bincinl rcsolntion !lfsed the ~" ,
Cct'Who Wll Oul special CRVO)' to dent to report on Ida PQIIcy by the
Somalia dm;inllbo cartymoo!h8 ·of enc1 of this week and to aet Ameri- ·· ,
the American int.erYCRWlll, OUiey can fOJtcs out. of Somalia by mid- · •
·:
has said f1atly thai "political recon- pecember. That's nOt enough.
What II needed is.k fl!ll•bodicd ~ :
c;iliatiOII il the Ol)ly way 10 IIOivc
the tii'Oblem...
debate under the lmlll. of the Wsr , :
Seeming to agree, i!l .late Powers kL Americans have been • •·
put into combat and are:~ in ::
~cpt"mliCr and early · oc~bcr
ent :.
Amalc:in l'ftldaJs waciCPOIIcd to unit-sized numbers. The
bC QDI Boutrou-GIWI to .,wt must tell' the 91tion cxacdy why ; ::
the \f.N. •way flom· ~ll!ion they are fil!blil!s 11114 fliJ' bCiw long. : :
with Aidicl. Wbell ......... lb
'
.ICIUII'C .· .H oddlns Carter"in; former, :
this policy circle, die !JIIfortunatc State Department ••oltesmaa ~ ,;
State Depanment ipotelllllll' wd and award~'llrilullq reporter, edP ::
these w_e re "1\ot contradictory tor llld pallllll!er;ll pmldeat or · '
piecf!l ~ illformatiOD."
MalnStnel,.
D.C.The ~lelll is that ~merican buecl, teleVIsion Prod!lttlon aim·
jlolic:y is ·vlmc dian coati:ldictay. pa~y.

w........,

----Weather.....
. ·- - Sou!bern Ohio
· Tonight, mostly cloudy with a
chance of showers. Low in the
middle 40s . Mainly southwest
winds 10 to IS mph. Chance of rain
50 percent
Extended ror~
~ Tuesday, mostly cloudy with a
slight chance of showers. High

around 60. Chance of rain 30 percent
·
Wednesday, fair. Lows 35 to 40
and highs 50 to 55.
Thursday, fair. Lows 35 to 40
and highs 55 to60.
Friday, a chance of showers.
Lows in the upper 30s to lower 4()s
and ~lghs in lbc upper 50s to lower
60s. ..

--Area deaths--Ernestine Williams

Myrtle M. Wolford
·

Myrtle Murphy Wolford, 70,
Sidwell died in Pleasant Valley
Hospital, Pt. Pleasant.• W.Va.,
Monday morning.
.
She was born Aug. 16, 1923 at
Lindsey, W.Va. to the late William
·and Sara Jane Pack ,Murphy.
She was preceded in death by
her husband. Frank Wolford,
February 9 by one brolber ll!d one
sister.
· She is survived by one son Carl
(Jacqueline) Vanover, MinersviUe;
three step-children Charles Wol·
ford of Texas City, Texas and
Brenda Kay Ydrogo of Gelvaston,
Texas; a foster son Brian (Wilma)
Murphy of Gallipolis; 13 grandchildren; several great grandchildren; four bro!bers Roy Murphy of
Marietta; William Murphy of
Columbus; Amos Murphy of
Edserton. W.Va. and Elbert Murphy o( Toled9; a~ . thtec.. s~tcrs
Sally (Jllflles),Stanlcy of Columbus, Georsie (Verlin) Stevens of
Vinton and Rebecca (Bill) Price of
Alexandra, Va.
Myrtle was a member of the
Clark Chapel Chwch.
Services will be II a.m. Thursday with Rev. Jim Paaerson officiating with burial will be in the Vinton Memorial Park. Friends may
call at the ~y-Moore Funeral
Home in Vititlon Wednesday 7 to 9
.m.

Stocks

Ernestine K. Williams. 73, of
State Route 124, Rutland, died
Mondliy, Oct 11, 1993, at VcJcrans
Memorial Hospital, Pomeroy, following an extended illness.
Born 011 Feb. 2, 1920 at MeAn·
drews, Ky., she was !be dau~ler of
the late Bailey and Lyd•a Ball
Kendriclc.
She was a former sales clerk and
a homemaker.
She is survived by a daughter
and son-in-law, Phyllis (Shorty)
and Jim Pierce of Rutland; three
grandchildren, Bailey (Buddy),
Ronnie and Patty Dugan, all of.
Rulland; a sisJcr, Jernestine May of
Georgia; six step-grandchildren,
Marl&lt; and Mike Pierce of Pomeroy.
Marty and Matthew Pierce of Ru!land. Gail Fitch of Cheshire. and
Cheryl Varian of Mason, W. Va.;
three great·grandchiidren, II s!Cpgreat·srandchildren, and several
nieces.
Funeral services win be held
Wednesday at II a.m. at lbc Birch·
field Funeral Home in Rutland. The
Rev. Cecil Wise will officiate and
burial will be in Miles Cemetery,
Ru!land. Friends may call at the
funeral borne 5 to 8 p.m. Tuesday.

Couples receive
marriage licenses
The following marriage licenses
were issued recently in the Meigs
Couriiy Probate Court of Judge
Robert Buck:
Thomas Lloyd DeeJcr, 41, and
Melody Ann LeValley, 41, both of
Portland; Timothy Roger Priddy
Sr .. 45, and Shirley Alice Smitli,
48, both of Racine; Earl Benjamin
Beckford, 36, Lake Placid, N.Y ..
and Jayme Rachelle TiUis, 19, Rut·
land; Timothy Lee Fortner, 31 ,
Ravenswood, W.Va., and Angela
MecheUe Manuel, 21, Racine.

Am Ele Power......................... .38
Ashland Oil... ..................... 34 3!8
AT&amp;T .............................:.. 51 7/8
Bank One ...........................42 7/8
Bob Evans .......................... 18 3/4
Charn;iing Shop .....................:.. 14
Champion Ind.................... 13 1{}.
City Holding ...................... 31 1{}.
Federal MoJ!Ul .........................24
GoodyearT&amp;R ..................46 1/4
Lands End .......................... 44 1!8
Limited Inc. :......................23 lfl
Multimedia Inc. .................35 l{l
Point ·B811C01p .......................... 14
Rax RcsJaunint.................... ,...06
Reliance Eleclric .............. .. 18 1/4
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 18 3/4
Dissolution filed Oct. 4 by Rod·
Shoney's Inc ......................23 1/8
ney Ray Butcher, Pomeroy, and
Star Bank .................................37
Paula June Butcher, Shade; divorce
Wendy lnt'l.. ...................... l5 lfl
filed Oct 4 by Armintic Conger,
Wonhingwn Ind................28 5/8
Coolville, from Henry Ross Con·
Stock reports are the 10:30 ger, Woodsfield; dissolution filed
a.m. quotes provided by Advest Oc!. 5 by Debra L. Kinnison and
orGaiUpolls.
.. James R. Kinnison Jr., both of
~!.::=:~=======~
dissolution
filedJ. Oct
r·- ..
· - ' Langsville;
by Rosalee Jones
and Paul
Jones,6

Divorces and
dissolutions

The Daily Sentinel
(IJSPIUJl.M) ·

l'llbllobod •""!' IIRonooD, MolldiJ' lbtouJb
Priday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Cltio by the •
01\lo VOlley l'llblloblq eo._yiMultl....U. •
lac., Pomeroy, 9bfo -4H69, Pb. 992·2l.S6.
$ei;ODd c1111 po~t~ae pad t1 Pomeroy, Oblo.

-

n.. Alaoo!Ud , _ ud llle Oblo

New•PIP"'-oD,NoUooal~

Repreeenllllive, Brublm NewlpiPfl' Salea,
, 733 Third. Aveaue, New York. New York
10017.
.

POSTMASTER: Send 11k1nu cbuJ• to The
I&gt;-Hy Seat.iael, ,lll Cowt. SL, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769. .
SUISC!UPTION IIATEII
.,. c.n.... Molar .....
Ooo Week. ................. -.... -....................... .$1.60
Doe Moalll. .......- ..... _.... -............... ! ....... .$6.95
OM v. ......................................... - ..SI3.l0

IIINGLI COPY
PRICII
Dolly................... -......-,.. -.......-

35 Calli

------lo...uoi&gt;IL.

Sublellbln DCO cloolillla lo p11'llle""""' . .,
nmll Ia ochuoo dlte&lt;t lo Tho Dolly Selliael
Oo 1111rte. ail ot 12 lnOIIh bulL Credit wlU be

.....

No IUbo:dptiooo

by moll pormllle&lt;l Ia -

.=.'M:.t:::J

13 w-............................... -...-....-..$21.14
26 .............................................. -.$43.16
.SU.76
OoiMo Molp c-.,
'
13 w.ob._,_.......;..........................._... -Jl:UO

both of Middleport; dissolution
filed Oct. 7 by William Dale
Haggy ·and Tricia Hammond
Haggy, bo!b of Rolland.

Hospital news
· Holzer Medical Center
Oct. 8 discharges: Cassandra
McCoy, Mildred Williams, Mrs.
Kent Eads and daughter, Joann
Crisp, George .Greene, Thomas
Clelland, Maey Lanier, Edna Oiler,
Kyle King, Sandrl Rayburn, Kimberly Mesdows, Janet Martin, Timothy Linton and Garth Wcelhee.
Oc!. I births: Mr. and Mrs.
Matthew Bokovitz, son, Gallipolis.
, ~t. 9.v.~tlscharaes: Mrs.· Eric
PetrY and son, Bob Roberts, Jeremy Wolf~. Julia Caldwell and Con·
nie Fry. a.
, .
Oct. 9 birth: Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Flynn, daushtcr, Athens.
Oct. 10 disc:bar1e1: Mrs.
Charles Flynn and daushtcr.

The first' Chinese emperor, Shih
Huang Ti !rllied 221·210 B.C.), stan·
:l&amp;W-.........................................$45.501 ' dardized the written l~nguage but
tried to destroy most philosophical
62~'...........\,,,,,,_.... ,...............$88.40
texts.

n-

. ..-............. ...................:.......

Meigs ban -2nd in festival
The Meigs Marauder and successfully competed at the
PortSmouth East Blue and
ite Festival Saturday evening in
· Portsmouth.
Under the direCtion of Toney D
ss, Meigs was runnerup
t place Rock Hill by
to the vand champion band trailing
only 7/10 or a point
.
The nac corps took first place in Class .
tition, a
for the second time in two weeks, tbe auxiliary was c
as
the best overaU.
Sam Cowan, an alto sax player with the band was chosen as
outstanding soloist for Class A and tbe Marauder field com·
manders won second place honors. The band also won outstanding show design and received a superior rating from the judges.
Pictured above with their trophies are band members, left to
right, l'ront, Anna Fink, Tabitha Swearingen, Megan Clark, Joy
O'Brien, Erin Warner, Nikki Bell, Cindi Roush, Sarah Anderson, Tara Erwin, Arnie Elliott, Heather Hudson, Jennifer Fink,
Dawn Hockman, Leslie Qlialis, and Katie Saunders.
Second row, Ronda R3ymond, Crissy Williams, Paul Epperson, Sl!ara McLead, Taryn Doidge, Carrie Glaze, Ann Rime,
Beckie Elliott, Anne Brown, Becky Meier, Stephanie See, Erika
Meadows, Tonya Pbalin, Beverly Stewart, Whttney Haptonstall,
.
Jana Jude, Robyn HunL
Tbird row, Molly Toban, Erin Krawsczyn, Jason Witherell,
Kelley Grueser, Tara Grueser, Dawn Erwin, Sam Cowan,
Marlo Wblte, Dodger Vaughan, LaDeana Grover, ·Chad Dod·
son, Palm~ Wiles, Amity Dixon, Tonya Thornton, Shaun Fife,
Kristen Dassylva, Daaielle Crow.
Fourth row, Emily Heighton, Denise Sbenerteld, Joey Rucht~
Crystal Vaughan, Anaie White, Pbiltip Edmonds, Susan Cotter·
10, Dauiel Russell, Jeremy Honaker, Stacey Price, Jodie Sissoa,
Adam Wbite, Darrick St. Clair, Anita Collins, Tomie Shaffer,
Chad Molden, Amanda Musser.
.
Fifth row, Christy Dill, Crystal Donohue, Mike Parker,
Sussn Page, Willie Johnson Josh Witherell, Chris Champan,
Ryan Roe, Todd Perry, Jamie WiUiamson, Aric Patterson, Ali·
son Gerlach, Dorothy Leifheit, Jared Stewart, Amanda Well,
Melissa WUfong, Aimee Lemley, Cassie Hubbard, Ryan Baker,
Mike Wilfong.
Pictured left is Sam Cowan, alto sax player, who was named
tbe ouiStanding soloist at last weekend's competition.

Meigs County EMS responds to 11 calls
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
responded to 11 calls for assistance
during !be weekend. Units respond·
ing include:
Sarurday - 7:53 a.m. Pomeroy
10 Rock Springs Road for a motor
vehicle accident in which John
Hollis was transported to Veterans
Memorial Hospital ; 2:39 p.m.
Pomeroy to State Route 681 and
U.S. 33 for JuaniJa and Charles
Gilkey and Charles Mainns who

cOQ/. ••

refused treaunent; 5:48 p.m . Mid·
dleport to North Front Street for
Troy McDaniels who was transported to VMH; 6:48 p.m. Rutland
to Slate Route 124 for Gary Nelson
who was transported to Holzer
Medical Center.
Sunday - 1:24 a.m. Pomeroy
to U.S. 33 for a motor vehicle acci·
dent in which Ka!by McPhail and
Matthew McPhail were tmnsporled
to VMH; 10:08 a.m. Pomeroy to

Charlene Goodwin who was trans·
ported to HMC; 10:48 p.m . Top·
pers Plains to state routes 681 and
124 for Foster Niday.
Monday - 12:29 a.m. Pomeroy
10 Sum:her Road for Gertrude Pel·
ligrind who was transported to
HMC.

Laurel Cliff Road for Bobby Sar·
suelo who was transported to
HMC; 12:45 p.m. Tuppers Plains
Jo Mount Olive Road for George
Parker who was transported to
Camden-Clarlc; 3:20p.m. Pomeroy
to Village Green forTy Elliott who
was tmnsported 10 HMC; 3:39p.m.
Rutland to Gibson Ridge Road for
Grace Bailey who was transported
to Doctors Ho spital ; 8:04 p.m.
Middleport to Second Street for

Lottery

/

Continued from Page 1

use in meeting clean air standards
solution.
"A scrubber converts pollution thattakeeffectJan. 1,1995. ·
And Henry Fayne, senior vice
from one form to another that then
has to be landfilled. I Jbink !here president and comroUer, said none
are o!bcr technologies thai arc on appears likely to help existing
the fringe of being available wi!bin power plants meet ano!ber round of
the nexJ I 0 years or so thai maybe standards taking effect Jan . I,
they could have gone to," Cera 2000.
"These clean coal projects have
said.
Coal mining employment in the potential of preserving or possiOhio dropped from 13,300 in 1982 bly even enhancing Ohio's coal
industry, but commercialization of
to 5.200 in 1992.
"The problem I bring \lp about these projects wiU only be possible
the coal industry in Ohio is, even if through appropriate changes or
in I 0 years they decide to sJart exempliQI!S in the regulatory
burning coal, who's going to come frameworr:" Fayne said.
"It really is a cost recovery
back down and open an !be mines
!bat have been closed, because the issue," he said. "Who pays for it?
capital investment to do thai is Who bears the risk if it doesn't
gomg to be great," Cera said.
· work, or doesn't work as w~ll as
His House subcommittee is expected? The current framework
holdin&amp; heariiiJIS into tile me!bods just does not have viable means of
chpsen ~ utilllies to comply wi!b sharing lhat risk:'
the fcderll standards.
American Electric Power agrees
thai technology offers the best
chance to maintain or expand use
or Ol)io coal. AEP's operating subsidiaries include Ohio Power and
Columbus Southern Power. The
sysJcm is the largesl user of Ohio
coal.
But the company told !he subcommittee last. week !bat none of
the new technologies was resdy fC?t

CHECKlHE

CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Super Lotio jackpot for Wednesday
wiU increase 10 $.8 million, after no
one had all six numbers picked Sat·
urday night with $4 million al
stake, !be Ohio Lonery said.
Here are Sarurday night's Ohio
Lottery selections:
Super Lo!tn
1-6-8-30-3 1-32
Kicker
9-5-9-3·6·3
Pick 3
8·1·8
Pk:k 4
1·7-S-9

SPRING VALLEY CINE~A
446·4524

...,

1

7
We'll Give You

•

s1oo OFF Pe%014
Shade
On Eacb New Sbade Purchased.

WALLPAPER AND
BLI.ND SHO_P
111-IL IIJJDQIII'f'IIOACII Olt
DAIIFIILD &amp;ft., PAIIICIIISIIIaQ

~.r"M,

I

�·....

...

-

,....

'

. . .........
~·.

Sports

..

'

•

-The Daily .SentineJ
11, 1893
Monday, October

Page 4

lntheNLCS,

Phillies' 2-1 win over Braves precedes series return north
By STEVE WILSTEJN
ATLANTA (AP) - Ed~e- of­
the-seat drama, that's what 1t was.
Marvelous baseball and lousy baseball. Unbelievable ~hes and gutwreoching emn.
Hits all over the parl&lt;. Runners
stranded at every base. A blown
call by an ump. Fans ch!mling, booing. Th~ game going on P1J:S! midnighL Everyone finally tiling out
exhausted by it all.
The Philadelphia Phillies won
Sunday night's wild show 2-1, tied
the Atlanta Braves at Z-2 in the NL
playoffs and gummleed a trip hack
nonh no maw:r who wins today's

t~ bad most kids in Philly iod
around the coun!fr probably slept
through the final mnings becnuse
CBS delayed the start to squeeze
'"60 Minutes " and a thousand
commercials between the AL and
NL playoff games.
8

This is some of what they might
have missed in the eighth and ninth
innings before the game ~nded at
12: 14 a.m. EDT after three hours
and 33 minutes:
Philadelphia's Danny Jackson,
battered by the Braves a year ago,
took&gt; the Phillies into the eighth
with the 2-1 lead and got the first
two outs before David Justice lllld
Damon Berryhill hit consecutive
singles.
Enter Mitch " Wild Thing"
Williams, the Philly reliever who
causes coaches 10 cover their eyes
on the bench. Enter Atlanta's Marie
Lemke, a hero of the playoffs last
year, a star in the World Stzies two
years ago.
It was a moment pregnant with
possibilities. Lemke already had
been in the thick of things this
game, driving in Atlanta's run in
the second inning with a double,
booting a grounder in the fourth to

· 't 14
24
w.. Vi . . 36. t.ouin&lt;ille
34
Yolo31:'fl:c.-27

Vill~Dwal7 , ...,
w...-27. D"'

- • Football • In the NFL .. .

South

Al.I.·Bianinc.:?w.Lilnt.Jth
14
Aubuza 31,
. . . Sl. 17

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
EuloroJHTW L T P&lt;1. J'll PA
MiomL,........... 4 I 0 .100 101 II
Bol!olo.............. 3
Jndlonopolio .. _. 2
N.Y. !do ........... 2
NowJ!oa)Uid _. I

I
3
3
4

0
0
0
0

CalL Pklidl48, Samford 11
Olldll' I Southem 15, Newblny 10
acm-13,Dute 10

.7l0 II 60
.400 . 6110'l
.400 139106
.200 74140

Cenll'al Dl•. . .
CU!VI!LAND.. 3 2 0 .600
~ ......... 3 2 0 .600
............ I 3 0 .2l0
CINCINNATI .. 0 S 0 .000

llnWioo 21. Woohio.... .t Leo 14
E. r..n..ty $2, T - SLI3
E. r - St. 20. Cilodol 11
FJmWo $1. t.SU 3
P1orida SL21, Miuni (Fla.) 10
fwm111 77, AppWchilll SL21
Go.p54,SioUo1MmMW. 24
Qooq;a- 19. w. Cudin• J8
CJeori;o Todl 31, Muylond 0
~liq St. ll,!otiu. V.U.y SL!9
U.w•ofU 21. Bodnono.Cookmul7
JacbonSt. 11, Allbttna St. 15
-llodilan 42, Dd.wue 31

.

93 90
108 71
II 79

52106

W...._DI...._

Kmou Cil7 _.... _4 I 0 .100 83 64

o..-.......- .... 3 2
I.A. Roidm •••• 3 2
S.ale ...._,__ __ 3 l
s.n JMso ..... _. 2 3

.600 l:ll 9S
.600 90 13
.600
73
.400 10 110

0
0
0
0

·MIIIIIan$1,\'MJO
MoNo. SL 3&lt;4, NJ! LouiJW.. 26

n

~SL4$,-S1.3

_ , Sl. 31, -

,._
~f1"'"1'&lt;1. rrrA
N.Y. Oimto....... 4 I 0 .1011 124 'I

c.-.

South
27,Eaot ea.wn. 3
Tcm.·MuW:I2A, Middle Tom. 14
r..,. sa. 35, Ubatr 13
V - 1 7 . CiDcU!aad 1

PWJMleJP'I•- .... . 1 0 .100 111112
DollM ....- ......... 3 2 0 .600 106 75
- ............. ' I 4 0 .200 I! 99
1 4

o

.200 93125

Oioo,
......
J)oaa;l ..............

C..ln!JH3 2 0 .600
3 2 0 ,600
......... 3 2 0 .600
0... ............ 2 3 0 .400
T~mp~B•7 ~· .... 1 4 0 .:zoo

Midwest

Atmn 3I , MJ.ni (Ohio) 13
Bill SL 31, Toledo 30
Bowliq
20, Obio 0
B•ll&lt;o [0, VolpmiloO
Coal. MidWil 23, W. M;dtipn II

" 59
.. 90
66 12
110104
S4J22

a-

s . n -...

3 2 0 .600 !2l!Ol
J.A. Jtomo ........ 2 3 0 .&lt;00 17106
Alloolo .............. 0 5 0 .000 91 ll2

, sun:'=
dJ~·11
:
.

6

DMM.S.. F-.Douoil.s..ule

ToDil!ht'seome

Houi&amp;Gn II. 8~~ 9 p.m.

20

Tbunday's aame
S..day,Od.l7
' '
CLEVELAND 1t CINCINNATI, I

Far West

c..,..

f·p.m.
'"'

Wubirtaloa ll Phoenil., I p.m.

l.naCU,. ..... IMaot 41 p.m.
San Prlndlect • n.Du, .. p.m.

()poo .._ Bull'olo, ll&gt;diuopolio, Mio·

mi. N.Y. '-• CU..,0. a-ll,,, MJo.
n.o&amp;a. Tunpa S..y

M.U1, Od.ll
LA. R.w.. • Dclnwr, 9 p.m.

AP Top 25 college poll

·1.549
1.410
1.413
1.3':1
I ,lAS
1.169
I ,163
1,156

, 5. OhioSt. .. '·- ·- ..... .540
" - . ..._ .._......540
1. - S1. ..................l-GG
Ulluni ...................A+O
9. '»;)#m' .............;Ji-Q-0 I.Q73
10. r -.............s.J.o I.o:ti
11. - ..............l.Q:(J 9l7
1;1.
A-1'0 121
109
697

19. Aoobum ..................6-o.G

s_. . . .

20. ~ ...............3-2-0
21. c.Jif&lt;lo;U ..............l- 1.0

21
24

4ll
426

22

3M

LOS ANOIILIIS DODOI!RS: N BillJtg•••D b.ch
•JUI Ro11te

SmilhhilllqOOICIL

9

HOUSTON OILEKS: lfped Jort

.....

Alm. dlf'..iw actiii,ID I--~ CD\·

BuketbaD

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Nltlllaal
51 ~dan
INDIANA PACERS: Alllliouacad
lAftll ilckl•, panl, waltmtaril,-lal\

-~J:r3121
...... 21

14

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- • Transactions • -

Major college

a

Ta-J'apmOI

WloaiJIOIII New
7:35p.m.
lkdf'llO ll Philadelphil, 7:35 p.m.
Pitubuqh ltflorMfa.1:3$ p.m.
au..., .. Jlolla.l:35 p.m.
N.Y. bllnddn &amp;l Loa Anptm, 10:35

15

l 56
470

.

lntheALCS,

By ROB GLOSTER
TORONTO (AP) - Before
each Blue Jays game, the giant
video screen in center fteld flashes
a commercial featuring pitcher
Juan Guzman.
"From the Dominican Republic
to Toronto," it proclaims, '"60 feet,
6 inches at a time." ·
And maybe that's what it tonk
- a man from far away- to finally end the frealcish streak of road
success in the AL playoffs.
Guzman improved his postseason record 10 5.() as the Blue Jays
defeated the Chicago White Sox 53 Sunday in Game 5 and became
the first home team to win in the
series.
With flurries fluttering around
SkyDome, Guzman used plenty of
high heat to beat the White Sox.
Back in his homeland, temperalures Sunday were in the'80s.
"For a while there he just overpowered us," said Chi,cago manager Gene Lamont. "Guzman had
awfully good sruff."
· Guz!Dan also won Game I of
the playoffs, despite walking eight
and throwing a playoff-record three
wild pitches. This lime, he retired
th,e fust 13 baiters an~ allpw~ 01\e
run, t~re.e hits and one wa.lli: in
· sevm mnmgs. He Sll'UCk out StX.
"Today .it was much better,"
said Guzman, who made the tiO
feet, 6 inches between the pitching
rubber and the plate seem much

closer with his 90 mph fastball and
sharp slider. '"I had a lot better
control of my fnstball."
Toronto holds a 3·2 lead in the
best-of-seven series. After a traVel
day, the series resum'es Tuesday
night in Chicago with Dave Stewan pitching for the Blue Jays and
Alex Fernandez for the White Sox.
After losing the fust two games
in Ch~o, the White Sox had
rebou
to win Games 3 and 4 in
Toronto.
Roberto Alomar went 3-for-3
with two walks and three steals for
Toronto.
Toronto scored in the first on
Jack McDowell's errant pickoff
throw with Rickey Henderson at .
second after a double. The Blue
Jays made it 2-{) in the second on a
. sacrifice fly by Ed Sprague amd
added ·a run in the third on John
Olerud's RBI single. Alomar singleil in a run in the fourth.
Ems Burks ended Guzman's
perfect start with a one-out homer
in the ftfth, but Toronto made it 5-1
in the seventh on Sprague's RBI
single.
Guzman was lifted after the seventh Wid, confident of victory, went
to do his pQSt·g!JmMxerc~ iQ,the
, weight room. 'He wasn't even
watching as Chicago threatened in
the ninth.
With Duane Ward on the mound
for Toronto, Robin Ventura hit a

two-run homer with two outs to
pull Chicago within 5-3. But after
Burks was hit by a pitch on a 3-2 ·
count 10 bring the potential tying
run to the plate, Do Jackson struck
out to end the game.
It was the .second big whiff of
the afternoon for Jackson, who had
criticized Lamont for not playing
him in Games 1 and 2. In the last
three games, Jackson has gone 0for-10 with six strikeouts as the
desillltated hitter.
With the White Sox Jrailing 4-1
in the seventh and two outs, Jackson came 10 the plate with Venrura
on second and Burks on first. Oilzman threw two liigh fastballs past
Jackson. With the croWd on.its feet,
Guzman threw a ball inside before
striking Jackson out with a dipping
slider.
McDowell, who also lost Game
I, lasted only 2 1/3 innings. He
allowed three runs on five bits and
three walks while striking out only
one. McDowell , 3-8 lifetime
against Toronto, has lost to the
Blue Jays more than any other
team.
. While the Blue Jays are within
one victory of a chance to defend
theil;,'!Vorld Sepc:s c.,_m{'ionship,
the White Sox are happy JUSt to be
heading back to Chicago still alive
in the series.
"If you go to Toronto and you
win two out of three, I think you 're
happy," Lamont said.

'

!

3
10
11
12
13
14

Nixon, glanced at second for a blame him jf he did - the Braves
moment and ttied to grab the ball woJJld have won right there with
with his bare hand to throw out Petota and Nixon scoring.
Pecota. Wrong move. Wi!liams
" Batty made a great flay," a
fumbled the ball on a high hop lllld relieved Williams said. " tb.tew a
both rumers reached safely.
palm ball to third and I thought it
The Braves had come back to · was going down the Ilnc."
win games so many limes this year,
Those were all the thrills Wild
and here they seenied about to do it Thing would provide as be got Ron
again, two runnc::n on and no outs.
Gant to ground into a game-ending
Jeff Blauser bunted nearlr._per- double-play.
fec:dy down the third base line"'ilnd
" We had a million chances all
Williams charged in after it, llnde- night long," Atlanta manager
tcned by his previous bobble. This Bobby Cox said. "With one hit
time. he scooped it up with his here or there we could have won
glove and without a pause flung the the ballgame "
ball to third.
They al~ mighT have won it
It was a gutsy throw, but w~y with a liUie help fiom the fmt base
wide, headed toward the bullpen m umpire, Who blew a call on a blint
left-field foul territory. But third that would haVe given Atlanta runbaseman Kim Batiste sttetched as ners on fii'St and second with no
far has he could to snare the ball outs in the sevmth. For the rest of
and force Pecota. If Batiste missed the game, the . fans booed and
that ball - and no one would chanted " SAFE! SAFE! SAFE! "

Dolphins beat Browns 24•14,
but may lose Marino for season

8

29.-

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0 l II
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6
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23. t.oo0n111o ............. .l· l·O 212
24.
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25. Middeaa SL .... - ...3-1-0 142

-

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The T"!' 25 ...,.. lo The Aooooioood
,._ 1993 colle.&amp;•l-boll poll, whh
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Now MWoo42, U1ah 3l
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~ Sl. 42, Pocific u.1
s..lli&lt;&amp;o 27. CoJ t.udw:nn 21
s.. Jlioio Sl. 45,1hwali 14
S..1henlc.J24,0...&lt;1113
St. Mlry'l, Cal. %7, S'"acramen10 St 14
UC llo.U 3l, CSU.OUoo !O
tJCLA 61,Brlah~m Youna 14
2A; CwtomU 23
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2 14 11

N. Cuolina St. )6, T01.11 Tech 34
Hardt Tcx.u 35, SW TCJ.• St. 2&amp;
Ok1ahcma 38, Tuu 11
Rice 34, Tes.u Ouiailtt 19
Southllrn U. "· Texu Soulhem 1
Slqlhlll F.A•tin 24, S~m Houaon St.

W, TIIUI AAM 28, Pniri&amp;l VIIIW 6
Wrornina 33, Toau-EI Puo 26

Nest week's stale

w......,. . . . .
r... ax .........

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Taas A.t:M 34, Hoaaan 10

LA. Illmt 1t Allllu, 7:30p.m.

W. L-T

2 II 13
2 8 11
I 10 12

B•Jior 31, S..lham Mcob. 12

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10
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9
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Ta.waet Ttcb 24, SE Miaouri 3
W. tl1blcU 14. S. 13
'WiJcoalin 53,NorthM~~tem 14
Ycutp&amp;o1m St. 42, Jlrelllw~re St. 21

14
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14 8
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SW Mluow! SL

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. 3

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Ilnb 33, (!,;. . . . 19
B. r.&amp;chiDa 20, Kan 15
lndiut1 f6, low• 10
KIDIII SL 10, Eanau 9
~St. 17. Micbipn7
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highlight-ftlm classic catch. A miss
there and the ball would have caromed off the wall, leuiilg both runners score and giving the Braves
the lead.
The Phillies mobbed Thompson
in the dugout, then loaded the bases
on walks in 1he ninth. Yet they
stranded them all, giving them a
playoff record IS runners left on
base in the game.
The Braves, who stranded II,
were just as wasteful of their
opportwJities, never more so than
in the bouorn of the ninth.
Pinch-hitter Bill Pecota slapped
a broken-bat bloop single to center.
Not much of a hit, but that's all the
Braves fans qeeded Ill start another
wave of chanting and chopping.
Now things got really interesting. Otis Nixon bnlinced a sacrifice
bunL Wilfiams, rather than r~elding
the ball with his glove just to get

Blue Jays' 5-3 win over ChiSox
first by home team in series

o.,...u,s--6

w..... DI•Woa

'D.

Pooy 14

N. Cudiria AAT •U, Rodell AI:M 13
NW l.a.tiliana 3.5, Nic:baUI St. 21
NoM CuWina 45, WMe fca.l35
S. CaroliAI3\. 49, ~an Sl. I 3
SW 1 riri•• 36.1\tlaiie 1!i

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

w..._ . . .

lead to Philadelphia's two unearned
runs against John Smoltz, who
would see his tO-strikeout performance over 6 1/3 innings go to
waste.
As the crowd leaned forward,
some fans sranding in anticipation,
nearly all of them chanting and
chopping, Lemke cracked a liner
that seemed destined to hit the !o,P
of the blue left field fence if 11
dido 't clear iL
Milt Thompson had another
idea. Kept in the game for defensive purt'oses by mana~er Jim
Fregosi m the seventh 1nning,
instead of going out for pinch-hiuer
Pete lncaviglia with two men on,
Thompson raced hack 10 llyto save
the pme and make Fregosi seem a
gemus again. lncaviglia may be a
better hitter, but this was a ball he
never would have reached.
Thompson ran and, ran and
leaped just before the fence, backhanded the ball iii fuiJ flight for a

I

By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP)- You had
to wonder which quarterback felt
worse, Dan Manno or Bernie

Kosar.
Marino tore his right Achilles'
tendon late in the fU'SI half Sunday,
but the Miami Dolphins survived to
beat Kosar and the ·c leveland
Browns 24-14.
.
Kosar, benched in the second
half for the third straight game,
linally loSt his starling job to Vinny
Testaverde.
"For us to lose our quarterback
but to hang in there and come out
of here with a win is really great,•'
Miami coach Don Shula said. "I'm
very proud of Ol!l foothall team."
Marino has been the NFL's
most durable quarterback over the
last decade, starting 145 consecutive non-strike games since 1984.
~ut the end of the slrealt, and possibly his season, be!:ame inevitable
after be planted his iight foot to set
up for a 10-yard completion to me
Cl eve I~n d 10 -yard I'me w1· th a
minute left in the ftrst half.
Working. in an area of the field
where sod was laid last week to
cover the baseball infteld, Marino
felt a sharp pain in the back of his
right ankle and tumbled slowly to
the~. He was barely touched
on
piay.
"It•felt like I got kicked," he
said. "I haven't been h~ enough
to know exacdy what happened, so
it was a real shoe~. But no matter
what 'the circ;umstances of this
injury are, I will be back. I will
play football again."
Further leSIB were P.lanoed• Mid
Shula said be wouldn 1 mow unlil
todaY how 1ong~ . Marin0 w~ld be
oui.
The Dolphins (4-1) had to overcome not only the injury but also
·~- Ia tha1 •0 11 ed. Cle e1 d
u"' p Y
v an
' ow ·
cornerback N!jee Mutiifaa interccpte\d ScOtt Mitchell's first pus of
~ .
d
d 97
'd
I ,,e
season an race · . yar s
' imtouched for a toucbdOwn.that.put
the Browns (3-2) ahead 14-10 at

positive, and you just go from
there.''

tana ;s second· to Marino among
active passers, with 249.
Mitchell was 10-of-16 for 118
yards: Pete Stoyanovich kicked a
52-yard field goal for the Dolphins
but was wide right on a 36-yard
auempL
The DoltJhins, already playing
without inJured defensive ends
Marco Coleinan and David Griggs,
lost linebacker John OfferdahiiO a
dislocated shoulder in the second
half.

A left-bander who had thrown
only eight NFL passes before Sunday, Mitchell was dazzling in the
third quarter. After missing his ftrSI
!wo attempts in the period, be completed his next six, including touch·
downs of 19 yards 10 Tony Martin
and three yards to Keith Jackson.
Both touchdowns carne on third·
down plays, pan of a pattern that
saw the DoiJ.&gt;hins conven 10 of 16
third-down Situations.
1 ---------The Miami defense, meanwhile,
clamped down after Kosar opened
the game with an eight-play, 74yard drive capped by a 14-yard
touchdown pass to Michael Jack·
son. Cleveland gained only 128
yards the rest of the day, and
Kosar, sacked five limes, was lifled
early in the fourth quarter.
· Testaverde drove the Browns
into scoring J.lOSition twice, but
Matt SIO-IRlssed a 39-yartl field
goal
inteltepled
pass and,~Chris
end Green.
•Ane with
less thana
'"''
two minutes lefL
"It's kind of mixed emotions,"
said Testaverde, signed away from
Tampa Bay u a free ·a~tto back
up Kosar this ·season. 'Everybody
wants a chance to play and to start.
I' m haPJlY that I'm getting the
opportunity to be·a startiDg quanerback. That was my inilial plan. I
didn't know if it would' be tliis
m
·

..

YCBf.·u'::r.:~:re~:n•::rin a

rtrSt-class way.l'm/'ust soing to go
out and do the best can."
·
.Kosar, who just signed a sevenyear, $27 million contract last
week, completed lS-of-19 passes
for $2' yards, and his five sacks
totaled 36 yards in lo~cs. Tes- .
taverdl\wasl$-of•13 fdr44ylnls.
"1 thought he moved ihe team
down the field ' twice there in the
fOurth quarter. He's bee~!· movinl
the team whal be'. been in there,
~"""h Bill n-"-~'-" said. ,
.......
...,..........
Bef&lt;Xe aeuin- hurt, Marino was
hall'tiine.
· superb, C!impleting 14 of 19 passes
But Mitchell a 1990 fourth· for 161 yuds and one touchdown,
round pjck oui of Utah, was a 1~-}'lrder 10 Mlllt Ingram midJJJJShakcJi.
way throullh tlto IICCOnd qUIIUit. It
. ''Yoil call't look blitk on it." be was Mttrino'a 298th c..- touch·
said. "You just have td io fcrilrd. . down pass, second in NFL history
Bvel')'bQdY on the aidelinca was to fn!ri.TIItenton'a 342: Joe Mon-

'·

Moncii!Y• October 11,1993

In annual 'Battle of Meigs County,'

The .bally Sentinel ~·

-

·

5

'

Eastern beats Southern 14-12 to collect third consec.u tive win
' Eagles-, Tornadoes
sp()rt m~or-opposite
records; EHS owns
county's best mark
' By TOM HUNTER
and SCOTI WOLFE
Seotloel CorretpODCieats •
Southern lllld Eastan closed another chapter .in their stcried rivalry
with a hard fought contest Saturday
night at Southern's Adams Memorial Field in Racine, where Easlml
claimed a 14-12 triumph.
In a game that had the stalistical
makings of a dead-even matchup,
Dave Bm's Eagles held oft Scou
Wi.~kline's Tornadoes in front a
large homecoming crowd.
Eastern won the ,opening coin
toss, electing 10 defer their chance
at the ball 10 the second half. After
taking the kickoff, the Tornadoes
began to quickly establish their
presence with the running game.
Great execution on draw plays by
Aaron Drummer put Southern deep
iniO Eagle territory.
·
"They (Southern) were killing
us on the ruMing game early. Fortunately, our defense hung in there
and got the job done. They defi;
nitely came out ready to play
tonight", said Barr.
·· ·
Inside the 20 yard line, South·
em appeared ready to fmd the end
zone until a turnover cost the TOrnadoes the chance. Southern's
drummer took a hard double hit by
Pat Newland and Jason Sheets.
Eastern took possession on the
fumble, only to be forced into a
fourth down situation deep in their
own territory. The TornadoeS' spe·
cial teams stepped up to the occassion, as Ryan Adams blocked
Sheets'punL •
Southern recovered inside the
20, ancf once again appeared on the
verge of scoring. Unfortunalely for
the home fans, the Tornadoes'
drive stalled when tllcy failed to.
convert a fourth down and did not
capitalize on a big opporttmity. The
fmt quarter ended 0-0.
For the most part, the ftrSI half
was played in Eagle territory.
Southern would penetrate, only 10
be held by the ~les on downs, or
fumble. Eastern s running game
tried to establish itself, but was
held. tough by the Southern defense.
Late in the second quarter, the
Tornadoes fought their way
through midfteld on what would be
their first sc;oring drive. At the 2:03
mark in the. quarter, Drummer rambled into the end zone on a threeyard run to put up Southcm 's fmt
points. Travis Lisle's kick failed,
IIlii! SoUthern Jed 6l0. · ' · '
Easttm came marching back, as
they lOOk the kickoff and drove toward midfield. Wcs Arbaugh led
tbe rushing charge for the Eagles
on this short I :25 drive. With 38
seconds to g9 in the half, Roben
Reed found his favorite target,
Newland, on a 56-yard touchdown
pass. Reed's pass to Arbaugh on
the point after was good, as Eastern
headed to the locker room up 8-6.
This was Eastern's first venture
into SHS territory.
In the third quarter, Eastern tonk
the open,ing kickoff and found
good fielfl..position on the return.
The Eagles drove thru midfield
only to be stopped on a fourth
down and five situation. Southern

lOOk over posst.Ssion, but ~ in

their aiiQmpt to drive downfield.
Late in the quarter, the Eagles
regalried mommllll!l, as they drove
inside Southern tetritory; wbere
with fiflt,::e:'lls' into the fourth
quaner,
· capped off ils sec-.
ond scoring drive of lhe evming.
Reed hit Sheets on a 39-yard touch·
down pass to give Eastern a 14-6
lead. '11le snap on the el!'b:a·poinl
kick was muffed, and the Eagles
prepared to kick to Southern.
If one was ,looking for fire·
works, the Eagles' touchdown
could have been the spark that lit
them. Southern's return team did
an excellent job of puttitlg their offense into good field position on
the kick return.
On fmt and 10, Trenton Cleland
sll'Uck Billy Jones on a deep side·
line route. Fifty-three yards later,
Jones and the Tornadoes were on
the scoreboard on a 53,yard touch·
down pass by Cleland. Trenton
Cleland's two-point conversioll run
was short as the Eagles defense
held Southern to a 14-12 score.

PASS PtAY - E!astera's Jasoa Sheets (26) aad Southel'll's
Jessie Maynard (15) look to tbe heavem for the pipkin in tbe opeo
field duriq Saturday ailbt's P.me Ill Racine, where the Eagles won
14-12'to notch their third stra1ght triumph. (Tom Hunter photo)

After an exchange or punts
Mike Marshall picked off an
Alexande~ pass and returned it 22
yards to the Alexander 33-yard
line. Two {'lays later Abbott
hooked up w1th Marshall for a 22
yard sconng pass, the extra ints
were no good but Meigs
,14half.
0 lead with 1:4lleft in
After the kickoff ~MarB!Jd'w
held on downs, on first. down
AbboU again hooked up with Mar·
shall on a 39-yard sebring strike
down the left sidelines. Abbott
hooked up with Marshall for the
extta points and the half ended with

MHS sports schedule
.
Today
Reserve football-Wellston at
home
Volleyball-at River Valley
Tuesday,
Cross country· TVC meet
District golf tournament-at

De~:.:baii-Belp;e at home .
Tl!lunclay,

.

•Volley~-81 Vinton County
Freshman football-Nelsonvill~
at home
· Eighth-grade football- at lack-

son
· Frltlay
VilrSity footbnll·at NelsonvilleYork

LOOKING TO IUT HIM- Southern's Trentoa Cleland (22) looks to gel a Uck ID oa Eastern
runniag back Jason Sheets (26), who moves
upfield despite the etrorts of Tornado defender

Tucker Williams (44) to tackle him durin1 Sabarclay night's TVC game at Adams Memorial Field
in Radne, wbere the Eagles walked away with a
14-I2 win. (Tom Hunter photo)

Lowery's field goal helps Chiefs slip past Bengals 17-15
By CRAJG.HORST
KAN~AS CITY; Mo. (AP) Doug Pelfrey kicked five field
goals. Ni£[c Lowery kicked one.
But it was Lowery who was carrying the game ball when the
Kansas City Chiefs came up the
tunnel to their locker room after a
17-1 S ·victory Sunday over Pelfrey
and tile winless Cincinnati Bengals.
Lowery's 37-yard field goal
with 2:43 to play allowed the
Chiefs to escape an inspired
Cincinnati team that could not find
its way to the end zone.
"For a brief second I wasn't so
sure," said Lowery. who had to
adjust the rhythm of his kick
because the snap was a bit low and
10 the right ofholder Bryan Barker.
" I was just looking at the spot
where the ball was supposed to be

Meigs &amp;serve football team
hands Alexander 44-6 defeat
Meigs defeated Alexander 44-6
in reserve football action last week
at Bob Roberts Field i!l Pomeroy.
After a scoreless first period
Meigs scored on· the fust play of
the second perind on a one yard run
by Jason Parsons. Travis Abbott
hooked up with Paul Pullins for the
extra points to give Meigs an 8-0
advantage.

Eastern drove inside the Torna- carries for 46 yard :.
with an interception and seven · Sheets hit Drummer ·so bard the
does' 30-with around 4:00 to go.
Reed and TJ'!IIIton Cleland had ~a~:kles . Pat Newland was 811Chor of ball popped loose and at the ~
Reed appeared to have a man ~· good eveninp •atjsricolly through . Eastern 's great pass coverage, time dazed the Eastern pair so
on a deep route to the left 11de, the chilly October air. Reed fin - picking off'Trenton Cleland once.
much lhat the game - delayed.
only to be picked off by TreniOD ished 6-17 passing for ISO yards,
Eastern (4-2, 1-{) in th.e TVC)
Hits such as this wm the norm
Cleland. Southern attempted to two touchdowns and one intercep- hosts TVC opponenr-Federal Hockfor
Saturday's hard-fouaht pme.
drive, but just couJdn 't get 11 going, tion for Easlml. Cleland fmished ing in the Eagles homecoming conTaking
away a fOI!l·millute perias they failed Ill drive deep into Ea- 6-16 passing for 109 yards and a test at Eastern, Friday nighL Southod
from
the jame, the .fJJJal would
gle territory. Eastern hel d off a . touchdown, while allowing one in- em (2..4. 0-1) travels to Trimble for
h&amp;ve been an undec:isive scorelcn
great effort by the Tornadoes, to ten:eplion for Southern.
a TVC contest on Friday. Both deadlock as both team ' s !Ouchescape with the victory, which was
The leading receiver for the Ea- games kickoff at 7:30p.m.
downs were matched within two
the club's first Tri-Valley Confer- gles was Newland with lhrlle catchWolfe'• 110tt1
minules of one another.
ence win.
es for 99 yards and a touchdown.
The bout was Wickline' s fim Quarter totals
"It was a good ball game. Our Sheets.caught one pass, his 39 yard Soothem-Eastem game since his
kids played really hard . If we touchdown receplion . Arbaugh playing days in 1985 which South- Easlem ...............•.. o s o 6 = 14
would have had a few breaks, I caught one pass for 10 yards, and em won 18-6. Wickline was a star Southern ...............0 6 0 6 • 12
think our kids would have held on. Scoit Golden had one ~h for two . tackle on that team which won the
Statistics
It was a good fought hattie by bolh yards. The leading receiver for the SVAC championship.
squads, and both sides beld their Tornadoes was Jones with three
The game was the second for
cool very well," stated Wickline ~bes for 100 yards and a touch- . Barr, who dropped a 44-29 contest Department
E
s
shortly after the game.
12
down. Williams and Drummer each at EHS last year. Barr indicated his F'lnt downs ........... .....- ..14
Arbaugh was the Ea~les' lead· 11M Clllches for IS yards.
first win in the Battle of Meigs Rushing atL·yds .....42-146 31-76
ing rusher with 19 cames for 71
Passing yards .............. ISO
109
Jamey Smith anchored the Tor- County was a sweet one.
yards. Newland finished with seven nadoes defense with IS tackles.
Comp.-au.
..................
~17
6-16
Saturday' s game was played
carries for 44 yards. Sheets added Williams, Cass Cleland Billy amid intermittent rain and occason· Interceptions tlnown .... _.1
1
26 yards on 10 carries. Leading the Jones lllld Jamie Evans a11c&amp;me up al downpoiU'S, but that didn' t muf- To!al yards ..................296
185
rushing charge for Southern was wilh nine tackles each. Aaron fle the hard hiaing, oor dampen the Fumbles-lost .. ............ .. I.()
3-3
Tucker Williams with 10 carries• Drummer fmished with eighttaclc- spirits of the fans.
Penallies-yds.............. 7-52
645
for 64 yards. Drummer added 17 les, and Trenton Cleland came up ·3-81
Early in the game, Newland and Punts-yds .................4-100

placed. Bryan did a great job of
gelling it down there. A lot of holders would have just gonen it in
front or them. But Bryan found a
way to get it on the right spoL' •
Joe Montana sub Dave Krieg
and running backs Marcus Allen
and Kimble Anders generated just
enough offense for the Chiefs, who
went to 4-1.
But it is simply amazing how
the Chiefs seem to stutter without
Montana, who sat out the game ·
with a sttained hamslrinf!\
Receivers don' t
as open .
Krieg, a veteran who has componed himself exceptionally well in a
difficult siwation and who played
every down last year, can't seem Ill
find the receivers as quickly. The
passes are just not as precise. When
open. receivers occasionally drop
the ball.
But Krieg completed 10 of 20
passes for 140 yards and a .touch·
down, and Allen had a couple of
important carries. He rushed 13
times for 48 yards and a score as
the Chiefs won a game that will be

seem'

Meigs on rop 22-0.
Meigs increased the lead to 30.()
in the third period when Abbott
scored from six yards out. Pullins
added the extra points. That touchdown was set up when Abbott
hooke4 up with Pullins for a 72yard pass to the Alexander six on
By RICK WARNER
the thud,play of the perind.
AP Football Writer
After holding Alexander on
The
Big Ten is big news in The
downs the next drive was all Jason
Associated
Press college football
Parsons.-Parsons carried the next
three plays for 24, eight and the poll.
With Michigan State moving up
final 1.1 yards for the touchdown.
Once again it was Abbou 10 Mar- to No. 2S this week, the league
shall for the extta points and a 38.0 now has five ranked teams - more
than any other conference. The
Meigs lead.
Israel Grimm scored for th'e "other Big Ten representatives are
Marauders on the fust play of the No. 5 Ohio State, No. 7 Penn State,
final period .from nine yards out to No. 16 Wisconsin and No . 18
close out the Meigs scoring and Michigan.
The Big Ten has struggled in
give the Little Marauders a 44-0
advantage. Alexander then drove Ill recent years, but the addition of
the Marauder six but the Meigs Penn State, Ohio Stare's resurgence
defense stiffened and held on and Wisconsin's rapid rise have
downs. 11ie Marauders were forced greatly strengthened the ~eap~e .
Michigan State broke 1nto the
to punt and ·a bad snap gave
Top
25 for the rtrStlime this season
Alexander the ball at the Meigs
by
beating
Michigan 17-7 Saturseverr. Alexander sCored two plays
day.
later Ill avoid the shutouL
"It feels 41reat," quarterback
· Grimm Jed the Marauder ground
Jim
Miller SBJd. "Spartan football
attack With 16 carries for 97 yards.
' L.- ...L ' '
Parsons added 10 carries for 60 IS
....... .
01\io State rose one spot after
yards,, and Robert Qualls added
fOur carries for 34 yaids. Abbott hit beati.ng Illinois 20~ 12. idle Pe~n
five of tp in the air fer 161 yards . State moved up one place and WJS·
and two touchdo,wns .. Marshall consin climbed five notches after
pulled in tvJo passes for 16 yards. routing Northweslml 53-1,4.
· Michigan fell nine spots after
2
for
Michigan State ended the WQlverOn defense, the Marauders lim- ipes' 22-game unbeaten streak in
theBisTm.
· ited Alexan~r to 127 yards; (61
Aorida State redlained a nearcoming op one play). Marshall
unanimous
No. I in the AP media
pickecf off two Spartan passes,
while Pinons had nine tackles aJid poll after beating Miami 28- 10.
The Seminoles received 61 of 62
Whiie
The Little Maraoders (2·2·1) first-place votes and 1,549 of a
will host Wellston on Monday possible l,S.SO points.
evening.
No. 2 Alabama, which didn't

Dave Klingler slarted for the Shula, who may develop some grey .
long forgotten by January.
Bengals
in place of Jay Scbroeder hairs before this season is over.
~
Anders also showed some nimand
had
good
success
at
moving
"We
played
a
...
good
football
ble moves for the Chiefs. He ran
six times for 33 yards and may the team . Klingler compleled 16 of team in a difficult place to play .
have earned himself some more 30 passes for 173 yards. Cincinnati The difference carne down 10 a few
plays bere and there. We're going
playing time. Anders also caught outgained Kansas City 271-203.
But Klingler could not get a back 10 the basics in the running
four passes for 70 yards.
But malce no mistake: Despite team that has scored only four game Wid we were able to do that
Chiefs coach Marty Scholten - ·touchdowns all year into the end and it proved helpful. We've got to
heimer denying that his team had zone on this crisp day at Arrow- get the ball in the end zone instead
of coming away with f~eld goals.
dodged a bullet, this was a gam~ head Sladium.
Pelfrey, whose five field goals
"We have our big rivals next
that should not have come down to
Lowery's field goal with just over tied a team record, was successful week - Cleveland at home - so
from 23, 24 and 42 yards to give we should be able to get up for
two minutes left.
"As I said to the squad. and I the Bengals a 9-0 lead. Bur Krieg that. We did some good things
believe very strongly, the reason hooked up with Tim Barnett on an today that we should be able to
that teams are very seldom D-16 in 8-yard rouchdown pass 10 leave it build on."
the league is after you get a few 9-7. Pelfrey then kicked a 4 7losses, you decide you're not going yarder 10 malce it 12-7 at the half.
--Sports briefs-Allen made one of his pictureto take it," Schouenheimer said.
Auto racing
" You are going 10 fmd a way to perfecr runs for a 9-yard touch·
t;ONCORD. N.C . (AP) change thaL It's not usual that peo- down in the third quarter, but Pel- Enue lrvan led all but six of 334
ple can keep the ball away from us frey kicked a 34 -yard field goal laps in Sunday' s record-setting
~long as thel did. My hat's off to early in the fourth period 10 malce it Mello Yello 500, registering his
them. It wasn t pretty, but let's face 15-14.
third vicwry this season and ninth
Krieg
then
drove
the
Chiefs
to
of
his career. besting Mark Martin
it, we've lost games that were
Lowery's
winning
fii:!d
goal
with
by
1.93 seconds at Charloue Motor
beautiful e.xcept for the result.
jusl
over
two
minutes
lefL
Speedway
for $147,450.
"'From our point of view. we're
The
Bengals,
who
have
archDale
Earnhardt
and Rusty Wal4-1 and still tied for first."
rival Cleveland at home Sunday. lace continued their duel ror the
left town with their heads held $1.5 ~iltion WinsJOn Cup champihigh.
onship, with Earnhardt finishing
" l10ld the team that they should third and Wallace fourth.
be proud of themselves," said the . Earnhardt .gained I0 points, raisyouthful -looking coach Dav id mg hiS margm over Wallace to 82
with three races remaining.
play Saturday, got the other first·
place vote.
Notre Dame moved up one spot
to No. 3 after pounding Pinsburg,h
44-0, and Aorida rose one place 10
No. 4 after handing LSU a S8-3
loss - il$ worst defeat ever.
Rounding out the Top 10 are
Ohio State, Nebraska, Penn State,
Miami, Oklahoma and Tennessee.
Miami fell from No. 3 to No. 8, its
lowest ranking in three years.·
Arizona is lith , followed by
Washington, Texas A&amp;M, North
'
Carolina, Virginia, Wisconsin.
West Virginia, Michigan, Auburn,
Colorado, California, UCLA,
Louisville, Syracuse and Michigan
Stare.
West Virginia jumped seven
spots to No . 17 by beati ng
Louisville 36-34. The loss dropped
Louisville six places to No. 23.
BYU, No. 19 last week, fell out
of the poll after losing to UCLA
68-14.

Big Ten puts five in Top 25
after Michigan State's win

~!d: ===:{.!.'2~. +

seven.'

Complete Medical/Surgical Care
For Ear, Nose &amp; Throat Including

John A.

M.D.

HYMN SIN.G

DOWIIING CHILDS

MULLEN -'USSER ~

OCTOBER 16, 1993
7:00P.M.

INSUUNCE

Chester Unit-.! Methodist Church

111 Secrilti.St., POIIel'oy

Featuring lissell lrothers &amp;
Mt. Her•on Si1gers
Plul other slnters. ,

. YOUIIIDEHNDEIT
AIEITS SERVINI
.MEIGSCOUNn
SINCE 1861

Come- Share the Gotpel in So'

_..
!

•
'

'

'

�••
•

Monday, October 11,1esia

IALi.OT I.MOUAQI, EXPLANATIONI, AAOUIIENTI ANO ~
AN ArecFEtT TO THE OtiO COH8TITUTION PROPOIID
.
IY THiE MMfR~. AI'PaY.

EXPLANATION OF ISStlE No. 1

Seventh
birthday
celebrated
Erica Haning recently celebrated
her seventh birthday with two parties.
The first party was held at her
home. Attending were her mother
Cathy Haning , her maternal grandparent,s Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Manley and Joe Manley.
The second party was held at
McDonalds in Pomeroy. Attending
were her mother, Cathy Haning,
Margie, Chalsie and Brian Manley
and Angel Stone.
Sending gifts were her maternal
great-grandmother, Darlene McKinney, Jessica Howell, Lesley
Preece, Doug Noel and Kristen
Slawter.

ELCE classes
still offered
The Eastern Local Community
Education is still accepting registration for the following classes:
Quilting wall hanging will be
offered at pastern High School
from 6-9 p.m. on Nov. I, 8 and 15.
Fee is $20 plus cost of materials.
Bunny Kuhl instruciOr.
Flower ammging will be held at
the high school from 7-9 p.m. in
three different sessions. Fall door
piece on Oct. 28 and ·basic flower
arranging and bow making on Nov.
4. Christmas pieces will be made
Nov. II. Fee $15 per session. Take
one or all three sessions. Gail
Douthitt instructor.
To regist:er, call Nancy Larkins
at 667-30.85 after 6 p.m. or 9853448 during the day.
A seminar on services offered
by the Meigs County Health
Department will be held on Oct. 18
from 7-9 p.m. and seminar on borrowing money will be p~nted on
Oct. 25 from 7-9 p.m. by Farmers
Bank.

1

RESOURCES. AT LEAST TWENTY PllRCBNT (20") OF THE Pl!.OCEEDS
OP THB FIRST 1WO HUNDRED MILllON DOLLARS ($200,0()0,000) OF .
- THBSB BOND DOL;LARS MUST BB G!VEN TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT$
FOit THBSE PURPOSES.

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT
To adopt Scctioo 2 (1) of Article vm of the Constitution
of the State of Ohio.

ISSUE 1
TEXT OF PRoPOSED
CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

TitE STATE.

(Amended House Joint Resolution No: 6)

THE STATE TO MAKE GRANTS AND ASSIST LOCAL

GO~ WITH CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS PROJECTS

RELATEd ·to NATIJRAL RESOURCES AND REQUIRE THAT AT
LEAST '0\'ENTY PI!RCENT (lK) OF THE PROCEEDS OF THE FIRST
TWO IIUNDREDMILJ.ION DOLLARS (SlOOjOOO,OOO! Q~~-BOND
DOLLARS wn.L BE AVAILABLE TO 0100 COMM\Jty'f~ FOR

SUCH LOCAL CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS.

·

iF PASSED 11DS AMENDMENT WILL BE EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATELY.
(Proposed by Resolution of the General Assembly of Ohio)
A majority yes vote i.s necessary for passage.

PUBUCNOnCE
SOUTHERN OHIO COAL
COMPANY-IEIGBIIINE NO.
31 P.O. Box 410
Atliene, Ohio 417111
. Purauanl to . Ohio . Coal
Mining and R-.laMaUon

Rule 1501 : 1~. Boulhem

Ohio Co. Company, llelga
Mine No. 31, P.O. Box 410,
Athena, Ohio 45701, do•
hlldby • v•~•• to
........ a pump w..hola and
plpallna within 100 feat of
sal- Townahlp Read M,
beginning
at
.tha
lntaraaotlon of Malga
Coun~oad 1 and BaiTowna Road M, In Salam
Townah p, Malga County,
Ohio. The propooad pump .
borehole, •d pipeline will
have no affect on the road.
The only dieturbanca 1o be
aonductad within 100- of
Townahlp Road M will be·
the conetructlon of tho
borehole ell• and a portion
of the pipeline. Dlalllrballca
ol lhe area will be
conduclad to 11\a .edge ,ol
lha atone road aurlaca.
lntaraatad partlae may
comment at a public
meeting of the Salam
Townahlp TruetaM on
Octqber :ze, 1tt3, al 1:00
p.m., to be held at the
Sal-T-hlp Hall, Salam
Cant..-, Ohio.
(10) ... 11 2tc

PubliC Notice
- . o f Elactlon on Ta
of the Tan

t.v, In Ex

-Umii&amp;UIIIIIi

NOTICE Ia hlldby given
that In purauanoa of ' a
AMoludon .of the &amp;o.d of
Tni•- of the Townahlp of
Rutland, Rudand, Ohio,
,_lad on the tor l!aY of
July, 1tt3 there will be
aubnlltlld to a vote of the
people of eald aubdlvlolon
1/C a G-al Elactl011 lo be ·
held In the Townehlp of
Ruland, Ohio,~ the reguw
p i - of voUng ...,.t Drl
the 2nd day of Nov~~~
·
,
te•, the 11uaatlcin -.o '
levying • ·tax, In ax
the len 111111 IIMhalkln, lor
the lian•nt of Rutland
T-hlp lor loa Jlll!'po84!of
Fire · protacdon. laid Ill."
baing a r~aw•! ol .an
axledng tax of .a llill ,Iii a
rala not MUlling .3 mille
lor each one dollar of

w · "an.Whloh .....a.to

..... - · (ID.DI) ,., aaoh

a:-.Jil ,..,._ ·

o1e llil11dr,cl otolfira ' '
.V.'dan,lor
· The Polla lor
I Saotlon
•ta open 11 1:10 o'clock
- · lind Nlllllln opln undf
7:10 o'oloall p.lll. lit aakl

••

,... \1.

8A.M,•5P.M. •

DAY~PUBUCATIOO

SAT.B-12

CLOSED SVNDAY

• ~de ouuicle abe county ,.Our ad raae ia111t be prepaid
• Receive dUc:o~t for &amp;dl paid ia'ad.YII.Dt:t.
• Free Acb: Civeaway and FouDd acll u.:ad.,IS wonU wlU he
rua 3 da Jl at DO cbarp.
• Prtce of ad for all capltallotw. it deUia prioe of ad coet
• 7 point line type only ~
.
• Sectinelil nf:!:l H1poulble fo r erron alter flnt daJ (cl.ck
for error. fll'll day ad I'UIUI ill paper). C.U belorei100 P·•·
day aft.e:r puhHcation to lilak• correctioa
• Ad. thal mutt he paid bl .dvance an:·

NOT SUBIECT TO SECTIONS l. 6, AND II
ARTICLE XII, OHIO CONslnuno.:cN:;;'.Mj~
WITH RESPECT TO THE PURPOSES n
THElR ftOCEEDS ARE to BE APPUI!D.
NOT SUIIIECT·TO SECTIONS 4 AND 6 OF
CLE VIU, OHW CONSTITUTION.

JOINT RESOLUTION
1lii!II.EOP' AND 1111! INI1!RI!ST
To en&amp;'CI new ICdion i~ly fottowing Section COME AND ACCREDITED AMOUNTS
:!It of Arliclt vm of the Conllilution or Ohio .. followo: FROM, INCLUDING ANY PROPIT MADE
THE SALE THEREOF, SHALL AT ALL TIMI!S
ARTICLE VW ·
,
FREE FROM T~TION WITHIN THE STA'fl\.
Se&lt;tion 21. (A) IN .... DDITION TO· THE
AtrrHORIZATIONSOTHERWISE CONTAINED IN (F) nus SECTION SHALL BE IMP'L£~4~NT£D
.ARTICLE VID OF THE OHIO CONSTrrUTION, IN THE MANNER AND TO THE EXTENT
THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY SHALL PROVIDE BY . VIDEO BY LAW BY THE GENERAL ASS;EMI~LY.
LAW, IN ACCORDANCEWITHANDSUBIECT
TO THE Lllo41TATIONS OF nus SECTION, POI'EFFECTIVE DATE
THE ISSUANCE OF tBONDS AND OTHER If ~~!!&lt;&gt;~&gt;ted by a majority of the el«ton VC&gt;ting on ·
OBUGA110NS OF THE STATE FOR THE PUR- propoocd Section 2t of Article vm of the
·
POSE OF FINANCING OR ASSISTING IN THE tion Ohio shall take effeCt immediately.
FINANCING OF THE COSTS OF CAPITAL
IMPROVEMENTS FOR STATE AND LOCAL OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF STATE
PARXSAND.LANDANDWATER RECREATION '
OHIO
fACILmi!S; $08. AND WATER RESTORATION I, Bob Taft, Socnotacy of SUre, do hmby certify
AND PROTECTION; LAND MANAGEMENT IN· the •fore&amp;oing is a true oopy of Amended H!lWO
CLuDJNG PRESERVATION OF NATURAL ~No. 6, oontainina the Iiiii to&gt;! ofaiXIIIlllilll'
AREAS AND REFORESTATION ; WATER tionaiiiiiiOIIdiMIIt~bytheGeneraiAia&lt;mbiJ
MANAO!!MENT INCLUDING DAM SAFETY . . and ftledin the Office of the Secretary of State,
STJII!AM AND LAKE MANAGEMENT, . AND ..a.;, ujArtic:le XVI, Section I of the Constibltion .
FLOOD CONTROL AND FLOOD DAMAGE the Sca10 OfOhio,!Oidher with the balloti lantiUII'
RBDUcnON; fiSH AND WU.DUFE RESOURCE ex~ c:enilied to rno by the utu&lt;&gt; llli!OI
MANAGI!MENT; AND OTHER PRdJECTS THAT ltld ~~~-to nie by
and
ENHANCE THE USE AND ENJOYMENT OF "''!"""'nll of the ;,_, u pracribed by law,
NATURAL RI!SOURCI!S .BY INDIVIDUALS. IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, I have• ~'~~.
CAPITAL IMPROVI!I,IENTS INCLUDE WITHOUT subocribed my nome and lffixed my alfi&lt;ialac
LIMrrA110NTHECOST OF ACQUISfi'JON,.CON· umbul, Oltio this Jrd day of Scptombor, 1993.
STRUcnON, RECONSTRUCTION, EXPANSION,
f
.
IMPROVEMENT, PLANNING, AND EQUIPPING.
'

1:00 p.m. Saturday
I:OOp.m. MCctday
I :00 p.m. Tuaday
1:00 p.m. Wodneiday
IOOp.m. Thunday
I :00 p.m. Prltlay

Card of Tbaab

Happy Ado
In Munorii.m
Yard Saloa
' Aetuoified advertioement placed Ia lho Tbo Don, s..tl•l
(exe.e pt Cluoif..d Dlaplay, B"'ia- Cud or Lop)

446-CIIIlpollo

992-lthWiepcnt/

~67..a.hlre

24$-RioG......
256-Gtl)'aa DilL
643-Anlola DiaL
• 379-'IVolnul

Rate Over 15 Words
$4.00
s..20
3
$6.00
$ .30
6
$9.00
$ .42
10
ts
S13.oo
s .60
Monthly 15
$1.30/day
$.05/day
Rates~ for coruecutlw runs, broken up days will be
chafsed for •ch day .. separate ada.
Bua!Ji- Card.....$17.001 lllch permomth
1

••

I+I-Pordoa4
247-l.elaat , ...

576-A,.&amp;.G.....
771 ¥a a

882-l'lowlip.
895--l ..... .
917-hlf'olo

949-laelae
742-Jutlaa4
667-4:ooi'IIL

RATES
Daya

Q

Bulletin Board• .,$6.CIMDch per day

CIASSD'IEDS

Noli&lt;ea) willalao appear Ia lite Point Plouutt lloplor tad
the Gallipolia Daily Trlb-,
18,000 loo-

,_,w.,. •-

BFSlJiJI'S • FASTf

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U-F.... forSalo
M'- Bor

--a-t Eololo .........
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Auao.lorSaa.
Trueb {or Salo
41- Bo- for Rat
U- Mol&gt;ilo JL.io• for lloa1
v... a4 'IVD'o
Motoftyelai •
U- F.... for Ileal
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Boau A Moton for Sole
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7(&gt;... Auto p...., A Aoe.-•ri-1
77- Auto &amp;.p.lr
66-S-forlleal
47- 'IVuted 1&lt;&gt; R.. t .
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n- Help,;.-

3-- AuouDCell.eaU
4- ClNway
5-- Happy Ada
6- Loat m4 Fouad
7- Lolt llld FoUll.d

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85-- C..eral Ho..W.,
86-- Mobilo llo•e Ropair
81- Upholat.ery

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11&gt;-- Schoolo A 1.......1(&gt;... lladlo, TV A CB Repair

Auction
9- Wmted 1&lt;&gt; Buy

17-MiooollaMo•
1&amp;-- 'IVaated To Do

or

YES

SHALL THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
BE ADOPTED?

NO

ARGUMENTS FOR STATE ISSUE I

On November 2nd, Ohio voters will have an opportunity to protect, preserve, and im' prove our state and l~al parks, forests, recreational areas and natural resources -- and
to promote health and safety through Hood control, pollution prevention and water quality
improvemenls. With a YES vote on Issue I - wlrielr dins noll'llise taxes -- this can be
accomplished.
·

IT IS HEREBY DETERMINED THAT THI!SE
CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS AND PROVISIONS
FQR THEM ARE· NECESSARY AND APPROPRIATE TO IMPROVE THE QUALITY OF
UFE OF THE PEOPLE OF nus STATE, TO BE'I\ ·
TER ENSURE THB PUBUC HEALTH, SAFETY,
AND WELFARE. AND TO CREATE AND
PRESERVE JOBS AND ENHANCE EMPLOY·
MENT OPPORTuNITIES.

Issue I will authorize the State of Ohio to use up to $5Q million in bonds annually -- with
a maximum of $200 million in bonds outstanding at any time -- to make capital improvements in our parks and recreational areas, preserve natural areas and habitats, and
promote Ohioans' ~ealth and safety . Bonds will be retired from general state revenues.

.

Governor Voinovich and Ohio's legislative leaders-- House Speaker Riffe, Senate President Aronoff, and Minority Leaders Davidson and Boggs -- are leading the effort for Issue
I . The Ohio Chamber of Commerce and many other.business, labor, civic, environmental and outdoor recreation groups have endorsed Issue I .

On November 2nd, Vote for Issue I.
COMMITfEE TO PREPARE ARGUMENT FOR STATE ISSUE I
State Representative J. Barney Quilter
State Representative Thomas M: Seese
State Representative Jo Ann Davidson
State Senator Roben W. Ney
State Senator Roy L. Ray
State Senator Roben Boggs

!.

ARGUMENT AGAINST THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT

.

'·

.

There are currendy line itenll in the general revenue budget .which .III'Jii'llPriat tulidl ·~..
·. Jiillrpole&amp; specifted in the proposed ainendment, There are significattt lilcal ..Ymp
·~

'

~ ~ 1 FneraliF'PfOPI'il!lio nther than the ill' me of debt which IXIIIId

1:01t ~a~p~yen over $SOO million in

mea and interat:.•Miny ifCma fiiiDd bY die debt will

ttth:,•~t-~ln~~~~~~~;~~~·
l
~

.

and
BE IT FURTHER
REBOLYED that the Village
of Pomeroy loin with the
Vlllega of Middleport and
execute and Ria a patiUon
with lha Malga County
Common Plaaa Court tor
lorma!lon of the Big Band
W~ler Dla~ for the banafit
of the Village of P-aroy
and the VIllage of
Mlddl~l and auch other
• - • may be e,.clllad
In ..aid palltlon ancllor
oubaaqliant rnodlftcaUon of

.

'

&gt;

BE
IT
FURTHER
RESOLVED that the Vlllaae
of Pomwoy appointe Ilia
· lollowlnglndlvklultla • and
ro; the ao.d ot TrUe- on
the following wrna: ,
Kathy Hy..n, terrn live

Rtpfe•entative William G. Batchelder
~ve Tim GreenWOod
Senator Dick Schafrath

r

Ill Llmlllttlon
NOTICE II harallf glwn
th~ In purau
..
Rnolulloil
ol the'
., .."ot
.,
Colllmlaolonare of lila
~ Coul)ly 'oilleror,
OhiO, pMaad on the 1111
dlly oflltly,.tiiD tiMN will
be lllbltlltlad lo a VQit Of
the , peopla of aald
aubdlwlaloil 11 I gollanl
altiallol lo be haltf the I';;;;:=~=
County of malgll Ohio, lit 11
the regular ,__ ol Vllllna
IOaiiiiSSELL
lh...,., on the lftll day ol
NO'JdnMr, 1H~ ( lhe
COinRUCTION
quaalon oflavylna.alllll, In oNewHom•
•xoaile of, the tall' 111111
lmltallon, lor the ~-~~~or · oGiragea
Ma.lga Caullly . lor tlta
oCo.mplete
!Hi~ of " . , . _ and
rMilol lolflg ....._ titllnna
Retttodellng
iiliillan or. ........... 8ald
Stop 1 Compere
11D1 1Mr1M lin ldd!Jion-' lilt
FREE
ESTIMATES
of t · ltlll at +.till not
aautlnt 1 ( '
lor
fi5-447J
iaoh .one de lilr• at

~
~

985·3406

WATER
HAULING

.o n• nLu·ndrad
llara ol
valuation, tor live (I) 'I'I"L
The Polle lor ••ld
Elacl9ft will open at 1:30

un•

a.M. and .-aln .,...
7:30 o'olook p.rn. ol ..lei
dlly.

RICHARD ROBERTS
"AdSpe~"

.

122 Jay Drlw, Gallpallt, Oh.
44&amp;-7812
Fitx/Volca 44&amp;-71112

12g... oily,

Fil.EE ESTIMATES

Begl•lllng0d.3

(Nos.-.yc.llsl

NEW-REPAIR
Gutterw

.

REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING

949~2168

S.1&amp;-l3-lln

announc:ea
Richard lloorw
hu joined our ltaff.
Richard COI1IM to us
with 12yrs.
·~lit

PorMroy Home &amp;
Auto and C&amp;A Auto

Come VIsit Us.

efiREWOOD

USED RAILROAD TIES
1MCJ.e2-lln

PHONE
IISIALLAftON

HAUUNG
SERVIa

Jicb lriltillecl

36970 lttll I• Road
Pa•nOJI 01t1e
GRAVEl. ~ND,
LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL
&amp; fiLL DIRT

~lonlr11nto

Dlffnnt Flooml ind
Out11de 8ullcllngl
F• ElllmltM

992·3470

814-367-0421

Lariy WW.rung

ROOFING

FREE ESTIMATES

C8rpentry,

EXCAYAnNG

.H.WriL Wlftesel

TRUie•d

742·2443

Callly Hyeall~ Clark

0¥!1111: .1111 Wltl:.....

'

WIWD'SIUTO

fAll.

SpecialiZing In Custom
FrlliTIII Repair
............. fOI '
IlL...., a IIIIIIU

992·7011•
tt2-501
•IOU Fill

........ 10070
llllWFII, OliO'

IESIDENnAL
CONCRETE
WORK
Porches,
.Patios,
Sidewalks
. . .
992-7878
7n1

HAULING
UMESTONE,
GRAVEL, TOPSOIL

YOUNG'S

•-a- ., .....

CARPENTER SERVICE
WOIII
and Plumbing

&amp;.COAL

Boolt Dillon
PHW•Warry
BIIYoung
(10)4, II

:,A'HMOFUL
.OF CASH
B£1'TER·
'THAN-A
GARAGE-FUL .-: &lt;
OF STUFF .. ..·"-

RIIIO!IIblt Rates
Joe N. S.yre

,.,. -·"
······
•A•••._..., 1,

'

~·

SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742·2138

IMI

~

,__ _"!-_ _ _"'

CoU(IIy
.
Ocl!lber
· · P.-111. lo be ~ II
· Courtly ...~'!,uri
P•nlr'Of, urw.

.2"'

·.

.........

$UO fir dl'6Mi
&amp;lilt
I .
I

flrlli. Rdl I
' Calt9t-240J

(FREE ESTIMATE$)

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

Wor'lli ••, • ..,._
~... ro'

•'"'JOJ•
lallpltlU .........

•HAULING
Limestone
\Dirt

IN POMEROY

'IOi:cw.

1

Griyel
992·7878
7nl1n.

FREE ESTIMATES
T•lta the pain out of
palntln~

a...t me do It

for you.
VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

11

l1 T1111 R-.1

...... ......
l'nelllltlllfe1

742·2360

Anno unc cmt: nt s

614-915-4110
1112111111 mo. pd

eDOZERS
oBACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

D.A. IOSTOII
EICAYlniiG
667-6621
4-1N3otfn

~------.... lt"~~~~~~-,1=.~ To-._._
EAGLES .

'

INI'IRIOR

f&amp;A TREE TRIMMING

PonaOf, Ohio

~RYTHUR8DAY ·

St-DkwSUJ' .

LINDA'S
PAIITIIG

(614)

PlllnUng

·IIIlO

7a14,_

; hitltl ... ~ .'
. . ls ..ttf •.. ' .
l

614-H2·7643

-

All tvl*l of

991·2269

. '·.

Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

DAVID ARNOLD
(114) 11112-7474
POMEROY, OHIO

Gutter Cleaning
Painting

Senior CIIIDna

llle
Ads

flldory Clloke,

New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows

QUALITY WORK
&amp;GOODRATSS

SHRUI&amp; TREE

(101 4, 11, 18. 2S 4lo

UIESTEPSI

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

C•ll
Ralp. At

DoWntlpOuiS

BILL SLACK

PUBUCNOnCE
SOUTHERN OHIO COAL
COMPANY·
liN!
NO.
P.O.

lox 119
·~·leport, 01110 45760
(6141 143·5264 511

•so,., .....

POMEIOY
HOMIIEPAII
Plumbing,
Electric, etc.

Public &lt;Notice

GUN SHOOT

Rocky I. Hupp, D.C.Ua • Agent

EVERY SUNDAY
AT 1 P.M.
RACINE GUN QUI

VOid'

7mlf3

wiluallwl, wllloll alioiiUII"Io
len - · '(to. t~l!w aaoh

...... .

.

Chester, Oh. 45720

ARNOLD'S
PLUMBING,
HEiniG &amp;
. COOLING

Ill"'

RESOLVED that all tarrna
the lnldal Ierma llallod
abo we a haiL be .live year

JohnBI-..

36358 SR 7

Ufe • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • HNHh •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

M11110.

Ill

ve-e.
'
BE IT FURTHER

Bally S.onlck

CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

742·2904

10% DlaKount

(10~ 112ID

,.

l.aVy lrl Ex- ..... Tan

Rlte,D.Im..
0. ator
Datad8apl6,111D ' .

•

not provide IICCurity in cue of a defauli ~ leaving en Outstanc!ina ob1ipfioa for ~
!Upayere will bear the responsibili~ .
.
·
·
·

Notloa of Elacllon 011 Tax

Bruea Read, llrm eaven

''

W. •P ula1121i In:
FIRE.&amp; WATER
DAMAGE
AEBTQRATIONINBURANCE CLAIMS
,
24HDur
Ellllfllel'lcr Service

..., 1 IMII
"dt ;uy.(on aile)
"fine flbrloe

Chair-,

.

ve-e.
.
Larry Wahrung, tann ftva
ve-e- . .
.

Council
the VlllaP
Rutland, Rutlan!l,. Ohlc,,
pouad on the 13th - , of
July, 1183 .there· will be
aubml- lo a v~.e
people of uld lliu
at a Gan.ai ElaeUon lo be
held In the VIllage of
Rutiand, Ohio, tit the Ngular
plocM of
lharlln, on
lhe 2nd day o Novamllat
1993, the que•tlon oi
levying' • lu, In· u - of
the ten mill llmltaUon, tor
the benefit ol Rutland
Village tor the purpo.. ·of
Currant open••· Bald tax
belng,-An additional lu of
2.9 milia at • rete ilot
ucaadl'!ll U mHII t.r aaoh
one dollar of valuation,
which amounte to -nty·
nina cante (S0.21) lor - h
oilil hundred dollar• ol
.
Iuelion ' or fly 1 ("'
vaThe
VJ yen.
Polla
lor
llld
'
ElecUon will open 11 1::10
o'clock a.m. and r-ain
open unUI 7:30 o'olock p.ni,
oloold - ,..
·
By order of the
Board of Elactlona;
ol Malga Cou,ltr, Ohio.
HanryLHuntar

wotlo7

wall••

(C) THE STATE MAY PARTICIPATi! BY GRANTS

OR CONTRIBUTIONS IN FINANCING CAPITAL
The proposed amendment will increase the tax obligations of Ohio ci,tizens. Although the IMPRO~ UNDER nus SECTION MADE
issuance of bonds is not a direct tax on Ohio citizens, the debt service (principal, interest :~ ~~:!-r~~~=·
and fees) required to maintain the bonds will come from tlic budget whicb will force CUIJ MILLION DOLLARS PRINCIPAL AMOUNT IN
in other areas like education or, alternatively, prompt an increase in taxes. It is eatimated OBUGATIONS ISSUED UNDER nilS SECTION
the debl service would result in payments of approximately $2.2 million in fiacal year FOR CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTs, AT l.llASl
TWENTY PllR ¢J3i.rr SJWi. 81! AU.OCATED TO
1995 and Si8.4 million for 1999 through 2019. Local governments must be warned there GRANTS OR CONTRIBUTIONS TO LOCAL
is no requiremem they receive funds after a first year set aside.
OOVERNMENT I!NTI'nEs FOR stmH CAPITAL
IMPROVEMENTs. •
.
Moreover, the proposed amendment will enlarge the state's debt with no known dedicaled (D) THE OBUOATIONS ISSUED UNDER THis
·means of repaying the principal. The taxpayers should be aware there will still be fees S1!C110N ARB ~QIIIOATIONS OP 1liE
for park services. Passage of this proposed amendment will create a deterrent for the effi- STATE. . THE PUU. FAITH ANP CREDIT.,
RBVENUE, AND TAXING FOWilR OF '!1lll
cient operation of our parks and recreation areils.
STATE SHALL BE PU!DGED TO THE PAYMENT
Of THE I'IUNCIPAL oF AND ~. AND
The proposed amendment, if adopted, will create an inherent conflict in Ohio's Constitu- OTHER .ACCIU!DITI!D ~NTII ON THOSE
BUOATJONS ,., THEY fit!CO~J!' DUB1_AND
tion. lt would authorize debt contrary 1o Section 2i of Anicle vm of the Ohio COIIIlilll- .O
BOND RI!TIRIIMENTPI!I'!D PRO~ SIWL ,
don. The lqulse of the Jll.' op ...:d amendment is a vut deplrlure from ~.. ado(lled 81! MADE POR PAYMENT OF THAT OBIT stiR·
BE MADI! BY LAW,
in the past. It will authorize the State to float debt for bperating purpoees similar 10 the VICB.
FOR
AND APPIOi'tliATtON,
~ adoptCd by the federal government. This proposed aniapnent willall1horize the FOR
DDT stiR·
iiiUiinCe of debt for non:eapital expenses .

Notice or·Election on Tax
Levy In E - of the Tan
Mill Urnltatlon
NOTICE Ia hereby

organize euah a dl•trlcl;

palltlon.

upllolltel 'I tile
"IPEaAL CARE"

Shade River·

1625 Gallons

WHEREAS, II le believed
that the Joint afforllr of the
Vlllllga ot P-oy •d the
Vlllllga ofllddlet&gt;&lt;!rt would
qually aald .,,.., .dletrlct to
be eligible tor laclarol and
otall aaelatanca and would
be conducdva to the public
h..lth, IN!Iaty, convenience
or.
of the vllagae to

I!ACH ISSUE OF OBUGATIONS S!!ALL
MATURE IN NOT MORE THAN TWENTY-fiVE
YI!AilS FROM THE DATE OF ISSUANCE, OR. IF
ISSUI!D TO IU!TIJU! OR RBPUNI) OTHER
OBUGATIONS ISSUED UNDER nus SECTION, ; .
WTI'H1N TWENTY-PJVE YEARS FROM THE
DATE THE DEBT WAS ORJGINALL~N­
TRACI'I!D. IF OBLIGATIONS ARE ISSUED AS
BOND ANTICIPATION NOTES, PROVISION
SHALL BE MADE, BY LAW OR IN THE PROCEEDINGS POR THE ISSUANCE -op THoSE
NOTES, fiOR THE ESTABUSHMEI&lt;IT AND MAINTENANCE WHILE THE NOTES ARE OUTSTAN·
DING OF A SPECIAL fUND OR fUNDS INTO .
WHICH THERE SHALL BE PAID, PROM THE
SOURCES AUTHORIZED FOR THE PAYMENT
OF THE BONDS, THE AMOUNT THAT WOUW
HAVE 81!EN SUFFICIENT, IF BONDS MATUR·
INO SERIALLY IN t!ACJ;i YEAR OVER API!RIOQ,
OF TWENTY-FIVE YEARS HAD BEEN ISSUED
wrrHOtrr THE PRIOR ISsUANCE OF. THE
NOTES. TO PAY THE PRINCIPAL THAT WOULD
HAVE B1!1!N PA'i~.ON THOSE BONDS DUR·
lNG THAT Pl!ltiOD; SUCH ·FUND OR fUNDS.',
SHALL BE USED SOLI!LY POR THE PAYMENT
OF PRINCIPAL OF THOSE NOTES 01'- OF THE
BONDS ANTICIPATED.
(2)

4. Issue I will stimulate Ohio's economy --creating jobs through improvement
projects and expansion of our travel and tourism industry.

.

P0111aroy; lind

W.gMicarp.t

/

AMENDED 107.13
AEBOULTION
WHEREAS, lla Vllllga of
Pomeroy raaii.Ma that thara
~ a n -..lty and urgent
need fc!r the •tabllehmant
of' • batter public water
..Upi!IY •'{•tam which
cannOt' be acOnomlcillly or
t..elbla provldacl by the
vi~ Individually; Md
WliEREAB, the VIllage ol
Pomeroy dealr""' to •loin
with tho VIllage of
Middleport to •tabHah •
wallr cllatrlct which would
provide
a
rnora
economically leaalble
eource ol regional ruraJ
water lor the Village of

itJSCAL~~~~!:E~

5. Issue I does NOT raise taxes . It is NOT a levy issue. It does NOT require
additional property tax millage.

is now olferitig
Meatball &amp; Philly Steak Subl
1 Free Bag of Chips &amp; 1 Free
Drink with purchase of sib.

Public Notice

(8)(1) NOT MORB THAN FIFTY MIJ.!.lON
I . Issue I will ensure that Ohio's parks, forests and natural areas are clean, modem
DOLLARS PRINCIPAL AMOUNT OF OBUOA·
and safe -- protected for future generations. It has been 30 years since many
TIONS MA\\ BE
nus
facilities were built or expanded: Now we 'must renovate and modernize ou/ ' ·
... IN
ANY
TWO
HUNDRED
cabins, campgrounds, picnic areas, lrlils, beeches, docks and restrooms.
AMOUNT MAY BE
AT ANYONE
TIME. TilE LIMrrATIONS OF nus P/.RAGRAPH
DO NOT APPLY TO ANY OBLIGATIONS
2. Issue 1 will pro!CCI Ohio's water resources by defending apillst erosion, polluAIJI'HORJ7ED TO BE ISSUED UNDER nus SECtion, and agricultural runoff that threaten lakes and waterways.
TION TO RETIRE OR REPU~ OBUGATIONS'
PREVIOUSLY ISSUED UNDER THIS SECTIOI!I.
TO THE I!XTI!NT THAT THEIR PRINCIPAL
3. Issue I will improve Ohio's local parks am( recreational facilities. From the
AMOUNT DOES NOT EXCEED THE PRINCIPAL
initial $200 million, at least $40 million in liiatCliing funds will be available
AMOUNT OF THE OBLIGATIONS TO BE
to local communities.
IU!TIJU!D OR REFUNDED.
'

,......

Oominos-PizZa

tile.,..,.,.,...,..

Wltat dins luue I say?

,.
'

an ad
Call992-2156

MoN. thru FRI.

(E) OBUGATIONS ISSUED UNDER
TY OF THIS SECTION, THE

My Slwulll Ohioans Vote for Issw I?
PubliC Notice

Topl~ce

POLICIES

l. LIMIT THE TOTAL OUI'STANDING PRINCIPAL AMOUNT OF ALL
DEBT ISSUED UNDER THIS SECTION TO 1WO HUNDRED MILLION
DOLLARS, ($200,010,000) AND ALL NEW BONDS ISSUED WITHIN A
SINGLE YEAR TO FIFTY MILLION DOLLARS, ($!0,000,000) WIDCH

PEllMlT

·

3. MAKES ALL BONDS ISSUED GENERAL OBUGATIONS OF THE STATE
AND ALLOWS TAX DOLLARS AND OTHER REVENUES TO BE USED
TO REPAY THOSE BONDS.

TY IMPROVEMENT.

p..,forSalo
Muoicol ·~

Gallla COIUity Melia COUDt7 11- Co., YV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

TIONS CAN BE OUTSTANt&gt;ING A'll ;A;NY TIME. THB AMENDMENT '
DOES NOT CHANGE THE CONSTn'UTIONAL UMITATION ON THE
TOTAL AMOUNT WlUCH THE STATE IS ALLOWED TO BORROW . ' ·

1. AUTIIORIZE TilE STATE OF OIUO TO ISSUE BONDS, WIDCH WU.L .
BE RETIRED FROM GENERAL STATE REVENUES, TO fiNANCE
CAPITAL IMPRO~ FOR STATE AND lOCAL PARKS AND
RECREATION'AREAS, TO PRFSEilVE OIDO'S NAllJRAL ARlWI AND
HABITATS, AND TO PROMOTE HEAL111 AND SAFETY THROUGH
ft.OOD CONTROL, POLLunON PREVENTION AND WATER QUALI-

3.

CW.(/Md pawe• cOHr 1M
fo&amp;n.,in6 telepholUl eseluu&amp;6e1 ... ,

.

.

2. NO MORE THAN FIFTY t.fiLLION DOJtARS ($SO,OOO,OOO) CAN BE BORROWED IN ANY ONE FISCAL YEAR AND NO MORE THAN 1WO HUNDRED MIWON DOLLARS ($200,000,000) IN BONDS OR onmR OBUGA-

TO IMPROVE STATE AND LOCAL PAR.KS AND RECREATION AREAS
AND TO ENHANcE THE 'USE AND ENJOYMENT OF OIDO'S NATURAL
RESOURCES, THIS AMENDMENT WU.L:

SHALL BE GENERAL OBLIGATIONS OF

•The Area'·s Number ·1
Marketplace

L nns AMENDMENT ALLOWS PAsSAGE OF LAWS PERMITTING 111B
STATB TO BO~OW MONEY FQJt CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS FOR
PARKS, WATBR AND RECRBATION~ FACIUTIBS AND OTHER PROJECTS RE4TBD T() THE USB ~ ENJOYMENT pp NATiilw.

PROPOSED AMENDMENT.- to
. THE OHIO·C_
ONSTITUTION
ERICA JIANING

"

I

CLUB
8~p.m;

Spacllll Early Bird

$100 payon
Thll .t gOod lor t
FREE OM!.
Uc. No. 0051-342

�hG• a
7

The Dally Sentinel

Yard•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
51'

BEA'ITIE BLVD."' by Bruce Beattie

Monday, October

HousehOld

71 . AlliOl.tOr S&amp;ll ' ;-..

"

Pu••••

NitA Cro••word

I

---

ACIIOII

ae If wttter
IIUC-

PHILLIP
.ALDER

Rentals

40 Phlnaphef
'--1~ ......,cllrmp
44 -In

11Grl,........
(2wdL)

13--.,.

ClnclnMa

llood lor

46~=r·

Love

14.t::"ot....... . 4t 11111111

•

• AU. Yanl-- Be Paid In
: Ad•••· OEJDUHE: 2:00 p.m.

,tho.,
.......
·~
•-

-

NORTH

li·IJ.II

+AtU

tbo .............
• Z:OO p.m.

.Q104

tU
+A lOIS

· _ , odklon • 2:00

: P.~_ ...,.Y.

.-----•
Pomeroy,

~~

"""'
........,..

+u

•• 7
+QJIOU
+K142
SOUTH

.20 Fr-hfor
~~

flltterer
116 Plnltlt

21 AclreN
. !111111-

57 c-llrtto

Hlqn(JioeL)

+A 71

+QH
Vulnerable: Both

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

wlow

13 lloml

r. =-Unclen

DOWIII

28 Prllltlsloftc
crMiurt
28Schodute
30 &amp;wort
34 Pried
36 llovle ........

+KJ 2
•AHS

-

In*-I
17 Wooden lull
II -llld

EAST

MiddlepOrt
&amp; VIcinity

- ln,'lment
47,...,..1*
48 Lqe lllteartt

1511rtdu

8~~

1Cara...,...

IMrl' llln.
21110- lung
3 Prlctdr plltlll

71nltr
8 Smooch

11--mr
brother'•

4 Rrtfungut
5 ArchiiKt

keeper'?

Dealer: South
P us
Pus

BARNEY

8

PubllcS81e
&amp; Auction

Pol,_,......,=,

All- ..... act&lt;enllll1g In
Uil neue
lltubfed to
1111 F-FIIf-.gA&lt;t
al11188_...,.. ••logol

Ulo---

10-...,Yproforlncol,

warMdlnanMI ........
pc =~ tr a msq'ly llfiii'C! tu1

~ ot

.. """ 111M, llllnlng .......... ~.
-~e«nmloalonlor

make""'' such proMnMICO,

Openin1 lead: t 6

HOW COME. I GOT TO
PULL FOUR TIMES

MORE'N ENNYBODY
ELSE?

JUGHAID

2~217.
~- . 814114441·
Q7Z2.

All-

II .

2 bod- tllllotj nt. dop, AI.
82 H. ~ Ra on right, na
.

aCora•·~... F..,r-. en
- - , . 4 lllloo F"""

This ... . . , _ wtl 1101

Wanted to Buy

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

,poiL3DU71--.

ltntollon "'dsalmlnatlon.'

-ion I · ·Vlrglnlo,
L!coMod
.,Cihle
Will
10477H715.

9

dllce•••lldon

on I'IICI, color, relglon,
..., fllmlllallllluo ot neuonor
origin, or 1111)' lnlentfan to ·

t l r l l l - l l e . - - 1 0:
,.,_ ...,, P.O. 8oJ: 1G71,
fuN Urn1 ..... . _ , , , ......... OllloRick

WE GOT TO ALL PULL
TOGETHER TO GIT
OUR CHORES
DONE,

"*

Eut
Pau

'knowing~-·

Rio Cltlndo. "" . Poll, Coli
Evoni!'OI, 8~45 5822

Our,_,..,.

!lotJooll. ...... 1 trolh plld,

acMIIflaemenll for realeetale
which II In -lion ot lho
low.
hollby
•lluiul&amp;d thll an dMIIIngl

ldvell-flllhllne-r
.,.IYIIIabllonanequ.r
oppootuntly blllt.

211dnn., l20ttlmo. Stoo oocurfty

llldd'-', 114-187-7001.
3 Bodroont, 2 Bllht, No Polo,
814-187·1'138.

Buy « .... RlYOflno An!Jquoo,
1124 E. 111111 111M!. on AI. 124.
l!ornoray. llouta: II.T.W. 10:00
un. to 8:00 p.m., 8-y 1:00
to 1:00 p.m. 114-182-21121.

Want To Buy: "'Od 1..oa - ·
WIN RIIIIOYe, 814-24114145 Eotly
IIO&lt;nlng Or l.oto E-lngo.

31 Homes for Sale
Apartment
tor Rent

. · 'r

PEANUTS

Antiques

IF VOV DON'T WRITE
IT '{OURSELF, !-lOW WILL
VOU EVER LEARN ?

NEED 'I'OU TO WRITE
THEME FOR ME ..

-··
64 Hiv l Grain

..... lutt .I:.Oiwo For ..... 814-

~-- .,.
'
.

...-----1

54 ·'MIICIIIIaneous

Merchandise
' ZXK

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UNSCIAMIILE A&amp;OVE lETTERS
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Assign · Liken - Grant - Jurist • KISSING
The teacher asked !he youngster what he was really
thankful for. "I'm thankful for my glasses: he stated
, firmly. "They keep boys from hitting me and girts from
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "If God wonted uo to be _..niiiiCI, He -*1
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-- OCTOBER 111

...
t.ot 2) (CCJ

are romanticaliy perlect lor you. Mail $2 ··
and a long, se lf~addressed, stamped enve·
lope to Matchmaker. c/o this newspaper,
P.O: Box 4465, New York. N.Y. 10163.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Now. 22) Today it
BERNICE
you're patient enough•.things should wofll
out to your .uttlmale benefit in the tong run, ·
BEDEOSOL Don't be distu~ Wmanera gettemporiri'
1y oil track. Thisloo wiH peoe.
SAGITTARIUS (Hoy; 23·Dec., 21) Vou1
popularity could roach a high point todaj
and this won't be duo to chltlcf. You're no.
1 In the eyeo of Others, beC8ilie you knoW
how to make everyone !ti el he/she is
Important
C4P~N (Dec. aa.Jan .. 181 Generally,
speaking, ' Lady Luck tendo to' favor you
today. The two areas where ""' might be
s ... ral projecta lor which you've planted ' the nic~st perta)ns lo your sl~lus and
seeds. in the paatth•t have not 11 yet tlnancea.
ccnie lo lruitlon could produce a htrvHIIn · AQUARIUS (Jan, 211-Ftb. 18) Yoo•re ~
the -year 4he1d. You'll be glad you, didn't ~ NIIIPIIIO'l today, 11 well II a~~
tooe In llle ..,_,.1, .
b(e tNC!ltr. Olho.-··can benefH 11001 you{
LIIIIA (Stpl. 23·0C1. 23) You're more ldell and witdOm, lio don~ be 'rwtuctantld
than • gOod leader todly. y_ou'rt alap a ' oey " ! ' * - ~· "
. . .
capable maf!1G11r. Try to utilize tMM two I'ISCII'IM iO ... oil II) Hu~ and
llltMIIOUt aoea11 In endoovorllhet require 1 porcepttona you QIIIIOday pertaining to 1 i
theM elements. Knqw whtrt to look 1or 1' y~ur cbmmerclal ·allairt ah9u ld not ba
· fOin!inee ancl'you'lllind H. The Aat~ropll , ~; Your .l?tuHion·c:ould be zeroed in.
Matchmaktr lllatantly reveals whlcll sigN · oolactoll your logic may oveflook,
·

ASTRO·GRAPH

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ARIES (llarch 21·Apr1119) Do not put lim·
itations on your thinking today , becoous&lt;t
larger expectations might have a chance
being tullilled before your lesser ones do.
Think big and dO your best.
TAURUS (April 20-lloy 20) Where
work or career is concerned
could be quite lucky with meaningfuiJ
andeavoni, ~ ~ ooe or several. Don't
alraid to, handle olluations simultaneously
GEMINI (liar 21.Junt ~) Something
whiCh you're preoently ·involved has
potential, but It n\lghl have to be reorga · l
nized. This Is an . - n t day lo cooside.r
new approaches.
CANCER ~June 21.Julr 22) You co•11a1
reap rllher subStantial benelits today
ahlfting condltiono , Evan trarratom,.lliorlS
you_did not generate might P.'l'lie to
lucky tor you.
LEO (July 13-Aug.
In a panlnershlt)l
arrangemen11oqay thtngo could work
quite W&lt;~lllt you are lhe idee pef80II wllilo
yo!Jr CO\Ifllerporl plota lhe COUll&amp; oloctlon.
Elclt'eontrlbUtlpn complifllltllllhe - ·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Bopl. 22) Wllat you have
to onor COlJkJ be more valuoblo lhtln you
may .reaKz~, whether. H be a oervic8 or a
product II coridlllona warrant, a
lncrHH ellould be1acceptablt.
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By
The
Bend
.

Brian and Jayne Collins
announce the birth of their second
child, a girl, Baylee Brianne
Collins on September 3 at Marietta
Memorial Hospital. She weighed 8
pounds and 13 ounces.
Maternal grandparents are Joyce
and Elton Ritchie, Coolville. Paternal grandparents are Larry Collins,
Long Bottom and Teresa Collins,
Marietta.
Bay1ee was welcomed home by
her brother, Dakota, 16 months.

BA~LEECOLU~

Lee birthday
celebrated
Amber Nicole Lee, daugtber of
Trince Lee, Pomeroy and Laurence
Lee, Jr., Shade, celebrated her
ninth birthday with a Snow White
theme.
In attendance or ·sending gifts
were grandparents Cora and
Lawrence Lee, Sr., Sid and Carol
Hayman, and Rachel Wilson;
brothers and sisters, David, Larry·
and Natasba Lee; cousins, Scott
and Brittany Chapell, Brenna Hayman, Jerry, Dtana and Brian
Fredrick; aunts and uncles, Ryan,
Robert and Rita Hayman, Sandy
and Rick Chapell, Kim Lee and
friend Cassie Brawne.

Hudson rewarded for
leadership abilities
Heath Hudson has been featured
in this year's edition of the United
·States Achievement for an award in
Leadership and Student Council
Achievements.
A senior at Meigs High School,
he is enrolled in college preparatory classes and is president of his
class. He is co-captain and a fouryear varsity letterman for the
Marauder football team.
He is involved in Student Council, French Club, and is a member

of the wrestling team, where he
was named All Tri-Valley Conference lasi year. He is a four-year letterman in track.
Hudson is a member of The Fellowship of Christian Athletes
and attends Faith Tabernacle
Church. He is th~ son of Mary
Hudson, of Pomeroy, and the late
Bryant Hudson. He JS the grandson
of Geage Hudson of Pomeroy, and
~- and MIS. William Arthur Sr. of
Ripley, W.Va

by Bob Hoeflich
Big congratulations are in order have known somebody·who knew
for Stephanie Sayre and Fred Mat- somebody or else the ruling on the
son, Southern High School students dividing line wasn't carved in
ar.d members of the school's s10ne. At any rate that was the way
Future Farmers of America Chap- it was. How soon we forget, eh
ter.
Mazie? Check it out with Dorothy.
After winning top honors in She remembers that she was not m
·Ohio competition with their instru- the "Bucktown" gang because she
mental presentations. Stephanie lived above Lincoln.
and Fred have been selected as one
The Bucktown references
-of the 40 acts to entenain at the didn't seem to have verv much
annual National FFA Convention effect on me and frankly, I was
to be held next month in Kansas glad to go to PaJt SL Somehow, I
City, Mo. Acts selected from always felt the tall. Central School .
~ross the nation entertain several
looked like it was about 10 topple.
audiences during the convention Pat Sherman Mills who attended
including service club luncheons the school tells me that a pan of it
and at the Crown Center shopping was condemned before the building
complex.
.
was abandoned.
Stephanie and Fred will present
_ __
their instrumental act at an audition
And a couple more birthday
on Nov. 8 or 9 in Kansas Citr, and girls.
through that auditi!lfl they wUI be
Bernice Hawk, a lifelong Meigs
placed in the various perfonnances resident, observed her 95th birthslots throughout the week. The day Friday. Her address is Hemtwo Southern High School students Jock Grove Road, Pomeroy. . '
have been advised that their primaMiddl~'s Terry. Byer marked
ry purpose convention week s~!l'd her 89th bfrthday on Saturday, Ocl
be the talent pro8J111!1. Competition 2. On the following day, her son
to be. one of the 40• acts was and daughter-in-Jaw, Charles and
extremely keen and Stephanie· and Helen, took her to an -orchard in
Fred have been advised to prepare Jackson County for apples, cider
"very rigorously" for their upcom- and sorghum and then dinner at
ing perfonnances.
Bob Evans in Rio Grande. Son,
Sinee the d~o will be represent- Bob and his family, presented her
ing not only Meigs County but also. with gifts and money. Terry also
the State of Ohio, contributions to · · received 24 cards from friends and
help with their expenses are bei~W relatives. Terry woFked at the
accepted. Donations to either stu· Meigs Senior Citizens &lt;':enter for
dent or both may be sent to 4 7440 20 years but doesil 't get there too
Morning Star Road, Racine, Ohio frequently any more.
. 45771. By the way, FFA has
412,788 members.
Seems like we have a good deal
of longevity going in. Meigs CounMazie Hannahs and Dorothy ty. And that's spectal. Do keep
Jenkins relived some memories of smiling.
long ago with the recent mention of
the. Park Street SChool .on Middleport's Gravel Hill in thiJ column. · ' r
Neither Mazie nor ·oorothy
Toe to Toe
attended the school which later
became an ice cream plant among
Most birds have four toes on each
Other things. Dorothy ,recallS thai foot: .three in front and one 'behind.
she atiended the uptown Middle· However, members of the ~t and
part Central School as did Mazie•. woodpecker-fainilies- including road
Mazie though bas forgotten abou, runners, cuckoos and kingfishe~ i
have two toes that pc)int forward and
~ schoolllwes.
-. ,
Let me ~fresh your memOry on two that point backward.
that, ..Mazie. Your schoolmates
Were everyooe.you•knew who was
.Jour age or about y.our age ''way
back then" wh!l lived above LinCl)ln SL 1boac_bdow Lincoln SL,
the area known as ''Buckto\¥11",
1 some time at the Part Sinlet
ScbdoiJ
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However. there w~ a few
exceJ!tioas and some ·k ids who.
The largl II 18nd gorge 1,. the
lived a bit on the loWer' tide of die world
Z7'l'·mlle
.
. Grand
LinColn.~L line'were permiaed 10 Cllnyon11Inthe
Arlzotla.
aiitend Cenll'll ... :Jbeir
. . Jl8fCI9 must

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• Jane Molter was leader for. the
program "Technology: Employ It
for One Another" at the Sepiember
meetin~ of the Racine United
Methodist Women.
Scripture was read from First
Peter. All members joined in discussing how technological changes
at home, offioe and the church have
influnce4 the way thin!ls are now
accomplished and quesuoned if the
church has made use of the new
technologies. Prayer closed the
program.
In opening the business meeting, Lee Lee welcomed everyone
and all joined in repeating the
· Lord's Prayer. The UMW purpose
was repeated by the group and the
UMW song was sung and accompained by Ruth Steams.
.
The secretary's n:pon was given

Dear ADa Leaden: Reoenlly.
you prinll!d a 1eaer from a man
tllanking a truclJ: driver for saving
his life. He was f'lllinl ulcep while
driving, and a truck driver kept
blowing bis bern to keep bim awake.
This ill a fascin"ing coi!M;idcnoe
because IOIDeOite saved my life,IOO,
and il alao happened 33 yeara ago.
I was working on the Garrison
Dam in Rivenlalc, N.D. At that time,
it was the largest earth-filled dam in
the warkL I was working on top of a
136-foot surge tank wlien a mne
hit me in the bl!ct with a cable,
tbrowing me off the tank. I was
headod for dte concretc below, with
no chanoe of slniVII, when a man
by the name of FII!Yd Hartman
grabbed me by die neck. He bad his
safety belt on and Clllght me about
halfway dowll sa I pasaed by bim.
I was lakeD to dte hospital with a
few broken ribs llld didn't Jet a
c:ltanoe 10 thank bim. That was his
fiist and last clay on that job, and I
don't know wbc:tc be went. So thank
you. Floyd Hanman, for saving my
life. ·- ROGER W. DAUB,
CENTER. N.D.
DEAR ROOER: What a tarific

counaelor ·said we were made for
cachlllbcr.l posq.oned the wedding
~-Jack wouldn't continue with

Ann

Vol. 44, NO. 111

·lotulllmedlalnc.

~g

!Ullyl I !tope Floyd llartaWI 11CCS
this and wrilu to let me know. Orif anyone knoWs wbc:tc Royd is, wiD
you please .end him this column and
tdl him I W1111 1D bear from him?
He ihouJd write ID me in care of the
Chicago Tribune. ru keep an eye
peeled for his lcaler.
Dear Am Ianden; hm 37 Yean
old and have aever married.l·daled
a 35-yar-old divoroed man for five
yean. "Jack" and I were very muc:b
Ia love. I wore bla eagagement ring
for a year, . and we talked of
maniage, but we bickered a lot. I
asswiled this .was just our style of
CCIIImllllication.
We decided to get premarital
couaaeling about our DCVa"-ending
81JU111CDII. One COIIIBdor aai4 our
values were 100 clificqdt. Another

10 you. it's sort of a

·~" ofhitn. I say, not nccessy..
Uy. I .enjoy walking behind my wife
becatt... she has a tcirific fanny and
looki peat when she walks. --

CONCORDIA, KAN;

DEAR CON.: Some might

think it's lither sweet. Thanb for
writing. ru bet t1te1e will.be Iota or
gucssins pii!CI in Conc:cirdia IOday.
Do youlttwe qlltstioM obolll sa,
bill 110 OM to talk to? Anlll...anders'
booklet, "Sa flNitM . Teen-Ager,"
Is frtink liiJd UJ lilt poilll. Send a

to,.,. busilless-n"

envelope and tJ ~Mck or inoM}' ordo for $3.65 (IIIU illdlldes postoge
and ltandiUJg) to: TteliS, .c/o AM
LtlndNs, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago,
JU. 60611-0562. (Ill CtWJda, send
$4.45.)

Community Calendar ·Items
appear two days bel'ore an eveat
·aad the day or that eveat. Items
must be received In advance to
aasure publication In the calendar.
'
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Marilyn
Meier will tei!Ch sweatshirt painting at the MiddlepOrt Arts Council
at 7 p.m. Participants must bring
their own shirts, j&gt;aints and brushes
will be provided. Cost is $10. Call
992-5983 or 992-2675 for more
information.

POMEROY - The Meigs County Garden Club's fall meeting will
be beld at dte Meigs County Museum at 7:30 p.m. All garden club
officers and members are welcome.
MIDDLBPORT - There will be
a revival at Ash Street Free Will
Baptist Church· from Oct. 11-16
starting at 7:30 p.m. nightly with
Evan~elist Paul Thompson from
Cincmnati and special singing .
Everyone is welcome.

CHESHIRE - Women Alive
will meet at 7 p.m. in the Kyger
Creek Oub house. There wiU be a
devotional speaker, craft demonstration and refreshments.

general membership meeting for
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce at 7:30 a.m. at the Senior
Citizens Center. The topic will be
the senior citizens levy.

RACINE - Racine Board of
Public Affairs will meet at 10 a.m.
in the village hall. .
'

WEDNESDAY
CHESTER - There will be a
revival at the Chester Nazarene
Church Oct .. 13 - 17 at 7 p.m·.
nightly and 6:30 on Sunday with
Evangelist David Canfield from
Russell, Ky.

POMEROY - Pomeroy Elementary PTO will hold itS regular meeting 'at·7 p.m. in the school gym.
Everyone is welcome. 5th graders
wiU 1Jf0vide entertainmenL
1
POMEROY • Disabled AmeriCOOLVll.LE .- There will -be a
can Veterans and Auxiliary will revival 81 Whites Chapel WeSleyan
DARWIN - The Bedford Town- bold their monthly meeting at the Church Oct; 11 - 17 with Evange· list Kermit Farlow. Everyone is
ship Trustees will have their regu- · Hall at 7 p.m.
welcome.
lar monthly meeting at 7 p.m. in

TOPS members congregate
Both meetings were opened in
pmyer followed by the singing of
the Happy·Song and the reciting of
the TOPS pledge.
The best TOPS losers were Jean
Kahler and Jeannette McDonald.
The KOPS pledge was recited. The
best KOPS losers were ,Linnie
Aleshire and Bernice Durst. The
best stork loser was Bernice Durst.
·Jeannette MCDonald won both
gadget gifts and MaidQ Long and
Ruby Fowler won the fruit baskets.
T.C. Ervin received a charm
bmcelet for being half way to her

COOLVIT.LE - There will be a
hunter safety course Oct. 13 - 15r .....and Oct. 20 - 22 from 6:30 to 9:30
p.m. at the Coolville Lions Club •
Building. For more information or
to register call 667-3831, Ed Rood
at 667-6348 or Ed Wigal at 6676657.

TUESDAY

goal and a charm for losing six
consecutive weeks.
Articles on curbing cravings,
eating out and the benefits of walking were discussed.
Members sang to the best losers.
The TOPS IIOH 570 held two
meetings recendy.

POMEROY - There will. be a

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U FORURONCO IIILT 414 2.1 vsi ktllded,M.........S7;49S .
U CH,EV. SI0 IWU 414 u vs. .;,.o:·.,~
';.';;S1f15 ,
9.1OIEY IWER 414 4 Dr~ .u va, .~.t,.ne.-$1 S,$QO
87 CHEY. 510.m. CAI414 PICKUP ..................-$6495 ·
~ fOtD f150:302 VB; JtWI'O, ~lr, till, cruiH
· $6995
17.DODGE D250 Jtava,IIUtD~
~
$5995 '
, II CIIV. 1/2 JON auto., .alr, utJ'Uharp--__,$7495
17 fOID 'UNGU ILT lalglletl • ..........M.~--$41'5
15 FORD FISO ILT auto-Air. utr~~ wrp
.. $4695
. 14 CHEV.% TON CONVERSION VAN \tery nlce-~$4995

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By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Starr
Visitors this weekend to "Showcase, Meigs County" ·at the Rock
Springs Fairground will be able to
see a wide variety of exhibits and
demonstrations mnging from apple
butter making to archery, from
chair caning to classic cars.
Scheduled to open Friday with a
County" this weekend. He poses here with a
CLASSICS - Roy Grueser will be displaying
ribbon cutting at 2 p.m. with sever1927 Model T pickup and a 1914 touring car.
four of his antique Fords at "Showcase, Meigs
al state officials and other dignitaries attending, the activities will
continue through Sunday.
Hours of the showcase arc Friday, noon to·6 p.m., ~aturday,
10:00 a.m. to 8 .p.m. and Sunday,
noon to 6:00 p.m. Everything is
free and the public is invited to
attend.
For·the younger set the Southern
FFA will ha'iC a petting zoo in the
RIO GRANDE - Repons on comsheep barn 4rea where youngsters pany visitations and a discussion of
will have an opportilnlty to interact developing a regional outdoor drama
with various farm animals.
highlighted a meeting of the Regional
A kiddie tractor pull has been Economic Development Association
scheduled for 4:00 p.m. on Satur- Monday.
day and Sunday in the show arena.
recent1y-f~i group consists
Various prizes will be awarded and ofThe
·business and
nearly two
registration for this activity is
industrial
Jeade
s
from
Mason
$1.00: Registration for the tractor
County,
W.Va.,
and
Gallia.
Jackson,
pull will be available each day at
Meigs and Vinton counties iii Ohio.
3:30n.m.
- ctmpingc Xliitiits by Forked ·'l'llp WOtbillvn'nmted miSSionis1!3 ·
Run State Park' Rent-A-Camp pro- expand economic development ·
throughoilt the region.
gram and elements of the 91st OVI
The University of Rio Grande,
Company B Civil War Living Histhrough
the auspioes of its newlytory will give Showcase visitors a
taste Qf camping from the present developed Cenler for Economic Deback to the Civil War era. The velopment, hosted the meeting.
Chester Bowhunters will have a
Oi'ganizC!I in September, the groups
display and feature demonstrations first pro~t involved visitations to
throughout the weekend.
area businesses wid industries deThe Meigs County Historical signed to deteonine existing needs of
Society will host a display down by established f11'111s.
the log cabin on the fairgrounds
The fm:t round of visitations inand feature an opportunity to take volved contacts with representatives
pan in a living history project on
ECONOMIC
-BarryM.Dorsey,
of -Facemyre Lumber in Meigs
Saturday.
of
Rio
Grande
addresses
members or the
President
or
the
University
Meigs County Senior Citizens' Co\lllty, the Pillsbury plant in JackCenter volunteers will be making son County, and Gallia County's Bob Regional Economic Development Association at a Monday evening
meeting. The association, which focuses on ec01i'omic development on a
homemade apple butter on Satur- Evans Farms.
regional basis, meets at the university througb the auspices or the
The
initial
contacts,
visitation
comday and people attending will have
school's
·recently formed Center for Economic Develop)llent.
mittees reported, brought forward
a chance to sample the product.
Other outdoor displays will suggestions for enhanced considerFollowing a wide-ranging discusinclude the Bookmobile sponsored ation - including the development of and area-wide support for specific
by the Meigs County Library, Ohio a legislative agenda - of the local projectS, such as the proposal to de- sion of the need for a regional apDepartment of Natuml Resources wood indusuy, a need to draw labor velop a regional airport in Mason proach to the development and proand a cruise-in on Sunday after- intensive induslries to the area. and County.
motion of tourism, Greg Miller, Ph.D.,
noon. Registration for the cruise-in
cooperative effons between Bob The second round of corpomte visi- the University of Rio Grande's direcwill be available at noon and cost is Evans Farms and regional tourism tations, to be held in October, will tor of theater, addressed the possibilS5.00. This activity is being spongroups.
initiate contact with Shell Chemical ity of establishing an outdoor drama
sored by the Oldies But Goodies
Additional concerns expressed by Co., in WeSt Virginia, as weB as the presentation.
Car Club, and prizes wiT! be awardthe COI])Orate .leaders included the Ohio flfllls, Southern Ohio Coal Co., ·Acctirding to Miller, four such proed 10 the top 20, best of show, origneed for improvements ilj education, the Gavin Power Plant, Adellman ductions- each of which receives fundinal and best of show, modified.
a
regional·approach to grantswriting, Lumber, and Merillat Induslries.
Cont_inueil on page 3
Cruise-in awards will be pr~nted
at 4:00p.m.
Rounding out the outdoor activities will food booths sponsored by
the Lions Club, Harrisonville
P.T.O., Senior Citizens, Carmel
Sutton Church, Star Mill Park,
Eastern Band Boosters and Sweet
Greetings.
Other exhibits in Commercial
By JIM FREEMAN
tee is trying to further develop the (17 :49) and.Jon Perrin (17:57).
Building One include antique cars
Top five woman runners were
Sentinel News Staff
fireworks display and is taking
(pre-1945), antique tractors, model
Despite persistent rain showers • donations for next year's fireworks. Angela Malone (19:43), Lori Kelly
trains by the Meigs Division of which occasionally moistened
Apparently wet weather is chili (27:26), Sherron Barnett (28:00),
Southeastern Ohio Railroad Asso- those attending the 1993 Big Bend weather judging by the number of Susan Grueser (28:48) and Cathy
ciation, Meigs County Senior Citi- Stern wheel Festival Saturday, the participants in this year's chili Atchison (29:16).
zens; JQ)ln Hetzer, trapping; and event, in the words of Stemwheel cookoff.
Male winners in the following
several craftsmen.
Committee Chainnan Larry Banks,
According to cookoff organizer age groups were: 15-19- Crock· The Junior Fair Building will was "pretty successful."
Sherry Warner, 17 teams and indi- ett Roush (18:08) and Bill Toundas
'have a wide variety of educational
Near-perfect fall weather Thurs- viduals panicipated in this year's (18 :23); 20-29 - Jim Freeman
and commercial displays. A high- day and Friday gave out to cooler culinary conquest, easily doubling (24:25) and Sean Walton (26:24);
light of the building will be a flow- tempcmturcs and showers Saturday last year's ligures.
30-39 -Robert Musser (18:35)
er show featuring the Meigs Coun- morning around 10, but if the rain ·
Chili cookoff winners were, in and Mitch Meadows (24:46); 40-49
ty theme song wriuen by Roger and was supposed to keep festival order by class: corporate - Mike Carter (18 :05) and Gary
Mary Gilmore. This show is open turnout low, it wall not evident by Coolville Lions Club, Big Bend Donavan (19:59); 50 and over to the. public .for .exhibit, and will the large. number of people partici- Fimess and Teaford ~calty; indi- Larry May and Ken Holley.
be a People's Choice Show. There pating or simply watching such vidual - Jim Warder, Mike
Andrea Neutzling was first in
are classes for arrangements,_speci- events as the SK run/walk, stem- Canan, Bonnie and John Dennis the women's 14 and under group
mens including flowers, sunflowers wheeler races, chili cnok-off and and"Bob Arms (tie). ·
with a time of 35:33 while
and pumpkins and a judge's class. . the -Herbal Harvest and Country
The min Saturday began as run- wheelchair winners were Tom ·
. Meigs County Agriculture will Fair.
ners in the third annual Big Bend Lowery (31 :33) and James Ferrell
also be showcased in t11e Junior
The festivity began quietly Stern wheel Festival 5K Run/Walk (47:10).
.
Fair Building in an exhibition high- Thursday with cruises aboard the were getting-ready to run from the
Thirty-six walkers .participated
lighting ·the .major sources .or . sterilwheeler P.A. Denny and Mason, W.Va., levee ·to the in the event with Glen Carpenter
income and products from Metgs ended with a bang Saturday , Pomeroy parking lot approximately finishing flfSt with a time of 31:03.
Co~nty and examples of the prodevening ils hundreds braved falling 3.1 miles away.
Sponsors of the event were .
ucts. ·
.
temperatures and chilling down"The number of participants was Vaughn's Cardinal and Peoples
Winning entries from this ~ear's pours to watch 'fueworks lisht the downa little bit," said organizer Bank of Point Pleasant, Mason and
Soap Box Derby will be on dtsplay sky above the Pomeroy river front.
Mike Kennedy, ''but everybody ran New Haven. Helen .Fields, reprein the J unio~ Fair Buildins. Show_ In between; revelers of all 'ages good times·. This is a ~ery fast senting Peoples Bank of Mason,
case visluirs will luive an opponu- found P.leilty of enJertainment rang- course."
served as starter and Don Vaughn
nity to take a closer look at the ing from rock-n.rolliO tountry and
Nathan Baloy was fastest over- handed out prizes. .
workmanship of these unique vehi- western, from cmfts and herbs to all coverjng the distance in 16 minAnother poJ)ular crowd pleaser
cles.
an 'abundance or country ouisine utes and 46 seconds.• Following Saturday was the Herbal Harvest
Eastern, Meigs and Southern sure to please. .
were Jeff Jones (1 '7:2S), Phillip and Country Fair which, due to the
Banks said the festival commit- Edmonds (17: 3S), Richard Haft
· Continued on Pll!lt 3 '
~ontinued on page 3

Festival 'pretty successful'
despite contrary climate

Five countries account for over 75
percent
all foreign direci inveatment in the United States. The 'leading· foreign ,investor is the United
Kingdom; with $106.1 billion lnvealed·
here.

Ill

I '

.

•

the town ii811.

:. . . hill.... ' .· .

·VDhta canfield &amp;oi ......

A lluiiiiRI ltlalnc. .........

Horton named new mayor

REDA focuses oii company
visitations, discusses tourism

ccnsidc:llblt IXIIIIIIICIIl vulgar, bull

1..-ln 40s, cloudy.
Wedllelday, parUyolllllly. High
Ia mid-50s

1 s.ctlon. 10 ..... 3li con .. .

Pomeroy·Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, October 12, 1993

Fridayat2

"JIOWU lb'ugle.• Sbe wants to be

self-oddrused,

.Pick 4:
. 6817
Buckeye 5:
10-12-15-17-35

will begin

bim.

moved

656

Showcase
activities

111m!
Dear Ana LOden: I've written
clor.as oflelten 110 you in my brad.
but this one loeB to the post offioe.
It's about the woman who never
Wllb beside ber husband. Sbe ill
always • least three stepS ahead of

die ~g. Also, be wanted ID
elope; and I wanted a church
weddills- .
.
LaaJanuary, I went over !0 Jack's
houae ind caught him with hill
secretary.It ll!mCd out this 21-yearold ·jliplld tb1ng bad
in
with him. Jack insiBis that be doesn't
love hCr, but she coob and clearJS
for bim, which I never did.
Am, we've l!een ~ eacb other
behind the aeereltlry's back. We
tFC that we love each other, but
· he's aQaid be hasn't the wiUpower
or aelf-Gscipline 1D Rlllain b'ue ID
me. lllill WIIIIID marry him.
I went to a doctor who told me .I
was depreacd I've tried dlling other
IIICII, but I ha\&lt;e·no desire for them.
What should I do? - INDIANAPOUSDILI3MMA
DEAR INDIANAPOLIS: It
aounds 10 me as if the rocks in Jack's
bead matCh the laolea in yours. I
caution you, however,. against
marrying this Rmleo un1eas be gees
rid of dte aec:rellry aad agree&amp; -ID
joilll CDIIIIIeling; If be refu8es -drop

Pick 3:

-PageS

the fellowship.
Several members are planning
to attend 10 District UMW Leader•
ship Enrichment Day on Oct. 16 Jlt
Belpre, St. Mark's UMC. Cost is
$5 and resetvations can still be
made by calling an officer.
Refreshements were served by
Margie West and Lee Lee. Get
weell cards were signed during the
social time.
Attending were Alice Wolf~.
Vicki Hill, Karen Walker, Dorothy
McKenzie, Margie West, Clara
Mae Sar~ent, Sharon Hubbard, Ewi
Mae Htll, Jane Molter, Rutll:
Stearns, Margery Roush, Chris
Hill, Frances Robens, Nancy Ervip
and Lee Lee.
,
·
The next mc;eting will be Oct·
25 at 7:30 p.m. at the church. All
members please uy to attend.

A November election day dinner
wil be served. Note cards personal- ·
ized with a sketch of the church
will be orderetl. A donaiion was
sent to the Blanket Program,
The Campaign for Children Program will continue thro11gh 1994
and a form was completed to be
sent 10 the District.
The nominating committee
chairman, l;tta Mae Hill, presented
the slate of officers for 1994 and
noted they are the present officers.
The group accepted and voted to
retain Lee Lee, F.esident; Mar~ie
West, vice-presJdent; Chris Hill,
secretary; ClaJa 'Mile Sargent, treasurer.
Craft making and sewing will be
continuing at the church every
Monday at 9:30 a.m. All women
are invited to participate or join in

by Chris Hill 8nd correspondence
was read. A letter was read by
Mike Euler who survived a bad
vehicle wreck almost 5 years ago.
UMW have been faithful in sending cards 10 him monthly.
.
The treaswer report was gtven
by ClaJa Mac Sargent. The penny
fund collection was taken and sick
calls reported.
Margie West reported on the
annual District UMW Day.held in
Marietta recently. Attending the
day were Lee Lee, Jane Molter,
Margie West and Frances Roberts.
Lee Lee was installed as a new
member of the Athens District
nominating committee for 1994. ·
Several items of busineess were
discussed and attended to. The
1994 mission pledge was
increased.

Man grabbed by the neck and saved

s
_
p
•
e n

'

.

Community calen4~

Beat of the Bend...

. •.' •
•••
•

Monday, OCtober 11, 19~

•

Ohio Lottery

Phillies
edge
Braves

Technology program presented .at meeting

Collins
second birth
announced

A"MBERLEE

The Dally· Sentinel

Middleport
Council honors
Fred Hoffman
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
AfJer serving more than 19
years as mayor of Middleport, Fred
Hoffman submitted his resignation
to Middleport Village Council
Monday night
Wednesday he moves into the
position of Meigs County Commissioner to which he was appointed
by the Meigs Co~nty Republican
Pany central committee last week.
He fills the unexpired term of
resigned commissioner, Manning
Roush.
·
Hoffman has served four full
terms as mayor of Middlepon and
was in his fifth term which expires
on Dec . 31, 1995. Dewey Horton
as president of Council steps into
that unexpired term.
It was in I 974 that Hoffman
went from president of Council to
mayor upon the death of Mayor
John Zerkle.
As a tribute to Hoffman and his
contributions to the village, Horton,
on behalf of Council, presented
him with a plaque. The mscription
~ "in appreciation for 19 years
of'dcrucllted service as Mayor of
Middlepon".
During the meeting former
Councilman Bob Gilmore was
appointed to fill the unexpired term
of the late William (Bucky) Walters. Gilmore is one of two candidates for Council seats whose
names will be on the November
ballot. Mick Childs is the other
candidate. Both are without opposition. With Horton moving into the
mayor's post, there will still be a
vacancy on Middleport Village
Council. An appointment to Horton's unexpired term is expected to
be made at the next meeting.
Council authorized Hoffman to
hold court on Oct. 18 pending Horton's completion of required tnlining.
Projects and Changes
A first reading was given to an
ordinance increasing the water and
sewer tap charge from $225 to
$325 . The increase was recommended by the Board of Public
Affairs.
Council again postpOned action
on bids on the Broadway-Logan
Street draina~e project. Two bids
had been received, one from Weber
Construction at Reedsville for
$13,143, and the second from
TAM Construction, Lancaster-for

Sl2,481. Both bids are in line with
specifications, Engineer Eugene
Triplett reported.
Councilmen Paul Gerard and
James Clatworthy at last night's
meeting said they wanted to go
with the high bid because Weber is
a local contractor and uses local
workers, despite the fact that it will
cost the village $662 more.
Since members seemed uncertain as 10 whether they are required
to accept the low bid, action was
postponed until Solicitor Linda
Warner canobe contacted for a ruling.
On a request for a D-1 liquor
permit from the owAer of Chris'
Diner, located in. the former Middleport Lunch Room building on
North Second, Council decided to
request a hearing at the county seat
It was generally agreed that taking
no action and allowing the permit
to go through and beer 10 be served
there has the "potential to create
some problems."
The proposed solid waste management plan of Gallia, Jackson,
Meigs and Vin10n Qlunties was
presented 10 "Council by· Hoffman.
No action was taken pending
review by members.
Activities
Trick or treat night was set for
Thursday, Oct. 28, 6 to 7 p.m. That
same night, Feeney-Bennett Post
128. American Legion, will hold its
annual community halloween party
at Sleepy Hollow iocated near the
marina off Page Street.
Tom Dooley, president of the
Middleport Community Association, reported on the CatfJSb Festival noting that $1,300 was cleared
on the activity. He noted that the
name of the annual event is under
considemtion for change.
Dooley also reported that Middleport will be at Showcase, Meigs
County, this weekend. A video has
been prepared and will be continuously presented during the Showcase, and photos of early Middleport will be displayed.
He also noted that United Fund
for Meigs County has been estab~ ·
lished and the official kickoff will
come on Nov, I.
The Rev. Kris Robinson had
pmyer preceding the meeting.
Attending were Hoffman, Council members, Horton, Clatwonhy,
Judy Crooks, Gerard and Satterfield, Dooley and Gilmore.

PRESENTED PLAQUE • Fred Holl'man, mayor of Middleport ror the ~ast 19 yea!'5, was presented a plaque or appreciation
at Monday night's meetmg or Village Council. Dewey Horton 1ert,
wh~ moves from president of Council to mayor, made the pr~sen­
tahon.

•

Cristopher issues
WASHINGTON (AP)- Secretary of State Warren Christopher
warned today Haitian military and
police leaders are inviting the reimposition of "severe economic sanctions" br obstructing the arrival of
scores o noncombat U.S. forces in
Haiti. ·
Christopher said Army chief
Raoul Cedras and police commander Michel Francois violated the

commitments they undertook last
July when they agreed to allow lhe
rcstomtion of democracy in Haiti.
Under that agreement, ousted
President Jean-Bertrand Aristide is
due to return 10 Haiti at the end of
the month. About 170 U.S. and 26
Canadian noncombat forces were
due to land in Haiti on Monday but
'Were blocked by forces opposed to
the return of democracy,

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