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.•

By The Bend

Sen~inel

The Daily

Monday; OCtober 25,1993
Page 10

•

•

t
4

.•

Ohio Lottery

Vikings
defeat
Bears

•

Pick 3:
761
Pick 4:
6635
Buckeye 5:
1-2-13-31-32

:-Page 4

· Vol. 44, NO. 121
llull.......,lnc.

QUARTERLY AWARD • Betsy Weaver, !!clm!•lltnltive secrepltal Administrator Scott LUCllllas a part oftbe hospiCIII'I "I' Done
Good at VMH" program designed to encourqe extn effort ou the
part of employees and voluuteen In their hospiCIII eadeavors. Mrs.
Weaver was one or several named to the "' Done Good" Honor
Roll at the hospital over the put three montlui. The winner of the
$50 award each quarter Is selected via lottery.

Caravan induction held
The Syracuse Church of the
Nazarene held its Nazarende Cara·
van Induction Ceremony on Oct:
17 during their morning service.
Past Rick Sturgill inducted the
leaders into the Nazarene Caravan
Program. Inducted were Jan Hawk,
Kathy Lehew, Deanna Sturgill and
Sharon Cundiff.
·
The Children were also inducted
and given their scarf or sash, group
badge and rank. After receving
their awards they said their group's

pledge and Caravan motto.
Inducted were Searcher Class
Ashlee Hill, Cody Davis, Ambe;
Mills, Timmy Lane and Kathy
Byers; Exflorer Class, Jackie
Sturgill, Jil Matson, Jeremy Cundiff, Patrica Layne and Stacey
Mills; Adventerer Class, Ricky
Sturgill, Missy Lehew, Niclc Bolin
and Erin Bolin.
Anyone who wants to join the
group can call 992-3517 or 9926050.

Homebuilders banquet held
The Homebuilders Class of
Middleport Chruch of Christ held
their 54th annual banguet recently
in the church social rooms.
Kenny McElhinny's class pre·
pared and served a steak dinner to
members, former members and
friends.
.
AI Hartson, minister of the
church, gave the table blessing.
The tables were decorated with faD
leaves, flowers, pumpkins, com,
gords and buckeyes. Thelma Boyer
made napkin rings for all the
guests.
Dorthy Roach welcomed the
class and guests and thanked the
commiuees for helping to melee tbe
class activites a success this year.
Glen Evans was Master of Cuemonies and called the kitchen help
out and thanked them for 'the good
meal.

A sharing of old times was held.
Katherine Evans presented gifts
to Teacher Frank Ihle and President
Dorlhy Roach.
Committees for the evening
were: reservation, Flo Grueser,
Dorlhy Roach and Clarice Erwin;
decoration, Gene and Dorthy
McDaniel, Elsie King and Dorthy
Baker: program. Glen and Kathering Evans, Willard and Nettie

Boyer, Lester Bowers and Loretta
Fiemeyer.
Officers for lhe coming year are
Doroty McDaniel, president; Loret·
ta Fiemeyer, first vice-president;
Frank Ihle, second viae-president;
Elsie King, secretary; Thelma
Boyer, assistant secretary and
Katherine Evans, treasurer.
The class was dismissed to the
santuary for a program prepared by
Cathy Erwim. After the program,
aU joined in a friendship circle and
sang "The Moments to Remember." Qosing prayer was given by
Frank Ihle.
Attending were AI and Donna
Hartson, Glen and Katherine
Evans, Clay and Geneva Tuttle,
Bud and Hazel Wilson, Nettie and
Willard Boyer, Kathy, Frank, Josh
and Jodi Ihle, Nelllfl(l Cash Bahr,
Pat and Gardner Wehring, Farie
and Raymond Cole, Tammy
Gilbert and Samantha, Clarice
Erwin, Raymond Russell, Nora and
Denver Rice, Harold·and Elizabeth
Lohse, Lois and Ken McElhinny,
Loretta Fiemeyer, Lester Bowers,
Thelma Boyer, Dorlhy Baker, Bonnie Smith, Elsie King, Dorthy
Davis, Milton and Annabelle
Houdashelt, Rosanne Manley and
Dorthy McDaniel.

Community calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day or tbat event. Items
must be received In advance to
assure publicJ~tlon In the calendar.
MONDAY
POMEROY • Forest Run Baptist Church will have a revival from
Oct. 25-29 beginning at 7 p.m .
nightly. Pastor Arius Hurt invites
the public.

'

REEDS VILLE • Eastern Local
OASPE 44g will meel 81 7:30 p.m.
in the Eastern High SchOol cafete·
ria.
LONG BOTTOM • Long Bot·
tom United Methodist Church will
have a revival from Oct. 25·29
beginning at 7 p.m. nightly with
Evan,eliSt Gerald Sayre. The public is mvited.
I

POMEROY • The Meigs Coun·
ty Veterans Service Commission
will meet ill 7:30p.m. in the Veter·
ans Servicl: Office.
)

MIDD~RT ·The OH KAN
coin club will meet it Bwtett barber shop•.~ial hour and tradinJ at
7 p.m. wilt preceding a meeung.
RefJeShntenll ~ill be served. New
members are·welcome.

weight control· at 6 p.m. Monday
and Thursday at the Senior Citizens
Center. The classes are free to
Meigs County residents. Each class
will last two hours. Attendance is
required at only one two hour session a week. Those wishing to register may cail the Meigs County
Health Department at 992-6626.
Please indicate your preference of
class nighL
RUTLAND ' The Rutland Garden Club will hold its regular meeting at 7:30 p.m . at the home of
Pearl Canaday on Hysell Run
Road.
RACINE - The regular meeting
of the Soulhem Local School District Board of Education will be at
7 p.m •.at lhe high school.
TUESDAY
POMEROY • American Legion
Drew Webster Poilt 1139 will have
an urgent meeting for all executive
members at 7 p.m. at the Legion
Hall.
HARRISONVILLE • Har·
risonvillc SeniOr Citizens Club will
bold its fCIUiar meeting 81 7 p.m. at
the towri house. AU members are
:~to attend. SnackS wW

RACINE l There will be a choir
boostrr nieeimg at 7:30p.m. in the

CHES·TER · -Mount Hermon Southern High School music room.
United BrCdacm Church will have a
WE!)NESDAY
reviVIHJi:t. 2S • 31 beginning It
MIDDLEPORT • The American
7:30' p.m. nightly with Evangelist
Legion
Feeney Benneu Post 11128
OreJ Gardener from Lancaster.
·
and
Ladies
Auxiliary wil meet at
Pastor·Rblierl Sanders inviteS the
the
aimex.
The
auxiliary will serve
public. ;.
'
dinnert 10 members at 6 p.m. The
POMBRQY.· The Melli Coun· meetins will follow al 7:30 p.m.
ty Hollth Department wilf begin a All members, auxiliary, juniors and
series of six-week classes for SAL members invited.

•

r

/

.~
. RECOGNIZED • Special tribute was given
to tbe late Clarence Headerson, ·longtime member or the Meigs County Fair Boar.d, and his
wife, Thelma, at Wedaesday nlgbt's apprecia·
lion dinner at the Racine United Methodist

•

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Middleport Village Council ratified the Gallia-Jaclcson-MeigsVinton Solid Waste Management
District plan at Monday night's
meeting by a five to one vote fol·
lowing a lenglhy discussion.
Councilman Paul Gerard who
has always contended that the plan
leaves too many unanswered questions voted "no".
Middleport now joins Rutland,
Racine, and Pomeroy ViUages, the
Meigs County Commissioners and
five Meigs townships in ratifying
the plan.
Ratification requires approval
from g,ovemment subdivisions representing 60 percent of the total
population of the district and
approval from three of the four
lar$est populated municipalities
whtch are Mtddleport, McArthur,
Jackson, and Gallipolis.
Kenny Wiggins, a member of
the district executive committee,
and Ro11er Manley! a member _of
the ~vtsory commtuee_, met w1lh
counctl to further explain lhe plan
and answer questions.
Gerard questioned whether the
money generated through a per ton
fee on solid waste going into a

Reader appalled at Ann's advice
DEAR READERS : Pass the
humble pie. ru eat a big slice with a
side ordet of aow. I have barely
recovered from the clobbering due
to my ipnnce lbout cows, IJ1d
now I'm in big rrouble with pet
owners.
Not long ago, I advised "Mark's" ·
girlfriend ID immedial.ely surprise
him wilh IIIOCher dog when be bad
to put his bel11liful German ·
slleph«d to sleep. Apparendy, l·was
biDing up lhe wrong tree because I
have been c:au:bing it from aU sides.
This is what my week bas been lilce:
Dear Ana Lauders: I -was
appaUcd at l'!e advice you gave to

St. Paul UMW
has meeting ·
Saint Paul United Methodist
Women met on Oct. 18 at 7 p.m.
The meeting was called to order by
Pr~ sideos . Betty Chevl!tier and
prayer was given by Rev. Sharon
Hausman.
Discussion and plans were made
complete for the soup supper on
Oct. 23. Plans were also made to
visit shut-ins in December and
deliver fruit basket and gifts.
The group endorses the senior
citizens levy and encourages members to support it
The program was given by
Melissa Harris and was titled
"Thank Singing, Thanlcs Giving for
World Thank Offering." Refreshements were served by Melissa Har·
ris, Shirley Rockhold and Heather
Rockhold.
The next meeting will be held at
the Ponderosa in Parkersburg,
W.Va. Elsie Culley will hold the
program.
Attending were Rev. Sharon
Hausman, JoAnn Francis, Susan
Francis, Beny Chevalier, Judy
Jones, Connie Rockhold, Melissa
Harris, Shirley Rockhold and
Heather Rockhold.

brother's dog was hit by a car,
limped home and died on our
porch. My brother was coping
pretty well until a neighbor wliman
1 called out her window, "I know
where you can get a puppy." Then
ANN LANDERS
"1!193, Los An&amp;d.,
he fell apart.
Tlma Syoclkate
Gary, Ind.: I'll bet you a dog
Crtalon Syndh:ale'',..
biscuit to a doughnut that you will
be in the doghouse because you
the woman from Virginia whose advised lhe girlfriend 10 IAII)Iise her
boyfriend had to euthanize his "best grieving riiiiCC with a puppy. A
friend of 14 years.• Would you beau sugges1ion would have been
surprise • parent immediately afiQ' to allow Mark lime to grieve and
the death of a child by showing up then give him a gift catificate 10 he
with a baby you picked out in an could choose a pet when he Is ready.
orphanage?
Virginia Beach, Va:.I had a cal
· The pet lover must grieve in his from the time I was 3 years old. She
own way, and often it takes a long became ill and had 10 be put to sleep.
time; If Mark W8DIS another dog, he I, too, was illconsolable. Then my
should be allowed to select the mom's boss aslctd if I would like to
breed, sex and color. Thank you for cal-sit while she went on vacation.
listening. •• ANOTHER PET She thought it would be therapeutic,
LOVER
10 I asreecJ, Ann, the lciaen was
From Wilmeue, m.: Dlllrlb, dwnb, sweet, but I lcept comparing her to
dwnbl Your "'ggestion that Mark's my ·cat, who was beats in every way.
~ 1]1811 out llld ~ . binl..a
I'm uhameJl-IIUIIIIIIit lhlt II·bani IS
puppy "to rill the hole in his heart" I tried Ill be nic:e to the lciacn, I was
was llllpid. Not only will the man not as nice as I could have been. If
not be thrilled, he just might refuse she had given me that lciuen as a
it. It is apparent that you know aurprise, I would have been in real
nothing about doga, 10 why clidn't trouble;
you consult someone who does?'You
And now. clew friends, a miller
really bombed on that one.
in Halifax, Nova Scotia, wrote a
Sarasota, Fla.: Aa animal is not a leuer that helped lift my spirits. Keep
piece of merchandise that can reading:
be exchanged · or replaced. As a
Dear Ann: When "Rex" was bit
volunteer at the local humane, by a car (he had been a member of
society, I've seen animals dioppecl the family f&lt;w 16 years), I was d!qlly
off bec•nse some· wdl-inteationed depressed for several days. Then my
person decided to "surprise" a friend folks surprised me with another toy
in the mannm; you described.
poodle, and it was the best gift I
Minneapolis: Surprise him with a have received in my entire life; puppy?ll Would you say to a man K.F.
whose wife hild died. "Here's a nice
DEAR K.F.: Thanks for saving
girl you ca,\1 have?" My younger me from total disgrace.

Ann
Landers

The Reedsville
United
Methodist Women held their October meeting 81 the home of Lillian
Pickens.
The mee!ing was opened with
prayer by Diane Jones . Gr.ace
Weber read "Christianity in
Action."
Thirty-nine shut-in calls were
made.
Frances Reed reported from the
nominating committee and read
"The Joys of being a Pres." and
"Are You an Active Member."
Plans were made to sell food at
the Harris Auction sale on Nov. ·6:
Members will also be taking orders
and seUig pecans.
Pearl Osbourne received the
door prize.
Refreshments were served to the
above named, members Mamie
Buckly, Paulien Brewer and Nancy
Bucldey and guests Maxine White·
head and Ruth Anne Balderson.
The November meeting wiU ~
held at the home of Frances Reed.

I

Serenity House: a place
~-·escape- tile- violen·ce

A • .,.,,. . . Inc. Ilea I

DOMES'l'IC
VJQI.ENCE

COMMIIN:ITY

APPLES EVERYWHERE ·. Picture~ rrom left ar, Beverly
Rupe as Jobany Chapman Appleseed, Curtis Jewell and Mkbele
Imboden, students In Suzy Carpenter's second crade chass at
Pomeroy Elementary. Rupe gave a prf!!!tntatloa ot the lofal hero
who travelecl Ohio plantin1 apple trees. Tbe cbildren were Jecl in
·gamll5 and activity sheets·about apples 11nd prepared. de~rated
apples. Readln1, math and sequenclnc skUll were enhi!Jiced aloaa
with building 'cooperation and teamwork In thiJ delldoas Jesson
which~ also used by Janel Hotrm,an, Cbapler 1 readlag leach.er.
~

.

-~ .-- ... ~

·

-r ··;· •"'-•· "'

SHIVER .

' ··

.. - ..t ...,.,

_,. •

'

(AIIIralds)

Lawyer questions who should
decide school funding disparities
NEW LEXINGTON, Ohio (AP)
- A lawyer for the state .told a
Pe~ry County judge a trial over ·
school funding IS not about disparities bot whether tile Legislature or
lhe courts should make changes.
. Joel Taylor aclcnowled!!ed 'there
~ differences in per-pupil spending among poor and wealthy dis·
triers.
But Taylor doubted if the differences .~,re gte,_ter than in 1979
when the Ohio Supeme Court ...t
upheld the shared·· state-local

...... ...,.....
n ·

caD . . . . . . .44 . . . . . . .

....,., ..... '"a te..t~~

method of school fuoding.
He said districts retain control of
school operations and have the
ability to try to raise more local
money.
"There's no legal restriction on
lhe raising of money locally," Tay,
lor said Monday.
.Taylor represents the state
Board of Education and state
school SuperiniCDdent :red Sanders
in a lawsuit that asks the commonpleas court to scrap ihe current
fu!lCiing system. .
,

,
1nc Judea: CINnlng, Oiling,
1,AdJus~. o,...lng.

.

.

· M01t vlllalfl •Dd eommunltles 111 tile county · ·

r::n

~=r~-:~~ ~~t p"],.~ be bo!dl.• l trick ~r .

'

: All vlllacea (Middl~port. Pomeroy, - Ra~lne;
Rutl•ncl and Syr!ICUie) Ire observing tr.lck or
.f rat l!t that time ia lddldota to most or tbe commualtlea.
: The ,(1eeaey-Beaneu Po1t or the _American
t.ellon and tbe,\'lllqe ofMI4dleport are holding 1

TUESDA't OCTOBER 26, 2:30 PM-4:30 PM

FRUTH PHARMACY .
71'6 N. Seu.lll Aw. • II• I• part,

The· Cihio Coalition for Equity
and Adequacy of School Funding
offered no alternative in the suit it
filed on behalf of most of the
state's school districts.
Taylor said in his opening state·
ment that the state board and
Sanders have supported programs
to reduce disparibes.
"The !lefendants have advocated Plll1ing more money into the
foundation formula. The defendan.ts have also advocated more
equny money tor poor school dis·
trlCIS," he S8ld.

Trick o~ trea_t~~~~duled 'fhursday

Same Day S.rvtce
All P.O Extnl .

' '
I ,

;~

-~=:: ;:-;;,T::.=,n:.:!!

:!l~'!:

see••
wllllte felturetl, boll. fire llllllltot dGp,
pop aid calldy for re,....eata. COitllaejlldil..
1

..

==

commdulty H1lloweeu party at tile Pap Street

·

will be held arouad 7:30 p.m. foliowllll trici or
treat.
·
·
Bashan·Ke~o area .and Loa1 Bottum 'Ifill uve
trick or lreat ThunclaJ l'rOIII '-7:30p.m.

'

.

.

landfill will handle the ex)ienses of
the district, and what assurance the
district has that the proposed tip·
ping fee will not be increased.
Wiggins explained the three·
tiered district fee of $1.25 per ton
for in-district waste dumped into a
landfill, $2.50 for out of district
waste, and $1.25 for out of state
waste has been determined by the
plan developers as adequate to han·
die expenses of the district. There
is' written into the plan provisions
for changes in those fees if the
amount generated is not s ufficient
to handle the district management
expenses, Wiggins said.
As for the promised $13 per ton
dumping fee, the Meigs County
Litter ConD'OI offiCer said there is .a
contract between lhe county commissioners of the four counties and
the landfill operators which provide
for that fee to be in effect for lhe
next ten years. He said he has no
reason to doubt that the contract
will be fulfilled.
Gerard charged that the district
is creating a "new bureaucracy and
getting in deep with no way to pay
for it".
"It's not a good plan, and we
can't afford it." said Gerard.
In response, Wiggins said that

while the plan is ''not perfect", il is
a good working plan, and that the
district fee will support the expenses of managing the district Manley, a Middleport hauler and recycling center owner, agreed with
Wiggins and urged ratification.
After tile motion by Councilman
Bob Gilmore to rat ify tbe plan,
Gerard gave an amendment to postpone the ac tion for two weeks to'
give council member s another
chance to read the plan . That
amendment died for the lack of a
second, and COWJCil J)rOCeeded with
lhe vote ratifying the plan.
Wiggins repol1ed at the mee1ing
lhat in addition to lhe Gallia Coon·
ty landfill , now the only one in
operation in the district, Mid America Waste is in the process of
securing final approval from the
Environmental ~lion 'Agency
to put in a landfill in Vinton County, and Sands Hill has applied for a
permit to have one in Jackson
County.
Wiggins talked about the proposed transfer stations, one of
which will be in Meigs County
near th e old landfill site, steps
taken to pro tect ground water
monitoring by the health depart~
ments, and plans for recycling pro.
cessing facilities.

Gilmore, Childs assume
Middleport Council duties

By JIM FREEMAN and KEVIN PINSON
the shelter's bi-weeldy support group meetings, 1 to 3
OVP News StaiT
p.m. Mondays and Thursdays.
Some domestic violence victilns remain in an abu·
If the victim indicates she wants to move into the
sive situation because they feel they have nowhere to shelter, a counselor conducts an interview over the
run. In GaUia, Meigs and Jackson counties, however, phone and describes Serenity House's services. Tirado
women have a place to escape the violence.
sald Ibis is to screen potential clients to learn if they
Serenity House, a shelter for domestic violence reilly need or want to move into the shel~.
victims, provides a safe haven for
''The scariest thing," said Tirado,
women who need a jumping off
"is to be on the phone with a dopoint before beginning a new life
mestic violence victim 'Yhen she's
, //11 ~~(1111dlu \ "''U\
. away from their abuser.
alone and scared, and then all of a
The three-bedroom shelter can
sudden she says 'Ob, my God he's
house nine to 13 women and chilcoming bade.' And the phone goes
dren, providing lhem with food
dead. You spend ti lot of time wonand tlrrangingcounseling services.
dering what happened to her."
Residents Can stay at the shelter
Once the victim decides to come
for 30 days while case workers
to the shelter, she is required to find
helpfindthemotherlivingarrangeher own uansportation to the site
'ments.
- case woricers do not pick up
Working with other organizavictims at their residences. There
tions such as the Gallia-Meigs
are two good reasonsforthis, Tinldo
Community Action Agency, the
said.
First, it shows the victim really
county welfare departments and
the ·outreach Center, Serenity
wants to leave the abusive situa·
House coonlinates efforts to help
tion. Second, it keeps caseworkers
women regain their independence and establish a goal from placing themselves in a potentially dangerous
plan.
situation.
•
However, Tirado pointed out, sometimes law enforce'"IfSerenity House was on its own we really wouldn' t
accomplish moch." Director Hilda Ttrado said. "We ment officers will bring victims in.
couldn't do it on our own."
Once 81 the shelter. counselors collect more informaLocated near Gallipolis, the shelter's exact lOcation tion and provide a lot of emotional support, Victim's
is kept confidential to protect the residents from their Advocate Karen Toothman said.
Tirado agreed that the support was one of the most
abusers. Those who need the shelter are refetred by
counseling services such as Woodland Centers' important aspects of the shelter.
"There's always someone to tallc to here and that's
CRISISLINE (1·800-252-5554).
There is no commitment when the victim ftrst con- really important to the women," she said.
Through information COllected &amp;om interviews, COUn·
tacts Serenity House, :rirado said.lf lhe woman is not
Continued on page 3
ready to move into the shelter, she is invited 10 auend

'

Jolin 1.

PLPI•ETewt

SERENITY HOUSE - Staff members at the Serenity House domestic violence sbtlter talk with a
resident From left are Director Hilda Tirado, Victim's Advocate Kltren Toothman and Case Manager
Charlotte McGuire. Not pictured is Support Group Educator/Coordinator Cynthia Waugh. (OVP photo
by Kevin PinlltiD)

IN OUR

Reedsville
UMWmeets

Co•pl•t• Medical/Surgical Care
For :Ear, Nos~ &amp; r•roat.lndutilng
'. ~

Church. Here, Donna Jean Smith, second from ;
left, accepts a plaque tor Mrs. Henderson, with
Roger Spencer accepting a plaque in tribute to
Clarence Henderson from Dan Smith, board
president.
'

Low tonJahlln 501. P•rtly

cl!&gt;udy. WedlltSdoy, cloudy,
high In mid-50s.

Middleport ratifies
solid waste plan 5-1

l

The Rev. Deren Newman was
guest speaker for lhe observance of
National Defense Monlh at a meet·
ing of Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of lhe American Revolution, held recently atlhe
home of Mrs. Ronald Reynolds.
A luncheon hosted by Mrs.
Reynolds preceded the program.
Rev. Newman ' s national
defense presentation was entitled,
''The Defenseless: The Unenlight·
ened of History." He discussed lhe
role of history, lhe way we under·
stand situations around us and
lhroughout the world. He based his
presentation on: History and the
Need for It; History and Knowing
People; History and Its Role in Pol·
icy Making; History and a Modem
Example Bosnia/Croatia; History
and the Perpetuation of its Under·
standings; and History and Letting
it Enhance You.
He pointed out that to under·
stand who you are, one must first
learn from where you came. "We
must look back in history to under·
stand what is happening today,"
·
said Newman.
Citing a lack of history for many
people, Rev. Newman stressed the
need for more teaching and under·
standing of history to take place in
our society, government, educa·
tiona! institutions and in our
churches.
"To understand the basic make
up of the world, we must under·
slBnd the views of differenl-eoltures and ·how and where they
began, before we can help them or
tell them what to do. Those who
forget history are doomed to repeat
it and prodoce ineffective policies,"
said lhe speaker.
He concluded his presentation
with the reading of a poem by Lord
Alfred Tenneyson on the death of
his close friend
Eleanor Smith, regent. called lhe
meeting to order and conducted the
opening ritual. Mrs. Gene Yost led
the pledge of allegiance to the flag
of the United States of America.
She encouraged members to fly the
flag on Flag Day . Mrs. Yost read
Amendment XI of the Constitution
of the United States, Article XI
which states, "The judicial power
of the United States shall not be
construed to extend to any suit in
law or equity, commenced or pros·
ecuted against one of the United
States, by citizens of another state
or by citizens or sul!jects of any
foreign state." This· amendment
was proposed to the legislature of
the several States by the Third
Congress on March 5,' 1794 and
was declared to have been ratified
in a message from the President to
Congress, dated January 8,1798.
Chapter members were invited
to attend a luncheon at the Nabby
Lee Ames Chapter, DAR, Athens,
on October 23 at the Athens Coun·
uy Club. The speaker will be Mrs.
Ralph R. Bush, State Regent. Ohio
DAR.
Eleanor Smith encouraged
members to observe National Day
of Prayer by attendance at church.
Guests at the luncheon were:
Stefanic Arnott, Cathy Moore and
Rita Lewis; Mrs. James Roush,
Regent and OSDAR Commemora·
tive Events Chairman, Mrs. George
Grace, Mrs. Geraldine Reed and
Mrs. Pat Ingels · from French
Colony Chap~, DAR, Gallipolis;
Ruth Ellen Story,~ DePue and
Carrie Belle Bum·s, l'rom Nabby
Lee Ames DAR, Athens.
The next meeting of the Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter will be
held on November 13, 1993 at Our
House, GaUipolis~ The meeting wiU
include a tour of Our House.

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11HI;n. '1 0"- · - ·

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Rev. Newman
DAR speaker

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, October 26, 1993

REV. DERON NEWMAN

lBry, receives a $50 quarterly award trom Veterans Memorial Hos·

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4

By CHARLENE HOEFI,ICH
Sentinel News Staff
Two new councilmen were
sworn into office and council was
given a "state of the village"
address by new Mayor Dewey Hor·
ton at Monday night's meeting of
Mdcllepon Village Council.
Bob Gilmore and Miele Childs,
whose names will be on lhe ballot
in next week's election, both unopposed, were appointed by Mayor
Dewer. Horton.
Gilmore fills the seat vacated
by the late William Walters. Childs
takes the seat of Horton , who
advanced to mayor from president
of council when Fred Hoffman
resigned after being appointed
Meigs County Commissioner.
Council named Gilmore, a for·
mer longtime council member,
president, and lhe mayor appointed
him to lhe finance committee.
Horton, presiding at his first
meeting, addressed council on the
status of the village, the accom plishments, as well as the prob·
!ems.
He acknowledged a gift of
$3,500 from Feeney-Bennett Post
128, American Legion, MiddlepOrt.
The money was designated for the
general fund $1 ,500, the fire
deparunent, $1,000, and the police
deparunent, $l.(Xl0.
Honon talked about the role of
the Middleport Arts Council in
malting the community more cooscious of lhe arts, of the Middleport
Community Association for its role
in business development, and lhe
Peoples BankJor its contribution as
a partner with the Middleport Ele·
mentary School.
He commended the former
Mayor Hoffman for his leadership
role, and for the quality and dedica·
tion of the team he has put together
for the village.
The new mayor also talked
about the importances of getting
new businesses into the village. of
keeping Jll1d helping businesses, of
the problems with the water system, waste disposal, the need for •
free telephone exchange between
Meigs and Mason Counties and a
new Pomeroy-Mason bridge. He
com~~~Cnded the"Rev. Frank Smith
and other Involved for getting a
United Fund for Meigs County
underway.
PubUc Hearln1
Llsl night's meeting served as 1
public he,aring fot I proposed
emergency conservation ·program
~-ned ror Midcllepon.VIflaae

SWORN IN - Mick Childs, ten, and Bob Gilmore were given
their oath or office as council members by Mayor Dewey Horton,
right, at Monday night's meeting of Middleport Village Council.
Both will be unopposed on next week's ballot for council seats.
They were seated early to fill the vacancies or Horton who now
serves as mayor, and the late William Walters.

tor, said the program will cost
$30,000 wilh half to be paid by the
village. She said that the payback
in energy savings must come over a
fi ve year period.
The work would include insula·
tion , new story wind ows, more
energy efficient lights and heating
in the building.
A second hearing was set for
Nov . 8 after wh ich Trussell wi ll
proceed with the projecl
C0111111unity Association
Tom Dooley, president of the
Middleport Community Association, reported on plans for the kick·
off of lhe United Fund for Meigs
County Monday night at 5 p.m. at
Dave Diles Park.
The Meigs Band will play, there
will be three short speeches. and
the
Middleport Arts Council will serve
refreshments. The entire ceremony
will last about 20 minutes, Dooley
said.
He also lall&lt;ed about a Christ·
mas open house and parade being
planned. In conjunction wilh that
Council vote4 to Cree the parking
meters begiming Nov. I to encourage holiday shopping in Middle·
port. Motorists will, however. be
restricted 10 two hours purlcing.
C011tract A warded
Council voted to award a contract to.TAM, In~.· of Lancaster for
work to correct a drainage problem
on Broadway and Logan Streets.
JCIJI Trussell, grants coordina- The bid was ~ lowest of two on

the project. TAM 's bid was
$12,48 1, while the second bid was
fro m Weber Construc tion of
Reedsville, $13,143.
Di sc ussion has been taking
place over a period of se veral
weeks about awarding the contniCI
to the highest bidder since that
company is in Meigs County.
That discussion surfaced again
las! night, but Horton reported that
after conferrin g with Solicitor
Linda Warner, th e opinion wa s
given that such a move would put
council on "shaky ground". Both
bids met the spcctfications for lhe
project.
Warne: did, however, suggest to
Honan that the village might pass
an ordinance setting a perc:enlage
of preference for local conll'aetors.
Councilman Paul Gerard proposed
that Warner be asked 10 draft such
an ordinance.
Other Business
Mayor Horton reported that the
Ohio Department of Ttansportation
has approved funding for the Blue
Strealc Cab Co. of $38,537 for fiscal year 1994 . That amount is
given as a grant to provide public
transportation for the elderly and
handicapped. It was reported that
the Meigs County Commissioner$
will be contributing $3,500 to the
operation.
.
The Sec:ond reading
given
to an ordinance which Will inacase
water taO fees from $225 10 S32S.
Conlinuet011 pqe 3

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Commentary
The Daily Sen~inel
.

111 Cowt lbeet

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DSV01BD TO.'I'IIB JJnataiTa OP 111B IIEIG8-IIA80N AREA

ROBERT L WJNGETI
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Geaeral Ma~~~ger

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

I.E1TERS ·OF OPINION ue welcome. They abould be lesa than 300
worda ...AI,I 1ettm 11'1 oullfec_
t 10 edltiua and must be li&amp;ned with name,
ICidreu llld telepbooe number. No Wlliped !oilers,will be published. Leum
oltoulcl be in 8QOd -t uk!, ~uinc ~-. not penonalitieo.

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Letters to,the editor
Responds to column

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Notfair; writer says

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Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuea~ay, Octo,ber 26, 1993

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the tax ·incrcac bas receded as-the plan for where she would cut serkey i$auein.lhc'c:amDIIip.
vices, and !ben while 1101 ignoring
· Mrs. Whitman trfed ro move lhc her own IIX plan, she bas all but let
tax ~ bac~ frOnt aDd center by itfadc from memory.
comma: out w1th a major tax pledge
The national imp6cations of Ibis
of. her own. Elect me, sllc cam{lllign can be seen in who is
J • rrt
prOII)iSed, and' over lhc next three runrung ·both campaigns. Florio's
years I will cut )'(!111' state taxes by campaign is being managed by
ical memory, only days ·before 30'peltCIII, 10 pcti:Cnt a year.
Paul Bep!a, and has as one of its
~lec:t!&lt;Jn Day, most polls show fl~ '
~itm.. 's tsx plan is pairc sup- top adv1sers James Carville. The.
no wtlh a comfortable~ ovet his ply-s1de ec:onom1cs • .lis .authors two were Bill Ointon's J6p strateRepublican opponent, business- were Bear-Stearns ecoaomist sists in his 1992 victory, and bolh
woman and Somerset ·County Law1cnce Kudlow and Forbes are still key White House po6tical
Board of Freeboldc·rs member . Magazine editor St11ve Forbes . advisers. The Whitman camp is
Christine Todd Whitman,
They arc among the chief propo- headed by Ed Rollins, one of lhe
Mrs. Whitman, a multi-mimon- nents of the theory that 1f you top GOP national political stratea ire heiress whose father was a lower iax rates people will work gists and, for a shon time, the head :
major figure in state GOP pqlitics, harder and
will ultimately end of Ross Perot's presidential cam- ·
be~am,e l~e hottest Republican up with ~~r \)VeralliBl\ income.
psign.
•
pohticUIII m Ne)Y JefS\:y When .she
The WbibMh\ plan ,was ·~ted
Begala says th81 if his candidate,
ran a very strong rl!(:e against with almost universal deriSion. wins it will show voters undersUIIId
Democratic Sen. Bill -Bradley in . &gt;Most .conunernators siid·lllall ,many , that "good lead~rs need to make:
1990..
. .
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of those behind the failed Reagan lOu~ decisions and that you c:sn be
For the past two years.Florio bas , tax.cutting experiment were now deciSive and stiJj win re-election.''
argued insistently that the tax Irying 10 use New Jersey as a Jabo- On a national note&gt; il
also
increase was necessary IO 'gel Slat!l· ratory, and.bccausc .the siaJc C'annot show that Bill Clinton may not
finances back on a firm rooting have a delicil·likc Washington can, have as difficult a lime of winning-.
witholu cutting the heart out of · that reduced tax income would · a second term as most now believe.
public education and essential. ser· mean inullimillion dollar cuts ' in . · But the New Jersey campaign is
vices like police and health care. It - ~· · :
·
· actually more complicated than
appears now that a majority of vot.. , ·
simply a r~ferendum on tax· ,
ers have come 10 believe him, and
a . incieases and the public perception, .
•ofsbJllliY·side.economic:s. Florio is
. · runmn'11 a very complieatcd eam- ·
' ·· paill!l· Once endotscd by both lhe
' NatiOnal Right-To-Life Commitice
and the National Rifle Association,
be is.now holh pro-Choice and pro:
gun control. But at the same lime.
he is running a very conservative ;
campaign on issues like crime and
welfan; reform.
· .
, Some predict' that if Florio wins, •
you .will see manr Democrsts·mov';
·mg far to the nght in 1994 and '
1996 c:ampail!nS.
'
Republicanure already ·~par-· ·
· ing 10 pul die bes!Spin jJOSS1ble on-:
a Whitman defeat. Copservatives :
say •her problem is ·iliat she is basi· ·
ca!ly to&lt;i llloderate - 10 much a ·
"Bush Republican' ~ - one of the
most derisive epitaphs possible·;
from consctvauve -Republicans.:.
·They say she has run a very bad '
campaign and by re-electing · •lorio'
New ~erscy voters are DO\ sending
. any. kind ~f a message except lhat ·
Wh1tman 1s a poor candidate.
.'
Rollert Wagman Is a syndicat•'
ed writer ·ror Newspaper Enter:·
prise Association.
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Heaven has a library - but hunches and iniUilions.- even lhc exacdr lhc same people we were
Those who have lived a materi·
there no books itl'itl
.
insjliration fot c~n' of mankind's before lhc blllsilion we call death alistic: life on Eartlt can go on mat:
This is one of the things. that inventions.
-. exce)ll lhat we will be without ing ~ and Iryin~ 10 earn mo11ey"
amazed BeUy Eadie during what
Eadie suggests that ~Y of lite our physical bodies.
·
. in lhc spirit world, if they 6ke.
she says was her lrip 10 the other
But they usually give up this
· This docs not mean, _however,
world'm 1973 in a ncar-dealh expe·
that we wiU ·jlist be spirits, floaling way of spending lhelf time. .
rience.
They realize, Ford is quOied as
aimlessly and invisibly through
Now S1 and the molher of eight,
saying, lhst money makes no dif· spaccforctemity. ,
,
Eadie tells her story in the current sudden insp1rations th~t ·human ' · r We will have bodiei; ays·Fox, ference in lhat other place - that ,
best-selling book "Embraced by beings ~el emilnate from tho~ in but,lltey lviD •bO like.the ~we you can have wbal you wanl mere- _,
the Light" (Gold Leaf Press).
the spint ·world. 'She adds: "I saw have in our dreains that 'seem phys- ly by thinking it, so no one looks ::
Recounting what happ:ncd after also that they are tumn 10 assist
:I
butnnlL Life after dealh will up 10 you for having money.
her "dealh" in the hospital durin
:::-r.rY
us .ic:al
Montgomery
reports,
that
Ford
·•
be cQIJ!jlarable,in,this way 10 our
"-~'- . .
g in any way they can:'
told of a man newly arrived in :~
surgery,""""' wntes: "I was taken
This corresponds with what presenl worlfl•of drca!ns. he ays.
10 anolher large room, As I looked Arthur Ford - who was·1 Disc:iAccording to Fo.x, life and ~ven. who decided 10 go fishing:::
He wishes he had brought a fish- "
BlOI!nd lhc room, it seemed to be a pies of Christ clergytJU~D during his awareness will continue for us in
repository of knowledge but I life here on J:arth -is -said by image form, rath11r than physical ing ~le IUld immewately finds one ;;
couldn't see any. books. Then I journalist Ruth Montgomery 10 form. It will j)C subject 10 11\e laws in his band. He casts and pulls in so I;
noticed ideas com in$ into my h11ve told her in a series of spirit of mind ralhcr .than tQ lhc.laws of many whopping bi~ fish .lhat the :•
1
mind. By simply rellocbng on any communic:stions.
physicS. We&gt;will- 10 each olher, pastime soon dulls.' He goes on to. :;'
topic, all knowledge on that topic
She published the purported sec colors, liSten to mus.ic and li higher form of activity.
Eadie is more cvangelic:sl in her :!
came 10 me."
·
messages in a book. .
embrsl:e 0111'· fl'ienils as we do' now
descripli.
ons of heaven than either ::
-:\C:c,ording some •people who
SI)C8lcing of the late actor Clarlt ~ - our ~s:-But jn ltei~cit . this
Ford
or
Fox.
She tells, for instance; "
cla1m to have had supernatural Gabli:, Ford is quoted as saying:
will be real; Wc ·woit'l be dreamof
literall~"
being eJI!braced by :;
· experiences, occupants or lhc spirit
"He is as admired here as he ing. . .
,
,
Jesus.
Hence
the book's title, ~ ~
world can 001 only 10 usc heaven's was there. He workS willi out:.ofWltlfwill we do in heaven? We
:1.
"library," but also ,study -with . work -ac:IOnl on Barth 10 help them will do whatever vie like, Ford Uild "Embraced by lhc Light."
G.
e
orae
Ptaaenz
Is
a
syadicatsome of lhc best minds in history.
find ernploymenL"
, Ml!ntgomcry, acclirdinl! to her ed writer for Newspaper Eater- :,
Furthermore, spirits are .even
Is IbiS son of thing mdly possi- book• .
-·
prise Association.
::
said to be able 10 implant their ble?
. ,."
knowledge or ideas in the subeon- · One of lhc most popular of the
sc:ious
mil!ds
of
those
on
Earth;
metaphysical
writers
on
lhe
subject
~Ecluor.
s~ _Janet H9Ward for suJIPQI1ing
· ·1 would lib to 1a1re 'litis oppor- me through this entire ordeal. I This, it is said, may be lhc source of lhe hereafter is Ernniet Fox. He r-~------------~--------------------------~·:
of our unaccounted· for says that when we die we will be
tuaity·IO thank everyone for the wasn't prepared 10 ,1tandle lite polit· for many
·:f
.saq)port and fliends~ip that l !C;a1 chac)ft 8J!C1 even t!lough,our wlreCelvcil while servina as Meias 1UC1 .were dif.fercnl, she ~
, "gs·Counov
""&gt; 'vi,du·
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Couaty · . Ch. am be.r.
o f me:
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C!)lllnll!rce/Econornic Develop- a1s who'·~ V(llling 10 work for lhe
By The Associated Press
. ·· 'ineefand Planning Commission countyandnotjusttheirputy. ·
~oday
is
Tuesday,
OcL
26, lhc 299111 day of 1993. There are 66 days
Dil•c•. I liied'eo do ~1. also want 10 thank Southern left m lhc year,
,,
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· 11 1 11:1' 10 beJp fdeigs Coul!ty,_ grow Ohio Coal .e0111pany ·and the coal
I
Today's
Highlight
in
History:
,
I
aac1 III.F qf' .
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· minert fpr their thoughtfulness.
,I
. . r lnted 10 ~y recognize Tho sood-bye dinner and·.lite gifts On OcL 26, 1881, lite "Gunfight atlhe OK Cmal" took place in Tomb, I
s~nc,
Ariz.,
as
"';Yatt
Earp,
hiS
two
brothers
and
Doc
Holliday
shot
it
out
I
........sillon. oilil~}(iYier·.ac~ Mal-· were
apccial ..d ·Iwill always
l
w11h
Ike
Clanlon
1
gang.
'Three
members
of
Clanton's
gang
were
killed;
r
""""'PIID. ~ with 'Nalionll treallire llteirl. ·I am a beUer, person Earp's brolhcrs were wounded.
&amp; 1Qjl for ihw .suppO,rt ape! . ~ womn~ ll(ith the ,coal lllincrs,
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'ri ' rilllilll.llld dOiDJ1WbiUw:r one ~I,IU~!IOn . after ~nother, but
.I
abomination
in
His
sight.
As
for
Dear
Editor
'
It D ,ID CJa!e ec:onClmfc dcYCipp- Jct:ep ~ve and 111011~. Good
I am using my rights in regards having cllildren, they shouldn't be ·
_ . illllle COilllty. Tiley aupponed things will ~I " . .
to
lhc
news .article that was put in allowed to have children arourid
1D0 Ia dill.-vor 10 .1111lr.e ~
I wiU mia Meigs COunty llld its
the
Wedl)csday
paper by 11 gay: or them. If they want children, let
COI'C¥ a .,_., placi: 10 w'q'k and residenu, epecially ·the ~plo ·in
homosexual
from
way out in Iowa tbem{ClJ'Sa4 their wickedness and
1M.
.. , ·
,
Langlvillulid the pat folks at lite
City,.lowL
mi!"'Y the opPQsite sex, and hav~
Darill&amp; the last few 1119f11hs, il By the Way Store. Take Care
I'don'l believe lltata py should childrcri. 1hey ehoose. 10 live lhe
w~ difllcah to keep my. !!lil!d Meigs County llld Qood Luck!
be allowed to put. ~ article like way they cjO. God hates sin, and we
' rm ' 1 widiout knoWmg'tronirday · •
,Siacerel)
woo arc Uving fdr the Lord hate'sift ~ .,
that'in lite loc:al piper, in anv piper also
10 *'I If llild J jail or not but I did
Paall 'Rac:(ler
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really. There lbOuld be ~ laws
1111 ~ J ~ ..-..,.J!Ie ~um- ·
Cllr~Et:vlllel :J'eua.
Our
Almighty
GOd
is
going
10
bt~vd
10
stay'
hidden.
l'hcy
arc
• 1•''1 . , ...., ~ Commil·
e~posing· our 'children t'o their destroy Ibis· cirlh with lhc sins of
'
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w1cked WI)' I. Th~y lire called , lhc Sbdomires and wf~thcraft and· .
SddOI1!itel Ill the Bible and they devil wonbi_pers, and the many .
have
IUrncd lhc natural whicll Ocii1 cults thil we~ and all·lhc evil,
chore c:leanina and evc11 takes has createcl
iillo the unnaturai wic;~ l1!d sin, that's come on !he
WinD mclls, cvorytb,ing ~le 10
whicli
0041
hates.
Genesis earth. 'fhO Only onesiwbc will lo '
help keep one in lhcir owD home. Chapter 19, Verses Read'
41Juougb 11. heaven·ate lite ones wbc have had
As YOillmow. lbcre's no plat!: lib They are . why· Gild 'destroyed · lhclr ~ ~ and IIIIIICiiflcd. If
home.
\ .
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Sodom and Oomorah. Tllcre wu lhc gaysllild leabiana will repent of
Please VOle Yes on thiJ levy as too m!!Ch sin and wicb!Pss in lhc tfieir evil deeds and tura b8ct· to
vie all will be old 101110 daY (al we two c1lies so God destroyed them. Qod: he will.fo!Jive ~. , ·' ' ,
don't~ will not be heie). ' ' .
In Romaas Chapter 1, verset' '24
' Doris Richmond'
MaeMcPeH
,.
.,
Route 1
28,1hcy ~liven over.IO a
Loqlloftom .
te mind. To GOd lhcy are.an
' Mlddl~~ ' ''-7;;...;;~...;,;,..l..i:.,-....:.''.:,;;:,:7~.,;,
' ·-..:;..~·.;;.
'' "-,,_ _:.._.._;i.J
&lt;1 •
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are

J:'ln":

George R. Plagenz

;:a.
.;,pllflll;

:£.•·p;And·

·!

. Addres$es Meigs ·County

., s.e~·ry·s · world

l

Today in ,bi~tory

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~t !\1lu~~~":·~ ,:s~tl ~~~?t·:':Bin~~·~~~

Objects to article znpaper

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,, il;,es ~Yes' vote. . for levy

ao

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will

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•lcolumbus!s2"

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upper .50s to sround 60.
Skies turned mostly cloudy
across Ohio overnight, but dry
weat~cr again prevailed. Early
momms temperatures were m lite
40s, ex~t. over. southwest Ohio
where r dmgs 1ft the lower 50s
were co on.
_
Record high for ~is date 83 in
1963;
low 23m 1962. .
SllllfiSC Wednesday at 7:55 a m.
Sunset at 6:35 p.m.
Around tbe Dation
Parts &lt;!f the Mid~cst shivered
today, wh~e Slrong Wind threalenecl
beach CIOS1on on lhe East CoasL

n:coro

you

crs, chose nursing as' a C:arecr. ll's

hard to tell how many lives she's
.
influenced OVC1' tb,e years. Person~- in which ho said tome Vel)' ally, she's the ' Aunt Carol who
'Dkle dtinp about Ill. We appreciltc bought my kids 'ifts when I
!lf.,;IBd wOuld !ib-ID dtank him. But couldn't, and the s1ster who has
!f~:equi~(IIIC!pce). ' ' cared for our ~IS in way that I
': · Tho bat dmea of our year arc never.could. sho·is ill now herself,
;wileD Juanita (we c:all her Nanny) bul, by examP.IC, like that watch •
=~~-:
~ a lic:)l:mg .,Yt keeps on lick·
· ~~ ..___ (you c:aJl him Bill Mat- mg.
. ' · . · ' " ', • ..,..• ..,.
And Pop-Pop (who must know
t*k). · ·
· '· ·, almost every sOul' in Meip' Coun~ ' Pot lite JIISt few years we ~VC ty) has-never sAid an unkind word
-. . .fonunate 10 be able ,10 live about anyone. (\fcll; maybe.one or
j1ery comfOIIIbly !lid ~vc ~Y two • but·lhcy ri:any dcscr\ocil ill)
ileft over on JII~Y· This was not He.bas spept'his lif~ bein' cheerful
. always ''.'·.During our
_ ,111_any lelu! · .and .lcind'·loving lild givmg. He is
. ,..,., • rusma four lddi,Qft "'·~u- . •inlmlled in cveeything and every' cal« I saliry • lbciC 1R ~ pCopie b!ldy ind lias fiXed more things for
,m,o were always tbere for Ill. ' .
me than I c:sn counL
.
,fc/C::.~h::!mhcr~ ~
These l,hrce·are f!llllily. They
..-ICii · · alid b
bile have Clled for us and infiUCIICCd us
~:. ::erm~
lnd · over_t~ y.e .-s in many, many
rllsinr a family . Over lhc years, ways. e can ncv-:r. repay them.
abo did her pan in llte·community - What we have_can ~·.What
lnd bas ·always been aclive in her· they have, neycr will. 'fliey gtve of
diuR:b ·
· · · · tbcrnsel-to iJthcn e~ day.
·dll~s~~C:='!:~~ . Every famjly should;, have a
low. Now~
Nanny_~~CitrOland. aPOp-Pqp.
c:Jiildre • lnd abo
. us all, by
Kitty Dallas
eumple.
Los Aaaelel, Calif.

IND.

Robert '· u:J:a:gman

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.,..,

By The Associated Press
The unseasonabl y mild weather
as of late' will come 10 an end 'by
Wecln~y morning. wilh _CIIOI a_ir,
cloildy skies and a htde hght ram.
Highs will be about 50 s~wide,.
The cold front w11l arnve
tonight, bringing cloudy skies and
s~ow~rs._ Overnight temper~tpres
w~l dip miO the ~pper 40s, about
10 de$fCCS warmer than nonnal..
For. today,, partly sunny sk1es
were· 10 be lhc· rule. Temperatures
were to top out in t~e 65 10 70
d~gree range statewide. N~rmal
h1ghs for late October are m the

ITolildo I 48" I

· Appreciates column
'~.~.:...,_ A'.....,
· ,, ~
,.
Carol, beatuse she earcs for olh·
.·

'

-

impeached in 1991. .
But a very strange thing has ·
happened. In one. o~ the mo.st
startling comebacks·m aeccnl polit·

The

, Inc.
I

------Weather----South Central Ohio
Tonight, cloudy with a chance
or shower$ or thunderstorms. Low
around 50. Chance of rain 40 percent. Wednesday, cloudy and cooler wilh a chance of light rain. High
50-55. Chance of rain 40 percent.

Extended forecast:
Thursday through Saturday:
Fair ori Thursday. Lows 30-35.
Highs around 50. Chance of showers Friday and Saturday. Lows in
lhe 30s. Highs on Friday in the 50s
and Saturday in the 40s.

MORE PARKING FOR LIBRARY VISITORS ·A aew park·
ing lot is being constructed across the street from the Meigs County Public Library oa West Main Street in Pomeroy. The 27 x 120
foot paved _area will provide 10 additional parking spaces lncreas·
ing the total aumber to 27. Parking bas beea a problem at the
buililin( since it wu purchased and renovated by the Meip County Library Board. The area being developed into a parldag lot is
owned by the Library Board and the Villaae or Pomero7 and It
was through cooperatloa or Village Couacil that tbe project was
able to go Forward.

.

--Area deaths-Catherine Long

Russell Rhodes

Russell S. Rhodes, 83, of Marl·
Catherine E. Long, 83; of New
Haven, formerly of Henderson, etta died Tuesday. Oct 26, 1993, at
died Monday, October 25, 1993, 81 Arbors of Marietta. ,
Born on April 21, 1910 in
Pleasant Valley Hospilal.
Born April 30, 1910 in Gallipolis Meigs Co.unty 10 the late Milo A.
Ferry, s~ was a daughter of the and Clara Wagner Rb.odcs.- he was
late B.P. and ·Lily (Roberts) employed by the BvF. Goodrich
Pearson. She was a member of the Corp. He was a veteran of World
Wyoma Pcntacostal Church and Wilt II, US Army Air Corps, and a
m~mber or Morse·Chapel Church,
was a homemaker.
Racine
Lodge #461 F. &amp;. AM and
She was also preceded in death
VFW
Post
#5108, MaOetta.
by her husband, Cody Long; a
Survivors
are his wife, Helen B.
daughter, Phyllis Jean; a son, Char- Wickline Rhodes,
son,
les; lhree sisters, two brothers and Dale L. Rhodes, Marietta;
Great
Falls,
two grandchildren.
Mont.; daughter and son-in-law,
Survivors
include
three Dauna
L. and Dale Huller,
&lt;laughters, Grace Bell Winnings of Strongsville and four grandchilNew Haven, Betty Sue Hupp of
Clifton, and Virginia Sayre of Point dren.
He was preceded 'in death by a
Pleasant; lhree sons, Forrest Long sister,
Nona Rilehie, and brothers,
of Gallipolis Ferry, Johnny Long of Waid , Harley, Dale; Ralph and
Point Pleasant, and Bobby Long or OrviUe Rhll!les.
_
Chillicothe; a sister, l!Cssie· Supple
Entombm-ent will be at East
of Henderson; three brothers, Clark Lawn Mausoleum at 1 p.m. ThursPearson of Point Pleasant, Gerald day with the Rev. Charles Bush
Pearsonof WilmingiOil, NC, and offiCiating.
Worthy Pearson of Gallipolis Ferry;
Friends may call from 2 10 4 and
37 grandchildren and 45 great- 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday at Hadley
grandchildren.
Funeml Home, 500 Fifth St, MariService will be held on etta.
..
Thursday, October 28, at 2 p.m. 81
Memorials may be made to lhe
Wyoma PentacosJal Church wilh allarity of the donor'sj;hoice.
Rev. Charles Birchfield officiating.
Burial wiU be in - Kirkland
Memorial Gardens.
Continued from page I
Calling hours will be held Wed·
nesday from 7-9 p.m. at the WilThe increase was requested by the
coxen Funeral Home.
Middleport Board of Public Affairs
10 cover the·increasecl1cost of materials used in inslalling new taps.
Discussed by Gerard were the
.
need 'for center lines dn Nonh SecAm Ele Power ......... ........ .. 38 1/4
ond l\Dd Hartinger P~rkway, the
Ashland OiL ..................... 34 7/8
sewer
gas on Hartinger and Page
AT&amp;T ......................................58
and Ash, and the need- for enforcBank One ................... ...... .. 39 1/8
ing the permit fee for political
Bob Evans........................ .. 18 7/8
signs.
Charming Shop .. :............... 13 1/4
Gerard also noted that the
Champion Ind.................. .. 14 112
September financial report showed
City Holding ............. ......... 30 314
deficits in I 0 accoun'ts, about
Federal Mogul ....... .......... .. 26 1/8
$44,000: and questioned how conn-·
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................45 1/8
cil is going to reconc~e those fig·
Lailds End ..........................41 314
ures. The mayor indicated that is an
Limited Inc ........................22 118
area
where work must begin.
Multimedla Inc. .................36 1/4
Questions concerning a new
Point Bancorp ..........................14
water supply were also raised by
Rax Restaurant ............ Not 6sted
Gerard who-asked that current
Relia~e Eleclric .............. .. 16 7/8·
infonnation and proposals on rates
Robbins&amp;Myers .............. .. 18 7/8
be secured from Leading Creek
Shoney's lnc .................... .. 22 314
Conservancy Dislrict, the Tuppers
Star Bank ....... .......... ................36
Plains/Chester Water District, and
Wendy Im'L .. ................... 15 3/4
the Gallia County Rural Water SysWorthington Ind ......... .......18 314
.
'tem.
Stock reports are the 10:30
He suggesled lhal those proposa.m. quotes provided by Advest
als be compared to the cost or plans
of Gallipolis.
-for wells and treatment facilities
now being proposed by the Big
Bend Water Dislrict •
..
Gilmore announced plans for
The Daily Sentinel .
Thursday night's Halloween party
(USPS 113-Mt)
': Publi1hed every llternoon, MoDday tJvouJ)t · to be co-sponsored by Feeney-Bennell Post 128, its Auxiliary, and the
. Friday. 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio by ,the
, village of Middleport. Four wa$ons
·Ohio Valley Publilhina Compuy!Multlmedia'
IDC .. Pomeroy, Ohio 0769, Ph. 992~2156.
have been secured .for the ndes
Second claM poilllt paid at Pomaoy, Oblo.
through Sleepy Hollo'¥ where II
stations are being created. Seven
· Mr:mbtt: The Auoclated Preu. and the Ohio
Newspaper AIIOCiatlon, NaUOIII Adwrtialq
are electrified, Gilmore said. SponRepreseawive, Branham Newspaper Sal«,
sors
are Vaughans, peoples Bank,
733 Third Avellue, New Yati:, New York
Farmers Bank, Sons of lh.e Ameri10017 .
can Legion. and McClure's Dairy
POSTMASTER: Send address chanr,e~ to 'The
Isle.
Daily SeaUnel, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
4~769.
The fire department will again
Ibis year be assisting in protection
SU&amp;SCRimON IIAT1:S
ly c..,ler or Motor Roale
aropnd the marina, cro\'1'!1 control,
One
$1 .60
and·lighting in lhc area. •
Ooe Monlh..... .................... .......................$6.9!
One Y~........................ .................._ .. $13.20
-l'layer 10 open lhe meeting was
~GLECOPY
,
·given
.by the· Rev. Greg -Cundiff.
PRICE
Doily......................................... __,..3.! C.ala
Atiending were coui!Cil members,
Childs, Gilmore, James ClatworSut.criben aoL dellrina to pay the cwricr maY
dty, Judy Groolcs, Gerard, and Jack
remit iD advance dltect to THe Dally SeatiDel
011a tlne,lixor ll moa.th bltll. Cro::lit wiD be
Satterfield.
.'

Gilmore..'.

Stocks

-

·Meigs announcements-

Fall Hallelujah Party
There will be a Fall Hallelujah
.Party at the United Pentecostal
Church in Middleport on Sunday,
Oc1. 31 from 10 a.m. to I p.m.
There will be games, prizes and .
free-lunch for the children, Free
bus rides to and from lhe event are
available by cillling 992-7748.
Dexter Church Homecomia~
There will be a homecommg at
the Dexter Church of Christ on
Sunday, Oct. 31. Dinner will be
served at noon in the basement.
The program will follow in the
afternoon. Former pastor Charles
Russell wHI be there. Everyone is
welcome.
Christian Seminars
First Church of the Nazarene
will have mini-seminars by Frank
Carl on Nov. 4 • 6 at 7 p.m. nightly. The mulli-media presentation
will have marriage and lhe home,
the impact of television, rock
music, The New Age Movement
and the Occult on today's families
. as its topics.

.

Revival
Rutland Free Will Baptist
Church will have a revival from
Nov. I through Nov. 7 will) preaching by Rev. Martin Markham. Pastor Paul Taylor invites lhe public.

EMS answers
to six calls
Units of 1he Meigs County
Emergency Medical• Service
responded to six calls for assistance
overnight Units responding included:
Monday 'T 9:06 a.m. Pomeroy
to East Main Slreet for Edna Stobart who was transported to Pleasant Valley Hospital; 1:42 p.m.
Pomeroy to Main S1ree1 in Tuppers
Plains for Marvin Walker who was
transported to St. Joseph's Hospi181; 3:47 p.m. Middleport 10 Beech
Street for George Writesel who
was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospilal; 5;27 p.m. Rutland 10
Side Hill Road for Lena Hatfield
who was transported 10 Holzer
Medical Center; 6:14 p.m. Rutland
to Salem Street for Merle Davi s
who was transported to VMH.
Tuesday- 2:04 a.m. Racine to
Letan Falls for Carol Rifne who
was transported to VMH.

~ven ~iet Met\ weet.
)'lo tubocripCiaDI by moll peiiplttod Ia .-- ,
where home c.irlet wvic!e llavatllble.
...

MaUS.Wilp1L

j 3 WpeU..........r...................... ......... ......$2!.14

u w.leb .................................. ...............So43.16

nw.eu ......... .......................c.............. $14.76
•

.
' c-.,
.. . -·'"

Out.W• Mrip
Wetb·"l" ''':............ ............ .......................v
wa.a ............~....:.,, .._..:.;.,........ .$4&amp;.60

U
sz

wH~~a ...............:............,........;.. A81AO

'"

•

Daily Sentinel-Page

!

C(Jrrecti,on

'

~;.

Gordon ~ · Holter, Long Bot·
tom, was faned $30 Phi.J coats
Wednesday in Mei; County Cowt
for speeding, not Gordon 'L. Holler
as originally reported by the coun
and·indicated in the Sunday TimesSentinel.

The Grubb FamUy to perform
The Grubb Family Singers will
be at Old Bethel First United Baptist Church in Cheshire on Satur.day, Nov . 6 at 7 p.m. Rev. Bob
Grubb will be preaching.
·
Eastern Craft Show
There will be a craft show· to
benefit lhe band in the Eastern
High School gym on Nov. 13 from
9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Along with a numbcr of crafts there will also be food
and entertainment For more informalion call 985-4231.
Caravan Program at Syracuse
The Syracuse Church of the
Nazarene invites the public to the
children's ministry of caravan for
children ages preschool through
sixlh grade. Caravan is a·Chrjsti;m
version or scouting. It reacheS' children Chri'stian doctrine. first aid
and survival techniques among
other things. Meetings are at 7 p.m.
every Wednesday at the church .
For more information call Rev .
Rick Sturgill lit 992-3517 or Kathy
Lehew at 992-6050.
CoalS for Kids
Bank One is again accepting
new or used children's winter coats
through Dec. 16 Bank One is also
accepting cash donations for the
purchase of new costs. Employees
of Bank One volunteer to clean the
coats which are lhen distributed
mainly through local elementary
and junior high schools.

No one hurt in wrecks
No citations were issued in two
accidents on West Second Street,
Pomeroy. Saturday investigated by
Pomeroy Police.
At 11:01 a.m. the parked car or
Rhonda Mozingo. Rutland, was hit
in the front by a vehicle driven by
Dale Du11on, Middleport. Pollee
said lhat Dutton backed his vehicle
into the Mozingo car while he was
parking. There was light front end
damage 10 lhc Mozingo car.
At 12:32 p.m. the parked car or
Louise Staats, .Tupper Plains,
parked in front of 1he Farmers
Bank was hit by a lruck operated
by Buddy Kauffman as he pulled
fr~m Powell's parking lot. The
from quarter panel on lhe driver's
side of the Staats car was dama(!ed.
and the passenger side, headlight
area or the Kauffman truck had
light damage.

A high pressure system moving erosion and minor coas1a1 flooding
from lhe Pacif1c Nonhwesl 10 the are lilcely along the Middle Atlantic
cenual Rockies and nonhero Plains CoasL
•
was expecltd to spread colder and
. In California, northeast winds:
drier air across the upper MidwcsL ' w1ll warm up as they descend lhc.
Wind was _expected 'to accom~- mountains toward lhc COII$l .
,
ny the drop m temperatures w•th
Temperatures were forecast in,
snow showers and squalls al~ buf- lhc 50s and 60s in the East, the 30s;
feting the nonhwest Great Lakes.
and 40s _in the Mi~wesl, the SOs;
Colder air is also moving toward
and 60s m lhc Pac1flc_ N~weast.
Texas, with a free ze possi ble
and ·80s ~90s m Califonna.
•
tonight as far soulh as lhe Texas
The h1gh temperature for the'
Panhandle
nation Monday was 96 degrees at:
aoudy .weather was expected in
both Palm Springs and Thermal ,;
lower New England, while beach Calif.
·

Serenity House...
selors discover the victim's needs
and work to meet lhem.
While at the shelter, women can
altend support group meetings for
r~sing self esteem and auaining emooonal sJability. In c:oopel'alion wilh
Family AddictionCommunityTreatment Services. the shelter also offers
a bi-weekly addiction education session.
"A lo1 of women don' t specifically
have drug or alcohol problems themselves," Tirado said, "but most ciJme
from a background of alcohol or
drugs."
If a woman comes to the she Iter and
takes fuU advantage of the services,
she can expect a belter situation than
when she arrived, Tirado said. Those
who come back to the shelter a second time usually did not stay lhe
entire 30 days and were not ready to
be on lheir own.
"If (independence from the abuser)
is what the woman wants and she
works for it, yes, the sheller is successful," she said. "Thiny days is
usually enough for someone to make
a real change."
Many or the women co.ne to lhe
shelter wilhchildren. Tirado said most
of lhe children adjust 10 the shelter
really weU and don't want to leave its
peaceful·environment when lhe time
comes.
''To me it's kind or sad that a child
as young as four values the peaceful
aunosphcrc that much," she said.
Many women do not leave an abusive home until they be6eve their
children are endangered, Tirado said.
But lhe child's menial health is CD·
dangered from day one.
''There's a lot of damage done that
docsn 'I involve physical abuse," she
said.
Although the shelter serves three
counties. Tirado said few victims
come from Meigs Counay.
·
"Meigs County is definitely underrepreseined," she said" "A lot of the
women we get from Meigs Coun'ty
are under lhe worst possible circumstances. It bas to be really bad before
we get them. We'd rather get them in
sooner than later."
Tirado cited lack or media publicity and the physical distance from
Meigs County to 1he sheller in
Gallipolis as the main reasons behind
Meigs County's under·representation
at Serenity House.
"In rural counties, distance and lack
of transportation are definitely problems, Isolation is a real factor."
Tirado said most, about 80 percent.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Oct. 26 discharges - Dianna
Eads, Ruby Saunders, Eulalah Bennett, Carey Cramer, Mary Canter,
Emalcne l'la1~ Evelyn Nichols and
Lois Perkins.
Oct. 26 birth - Mr. and Mrs.
Donavan Lester; daughter. Palriol.

By

Dave

Grate
of
R•t'-cl
A fool 1st person who complttts
his schoolin~ and his tduulion
at lht umt hmt,

.. .
...

Ftuhs m like h11dlights. Tholl
of olhtrs sttm mort glaring lhtn
our own.
Tim : 'Whtn your son flnlshu
cclltgt, whst is ht going lo bt?"
Jim : "About 37 ."

...

Politicians hnt thought of .
everything lo help lhe farmer but
to luve him slone so ht can run
his own business.

...

You cu't do much aboul tha
ltngth ol your lilt, but zou nn do
1 lot tbout its depth an width .

• •

Shop 11 Auttlftd Furnlturt now lor tht
bttt ,11lectlott ot the ynr. Choose
11om rtcllnera, curios, dub, gun
ublnelo, tHdt rocktn lftd aore.
Lay ..·WIY now lor Chrltt..t .
•••

CHESTER WELLS

• ... 1'111 .... l'lltll

214 EAST MAIN

c- ... ,..,"" Jut!

POMEROY
992·6687

".1!1

7 SHOWROOMS

II WAIEHOUSlS

Rutland F•rait1re

St•l• Auto

1~.~t~urance Companies

bJtho oanclkiiU Boa71A I.R. :Me, l.ollg ~Ohio __

NEW OmCE - Dale E. T•ylor bas opeaecla real es~te ofr~ee
at 137 Butteraut A:ve., ia
Pomeroy. His olf'u wiD be open
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Moada1
through Friday aad 9 a.111. to
nooa Saturday. He receatly
became a licenses broker.

flrtilll't

VOTE FOR

P~lcl""'

of those ulilizing Serenity House do
not have ttansportation.
The shelter bas a four-person staff:
DirccJOr Hilda T'lflldo, Case Manager Charlolte McGuire, Support
GroupEducator/CoordinatorCynlhia
WaughandVicJim'sAdvocateKaren
Toothman.
For lhc first 12 years or its existence, Serenity House acted as an organization which only provided immediate emergency assistance and
referrals to self help groups. 11 bec~e a full-fledged shelter in 1974.
The shelter is funded by several
federal grants, lhc Unilcd Way, lite
Gallia-Jackson-Meigs Board of AI·
cobol, Drug Addiction and MenJal
Health Services and marriage 6cense
fees.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Monday admi ssions - Goldie
Lightfoot, Middleport. and Merle
Davis, Rudand.
Monday di scharges - Gerald
Eblin, Pomeroy.

Lei us lell you just
how much your savings
can be.

for
OLIVE TOW~ SHIP TRUSTEE
Experienced·IJ'I road work
equipment operator
. carpenter
YOUR VOTE ON NOV. 2 APPRECIATED

C011tia11ecurom page 1

Hospital news

State Auto's already
low premiums can be
reduced even more by
insuring·both your car
·and home will'lthe Slate
Auto Companies.

-t.... . . . ..... . . . . .
........... c-tt

.

Mild
weather
will
_
end
Wednesday
.

Accu-Wesllter• forecast for

.

TRENTON, NJ. ~)-The
most. watc:bed U.S, ele&lt;;tion this
year is lhc rc-eleclion bid of New
Jersey's Democ;ratic Gov. Jiln Florio. Many of th~ themes of this
. campaign will almost surely be
repeated in lhc con~nal campaigns of 1994 and the J,li'CSidcnlial
contest in. 1996. If flono survives
Ibis Npvem'b4:r, it might point the
way for Bill Clinton in three years. ·
Four years ago, then-congressman Florio woit lhe governorship
in a bruising campaign by promising not to raise state Wtes. But a
year later he was forced 10 ram a
$2.8 billion tsx iacrease through
the state legislature. He claimecllhc
increase was necessary 10 balance
lhe Sllte bUdget l!Dd that previoUS
Republican administrations bas lied
about the sta.tc of New Jersey's
finances.
The tax increase raised a
firestorm of protest from voters.
Florio's approval J~~tiug dropped 10
record, lows, and the umversal
opinion was thatlhe IIX increase
had ended his political career. The
question, in fact, wlis not whether
he might win a second term in
1993, !lui whelher he might not be

·,

· 'certain players make oiie mistake
Editor, .
. .
Favoritism at Eas'iern Junior and Sit out the felt of lhc game.
How can lhcy learn how to _play
High Sc,hOPI ~venth and eiahth
if
they
do not get playing ume,
grade fOOCblll,lea!D ' is, ~·bad, it ·IS unless you're
a coaches • son;·lhen
not fair io Pile of lhc,players.
·it
does
not
matter
It dpea aot mat.ter how much takes lhcy make. how .many. f!lis·
~Iicea p~~ how many
Eastern is lhc only school that I
mia.m·a plaYer 1illte,l, lloW.good
know
runs .their athletes off.
a ~ il, what lrade a player is Maybetltit
next
year- Eastern can hire
i,n ot if they alf pay' the same the same coach and run more alhIIIIOUIIlll,) play. '
..
; Fqi mMMICC, a C~q&gt;le_ of pia~ leteS off.
. Ralph Coleman,
have ~ 1011 of pncliccs and
Tuppers Plains
sdll 'plly 111011 of the Kame. But

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHI O Weather
WediHiiday, Oct. 27

National -implications or local politics?
.

Dear Editor,
.
'
.
. .1. kn~~ there are ,jobs in: this
In response 10 Lin Coleman~s · ires; but' -, t4e ,old. ~ying goes,
lcller and Diane 'Zllkle's lcller 10 · "Its'llOI whll you know- it's who
the editor. I CO!Ildn't qrcc more you knoW~ to JCl a job.
widt both of lhelie peopl~ , .
. . I gi'(.c pra1se 10 Lin CQleman
The hirinp at the Departmcru·of and Diane Zirkle for voicing lhcir
Human Services · ~ere not adver; opinions. Maybe more citizens of
used, or not·~ .that· they .· Meigs, (\:ounty will voice · ~beir
~ere accl"p'ing, IJIPlicatlo':'l, but I · opinj~_ l(ld ~fully ~ will be
heard ~gll tl!e ppevme they , changes made in our system. As
were. takiRg a,pphe,al}ol!a on a youJmow'by voling .lhc rig~l pcoTbunday olily .m Seplember ·1993. . · ple,il!IO offiCe will help make some
Since most or the peqple were ·good c~ges.
hired.·from ~c co~itoll~sc.• boT-'
Carol Russell,
many ~ hired an walk in? My
Pomeroy
guess .would be none. .
·

.

Tun_day, October 26, 1993

•

.

.

Rr. 124, ........ ~ 742·2211

_,

&gt; ..

I

�Sports

The Daily Sentinel

The Dally Stntlnel Pqe 5
.-..'i~iiidia~y~,~~ibe~r;2~&amp;~,1~~;;;;;;;;;;~.;;a~;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:P:o:m:•~o~y~·~~~AI~d~dl~epo~rt~,~O~h~lo~----------------------------~~~~~~~:!!!~
:~

l~· basebaU off-season

They did. The Bears rushed for
only 87 yards.
The heralded mau:hup between
Harbaugh and Minnesota quanerback 1im McMahon never really
developed.
Harbaugh was rushed too much
10 be effective as he completed 20
of 31 passes for 202 yards and was
intercepted twice. McMahon was
14 of 27 for 90 yards and one interception. He left in lhe fourth quarter after getting kicked in the head
by one of his teammates.
The big interception Harbaugh
threw came in the third quarter
when Audray McMillian picked it
off and raced 22 yards for a !OUchdown and a J9-9Jead.
..
The twO teams traded field
before the flrst big turnover made
im impact
Harbaugh completed a 5-yard
pass to Chris Gedfley, who fumbled
after being hit by Jack Del Rio,
with Carl Lee recovering on the
Chicago 26. Rookie Robert Smith
went around left end for his first
NFL touchdown and lhe first rush·
ing touchdown this season allowed
by Chicago. .
·
That made it 10-3, Minnesota,
and Chicago never caught up.
Butler kicked field goals of 55
and and 39 yards, and Ftllld Reveiz
countered with a 25-yarder with 13
seconds left in the half _as the
Vikings took a 13·9lead.
Another key situation developed
wly in the third quarter after Mark

goals

Carrier intercepted a McMahon
pass and returned it to the Minnesola 38. Butler later a'ltempted a
48-yard field goal, which was
wide. But a penally gave !he Bears
anolher ~Ol.
This lime th~y fated a field goal
and holder Chris G~ threw a
perfect pass 10 Butler, which would
have been a ru:st down and maybe
a touchown. Butler dropped t_he
ball.
The Bears cJ!dn't convert a third·
down play unnllhe fourth quarter,
and that's probably because the
Vikings had read them. wen;
"Based on watchmg film, we
knew they like 10 throw slants on
third-and-five," said McMillian.
"Webappened to gel!! tremendous
pass rush on Harbaugh. arid he got
rid of ~e ball !'Cal qu1ck and we
were !n t~e nght cov~rage . .I
couldn t believe he threw 11 when It
came "!Y way."
. .
Unhke Butler, . Mc~1lh.an
caught the ball and danced mto the
end zone.
Randl_e, ~ho had three of ~he
sacks, S31d,_ fiar1?augh was ttymg
to do the. httle thmgs because we
were commg down on him."
Harbaugh really never had a
~.hance, .and Wannstedt not~~·
They bhtzed more than we anbCI·
paled they would." . .
.
.. ~u! H.arbaugh satd the bhtz
didn t gtve ~ 1f0 much trouble.
T~e s~~ks d1dn t come off the
blitzes.

it's true right now."
A case in point is Saturday's
game against No. 12 Penn State at
Ohio Stadium.
This is Penn State and coach Joe
Paterno's first year in lhe Big Ten,
but already the inaugural conference contest between the schools
may go a long way toward deciding
the championship. ·
Ohio Stale, 7.0 on the year ~nd
4-0 in the conference, enters as the
sole leader in the Big Ten for the
first time in almost seven years.
Penn Swe (5·1, 4-1) is just a game
back 'in the loss column, as are

I

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3 ! 1
Flooido .-......... 2 4 3
37o
N.Y. Ulondao... 1 6 I

•

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w......,.. . . .

In the NFL.~.

NortiMullliYioloo

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

l'itUbuql&gt; ......... 6 3 I

!uUnDI......
W L T Pet. PF PA

TBull'tlo............. 5
M;onU .............. 5
bldiallpolia ...... 2
N.Y. leu .......... 2
New f.nal..-l .... 1

C~t~lrll

Mom&gt;eil ........... 5 3 I

SACK TIME comes ror Minnesota defensive
tackle John Rangle·(rigbt), wbo puts tbe wraps on
Chicago quarterback Jim 'Harbaugh in tbe second
quarter of Monday night's NFC Central grudge

s - ..............

3 2 4
Quaboc .............. 4 4 I

I 0 .133 135 77
o .m 142101
4 0 .333 95 143
4 0 .333 149125
6 0 .143 'T1 171

1

............... 351
OliiWI M
............ 1 4 2
Bu!folo... ...... ..... I 7 I

match in Chicago, where Harbaugh was sacked
seven other times in the Vikings' 19·12 victory.
(AP)

Heu~IGII ............ 3 4

0

...29 1441~

Rio soccer team nears season's
end
a

s

W_,IM ......
5 I 0 .133 I 00 71
L.A. JWdcn ..,.. .. 2 0 .667ll3100
• S.ule.......... .... 4 3 0 .511 112 112
Dalvor .............. 3 3 0 ..SOO 149111
s.. Oiec&lt;&gt;·.. ······ 2 4 0 .333 14 127
~Cantu City .. ....

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
PF PA
14S 71
132 92.
121133
135133
99161

14 l3 23

14 :15 29
12 47 37
6 11 31
S %7 :15

New QdCIR1 ..... S 2 0 .714 163 I31

23.- ......... .........,.6-0;0

:1A -

Stoto ....... 6-:I-O
2l: e.~y ...... .A-3-0

961

15

171
160

19
16
17
5

7:M
616
641
517

562

1
10

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9
21
20 '
14 .

306
243

Zl

401

lolO

2l7
2l1
134

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-•NHL•EAsTERN CONFERENCE ·
MIMMcDIW L T '"" ·OF Got. .
_ _ , ....... 1 o o · 14 3316
~ ...... 6 2 0
12 Sl 21
. ....... ~ .... 5 5 0
10 :15 33

T-

....s.

· SAN ANTONIO SPURS: Waived
OW OWd•, p.nb, and luiah Morril,
rorwud.

Footbllll
No,_F-1'-"t
ORBEN BAY PACiti!JIS : Stcnod
Sammy Wilker. comarbact. Wllved
M"'ll!lllld OU.., ......-_

' !ballaD

SAN DIEGO CHARGERS: Ploced
Jcnvt W'!.Wiml; ~. Oa iDjund ftKI'Ve. Sipocl wr IIndy. lin±• rn.

AIIM'I'Icu t.aaua
BOSTON RED sox,"'"'""""" lhoy

will Mlrmew lhe CICintnCt&amp; of JUch Gate.
phchi111 ~;oa~h; Al Bumlpry, t'U111 ball
coach; an4 Rick Burle~~on, ,lhlrd b'aae

Plo.W..tl
1506
3
I~
4
1+11
6
1276
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1234
2
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1132
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1016 12
1194 13

0011&lt;11.

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'·

HONEST· BXPDI.ENCD
.
. .
..
VOTE FOR

.

Thurs·d:ay, N;ovemb,~ 11

;.

PmsBUROII PENOUTNS : Soot

..aty. ~lnlkla 10 Toay ~· eatctt.,
oad llob·Docr. coilfioldor, olio.... bolh ..

~,

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.

Your Ad·Wl,ll INch Over 20;000
Households In The Tri·County Arecl'l

.'

ADVERTISING DEADLINE
. tuE·SDAY,-· ·NOVEMBER ·: 2.

·HOWARD .GAL
'

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-· '

..... '

'

•

·Meigs County.
·Board of Educat~n .
'

•

4

'

'

•

992•2156·

YOUR FULl TIMi CANDIDATE.
•

....•'

l'be. Ddy ·.S.e ntmel

Your Vote W"zll Be Appreciated!
'

•'
•

&lt;

'

'I

Pltld for by candldlttt, 41031 St. Rt. 7, R..cln'lle, Oh.
'

~~~
. ,.

.

•

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I

..

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.· ..

Dallas, Calgary post wins
'

By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Hockey Writer
Alexandre Daigle showed why
he was the No. I draft· pick in the
NHL last June by the Ottawa Senators. And Alexei Yashin' showed
something, too.
"Yashin embarrassed six guys
out there .. A , guy shouldn't be
dipsy-doodling like thaL This isn't
Europe, this is t~e NHL . He
should've been on his back," Anaheim goaltender Ron Tugnutt said

I

-

after Yashin's highlight-film goal
Daigle scored on a slap shot at
helped Ottawa beat the Mighty . 7:45 of the third. Yashin, chosen
Ducks 4-1 Monday night.
second overall in the 1992 draft,
Meanwhile, fellow rookie !hen stickhandled through three
Daigle continued to. impress, scor· players from the Ducks' blue line
ing his fifth goal as Ottawa won for and slipped a backhand move
the fll'st time this season after four around Tugnutt at 12:06 for his
losses and two ties. Daigle has had fourth goal.
.
"Daigle made a good shot that
a point in each of Ottawa's se.ven
games and a team-leading 13 over- I'm going 10 stop 85 percent of the
all.
·
time," Tugnuu said.
Daigle and Yash in scored thirdBob Kudelski added an empty·
net goal in lhe final minute to seal
period goals to break a 1·1 tie.
Ottawa's first win . Anaheim's second straight 4-1 loss dropped the
expansion Ducks to 2-5-2.
The heroics by the two rookies
salvaged a game that was otherwise
sloppily played.
uwe're still an expansion
responsible for two kills, and one team," Ottawa coach Rick Boweach came from Deana Smith, ness said.
In other NHL action, Dallas beat
Kristy Lindsey and Heather Exline.
Burns also bad a· block against Detroit 5·3 and Calgary defea1ed
Washington 3-2 in overtime.
Huntington .
. Stars 5, Red Wings 3
Bums and Billina Cooper each
Dean Evason had a goal and two
had a serving ace, while Smith.and
Lindsey led the defense with six assists 10 lead the Stars over the
digs each. Carrie Taunan had five Red Wings.
The Red Wings outshot Dallas
digs for Rio Grande, and was
backed "!ilh four e~ch from the 24-13, but allowed the Stars several
Coopers, three from Bums and two uncontested short-range goals.
Monday night's crowd at the
each from Exline 'and Michelll'
Joe Louis Arena was just 19,004,
Warne.
Hanover feU under an offensive breaking Detroit's string of 133
assault from lhe Coopers. with Bil' re~ular-season sellouts. The Red
lina recording 16 kills and KeUina Wmgs had filled the 19,275 seats at
seven as Smith and Lindsey had the arena in every game since late
lwo each and Burns one. Billina in lhe 1989-90 season.
· Flames 3, Capitals 2 (OT)
Cooper had Rio Grande's single
Calgary rookie ted Drury
block of the match and Kellina
Cooper its only serving ace. hi scored his second goal of the night
digs, Kellina Cooper led with -also the second of his NHL
seven, Lindsey had four, Smith career - at 2:57 of overtime to
three, Billina Cooper two and boost the Flames over the Capitals.
Drury tipped a shot from the
Stephanie McLaughlin one.
blue
line from Chris Dahlquist past .
In the Siena Heights match, Billina Cooper had nine kills, Kellina Washington j!Oaltender Rick
Cooper five, Burns and Lindsey Tabaraeci to wm a game Calgary
four each, and Smith and appeared 10 be in control of late in
McLaughlin two eath. Smith and · the third period.
A 1-1 game through the first 58
Tatman notched a serving ace
apiece. Tatman led in digs with minutes erupted into a shootout as
f1ve, Kellina Cooper had three, Drury scored his first at 18:03 of
Lindsey two, and Smith and Burns the third, making it 2-1 in Cal one each.
gary's favor. The Capitals tied it 19
The Redwom.en open this seconds later on a goo! by Kevin
week's schedule tonight at Urbana. Hau:her.

:·Redwomen win two, lose
:: one match in road trip
Nearing the final stretch of the
season, the University of Rio
. Grande volleyball team remains
· focused on its goal of defending the
· Mid-Ohio Conference after suffer·
. ing•a' paif'of·losses•last week· to
·District 2Z and non-district oppo·
nents.
A victory over Ohio Dominican
Oct. 19 helped the Redwomen
maintailltheir grip on first place in
the conference, where they are 10-1
as this week began. Overall, Patsy
Fields' club is 20-11 as it prepares
to renew lv!OC action this week.
The Redwomen defeated ODC
15-6, 15-4, 14-16, 15-9 to start last
week's schedule, and then fell to
district leader Moun! St. Joseph 615, 9-15, 10-15 in Cincinnati last
Thursday. The team then traveled
to a match at Huntington (Ind.),
where they won two and lost one.
The Indiana trip saw Rio Grande
defeat Hanover (Ind.) 15-8, 15-10
and then wallop Siena Heights
(Mich.) 15·6, 15-3 before falling 10
host Huntington 5-15, 13·15.
Against Huntington, Billina
Cooper and Kellina Cooper each
posled eight kills and had a block
solo apiece. Renee Burns was

Cooper chat ...

Will Be Publi·shed in
The Dally Tribune,
Pt. Pleasant Regist.er and
·lhe Dal_ly Sentinel

me-,., contnc:t. Releued. AJ. Wynder,

- • Transactions • -

1M&amp;

DENVER NUGOETS: Waived Elmer
B"""ou, par&lt;li. Fred Bonjamin, conto•;
and Shaua Vanl:liver, fcirwaid.'
OOLDEN STATB WARRIORS :
Siaqod A~ Jolwori,ptrd;·w a two-

10...,.

•

HUI'nlNQOON VAUJ!Y. Po. (AP)
- Th!: tap 25 W&amp;ma in 1M 1993 Sporu
NcaWOik DiviJion I·M rco&amp;biU poll. wi.th
fu-tl-~CO \'Otcl in pumtbae~, rocordt
1hrouah Oct. 23, lOtal pointl and last
wecll 'l rank.inl:

;fiiiiiB·

)'oar c'oD1nc1. Waived Jay Goodman,
.......
LOS ANGBLI!S CIJPPERS:. Aped

Hanfld a\ Dtllu,l:35 p.m.
Buffalo tt Caiaary. 9:JS p.m.
Wuhi.np at Ve~couva, 10:35 p.m.

NCAA 1-AA poll

II Pel r • ..............UO
19: MWoao T-. St. ..A-J.O
20 Aiooin Stoto ........ ...'J·:I-0
21: - -.............5-U
:z:z. W-Cuolino ..A-3-0

·

Phi'•delphi• at OU.wa, 7:3S p.m.
W'....... 11 T""po Boy, 7:35 p.m.
U. Ar\~ at Oearoit, 7:3S p.m.

M;M-..19, 0U..pl2

laoblboiAilodolloo

CHA.RLOTTE HOJt~TS : Waived
Edmund Wibon an4 Bobby Madin, (or-

Wedaetclay'saames

Monday's score

DDIDE·

Bubtb'U
-

MlwnU11N'e:w ,_y,7:3S p.m.
W'LI'IIIIipls.at Florida, 7:35p.m.
SL ....... It OU..p. 1,35 p.m.
F.drDoraoft al San J01e, lO:JS p.m.

San Fnncilco ... o4 3 0 ..511 170141
L.A. Romo ........ 2 5 0 .:116 114 152
A.danu. ....... ....... l S 0 .216 147191

..s.u

SAN PRANCISCO GIANTS: An·

I'IOilDCod th•t Jim Dti.liai., pi~eber, d•
clinod to es.erciae 1994 cpl&amp;on.

17 35

P"'·

w....,.DI......,

'

PHILADELPHIA PIUWES: Exerciled ohe 1994 .,.._,ol ' - 7 DJUin.
016LM,Uid Maiario ~.Wielder.

ftil ' \' ia aa Queboc,7:35 p.m.
Lot Aftaet.. at N.Y. ftlan4.en. 7:35

TampiBay ....... 1 5 0 .167 68IS9

Jlolo...................
1~ S10p11on P. Allllln ..5·:1-ll
17. NaiolMmlowi ..... ...'J •...o

I

IC1WL

TCIIIicbt'• pmeo

o:...........

u

2
2
2
I

'

LOS ANOI!l.I!S OOOOER$: O!f....t
lllo!y ubilnlien 10 x..;, a.-, pildlcr.

Dollu!,Diaal3
c.lpy 3, Wuhln ..... 2 (011

Gnon Boy......... 3 3 0 .500 147 Ill

H i - Uni¥..........7~
11 1Jowood .................7·Q.O
1iSeuoMrn ···.. ·· ··· ......I.Q.O
1]. Wdliolll oUtUY ....5·:1-0
14. N. ~AA'f ..6-I.O

.......

. MODday'a scoreo
aa..... Aalheim 1

s

W-L-T

HOUSTON ASTROS: Announced
DOt otrar llllry ad:litntion to
J• Uribe. intWder; arid KMri Bau, m~t­
fialder, allowina both to ~e free
they would

NJ.mod Art Howe a~al a~ai,pmenl

•
Lao AnaeJoo ...... 5
.......... ........... 2
l!aal~a~ ,... _.. 2

San JON ..-·~-.. 0 I I

Cnl,.l Dhltiofl
' l)cuuil ..............
2 0 .'714 134113
MiftntiiCU ......... 4 2 .0 .661 BS 94
· ou..1
3 3 0 .500 109 71

L Y'lown St.(3l)........6-I-O
:Z. MooshoD (12) ...... .5·:1-0
3. Oo. S..iltonl (6) ....6-U
4. M......, (4) ...........7· 1·0
5.TovySto10(~) ........6-0.I
6. c.nnJ.florida .......6-l·O
7. 14oho ......................6-1·0
1. NE ........... .........6-U
9 M&lt;N_Sto.. .......5·U

loy bullpen -a.

41 18
39 3S
29 20
34 33
:14:11
'J7, 46

VIUICIU¥ct ........ 1 l 0

2
3
5
7

a.m...

N"""""' Leo...
ATLANTA BRAVES : ,Announced
that Otil N'u.on, ~tfltWR. declined 1.0 Cl·
ercilc 1994 opcioa. Wliwd Marvin Freeman, Ditche.r, for \M P.wPoto of Jivinl
ltim h!;"uneondillonalodeUe. :
CHICAGO CUBS: Named Moo
Dnbowoky pi...... ond r.c... fo.

hdkDI-

~ .........:..

Eukni!M......
Ttam
W L T Ptt.
N.Y. oo.u ...... 5 I 0 .m
DallaJ ................ . 2 0 .667
PtUJ,.delphia ...... . 2 0 .667
Ph...U.. ............ 2 5 0 .236
WashiJI&amp;ton ...... I S 0 .167

II
12
II
9
•
6

notching ~oal apiece, but Jack
Wroblewski went' home with the
honors by supplying the Redmen
with three goals of his own before
it was all over.
The Redmen took 29 shots on
goal and the defense held KC 10
three. Mw;rBy recorded three saves.
The Cedarville trip, another
important step toward a postseason
herth, marked Rio Grande' s final
district game of the campaign .
Bearing that in mind, the team IISil!l ·
its accumulated expeiience 10 !'Ost
a win, with Wroblewski cred1ted . '
with the game's only goal .
The primarily defensive effort
saw the Redmen take 17 shots on
goal and Cednrville allowed eight.
Mumy ended the game with four
saves.
The Redmen will be idle this
week until Saturday,. wherl they
close the regular season at horde
aglinsf llldiailll Uni\&lt;ersity/Piltdue
University-Indianapolis, starting at
2p.m.

pi!Cher.

W L T Plo. GFGA

Torankl ............. 9 0 0
Dolla ..............
3 2
SL IAuis ....... _., 5 I I
WinnipcJ ......... 4 l 1
Clli.... ............ 342
Douoil .............. 3 7 0

Ott~wa,

roRomo BLUE lAYS: Doclined to

CtnlnJ Dhillon

T-

CINCINNATI .. 0 7 0 .000 11162

Lamont AL Manager of the Year

In NHL action,

uerciae 1994 opl.ion on Jac;k Morria,

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Pk-.p ......... 4· ] 0 .511 1611:10

y..,. ·

31 :II
31 :lA
2723
36:15
:1136
29 33
3 2140

Dlwllloft

CLEVELAND .. 5 2 o .714 149130

HE. SCORES, HE SUDES! - Dallas left wing
Mike McPhee (left) s'ides to the ice after scoring
past Detroit goalie Vince Riendeau in tbe first

.,,ollowioabolh10becomo~opnu.

13
II
10
9
7
4

..'

•

tiDCAOO WHITil SOX: !i.....od
lallololor.
Tl!ltAS IIANOI!RS: ............ they
........... air• oa1uy .. c..;,
LdftN,J"f':l-..... Oono PoonlJi, Clleh·
11194- aiDIIio

• ••
I
I

,-

I I

r:at

The Unlversitr of Charleston week but played as if it were buckshut out th9 Umversitr of Rio ing for a spot as it recorded its fii'St
Grande soccer team 5.0 m a non- goal at 33:05 in the fll'st half and
District 22 game Sunday at Stanley followed up with anolher less than
L. Evans Field; being the only sour four minutes later.
·
note in a successful week for the ·
Rio Grande's defense, sparked
improving Redmen squad coached by some notable work by goalkeepby Scott Morrissey.
.er Doug Murray, who ended llle
Indiana, Wisconsin, Illinois and
Rio Grande started the week day with 14 saves, kept UC at 1\aY
Michigan State.
with a 1.0 win over Cedarville on for the better Part or the half, liut
But Cooper said lhat despite lhe road Oct 19- a game critical the visitor.s broke through again
what's riding on the Penn State to Rio Grande's hopes of entering with 6:05left to leave the score 3·0
game -and Michigan's eighth- the postseason - and blanked at halftime.
place standing in the Big Ten Kentucky Christian 8.0 at home on
In spite of. Rio Grande's better
the hatde with the Nittany Lions is Friday.
efforts, Charleston notched its two
still not as b.ig as the one against
The Redmen staned this week at last goals at ·the 18:32 mark and
Michigan.
8-9-2 overall, making them 4-4 in with 11 seconds left. Overall, the
"I don't think anything will the district, where they were fifth Redmen took 19 shots on goal to
ever rival the OhiQ State-Michigan last week. Within the Mid-Ohio the visitors' nine, and Charleston
game," Cooper said. "It's going 10 Conference, the Cednrville victory, was credited with nine saves.
talce ,a long, Ion~. long ~me. I_think which was their last MOC game of
The Kentucky Christian game
that· s somethmg that.~ bu1lt up the season, put Rio Grande at 4-2, was a virtual scoring riot rot the
through years and y_ears.
where they were third last week.
Redmen, sparked by the first goal
t (See-COOpER on Paae 5)
CharleS!l)n, l'sually_ 04 the the .from Timothy, ~van •.J)w!lll1 N!a·
~... national rankings-danng ll$ season, ·. hat followed: willi Ken ·Dinwiddie,
.,· was noi on lhe lOp 20 lisl for last Steve Nagy and Paul Koch each

·7
7
6
3

''
~

Scoreboat'"£1
.l....·• Football • -

By RONALD BLUM
against exercising it and will seek Rockies general mad'!f:er Bob
NEW YORK (AP) - It didn't tnore in the open market. The G~rbhart about a new
. But 00
take tong for baseball' s business Braves have hmted they intend to a~.li~ talks are scheduled.
season to starL
go with DeionSandersnext~.
R1ght now, there's a signifl.
" I feel real- JOPd about it, cant gap," Bronner said Monday.
Will Clark filed for free as:r.
on Monday, Otis Nixon bid g • although some wd I should take "If they want to come back to us,
bye to the Atlanta Braves and what I had," Nixon said. " I had to they have a pretty good idea where
Toronto said so Ions to Jack Morris fed comfortable about the deci· we're at. We have a pretty good
.as shopping season began.
sion, and I do. I can only talk 10 idea -where they're at. Hopefully
Clark, Nixon, NL batting cham- • teams. I cannot talk any money. I the madlet will tell us whether we
pion Andres Galarraga and Texas have 15 days to wait.''
were right or they were righL"
first baseman Rafael Palmeiro and
Players can't talk money, except .
San Francisco pitcher Jim
were among 21 players who opted with their former clubs, until Nov. Deshaie1, who declined 10 ~xen:ise
for f~ . agency on the first day of 8, but may have general discus- a $700,000 player ojltiOI), also filed
the two-week filing period.
sions with other teams after they for free agency. Deshaies was 2-2
The fU"St to file was left-bander file. ·
·
with a 4.24 ERA in five games
Sid Fernandez, disenchanted that
Morris fonnally found out Mon- with lhe Giants after going 11 -13
the New York Mets would not give day that the World Series champ!· with a 4.41 ERA in 27 stans with
him a multiyear contract worth $3 on Blue Jays wouldn't exemse the Minnesola Twins.
million a season.
their $5.15 million option and
Palmciro hit 37 home runs,
Clark, a rust baseman who has mstead wiU pay a Sol Jllillion buy- drove in 105 runs and batted .295
spent his entire career with the San out. Morris, a 38-year-old right· for the Rangers. He earned a teamFrancisco Giants; is the biggest hander, was just 7-12 th~ year with high $4.55 million this season.
name among the approximately a.6.!9 ERA. Ligament damage in
Palmeiro has long said he wants
II 0 players porentially eligible. He hts nght elbow may end his career.
to remain with the Rangers, bul
slumped 10 a .283 average this seaGalarraga hit .3 70 with 22 onlY. if they meet his price.
son with 14 homers and 73 RBIS.
homers and 98 RBis, becoming lhe
' I'm not going to ask for $7
" At this point, filing formally is rma player on an expansion team to milli9n a year," he said. ''I'm not
the name of the game," said his win a batting tide. The first base· th best Ia
· baseball bu1 r
lawyer and agent, Jeff Moorad. man, who signed with Colorado u;·there.P. yer 10
•
m
"We remain hopeful that a deal last Nov. 16, made $850,000 this
Among other players who filed
with San Francisco can be worked year, including $250,000 in bonus- were Montreal pitcher Dennis Maroul'"
es.
tinez, Houston pitcher Mark PortuNixon had a rare player option
Galarraga's agent, Jim Bronner, gal and Cincinnati third baseman
period of Monday night's NHL game in Detroit, worth $2.5 million, but decided talked in late September with Chris Saba.
where tbe Stars beat tbe Red Wings 5-3. (AP)

! ••

Cooper expecting Penn St(lte to play
'lights out' football against Buckeyes
By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Faced with four teams still contending for the Big Ten title, Ohio.
State coach John · Cooper said he
expects everyone to take aim on his
third-ranked Buckeyes.
"You might as well accept that
when you play and coach here,"
Cooper said Moliday at his weekly
news conference .. "We're not
going to slip up on anybody.
Everybody plays Ohio Slate, we're
going to get their best shot. That
' was true last year and the year
•before that and my .ftrst year and

·

.Morris, Nixon, Sabo to leave
teams to try free-agent market

,Uesda~October26,1993

Minnesota defense takes ch~rge
in 19-12 victory over Chicago
By JOE MOOSHIL
CHI CAGO (AP) - What was
bilied as a baule of the defenses
had a definite purplish hue.
The Minnesota Vikings' defense
sc t up one tou c hdown , scored
anoth er and then knocked the
Chicago Bears ' offense cockeyed
by sacking quarterback Jim Harbaugh eight nmes Monday night on
the way 10 a 19-12 victory.
It was somewhat of an awaken·
ing for _the. Bears, whose threegame wmmng streak came to an
end.
' 'We got whipped in areas we
thought we had made improvements in," said Bears bead coach
Dave Wannstedt. "Overall the
guys played hard, but the 'two
turnovers resu Ited in two touchdown s. and that was the ball
game."
But there was more. The ferocious front four of the Vikings
never really gave Harbaugh a
chance to get the team into more
than field position for four field
goals by Kevin Butler, including a
55-yarder, the longest of his career.
Minnesota head coach Dennis
Green summed it up well.
"I think our entire defensive
line was very good," said Green.
"We exploded ori the ball with
John Randall, Henry Thomas,
Chris Doleman and Roy Barker. To
do that, our linebackers had to stop
the run."

business,

(Continued from Page 4)
What.the Penn .State-Ohio Stale
game lacks in history, it could
make up for in motivation.
"I think Penn State realizes
because of their position, they can
ill afford to lose another conference
game - whether it's to us or
Michigan State or anybody else
they might play," Cooper said. "I
don't think they need that extra
incentive to get fired up for us.
They 're going to play lights out
anyway."
For the first time this late in
Cooper's six years in Columbus,
his teatn doesn't need help from
anybody else !O reserve a trip to
Pasadena for the Rose Bowl.
But the road is a rocky one .
After Penn State comes a game at
No. 21 Wisconsin, then home
against No. 23 Indiana and finally,
of course, the regular-season finale
at No. 24 Michigan.
This is the ninth meeting
between Penn State and Ohio Stale,
with the Niuany Lions winning six
of eight overall and five of six in
Columbus.
Penn State was idle last weekgiving'lhel,ionS tWD 'WC!lks to~­
pare fot Ohio Stale - smce loSing
to Mi~higan 21-13 at home the
week before.
Ohio Stale is off to its fastest
start since 1979, .in between the
most ~~ prnes widt the Lions.
Penn Slitte .opened th~ 1978 season
with a 19.0 victory at Ohio Stadi·
urn, and ~ncluded the 1980 season
with a 3·1-19 win over the Buckeyes in lhe Fiesta Bol):l.
-Kickoff for Saturday's gaine,
which will be televised by ABC, is
3:35p.m.

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PBL results
Tennis
STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP)
- Mikael Pernfors. a Swede play·
ing' this tournament the first time
since l989, beat Kelly Jones 6-4, 6·
I in the opening round of the $1.65
million Stockholm Open.
In oiher first -round matches.
Richey Reneberg defeated Swedish
qualifier David Engel 6-2, ~;
MaliVai Washington downed
Amos Mansdorf of lsrael 6-4 , 6-4 ;
Aaron Krickstein beat Nicklas
Kulti of Sweden 6-3, 7-6 (8-6);
David Wheaton outlasted Daniel
Nestor of Canada 7-6 (7-4), 6-7 (7·
5), 7-5, and Carlos Costa of Spain
dropped Andrei Chesnokov of Rus·
sia 6-3,6-3.
Brett Steven of New Zealand
edged Marc-Kevin Goellner of
Germany 6-7 (7-2), 6-3, 7-6 (7-5)
and Henrik Holm ousted Swedish
compauiot Jan ApeU 7-5, 6-3.

(647)

Women
Individual bigb series -June
Mowery (497) and Shirley Sim· .
mons (474)
Individual bigb game- Mowcry (179) and Drema l.lssery (177)
Men
Individual bl&amp;b series - Bub
Stivers (580) and Danny Will (504)
Individual higb game Stivers (255) and Russ Carson
(200)

,

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A native of nearby Rockford,
Lamont received eight first-place
v_ol.es, ':line second-place votes and
f1ve th1rd-place votes in balloting
by the Baseball Writers Association of America, a total of 72
points. Showaller had 63 points and
Gaston 49.
Lamont said his most pleasant
surprises during the season were
Ozzie GuiUen and Ellis Burks coming off injuries and playing well.
"Our closer, Robeno Heman·
dez ...was a real big plus for us,
too, Lamont said. "We didn't
know if he could do it early in the
year, but he showed he could and
he gave the team the confidence it
needed."
Lamont said he thought the
White. Sox' strong finish may have
contnbuted to him getting the
award.
' 'I'm sure that helped; we treaded water and let some teams come
back. but when we had 10 win, we
did.''

.Rio runn~rs pick up 4th
trophy at Gettysburg
The University of Rio Grande
men's cross country team picked
up its fourth fll'St place finish of the
season last Friday when it squeezed
out24 other compet!tors in lhe Get·
tysburg (Pa) Invitational.
The women's team, highlighted
by an individual second place fin.
ish from Bonnie Evans, placed 13th
out of a field of 21 teams.
The men's team, which previ·
ously swept the top spot at the
Wheeling (W.Va.), Centre (Ky.)
and Rio Grande invilationals, supplied good packing performances
from its runners, sparked by a third
place finish from Chris Smith, who
set a time of 25:32. Chad Benson
followed in eighth place in 25:45,
with Scott Wenger taking 12th in
25:57 and Hidemitsu Maeda 13th
in 26:02.
Following them were Mark
Bennett, 23rd, 26:21: Coody
Richardson , 27th, 26:29; Chris
Rowland, 33rd, 26:42; Danny
Hayes, 39th, 26:56; Terry Anderson, 62nd, 27:22; P.J. Chadwell,

67th, 27:26; Frank Bucy, 68th,
27:27; Andy Godwin, 88th, 27:54;
Brian Lutz, 91 si. 27:57; Corey
Whalen, 94th, 28:04; Jeff Roberts,
!39th. 28 :52; and Chris Holt,
i47th. 28:57.
There were 239 runners entered
in lhe race. Indiana University/Pur·
due University-Indianapolis placed
second with 82 points.
In the women's race, Evans finished in 18:43 behind first-place
Josephine Schaef of Washin~ton &amp;
Lee University, who set a Ume of
18 :18. Adrianne Harris was the
next to fmish for Rio Grande, plac·
ing 41st in 20:29, followed by
Robin Egelhoff in 44th place in
20:32. Angel Robinson placed 95th
in 22:16 and Jennifer Beyer was
I lOth in 22:43.
The race drew 211 runners and
was won by IUPUI with 88 points.
The Redwomen scored 292 points
in the team competition.
Both teams will be home this
Friday for a three-team meet
between Rio Grande, Wilmington
and Bluffton.

Chica~o lost the AL playoffs to
Toronto m six games, but balloting
took place before the start o( the
postseason.
Lamont said he didn't see the
award as vindication for a season
of savage criticism he received on
Ch1cago radio sports talk shows.
"You're always goin¥ to have
some second-guessing,' Lamont
said. ' ' When you take a major
league managing job, you know
that's part of iL
"That's why baseball is so
!!"eat. When lhe basketball season
1s over, it's over. When football is
over, it's over. Baseball is never
over because r,eople talk about it
all year-round. '
He said his low-keyed approach
worked with lhe White Sox.
"I don't want to say, 'I told you
so.' I don ' t think that with every
team you can be low key. With the
team we have right now, you can
be low key," he said.
Lamont was hired by the White
Sox on Nov . 26, 1991, after Jeff
Torborg left Chicago to go to the
New York Mets. Lamont led the
White Sox 10 a third-place finish
and a 86-76 record in 1992, then
took them this year to a 94-68
record and the AL West title.

DOWNING CHILDS
. MULLEN MUSSER

INSUUNCE

111 Second St.,. Po~~eroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1861

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

Sports briefs

(Results as or Oct. 20)
Lea11ue - Early Wednesday
Mixed
Team standings (latest points,
season points) - No. 6 (44-28,
15326), No. I (43-29, 15250),
Hackett's Roorms (40-32, 15776),
Pinsplitters (32-40, 14934), No. 2
(29-43, 15033) and Tony's Carryout (28-44, 15412).
Team blgh series - Pinsplittcrs (1834)
Team bigh game - Pinsplitters

By MARIO FOX
CHICAGO (AP) - Gene Lamon~ woul~ have rather been in
Pluladelphi~
.
.
Lamont s Ch1cago Wh1te Sox
lost the AL playoffs to the Toronto
Bl':'C.Ja&gt;:S, who went on !'J beat the
Phlll,tes m !lJe W~rld Senes..Butm
a consolau'!n pnzc, Lamont was
voted Alllencan League Manager
of the Year on Monday.
·:As !I coach and manager, you
don t think about personal awards.
It's mce, but you get 10 thinking
more about team awards. We were
hop in' we'd still be playing last
week, ' the Chicago skipper said
via teleconference from his Sarasota, Aa, home.
He said he was happy for
Toro.nto:s Cito Gaston, who came
m third m the vonng, beh1nd Buck
Showalter of the New York Yan·
k~~· ,
. I .d be even more happy for
Gene 1f we had won the Senes,"
Lamont said.

Believe it or not, this was once the feeling
of many people who are now and have
been successful foster parents. Making the
commitment can be difficult. But it can
lead to many rewarding experiences- and
the knowledge that you're doing something
that really matters.
The Meigs County Department of Human
Services needs caring adults to provide
temporary homes to child~n of all ages.
Financial reimbursement, training, and
case management are provided by the
Agency.

Christian Clowns from New
Life Mountain
'
ChurcJI Charles~on ·w.v.
wiU be at Rejoicing Life Church
Wednesday OCtober 27th 7:00 P.M.
Ministering t'o all ages Nursery Provided
PaStor Lawrence Foreman
PUBLIC INVITED

Help ·us make 'the most important
investinent we can- our children! Call now
at 992-2117 for information.
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�By The Bend

The l)aily Sentinel
TUeada~~ober26,1993

\ Page-6

Book lists 'best'
and 'worst' cities

STUDENT COUNCIL • Tuppers Plains Elementary recently
organized a Student Council for grade four tbrougb six. Pictured
are; front row from left, Kimberly Marcinko, Chris Lyons and
Bradley Brannon, secretary; second row, Beth Bunting, vice-presi·
dent, Dean Alexander and Gar" Vierling; third row, Molly Heines,
Leah Sanders and Meghan Av1s, president; top, Cindy Linton and
Pasty Chapman, advisors.

Beat of the Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich

Community calendar

Mawtn • CIH Slws
f(.....ers

Authorized; 8~ ..
Stretton ii!ITD,_Ry.n,
I.D.C. Rep_.r Ceillar
PICKUP .,d DEUVERY
Houra 16- M-F W Sill
Cloaed Sunday

'

TUESO~Y

.
POMEROY - American Legion
Drew Webster Post 1139 will have
an .urgent meeting for all executive
members at 7 p.m. at the Legion

•The Area's Number l
-

_

Public Notice
__.;,.;...;.._.;.....;..;.._

The VIII• ol Pomeroy
•ceeP-' auloocl blda at
the Clm • Ofllca, 320 Eut
llaln Strtel, Pomwoy, Ohio
: for · lhe following
lnaura-:
·
I . Police Liability
2. Public Ofllclal'a
Liability
will

:s. Fleel ecw.r...

.

' 4. OeneniU.blllly

l.llailthiiJia .... _

lpeolllcatione may ba

. lllokld .Ill ... vutaia Hall.
lillda...., lie aubmlttad until
12:00 jnft EST on November
15, 1113. The · Vlllilge
- - • the rlghl lo Njecl
eny or all bkla.

'

Bruce J. Reed
Mlyor

~=

(10)21,"22; 25, 26

u.

Helen Miller, a long time resident of the Rutland area, will be
marking her 96th birthday on OcL
31. Cards will reach her at 343
Palmer SL, Middleport.
Cruising is getting 10 be a habit
with Donna Boyd. who has
returned from her fourth annual
sailing. Donna again went to the
Bahamas this time changing to a
new cruise company, the Royal
Carribean line. The company owns
its own island in the Bahamas and

:
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Nolloa of Eloctlon on Tax
l.llvy in e - Ollhe Ten
· 1111 Uodtatlon
NOTICE Ia hereby glyan
that In purauanca of a
R.oluUon of the Board of
T - - of the T_..ahlp ol
Clleetw, Cheater, Ohio,
pauoocl on the 10th clay ol
Auguat, 11113 !hera will be

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The inspiration for ofledn_g IIIOI'e
choice in·iJufhome etllliiYliJans and

crediltines
~.fi'Ditj .10_2,847
hubcaps. {Yes, P« saidhubCaps.}

"

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Golf Club&amp;
Repair,
utadGoll
Clubo,

ll'ophloa
Ploquot

'·.

We may have our differences
but many of us can cef\llinly agree
that the weather of the past few
days has ~n fantastic hasn't it?
You keep smiling.

JOAN TEAFORD

TRICK-OR-TREAT- Trick or
Treat will be from 6 to 7 p.m. in
Chester,
Tuppers
Plains
Reedsville, Racme and Portland:
Participants are asked to have their
porch lights on.

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBIN.J

.• ..

. numjllng
,

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•

••,.
•

•,•
"

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:&amp;j
·'

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31.904LH•I•I
Creek loa•

......,....; Olllo

614·992·7144

'•

. 4/29/93tt.

RESID.NTIAL
CO"CiETE
WORK

Fn d oy &amp; S&lt;1turdJy
nc!olH:r 27 29. ;&lt;, '30
'l fW1 - 1:30 ,1111

.
..
Have opened fon Billy Dean, Johnny PaY&lt;:heck,
·
Hank Jr's Barna Band, Colin Raye
and Eddie Raveri.

448 00110

BUUDO~ACKHOE

and 1RA
E WORK
AVAILAB'ff·
SEPTIC 8YS MS,

Porches,
Patios,
Sidewalks
992-7878.
Before you mal&lt;e an important decision, you want to be
. able tO see the choices.Which
is probably why Lucy Pearson,
the owner of Hubcap tucy's,
has been so successful. At last
count, she had over 102,000'
hubcaps in stock.
At Bank One, we figured
if Lucy coul~ offer so many

Q

Bisque, Greenware,
Paint. Brushes,
Accessories,
Finished Pieces,
end Day &amp; Evening
Classes available
now.
949-30B6 111114113

HOllE BITES~

TRAILER=,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALlED
UMESTONE-lRUCI(INQ
FREE ESTIMATES

992·3838

6 14-ti5-J961 1or.z8

lr 1,•clncscLw.

••

·COUNTRYSIDE
CERAMICS

LANDCLE

Southern Be Classic Rock

•

.Sybil .Ebersbach Home
Located at 166 Mu.lberry Ave.,
Pomeroy, Ohio. 2 story with
basement. Excellent
&lt;:ondition, hot water heat.
Contact992·3172 or·992·3381

7f11 roo.

choices in hubcaps, then why even the choice.of borrowing for you, remember where we
couldn't we do whatever it . up to 100% of your home's
got the idea. From 110me&lt;ine
takes to offer·homeowners . value. Pl~;~s a special!~ fea· with a lot of then!.
morecltoicesinholl_leequity? .ttire whith&lt;;an protect you if
. .
· And so now we do. More rates go up and can reward
.
.
choices in hortte equity loans you if they go down.
and credit lines thn any ·
•So when you coq.e jnto t.
other bank. More choices in·· Bank One and one of ourpeorates, more choices in tenns, pie shows you all the different Wfiatever it
.
more choices iq repayment, ways home equity can work Member FDIC

111110' ,

BANKEONS.

EVERY. THURSDAY

. EAGLES

~LI.IB
,t .llf!JPI4EROY , .
.- , · er46 p.m., . · •. ·:

tdkei.

~EwlyBird
S 00 Payoll
Thll .,j good lor 1

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. Pl'll1l\l II) 1993 BANC ONE COAPORATION Subject to credit approval ,

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FREEDird. .
Uo. NO. 0061-34/l,
'
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SHIUI &amp; TREE
TRIM•••
REMOVAL

GUN SHOOT

•LIGHT HAULING
-FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992-2269
USED RAILROAD l)ES

._...,

·- ----.,

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12-30-92·~·

EVERY SUNDAY
AT 1 P.M.
RACINE GUN CLUB

1130 11c

HAULING

Specializing In Custom
Frame Repair
IIW &amp; 1111 PIIU rot

•

Limestone
Dirt
Gravel
·992·7878

912•7011•
tt2·SSSI
trfOU fill
1-ION4M070

DliWII, OliO
. ..

7131/Gtnln

·- ·

·- ·

.HowriL Wrltesel ,

TO BUY
.JUNK CARS
&amp;TRUC:KS .

.NEW- REPAIR

·.ROOFING

Any Condition
614-992·7553
. ' . .
' 1Ciii4111
I,

HAULING
LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL, TOPSOIL
. &amp; COAL

742-2443

INTERIOR

1H-1 mo.

FREE ESTIMATES
Taketha pain out of
p_.nting. Let me do It
for you.
VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

ARNOLD'S
PLUMBING,
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

614-915-4110
8112111311 mo.

QUALITY WORK
&amp;GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD
(614) 992·7474
POMEROY, OHIO

CHRISTMAS
TREES
Wholesale

&amp; Retail
$10&amp; up Ratall at
Bob Snowden'&amp; lot In
Ruti.,d,Oh.
Wholeule $10 II farm,
$12 dellvaroocl. Rllaillol
will be open II a.m. to II
p.m. atlll'llng Nov. 24th.

lli2Mtn

•DOZERS
oBACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

T,... .,. 5'"' w.

C.ll614-742-3051 1tli2SIIO

D.A. BOSTON
EXCAYAnNG

Specializing in
Automatic
Transmissions
368 El!st Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-6321
11111111113

Call Gene Riggs 985-3594
TRI-COUNTY RECYCLING
now accepting all ferrous metals
Including: tin, cast Iron , long and short lroJl.
Must be small enough to be moved by hand.
Short Iron (less than 3ft.) 1.75 per hundred
Motor Cast..... 2.00 per hundred
Clean, dry alum. cans .23 pound
Prices subject to change without notice
Located at the corner of S.R. 143 and 7

Is

Phone 992-5114

POOR BOYS TIRES
Daytona Radial 60 and 70 Series ·

10/ioll3

WATER

HAULING
'50,., ....

FREE ESTIMARS
·. 949-~168

Call
· .la... At
742·2904
'

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body.

EAGLE
LANES

(Former Mason Lanes)
ond Pomeroy St11tls

Mason, WV

CALL

304-ns-5533
Open 6 Day's A Week

eo~ ~~~~~

(70s tu 6 l'lb lrMd - . )

1304)773·5515

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL

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

ATTENTION

,.,., Ul1li1g peinl

""'l!ld a..iiv

AMERICAN GENEUL liFE and
ACCIDENT INSURAfiCE COMPANY

. Mobile and Doublewide owners...

ltJ:£::r~~1.

FURNACES
Ina tailed complelo with
financing IYailable.

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Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

-r •
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1·'tl!l
• •1
!

i~~· ! 'till
I

IEil.:~;'if;umacea;;;
G••FU;;;K..
Oil ~..
$21.00 mo.
$25.00 mo.
$36.00 mo.
Call lEHNEn'S MOBILE HOME
HEAnNG liD COOLING

44&amp;-1416 or Toll Fraat-100-872-5!167

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
~E ESTIMATES

446-9515
CARPET &amp; UPHOLSTERY CLEANING
1·100·30r-:0~·9.::.51=5:___.....,

(No Sunday Callsl
2112/921tfn

ma .

614-367-0421

1

• Aggressive tread design
~• ~.)f.\
• Smooth riding polyester cord ~-

614-742·2138
3141931

Special RIWI L Day! on
Truckload SALE Prices

perloiiiUince profiles.
• Two strong fiberglass belts

(614)
667-6621

DAN'S
TUNSMISSION
&amp; AUTO REPAIR

Located in Eastern Meigs County. 1 to 5
acre tracts l'iailable. Tuppers Plains &amp;
Chester water; electric available, on site
septic tanks &amp; roads to each lot
approved. Partially wooded with rolling
hills.
From $5,000 up

• Low, wide 60 and 70 - Series

614·992·7643

Gutter CINnlng

$-111-.,.lln

LINDA'S
PAIIITING

HOME SITES

Golllpolia, Oh.

1625 Gallons

Pllntlng .

915-4473

Middleport, o•lo 45760
(614) 843•5264 5II4JII3/IIn

Gutterw

lloyffl1p0uis

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

Box 189

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WANTING·'·

MARINE SERVICES

R•cky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent

Jacks Installed
Extensions run to
DHferent Rooms and
Outside Buildings
Free Estimates

AUUIII&amp;MOIIIS

7fl/1roo.

742·2360

PHONE
INSTALUTION

PIIT'

8H •lclne aU Milk• $Mode-.;

I•Niew Homes

.1M2-tin

SAYRE TRUCKING

Beginning Od. 3
WHALEY'S AUTO

lilnllt..g, Toppl... R•oval
Fr" Esrlnlates
lallftMmoge

Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

Factory Cltoke,
12 gage oaly.

GENEUL

FU TREE TRIMMU(G ·

CERnRED MECHANIC
OUTBOARD MOTOR 532"
INBOARD/OUftOARD 580"
WINTER STORAGE AVAILABU

ROIIRT IISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

All types of
Carpentry,
Plumbing,
Electric, etc.
10% Dloscount
Senior Citizens

Richard comes to us
wHh 12 yra.
•~lienee at
Pomeroy Home &amp;
Auto and C&amp;A Auto
Come VIsit Us. .

WINTERIZATION SPECIALS

PH. 614·992-5591

POMEROY
HOME REPAIR

Richard Moor.
haa joined our staff.

&amp; FILL 'DIRT

Ua.rtMd .... Bondad

(FREE ESTIMATE$)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

HOUSE FOR SALE
By TRINITY CHURCH

' I

THE COUNTY CLUB

HOME SITES

HAULING: UrMetone,
Dirt, Grnel and Coal

4-1 9-93-lfn

I,

QUARTER
MORSE

'

Notice of ElocUon on Tax
Notice of Election on Tu
Ll"'f In Ex- of the Ten
Levy In Exc,.a of Ten
Mill Umltllllon
IIH Umltaiton
NOTICE Ia hereby given
NOTICE:_:Ia.r h0er
1inebi&gt;ey
glvon
p•0 0 1
of • thai In purauance of •
of lha Vlllaga ReaoluUon of the Board of
Ohio.
,the VIllage of True- of the T-nehlp of
Henry L Hunter
Pomeroy, Ohio, Scipio Pagevllla, Ohio,
ChairMan
tho 13th day of putad on the 7th day of
Rita D. Smith
there will ba Juno, 1883 there will be
to a vote of the
Olractor I-~~:.~~· lo a vote of the aubmlttad
O.lad Sept. a, t 1183
h
aald aubdlvltlon people of aald aubdlvlalon
Ill a general ai011Uon to H Ill a goneral election ID be
(.10) 5, 12, 18,284 lc
held In the VIllage of held In the Townahlp of
PubliC NOtice
Pomeroy, Ohio, at lha Scipio Ohio, at the regular
regular plac• of voting placea of voting therein, on
therein, on the 2nd dlly ol the 2nd dlly of Nov-bar,
Notice of Elocllon on ;ru
Nov-ber, 1811~,
tha 111113, the queallon of
~.evy ·~ ex- of the T.,
quMtlon
of
levying
a
lax,
in levying a lax, In axcMa of
Mill Uml,tatlon
the tan mill limitation, lor
excoaa
ol
lhe
ten
mill
NOTICE Ia hereby given
the benelll of Scipio
that In purauance of a limitation, ·lor tho benefit of Townthlp lor the purpooe of
Pomeroy
VIllage
for
tha
Reaolullon of the VU!age purpoaa of flre prollctlon. Flrapratactlan. Said lax
Council ol tho Village ol
being • replacemant of a lax
Mlddlaporl, Middleport, Bald lu being a of 2 mUla at a rate nol
of
•
tax
of
1
replacement
Ohio, paaaad on tho 26th
axctadlng 2 mAla for uch
day of July, 11183 thara will mill al a rata not exctadlng an• doll•r of VIIUition,
1
mill
for
-h
one
dollar
of
be eubmltlld to a vote of
which amounte to twenty
tha pooplo ol nld valuation, which amounta to cenla ($0.20) for -h one
len
cenllt
($0.10)
for
uch
aubdlvlalon al a ganaral
dollara of
elocdon to be held in the ona hundred dollar&amp; of hundred
valuation,
for
live (5) y....
lorllw (5) yaaro.
VIllage ol Middleport·Ohio, valuation,
The Polla lor aald
The
Polio
lor
aald
al tho regular placea of
Election will open at 6:30
vodng ·thoraln, on tha 2ild Elactlon will open at 6:30 o'clock
e.m. 1nd remain
o'clock
1.m.
and
rem•ln
day ol Novamber, 11183, the
open until 7:30 o'cl""k p.m.
open
until
7:30
o'clock
p.m.
q-tion of levying a lax, In of uld day.
of aald dlly.
0 xceaa of tho ten mill
By order of the
By
order
of
the
Board
of
limitation, for the bWioftt or Elacllono, of Mllga County,
Board ol Electiont, of
Middleport VIllage for the
Melga County, Ohio
Ohio.
purpoae of lir'- prollcdon.
Henry L Hunlar
Henry
L
Hunter
Said lax baing a
ChaiiiNin
Chairman
ropl11Cament of " lax of 1
Rita D. Smith
Rill
o:
Smidt
miU al a rille nol ..e-ng
OlrociDr,
1 mill tor each one dollar of Oated Sept 6, 11183 Diractor Dated SepL 6, I 1183
vlluaUOn, which amount&amp; ID (10) 5, 12, It, 26
(10)5,12,19,2641c
tan cantil ($0.101 for oach
ona hundred dollara ol
vlluallon, lor live (5) y....
Tha Polla for nld
ElacUon will open Ill &amp;:30
Real Estate General
o'clock a.m. and remain
or.: until 7:30 o'clock p.m.

..

.: r-------------------'------.
. , Now Appearing at The Holiday Inn...

,,

Public Notice

36970 lal R• Road
Pa•uoy, Ohio
GRAVEl, SAND,
UMESTON(, TOP SOIL

992·3470
owiu~: JtH *•.._

PONDS
SEPTIC SYIITEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWERUNES
BASEMENTS&amp;

-Roofing
-lriltrlor • Exterior
Painting

Elecllon will open al 6:30
o'olocll a.m. and rem lin
or:: until 7:30 o'clock p.m.
o lllfd day.
By or., of .the Board of
Election, of Melga County,

You'll be floating on a cloud with
the buys you'll find in the
classifleds.

'

"'

Public Notice

PubliC Notice

aubmlttad to a vola of the
pilople of Hid aubdlwlalon
at • general elacllon lo H
held In ' the Towriahlp of
Cheallr Ohio, Ill lila regu!llr
~ of voting llwln, on
the 2nd dlly of Nov-bar,
1183,- the queatlon ol
levying a lax, In ...,... of
the 1111 111IH limitation, for
the banellt of Cheater
Townehlp tor Ill purpoee of
fir• proteolloil. · l•ld lex
being a replao-ent of a lax 0 aaldday.
ol 1 111111 11 • rata not
Byordtrollhe
uDHCing 1 Mill for - h Board of Elacllona, of Melga
ooe dollar of valuation,
County, Ohio.
Henry L Hunlar
whlch.-nla.to 18ft - •
(10.1 D) for ·aach one
ChainnWI
hundred dollara ol
Rita D. Smith
Olroclor
valuation, for llw (5) yaan.
Tha Poll• lor aald Dated Sept&amp;, 1993
(10)5, 12, 18, 26 41c

·'

The Women's Auxiliary at Veterans MeiJlorial Hospital extends
big thanlcS to Paul Nease of near
Pomeroy and the Meigs Methodist
Cooperati-ve Parish. Th'e two
recently responded to the group's
request for srnall toys to be used to
help ease the traumatic experiences
of children visiting the hospital' s
emergency and urgent care center.

BULLDOZING

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
I -Room Additlont
-Gui!MWork
-Eieclrlcal and Plumbing

Marketplace

that was one of the ports of call so
panna and her tra~eling compan·
10n, Shelba Wtckhne of Racine,
found that to be interesting and a
treat
Nancy Manley, a rep for TOPS
(take off weight sensibly), has
some tips for those of you watching
!heir weight (and isn't most everybody) during the Halloween season
since a lot of sweets are floating ·
around at this time of the year.
Nancy su~gcsts you get some
exercise making a trip to a pumpkin patch where you will hike
around to select your pumpkin.
Select some colored popcorn kernels and pick up some apple cider
to make it a successful run, says
Nancy.
I know a lot of you are into
Nancy's next suggestion and that is
establishing a tnldition by decorating the whole house in keeping
with Halloween. Plan to pass out
non-candy treats this year, but if
you feel you gotta do candy, then
buy varieties you personally don't
like too well, Nancy advises, and
she recommends that you avoid
some temptation by.not buying
candy too early.
If you want to know more about
TOPS which meets weekly just
give Nancy a call.
'

UCIVInNG

949·2104

Public Notice
Quite a surprise for Henrieua
Bailey the other morning when she
was watching the NBC news and
spotled Dr. Bruce Bailey who was
pictured with Michael Durant, the
helicopter pilot who had been taken
prisoner m 'Somalia and arter a
great deal of pressure was released.
Dr. Bailey is the nephew of Mrs.
Bailey and her husl;l;md, Don, and
~ also of Mrs. Ada Hoi!Cr of Meigs
County.
. . A frequent visiror. here (he was
here durmg the Christmas season
last ye;ar), I&gt;r; Bailey is a Colonel
and has been m the U. S. Anny for
17 years.
·
In a leuer, Dr. Bailey writes !he
following, in pan:
"My initial reaction on stepping
off the plane in.Somalia was that it
wasn't nearly as hot as I had
expected. My second observation
· was that the·airport reminded me of
Grenada. Odes evqy third world
have a half finished airport built
from concrete?_ (Or, perhaps, only
the countries the
s. decides to
invade?)
"I have been able 10 fly over the
· city three or four times by Black. hawk Hclicopte~. It looks like it
.. . was once a beautiful city of dirt
• sueets and white stucco homes in
: : walled compounds. It now looks
· like at least a third of the buildings
are in ruins, without roofs and
filled with rubble."
He also writeS:
"I haven't seen any starving
people, but I haven't seen anybody
who would want to join Weight
Watchers either. In fact, the official
position is that the food crisis is
over, now we are just peace making".

of Ravenswood
announces

WllUillUY
Plrts ... Senb

PORTLAND - Lebonan Township Trustees will meet at the township building at 7 p.m.
,
.
.
shot of a moving target," the
MIDDLEPORT
•
Ame(ICan
authors said. "But metro areas are Hall.
. Legion Fee.ney Bennett11'0st11128
dynamiC and won't always sit still
wiD have a Halloween pany from 6
for their statistical portraits.
·
to
I0 p.m. at Sleepy Hollow.
HARRISONVILLE • Har"With so much in life that's
changeable, you'd be wise to sup- risonville Senior Citizens Club will
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
plement this book with your own hold i.ts regular meeting at 7 p.m. at Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
the town house. All members are
independent verifiCBtion."
encouraged
to allend. Snacks will will hold a rush party at the home
Many high-ranking metro areas
of Eleanor Thomas on Lincoln Hill.
be
served.
have c.ombinalions of superior and
Members are to be" there at 7 p.m.
dismal rankings in the almanac's
to welcome guests at 7:30p.m.
RACINE
There
will
be
a
choir
10 factors, the authors said.
Four years ago, the ·'Places booster meeting at 7:30p.m. in the
- There will be a
Raled Almanac" listed Pine Bluff, Southern High School music room. freePOMEROY
clothing
day
at The 'Salvation
Ark., last and Seallle fust out of a
Army
from
10
a.m.
to noon. All"
WEDNESDAY
list of 333 metropolitan cities.
residents
in
need
of clothing
area
"New York City is the classic
are
welcome.
MIDDLEPORT
•
The
American
example of an uneven perfor mance," the almanac said. It fin - Legion Feeney Bennell Post 11128
POMEROY - Pomeroy group of
ished among the top 10 in trans· and Ladies Auxiliary wil meet at
the
annex.
The
auxiliary
will
serve
AA
and At-Anon will meet at 7
portation, health care, the arts and
p.m.
at Sacred Heart Church. For
dinner
to
members
at
6
p.m.
The
options for higher education.
more
information call 992-5763.
meeting
will
follow
at
7:30p.m.
But New York's poor showings
All
members,
auxiliary,
juniors
and
in cost of Jiving, jobs and crime
·
PARKERSBURG· Riverview
could " for many people, cancel out SAL members invited.
Garden
Club members ,will eai out
this super-city's finer points," the
Wildwood
Garden
RACINE
at
the
Point
of View Restaurant for
Almanac said. Hence, New Yolit's
Club
will
meet
at
7:30
at
the
home
their
meeting.
Members are to meet
ranking at 105th overall.
of
Evelyn
Hollon.
at the Whitehead home at 5;30 p.m.
"There isn't an ideal haven in
North America," says the almanac.
TMURSDAY
RACfNE • Glenna Riebel, RN,
But this year's closest thing is
will
be having a free immunization
home to the Bengals footbaU team,
TUPPERS
PLAINS
Tuppers
clinic
at the Racine Fire Departthe Reds of baseball and a comPI
ai
ns
Post
905
3
of
lhe
Veterans
of
mem
from
I to 3 p.m. for children
memoration of the past in the form
ign
Wars
will
meet
at
7:30
Fore
ages
2
months
to kindergarten age.
of 3-foot, bronze flying pig sculpp.m
.
at post home. All members Parents must bring child's i,mmutures.
urged to aucnd.
nizalion record.

NEW YORK (AP) - A former
meat·packing mecca that immortalized its past with sculptures of flying pigs at a riverfront park rops a
list of North America's best cities.
Cincinnati's family atmo~here,
fiscal conservativism and ' fairly
comfortable" race relations boosted it to the top of the new "Places
Rated Almanac," said Mayor
Dwight TiUery.
Residents, because they are so
modest, wiU receive the good news
" with a rather reserved surprise,"
Tillery boasled.
The almanac, pQblished every
four years since 1981 by Prentice
Hall, rated the cities in 10 categories, then combined the scores.
And where there is a .best, there
inevitably is a worst.
Yuba City, Calif., ranked last
among 343 metropolitan areas in
the list issued Monday.
Bill Fuller, assistant manager in
the city 50 miles northeast of
Sacrarnenro, took the news stoically, again. The city has ranked poor·
ly before.
This time, said Fuller, " We will
look at the points where we were
deficient and take advantage of iL''
But the gulf between Cincinatti
and Yuba City may not be as great
as it seems.
'"Places Rated' is like a snap-

Bill's n ..

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Pomeroy
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CUSTOM SADDLES,
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Chester, Oh. 45720
985·3406
3/8l1ln

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1 ••

. . . ..
•

Palgl . 8 The

'•

Ohio

Sentinel
BEATFIE BLVDJM by Bruce Beattie

31 Hom I I for Sail
Zacwj .....,41t*tiMI,FUI

••• ..,.., .. GNunll Pool 112

AfN Loi,•1W-.

42 . Mobile Homes
fOr Rlnl

-.- -...

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wript

NEA Cro .. word
Pu••••
.
'

iflliiOJ 411 110 ot Poitoir,
~
,....m
·z ladroont UnlurNat...r; 1111
2 IR

....

ZIJ00111-1Mih011 .... AI Clly Ulllllt.o,
131,100 l'trm, l'lnoi!ce, Col
Larry, 114-441-1117.
Clown Clly, ....... .,.,... •
Ani,..
Sbr. - . $15,0110 - . 31)4. R6fllt11 en.
tMOtNowm.ber,~ 11120.
4111-1721.
U.C.
J b J OOiil Irick homo, I 11:1 I btd"'Offt,
bMh,
b R ..., , lion, Prtnlo Y..,., lllltlo:...,
Wllor Pold 814....._1051.
hoot IIIII olr Z oar

No,....
corrt.....

ftnl.....

..,..., ..._ nntal-.ittaad •
i1loo lovol lol. l'or opt&gt;!. ,,.._
~

o-

~52e.

--·hOok- ......

"~...,-=
liiiOke .
"·'.._.
•Mille

"'····

I,

a ltdrooN, 011 ~.....

5011olher-ol·

NOilTII

-~=·-

......

• .ut''Q

1o oH ochoolo.

EotoiO ol KonnJ CoeM ::bll~
l&gt;ouooo, 2 ... · 4
ol loaolhor. Locollon: L.M.fo1 Sl.
I OIIW:r St., llldcllopo;t, Ohio.
304-t'IM113.

IOund

u--1111

PHILLIP
ALDER

· ir OWIIOf, high SO'o In IliuM
EaKion.

,,.n.ntloft.
......

.EEK~NDMEEK
'

Hllulltlng
toll:ider

+JttU

'

Zbf. 1roillor, AI. Ill. SOUli-

55 lll:ll8llon

.o\IIH
to\J

JJQI.

'TR:X.l!l£. 15
1 CHJ'TM~

Zbf. troller, _
... 2ml. Havon In tlounlry. :104-71111111.

1111a••nt

ea Cornedlon -

•u
.7 ..
EAST

SMALL iALK

83~

84 Dutchtown

tltQIOt
+o\117

DOWJII

1100'1'11
+JIOUU
.Q ..

2 Ulld IIVIIIJiy

+st

3 Arcllltect 8ur1Mn

I Aultlor VICtor

tu

VuiDerable: Botb

Dealer: Norlb

BARNEY
:WE FINALLY GOT
. OUR NEW PUPPY
· HOUSE BROKE,
LOWEEZY!!

()peniDc lead:

DON'T GIT
BRAGGY
WITH ME!!

+Q

Knavish
or childish?
IIY~Alder

I GOT A ''C,' AN ''A,"
AN ''R.'' AND A ''D"!
•• NOT .TOO BAD, ~UH , MARCIE

Normally, you wiD a trick wllb the
cheapeal can! poalble. But OCCUIODally~ pays a poor premium u In loday'a deal.
.\pinal four spades, West led the
club,-. Declarer could see at 1eut
. four a.en: ooe beart, one diamond
aad two clubt. Yet If lbe defeaden
dlcln't attack dlamoacll, maybe be
could establllb dummy's hJai
for a
dllcard. ADd Soalb
tbat
After be bad called for a
low
dummy,

TI-IAT'S ''CARD." SIR ...
IT SA'&lt;5 ''REPORT CARD''

AM Y.... SOioo SO Pold In
- - - . Doocllno: 1:110p:n tho
., -

:-;-·,· .. - West
CGDtlnued
'"" more rouac1s
elubl, wileD a
switch at trick
three couldn't COil
South ruffed and ml&amp;bt bave tried

......... 10 ""'·

&amp;lilclor odllton- 1:0Gp:n Frl:lor.
lilondOJ ....... 'IO:DOo.m.

_,.

Pl. Pleasant
&amp; VICinHy
s-..1 S1. Clllon Oct. 2&amp;.0fl

t:Oo.J:OO.·a..;:; 20~ a rJ,rri iii'

l:lqcloo, ........... •lolhln9.
o1oct. 1nn0 - · mocoroyclo.
- . ..... 1-2.

8

SO/f,Y, BVT IT APPfAitS YOU

GSNSALOGY

wf,f fltVNfl&gt;
F,OM T~f

SSRVICS

PUblic Sale
&amp; Auction

fA~ILY Ttt~.

1110 -

CR 2110 A, 114ot12'
::

~·ft•llpm.

..- . ...,.....
.....
Wantedlo Buy

9

,.

AntiqUII 8ncl ned twnlhn, no
11... too llrp or too email, wNI

....,
hot

-.

'Juld, cal

OtbW

Martin,

."' .

• •

' ..

• •

:BORN LOSER

r - - 7'""""" 1-JE:t.L &amp;: ..
:&gt;TUDYI~~

LIFE, (.L~~ ...
SALES

--~-

c.AA

~'lOt-I(

OCFI~
i!&gt;IIJN..V€~?

IT':&gt; WAAT '{fJ.J"''
t--f.f#: ...... rYl lO ~€ -mE
1t.F\I\ ... 'roi:JIQIO\ol,

OO'Wim.

.

Ill lmrne&lt;llate beart ln-. laltead,
be drew two I'OWida of trumpl aad,
kaowla&amp; bla pereeatage plays, played
a low beart to bla nille.
U West bad 'IIIQII with lbe jack and
awitcbed to a dlamoad, declarer woold
bave woa wllb dummy's ace, ruffed
tbe club king to aet blck to bud and
fllleaed West·for lbe beart king. With
tbat flnMM working, declarer's ella·
mond loeer would have disappeared oa
lbe beart five.
Ho__., West saw tllat CllllliDg. He
aot with lbe beart jack but with
lbekJJw.
Now, after wiDDlng lbe diamond
switch In lbe dummy, declarw c:OIIfl·
denUy ptayed a beart to bla elcht.
lmallne bla IIW'pl'ille wileD West unes, l
pecteclly IIIOduced the jKk. A dla·
IDCIIId to Eat's queen defeated lbe
CGDtract.
Samuel JoluiiOD wrote tbat aU
trlcb are either knavlab or childish
Thil wu a kna¥iah trick perpetrated
bya lliall.

Oct. 26, 1993

----......
f.1r.:1 u l":i lll.lf.t

--.......
--...
.....................': . .

Top -

- : AI Old U.S.

wXirilii: : t - - . ... ,..

---Oot.JOIII.

E"lp'oymert
11

'IIIIS.

HllpWinlld

A-lAI_

I_.,.

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

W.ntlna to rwnl·l• 211ad&amp;...,r
l&gt;ouoo, ln _
..... ~ ......

A_.AI _ _ _
.,....., or w.N 1 Clf'llr, ....,
j Q Dll lllll'Wft. 301 112 21141
ar 1100 Ill all.

lion,..-... . . - - . . ...
IIU4421, h no j&gt;loioo

1.1 erc n.md 1se

51

........
__ ,__"-_

IITin -

llrr.c: . •s

wllh Z1
~ grotiL
ltOO.OoOIO.I'M 411

·~'='=···

'Ill Do\Y lAIII AI CASH
OR IIENT.:I.QWII (NO DIPQIII)
OUTUII
PUJII•I•I~at•

__ __

RENOT&amp;.~9M1Q.I.

\

S041114-441-..,.

J:i. Two 'VNN Old,

~

· 311,100
llollor,1110
-JD 440 c11::np,
11nn1 ,.,
111-,.1110 oftwlpm.

63

LiveStock

,.......,,..,.__;~;.,;:.;;.;...,,....~

--~--

Serv1crs

11111 112 ............. $4110 ......

Nloo -

j

•

· ~-"l.olhor

Cool -14,110,

81

~- PMo .L!rllntl

Home

l!nprov~manta

Choir, Qood Sh-

. .; ... 2411441.

.

Old lloollna 81oto SIIOolo
11"d4" To • l*d l'or Polftl.
~~~ fi.DO Eoch, . . .

QonJo::- - · · t12f,QO

Tr Jns port a!· an
TRO·GRAPH

Rentals

... -.old;

-

41 HOUSII for Renl

...... - . :wl. ...........

IOWlMPIII.

0.

,......................
.
::poporll'aublild ..

a few pennies spent here

comes back ~Qiding money

INo ...
.. -

11a

-

r

'

~. 2 .-'ll-2tZI.

· 1

tilL 21 • •

........
,.....
Pill!·..~
Wll bUild·""'
'" _
=:'
....
...........

...

82

--....................

- on._-· ilillllllol'i

WANT
·ADS .............................
WORK!
~otonyliWIIIOftiO

........_.orclli ,,.........

TIIIIMWI!IIPOI . . ""'
,...~

- ·Our
l i_
i-o
l l.w
low.
_
_,

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

"' 1u:ll-

PIUIIII)Ing &amp;

I

torot

••esad..,..lld' • •

..... Ulnftl

newspaper, P.O. Box 4465, New Yol1&lt;, N.Y.' qu1el way ·loday you'll be twiCe as effective
10163. Be sure 10 state your zodac sign.
as associates who are more show than go.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·0.C. 21) Familiar SubslanCe counls,lacades mean nolhing.
laces and cuslomarv routines might tJore GEMINI (Mar 21·Juno 20) A cha nce
you lo Iears loday. That's why you may look encounter mighl bring you into contactloday
lor a new playgroond with new playmales. ' w~h someone you recenlly mel. Each will be
CAPRICORN (O.C. 22..Jan. It) 11 you're eago: lo gollo know lho Olhef better.
.
feeling a bit high 811\lng today. dOn't lake 11 CA!ICER (Junt 21..July 22) Even lh.ough
out on Innocent family members. They're not you may lnnalely weloome assistance from
responsible lor your emolionalaurgos.
others today you'll fare better opera11ng as .
AQUARIUS (Jan. »hb. 18) Your mental lnd::ptlncjenlly l:om a~les,as possible.
faculties a:e your. mosl prominent aasela LEO (July :P.Aug. 22) Oll:enl _,., be left
WoclnHCiay, Oct 27, 1903
today. Vou 'sl!ould do except~ well In ~I)Q· a• lo whlfe you tlcind on critical,.
P~rsons you'Ve helped in lha paat will try 10 sliuallor:s ,thli empllaall c:om:)lunicalion iind luuei ~ . You're notlf)t to be bashlul ,
about eiqnlting Slrong opinlono.
even accouniSin the yaar ahead. However, illoat.
PISCES
(ftll.
20
Milch
20)
Make
material
VIRGO (Aug. 23 8opl 22) Oon't be dtpen·
y~ur biggest opportun llles might come
goals
your
p~nclple
largels
loday.
Your
denl
·UPon an~ IO&lt; lif!ancial assisllnca
lflrough individuals yo•!'ve never aided.
S!;ORPIO .(OCt. 24-No:i. 22) Vou hava \he chart""""" lhla Is whore you:re ikely to be' today. Eoli:] ~who UlUIIIy trill you ; , .
abiily today to·locus yopr mf111lal a,rld physl· lhe maitauCo::ootU. Given a·I!Y.,
1 , . . generqusty miQ~I aua~h llrlnge to lhei:
'eal•lorcea· on•an objlctive other$ might find AIIIEI (Mircll 21..,.111 11) iio1dneoi and rllj)OR8e.
10 be' LIIIIA (..pl. U·Oct, 23) Quard a111lnat
I'll! difficult' lo aHem pl. Scorpio, 11111 your· · -rminat!On Cli! make you a
ei.Q 1o ~ birlhday gift. Send lot your Altro- reckoned wllh Ieday. Whtn yoUr mind IS . lncllnallor:o to lry to dominate coint&gt;;:nlona
!lrlrph predict1ona for lht year ahead by ' locktd 1n on an obltciiVe, achlavoment 11 · tpdayl Your be~ivlor could bo more
"
·•
aaMrtlve and overpowellng llll!n uau11 at
ma\ling $1 .2'5 and 1 'lollQ, aell·addreastcl·, • lndicaltd.
slamped envelope to Aliro-Graph , clo this TAUII!JS (April 20.Mar 20) In your own · this lime.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

~olr-.lvtl.

lor h

IIQIONn,
laJ Loll
1111 · ot··
~No
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TO DAY'S QUOTE: "I'm jusl slartin' ' those (jerks) I~ Beverly Hills, where
to make it. I only own a HQnda. And ·after 30 minutes you 're still tlrivin' in
I have one lady who comes to clean 1the guy's driveway." - Bob Hoskins
in the mornings. But I'll never be like

$10,10o, ,,.._

-~117.

.., . . . . . ·q·p:tf•ericl.
a

~.

1171 Clio¥.

l!t1088- ..........
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Ph!l DopOoll, ' Haw
Ref1f11111. No Plett, Itt 441
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "When the NHL Hnally expands to thirty-one
IIMio, wiM Bukln-Robblna be the official sponsor?" - KOY!n Paul
Dupont.

_,._,._~-~-;~_'_S_@...;..~~~~-:~trs·

....

WOlD

0 four
Rearrange ittters of
tcromb'-d words
low to fortn four words

I

I
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r 1 I' I 1
HOLDE

,_:1-,;:t...:....l--1 .

I;-,.-,

"

argued
. • over son
amount ofhad
allowance
5
he was getting. Granny knows
. . .
a great way to teach kids the
.------,,...-----. value of a dollar. She says all
....,.H::-G-rL....,.t_E::.,..,.N......,.---11 ~ou ~~ve to do is just give ....
.

r

7

I I

18

I

1--'·'--'·--'---'----l
...-'-·

8

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•

0

C omplete the chuclr:le quoted
bv t.llu'lg in the miss1ng WOF&lt;ts
you deYelop from step No 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE FORI
ANSWER

SCJtAM.UTS ANSWIIS

Hazard - Venom • Exist· Turkey- STEAMED
My husband tried to stir up an old argument that 1
thought had been settled weeks before. I've concluded
that there's nothing like a cooling off period to get people
all STEAMED up.

OCTOBER 261
114 11131!1

.._

IDEOT

E 0

RJVD

E II

'

.....,
~
Clolhoo llu1y
Drwr, -10 .,., .

loci
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f!oooi.TTeRIE!e IN O!R"TV

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F., loOt Roold:ig Cltolr Ill;

.....

....... -

YEeil EROA.Y 1-15 PUT' NEW

Tried Doolin P1111 f01114 ...

HOUIIhOid

Goodl

&lt;'

WELL,11 EP k Jt.r:m.IER
eu:cT1CN !)6.Y COMING&lt;
UP ~ETT'( eooN.

For Solo: . . _ Alg- Loolhor .
Cool 10, Ul:o 130,
-:~ . c-.

Srrv1ces

.,_, toull--

MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

For SOlo: ~ Oolkin Fuol. 011
Tonllt2$,-:t1441H147.
For Solo: Alleo WNotllna 8,_
SilO 12 1IZ ......, 120, 114-441-

CoN. ..T.l. Coin ll:op,

-

Today is the 299th ·'
.' '
doy of 1993 and the
&lt;'
35th day offall.
,.,
TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1825, the Erie Canal opened to traffic
between Lake Erie and the Hudson
River.'
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Primo Cam·
era (1906-1967), boxing great; Mahalia
Jackson U911 ·1972l, singer; Francois
Mltterrand (1916-l, French politician.
is 77; Bob Hoskins (1942-l, actor, is 51 :

'KUDZD

h~

II

lo

�Ohio Lottery

Bartrum

Pick 3:
334
Pick 4:
2951
Buckeye 5:
1-12-14-18-19

signs with
Chiefs
-Page 6

•

•

at
Vol. 4f, NO. 121

1.- fiiiiJ&amp;bt Ill 30s. Portly
clooody, Thulllloy, ouuy, high
I~ low·50o.

3 SJ: . . w.24 ...... 35oent.
A IL-oilo Inc. .._,.,...

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, October 27, 1993

Muhlmedolno.

State officials (our streams affected by mine discharge
Air Conditioning, cruise, automatic,
Air Conditioning, AMIFM
cassette, loaded!

AMIFM cassette

$13,99·5

$8495

$9537

94 TOYOTA COROLLA

93 OLDS CIERA

.GL

..
Driver's side air bag, V6,
loaded wlth equipment

"utomatlc, air, driver's side
air bag, power tacks, loadad.!

$13,995
94 CADILLAC SEDAN DeVILLE

$12,995
TOYOTA CAMRY LE

94 FORD TAURUS

/'9/~· ~~~
a..,.... _JL_.l_)

-

i

By JIM FREEMAN
·
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
Ohio EPA Director Donald R.
Schregardus and other state offi·
cials visited Leading Creek, Rae·
coon Creek and their uibutaries
Tuesday to inspect recovecy of the
slreams and restoration effons in
the wake of Southern Ohio Coal
Company's efforts to restore the
flooded Meigs Mine 31.
Water from the mine, which was
flooded by an estimated one billion
gallons of water from an adjoining
mine on July 11 was pumped into
the creeks.
'
"Restoration and natural recov·
ery are well underway. Fish and
other organisms are beginning to
come back to Leadin~ Creek and

any pockets of iron sludge are
being removed." Schregardus said.

Accqm_pan~·~~ Scbreg~r~us

Water in the sueams, which
resembled .tomato soup shortly
af~r pumpmg started, was once
agamclear. .
.
Dave Wnght, SOCCO en-:uon·
ment and land !'lanage~, pomted
out that wa~r ·~ Leadmg Creek
was .dark. at thts urn~ of year due to
tanruc .ac•d from .falling leaves.
Wnght explat~ that about 50
perc~nt of the ftsh spectes that
mhabtt the creeks are ~gmnmg to
re~urn. T~e other spectes ~hould
mt~rate u~to the. streams ·~ the
s.prmg dunng thelt annual mtgrauon, he S81d,
.
The CO".'pany has halted feedmg
and watermg of cattle along the

were ~ubhc Uuhues ~ommtsst~n
of Obto (PUCO) Chrurman Crrug
A. Glazer and Department of
Industrial Relations Director John
P. Stozich.
"We appreciated the opponunity
to show Director Schregardus the
suearns as they~ today fo~lowmg
the release of mme water thts sum·
mer," said co?lpany spokeso:voman
B.J. Smuh. 'He was ,?bv10usly
pleased by what he saw.
The digniUJties toured several
several sites in Gallia and Meigs
counties including Sugar Run,
Strongs Run, Parker Run and Lead· aff~ted w~terways.
ing Creek.
We S81d there would be tempo-

Loaded wllh equipment
"Ovor 40 Toyota Avoltoblo"

$31,9.95

$17,495

Dual air bags, V6,
automatic, air, loaded!

$15 ' 995
.

93 FOliO E•150 CONVERSIINS

fioDQ\~-:t
FROM

$14,495

$8995

$13,99~

deposition in the sueam and no
physical cleanup is needed.
_ Leading Creek above the
confluence of Parker Run bad a
depressed pH and elevated iron
levels. Work in this area to reduce
the iron levels and raise the pH has
been completed.
_ Water quality in Leading
Creek from Parker Run to the Ohio
River i; good. There are limited
iron sludge deposits along the
creek. Where pockets of sludge '!lC
round, they are being removed w•th
a vacuum truck.

Plan won.'t
be available
until1998
WASHINGTON (AP) - Fiv~
weeks after he fust pledged health
security for all, President Clinton is
releasing a retooled version of his
plan that puts off his goal of universal coverage by one year and
offers significant concessions to his
critics.
Bowing to the politic,.,alii rea1
tonity of
the long debate~.... 11
by startof
And trying to balance compel·
ing demands for more generous
health coverage against ·Calls for
tighter cost controls, Clinton is
proposing to ex11and benefits in
some areas whtle slowing the
phase-in of others. He also has
agreed to cap subsidies for small
businesses and low-income workers.
The president and his wife and
adviser, Hillary Rodham Clinton,
were delivering their 1,300-page
Health Security Plan to Cal'itol Hill
today and traveling to Balumore on
Thursday to promote it at Johns ·
Hopkins University.
' We cherish- and we will
never surrender - our right to
c;lloose who ueats us and how we
get our health care," Clinton said
in a leiter to Americans that accom·
panies the bill. "But today our
health care is badly broken."
On the eve of the plan's debut,
Mrs. Clinton confidently predicted
that Americans would be reassured
by what they see.
The latest version contains con·
cessions designed to win over dis·
affected legislators, wary Ameri·
cans and critical special interest
groups put off by what he unveiled
in September.

COMMENDING RESCUE TEAM - John
P. Stozith, director of the Ohio Department or
Industrial Relatioas, commended Eric Gryszka, ·
captain of the Melgs Mine 31 rescue team dur:
ing a visit to Melp and Gallla counties Tuesday.

ri.

.. ·-·:

~·

Here, Stozich, right, talks with Gryszka during a
brief ceremony at the offices of the Southern
Ohio Coal Company while other members or the
mine rescue team look on. (Sentinel photo by
Jim Freeman)

l lO \I FS II (' \ IOU· '\( 1·. \\\ \IU'\1 SS \10'\ Ill

Growing number of domestic cases
jeopardize police, perplex courts

By JAMES LONG and JIM FREEMAN
OVP News Starr
Late on a Tuesday afternoon a disrurbed Third Avenue resident calls the Gallipolis Police Department to repon
an altercation taking place on the sidewalk in front of his home. A man is beating a woman, he says. Shouts·and
screams pierce the neighborhood three blocks away as two officers walk briskly to separate cars and speed to the
scene.
.
Gallipolis Police Chief Roger Brandeberry and Patrol Officer Milce Fulks communicate by radio over the shon
distance to time their arrival together. They are taking this very senously.
•
As they pull to the curb where a man and woman are still arguing, a look of annoyance crosses Brandeberry s
face. "I know this one," he says getting out of the car, as if he had ~ted the man befo~.
Police question the CD!IPle. Two drivers slow on Third Avenue to pomt out the man,obv1ously angered by what
they witnessed a few blocks down. "I saw him hit her five or six times," one of them says. The accused shouts back
Ord~rsfor
asking how many times the woman hit him.
.
·
Because they notice that they have heel) drinking, officers will take ~ couple back to the Slallon to be released
separately to the care or more sober relatives or friends. Each wiD be tssued a summons to appear mcoun for
disturbing the peace.
As they are stepping down the bank toward the patrol car. the man tells the woman to shut up. Tears cause the
bruise under her eye to glare out for an instant as she ducks to enter the car. Bu! as offiCCI'S confer oulSlde the car,
WASHINGTON (AP)
the couple in the hackseatembraces-theman holding the woman's head on htsshoulderandsmoothmgthehair .
Orders to U.S. factories for durable
from her moist face.
goods rose 0.7 pen:ent in Septem"This," Brandeberry says, "is a textbook example."
ber, the third advance in four
---------------------------months. the govmment said today.
Gallia and Meigs County authorities agree that 00. dismiss charges they filed in the midst of a beating. A
All major industry groups except
mestic violence is·the most perplexing and dangerous member of the household who has been victimized can
transponation posted gains. . .
of the complaints they receive. Meigs Counry Sheriff immediately fde charges by signing a statement in the
·orZ:: ~~~::~ =•~enf~~
JamesM.Soulsbyestimatedthat !Open:entofthecalls presence of an officer. Abusen are then jailed or re•
mputers
ex.his office receives concern domestic problems.
leased on own recognizance.
1
Such as Cars and CO
And all too often they put officers on unceruiin and
"I've seen women come in here with black eyes and
ed .10 last more than three yean'te
'tory
bruisesallovertheirbodyandthey've
leo
totaled a seasonally adjusted
unwe me m .
iUioh,
up
from
$131
.9
bil·
'The
reason
is
that
we
almost
come
in to drop the charges on their
$ 132.8 b
husbands,"Brandeberrysaid.
al
I 0 ffi ders on
lion in August
ways encoun er en
Economists had expected a 0.3
their home turf," Brandeberry
They just want the hitting to stop,
''Th .. kno here
Soulsby explained
lained.
percent advance in orders, a: 1\ey
exp
· ey ww
ev·
· DOl(. .!VIJ'Ill~
'
barometer of manufacturing aclivi·
ecy buicher knife is, where every
117'1:7:n'.l:co - -"V
According to Municipal Coun
·
baseball bal is."
Judge WiUiam S. Medley, this hapty.
70
fthe tim
and il
The Augilsl increase also was .
"Domestic violence calls are
VfQJ ,ENCE
pens perc~~"R di:;;;-ma for
larger than ..first thought. It was / someofthemo&amp;tdangerouscalls
presents a uuouauug
revl·sed to 2.6 perc.ent from the
om--- are reqr,oo
· to respond
law enforcement offiCials.
·
-·
•
origina12percentgam.
.
IO,"Soulsbysai .
IN -OlJK
Forhispart,MedleysaidheUICsto
But the backlog of unfilled
Adreilaline levels soar in these
counlft the tendency by requiring
si~tions. The eqraged l)atterer
parties to go through a hearing in
orders continued to. f~l. down I
J)etcen.t lO $428.8 bilhon, \OWCSt
!!Uiyevenfeelthrealencd,Cnollgh
ordetto$opthecbarges.
level &amp;lnce June 1988 811.d the sevto turn on police in !)(del' tO de. "People~ toknowthatthecowt
e~'t~ut\'= are a measure of · f~ the home. •' .
,
llkcsa~standthatoooneshould
whether current production facili·
If a h~ban~ ~YCS yo~ ·ie .
.
berne·~bcrllmor,~!bt.~~~:·~~
ties IIJ)d manpower are able 10 keep
threatenmg h1s w1fe he mtghl
·
...-· with demand. When they fall, 11
jump all over you; back,~ Branclebeny ~d:
not necessaiily there to punish but to help people work
:~ no.!ICCd for large!' 'pro&lt;luc·
But w~en emotions and tempers cool, v~eums often
·
Coritlaued oa ~ 3 ·
tionlinesorinllreaSedemploymenL

durable goods
up 0.7 percent

FORl'&gt; LINCOLN·MERCURY LOCATJON

GM·TOYOTA LOCATION
WAS

WAS

NOW

90 IIIIIs 98Rqlncy Bnughlm ...... $13,995 $12,88&amp;
12'Sitlnl SL 2 Sldln ... .... . .... .$12,995 St1,885

10 Ttylll i:lftry LE, V6 ..... ..... $11 ,995 $10,885
PllltiiC Sllllllnls ... .... ..... ... $10,995
13 Olds Cutllu Sllfllme .... : . ..... $16,995
93 Olds 111111 18 •... ... .. .•...... $17,995
P111111c lrllld Prl1 LE .. .. . . ..... $15,995
13 CI.IC Sldln De VIe ... . ... ... $26,995
91 ACIIII L. . LS .. ..... ....... $26,995

r.HIC LIMIRS SE .. .. .. .. .. . ..
..ICilY ca,~; one owner . . . . . .
~ T1111111 GL . •. . . . . . . . . . . . . .
MarCIIy 81111d Mq1is . .. .. .. . ..

...... Slrlin " .... .. " ... :...
01a
Ctllllu Supreme .. .. .. .. .. .
•

u tiiH Clln . " . . .......... " " .
17 Ill CitY :flfU ......... . . .... ..

II fM Escort W~ge~~ . .. . .. . . .. .. .

$6995
$4495
$9995
$6995 .
$4995
$6995
$5995
$3995
$2995

NOW

.$5885
$3488
$8888
$8888
$3888
$5881S
$4885
$2885
sn~85

TRUCKS AND VANS
WAS

10 SIC Saflrl Collvertun Yen .... .. $12,995
II Qery C·20 414 Pickup .. .. .. .. .. $7995
·. - ~ _C.10J'Ict.,, automatic ... $6995
"Qt!y liar, full ,size 4x4 ..... $8995
U fM c..wtnloll Vlft .. .. .. . . . . .. $8495
86 ~· Cimillln V1n . . . . . . . . . . . . $6995
IH:Iievy 1·11 Pickup, 7000 miles .$10,495
~ Fin! f·1sG 412.. . " ..... " " .. $3995
'Units·subiec1 to prior 11te and credit appro-.,al.
All prieta ineluoe appllclble reb~lltS ana incentives.

A

comprehensive

sueam

reSIIlfati~ plan must be submitte_d

to the Ohio EPA by Nov. 23. This
will_inc.lude a plan for long-term
monu.onng to m~ the succ.:ss
of stteam resunt~on and detammc
if any additional steps are neccssary.
The Ohio EPA issued orders on
July 26 allowing SOCCO to dis·
c~arg~ water from the flooded
mme mto d!c streams. Under the
order~, Ohto EPA allow.ed the
pumpmg to proceed wtth the
Continued on page 3
·

Meigs board discusses·
'buy local' proposal
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
chan is feel the program could
Sentinel News Starr
increase traffiC in their SUJres.
The discussion of school pur·
Merchants have had two meetchases from local businesses which ings with the Meigs Local Board
suppon the schools through contri· and plans are being made for
bu uons was continued at a meeting another meeting to further the "buy
of the Meigs Local Board of Edu· local"
cation Tuesday night at Meigs
"W at we want to do," said
Junior High School.
Rope, is to get the "large majoriry
·d
of purchases now being made out
Larry Rupe, board pres• ent, of counry, back to the local busi·
reponed that more than $100,000 a
year is going out of the county to ~~~ which suppon the schools
purchase school supplies and materials which may be available at a
It was stressed that if the "buy
competitive price locally.
local" prognun ~to~ the sup"We need to come up with a phes and _malerials wtU have to be
method· to allow that money to stay made available.
.
in the communi'};." said Rupe. He
A lenet from Bob Gilmore, who
listed ·:ch.~fi..~ ~a.Hi!UJg~!L - was ~!.e to_~'\t¥ read. In
obs!SCie lli overcoii1e"Tn1Jie "l!uy lfuinetlli Gilmore potnted out the
local" proposal.
imp~rtance of supporting those
Principals from several of the busmesses !'ho support th.e
schools in the district were present schools. ~ llll;'d that all _local bust·
at the meeting to have input into ness IS asking IS for the nght to btd,
suggestions from the board and to have the opponunlly to make the
merchants.
sale.
Tom Dooley 'of the Middlepon
In other business, the board
Deparunent Store asked that local changes its November meetings to
merchants be given a list of sup· Nov .. l6 and 30. .
plies which schools purchase so
Hired as subsututes were Penny
that they can have a chance to L. Burge and Mila Raymond, both
make the sale if the price is com· cenified in cosmetology, Gloria
petitive.
Van !teeth as a tutor for Angela
One principal talked about the McKinney for five hours a weelc at
"good deals" from the out-of-coun· $11.72 per hour, and Carolyn
ty promoters, the "motivators" Nicholson~ a substitute aide. .
which are given and how "well
The restgnauon of. Pauhne
organized" those companies arc Snowden .as a bus dnver was
when they come in to start up a accCJ?ted wtth regret. The effecuve
fund raising program.
date IS Oct. 29.
.
The board adopted .a JOb
Dooley's contention was that
local businesses could develop pro- descnpuon for a teacher atde for
grams and that since local mer· severe behavmr handtcapped class
chants support the schools, they and an adminisuative assistant.
should be given the opponunity for VICA officers were granted per·
business from the schools.
mtsston to go to Columbus, Oct.
As for how to get a list of sup- 27-28 for. a training session, and
plies and materials purchased by the a.th~euc dtrector was g.rantcd
the schools. Treasurer Jane Fry said permtsston to.
a commtttee to
that she can compile a list.
develop an athletic handbook.
Dooley also proposed a certifi·
. The board also passed a resolucate program which he said would ll'?n to allow for transportatiOn
promote business for local mer· ret'!'bursement for post-secondary
chants as well as give the schools a opuons shldents.
.
source of income.
Attending were Supt. BtU BuckCustomers in the particil,lating ley. Treasurer Fry . and Board
stores would be given a cerulicate members,
Rupe,
Randy
for cash based on a percentage of Humphreys, Roger Abbott, Jon
the purchase. That certificate could Hood, and Bob Banon who had
then be redeemed by the school for prayer to open the meeting.
cash. Dooley said some of the mer-

ra:gram. .

_,

Loaded with equipment,
Como Choctc Tho Now Body Stylo

rary effects on the streams and they
~ere just that - temporary. With a
httle help to speed up the recovery,
the streams are n~w natur~lly
restonng themselv~s, S'!'uh satd.
Company offictals said fish and
other organisms in Racc~n Creek
were not affected by the discharge.
More than 100 2,500-gallon
truck loads of iron sludge. have
been removed fro~ trtbutanes of
Raccoon Creek usmg a va~uum
tru~~· company offtcillls satd. In
additiOn, several truck loads of ~on
siudge were removed from Leading
Creek. .
.
According to the Oh10 EPA:
.-Parker Run has clear water
wtth normal levels of •ron and a
normal pH level. There was no 1t0n

L----------.. . --..,.-----------:-:------'
~

tm:m

Deer wrecks reported
No injuries were reponed in five
deer-vehicle accidents investigated
recently by deputies of the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department
Michael L. Roush, 31, Hill
Road, Racine, was southbound on
State Route 338 near Racine Sun·
day around 1 a.m. when he struck
and killed a deer that ran into the
roadway. Light drunage was listed
to his 1988 Chevrolet pickup truck.
Sandra Wright, Coolville, was
eastbound on Success Road Mon·
day around 6:50p.m. when she
struck and killed a deer that ran
into the path of her 1975 Dodge
Dart whtch sustained moderate
drunage.
.
Timothy R. Cundiff, Pomeroy,
was suuthbound on State Route 7
Tuesday around 7:0S a.m. when he
.. d .
tb
suuc~ an let1led a deer at ran
intoth'c J?athofhis 1989Ford
thunderbtrd. Damage to the car
was listed as lighL
Joseph Marcinko ll, Reedsville,
was northbound on Limburger
Road Tuesday around 9:50 p.m.
when he sttuck and killed a deer
that ran, into the path of his 1983
Chevrolet Chevette. Moderate
~e was listed to the vehicle.
n Samuel Reitmire, 19,

Mason, W.Va .. was southbound on
State Route 7 just oorth of Success
Road when he swerved to miss a
deer. His 1973 Volkswagen Beetle
flipped and skidded down the road·
way.

Middleport man
cited after crash
A Middleport man W8l cited on
charges of drivin&amp; undet the influence, no operator's license and
hit/skip followinJ a two-car crash
on General Harunger Parkway in
Middleport Friday around 8:32
p.m.
According to repon from the
Middleport Police Department
Jackie R. Barker, 42, pulled
the Blue Tanan parkmg lot and
suuek a vehicle drivtn by Laura L
Jarrett, 65, of Elkview, W.Va.
After the collision, Barker repQttedlr left the llild went 10 .his
residence at 570 S. Second Ave.
where he was COIIIaCted by off'ICCB.
No injuries were reported and
modente ~-listed 10 Jar·
rett'a 1992 Geti IDd Bilker's 1983

rron:

OldsrnobiJe.

.,

. ~

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