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                  <text>Pag1 10-The

Sentinel

Twins celebrate first_birthdays
Megan Danielle Tripp and
Amber Nicole Tripp, daughters of
Rodney and SI8Cy Tripp, TupJXI!S
Plains, celebraled their first birth·
day recenlly.
· A hog roast was given in their
honor at Henderson's farm in
Airred and "101 Dalmations"
theme was carried ouL
Attending were malel1l8l grandparents, Mike and Becky Newell;
maternal great-grandparents, Del·
mar and Betty ~othgeb; paternal
grandparents, Alvin and Barbara
Tripp; paternal great-grandparents,
Fr~ Tripp and Fred and Bertha
smuh; Andrea. Hudson, Troy
Yankuns, Todd and Kelly Tripp
and Ryan:
Others anending were Jayne and
Dakota Collins, Rod, Susan and
Jason Pullins, Cricket Pullins,
Fritz, Phyllis, Christy and Jason

Rothgeb, Debbie, Adam and Abbie
Cbevalier, Larry; Janet and Ashley
Life, Sherman and Robena Henderson, Tom Morrisey, Jay Black·
wood, Donna and Jacob Roach,
Brian and LceAnn King, Bill, Jack·
ie, Mark and Nancy Gaddis and
Hazel Smith and Jack, Lisa and
Kenny Ritchie, Jeff and Sharon
Googley, Wilma and Bim Hcnder·
son, Robert Henderson, Rod, Debbie and Ryan Beegle, FracCll Imboden.
·
Sending gifts were Bob Moore
and Sharon Smith, Ronnie and
Lceann Beegle, Homer and Nancy
Cole, Ralph, Jenny and Jimmy
Parlcer, Tim Stone and Kelly, June
Hudson, Libby, Terry, Todd and
JoBeth Rothgeb, Mary Crossan,
Cheryl Crossan, Pauy Roush and
great-great-grandmother of Bosron,
Ma.

Twenty-two attend Past
Councilors Club meeting
BRANDI DILLON ud DAVID WELLS

Wells-Dillon
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wells, Long Tuppers Plains.
Bottom, announce the engagement
The wedding will be an event of
and approaching marriage of their Sunday at 1:30 p.m. at the Long
son, David Wells. to Brandi Dillon, Bottom Uniled Methodist Church.
daughter of Ginnie Dillon Himel!, A reception will follow.

Beat ofthe Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich
Now isn't that special?
Vice President Dan Quayle has
been nailed to lhe cross for adding
that "e" to potato while visiting
with some students recenlly. His
error-let's face it-one which
many of us might make-even
made it to television's Wheel of
Fortune as one of the puzzles.
While I can't wax any enthusiasm over the fact that Quayle is
only a heartbeat away from being
President, I think be's been taken
pver too many coals for the cnor.
The incident has certainly been
blown out of proportion . Good
spelling doesn' t necessarily make a
good vice president-nor does it
make one healthy, wealthy or even
wise.
I'm told that a resident of the
Middleport area bit it lucky last
Tuesday by selecting the correct
five numbers in the Buckeye Eye
Five Ohio Lottery.
However, my grapevine hasn't
come forth with the name of the
resident who should be $100,000
richer at this point in time. The
ticket, I understand, was purchased
at the Hilltop, located on the
Porneroy-Rulland Road. ·
So let me extend my congratula·
lions to the winner- whoever you
are. Enjoy!
I don' t get as many letters as
Perry Como used to, but I get a few
as well as a smattering of phone
calls which help keep me up on
what's cookin '.
One reader phoned to express
concern about interest charges and
be bas an i~g points. Even
though the prime rate has been
reduced and reduced-that was
supposed to help the ailing economy-it hasn' t really done so and
that, the reader points out, is proba·
bly due to the fact that banks and
other lending institutions have not
reduced interest charges on loans
as drastically as they've reduced
the amount of interest paid on the
money you have on deposit. In
other words, there is too much
range between what you pays and
what you "gits".
Also the credit card interest
rates stay right up there in most
instances-whatever happened to
the action Congress mentioned tak·
ing to force the credit card interest
rates be reduced? Maybe lhe flood
of bad chec.ks got Congressional
members sidetracked. However,
all of those offenses, it turns out,
were not offenses and all is forgiven. Maybe they can get back on

membership fee.
The card features a GM rebate
which can be used towards the pur·
chase of a new General Motors
vehicle-a maximum rebate for
each year is $500. Now that's a
new aptllliiCb.
All of you are invited to an open
house being staged from 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Friday to marie the grand
opening of Continuity of Care
Medical Equipment in its new .
quarters. The fum which obvious·
Iy deals in medical equipment is
now located in one of the new
buildings at the foot of Hiland
'Road--dtis is lhe road that passes
Veterans Memorial Hospital and
the Meigs lnfumary and lakes you
to the Route 1 bypaas.
Personnel of the firm will be
serving refreshments and there will
be door prizes awarded during the
two hour period. And-you'll get
a chance to look over the outfit's
brand new quarters. The address is
33091 Hiland Road.
Can you believe that we're in
the middle of September already?
And isn't the weather terrific! Just
makes you want to keep smiling.

Harrisonville
community news

John and Ann Williams entertained her sister, niece and five
children from Allen Park. Mich .,
last week.
John and Ann Williams enter·
lained her brother and sister-in-law
from Columbus on Saturday.
Louise Eshelman entertained her
three sisters last Wednesday. They
are Virginia Casteel, Columbus;
Mildred Ray, S~ringfield; Doris
Vannatty, Springfield. This was the
first time all four sisters had been
together in 20 years.
Eugene and Ada Dilcher,
Albany, visited Ora Carsey on
Labor Day. Other visitors were
Jack and Laura Sayres, Vero
Beach, Fla. on Sunday afternoon
and her sons, Roger and Terry
Carsey and families over the weekend.
Faye Cotterill spent a month in
Dade City, Fla., caring for her
father, Noah Birchfield, who is in
poor health.
Mr. and Mrs. John Dill, Michigan, spent a week visiting her sister
and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Foley. "Kippy" South accomtnK:k.
panied them home where be spent
By the way, General Motors is three weeks.
now issuing a credit card which
Hazel Stanley entertained the
docs have a little lower interest Circle of Helping Hands of Zion
rate- 16.4- than some and no Church for their August meeting.

The following read poems: Barringer, lnzy Newell and a visi·
Goldie Frederick, "Happiness," tor, Sandra White. ,
from a get-well card that she bad
The Past Councilors Club of
received from Letha Wood, Cbesrer Council No. 323, Daugh·
deceased, years ago; "The Dirty ters of America, met recenlly at the
Open Bucket" by Ethel Orr. "The hall.
First Day of School" by Erma Cle·
lnzy Newell presided and read
land.
from the book of Genesis. The
Hostesses were Betty Roush, Lord's Prayer and Pledge of Aile·
lnzy Newell and Mary Jo Bar- giance to the American Flag were
ringer. They served refreslunents.
given in unison. Members
Games were conducted by Ada answered roll call by telling their
Bissell and Mae McPeek with favorite television program.
Enna Cleland assisting.
Mary Jo Barringer gave the secDoor prizes were won by Char· retary's report and Thelma White
lotte Grant and Sandra White.
gave the treaswer's reporL
Attending were Thelma White,
The October 14 meeting will
Elizabeth Hayes, Opal Hollon , begin at 1 p.m. This time will be
Marcia Keller, Enna Cleland, Mar· lhe new meeting time for lhe winter
garet Amberger, Ella Osborne, months.
Ethel Orr, Lora Damewood,
Mrs. Newell appointed Mary Jo
Pauline Ridenour, Charlotte Grant, Barringer and Jean Frederick to get
Faye Kirkhart, Laura Mae Nice, information from different restau·
Betty Roush, Goldie Frederick, rants for their Christmas supper on
Mary K. Holter, Ada Bissell, Mae Dec. 9.
McPeek, Jean Frederick, Mary Jo
Mary K. Holter spoke briefly
about attending Pribble Nell Wil·
son's funeral at Gallipolis recenlly.
She used to be a member of Gallia
Council No. 114 and was Associa·
lion State Council in 1948.
The Willing Worlcers of the SL
Paul Uniled Methodist Church of
Tuppers Plains met in the church
social room recently.
BOSTON (AP) - During an
The meeting opened with a average lifetime, a man will
scnpture on prophets by .Glenna remove about 27 1/2 feet of
Sanders, presiden~ and a prayer by whiskers from his face through
Evelyn Spencer.
shaving.
Reports were $iven by Mae
According to shaving industry
Vineyard and Patricta Hall.
researchers, it would take an estiThe group will begin quilting mated 3,350 hours to remove the
again and the y!i_ces for quilting for whiskers. And if the man never
1993 wiU be ~ for full sizes with shaved, lhe beard would be almost
$10 extra for each extra size.
30 feet long.
It was decided the group will
Shaving removes about 65 milassist in making puppets for the ligrams of whiskers daily, or about
upcoming puppet mmistry within a pound of hair every 16 years.
the church.
A birthday card was signed for
Edith Harper, the honorary member
of the group. Others celebrating
special days were Sharon Haus·
man, Glenna Sanders, Edna Har·
moo and Mary Jamison.
The group voled to have a bake
and craft sale Nov. 7.
The program participants were
Edna Harmon, God's Love; Doris
Koenig, Life's Problems; Mae
Vineyard, Diary of Unused Bible;
Glenna Sanders, Fall Promises;
Joanna Weaver, God Gives to Us.
Attending were Rev. Hausman,
Glenna Sanders, Patricia Hall, Beu·
lah Zumbach, Doris Koenig, Edna
Harmon, Mae Vineyard, Mary
Jamison, Evelyn Spencer, Mildred
Caldwell, Hazel Barnhill, Terry
Soulsby, Joanna Weaver and a former member and guest, Bulah
Maxey and Tyler Sanders.
The next meeting will be Oct.
13.
The meeting closed with the
regular circle prayer.

Willing Workers
to host bake sale

Close shaves

Contest

winners
were
IIIIIIOUIICed at lhe recent meeting of
Rock Springs Grange.
· Winners were judged at the
Pomona Gl'lllgc meeting and they
are: Elma Louks, first , afghan;
Kathryn Miller, fust, quilt, wall
hinging and decorated sweat shirL
Other winners were Louise Radfcnl, stuffed lOy; Bunny Kuhl, pil·
lowcascs; and William Radford,
wooden lOy.
lbc pgc endorsed the Ohio
~lion for reclamation of abendoncld mines.
Opal Orueser explaine_d the

Vol. 43, No. 101

Copyrighted 1m

'

POMEROY LODGE
164 F&amp;AM
18·HOLE GOLF
SCRAMBLE
SEPT. 19, 1992

.Ohio Enviropmental Protection
Agency (OEPA) Director Donald
R. Schregardus bas stopped the col·
lection of disttict fees by the six·
county solid waste disttict, accord·
ing to a release from Roben Berger
ofOEPA.
Berger told the Pomeroy Daily
Sentinel Tuesday, the order by
Scbregardus had been finalized and
mailed that afternoon by OEPA
officials and the Athens-GalliaHocking-Jackson-Meigs· Vinton
Solid Waste District office in Wellston had been notified.
When dumping waste in a landfiU, the hauler is charged the land-

TEE·OFF 9:00A.M.
BLIND DUWING SEPT. 18
s3500 Per person

fill fee, as well as the additional
cost of a tipping fee. The disttict
wiU no longer receive monies from
the tipping fees.
Since the AGHJMV district
failed to ratify its so~d waste management plan, OEPA will now
write the plan for the district ,
according to the release.
Ohio law requires a solid waste
plan for each disttictto guide waste
reduction efforts and long-term
management of waste. Under
House Bill 592, local officials must
ratify the plan prior to state
approval. If lhe plan is not ratified,
Ohio EPA must prepare the plan,

the release read. At that stage, the
local district loses the ability to collect fees on wastes disposed in
landftlls within the disttict.
It also loses the ability to adopt
rules governing restrictions-on out·
of-state waste, operation of solid
waste facilities, and inspection of
out-of-state wastes, according to
the release.
"The planning process in this
disttict has caused much conuover·
sy, which could not be resolved
locally," said Schregardus. "It is
important for this disttict to operate
under a comprehensive solid waste
management plan, so Ohio EPA

0
00
1st Prize 5200° 2nd Prize s100

Lunch/Awards Following Scramble
All Pro(eeds Go
Toward
Construdion of A
New Lodge
Building in
Pomeroy

lOIN US FOR OUR

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

OPEN BOUSE
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 18
2:30PM_TO 5:30

Theft, vandalism reported

•

PUBIJ:C IS INVITED
•DOOR PRIZES .•REFRESHMENTS
We wlllte raffline aH a Uh Chair, d•ted by
Cantinulty af Care, with • pro•ds going to area ·
Ost011y Group - drawitg DeCIIIIber 13th.

Rutland Couple
• $100 000

are

Accident investigated

~ARE

Miller trial underway

MEDICAL EQUIPMENT AND SUPPLIES
POMEROY

.

992·2310
,.

I

Dowler predicts Meigs section of
Capital Corridor will be done by '98

\

33091 HILAND RD.

ine the areas of drafting a plan,
making an assessment of the plan,
and seeing what additional information they will need from the dismet office, he added.
A local plan is ratified when.
legislative authorities representing
atleast60 percent of the district's .
population approve the plan. Also,
the release continued, the plan must
be approved by the boards of coun· .
ty commissioners and the legislauve authority of the largest municipality in a majority of counties:
within the distticL
Results revealed previously by:
Continued on page 3
:

,

Program presented

OF

"Even if we do not get to every
county, a copy of lhe the plan will
be put in a location where the public can read it and have some input
on the plan," said Berger.
According to Terri Belville of
the disttict office. as indicated to
her by OEP A official David White,
OEPA wiU hold a staff meeting to
detennine what additional information lhey will need from the district
office in order to go ahead with the
drafting of a plan.
"I will be the primary coordinator for the plan," White said Tuesday afternoon. OEPA officials wiU
ialce 2· 3 weeks to a month to exam·

Lentes said. "But a cooperative attempt to help the people in th81
By BRIAN J. REED
program between the LCCD board ares who are now without service."
Sentinel News Staff
Lentes said that the board is alsO
Efforts have begun between and the township trustees could
three local agencies and various qualify us for funds not now avail- pursuing a cooperative effort
between LCCD and Leax, Gallia
township trustees to improve water able."
"LCCD is real concerned about County Rural Water and Tuppers.
service m west:m Meigs County.
lobo R. Lentes, president of the making sure that past problems are Plains-Chester Water Distrtct to
urn~-?
Meigs County Regional Planning put benind us," Lentes said. "We provide a backup program in the
,: ·
&gt;.,
. .,.
Commission and legal counsel for are working for our existing cus- event of service interruptions.
Continued oa page 3
lli9Z
the Leading Creek Conservancy tomers and, now, are worlting in an
Disttict. reporled today that he and
Economic Development Director
Paula Thacker met on Tuesday
night with trustees and clerics from
Scipio, Salisbury, Salem and Rutland Townships. The purpose of
the meeting, acc~ng to Lentes, is
to set up a multi,wwnsbip commit·
tee, formed to explore funding
nros!raii11.1'1ie
MONEY DONATED TO BOOSTERS • Tbe
sources
for water line extension to
Home National Bank and
pu'r ·
Home National Baak, Racine, and Jay Hall, Jr.
customers
without water service.
chase of tbe 1,025 pound steer at $5 a pound.
donated $1,708.33 to eacb or tbe Meigs County
The
new
committee
will consist of
Here Tom Wolre, second rrom left, or Home
high schoolatbletic boosters associations TuesLentes
and
Thacker,
as well as a
National presents cbecks to Rick Edwards,
day. The money came !"rom the resale of a steer
representative from the county
Meigs Albletlc Director, Sandy Bowen, presi·
at the Meigs County Junior Fair Livestoc:k Sale,
commissioners'
offtee and one rep·
dent of the Eastern Athletic Boosters, and Virgil
owned by Jeremy Buckley. Frank Cremeans,
resentative
from
each township.
Dill, president oft~ Southern Athletic Boosters.
candidate for slate representative, purchased
Lentes
said
that Issue 2 and
the animal at the sale and then returned il for
Famers Home Administration
funds will be among the avenues
that the new committee will
.explore, in an attempt to provide
water service to customers who
have no rural water service, and in
many cases, no wells on their prop·
erty.
"Because of its prior (fmancial)
problems, Leading Creek Conser·
vancy District does not. have a
,,. . .
"This guy called me at 3 a.m.
By JEFF WILSON
Slreets have been cleared of bankroll to fund extensions,"
and said, 'I'm the ftrst one in line," power lines and poles, and there
Associaled Press Writer
LIHUE, Hawaii (AP) - Resi- said Civil Defense spokesman was heavy traffic congestion with
dents separated from family and Glenn Soma. "These guys have people trying to find water,
homes on hurricane-banered Kauai been waiting since Saturday to get propane gas and open markets.
began returning to the island Tucs· there so I don't think it's roo early
Electrical power was expecled
day for their ftrstlook at the devas· for them."'
to be restored in Lihue, Kauai's
Because Lihue Airport's control 'largest town, by Monday, although
tation.
Officials resumed some com- tower is damaged, only daylight officials said full restoration would
A prediction that the Meigs career in highway construction, the-present administration has
mercial flights to the island, where flights are allowed. General avia· take months.
County section of the Capital Cor- was introduced by his administra· shonened that to five to six years.
tion
craft
and
helicopters
are
still
He said that he came out of
limited phone service was restored
lniki struck Friday, flattening rido)" will have traffic moving over live assisumt, George Collins, for·
forbidden.
mer
Meigs
County
treaSurer.
John
retirement
to take his present posiMonday for some of the 52,000
sugar cane fields, battering the its entire length by 1998, was made
Before
the
flights
could
start
tion
in
Division
10 which has nine
residents, and portable generators
island's 70 resort hotels and seri· by John· Dowler, deputy director, Rice, pro$ram chairman, intro·
going
in,
more
than
2,000
stranded
counties with 1700 miles of highously damagi.o.g almost half of Division 10, Ohio Department of duced Collms.
were pumping running water to
tourists had to come out, said stale Kauai's 21,000 homes . Damage . Transportation, (ODOT) at MenThe deputy director, a 1957 ways, 1200 bridges, 15,000 culabout70 percent of it
Electricity remained out, and transportation spokeswoman Mari- has been estimated at $1 billion on
day night's meeting of the Middle- graduate of Ohio University ':"ho verts. and 442 employees.
immediately went to work on htghGene Riggs presided at the
.health officials warned people to lyn Kali.
Kauai alone.
pen-Pomeroy Rotary Club.
"We
would
hope
that
people
meeting.
ways,
said
that
it.uSed
to
be
eight
to
Women of the Heath
bury perishable food and issued
A National Guardsman died in
The Capital Corridor is a pro10
years
between
the
start
of
plan·
who
visit
the
island
have
a
real
United
Methodist
Church served a
instructions on how to build 1rench
an accident on the island late Mon· posed connecting road between
ning
to
construction.
He
said
that
dirmer.
good
reason
for
being
there,"
said
latrines.
day, said Army National Guard Columbus and Charleston, W. Va.
"It's just a Herculean task that Roy Price of the state's Civil Maj. Bud Bowles. It was unclear tf
Dowler said that Gov. George
we're doing," said Thomas Batey, Defense.
the death of Tech . Sgt. Dennis Voinovicb is committed to the phiHomeowners carted trash, tree Dalen, 46, of Honolulu was storm losophy that highway construction
assistant to Kauai Mayor JoAnn
Yukimura. "We've been kind of limbs, palm fronds, and aluminum relaled, authorities said.
can be a tool for industrial and ecoknocked down to our knees and siding to their curbs and slacked
Three people died during the nomic development and that is the
we're crawling up as fast as we rubble in neat piles 6 feet high. weekend, one on Oahu . Coast reason that Route 33-12A is so high
People lined up outside banks, Guard officials suspended the on the current agenda of construe·
can.''
Residents lined up before dawn which reopened Tuesday, and at search for two missing fishennen lion. ·
at Honolulu's airport for the first markets and drugstOreS, and neigh· Monday.
J{e said that ODOT bad given
bors exchanged Iniki stories.
him pennission to select a pan of
flights.
the "bridge connector" route with
the least environmenlal problems
for early construction. That is the
WIDS
'
reason, he said, he selected the
Rock Springs to Five Points secMeigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reporled today that on
A Rolland couple is going to be tion.
Saturday, Ann Cozart of Ponland reporled thai several buUet boles
The complete environmental
$100,000 richer as a result of
were found in her residence. She reporled that she heard shots being
impact
study for the entire route
selecting the right combination of
fued on Thursday night
will
be
compleled
sometime in the
five numbers in Ohio's Buckeye
John Marzoeehi of Carpenter Hill Road reported on Tuesday that
spring
of
1993,
Dowler
reponed,
Five lottery game last Tuesday.
within the last three days, a 1972 Dodge van was taken from his
but
he
said
that
work
will
proceed
Troy and Cathy Willis of the
~~.
on
the
first
section
before
that
New Luna Road
the winners of
impact
statement
is
completed.
the top money paid in the bi-week·
DOwler explained thai one of the
Iy game.
reasons for rebuilding the bridges
However,
the
old
adage
that
Cathy Clifford of Long Bottom n:porled to the Meigs County
"you can't win 'em all" rang uue on Route 33 north is that the old
Sheriff's Department that on Tuesday morning, she struck a deer
for Troy this week on Monday. He bridges could not stand the weight
that ran into the path of her vehicle. Light damage was reporled to
was enroute to his employm~nt in of materials to be brought in for the
the headlight and parlcing light. The deer ran from the scene of the
West Virginia when his vehicle "bri~e connector" construction.
accident, which took place on State Route 2A8.
was involved in a highway accident He satd that the normal life bf a
due to heavy fog. He was treated bridge is SO years but !hat the use
SPEAKER· John Dowler, Deputy Director, Dlvlsloa 10, Olio '
foe injuries 81 Pleasant Valley Hos· of salt in winter on highways bas
shortened the period. He also Department of Transportation, Jiaht, lalked alloat blpwlly wor~ •.
piial in Point Pleasant.
Testimony rrom both Defendant Bill Miller and an alleged rape
Meigs County at Monday •lgbt's meellll£ or t•e Middleport. '··
Mr. and Mrs. Willis are expect· blamed salt for the joint damage In
victim was beard when the fust day of'Miller' s jury trial got under·
Pomeroy
Rolary Club. He Is pictured here wltb bls admlnlstrallve •
ing to receive their prize money necessitating repairs on hig~way~.
Continued on paae 3
assislant,
George Collins, lel"t, and Gene Rigs, Rotary presldeat. ,'':;
Dowler who bas ~I 'Ius enure
within lhe next cOuple of weeks.
'

Kauai residents return
Home; tourists leave

~ONTINUITY

will now step in and draft a plan."
There is no time frame, however, on how long it will tak'e OEPA
to draft a plan, according to Berger.
"We (OEPA) will be using the
district's current plan to draft
another plan," said Berger.
Once OEPA drafts a plan, said
Berger, it will hold public comment
meetings and hearings, as weU as a
30 day period to allow citizens to
voice or write their opinions.
Whether or not OEPA will hold
hearings and public comment ses·
sions in every county of the solid
waste district, has not yet been
de1ennined.

Committee formed to
explore water extension

DOOR PRIZES:

Contad:
Meigs Co. Golf Oub
992-6312
or send $35.00 per
person
larry Th011as
33080 Badey Run Rd.
Pomeroy, 0~. 45769

2 Sectlona, 14 P1gea 25 cent•
A lluldmodlo Inc. Newape...,.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 16,1992

OEPA orders halt on district collection fees

AMBER and MEGAN TRIPP

33091 HILAND ROAD

chemical labeling issue which vot· Grani!C were made for ''Operation·
eQ will decide in November.
Baby whicb the nationaf ~ge
The £range COnJratulated the has endoncd for hurricane VICtims.
senior and junior fau boards for a
Pat Holter presented an article
good faii year.
for the ~liD on flrC tilts. Opal
Rock s~ placed second for Gruescr discuned ladder safety.
their exhibit at the fair and thanked Roy Holt« spoke on hand talking.
all who had auisled in the project.
Bunnb!;bl presented A Friend
Bunny ICuhl, newly elected lee· NC1t
and jokes were shared
turer, ootlincd some propams for · ~~ah Caldwell and Kathryn
the comin' pgc year. An open
meeting will be held Nov. 12 and
Cards have been at to Mr, and
slides of all churches in Meigs ~ Cblrle8 Aldridge, Ada Holter
County will be shown by Rev. and Kadlryn Miller
William Middleswarth.
Refreshments were served by .
Conttibutions to Florida Slate Janice Weber and Sarah Caldwell.

Low tonight In mid-60s.
Tbursday, sunny. High In mid·
80s.

•

AT OUR NEW LOCATION AT

Rock Springs Grange names winners

Pick 3:
732
Pick 4:
1441
Buckeye 5:
1-3-19-21-26

Page4

YOU'RE INVITED TO OUR

A candlelight program was pie.
sent by JoAnn Francis at the
September meeting of lhe SL Paul
United Methodist Women. The
theme was "Children with Aids."
Others panici~ating in the pro·
gram ·were Elue Culley, Rev .
Sharon Hausman, Connie Rankin,
Joanna Wcavcr and Betty Cheva·
lier. The group is streSsing Project
Children for the Season.
Betty Chevalier presided at the
meeting. The pledse and objectives
were read by the~·
.
A $50 donauon was made to
assist Hurricane Andrew victims in
Florida. Another donation was
made to Blankel Sunday.
The October meeting will be at
the church and lhe group will ceJe.
brale World Thank Yoo with Elaic
Culley leading. Connie Rankin and
Joanna Weaver will host the group.

Ohio Lottery

Reds keep
home jinx
·over Braves

'•

�,,Commentary
"

The Daily Sentinel
'

,

111 Coart ltnet

,_..IOJ', Oldo

· rn:YOia) TO 'I'D INliRiaTII or Tim MBIO!L'IIASOK AllEA

. :·

ROBERT L WJNGETI'
PabiiiiMr
PAT WBI'I'F.READ
•·htu~ l'llbllllleriCoatrolr

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
GenenlMauger

UlTil!RS OP OPINION m welcome. They should be t... than 300
words. All Ieaen ..., oubiect to editina IIIII must be aigned with nuue
oddmal!ld t.Iopli&lt;JM namber. No unliJDOd loltm will be published. Le~
should be in JOOd - ·lllld!ulina il111eo, not ponollllitico.

·..

:.Bush says he'll work with
Congress next time - again

Weclnelday, September 18, 1992
Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Weclnelday, September 16, 1992

Mother Teresa differs with U.S. on
dying - she believes the money
that people donate can be better
spenL
According to government offi·

WASHINGTON - Mother
Teresa is miffed at George Bush.
The frail 82-year-old Nobel
Peace Prize winner many have
called a living saint is clearly dis·
appointed with the president. She
&amp;JliWCDUY preferred doing business
with Ronald Reqan
.
The issue is the fcc the United
States is impcisin&amp; on her n:ligious
workers coming into the country,
Last April, the $50 per visa charge
doubled to $100 per religious
worker from India entering Lhc
United States. Some government
officials predict it will go up even
more.
. To Mother Teresa, of course,
it's a huge waste of money. It's a
tax imposed on charitable workers
who can put that money to much

Jack Anderson
Michael Binstein

cials who have had recent contact
with Mother Teresa. it is weighing
heavily on her mind, and she's
asked for help in her conflict with
the White House.
At least twice, she has visited
the U.S. consulate in Calcuua,and
implored them to get the pmidcnt
to drop the fees. And Lhat hasn't
been her only moments of attempt·
beacruse.
ed redress, e.lher.
Arter all , Mother Teresa has
One of her most recent visitors,
only two changes of clothes, both someone she knew was a friend of
of them blue-trimmed COlton saris the president, descn'bed for us how
worth $1 apiece. There arc no Mother Ten:sa .expresses her frus.
washers or dryers, vacuum clean· lralion.
ers, televisions, record players,
He visited her on the second
computers and other modern floor of her hcadquaners, known as
devices in her homes and hospitals the "Motherhouse," in the middle
in Calcutta for the destitute and of the squalor of Calcutta. She

.:,
ByWALTERR.MEARS
.
AP Spedal Correspondent
··: WASHINGTON -Remember the gridlock Congress? Forget iL
·• President Bush now says it is certain to he supplanted by a new-look
Congress he could work with in a second term, even if the DemocraiS
remain in solid control, as they almost certainly wilL
Besides, Bush said, if he can't get his agenda through the House and
-: Senate, he'll go around them to get things done.
&gt;: · "With a new Coogress, I think we'll have something entirely different
..!,han the gridlocked Coogress that I've been facing," Bush said, explain·,ing how he'd push his repackqcd economic program, Agenda for Ameri·
;~ Renewal, the new ccn~iece of his IH!ection campaign.
.
-: •: But Congress has been blocking Bush economic proposals foc most of
:;ll)e past four years. That raises the queStion of how he'd get new ones
' passed in the next four, given the prospect that his re-election would
.extend divided govemmenL
. With one party in tontrol at the White House and the other in charge of
:.congress, impasse has become a habit. That means compromise or, oftell,
.the inaction of political gridlock.
. " lthin.k we must end the divided government." Vice President Dan
Guayle said earlier in the campaign season, suggesting in a television
interview lhal people wllo intend to vote for Democrat Bill Clinton should
: vole for Democratic congressional candidates too.
"It's a controversial viewpoint," Quayle said in the July 22 CNN
interview with Larry King, "and it's not shared by all the people in my
pany."
He could say that again. He didn't.
·
Quayle now says that he can't predict the election of a Republican
· Congress, much as he hopes for GOP gains, and that solidly Democnttic
c government would make things worse than they are under today's divided
government
, . · He said Sunday on ABC· TV that there may be 180 new members of
:· Congress next year and they'd be far more cooperative with Bush than the
· people they replace.
,.. Ninety-two changes an: guaranleed; eight Senale and 84 House seats
. were left open by retirements, death$ and defeats, with more to come in
· primary elections today and the Nov. 3 elections.
, But changing faces doesn't mean changing parties. Republicans now
&amp;old only 166 of the 435 House seats. The Democmts' Senate margin is
57 to 43.
WASHINGTON (NEA) Bush now is emphasizing the ways he could work with, or around, Congress has returned for a fmal
,•8110lher Democratic Congn:ss if he must. He sai4 he would get together month of delibentions befon: head·
ing home to await the election.
; with the new members and tell them:
·; , . "Look, you and I have been listening to the same song, the same Then: is still much work awaiting
·, ·American people. They want the kind of changes I've ouUined. ... Now both the Senate and the House, but
:~ .• let's get together, lay aside partisanship, and let's in the first 100 days given how politically charged the
~ ·;wet this new agenda"
atmosphere has become, it is
~ :. : That sounds a lot like his 1989 summons to congressional Democrats doubd'ul that much will be accom~ : to a new era of bipartisanship. "The American people await action," he plished before the expected early·
:; · said in his inaugural address. " They didn't send us here to bicker. They October adjournment
• · asic us to rise above the merely partisan."
When Congress went home in
:
He recalled that inaugural address at the Republican National Conven· August, the leadership was lavish
:. lion: "I exteoded my hand to the Democratic leaders - and they bit iL"
in its praise of the 102nd Congress'
'
~ m;rerence, he~ :a:-~~~· he'd tryheto w~bewith con· accomplishments. The highway
_: gress10na rewcornen
......... course won t working bill•.civil rights, veterans' benefits,
•· with either unless he's re-elected, and if he is, the message from the voters a third extensioo of unemployment
~ might help him make his point
benefits and a higher-education bill
Quayle says newly elected freshmen will be closer to the people than were singled out as milestones
: members of Congress with 20 oc 30 years in office, "more willing to give passed thus far. AU, however, were
Issues held over from last year and
: a president the benefit of the doubt.'
• · . Still, new Democratic senators ant! represenLatives aren't going to long in the works. Uttle new work
: come 1from
of them
corning out of was undertaken.
gisl a different
localpolitical
and planet
m- most
th tradi
'onalan:back
: ..sllltedidae ~C,
state o 1ces, e
b
grounds of
This record will probably get
• can
t.es .or ongress.
worse. In the wake of the two polit·
:
"I will fight for this agenda with the new C~ and its 150 expect· ical conventions, reWions between
: - ed new members," Bush said in a campaign ·o address on Saturday. Capitol Hill and the White House
: " If C!Jn~ balks, I will work with go-:emors, mayors, teachers and have n:ached a new Bush adrninis·
•.oontmun1ty leaders to keep my agenda movmg fmward.''
tration low with Demlicrats and
• • First, of course, he has to convince the voters he deserves four more Republicans barely speaking to one
:: years to try it
another. Theae frosty n:lations will
·:
affect all but a few very non-parti:· EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and colum· san issues remaining on Congress'
.; nist for Tbe Auoclated Press, bas reported on Wasbinrton and plate.
:: natioBal politla tor more tban 25 years.
Looking at what is remaining
:only one thing is mandatory ;
Congress must pass a new budget
·•
•
for the fiscal year beginning in
~
October. So far the House has

lt

lion under President Bush's overall
budget request, but several contain
items he opposes and could be veto

~·most contentious still to be

passed is the defense budget. There
will be arguments about the size of
the initial post-Cold War cutback,

whether to continue funding the
" Star Wars" anti-missile program,
and what 10 do about funding
expensive new weapons programs
and the jobs they n:present
Among the ·other issues
c ongrcss wt'II be facmg
· durmg
·
these final days:
Russian aid. Both House and
Senate have approved wide-ranging aid packa~es for the former
Soviet republics, and must now
mesh their two bills. Some signifi.
cant differences remain.
Savings and loan bailout. The
House is balking at approving the
reduced Senate-passed legislation
10 replenish the Resolution Trust·
Corp.'s thrift cleanup funds, which
ran out AJJrill.
. Cable TV. Both House and Senate have passed bills re·rcgulQting
cable television rates and services.

: The Issue:

Reducing
the
tax
.
;~ rate on Capital Gains A~erica's

;-

:
EDITOR'S NOTE~ Tbis marks the beginning of the 0a Lhe Issues
·• se~les tor tbe tall campaign. Tbe Associated Press asks President
:: Busla and Bill Clinton their stands on an issue eacb weekday and
·• -•bles their respoases.
.
:: _
·: WASIDNGTON (AP) - Here an: the views of the ~residential candi·
··. dates on the quesbon: Should the tax rate on capital gams he reduced? H
.: so, to what level?
~ Bush: "I want to lower the tax on capital gains to a rale of 15.4 pereent
: so capital will be more abundant. Then investment will increase, labor
: wm be more in demand, wages will rise and une.nployment lines will
~ shrink. I also want to index capital gains so that - when average Ameri·
: cans sell their homes or farms or small businesses - they are not focced
~ !Q.pay taxes on the amount of increase from inflation."
:• · Clinton: "I do not support providing a special capital gains tax break
: for the rich; insttad, I suppon encouraging entrepreneurs who risk their
: savings rate to create new companies, the. ~ain !iOUfCC of new jobs in our
• economy. Half of the profits from the Ott$Jnal mvestments in new rums
: will be excluded from tax, so long as the mvestment is held at least five
• years."
~
.
~

rroday in history
~

.

:
'· ,
By Tbe Associated Press
~ Today is Wedne!day, Sept. 16, the 260th day of 1992. Then: are 106
'days ltft in theti.
~ Today's Hi 'ght in History:
.
~ On Sept.l 1940, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed into law the
'tielcctive !raiDing ,and Service Act, which set up the tint peacetime mill·
~ draftm U.S. lliSiory.
·

~ .
,.........

F. Sc&lt;?ll Fitzgerald once wrote
that the ncb are different from you
and me.
What about the [!O;Or? Are they
different too? Are ltving standards
of poor families substantially worse
than those of average American
families?
These questions come to mind
with the recent release of the Census Bureau's annual report on
poverty and family income. The
dal8 indicate thai the ranks of the
poor numbered more than 35 mil·
lion last year.
On the face, the poverty numbers an: quite troubling. One wonders how it is that in this nation the most 8muent in the history of
the world - one of every eight of
its citizens is mired in poverty.
Simple. Tbe Census numbers

Joseph Perkins

you or rpc.
The reuon that poverty appears
to be a much laQier problem than it
really is is that the government persists in measuring poverty stric~y
on the basis of yearly cash income.
Non·cash assciS llld benefits which pdy imJ!lOYC a poor fami·
ly's 9.uaii1Y of life - are !101 fac.
tored mto the~ eqU81101l.
The exclus1011 of non-cash assis·
tancc from poverty calculations
was not especially significant 30
years ·ago, when such benefits
accounted for only a renth of govAmericans who truly are poor enulient aid to the poor.
who haven't the means to provide
But non-c:uh benefitS - includtheir families with such basic ing food stamps, public housing
necessities as food, shelter and ao1 Medicaid - have pown expoclothing - is not nearly as large as nentially over the past three
the Census suggests.
decades, from roughly half of all
Moreover, mllly families that public es•istuce in 1m to twofall below the government's offi. thirds in 1980 aol thmc-quarters in
cial poverty line - $13,924 for a 1990.

r;o~~~~~~~~!"::u~tl:r~r

.

'

I

MICH.

pulled a bench over for both or State Department rules of n:ciproc·

mau:h their fees.
" Our position worldwide is that
we want to abolish visa fees alto·
gether," on.e State D~partment
bfficial explained to us. 'Until that
happens, our position is that we
will implement reciprocity. So if
somebody charges visa fees , we
will match them."
So what about waiving the fees ·
for Mother Teresa' s workers?
"Mother Teresa has been trying for
quite some time to get us to abolish
fees for her nuns," this State
Department offiCial said. "But our
policy is worldwide. It applies to
Indian nuns; it applies to Brazilian
priests; it applies to Mexican
monks; it applies to African eccle·
siastical workers. Everybody
worldwide. We don't have a
son."
'Mother Teresa visa.' We have reli·
Both this Bush friend and the gious worker visas."
consular officers in Calcuua genUy
Several of the' American offi·
tried to explain to her that there cials have pressed Mother Teresa
was nothing they could do. The to turn her lObbying efforts on the
Indian government was charging government of India, but she
such fees to American religious demuned describing her relationworkers, and the long' standing ship with.'!"" 1~ g~vernmenl as
delicate. She said this was some·
thing she could not ask of them,"
·
said the Bush friend.
~CiUNR!
.
111&gt;1:-.. In her comparisons between
' 177"'· Bush and Pres•dent Ronald Rea·
gan, Bush glarin~y falls short.
" I like President Bush," she
told the Bush friend, "but President Reagan was helpful." She told
the story of a time when she had
called President Reagan on the
phone about another matter. She
was put right through . "He was
quite responsive to her, and imme·
diately acted on her request," said
this source.
Her concern about the visa
charge has escalated in recent
months, so it was not a matter for
discussion last Dec. 9, when she
met with President Bush in the
Oval Office.
At the time, a presidential
spokesman said the IO.minute visit
was "'very cordiaL''
Jack Andersoa aad Michael
Biasteln are syndicated writers
tor United Feature Syndicate,
Inc.

lion If it posses, and the vote to SUS·
lain will be close.
Energy. Both the Senate and
House have passed different ver·
sions of a new energy bill but have
not been able to mesh the two into
a single measure in the face of a
threatened veto over the issues of
environmental laws and the
increasing of the mandatory fuel
efrtticncy requirements.
Abortion. Bills to legislatively
mandate the right to abortion con·
tained in the Supreme Court's Roe
decision are pending jn both ,cluln·
bers. So far the leadership in both
bodies have feared bringing the
measure to a vote. If it passes,
Bush is sure to veto it. Many
Democrats would like to f~Xte him
to do that to make the veto an elec·
lion issue.
Family leave. The House will
nats.
certainly pass an already Senate·
Tax relief and urban aid. A passed measure requiring larger
long-range urban aid plan, includ· employers to give workers up to 12
ing enterprise zones and other tax weeks or unpaid leave to care for
incentives, has been apPtoved by newborn infants or seriously ill
both houses. A conteollOUS House· family members. Bush has said he
Senate is in the ofrmg and then the will veto the mcas~.
Health care. Too many different
measure faces a threatened veto
because of the Senate's refusal to proposals are still being debated to
include a capital gains tax cut in expect Congress to agree on one.
the package.
This is an issue that will await a
China. The Senate will take up new pres.ident, or a re-elected
House-approved legislation, George Btish.
removing most-favored nation trad·
Robert WaJIIIIan is a syndical·
ing status from China unless it ed writer tor 'Newspaper Enterimpleme~ts .hu~ rights ref~s. prise Asociation.
The presuleilt will .veto
. the legiSia·

The different bills must be meshed
in conference, and the final bill
faces the likelihood of a presideD·
tial veto, which the Democrats will
try to exploit as a campaign issue.
Elementary and secondary edu·
cation. Bills passed in bOth the
House and Senate have as their
go8l improving the nation's publil:
schools. But the bills, when they
cmerg~ from conference, face a
presidential veto because neither
version allows for federal aid to
private or church-sponsored
schools.
Crime. Both chambers have
approved anti-crime measures,
including a wailing period to buy a
handgun. But the House-Senate
conference is stalemated by,fllibus·
tering Republicans who oppose the
handgun measure, claiming the bill
,·s not suffitet'en•'y
tough on cn'mt' ·
u

poor may not be so bad off

family or four - are not especially
worse off than non-poor families.
In terms of material well-being,
they are not tenibly different from

By The Associated Press
. Warm weather will continue at
least into Thursday.
It will he pl!llY to mosUy sunny
today, with highs in the low to mid·
80s, which is 5 to 10 degrees above
normal
Lows tonight will be in the 60s.
Skies will be partly cloudy in the
north and mooUy clear in the south.
Highs will remain in the 80s on
Thursday, but showers or thunderstorms an: forecast in the north.
Overnight lows were in the 60s
throughout the state.
The m:olll high temperature for

Accu· Weather' folllC8Sl for

them to sit on. In her familiar sari, ity required that the United Sutes

Politics likely to rule rest of session
Robert J. Waoman

Thursday, Sept.17 ':

she sat down gen~y, clasped both
hands and spoke 'to him with her
shoulders hunched, her head
bowed, only occasionally looking
up at him,
And then she raised the subject
for which she'd wanted the meeting:
"She brought it up very shonly.
She asked genUy, but forcefully,
that when I went hack to Washing·
ton, would I Bltempt to do some·
thing for her,'' the source told us.
"To·pass the word that this visa
charge was an unfair burden on
Lhem. That what troubled her great·
ly was accepting money from peopie who were giving to help the
poor and having to spend that
money by giving it to the government for some bureaucratic rea·

In 1991, government at all levels spent more than $226 billioo in
aid to the needy. In arriving 81 an
mDaled poverty rate of 13.5 per·
cent for the year, the Census fac·
tored in $32.5 billion of this aid,
while ignoring the roughly $193.5
billion that went toward non-cash
public assistance programs.
Don't food stamps, public housing and Medicaid improve the
poor's living slandards? Of course
they do. In fact, the Census
Bureau's own dal8 reveal that poor
households spend $1.79 for every
$1 of annual income they Rceiv~.
AU told, the government aid spent
on the poor - but uncounted by
the Census - amounts to $13,330
for every poor household. The
irony is lhal the average poor fami·
ly requires only $5,5 IS to be elevated lbovc the poverty threshold.
Along the same lines, govern·
ment poverty statistics fail to take
into account the value of assets
owned by the poor. A n:cent analysis by Robert Rector of the HeriLage Foundation illuminates this
gt.ing oversight
.
Nearly 40 pertcnt of the pooi, as
so idemifiCd by the Census Bureau,
own llteir own homes, with a medi-

an value of $43,562 in 1989.
AlmoSt three-quarters of a million
poor persons own homes worth
more than $100,000. Another
75,000 own homes worth more
than $300,(XX).
Almost half of poor households
have air-conditioning. Nearly a
third have microwave ovens. And
some 22,000 "poor" households
are fortunate enough to have heated
swimming pools or jacutzis.
More than 60 percent of Lhe
poor own a car. Fourteen ~rcent
actually have the wherewithal to
own two or lllCB'e cars.
The point here is that most of
America's poor are not qttieUy per·
ishing in hovels around the coun·
try. They generally are well-fed,
propertied and upwan;lly mobile.
Yes, there are some unfortunates
out there who fit the Slereolype that
most Americans associate with
poverty. But the simple fact is that
such families and individuals are
more the exception than the rule fcir
America's poor.
Josep• Perkins b a colamlllst
tor T•e Saa Dle1o Unloa-Trl·
bune alld a syacllcaled writer tor
Newspaper £aterprlse Assocla·
lion.. .
'

IND.

• IColumbusiBS• l

this date at the Columbus weather
station was 96 in 1897. The record
low was40 in 1916.
Sunset today will be at 7:38
p.m. Sunrise Thursday wiD he at
7:15am.
Around tbe aation
Thunderstorms hung over parts
or Minnesou early today as much
of the Great Lakes region and
upper Plains tried to mop up from
heavy rains.
Scattered thunderstorms were
predicted today from Michigan to
northern Missouri. Heavy rains
were expected along the Gulf Coast

r----Local briefs... ----.
~
(I
W.VA.

-----Weather----South-Central Oblo

Tonigh~ clear. Low in the mid·
60s. Th~y, mosUy sunny and

warm again. High in the .mid-80s.
Extended forecast:
Friday tbrougb Suaday:
Fair on Friday. A chance of

showers and thunderstorms Satur·
daf and Sunday. Highs in the 80s
Fnday and Saturday and in the
mid·70s to low 80s Sunday. Lows
60-65 Friday and Saturday and in
the upper 50s to the mid-60s Sun·

Charles Bailey
Charles P. Bailey, Sixth Stree~
Syracuse, died Tuesday, SepL 15,
1992 at Riverside Methodist Hospi·
tal in Columbus.
Arrangements
will
be
announced by Ewing Fuenral
Home in Pomeroy.

Theft probed
The theft of a police radio, its

case

and SI'C8"er microphone, is being
investigated by the l&gt;omeroy Police
Department
According to Pomeroy Police
Chief Jerry Rought, his radio, with
all its equipment. was stolen Mon·
day evenmg while he was in
mayor's coun. He reports the items
wm locked in his penonat car out·
side Pomeroy Vill8ge Hall but that
someone gamed entry to the vehi·
cle, stole the items and again
locked the car.
Chief Rought is asking for the
return of the radio and all equipment. He stated if cverythin$ is
returned in its original coodiuon,
no questions will be asked. The
equipment totaled $730 in value.

Court news

Continued trom page 1
way in Meigs County Common Pleas Court on Tuesday.
.
. Miller is accused of having sexual contact with a boy under the
age of 13 in January, 1991. The incidents in question were alleged
to have taken place in a machine shop on Condor Street in
Pomeroy.
Much of the testimOny yesterday cenlered on whether Miller was
able to enter the building, owned by Bill Sorden of Middleport,
without a key. The sl8te, represented by Special Prosecutor Mark
Sheets or Gallipolis, contends that Miller had a key to a back
entrance of the building, and entered the building with the alleged
victim after the shop was closed.
Defense attorneys Charles Knight and Christopher Tenoglia,
however, will try to prove that the door cannot be entered from the
outside, that the door is secured only by a deadbok and, thus, cannot
be unlocked from the outside. Sorden and Miller both testified that
the defendant did not poS$ess any key to the building.
Other wimesses who testified were neighixl'hood children who
testified that they had seen Miller enter the building, and Charles
Knopp, an investigator for Meigs County Childn:n's Services.
The ttial is expected to conclude today before Judge Fred W.
Crowm.

Harold Sedgwick

Two accidents were investigated recently by the Gallia-Meigs
Post of the State Highway Patrol.
A Pomeroy youth was cited afler a one-car wreck on Flatwoods
Road in Chester Township Sunday around 7:30p.m.
Gary D. Arnold, 17, of 122 Union Avenue was eastbound when
he lost control of his car which then overwnied.
Arnold was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital by the
Meigs County Emergency Medical Service for tn:atment or minor
injuries.
.
Damage to Arnold's 1988 Ford Escort was listed as moderate
and disabling.
Arnold was cited for failure to control and no operators license.
A Logan man was cited after a one-car wreck on U.S. 33 in Bedford Township Tuesday around 10 p.m.
Howard J. Slusher, 62, was northbound, went off the right side of
the road in a left curve and struck a guardrail.
No injuries were n:ported.
Damage to Slusher's 1985 Oldsmobile Delta 88 was listed as
moderate.
Slusher was cited for failure to cootrol.

Harold A. Sedgwick, 83, 42053
State Route 7, Tuppers Plains, died
Tuesday, Sept 15, 1992 at Veter·
ans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
Born in Broadwell, he was a son
of the late Grover and Hazel Kester
Sedgwick. He was a nayy veteran
of World War n and a member of
the Tuppers Plains VFW Post No.
9053.
Mr. Sedgwick is survived by his
wife of 54 years, Evelyn Stalnaker
Sedgwick, Tuppers Plains; one son,
Harold
"'t'ed" Sedgwick,
Columbia, Mo.; one sister, Mildred
Duckworth, Rillman; one niece,
Dolores Bruliaker, Wadsworth; and
several cousins.
Besides his parents he was pre·
Cases processed in this week 's
ceded in death by one son, Donald
court
of Pomeroy Mayor Bruce J.
in 1989; and one sister, Laura
Reed
were
as follows :
Donohue.
James
Sauvage,
Pomeroy, $80,
Services will be Friday 81 I p.m.
at White Funeral Home in n:ckless operation; Alisa BonecutCoolville with Rev. Duane Sr,den· ter, New Haven , W.Va., $392,
stricker officiating. Burial will be driving under the influence; Clio·
in s.ntett Cemetery whdc military ton Bailey, Long Bottom, $80, fail·
graveside services will be conduct· ure to display registration; Jerry
ed by the Tuppers Plains VFW Jarrell, address unlcnown, failure to
comply with a court order, S80 and
Post.
Friend$ may call at the funeral costs; Roland Will, RuUand, $76,
speed; Nancy VanMeter, Syracuse,
home on Thursday from 6-9 p.m.

Pomeroy Court news

Cases promsed
Divon:e actions have been fded
71.1 •
in Meigs County Common Pleas - - Lfl
Court by Jo Leigh Goode,
Moore reunion
Pomeroy, against Todd Norville
Descendants of James C. and
Goode, Silver City, N.C.; and by
April Y. Haggerty, Pomeroy, Ethelinda Stone Moore will hold a
against Joltt Matt Haggerty. Mid· reunion Sunday at Suuon United
Methodist Church, Racinc·Bashan
dleport.
A divorce has been granted in Road. Then: will be a carry-in din·
the court to Freda M. Bays from ner at 12:30 p.m.
Games canceled
Robert W. Bays. An action for disThe
Meigs Malauder Freshman
solution of marriage has been
granted to Debra Jean Doafer and football game with Nelsonville·
York scheduled for Thursday
Thomas ~er Roche:
evening at the BOb Roberts Field in
Marrlllge lkease
A marriage license has been Pomeroy has been canceled.
OAPSE to tattt
issued in Meigs County Probate
Southern
Local OAPSE will
Court to Ronald Eugene Maxson,
meet
Monday
at 7 p.m. at the high
22, Pomeroy, and Wendi Marie
school. All members urged to
Kloes, 22, Pomeroy.
attend.
Revival
teterans Memorial
Revival 81 the Pomeroy Church
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS • of Chrisr, will be OcL 4-7 at 10:30
Ollie Hill, RuUand.
a.m. on Suaday and 7 p.m. nighUy.
Kenneth Baker, Georgie Dean Scott will be the evangelist.
Wehntng, Paul Houdashell
Andrew Miles, minister, invites the
public.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
L!)Ciae to meet
: Birth: S~pt. 15 • Mr. ~d Mrs.
There
will be a special meeting
: Terry Midkiff, son, Oak Hill.
of Shade River Lodge No. 453 F &amp;
AM Saturday 7:30 p.ill. Work in
The Daily Sentinel
the Fellow Craft Degn:e. Refn:sh·
ments will be served.
Roush reualon
.
PubliiW n1'1 ~ft.moan, Moaday
Gideon and Artimesia Roush
""-" frido3l U Coart Sl~ ~ OJ,
Ohte t., u.. Oklo 1!ollq ,...U.ldoa
reunion, Star Mill Park, Racine,
Compaay/MaltiiH&amp;Iia lac., PGIDII'OJ,
Suaday. Potluck dinner at 1 p.m.
Oldo am, ,._ 11112-ausa. s.-• d . .
Guest preadltr
J1011110 (lila all'biiwiu); Oldo.
Rev. Eddie Buffmgton will be
Member: ,.. , st·'«~ rr... w u.e
the
guestprc81;her II Naomi Baptist
Obia NewEAieocUtloa, NatioMl
Ad&gt;ortiol..
nlaU.., Branham · Church in Pomeroy on Sunday at
"'"'papor
•· 731
Tblnl "'"'""
!0:45a.m. Public invited.
11tw
Yortl, Now Yart
111017.

$66, speed; Christina Wilson, Mid·

dleport, $65, speed; Jason Hysell,
Pomeroy, disorderly conduct, $63
and cost; Richard Stewart,
Pomeroy, $313 and costs, resisting
arrest, $113 and costs, public intox·
ication, $63 and costs, littering;
Ricky Queen, Pomeroy, $313 and
costs, destruction of property; April
Miller, Mason, W.Va., $88 and
costs, consuming under 21; Lisa
Blake, Middleport, $63, open COD·
tainer; Matthew Eblin, Rutland,
$88 and costs, consuming under
21 ; James Morton Jr., Pomeroy,
$48 and costs, speed ; Jennifer
Michael, Pomeroy, failure to comyard and bake sale Ocl 3 from 9 ply, $63 and costs; Robert
a.m. to S p.m. at An and Joyce Kennedy, Ru~and. $113 and costs,
Vickers, 2500 Fairview Avenue in controlled substance in his possesParkersburg, W.Va.
sion; Micky Eakins, Pomeroy, fail·
Benefit
ure to comply, $63 and costs; Betty
There·will be a music benefit for Mankin, Pomeroy, $75 and costs,
Glen "Lefty" Baker on Sunday public intoxication; and Mark
from 1·11:30 p.m. at Hockin~ Haley, Pomeroy, $88 and costs,
·at the home of Kenny and Millie consuming under 21.
Reynolds. All bands welcome. EMS
•
lis
Food and softdrinlts available .
umts answer ca
Door prizes, cake walks lnd more.
On Tuesday at 12:11 p.m, Mid·
Bring a lawn chair. Everyone wei- dleport squad went to Fisher Street.
come. Further information may be Lorna Davis refused tn:atmenL At
obtained by calling 667-3745.
12:41 p.m., Middle)XI't unit went to
Spiritual renewal
South Third and took Charl es
Jeff Faull, evangelist, will speak McFinncy to Veterans Memorial
at the Bradford Church of Christ Hospital. At 10:08 p.m., Rutland
Sunday tluoogh Wednesday at 7:30 squad went to New Lima Road.
p.m. mgh~y. A nursery will be pro- Ltsa Haggy was taken to Veterans.
vided. Derek Stump, evangelist, At !0:26p.m., Pomeroy unitll went
invites the public.
to U.S. Route 33 and State Route
Chicken barbecue
681 for an auto accident. Jennifer
Star Grange wiU hold a chicken l&lt;lOI!ard was .taken to VelellUIS and
barbecue Sunday at 11 a.m. at the Alice Slusher and Howard Slusher
grange hall near Salem Center. · were treated at the scene.
Public invited.
On Wednesday at 1:43 a.m.,
Rurl181ls to meet
Pomeroy squad went to Pomeroy
Racine Ruritan Club will meet Nursing and Rehabilil8lion Center.
Tuesday at 6:30p.m. at Star Mill Gladys Taylor was taken to Veter·
Park. AU members urged to attend. ans.

ezgS ann0. URC.ementS

Hospital news

-clio-

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Homecoming at the Mt. Moriah
Church of God in Racine will be
Sunday beginning at 9:45 a.m .
There will be a puppet show at II
am. with dimer at 12:15 1111!1 after.
noon service. Singen include the
Jenkins Family,lronton: ,Mountain
Top S~Racinc. Guest speakers wiU be featured Public invited.
YearbooUaV.U.blt ,
Eulem Hiah School yearbooks
from 197-'. t!J75. 1976 and 198690 are available at the high school
tor $23 eac11. Anyone lntmsted In
purchasing iJnc of lheae ye8lboOks
may c!o so by' stopping by the

school.

and strong thunderstorms were n ight and Tues day morn ing ~ n
forecast for the southern Roclties.
south-central Iowa, covering JIJW.
Torrential rains fell in southern lying roads and bridges
Minnesota late Tuesday, flooding
highways and triggering a mudslide
near Belle Plaine. No injuries were
Continued from page 1 :
reported. Rainfall of up to 7 1/2·
lance
Wilson, dislriet director.&lt;82
inches was reported in some areas.
percent
district had respo(ld·
Storms in Arizona on Tuesday ed with of66the
percent voting for the
sent a flash flood through a camp· plan's ratification
and 16 percent
ground at the Grand Canyon. No voting against ratification.
·
one was injured. Nearby Page was
Ohio
law
imposed
a
deadlin~ of
hit by I 1/4-inch hailstones and June 24 for the dis trict to have
winds gusting to 60 miles an hour. received appro val of its ratified
A half-inch of rain fell in 15 min· plan, the release read. OEPA did
utes.
not immedialely move to pre~ a
Strong thunderstorms also plan for the district in Junc so the
moved over northern Indiana. parts dis.lrict ~uld complete the 90·day
of Michigan and northwestern rabficauon process began in ~y .
Ohio. Hail an inch in diameter fell Because the plan failed in its secoutside South Bend, Ind., Tuesday ond attempt at ratification OEPA
evening.
is required by law to prepar'e a plan
Up to a foot of rain fell Monday for the dislricL
·

OEPA ...

Patrol examines two wrecks

day.

--Area deaths--

battery pack, leather carrying

The Dally Senti nei-Page::--3

Warm weather will.continue through Thursday

OHIO Weather

• •
VISa ISSUe

~teR

approved alll3 appropriations bills
for FY '93, and the Senate has
approved seven. All told the
House-passed bills are $12.5 bil·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

MADD meetbl1
MADD will moet Tuesday at 6
p.m. at 119 Buttemut Avenue in
Pomeroy.
Yard aa,d bUe Ale ,
Faith Chapel Church will have a

L ttery nom b

To meet Sunday
0
efS
The Gideon and Artimesia
Roush family reunion will be held Buckeye 5
at Star Mill Park, Racine, Sundliy
1-3-19-21-26
at I p.m. There will he a potluck
(one, three, nineteen, twenty·
dinner. Family and friend s are one,twenty·su)
invited to attend.
. - - - - - - - - - - -.,
Church picnic set
A community wide church pic·
nic will be held on Sunday at I
p.m. at Forked Run State Park,
hosted by the Reedsville Oturch of
Christ. In case of rail), the picnic
will be held at the Olive Township
fire hbusc. Those who aucnd
should bring a coveted dish and a
lawn chair. Special singing is
planned, and an open invitation
will be extended for those who
would like 10 sing.
Car wull pllulaed
Boy Scout Troop 249 of
Pomeroy will hold a car wash on
the McDonald' s Parking Lot on
Saturday, from 9 am. to 2 p.m.
Sean, Roebllct wu tile tblnlleadIDC ~ In tbe Unital States In
mt, beblad PlllUp NorriJ llld

Procter lo Gamble.

lEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio has set for public hsaring
Case No. 92-102-El-EFC , to
review lhe fuel procurement prac·
tices and policies of Columbus
Southern Power Company, the
operation ol il$ Electric Fuel Com·
ponent , and related maners. This
hearing is scheduled to begin at
the CommiSsion offices at 10:00
a.m. on September 22, 1992.
All interested parties will be given
an opportunity to be heard. Further
inlormalion may be obtained by
contacting the Commission at 180
East Broad Street , Columbus, Ohio
43266-0573
THE PUBLIC UTiliTIES COMMIS·
SION OF OHIO By: Gary E Vigorito,
Secretary.

ODOT OFFICIAL VISITS SITE· Obio Deportment of Trans·
portation Director Jerry Wray, second from right, visited Me'p
County oa Tuesday to discuss fhe need tor completioa ot the
Ravenswood Bridge Connector. Wray Is pictured at the end of fbe
tour·lane at Rock Springs with Meigs County Commissioners
Richard Jones aod Manning Roush and Frank Cremeans, candl·
date tor State Representative. Wray re-affirmed tbat bigbways,
and tbis project in particular, were priorities for Governor
Voinovlch and ODOT officials. (Sentinel Photo by Briao J, Reed)

commiUee

Continued trom page I

--------~~-------------

"All or the trustees seem really
interested in this extension pro·
ject," Lentes said, "and those of us
on the planning commission n:cognize that with the mines il) the position that they are in, improved
water service will be required if
there's to be any future develop·
ment in that community."
Lentes said that at the commi-

tee's next meeting, the area's greatest water service needs will be pri ·.
oriti~
.
"Ultimately, we would like to
serve everyone," he said, "so we'll
prioritize the community's greatest
needs compared to projected funding and extend year-by-year wift:re

wecan."

··

Lentes said lhal the most PD{'U·
lous areas without water sem ce
will be targeted for service firsl ·

Stocks
Am Ele Power.................... 32 1/2
Ashland Oil.. ......................23 3/4
AT&amp;T.............................. ...44 1/4
Bank One........ .. .................43 7/8
Bob Evans ..... ............. ...... .18 1/2
Charming Shop .................. 31 7/8
City Holding ...... ................ 17 1/2
Federal Mogul................... 14 7!8
GoodyearT&amp;R ......... .........661/4
3/4Key Centurion ..............19 1/2
Lands End.......................... 26 1/2
Limited Inc. ...................... 23 1/4
Multimedia Inc ..................25 3/4
Rax RestauranL ................... J/8
Reliance Elecaic......... ....... I7 5/8
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 14 3/4
Shoney's lnc ........ .. ..... .... ... I8
Star BanL .................... .. .. .32 1/4
Wendy lnt'l.. ..................... .l 2 3/8
Worthington Ind . .. .............20
Stock reports 111:e the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
Ellis and Loewi of Gallipolis.

POMEROY LODGE
164 F&amp;AM
18·HOLE GOLF
SCUMBLE
SEPT. 19, 1992

•.

TEE·OFF 9:00 A.M.
BLIND DUWING SEPT. 18

$35" Per person

,,

DOOR PRIZES:
2nd Prize 5 00~:
Lunch/Awards Following Scramble. : ~

1st Prize 5

200°0

Contad:
Meigs Co. Golf Oub
992·6312
or send $35.00 per
persoa
L.ry Th011as
33080 Badey Run Rd.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

1

All Proceeds Go .
Toward ::
Construction of A
New Lodge

Building in •·,,
Pomeroy
.

..

�•

Wednesday, September 16,1992

Sports

The Daily Sentinel

CLEVELAND- As he walched
the Cleveland Browns driving for
the go-ahead points late in the
foJUt!l Quartet, Miami Dolphins
nmrung back Mark Higgs only
hoped they. would score quickly
enough to gtve Dan Marino one last
chailce.
."I was thinking if we could get a
mm~te, Dan could go to work.
That s when he's at his best "
Higgs said after Marino's · 68second, 84-yard rouchdown drive
gave the Dolphins an exhilarating

Wednesday, September 16,1992 .

Paa• 4.

'

'

For PittsbU!J!h and Montreal, this
series is definitely a showdown. For
the Atlanta Braves, though, their
tussle with Cincinnali is more like a
slowdown. '
The Pirates and Expos, wbo'U
finally play each other tonight afler
nearly a summer's worth of walching scoreboards, both won Thesday
night to set up a final run at the NL
East.
In the West, however, the firstplace Braves continued to shuffte
along, knowing time is running out
for Cincinnati. Even a 4-2 loss 10
the second-place Reds on Thesday
night still seemed like just a minor
delay toward Adanta 's secondstraight title.
There's so little drama at
Riverfront Sladium that feisty Cincinnali manager Lou Piniella concedes he's not real fired up playing
Atlanta.
"We've got two more games
with them and hopefully we can
slow down their pennant express
and solidify our hold on second
place," Piniella said.
In the East, however, it looks
like the two-time champion Pirates
are going to have 1p battle the Expos the rest of the season. Pittsburgh has won 12 of its last 16
games, inc~~a 4-2 vicrory over
St. Louis
y night, but stiU
only holds a four-game lead over
Montreal.
The Expos, who've split 14
games with the Pirates this season
but haven't played them since June
28, prepped for their two-game
series at Pittsburgh by shutting out

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Philadelphia 3-0.
John Wetteland closed for his
Elsewhere, it was Houston 9, 34th save.
San Francisco 6 in 11 innings; the
Marquis Grissom had a two-run
New York Mets 4, the Chicago single off Curt SchiUing (13-10).
Astros 9, Giants 6 ·
Cubs 2 in 7 ~ innings; and Los Angeles 6, San Diego 3.
Jeff BagweU 's lhree-nin homer
Reds 4, Braves Z
in the 11th inning was his fifth hil
Atlanta's number for clinching of the game and helped Housron
the West stayed at 10 as Dan Wil- overcome a five-run lead
son doubled home two runs in the
Bagwell's 15th homer, a two-out
eighth off Steve Avery (10-10). The shot to center field in the
Braves are 0-7 at Riverfront Astrodome off reliever Steve Reed,
Sladium this seasoo, while Avery is foUowed consecutive singles al1-5 with a 7.20 ERA there in seven lowed by loser Dave Righetti (2-6).
career starts.
Thn Belcher (12-14) gave up
Doug Jones (9-8) worked three
four hits over eight iooings, includ- iMings, aUowing a run on two hits,
ing solo homers by Jeff Blauser and for the victory.
Mets 4, Cubs Z
Ron Gant Rob Dibble sauck out
Severe
thunderstorms
hit
the side for his 20th save.
· Wrigley Field as Chicago was
Pirates 4, Cardinals z
Pittsburgh got consecutive preparing to bat in eighth inning.
homers frOm Bany Bonds and Jeff After waiting almost 90 minutes,
the game was called.
King in the sixth inning.
Eddie Murray had his 15th
Jay Bell opened the sixth with a
double, extending his hitting streak homer and Jeff McKnight got his
to an NL-high 20 games, scoring first homer for New York. Both
on Bonds' 29th homer, off Mark were two-run shots and both came
Clark (3-10). King foUowed with off Shawn Boskie (5-9).
Mark Dewey (1-0) replaced subhis bome run.
stitute
starter Paul Gibson and
Andy Van Slyke also homered in
pitched 2 1-3 scoreless innings.
the first for the Pirates.
Dodgers 6, Padres 3
Rookie reliever Paul Wagner ( JOrel Hershiser (10-13) twice
0) worked two hi~ innings after
Randy Tomlin left with a bruised plunked Gary Sheffield, the NL's
left foot he got while running out a leading hiuer, then plodded through
five innings for his first vicrory
bunt.
since
Aug. 19.
Danny Cox worked the last three
Los
Angeles scored four times in
iooings for his second save.
the sixth inning - keyed by Dave
Expo&amp; 3, PhUiies 0
Ken HiD (16-8) rebounded from Anderson's tie-breaking RBI
a poor start last week to shut down double.
Jay Howell survived a shaky
Philadelphia on three hits over
ninth
for his third save.
eight innings. Hill lasted just 2 2-3
Jim
Deshaies (4-5) gave up three
iMings in a I0-3 loss 10 St. Louis
runs in the sixth for loss.
onSepL 9.

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Tom6,0ooo;tl
OaiJil\d 2, Minn.w I
Coli!..... 9, Soollle 0
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Callf'omil (Lanpta~ 12-13) 11 S.alc (Iahn&amp;m
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Oiclp (Hibbud 10-1) 11 New Ym:k
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Mi!wolll:oo (Wepnan 12-ll) 11 Booon (0ud,..4-ID), 7:35p.m.
JCwu Cily (Honey 1·0) 11 Blltimo,. &lt;M&gt;win•
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~114 (Noty 14-10) 11 T0&lt;a110 (SIOU!an,.,
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Tbu {Pivlik 4-2) 1t Detroit (Doherty S-4), 7:35

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Allanlli (P.Smith 5-0) It Cincinnati (Swindell
12~. 7:ll ~ ...
(Nobloolz 9-10) 11 Piu.bu'Jh (Wolk 9·
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SL lAulo (M.opanc 1.0) II Now Yon (llj!mn
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Dldy-odloduled

TODAY'S M.uotl LIAGUE LIAOEIS
IJTIM-IodrNA110NAL LIAGUE
·~ Son Diet&lt;&gt;•• 33l: Von-

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111an1noo1, 92; 11o11ino, l'lliladolphio, 90; VanSI,t~
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llnu, 17: s--., O!kaao,l2.
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oq., 9l: - . Allznu, 9l: McOrift', S..
Dicao, 9~ B-. l'llloboqh, 91; LWolker,
l\laninool, 14: "'-ny, New Yodl.l4.
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AW..., 176; Shclllcld, s.. Dica• 171: GWJIIII,
Son Dieto. 16l: Oriuum. -11011. 164: Onoo,
OU&lt;oao,t63: Sondbcq.O!ka,.ll9.
IJOUBW-V..Siykc. Piasbuqll, 41: llunt.v\,
~ 37; Oriuum. M......t, 36: WOuk,
SUI Pnna-, 36: Lonkford, SL I.Guis, 3l: JB&lt;ll.
l'ilubuqjl.ll; hluny, New Yool:. 33.
'l"RlPP..BS-DSandcn, Ar.Luua, 14; Finley,
- . I I : YonSiykc. Pilllblo'Jh,ll: BUller. lA
Aaploo, II; Aliou, SL Lao;a, I~ orr...,.., l.al
Anae~&lt;o. s, s..dbcq. au.. ... a.
HOME RUNS-Mc:Grilr, Son Di'l", 34; Shcf·
field, s.. o;.ao, 31; Boodo, Pilltbwp, 29:
lloul1&lt;11, l'!lilodolpiUa. 26; Hollins, Pllilzdolpltia,
23; LWIIi«, Moouool, 22: .....dklm, Albn,., 21 ,
STOLEN BASES--Oriaam, M111UOII, 70: C.
Shieldo, M111IJOII, 4l; BuW., Loo Anaeb, 41 ;
Lonkfcd, S1. I.Guis, 40: OSmilh, SL t....io, 40:
Robcr\1, Cincim1ti. 39; Nllon,Ailanv., 38.
PlTCIIING (17 DociMno)-(ll&gt;vine, Albn•.
2{).~ .7fll, 2.11; Towbbwy, SL Louio, 16-l, .762,
2.171; KHID. M.....U. IH .667, 2 . 7~ Swinddl,
Cincinnati, 12-6, .661, l.S4; Moqan, Chicaao. 147, .667, 2.61 : IAibnnd'- Alllno, 12-6, .667, 3.l4;
Cone, Now Yool:, I:J.7, .6lll, 2.!8.
STRIKEOtJJ'S.--Cone, New Y&lt;l:k, 214; Smolu,
Albno, 197: SFcnwtdoz, New v.... 113: GModdw, Oti&lt;o .., 172; Dnbdt, PltUbu'Jh, ll7: R;jo,
Cincinnoo , ll7 : 0....IAAn 1 c~c:o. 14l.
SAVES-LoSmilh, SL Looio, 38: Wcudond,
MonUOII, 34: M,..., s.. llica~ 34 : ru,.,..,
HOUII.orl, 31: Chutton., Cincinnati, 2S; Mt·
Williams, Pki.lldclpbil. 25; Dibble, Cinci.M&amp;ti, 20.

p.m.,'
,
'l'bundly'1 01mes
Milwau.ioo (Navii'IO IS-II) at Booon (CC111cm
t &amp;-'.), 7:35 p.m.
Clovetmd (Nlitk:t 0-0) 1t Toronto (MorriJ 19·5),

l'llllbuiJb, 97:

AMERICAN LI!AGUE
BA111NG-£MIItina, S..lll&lt;, .343: -"'-...,., .331: Mock, Minnoo&lt;11, .324; Ori1!'oy,
Seaule. .323; MoliLOr, Mih~•ukcc, .323: RAlomar,
Toronto. .318; Thom11, OUcaao.. 314.
RUNS--l'llillipl, 0.0.U. 103; I!Manincz,
Su.lll~ 100; RAlamu, Tcwcnlo, 95; Knoblauch,
Minncloll, 93; Thanu. OLie&amp;JO, 93; Andcna~ ,
Bahimo~ 93; Jl\ac:k&amp;, MiMaou., 92.
R.BI-I'Wdcr, o-n, II); Co=, T_,.,
ICC; l'hc.nu, 0Uc.ao. 10\; P\lctcu, t.imCIICMI,
101 ; JoGooula, Tuu, 99; GBdl, Otieo... 99;
J)cyeR\Iul, Blltimore. rn.
HITS-Puckett, Minnca~. 190; EMininez,
S..llle, Ill: Bq~ Cle¥dond. 171; Mock, f&gt;lin.
omw, 17l; MoliuJr, Milwouteo, 174; M.o•""&amp;'y•
New Yori, 161; Devcre~ux, B&amp;Jt.imotc, !66.
DOUBU!S--EManiooz, S..llle, 46; Ori1!'oy,
Seattle, 31; Nltlinf.IJ, New Ycd, 37; 'I'homla,
aue~ao.
\W\tw1, Clliclao, 33; Jeft'erill, rc.n-

:w:

... City, 33; Joyner, Kant~~ Cily, 33.
TIUPl.£S--0evCRIUJ.,
Balcimcn,
II ;
UoMJM, Chi~p. II , Andcaoo, Btltimon:, 9;
r....,,., 7: •
Ld\oo, Clovclond. a:

RAJ-.

tied m6.
HOME RUNS-M la•wla, Tcuo, 40; Ide-

R.Jinc~ , OtJ~ao. 7: 6m

o-.;,., Ookluld. 31: Cane, Ton1110, 32: Fioldoo,
o.u.;'- 31; a.u., O..olond, 29; T""""'·
o.u.;'- 29; Door. o.u.;,, 21,
STOLEN B~SI!S--LoftGn, Covolznd, l6&lt; J.il.
l&amp;ch, Milwaukee., Sl; Andenon, 81ltim1W'C, Sl ;
Polonil, Califwnia, SO; Rllclldcnon, o.Jdlnd, _., ,
am-, OU.C.ao, 44; RAiornar, Toronto, 41
PlTCIIING
(17
DocioiCIII}-IuOulmon,
T.,...10, ll-! , .Ill, 2.49; JoMorrio, T"""""' 19-l,
:m, 4.01; MuiCi.nl, B1ldm0N. t5-5, .750, 2.11 ;
McDowell, CU..,.. 20-7, .741, 3.171; BOlio, Mil·
w•llkeo. \4-S, .1'!1, 3.66; KBrown, ToUI, 19-9,
.679,127: a ...,,,. . 11-9. .6lil. 2.11 .
STRIXEOl11'S-Cian..,., B'""'"· 191; r....,
New Yon, 194: ~
Ill; I~
Ouunan, To1u, 161 ; MtDowell, OUe~p, U6;
JuGmnan, T~to. !SJ; Drown, Teus,l!t.
SAVES-I!Wnlzy, OUJand, 47; AaWJon,
MiMcoolo, 37; M"''""""l'· Knu Cily, 34; 01·
..... Balan-. 33: 1~. Ooiland. 29; -~
Tarona.o, 29; ROll"dcn, Soan, 27.

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a,n.•

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MILWAUKEE BRBWl!IIS-Aaqlilied Molll

"""""'"· plldMI, ,_ lho Tolll Ran............
""' ., ...U. dloJ tbo1 - J!dwln Nunoz,
pildMr, ,. r-. Allipod 11omp1cn 10 S!Ocltllln
ollhl Colllomlo Loop. .
NBW YOU: YANDII!S-Roctllod Gml&lt;l W~-

u-, - · ,_ Coblmbw

llooo!IAopo.

ol .... lnloml·

SBATI'U! MAIUNl!IIS-I'uldlued lho ...,_

lnCt ol JloM lfowia, CMfielder, !ram CtJa"l' ci
lho I'Kilio C.... Loopo.
'IEXAS 1tAN0E1tS-Reca1 Crio Colon, ;,.
fieldct. , _ 1'uiN "'""' TCUII.eap.

NlllloooiLoopo
CINCINNATI REDS--ed lhoir Clw A
allilio10 r... CeoJv RopWo otlho Mid,_ Lea""'
to W"IIIIIUII-Salan ~ the Cuciinll.e~Jue. Exltn·
dod tho&amp;r W&lt;llkiaa •sr-n-t with Quleltoo,
W.Yo, ci lho Saulh Allande l.eafl' lhroup lhe

1'194 .......
PITISBURClH PIRA'Il!S-RO&lt;I]Jed Wllliom
l'loMyfllllla 01d Alban Mlnin, oudloldon, ""'
Kevin YQUI'I&amp;, inftddflr, ham Buffalo of the
Amorim As~GeiJcion. Pan:huod Jhc CCIUI'IC\ of
Tom Princo, caldlcr, !ram Bu!!llo. Rocolled Poul
Miller, pildlor, fran Butrllo 1nd placod him on lho
60-doy diaoblod till
SAN DmOO PADRES-Roc1Dod Jim V•iehcr•
Clllllloldoo, , _ w "'au c{ lh&lt; P,cilic C..A
l.aiJU•

BASKETBALL
No-11-IAiooc~llon

omorr PISTONS-SieleoJ Trny Millo, r...
wud, \.0 an atfct shoel

FOOTBALL
NaUoul FoatlleU Laaue
N'Fl-AnnCI.IIICDCI Leeman Bmncu will •etve
u uocutive dUeaor d Atlan&amp;ai'• Supt:r Bowl
xxvm Hmt Carnmia-..
GREI!N BAY PACICERS-I'Ioocd Mom
D'Onofrio. liMblc:k~~r, on injn rserve. Sip!d
llumdl Dml., li"±lduw OUnod Dmn.y Noon1n,
dol'enaiwo linG'MD, olf wllinn fnm 1ho Dallu
Cowboy•
INDIANAPOUS COI.TS-Pioocd Alhley
Ambn.e, dll{mJivo b.clr, an injlnd rmerve. Sia·
nod WllliJ Pq,u-. dciCNive ald.
KANSAS CITY CliiEfS-jl;,ned
Mictell, deftn~ivo awl. Wlivod Stephone Pai&amp;e..
wido roceivc:r.
NEW YORK II!I'S--b-liped R.I. Kon.
ufcty. Plaood Jelf Lipan. defcmive a~d, on in·
jwod ........
PHOEN1X CARDINALS-Waived Anthony
Th......... ........ bock, S~ed EDt Wilhelm,
q1&gt;1tl0tbodl.
TAMPA BAY BU&lt;XANEEIIS-Phoocd Rondy
Grime~, center, an injw'ed raavc..
HOCKEY

27-23 win in their hurri~ne­ 'Mark, you're going 10 get the baU
delayed opener Monday night.
back, and you have 10 be ready."'
Htggs scored the winning points · ~e Dolphins relied on Higgs for
on a 1-yard dive with seven thetr runnmg game most of the
seconds left His fumble midway night, favoring him over newcomer
through the fourth quarter had been Bobby Humphrey, who was acreturned by David Brandon for a quired in an offseason b'ade with
touchdown that got Cleveland the Denver Broncos. Higgs rushed
within three points, 20-17, . and 25 times for 90 yards and two
brought the crowd of 74,765 back touchdowns; Humphrey canied
inro the game.
twice for 11 yards.
"My teammates made me able 10
Marino completed 25 of 35 pasbounce back," Higgs said. "Dan ses for 322 yards and one
made me hang in there. He said, touchdown, a 25-yarder to Mark
'

. ·'£

'•..:tr.·

Chad Nelson and Jason Arb:. Staadl111ea•·
mates are Josh Marcum, Josh Broderick, Erll
Smith, Wes Crow, Josb WUI and JIIOD Waner.
Behind them are coaches Tim Smitlt, Gary Nel·
son and Jim Crow.

TOP TEAMS - First-place winners In the

La~ies' Monday Evening Golf League at the

Me1gs County Golf Cou~ were Nellie Wright

DOWN AND OUT - Cleveland quarterback
Bernie Kos:u (19) bits the dirt after being
sacked by Miami linebacker John Offerdahl
during Monday night's game in Cleveland. Tbe

Nldoftal~eJtAaaut

By THOMAS P. WYMAN
Associated Press Writer
SOUTH BEND, Ind. - Precious seconds slipped away while

.as...
..
dOOrS::t.··
Whllt 32" Of ,..

~~.~-.-~~~~~

239.95

TAKES THIRD, FOURTH- Recognized as
third· and fourth-place league winners at tbe
Ladles' Monday Evening G~Jr League outing

Moo day were (L·R) Joan Childs and Nellie
Brown, wbo took third place, and Donna Nease
and Gail Davenport, who took fourth• .

Lou Holtz talked taCtics with Rick dumb a mistake on the sidelines in
Mirer, forgetting a rule change that years," the Notre Dame coach said
starts the clock after a penalty.
Tuesday.
" I don't think I've made that
Fifteen wasted seconds ran of(;
before Mirer dashed back to thro~r
Monday league golfers get end-of-year awards
a sidelines pass out of bounds to
The Ladies' Monday Evening pon and Donna Nease. There were Lake Dawson. The clock left the ··
··
Golf League held its end-of-t.he- 17 teams participating in league Irish with just seven seconds.
The game Saturday ended in a
year outing on Monday.
play this year.
17-17
tie, the most notorious for ·
First place in the scramble was a
Twenty-six women were present
the
Irish
since 1966 when No. J· ·
for a nine-hole scramble, foUowed tie between the team of Celia
Notre
Dame
and No. 2 Michigan'
by a catered dinner from Crow' s McCoy, Tonja Hunter, Dianna
State
tied
10-10.
,
Lawson, Ada Nease and Jean PowFamily Restaurant.
The
tie
brought
an
immediate:
·
Following the dinner, Becky ell and the team of Becky AnderTriplett, league president, made son, Becky .Trent, Becky Tripleu, shower of boos from fans who .
presentation to the league winners. Carol Adams and Carol McCol - noticed the ticking clock and were
disappointed by a conservative
The first-place team was Mary lough.
The criticism shows little
drive.
Third-place winners were Rita
Froendt and Nellie Wright. Second
si~m
of
abating this week.
place went to Tonja Hunter and Slavin, Nellie Brown, Julia Hysell
Michigan
pushed deep inro
Melanie Weese. Third place wem and Carolyn Grueser. Fourth place Notre Dame had
territory
with lillie
to Nellie Brown and Joan Childs. went to Debbie Sayre, Mary
more
than
a
minute
left.
Holtz
Fourth place went to Gail Daven- Froendt, Clarice Krautter and expected to lose by a touchdown
or
Donna Nease.
at least a field goal.

Hundii,dd'~'9•mlllti)'Nl'~lc:t.

WAID CROSS'
SONS

O'DELL LUMBER CO.
Pickens Hardware
Mason, W.V.

••
Browns lost more than just the game, as KOIIIII''s : ~
injured ankle, diagnosed Tuesday, wiU keep him _..
out or action for at least six weeks. (AP)

Holtz's forgetting rule change costs Irish win

o,...,

CALOARY fl..AMES-Apwd to ~em~ • with
Thoon:n Fleuly, forward, m 1 muhiyw conuaCL
KAII'I'R)RD WIIAlJ!Il$-Si""" Mutin

··.·

· ~

a

Hardware for the
best selection of
LAWN and
Garden Tools for
fall clean up.

•
Cleveland !-yard line with to~
seconds left. A roughing-the-passer
penalty helped. lacked onro Banks!. iirst catch.
Higgs had little lrouble punching .
it over from the I, saving coach::
Don Shula the agony of deciding
whether 10 go for the win or send •·
the game to overtime with a field: :
goal.
"That's about as thrilling as you
can make it," Shula said. "The
drive at the end was as great as you
could gel. ll was vintage Marino."
The Dolphins' scheduled opener
against New England was .. .
postponed last week while south .
Florida worked to recover from .:
Hurricane Andrew. The game wiD '
be played Oct. 18, initially the Dol- ..
phins' bye week.
-.:

(left) and Mary Froendt. Second-place winners
were Tonja Hunter and Melanie Weese.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Flanker Joey Galloway, who
scored on a 50-yard reverse in Ohio
State's opener, will be lost for the
rest of the season after sustaining a
complete tear of the anterior crociate ligament, team doctors said
Tuesday.
Galloway. a 5-foot-10, 180pound sophomore, also caught
three passes for 24 yards in the
Buckeyes' first two victories. He
caught 14 passes for 255 yards and

Pickens

One possession later, Kosar
completed six passes on a 77-yard
drive that gave Cleveland a 23-20
lead, capping it with a 3-yard dumpoff 10 Mark Bavaro with I: 18 10
play.
"''m not really sure what kicked
in," said Kosar, who will be out for
at least six weeks. "When I went
into the huddle, I could see il in the
guys' eyes. Hopefully some!"of that
confidence that started in the fourth
quarter will carry on."
After Bavaro scored, Matt Stover
banged the extra point off the left
upright, meaning Miami could tie it
with a field goal.
"We shouldn't have got to that
point," said Marino. Working from
his own 16 with one timeout, he hit
four slraight passes, liJ.e last two to
Fred Banks, puaing tJie ball at the

I

OSU's Galloway lost
for rest of season

Stop by

Duper that opened the scoring in
the first quarter.
Another long pass, 45 yards 10
Ro~n Clark, set up Higgs' 7-yard
sconng run later m the period. A
47-yarder to Tony Martin led 10 the
first of two field goals by Pete
Stoyanovich as Miami surged to a
20-3 lead early in the fourth·
quaner.
Kosar, limping on an ankle that
he learned on Thesday had a
hairline fracture, woke up
Cleveland's listless offense in the
fourth quarter with a 60-yard pass
to Michael Jackson to the Miami
20. Jackson scored seven plays
later on a 6-yard catch.
Two plays after that, Hi~gs
fumbled, stripped by Mike
Johnson, and Brandon ran 32 yards
unrouched for the touchdown.

·.

'

G!'

THIRD IN TOURNEY -Chester's Big
Bend Pee Wee League IJasebaU team finished its
season with 9-4 record and a third-place finish
in the league tournament. Kneellng are (L·R)
Justin Brewer~ Chris Krawsczyn, Joey Taylor,

The Dally Sentlnel-Page---6

Kosar's ankle·fracture will keep him out for at least six weeks

Cincy's.4-2 win over Atlanta
barely keeping Braves from flag
. By Tbe Associated Press

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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�Wednelday, September 16,1992

Sentinel

. .Rio kickers ·split wtth UP·B

·EASTMAN'S
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The University of Rio Grande
soccer ream split a pair of pmes in
a weekend tournament at the University of Pittsburgh-Bradford,
leaving the team with some mixed
signals about its performance to
date.
Now 2-3; the ~ are keeping a respeclable s~ for an early
season slal1, but Coleh Scott Morrissey noted that elimination of
mental errors in lhe heat of play
will have 10 become a priority as
the campaign progresses.
Rio Grande defeated the College
of Misericordia (Pa.) 3·2 in opening action last Sawnlay following a
lopsided pair of halves, and underwent a 3-2 loss in the championship game against Kukea (N.Y.).
The 6rst contest saw S&lt;XIring by
sophomore Todd Koch and fresh·
men Stuart Smilh and Jack Wroblewski, along wilh supponivo t"~eld
work by Koch and second-year
teani mem~r J.C. Circle. But the
bulk of Rio Gl1tnde's effons didn't
take hold until it bad reversed a
sloppy fust half, Morrissey said.
"By far we wen: the betler team,
but suange lhings happen in athlet·
ics and we didn't ge(the job done,"
he said. ''The second hal(was a different story: we played superior
soccer. The disappomunent was,
we had two mental breakdowns in
defense and we literally let the

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ltldlyarru t'lfor.,.lnoochK._s,......... ,.

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...-.

Hurting lhe Rcdmen endeavor
was the early. loss of first-year
players Andrew Jones and Peter
Richards 10_ in~. Howevtt, Jim
Egner guanlcd the Rio Grande goal
weD, I'CCCX'ding fivo sa_,,
.
In lite ~ tilt Sllllday, the team
continued ita good work rrom the
previous day tor about io minutes .
mto the first half, and then "we
gave them (Kukea) the game,"
Morrissey said. Nevertheless, the
Redmen made diose I 0 minutes
count by sccring their only goals of
the game, lhe rust by senior cocaptain Joe Kiley and the other by
Jones, wbo ~ off his injury
10 see about IS nunutes of play.
As for the rest of the game,
Morrissey said the team was
defeared by "the simple lhings that
bum you, and have blimed us all
season so far.
· "I lhiDk the positive side of Ibis
is lhat we're not doing Ibis in disuict and conference play, where
it's really going 10 matter for us,"
lite coach noted. '1'm quite confident we .will getlhrough Ibis."
The Redmen were home for the
firSt time this season ibis afternoon
in a matchup with Wiuenberg.
They resume their road schedule
this Satunlay at Malone.

•
••

.

Allen, Kane among KC victors
1LB.
BOX

F

DELMONTE

CARROTS.SPINAC~MIXED-

Tomato Juice

BEANS.CORN-PEAS.
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Ohio Valley Christian School
posted wins over Meigs County
foes Eastern ;1nd Southern in the
last week.
'""""'
At Southern, OVC took the
wind out of the Tomaodes 15·9 and
1S-10.
Jodie Hager led the auack with
seven serving poiniS and a 4-5 hit·
ling night with two kills. Senior
Meredith Pollard also added two
kills. in he~ 7-9 outing and had six
servmgpomiS.
. C~ti Maidens ~ Southern
wuh stx pomts, whtle Megan
Wolfe had five, Jodi Caldwell
thiee, Andrea Moore two, Tabitha
Willford two and Angie Swiger
one.
. .
.
In the )untor high match, South·
ern's Amber Thomas served 13
consecutive point in pacing her

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lard two and Anesa VanMatre two.
Eastern was led by freshman
Jessica Karr's 5-8 serving night
and five poiniS, while Jaime Wilson, Becky Driggs and Carrie Morrissey each added two, Penny Aeiker one and Stephanie Otto one with
one ace.
EHS setters were 12-21 and in
spiking were 7-IS with no kills.
EHS coach Don Jackson said
"Hopefully, this is the only game
we have l(ke this. We couldn't
pass, had jw;t one spike in the second game and had our lowest point
IOialoftheyear."
"I'm conftdmt thai we'll bounce
back. We have 10 think positive or
the negative will get us in the end,"
said the rarst year coach.

U.S. GRADE A CHICKEN
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"IN THE DAIIIY CASE"

of Big Ten schools

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country Club
Ice cream
•
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B·

The Big ilend Bowhuters Club
,
originated in the wly 1950's as.the
CHICAGO (AP) - The Big LemmonhaU Field Archers located
Ten says the NCAA will conduct ill the McClintic · Wildlife Area.
iiS own probe of seven conference ·Since that lime, die club has moved
schools that gave extta financial 10 irs present location on Blessing
aid in non-revenue spons, delaying Ridge near Letart and Chan$ed
acceptance of the conference's rrom a field an:hery 10 bowhuntmg
repon on the matter.
club.
"We will cooperate fullf with
Numerous ardlery events will be
the NCAA,'' Big Ten COIIIIDlSSicln- held dttrilla theae three days, with
er Jim Delany said Tuesday. lllflles of III"Cheey equi(XIlent and
"We've sliared all our infonnation SIIPPiiea ll1il door prius given. .
with the NCAA, and it is cumnlly ' A lllthedule of eveniS is as rotreviewing the situllion."
lows; Frldlj - a 30-tariet 3-D
The NCAA is concerned about · sbool from S 10 8 p.m. Saturday • a
some inconsistencies over reasons 30-taraet bia game shoot from II
the extta aid was paid by Illinois, a.m. 10 S p.m.; a 30-taraet 3-D
Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minncso- sbool from S 10 8 p.m.; and a IS ta, Purdue and Wisconsin, the ~~~Jet coon shoot beginninpt dark.
Chicago Tribune reported TuesdaY. . Suoday • a .. 30-target b1g game
Michigan State, Northwestern sbool from II a.m. 10 5 p.m..
·
and Ohio State were not involved.
Lunch of roast pig will be served ·
In June, the Big Ten revealed Sunday at noai.
that for about 20 years the seven
EveniS an: open 10 an:heJS of all
schools bad been miscalculating ages. Novelty and "smoker" shoots
tuilioo for out-of•Siate studcnl·llh· will be held. .
letes in such spons as wrestling and
For additional information please
swimming.
ca11882-3345 or 882-3258.

FROZEN YOGU/11 OR

Pound

CoUins, Brianne Proffiu and Missy
The Big Bend Bowhunters of
Smith all added three ea~h, while Mason County will bold their !3th
Suzanne Clark led OVC wtth two.
Annual H ward "SIOO . .. Carder
15-~0~~Yis~;:c defeated Easrcm . ~VO:, oo Sep..J~ 18-20.
Hager led OVC with I6 poiniS ThiS annua!_ ~t" honors the
and one ace, AMy Pollllrd had six, IIICI1I!lfY of Stoogie Carder, one ,
Anna Hamrick two Meredith Pol- of the ~ members of the club.
•
"SIOOgiC" IS remembered as an ac·
NCAA to start probe e:ooall':twhunrer and conser·

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'Cy~t~fawinc;?d~~?, t5c~ssie jamboree Friday

EVANS

BOB.EVANS
Bur1tos aox

By SCOTI' WOLFE
Bobby's A·l Allen Enterprises
entty.
Sentinel Comspondeat
Finally, on lap 21 ADen shot by
Shooting from his ninlh-place
starting position, Hanover, Pa. Bowling and rilced 10 the win over
driver Joey Allen took the lead Kerr, Terry Shepherd, Bowling,
from Mike Bowling on the 21st lap KeUy Kinser, Dunpan, Ryron Reed,
to claim the $5,000 top prize in the Todd Kane, Keny Nonis and Joey
once-posponed "Freedom 40" at Saldana.
KC Raceway near Chillicoihe.
In the late model main Charlie
Cbillicolhe driver Charlie Sey- Seymour jumped into the lead for
mour claimed a close Late Model the farst six laps, but Fudge Leist
main over Mark Frazier and rook over on laps 7-12, before SeyRacine's Bob Adams Jr.
mour regained the lead.
.
Noted as one of the lOp indepenThe top eight cars meed two and
dent sprint races in the country, this thiee wide with Bob Adams Jr. and
year's "Freedom 40" drew 35 of Mark Frazier battling for position
the nation's finest !Print cars.
throughout the nighL
Jim"Nier of Piketon, second in
Following Seymour across the
KC points, set the fast time of line was Frazier, Adams in the
12:07.2, an average of 115 miles Riverview
Auto/) .D.
per hour.
Drilling/McDonalds of Gallipolis
Mechanical genius and welding enuy, Leist, Andy Bond of
engineer Charlie Fisher claimed the Coolville; Racine's Scott Wolfe in
dash, while Indiana driver Kerry the ~ision Automotive/MeDon·
Norris, AII·Star champ Frankie · ald's/ Mark's Auto Sales Nl4;
Kerr, Joey Saldana and Australian Chuck Waddell, Jon Osman, DonBroolcc Tamell claimed the heals.
nie Kennison, Clark VanHouten
Todd Kane claimed the B-main and Harold Redman.
while uansfer spotS went 10 Nier,
Wolfe passed the most cars on
Dean Jacobs and Byron Reed. Out· the night, coming from 14th to
law star Danny Smilh, who earlier sixlh.
blew an engine, changed power
Heats went to Waddell and ·
planiS and started oo the tail of the Bond.
18-car field. He kept the large
KC has an Enduro 100 and
crowd on edge as he powered from Street SIOck Invitational Ibis week.
last 10 sixth before running out of No sprints Ill" Late "Models will run.
time and missing the feature.
The All-Star Sprints return on
Mike Bowling rode the rim, rid- September 26, paying $4,000 to
ing on lhe edge of quickness or win.
injury, gaining the jump swt on
Skyline Speedway in Stewart
second place Rodney Duncan . will run the annual "Harvest 50"
Smoothly and methodically, ADen Friday for Late Models, paying
picked off cars in his brother $2,000 to win and $250 10 start.

OVCS beats Southern, Eastern

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�By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel

Ol!lo
.,.

Paga-8

•

by Bob Hoeflich

'Trapped in Texas' gets advice
from reader in same situation

·New ollicers of tbe Women's
Veterans Memorial Hospital are
with Mrs. Louise Bearbs, len, ooly
charter membeJ'. Installed by retiring

president Jeasle w•ite, tbey are left to right,
Libby Fisher, president; Jeaaaette Lawrence,
vice president; Mildred Wells, recordlag secre·
tary, and Abbie StraHon, treasurer.

·:VMH auxiliary installs officers
'

: New officers were elected and
instilled when the Women's AuxilillrY''~~~ Memorial Hospital
:met'. · y in'the hospital confer~nce· ro&lt;ii)I .

· ·Jessie' Whitc, long-time presid~stalled the new officers with

J

'

Betty Sayre presenting corsages
during the ceremonies.
Installed were Libby Fisher,
president: Jeannetre Lawrence, vice
president: Mildred Wells, recording
secretary; and Abbie Stratton, trea·
surer.· Not present was correspond-

ing secretary, Carrie Kennedy.
The Auxiliary voted to give
$300 to the hospital's Candys·
tripers which is being revived
untb the direction of Kristy Dailey, an auxiliary member.

:;· . ·. ·\ . People in the news--: ; LOS . 'ANGELES (AP) · Richard Dreyfuss, Oscar-winning
star. of " The Goodbye Girl," filed
for divorce to end his nine-year
marriage to Jeramic Rain Dreyfuss,
court documents show.
Dreyfuss separated from his
. wife on Feb. 28 and filed his
: divorce petition Monday in Los
· Angeles County Superior Court,
' citing irreconcilable differences.
A call Tuesday to the actor's
lawyer, Dennis Wasser, was not
· immediarely returned. On Monday,
· Wasser said Dreyfuss wanted an
amicable divorce.
Dreyfuss, 44, is seeking joint
· custody of the couple 's three children, Emily Robin , 8; i!lenjamin
Darrow. 6; and Harry Spencer, the
documents show.

WMUmeets
The Women 's Miss ionary
Uni on (WM U) of Hope Baptist
Church mel recenlly with several
members auending.
Opening prayer was by Denise
Michael.
A meeting dale of the second
Tuesday of each month was set.
The WMU is emphasizing the
Ray Robens Slate Missions Offering. The church goa l is $6 per
county in Ohio. A Missions March
is being held each Sunday morn ing
during September to give people an
opponunity to participate. Bulletin
inserts highlighting "Missionary
Moments" and how the slate missions offering is budgeted in the
slate eonvention arc disuibutcd
each week.
Refreshm ents were served to
Emm a Ashley, director; Mar y
Bryan, Bron Williams. Jenn y Dnty.
De nise Mic hael and Donna
Grueser.

MIAMI (AP) - Muhammad Andrew.
Ali will be grand marshal of the
King Orange Jamboree Parade on
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
New Year's Eve - better known
judge
said a sound-effects inventor
as the Orange Bowl Parade before
can
still
sue Michael Jackson over
the football game.
failure
to
remove the man's name
Ali, the only three-time world
heav yweight boxing champion, from the album "Bad" after deletwon his first title against Sonny ing his conttibution to the r=rd.
Lawyers for the pop star, his
Liston in Miami Beach in 1964 and
MJJ Productions ancf Sony's Epic
trained there in the 1960s.
"Miami is one of my favorite Re&lt;:ords failed Monday to persuade
places," Ali, SO, said Monday. " It Superior Court Judge David Yaffe
holds • lot of fond memories from to dismiss the lawsuit for !act of
the days of my fiTSt tille, and I've evidence and cauae. However, the
always liked the weather."
judge said he would consider the
Ali went on to defeat George argument that the lawsuit was fded
1
Foreman and Leon Spinks for the late.
world heavyweight tille.
Hugo Zuccarelli's lawsui~ filed
The parade, to be broadcast in 1991, seeks more than $30 milnationally by NBC, will have the lion in damages.
theme " King Orange ... A Wotld
Zuccarelli invented a system
of Fun " and include a section, called Holopbonics to create three" Heroes of the Hurricane," honor- dimensional sound effects that
ing those in the community who seem to project a sound away ·from
helped victim s of Hurricane the srereo speakers producing it

SHS grad aboard USS Tortuga
Navy Fireman Marvin E. Bick·
ers. son of Edith A. Hubbard of Rt
3. Racine, OH, is currently aboard
the dock landing ship USS Tortuga,
homeported in Norfoll:., VA and is
mid-way through a six-month
deploymem to the Mediterranean.
Bickers participated in a joint,
combined amphibious exercise
with Tunisian Army, Marine and
special forces units, which was followed by cross training between
U.S. and Tunisian military forces.
Bickers visited Corfu, Greece,
fo r the Fourth of July and fostered

international relations by hosting
several dignitaries, residents and
tourists for toun aboard the ship.
Bickers also .visited Haifa, Israel,
where crewmembers were able to
visit Jerusalem, Galilee, Bethleham , Nazareth, Massada and the
Dead Sea. Several crewmembers
were afforded -the opportunity to
spend a night with local families in
Haifa and learn firsthand about
Israeli culture.
1M 1984 paduate of Southern
Higk School joined the Navy in
AuJU8tl989.

Wolf Pen community happenings
Mr. and Mrs . Tom Summerfield , Crystal, Medina, were week·
end visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Russell.
Mrs. Dan iel Worley, Stacy,
Da niel and Stephen , Daniels,
W.Va., were weekend visitors of
Naomi Smith .
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Johnson
were recent visi tors of Mr. and
Mrs. Harley Johnson.
Ju lie Steve ns and Barbara
Steadman, Fairfax, Va.. were Sun·
day visitors of Dorothy Reeves.
Sunday visitors of Naomi Smith
were Mrs. Daniel W_orley, _S!JI:Cy,

=r;·

Daalal, Ste,.ll, Mr. and Mrs.
Doyle
and Mrs. Kcvill
llld
ters, Julie Srevcns
~ubara teadman, Fairfax,
Va.
Tim Peterson was a Labor Day
visilor of his lister, Mr. and Mrs.
Chlrlcl KJia,·
Douna Aoush was and Bud
Lavender, Syracuse, were Labor
Day visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Kevin
Knipp and daughters.
Cliristine lailey was a Labor
DIX visllor of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Bailey Sr.

-~
~,..
Special of the Week!
CARA LAWLESS

First birthday

(I

Cara Lyn Lawless, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Lawless, Middleport, celebrared her fi rst birthday ·
recendy with a dinner and party at ~
her home.
A "Care Benr" theme was carried out in the decorations.
Atrendifll, besides her parents,
were her sister, Delana. her maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
McDaniel , paternal grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn McDaniel and
Mrs. Hazel Hazle~ve, Mr. and
Mrs. Paul McDamel and Kristen
and Travis Lawless.

B.B.Q. SANDWICH

s1.64

WITH FRIES........
- •••• $2.34
.

Dear ADD LaDders: rm writing
about that tcacr from "TTawcd in
Texas.' She is the woman who
was getting all those calls from a
suicidal friend. I went through
the same tbiag and ·c:ame 10 the
conclusioo that anyone who aies
suicide for a long time is looking
for attention.
When I was 16, I foolishly gave
my phone number to a man I'd been
raJking 10 on the CB radio. He was
2l,lived with his parents and bad a
learning disability. Whenever he
called, be would end up threatening
suicide if I didnl keep ralking to
him. He lcept repeatins bow much
he needed me to talk him out of
killing himself. I was afraid to hang
up.
After six months, the strain
heeame unbelrable. •I told him I
cOuldn't help him anymore, that he
shouldnl have ]lut the burden of
saving his life on my shoulders and
that I was only 16 and not able to
handle the load. He threatened to
kill himself 'within five minutes" if
I bung up on him and said it would
be my fault I hung up anyway and
unplugged the phone. At this poin~
I had decided it was either him or
me.
Two weeks law, I heard him on
the CB radiO again, trying to laUe a
woman into giving him her phone
number. Please, Ann, tell 'Trapped
in Texas" that she should not talk to
her friend again until they can have
a normal conversation. And tell her
that she should never be alone with
him. Luckily, I never met my
caller, and he didn't know where

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDEIIS
"19!13, Loo Allltl•

n... s~-'
Craion SJ'II..C!..e''

I lived, but 'Trapped" bas known
hers for several years, and she
shouldn't take any chances. He just
might decide to get even with
her for refusing to be his ouUeL -TifEWARNER
DEAR WARNER: You were
pretty savvy for 16.1hanks for those
words of wisdom. Yw've given that
Texas woman excellent advice. Let's
hope she takes it
Dear Ann Laaders: I'm a
friendly, non-threatening person
and essy to talk to or unload on,
whichever way you want to put
it There's a good deal of marital
cheating in my social circle and I
decided to fmd out what goes on in
the heads of the players, so I asked
a lot of questions. This is what I
learned:
Almost all the divorced, widowed
and single women are sony they
became involved with a married man
and said it made them feel guilty
and sleazy and wasn't worth the
trouble.
The men who cheated said they
did ii because their wives had
gotren sloppy, careless and too
involved with kids and club \YOrk,
and marital sex had become bumdrum and boring. The women they

Plans, for a craft fan durmg port of the Meigs County Health
Pomeroy s Christmas Open House Depanment replacement levy to be
wcrc discussed at the recent meet- voted on in the coming election.
ing of the Preceptor Beta Beta
A donation was made to the
Chapter, Beta Sigma Pili Sorority, sorority relief fund set up to assist
held at the home of Charlotte victims of Hurricane Andrew in
Elberfeld. H.o~sscs were Nellie Florida and Louisiana.
Brown and Lill1811 Moore.
Matda Mora presented a proThe four local ·chapulrs of Bela gram and the group worked on
Sipna Pili are requested to partici- ansels f&lt;l- the craft fair with assispate ~ the craft fair which will be lllnCC from Mrs. Elberfeld.
held m the office space of Kenny
Other members attending were
Utt on Main Street

dur:~r~w~~~~~g:

well as t-sbirts and souvenirs for
the.rc:'.:=:ethegroupwill
be serving the American Red Cross
Bloodmobile in Meigs County and
will be putting up posters in sup-

Now that IS special!
Yo~ :-were wonderful in your
recogmtion of the reCent binhday
of our beloved Maye Mora-but
th en you are always wonderful
about these things.
To mark the occasion, Maye's
son and daughter-in-law, Don and
Matda Mora, entertained with an
open house in her honor at their
home on Route 7 near Pomeroy. A
total of 140 guests registered and
Maye received 199 cards not to
mention a slew of flowers and
gifts-even though she bad asked
that you forget about gifts.
Arthur and Beulah Strauss of
Middleport sent scads of roses 18
well as five white orchids for the
occasion and these were used about
the Mora home along with the
many floral arrangements from the
flower shops.
Maye's granddaughters, Sally,
Rhe~ and Mary, took charge of
servmg refreshments in the dining
room thereby freeing up Maida to
JOin Maye in rolling out the Mora
red carpet of hospitality for the
afternoon.
What a nice memory you've
given Maye. And what a deserving
person she is.

cheated with were much younger
than the wives and were usually met
in the woricplace.
Most cheated-on wives decided
to ride out the Storm and keep their
marriages intact for a variety
of reasons, mosUy the kids and
financial security. And to my
surprise, they did not let their
husbands !mow that they knew.
However, when. the humiliation
became more than she could tolerate, one woman did have a big
bundle of her husband's soiled
laundry delivered to the other
woman's house at midnight (she was
married). Anached was a n«c which
read, "Since you are enjoying my
husband's company and accepting
his gifts, it is only fair that you do
some of the dirty work. •
What do you think of her
approach, Ann? - SPLITSVll.LE
SOUTHERN STYLE
DEAR S.S.S.: Not much. Those
dramatic scenarios may seem lilt:e a
good idea at the time bunoo often
they create such a rift that tbcrc can
be no healing. (P.S . Readers,
wouldn't you have loved to be a fly
on the wall when that laundry
arrived?)
Is t/UJt Ann Landtrs collUM you
c/ipp&lt;d ytars ago yellow with age?
For a copy of hlr most frtquenlly
requested potms ani essays. send a
self-addressed, long, bu.rinus-sizt
tnvtlop&lt; and a chlck or monty
ordtr for $4.85 (this includes
postage and luvtdling) to: Gems.
c/o Ann lAnders, P.O. Box JI562 ,
Chicago. Ill. 606/l -0562. (In
Canada, send $5.87.)

Sorority discusses upcoming fair
Clarice Krautter, Jane Walton, Jean
Werry Donna Jones Reva Vaughan ruin Rope Vel~ Rue and a
gu~st MargrJet Stewart Beta
Sigm~ Phi from Florida~ sisrerin-law of Donna Jones.
The next meeting will be a Ioncheon at the Point of View in Parkersburg, w Va. on· Sept. 24. Meet
at the hom~ or' Maida Mora at II
a.m. to leave.

a

Syracuse PTO
holds meeting

were in California to visit the
Frankos who reside in Irvine.
. During the tbrCe week vacation,
Carol flew back to Phoenix, Ariz.,
where she Visited her brother and
sister-in-law, Butch and Carol
Bachtel, formerly of Middlepo~
who now reside in Phoenix. Carol
then returned to California and
joined her mother for the return
flight to Columbus. Their plane
had put down in Las Vegas when
who should walk on but Denver,
Nora and Billy Rice of Middleport.
They had been in Vegas to visit
Denver's younger brother, Harold.
Harold, too, is formerly of Middleport and is ill and Denver, Nora
and Billy were there to visit 111m.
Harold is employed in Vegas after
leaving the armed forces some
years back. The Rices', of course,
were heading back to Columbus,
on the same plane.
You know !keep telling you it's
a small world.
- -

-

Would you believe in the
warmth and supposedly slow
month of August, units of the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Services answered 226 calls?
Units transported 116J,l8tiCIIts to
Veterans Memorial Hospttal; 31 to
Carol Tannehill and her mother, . Holzer Medical Center; 20 to
Juanita Bachtel, have returned to Pleasant Valley Hospital and 17 to
their Middleport home from a bip other institutions.
Calls per unit included
t~ Agoura !fills. caJif., where they
Columbia,
one; Middlepon, 63;
v• s•ted wtth George and Kitty
Bachtel Dallas and their family . It Pomeroy, 48; Racine, 43; Rutland,
39; Syracuse, 19, and Tuppers
was a great three week outing.
Plains,
13. In additino, units made
While in Agoura Hills, they met
50
transfer
runs and there were
George and Phyllis Hackett and the
lhm?
Lifeflight
calls handled by the
Hackeu's daughter and son-in-law,
serviCes.
Melanie and Bob Franko, for a lunWhatever, did we do before the
cheon at an Agoura Hills restaurant. You can imagine what a get- services were established?
. together that was. They seemed to
Mid August and The Great
be having so much fun during the
American
Wish Book from Scars
luncheon that one of the waiters
has
arrived.
Does this mean that
asked to join the group which
we
should
be
getting ready for
included the Frankos, the Hackeus,
Chrisbnas?
Do
keep
smiling.
the Dallas·, and Carol and Juanita.
By the way, George and Phyllis

By SCOTT WILLIAMS
AP Television Writer
NEW YORK -It's unusual for
a network anchor to acknowledge
that Lhcre are problems with TV's
coverage of the sound bites and
photo opportunities that U.S. political campaigns bave become.
Yet few people noticed last
weclc when Peter Jennings, anchor
of ABC's " World News Tonigb~ "
acknowledged that people have
soured on TV's approach to politics;
"We are aware that a lot of you
are wmed off by the political process and that many of you put at
least some of the blame on us for

for working around children.
The workshop will be presented
Saturday, Sept. 26, from 10 a.m.
until 2:30 p.m. at Baker Center on
the Athens campus of Ohio Univer-.
sity. The re$istration fee is $35.
Additional mformation may be
obtained by calling 1-800-3365699.

the way we cover political cam.
paigns - or do not cover them,"
he said on Thursday's broadcast.
So, ABC News will try to do
things differently for the next coupie of months of campaign coverage, Jennings said.
"We'Dgive you the day's headlines, and we'U only devote more
time to a cantlidare's daily routine
if it is more than routine,'' he said.
" There'D he less atrentioo to stage
appearancet and sound bites
designed exclusively for TV."
lfe also pledged that ABC
would focus on "bow the baUic for
your vote is fought" and "examine
very closely how the candidates

VOTE AT YOUR OWN PRECINCT AND AVOID LONG LINES AT THE BOARD ON
DAY BY CHANGING YOUR ADDRESS (IF YOU HAVE MOVED WITHIN THE
OR If YOU HAVE CHANGED YOUR NAME, BY UPDATING YOUR
IY OOOBER 5, 1992.
FOR YOUR CONVIENCE, YOU MAY TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR EXTRA HOURS.
BRANCH LOCATION: MEIGS ·coUNTY LIBRARY
THRU FRIDAY 9:00a.m. 'tll9:00 p.m.

9:00a.m. 'td 5:00p.m.
1:00 p.m. 'til 5:00 p.m.

ALSO .REGISTER ON THE MEIGS COUNTY BOOKMOBILE AT IT'S DESIGNATED
.

MOUNT GILEAD, Ohio (AP)
- A man was being held in Mar·
row County Jail after allegedly
attacking a 10-year-old girl with a
riding lawn niowcr, authorities
said.
Clarence Roush, 59, of Marengo, faces two charges of assault,
one charge of felonious assault and
one charge of operating a motor
vehicle while under the influence
of alcohol, the sheriffs department
said.
Roush was being held Tuesday
on $1,800 cash bond.
Roush chased and sttuck Rebec·
ca Keenan with the mower after
she fell off a bicycle on Sunday
night, said Deputy Dale Beam.
Keenan was taken to Grady
Memorial Hospital in Delaware,
where she was lmlted and released.
Beam said he did not know the
motive behind the assault, which he
said about IS people claimed to
have wimessed.
Roush, the girl and the witnesses all !mow each other, he said.
Beam said he suspected the
attack was alcohol-related.

Papers he filed in a July lawsuit
for the estate cnotend that the helicopter charter company should
have known that the weather "precluded safe flying conditions."
John Neilson, Ornniflight general manager, declined to comment
on the NTSB report because he had
not seen it and because of the peoding lawsuit.
In the McEntire band crash, the
NTSB s · the probable causes
were tmpr er plannipg by the
pilot, the pilot allure (o maintain
proper altitude d clearance ov~r
mou·n~ainous te ain and the copilot's failure adequately monitor the progres. of the flight.
The
y's report also said
Jcient information on terrain
was provided by a Federal Aviation
Administration flight service specialist before the March 16, 1991,
crash near San Diego.

respond to your concerns on what
you have told us arc the most
imponant issues."
Staning this week, " American
ACda" segments will specify
.w
candidates Bush and Clinton
"actually stand on everything from
job creation and health care to the
environment and education," he
said.
Hendy slllff, eh?
Jennin$s, readying "World
News Torught" for a road ttip 10
Charlotte, N.C., and three days of
intensified elections coverage,
acknowledges the power of TV's
hunger foc good, strong images and
its sbonness of memory.
· "There are a lot of things that
we have a hard time rememberin~," he said in an interview. " The
Wtllie Horton ad, for instance.
Nobody seems to remember that it
wasn't a national ad."
True. And after the national
media picked up the story, the antiDukakis ad about the infamous
crime spree of the furloughed Massachusetts prisoner became a
national story.
"It's that ltind of a thing - dare
I say 'embarrassment'? - embarrassment over time which has made
us realize that we could do a hetrer

AUTHOR VISITS • Children' s author
Francts Strickland, Lucasville, visited Pomeroy
and Salisbury Elementary School on Tuesday.
She is tile author of ''Martha Layne CoUins: The
Girl Wbo Gr!w Up to Be Governor," the fast or

All I 0 people tiboard the twiD·
engine Hawker Siddeley aircraft
died in the fiery crash atop Otay
Mountain, including McEntire's
tour manager, Jim Hammon. oilot
Don Holms and co-pilot Chris
Hollinger. McEntire was not
aboard because she was taking a
commercial flight the ~t day.
An FAA transcript ot cooversations between Holms and the flight
service specialis~ who bas not been
identified, shows that neither mentioned the mounlllin.
Shortly before takeoff, Holms
asked if he could fly northeast
below 3,000 feet The flight service
specialist, whose job is to pass rou·
tine information between pilots and
air traffic controllers, responded,
"That'll be ftne," and did not leU
Holms about the mowuain.

seven children's ·biographies. The series will
emphasize early development of skills needed in
adulthood. Stickland also discussed skills needed
ror children who expressed au Interest In wriliq
professions.

' ··..,

CAN YOU

j

Jennings doesn't think ABC's
initiative will force the competition
to rework their campaign coverage.
"I haven't thought of it in that
~t," he said.
'I tbiuk we're just doing what
we feel is, for us, a realistic thing to
do. I can't say we're plensed with
ourselves because we haven't done
it for very long," be said.

.

..

\

SUNDAY

Man, 59, allegedly
attacked girl with
riding lawn mower

cause of the 1990 crash nenr East
Troy, Wis., where Vaughan and
four other people died.
.
Conttibudng to the helicopter's
crash into the side of a manmade
ski hill were "darkness, fog, haze
and rising terrain," agency
spokesman Ted Lopaddewicz said.
The 35-ycar-old Vaughan, a
Grammy Award-winning musician,
died on Aug. 27, 1990, after the
Bell 206 copter carrying five peo!Jle left the Alpine Valley Music
Theater, an open-air concert facility, and crashed.
The NTS B took more than two
years to complere its investigation
mto the crash of the craft, owned
by Omniflight Helicopters Inc. of
Dallas.
Thomas Demetrio, a Chicago
lawyer representing Vaughan's
eslllle, said he was not surprised by
the NTSB fmdings.

IMAQINI

WMAT A DtHIRINCI

job."

-nVOftiN
IIIDAL ELIC,ON, YOU MUS7 BE
BY OC70BER I, 1992

~ATURDAY

By The Asslmted Pmts
Federal investigaton blame the
pilot and a flight service specialist
on the ground for a crash that killed
seven members of Reba McEntire's
band and cite pilot error in the
CJash tlw kiUed blues guitarist SICvic Ray Vaughan. .
·
In separate reports Monday. the
National Transportation Safety
Board released its findings on the
probable causes of the two show
business-related crashes.
The NTSB found t1w "improp·
cr planning-decision" by the aucraft's pilot was the main probable

_Peter Jennings: ABC's 'World News
· . Tonight" to tfg1ttffi'catnpaign focus

Glassmeyer to conduct
kh
Oh. u
wor s op at 10 .

"How to Make Money and Stay
Home with the Children", a halfday workshop for women of all
ages and backgrounds who are
inrerested in learning how to make
money at home is being offered by
the Ohio University's Communi The organizational meeting of versity.
The seminar will be presented
the Syracuse PTO was held recentby
home-based working mother,
·ly at the school.
Donata
Glassmeyer, M.A. of
Officers ~ized were Rhonda Dailey, prestdent; Angie Bass, Maineville. A home business convice-president; Sharon Hubbard, sultan~ seminar leader, and director
treasurer; and Srephanie Ash, sec- of HOPE (homemakers Organization for Producting Enterprise),
retary.
Glassmeyer
has researched the
Bcclty Smith and Anita Shepard
field
of
home-based
endenvQrs for
were appointed as co-chairmen of
the
past
eight
years,
networking
the ways and means committee.
Plans for the Nov. 7 fall carnival with women all over the country
who pursue worlc-at-home endeavwere discussed. '
ors.
The basketball committee,
Glassmeyer will provide ere·
chaired by RIJI!ia Sayre, IDIIOURCed
ative
ideas for workmg at home,
plans to apin bold a preview basincluding
personal services, comketball tournament in November. A
pulers,
cooking,
sewing, gardening,
date was unavailable but it would
crafts,
child
care,
postpartum care,
be announced liter.
and professional consulting serThe~ decided to pur·
chase the Scholastic News weekly vices. Additional infonnation will
paper. This was to enable teachers include ways to generate stan-up
to better instruct their students on funds and paperwork, publicity and
marketing, "fast-money" scams to
civics during this election yenr.
avoid, and the special challenges

NTSB cites probable .causes in
crashes of Vaughan, McEntire band

_ Beat of the Bend...

Wednesday, September 16,1992

The

.

THE IOAID Of ELECTIONS.OFFICE WILL BE OPEN ON MONDAY, OCTOBER

5, 1992 9:00 !I.DI. 'tl 9:00p.m.
fer ••Y eddlt1H1d l1formttlon, call 992·2697 or stop by our office at 108
Street, P011troy, Ohio.

THE WINNER • Job a Krawsc:zyn, eight-year-old son ot Dr.
and Mn. David Krawaczyn, waa tbe winaer ot aa AMT-'00 pedal
, • toy donated bf Dallas Weller of D. K.'l Farm Toys, MlddlepoH, In
a drawing whiCh took place at tbe kiddie tractor pull att•e Meigs
: .' County Fair.

.•

Noise and flashes

TMI YOUNG

Elsewhere in relevision ...
ABC's 'VIEWPOINT'; There's
more to walth tonight after you've
watched NBC's one-hour "Seinfeld" season premiere and then
rewound and watched ABC ' s
"Home Improvement" you
ihoughlfully reconled on the VCR.
ABC's "Viewpoint," anchored
by Ted Koppel, returnS to Houston,
Site of the Republican National
Convention, for a seJment titled
"Politics and the Media: Rep&lt;XIing
or Distorting."
. _

IN TMII

IMOWID

IF

PIDPt.l

CO\INTI ,T

T ill IAM I

INTIIUSIASM FOil

.
.
Till VOTIJIQ IOOTN l

DOMINO'S PIZZA'

..

NEW YORK (AP) - The
sound of thunder is caused by the
violent cxpansioo of the air after an
elccttical charge of lightning has
heated it.
Thunt,ler is usually heard some
• time after lightning has flashed;
: since light travels at 186,282 milea
• per second, while sound travels at
: · only about 1,100 feet per second.
•
By coundn~ the number of sec·
: , onds between lightning and thunder ·'
: and dividing by five, it is JIC!Ssible
• to tell how far away a storm IS; say
: weather cxpens. If it is five sec: ·~ onds between the lighming flash
; and thunder clap, the storm is about
:- a mile away.

IT WOUI.D MAKI

811 W. MAIN STREET•POMEROY

992·2124

LARGE
PEPPERONI
PIZZA

s 9
PICKUP er

DEUVERY

Reg 1ster and 'l ote .

~

~

l n t er n ~ no nat

'

ABowt10 n o1 Cl!rk s. R et ~ rd u s . Elec110" Olh ti lh u 4 Trus ~ : ! '~

·r ·- ......... ..... .

&lt;

''

�~~,P~ag~e~1~~~Th~e~D~al:ly~Se::nt~ln=e~I-------------------------!P~om~•r~otY:!M~Id~d~le~po~rt~.~O~h~lo~------------------------~W~ed~n~e~~·~~~Se~pt~em~be~r~1!6,~1!6~2~

I

;C~mmunity

•

.~calendar

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC

,,:
WEDNESDAY
• RUTLAND • Rutland Fire
Department Ladies Auxiliary meet
i'· Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. at the ftre
:· station. All members urged to

POLICIES

• Ada oullide t.be county your ad rwu RnUit be prepatd

: Garden, Fla., will be the speaker.
; Public invited.

1

MID 3

Days
6
10
Monthly

: POMEROY • Meigs County
' Democratic Executive Committee
: meets Thursday, 7:30p.m., Carpenters Hall in Pomeroy.
POMEROY • Grand opening of
Meigs County Democratic Party
Headquarters, 220 East Main Street
in Pomeroy at 7 p.m. Democratic
candidates will attend, and refresh·
ments will be served. The public is

15
15
15
15
15

Rate

843-Pordand

24i-l.aa"

r.u.

458-l.eon
576-Apple Grove

773-Muon
882-New Ha•en

949-R•eine

895-Letut
937-Buffolo

66 7-Coolorille

.20
.30
.42
.60
$.05/day

~ Far~ntlor

\11-Bt

14--- Bwine.• Trainins

15- School• &amp; INLruetion
16-- Radio, TV &amp; CB Repal&lt;

17- Miocelloneouo

54- Mi~e. Merc:handile
Sf&gt;- Bwtd;"' Sup pH•

18- Wantod To Do

Publlc Notice

.;

ROCK SPRINGS • Middleport
, Child Conservation League, Thursj day, 7 p.m., Rock Springs United
•j Methodist Church.

64 oz. Ctn.

. 24·25 oz. Jar

Apple
Sauce

Orange

RegularorNatural

Juice~role

~

family, PIOOM

205 North S.COnd Ave.
Mlddltport,
. .. OH .
'

-

-.

tx11a lnUer lot.

She•ancloah • 85% Lean Pro11n

GrOund
Turkey

4to7111.Ayt.
I

10 lb.

lag
I

992·7013 or
992·5553
or TOll FREE
1·100.141·0070
OHIO

CONSTRUCTION
•New Ho1111s

-G•r•tts
-complete

Remodeling

·Stop &amp; Compare

985•4473
667·6179

NEW USTING .::-'fuppEJii PLArNS - Calva;y Ridge.
43Y, acnoo with 1 floor fram&lt;1 homo with 2 bodroomo TPC
&amp; dug woll , now .. ptic, tool building &amp; bam. Gao ~II on
p~rty that con be Nn to homo to provide froo gas.
ASKING ~0,000.

.

NEW USTING - Nichola Rd. - Frame ranch with 3
bodroomo, 2 batho, hoat pump, docking, abovo ground
pool, appl;.ncos, storage buildings on 1.053 acros.
ASKING $48,000.

One lb.

Roll

liMIT 10

Pkgs. Per
Family,

Pltase

NEW LISTING - MIDDLEPORT - 1 floor framo homo
with 3 bodroomt, 1 both, full ba.. mont with garage, attic
spac1, F.A.N.G. hoa~ new hot water tank. $22,000.

$28,0011.00

HYSELL RUN ROAD - II a kitchen with lots ol cablnoll
lo whll you nood. lhio home Is lor you. It has 3 bodrooms, a largo kill:hon, and o Iorge Uvlng room .
with ~. of 111 acno and a paMo.
$21,1100

eo,.,

NEW USTING - Pomoroy - Vacont lot on Spring Avo.
All utilihs available, o gnoat mobil homo sill I $5,000.

LOOKING FOR A COIIIIERCtAL LOT - Juot oW tho
moil - l You nody need to cltack thio one· out.
Located on Thltd St1111t In Mlddloporl
$10,000

· VERY. NICE NOliE - Pomoroy - SR 33, 2 o~ry frame
homo wllh 3 bedrooma, homo hat beon complotoly
romodelod and lncludoa moat eppllanc11, central air,
largo front porch, dadting &amp; garage. $37,500.

IIDOLEPORT ,;. A ctmmoroial comor building with
epprox. 2800 oquara fool Could bo 2
or oMiolge
11.... Hoo one bath and clooo to "" cily parking.
$37,000

Ito"''

CHESTER - Gonu-'a farm - 78.33+ acnoo with t Y.
otory home, 3 badroomo, pootuno &amp; tilllble acnoa, ponds,
ohacl, olio, oil, mNk hou•, bam, cltlckon houoa, well &amp;
TPC water. $1011,000.

CHESTER - Sum- Road - A gr~~at ilUo galloway or
otlller homo. Hal 2 badrooms, 1 bath, and fual oil,
fum&lt;ICI wilh approx. 34 acroo.
$32,500
DOTTIE TURNER. Brokor..................................t9Z.Sb82
BRENDA JEFFERS ............................................t92·3051
t:IAAL,!NEBTEWART...........................................tt2-6385
SANDY BUTCHER......................................;,,..... 912·5S71
.SHERYLWALTERS, Ch..hlro............................ 387o0421
JERRY SPRADUNG ...............................(3041 882·3498

LETART - One acra bYI!dlng tilt on Manuol Rd.
POSSIBLE OWNER RNANCINGI $3,500.
HENRY E. CLELAHD-...........--.-·.................112.. 1t1
TRACY BRINAGER..... .....................- .............Mt-2431
JEAN TAUIIELL..•• "'''''-'"''''''";.•.•- .............141-2110

OFRCE-·-·-···················..........."'''-·-..........tl:t-2251
.,

I

U91S.IIoriSclloeiU.

~·

. 5-14-92-tht

MORRIS
GARAGE DOOR SERVICE

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING :

4·4·92-tht

CURIO

BARN
45633 ST. RT. 124
RACINE

!!r~']~

PRECISION POST FRAME

~

BUI~ERS

9 Y1111ra

104 Beoch StiMt
l'omenly, Ohio 45761

Experience
"Call Ua for All Your Building N-. •

OFFICE SERVICE
AND SUPPLY

Livestock Building• • Mllchlne Shede • Hay

Office, School&amp; Art
Suppll.., Office
Furnlturo1Advertlolng
SpeclldiiU, l'yplng,
L.amlllllllng, COpy, Fa
&amp; Nolllry SorvlcH
CHECK OUR SELECTION
AND PAICEIS FIRST

Bam• • Carports

Garages • Storage Bulldlnga • Roofing Windows • Siding
WV Lie. tWV 0203U
FREE ESTIMATES
ROBERT BORING
(614) 112-3541

SPECIAL
UNLIMinD SESSIONS
Montlts of SepteNer
and Ocloller

s3soo

naoiOOnNG
AND EYERnHING UNDEINUTI
GARAGES • ADDITIONS • SIDING

TROMM BUILDERS

CALIFORNIA
TANS
949·2823

... O••lityAIIINI ,,.,,.,.,.
20 Yr. bp.
C•ll AI, 614-742·2321

CHARLIE'S

RUTLAND

Ill JAin

SMALL DOZER
WORI
DRIVEWAY Woll
•ntiUMEnOIE
DEUYEIY SIIYKI
1••11 Do1er Wor1J

MINE SUPPLY
Pipe for Water, Sewage
and Gas
Rutland, OH.
742·2656

$25.00 hr UTU
""'
IWOUill

992o7553
POIIEIOJ, 01.

8·11·'112·1 mo.

SEP'rtC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;SEWER

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

BU~J~NG

Lawn Mowing,

UNES

Ftrtlllzlng, WHdlng,
and SHdlng.

BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Llmeotone,
Dirt, Groveland Coal
LICENSED onct BONDED

New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement wrndows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESlDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-949·2101 • 949·2160
or 915·3139
INo l•llll•r C.lsl

PH. 614·992·5591

211VII2Mn

~------~~~~·n~~~~~------~~t~2·~5-~tln~

PLUMBING
D~W~ng

11111.. 1

.

,..,..
1
.,u•••lll
.Roofing
Wladaws
"'-

31904 Lt•diag
CNtk Road

Mlddltj~Grt,

NORtON
CONTUCIING
Carpttttry Electric

1'

o•io

JEFF STAATS
peN)~

1-11·'112·1 - ·

949·2391 or
1·100.137·1460

DAVIDSON'S

•

••

COMMERCIAL • RESIDENTIAL
AGRICULTURAL

112 w. Mill ltrttt
,_t"'J OH, 45769
(614) .92oiJ76

R&amp;C EXCAVATING

RMidtntlall Comrntn;~&amp;l
FI'M EMimltM

•Any SlzeAnlleblt•

"Pole B.anclints"

OPEN MON.·SAT.
9-7?
• • 8117/Pd.

KEVIN'S LAWN
MIIITEIIICE

Trimming &amp; Removal

992·2259
608 EAST MAl"
POMEROt OHIO

G...~Ollie
Clll6141 44._9416 orl-&amp;00-172-5167

•

• ,...,:·
••

IOWOPII

Shrub and T,..

SYRACUSE -4th Stroot - Need an extra income? You
havo it W you buy flio 4 bedrooms, 2 balh duploK
located cioN to lho pool and park. Also included lo an

GALLIPOLIS · Annual meeting
(of Athens District United
~Methodist Women, Saturday,
ZGrace Uniied Methodist Church,
~Gallipolis. Registration, 9 a.m.
, Rev. Lynette Arthur, guest speaker.

Public Notice

OFFICE 992·28118

Clll

7'

Upholltery

G

I

•• -N- •

a.aJity HI Effldeacy
~ C.tlliolen, Heat
P1..s, hrlaces &amp;
Now Water Heaten.
Bennetts Mobile Home ~~~h1g

Wetlc•r AM•r

J

USED RAILROAD TIES

lrf,k•

·.
RUTLAND - lk&gt;p - YOll nood to - lhls beautiful 2
aportmont homo it town but with ita own privacy from a
n1&lt;o '"'ga black yard, also a g8ldon opol Hao 3 bodroom• it upllllno apor1mon1 and 2 badroomo In downllllra apartment Ront ono to help with paymonll. Priced
right to Ml II only.......
826,1100

Potatoes

..

Real Estate General

'

Turkey
reast

porv

Plum bU., &amp; Heatla1
E•cnalinJ
Electrical &amp; Ref•·;ger~otlaq
General Haulin1
MDt.ile HDme Repair

- "'"•

992·3838

•tal81a ulollowa:
2·7·92-lfn
lo rajecl ·~Y or all blda
The following dMcrlbed 1-====::::::::::::~
aubmlltM.
rNI ettale altualld In lh• ll
Furl!•, u. obovo cotlat- Ylll•u• ol R..davma, MICROWAVE OVEN
ord1ot
wti 11H1 ootd 1n tho con- county of lhlga, Stato or
a•d VCI UPIIR
11 on
I Ia In wllh no Ohio, and belnt known u
lllMIIII
•xpr. .ed or Implied Wit· Lot No. I ol lloDole and
ronllea ginn.
Torrence Addlllon to tho
It 11 Or We
For mo,.lnlorlllallon con- Ylllega o1 Roedtvflte.
~
tact ScoH Shank, ol tH·
Aloo Lol No. t olllcDolo
Bring your beef, pork, or
3283.
and Torrenco Addition 10
KEN'S AP lANCE
&lt;•I 11, 11, 11 •
the wtoga or Roecltvilte.
SERVICE
sheep to
-~-:-----1
Rol.....,co
Deed:
Volu"'"
992•5335
Or
BARR'S PACKING
Public Notice
322, Poga ns and votu....
_ __;;.:,:.:;:....:.;,:=:...._- 302, Pago 121, llolgo
915·3561
on Kerr Rd. We kill, cut,
NOTICE OF SALE
County Deed Rocardl.
wrap and quick freeze to
By vlrtua of an Ordor of • Tho above doeorlbed roal
your specifications .
Bolo lt~uocl out of the ntate hat b - oaalgned
Common
Pleat Court of Auditor'• Parcel Numbero
CALL FOR APPOINTMENT
lhlga County, Ohio, In the 1J1.011214 111d 011-015zt.
614-446-7457
• - of Bank Ono, Alhana, . Bald 'roml•• known u
NA, Ptalntllf, n. Helen L. 65e51 A 124, RoedOYIIIo,
Conrocl, ol at., Delondanta, Ohio 45m.
upon a Judgment lhoreln
8ald real •tate Ia eubjoct
...,dorod, being Caoo No. to accrued 1112 rNI oatote
CARPENTER SERVICE
82.CY.1U In aald Court, 1 taxoe.
~oom AddiUo ..
will olf• far aat111t tho front
REAL ESTATE APPRAIB- -Guitar
Work
cloor of the Courlhouae In ED AT: 117,130.00. Tho real -Eioclrlctl
Public Notice
Public Notice
111d Plumbing
Pom•,;y, llolga County, •tato cannot be aold for -floofint
1111 SNAPPER TRACTOR Ohio, on the 11th day of loll than lwo·thlrde lhe -lnllffor a Eltllrlor
PUBucNonce
October, 1M2, 11110:00 a.m., !ippralaed value.
Painting
NOTICE II hftby glv111 that AND MOWER 72110 12 HP
HYDRAIIATIC
lho following Iande and
TERMS OF SALE: Caah or
on S.IUI'IMy, ........,.._,.,
(FREE EST111ATESI
-.nonta,localld 111151151 dellvwy of dud.
1M2, at 10:00 a.m. a public TRANSIIISSION, 41" CUT
V. C. YOUNG Ill
WITH HEADUGHTS
SR 124, Reodevllto, Ohio
J1111ooll. Souloby
HI• wll be hold at 105
Tho Farmora Bank and 45772. A comrlele legol
Shorlft of llliga County
Union AYIIIUO, Pomwoy,
Ohio, to HI for CMh the fol- Savlnga Company, Pom• doacrlpllon o tho rool It) 16, 23, 30 31c
POnllloy,Ohlo
lowing ooiMaral:
roy, Ohio,-" the right
~-10·92-Un
1110 FORD ESCORT LX 2 to bid at thlo ollie, ond to
Real Estate General
DR.St
withdraw lho obovo collllllr·
1FAPPII111LT103650.
at prior to .._ Further, Tho
AND
Farmora Bank and Savlnga

''

Russet Baking

I

•

:

FREE ES'nMATES

BISSELL &amp; BURKE

~l · ll\1&lt; 1 ..~

. 614·949·2804

•AREWOOD
BILL SlACK
992·2269

1-:-------::.------------

sposable
Diapers

. •lash Prozen

BULLDOZER BACKHOE
and lRACKHOE WORK
AVAILAIIL£.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITE!!,
LANDCLEARIN&lt;a,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE-TRUCKING

992-6215

TOP ··

New Crop

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

Specializing In Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
.ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS

MotoreyeW
Boata &amp; Moton lor Sale
Auto Part. &amp; A.,.,...,;,,,
Repair
C.Mpiq Equipment

PARTS &amp; SERVKE
Mowen • CW. Saw,
•Wee4eaten

111&amp;/lln

YOUNG'S

UMIT 2 Jar1 Per

HENDERSON, W.VA. · Gallia
: Twirlers Western Square Dance
: Club, dance, Saturday, 8-11 p.m .,
• Henderson Community Cenler. Jim
- wilbur, caller.

G1190ttly
Starts Sept. 27

qup

Waot.ed to Buy
63- Li•eatock
64- Hay &amp; Grain
Seed &amp; Fertili1er

c-...,.y IMe&lt;VM the right

IULLEnl IOIRD DEIDUIE
4:30 P.li. DIY IEFORE
PUILICAnOI

POMEROY • Boy Scout Troop
; 249, Pomeroy, will hold a car wash
• Saturday, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., at
: McDonald's.

11\\lll~l

51- Hou,.hotd Condo
52- Sportins Condo
53-Ant;q ...

Bl' LLI-:T I \ BO.\ RD

MIDDLEPORT • Catfish Festival Committee, meeting, Thursday,
• 7 p.m., Middleport Council Cham: he~

SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER · Star
Grange and Junior Grange, annual
hayride and wiener roas~ Saturday,
6:30 p.m., grange halL Buns provided. Bring hot dogs and finger
foods. Members, potential members and guests invited.

Factory Goke 12

FlUE ESTIMirES

'

RACINE · Hymn sing, Carmel
United Methodist Church, Racine,
7 p.m., homecoming weekend cele·
bra!ion.

Rent

47- Wanted to Rent
48-- Equipment. for Rent
49-Forl.eue

l l - Help Wonto&lt;!
12- Situaliobl Wanted.
13- ln1urante

&gt;-Happy Ad.
6- Lo.t and Found
7- Lo.1 and Found
8- Publ;. Sole &amp;
A11ct.ion
9- W111ted lo Buy

. . I(. . . Crtl•

RIPLEY, W.VA. · Liberty
Mountaineers will perform Friday
at Skateland in Ripley, W.Va.

36-- Real E.ute Woated

44- Apart.eat for Reat
45- FunUbed Roo...
46- Space for Ren~

. Veaeta.b les
~c. c.t.
..... ..,.. .................... ....

LONG BOTTOM - Faith Full
Gospel Church in Long Bottom,
preaching and singing, Friday, 7
p.m. Pastor Sieve Reed invites the
public. Fellowship will follow.

32- Mobile Horne. for Sale
33- Farmt (or Sale
34.-- 8~qineat Bui.ldiap
3&gt;- lou &amp; A&lt;r.. l!"

Auto. for Sale
41- Houae~~ lor Reat
72- Truck• for Sale
42- Mobile Homee for Rent 73- Vana &amp;: 4 WD'•

GET RESULTS • FAm

'--- Civeaway

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
GUN CLUB
SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M.

I· \I i\ I ~ l I' I' I II· ~
.~ I I\ 1. :- I' !I! I\

;-----1

16·17 o.z. Cans

: POMEROY · Meigs County
• Young Democrats, regular meet. ing, Thursday, 6:30 p.m., Carpen. ters Hall, Pomeroy.

Peu for Sale
57- Mwic:al lnttrwnenta
F..,;,. &amp; VOJelobloo
59- For Sale or Trade

$
$
$
$

flllool

675-Pt. Pleuaol

742-Ru~ond

Over 15 Words

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

2-ln Memory
3- Announeemenb

·

.

643-Arahla DIH.
379-Walnul

Rates are lor consecutive runs. broken up days will be
charged lor each day as separate ads.

Stock Up
On.Our Best Brands

POMEROY • AA meetin~,
Thursday, Sacred Heart Cathohc
. ·Church, 7 p.m. Call 992-5763 for
: information.

POMEROY · Meigs County
.; Retired Teachers, luncheon Saturi day, 12:30 p.m., Trinity Church,
;:: Pomeroy. Paula Thacker, Meigs
·· County Chamber of Commerce,
~ will speak. State Senator Jan
~ Michael Long will attend.
•
•• RUTLAND • Dance, Rutland
.~ American Legion Hall, Saturday,
~ 8:30 p.m. to midnight. Music by
·: While's Hill Band. Public invited.
•
',: MIDDLEPORT • Evangeline
: Chapter OES, bake sale, Saturday,
"10 a.m. to 4 p.m., porch of Middlepan Masonic Temple. Any mem' bers wishing to contribule should
-\ call 742-2544 or 742-2890 for fur.
: !her information.
•
; GLASGOW, W.VA. ·Liberty
•Mountaineers perform Saturday at
:Glasgow Fire Department, Glas;gow, W.Va.

Words

1
3

'

''·

c......

992-Middleportl
Pomeroy
985-Cbetter

RATES

..

,
!
•
;

446-GallipoUo
367-CJ...w..
388-Yialoa
241&gt;-lt;o
256-GII)'U Diol.

• AcL that InUit be paid madvucc are;
Cud of Thanlu
Happy Ad.
Ia Me.raoria•
yard Sale.
1 A clUiifted .dYertitemeat placed in the Gallipolia Daily
Tr~uno (C:Xcept Clulilied Di.play, Buinett Card or Lepl
No be~) willa~o appear in tlw! Poiut Pleuant Rep.ter and
the Daily Senlind, reachins over 18,000 homo

THURSDAY
~ RACINE - Regular meeting,
::;American Legion Post 602, Racine,
. 'Thursday, 7:30p.m.

I

Meigw County Muon Co., WV

Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

day .Cter publication to make corroclioa

~

•

GaliJa County

1 7 po1Dllilw! type only uted
1 SeDtiad.
11 not r•pouibie for crron after flnt day (check
for errort rlfat day ad rwu in paper). c.u before 2 :00 p.lrl.

REEDSVILLE - Revival and
• homecoming at Joppa United
:· Methodist Church, Wednesday
: through Sunday. Carry-in dinner
· Sunday, 12:30 p.m. Special singing
; nightly and Sunday afternoon.
: .Brenda Weber, guest speaker. Pub: lie invited.

!

dayaat no ebarge.

• Pric~ of ad for aU capital !etten ia double prK:e of ad cott

·:;,. SYRACUSE · Syracuse Home·
:::;makers Club will meet Wednesday
~-';at the Syracuse Park at 10 a.m.
····Potluck lunch. Bring ideas for pro; jects. Books will be filled out at
: this lime.

1:00 p.m. Saturday
I :00 p.m. Monday
I :00 p.m. Tuesday
I :00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thunday
I :00 p.m. Friday

Classified pages cover the
following telephone exchanges.,.

Reeei.Ye clilcout for ada paid in advaftee.

• Free Ad.: Giveaway and Found ada ubder 15 wonb will he

. POMEROY • Meigs Athletic
: Boosters meet Wednesday, 7:30
~..p.m., Meigs High School. Public
invited.

FRIDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - TuP.pers
Plains VFW and Ladies AUXIliary,
round and square dance Friday, 811 :30 p.m. Music by Smoky
Mountain Drifters. Public invited.

CLOSED SUNDAY

(J....ty ~ Rlllp s..l

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thunday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M. - SAT.8-12

~. and 6 p.m. Guy Mallory, Winter

.

COPY DEADLINE

Call992-2156

~:
BASHAN • Services, Red Brush
~- Church of O!rist on Bashan Road,
~~ Wednesday through Saturday, 7:30
·~ p.m. nightly, and Sunday 10 a.m.

' invited.

IAONf, OHIO

To place an ad

•r
'"••auend.

:
·
:
:
·

P.O. lex 194-Wtl• A10J

,.

.....

•

L

..,....
Fret Estittatts ·low
Ratts for Sellon

614·992·7144

NoJoUooS. .
~----~~-3~1/_92_~~~·-------MM--1--~~~
~

\tr

UNDI'S
PAINTING

HOUSE FOR SALE
BY OWNER
12 Year old ranch type house. 3
bedrooms, two baths, 1'h car
garage and breezeway, central air
and heat pump, many extras. On 2
acres of land.
Eastern School District. Blacktop
roacts Co. Rd. 28 and 32

lily

&amp; co.

.,.at. lh ,,. 0.1 01 ,.,.,

r.·

-r..t u.Dtlt,.,
INnRIOR &amp; EXTERIOR

Stone Co.

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Call614-992·
6637

FREE unMAns

HAVE IIFIIIIKES

...... ,... ._.Mot....

St. II. 7
Clats•irt,

Altor 6,... 614-915-4110
1121/Wt-~

•

WILSON'S ARMY
SURPLUS
Countr Rd. 11o
I'Mchfori!Rd.

181-'701a
lion........... . .

......
........., ..,......
... ..
..... lor,... ....."'
and ll•k to atiiMI

•II'JIIul--t

'"'"'

•

�1992

,..
---·-on
-·-:r.-'o"'

?I' Auta for Sale
'

........ -. "'""'·

. . .i•fM.: 2 3102.·

--'
--

I'VE: r.oT A. TRla.Y 111&lt;.14T

01, Y£AII? WElL., &lt;.IV£,

~

ITY~~T~T

llll.fU. I(II()(J(.

Television
Viewing

YOU

FlAT!

•

I

a- .... good homo.

11.11

• •171

I -

$213 Ptr Month Including lot
r.nt. Ntw14' wide moblle hOme,
lncludM _delivery, complete tet•
tklrtlng l atopo. 1-800-1375.
.

0111 ICIH- Freo To

U2

old llltton oloo •

.

Ill 10

dotp -

homo

1W1 Ftomln110, 3 bodraom t2 x

,.,...
Moll Bluo Hoolot, Holt

"Sure l"m a riCh

famous actor, but

= d= r========:-r::=:::=====:i
8ooi I

what I really wanted to be was a walter."

9,......,.....w....,a,....nt..,..ed;...t.,.o_,B,....u~y,....., 11

8hopllood, I W ,_,. Bookl: Books: Books: UHd
old, IIMio good homo, 114-lii:Z.. ond Aoro, Bought ond Sold.
2011.
TheopNh.18, Box 731, Galtlpotla,
-

=-

Ohio 4!113t 114-448-7282 I ·
10P.II.
~l.o!:!':':U..
-~~~ curmotoncoo, 304-t75- 1;;;;;,1d,Jgunk HI Soil Uo Your Non0
· : 3ISI
1!
Appllanc..,

"::.:

:~;~~·~A~~~~'r~owo~"'::!"~,;
Guitar Ampa,

:• :, •
- • far porto,· 30H7S·I
11ot.
·•
E

: : ..__ To G-ny. 114-446-

tc.

.. ,;.om=·------- :~"&amp; T~:~ ~:!..:'"'C:
• ..... lallck JUP. lhota up to

: dlle.l1t Ita 2501

Larry Uv.tf. C1'14488al303.

'-st &amp; Found
TOll Prlcoo Paid: AU Old u.s.
...,
Colno, Gold Ringo, Sll- Coino,
.,
Gold Coino. II.T.S. Coin Shop,
· , ~ A pollllock ldtton oround 151 Socond Avonuo, Golti!IOIIo.
: • Ill Avo. Ploooo Clll 114-446: : 7111.
· · LOll: Ton- puppy, Mlooy.
· · Poft a-ISIIoop. wttll red col: tlr, Loll on Ctaik Chapll Road,
', ,· I

. .......11WII-IM1
v
S

; 7

1

11

8rd ale

Help Wanted

'AVON' ALL AREAS! Shoro your
time with us •. You'l tove thl
company. 1-100-182--1318.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

AceiPIIng
opt&gt;llcotlona It
Domfno'• Plu1ln Pomwoy.
: AU. Yord- Bo Paid In A'""lcoro Homo Core,IIO Eoat
. A4MnoL DUOUNE: 2:00 p.m. M1ln StrMt, Jacklon, Ohio Ia
· tho doy loolln tho od Ia Ia run. Sooklng Conlllod Homo Hoolth
• ......, • 2:00 p.m. Aid•
HomoHoofth.lldoo
lloltdaJ odMion • 2:00
. And
Homomokoro
n ...., aa' Yard Sat.: To Sorvlco GotHa County. ApMoliolont om.. TltuJodoy • l'lillllono WNIIo Tokon Monday
F....,. N p.ot. Scltool ctothoo, 'Fridoy, I -6 P.ll.
tolnl, Miclllracko, omoll op- AVON I All Arooo I Shlrioy
Spooro, 304-175-1428.
• pllncu, lallei'IMIII.
: Wo on .,tiling tho rvmmo110 Coblo TV tochniclan, lmmodlato
oponlng lOt cablo TV tochollclan.
IIUII hlvo 3 to 5 yro oxporionco
=-~ :"'~'\
In cabte tilllvialon malnlenance
' . -~~ • - Evtl'jthino muot &amp; ropolr. Good " " - bonotbo,
. loo Mid. Too ftiiiCh to llit. Dl~
MillY commentur~Te with IX·
- - - c h d o y. porllnco, E.O.E. Submlt reoumo
- lftdWod.
llwo&lt;lgh
··~.• 111. 1111
. . oontl,..
noxt to llol c.e coro ol Point
Plouont AOQiotor, 200 Moln Stl
.· tl -ltlllott II oold. At
. Cortl.wy. .. ~ Plko at pt, PM., WV 25SSO. S"'MStu
111 W all 14t. 3Jd tnllor on opt&gt;llcont will bo roqulred to
tako drvg toot
· wt. ~I. Joflueon.

::FrtdoJ.'
, ,....-,.

. INtlor'-.-.. - .......

;

:r""::t

Yord - : Joy Dr. Wod., ThurL,
. Flf. -.?

Pf. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

.......

lit , .... Solo, $opl "· 17, ,. •
ft. 114 .... on .loJicha Ra, Fof..
Yord Solo, 101 " - St, Sopl.
17,~ 11. 1'hllla, Frt, Sot. t:OO •
4:111.

Pomeroy,
Mddleport
&amp; VIcinity

caro lor oNorty lody In pi-nt
Mlddl1pD111 hoiM. I hour 1tMtl,
bo ·rollablo llevo ,.,_,
- · Coil tf4.ii':l-t111 1111lllm-lpm, Mondly-Frlday. ·
EARN MONEY Roodlng lookol
130,000/Yr. Income Potontlol.
Dotollo. (t) 105-1112-«100, Ext. Y·
10111.

Eooy Wortll ExCIIIont Payt At-blo Producto At .,_, Coli
Toll F-, 1~17-5!111, Ext.
313.

Flrot Flvo Lodloo To Coli To Soli
Avon WIU Rocolvo 115 Worth Of
llorcllendloo FrH, Coli 114-4463351.
Holrotyllot
Hoodod:
Paid
Vac~Uon1 Gauranleed W1g11.

AI 'Yord IIUII Bo Polcl In
· Doodllno: 1:00pm tho 114-446-7217.
cloy - . tho od lo to Nn ,
....., odltlon- t :OOpm Fridoy, Ottlco &amp; tllflcal Job. Ap.
· - , odMion 10:00o.m. piM:.Iionl tor per8one 51 I
ow«, nwetlna the Income
. So-Y·
guldollnoo olt~o Dept of lobor,
· c-unly yord 1111- Flvo will bo tokon on Sopt 11 &amp; Sopl
: , . . , ..... Rl 7, Sept, 17, 18, 21, ~om 10:00 All • 2:00 Pll.
Apply ot tho WV Dept of
. ft. Aoln ... · -·
Employment Steurlty, Point
. Oonp ulo- Thurodly only, 11· Pltaunt,WV.
7 W - pool 5-Polntoon At. 7.
Port tlmo laboror, opply at Ohio
· lvorytlllng W prico.
Volley Tiro, Golllpollo Forry, no
phono COlli piNOO.
Public Sale

:a

&amp;Auction

Poo.-- Comptny,
.,. limo ouct-r. complllo
Rick

oucllon

oorvlc:o.

UconHd
IM,Ohlo &amp; Woot Ylrglnlo, 3Q4.
m.171!1.
• · Alo Auction. Auction Frldoy
&amp; lllurday, 7:00 PM. F~·

-loa, ,_ I uHd morchxn·
- . ~~~- guorontood mor·
cMndiM. Dlft.... nl: dnlert

_ , ., Ed Frozllr, Rt. 2 North
o l - - · Llconoo No. l30.

. 1--lrT-=tr-:lrr-:lzlr.,lr-1

llnclod
Coiloae
Proopoctt 01 Amorlca II A NOtional Organization Which
Scouta High School AthlltH
For Collogo Scholarohlpo.
Expanding In Southoaot
Ohio And SNk Aopr_,.tlvH
For Secure Ar... To lr«mlew
Sporio

Coachtt Parenti, And Athletes.
S.ver11 Pan-Time Md Full·Time
Po1itlons Open In locll Area.

Athtetlc: BacKground Coaching,

Counaallng H"tlprul. c..n &amp;14·

512·tl40.

Read the Best Seller

Read the

CLf\SSIFIED f\DS

HelpWanted

Chriotmao Around Tho Worid lo
Hiring
Domonatrotoro.
No
Otllv"f. No Collcting. Eam
Commloolon On Firat Silo. FrH
1300 Kb 01 Chriotmu nomo. No
lnvutmont. Aloo looking
Pan&amp;M. 1'14411-2S02.

65.Atklng$3500,.114-"l'l2-3031
11111 Corrloll" Houu, 2 Bed-

Dlahwnher Mlcrow•v•, Gooci

Condition, Outbuilding. 614·245-

11127, 61~46-3257.
1a82 Wlndoor 14, 70 , 2 bod·

room1, CJA, total elec, under·

SPRING

I CAN

BETTER

UNDERSTAND

=

l':"e;:.Nov

51

r Eif

....;.te

-

turna., 'f;XID.»C . . . ..

stereo.

lllilr

......

Rotroln
NowiiiSouthoo.,om
l•otnooo ~ Spring Volloy
Pluo. Coli Todiy,'t14--431711
Rtg-121118.

18 Wanted to Do

tlr~ond,

p.rtly

1ft

'-·

l

Tt-IINI'

YOU~

GEN~

Stereo. 1:;1

FAMil-Y

(I)

~&amp;ultra

•t

•~

'

•

&lt;.

.

-ALLEYOOP

'"' .

MpteMa (Season Premiere)
A puzzling dlaple: llghtaln

lite sky. Stereo.
!II MOVIE: The

of
Tlmn tPG131 (2:00)
Clle (I) • Ful HouM
Jesse's video debuts on

~.

MTV. (PI 2 ol 2) (R)

Fum,_ Eftlcloncr 117M1o.
UtiiMioo Pold ..,_ loth, 1111
8ocond Avonuo, Golllpollt, 114441--4411 Aftor 7p.rn.

Stereo.

g
Live From LJncaln
c:-stereo.
(f)

IlliG 1121 e Hit Squid

(Premiere) The Squad gets a
tip from an lnfonnanl about a
bank robber. Stereo. C

aDe....,.. ".., a1o
Brenda apeaka to a llblold
show; Nikki makes a play for
Brandon. Stereo. C .

o

Mulder, 1111e w101e
18 Cloalt Inti CltiM
aPtlruNa•aQ_

0

- . --

•:-;-,·•-·

·~

- -

lliltor Homes
-

Conconl

NT camporl

1:;1

'Young RltleNI;IJ

1:011]) MOVIE: The MlrUin
Chotlclu (4:00)
1:30(1). ( I ) . -

EEKANDMEEK

Campers&amp;

I

l~ Tim toMs to
JIU wtten lite enUre family
goea bowling. (Rl Stereo. Q
1:00 (J) e 0 &amp;lin- (Season
Prtmllre) Jerry gets en Idea
lor 1 new network series.

UJHAi :S -n-1£

MAmRm\
1-\IM ?

.,

•n

.KIOB2
.KJi51

•t711
• Q 101
.QJ 106

SOUTH
.QJIU864

....

•u

is important

.AK4S

VulDerable: Both
Dealer: South

By Pllilllp Alder

7:351]) IInford I Son
1:00 (J) • 1121 UniiOived

t.I&amp;-H

EAST

lii!ST

tu

e You lei Y- Life

IlliG Wheel ofF- Q
1121e Family Feud
ill le 1 Stir Stereo.
D M*&lt; Llegue leMbltM

POOl.

N~~l&gt;ED ,EiT~fl
DfAINAG~.

-

Weal
Samuel Johnson once said 1o some- Poa
P oa
one: "You musl have taken great 1 •
Poa
Paa
pains, sir; you could nol naturally have lt
Paa
Paa
been so very stupid. • At least we know 1 •
that be couldn't have been lalklng to a
Opening lead: • 2
bridge player. Players of our creat
game need lo have good brains in their
beads. But even so, occuionally these
well-oiled intellects blow a neuron.
Take totlay's deal as an esample.
·
Nortlt's jump 1o five spades sbowed ~ bearll, one, Glamooa &amp;DG two clubs.
slam interest, lfitlt useful cards in . But be bacia t coasidered the l!lltry lit·
spades and diamonds, but oo heart or uatl~ Wbea the heart f~ loll, lle
' club control. South was happy to raile ·elida t have the commtllllcatl- to colla tlte slam.
lect the leCOIId heart trick. However,
West led the spade two the normal II Sou1b Ud just led a heart to hll «e
lead of low from a ctOubleton in ~t trick two and retiii'Ded tile beart
trumps. Finding bimseU in the dwn· jack. be would have beea 111 fiDe llbape.
my, South was lured over the prec:l· Wat wiDI with the llelrt tiDe Uti
. pice, immediately finesain&amp; his heart rettllllla trump. But now declarer can
·jack. However, wben West Willi witk dilclnl blltwo club loRn, ooe 011 the
the king and returned bll ltlCOIId heart queen Uti the other 011 tile dla·
trump, South suddenly found that be monel ace.
.
bad only lllricks. There was no way
Only take a f,_llltasucceawlll
1o avoid a club loser.
~rate ID enra trick ,. Ill loss
Soutlt had stopped 1o count hts tricks woo I COlt you u addltlooal trick.
and found !2: se~ ~pades, two
Cl---•twtu-

'-----------..J

The World Almanac 11 Cro•aword Puzzle

Stereo. C

Clle (J)e-

llnpoo•-1 (Season
Premiere) Jill'a romantic
slgnela to Tim are unhaeded.

Stereo. C
aDe MiTioH PIKe Billy

encounlerl crime on lite bad
aide of town: Jake's pasl
retuma. Stereo. 1:;1
(2:00)

-

r..:J.Indmnq

MY ~Ao\DS N5W
6ft)t;ll e ~ e A

....e

• Lorry King Llwl
F1Dter Do• ling Myllellel

YeAH ••. MY [)1.0 AND
THE: (qUY FQOI. 'THE
Fl t-4ANCE caw::!"'N'I".

"TV.o-SEATER.

-om

446-03311ol0no 7p.m.

ALDER

(I) II Enlelllllnlnent Tonlgltt

tur-

a.,

NORTH

.AK

PHILLIP

7:30~f..:o~ 1:;1

11/W"

wv.

ChillY Hutch f40Q;
niOiiOi/, no polo, Golllpollo Forry, Will Bobyolt In lly Homo. Fon- 304-675-2178.
r:uttooo~~
~J.,IOO~
cld In Play Area. Reterenc11
'Avolllblo. Aodnoy Aroa. Coli 1BA Trollot lwnlahod Eloctric Cholto, a " W)llto !ling Bock
IBCIUtd,
Water,ttWigt,truh Chllr $200; ttlniWOOCI DriiMra.
114-245-5117.
romovot lrM. szoo. Por month. Bookc- Mony Olhor • - ·
E6A TREE SERVICE. Topping, $150 Dop. I14-251-110D
All Eocollont Condhlonl Call A~
Trimming, TrH Removal, Hedge
tor 1:30 P.ll. 11WIH7t0.
Trlrrimlna. FrM Estlmattll 6f4· ·2 B.clrooma UntumlaMd,
SWAII
12x50, on G~n Croofl.
30-7UT"After 4p.m.
$175/llo. WID Hook·Up. o.-tt, lUC'TIOH I .FURNITURE. B2
Gooi1oo Portoblo Sowmlll don't Aeflltnct Atqulrtd. 6~ Olivo St.. Golllpotlo. Now &amp; UHd
hxul yow toao to tho mill juot 4318, 304-175-2130.
tumhwo, - .....
&amp;
coll304-t7S·Il57.
Wortl booto.lt4-446-315D.
2 BA mobllo homa lot ront : no
IIIIo Pouta'o Dey caro Center. polo. Dip. l rot. roq'od. Coli a~
Satl, lffotda~, chlldciN. M-F lor 2 p.m. I M-446-0527.
!~~ ;r.,,::.~r:.~
I o.m. • 1:30 p.m. Agoo 2~t0.
1100. Moytog wrlngor wuhor
Befor., after ~ehoot Drop--Ina Nlco mol&gt;llo hO&lt;no camp Con- $50. 304.U2-31SI.
wotcomo. 114 441 11224. Now In- loy, abodraomo, otl oloctrlc, olr·
font Toddllf Coro, 114-44M227. ccind, no pell, rlfw.nc~a, :J04. VI'RA FURNITURE AND APPUANCES
175-2133.
S I l Trucb, loa h•ullng; c•ll
114-441-4421
anor lpm, 114-1111-3320, aak tor 44
lt4-446-3151
Apart~Ytent
won.
AEHT-2-owN
No Dopoob • GRAND OPENING
tor R&amp;nt
Wonlod To Do: BabyoHIIng In
NOihlng P-nod Or UHd,
My Home. Have Nurse A111111nt 1 B o - Apt~mont Rio Ev ....
Training. Locotod Within City Orondo. 614-388-11141.
Umlto. CoiiG14-441·1221.
1 bedroom aputment In Pl.
Wll do wallptl&gt;frlng a painting Pl....nl, W.VL, 1·304-175~042.
I~ ~r home. Rtler~ne~~ tvalj;.
lblo, • dol&gt;ondlbll, 8t4- 2 -oom Apartment, L.ocatod
llolllnd Holzer Clinic 01 Woot
441 1144 0&lt; 304-t~3734.
Ylrglnla, 304-475-44H.
2
bldraam, Air concl, pund
Financial
floor ~~~ l dop roqulrod, no
....
5-11162.
2
bodroomo,
corpotod, liP'
Business
21
Dlloncol turnlohod, noor ochOOI
l ohopplng, $2104278. mo, Now
OpportunHy
Haven, W-182-3716 E.O.H.
!NOTICE!
2 BA romodotod ~~ntum'od
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. Glllgt lpt. WI Nii\g. &amp; atovo.
recommends that you do busl· l'lotor tum'od. 1250 month. Dop.
11111 with ~pie you know, tnd roq'od. 114-441-3717.
NOT lo send monty lhrough the
mall until you have ln"'tttlgated Zbdnn. opt. In Middleport, otovo,
lh• offering.
rotrlgorotOt 6 oomo tumhwo,
roloJoncoo &amp; dlpoolt,
Vtndlng Rou11 : LocaL We Heve corpotod,
The Ntw1111 Machlntt, Making A 114-112-507t '
Nice St11dy Cash Income. 1·
800-955-0354.
VENDING ROUTE: Got Rich
Quick? Ho Woyl lui Wo Have A
Good, St11dy, AHordoblo, But~
n111. Won'1 L.ut. 1.SOD-284·
1363.
3 room apt, ltOH a ret fur·
nlohod. nlco nolahborllood, dip
1
rat NqUINd, 36U?S.10DO.
,. ~~~==-~~:;:~
Real Eslate
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT Sooro 12 gun oaltlnll, bottom
BUDGET' PRICES AT JACKSON 110f1191. MOO ooklng $171.
ESTATES, 1131 Jocko'"' Plko Colt IIIIW- 5:30-t:30 p.m. 11431 Homes for Sal&amp;
lrom 11112/mo. Wolk to ohop I Ho•n For Solo: 2 Bodrooms, ........ Clll14-441.z511. EOH. =;;;;:;;:::__ _ _ _ __
Fomlly Room, Full Bmmont , Conotrucllon _ , . , Rontoll 53
Antiques
With Flroploeo. 814-448-86111.
ovollablo. =-~ tumlohod. ,..---,-,,..:..,..-..,..,.,..-~~·~·
0&lt; 111. A - ·Antlquoa,
hi y. ..
3 bodroom ronch homo - l y Ot
~-~. 1124 E. Moln •reot.
Ill. 12.4,
tOOxzoon lot, OR, FR, LM F u - Aport"*lt t Bed- - . , . Houro: M.T.W. 10:'"'
wfflrepllce, l•rgt kitchen, 2 raom 21 112 NIH 011=1
Ia, un. to 1:00 ~m., Iunday 1:00
-.,!liMO•. Utllltllo Paid. 1
to I :00 p.m. I ~
both•. do ubl• cer garage, new •-'"·
- 21111.
Lenox htat pump. BriCk front 4411•tt 7
wllldlng. 304-812·3310 or 882·
R . , p.m.
Chino Coblowt CUnod GloM
3217.
Fumlohod lportmont, 4 R - F - . P4l. 1 - 1 1.
And Both, Nlco And Cloan, No
Miscellaneous
Pota, Socurtty Dopoolt &amp; 54
Aotoronco. 114441 0444.
Merchandise
Complotly Fumlohod, 1bJ, noxt I'...,.,.--;,..;-.,.-....,.,-'""'"
Ia Ubrary, pirklng, hilt, air.
,......._ dopooll roqulrod. 114-

I I I

.A71U
•• 71

0 Life Oou On Stereo. 1:;1
7:051]) lelllflr IIIRIMiu

Phllto tile range, avacada
12xll 2 bedroom, tumilhed, 1 gNOn, 178. IM-44f.lll25.
W mill on 11111110111 Rd, Apple
PICKENS FURNITURE
~ no poto, 1200. pluo
~111\Jood
I r.lerencll, 3Q4..57I.
Hou- turnlohlng. 1/Z mi.
I.
Ad. Pt. P l - .

roomt

I I II

•Qu

a.._,._..

olltr; &lt;114-111N111t -

446-4311.

14x70 mobile homo, 3 bod coii31J4.175.1410.

I'

D 8pottaCenler

I loot -1111 dlotl _,.,...
-

p
I

BRIDGE

Tonlgltt

c

r

IIJ au.nilim IMp Stereo. 1:;1

roq-.

for Rent

... Wltlt

~-~

_,____ _

15,000 lilt~ -

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS
IN THESE SQUARES

SCIIAM-I.ITS ANSWERS
Unsold • Jeffy • A\1811· Deceit · VOICES
'We need more good men to speak out about whafs
going on in our goooemment." one fellow said. "There's
plenty ol good men; his buddy slghed, "I just wish they
had lOuder VOICES.•

ChlkiNn

ae

7

. , UNSCRAMBLE lETTUS
FOR ANSWER

a..

"-wtltourQ

. people who say they want to

-.~IL-_.1---~.1. . . ~. 1~~...1 :!n~=~e~
-··to .. •
6

e

ONewZor10Q
1:35 (I) Andy llrllllth
7:00
1111 Wheel of ~

(I). !-~

s....

Business
Training

YETZ0 G

1.....

DUpCioM

ro

Altar a chat with a coworker. my friend commented,
r~---=----=----,~·Have you ever notlced thai

The J e l l Clllllnlkllt EdlaM'Q
(!) (f) IIKNeii/LAitNt

~

14

'

~=~~NeWt !:;I

e,,...,.,.....lloM.

on

'

Iii•

Country llabllo H- Plllll, At.

Tile
Locol School
8xzollurnn
· troottd
wood&amp; 1fT Wanted to Rent
ll llllgo
currrwtly
MilkingOlatrlct
apo ptnnlng,
porch, 8x20
awning
pllcl:tl01111 from certiUid ap-- n1lllng w:lacrolla, everything txc
pllconlo lor o Junior High oond, ono ownor, 304.S75-5t41.
w.ntodoreo~.
- 2 '"
ao111potto
F...,
0t -3 bod-,
304-675-3100
oltor
4:00
Pll.
~::"ctrd~:~or ~~ 1D87 14x72 On Rontod Lot. Hoot
pllcanla mull Mid a valid Ohio Pump And Sto,.ge Building In· Wantod To Aont: Mot01 tiiChl~ certltlclte lnd tor eluded. 114-448-8701 Aller 4~.M.
For Trip To S...h
coocltlng pooltlono muot moot 1DI7 14x72 On Rontod Lot. Hoot
1S.15. Colt Pot 114cortlllcollon roqulromento of P•mp And Storoll" Building In·
Ohio lor oporto modlclno and cludod. 11~706 Aftor 41'.11.
CPA. - · lnt-tod ohould
contoct Jim ca~tor, su....on. 1DII Fairmont 14x70 2 Bod·
Mercl1and1se
tendent. Melp i.Ge'Jt Schod~,' P. room1, WID, CA, Deck, UIUIIy
0. lox 272, 320 Eoot lololn Building, SotUp Ouall CrHk,
St-. Pomoroy, Ohio.
$14,900 ~14-245-93101.
5I
Household
Wa ...td perMn to Uve In &amp; Cll'l 181h Adame 2 BR, all •leclrlc.
tor tldert~ man, 304~773.5045. $1500 down &amp; t1ke over
Good a
Poll VFW n Mooon, tlrot opt, go paymonto. 304-675-6897 or 675biZ Corpot. 110; Mollolton Fur·
In otldlng dooro,llft opt.
6613.
.
~W~ANT=E=D:"".-;:P:-ort;;,•TI:::::..rno=P:-os-,l"'llo-n Looking For A Dool? Consldor A nhuro,SM-441-11144.
Snlngo
On
All
Ylnyt
6
Cor(22 Hro IWI&lt;I Avotloblo At A Pr.-&lt;Mntd Mobile Homt, Llr11•
In StoCILI5.00 Up. Moltohon
Community C1041p Homo For Stlectlan, Low Monty Down,
Peraona Whh O.VIIoprnen111 Freo Sot .Up And Dollvory. 1.aoo.
DloobiiHin In Bldwoll. Ho•ro: I 58H710.
Couch 6 S mo old, oac
4m .a p.m., OR 10:30 o.m. -1:30
....,.. choir,p.m., Sot (ROiotoo); 8 o.m. .a Nlco 10X55 11.11., 2 B~A1 both,
304-175-'1111.
., tOIII
m. OR t ·11 p.m. Sun A.C, new range I re
otolal; 2 ·Hour Wookly Staff -lc. 12,000 080. Ollng; OJ Ao Othorwlu 7241.
Schodlilld. Hlah SchOOl Ooaroo
Volld Drlvw'o [lcorwo And GOOd 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Drlmg Aoc:anl Good Com.
m•nlcitlon AOd Orgonlz.atlon 3 Acrn SUMyocl• U1Uitllo lnSklllo, Punctuol And Ablo To atollod, North uollla Hlah
Worll At Pa~ Ot A T11m Re- SchOOl Tttom_. Rood, 1/io
quired; Exporlonco Worlllng IIIIo, M,!IOO. tf4.I2N'1 II.
With Poroono With Monlol
lor homo
Aatordotlon And Dovotopmontal Acrull" nolloldoRoybum
Rd,
Dloabllhlu Prolorred. Salary: oonotructlon
$5.00 IHr, To Start. Sind ro--.blo -rlctlofto, wotor,
Aoourno To Cocllla Bakor, P.O. lniO&lt;mOtlon noollod on
Box. 104, Jackson, OH 45640; 304475-1211.
Doodllno
FOt
Applleanto:
Real Estate
11&lt;2:1182. Equol Opponunlty 36
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Employer.
Wanted
Complllo homo tumloltlnao.
WE'Ll PAY YOU To Typo Nomot
Haul"': Mon-Sat, t-1. .14-tilW Acldreuill From Hom1l SOtldna Smol Form OJ Woodod 0322, 3 mUoo out Bulowllo Rd.
Properfy
.m
Stcludllf
Ana.
Clll
~.00 Por 1000. Co•l 1-.&amp;116FNO Dotlvory.
1!111 tlt41 Mlnltdyro.+l Or 21..211-2318.
Wrllt: PASSE • W, 161 S. Un.
~- . .,. • choir. cau 114r:oltroroy, N. Aurora, IL 60!42.
Rentals
lloytag - - . dryor, •tchWoii-Eotollllohod ANI Eatato
lng- ... 1221; Cldw
'•a.
Flmo Oponlng An Ottlco In Gol·
ll'l to Stoo; DJyoro 1!50 to 8100.
llt&gt;OIIo. Socrotory ·A-IIIIonlat1
A H - - Wlrronty. Wuhor &amp;
Brlnch Manag.,., UcttnHa 41 Houses for Rent
Agent•
Llstlnft 3 lodraomo Untum,_, Dlyor 1 ' - -114-4fl.2844.
Sptclalloto A ~rlo~ty. A
Now Round Ook Tobit, (Ciow
AHUmM Contldtntlal. Mall To Locatod: Hondoroon, wv, &amp;14- Foot,
z Loavu, 4 Ook , _
44141140.
P.O. lox 230, Jakeoon, Ohio,
bock Chol...,. 1795. Oott Chino
4!11411.
~.. Stoning: 81H. 11442 Mobile Homes

J

~~Htl(l)=s=.~
Q

"' - " " -·""'
~::======~;:=======~:
~~~~~~~~:

S3H., Linder new •nagaiiiMl
L.oto, Ul; homo rontalo, 1231;

114-Da..saaa.

Q

(f) aqu.,. OrNt TV

~~~

IL...Jii-.11---Lis-L.I.....JI..~
SUTQE

L «L'!~ Newt 1:;1

I:SO~

TI-\AT..

46 Space for Rent

114-DD:I-2117·
Trollot loll lor ront 1n Aoalno,

T-

0 Rln Tin Tin, K·t Cop
1:05 Ill Tlne'a Company

=-

Aoomolor---.. -·

loctrlc,
.. 1811. All Sl-"'a .....,. with ~
roomoE
• $5,!500.114-44
2 llolho, 12a65,
1110 Porkwood, 14a70, 3 bod· Col dor 2:00 p.M. 104-771Alootra]or-.AII h ct.upo.
~~~~~relolln city llmHo, .MSI, ..._ wv.
1D81 Shultz 14x70 3 Bodraomo
I W Botho, Good Carptl, p.,:
tlally Furnlollld, Control Air

WELL.'r'ES ...

T~AN ~ALL?

Room a

IIJIIecOt*
D ln8lde lite
a w011c1 Tadttr

·,

3

~:.e~~~Stereo. 1:;1

1hi'H 1 hect ......... loclllecl
71h Stroll; tor hutltOt ln._

~42'~ Oolllo - ·

I 1 1~ I

(l)lqun~

't'OU LIKE

342t

c
- ~- IMio llooglo, 3041

llalhf00d--.m4

I

'·

OSUDJO

(I) laved by lite ...

1HI 2 lA King mobile homt. tlon 304-1.,._ loll lor .....
NMda some r•PIIr, &amp;2000. 7tm10Jm &amp; 7:30pm·11 pm. 304·895· 45
Fumlshed

. &amp; omoll

Old. 114......llo!:!'I-~~~
Had Sl1oto,
To
... Ill
t£, "::.~

or ,.,.

• · ORoorrongo ~tttwa
.
t011r ocrombltd ..da below to form lour limp!&lt;~ -eft.

De ONwa

One hrbncrn llpMtrnenta. fur.
nllhlcl,
ui.IUtilll
hcl d1d
_ , clo!IOIII roquiJod, ..
oot•: lf4.tCI.Znl.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

,,,"""""4.....,
'" u•
'lltiiolll Old
IIOOd
..., .........'IMI
a::.,:__.,..__

EVENING

PIULII

t:OO(J)e Clle ~• • •

........lowod. l14-

- . Col AltoJ I P.M.

-

WED., SEPT. 18 • .

TUTNILT

1:30 (I). (I). COidl (Preview)
Haydart proposes to
Christine on hla new spans
TV ahow. Stereo. C

• • liZ . . . HciUia

(Season Premler1t) A r8J!!!'1
on k!dnepplng. Stereo. 1iJ

10:00C2le 1111 Llw l Oldlr A

'~ ·

nun laces chlrgea ol
sexually abusing a
~year-old gin. (Rl Stereo.

WlterHM1erS.a.S2,..0,

lon oloctric ond

I15U5
Noturol

'tO

tllOIIIJrn

Jo":..-n
- a 11'1u&gt;·

H.Irdware. l~5

And
Freo

(I)~
i Crourllldl A
New York City prOMCU!or

BARNEY
IN MY BACK·
SCRATCH IN'
MACHINE

DDCII 1 GOT
THIS

TIRIIBLE

IA'IC IT'H If

311 Smtll ,.,_

ACIIOII

37 Wlleonlln

1 1111111111 br

clly

btcktrr

31E,.........

IPietaefllllr

40 11or1t1 of WY
41 Holclly ltlltlx

13 OrNt held

capiiYa
14 Autllor Je111

42¥11111

41Polta47 OltiiMmt

II. -

15 Scoobr-

IOWtt
50 llwMdiNCI

11 Frealtwller

511n--

17=--

lroutlttlndl

Nevldl
1S Rltlltr lltln
lpoeL)
11- Aviv

52 IIM'tlltll
5301Dter
Mlltllenlclllr-

21 llenttln

5I Sltlntty lllhea
57 Trlel

....

IICterlttlc

200re~~r

· 22 lllofeAD
23 Vapon
HP.... producl
31 AltclllllnCt

DOWN
1 AllrOIIIUl -

1 Lltllllr

2- -lllout
3 Plllnllndllll

32F-IIone
33FUIJ

4CreNtMitlhl
51Mcrllllt

34 Thonty altrub
35 ""'
praf. tltlp

8 lttlerlor

AIIM!Joltt

lllnZNIInd

PMOl

1-1¥11
10 Cooking fal

11 Entll
12RuH

reun~•• with his son. (R)

Stereo.!;!

I
~

(!) (f) Jl'cl&lt;actotlll'm...
.vlle Jlu XII
The R!pplngtona felture
Run ~rioeman, Cuban
trumpeter ArUo Sandoval.

Bela Fleck and lite
Flecktonel, Chick Corea
Elektrlc Band and Diane

Schuur. (1 :00) Stweo.
aDe 1tun1ar ·c
a w011c1 NtWi
0 700 Club Wltlt Pit
RObtiiiOtt

1O:SO ill On Slltgl
D IIMbltU Tonlgltt

!:~~~~==~===~~b=ro:k~en
ASTRO..QRAPH
AKC !loglot

oil,_ ,..,oritril.-

~:11tlmoioo1 .... Jlldy ,, . ~; -

turo

3827.

BERNICE

BEDE OSOL

on

&amp;lpl. 17, 11112

' ~specially journaya to toreign '
Travel,
lll1dl could produce some rather r,..
.rllerf&lt;Abtt benellll for you In tile yMr
ihald.Try 1 0 - ktiOaJIIIIQIIble In '
add tel abOUt lite countrlel you Intend
to vtalt.
VIRGO (Atltl· 23-&amp;lpl. 22) There Ia a
special market tor some ~nOwledQ41
you've recenlly acquired. If you can
zero 'in on lhe outlel, II could be very
prolllable tor you. Trying to patch up 1

- - ----·-- - - -

-

romance? The Aalro-Graph tlmum conclusions and work In thai
Malchmlktr can help you undersland direction.
what lo do lo make the relaHon·shlp PISCES (Feb. 20-Merch 20) Play lhe
work. Mill $2 plus a long, sell-ad· back-up role In a partnership today In·
dreaaad, stamped envelope 10 MilCh· stead ot trying to ba tile wheeler-dealer.
maker, clo this newspaper, P.O. Box The key to succesals to position yoursell whore you'll be tile mosleHectlve.
91428, Cleveland, OH «101-3-428.
LIIRA (lept. U-Ocl. 23) Someone you ARIES (MMcll ai•April 11) You're
have a strong connection with will be presently In a cycle where good
looking out tor your material concerns could gel better, provided you
today. Thlo lon't the first time lhls lndl· i8ave everything up to Ch8nce. Create
vidual hu ltelped you wllhoul your hav· solid game plan and then adhere 10
lng to aal&lt; .
TAURUS (April »MMV 20) Don't
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No¥. 22) Someone surprised If you gel a lew more
you recently mel lain a position lo help menta than usualloday,
you develop a new circle of Influential members of lhe opposite
frlendl. There Ia a chance you'll be r,.. servers like your style and may even
celvtng a social !nvltiiJlon from this lndl- to emulate you .
vidUal 00011.
GEMINI (Mar 21-.ruM 20) A CIOH
IAOinARIUS (Now. :a-Dec. 21) You clatemlghl beUtepur'leyoroii.Oino
could be lnalrumental loday In helping . slrable lntormatlon today thai
yourself, end those you 're Involved your aplrlta. It perllins to aon181hlnO I
wilh, In achieving something of mutual you hope will transpire.
benefll. However, ba ourelo ahara tile CANCII (June 21-.luiJ 22) You.,,.rluat,sl
glory With your peers,
_ , loday Ia your tblllly to
CAI'IIICOIIN (0.0. 22-.lan. 11) You · lite worth ot othtofl' auggeotlono
hiW -~~ Cl!'liflles thll w!ft be ad· · ld-. When you hear aomethlnl) Of
mftd by the piople you'll be Involved · '""'··you 'llknowhowtomulmb!IH
with today. Firat and foremost. Ia your , , your advantage.
ph!lotophleat way of dealing with LIO (.IUIJ 23-Atlg. Zl) You're in utron·
uncertlilttlel.
ger pottlllon lhan you mey realb!lat IIIII
AQUARIUS (Jill. 20-Feb. 11) A poalllve time where your c.reer 11-ned. II
aHitude will help you fuHIIt your expec- your performence warrants It, lnqlllnt
lotions today. Ooh'l be enxloua about · about 8 promotion and/or raise.
lhe oulcome of events but vtsuellza op- :

- -- ----·-- ··-

11:00()). (1). (!) ~·

•• ae&amp;ltrwl

P&amp;~(l:i

18 Crllek IIIII CltiM

aD~
11por1a Tlltlglll

0 ac..c:.ow and Mrl. King

11:~ !II

Inti Julllce

.I

(I) Amlltc8'1 Dale&amp;•

Morillor

e

lllglllllote

c

Artenlo Hili Stereo.

• 'OingtrDUI CulvM'
Clime Tlnti Allar PJime

Q
aTlntiStereo.
Manerllne
·

11:35(J)e 0 Tonlgltt lltow Wltlt
Jer ~
1:;1

s:n3.

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.
.
e

Rulli Um~augll
18Nnh... _
D 11Dut1181n lllldng World
Cup Flnelt 11om VIII. Colo.

.

a Ne•INigllt

0 llonlnza: The Loll

l!piiOdll
12:06(1) MOVll!: hiVIdlrt f10t11

Mill (POl (2:00)

TDIII

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PRHIIH

ftGJ

NRPO

lilA

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Wltlt

12:00 (I)

(T)

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RNZOL

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IPPZICAYIUIJ.'

RDILYO.

.

••

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Working In llltwlllon II Hkl being nibbled to :dealh by ducu. " - Eric s.var.ld.
· -... NIA.Ino

.,

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KRAFT

MACARONI
&amp; CHEESE

STORE HOURS
Mottday~ Sunday
. 8 AM-10' PM

7"!. OZ. BOX

s

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY; OH.
WE RESERVE. THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD SUN., SEPT. 13 THRU SEPT. 19, 1992 :

Ohio Lottery

Expos trim
Pirates lead
to 3 games
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Pick 3:
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Pick 4:
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Super Lotto:
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Kicker :
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•

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'

•••
Vol. 43, No. 102
Copyrlghled 1112

s

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59

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FLAVORITE ·

Bacon. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .La.

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$199

Round Steak. . . . . . . . . . . .LB.
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Ham..................La.
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Sausage. . -........-.. -.. -.
ECKRICH ASSORTED

Lunc:h Meats. . . _a oz.

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•

COCA-COLA
PRODUCTS

99
ACCIDENT SCENE • Three Mason County residents were injured Wednesday afternoon in the acci·
dent pictured above. The head-on roUislon occurred on S.R. 62 around 4:20 p.m. Shown is Sgt. G.L. Clark
ot tbe Point Pleasant Detachment- West Virginia State Police taking information at tbe scene.

$1.69 SUNSHINE
DOG FOOD

.

$ 19

Three injured in head-on collision
Three people were taken to area
hospitals following a head-on collisian on S.R. 62 Wednesday after·
noon, according to a spokesman for
the Point Pleasant Detachment·
WestVu-giniaStatePolice.
Rick Bush, Sr., 38, of Lelart,
Diana·' Bwris, 28, of Letart ·and
Christine M. Gibbeau~ 42, of Point
Pleasant were all injured in the 4:20
p.m. aacident.
The Point Pleasant Fire
Deparll!lent's Jaws of Life were
used to ,CJ:triclile Bush IUid Burris
from his1988FordEscon.
·
d a·
·
Bums
an tbbeaut were both
taken io Pleasant Valley Hospital
where they underwent surgery. A

20 lB. BAG

1
89.(

GENERAL MILLS

CHEER lOS

$ 59

s

69

WASHINGTON(AP) - Inthe
hea.t of a re-election campaign in
whtch he has accused Demlicrat
Bill Clinton.of ~isi.ng taxe~ and
fees and enJoymg 11, Pres1dent
Bush is grousing about yet another.
fee increase.
But this is one !hat Bush waniS
- and !hat the Senate is ignoring.
In his campaign remarks, the
president has left the impression
tiJat the only revenue increase he
has been i!JVOivC!I ,With was the
1990 tax b11l he s1gned - a fiveyear, $165 billion measure that was
one of the larg¢st in history.
But his tiff with' the Senate on
Wednesday underlines a fact Bush

BR~UGHTON;s

2Yo ·Mllk. . . . . . . . . . . GAL.

PHILADELPHIA

Cream Cheese............aoz.
KEMP'sPAIL .

6.5 • 8 OZ. BOX

$189

99(
$ 99

2
(
TV D1nner. . . . . a.s-1o oz.. 69
Ice Cream."_.._s auart

MORTON • ·

s

39

~blientreportedadeerwasthe
~ . of a single vehicle accident
Wednesday morning on Sandhill

Road

·
Apparently Eric D. Myers, 31, of
Henderson. was traveling east on
SandhiU Road 81 5:15 a.m. when a
deer ran into the driver's side of his
199000dge.MyershadnolirileiD
avoid hittirlg the anim~.
Neither Myers nor-htscger,
John Clonch, 29, of enderson.
· 'wed Dam
to the
were lnJ
•
age
vehicle wasestimatedat$800.
There were no cititations issued.

ne~er

r~iling

discusses while
agauikt taXes: ~ has sought doZC!Is
of tax and fee mcreases wonh bll·
'lions "ofdollars in every l;'udget ~
has llroposed smce becommg prcs1dent m 1989.
Bush ·was upset that a Senate
bill fi~ancing federal health programs om1tted a proposal he has
made to charge fees to hospitals
~ ~ursi~g homes receiving feder·
al m~~ons.
" lgnonng t,he proposed fee
~.U!d result1n fewer ~llh ~
fac1bnes bemg mspected, Bush s
Office ,of Management and Bud~et
wrote m a policy statement dehv·
ered to Senate leaders. "The Sen·
ate is 1/fSed to adopt the president's

· JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) Ohio Gov. George Voinovich
expreS.!ed confidence today !hat his
visit wO!Jld paye the way for more
American small businesses to come
to Indonesia.
"The most important tntng
abotit our trade mission ls that we
are breaking the ground for others
to come," Voinovich, who leads
Ohio's first business and trade mis·
sion 10 Indonesia, wid a news con·

so LB. PACKAGE

90

ferencc.
"1 sincerely believe that as a
result pf .this visit, many more
American smaU business groups or
pewle, fa,ticularly from my own'
state o Ohio, will come," he
added.
He said that when he was elect·
ed governor in 1991, his regional
inrerest was in East Europe. But he
then concluded that he should go to
the Association of Southeast Asian

.Local· br·I·ef:s ----.

·

proposal.' '
The. statement seemed to con traSt w1th Bush's frequent attempts
to portray himself as. a president
who wants to avotd revenue
increases -and Clinton as a leader
who would noL
"Who do you trust in this election?" Bush asked at the Republic·an National Convention last
month. "The candidate who has
raised taxes one time and regrets it,
Or t1!e candidate WhO raised taxes
and fees 128 times and enjoyed it
every time?"
Despite remarks like !hat, Bush
repeatedly ha$ found it necessary to
seek higher taxes and fees to
finance govemmentpro~s.

Nations region bec••\se its economy is growing faster than those of
other places in the world. .
. The ASEAN region includes
Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, the
Philjppines, Thailand and Brunei.
"The ~rospects of our people
doing busmess will be more likely
here than perhaps they would be in
some other places in the world,"
Voinovich said.
·
Voinovich's mission includes

14 food
Ohio-based
companies
dealing
in
processing
and packaging
.
•
· machinery, machine tools, and
plastics production and processing
The Meigs County Sheriff's Deparunent investigated an appar·
machinery.
·
ently self-inflicted gunshot wound early this moming.
·
The Sept. 15-18 visit to Jakarta
According to Deputy Jeff Miller, the investigalin~ officer, a can
is the last leg of an ASEAN tour
was receiVed 81 appmximal.ely 7:50 a.m. from Metgs Emergency
tiW ll1so has taken the delegation to
Services regarding a shOOting on State Route 124 ~Rutland. .
Thailand, Singapore and Malaysia.
Burdell Black. 90, was found at his lelidencc, with a gunshot
Ohio is the third-larRest export·
wound in the head, a .22 caliber gun next to him. He was llansport·
ing stale in the United Swes. with
ed to Grant Medical Centtr in Colwnbus by Life Right helicop!Cr.
exportS tolaling $25.8 billion annu·
His condition was unavailable aqxesstime.
·
ally. according to recent U.S.
Department of Commerce statistics.
Its exports to Indonesia in 1991
were valued at $38.6 million, an
Suite Representative Mark Malone (I)-South Point) wiD atterid
estimated 36 percent incmuc from
Saturday's Catfish Festival in Middlcpon. and wiD be available to
the previops year. The ·top three
answer questions regarding s"te govemtnenL
,
exportS
to the country were indus·
Malone will be at the Meigs C01111ty Democratic Party booth,
trial.
and
communications machin·
located neat Snouffer's Fire and Safety Equipment {fOIII 3l0 4:30
ery
and
computer equipment,
p.m.
chemicals and alli(ld produciS, IUid
,.
transpOrtation equipment

Deputtes investigate shooting

GROUND

CHUCK
10 LB. PACKAGE

90

Malone to visit festival

..

_. _..'

_~-

JJ
-·-----·
.

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentlael News Starr
D.V. Weber Construction Com·
pany of Reedsville was awarded a
bid for removal of old fuel storage
tanks and installation of tanks at
the Meigs County Highway
Department when the Meigs Coun·
ty Commissioners met in regular
session on Wednesday. .
Two bids for the work were
opened at last week's meeting, and
action was tabled at that time,
pending review by County Engineer Philip Robens. The bid of the
Weber finn was for $44,815. A bid
in the amount of $44,995 was
received from Jeffers Excavating of
Pomeroy.
In conjunction with yesterday's
bid award, the commissioners
authorized an insurance voucher,
required before work on the tank
removal and replacement begins.
The board continued to discuss
a proposal that would offer "freedom of choice" for its employees
on the county's self-insurance med·
ical plan. Charles Riffle and Kenneth McCollough of Swisher and
Lohse Pharmacy in Pomeroy had
approached the board about the
possibility of changing the county's
prescription program from a mail·
order plan to one which aUows customers to use a prescription card at

the pharmacy of their choice. Currently, all covered prescriptions are
purchased through a mail order
fmn in SL Louis, Mo.
Shirley Johnson and Ed Tyburs·
ki, third party administrators with
Medical Claims Service of
Ravenswood, W.Va., met with the
commissioners, Riffle and McColIough, and outlined what action
was necessary on the part of the
board and any phannac1es interest·
ed in participating in the ' 'E~press
Scripts" card program.
Although a one to two percent
increase may be e~perienced by the
county under the new service, the
pian will not effect county employees' co·payments on prescription
purchases. Therefore, their cost
will not change.
.
Roberts and county garage personnet discussed a road abandonment request in Scipio Township.
Jeffrey Latta had requested !hat a
section of Township Road 284 be
abandoned to accommodate new
home construction. That request
was made in August, 1990, and
Latta has since modified hi s
request. Necessary action to
approve Latta's request, and the
matter of whether another site
review and public hearing would
be required were discussed. No
action was taken, although Roberts

M "ller fioun d
~

agreed to investigate the requesL
Mike Swisher, director of the
Meigs County Department of
Human Services, and Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman discussed a
proposal in which the DHS would
purchase a parking area from the
Middleport Housing Corporation
for $30,000. Swisher discussed
problems with parking which have
arisen for both employees and
clients in light of the new DHS
facility.
The space is located at Race
Street and Third Avenue and would
provide parking for 34 cars. AOOth·
er 16 spaces could be developed if
two buildings on the lot were
demolished. Further site review
will take place prior to action on
the proposal.
The board also approved pay·
ment of $350 to the Ohio Depanment of Developmen~ Division of
Tourism. The payment represeniS
Meigs County s share of a statewide study, which will measure the
impact of tourism on local communibes across Ohio.
Present were : Roberts, Ted
Warner and David Spencer from
the county highway department;
Commissioners David Koblentz,
Manning Roush and Richard Jones;
and Clerk Mary Hobstetter.

•lt'\1 on •npe Char•oe

gu~
"

J

• "

b

"
· ·
George W. (DiU) Miller of Middleport was found gul'lty on
Wednesday by a jury in Meigs
County Common Pleas Coun on a
charge of rape.
MiUer was indicted in February

S ia1
lOr Mark Sh ts
. . Sh
has
f Gpecll ' plrosec~ d h
ee
uthgauon.. eelS
recommended
o a 1po 1s tne t e case on
e maxunum sentence of 10 to 25
behalf of the state, and Miller was years and a fme of $10,000.
represented by Pomeroy attorneys
Miller faces similar charges in
Ch ar 1es Kmg
· ht an d Ch nstop
·
her another case, alleging sexual conTenaglia.
tact with different female victims,

~~~~n~ecasebeganonTuesday

completion:allfe·sentenceinves·

~~:.~:ro~~e~: :w~~=:- pla~:n:nn;:d~~S~~~~rf~:~w~: ~~ ~;~;7; ~t~~~~X~~~ :~

Voinovich confident his visit
paving way for small businesses

GROUND
BEEF

s

incomplete.
The Mascn County Sheriff's

ignores prop(Jsed fee increase

RGER
HELPER

Lettuce. . . . . . . . . . . . . . HEAD

hospital spokesman reported both
were listed in fail\ condition
Thursdaymoming. "
Bush was taken· to Holzer Medi·
cal Center. A HMC spokesman said
he was in guarded condition
Thursday rooming.
·
AsSisting at the ~ were the
Mascn County Sheriff's Depart·
men~ Point Pleasant EMS and
Mason EMS.
.
Gl6'1\eii w as driving a 1990
OldSinobile. Both vehicles were lis·
ted as iotallosses.
The state police spokesman said
B
li
ush was trave ng north on S.R.
62 and Gibbeatn was traveling
south. Details of the accident are

BUSh compl azns
• as senat e

15 OZ. BOX

1

A lluiUmoall Inc. Newapapor

Weber firm awarded
storage tank bid

24 PACK
12 OZ. CANS

s

2 Soctlona 1 1• Pogea 25 conll

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, September 17, 1992

20 OZ. CAN

.

low 80s.

'•"

3 DIAMOND
PINEAPPLE

FRESH PORK BUTT

Low tonight In mld·60s.
Fr iday, porUy &lt;loudy. Hlgb In

• ·l

Judge FredW. ~wiD'scourt

Cable TV price regulation
ISSUe ready or Bush's desk
~

•

representatives called a news conWASHINGTO~ (AP) Congress is likely soon to send ference Wednesday to counteract
President Bush a bill that responds cable's media campaign against
to a multitude of customer com- their bill.
" We creared a monsrer in 1984
plainiS about the cost and quality of
and
now we are paying the price,''
cable television.
said
Rep. Christopher Shays, R·
The legislation was expected to
Conn.,
m a reference to the year
be approved today by the House,
cable was deregulated to help it
foUowed shortly by the Senate.
The cable industry has cam· grow.
The cable industry now is a
paign.ed relentlessly against the
measure, saying in newspaper and multibillion-dollar business that
cable channel ads that it would enjoys monopoly conditions in the
raise cosiS that would have to be overwhebning majority of commu·
passed on to customers.
" Some in the cable industry
must feel !hat if you tell the big lie
often enough and loudly enough,
somebody will start 10 believe i ~ "
said Rep . Edward Markey , D·
Mass., sponsor of the legislation in
the House.
He and a group of other House
The Wahama .Band was vicmembers and consumer and labor torious at the Hurricane Invitational

nities.
Th e re-regulation bill would
hold monopoly cable companies to
Federal Communications Commis·
sion rare standards on hasic service
and foster competition, which is
seen as ultimately the best way to
control prices.
The FCC would determine
" reasonable" rates and ensure that
equipment such as convener boxes
and remote control devices are not
too costly.

Wahania Band wins six
awards at Hurricane

Band Festival Saturday, the first
competition of the season for the
White Falcons.
The hand placed first in Class C .
with a total score of 78.6 out of
possible 100. The color guard came
1n first in Class C and second over.
aU, with a score of 88 out of a pos- ·
sible 100. Also placing first was the
~ussion section, judged best at
the festival with a score of 8.4 out
of I 0; and the Wahama soloists,
Emy Zuspan and Carla Sayre, who
also placed first.
Wahama's field commander,
Bethany Roush, placed !biro in
Class C and founh overall with an
84 out of 100.
The judges commented on
Wahama 's continued tradition of
bend exeellence, difficulty of
"!USic, llld the pride and dignitY :
displayed by the band. according 1n ·
WHS director, Kenny Bond.
•:
The White Falcon Band also :
brought .home the boosters plaque
for havmg the most supporters
·
RECEIVES AWARD • Wabama 1111 corps cCHaptalns Kendra present at the festival.
Wahama's
next
competition
is
·
ReJDoldl ud Dan Rous•, and rille captain Allllft Hirbour (I to r),
Saturday,
SepL
19,
81
Vmson
High
:
~~Jictured rectiV!DJ one ot 111x awards 111011 by the White Falcon
It tile Huniclae Invitational Band Fesd\'11 bdd Saturda)'. School. The competition begins it SllowD IDikml tbe praeatation Is a member of tbe Hurricane band, 4 p.m., with WHS taking the field ;
at 4:35p.m.
;
wblle otber bllld members look on in tbe background.

a

~

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......

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