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Page-Oil-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolla, OH-P9Int Pleasant, WV

October 13, 1991

USDA
boostsoutlnak
~or Group for working women swamped with har~ssment can~.
. ··
'. J--•
pro~!t~ns,
·
t
·
·
corn, SO"J bean harve s s
's
Nu~sbaum
WASHINGTON (AP)- Farmers in Illinois, Iowa and Nebraska
brought in better-than-expected
· yields last month as ·gooct weather
.blanketed the Midwest, the Agriculture Department says, forecasting this year's com crop at 7.48 bil·

!i&lt;&gt;r;.~~~%~~bea·n liarvesfatso·is

the worst.''
Nationally, soybean production,
a source of high-protein meal and
vegetable oil, was estimated at 1.93
billion bushels, un 6 percent from
September's forecast oL1.82 bil·
hon bushels.

w~e.at

·- ·Ana lhe.
harvesrwa.s fore:-proving to be better than anticipat- cast at 1.98 bilhon bush~ls, d~wn 2
ed in the major producing states, percent from Septembers esttmate
' with this year's output estimated at and down 28 percent from 1990,
1.93 billion bushels, USDA said when 2.74 b1lhon bushels-were har·
Friday.
'• vested.
Aithough forecasts and yields
Orange production is forecast at
for both crops are up from Septcm- 8.19 million tons, 4 percent higher
ber estimates, the com harvest is than last season and 6 percent more
still down 6 percent from 1990 out· than the 1989-90 crop. The Califorput of 7.93 billion bushels, while nia-Arizona lemon harvest is forethe soybean harvest is up fraction· cast at 688,000 tons, compared
ally from last year's total of 1.93 with 722,000 !Dns a year ago, while ·
billion bushels.
the grapefruit harvest is forecast at
Based on Oct. I surveys, the 2 million tons, II percent below
department said this year's corn last season.
harvest would be up 3 percent from
Other 1991 crop estimates based
last month's estimate, while soy- on Oct. I indications, compared
beans would be up 6 percent.
with 1990 output, included:
Corn yields were foreca st at
- .Sorghum, 566.7 million
108.8 bushels per acre,~an increase bushels and an average yield of
from last month's estimate of 106.1 58.2 bushels per acre, compared
bushels, but down from 118.5 with 57 1.5 million and 62.9 in
bushels per acre in 1990.
199o. .
A~crage soybean yields are esti-Rice, 157.7 million hundredmated at 33 bushels an acre. two weigln and a yield of 5,571 pounds
bushels above the Sept. I forecast per acre, compared with 154.9 milbut 1.1 bushels below 1990.
lion and 5,507 ·
·
·•
•
·
1 100 poun ds
Dcspue uoe department s 'prOJec- Peanuts • 4·94 b'IJ'
·
·
d
d
·
ld
f
2
513
tions of a better·than·an!ICipate an a y1e o .
poun ds per
·
f
ed
·
h
3
6
b'll'
d
crop, some llhnoi s armers say acre,
1 991 com par wll : 1 10n an
their yields arc down significantly.
· ·
"The com ranges from terrible
-Tobacco, 1.64 billion pounds
to bad," said Gary Luth, who rais· and a yield of 2, 143 pounds per
es corn and soybeans in Douglas, acre, compared with 1.63 bilhon
Vermilion and Edgar counties. He an d 2•218 ·
estimated his yields were 30 per-Sugarbeets, 27 million tons
and a yield of 19.8 tons per acre,
cent lo 40pcrcenroelow average.
But Steve Ayers, who raises compared with 27.5 million and 20.
corn and soybeans in Piatt County,
-Sugarcane, 31.7 million tons
said: ''We just finished harvesting and a yield of 35:4 tons per acre,
last night and we are pleasantly compared wi th 28. 1 million and
£
35 4
surprised by our yields. We eared
· ·

West Virginia's first natural
•
t•
gaS fill
I Ing sta IOD opens

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CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- West Virginia is the ninth state
to have a public service station selling compressed natural gas, with
two more soon to follow, officials
said.
Natural Gas Transportation's
first station was to open today in
Charleston, with Rep. Bob Wise,
D·W.Va .. scheduled to be its first
customer.
..
The company, 'a subsidiary of
Charleston-based Eastern American Energy Corp., plans to ope'n
stations in Nitro, Huntington, Park.

to keep the length of calls to a milt•
imum, it's just been wild."
Before 'law professor Anita
Hill's allegations that Thomas SeX·
ually harassed her when she
worked for him at the federal Equal
Opportunity Employmen't Commis·
sion. the organization got about 40
such calls a week, Ms. Kinsella
said. Karen Nussbaum, the organi·
zation's director, sai4 the Thomas
case has made more women aware

ihg a victim of publicity,'' she said..
After Hill's allegations carne to
light, a second woman, Angela
Wright, made similar accusations.
Wright, now an assistant metro editor at The Charlotte Observer, was
an EEOC press officer when
Thomas was in charge of the agency.
:rhe 9to5 hot line _ which
offers job counseling to .both-men
and women- normally ·averages

anll safety
pay equtty
and women IQsmg JObs becaqse of
pregnancy.
.
Ms.
srud 9to !=QUO·
selors advtse workers on whether
they have a legal case and what
kind of action to take. .
.
. " No on~ wan,ts to. ue up thetr
ltfe and thetr savmgs m lo~g court
cases ~r to become notonous, so
we
\0 ~e a nar: _
row,
mstead to

''We've not had time for a
breath between calls," Ms. KinselIa said. "Even though we've tried
.. " -·"-

" Many times they don't report harassment, said Kinsella. Other
it because they fear losing their calls are abOUtSi'ich·issuesliS"heahh
J'obs not beiog_believ~_or beco.m~
' - "

organization has grown into
a national voice ·for · working,women since. its fQ1!..11!lillg in 1973
by uoout25 women office workers
in Boston who got together to ~mplain about working conditions. '
The association, which moved
its headqvarters to Cleveland in
1982, now bas a membership of
15,000 and l)lore lhan..25 chapters
nationwide.
''Who would have .thought in
1973 , that the problems and concerns of those women would in
'"1991 be on the nation's political
agenda?" said spokeswoman Barbara Otto. "Now low-income, lowstatus women have a voice.''

AP board approves 3 p·ercent rate hi.ke
.
NEW YORK (AP) _ J"he
board of directors of The Associated Press has approved a general
asses~ment increase of 3 percent
for its members, the lowest percentage increase in four years.
The increase, effective Jan. 19,
1992 affects AP's 1641 daily and
week)y newspaper ~embers and
5,800 radio and television members.
William J. Keating, chairman of
the AP board of directors and
chairman and publisher of The
Cincinnati Enquirer, said in his

announcemenc
"As we all know from what is
happening in our own businesses,
1991 has been a very difficult year,
and 1992 does not loom much
brighter. So the AP board gave the
most careful consideration to next
year's as.sessment, weighing the
necessary cost controls and the
major tasks that lie ahead in
1992." Those tasks include covering the elections and OlympiCs
nextyear,Keatingsaitl.
"Many variable expenses in
1992 will be cut below 199l'levels,

Dems p•eparz"ngflght to
ove•rz·Ul~e Bush's veto
I '

1,

WASmNGTON
(AP)- Con· al De
·
gresston
mocrats
h'll b 11are prepanngk
to press 'd
an up 1 at e next wee
to ovem e Pr est'dent Bush' s veto
of $6.4 billion in benefits to help
the unemployed.
!Although Democrats' have highlighted the unemployment issue as .
·
r · 1 b tl
d·
a maJor po tltca at egroun m
the 1992 election, they conceded
Friday they would hilve a hard time
overridingBush'sveto.
But they said they would
next week anyway.
"It'll be tough ... but we owe it
to-America's veterans to give it our

.

A·n overrt'de vote was expected
to .go east'ly through the House
whl'ch passe&lt;! the bt'll by a 300-118.
margt' n. But 1n ·•e
•• Senate, where 11
passed by a 65-35 margin~tw -of
the prior opponents would
e to
vote for the bill for the ov ide to
su
.
cceed
.

som~ even below 1990 levels, "

Keahng noted. Also, the cooperative is developing new revenue
~ources to h~lp meet expense
mcreases, speciftcally m the areas
~f photo.technology and in format1on servu:es. _
In 1992, non-traditional _sources
will provide for $89 million, or 25
percent, of AP's revenue. A decade
ago that figure was $19 million
(10.7 percent).
"

I

The agency now, however,
intends to develop plans to assure
that beginning farmers and r;mchers are given preference in sales of
suitable inventory farm property,
afacr the rights of previous owners
and operators have been satisfied,
Ausman said. FmHA will also
::t~% a:~ck begi~ners in its
But. when questioned by
English, Ausman said he did not
know how many young, qualified
.farmers who had applied for loans
·. last year and did not receive funding.
·
He also acknowledged that such
informllllon had not been soughJ by
others In USDA, after telling the,
subcommittee that the problems of
young farmers were considered a
pri«ity.
"Its obviously not one of the
top 10 priorities, when no one in
USDA has even cared enough toIlk how many qualified beginning
f*'llell were not funded this last
)"011'.'' English responded. "This
uaub~ me a great deal."
·

8

erans would lose out on new unemployment benefits under Republican alternative legislation.
With the expected veto, Bush
said Friday that the bill to extend
unemployment benefits by up to 20
weeks would increase the federal
deficit unnecessarily.
He said the legislation would
create a "complex, cumbersome
systel'ft that could slow re-employment" and cost the federal government money it does not have.
The bill would allow unemployment benefits for people out of
work longer than ,the current 26week period of benefits provided.
The veto brought immediate
·criticism from Democrats and labor
leaders and revival of the..partisan .
rhetoric that has followed the
unemployment issue.
Sci;t. Edward Kennedy , DMass. , said Bush demonstrated
"this administration's utter lack of
concern for the hundreds of thousands of working Americans who
have lost their unemployment ben- .
cuts and been hun the most by this
recession. "
AFl.-CIO President Lane Kirkland said Bush "has again given
the back of his hand to the unemployed.''
House Democratic leader
Richard Gephardt of Missouri said
the "severity of. this recession has
caused many workers to spend
more than 26 weeks lo6king for
new jobs."

1986 FORD AEROSTAR VAN. V-6,

auto., New Ford

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Trade.

interior. Sharp.

1988 ISUZU PICKUP.

Cloth interior. Sharp, Sharp,
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1986 DODGE D1 SO PICKUP. Auto., air. Topper.
1984 FORDFl SO 4x4 PICKUP. Auto., Nice.

We Have Thel.aqest Selection of
UHCI Truclu fn The Tri-State

Ca~ds: A·H; K·C,

7-D, 9·S
. . Super Lotto:
3·4·9·19-41-46
Kicker: 22-7929

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· Copyrlghtecf1191

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, October 14, 1991

AMutllmodla Inc. Newop•P!i

Malone will run in
newly-draWn district
"

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Stall'

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1 SocUon, 10 Pog" 25 eenle'

Vol. 42, No. 113 .

reliable operation

Mark Malone (D-South Point)
will seek election to the Ohio
House of Representatives in the
new 94th House District, which
will be made up of Gallia, Meigs,
Jackson and portions of Lawrence
Counties. Malone made that
announcement at the Meigs County
Democratic Party's Columbus Day
. Dinner at 'the Meigs Senior Citizen's Center Saturday night
Malone stated that he has made
an offer on a home in the new dis·
trict, and plans to move and run for
election in the newly-forined dis·
trict next year. According to Mal·
. one, his current residence is only a
half-mile from the new district line.
The newly-drawn house district
lines,
created by the Ohio Reappornight. Among the other speakers at the dinner
1
tionment
Board, place Malone in
were, 1-r, St~te Senator Jan Micl!ael Long, State
the
same
district as Democratic
Representattve Mary Abel, and Meigs County
powerhouse and Speaker of the
Chairwoman Sue Mais011.
House Vern Riffe.
"I don't feel too badly about
redistricting," Malone said. "I feel
that I have represented ·the people
of Meigs and Gallia Counties for
the nine years that I have been in
the Ohio House. Every vote I have
cast has not been just for
Lawrence, Jackson and, Vinton
Counties, but for all of southeastern
Ohio."
"It {re-apportionme.nt) is an
•lncofn tll)(Jif~. " MilOne said, "but
we're going to fight a battle next
year on the turf that the Republicans drew up. And we're going to
win."
"I do expect to be your state rep~ resentative eome.J993," Malone
said. "But I'll do as much for you

·

PARTY RECOGNIZED- Meigs County Democratic Party
Chairwoman Sue Maison, left, was presented witb a certirtcate rec·
ognizing the party lor its community service at its Columbus Day
Dinner on Saturday. Making the presentation allhe dinner was·
Carolyn Andrews, Regional Liason for Ohio Attorney General Lee
Fisher.
· now as I will after I'm elected as
your state representative."
•
DltleUGel PrtsideDilall'ace
· Although he used Saturday's
Meigs County appearance to
announce his. candidacy for the
Ohio House, the primary theme of
Malone's speech was the importance of grass roots politics to the
·'party 's success. Accoiding ~ Mal-

one, local suppon of the pany is
essential, both in local and state
tace~ and ill the national election
process.
Malone, who is a Vietnam vet·
eran and active in veterans affairs
both in the legislature and the com.
munity, recognized that Ute Persian
Gulf War would be an_ijSue _in the
Continued on page 3

Now Open Saturday 9 to 1- Monday &amp; Friday 9 to 5

ALL EARS - Former colleagues or Clarence
Thomas, J. C. Alvarez, left, Nancy E. Fitch, second from left and Diana Holt listen to Phyllis

•
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-- "-- 1--- 1-

-~-·~--------

Irs a small price to pay.
And from Oct. 22 through. Nov. I, it's the special
price Pleasant Valley Hospital is offering the
women of our conununity for a screening breast
mammogram. Why? Because we know that when
breast cane~ is found attheearliest possible stages, •
your chance for survival jumps tci nearly 100 percent. • And mammography Is an important part of
the three-step early detection program all women ·
should follow.

National
. Breast Cancer
Awareness Month

If you are age 35 or over - the age at which the Ainerican Cancer Society re&lt;:ommends you have a
screening mammogram - you can take ad vantage of our $49 special with a phys!cian's order. We'll
honor orders from any physician licensed to practice in West VIrginia or Ohio. And you should also
know that most Insurance carriers, lnclud ing Medicare, are now roveringscreening ~mmography.

Call your doctor now to schedule an appointment for a screening manimogram at Pleasant Valley
Hospital belween Oct. 22 and Nov. 1. And if you think you can't afford a mammogram, think again.
·Now you can't afford not to have one.
For a free guide to breast seU-exa~~~lnatlon, a referral to a physician on the PVH Medical Staff
"':ho can order a maD\11\ogram or more lnform.ation about this offer,.call (304) 675-4340, ext.~·

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Berry testify bdore the Senate Judiciary Com·
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Thomas hearings oVer;
Senate-to vote.Tuesday

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DEMOCRAT SPEAKERS- Mark Malone;
second from right, was the keynote speaker at
the Columbus Day Dinner sponsored by tbe
Meigs Couniy Democratic Party on Saturday

'rRUCK SAJ,E

j

Twins 1·,
capture AL
.crown

Company's Philip Sporn Plant, and
Ohio Power's Gavin Plant.
Roger R. McKinney, ACPM
manager, said, '"This is an exceptional accomplishment and one to
which every employee was dedicated. Considering the hazardous
nature of our business, we are very
proud of this achievement. We look
forward to the challenge of working another year safely.'

~~~:SC~~ori:~ex~:~~~·~i~~t~ ·

I

Ohio Lottery

Group completes one year of
operation.without disabling injury .
POfNT PLEASANT - The 127
employees of Appalachian Power
Company's Centralized Plant
Maintenance Group have completed one year without a disabling
injury.
Headquartered in Point Pleasant,
West \1 irgi nia, ACPM provides
maintenance service to Appalachian Power's Mountaineer and John
Amos Plants, Central Operatin,l!

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;'~~~~~fro~~~~~~~~~i~~e~ -- ~~~~~~!i~~tomething.about.....1l~~~t~%~2-~~~~if;~f~J- €/s·!'~i!tei~·. ::Mli.~ ~~~~ilffi~~~J::... .·· · I~..... . . . . ..

crsburg, Buckhannon and Glenville
by the end of the year, President
Frank McCullough said.
He hopes to have up to 25 stations operating statewide by late
1993.
Other states with compressed
natural gas stations are Colorado,
Florida, Georgia, Massachusetts,
New York, Ohio, Washington and
Wisconsin. California and Maryland soon will join lhe list
.Compressed natural gas producers tout it as a way to meet federal
clean air standards that require
states to drastically reduce the
amount-of dus~ gases and harmful
emissions by 1995.
McCullough said compressed
Continued/rom D-1
natural
gas is cleaner than' gasoline
the Beginning Parmer and Rancher
because
it doesn't drip on the paveCredit Act of 1991, would target
ment
and
is safer because it cannot
farm ownership loans and interest
assistance frorn' the Farmers Home ignite in the open air.
Consequently, crash tests on
Administration to young prdduccrs.
The plan, sponsored by Rep . na tural gas vehicles have shown
Timothy J. Pcnnr, D-Minn., would they are safer than gasoline vehicreate a new . 'down payment cles, he said.
Automakers have hesitated to
loan" option withifl'the FmHA
commit"tlM!htural
gas because few
farm ownership loan program to
service
stations
sell
it Meanwhile,
)everage private and state financing
natural
gas
companies
dido 't want
with limiled federal funds.
"Getting started in farming to build filling stations until the
today is a difficult task, and young public started buying the vehicles.
But Ford Motor Co. last week
farmers are becoming few and far
between," Penny !Did the subcom- said it would begin producing
trucks fueled by natural gas next
mittee at a hearing Tuesday.
As a result of farm financial dif- year.
fiGulties, nearl y half of all farm
asSets are owned by farmers likely
to retire in the next I 0 years, Penny
said.
· English said the average age of
today's farmer is 52, and there are
1988 FORD RANGER LXT. New Tires, Sport Rims.
twice as many farmers over the age
SHARP.
of 60 as under the age of 35.
__Desp.ite_Jlte grayll!g .Qf,,J~e - I ·--'.L
• nation's farmers, Penny said, ~nere
1
is evidence the FmHA has dnfted
froril its basic mission of providing
1988 FORD F150 XLT, Loaded. One owner.
modest and temporary credit assis1987 FORD BRONCO II. Auto., air. Nice.
tance to beginning family·sized
1986
FORD RANGER PICKUP. Low m'1les. X-•ra
farms. Instead, it used most of its
1
resources in the 1980s to deal with
Clean.
the problems of previous and com1986 FORD BRONCO II. Red/Silver~ X-tra Sharp.
mercia! borrowers, he said.
FmHA Administrator La Verne
1988 TOYOTA PICKUP. 5 spd;, real gas saver.
Ausman said there is some truth to
1989 ISUZU PI.CKUP. Black and sporty.
.
criticism lhat his agency strayed
198'9 FORD RANGER PICKUP. Low miles; Clean.
-~e:. its original path in recent
1986 FORb F150 PICKUP 4x4. New Ford Trade.

Lawmakers ...

I

CLEVELAND (,f\p) -'- The
sexual harassmeilt accusations
made against Judge Clarence
Thomas have helped shove into the
spotlight a national organization
formed 18 years ago to improve the
conditions of working women.
Hundreds of people have been
calling 9to5, National Association
of Working Women each day since
the charges ag~inst Hill ,surfaced
last w!=Ckend, srud Sharon Kinsella,

.

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,......._

2520 Valley Drive, Poi~t Plea11111t, WV 25550 (304) 675..ol340

WASHINGTON -Twenty
people spoke long and forcefully
for their friends - accuser Anita
Hill and accused Clarence Thomas.
- - But anhe end· ohhree--grueling days of testimony, the truth about
whether the Supreme Court nominee sex ually hatassed his aide still
wasn't clear.
There was little in the emotion.a!, sometimes lurid testimon y to
shake firm Thomas supporters or
his opponents. The focus now is on

the senators who may have heard
something ID change their declarea
intention to vote for Thomas' confinnation.
- A final climactic-showdown
today between Thomas and Hill
was averted by mutual agreement.
The full Senate is scheduled to vote
at 6 p.m. Tuesday on whether
Thomas should replace Thurgood
Marshall on the nation's highest
court.
The Senate Judiciary Committee

ended lhe hearings at 2 a.m. today
after a 14·hour Sunday session in
which supporters of Thomas and
Hill debated whether Thomas was
·capab Je· orcommining-the-aggres·-"
sivc behavior attributed to him, and
whether Hill was capable of making it up.
''At this point, what more can
be said?" concluded Sen. Patrick
Leahy, D·Yt.

" The whole thing was a disaste·r. The whole process was a disaster," Sen. John Danforth , R-Mo. ,
Thomas~ chief sponsor, said as he
walked from the ornate Senate cauviscd hearings.
cus room that had been the scene of
"I' mas pained and perplexed as X-rated discussions aired on
the rest of America," Lieberman national television.
sai_d on NBC. "It's quite possible
Both' sides agreed on this, at
... that we're not able to decide that least: Both Hill and Thomas have
anybody is lying," he said.
been forever damaged by the proAs senators weigh their votes, ceeding.
P.Dblic opinion po~s indicate more
President Bush repeated his sup·
Americans are siding with Thomas port for his embattled numinee,
than with Hill. And poll after poll saying "I believe he will make it."
shows dissatisfaction with the Sen· . Sunday's final proceedings were
ate's handling of the controversy.
marked by electrtc moments outA USA Today survey of 758 side the hearings as well as inside.
people Sunday night found 47 perFour witnesses for l:lill testifi~
cent believed Thomas when he that she told each separately during
denied l:lill's allegations; 24 per- . the 1980s that Thomas had made
cent believed Hill. The poll has a inappropriate and unwanted sexual
margin of error of 3.5 pej'centage advances toward bee.
points.
·
To bolster her credibility, Hill
A Los Angeles Times PoU con- voluntarily submitted to a polydueled among 1,264 people nation- , graph test mdependent of the com. wide on Saturday and Sunday mittee . The head of a Virginia
found 51 percent supported confir- security fmn who administered the
matio.n for Thomas; 25 percent lie detector said she he believed
favored rejection. 'Iihe Times poll her.
has a mar~in of error of three per"Ms.l:lill is truthful," declared
centage pomts.
· Paul Minor.

National pollsfavo'r Thomas
WASHINGTON (AP) - Senators today began weighing contradictory testimony from three days
of spellbinding hearings into aile.
gations of sexual harassme.nt
against Supreme Court nominee
Clarence Thomas.
The truth was still unclear wlien
the Senate Judiciary Committee
wrapped up its hearings early today
after.20 people spoke long and
forcefully for Thomas and his
accuser, Anita Hill. A final climactic showdown between the nominee
and .Hill was averted by mutual
agreement. .
·
With the vote scheduled for 6
p.m. Tuesday, the focus now was
on Democratic senators who were
undecided or who may have hear&lt;!
something to chan¥e their earlier
support for Thol)llls. cbnfmnation.
Sen, Joseph Lieberman, DConn., said he was no.t officially
withdrawing his support for
Thomas but that h~ was undecided
· after the weekend's nationally tele·

SECOND PLACE STERNWH.EELERS •
Second place wlnaiDJ stemw•eelen In the races
that were held on Saturday for the Bla Bend
Sternwheel. Festival were Ruddy Duck, Gam·

bier, ,lenny B, Sllelll D, Prlacess Maru aad Ole
Wood. CaptalDs of the stemwbeelen are WaUy
Venable, Gary Mortoa, Rick Burden, R.C • .
"Heck" Heckert, Pete Grassle and Georae ·
Woody Roberts.

�•
,-

..

·Commentary
Th~ Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

- ROBERTt::; WJNGETI
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher7Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

AMEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association ond
the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION ore welcome; They should be less than 300
words long. Allleners lire subjec110 editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned leuers will bo published. Letters
should be in sood tasle, addressins issues, no! personalities.

Congress .has abolished some
perks, but not ..the biggest one
'

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON - One by one, layers of congressional privilege are
being peel~ away by a Congress nervous about rebellious voters - but
the trappings and conveniences surrendered so far are minor fringe benefits.
·The rewards and perquisites of power run far deeper than fiXed parking
tickets, unpaid lunch tabs and bounced checks. And there is no erosion in
the pay, raised to $125,100 this year; the pensions, which go up in tandem; and the exemptions, automatic as the House and Senate pass
employment, civil.rights and other measures that govern conduct everywhere but at the Capitol.
Congress is not covered by laws dealing with harassment, discrimination, wages and hours or other workplace guarantees, written into at least
16 laws that do not apply to the more than 30,000 people who work for
the House or Senate.
Instead, Congress and its members judge thei~ own behavior, on
grounds that the agencies they empower to supemse other employers
cannot constitutionally supervise them.
.
Sen. George J. Mitchell, D-Maine, the majority leader, said the separauon of powers precludes the enforcement of job discrimination laws in
Congress by the executive branch agencies and the commissions that
cover private employers.
.
"I believe that Congress should independently apply standards to
itself. enforced itself, standards similar to those apphed elsewhere,"
MJtchcll said.
When women employees of the House sought written guarantees from
each membe[ against_~~~.uat harassment, they we_re told it wasn't necessary. Speaker Thomas S. Foley said any harassment is intolerable, and a
violation of House rules.
Republican Sen. Charles GlliSSiey of Iowa has been trying to get the
system changed, arguing that Congress would pass better laws if it had to
live with them. But he isn't getting anywhere.
Gmssley was unable to force a Senate vote on an amendment to make
Congress subject to
faintly leave guarantuSit IW voted 10 require of
private employers. But he said he'd try again on a pending civil ri$hts bill.
Gmssley is opposed to both 'measures, but says if they're to be unposed
elsewhere, Congress should "have a dose of your own medicine... ·
"We can talk about the hypocrisy of Congress - the above-the-law
attitude that runs rampant around here," he told-the Senate. " .. .1 take no
pn~o~grh;~~~~toJ·u~~!~~~~":A';"J~:~~~~~~;d vulnerable of

tile

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, October 14, 1991

WASHINGTON Sen. Destruction Act of 1991." PresiGeorge Mill:hell, D-Maine,lllll for dent Bush has promised he will
Senate majority leader in 1988 veto any energy bill that does not
after a little more than one term in include the opening of the wildlife
office. He pulled it off with the reserve.
boast that he could improve the .. In the minds of many
quality of lif~ around the Sena~. Democrats, Johnst(ln's bill is
Translated,
that. .oLlegislation..
means more efflBush's
bill, and
passing
it would
cient.
handl,ing
and •...ruin
.an.y-claim
.. that
.the.Demoerats
less time the senators have to spend have to the moral hi~h ground
on Capitol Hill.
when it comes to envuonmental
The senators believed him, and protection. That ground is one of
gave the job to him instead of Sen. the few places the Oemoerats have
· Bennett Johnston, D•loa7 Now · Jefno stand·inlhe coming-presiJohnston is making Mill:hell eat his dential campaign.
·
promise.
.
But there is more. The bill is
It has been five months since bound to eat up at least two weelcs
Johnston rushed his disagreeable of time on the Senate floor and
energy bil out of the Energy Com· block the passage of other crucial
mittee that he chairs and onto the legislation.
Senate floor. Yet despite John·
Johnston, a booster of the oil
. ston's clamoring for a vote, industry, managed to ~et.the bill
Mitchell has not put the bill on the through his own commtttee by Pilcalendar.
ing on fav,prs to all of his fellow
The reasons are many, and all of committee members. "He dressed
them have Mitchell in a box. John- it up like a Christmas ttee,'' one
stan's biU O!'Cnsull Alaska's Arcti_c Senate aide said.
Nauonal W1ldhfe Reserve to ml
- A wily pro at these deals, Johndrilling. That alone makes environ- ston has not directly blamed
mentalists and many Democrat's Mitchell for letting the billlanapoplectic. The Sierra Club has guish. Instead, sources told our
called the bill ''the Environmental associate Jim Lynch tha't Johns10n

sends other senators and their
staffers on errands ,to Mitchell's
office to needle him about the bill.
One source said, "Mitchell's
spine 11oes up everv· time Johnston
uses that weapon against him.''
Mill:hell, who has a-n:pultatilm
•

ey ee

a bill that
But·he
has Democrats
on him to
make sure Johnston's bill never
m
·~"'eslt-·"-the- "~~~
- ----... ..., 'IUV'·.
Some•want to duck it for political reasons. Others are worried
about the environmental impact.
Still others worry about how a long
debate on a controversial energy
bill would influence the presidenti'al election.
Mi~hell is too fair to sit on the
bill forever. Johnston will get his
day - he says this week;
Mitc6ell's staff says "sometime
this fall.'' When it does come to
the floor, Democratic senators are
expected to be ready with a wellorchestrated fillibuster.
Johnston 'llllegedly has already
complained to Mill:hell because he
heard that Sen. Joseph Liebennan,

CAPTAIN, T~l~ I~S*bcK
~ft. TIW6R.JRT !\roM..
WE'VE GoTSC¥1 WBLL
SE ~NG WE'VE JU~T

SE~ED UP A(o(JP\.E

B'osPHERJANS

-

____

_

___ _

__

ing a rather more subtle argument.
The alleged misbehavior of the
CIA in the above-mentioned
respects, Metzenbaum argued, had
raised a "cloud" over the agency.
And what he suggested the senators
should consider was whether the
confirmation of Gates as director,
whether he personally participated
in those activities or not, would
help dissipate the cloud? His clear
implication was that it wouldn'L
In other 'Words, Gates ought to
be rejected, not because he had
been shown to be .......nnally guilty
.---of any misconduct whatever, but
simply because he was so identilied with the agency that his confrrmation would not lift the "cloud"
that Sen. Metzenbaum perceives
hanging over iL
Students of the tactics develope db y the Democrat-con tro!led
Congress in its running battle with
recent Republican presidents will
recognize Metzenbaum 's gambit.
When you are tryin~ to bring down
some presidential rude or nominee,
and he rums out to be annoyingly
innocent of any wrongdoing, tram-

D-Conn., was schemmg a waY. for
the Democrats to talk the btll to
death. Mitchell told Johnston to·

__

.

10 "be tough."
No matter how protracted the
debate, Johnston's bill is expected
to_fail. Th_at will reflect badlv_on _
·
- who
-- has staked
--- -his repu'- Johnston,
tation on being able to ram through
any legis~tion he wants. The vote
will leave a smaller footprint on
Mitchell's resume as we)!.
lJNCERT AIN QUARTERBACK Pres'de
· a1
1 nt Bush IS
waysa
accompanied by an aide carrying
briefclfse, known as the fOOtball,
with the secret code to launch a
nuclear strike against 811 aggressor.
But mt'li tary mm
· ds never contemplated the dilemma Bush now finds
himself in. The conii'OI of pieces of
the Soviet nqclear arsenfll-could
fall into· the hands of breafiway
republics. The Central InteUigen'ce
Agency and the Pentagon have
assigned the highest priority to the
job of pinpoiQting the location of
those missiles. But that doesn't
answer the question for Bush of
whether he should strike back.
Would he unleash the massive
American nuclear arsenal against a
backwater Soviet republic with an
i11:hy trigger finger?
·
MINI-EDITORIAL - Out-ofwork Haitian President JeanBertrand Aristide .can blame himself for the coup that booted him
out. He dug up bad memories of
the vicious Duvalier regime when
he began training his own secret
militia, prompting a faction of the
military to threaten to overthrow.
him if he didn't disband the secret
police. He has ignited class warfare
by threatening his own people with ·
being burned alive if they don't
share what limited wealth they
have. While sewing the seeds of
violence and mistrust at home,
Aristide has also angered his neigh~ bars. He made such a vociferous
verbal attack on the Dominican
Republic recently that the two
nations appear to be drifting toward
war. For a populist, Aristide has a
lot to learn about dealing with peopie. _·
·

pie down all the grass in his neigh·
borhood: Create a general impres·
sion that there has been misbehav·
ior by somebody, whether it can be
proved that he participated in it or
not, Then call-for his rejection on
the ground that he is or was too
close to Ground Zero to pass
muster. Hard facts may be laeking,
but the fumes are fatal.
One of the most memorable
uses of this vicious tactic was on
Pr ·d R
'
1
d

Today in history

-- '

. (,____ _ _

._.....

Mar~y, second place, apd Virginia, third plaee. .:
The Virginia is owned by Minersville residents,
Jim and Donna Davis. Six races were bel" on · --:- . ,
Saturday for a large crowd that gathered at the .-:..
banks or the Ohio River in Pomeroy and Ma5oo. •

STERNWHEEL RACES • The sternwheel·
er, Hill and HUI, captured first place in the fifth
race of the' Sternwheel Races on Saturdar.,!!uring the 1991 Big Bend Sternwheel Festtval.
Other sternwheelers pictured are Princess
THIRD AND FOURTH PLACE STERN·
WHEELERS • Third a)\d fourth place winners
of the sternwheel races held on Saturday. were
Hobby UI, Rufui 8 D, Muilsoek, Virxinia, and
the Spirit of Charleston, all third place winners.

Rain forecast for
Ohio
tontght
-

Drifter was tbe fourth place-winner in the fourth
race. Captains of those stern wheelers are Harry
!;:. Wilson, Lou Wendell, Carl Wright, Jim
Davis, John Herr and Jerry Strick, and Joe
Lockhart.

--Area deaths--

·-

'

-

By The Associated Press
The National Weather Service
says rain should be falling in all
areas of Oliio by evening. Amounts
should be light will most areas
receiving less than one-quarter
inch. Heavier amounts could fall
tonight, maiply in eastern Ohio.
A cold front will cross the Slate
tonight and the precipitation should
end later tonight' in southwest Ohio.
The east will continue having rain
showers. Temperatures will drop
into the 40s.
The rain should end over much

Malone ...

.

.

of s_astcrn Ohio by Tuesday afternoon or evening, with a few lingering lak~_ effec! showers over th e
northeast corner of the state
through · Wednesday morning .
Highs will be in the 50s Tuesday
and lows Tuesday night will
approa ch 32 degrees in many
places, except the northeast areas
ncar Lake Erie.
Temperatures will warm back
into the 60s Thursday and Friday.
The next chance of rain will arrive
Friday with another cold fronl
Rain moved into northwest Ohio

Continued from page 1
·
Nellie Connolly
1992 Presidential E1ecuon.
"There are more important
Nellie E. Connolly, 78, Route I,
issues in the United States than a
G
war in the Persian Gulf," Malone
Racine, died Saturday, Oct. 12,
1991, at Veterans Memorial Hospitrgmia H. rover
said, citing domestic problems such
tal.
as widespread poverty, the homeBorn on Jan. 13, 1913 at Long
Virginia H. Grover, 83, former less and needed education reform .
Bottom, she was the daughter of resident of Kanauga, died Sunday, "We can't allow George Bush to
the late Jasper Newlun and Lola Oct. 13, 1991 at her son's res1dence continue rQnning this country just
Congrove Newlun . She was a in Salem, Va.
becausehegotusintoawar."
member of the Pomeroy Nazarene
She was born June 2, 1908 in
"We have to take back the
Church and the Meigs Senior Citi- Meigs County, daughter of the late White House in 1992 and grass
zens Center.
Evan David and Anne Williamson roots politics is how it's going to
However, "if there were no
She is survived by three daugh- Hughes.
be oone," Malone said.
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) • change in the situation, if there
ters, Evelyn Boggess, Pomeroy; . She was an employee of the
· · Abel, Long speak
The National Labor Relations were no union contract. probably
Cathy Boney, Columbia, S.C.; and Oh1o Valley Electric Company,
Malone was mtroduced by State Board on Friday ended its hearing we would tum them away," Schick
~loris Reese, Newpon News, Va.; retiring in 1974, a member of the Representative Mary Abel (D- into allegations q'f unfair labor said.
threesons,GeneConnolly,Califor- Order of Eastern Star Chapter, Athens), who, under llie new dis- practices by Rave~swood Alu- _ Don Worlledge, Raven swood
nia; -GeorgeConnollyandJimCon- Cheshire, and the Women of the trict lines, is placed inTdistrict ll)inum Corp.--in its~ealings ·with Aluminum president, said umon
nolly, both of Syracuse; two sisters, Moose, Point PleaSant, W.Va.
with two other representatives.
the United Steelworkers.
workers were forced to leave 1hc
June Griffin, Long Bottom, and
She is survived by one son, · Allhough she did not indicate
The hearing, whic~ began Oct. plant al midnight Oct 31 because
Ruth Powell, Little Hocking; 20 Kenny Hern of Salem, Va.; two whether she would seek a house 1• centered on charges that th ~ officials feared they would walk
grandchildren, 24 great-grandchil- grandchildren; two great-gllllldchil- seat, Are! did take the opponunity 1ack son County plan illegally out when the con !{act exp1r'cd.
·
d h'l d
d
b th
H
1d h
· d
k
locked out I ,700 union workers
dren, an d SIX
great-great-gran c 1ren; an one ro er, enry tope ge er contmue wor on after the•rcontractexpired Oct. 31
He said a union offer to keep
dren.
Hughes of Tallahassee, Fla.
behalf of Meigs and Gallia County 1990 _
• 1vorkmg w1thout a contract was
Besides her pareqts, Mrs. ConShe was preceded in death by Ctlizens.
The union contends the workers, re1cctcd bcca~se the Steelworkers
nolly.was preceded in death by her her first husband, Elmer Hem; and
'This is 1991 ," Abel said , "and who have been off the .0 b-since - wanted the .nght-to stnke--on-481
husband, Everett Connolly, a son, her second husbll!ld,-Aiva Grover. -- Meigs County elected me. I still
• hours' nouce while talks contmued.
Russell, a sister, Wilda, and five
Funeral semces lvlil be con- plan to represent you in the Oh1o were locked ou~ The company says
Also Thursday, Ravenswood
brothers, Curtis, Chester, Clifford, due ted I p.m. Wednesday at the House of Representatives."
· th ey went on stnke. .
. Aluminum filed unfair labor pracEd and Fred:-,
Waugh-Halley- Wood Funeral
State Senator Jan Michael Long
Ravenswood Al_um!~um also IS tice charges against the union ,
Funeral services will be held on Home, with Rev. Chester Lemley (D-Circleville) also spoke to the accused of bargru~mg 10. bad fatth, alleging it committed 65 illegal
Tuesday at I p.m. at the Ewing officiating. Burial will be in group on Saturday, and stressed the Improperly declanng an. Impasse 10 acts. at or near picke~ sites set up
- need for increased-unity in the - ¥egouauons, Illegally lmplem~nt- outs1de the planr.-- _--Funeral Home. The Rev. Gle.n. __ Reynolds Cemetery., Add1son.
McClung will officiate and burial
Friends may call at lhe funeral party, following the loss of the mg tts f•~al contract offer and tileUmon spokesman Clmton Durst
will be in Sand Hill Cemetery.
hom~. on Tuesday f~ 7-9 p.m.
Governor's _office to the Republi- gaily .hmng 1,OOO permanent denied the allegations, calling them
Friends may call at the funeml ·
·
·
·
cans in 1990:
rcplllc~ent;.woriglra. .. ,. ~ .
"a pu~licity'thing."
·
"We need to call ourselves
Tcsumo~y- concluded Fnday
· home from 7 until9 p.m. Monday. Harry E. Purdum
together as Democrats," Long said. before Admm1strat1ve Law Judge
"We're kind of down on ourselves Bernard Rtes, who has srud •t may
Lorena Bonecutter
Harry E. Purdum, 74, of Sun today but we only have ourselves be s~veral months before he ISsues
,
City, Fla. and formerly of Mason, 10 blame. We give up 100 easily."
,a ruhng.
Guest speaker
LETART, W.Va.-Larena Mac W.Va., died Sunday at Pleasant
Long compared the defeat of
. On Thurs~y, Ra_venswood AluRev. Eddie Buffington will be
Bright_Bonecuuer, 68, of Letart, Valley Hospital.
Anthony Celcbrczze in 1990 to thm fll10U_m of[ic1als tesufi~ they pr?b- the guest minister at the Naomi
died Sunday, Oct. 13, 1991, at
Arrangement ~ . will
be of Democratic Presidential nomi- ably woul_d have turned away umon Baptist Church in Pomeroy on SunCabell-Huntington Hospital in FaunnncoraulnHceodmela. ter by Foglesong nee Michael Dukakis in 1988.
worker~ If t~ey had repo~ted for day at 10:45 a.m.
expucd
The Hockin g District Sunday
duty
aft•r
Huntington , w.va :, following a
" If we hadn't given up on
' thctr
. contract
.
. ·
long illness.
Michael Dukakis after his nominaEarl Schtck, v1ce prestdent of School and B.T.U . Institute will
She was born Jan. 19, 1923, at
0SpltQ neWS tion, we wouldn't be watching labor relatiOns, sa1d .manageme~t meet at thc 'Naom• Baptist Church
Arlee, W.Va., the daughter of the
Cla rence Thomas' confirmation never d1scussed what It would do if on Sunday afternoon at 2:30 p.m.
the workers showed up Nov I Rev. Buffington w11l be the guest
late James Bright and Edith Wolfe
,Vetemns Memorial Hospital
hearings on television this week.
·
spcal&lt;cr.
Bright.
SATURDAy ADMISSIONS _ end," Long said. "If we had worked wtthout a contract.
· She was founder of the General Eliza Hayman, Racine; Nick harder last year, we wouldn't be
·
•
Assembly of Christ Church on Blackburn, Long Bottom; William looking at the most blatantly partiSa.ndhill Road in· Letart, W.Va., Finkenbinder, 'Racine; and Beatrice san efforts at re-apport1onmcnt in
where she was a pastor for 28 Williamson, Pomeroy.
the history of the State of Ohio."
dd
years.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES _
Malone, Abel and Long all
Meigs County Emergency Med- ans. At 7:48 p.m. , M• eporl un• t
She was preceded in death by a None.
emphasized to Meigs Democrats 1cal Services units answered 14 went to the river bank. Roy Boggs
daughter, Lucrechia 'Che-Che'
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS
the importan ce of retaining the calls for assistance over the week- was tran sported to Ve1erans. At
Marks, of Memorial, Ohio.
None.
party' s conuol of the State lcg•sla- end .
8:09 p.m. . S yracusews~ u.ad rcFspoknd1 1 lam 10 en5 trccl to 1Veterans.
.
I
h
h
b
d
·
I'
ht
f
th
t
On
Saturday
at
9:08
a.m.,
ed
to Mam
Survivors me ude er us an •
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
ture 10 tg 0 e re-appor IOn·
binder
was taken
AI
Harley A. Bonecutter; two daugh- Glen Baker.
mcnt.
Racine unit went to State Route 10 45
p
.1
ters, Judith Adams of Letart, and
The new lines, according to the 338. Eliza Hayman was taken to
: p.m., omcroy Ul\l wem 10
Christia Francis of Long Bottom; HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER three legislators, is to weaken the Vcterans Memorial Hospital. At Dark Hollow Road and took Ber·
one son, Gregory A. Bonecutter of
Discharges, Oct. II- Joan Hill, party's stronghold s state wide , 11 :11 a.m., Rutland squad went to ni ce William son to Veterans. AI
J ffRikePnegkat,
L
· the GOP to WID
· the maJor·
Me1gs M'me 31· . T'1m B'tsse 11 was sent
11:13 p.m.,
squad. Th
wase
J
Lelllrt~ W.Va. ; one sister, Audrey
enn1'f er Hfu bble,Mre
enablmg
DarkPomeroy
Hollow Road
10
Hoffman of Letart, W.Va.; 22 Raben Mon rooe, s.
er IDS ity in the Ohio House.
transported to Pleasant Valley Hossheriff's department took Dale R1f·
0 thers recogmzc
· d
· 1
grandchildren; and 15 great-grand- an d son, Mrs . Dav1'd Rh odes an d
pita.
.
children.
daughter, Harrison Robinson,
CarolynAndrcws,RegmnalLiaAt 1:17 p.m., Pomeroy squad fie to Veterans. At 1.1 :23 p.m.,
. · · SaIf er, son for Attorney Genera ILc c FISh· went tot hc p omeroy par k'mg Lo1 Middl eport to Race Street for
Funeral services will be con- Dere k Rous h, Vtrgmm
••·
·
Sh
·
Mr
·
and took Christine Oleson to Vetcr- Helen
Hawk,
was Jalocn
Jo
P
ducted Wednesday at 11 a.m. at the
aulCta nvers, . s. John s·~,mp- er, prescnte d party Ch. a1rwoman
Veterans.
At 11who
:49 p.m.,
Pomeroy
General Assembly of Christ klns a_nd daughter, ~rs. Ter~y Sue Mruson w1th a cert1fica11: from
squad went 10 Pizza Hut for Launc
Church in Letart_.Jy,va., wL~ Pas· _.W~~h~ a.nd da~hter,~d Sad 1e....Bsher ".recognjzing _tbc _couruy __ ~~~~~~====='il B urBridge ana took her to Vctcrtor Marshall Bonecutter offictating. Wtlh_ams.
party's contnbuuon to the commuans.
Burial will follow in the Suncrest
B1rths, Oct. II - Mr. and Mrs. nity and the local political process.
OC
S
At 2:25a.m. on Sunday , Rut·
.
Cemetery.
Kent Eads, a son, Rutland. Mr. and
Mai son rec ognized county
land
squad went to Beech Grove
Am Ele Power ................. .30 1/2
Friends may call today from 7 to Mrs. Joey Wyant, a son, Jackson.
chairmen from several surrounding
Road
. Eva McKinney wen! to
Ashland Oil ......................28
9 p.m. at the Wilcoxen Funeral
D1scharges,Oct. 12 - Victor counti es and other prominent
Holzer
Medical Center.
AT&amp;T...... ..........................37 1/8
Kailes, Mrs. Ronald Camp and son, Democrats.
At
12 :52 p.m., Middleport
Bob Evans ...~ ................... !8 3/4
Sally Gill, !'rc~a Marcum, Oscar . Ab~ l' s legi slative aid , Joe
squad
went to Hudson Street.
Charming Shop..................21 1/4
Perkins, Gml Ptlhod, Anthony R1f- Savarisc and the Prcs•dcnt of Oluo
The Daily Sentinel .
Katherine Roach was transporll:d to
City Holding ... ..........:....... 16 3/4
fle, ~s. Roben Weethee and son.
Young Democrats of Am eri c:1 ,
Veterans. Ar 3:28p.m., Middl eport
(USPSm·HO)
B1rths, Oct. 12 - Mr. and Mrs. Michael Sexton were introduced , Fed em! Mogul................... 14 1/2
unil went to Overbrook Center for
GoodyearT&amp;R .................43 7/8
Publiehcd every anarnoon, Monday
James Gibbs, a daughter, Hanford, and Sexton pre~ntcd a history and
_
.A
lic..c W ql!;!l .~ho was ta ~n to_
through Friday, l U Court St., Pomeroy,
.W.Ya•.Mr. and Mrs. Bruce-Moore,- background information on -tlw- Key.Centurion. .......... .. ".. l$ Ohio ~by lh,e Ohio- Valley Publiahing
Veterans.
At 11 :16 p.m., MiddleLands' End ....7..... .. .. .......... 19 3/8
Compnny!MU11imcdia lne., Pomeroy,
a daughter, Gallipolis.
' group.
port
un
it
went to Hysell S!reel.
Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2156. Socond olau
Discharges,{)ct. 13- Sally DonSexton and Savarisc arc tru vcl- Limited Inc............ .. ..... .... 23 1/8
polll.a:Go paid al Pomeroy, Ohio.
Sh
ane
Leac
h was transported to
Multimedia Inc . ................. 23
aldson, Mrs. Kent Eads and son, ing to counties across Ohio in :10
Holze
r.
Rax Restaurant ...... ............ 1/4
Member: The Associa~cd Preas, Inland
Sherry Nitzling, Alicia Racker, attempt to cswblish Young Dem&lt;l·
On Monday at 8:51 a.m., Mid·
Daily Prcfll Association and Lho Ohio
Robbins&amp;Myers
................. 39
Mrs. Joey Wyant and son, and crmclubs.
,
Newapapor Auodation, National
_
dl
cport
unit went to South Third for
Advcrtiting Rcprctcnt.atlvc, Branham
Tiffany Wyatl
Mc•gs Local School Board can · Shoney's lnc ..................... l7 •1/8 · Gladys ·Walburn . She was tran s·
Now•papur Sal~•. 733 Third Avonuo,
Star Banlc ..........................22 1/2
dict ate Gary Ph1ll1ps was rccog·
Now YOrk, Now YOrk 10017.
ported to Veterans.
nized and spoke bnerly to those Wendy lnt'l.... ..................... 8 3/4
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NLRB he'arz'ngs on RAC end

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earl y this morning. Temperatures" ·
were chilly with readings in the 30s &gt;
and 40 s. Frost was common in·
many areas of eastern Ohio, where . •
skies were still clear. Clouds and .'
rain prc;.vented frost from fanning ·in the western pan of the state.
The record high temperature for
th 1s date at the Columbus weather
station was 86 degrees in.1897. ,;· --:::
The record low was 28 degrees in .. ·
1988
·-.·~
Sunrise this morning was at
7:40a.m. Sunset will be .at 6:S4 , ,
p.m.
. . ."':
Around the nation ·
-:"· w •
· The northeastern seaboard sbiv,~··
erect today with tempemrures in the ·
30s and 40s. Florida had warm ..
weather and cloudy skies.
. ,
Snow fell in Alaska, where tern- ,:
peralurcs dipped to '25 degrees · . ,

Weather.

., -" -·,j ____

South-Central Ohio
. .
Tonight, occasional showers :: ,
Low ncar 50. Chance of rain 90,
pe c t T d
I'
· hr en · ues ay, coo er wll
s how ~r s likely, especially_in tli\l :
mornm g. H1gh m the mtd 50s ,_.
~hancc of ram 70 percent.
F.xtended forecast:
- . •
Wednesday through Friday: . ,
Fair Wednesday and Thursday
w1th a chance of morning showers ·
in the extreme nonheast Wednes- .
day. A chance of showers Friday.'
~1 ghs f!om the_ 50s WC!inesday_!9 '
between 55 ana 65 Thursruly and •,
F r~d ay. Lows from the 30s'."
Wednesday to between 35 and 45 '
Thursday and Friday.
·

Meigs announcements

William A. Rusher

cessful conviction of Meese's
friend was subsequendy overturned
on appeal.
But it was too soon to count
Meese's opponents ouL A few similar threads of conii'Oversy, involving Meese but leading nowhere as
far as "illegality" was concerned,
were added to the mix, and the
demonstration was pronounced
(Ia~~) e:~r:!::'e~e~u~~
complete: Meese might not be
Meese' 1
R
ad
gut'lty of any actual crun
· e, but d1'd
s c oseness to eagan m e
him an obvious target, and the' his over-all conduct maintain the
Capitol Hill Democrats, enthusias- level we are entitled to expect from
tic ally seconded by their liberal an altomey geneml?
Sancho Panzas in the media, went
Ed Meese is a tough old bird,
to wof!c on him with high hopes.
and he beat the phony rap. But such
absolutely honorable men as Labor
The chase turned to the Secretary Ray Donovan and NSC
"Wed tech. scandal,"
. h' ah case of D'rrector D'1ck Allen were ·pou"lical•
alleged bnbery m w tc a c1ose ly destroyed by similar tactics.
friend of Meese's was supposedly Now a variant of the formula is
implicated. A special prosecutor being tried on Robert Gates: He
wu llppointed to probe the whole may_not be guilty of anything, but
ghastly story, but he ultimately haven't we mussed up his neighreported' that Meese wasn 'I borhood so thoroughly that he isn't
in~olved at all, and even his 1uc- fit to be CIA director anyway?

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EMS unz·ts answer 14 calls

IS a~yone· dfiVID
· · g. the economi·c
trat·n__
__ _ ·

at ey are a ve e aw.

...__._-~--~··

By Jack Andfrson
and Dale Van Atta

What Robert Gates is up ~gainst

the. alarm. And so George Bush is Maximum Leader is in knowing
~ng to be both True Grit and The which economic indicators finally
Gt~per as he gazes bey~nd his moved him to speak as he did. It
'Y~~~ House press room, mto our wasn't the numbers from his chief
hvm~ r~ms and confides with all economist, Dr. Michael Baskin,
the smcenty he can muster:
who last winter assured us this
By The Associated Press
''Although I believe that the unpleasantness we insisted on callToday is Monday, Oct. 14, the 287th ·day of 1991. There are 78 days economy is on the right track, let ing a recession had bottomed out in
left in tile year. This is the Columbus Day holiday in the United Srates, as m~ ~~ the first to say all is not late 1990 ~ and we'd enjoy a
well a.s Thanksgiving Day in Canada.
· well.
bountiful recovery this fill. If Dr.
Today's Highlight in History:
·
Right. And he can also be the Baskin were a physician,-he'd-be
·On Oct. 14, 1947, U.S. Air Force Capl Charles E. "Chuck" Yeager first to wish us a Merry Christmas planting his clients with such regubei:~e the fust person to fly faster than the speed of sound as he tesied a ' -1990.
larity that he'd be mistaken for the
roeket-powered research plane, the XS-1, over Muroc, Calif.
It was with that curiously-but- White House $ardener.
·on this date: . '
carefully constructed bit of rhetoric
The statistiCS that moved Bush
:In I066, Normans under William the Conqueror defeated the English that Bush, fresh from his triumph to concede our economic reality
at the Battle of Hastings.
on ~uclear arms, vc~turetl cautious- came from analyses by his pollster
In 1586, Mary, Queen of Scots, went on trial in England, accused of ly mto the one toptc that we care and strategist, Roben Teeter, and
conspiring against Queen Elizabeth I. (Mary was beheaded the following about even more - the Recession other political advisers •.They told
February.)
That Won't Die and the Recovery him there is danger lurking just
In !890, Dwight D. Eisenhower, the 34th president of the United That Won't Happen.
..States, was born in Denison, Texas.In 1912, Theodore Roosevel~ campaigning for the presidency on the
Bull Moose ticket, was shot in the chest in Milwaukee. Despite his
wound, he went ahead with a scheduled speech.
·
In 1933, Nazi Germany announced it was withdmwing from the
In 1980, Republican presidential nominee Ronald Reagan promised
that, if elected, he would name a woman to the U.S. Supreme'Coon. (He
League of Nations.
In 1944, during World War ll, German field marshal Erwin Rommel later nominated JudJe Sindra Day O'Connor of Arizona)
In 1987, 18-month-old 1eaica McClure fell 22 feet down an abancommiaed suicide rather than ·race trial and execution as a traitor to the
doned.well in Midland, Texu. (Hundreds of rescue workers socceeded in
, Nazi regime.
In 1960, the idea•of a Peace Corps was fust suggested by Demoemtic freeing1essica 2 1/2 days later.)
. ·
Ten years ago: ,The new president of Eg!/!t, Hosni Mubarak, was
presidential candidate 1ohn F. Kennedy, before an audience of students at
sworn in to succeed .the assassinated Anwar S1 L Mubarak pledged loythe Unlvenity of Michigan.
·
In 1964, civil rights. leader Martin Luther King Jr. was named winner alty to Sadat's policies.
.
Five. years ago: Holocaust survivor and human rights advoeate Elie
of the Nobel Peace Prize.
.
.
In 1968, die fUll live telecast from a manned U.S. spacecraft was Wiesel was named winner of the Nobel Peace Prize. Following the stalemate at the Reykjavik summit, Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev
tranSlllittecl from Apollo Seven.
In.1977,liqet Bin~ Clolby died of a bean attack after a roun~ of golf charged that the United' States wanted to "bleed the Soviet Union white
economically" with an expensive arms race in space.
at a club ouulde Madrid, Spain.
·

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ae~;i~ng:~fau~·~~a~:l~m~os~~tit~o~a~h-;~:~(~~---·ti!~=h~i::s~~~{~~~~~:~~~~l~o.:t~ot-------·

sai~Vic;-~id~t Dan.Q:;:yleilrg~.to-~~Qf .tbe system itself____1lilrpffisillei!t's "pollSter sounded - - T he key -to un-derstanding-Our -beyo"iiir th?se glow~ng
...

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The Dally Sentinel Page 3;-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'Mitchell d~lays -controversial energy_bill

Toward the end of Robert
Gates' interrogation by the Senate
Select Committee on Intelligence,
Sen. Howard Mctzenbaum, Dthe favors of office:
Ohio, raised a new question.
- After an audit showed that some congressmen had been bouncing . The hearings into Gates' nomi·
cheeks on the House 'bank, it was ordered shut down by the end of the nation by President Bush to be
year, and an ethics panel was assigned 10 investigate the mess.
director of the CIA, the senator
- House members now have to paid. with cash or credit card for meals
· d
h d
· 1
at the House restaurant, where some'S300,000 worth of unpaid bills pomte out, a extenSIVe Y
explored various alleged activities
remain.frQJD the days when they could sign the tab. The up-front payment of the CIA during the 1980s: its
policy was set earlier at the Senate restaurant.
role in the sale of arms to illlll; its
-The House has just ended a system under which its sergeant-at-arms involvement (if any) in the diverused to fiX the parking tickets members got around the Capital by certify- sion of a portion of the sale's profing that they were issued while the congressmen were on official busi- , its to the Nicaraman contras·, and
ness. The Senate adopted a similar policy in January. .
..- f . .
Those high visibility, everyday perks ma.y carry more political risk its supposed slanling o mtelltgence
infonnation on various subjects, in
than the high priced privileges built in to the system.
its reports to the president and the
A New York Times-CBS News pol\ published on Thursday reports Congress, to support the policy
that 29 percent of Americans think most members of Congress are objectives of the administration.
''financially corrupt," and another 28 percent think about half the lawWhether· Robert Gates, as
makers are. 'fo 58 percent of those surveyed, benefits such as travel deputy director of the CIA under
allowances,
staff assiStance and free mail are "mostly unjustifiable privi- the late William
Casey,
leges...
. .
d . had personf th
11
Even so, 56 percent said they approve· the way their own member of a Y parllc1pate m any o ese
Congress is handling the job. That has been typical in polls reflecting dis- alleged misdeeds was, of course,
satisfaction with Congress as an institution.
highly relevant to the issue of his
But Republicans claim there are signs that the incum~u advantag~ is ~ualifications to head the CIA in
narrowing. Spencer Abraham, who runs the GOP congresstonal campa1gn t e years to come, and Gates hotly
committee, said that shows in his polling,~ it may make for more com- denied it.
petitive challengers in 1992 House competibOn.
But Sen. Metzenbaum was mak-

Oe~~~~~:~:n~:~~tser:n~:~~=~sili!~~:.
an~·i':·~ss;:~r:~o:~~:~~=~::~108~~ga:n~~h~...

Monday; OctOber 14,1991

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_nigh- By Martin Schram-- -

approval ratmgs hovenng m th_e
.
upper 60s - ~use most ~er_I- - - ' - - - - - - -.- - . - cans also behev~. our nallon ~~ break to the wealthy wh~e mtddleheaded ~wn the wrnng tJ:8Ck.
class _Amencans ~CC: thel:" tax .burA whoppmg 60 per~ent smd the den nsmg and ~CIT Jobs m pen! country was movmg on the or worse, thctr JObs already &amp;one,
"wrong track" while only 30 per- their · unemployment benefits
cent f~!t we we~e on "the right dep!eted and. their president ve10ing
track1 accordmg to a recent . a fan: extenston ~posal. A decade
Washmgton Post/AB.C News poll.
of Reagan-Bush trickle-down ecoSo ,Bus.h chose hJS~words care. nom1cs-has l&amp;ft -the middle-class - fully lR h1s last press conr~ence, tired of bemg tncld~ on.
s~ymg our.~onomy -:vas on th.e . But Democrats, mstead of seiznght track. But Bush s problem JS mg the 1mttaUve, have merely ftlled
that he then offered no plan to pro- the leadership vacuum with bornpel us down the track.
. ,
bast and bUf!!~X:r·strip sloganec:fing.
. Indeed, both pemocrats and S&lt;:nate .MaJouty Leader George
nght-wmg Republican~ are b~U~g Mttchell, House Speaker Thomas
Bush these days for bemg_jOO Umtd Foley and Party Chaif!llan Ronald
to take the lel!'l by proposmg a plan Bro~n, eta!., proved mcapable of
for a true national economtc recov- forgmg a party· consensus tliat
ery. They differ, of course, on what should hav~ produced a Demoemt,.
it should provide. Right-wingers ic program for economic recovery.
are furious that Bush has all but Their plan should have included
abandoned their sacred cure-all- carefully honed capital gains tax
a i:apitalgains wr. cut When HUD cuts and tax credits targeted only
Secretary Jack Kemp urged just for job-creating invesnnents- noi
that at the last Cabinet meeting, he a rerun of the Reagan tax breaks
was opposed by The Amazing for those taking risky, speculative
Baskin, who argued that it was bad . g~~mbols with our money.
economics because the recovery is
So here we are left Sl&amp;llding at
at~. and by Chief of Sraff John the station. Our president diinl:s his
SWJunu, who argued that it was bad only role is to tell us we're "on the 1
politics because •it will let right track." Our opposition seems ·• ,
Democrats revive their populist content to just collect fares and
mantlil- ~e fairness issue.
punch tickets. We're lookina up · :
Ipdeed It would. If Bush pro- . and down the lrl!Cks in searchrof a
posed a sweeping capital gains lilt leader, yet all we see arc little
cut, he'd be givi!JJ yet _anothq' lilt • engines that won'L
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Revival services
Rev ival services will begin. •
Tuesday and continue through Sunday at the Middleport Church of·.
the Nazarene. Rev. Donald R,, •
Dunn will be the evangelist. ~im ·
and Cathy Sisson will be the song" ;__
evangelistS. Servie;es will~ held at :; • -7 p.m . nightly and 10:30 a.m. on',. ·
Sunday. The public is invited to " -auend.
..
AA to meet
,
The Pomeroy Group of AA lind·+·-·-t
AlA non will meet Thursday at 7- - ·
p.m. at the Sacred Heart Catholic.:..- ·
Church. For infonnation call 9925763. Ill"
Sorority event
The Preceptor Beta Beta Cha~ ­
Jer, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, will .
mee t Thursday at 10 a.m. at the
home of Jane Wallon to leave for
the Circleville Pumpkin Festival. '
...
Dance to be held
•
" The Belles ana Beaus Western
Square Dance Club will hold a-.
dan ce on Saturday from 81o 11.
p.m. at the Pomeroy Senior Citi:·-, •
zcns Center with caller. Sonny .
· ·.
Bess, Huntington, W.Va.
Homemakers to meet
."
The Third Wednesday Hom ~ makers Club will meet Wednesday. ·
at 10 a. m. at the municipal building
in Syracuse.
_

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

". ·. :, '

UAGAIN ltAT tttrf S ~rultDAY &amp; 51.MMf "
IA ~c.AJ~

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tfftlit TlfESDAY .

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VOTE FOR-

No 'ubscrlption1 by mail permitted in
aroa1 whare home carriar 10rvicc it

availabJo.
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ln1ldo Oallla Count)"
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26 Wcckl ..................................... .....$4.1 .18
52 WC'Cb ............. .............................l84.18
Ouhldo Golllo County

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Complete Medical/Surgical Care
For Ear, Nose &amp; Throat Including
As.hma, Allergy &amp; Hearing Aids-

Pick 4 Numbers
7-2-8-0
(seven, two, eight, zero)
Cards
A (Ace) of HW,ts ·
K (King) of Clubs
7 (Seven) ofDiamonds
9 (Nine) of Sp1es
•oJt &gt;.J.O ' ' • -

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Johfl A. Wade,

.Suitt 112 YaUty Drivt
Pt. Pleasant, WY.

D~

Call 304-675·1244 for lppt or Information
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JOHN HOOD
For

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THE RIGHT CHOICE

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.\ ,Meigs Local School Board .· ·:
.~

Paid For By The Candidate

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THANK YOU

John Hood - 155 Pearl St. Middlep~t, Ohio
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.

. Meigs harriers win meets
• The .Meigs Marauder. cross countrY teams :won meets .at Lake
Snowden ncar Alexander High School last TueSday. The guls won
-. -~ a.duaJ.mect-o¥er-Alexander,-whilethe boys.tel)rll·.wOn a. three ..way.-...meet over·Alexander and Miller.
.
Katrina Turner placed first place' in the girls meet to lead the
Lady Marauders, other Marauder finisher~ were. Heather Franc~­
owiak (fourth), Elizabeth Downie (fifth), M•ssy S•sson (s•xth), All•·
son-Gannaway- (.!Oth),-April Hudson-(-! J.th)-and ·Tara .Gerlach- (12th).
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Top Marauder fi,nishers for the 'boys were Nathan Baley second), PJ. Chadwell (fourth); David Swanson (fifth), Bill Toundas
(sixth), Chris Sloan (eighth), Phillip Edmonds (lOth) and Jeremy
lieek (14th).

By HOWARD ULMAN
more insurance runs intO Toronto's
.
AP Sports Writer
shattered hopes.
.. ,....... - ..1'0RONTO 'tAP) """. When bad ··· -· ChuckKnoblaiich liad gone·6: ·.·
things happen to good players, for-10 in the series before going
some teams tumble. The Minnesota , hitless in his ne~t nine at-bats.
Twins. veterans of adversity, shrug Then ·he, too, rose at the right
at setbacks and keep on climbing.
moment with a two-run double that
There's just one rung to go.
tied the game 5-5.
Last season, they had the worst
Two other Twins who endured
record in the AL West. They start· tough times were instrumental in
·: ed this season by losing nine of II the series.
"games.
Carl Willis, a journeyman minor
: Today, they can rei~ and smile leaguer in the midst of his first
. : while Pittsburgh and Atlanta fight strong major league season, gave
· for the NL berth in the World up one hit in a scoreless eighth
· Series.
inning Sunday and allowed just
The Twins wrapped up the other two hits and no runs in 5 1/3
spot Sunday with an 8-5 victory innings in the series.
.
that gave them a 4-1 tnumph m the
David West a tenant m manager
AL playoffs. The victims wer~ the Tom Kelly's d~ghouse most of the
Toronto Blue Jays, a team w1th a season, got the win w1th three
history of coming close but being innings in relief of Kevin Tapani,
unable to respond to misfortune at who left after the foW1h. West per.critical times.
miited just two baserunners pn a
Minnesota did it in style - its walk and an error.
own down-but-rarely-out style Even when they could have
• a5 it perpetuated iLHiream of a sec- relaxed , knowing the next two
ond World Series title in five years. games of the best·of-seven series
The Twins trailed 5-2 after five would have been at their
innings but tied the ·game with Metrodome home.
three runs in the sixth and won it
Minnesota completed a stunning
with three in the eighth. It was the turnaround, going from worst to
third consecut1ve game, all v1cto- first with the considerable help of
·. ries in Toronto, in which Minneso- free agents Jack Morris, Mike
. ta battled from behmd. .
Pagliarulo and Chll1 Dav1s, all
The Blue Jays couldn t compen- signed in the offseason.
sate for calamity .
Toronto still couldn't shake the
In the third game,Toronto slug- stigma of being unable to win in
.ger Joe Carter spramed h1s nght crucial situations.
·ankle. He was hitless in his ne~t
It lost the 1985 playoffs to
seven at-bats, four of them stnke- Kansas City after winning three of
outs.
the first four games. In 1987 and
"It's.a shame the whole country 1990, it lost AL East leads in the
didn't get to see Joe Carter f~ll final week.
strength," Toronto manager C1to
The Blue Jays trailed 2.Q-after
Gaston said. "I've been here 10 two innings. Before the top of the
years now and we always seem to third, Gaston, apparently argwng a
come up with someone gettmg called third strike against Candy
hurt."
Maldonado. was ejected by plate
For Minnesota, players who umpire Mike Reilly.
struggled for stretches sparkled.
Toronto scored three runs in the
. Kirby Puckett •. l -for-7 m the third on Roberto Alomar's single,
first two games, h1t a solo homer Carter's double and John Olerud's
for Min~e sota's first run in the groundout. Alomar made the. score
opcnmg mnwg, then broke the 6-5 5-2 with a two-run smgle m the
tic with a single. He was named the fourth.
series most valuable player. . .
Pagliarulo singled home a run in
Kent Hrbek, who had one hit'" the sixth before Knobla"ch 's dounis olher 19 at-bats, followed Puck- ble tied the score.
ett with a single that pounded two

. By The Assocuit~ Press
Jim Kelly couldn't even remem: . ber the play book, but this is one
• · the Indianapolis CQlts won't soon
:

for~sp· ite losing Kelly with a mild

75lst, a 14-yard TD from Mark
Rypien in the first quarter. Steve
Largent, the former Seattle Seahawk, had 819.

Meigs spikers tie for TVC title
The Meigs Marauders defeated Nelsonville-York 15'7, IS-~ to
win a slice of their second straight Tri-Valley Conference volleyball
title. Meigs will host Belpre Tuesday at 5:55 p.m. A Marauder win
will give Meigs the title outright. The win gave the Marauders a 141 TVC mark and 18-1 overall.
·
Tricia Baer led Meigs irr its win over Nelsonville with 10 points ,
three aces and a perfect 13 for 13 serving match. Nikki Meier ad4ed
nine points and five assists. Misty Butcher added three pomts, and
Kim Hanning, Chrissy Taylor, Chrissy Weaver and Yvette .Young
two points each.
Meigs lost the reserve game to Nelsonville-York by scores ~f 157, 15-5. The Little Marauders saw thCir record drop to 13-4 w1th the
loss.

Division IV volleyball
.
sectional matchups announced

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. · With Rich Gannon at quarterback for the 5eeond straight week,'
the Vikings kept throwing late into
the game • and Cris Carter had six
receptions for 118 yards and a
touchdown. lie also had big recep·
,s f'1ve
.
tions in four of Mmnesota
TDdrives
Gannon completed 23 of 31
passes for 254 yards and two
IOUChdowns. ·
Redlkins 42,l!rowns 17 .
· Art Monk caught seven passes
~ for 106 yards, moving past Charlie
Jo)oner (or No. 2 on tho NFL allJime list (Or n:c:e¢ons. Monk now
has 756 and puieil Joiner with his

D•ego 0· ) got
yards passmg
and two' touchdow.ns from John
Fnesz, but couldn I overcome a
spate of penalties and a safety
agamst them as the rust half ended.
Everett completed. l 9 of 25 for
219Ayards Without
an mtereepuon
27 d f'1 ld
1 b J hn
C
- ~thar 3 . 3 8e go.a · Y, 0th
ameypulled
WI the
. Chargers
remammg within
m e
game
.
.
h h
s•x pomts, but, alt.houg t ey got
the ball back .twice, they .were
unable to n,tove •t.
· Oilers 23•Jets 20
Warren Moon completed a.
career-h•gh 35 passes for . 42 ~
yards, and Haywood Jeffucs
caught a career·besll3 of them for
(See NFL oiPage 5)

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The Meigs Marauders received the top seed and Jackson got the
second seed in the Division II volleyball sectional to be held on·Saturday, Oct. 19 at the.University of Rio Grande.
Gallia Academy and Vinton County will play the evening's first
game at 6 p.m. with the winner of that game taking on second-seeded Jackson at 7 p.m. in the second game. ·
Meigs will play Rock Hill in the evening's. third game a~ 8 p.m.
The winner of the Me1gs-Rock H1ll contest will play the wmner of
the evening's second game for the sectional championship at 9 p.m.
The winner of the 9 p.m. game will ad,·anee to district play on Saturday, Oct. 26 at Unioto Hikh School near Chillicothe.

WE'RE THE CHAMPS! - Minnesota's Mike Pagl~ar~lu (Jeri)
celebrates with a few or his teammates followilig the Twms 8-S.v•ctory over the host Toronto Blue Jays in Game. 5 or t~e A!fler•can
League playoffs. The decision secured the Twons the1r th1rd pennant. (AP)

UC Bearcats. beat Kent
State for second straight
.

5, TCICI'Ito 4
Wednesday, OcL 9

MinnctCM

critical. It's not being negative. It's
reality," he said.
·
Elsew~ere in Ohio college football Saturday, No.I! Ohio State (4I) lost 10-7 at No.20 Illinois on
Chris Richardson's 41-yard field
· h 36 seeon ·ds 1eft. Th e
goa 1 w1t
Buckeyes had tied the score at 7-7
'
1
w1'th 1ess th an •Our
m1·nu1cs to pay
on Kent Graham's 44-yard touch·
down pass to Joey Galloway in a
game filled with frustrations for
both teams.
Bowling Green to9k sole possession of first place in the MidAmericaq Conference with a 45-14
victory over Ohio University.
Miami and Central Michigan tied
10-10 in anotjler conference game~

Hiram 30-2 and Otterbein remained
winless, losing 37-14to Himm.
, Akron defeated Youngstown
State 38-24 as Tyrone Nelson
rushed for 169 yards and three
touchdowns for the zigs (2-4).
Duron Alcorn's 33·yard teld goal
with one second to play in, the first
half put Akron ahead24-JO an d th e
Penguins (4-2) never got close(
than atouchdown after that
Unbeaten Dayton won its fifth
straight game, struggling to a 13-0
decision at Dmke. The Flyers led
NCAA Division III with an average of 519 offensive yards per
game but were held 1o 392 by the
Bulldogs. William Peterson had
134 yards in 12 carries for Dayton.

wort Series

ncaou, 1:29 p.m. ·
S•nday, Od.lO ·
NL at MlMtooto, 1:40 p.m.

Satui"'IIJ1 Oc:L 26
NL al Minraou,l:26 p.m., ilneca·

Suottar,OcU7
NL at Minnaota,l:40 p.m., ifnccu·

.

Miami

....

3 4 0 .429 14013l
Now EnJlond
2 4 0 .333 66tll
lndiwpoliJ .. 0 7 0 .000 49176

u......

... l I 0 .133179 89
... L 2 0....600115104
• I 4 I .333 19111

Pllllbwal&gt;

ct..&lt;luid
Clndanad

•• '

• -

Eft IPAY- Chopped Steak, Choice of Po~to, Soup &amp;Salad Bar
TUaDAY • TIIUR8DAY, CIIILDRD UNDER 12 U.T J'IIU
FROII CHILDRICI'I'IIIDU. (EXCWDES DRINK &amp; DESSER!l
U11JT 1 CIQ!D PIRADULT

CARRY OtiT ORDEii AVAILABLE (3041 773-8321 I
IBNIORI 0ST

1~

VISA • MASTERCARD • AMERICAN EXPRESS

t 3 t

3 16 t7

. ~ 2 0 .114140 7ft
Den...
.... 4 2 0 .667128107
L.A. Roidcri
• 3 0 .571114121
Scaulc _ -· r··--~ 4 .0 ·· .429 111109

.. 1 6 0 .IC31211S7

~-- ·- -~ - -

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

"

»

Central Dlvlllon
l I 0 .833121lt9
Dowk
.... 4 2 0 .667 91111
Chieaao
Minni:J&lt;XI
" 3 4 0 .429103lt3
OrocnBily
.. 1 5 o .167 83 m
I 5 0 .t67 173113
.'!!mpa B1y
Wlilttrl Dl¥11kHI
NewOdMlll.
6 0 01.000134 !!
_,.,_

..... 3 3 ·O .l00 101122
3 3 0 .l00103tll
SlO\Ptoncloco
2 4 0 .333129108

L.A.R.,.

Sunday's scores

Dalu 35, Clndnn1U 23

W_.ln11on Cl, Cleveland 17
Buf!Jto 42, lndimopolil 6
New Otlean• J3, Plill.adclphi• 6
MinnoOtU 34, - · 7
LoJ
R""' 30, Son IJi&lt;&amp;o l4
Kwu 'l:ily 42. Mlomi 7
.
H&lt;M~Ga 23. New YOlk

;

Norr .. IM~IIIoft

Team

W L T PI.LGFGA
321

Clliea10

Tomn10
llolroit

72122

6 10 6
4 II ll
4 19 16
IIIII

.... 3 0 0
...... 2 2 0
...... 2 ! 0

MinnSI. Lou.il

........ 031

VanCOJvcr ... 5 I
lmAn&amp;elto ... 2 I
WU.UP'J
.... 2 2
Calpry
..,... 2 3.
EdmonlM
... I 3

Jcu 20

OPENbATB: ChlttJO, Denver, De·
uol~ 0""' Bor. Now EnaJand, T""pt

".i

Toollibt's came

-

"'

N.. Yodi OianiJ" PilubloraJI. 9 p.m.

'·

Chl.caso aLan. Bay, 7:30p.m.

••

Tbundey's pme

......

10 23 16
6 II II
S t l 19
4 23 IS
3 12 2t

I l 0

2 19 30

lhrtford 5, N.Y. Rancen 2
M.....U6.B"""'O
N.Y.tdmdcnl, Philoddplda 4
Bulldol, Qudoco 4
:MinnCIOU 3, Odrtft 2
.Eol:notwia l,Cill'l)' I
Vancou~a 1, T«mlO 1
SL LouiJ 6, Son/,.. 3

"'

'

Sunda1, OcL 20 ·
llouoloo'otMUml,tp.m.
Now Yodi S..,lo.....polis. t p.n.
s-MNOwl!lo
..~~o ~~, I p.m.
To....&amp;•~''"" ,lp.m. 1
4p.m.

..

A.-.
.
ct..tllod .....

a.r.

•

p.m. '

Delzoil1t San Fnncitcio. ~p.m.

·.

Kwu
Dsnvor, 4 p.m.
Lot Aaa• ea Ram• at Lot Anaclca

OUT OF REACH - Washington running The Redskins, also putting tbe game out of
back Ricky Ervins (32) gets out of reacb or reach early, won 42-17 to claim their seventlt
Cleveland sarety Vldce Newsome In tile tlllrd · straight win. (AP) .
quarter of Sunday's game In ~ashington, D.C.

Nanh Cuolina 24, Wlk.c Foreat 10
Tulu 34, SW Louisi•na ZO
ViJaini.120, Clemson 20, tic
Akron 38, YOLLil&amp;I\OWf&amp; Sl 24
BoU SL tO, E. Miohl&amp;on I
Bowlin&amp; Gntn •.5,_0hlo u. IC

Cin.W.,ti38, Kcnll9

.

Dllno11101 OhloSL 7 •
lnd:i.1na 44, Nonhwcstern 6
Indl•na SL 16, E. Illinois IS
IowtlO, Wi~CMain 6
Karuu Sll6. Karuul1
Miami. Ohio 10. Cmt. Michiaan 10. tic
Midripn 4l, Miohipn Sc 2J
Minnaou 6, Purdue 3
Notre Dune 42, PitsabuJJh 7
W. MioJoiaon 22, N. tlliDDiJ tO

Soutbwest
Ncbn1ka 49, Okl&amp;hclna S1. lS
Ricc20, Baylor 17
Tciu 10, Okllhoml7
T~u Toch 31, Southern Meth. 14

Far West
Ari.Jona SL 2A, Orep SL 7

Tonight's games

Hanford n M&lt;rtueal, 7:35p.m.
Wuhington tt N.Y. R•ngen, 7 :35

p.m. ·

Brii!&gt;un Y"!"'f !I, Touo·El Pow 29
California 45, Orqm7
Colon doSS, MioJowi 7
Ftclllo St. 42. Lon&amp; B01eh Sl 14
Pocifu: U. 63, Col Polr·SLO 21
San Dicao $1. 38, New MWco 24
San Joac SL 39, New Mexico SL 13

s...lhom Cal34, Wuhiftalon sc v

Tuesday's games

S~tnford

EdrnOli!Qn uJ~.II.QiJ,1;JS p.m.

PiLuburah at N.Y. bl•ndcu , 7:3S

56, Comcll6

UCLA 54, A:izano t4
UNLV :2.1, Cll Sc·fuU"""' 3
U~hl7.

Wyomlna42

Wuhlnpn41, Tolodo 0

Satilr~y's Ohio

APTop 25
college poll

prep football scores

...:onl•lhrouahO.•. !~lD~tpoinub"ed

oo 2S ~lnLI for 1 fust·placc vote throu.Pf
one ~111~ Cor a 2Slh-placc volt, and prcv1·
ousnn.kina:
LMal

Team
Record
1. Aoridl Sl. (56) .. 6-0-0
2.Miomi(l)
.. .S·O.O
...,....3. Washin8l0n (2) S-0-0
... 4-1.(1
4. Miohipn
5. NotrcD•me
.S·1.0
6. 1'loridl
.. .... l.J.O
7. C~ifomil
... .S·O·O

8. TCnncaco

IJ82

l

1.236
t,l79
1,021

7
10
13

...4· 1· 0 998

4
14

... 4-1·0
.. .. l·2.0
I L•N. Corollna~l.
l·O.O
12. Ok.lah()Tia
.4-1-0
ll. llllnois
... .... 4-1-0
t4. AlobJmo
.. l ·l ·O
IS. Iowt
..... 4-1-0
.... l·l ·O
.16. Dl)lDr
· 17. Gootaio
...l·l-0
tS.OIIIoS!.
.... 4-1.0
19. TcuaAAM
3-1 -0
lD. Piluburp.
... l. l-0
21. Cl"'"""
.. J.I · I
22. Col0l1do
.. 3-2-0
23. EI~C.rolinl
.S· I-0
:14. S)ft""'
... 4-2.0
2.1. Ari&amp;ono So.
4·1-0
9. Nebruh

Ph. Week
1,412
1
t,392
2
.,
3.
I, 3.,..

tO. Penn Si.

922
883
8l6
•760
744
691
664
629
l7l
l04
382
316
239
229
170

9
16
6
20
19
' 17
8
22
II
21
12

18
2.1

Ill

122

IS

CHAIN SAW

AkrmN. 2l,AtranCm-Howa 14
Bdlaire SL John'a 14, Buck~ltTrailli

GOOD CATCH, JAY! - Dallas quarterback catch in the second quarter of Sunday's game
Troy Aikman (len) congratulates tight end Jay · against the visiting Cincinnati Bengals, who lost
Novacek after tbe latter's 26-yard touchdown 35·23. (AP)

12

etc. Adamall, Clc. Sou~ 6

Clc. Rut 21, C1e.. Wr.a Toc:h 8
Clc.Kenncdr22.Cc.Rhodct6
Cle. Uni•enilf3l, Pinobw'Sh Shld) Side
6
Clc. Villa Anacla-St. Ioscph 8, Clc. St.
t .... 0
lJPIOwJ
Covii!Jton 12, J&gt;.nbwy LakCiidt 8

NFL action ...

SHARPEliD

O'DELL

(Continued from Page4)

186 yards. Houston' s defense
sacked Jets QB Ken O'Brien four
times and held host New York to
just three points from two
turnovers on punt returns and two
interceptions.
The highlights of Jeffires' day
were two receptions of 35 yards,
another for 21 yards, a nine-y~rd

Dor.tNtobu4t,Dor.Bcl.-lO
E. Cleveland Shaw 13, Ccvd1nd Hu. 6,

&lt;Yl'

El)'lU W. 38, Lon~ B - 0
Oarfiold H\f. Trinhy 10, Clo. C.l.holi~: 12 ·
GUmourl4, l.clni.nC•th.20
Howl., 44, Co,.noyO
lluih21,FiollerColll7

Hudlan W-.m RGIII'\'C 31. Culver, lnd.
29
lnoloponcl-t4,BNdn•ood 9
ltmtollSLJoeepb20,MarionC.lh.l
LoJpo54.Soulldn..,.6
Lokcwood SL Ed-t7, Niloo 0
Lodllond30.Bol0via9
Mal~em 21, Tulctn'NU C.th. 0
Musilloo/..U.. t6.ConlDO\Co~olio 10
MuJWon Woohin&amp;ton4t ,lndiwpolil N.
Ct1nnlO
MialiMiDiw•Vall.31.NationalTtti.l1C

catch on fourt h down to keep
Houston's first TD drive going. and
an interference penalty in the end
zo ne on th e other touc hdown
march.
•
Houston is 5- l, Lhc Jets arc 3-4.
Falcons 39, 49ers 34
Chris MiUcr Lhrcw three touch-

down pa sses , Deion Sanders·
returned a kickoff I 00 yards for a
touchdown, and cx-49er Tim McKyer intercepted Steve Young twice
m thc ·fourth quartet as Atlanta
ended a fivc·gamc losing strc;lk to
San Franci sco.

STARTING MONDAY, OCTOBER 14TH -DOMINO PIZZA WILt
OPEN FOR LUNCH: 11 A.M. TIL 4 P.M. $ 99
LUNCH SPECIAL: MED. PIZZA (litem, 2 Pepsi's) 4

Newut.C.dl.!4,Cai.Roa4r7

•"r----------._....;__..,

I
PEPPERONI PIZZAS
I
AND 4 LARGE COLAS
I
I
II~
99 II
For

BU

2 MEDIUM

·u a
CHillS ·' CRAll

(Off·I•Saw Chains Only)

...

LSU"iO,Iubnm Sl14
Lou.iaiana Toch 12, Soulh. Carolina 12,lie
Memphis S.. 17, So&lt;uhem Min t2
MUml :M. PCM Sc 20
·
Miuiuippi St. 31, KS~'tucky 6

Arkanu• 29, H001tortl7

Vanewva 3, B•ff"alo l
Philodclphil4, Now rcncy2 ..
N.Y.b~ndmt, Quebec t, U.
O.iuso 1, San l01o 3

IIC

Next week's slate

••

Aubum :14, Vontlorblll :12
Aorid• 35, Tcnn~ 18
Aorida SL 33, VirPni• Teeh 20

Midwest

0
2
I
0
I

• A.- 39, Sin Fmncioco 34
.
LoJ
RJidcn 23, Seotdo 2~ ar

..'

South
Alablm• 62. Tulane 0

_ ·--~Auocincd_Pm;,_J 99.1-coU~adootbaU -- - -BtaamoCIII'Dil--34,-Ptirfir.ld Union Z7 - ~
poll, with fust·placc vol¢1. in parcnthuea,
Cin. Putcell·Mirim 36, On. McNicholu

Eultm DlvllfH
Ttall'l
W L T PeL PF PA
Wuhinfon
1 o o 1.000211 82
Dollil
...... l 2 0 .714110136
N.Y. Oiantl .. 1 3 0 .!100 95 93
Philadelphia •• 3 4 0 .429 96 93
~
·
3 4 0 .429 Ml~

AnAn-

Boaon Collcac 33, Loui.Jville 3
Ci•dcl20, Anny 14
Eut Cuolin• 23, S)!acwc 20
JMp .!i(). Maitlc 17
Wed YlralnlalO, Temple 9

Georii.l Ttc~ 34, Muyland 10

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

The Top TwctJI)' Five teams in the

..

East
AitForte46.Navy 6

Gcctgit 37, Miuiuippi 17

Toronto tl St. Louis, 8:3Sf.m.
MiMuota 11 c.t,uy, 9:3 p.m.

K•nwCity

....

Saturday's college
foot ball scores

I

p.m•

91111

w..e... Diwlllon

' S'llftDiCSO -

7 17

3 9 I
3 tl t9
3 ll 19

I

t 3 t
I 3 I

Queboo

CtnlraiDIYWM

B•r

THURSDAY • Liver &amp;Onions, Choice of Potato,
Soup &amp;Salad Bar

I I

.. .. 3 4 0 A291Z7164

N.Y.I&lt;U

.

WEDNESPAY • Philly with Fries, &amp;Soup

3 I I

Hartford
Boa ton
BUfftlo

Sunday's scores

EulornDI.Uioo
W L T Pe:L PF PA
6 I 0 .Bl7210 154

Buflolo

3 IS 20

Winnipea 3.Lct AnJdct 3, tie

AMERICAN CONFEJIENCE

Locallll on Rt. 33 btlltlt Mnon Enonllld Ma1011 Mottl, M11011, 'NV

MONDAY - Bacon Burger, French Fries &amp;Salad Bar
.
'
TUESDAY. Chicken Sandwich, Onion Rings, &amp; Soup

Montml

In the NFL ... ,
Tetl'l

l 14 13

I 3 1

New Ieney 4, Pilllbu.tJh I

-"
NL, 1:26 p.m.
nurJolar,Ot:L:W
MiMci.IIU ll Nl.., 1:26 p.m.., if IICCCI·

•orr

..... 2 t 1

Saturdafs scores
Chi"l" 7, Wuhina«on 2

W-day, Ot:L 13

•orr

6 15 20
~ 13 13

Sm I&lt;H

T~y,OcLll
Minnclw. 11 NL, 1:29 p.m.

•orr

N.Y. Ranam
3 3 0
N.Y. b landers . 2 I 1

SIOfiiM Dt ... lon .

Salurdiy, OcL If
Nationall.elaue c:htmpion 11 Min·

..

playoffs Sunday night_In Atl~nta, wtiicb the
Pirates Won 3-2. Bell, whose bit allowed Gary
Redus to score, advanced on a throwing error
by rigbt rtelder David Justice. (AP)

Other mccivinJ votcs: Missiuippi St.
80, Auburn 77, A1r Foree-47, Frc&amp;no St.
33, GeorJit ·rcch 29, Tcx.u 27, Indiana
25, Southern Cal22. UCLA 19, Non h
Cnolin• 10, Miuiuippi ;S, Rutaer. S,
Arunau 3. Viralnia1, Texas Christian 2,
RiCe I.
·

Adami Dlrillon

Saturday, OcL 11

n......ry

8 20 ll

PittJb\Uih

Aol&amp;nta I0, Pilubu!Jil 3
Sundl1, Ot:L 13
Pittahur&amp;h 3. Atl~n.ta 2. 10 inninga,
acrica tied 2-2
-;MondiJ, OcL 14
Piltlbu.rJh (Smith 16-10) 1t Allant•
(Gio&gt;ino 20-11 ~ 3:07p.m.
W-daf, Ot:L U
Alltnta (Avery 11-1) at Pittlburgh
(l)pbck U·14), 1:37 p.m.
Thurlllay, &lt;k:L 17
AUtntl at PiutburJh, 8:37p.m., if

'

4 1 0

__ Philadefphia ....

Wedneldly, OcL 9
Pliubllrah l.Atlonta 1
fhurld1y, OcL 11
Aol&amp;nta I,PiDlbu!JilO

I .

Patrick Dlvlllon
W L T Pta.GFGA.
... 4 1 0
8 23 14

wuhins""' ...

Nadonal,League

RESTAURANT

Moruluy I nd&lt;IIJ. I I CUll. to J p.m .

Tum
NcwJcney

Sundly, Ot:L 13
Minnuota 8, Toronto S, Minnesott
winl aerie&amp; 4-1

So"}ttliing (jooa's Jl{ways Coofjng Jlt

HOMESTHE LlJNCll SPECIAL'i

WALES CONFERENCE

MinnesaLa9, TCilUlto 3

" '""""

.

In theNHL ...

Toronto 5, Minn~ 2
Friday, OcL 11
MinnrAC:U 3, Tmanto 2. 10 inninp
Saturday, OcL 11

-Sports briefs--

·1MASON FAMI·LV--

Monday, OcL 21

ClndanaU at Burralo. 9 p.m.

Tlladay, OcL I

)

Rsidcn,4~m.

OPEN DA.TB: DIU.,, New York Gi·
'""· Philoddphil, w•.,.,....

PLAYOFFS

Meigs golfers finish ninth in
district tourney at Coshocton
Columbus Academy, Claymont, Green and McConnell of ClayPhilo and St Charles have mont, Evans of Columbus Acade·
advanced to the Division 11 state my and Frey of Martins Ferry, 'all
golf tournamcn't this weekend in shot a 77. Chris Casto of Alexander
Col umbus by placin~t as the top had an 80 and was involved in a
four teams in the distr1ct golf tour- two hole play off for the fourth
nament held last Wednesday at the individual qualifying spot for !he
River Green s Golf Course in state but did not advance.
Coshocton.
The Marauders fmished an outSoutheast sectional runner-up sta nding season with a 59-10
Meigs placed ninth, while sectional record and its second straigbt Trichampion Gallia Academy placed Valley Conference championship.
last in the 16·tcam field.
Columbus won the tournament
with a team score of 313, followed
by Claymont with a 322. Philo fin·
ished in third place with a 335 and
Golf
St. Charles in fourth place with a
LAS VEGAS (AJ&gt;) -Andrew
· 337. River Valley and Bexley tied Magee parred the second hole of a
for fifth place wilh a 338, followed sudden·death playoff to defeat
.by Mattins Ferry (341), Coshocton D.A. Wcibring m the 90-hole Las
(343), Girclevi lle (34?.),-Meigs VegasJnvitational on Sunday.(3 51). John. Glenn (354), Mt.
Magee recorded rounds of69,
Gilead and Ironton (361), North - 65, 67, 62 and 66, and Weibring
west (367) and Gallia Academy had rounds of 70, 64, 65,64 and 66
to break the PGA Tour's 90-hole
(370).
Jason Hart, who led Meigs with recor d bY two strokes wll. h 31. a 85, was followed by Jay Harris undcr-pa,: 32? totals . .corey. Pavm ..
(8.?),)..QbnJ:I.en!le¥ . (8.9), Adam ..andMnr~ 0 Meaf!! set ilie record
-Riawsczyn (90) and-Phii-Hovat(llr-- carher..th1S-season m-the-Bob.Hope(104). Other Meigs golfers making Cl.ass•c. Magee, w.ho W'!JI the Bay
. the trip were Tim Peterson, Jay H1ll Class1c earlier .th1s. season,
Cremeans, Chris Knight and Benny earned $270,000 to ra•.se b1s season
Ewing.
. total to S71J,281. We1bnng earned
The match co-medalist were 8162,000.

I

American League

'

TERRY TUMBLETON Is a character played
by Atlanta third·sacker..Terry Pendleton (rlgb!)
after Pittsburgb's Jay Bell knocks him on bts
backside in bls slide Into third base for an RBI
triple during Game 4 or tbe Nationa.l League

Scoreboard
In the majors ...

Meigs spikers top seed
in D-ll sectionals Saturday

l, ~~r~~;:~~e~~~~~~ ~~:;af~s~ forth~ Ra~s
(3-3). Visiting Sa~ ~~:t~; ~;;,~~. ~~i~oi~ Pn~ts~:i~~ ~~~~~e~~~~C~~~~~f~~t ~~~Y
306
6
Phoenix Both teams are 3-

-~:·-·-

-·

very

By TOM SALADINO
the plate and not lrying to aver·
The Braves had
little sC'or·
AP Sports Writer '
swing. I'm not looking for anylhing ing opponunities aflet that as Tom·
\
ATLANTA (AP) - Mike in particular,just the ball."
lin, making his first plllyoff appear·
LaValliere was just trying to surLaValliere's hit scored Andy ance, setifed down, allowing only
vive. And because the squat Pitts· Van Siyke, who walked on four two more hits over tqc next five
burgh catcher did, the Pirates are pitches off Braves reliever Kent innings before being lifted for a
alive.
·
Mercker. The Atlanta left-bander pinch-bitter. ~elievers Bob Walle
..LaValliere's pinch-hit single on· then got the Pirates: Nos. 3-4 hit- and Stan .Belinda thew shut the
; ....10tll
an 0-2
P!tch. wi.f:l!~~o
!l!!~.!n
tl!.\l.:...1ers,
J~.o.~by
..R3UY.-...the
Braves,down:::~:~=~e~:
~:·:: ·· -·
··· .....·,..
..inntiilPittlve
1ntlie
wmmng
Bonds,
on fly!!.onilla~nll.
ball outs before
fmal four
; tun Sunday night in Pit!Sburilh's 3- walking Steve Buechele, ,bringing
MC~U~while, ·.
got a run
2 victory over the Atlanta Braves, on Wohlers tQ face LaValliere.
back in the second off Braves
tying the NL playoffs at two games
"It wasn!t a total disaster if we starter Charlie Lei brandt when
apiece and silencing the tomahawk- didn't win,"_said I&gt;it'ates manager Bonilla led -off with.a ..walk,-took. ftenziell sellout crown ofSJ;J09~ -- - Jim Leyland, ".but certainly it was second on .the first of Buechele's
A loss· would have left the a real big ball game. Now it boils three singles - giving him five
Braves only one victory awa~ from down to a twiKlf·three series."
consecutive hits to tie a major
a World Series date with the Min- . At the outset, after former ~i- league playoff record - before
nesota Twins next Saturday and a dent Carter threw,out the fiCSt p1tch ,Don Slaugh! drove in Bonilla with
chance to clinch it today·in Atlanta and actress Jane Fonda, Braves' a single.
in a town that has gone wild over president Ted Turner's fl~eee. led
The Pirates theri got a break and
thelast-lo-firstBmves.
the chantm~ ~nd chopp19g fans a 2..-2 tie in the.flftlton a throwing
Instead, when Zane Smith goes with her vers1on ~f ~ two-.handed error by Justice, the· Atlanta right
, against the Braves' ·Tom Glavine chop! the Braves qu1clcly Jumped fielder. It started innocently with
· ; .today. in GameS, the -Pirates know on Pittsburgh starter Randy Tom- Leibrandt getting the fust two outs
• they will be going back home for lin.
.
. ..
.
before Gary Redus singled. Jay
' Game 6 on Wednesday, and if neeLonme Sm~th. h1tle~ m 10 pre- Bell, who also hall three hits essary, a seventh game on Thurs- vious at-bats m the senes •. led off giving him six in two games. tying
day.
.
wuh a double, moved to third on a a NL pla~off record - then
The victory also was Pitts· fly out and scored on Ron Gant's blooped a.smgle to righL
burgh's fu;st thts season !n Atlan!3 RBI !P'ou~der to short. 'Fben c~n·
~edus, run~ing with tw.o ou~s.
after seven losses, droppmg all SIX secuuve smgles by Dav1d Justice, easily made thud, but Jusuce sull
in the regular season as well as Sat- Brian Hunter and Greg Olson made tried to get him and his wild throw
urday's 10·3 playoff loss to the it 2-().
slcidded past third baseman Terry
Braves.
.
With a chance to break the game Pendleton, allowing R:edus to easi"1 was just surviving," said oven. as Lhev did Saturday by scor- Iy score to tie it at 2-2.
LaValliere of his single to right ing four first-inning runs, Tomlin
It's now a best-of-three series,
center off Bmves rookie right-han- shut the door, getting Marlc Lemke and Zane Smith said it best itpon
der'Marlc Wohlers. "I wasn't look- on a grounder to short with runners learning he was to pitch today:
ing for a pitch.
I was just
"Right now, it's do or die time." ·
.
- guarding at second. and third and two outs.
.

Pam Douthitt's Eastern.Eagles (7-10) will play Trimble (4-10) in
the first round of the Division IV sectional tournament on Sauuday,
Oct. 19 at Federal Hocking High School at I p.m.
That winner will play Miller at 2 p.m. The winner advances to
Athens for the district tournament to play the Dawson·Bryant
upper-bmckct winner. In the lower bracket, Kyger Creek, the top
seed, now 12-4, will meet North Gallia, 4-7, in the 3 p.m. game.
That winner advances to Athens to play the Shawnee State upperbracket winner.

Rookie Ricky Ervins rushed for
1 B'll 133 yards and two touchdowns for
concussion, the Buffa o I s host Wash•' ngton (7-0). Ervins
possession's
By TIM PUET
while No.3 Washington whipped
th · firsts'•
red
1
sco
on
eu
~
became
Washington's
primary
Associated
Press
Writer
Toledo48-0innonleagueaction.
42
6
; and p~mmeled the Colts • on ball-cam'cr after Earnest Byncr left
)
· h
•• s un day . K eII Y d'1rec ted the first in the third quarter with a hand
Cincinnati head coach Tim MurAshland (6-0 , ranked s1xt· in
:- three drives, and Frank Reich quarphy sounds as though he's bec.omc NCAA Division II, defeated Sagi.
ha
ked
th
thr
injury.
·
accustomed
to victory pretty quick- naw Valley State 26-6 in the Mid• ter c
e next ee.
c:leveland is 2-4.
"When I told him one of our
Cowboys 35, Den•als 23
ly.
west Intercollegiate Conference as
·
b
·
nn'ng
plays
and
he
•
The
Bcarcats,
81-0
losers
to
Tom
Shiben rushed for 87 yards
most as1c ru I
Troy Aikman completed a 61'd
'What's
that?'
l
...
'nd
of
knew
Penn
State
in
the
season
opener,
and
Keith
Weaver added 82.
·
sa• •
· ...
yard pass to Michael Irvin, setting
he was out of it.'' Reich said.
_defc~tt;!LK.e.nl State 38-1.9 Saturday
Allegheny and Ohio Wesleyan
The Bills- are Mw 6·1, while up-Emmitt Smith's two-yard 'I'D after surprising Louisville 30-7 one remained unbeaten in the Nort h
run on the first play of the fourth
k r Af th
M
Indianapolis remains one of two quaner and giving host Dallas 3 28 _ wee car 1er. ter e ~arne, ur- Coast Conference, with the Gators
winless teams in the NFL at 0-7.
23 lead. Dallas' 5_2 stan is its best phy sounded lilce the kmd of head outscoring Wooster 38-24 and the
In other games Sunday, it was
coach for whom victory is so com- Bi shops downing Denison 28-21,
• New Orleans 13, Philadelphia 6; since Tom Landry was coach in mon that he can afford to be disap- but Wittenberg fell out of a tic for
:. Minnesota 34, Phoenix 7; Wash- 1986·
•
pointed with the way a team looks the NCAC [cad, losing 14- 13 to
..;. ington 42, Cleveland ·17:' Dallas 3S, ~-Cincinnati, meanwhile, is off to while winning.
Case Western Reserve.
.
.
K
c
·
an0-6stan,itsworstsincel979.
"ltwasn'taprettywinforus.
· d
· k' kb y
23
42
•• Cinconnall ; ans_as lly ,
After Smith's scoring run; rookA m1sse extra-pomt •c
: Miami 7; L.A. Rams 30, San Diego ic linebacker Dixon Edwards but we've come a long way when Greg Brame proved to be the dif:: 24; Houston 23, New York.Jcts 20, grabbed a tipped Boomer Esiason we can say it wasn't a pretty win ferencc in the game. Brame also
• and Atlanta 39, San Fmnc•sco 34.
d da h d 36
d f th
and we beat somebody by 19," he was short and to the left on a 43. · In the Sunday night game, the Los pass an
s e
yar s or e sa id . ''W hen you can win two yard field goal attempt with five
: · Angeles Raiders beat Seattle 23-20 touchdown that put the g~e away. games decisively in a row. for us seconds to play.
• in overtime.
Dallas scored three TD s '" the th'at's vcr.y.heaqy stuff:::"=:::.~·:;·===·~Cti!11lJ!!el:LI!!
!!!c.ll!blff&lt;leb:Bo~try::
fl==c~=~=~ Saintscl3, Eagles·6
-.seco~d penod.:to_erase..a. I.OoO ..- -vtn-ce· PowCll ana-Dav1a-small refused to call it the biggest victory
Steve Walsh, substituting for the defic•tCh' ~ 42 D 1 h'10 7
each rushell for more than I 00 in his five seasons as the Spartans'
5
0
inj1ued Bobby Hebert, threw a
•e
P ~
yards for the second straight week head coach, but said, " It was prob'
game-winning touchdown pass in
The. sNFLecondh;longest thfumble for Cincinnati (2-4). Powell had ably the biggest this season, comthe third quarter, and New Orleans' return 10 •
!Story se~ e .ton~
121 yards and Small 118 as 1he ing when it did (a week after losing
defense was dominating in beating for the thlfd-worst l.oss m M•amt Bearcats took a 24-7 halftime lead . 23-20 to Wooster). We needed
the Eagles in Philad~lphia.
history · Kansas Cttl got three and coasted through the second something to get the morale back."
The Saints have now allowed an touchdown passes ro~. Steve half agl!lnst the Golden Aashcs (0Kenyon downed Oberlin 17-7 in
.
.
DeBerj!. !53 yards rushmg from 6)
• offens1ve touchdown m 16 9uar- Chrisuan Okoye and a 100-yard
·
.
.
another NCAC game.
ters. Their defense had five mter- f bl t £ a TD from Chris
Dust!n Kaczorosk1 scored two
A's in the Case· Wittenberg
· ceptions recovered a fumble and um .ere urn or 17 161
of Kents touchdowns on runs of I game, kicking made the' difference
sacked Eagles rookie Bmd Goebel M!1ftln .to avenge ,a · .oss to . and 9 y~rd~ and added a 6S-yard . as Mount Union and Jqhn Carroll
h - -: a reserve"Pai yan IVe times.
M•am•·m last year·~·AFC Wildcard scoring pass to Brian Dusho in the tied 20-20 in the Ohio Conference.
Walsh's game-winning TD pass playoff. .
fourth quarter. Kaczoroski com- Both team s missed extra-point
was a 14-yarder to Dalton Hilliard
:rhe Ch•efhs &lt;5f-2th) , sf~ortetdh 14 plcted 10 of 23 pass attempts for attempts in the fourth quarter and
.
f . th third
· pomts 10 eac o e m
rce 2!2 ards
.
hd
With 7:32je t m, e.
quarter. quaners while handing the visiting
Y ·
. Mount Union's Tim Gearhart a a
r Hebert left earher m the quarter Dol h' (3-4) th .
'ded
Kent head coach Pete Cordell• 19-yard field goal try blocked· with
1 after sustaining a concussion.
P .ms
e1r m'!s1 1ops• 0 sounded as though No .l -rankcd 1:15 to play.
•.
Vlklngs34, Cardi~als 7 . ~~s~~~~~! 35·0 blankmg 10 197
Florida State couldn't have been
Baldwin· Wallace and Muski . One weekafterallowmg Detron
R.,.. ·30 Ch
any
more
dom
mant
than
the
ingum
stayed tied for the confer24
•i to ra 11 y firom
· 17 pomts
· beh'nd
th
ams
'
argers
Bearcats
1
· WaIIace cdged
' • .e
Jim Everett threw two touch .. . . .
,
.
ence ea d. Bald wm• Vikings turned away fn;&gt;m theu down asses his f~rstofthesci!Son
Cm cmnau phys•cally. out- Ohio Northern 10-6 while the
· 1'ti

·-~··· '"'''"""•

-~-.. . . - - - - _ _ _ ......_ ...... ---or ----- ''!'" ' '

to deadlock NL playoffs at 2-2

Monday, October 1·4, 1991
.
Plge-4

Meigs sports briefs-

for AL title

· suffer defeats Sunday

·

.
'

.

. .Cleveland, .Cincinnati

.. ~ .,_ _____
· ~·""" _,

The Daily Sentinel ..:.- Pittsburgh d.owns .Atta·nta .3-2.

:Minnesota
beats
.
~ Toronto

,. q;·· ··-

Monday, October 14, 1991 .

j •

'Sports
.

. ·- ~. . . . ···~ . ~··· --... . .-- ~... .. ...__ . -'·-·

sa

00.

Offer
only at All
Pomeroy &amp; GalllpoU.
Storot
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Pickup or DcUvery • Y

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•

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Lumbar Co.
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LARGE

PEPPERONI PIZZA

s

99

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orr•• pod only II Pomeroy • ~o!Upolio s - I
Pickup or DeU•ol')'
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"""~· cu.on. ~ ....... wflttll...,..,...o..y- ...... "
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.

.

'

·~ -By The Bend
., ..

;

'Pomeroy--MiddlepOrt, Ohio .

.

' -·

The ·Daily Sehtinel
Monday, October 14, 1991'

~

. AtS INSULATOR•

Consider this ...

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOW

·•

. We.wm·Not .Bt.Un4ei..ld
*Save

By Brian J. Reed

'

, Perhaps you .are as pleased as I
..am that the larger Court Street
mini -park will remain open, after
all .
.; .The park -gets -a real-workout,
especially in the summer, when it
plays host to herbalists. artists and
picnicers. Of course, at Christmas
lime, Santa Claus himself, who
probably has his _eye on those who
thought the park should be closed.
· SAeriously, the park does much
good for the downtown communi·
ty, and I am happy that the park
will stay open. I think counsel
(nembers Bruce Reed and Bill
V·oung should be commended for
iaking a stand in favor of the parks,
;and Reed and the Pomeroy Mer:thants Association should be
~anked for seeing the need to keep
~e parks open.
;..:_ !think the community thanks
;1fllu!

~=·
~:: Interesting ... Pomeroy Realtor
~ruce

Teaford brings out an imer~ting point that puts an end to the
3!taim that Pomeroy has 38 "T"
~ptersections. Bruce says that he
::Sounted 83 of those "T' intersec;g~ns on a recently prinled map of
· '!"~roy. Of course, Pomeroy
~alicady claims to be the only town
lwithout four-way intersections.
:Perhaps someone might see if this
tnew dis'covery is a record, too.

•

: Red Letter Day •••In conjunc·
:tion with Meigs Local School Dis:trict's Driig:Free Week, the com:munity is asked to wear red on
,October 23 (a week from Wednes:day). The clistrict has many activi·
:tics planned for the week of Octo·

'-

.....
~ .

ber 19-27, and this is one activity
that we can all get involved with.
Plan to 1wear something red that
day arid,Sflow that you, too, support
a drug-free community; -- _Historic Headlines ... Things
were really happening here in mid·
October, 1964.
The M.D.'s at Meig~ Memorial
Hospital were threatening to walk
out following the Ohio Shpreme
Court's refusal to hear an appeal of
the hospital's trustees. That board,
throughout an JS:month legal bat·
tie, maintained that it had not vio·
lated a lease agreement by refusing
to allow osteopathic doctors to
practice at the hospitaL
.
Dr. H.C. Mullins, D.D.S., had
just taken over the East Main Street
office of the late Dr. K.D. Amsbary.
Meigs County Memory Gardens
were about to open, a "new, mod·
ern-type" cemetery near Five
Points.
A&amp;P Supermarkets, in a fullpage ad, were announcing the
many winners of its A&amp;P Plaid
Stamps Sweepstakes.
And, here's my personal
favorite this wee k: The Mei~ s
County Health Department had
received a report that a skunk killed
in the Peach Fork area was rabid.
Health officials advised that
anyone killing a possibly rabid animal sho uld immediately deli ver
that animal's ~ead to the -department for in~ation.
O.K.
.

Meig1. Gtlli,l or ~IIOI'i COU!1ti• mu~ bit pql!·

In Mentorilrri

WEATHERED WOOD • This arrangement by P~uline Atkins
in the class named for the sternwheeler "Old Wood" won a blue ·
ribbon by popular vote of the more than 100 visitors attending the
flower show, a weekend feature of the Big Bend Sternwheeler Fes·
tival in Pomeroy. Th~ asymmetrical design featured weathered
wood with celosia, golden rain ~ee foliage, and rer111eaf tanzy.

..

·Afeigs gardeners participate in festival
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH .
· · Times-SentinelStaff
Flowers in autumn's brilliant
colors attractively arranged by
Meigs County Garden Club members in traditional and modernistic
design were featured at the week·
end's Sternwheel Festival flower
show.
Staged in the Riverboat Room

of the Meigs Coun!y Publ_ic
Library; the show featured six
classes, each named after one of the
stemwheelers here for the festival .
Judging took a different turn
from the nonnal procedure in that
visitors were invued to cast their
ballots for favorites in each of the
classes. Blue and red ribbons were
laid-Sunday-afternoon-by show -:
chainnen, Janet Bolin and Pauline'

Atkins.
Ceramics and pottery-were featured
In the class "Shelia D", Shelia in "Midsock" with Betty Dean takTaylor took the blue ribbon, and . ilig first, and Allegra Will, second.
Marjorie Fetty, the red, First in tl)c
The blue ribbon in " Hill and
"Virginia" class went to Judy Hill", a class featuring two ~ontain·
Snowden with Jeanne Bowen tak- ers, went to Shelia Curtis, with the
ing second fof mass arrangements.
red to Kathryn Johnson,
In the "Old Wood" class featurPat Holter captured both the
ing treasured wood, Pauline Atkim blue and _£ed rib_llQil_~_in_ til_~ "Ga!ll·
took the blue, with-K:imberly Will' bler"- lOr her unique still life
ford winning the red ribbon . arrangements.

FESTIVAL QUEEN • Michele Friend, 1991 Big Bend Stern·
wheel Festival Queen, led the Fireman's Parade on Satur&lt;~..&amp;y from
Pomeroy to Mason, W.Va. Fire and emergency vehicles f~om both
Meigs and Mason Counties participated in the parade which could
be heard for miles around.
.

Lefthancted hitters had a higher
batting average against southpaw
Fernando Valenzuela than
nghthanders.
·
CEREMONIES • The American L~ion conduet~d
flag raising and opening ceremonies ror the 1991 Big Bend Stern·
wheel Festival In Pomeroy on jlaturda;r morning. The ~rvice was ·
conducted simultaneouSly with the American Legi~n in Mason, ..
·•
· W.Va.-and !J!e nlltional11nlheni w~ J!ect'ormeill!y_Mgie Teaford.

Skaggs won't give up on bluegrass

·'
.flj,

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) gesled he branch out, but he never
. HAVANA, Fla. (AP)- It took ton of repperoni. Tens of thOu· Ricky Skaggs says be tried pop, but gave up on bluegrass and acoustic
aJlil Ioriger tban 30 minutes, but sands o people paid $2 apiece for it just wasn't him.
music.
the owner of a pizza restaurant some of the I20,0QO.slice pizza.
"I knew when I was slngin~
dalivered in his attempt to make the
"It's the world's largest pizza," them .that I wasn't digging it,'
Wtirld's largest pizza.
said Ron Villella. "But·it's-notthe Skaggs said of the songs on. his ..
::.Lorenzo Amato, helped by 150 world's best,"
"Love's Gonna Get You" album,
·
s
da
It was cooked td
recorded after winning the Country
·pizza coolcs, created a pie un Y
ou oors on a Music Association Entertainer of
thlit measured 140 feet across and 10,000-square-foot tray heated by the Year award in
.
1985
\l'eighed more than 22 tons._ The ' gas.
•
Skaggs said his managers sugGitinness Book of Records h~ts a r"'"'":--\ii\;r'Pi;'i;A''U':'i:i::'::':'~:":'::'---...,
pizza of 112 feet, mat1e by a Pizza
•
U,ijt in Singapore last year. .
•
"We were more mouvated
VOTE FOR·
·
mause we were palriotic," Amato
t1
sajd. "this pizza is a community
;..tYL~Orrz.s
pizza a state of Florida pizza, a
.
United States pizza."
C1111clclate For
Measurements were taken by
. the state and wiU be forwarded to .
Guinneu.
~ The work took almost seven
~ours. A food company donate!l
Paid For ly ne Catdldatt
• ,·
THANK YOU
!'8,174 pounds of flour, 6,445
Ohio
]ibunds of sauce and more than a

VOTE FOR AMAN WHO CARES •

f

.

Meigs Local School Board

Your Vote and Influence Appreciated

leo Morris • Box 212 Rutland,
742·2455
Retired Em lo " of the
s Local School District

'

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. ,.
~

...

~

..

~ . ....

.... -

or

....

-+------

~

·- .

~

... ..,
•

I

.,..... ,

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURAB:CE-

Ill Second St., Pomeroy
YOUR INDEPENDEN-T
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

- PUBUClNVITED -- ----ounty· f arm ·
Bureau Annual Meeting
Oct. 15,1991
7:13 ~.M.
__Eastern High School
--- -Auditorium -··

M , (.
elgs

·~

STEAK DINNER .
1
5.00 Adults..S3.00 Children
·ENTERTAINMENT

Call 992·2403
For Reservations

--

-·--

S~lijeCt to 8ft Ollllld g11

~~i&gt;~;;'~Eddl
BOgQHIIO
dllltd Apdl24lh,

...

Ohto;
lhe Townahlp
CountyondofInMalga,
Slate of
Orange, and bounded 111d
deacrlbed aelollowt:
Being In Secllon No. 5,
Townahlp No. 4 and Range
No. 12olthaOhloCompany'a
Purchtot In Orange Town·
ohlp, Mtlga County, Otilo,
beginning at the Soulhweot
corner of a 5.28 acre lracl of
landoiThtOhloVallayManu·
lecturing Company, 1 oorporation, ducrlbed In deed
recorded In Book 181, fl page
283 of lht Datd "-de of
Mllga Cou~, Otilo, lhtnoe
SoutH sao 25 &amp;II 244 !tal;
lhonceNorlh71'30'Ellat272
lttt to the·Eutllne of IInde
of Guy G. and Myrtle C.
Boggan, thane• North n.5
lttl to tho South lint of aald
5.28 acrelnlot, thor~oe Weal
4751eehlong the South Une
of oald 5.28 acreltactto lila
place of beginning, con18lnlng 0.15 acre. Excepting and
reaervlng on•alxtunlh (1/
16) ohll oil and gat undarlyIna aald premiMI u hto;et~
lore excepttd and rtHI'V8d
by prevloua grantoro.
And being pan of the real
ealale conveyed by Eclcla
BoggHIIOGuyG.andMyrUe
C. Boggue by deed deled
October 21, 1t50, and ,.
cordtd In Book 188, at Plllll
911 of lhe Deed Record• of
Mllgt County, Otilo. ·
Deed Ralerence: Volume
195, Page 71t ollht Me!Qa
County DHd Recorda.
Parcel 2: Situate In the
Townahlp of RuUand, In tha
County of Molga and Sl8le of
Ohio:

-~~

P~M.

and
u bounded
lollowa:
Rangeducrlbtd
No. 12 and
Beginning In lilt middle of
Slate Highway No;·7·1111•11'29
rodalf•~ and South '1·112
roclalrom the NcirtMMt oorner of Hid Becllon No. 5;
tltance Weal11 rodt 'lo lin
Iron pin; lhenot Souih 8-112
rodt to an
112rodt
nlng,
acre, mora or
and
1 part of the -premlltl
cclilftyed by Flonla 0. Limb,
at at., to Fon'eat A. Ward by
warranty claad ofdllte March
17,1844,111Cf recorded April
17, 1844, In DHd Book No.
151, page 321, Dud Recorda
of Malgo County, Otilo; over
and aoroaa tha ftrll haralnabova dtacrlbed promlttt
atlhar to the dllch running
through lht nrat above daacrlbed preml111 an!! aroaaIna State Highway No. 7 or to
!"-ravine running North and
South on the , ftrtt above
deacrlbtd preml-, which
ravine Ilea W11tolthe houae
on tha lui above de-'bed
premiMa, eald drat nor10belaldatadepthao.-not
1o Int.,_. with the firming
or cuf.ltvatlng ol lilt nrot
above ducrlbecl premltta;
and being!"- ume property
!!!ll'viY"-"Y I:.C!rrlllA. Ward
and Eula 1. Ward, hla wlfl,to
H.A. Cole and Oneill Cole,
by deed dilled Auguat 24,
1845
-dtd In Book
817 of Dud

menlo,
and lnteraol
quant lo the

:g,,i/1

'u

•

BENNETt'S

Hciw•ll L: Writllitl

tEA1111G &amp;

COOUNG

LoC.• o. s.tt.n SchMI td. •ff tt~ •••

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1.-dlllnt

sto;&amp;c.....,.

Begins Sept. _15

.

Blllldlttl and R8Melag

''" Eltl11111fe•

Every Sunday 12 Naon

We Guaraatee Your Satl1raedoa

915-4473

FIIIISlllllm

JOSEPH D.I&amp;CIS

~·~---..---N

J.-.

Announcemrnls
10 (14)(21) (28)

BUUDOZIIG
PONDS
WATER Ill
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING:
Um111one, Dirt,
Gre.vel end c..l
Ucan•d end Bonded

PH.

&amp;l

1r1nt It Ill Or We

Convertible To~.
Carp_ets!.Headlintr
a. Salt Cover• and
Minor Auto Repair.

MAll ST~ MASON, VA.

1-13034)·

2

........ hilt

"FrMIIttlmataa"

PH. 949·210 1

' or leS:llt:2llit"
NQ SII!IDAf CAUS

er

Acna ,,.. PMt GHicil

Have--- .

AmHTION DE£11

992·3$24

WHALEY'S
AUTO PAm

mo.

Sp.iaiJillln

•Remodeling and
Home Rep1lra
•Roofing
·

C...._Fr-lllfltllr
NEW &amp; USED PAll'S ·
FOI All MAlliS I
MODELS

992·7013
Ill' 992·5553

.

FUUY INSURED
. FREE ESTIIIATES

OITOU,_
1-IOO·MI..0070
IAI. . OliO

CEDAR

CONSTIUCftON

.

992·6648 or ·

Ront f1 HR. Ootootll etG0.
114 111121511.
.

WWIA Clllllll

S Dip, • NlaiU, Onr llouaht
~lo

frip,

lto)lol

Pilei,

Tlcblo a- 1 YMr. Bonue
Orlan&lt;lo
TriP:
. P311Couple,
I.Joobcl
AvllllbiiHy, &lt;IDWM-IZJS.

No Hunting or Tr.~ llllni on
Iloilo )iloptlly the - . .
Dtvy ond Hull Toytor )l1lcia
wlhout wrfttan prm' h n.

No I!Unllng !&gt;1 T_.....
the Glonn II&lt;Cor _ ,

.,
on

Rl. 2, Polnl
- -teep'
· ..,_a
wrtn.n
pntmlll*'-.
wiN be pt DIIC'stld
I

7131!'t1 ""

691·6164
•

=~~~: ]iitrtif~~iilii - 1+ 1--·- aissLELILN
2
=~M;;
SIDING CO.

.......,

992-SUS

H.I.C.

773-9560
•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM 81PlNG
•Bt:OWN IN

lEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIVICE

Entertain111ent
Center

•Siding ·
•P•Inting

3 Announcements

------Pidt:lp;- ~~ ·

VCR
Boom Box·
Scanner • Tyj~1·liir
Cordle eo
Microwave·
Detector ·
IIOllie

"112711

COMPLOE AUTO
. UPHOLSTRY

AU. IIIIlS .

NUll

POIIIIOY

A&amp;B
s'r.x·;.,o;v-•

OYEN ·IIPAII

REHHO.OWN

Real ES1ate
t~;;;~~~~~~~~~~~;~-~~

60, EAST MAIN

N•wl•· ·

. All CONDITIONERS • HEAT fUWS ond
FURNACES FOR MOIII! &amp; DOUILEWIDE HOMES

I'lL' ...,.2.. 1
. ., .... 94·1·JI:60--I-l
· hy or Nlaht ·-· -

CLUB

·

·~ lao•nallla Price(~

..

one
by
out from lha canler of weal
and
line of Sactlon 31, Town e, r-dild In
page
Ronge 14 of the Ohio Com· 230 of ttld DHd Rtcordt.
pany'a PurchtMtllhenonhBeing !"- Nma real e•
out corner of· Jooephua . 18te OOIIVeytd to H.A. COle
Carpanler'a land; lhanO. Lumber Co., Inc., by
aoulh 44 roda to the nortli- A. and Oneill Cote by deed
wtet corner of Gronl raooldtd ,In Deed B!&gt;ok 185
Romlne'e land;,.lhoncl 1111 PIJIII204,MIIIgaCountyDatd
7tJ.1/2 rodo to the northtaet R~a.
corner of Groonl~Ron•lnt,~•- 1· Detd·Refortnoa: Volume
land; lhenoe aouth 18 roda 1_81, Plllft283, Mt!a·~~nly
• aOd 23Jili.~; thenouutl7 Dead Ra.rde•...-· - -·- - -roda and 22·112 link• 10 lhe
Paroll 4: The follOwing
Will . tina of Jom.e a real 111811 being In Section
Chepman'a, land; thanca S, Town 4, Range 12, Orange
northtorodatotha-rol Townahlp, Mllgo County,
therotd;...-eouth87·112 Ohio, and bounded and d•
degr- -~ 11 rode and e acrtbtd •• loUowo:
llnkt; lhonce north 78-112
degrou-t14rocla;lhoncl Stall
881~ where
north 4 rod a to lha cenllr of the W•t Una ollht Chrliotlan
tha tald HOllon No. 31; Church t:emlllary lnleraacta
lhanoe- 10 tha ~of lllt-olaakl818laR-;
btitnnlng, Dollialnlng 33 end lhtnoa-107.81 fttl along
67/100 eCrtt, more or ten. lhtcantttoiNid Slate Route
Dttd re""'"'-: Volume (10 where !"- WHI Hna of
180, Plge 37;_8nd _Volume Guy BOliiJijla' 57.14 acra
234, Page 411, Mllge County farm, d•orlbed In Vol. 181,
Dttd Reoordl.
page H of the M,tge County
Parcel 3: Tha following Dead "-'de, lnllrtactalht
duorlbecl promlHa,_oltueled canter of aald State Route}
In the Townahlp of Orange! lhtilceeoulh 0 dog. 22' _ ,
County of Mlllgelnd 81811 o 72U '"'along the aatd_.
Olil!&gt; and boundtd end d• Ina; 1honoa aoulh II · dog.
torlbed •• lollowa: Btlng In 1111 2087.M fttl 10 the ...,.
Section No.-1, Townehlp No. 11r of IIIII Route No. 7;
4 and Renga No. 12 of the lhtnoa norlh 4 tlag. 40' - •
Otilo Company'• Purchaaa, 10 lltl ·along tha cantor of
ond beglnnlno In the 1!1fdclla Hld8ta111Raute, lolhtaoulholl18telllaiiWII7No.IIO,on eaat-ollhaOhloValay
the North tJne o Bectlon No. MIMfacturlna Corp.; lhenoe
5, 44 rodt 14-112 laat Wul North ~ .... 80' .... 34t
from the NoriMMt oomtt o1 fatllo a lot nowownact by the
aald lllollon No. 5; lhanoe Ohio Velley llanulacturlng
Watt ·28 rode 1D-1/4 lltl 1o Corp.; 1honoa north 2 dag.
the ChrloUan Churoh Lot; 10' lla11251atlwllh lilt llnt
.,._ South 1 rode; lhoncl olaald Otilo Valley Manufeg.

"''

. CUSTOM llaT · '
HOMES &amp;.GAUGES

B

· auba•
to .the
pro~llng euorney of
dellnqu1111 !tndlax ct111fl~llt
or muter 1111 of delinquent
trac18loratolalol$31,240.59. ,
The flrol ouch uta ohllfl
bt bttwMrl tht hoilre of a
a.m. and 4 p.m, at the Iron!
atepa oltht.·oo~rthouoe In
Melga· County, Pomeroy
Ohio, on Friday the 15th day
o1November, 19V1:
If aal~ perclle do not r•
celve a aulflclonl bid, they
ahall be oHtlwd lor uta,
under the uma term a and
condlllone of the ftret eele
end at the umetlme of dey
end etlhe ..._place, on
Wednetdly, tho 271h day of
November, 1911, lor an
ainountthauquela etlutl:.
Aa In lhi couri't order,
the lalr market velua ol the
parcel• a a detennlntd by the
county luditor ,In tha ainounl
of $84,850.00 or lilt Ioiii
-of _the judgmon~
11
monte, •
and
qu•t lo
the
lht

'

~- ~

.. . . . .-

SUNDAYS

11141,-end recCinlld ~n ·vol.
DAV BEfORE PUBLICATION
COPY DEADLINE 41, poga ~ of tho L.oaae
~ 11 ,00A . M . SATURDAY
MONDAY PAPER .
Rf!'Ordo of ll,tolgo County,
- 2,00 PM . MONDAY
TUESDAY PAPER ·
Otilo.
- 2 :00P.M.. TUEIDAV
WEDNESDAY PAPER ,
. _SiibJKt lo !"- right ollhe
~ 2:00 P.M .. WEDNESDAY
THUI\SDAY PAPER
FRIDAl PAPER..,
-- 2 OD P.M. THURSDAY
Gl'llltora, Guy G. Boggna
- 2·00 P.M. FRIDAY SVNDAV PAPER
and Mynte C. Boggau, tholr
helr1 and uolgne, to con·
'-------~.,..-------_,•lruct, nuilnloln, repair a olx
Inch aewer line to a run on
Public Notice
PubliC Notice
ealdroaleetate,togetherwlth
(he , right of lngrut ancl
IN THECOUIION PLEAS Wut .10 roda; thaftoe South ' i'greia ·for Hid Grantort,
COURT OF MEIGS
21·112 roda; lhiiiCI &amp;at 52 their egonl8, •••lgne ond ·
COUNTY, oHIO
rode111d l! leal;thanoe North lnvlleoa, 1o contlruct. mal~·
HOWARD E. FRANK
2·112 roda; thonee WHI 18 18lnandrapalrtheaaldaawor
MEIGS COUNTY
rode;thonctNorlh27rodalo lne.
TREASURER,
lilt r,loce of baglnnlng, oonSub]ecllo all eaoementa
PLAINTIFF,
lain ng 5.21 ocrn, mort or and hlghwoyo of record.
CASE NO. 80 DLT 01
leu; ercepllng lha following
Rtftronce Detde: Vol.
ve.
deecrlbtd prtmlllt con· 186, page V!;Manlgd Vcotumtye
THE OHIO VALlEY MANU. veytd to Blaine Herdwliy by 227, Page 40 •• e • ~un
FACTURING
AorrlaO,L.ombondboundtd Petd Recorda.
CORPORATION, ET AL,
and doocrlbtd u tollowo:
Parcel 5: Shuatod In lhe
DEFENDANTS,
Beginning 351Ml &amp;11 oflht County of Melge, In lht Slate
N011CE OF SALE UNDER Norlhtlll comer of Lot No.3 of Ohio, and In the Townohlp
JUDGMENT OF FORECLQ. lnW.W.McCunt'oflretAdd~ of Olive, bounded and d•
SURE 'of UENS FOR
Uon to lht VIllage o!Tupperl tcrlbtd U lollowa:
DELINQUENT LAND TAXES Pllolna, Ohio, In the ctnllr of · Being the weatern
. - Whoreaa, Judgmant hu tha Tupper a Plalnund Allrtd hall of the weaiern
been rendered agalnel W• Roed; now on plella Mill Sl; ln Fraction 32, Town 4, Range
lain porcela of rul property tltance Etlat170 '"'; lhenoe 11 of lhe Ohlo Company'•
lor ltxta, aaoilumanlo, South 205 '"'; lhanct Wnl Purchaoe, and beginning ol
chargu, panalllu, Intern!, 110 fttl; thenco In 1 North- lha aoutheufcorner oluld
and co1t1 ulotlowe:
weolarly direction to the Fraction No. 32, end running
Paroel Number·Tue1, lnllr· ~~~-of beginning, contain- WHllo tendo now owned by
eat, and P-lllta
lng 1/4 of an acre; raattvlng -t:ane VIneyard (formerly
111-00780.000-l 381.14
lharlghllolayandmelntalna owntd by Reuben Webolor);
1tJ.OOm.OOII-$17,273.12
dralnor-erlromlllthouH thence north fir enough to
. 11·00795.0011-$1,815.81
O&amp;.oot81.001J.$1;4U70--- 11-~~b;_~~~~;;~·~~;;;l-~~~;:~:;
hundred
acraa;
acrlbtd promltn:
thence Hello
the Fraction
1tJ.OOn8.00tJ.$10,51U2
In Orange Townthlp.
llne;lhonceeouthtotheptace
Tolal·$31,240.5$
County, Otilo, btfriilln s... of ~eglnnlng, containing
Parcel t: Situated In the tlon No. 5, Townehlp No. 4, IWtnty·flve aorea, more or
-'-·--

UNIQUE DESIGN. • Pat Holter Is noted for her creativity in
arrangements and she. really lived up to expectations with Ibis
entry in the class ···Gambler" at the Sternwheel Festival flower
show staged in the Riverboat Room at the Meigs County Museum
over the weekend.

_

1:00

.V•d 51181 ,

"A ~JJJ tijied-•dYtr1ittm'"t piiC.t in TheOtitv-Sentlnelllll·
cepl - cl•tified dllpl:l't. Bu1in~1 Card and lege! notic:ft)
wilt 1110.IPPMI: In the P1 . Pl•••nt .. , . .,,, tnd ttle Otlli·
polis Dtilv Trlbunt. rt~chlno awr 18,000 home,

a

r
1..1e0

ClUB
GUN SHOOT
,_

for errDt'l flr11 div ad .run1 in ~•perl . Clll b11lofe 2·00 p,m ,
d ... lhlf publitltiOn 19 mlk• coneetiGon
"Ad1 thlt mu11 bt paid in 1dV1nctlfe ·
Cerd or :Thtnb
t4•ppy Ad.

By JEFF HILLEARY

Tons _o f toppings go into
world's pizza record try

'

~----'-'-•
let:t.,, · double price of·~ co~t
typt
, u•d .
. ,.
·~01\tll,n···· it riol rnpontibll for eno;11tt11 firtt;d.... lChedl

-·Video-views

.,.

1D.Jtme.

cfitcOunt for •d• p1kt In ldYtnce
Glv•oew,ovll•d Found ldt und.- 15 W(lrdl will be

Take Care.

column would not have been possible.
·· The Cold War has ended and
Now that we have covered
oiie of the greatest threats to threats to the modem world, let us
humanity can now be made public. take a trip back into time to the
The United Network Command for Land of Hyrule as Link goes into
l:aw and Enforcement has begun .. battle once more in THE ADVENmaking some of their battles with TURES OF LINK from Nintendo.
THRUSH available to the public. This game has great graphics and is
Eight volumes in the "Man from by far more challenging than its
IJ.N.C.L.E." series arc now avail· predecessor, "The Legend of
able to everyone who likes straight Zelda". Now the task is to wake
adventure that has more than a Zelda up from a deep sleep by
sgta!l_touch of bumor a~ded- SU!r· putting six ~ryslals into six .statues
~iqg Robert Vaughan and David to be able to get into the seventh
McCallum as Napoleon Sola and where the battle is for all the marUiya Kuryakin, ·these episodes bles.
transport you to a less simpler time
Here are a few tips to help you
when evil could look like anyone along on your voyage.
and the bad guys were really bad.
One: you don't alwa.ys need
- Volume 3, "The Deadly Toys keys to get through the locked
Affair", and -'~The Minus X Affair" doors you will run into. After you
~two that have been made avail- have the spell to change into a
@Die to me from MGM and and at a. fairy, you can use that power to fly
risk of violating the Official through the keyholes.
S!lCrets Act, I will give a capsule
Two: In the Moun tai n Town
9escription of these two so that you you will be told about a missing
can see how close we have come to child. Go to Maze Island and look
being conquered by those for a hidden trunk . Defeat the
THRUSH nasty boys.
guardian and get the chilcl. Take
"The Deadly Toys Affair" stars him back to Mountain Town and
Angela Lansbury and Jay North in get your magic spell. Once you
'tale of a boy genius who is have done this, go to the outskirts
marked by the crooked headmaster of the village and use that spell and
gf a boys· school to be the ne~t a buildin_g will appear . Inside is
-~cad of THRUSH after-his father-Is-: your magiC' key.
-I(flied. Solo arid Kuryakin go
Recapping our two selections of
undercover and manage to barely the column: "the Man from
survive with their dignity and skin UNCLE'' is a release of the televii'ntact.
sion shows and volume three is a
"In The Minus X Affair", the small sample of the best. Released
Mlliant mind of a scientist, played by MGM/UA, it is unrated.
1!~---~r.~~i~~~~~~;~~ drug tha.L _ ...:.'The.Adventurc-of-blNK' ' from
[1
senses of Nintendo is the sequel to The Leg·
the people who take it and in end of Zelda and IS fun and chal·
another form changes them into· lenging. Highly recommended for
· lillobling infants.
those who like high adventure.
: · I wish to thank the United Net·
This column draws to a close,
Y,Qrk Command for Law Enforc~- my friends, and so I bid you a fond
ment, without whose assistance thiS "adieu" until we go adventuring
·
oncemore.

50% on Fuel Bills

1-14·'11-tfn

WPENTER
SERVICE
_,..._ AdclftkMI•

:=:"~

GUN SHOOT.

:!=""!\

RACINE

FIRE

Giveaway
Pluml&gt;lntl

-

...

okl, lri11noy
304-UI-1525,

n-.-~ -';""-• '~'"",""'"'kiitH•,....

lashGn lul6tg
EYIIY
SAT. NIGNI
6:30 ;...

(FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
. 992.6215
., ......,.Ohio

~t.

Startlna

21
. OnJr

tl -14-'90

a..tle

II Gnp

Strktlr

SUMNER ROAD '-- SUPERIOR UVING ~ In !his 2 &amp;lory
briek bl-level hamel 9 rooms, 3-4 bedrooms, 2. baths,
stone

front

I

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
"2-SUS tr 9tS·SS6.1

POMEROY PIKE - LOTs QF ROOM ~ Ranch style
homo wilh 25 acres. Homa ro~dy remodeled. Includes
chony lrllel, supply of wood and wood slove, Bctdltional
healing source. In , Eastern school dlslrjct. ASking .
$69,000. COme take a look. M~ an offer.
. ·

,.0,, oito
&amp;

NEW USTING- 1975 14x70 Nashua mobile
- 3
bedrooms and bath. ,lncludoUO' decl&lt;,~un,derp,innir-.g,~ H
dryer and refrigerator. ASKING$7,000.

SHRUB

MIDDLEPORT - RANCH STYLE HOME __:Features 6
rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, llullt in bar and bookcase.
Lorge roar pprch, shed, heat pump, Asking $39,500.
Naedaalinlework MAK~AN?fFERI
·.

REI.OVAL ·
tUG HT HAU Ll NG
•fiREWOOD

POI4EROY- coMFORTABLE, AFFORDABLE! - ,)\
sto~ frame home wllh 3'btdrocms. Localod on two lots
of 50x100 eacll of pavedstreel: Asking $2f ,ooo._._
YOU MAY B_E A PUMPKIN EATER, BUT YOLi CAN'T
UVE IN A PUMPKIN BI:IELLI COME ON IN 10
CLELAND REALTY•••WE HAVE A HOME TO SUIT
YOUWELLI
HOMES ARE ~IV{WOAU~'liTHINKING
OFBEL
I
HENRY E. CLEJ.AND....,...................................882-61t1 ,
TRACY BRINAOER,...........................- :......:.••848·2438
JEAN TRUSSeLL......:......................................840·2880
JO HILL....- ...· - -.......................................-.111-4481

OFFICE...........................~......."...........................tl2·2258

..

.'

..

BOB JONES
EXCAVAnNG
DOZER and

from PMt'Oiflct

TR.E

Till Gild

TAP &amp;
JAZZ CLASSES
AGES 3 and UP

THE DANCE
COMPANY

•1LL SLACK-.·
1
.
_

992 2269

A
FIREWOOD

992-6289

nES

USED

I

. SELLERS

••••

SMALL
WANT ADS
R\D(
,, .

· ·~ ·:

ijydroulic

,lack In Ylllow
Below Shlnn't And Joe

Dolly Tiro,
4,11-4312.

Dolllpollo ONo. 114-

LOST: llondoy, Rl. 2 ll2 no,
llmole; Pnii!&gt;Siamao, ltrgo
eel, Nil oolll£ _!_h_lld'a pot,.
IVInlnp,, lfM.I~

, ,

lool: Smol lllty Sholl HII!O'I
Ooa M&lt;IConnlok Rood Nloi'
Ro6biiW And llpro, G;l~~po~to.
Rowordl&amp;1+&lt;t*nu.

"

REWAAOI

lllaolna Whitt ~- Wllh INwn
Bilek tpa~a, lob Till, ftmllt
fill ,.,,..,, ' 111"'1~-lt.
lool VlclnMy 01:
And,
Whllt Dtk ROad. ltlanga To.11,
Voor Old Clkl, Who Crlot lnry

· Night For Htr. t14-317-0t10,

7

Yaril Sale

·
rvmwt'Oy,

..

Hardwaod SW.s
Far Sole
· · Gnat Priol

Mlddllport

CALL

.. YW · - ...... '-Win

"

a VIcinity

=-,. . . .

.'
'

OHIO PALLET CO. :::"'.:0.oa:'':t ':'r:'~

A·Ill PUtOfl
II . ,

BACKHOE
_WORK
(614)
696-1006

Lool:

c..,,

.• •'( ''

. ..

'

.
'

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YY:Z.CI140 1

•

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;

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·
..

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aollllon

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�.

...
Page a
7

The DallY Sentinel

Yard

'.

........
. .

'

Ohio

5I

SNAFU® by Bruce Beatde.

HOIIIIhold
, ··-Gooda -·· -

'..,..,

Television
Viewing

KIT 'N' CARL YLE!Il by Larry Wrfabt

Galllpolla
&amp; VIcinity

I

MON.. OCT. 14

= -"-'.;.;IL.;.;I!I.....;;..;;;- I

.I

Cl·

42

"['d

M2 111011111 11omo w
Z.IR,
him., wiohorfclryor, ". , I""
holt, SJU .... . '010. piUI
·= " l t t l - , 114-HUIOO or

11M · Chevy Plck.Up, enoi;
Owner, Low llllollll, Exf1!11111t"
Ccndlooni- Prloo
446.7211,
,
·I
11M Chevy S.IO.' outomltlc, 41·
whlol d~voi . VIIJ
oond~ •
tlon. low m lllgo,
711-3433&lt;
or 171·7101. ,
: • '

tr-. 114!:

--l ll--1 14110 2 - lr, 1 mlo Iouth -of

i

•

Euflkl, on ll 111 .7. No poto,
..-.114411-1011.
Mill In Country, VInton Aroo.
•ove,
Truh
Plld. Refrt~Mrttor,
12111 · Pluo•••,
Dtpoolt,
Rlferlr:CSP .14 311 1181.
2 kl-.. mollllo homo, ..nd
Hllllollii,I04-I-34.

~~~f~~;;;:;;;;g~~F-:;::::;CI~~~~~
••
1m
NoWIUIId

All304-t75·1450.

'

RENT 2 OWN

J=~~~

I Chll.- 111.10 Willi:
Roollnor, U.47 Willi, lwtnl
Rocker, $US W11lc.l""k lid
Cornplot1 $1.41 WMII, 1 Chill, SUI
""""
Butto,
7 ng.CounlrY
fll.l7 Willi,
IIICiudOI
locld
Plnl
·Dlnltto Wtth
Chilrt,
f!D.II -lc.OPEN: llonder
·Thru lllunllr, ll.m. to IP.M,
Bundly 12 N- TAl ep.m. o
IIIIM Ott.Routo 7 On.Routl141,
In Cont.,.ry,
lolldDUCNnaCUinotLifl*, 1 v~:'~:OO C1.1 A~
lor4p.IIL 114
I.

MJ-..I•~neoua

""

_,.

Mtrcl!lndlll _

c.

RATS 0~ IIICEt
In ¥our _ , IUr INI'OIIo
CIR. Kille 11111 Ana Mlcl In
~ ~ ,.....,, GUARAN111DI

~~..~~~~~~

~lm'l ,.,., Equl""""'•·'ll. II,

Wilt

Oolll~le, .114...un7;

~...
- . . ~~ t"'y,

·,.......,..
1111, 1nldo, 1:004:00 irlllulayo,
lot.UII-

Hlrdw111, Ill .tlokllMI Pilla;
Odoll TM Vlluo LIR, Vlno
It,_ At Tlllrd A - IIIIo

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55 - ·· Building
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W.nlod To luy: Junk Autool
lcrop 111111 Anil F110 Romovo
From Woot Ylrglnlo. 114-44t·
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IlOna With JOhnny Cltlh,
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111 , _ Pnnea at
lei Air WIH' 1 mo1ttttr lorblcll
him to attend the
his Aunt JaniCe. SteiiiO.

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tor Sale

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of bounty hunter~ lillpl an
on doe nm.
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1:01 (I) MOVIE: C.. llallau (2:00)

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D lcltMp Talk
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at 3)' N8C
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BARNEY
.
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1 Folklinger
Gutliril ·

5 Playwright
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8 In lne

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11 Untt oflltht
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15 Jll- ·
18 Molt
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21 Dlotreoa call
22 Fkot kJng of

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25 bcianlallon
ol dlatluol
28 Auntlt -

29 Flghlhlg-

lquipment
33 Artny
35- and
potatOII ,

38 AulhOr Jean
M. -

37 JeiUIIQ tllk

39 Rolklll

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40 P~rchld
42 Colorlnt
43 Shtllorad
(a:to)
46 Actmo
Hagen ·
49 Dog, lor ahort
50 Sltltdtr
54

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woman
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'57 Girl of lOIII

.58 Ooil
58-dlplumt
80 Stld

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81 llohlrtilltn

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1 111u111 motoroln otook, 1101110
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Almanac" Crossword Puzzle ~,
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Lally King Uvel

• •

Mary Jo trlee to dlckll on a
final candidate tor

f

Wt All ......... An lndhlduol

Nordi ·

A man I1NII lin1lqull thet

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

............ , .....'

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: West

(R')Qbelongld to hlo family.
t.30 llll 1121• Dttlgnlltg w-

F - 1er MILI14.ZM 1102.

Fumllhed
RoomI

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Bridge books tell you !bat you need
u
about 26 points for game in a major 3 t
H
and 2t points for game in a minor. At
best, tbele are rough guidelines. When
Opening lead: • K
there are voids and singletons around,
It Is often poalble to make game with
far fewer points. In "Moonraker," .
James Bond makes seven clubs redou- To make your game, you must plij:: ·
bled lriJh eight high-cart!. pol!lts In hiJ the club suit-for ~no loeen. T1len! arJ; band and a Yarborough in the dummy. two chances: West baa a sinaJetoa tiJtt
Today's band is unusual also. The or East bas a singleton jack. In tile for,.
North-South bands contain no voids, mer cue, you cull dummy's club ~ct·
only one singleton, and just 19 com- and then finesse Eut out of Ilia jlclo.o
blned points, yet the declarer brougltt In tile latter, you lud tbe q,_ 11111il~
borne bls live-diamond contract.
band, pilninc East's jack and fi-tnc·
U you would like to test yourself, West 1111 of bls tiftlo- - _:,... -- -- -cov. tbe East-Welt cards and plAin • w.lcl: is more Ukely? Given that'
· tba play in five diamonda, West cub· '\West baa a aingleiAio dialllOIId, it is un:
ing the A·Kof hearts before nrltchln1 likely be bat a l1acJetoG clull u nil...
to a spade. You draw trumps in tltree There!~. you litould play for Eut 1(.
rounds, Wut having a sin&amp;letoo. How bold tile sin&amp;leton elub jack. Aliefdo you continue?
drawinc trumps, leed tbe club queea
Tbree diamonds was a brave bid, from band. W11en the jack appeaa,
but the secondary club support from East, you can claim your coostrengthens the hand.
··
tract. Points, scbmoints! ·
"'

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lnatrumenta

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Taylol Wrtcl&lt;a the car and
Emily II left aloni, ill Nub

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Winners are better
than points
By PbiUip Altier

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Croat (2:00)

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PHILLIP
ALDER

7:011(1) . . . . liT rill

t=mployrnenl Serv1ces

11

NORTH

7::10a&gt;• IIJ Ja 5 .,. Q .
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lftlf 1:00pm

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250,000 people atttnd the

Low;
111111, M,IIOO Or- Oflot.l14-,

Wol032.

.

BRIDGE

ID ellllly o'J:i.... Cn:Ndt

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73 Vane &amp; 4 WD'a
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ttl7 Ford AMo .... XL.

won,

• eun.nt Allelr a
2.:~st= Tire Nut.

FRANK AND

........

1CUMoUrS 'ANIWIII
,. .,,
Heroic - Vying - Awful - Matrix - WITH YOU
"Oon1 lry to atop me.' yelled the teen. 'I want to go
when! ther8's excitement and where I can l11lke real
money I' "I
try to stop you." said the dad. "But,
can I go WITH YOU?" •

7~~~a:w:.::.-

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P.U, il;zta; 111t QtMvy 8-10 !
P.U""·
Chevy Von, '·
t1tBI;·".2!!i
1wn 1171
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11,281; B&amp;D A~ 11.111, High' :
Wly110, N. 114 ... .....
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12.1~ 1... QIIC P.U.1.!2f:.j '
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11111 . Dodp Rol!loltl plck-11~p j'

PICKENS FURIITURI

NII~Nn

...

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lao, '1110 .Willi

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l ktiiill'l'rii4ao C1oee tor C h t

82

Stereo.

y011 can ecoompll1h many poaltlve
things. Kilow Where to lciok~tor roinlnce
._,- - - - - - - - - - - - . and y011'll lind II. ThoJ Altro-Graplt
"
MatChmaker lnelantty ~ whiCh
ligna ""' romenllcellr ~ · lor you.
Moll ~ pl.. a long, 11111-eddt 1111
11ampec1 en 1111 J 110. MII1Ciwnlker. clo
lhlu. . op .. l , P.O. .... Q1428, CleveliM, OH .-101~411.
BERNICE
ICOIIPIO (OII.IItollow. Ill) TIM! mlln
BEDE OSOL P,o~you...-yhavetooontendwtth

••••••1!111•
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1711.

llrVIoo It' IIPIIL'L .,•

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bii:l In lumRuro .u~oring.

Coli 104-f71.4114 lOr ... ...

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For the pat year, you may '*I liMn

day may 11ot be lmrnsdlat.ty .,.,.,.n~

RolllrtiOii

10:01 (I) MOVIE: Tile Moit*ll

-·-Afiir JRI(2:15)

10:11. C1aok 11111 CMM

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a a;a~o~~~n
[tl~=
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•
I

OI!MIII (llaf 11..,._10) A jolntven-

tu1111n whiCh you'111 p-tly Involved
ll:ould IMi upper:nott In your mind to~. but t1t11 mlg11t not be the CUI. Dl·
¥ldlng your attondon will dilute ywr
efle:U.
.1
C:MCIII C,_. .,....., •1 Tl!ir* II
.
lloth aha-d...., ....... ..,. .w; to do
II~-. 11) Even tltlnti ....' You'MM ... to d1I1Jn.

lngly-"

though you'M IMi truly gndelul1o tltoM ' gullllllillr:un-..,.t,owmayknowwhO do '-tlor you todal'. you might
taugh on youreott.
not laubte to ...... your grllltudo In LlO ( - I I· 'Ill Ill If you're not In a
W1tP that 110111 you ..a IIIIJ 1111 II i 1poaltlon teiiMiilllll impOI1In1 M1111r

-·t--

under the iriiPJIIIIIn that fortultOIIO
ad1qu111.
1o4l:lf,
M. - , . . . .
• lhlliQI can lieppan tw o1tttn, not lor . AQUMIIM
(.-. • No WI. ~ 111M to ••lila 111d1 •• and 1111'Y'JI.Iut In the- ...... " wll be . . polnt- ,.,. It' It 18day- WJOIII' . ..,.,... ... 1111 ... 11111......,.
lr'l w110 anvy you. IIMI ,.... 01 • r01e
... 1011:11
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CAitlo llltpl ~ Dln11um
illlllrlllllllltltollr)lllll. Tholtnly your "«&lt;o 'aid IIIIo a n••• !natalia
LIIIIA ~ lloOot.lll Thll mlncllla · -you--ttiii)Naoll.
tton lor your- or thtlellao today.
ttmartlabte mte111n11m 11Mtt can per- I'IICII (Pea II S: alt .., ThoJ Hl(lli
lnCI tulea woo't be
form ......... Hyou...- JOIII' poai- bumld Ohlld ..,. IIMI tn. lllri ·you're .•....., •
elfeotlw u moM'IIt
!We lhou;IAI taclay 1e Mll4_. ~ not a aNid ••,..... Den't opntiMII to, P lUI 11&amp;!61.

,....... .

0Wortt1Ntw8

1D 7110 Clull Will Pal

TAUIIUI(ApoiU.0...,211)The.,...ln

I whiCh you'tt apt to be tiMIIuckloot to-

opportunlllll.
·
IACIITTAIIIUI (Now. 23 Dec. 21) It
might be wiN II tNitlmt to ~
your lntrlllllc ....,.tonornalhlullmetertal you've liMn Wanllf10. Pemape ,
you've IOiiglll Mlor IIMI wrong _ .
.... rnilhl "- ~~~~~- M'1

C:VIICOM CU..

Refrlgereilon

8fm:~·a
Slt1lng Sail for San Diego

.

todltr II lhelulftllmtnt Of Y- exptC1a- to you. If your IOCIIIII-Id on lofty
Ilona. You rn1g11t IMi unable to Get into a · objectl-. you might not -the lholl
• pos11101: to tepltallze on y011r that 1:11 ~ taroets.

'*"-lid.

':R~IIl~do~nl~llt~:,or~:;,-;;.:,"""'
__""111' •:

rotherl1rong polltiOit tOday Where your
111 cor:centell. Oddly llnlltlgh,
t'*"", you mlghtlnterpret1ttlngl dark·
1y 11M! ton:n1 tr011111e ra1tter 1111rt
ttiCCIII.

'*'"' -

oommat*

-l•pnUM

Maggie baiiiVea a dOg 11 tho
relncarnaaon of hlr
~lied boylriln&lt;l. Silt'IO.

-

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Plumbing &amp;
Heating

EIICirlcal &amp;

lhun a lormer coll-ator lu•1.'*aull
tnlt liidlvRlilal lfreilln the diStant put.
ARII!I (llaralt 21·Aprtl11) Y011're In I

111 liZ

llaoQper

r::l

On~Siirwo.
0 o11t
From Dlylona
BNCh. Fla. )

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n:aiJle a

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I'm like a wild animal whO's behind bill. I -

Tonight ~~~ow

air. 1 need ipiCI." -

Klaua Klnlld.

•

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Beat of
the Bend..

Bob

~~~k~Zk

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oellicJJ

-OhJ~_Lottery
.
-

.Braves ~drop,
t~o battle to

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percent. Wedn~~ay

'

·• high in tilid,$0s.

1 Stcllon,.10 PagH 25 centa
A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

Funds sought
for Hobson
water lines

-

I

'\
'

199lMeigs High School marching Band

Meigs band wins more competition awards
The Meigs Marauder Marching
Band was again victorious on Sat·
urday as members participated in
two competitions - one at
Riverview Stadium and one at
Claymont High School. At both
events the band participated in
. Class A competition.
At Riverview the flag corps was
awarded first place and the auxil-

iary, which includes boih tlag corps at Ri vervicw with a score of
and feature twirler, April Hudson, . 252.50, fini shing behind the first
won-most outstanding auxiUary of place band which scored 252. 65
points.
the entire festival.
At Claymon1, Meigs' auxiliary
.~eigs field commanders Holly
and
field commanders won first
Williams and Stephame Price won
place
as the band marched their
first place in Class A at Riverview
way
to
a f~rst place victory over the
with a score of 90, which was the
other two class A bands.
highest score overall.
Meigs was rated superior at both
The band captured second place
contests making 'this season the

first time in the school's history
that the Marauders have received
superior ratings at all regular sea·
son contests.
The band will compete Satuf'llay
in Point Pleasant, W.Va. at2 p.m.
and again at state contest on
November 2.
The_band is under_tbe direcJio!L
of Toney Dingess.

·Thom·as ~awaits confirmation vote
spokesman Marlin Fitzwater, an opposes Thomas. Hatch criticized
assessment shared not only by Democrats for their conduct during
Thomas' Republican backers but the weekend hearings, and Leahy
also by Shelby, who predicted on answered with an indictment of
NBC's "Today" ~ show that Republican tactics . "It wa sn' l a
Thomas would win by a narrow search for the truth," Leahy said.
"It was a search to try to smear
margin.
After a weekend of heated, Anita Hill."
A simple majorily was needed
sometimes sexually explicit hearings televised to the nation, the to confirm and send the conservaissue of Thomas' nomination at last tive black judge to a lifetime scat
was before the Senate, where floor on the nation's highest court.
debate was preceding the scheduled Democrat Shelby predicted a narrow Thomas victory, but opponents
6 p.m. EDT roll call vote.
"He's feeling good," Thomas' held out hopes their last-minute
chief Senate backer, Missouri lobbying would win enough dcfcc·
Republican Sen . John Danforth, lions to block the.nomination.
Thomas would have 52 votes if
said of the nominee.
"This is obviously, in my opin- 41 Republicans and I!. Democrats
ion, not one that you can decide by stick with pledges of suppOrt made
looking at public opinion polls," before Ms. Hill's allegations sursaid one wavering Democra~ Sen. faced. The Judiciary Committee.
had voted to send the nomination to
Joseph Lieberman of Connecticut.
the
floor without recommendation
Those polls indicated that more .
after
a motion of approval lost on a
Americans believed Thomas' total
7-7
tie
vote.
denial than Anita Hill's detailed
A key Southern Democrat, Sen.
allegations of ugly sexual harass- J. Bennett Johnston of Louisiana,
Two accidents with light to moderate vehicle damage and no .
ment in the office a decade ago.
reaffirmed his support for Thomas,
injuries nor citations were investigated Monday afternoon by
"Her story in my opinion was saying three days of hearings into
Pomeroy Police.
not credible," said Republican Sen. the allegations by the Universily of
At 12:06 p.m. near the intersection of west Main and St. and
Orrm Hatch of Utah , a Tho':" as Oklahoma law professor had not
Ebenezer, a-vehicle·driven·-by-Roland-Goodwin, Middleport, -was-- •. su_pp_oner ~n the Seltate_J u_!!JcJar r_ -changed his mind. Georgia Demostruck in the rear by a Ferrell Gas truck driven by Robert Cunnin$·
Co~mlUec told CB'"S _today, .
cratic Sen. Sam Nunn .reserved the
ham, Syracuse. According to the report, Goodwin had stopped m
I th1~~ Amta Hill was tclh~g right to change his mind, but said
preparation to making a 'left hand turn when truck driven by Cunthe truth .. ~ountered DemocratiC Monday night , " At this stage I
ningham slid on the wet pavement into the rear of his vehicle. There
Sen,. ?atr1ck Lea.hy of Vermont, a continue to support Jud ge
was light damage to the rear of the Goodwin car, and light damage
Jud1c1ary Committee member who Thomas."
to the front end of the truck.
The second accident occurred at I :06 p.m·. on West Main.
Martha Pearson, Mason, W. Va, was traveling west on West Main
when a car driven -by Irene Parker, Syracuse, pulled from the Foodland parkin~ lot into her path. There was moderate damage to the .
·R!asults of a NewawMk poll on sexual hmiSsintrll.
passenger s1de of the Pearson car, and light to the passenger side
. Here aruome questions asked:
and front of the Parker vehicle.

_ WASHINGTON (AP) .
Thomas but also over the Senate's
Supreme Court nominee Clarence handling of the nomination.
An Associated Press survey
Thomas awai,ted tonight's verdict
on his confirmation as a cqnfident indicated that Thomas would have
White House predicted victory. a majority of·at least 52 votes if
Pres ident Bush was working the Democrats stick with pledges of
phones today to forstall any last- support made before Ms . Hill's
1Tlinute defections by Democratic allegations surfaced.
Bush, leading the lobbying
backers.
"I have been troubled by the effort for his nominee, said public
allegations" against Thomas, Sen. support for Thomas was ''holding
Richard Shelby, D-Aia., said today. strong. " It appeared much of
"But !intimately you have to make Thomas' crucial support among
a decision and I made a decision Southern Democrats was holding,
this mornin g to support Judge too , leading to predictions the
Thomas, to give him the benefit of embattled nominee would win confirmation by a narrow margin.
lhe doubt"
Still , the White House said Bush
The weekend's acrimonious
hearings were over but the debate would contact a half-dozen or so
waged on as the climactic Senate · wavering senators.
" We think we have the votes to
vote drew near, not only over sexu·
win,"
said White House
al harassment allegations against

'
' -

',.,,,,. ,,.,;/

--Local briefs----.
No one hurt in two wrecks

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Low tonight near 40.
Chance .or showers 60

Page4

Community calendar

111111111111111111 IIIII

'

-~-

'

Spielberg, Capshaw marry

~·

_ Pick 3:076
--· 'Pick
' 4:... 7044
-· .• ·
Cards: A-H, 2-C,
A-D, 7-S

doing well

National 9rug Free Week is Chuck's 65th high school class
coming up Octl9 through Sunday, reun ion held at St. Johns, Mich.
ABERDEEN, S.D . .(AP) ::_
Oct 27.
Nineteen of the original class of 54
Twins born to. their grandmother
As a pan of the observance, stu,- were present for the reunion and 27
were
well but likely j~iill be ·
dents of the Meigs Local School class members are still living.
for-another two weeks,
District llfC being requested to wear
Mr. and Mrs. Blakeslee also visa
spokeswoman said.
red-colored clothing on Wednes· iLCd Reed City to view the ancestral
·- -day, Qct-.-23 to-shGw suppon of the-- ·home·of-Mrs. ·Bhlkes:lee'~s-rrlatemal- ..-twins ·o r
national campaign.
,
,
grandparents, the .Knuths. , .
b'abics),"
Patty
At Veterans Memonal Hpspnal, Knuth walked 75 miles north of
spokc~woman for St.
employeC;I will be w~aring red rib- Grand Rapids, Mich., to stake out
- land Hospital.
-~
bol!.S_dnnng the e_nure week at a hi s homestead. His deed was
Chad Daniel Uchytil and
part of the National Red Ribbon signed by Ulysses S. Grant, PresiCampaign to show support of a dent.
Chelsea Arlette Uchylil were.ileliy.
drug free society.
ered early Saturday io Arlette
By the way, speaking of VeterSchweitzer, 42, who served as a
Edie Hubbard of Racine has .
ans Memorial, the hospital's annual now entered the Arcadia Nursing
surrogate to her daughter and sonfamily picnic was held Saturday Home in Coolville . She is in
in-law. The daughter, Christa
· afternoon at the Kyger Creek Room 16 and would appreciate
Uchytil, was born without a uterus.
Power Plant Employees Club . hearing from fiiends.
Eggs were taken from Mrs.
There were games for hath youngUchyti1' s ovaries, fertilized'with
sters and adults and Christina
Women of the Sacred Heart
.her husband's spetm and implanted
HERBAL HARVEST HELD ~ "Herbal Har·
Looking over the itenis or Donna Nease, one or
McGuire won the attendance prize. Chuich in Pomeroy have their
in Mrs. Schweitzer's womb.
vest and Country Fair" was presented In the
the organizers for the event, are Barbara Riggs
Jackie Starcher, head of the nutri- heads together planning for their
Mrs. Uchytil, 22, and ·her hus·
mini-park in Pomeroy on Saturday in conjuncand Mina Swisher. The event was sponsored by
tion department, was in charge of annual dinner to be served as usual
band, Kevin, live in Rapid City,
tion with the Sternwbeel Festival. A abundance
the Pomeroy Me.rchants Association.
the picnic food.
·
in conjun ction with the annual
about 250 miles southw.est of
of
crea.tive
and
crafty
items
were
on
display.
Aberdeen .
bazaar.
'
You're invited to a retirement
Nov . 14 had been set for the
reception for Otis Knopp to be held date with servin~ to start at 4:30
from 3 to 6 p.m. tomorrow, Tues- p.m . and bazaar activities with
day, at the Meigs County Board of games and craft features will be
Education Office, E. Main St., from 6:30 to 8:30p.m. There will
Pomeroy. Knopp has retired after be a $25 attendance prize awarded
Community Calendar items gclist. Pastor Sam Basye invites the
serving 33 years as Meigs County every half hour during the evening.
school attendance officer.
By lhc way , dinner to featured appear two days before an event public.
creamed bake chicken,. homemade and the day or that event. Items
HAR.RlSONVILLlf. The HarCharles and Daisy Blakeslee noodles and the trimmings will be must be received well in advance
to
assure
publication
in
the
cal·
risonville
Holiness Chapel, Route
have returned to their Pomeroy $4.50 and S2.50 for kids 12 and
endar.
684,
Pomeroy,
will have revival
home from Wichita , Kansas , under.
Tuesday through Sunday at 7~ 30
where Mr. Blakeslee participated in
p.m. nightly with Rev . David
The Clarence Thomas confirmaMONDAY
the initiation of his grandson, Mark
RACINE • The Southern Band Nev ill e, evangelist. Rev . John
Circle, as an Entered Apprentice in tion hearings go on and on. Obvithe Bestor G. Brown Ma sonic ously, someone is lying and only a Boosters will meet Monday at 7 Neville, pastor, invites the public.
Lodge there. The Blakeslees' confession- which isn't apt to take p.m. at the high school band room.
LONG BOTTOM • The Faith
granddaughter, Marianne Circle of place-will cleat that up. The All parents are urged to attend.
Full Gospel Church in Long BotKansas City was visiting her moth- hearings have, of course, proven
BURLINGHAM· The Bedford tom will have a fundraiser for the
er, Patricia Circle while the that we across the nation arc going
to
have
the
same
problem
with
the
.
Township
Trustees will meet Mon· church on -Tuesday at 7:30p.m.
Blakeslees were in Wichita so it
pronunciation
of
harassment
as
we
day
at
7
p.m.'
at the town haiL
The public is invited to attend .
made for a nice reunion.&lt;"
Earlier, the Blakeslccs attended do wilh the Caribbean. Do keep
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Revival sersmiling.
POME~OY ·The Ladies Auxil·
vices will begin Tuesday and coniary at Veterans Memorial Hospital tinue through Sunday at the Midwill meet Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. dleport Church of the Nazarene.
There will be a white elephant sale Rev , Donald R. Dunn will be the
and refreshments will be served.
evangelist. Jim and Cathy Sisson
will be the song evangelists. SerEA_ST HAMPTON, N.Y. (AP) ccssful film s, including " Jaws,"
POMEROY - The annual meet- vices will be held at 7 p.m. nightly
-Steven Sp,ielberg and Kate Cap- " E.T. The E~ traterrestrial, " and
ing of the Meigs County Council and 10:30 a.m. on Sunday. The
shaw were married in a traditional " Raiders of the Lost Ark."
Cap
shaw
co-starred
in
the
on
Aging, Inc., will be held Tues- public is invited to attend.
Jewish ceremony at his Long
"
Raiders"
sequel
"Indiana
Jones
day
at I p.m. at the Meigs Multi·
Island estate.
and
the
Temple
of
Doom."
purpose
Senior Center.
WEDNESDAY
Harrison Ford and Dustin HoffThe
marriage
is
Spielberg
's
secman_.wJ;rc among 100 guests Satur- FIREMAN'S.PARADE ·The Fireman's Parade.ot'tht Big Bend
SYRACUSE - The ~ Third
ond and Capshaw 'Sfhird. They . RUTLAND - Revival at lhe
day night at the ceremony .
Steqmheel Festival drew ·quite a bit or attention on Sat~rday
Spielberg produced and directed have two children and ~are expect- Rutland Nazarene Church will be Wednesday Homc'makers Club will
morning as units from Meigs and Masqn Counties participated
held Tuesday through Sunday at 7 meet Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the
some of Hollywood's most sue- ing a third in February.
together in the event. A water battle was tonclucted Iiiier in the
p.m. nightly with Joe Jordan, evan- muniCipal building in Syracuse.
afternoon in Mason, W.Va., by several ol the units.'

'

Bahr Clothiers Rotary topic
Bahr Clothiers is possibly the oldest retail business with continu·
ous business in Middleport, according to Cash Bahr who was the
speaker on Monday night at the Middleport.Pomcroy Rotary Club
meeting. The meeting was held at Heath United Methodist Church.
Bahr Clothiers started in 1912 as Curtis Smith Clothing. Bahr
went to work in the store in 1949 for Charlie McMaster. Bahr purchased half of the store in 1951 and the remainder of the business in
1956.
.
Until 1974, business continued 10 increase, but with the advent
of shopping malls, the clothing business both here and elsewhere
has continued to decline.
.
Clothin~ manufacturing as well as distribution continues to
decline, wtth much of the goods produced overseas. Today, the
women's deparupent in the store is much more active than the
men's depanmcnt. Today's young.v.eople, Bahr reported, apparently
do not like to dress up, but they wiJI pay $40 to $95 to rent a tuxedo
for only two or three hours use.
· ·
•
Bahr was a former member and president of the Rotary Club.
Within recent years, health has been a problem, but he is now .
renewing his activity and Iouks forward to many more years in the
· clothing business.
Howard Frank was announced as a new member of the club.
Gene Riggs, vice president of the club presided.
Plans are movmg ahead for the Rotary Pancake Breakfast to be
held at Vaughan's Cardinal store on Saturday, November 16 from 7
a.m. to 11 a.m.

In your opinion, should a man
nominated to the Suprema
Court who has sexually
harassed a women In the past ...
Should be confirmed Never be
depending on the · · conlirmed
circumstances
to the Court

Don't know/
refused to
answer

Should not be
an Important
consideration

,

Somewhat
closely

7%

8%
..

How closely have you
tollowed news coverage
of aceuaallons of sexual
harassment made against
Supreme Court nominee
Clarence Thomas:
Don't know/
refused to
Very
closely

Not
closely

T,titP~ poll oi70. .dUit81ntervlewed on Oct 10,and
~anlZation tor ~ewsweek . Margin
error 11piiJt or
I

t

Source: New1Wttk

'

or

·';

APIManha P, Hernll!1dez

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
the lagoons in the Hobson area will
Sentinel News StafT
begin next week.
An application for funding
Equipment is to be moved in
assistance from the Ohio Depan- next week to begin the requ ired
ment of Transportation to extend excavation in preparation for the
water lines into the Hobson area bank stabilization work, he said .
was filed today by Middleport Vii· The erosion of the baDk has threatlage Council.
.
ened the sewage lagoons and creatMeeting Monday night Council ed a threat of leaching from th e
passed a resolution authorizing lagoons into the Ohio River.
Mayor Fred Hoffman to submit the
Several months will be req uired
application in the amount of to complete that $742,000 project,
$178,125.
Miller said. The project is being
That amount represents 7$ per- funded by the U. S. (:o!']?_s of Engi cent of the estimated total project neers, other state and federal agencost The remaining 2S percent, or cies, and a contribution from Mid$59,375; would be the village slulre dleport village of $12,000.
of the cost and would come from
As for the Pearl Street project of
the water revenue fund.
rebuilding the street, s id ewal~s .
Mayor Hoffman noted that the curbing and storm sewer, Miller
Ohio Department ofTransp&lt;irtation reported that the work being done
provides financial assistance to by C. J. Contracting and Trucking
municipalities contiguous to the of Gallipolis should be .completed
Ohio River through the Ohio Port by the end of the month.
Assistance Program.
The mayor reported that the
The mayor explained that the Meigs County Commissioners
proposed project consists of approved Community Develop·
mstalling a water main out Hobson ment Block Grant monies in the
_Qrive wit)l~_br;lliC_l! 3\QI\g L,!i()()"-_ amount'of $18,()()Q for the_paving
Drive to the railtiiidand a second ofFroiitSlreet. Smci! the t&lt;illil esu:
branch along S. R. 710 the entrance mated cost is $23,000, Council
of Facemeyer Lumber's drive.
voted to pick up the difference of
Elich branch may be described about $5,000 so that th e entire
as' brlhging watel"service to the street can be paved.
edge of the prime port areas, the
As for the wOIX on the Middlefirst to the potential port site on the port levee, additional information
south side of the tracks, and the has to be secured before the bid can
second. to the possible staging area be awarded, Miller reported.
on the north side of the tracks, he '
· Other Bu5iness
said.
It was reported that Feeney- ·
Floyd Browne Associates- in Bennett Post 128, American
preliminary engineering reports Legion, had donated $1,000 toward
stated that the present lack of water the· purchase of an intoxilizer and
and sewer service in the Hobson $500 for a new light bar for a cruisarea is a constraint to site develop· er for the Middleport Police
menL
·
Department.
.
When the Hobson area was
The planned purchase of Central
annexed into the village of Middle- Trust in Middleport by the Peoples .
port a couple of year ago, residents Bank Corporation was noted by
were told that water and sewer Mayor Hoffman who said he had
lines would eventually be extended met with pcrsonne) from Peoples
into that area and those services Bank who are hopeful of completmade available 10 their-homes.
ing the transfer by the end of the
"This is a good way to get a year.
water line started into that area,"
The f~reworks used at the My 4
the mayor said, although he said celebration have been paid for, the
admitted that getting full fundl!lg' is mayor reported. He noted that
somewhat of a "long shot."
Sl ,800 came in from donations and
In the applicat,ion the water line that the ~lance of t!te $3,600 cost
extension will be broken down into was spltt by the vtllage and the
two phases. Phase I will be the Middleport Fire Department with
water main out Hobson Drive and each paying $900.
down alon$ Lagoon Drive, while
James Johnson met with Connphase 2 wtll be the water main cil to discuss the possibility of initifrom Lagoon Road down Route 7 ating a pickup service for recyto Facemyer Lumber.
clables, including metal materials
Other possible funding sources, like refri gerators and sto ves, as
such as the availability of Issue 2 well as plastics and glass. Roger
monies,_were giscussec!, by th!l _r-.J a_llley recentl y• ~~~:~~~:\'.~ '1:~:~[~!:------~-t
mayor.
s1de p1ckup o-r 1r
Other Projects
cling. Council suggested Johnson
. Middleport's Developm ent talk to Manley about recycling and
Dlre_ctor 1)1ll M1ller reported that then come back to Council if anyreprur of the OhiO R1ver' bank ncar
Continued on page 3

Thomas support continues
to grow following hearings
NEW YORK (AP) :._ The'credibility question was answered in
Clarence Thomas' favor as polls
showed Americans found the
Supreme Court nominee's denials
far more believable than Anita
Hill's allegations of sexual harass'ment.
A CBS poll conducted Monday
found that 56 percent did not
believe Hill's allegations against
Thomas, and 27 percent thought
they were true.
Fifty-seven per&lt;:ent of the 497
adults surveyed nationwide thought
Thomas should be confumed to the
high court, and 19 percent thought
he should be rejec~. The poll had
a margin of error of plus or minus
five percentage points.
An ABC-Washington Post poll
released Monday found that 56 per·
cent favored Thomas' confirmation
and 54 pe&gt;cent were inclined to
believe be had not sexually
harassed Hill.
While the poll sho.)!led a gender
gap, both men and women found
Thomas more believable than Hill.
. Fifty-nine per&lt;:ent of men and 49
. ~~

percent of wo men said they were
inclined to beli eve Hill's c ~arges
were fal se: 33 percent of men and
41 percent of women were inclined
to believe they were true.
The poll of 506 people, conducted Sunday, had a margin of error of
· five points.
. '"
A CBS News-New York Times1,
poll conducted Sunday found ·that
58 percent said they were more
likely to believe Thomas and 24
percent were more likely to believe
Hill .
There was linlc, difference in
responses between men and women
and between blacks and whites but
party affiliation appeared to be a
significant factor: 54 percent of
Republicans versus 36 percent of
Democrats favored confir!lling
Thomas.
I
.
The poll, based on telephone
interviews with 501 adults rlation·
wide, had a margin of error of five
points.
,
Another survey found that three
out of every four AmCijcans paid
Continued on page 3

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