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                  <text>PagelWelve

VVednesday,Seplenmbtrl,l~

The Dally Sentinel Football Preview

...

In the Browns' camp,

~

'Monsters on the Lake' sworn to defend Kosar's constitution
fiftl!-round choice from Grarii bUng and ~as ~idding 10 come back, the two-gap scheme, which cuts down
By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP) - Bernie who's challenging for playing time playmg time at running back by . on his sack opportunities, and Ball
Kosar turns 30 in November, and at the right tackle spot held by Ed then was to be shared mostly by wasn' t in the best of shape when he
Vardell , Leroy Hoard and Eric was acquired in a trade with
because he has spent so many years King. ·
Suddenly, the offensive line that Meicalf.
playing behind a neglected offen·
Detroit. Even so, both are threesive line, it's an old 30. Some say allowed Kosar to be sacked 11
If the Browns are 10 end their time Pro Bowl players with .the
his arm hasn 'I been the same since times in last season's opener at suing of three consecutive seasons ability to dominate a game.
his elbow was wrenched in 1988: Indianapolis, the line that let a without a playoff berth. however, it
Flanking them are Rob Burnett
others wonder about the serious- Miami linebacker crash through 10 will be defense that does it - as
and Anthony Pleasant, two of the
n,ess or the ankle injuries that befell brealc his ankle the next week. has might be expected on any team run
beuer young defensive ends in the
grown younger and more talented.
him last year.
AFC, and backing up the line is the
l)y Bclichick, the long-bme defen·
But the Cleveland Browns gave
"I can't imagine we're ~oing 10 sive coordinator of the New York
veteran linebacking trio of Clay
get
any better than that,· coach Giants.
Kosar reason 10 hope that his best
Matthews, Mike Johnson and
.
years may stiU lie ahead when they Bill Belichick said arter the
David Brandon, with a combined
The centerpiece of the 1993
at long last overhauled the line this BroWils' quarterbacks went virtual· BroWQs will be the defensive line,
28 years of NFL experience.
ly untouched in a preseason game and in particular the tackle tandem
year.
"I think our defensive front
Was it too little, too late? Kosar against the Los Angeles Rams. of Michael Dean Perry and Jerry
seven is as deep and talented a
"There was nobody near the quar- Ball.
thinks not.
group as there is in the league,"
"At the risk or saying too much, terback. The tackles did a nice job.
Perry doesn't like Belichick's Kosar said.
too soon, I like this team," Kosar Herman played really well, and
said early in training camp. "I To11y played like Tony plays. T. L
think it's the best we've had since inside people ... dido 't get pushed
the playoff learns or '86 and '87."
back, so there was a lot of room for
The reasons for Kosar's opti· the quarterback."
Other changes on offense
mism are right in front of him.
There· s Houston Hoover, the include the addition of Tampa Bay
300-pound left guard signed away free agent Mark Canier at wide
from Atlanta as an unrestricted free receiver and the promotion of secagent There's center Steve Everitt, ond-year fullback Tommy YardeD,
the first-round draft choice from who moved up on the depth chart
Michigan who so impressed the when Kevin Mack unexpectedly
coaches they felt comfortable drop· retired. Although Mack had a
ping Jay Hilgenberg. There's huge change of heart late in preseason
Herman Arvie, the 6-4, 32Q.pound

•
resign
Bartrum

~

••
ho:

The weakest unit of the defense Browns have shown since
is the secondarr,. an aging group anived after their franchise-wont:
that relied heavily on 33-year-old 3-13 season of 1990. They went ~ .
Everson Walls and 32-year-old 1.0 in 1991, and their 7-9 mark ~
Terry Taylor at cornerback last year included several fowth..quar
year. Najee Mustafaa (formerly ter losses.
·
...
In both seasons, though, they 1
known as Reggie Rutland) has
been acquired from Minnesota as a closed poorly, losing the last ~;.
free agentro shore up the defensive games.
•
•'We had games where we had'
backfield, but Mustafaa missed all
of last year because of a back leads and opportunities 10 win,
injury. COmplicating the situation: · were not able 10 do it," Matthews..
Taylor injw:ed his knee in the third said. "Whether it was the offense
game of the preseason and will not holding orito the ball or tho~
probably miss the start of the regu- defense not slOpping the OI!JlO!ICnl,"r
lar season.
sometimes we didn't get tt doiiCI:~
On balante, Belichick sees It's something we need to conccn.:.,
enough improvement to expect a trate on, and to be able to do ill~
continuation of the progress the those situations."
·;:

..,

Jobless
.claims
;

down

'

· WASHINGTON (AP) - The
·number of Americans filing first·
time claims for jobless benefits fell
by 7,000 last week, the government
said today, and a·closely watched
unemployment indicator remained
at a four-year low.
The Labor Department said new
applications for unemployment
insurance totaled 324,000, down
from a revised 331,000 filed during
the week e.n ded Aug. 21 and
matching the level reached during
the week ended Aug. 14.
The 324,000 figure was the low·
est since new claims totaled
· 321,000 during the week ended
Feb. 6. Claims initially were estimated to have risen to 332,000 during the week ended Aug. 21.
_
Many economists had predicted
in advance of the report that applicalions last week would be little
changed. Initial claims have
remained below 350,000 for most
of the summer.
The less-volatile four-week
moving average of jobless Claims,
which analysts prefer to track
because it more accurately rcllects
the labor situation, also fell .
The average totaled 327,500,
down 3,750 from 331,250 during
the period ended Aug. 21. It was
the lowest level since the average
was 32i,250 during the period
ended Sept. 30, 1989.
The Labor report also said
"21i',125 applications were-fil e,d
under a federal emergency unemployment program durin)! the week
ended .Aug. 21, down from 33,107
during the previous week.
Thirty•sevcn states and territories had decreases in regular claims
during the week ended Aug. 21 and
16 reported increases.
·
States with the biggest declines
were Michigan, 1,768; California,
1,570; Tennessee, 855; Missouri.
817; and Kentucky, 746.
States or territories with the
largest increases were Puerto Rico,
up 3,465 because of layoffs in the
food processing industry: South
Carolina. 877: Texas, 663; Penn·
sylvania, 511 ; and Massachusetts,
314.
The emergency claims and indi·
vidual state figures lag the ovemll
total and the four -week movtng
average by one week. The national
figures are adjusted for seasonal
variations, but the individual state
figures and the emergency program
numbers arc not.

t1 Southern

Pedro gets the lowest marks for
receiving. He caught 18 passes for
158 yards last season, but dropped
too many balls he should have
caught.
"It just seems I' 11 make the hard
catches but drop the easy ones that
come right to me," he said. "BUt
... I think I've improved a lot on
my hands since I've been here.
"You la!ow, being that we are a
passing team, I said to myself I
need to catch the ball better if I
want to play," he said. · ·-

Wishes all area football teams the best of
luck in the 1993 season.
'

• MEIGS MARAUDERS
• EASTERN EAGLES
• SOUTHERN TORNADOES
• WAH·AMA WHITE FALCONS

•

2-18-25-36-39-45
Kicker:
818401

New law may cost
man his wheels

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
A Mason, W.Va., man may lose
his car after being the first person
chtlfged with a fourth offense under
Ohio's new tough drunk. driving
law.
Gale E. Wolfe, 51, was arrested
Tuesday at 12:32 a.m. at the june·
tion of East Main and Sycamore
streets by Lt. James Stacy of the
Pomeroy Police Department, Chief
Gerald Rought said.
Wolfe was pulled over after he
aUegedly swerved left of center.
Wolfe's arrest took place 32
minutes after the new drunk driving law went into effect. He was
charged with driving under the
inlluence, driving under suspension
and driving left of center, Rought
said.
Under the new law, those con·

BURTON, Ohio (AP) -Gov.
George Voinovich said a stronger
partnership between state govern·
mcnt and the private sector will
reduce industrial pollution throughout Ohio.
· The govcr11qr announced
Wednesday that iblnOO conijiiiniCs
in Ohio that reported the most tbx.ic
releases for 1991
be asked to
develop comprehensive plans for
preventing pollution.
·
"We believe it's easier to prevent a problem than to cure it after
the fact,'' he said at a news confe.r·
ence at Eldon Russell Park m
Gcauga County. ,
The governor said his administration will help the compames
develop· the plans and determine
how they can reduce emissions.
The plans also will show compa·
nics how to save money by using
raw materials more efficiently. he
said.
The governor asked Donald
Schrcgardus, director of the Ohio
Environmental Protection Agency,
to provide an outline within 90
days of how the agency will handle
his directive.
"I will personally write to the
CEOs of these companies to
impress upon them the importance
of this initiative," Voinovich said,

will

Drive-by shooting reported

MARATHON

l'f Harrisonville man reportedly sustained minor injuries after
exchanging fire with drive-by shooters Wednesday mon:u~g.
.
Paul Steinmetz, State Route 684 , reportcd "hc was stttmg on hts
porch shonly after midnlght when subjects in a white car with a red
top drove by and began shooting at hi s house, according to a report
from the Meigs County Shcrifrs Dcpanmcnt.
Steinmetz advised deputies he returned fire and heard the sound
of screams and glass breaking before the car drove off. He was
transported to a local hospital for trcauncm, Shcnff James Soulsby
said.
,
The incident remains under investigation, Soulsby said.

~--.

,.

Water service to be interrupted
Leading Creek Conservancy District will interrupt water service
for approximately four hours Friday from 8 a.m. 10 noqn. The
affecte4 areas are Hyland Drive 10 Laurel Cliff, including Willow
Creek.
·
LCCD will be instaUing a valve for connecting water service 10
tlie Meigs Motel, therefore a boil advjsory wiD be in effect for 48
hours after service is re-established, according 10 manager Brent
Bolin.

RIVERSIDE F'OOD MART
(614) 992·3636

POMEROY, OH.

victed of a fourth offense face a really lobbied far this."
mandatory criminal forfeiture of
"The new law increases aware·
the vehicle operated by the offend- ness like never beiP,re." she said.
cr. Wolfe' s 1989· model car and "Maybe (drunk drivers) will think
·
lic.ense plates were impounded fol· twice."
lowing his arrest.
"Every 29 minutes, a person is
Motorists who test above .10 killed by a drunk driver. The bot·
percent blood alcohol concentra· tom line for M.A .D.D. is to get
tion (BAC) or refuse to take a drunks off the highway ," Thoma
sobriety test may have their license added.
confiscated on -the-spot. Wolfe
Wolfe entered a plea of innocent .
allegedly tested at .164 BAC, during a hearing in Meigs County
Rought said.
Court Wednesday morning. A final
The new law also provides for hearing is scheduled for Oct 19 at
court-ordered driver's license sus· 8:30a.m.
pensions, vehicle immobilization,
In addition to the forfeiture of
tougher fines and longer jail terms. his automobile, if found guilty he
"The bottom line is 10 drink at faces at least 60 days in jail and a
home or let somebody else drive," minimum fine of $750. In addition,
Rought said.
he will have to undergo, at his
"The new law is a victory," said expense, a mandaiOry drug/alcohol
Pat Thoma, state M.A.D.D. (Moth· treatment program and may have
ers Against Drunk Driving) repre- his driver's license revoked for life.
sentative for Meigs Courity. "We

Voinovich a11:nounces plan
to reduce com nies' ollution

All troopers from the GaUia-Mcigs Post of the State Highway
Patrol will be working during the Labor Day Weekend, Lt. Robert J.
Woodford announced today.
The troopers will be watching for speeding, following too closely, failing to yield and drinking drivers, he said. The officers will he
working extra hours and makmg a concentrated trafftc enforcement
effort on U.S. 35 and State Route 7.
Woodford also urged motorists to wear their scm belts and not
drink and drive. Persons who see an impaired driver on the highway
can conwct the pa1rol post by calling 1·800·GRAB-DU1.
"Each person must do their part to keep this weekend safe," he
said. "Don't be foolish and assume nothing will happen to you or a
loved one while traveling the highways. Drive defensively. "

lI

431 WEST MAIN STREET

Low tonight low 70s, cbaD&lt;e of
rain. Friday, blgb In 80s.

2 Sec:Uont. 12 Pegea 35 c:enta
A Muhlmedla Inc. Newapapr

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, September 2, 1993

Patrol to be out in force

can."

Shula, 34 , whose rookie year
scrutiny was inten sified by being
Don Shula' s son and the youngest
coach in the league , gives the
impression that he knows where
he's going and how 10 get there.
"Having been through it once, it
makes it a lot easier the next time,''
Shu! a said. "I feel a lot more comfortable on the sidelines. I'm look·
ing forward to this year. I'm very
excited about watching these guys
mature and come together. "

0285
Super Lotto:

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

OPEN
24
HOURS

Pick 4:

lot&gt;l. 44, NO. 90
Muhlmeclla Inc.

Bengals ..•
(Continued from Page II
And No.8 Doug Pelfrey is kicking.
"That' s an area where we're
taking some risk," Shula said.
"Jimmy Breech has had a good ·
camp and certainly had one of the
best careers ever, as far as a kicker
goes in the league.
" It came down to us making a
forecast on what we think Doug
can do for us this year, and then if
we hung with Jimmy this year
we're looking at making the decision next year. Would there be a
guy of comparable ability? We
didn't think so."
But the Ben gals· success still
"depends on whether Shula and
newly designated offensive coordinator Mike Pope can craft an
offense around David Klingler, and
whether Klingler develops into a
franchise quarterback.
"Dave has been making
progress from week to week
throughout the preseason . He's
done some awful good things out
there in running the club," Shula
said.
" We spent a lot of time in the
off-season sharpening his mechanics, he and Kenny Anderson, working one-on-one. And that looks like
it's coming along real well.
"He· s also getting a real good
feel of the pocket back there, and
he's made several scrambles for
big gains. He's our second-leading
rushing - we don't want that to
happen during the regular season,
of course - but he's done a nice
job and we feel good about how
he's come along. "
Just in case, the Ben gals signed
10-year veteran Jay Schroeder as a
backup.
With a schedule that includes all
their divisional games among their
fi rst nine, the Bengals are at risk of
having their season scuttled before
their rookie starters get acclimated
to the NFL.
"When you take the fact that we
arc a young ballclub, we should get
beuer as the year goes on, there's
no ques tion about that," Shula
said. " Our schedule is front-end
loaded with division opponents;
we'd like it to have been the other
way, but it's not, so we' re going_to
go out there and do the best we

606

and:

tl Meigs tl Eastern tl Wahama

By MATT HARVEY
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- The 974 yards rushing gained
by Glenn Pedro last season grow in
stature when put in perspective.
First. it's the fifth-best total in
the more than 90 years Marshall
University has be.en playing foot·
ball.
Second, Pedro is a fullback, so
he's usually blocking instead of
running the ball.
"I think Gleon Pedro is one of
the best players in the country, "
said Herd coach Jim Donnan.
"He's an unsung hero for us. He's
· not gotten much all-star type banter
over the last three years, but I guarantee you he plays every down, and
he plays good."
Even so, the 5-foot-10, 203pound senior from Staten Island,
N.Y., sees ways 10 improve,
"One of my goals is to have a
complete season, one that I have no
regrets on anything I do on the
field," Pedro said. "I don' t want 10
come off the field saying what 1
should have done, could have
done. "

Pick 3:

PageS

GOOD LOCK ltl •93

Glimpses of Pedro's potential
seen in his 1992 rushing marks

Ohio Lotter y

Chiefs

•

·'

Man arrested after crash
A Langsville man was charged by deputies of the Meigs County
·
Continued on page 3 ·
.
r

CANOEING
Gov.
George Voinorich and his wife
.Janet canoe down the Cuyahoga River Wednesday after a
news conference on env.ironmental issues. (AP) .
adding that at least 66 of the companics already have programs to
prevent pollution. .
.
The list of Ohto compa01es
emitting the most pollution was

based on information the compa'
nies released 10 the federal govern·
ment for the I991 calendar year,
Voinovich said. He said that was
the most recent data available to
lhe state.
_Several companies and industry
groups, including LTV Corp., BP
America and the Ohio Chemical
Council, issued statements support·
· ing Voinovich's environmental ini·
tiative.
BP America said it was commit·
ted "to carrying out an ongoing,
comprehensive pollution prevcn·
tion program and looks forward to
working with the state of Ohio in
the dev elopment of its pollution
prevention plan."
BP Chem icals in Lima ranked
first on the toxic emissions list
cited by the governor.
The governor also directed the
Ohio EPA to suspend the oxygenated fuels program in the
Cleveland area. The program ,
imposed by the federal Clean Air
Act, required motorists to use the
more expensive oxygenated fu~ls
during winter because of a past VlO·
lation of air quality .standards for
carbon monoxtde, Vomovtch S8ld.

FIRST WITH FOURTH - The Pomeroy Police Department
racked up the dubious disllnction of being tbe first police depart·
ment in the stale to charge a motorist with a fourth drunk driving
offense under the newty revised Ohio drunk driving law. Under
the law, motorists found guilty of a fourth offense forfeit their
vehicle. Here, Police Chief Gerald Rou2bt displays plates confis·
cated from Gale E. Wolfe, 51, of Mason. Wolfe was arrested at
12:32 a.m. Tuesday, 32 minutes after the new law took effect.

Commission accepts
resignation of clerk
The Meigs Cqunty Board of
Commissioners accep~ the resignation of long-time clerk Mary
Hobstetter during its regular meet·
ing Wednesday.
Hobstetter is on vacation until
Sept. I7, her effective date of resignation. The commission appointed
Gloria Klocs 'as acting clerk until
Sept 17 at which time she will be
appointed as clerk.
In addition, the commission met
with Clerk of Courts Larry
Spencer, who updated the commis·
sian on rec entl y enac ted fc c

increases. and with Recorder
Emmogene Ha~ilton who dis·
cussed having documents in tile .
recorder's office handled by Business Records Corporation for
preservation. Also, Hamilton dis·
cussed the purchase of a new copying machine and fax machine for
the recorder's office.
Present were Commission Presi·
dent Robert Hartenbach, Vice Pres·
ident Janet Howard Tackeu, Commissioner Manning Roush and
Kloes.

Demjanjuk's detention extended
JERUSALEM (AP) - A judge
today ordered another delay in the
deportation of former Ohio
autoworker John Dcmjanjuk from
Israel, pending a ruling on appeals
by Holocaust survivors and Nazi

hunters who demand a new war
crimes trial.
The ruling by Theodore Orr, a
Supreme Court justice, marked the
fifth time that Demjanjuk's Aug. 1
·
Continued on page 3

Factory orders show wor~t decline in 19 months
WASHINGTON (AP)
Orders to U.S. factories dropped
2.1 percent in July , the worst
decline in 19 months, pulled down
by plunging .orders for aircraft and
communications equipment , the
government said today.
Orders fell to a seasonally
adjusted $250.2 billion, the Commerce Deparunent said, It was the
worst decline since December 1991
and the fifth in seven months .
Orders had risen 2.9 percent in
June.
In general, manufacturing has
been weak this year. in part
because domestic demand has been
soft and also because recessions in
Europe and Japan have cut into
U.S. export sales.
As a result, manufacturers have
been extremely reluctant to hire.

An indicator of future factory
employment - the backlog of
unfilled orders - suggested that
won't change soon.
The backlog fell 0.3 percent to a
seasonally adjusted $457.9 billion,
the lowest level since September
1988. It was the fifth drop in a row
and the 20th in 23 months.
A shrinking bacldog is an indication the current factory work
force is having little difficulty
keeping up with the flow of new
orders. However, analysts point out
that much or the dwindling backlog
is a result of cutbacks in defense
spending and is not widespread
among industries.
· Separately today , the Labor
Department .said the number of
first-time clatms for JObless benefits fell by 7,000 last week to

324,000, the lowest number since
the week ended Feb. 6.
In July, orders for transportation
equipment fell 16.7 percent, mQre
than reversing a 14.5 percent
increase the month before. Aircraft
orders plummeted 37.3 percent fol lowing a 52.5 percent increase in
June. Orders fell 10.8 percent for
autos and also were down for rail·
road equipment.
Excluding the volatile transportation sector, orders edged 0.2
percent higher in July after a 1.2
percent gain in June. But those
back-to·back increases followed
three consecutive drops.
Orders for military goods surged
18.7 percent. E~cluding defense,
orders fell 2.6 percent.
Durable goods manufacturcrs 1hose making big ti cket item s

expected to last three or more years
- said orders fell 3.1 percent.
Orders declined I percent for nondurable goods.
Orders for industrial equipment
and machinery rose 4.2 percent.
Increases in computers and office
equipment and con struction and
mining machinery offset drops in
engines and turbines and metalworking machinery.
Orders for electronic equipment
rose 1.6 percent, despite a 12.7 per·
ce nt drop in communi cation s
equipment.
Shipments from factorie s, a
measure of current production, fell
2.6 percent to $251.5 billion following a 1.7 percent rise in June
Inventories were unchanged at
$381.4 billion after a 0.1 percent
decline in June . •

Trumka says negotiations not going well
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) day contract extension reac"hed
- United Mine Workers President • with the help of the federal mediaRichard Trumka says coal opera- tors.
A week later, the union bej!aD
tors have "absolutely refused" to
participate in any real give-and- calling its members out on strike.
take during the latest round of con- After several escalalions, the union
tract talks.
says it now has 17,000 members on
"Their idea of negotiations is, strike in seven states in Appalachi·
' Here's our position. When you've an and the Midwest.
acccpled it, we've negotiated,"'
The UMW says job security is
Trumka said. ' 'Their whole stance its chief concern, while the operahas been, 'Take it or leave it."'
tors say they need more competi·
Talks between the UMW and tive work rules.
the Bituminous Coal Operators
The talks resumed after seven
Association resumed .Aug. II in coal state governors asked the two
Washington, D.C., under the eye of sides to go back to the table.
the federal Mediation and Concilia·
In a telephone interview
Wednesday from Washington,
tion Service.
Until then, the two sides had not Trumka alleged the operators have
met in formal face-to-face sessions failed to bargain in good faith.
since the May 3 expiration of a 60-

,,

\

"The BCOA has rep eatedly
talked about their willingness to
negotiate. But from day one, th ey
have come to the table and said ,
'Here's our position , take it or
leave it,"' Trumka said.
''To date, there has been no
willingness on their part to engage
us in problem solving or in the
actual negotiating process," he
said. "They have absolutely
refused 10 do so."
Thomas Hoffman, vice presi·
dent for public relations for CONSOL Inc. of Upper St. Clair, Pa.,
and spokesman for the operators'
negotiating committee, did not
return a message seeldng comment
Wednesday.
With the resumption of talks,

the two sides agreed to resume a
media blackout that was in effect
carl y in the talks. Trumka declined
to discuss specific proposals made
by the operators or by the union.
Trumka and other union officers
today were to begin a four·statc , ·
road trip to commemorate the ··
Labor Day holiday and to rally
their striking members . They will
attend rallies jn Oakwood, Va.,
Danville, W.Va., Morgantown,
W.Va., Pittsburgh, Lynnville, In.,
and Evansville, In.
The road nip culminates Monday in a Labor Day parade in
Evansville in which Trumka will
serve as co-marshal with Indiana
Gov. Evan Bayh, followed by
another rally.

�Thursday, September 2, 1993

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
~

.

111 CCM¢ Street

PomerOJ,, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE IN'I'ERESTS OJ' THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

"'

~ARGAR~·-w
~~~~ler

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General~anager

LIITl'!lRS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
wonls. All lettero are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
sbould be·in good taste, addressing issues, oot peoonalities.

Excerpts from other
Ohio Newspapers

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

Palestinian LiberaliOR Organization
had reached an accord that would
establish Palestinian self-rule in
lands occuoied by Israel since

Martin Schram
1967. The iransfer of authority
would be a modest, modular thing,
starting with the Gaza Ship and the
city of Jericho in the West Bank.
It was easy to predict that this
declaration of principles would be
greeted with consternation and
even condemnation by hardliners
on bolh sides. But it is also impossible to overlook the larger, historic
and probably irreversible event that
seemed to burst so suddenly and
breathtakingly upon a strangely
unsuspecting world of diplomatic
experts. These old adversaries
have, at last, wueed on the overrid·

ing imperativeof peace.
Why, you ask, was this breakthro ugh not anticipated by our
leading experts? Because great
experts are lousy expecters. The
experts make their reputations by:
(I) Knowing all there is to know
about all that bas been said by all
olher expens: and (2) then saying
the same old things in slightly new
ways- carefully eschewing observauons that could cost an expen his
or her pcer~cation .
Not so this portfolioed pundit.
Unencumbered by certification of
expertise, unafraid of being skewered by the tut·tuts of lhe kings of
expertise, I ushered in the New
Ycar by proclaiming:
''PEACE PREVAILS ON
BANK,
GOLAN
WEST
HEIGHTS.", In my beginning-of·
the-year column I wrote that this
was one of the great news head-

~TTA-@1'.191 FOII:TWORTI\~'Tei.EG­

HULME.'

By The Associated Press

Excerpts of recent Ohio editorials of national and statewide interest:
~ORNING JOURNAL, LORAIN
It seemed a good idea, so Rep. Paul Jones, D~Rave.nna •. schedul~ a
series of four public hearings around the .state on hts leg~sl~uon to restn~t
how the stare's Blue Cross-Blue Shield msurance comparues spend thetr
money.
.
But Jones cancelled the remaining tluee after the fl.rst one m Toledo.
He noticed, he said, that instead of hearing from ordinary consumers from
the grass rooiS, the witnesses were planted by high-powered lobbytsts on
both sides.
·
.
We think Jones ought to reconsider •. and res~hed~le. the h~~gs, and
open the topic up to include not only hiS spending lumts IegtSlauon (HB
425), but also the proposal to force a merger of the Blue Cross compames
in Ohio (HB315).
The lawmaker's original premise, that taking the forum out of Columbus will increase the chances of Jelling ordinary people have a .say,
shouldn't be tossed out just because of one attempt to orchestrate tesnmo·
ny.An initial hearing could be held in Columbus to allow the high-powered types to !Jave their say before lhe show goes o~ the road ..Jones could
then look 10 fellow lawmakers m each area to recrwt local vmces on bolh
sides of the fence forth~ regional hearings. Hospital administrators, busi·
ness leaders and labor union officers could be among those mvtted to

s~~re would be no harm done if the positions of the major players

were presented, with reasonable time limits, each time.
.
.
Regional hearings would guarantee more exposure to the tssues m
local media. Let's face it, legislative hearings in Columbus don't get
much attention in the outlying areas. Regional hearings, featuring the
voices of home town people, can fall into the category of "local"news.
Jones' two initiatives stem from a power struggle among OhiO health
insurance giants. Whatever the legislature decides is likely to have a
direct impact on the pocketbooks of working people. The more auention
this gets the better.
~ORNING JOURNAL, LORAIN
I fiTS! met Michael Jackson five $20 million, which be refused.
Have you ever wonde~ why the '60s ~ock stars, with their 1001\ hair, years ago. I came away with but
That a man who so loves chilscruffy attire and faces pamted to demon-like masks were so attracuve to one impression of the man whom dren, who has donated millions of
the youth of the day?
the celebrity mags Vanity Fair and dollars to various children's chariThey seemed ugly, but their music and their images appealed to that People declared the most famous
streak of rebelliousness that's found in many young people. II was entertainer in the world: He ttuly
" cool" to look bad, and even a face that would stop a ~ck truck could was the nicest human being I had
be beautiful in lhe eyes of some beholders.
.
ever met.
The ·remembrance of this might explain the populanty of one ~r
The pop star was not simply ties, who has graciously opened up
today's best known advertising images, "Old Joe," the camel featured m striking a pose, pretending to be his wonderfuf home to terminally
cigarette marketing. How anyone, even rebelltous youth, could thmk of a gentle and guileless before his ill children, who seiS aside thoucamel as glamourous is hard to understand.
adoring public while running sands of free concen tickets at his
Now the Federal Trade Commission is studying a proposal to ban roughshod over his hired hands tour srops for disadvantaged chil•'Old Joe'' from advertising. The idea of doing s0 seems misguided.
away from the public eye. I have dren, would have his good name so
The Firsi Amendment protects advertising, so-called "commercial seen him in close quaners several besmirched is an injustice.
speech" (as opposed to, say, "political speech"), allowing.gove':"ment to times since our riTSt meeting and he
I am reminded of the observastep in only if the messages are proven to be false and mtsleading. FTC has only confirmed my initial tion by Claire Booth Luce that no
auempiS to ban advertising that is not false but merely o.ffensive have not impression.
good deed goes unpunished.
been Tully rested in the courts, because past threats to tssue such orders
The irony of this whole sordid
Which is why it pains me to
have been settled by agreements to pull the ads.
affair
is that among the ranks or
read the recent spate of sensational
Basically, however, the Supreme Court h~s held that if it can be shown stories about Jackson quoting celebrity spons figures, matinee
that there is a government interest in regulatmg speech and the regulauons anonymous sources (naturally), idols, TV personalities and pop
can be limited to serve that interest wilhout affecting olhers, such bans who offer unsubstantiated second-, music stars, few have led as exemcan pass constitutional muster. .
. .
.
.
third- or even fourth-hand dope plary a life as Michael Jackson
In this case, the government mterest ts m protecung children from the alleging that the pop star fondled (who, it should remembered, has
dangers of smoking, which, as it says on packs, the Surgeon General and had sexual relations with had to contend with his celebrity
warns is hazardous to health. The courts have allowed government to go a somebody's child.
status since he was the S:rear-old
' step further in proteCting children because they are assumed to be vu lnera·
These are the veririable facts lead singer of the Jackson 5).
ble and not ready to protect themselves. ,. .
.
.
that have emerged in the case: The
He has never had to check into
The problem in the case ?f "Old Joe ts that government~~ not drrect- child in question, a 13-year-old the Belly Ford Center for alcohol
1y regulating the harmful thm~ - other laws already ban selhng tobacco
boy, is at the center of a bitter cus- abuse (Elizabeth Taylor). He's
products to children - but ts reachmg out to a secondary mfluence, tody battle between his estranged never been arrested for drug posadvertising that might entice young peo~le. to use the harmful product. parents. His mother says she was session (Paul McCartney, Steve
The danger is that there are other posstbtltues. For example, .should we not aware of any abuse of her son. Howe). He's never been investigatban news accouniS of crime because impressiOnable people mtght mumc Jackson's representatives say he ed for rape (Rob Lowe, ~ike
received an extortion demand of Tyson). He's never beaten up a
the actS?
.
th .
·
, al
The other reason to leave " 0 ld Joe . one ts 111at e tmage ts rea11y
not pleasing. Reports that children in a survey could identify the camel
more often than ~ickey Mouse doesn't mean they want to copy the
behavior of either character.
While the rock stars might have been attractive, it was their product The broad outline of President forms of insurance, where I am
the music - and not their appearance that made that so. Even if the
Clinton's
national health plan, c barged at least in pan by the risk I
appearance of "Old J?C" appeals~ some, they can recognize it as reprein
mid-August, depends lllke - driving a sports car, having
announced
senting a product that ts not anracuve, but ugly and unhealthy for all.
largely
on
rearranging
how we use a high accident or traffic violation
So, smoke cigarettes, tf you want to look like a camel.
what's already available. It relies
on making employers pick up a
bigger share of health costs, developing insurance-buy in~ cooperatives to help small busmesses get rate,- heating with wood- I gel no.
better insurance rates and encour- such break in health insurance. If I
·n.A~ o , -rt1' ~s of' J,'- IA.'I&lt;.. }t..
agi ng competition among health cat a diet high in fat, work at a
plans.
breakneck pace with a bun between
H~A.\.-\1\CA.R.E Jf- 1.-,A,\~S\ --~~
The hows and wherefores will my fingers and get no exercise, I
come later, the president says, but pay the same rate as the person
CR1Jiw\&lt;C. )~- J'Af'A~ )(- 0\..~
ufiless his vision expands to a who runs 15 miles a week, medibroader view of the health-care tales to relieve stress and counts fat
;~ ~\.\.. 0~ },', 'I.IE\..L~E. SS
puzzle we'll still be in trouble. grams as if they were live hand
Here are some goals the president grenades.
~{ p~y-,c.,-r ;:- A'i...SON. ~·,
If health insurance were priced
should add to his list:
1. For a national health program , according to lifestyle habits, an
~,'-i:.GF&gt;-1~ ~\Ct:: )/- l&gt;o.CI"\E. ):
to pay for itself and not bankrupt employee who pracuces prevenllve
SC~~~~C..I-\ ;t Sf?,~~ IN
us it must truly be a "health" pro- health habits would cost his
gr~m
that teaches and promotes employer less in insur~nc.e f~es . .
:(- ~~~ ~SI );health and prevents disease. What Would that lead ~ ~IScnmmanon,
we' ve had largely is a "disease" wah employers hlflng only nonprogram, a group of after-the-fact sm!Jkers who k~p in line with the
services 10 mop up after the dam- hetght-and-we1ght charts? It
age is done.
doesn't need to. Employees who
Insurance companies have to persist in living an un~ertaker's
begin paying for routine health dream can pay the difference
screening, which most physicians between the rate e~ployers pay for
believe is· necessary to maintain wo£!cers who Jl!'IICUce good health
good health. Historically, they have habits and theiT own htgher-nsk
been reluctant to pay for preventive rates.
.
·
exams, payirig for rests only when
3. '?'e're gomg to.have 10 tax
there is reason to suspect disease.
the beJabbers out of ctgarenes and
2. Insurance companies must alcohol, and perhaps even some
offer incentives for the insured who foods. If you think that's a radical
~
0 1:;; ~ NEA, Inc.
practice good health habits idea, consider that some medical
namely,lowered rates. Unlike olher researchers estimate that as much

tee.''

Berris World

\

q;•.

Sarah Overstreet

Truth be told, I'd been urging
this for not one but two years. Gaza
seemed the starting place of choice;
it's a ship whose value is symbolic,
not strategic. On the West Bank, it
seemed that if each side would recognize the other's imperatives,
Palestinians could be guarapteed
basic autonomy of a homeland;
they could police their lands but
must keep them demilitarized
under international guarantee. It
seems too much to ask that the
existing Israeli settlements on the
West Bank be dismantled, for those
Jewish settlers too have a right 10
live in peace. So I urged a Guantanamo Solution, with the settlements granted a status not unlike
that of the U.S. military base in
Cuba.
And for Jerusalem: The NoSolution Solution. Let all parties be
so candid as to recognize that there
is no quick, easy solution to the status of this city. Jerusalem must
remain Israel's capital; but eventually, old East Jerusalem, site of the
holy shrines of Arabs, can be an
internationally governed city.
Finally, all sides have come to
recognize the can-do power of candor. In this case, they have candid·
ly recognized that their ·world is
now driven by a common danger
- Islamic extremism (pronouced:
"TERRORISM"). That is the
force that now propels ·the ancient
enemies of the Middle East toward
peace.
~artln Schram Is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

Jaclcson's
creative and artistic achievements; all
of his admirable humanitarian and
charitable works, have been
brushed to the side in the wake of
the scurrilous assault on his character. The scandalmongers in the
media delight in nothing so much
as cutting down to size a largerthan-life figure who enjoys an
unblemished reputation.
I have no doubt that ~ichael
Jackson eventually will be cleaned
of the accusations that have been
made against him. Anyone who
knows him for the decent and
upstanding person that he is knows
that he could not possibly do injury
to any child.
My only real fear is that the negative publicity that has attended
this sordid matter will discourage
the already reserved and sensitive
Michael Jackson from having any
future contact with his young fans.
Joseph Perkins is a columnist
for The San Diego Union-Tribune and a syndicated wriler for
Newspaper Enterprise Association.

....

.

,.. -

-

in. Some-insurance companies are
beginning to reform this practice,
and we have to guarantee that the
trend continues. .
5. We have to curtail !he unwarranted hospital expansion, which
has led 10 the doubling or' unused
hospital beds over the last 30 years,
enriching builders and some
lenders and forcing hospitals into a
~crap for patients and sometimes
1010 bankruptcy.
No matter which way we go,
our health is the shared responsibility of hea,lth-care providers, recipients and insurers. If the government can help these entities strike a
proper balance, it won't need to
simply take more taxpayer money
to shell out on a diseased system.
Sarah Overstreet is a syndicated writer for Newspaper
Enterprise Association,

Today in history

By The Associated Press
~oday is Thursday, Sept 2, the 245th dily of 1993. There are 120 days
left 1111he year.
·
Today's Highlight in HiStory:
. On Sept.. 2, 1945, Tokyo time, Ja~an fonnally surrendered to the Allies
10 ceremomes aboard the U.S.S. Missouri. World War n was over six
years and one day after it began.
'
On this date:
In 1666, t!J~ Great Fire of London broke out, destroying thousands of
homes, but killmg ooly a few people, in the several days that it burne&lt;J
In 1789, the l!.S. Treasury Department was established.
·
In 1864, !futmg the Civil War, Uf!ion Gen. Willfum T. Sherman's
forces occup1ed Atlanta, one day aftu the Confederates bad retreated.

,,I

'

lMansfield In· I•

•

PA.

76°

•!coiumbus!e1•

•

I

Arouad the nation
Late -summer
mugginess
gripped the Southeast and spread
into the Great Lakes and upper
Mississippi Valley today.
Severe thunderstorms were fore·
cast for the Plains as a jet stream
disturbance plunges south from
Canada. Severe storms with hail
and damaging winds were possible
from lower ~ichigan across the
middle Mississippi Valley into the
Red River Valley between Texas
and Oklahoma.
Clear skies and seasonably
warm temperatures were forecast

from Cali-fornia to Washington
state.
Scattered showers wete likely in
the Middle Atlantic stares, north of
a stalled front. South and east of
lhe front, hot, sticky weather with
isolated but strong thunderstorms
was forecast.
On Wednesday evening, heavy
surf advisories remained in effect
for coastal areas of Virginia, Maryland and Delaware - lhe lingering
effect of Hurricane Emily.
Strong thunderstorms downed
trees in Virginia, Tennessee, Kentucky and North Carolina on
Wednesday. Winds gusted to 62
mph at Hopkinsville, Ky. ~ore
than 2 inches of rain fell at Centre-

ville, Ala.
Record highs were poste4 in :
Asheville, N.C.; Bluefield, W.V.; •
Greenville-Spartanburg, S.C; JICkson, Ky .; and Huntsville, Ala,
which hit 98 degrees, surpassing
lhe 95 reached oo Sept. I in 1991. "
Highs today were forecast in the ~
70s across lhe Northeast, the Great
l.akesregion, the central Plains and :
Rockies. Eighties llld nineties were :
forecast in lower Michigan and ~
across much of the southan half of •
the nation, with IOOs forecast for
the deserts of southeastern Califor- "
nia and southwest Arizona.
~
The high temperature for the •
nation Wednesday was I 07 degrees
at Lake Havasu City, Ariz.
•

Washington County has four
toxic substance emitters
Demjanjuk•.. continued from page 1

ed.''

Plan should promote healthful living
as 46 percent of Americans' illnesses are smoking-related, another
10-15 percent is attributable to
alcohol (although since most alcoholics smoke, how much damage
comes from which habit is murky)
ahd being overweight contributes
to a variety of serious heallh problems.
,
Blair Justice, in his book "Who
Gets Sick: Thinking and Health,"
blames obesity for 20 percent of all
disease, physical inactivity for
another 10-15 percent and drug
addiction for another 5-10 percent
Sufficient taxes &lt;in the purchase of
substances linked to disease could
provide the money necessary for
long-term ~are of the chronically
ill.
4. For decades, insurance companies required hospitalization for
many procedures that dido 't need
it. GeUing a check meant checking

will move into Ohio
tonight as a cold front moves easL
The greatest threat for rain appears
to be over western and southern
pans of the state, gradually expanding east and north tonight.
The wet weather should wind
down rapidly Friday afternoon and
night, and a drier and cooler holiday weekend is expected.
The record high on this date in
Columbus was 100 in 1953. The
record low was 43 in 1967.
Sunset tonight at 8:03 p.m. Sunrise Friday at 7:01 a.m.

.

girlfriend or spo~se (Jackson
Browne). He's never been booked
for publicly exposing himself (Pee
Wee Herman),, He's never been
stopped for
an
tered
fireann
~n~~~c~;~~~;w
What
he (Harry
has done
is
more than 100 scholarships lhrcough
the United Negro College Fund.
helped build a special bum treatment center at Brotman Memorial
Hospital in Los Angeles. He has
opened his purse to Camp Ronald
~cDonald for Good Times, a place
for children with cancer. And, lest
it be forgotten, he ~raise millions for starving Ethiopians by cowriting and performing the nowfamous anthem "We Are The
World."
Michael Jackson has done all or
this while soaring to the dizzying
heights of pop stardom that only
such legends as Elvis Presley and
the Beatles have approached.
He has recorded four top-selling
solo albums, including "Thriller,"
the biggest seDer of all time, with
more than 42 million copies. On
the strength of that landmark LP,
he won an unprecedented eijlht
Grammy Awards (the recordmg
industry's highest honor) in one
evening.
The pop star released seven No.
I singles during the 1980s, more

By The Associated Press

~oisture

'''''

"Holy Henry! - peace IS at
hand." I wrote that two weeks
later, dispensing advice to thenPresident-elect Clinton to push
swiftly for Mideast peace. "There
is common agreement on the broad
scope of the solutions. The basic
framework is ready to be negotiat-

Stop the injustice to Michael Jackson
Joseph Perkins

conditions and high temperatures

MICH.

lines we'd read in 1993. "There
will be an autonomous West Bank
homeland for Palestinians, a Golan
Heights domestically governed .b:Y
Syria - with bolh forever demtli·
tarized under international guaran-

The DallY Sentlnei-Page-3

Wet conditions in store around·Ohio

Friday, Sept. 3

Behind the Mideast peace/effort
"They all laughed at Christopher Columbus when be said the
world was TOWid. They all laughed
when Edison recorded sound. They
alllaugbed at Wilbur and his broth·
er ... Whitney and his cotton gin ...
Fulton and his steamboat, Hershey
and his chocolate bar.... " And lhey
all laughed at Schram and his New
Year's projlnostication of an
lsraeli-Palestmian peace in 93.
But - as George and Ira Gershwin would be the rtrsl to tell you
(and your faithful columnist now
rep orts with characteristic modesty) - "Hoi Ho! Ho! Who's got
lhe last laugb now?"
The first breaking news out of
the Middle East has been tenuousbut-miraculous: A peace draft was
forged by parties that only days
earlier were not officially even
talking to each other. The government of Israel and leaders of the

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather
Accu·Weather• forecast for

I .

W.VA.

Ice

.

Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy

01893Accu·Woalhor,lnc:.

Weather
day.
South·Central Ohio
Extended forecast:
Tonight and Friday, occasional
Saturday
through ~on day:
showers and thunderstorms. Low
Fair through the period. Lows in
tonight in lhe low 70s. High on Fri- the 60s Saturday and 50s Sunday
day around 80. Chance of rain is 80 and
Monday. Highs in the 70s.
percent tonight and 90 percent Fri-

---Area death-~argaretVVinebrenner
Margaret Ellen Winebrenner;
80, Syracuse, died Wednesday,
Sept. I, 1993, at the Veterans
Memorial Hospital Extended Care
Unit in Pomeroy.
A housewife, she was born Aug.
20 1913, in Syracuse, daughter of
th~ late Thomas A. and Ha~el,Mills
Clark. She was a member of the
Syracuse Presbyterian Church and
Order of the Eastern Star.
Survivors include a son and
daughter-in-law, Roger and
Suzanne Winebrenner of Gallipolis; four grandchildren and seven

great-grandchildren; two brothers,
Thomas Clark of Lancaster and
James Clark of Cinci11nati and a
special friend, Patricia Winebrenner of Pomeroy.
She was preceded in death by a
husband, William F. Winebrenner.
Graveside services will be held
Friday at I I a.m. at the Letart Falls
Cemetery Chapel with the Rev .
Kris Robinson officiating. Arrangements arc being handled by Ewing
Funeral Home, Pomeroy.
In ltcu of flowers, memorial
contributions may be made to lhc
Syracuse Presbyterian Church. ,

Meigs announcements
Chicken BBQ
Fife reunion .
.
.
The Olive township Volunteer
The Ftfe family reumon wtll be
Fire Depanment and Ladies Auxil· held Sunday at the Kyg_er Creek
iary will hold their annual ·chicken Employees Clubhouse. Dmner will
barbecue Saturday at the Reedsville be served at noon.
Fire Station.
Barbecued chicken and barbe· Western style dance
The Gallia Twirlers will hold a
cued rib dinners will be available.
Carry out and ala' cane items will ··western ·style ~ance from 8 to II
be available. Serving starts at 11 p.m. Saturday .at the Henderson
Community Center, Henderson
a.m.
The days activities will include W.Va. The caller will be ·Mark
·
scvenH games ff)r the kids, a rafffie Clausing.
and live music starting at 6 p.m.
Girl Scout dancing
.
Big
Bend
Girl
Scout
Servtce
Round and square dance
There will be a round and Unit of Black Diamond Girl Scout
square dance at the Tuppers Plains Council is sponsoring a counu:y
VFW Hall Friday from 8 to II :30 line dancing event for all guls 10
Meigs County between the ages of
p.m. Everyone is welcome.
6 and 17.
This will be held at the Meigs
County Fairgrounds on September
II from 2to4 p.m.
Barbara West, Walton. W.Va.,
CLEVELAND (AP) - There
was one ticket sold naming all six will be teaching the line dancing
numbers drawn in Wednesday and some other fun dances 100.
night's Super Lotto game and it's
Entrance fee is $6, Girl Seoul
worth $4 million , the Ohio Lottery Annual Membership and a
said.
parent/guardian must sign the regThe winnmg ticket was sold at a istration form
Convenient Food Mart in
Willoughby.
The jack pot for Saturday night's
Super Lotto stays at $4 million.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Here arc WcdncsdQy ni ght's
Wedne sd ay admissions Ohio Lottery selections:
Linda Jones, Pomeroy, and James
Super Lotio
Spencer,
Middleport.
2-18·25-36-39-45
Wednesday
discharges - Marie
(two, eighteen, twenty-five , thirRoy,
Racine.
ty-six,thirly-ninc, forty-five)
Kicker .
R-I ·R-4-0-1
(eight, one, eight, four , zero,
one)
Pick J Numbers
6-0-6
(six , zero, six)
Pick 4 Numbers
0-2·8-5
(zero, two, eight, five)

Lottery numbers

Hospital news

While none of the top 100 toxic
substance emitters in the state of
Ohio are in Meigs County, four of
the top 20 are in nearby Washington County.
The company that emits the second highest levels of toxic substances in the state is Elkem Metal
Company in Marietta. Companies
in Marietta also took places 15 ~nd
16 while Shell Chemical in Belpre
took 17th. The Mead Corporation
in Chillicothe took 18th.
Governor George V. Voinovich
released Wednesday the list and
pledged that the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency will work
with each one individually to
develop comprehensive pollution
prevention plans.
Togeth er, these facilities
account for 74 percent of the chemical releases reported in Ohio under
state and federal right-to·lcnow
laws . The plans will show how
companies can reduce the amoum
of waste they release to the environment, and s;tvc money by makmg more efficieni use of raw materials.
The governor's statement came
as he prepared to canoe the Upper
Cuyahoga River with members of
the press on his third annual press
briefing on environmental initiatives.
"I have asked Ohio EPA Direc. tor Don Schregardus to give me an
outline within 90 days of how the
Agency will enact this directive.
Then I will personally write to the

Stocks
Am Ele Power................... .38 3/8
Ashland Oil... ..................... 34 1/4
AT&amp;T.................................63 1/11
Bank One...........................41 1/4
·Bob Ev;ms ......................... 18 1/4
Charming Shop................. .12 3!11
Champion Ind.................. .13 1/4
City Holding.......... ............ 27
Federal Mogul... .................25 1/2
Goodyear T&amp;R ................. .42 1/8
Lands End..........................35 5!11
Limited Inc......................... 22 5!11
~ultimedia lnc .................. .32 5!11
Point Bancorp .................. .. l4
Rax Restaurant: ................. .l/32
Reliance Elechic ................I9 3/4
Robbins&amp;Myers ................. I9
Shoney's Ine:.....................21 3/4
Star Bank..................... ....... 35 1/2
Wendy lnt'l.. ...................... l4 3/4
Worlhington lnd ................. 30 1/2
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided· by
Kemper Securities, Inc., o
Gallipolis.

COLONY THEATRE
TONIGHT

LAST ACTION HERO PG13
STARTING FR1DAY
WALTER MATTHAU,
CHRISTOPHER LLOYD IN

DENNIS THE MENACE PG
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
AOMISSION SUO
446.(1!123

We have the easy

DRAPER LADDERS

CEO's of these companies to
impress upon them the Importance
of this initiative," Voinovich said.
Voinovich pointed out that66 of
the 100 companies on the list participate in the "33/50" program, a
pollution prevention program that
targets 17 commonly used toxic
chemicals for reduction. "We're
fifth in the nation in that program,
and first in the Midwest. Thanks to
our aggressive efforts to make
companies aware of its importanCe.
Now were ready to take the next
step, to get specialized plans for
our largest emitters."
Voinovich also advocated passage of Issue I, the ballot initiative
that authorizes lhe sale of bonds for
parks and natural resource preservation.

depo~tion. order w~s dela&gt;:"c!f to

permll revtew of mne peuuons
seeking a new hial.
.
Etght Supreme Coun JUdges and
Israel's attomer general have recommended agamst a new hial, citing the danger of double jeopardy
and saying legal proceedings
against Demjanjuk have already
dragged on for 100 long. .
.
Two pettUoners submitted wntten. argumeniS to Orr toda~ to back
thetr demands for a new tnal. One,
the World Jew1sh Cong_ress, argued
there w.as sufflctent evtdence for a
new tnal and that lsrael ·had an
obligation to prosecute the 73-yearold Demjanjuk.
In July, the Supreme Court
overturned Demjanjuk's 1988 conviction and death sentence as the

,..---Local briefs'.-..----,
Continued t'rom page 1
Sheriff's Department with driving under the influence, driving
under suspension and failure to control following a one-vehtcle
crash on Beech Grove Road Wednesday night
Delmas K. Goff, 37, was southbound on Beech Grove Road
when his 1976 Chevrolet pickup went off the left side of the road,
struck a drain tile and large rock and came to rest on property
owned by Don Blazer. Light damajle was listed to lhe truck.
Goff was held in the county jail pending a hearing in ~eigs
County Court.

•

:

gas chamber operator ."Ivan the:'
Terrible" of the Trebhnlca death
camp.
;
The judges found there was convincing evidence that Demjanjukc
was a member of the so-called
Trawniki unit of Nazi guards that
assisted in the killing of Jews. The
high coun also found he was posted at the Sobibor death camp and
the Flossenburg and Regeilsburg
concentration camps.
But the judges at the time recommended against a new hial1 say-.
ing too much time had lapsed ill
legal proceedings against Demjanjuk
•
·

Hospital news

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Sept. l
Edward Spriggs, Doris ~ace,
Doris ~eyers, Debra ~usick, Ben- .
jamin Ewing, Bryce Darst, Bonnie
Coon, Clarence Stewan, Gerttude
·scou.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446·4524

7

Sheriff requesting information
Meigs County Sheriff James ~. Soulsby has requested information from Gallia and Jackson counties on two suspects being investigated in the burglaries of area churches.
Soulsby said the Eden Church at Reedsvill~ and the Joppa
Church off State Route 681 were entered around Aug. 14.

EMS responds to seven calls
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency ~edical Service
respOnded to seven calls for assistance overnight. Units responding
include:
Wednesday - 1:51 p.m. Tup,
pers Plains Squad and First
Responders to ~in Street for Marvin Walker who was transported to
St. Joseph's Hospiial: 4:06p.m .
Middleport to Page Street for
James Spencer who was transponed to Veterans Memoria\ Hospital ;
6:03 p.m. Middleport Volunteer
Fire Department to State Route 7
for a fire involving a vehicle owned
by Serena Robinson: 10:22 p.m .
Middleport to Chestnut Street for
Pete Quick who was tteated at the
scene.
Thursday - 2:47 a.m. Middle-

port to North Second Street for
Michael Grueser who was transported to VMH; 5:01 a.m. Middlepan to Cole Street for Julie Miller
who was transported to VMH; 6:32
a.m.
Mary~~~ ef~~t1o~~C~on~.do:r~S~tr~ee;.t~£~pr~~
VMH.
. '~·.!'

1

KANAUGA DRIVE -IN
FRI., SAT., SUN.

WESLEY SNIPES, SEAN CONNERY
IN
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AND
PAULY SHORE IN

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110 West Main

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992·2284

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I Thursday, September 2, 1993

T~e

·Sports

Daily Sentinel

year while the Blue Devils appear
to have an edge offensively.
Meigs, with eight lettermen, will
be performing under a new head
coac h. MHS graduate Mike
Chancey, son of former Meigs head
coac h Charlie Chancey, has
replaced M1ke Staggs as Marauder
boss. Staggs resigned earlier this
summer after four losing seasons at
MHS. . . .
.
Galhpohs IS commg of~ a 6-4

ca mpai~n while th e M,araudcrs
hope to tmprove last years 2-8 fm1sh. Gall1pol1s blanked _thc Maraudcrs 21-0 on Memonnl F1eld 1n
1'1~ "

I

Expe~ted

to lead Coac h
Chancey s squad are semor co-capta1n s Heath Hudson, wmgback ,
Jared Hill, tailback and Scott Peterson, fullback. Up front, Marauder
veterans i~clude Jack Kennedy and
Walt Wtlhams, tackles.

opener against Gallia Academy, set for Friday at
7:30 p.m . at Bob Roberts Field in Pomeroy.
(Photo by Dave Harris)

MARAUDERS PREPARE FOR OPENERThe Meigs Marauders were going hard at i(
Wednesday afternoon getting ready for their

Cleveland Browns to spray Pepper
into eyes of opposing offenses
prac tice hard enough dis turbed
him .
"Can you believe that? I have
never missed a practice in my
life," Johnson said. "I have never
been a guy to take it easy in practice. It's insulting for htm to say
that."
John son, a second-round pick
out of Ohio State in 1986 and a Pro
Bowl choice in 1990, was courted
by several teams this week. He said
he narrowed his choices to Cleveland, Kansas City and Washington
before finally settling on th e
Browns.
The Los Angeles Raiders, he
said, called shortly before he got on
the plane to Cleveland.
The Browns won out because of
Johnson' s ties to Belichick and
because of the city's prox imity to
hi s hometown, Detroit, and to his
son, Diome, who lives in Colum bus.
" It's a great opportunity to start
off with a ballclub that's on th e
rise," Johnson said. "I was looking at the Giants more as leveling
off."
The Browns have become something of a refu ge for former Giants.
At least nine ex-Giants have follo wed Belichic k to Cleveland,
including cornerback Everso n
Walls and kicker Matt Stover.
"He feels ~ood about coming
here, and we feel good about having him ," Bclichick said. " He's
loose. he plays with a lot of enthu-

sias m, a 'Ioi of emotion, and he
always has a sm ile on his fa ce,
even on game day. '
Johnson became expendable in
New York beca use the Gian ts
acquired linebackers Carlton Bailey and Michael Brooks. Bailey is
ticketed fo r Johnson's old starting
job.
Belichick said he hoped Johnson
would pick up the Browns' dcfc nsi ve sc hemes quickly enough to
pla y in Sunday's season opener
agai nst the Cincinnati Bengals.
"He's had a lot of experience.
Hopefull y we can give him a crash
course, " Belie hick said.
Before Johnson arrived, Cleveland 's starting linebackers were
David Brandon and Clay Malthews
on the outside, Mike Johnson on
the inside. Owner Art Modell said
Bcli chick would find plenty of
playing time for all of them.
"Suffi ce to say that we didn 't
brin g him here to sit on th e
bench," owner Art Modell said.
"This is a major acquisition for

~

. Chancey is uncertain who he
wJII start at the quarterback slot.
Jeremy _Gnmm appeared to have
the startmg nod,but suffered a broken ha_nd m scnmmag~ last week,
and wtll be out of acuon at least
four weeks. Brent Hans_on•. sopho~ore or David Fetty, JUR!or, are
hsted as probable starters at that
spot.
_ Th_c.Marauders will play a basic
delcnsc, led by vetera n Tom
Cremeans at nose tackle..
Shannon Staats, Williams, Hudson, Shawn Petrte, Cremeans, and

'.0

~ill all saw action against GAHS
m the '92 season opener.
Gallipolis is coming off two
pre-season scrimmages. The Blue
Devils outscored Fairland 3-2. but
were outscored 4. 3 by Vmton
County last weekend.
.
.
It w1ll be the 21s t meeung
between the two schools. Gallipolis
holds the upper hand with 12 wins
agai nst eight setbacks.
Other than the normal bumps
and ~uises. Co"&lt;:h Saunders' Bl~e
Dev1ls enter Fnday ' s opener tn
~oorl physical condi tion.

his duties also include blocking.
His backfield mate and fraternity brother, fullback Glenn Pedro, is
an expert blocker. Parker said.
" I like to think that as the season goes on I will evolve and be
ab le to block as well for him in
return as he does for me," Parker
said.
Parker also praises the offensive
line.

GAHS Blue Devils
(Offense)
Wt. Yr.
Pos.·PLA YER
· TE-Brett Cremeens ........... 210
3
3
LT-Dy Ian Evans ............... 280
4
LG-Dwain Beaver ............ 205
2
C-Casey Canaday ........... 188
4
RG-Paul Sturgill ............... 185
4
RT-Matt Loveday ............. 235
SE-Ryan Barnes .............. .145
3
4
QB-Chad Barnes ............. .155
3
FB-Heath Hutchinson ....... 150
4
LH-Jam ie Caldwell .......... 165
2
RH-Jesse Stacy ................. 170
Defense
Ends - Burt Wood (2-200) and
Ca ld we ll ; Tackles- Evans and
Casey; Middle guard - Sturgill:
linebackers - Matt Wamsley (4190) and Troy Duncan (3-165) :
Cornerbacks - Matt Donm[lly (44- 160) and Seth Davis (3-130):
Strong safety - Hutchinsqn; Free
safety - C. Barnes; Punter and
kickoffs - Cremeens: Kicker Brandon Hill (3-130).
Meigs Marauders
(Offense)
Pos.-PLA YER
Wt. Yr.
LE-Adam Wyatt.. ........: .... I55
3
Or-David Fetty ................. 190
3
LT-Walt Williams ............230
3
LG-Bert Mash .................. 170
2
C-Shawn Petrie ............... 200
3
RG-Shannon Staats ..........200
3
RT-Jake Kennedy .............225
3
SE-Chad Duncan .............. 160
4
QB-Brent Hanson ............. l35
2
Or-David Fetty ................. 190
3
WB-Heath Hudson ........... 170
4
FB-Scott Peterson.:.......... .190
4
TB-Jared Hill ..... ............... 170
3
Defense
Ends - Staats and Mash or
Shawn Cremeans ((4-170); Tack!cs - Ke nn edy and Petrie; Nose
tackle - Tom Cremeans (4-180):
Lin ebackers - Peterson and Hudson: Monster - Hill; Strong safety
- Travis Curtis (2-145); Free safely
- Duncan; Cornerback - Wyatt;

Punter - Kennedy ; Kicker
Kenhedy; PAT- Kennedy.
GAME SITE
Bob Roberts Field
· Pomeroy
Kickoff Time:. 7:30p.m.

· Suund_crs wiU start nine leuermen agamst Metgs, led by Ch~d
Barnes at quarterback and Jamte '
Caldwell at left half. Up front ••
Brett Cremeens, Dylan Evans, Paul
Sturg11l, D:-vam Beaver and Matt~
Loved~y wtll be the ~nes to watch
offenstvely. Defenstvely, Evans, •
Seth Davis and Burt Wood, along •
with Sturgill Heath Hutchinson
Chad Barnes ~d Troy Duncan are
expected to carry. the load.
. In other area games Friday,
River Valley plays at Point Pleasant, Eastern is at Waterford,
Za~esville_Rosecrans at Sou~m.
Phtlo at Vmton County, Hamlin at
Wahama, Athens at Ni:lsonvillc- ~
York, Logan at New Lexington,:.
Grove City at Marietta, Warren ,
Local at Belpre, Portsmouth at
Chillicothe, Oak Hill at Coal Grove
and on Saturday, WeUston plays
Jackson.
.

at :

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The Browns also signed comerback Stacey Hairston to strengthen
their thin secondary. Hairston, a
thre e- year Ca nadian Football
League veteran, was waived Monday by Seattle.
To make room for Hairston, the
Browns released guard Rod Mil stead. They did not immediately
announce a move making room for
Johnson .

"A lineman might block an d
giv e th e ope n field to score a
touchdown, but the lineman won't
get th e credit," Pedro said. "I
always like to give the credit back
to them because I couldn' t score
without them."
Marshall, the defending NCAA
Divis ion 1-AA champion, will open
its season Saturday at home against
Morehead State.

•

SAVE THIS WEEK ON .KEDS
CHAMPION LEATHER AND
CHAMPION CANVAS.

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REVIEW
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Under NFL niles, Bartrum will
be unable to suit up for any games
until the Chiefs activate him to the
roster. Each team must identify a
49-player roster for each game on
each Friday before a regular season
game, but clubs can only dress 45
'players and a third quanerl;&gt;ack for
each regular or post-season game.

By RICK WARNER
enter the season with a total of nine
AP Football Wriler
career com pletions. But th e
Revenge will ill' a prime moti- Huskies should get plenty of punch
vation for both teams in Saturday's from junior tailback Napoleon
Washington-Stanford game.
Kaufman, who gained 1,045 yards
No. 15 Stanford wants to end its last season.
Washington has won 13 straight
nine-game losing streak against
Washington , including last year's at home, while Stanford has lost six
cmbl!rrassing 41-7 defeat And No. consecutive season openers·. Both
12 Washington is furious at Stan- streaks will continue ... WASH. ford coach Bill Walsh, who called INGTON 24-21.
No. 1 Florida St.
the Huskies •'mercenaries" in an
(minus
31) at Duke
offseason speech that harshly critiin ACC opener ...
Seminoles
roll
cized the school's football proFLORIDA
ST.
48-14.
!lram.
1
No.2 Alabama (minus 34)
Walsh later apologized and was
reprimanded by the Pac-10 Confervs. Tulane at Biriningliam
Tide's 23-game win streak is
once, but Washington coach Jim
t.a mbright has n' t forgotten the nation's longest ... ALABAMA 42ri:marks.
7.
• "He's got such a classy image,
Washington St. (plus 23 l/2)
tlut it's hard to fmd class in what he
at No. 3 Michigan
said," said Lambright, who took
Wolverines seeking siltth
dver Aug . 22 after Don James straight Big Ten title ... MICIDrFsigned to protest a two-year bowl GAN 52-10.
ban and other sanctions against
No. 4 Miami ·(minus 6 l/2)
'{lashington by the Pac-10.
at No. 20 Boston College
Walsh,
who
claims
his
speech
BC's last win over Hurricanes
1
was misinterpreted, said he doesn't was 1984 "Hail Mary" game ...
think the controversy will affect the MIAMI 28-14.
!lame at Husky Stadium.
LSU (plus 19)
; "I really don't think players are
at No. S Teltas A&amp;M
liS concerned with these peripheral
Aggies have won 21 straight in
things as the press and the coach- regular season ... TEXAS A&amp;M
35-7.
4s." he said.
Ball St. (no line)
I The furor over Walsh 's comat No. 6 Syracuse
ments and Washington 's off-theDavid Letterman's school no
field problems have almost overs:hadowed the early s howdown match for Orangemen ... SYRA'
between last year's Pac-t 0 co - CUSE 56-7.
Northwestern (plus 28) ·
c)lampions.
at No.7 Notre Dame
Stanford lost seven starters from
Irish have beaten Wildcats 12
last year' s defense , but prolific
(iasser Steve Stenstrom returns on straight times ... NOTRE DAME
offense along with a strong SUJl· 28-10.
Arkansas St. (no·line)
porting cast. The Cardinal also will
at No. 8 Florida
get contributions from one of the
Why?
... FLORIDA 58-0.
11est freshmen classes in the counNorth
Texas (no line)
try.
at
No. 9 Nebraska
; " We're very young and inexpeAnother easy opener for the
nenced, but we're also very intense
and enthusiastic," Walsh said. ; 'I Cornhuskers ... NEBRASKA 52-0.
Louisiana Tech (no line)
tl/i nk we'll get better and better' as
al No. 10 Tennessee
tl!c s~on progresses."
V.ols '. Heath Shuler is one of
!: Wqs!lill&amp;lQJl is ineltperienced at
qUarterback, where starter Damon nation's best QBs ... TENNESSEE
ffitard and backup Eric Bjornson 47-13.
I .••~ •

· Texas (plus 13)
at No. 11 Colorado
Buffs survive scare from
Longhorns ... COLORADO 2A-23 .
Texas-EI Paso
(plus 28) at No; 13 Arizona
Wildcats could go to first Rose
Bowl ... ARIZONA 35-0.
South CaroUna
(plus 10) at No. 14 Georgia
Bulldogs win border war ...
GEORGIA21-17.
Ohio (no line)
at No. 16 North Carolina
Tar Heels impressive against
Southern Cal ... NORTH CAROLINA44-6.
Minnesota (plus 21)
at No. 17 Penn St.
Nittany Lions make Big Ten
debut ... PENN ST. 35-0.
Rice (plus 15)
at No. 18 Oblo St.
Buckeyes 17-2-2 vs. SWC
teams ... OHIO ST. 27-10.
No. 19 BYU (minus 17)
at New Mexico
Cougars haven't been shut out
in 224 games ... BYU 45-17.
No. 21 Oklahoma (minus 17)
at Texas Christian
Sooners showcase improved
running game ... OKLAHOMA 3217.
UNL V (no line)
al No. 22 Clemson
Tigers have won nine ·of last I 0
season openers ... CLEMSON 447.
Memphis St. (plus 4)
at No. 23 Mississippi St.
Tigers upset the Bulldogs ...
MEMPIDS ST. 21-20.
Purdue (plus 13)
at No. 24 North Carolina St.
Mike O'Cain wins first game as
Wolfpack coach ... N.C. ST. 23-10.
No. 25 Fresno St.
(plus 2) at Baylor
Chuck Reedy loses coaching
debut for Bears ... FRESNO ST.
2A-17.
Last week: 1-1 (strai ght) ; 2-0
(spread).
Season : 1-1 (straight); 2-0
(spread).

The Chiefs can activate him at any in pre-sea'Son action, Bartrum saw
action on offense and special
time.
Starting tig·ht end Jonathan •teams. In a recent nationally teleHayes returns for his ninth year in vised game against the Bills, Chiefs
the NFL and his fourth as a starter. head coach Marty Schottenheimer
His backups are Keith Cash and was quoted as as saying that
Mike Dyal. One national publica- Bartrum had the best set of hands
tion that came out Wednesday gave of anyone in camp. Bartrum was
Bartrum excellent ink. The latest tied for ftrst on the team in tackles
edition of the Pro Football Weekly on special teams with three. Two of
reported in the Chiefs preview those tackles made the highlight
" Back-ups Keith Cash and Mike reels. Two weeks ago Bartrum had
Dyal have reputations as good a bone-jarring tackle of former
receivers but will be pushed by Ohio State star Roberi Smitb in a
newcomer Mike Bartrum, whose game against the Vikings. Last Frisure hands made him a frequent day night Bartrum made a beautiful
open field tackle on former MarMontana target in camp."
Although he did not catch a pass shall teammate Troy Brown.

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Being butts ofjokes part of Bengals'
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Revenge foremost on Washington's
agenda in coming bout vs. Stanford

us.''

Marshall's Parker looking to shed 'Hands
of Stone' nickname, gain more weight
HUNTINGTON , W.Va. (AP)
- Marshall tailback Chris Parker
shares two things with professional
boxer Robert Duran: the nickname
" Hands of Stone" and trouble
making weight.
Duran constantl y gai ned or
shcdded pounds to fight in various
weight divisions.
Parker, a 5-foot-11 , 189-pound
sophomore from Lynchburg, Va.,
" not big enough to run over anybody," said he hopes to increase
his playing weight by five pounds.
"I gain it, but when I go out
there and sweat then I lose it," he
said. "I got up to 194 one time and
I was happy for a few days, but
then I was back down to 188 and
192."
Duran is proud of his " Hands of
Stone" tag, but Parker is trying to
shed his.
As Orlando Hatchett's backup
last seaso n, Parker gained 602
yards on 100 carries. But he caught
just three passes for 42 yards, while
Hatchett had 39 for 454 yards.
' 'When I first started, they used
to call me 'Hands of Stone,'"
Parker said. 'I had a problem catching. I think it was more a problem
of relaxing more than sort of just
catching.
"I' m catchi ng much better
now." he said. " I still drop one
now and then, but I have good
hands now."
Parker believes he can contribute up to 200 yards in total
offense a game. But he realizes that

.

By DAVE HARRIS"
Bartrum said he wa.s happy to
Sentinel Correspondent
stay with the Chiefs, although the
Mike Bartrum is back with the San Diego Chargers expressed an
Kansas City Chiefs. The former interest in the former MarshaU AllMeigs Marauder standout, was American. Bartrum was contacted
waived on Monday by the Chiefs, on Tuesday evening at the home of
and then re-signed with the team on backup quarterback Matt Blunden.
Tuesday afternoon when the teams Bartrum and his wife Jennifer are
were allowed to expand rosters · staying with the Blundens while
from 45 to. 53 players.
they look for an apartrnenL

Pagl •

GAHS-Meigs gri·d ···neups

By CHUCK MELVIN
BEREA, Ohio (AP) -When he
abruptly found himself un employed, linebacker Pepper Johnson
turned to an old friend.
Still smarting after being cut by
th e New York Giants, Johnso n
agreed to terms Wednesday ~th
the Cleveland Brow ns, reuniting
him with coach Bill Belichick.
Belichick was Johnson 's defensive coordinator in New York until
1991.
"I had a ,pretty decent relationship with him when he was the
defensive coordin ator with the
Giants," Johnson said. " And right
now, yo u co uld say I need a
friend."
Johnso n, 29, led the Giants in
tackles four of the last five years
but was let go Monday by new
Giants coach Dan Reeves. A weeklong boycott at the start of training
camp had done little to endear the
outspoken Johnson to Reeves.
Reeves and Johnso n clashed
when Reeves made plan s to use
Johnso n as an outside linebacker
without disc ussing the move with
him . Reeves also reportedly questioned Johnson's work eth ic.
Johnso n has been a starter at
inside linebacker fo r most of his
career.
" It 's not that I didn 't wa nt to
play outs ide linebacker," he said .
"It's the way outside linebacker
was presented to me. ''
The sugges tio n tha t he doesn' t

C-h{efs re-sign ex-Meigs, Marshall star Bartrum

Thursday, September 2, 1813

Meigs will host GAHS in 1993 grid opener
Meigs will host Gallipolis Friday on Bob Roberts Field,
Pomeroy. It wiU be the 1993 football opener for both schools.
Kickoff is set for7:30 p.m.
Gallia Academy High School
enters the season opener with 14
lettermen and a veteran coach in
Brent Saunders, now in his lith
yc·~r al his alm·1 mater
'on pa.per, 'i t look~ like Meigs
may be tougher defensively this

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

5

"
I',

By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP)- Heard
the Qncinnati Bengals' jokes? Like
the one about being the San Diego
Padres of the NFL? The college allstars in stripes?
"They have to have somebody
to talk about, somebody to mock,"
general manager Mike Brown said
Wednesday, while watching his
maligned team work out. "Until
you establish you're a good team ,
they'll pin the donkey's tail on you.
That's what we're going through
now. But we'll survive it."
, That's the goal for now - survive an overhaul that has left them
w.i th four rookie starters and a
rookie kicker heading into their
season opener Sunday in Cleveland.
The Bepgals have one of the
lowest payrolls and youngest teams
in lhe: Ieague. Twenty-six playe~s
have ·a year or less NFL expert. cnce. ·DAve Shu! a, at age 34 the
leag ue' s youngest head coach, is
older than anyone on the roster.
Nobody expects much from
them this l'.car, not even the coaching staff and front office that put
this team together.
"They're going to grow together. They're good players; they're
just young," Brown said. "Soon
enough, they'll be a good team. I
don'tknow when that will be. But I
do believe th ey will be a good

smallest - and some of the lowest
expectations.
.J'icket sales are off- the home
opener Sept. 12 against lnd!anapolis isn't sold out, Jeopardtzmg a
five-year streak of home sellouts.
And critics have dubbed the club
the San Diego Padres of the NFL
for dumping high-salaried players.
Brown said the team is in good
shape fmancially and didn't cut ~y
players to save money. Brown ts
waiting until next year, when a
league-wide salary cap probably
wiU be in place, to m~~ .any Significant free-agent acqmstbons.
" If we have a sufficient income,
it would be fun to be in position to
sign a player or two ," he said.
" We'll be under the cap, I'm sure,
and that will give us flexibility that
half the teams in this league won't
have. ''

The few veterans who survived

the purge aren ' t surprised that
they're suddenly surrounded by a
bunch of just-out-of-college kids .
Two losing seasons led them to
expect as much.
"I think if you're going to
rebuild the team and you're going
to replace a few key members,
that's one thing," Kozerski said.
"But if you're going to replace as
many key members as we did,
you'd better b ~ willing to make
drastic changes. ·
"When you replace Anthony
Munoz, Boomer Esiason, Eddie
Brown, Tim McGee, Rodney Holman, Jim Riggs, David Fulcher,
Eric Thomas and a countless number of other guys, you'd better be
ready to go all the way with it. If
you' re going to be a part of the
effort after all those changes, you'd
better be willing to go along with
all those changes and be prepared
for it."

RG soccer team battles
Marietta to scoreless
tie for season opener

The season opener for the Uni- put it behind the net." ·
The second period saw justificaversity of Rio Grande soccer team
team. ''
tion
of Morrissey's confidence in
For now, they're just a young resulted in a 0-0 tic between the
his
upperclass
leadership, as markteam trying to get recognized by Redm en and Marietta Tuesday at
ing
forwards
Michael Bu sh and
Marietta, but Coach Scott Morrisfans and each other.
"I k.vow most people," said sey was pleased with the team's Greg J,ank e short-circuited each
Marietta attempt at an attack. In
offensive lineman Bruce Kozersk.i, effort.
defense,
newcomer Kristan MorDue
to
NCAA
Division
Ill
one of four holdovers from the
gan-Jones
provided solid support as
rul
es,
there
was
no
overtim
e
1988 Super Bowl team. " Since
th
e
sweeper
, while fres hm an
allowed
for
the
con
tes
t,
but
had
cut-down day, there have been a lot
Dwain Allahar played a composed
there
been
an
extra
period
Morrisof people coming in and out. So
there arc fa ces that change on a sey felt a winning goal would have game from the midfielder position.
The Redmen took 16 shots on goal
been at hand.
daily basis."
for th e game to 10 for Marietta ,
"
It
would
have
been
a
matter
of
Brown planned this overhaul,
while
Jim Egner recorded five
but didn 't think: it would be quite time before we were successful in saves at the goalkeeper's slot.
this drastic. All he knew was that scoring/' he said. "Ove rall , I was
"It may not have been a winning
the Bengals couldn't continue with very pleased with the guys' effort." result, but the team had a very posiThe Rcdmen overcame a disapthe team that had won eight games
pointing
ftrst half in which a direc t tive feeling when it left the field,"
the last two seasons.
style of play, offering little in the said Morrissey, who entered his
" We're like a lot of teams fifth season at the helm of the Redwe start out not knowing where way of combinations or attack, kept men program with a 26-42-2
we're gQiltg," Brown said. "But it them from scoring.
"We managed to threaten at record.
became evident quickly enough ·
Opening its 1993 schedule with
where we needed to go, and we times, but for the most p,art it was a five games straight on the road, Rio
made the changes we thought were pretty sloppy first half, ' Morrissey Grande's travels be~il! in earnest
necessary. You evolve into it, play- noted. "We made adjustments at this weekend when 1l meets Sheper by player, day by dar-"
. the half, and it was a totally differ- herd (W.Va.) on Saturday and
They'v.c evolved tnto a team ent team, almost a textbook exam- Wheeling Jesuit Sunday, with both
that will have one of the lowest ple of how to play soccer. We had games to be played in Wheeling.
payrolls in the NFL - . the players' 45 minutes of domineerin~ soccer,
association figures it will b~ the yet the only thing, we didn t do was

*
PER MONTH TO QUALIFIED APPLICANTS
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�Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Thu,.day, September 2,1993

Thursday, September 2, 1993

Pomeroy-Middlef)ort, Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

In NL affairs,

Church group meets recently

Cards down Reds 7-4; Giants edge Braves in series opener

The Reedsville Nazarene cards were signed for the sick and
Women 's Society met recently at shut-in. Devotions wen: by Janelle
lhechurch.
Sargent a readini on " God's
The meeting was called 10 a-tier Incredible Promises.
by President Tamie Putman and the
Attending were Crystal Vagalopening prayer was by Janelle Sar- song, Dian Bise, Kristi Boston,
gent. Fundraisers were discussed Linda Putman, Cathy Maste~. Sue
and it was decided the group will Suttle, Barb Masters, Tam• Putsell Tom Wat products and the . man , Wendy Wilfong •. Barb
money will go toward the building Swartz, Janelle Sargent, J1ll lett,
fund. It was also decided that the Evelyn Barr, Anna Skeels , Judy
group will tour the Amish Country Elkins, Greua Suttle, Mary Greer,
in October and they will also be Marlene Putman, ~ Lantz, Sue
helping a needy family at Christ- Douglas and Bonn~e R•chards. .
mas.
·. The next meeting wdl be w1th
There wen: 82 shut-in calls and Barb and Cathy Masters.

ST. LOUIS (AP ) - Bob
Tewksbury is having a good season . Maybe too good for the St.
Louis Cardinals' budget.
" Hopefully, I can pitch well
eqough to convince them to talce
me back," Tewksbury said after
beating the Ci ncinnati Reds 7-4
Wednesda y night. " ! don ' t care
about putting up numbers for anyone else to see. Obviously, I like it
here and I want to·stay. "
The problem might be money.
Tewksbury won a $2.625 million
contract in arbitration in the offseason after goi ng 16-5 wi th a 2.16
ERA. There's been speculation that
the Cardinals will allow Tewksbury
to become a free agent rather than
risk losing -agu in in arbitration.
This year, Tewksbury's ERA is
3.78, but he's 15-8 and still one of
the top control pitchers in the major
leagues, with only 17 walks in 190
1/3 innings.
"Yeah, my ERA is a IiUie higher, but it's decent, " Tewksbury
said. " ! know people say I've
given up a lot of hits, but when you
add walks to the hits I'm right in
line with a lot of other pitchers. "
Tewksbury said he tries not to
think about his future when he's on
the mound.
"There',s nothing you can do
about it but go out and try to do

your job," Tewksbury said.
Reardon was particularl y upset
Tewksbury worked seven about Gillcey's home run.
innings against the Reds, allowing
" The home run was stupid, "
lhrce runs on seven hi ts. Omar Oli- Reardon said. " It was a fal;tball
vares allowed a run in the eighth over the middle of the plate. I was
before Mike Perez pitched a score- so (mad) at that point about the hit
less ninth for his fourlh save.
(by Zeile). Once I gave up the lead,
Tewksbury looked like he'd end I should have kept my head, but I
up with the loss when he left trail- didn't.
ing 3-1, b'ut the Cardinals scored
Hal Morris' run-scoring single
five ru ns in the bottom of the sev- in the fust gave the Reds the lead.
enth to talce a 6-3 lead.
Tim CosiO homered in the sixth for
·
Rod Bre wer started the rally Cincinnati.
with a one-out pinch single off
Reds starter John Roper allowed
reliever Scott Service, who was a run on six hits in 5 1/3 innings.
replaced by Jeff Reardon (3-5).
Elsewhere in the NL, it was San
Prior to Wednesday, Reardon had Francisco 3, Atlanta 2; Houston 3,
stranded all 27 runners he had New YOrk 2; Philadelphia 4,
inherited, bill Ozzie Smith ruined Chicago 1; San Diego 13 , Florida
that mark with an RBI single.
5; Pittsburgh 5, Los Angeles I ; and
With two outs, Todd Zeile sin- Montreall1, Colorado 3.
· Giants 3, Braves 2
gled on an 0-2 pitch for two runs,
John Patterson woke up on the
giving the Cardinals th~ lead and
himself a career high with 83 RB!s. 60-day disabled list and went to
Bernard Gilkey followed with his bed as hero for a day. ~ ·
14th home run.
Patterson ' s first swing of the
Smith was 3-for-3 with an RBI 1993 season was good for his first
and stole his 20th base, giving him major league home run and a twogame swing in the NL West race as
16 consecutive 20-steal seasons.
Cincinnati man(\ger Davey the San Francisco Giants defeated
Johnson was philosophical about the Atlanta Braves 3-2 Wednesday
night.
Reardoo' s performance.
The victory broke San Francis" He's been the most dependable guy out of the bullpen all year, co's four -game losinJ: streak
and tonight he had his worst outing against the Braves and mcreased
of the year," Johnson said.
I I

the Giants' lead to 4 In games.
Th e Giants , swept in three
games last week at San Francisco
and losers 10 the Braves on Tuesday night, won for the third time in
th eir ,last eig ht games. II was
Atlanta's second loss in 10 g'anles
and fourlh in 21.
Patterson, out the entire season
after undergoing offseason shoulder surgery, was recalled from his
injury rehabilitation assignment
wilh Class A San Jose earlier in the
day.
Pinch hitting for pitcher Mike
Jackson (6-5) to lead off the ninth
inning, he watched two balls from
Marie Wohlers (5-2) befon: he hit a
shot over lhe right field fence.
"It's a dream that anybodr that
plays baseball thinks about,' Patterson said. "Actually, in my
dreams it was wilh the bases loaded, but this was just as good.
"Of course, it came as a surprise. I was just looking for something to hit hard. Without a doubt,
it's the biggest hit I've ever gotten. ••
"We feel better about ourselves," San Francisco manager
Dusty Baker said. "This was one
of the hest executed games we've
played in a while."
Rod Beck earned his 39th save
by getting the finallhree outs.

The Giants tied it2-2 in the sev- short of lhe modem NL record set
enth on an RBI bloop single by by the Pittsburgh Piraies in 1924Dave Martinez off Atlanta starter' 25. The AL record is 308 games by
John Smaltz.
the New York Yanlcees 1931-33 . .
The win was just as helpful 10
Padres13, Marlins S
the Giants' spirit as it was 10 their
Archi Cianfrocco, Jeff Gardner
place in the standings, according to and Derek Bell paced a 17-hit
Atlanta outfielder Otis Nixon.
attack with three hits each for San
"The way they won should real - Diego in Miami.
ly boost their spirits," he said. "A
And y Benes ( 15-10) tied his
guy up from the min ors, · fi rst career high for wins.
swmg, first major league homer.
Rya n Bowen (S-12) gave up
It's a big pickup for them.''
four runs in I 1/3 innings before
Astros 3, Mets 2
leaving with a slight sprain to his
Doug Drabek snapped a career right knee.
high seven-game losmg streak and
Pirates S, Dodgers 1
visiting Houston beat New York
Rookie AI Martin homered off
for the eighth time in nine games Tom Candiotti (8-6) and drove in
Ibis year.
four runs, while rookie Steve
Drabek (8 -15) struck out two, Cooke (9·8) scattered eight hits in
walked three and gave up seven Pittbsurgh.
hits in 7 1/3 innings to earn his first
Cooke has the most wins by, a
win since July 4. Sid Fernandez (3- Pirates rookie left-bander since
5) was the loser.
Woody Fryman went 12-9 in 1966.
Phillies 4, Cubs 1
Expos 11, Rockies 3
Jim Eisenreich drove in two
Sean Berry homered twice and·
runs and Terry Mulholland (1 2-9) Dennis Martinez (13-8) pitched
pitched a six-hitter to win his first eight innings of five-hit ball as visgame since Aug. 3 for vi siting iting Montreal won its seventh
Philadelphia.
straight game.
Mike Harkey (8-8) had a one-hit
Berry was 3-for-3 and Larry
shutout until the Phillies scored Walker went 4-for-5 with four
twice in the seventh.
RB!s.
It was the 149th straight game in
Kent Bottenfield (4- 10) allowed
which the Phillies have scored, one six runs on eight hits and one wallc. :

In AL action,

Indians get 22 hits to pound Twins 12-7; ChiSox top Yanks
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Minnesota's Chuck Knoblauch had a
premonition. It could have gone
either way, but - hke the game broke in Cleveland's favor.
" !kind of had a feeling that one
of us was going to score a lot of
runs," Knoblauch said. Cleveland
erupted for a 12-7wm Wednesday
night :over the Twms, backed by a
season-high 22-hit attaclc.
After holding the Indians scoreless for 15 innings during Tuesday's 22-inning marathon Twins
win, Minnesota couldn't contain
ClevelB!ld any longer.
The Indians exploded for five
runs and seven hits in the first
inning on Wednesday. Manager
Mike Hargrove said he' s come to
expect the unexpected in baseball,
especially m stadiUms hlce the
Metrodomc.
"The game on artificial turf is
such an aberration, you don't know
what to expect," he said. " You can
never have enough hits or runs in
this place."
Five Cleveland players had
three hits and three others had two
as the Indians rocked Twins starter
Mike Trombley and relievers Eddie
Guardado and George Tsamis.
Felix Fermin knocked in three
runs with two singles and his second home run of the year.
"Sometimes you have 10 score a
lot of runs to win here in th e

Meltodome," said Fermin, whose
two home runs this season double
his combined output of the previous four years. "It's unbelievable
to play 22 innings and lose and
then come back with 22 hits and
win ~ ··

Julian Tavarez started for Cleveland and came within one out of a
victory . However. he couldn't hold
a 7-3 lead, giving up three runs ,
two of them unearned, in the fifth
inning.
Derek Lilliquist, whose last two
appearances had been as a starter,
took over with two outs in the fifth
and struck out pinch hitter Bernardo Brito on three breaking balls.
"! saw Minnesota play against
Chicago on our off day," said
Lilliquist, 3-2, who pitched three
innings of two-hit ball . "They
threw him a lot of breaking balls
and got him out, so thaCs what I
threw him too."
Eric Plunk pitched the final I
1/3 innings to earn his 14th save.
He sllUclc out the Twins' final three
batters -Kent Hrbek, Shane Mack
and Pedro Munoz - to end the
game.
Minnesota, which struck out 17
times during the 22-iilning game,
fanned 10 times on Wednesday.
In other games Wednesday, it
was Chicago 5, New York 3;
Toronto 8, Oakland 3; Seattle 9,
Detroit 3; Milwaukee 7. Kansas

City 1; Baltimore 5, California I;
a·nd Texas 9, Boston 7 in 12
innings.
White Sox S, Yankees 3
Baseball's eyes are fixed on the
NL West this week as San Francisco and Atlanta have their showdown series. The AL East offers
the scoreboard-watching race
between Toronto, the New York
Yankees and three other contenders.
Quietly, the Chicagg White Sox
have started 10 make a non-race of
it in the AL West. Their fifth
straight victory and lOth in their
last 13 games - it was a 5-3 decision over the Yanlcees Wednesday
night - maintained their 5 1/2game lead over Texas. Except for
Philadelphia's comfortable 10game lead in the NL East, no other
first-place team is breathing as
easy.
"Yeah , it seems that way,"
right-hander Jack McDowell (21-7)
said after winning for the ninth
time in 10 decisions. "You pop a
game here and there, and it's tough
to come back. We're justifying not
to give games away. If we play
consistently the way we should,
we're not going to have any prolonged losing strealcs."
"The Yankees have embarrassed us this ·year," said Frank
Thomas, who hit his club-record
38th home run in lhe third.

Scoreboard
- * Baseball * -

TeJtu 9, BOI.\.01\ 7 (12 inn.)
BalWnorc 5, Calilomia I

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Tonight's games

Eulem DIYillion

Chicago (Belcher 3·2) at New York.
(Key 15-5), 7:30p.m.
CLEVELAND (Grimsley 1·2) at
Minnc:sou (fapani 7-1 2), 8:05p.m.
Milwaukee (Higuera 0- l ) at Setu.le
(BO&amp;io 7-1), 10 :05 p.m.
.
.
Baltimore (Rhodel 3-3) at Calitonua
q:intey 14·10), 10:05 p.m.

Tum

W L

~L

Philadelphia ... :....... 83 50
Mon...J .............. ..74 60
SL LouiJ ... ......... ....73 60

.624

GB

.lll

9.5

CNcaao.•..•.... ....... ..64 69

.549
.481

I0
19

PinoiNrgh .............. 63 70
Aorid. ....... ......... .55 71
New Yod ........ ......46 87

.47 4
.41 7
.346

lO
27.5
37

Friday's games

Waltrn Dl~lilon

San FnncUco ........ 116
Atlanu ...................82
Houaton .................70
Loa Angeles ........... 66
CINCINNATI ........66
San Diego ........ ...... 53
Colondo ................ SO

46
51
63
65
69

tO
84

.6S2
.61 7
.526
.504
.489
.398
.313

4.5
16.5
19.5
21.5
33.5

31

Wednesday's scores

Texu (Dreyer 2-1) 11 Minneaota
(Brummeu 0-0). 8:05 p.m.

Florida

p.m.

Lol Angclea (Aitlcio 10.7) 11 Pitt•·
bwgh (Z. Smith 3-7), 7:35 p.m.
• San Francisco (Bu.r::ielt 18·6) at At·
lant1 (Avery 15-4), 7:40 p.m .
New York qonea -1· 2) a t Chica,go
(Guzman 11-9), 8:05 p.m.

.....~

Friday's games
New Yorll: (8 . Jonc~ 1-2) at Chic1go
(Chlzman 11·9) , 3:20p.m .
Los Angeln (R . Martine:z 9· 9) at
Aorida (Hammoncii0-9), 7:3.S p.m.
Ph i ltd elphi• (Gree ne 12*3) II
CINCINNATI (Ay ala 5-6) . 7:35 p.m.
San Diego (As hby 2-8) at AtlJnta
(OLivine 16&lt;S), 7:40p.m.
S• n Fra ncis co (T orr e• 1·0) 11 St.
Louia (Wau:on 6-2), 8:05p.m.
Monl.rea l (Rueter 5-0) at Houn on
(Kilc 14·5), s,os ~. m .

Pittsbu rgh ~Hope 0 · 1) at Colorado
(Reynoso 9-9), 9.05 p.m.

Amtrkan Lape
BALTIMORE ORIOLES: Activated
Leo Gomez. Wielder, and Jeffrey Hammonda , oulfielder, from the 15-day dis·
abled liA.
CHICAGO WHITE SOX : T"ded
Donn PaU, pitcher, to the Philadelphia
Phillie&amp; for a player to be named lat.cr. Recalled Brian Drahman, pitcher, from
Nuhville of the Amcncan Auociatim.
Cl.EVEu.NO INDIANS: Piuchuod
the cm.tncts of Mamy RarrWa. ouUJeld..
c:r, and Bob Millcki, pitcher, fmm. O.ulotie of the lntt:mationll League.
KANSAS CITY ROYALS : Activated
Hipolit.o Pichardo, pil.c:her, from the I.S day dinblcd lilt. Recalled Kevin Ka~lofa ­
ki, outfielder, from Omaha of the Am=ic:an Auociation. Pulth11ed the contract of
Nclacrt Santo~cnia , catchc:r, from Omahl.
Transferred Rl.lllY Meacham, pitcher,
from the 1S- to the 60-day disabled list.

NEW YORK YANKEES : Recoiled

Kevin Maaa , fust b&amp;~anan-dctiJnatod hit·
tcr, and Mark H~~~on, pi.tehor. from
Colwnbua ol the lntcmational Leap.

SEAlTLE MARINERS : Activated

AMERICAN LEAGUE
E11tem DhiJion
Team
W L
Pel.
Toronto .. ................ ?&amp; 51 .51&amp;
New Yor:k .............. 7S .S9
.560

GB
~l

6

Baltim&lt;n ...............71 6l
DetroiL ...................71 64
8 ........................ 69 63

.534
.526
.ll3

CLEVELAND .......63 70
Milwaukee .............sa 17

...74

14

.430

20

Walern Di"lalon
Chic:a1o..................7S 57
.568

r ..... .................... .Jo

63

KaNa• Qty .. .........69 65
S..111e .................... 66 66

Califomia ...............~9 73
Minna ella .......... .... 56 76
Oal&lt;lond .................52 10

.526
.SIS
.500
.447
.4·2A

.394

Wednesday's scores

Milwlutec7, Kansaa City 1
Toronto B, Oakland 3 •
Seaule 9, Detroi.t 3
ChicaJO S, N__!w York 3

CLEVELAND I2. Mmnco... 7

7

u

s.s

7
9
16
19

23

ST. LOUIS CARDINALS: R,..ll..,
Stan Royer, infielder, from l.nuilville of

the American Auociation. and Man: Ronan, CIU:hCf, from Adunsu of 11\e Te~a•
League. AcUvaled Ric:h Bak:he:l.or, pi.lcl!er. Activated Paul Kilgua, pitc:hcr, from
the 60-day diublcd lilt.

SAN

FRANCISCO

GIANTS :

Awarded Gmg Brummett, pitcher, to the
Minnewtl Twina on 1 waiver claim to
com~ the Jim Dolhaicl tndo. Ac:tiyatcd John Patk:ratl"l, infielder, from the 6().
day disabled list.

Basketball
National Bukdball A&amp;lodallon

BOSTON CELTJCS : Announced the
rcli.anation of Dan F. Gaa.on, chainnan,
and Alan Cohen, vice chainnan and ditec·
tor. Named Plul E. OmM chairman.
SEATTLE SUPERSONICS : Traded
Dana Bal"TOII, RUi rd. and Eddie Johruon.
guard· forward, 10 the Charlotte Hornell
for Kendall Gill, guard.

FoolbaU

BasebaU

Tonight's games

!l

(Darwin 13-9), 7:35 p.m.

- * Transactions * -

Monii'Cilll, Colorado 3

San Diego (Sander• 2-0)

~su City (Appiu 14-6) at BOlton

Toronto (Morri• 7-11) at Cllifontia
(Langston 14-6), 10:05 p .m .
Milwaukee (Bone• 9· 9) 11 Se.ude
(Han'&lt;ln 10-11). 10:3.S p.m.
•
Baltimore (Valenzuela 6-9) 11 Oak:·
land (Van Poppcl 4-5), 10:35 p.m.

Houatm 3, New York 2
PhiladdpiW 4 . Chicago I
San Diego 13, Florida S
Pi~ubursh 5, Los Angcle. 1
San Francisco 3, Atlanta 2
St. Loui.17, CINCJNNA1l4

(Rapp 2-4), Bl

Chicago (Bcre 6-5) at Detroit (Doherty 11·10), 7:0S p.m.
CLEVELAND (Ojeda 0.1) at New
Yotk (Perez 6-13), 7:30p.m.

FLORIDA MARLINS: Pun:hu"' the
conlnct of Matiu Carril lo, outfieldei ,
from Muico City of the Mexican Leap.
NEW YORK METS : Activated Tim
Bogar, ahcruti!p, and Durin Jackson, out·
f1cfder, from the 15-day disabled list.

Mike Felder, ol.ltfielder, ftan the IS-ciay
d.iublcd lilt. Purchucd the con1.r1ct of
Chria Howard, catcher, from Cal&amp;ary of
the Pacific Co11t Lea~

TEXAS RANGBRS : R,.oUed left
Bnmkcy ond Mike Schooleo:, pUcllcn, ond
Doua Dt~CC~Uo, outficldor, from Okla ·
homa City of 1M Amaican A11oc:iation.
Pilrchued the '""""" of
Bolbani.
dcaip•tod hitLer and Rick Rood, pitcher,
frooa Oklahoma City. P'un:lhuod the CXJn·
ln.ct of~ Olivor, pi~er, from Tlllll
of the Tau Leap. Activaled DUly Ripken, infielder, from the IS-day dU:ablecl
lin . Ro-•ianed John R\auell, ca\chcr.
Movod Rob Maun:t, infic:ldcr, hom lhe 15
to dta 4i0-day d.iublcd 1i.lt. ReW!ccl D&amp;n
Smith, pitcher, from ptlahom1 Cily an.d
placed him on tho 60-day dilablod lilt.
Actinlc-d Hector Faiardo, piac:hu, hvm
the 60-da diNbled
ajllianed him
to Port ~hadotte of the Florid• State
WIIJ'Co

s....

u;""'

• NatlonaiLaaue

CIDCAOO CUBS: Ac:UvaLCd SNwon .
Dunaton, aholutop. from the 15-cla)' dilabled lilt.

Nallanal Focllball Leaaue
ONCINNATI BENGAL!: Rcc.oU"'
Fcmandu1 Vin10n, aa!dy, from waivcu.

Re-Jianed Ryan Baljamin, runnina btck.

and Donnell John1on, defenlive 1111d.

Waived 0armce Williama, liaht end.

CLEVELAND BROW!'IS : Signed

Jlqlpcr Johnlon,linebKkcr, to I GnC-)"CU
contract. Claimed Slloe.y Hain.ton, cor•
nett.ck, off waivet~ from the Se.aule Sea·
hawk1. 1tcleued Rod Mi11111d, &amp;Uud.
DENVER- BRONCOS : Relcued
Wymon Hendenon, comcrbaclr.. Sianed
Ouia Hale, c:omcrbac:.k..

GREEN BAY PACKERS : Siped Lioncll Crawford, wide receiver, and Malcam Showell, ddcnsive end, to the dcvd·
opmentalaquad , Named Lance Lope•

aenenl coun~el
lNDtANAPOUS COLTS : Roc•lled
Tony Walker, linebacker: Eddie Miller,
wide n:a:iver, and Mike Jonoa, tiJht ond ,
from waiven . Sianed Paul Bu tcher,
linebacker. SiiJ"Ied Jobn Illy, otfenlive
l.inoman; Eme~t Calloway, wide rocd:w:r;
Muqu.ise Thom.u, lineblcker; Kipp Viek·
m , offauive linem&amp;ft: md Tim l.owct),
runnina back, to the developnent.al squad.

KANSAS CITY CHIEFS : Si&amp;ned

Martin 8ayle11, A!ecy. and Dari1.11 Turner, fW.lback, to thedcvdopncntallquad.

Thomas drove in the winning
run, his major league-leading !13th
of the.season, when he was hit by a
pitch with the bases loaded in the
eighth and the score tied 2-2.
Bo Jackson led off wilh a pinch
single . After a sacrifice and a
strikeout, Paul Assenmacher (2-1)
intentionally walked Tim Raines
but unintentionally walked Joey
Cora. Bob Wiclcman relieved and
his second pitch hit Thomas in the
left hand. Robin Ventura followed
with a two-run single.
It hurt the Yanlcees, who fell 2
1/2 behind Toronto.
Blue Jays 8, Athletics 3
Rickey Henderson, in his first
series at his old ballpark, led off a
game with a homer for the eighth
time this season and the 63rd time
in his career. Henderson was ttaded
to Toronto in late July. The Blue
Jays jumped 10 a 5-0 lead in the top
of the third on a three-run homer
by backup catcher Randy Knorr on
the way to their fourth straight victory. Toronto starter Juan Guzman
(11-3) went 8 1/3 innings, allowing
five hilS wilh six strikeouts.
Mariners 9, Tigers 3
Ken Griffey hit )lis 40th homer
of the season and nave Fleming
( 10-2) threw seven-plus scoreless
~nnings. The two-run homer in the

first inning made Griffey, 23, the
lOth-youngest player to reach 40
and tied him for the major-league
lead with Texas' Juan Gonzalez.
Bret Boone hit a two-run homer
and Mike Blowers followed with a
solo shot as the Mariners took a 5-0
lead in the sixth. The visiting
Tigers got all their runs in the ninth
off reliever Brian Holman. the last
two scoring on a single by Cecil
Fielder.
Brewers 7, Royals 1
Jaime Navarro threw a sevenhitter for his fifth complete game
and evened his record at 9-9. and
B.J. Surhoff drove in three runs.
Surhoff had a two-run double in the
bottom of the fust and Mil waulcee
added five in the third to knock out
Chris Haney (9-7).
Orioles 5, Angels 1
Ben McDonald snapped a personal four-game losing strealc with

MUS to start spaghetti
dinners Thursday
A spaghetti dinner will be held
staning Thursday and will be held
each Thursday in the Meigs High
Cafeteria beginning at 5:15 p.m.
With the 1993 Meigs Marauder
football team and its coaching staff
will be in attendance, the dinner
will give local football fans a
chance 10 meet and get acquainted
with this year's team. Cash donations will he accepted.

.

a four-hitter as he struck out a
career-high 10. Chris Hailes drove
in the first run in the fourlh with a
groundout and the last in the fifth~
with a double. McDonald (10-11)
did not allow a bascrunner until he
issued a leadoff walk to Chili Davis
in the bottom of the fifth, and he
later scored the run.
Rangers 9, Red Sox 7
An error by first baseman Mo
Vaughn and a double by BiU Ripken gave Texas two runs in the top
of the 12th as it won the game that
took 5:28. The Rangers took a 7-5 ·
lead an inning earlier on a two-run .
single by pinch-hitter David Hulse.
The Red Sox tied it a bases-loaded
fielder's choice by Scou Fletcher '
and an error by third baseman Rip- ·
ken . Texas used 10 pitchers, one
short of the major league record set
by Seattle in a 16-inning game last
Sept. 25.

MEN'S PREWASHED

Mens Unwashed
Boot Jeans
21 99

Meigs 'Meet the Team'
slated for Thursday
Meigs High School w,ill hold
Meet the Team on Thursday
evening September, 3rd at 7:30 at
Bob Roberts Field. The 1993
Meigs Marauders football team,
coaching staff and cheerleaders
wiU he inlloduced.

Bo.b 's Late Summer FruitHarves

Bushel.. ..................... ..
1/2 Bushel.. .................. s7.
Peck................................. s4.4

Macintosh Apples
Bushel.. ......................... s10.
,
1/2 Bushel.. ..................... .... .... ..

112 Bushel.. ................... s9.50
Peck................................ ~4 . 98
112 Peck............................ s2. 79

BLUE DAMSON PLUMS
For Plum Jelly &amp;c Preserves

1/2 Peck............................ s1

FOR YOR LABOR DAY PICNIC!

WATERMELONS!
.
.

•

LONG, STRIPED
JUBILEE

d1c,
..d Jack DelRio, linebacker,
10 two-you QOfl\rlct ~.
NEW YORK GIANTS: A.e-li1ned

RED, RIPE
&amp;

Sieve Dc011iC. linebacke:r. Sipod Brad

q""""""*.

POMEROY
Alcoholics
Anonymous meeting at 7 p.m. at
Sacred _Heart Church for more
mfqrmauon call992-5762.
·
·

JUICYI

..------

:iA WEEK

PRICES GOOD THRU END OF SEASON

• 1/4 Mile North of Pomeroy-Mason Bridge, Mason, WV
Phone (304) 773-5721 • 773-5900 .
• 2400 Eastern Avenue (across from K Mart), Gallipolis. OH
·
Phorte(614) 446-1711

•
•

•
:•
'

'•nclen:

0

ing the meeting. An officers !"eeting will be beld at 7 p.m. pnor 10
the regular meeting. All members
are urged 10 attend.
SUNDAY
..

CONNOR SWARTZ

Announce birth
of third child
John and Carla Swartz armounce
thebirth &lt;if their son, Connor John.
The infant ~as born June 19,
weighted 11 pounds 4 ounces and .
was 22 1(2 inches long.
Grandparents ·are Gene and Shelia Whaley, Herb Whaley, Helen
Swartz and Etta Collums.
Connor John was welcomed
home by sisters Tiffany and
Caitlin.

Meigs native
to present hat
show

Two local students
on President's List

LONG BOTTOM - Faith Full
Gospel Church·will have preaching
and singing starting at 7 p.m. Pastor Steve Reed invites the public.
Fellowship will follow :

RACINE - The Racine Fire
Department will have a chicken
BBQ starting at 11 a.m. Homemade ice cream will be available
from the ladies auxiliary.

ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs
County Pomona Grange will meet
at 7:30p.m. at the Rock Springs
Orange Hall. Hemlock Grange. will
be the host. All members are urged
to attend.

MIDDLEPORT - ·The Bahr
family reunion will be he!~ at the
Middleport park. There will be a
potluck dinner at noon.

Pomeroy TOPS
Chapter meets

RUTLAND - The Rutland Fire
Department Ladies Auxiliary will
sponsor a pie ~g and cake d~­
orating contest 1n ConJunction w1th
the annual street festival. For more
information contake Margaret
Edward at 742-2509.
POMEROY - The Bedford
Township Volunteer Fire Department Committee will hold a bake
sale from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at
Kroger.
RACINE - The Southern Char!\e
United Methodist Churches _will
have a hake sale at ~orne Nauoruli
Banlc from 8 a.m. until noon.

#OH570 Pomeroy Chapter
NEW HAVEN - The family of metTops
recently.
.
George Wetzel and Susanna Roush
The
meeting
was
open
ed
in
will have a reunion at Zion Lutherpraye~· led by Peggy Vinning. The
an Church on Broad Road. There Tops 'loser was An gela Sharp with
will be a covered dish dinner at 1 Jeannette McDonald as runner up.
p.m.
Linnie Bell Aleshire was the best
loser with Ola St. Clair as
LOTTRIDGE - There will be a KOPS
runner
up . Amy Cleland was the
smorgasbord dinner at the Lotstork
loser.
The gadget gift was
ltidge Community Center, Athens
won
by
Donna
Jacks. The fruit basCounty Road 53, from noon to 1:30.
ket
was
won
by
Linda Grimm.
· p.m. Cost is $5 ror adults and $2.5,0
Peggy
Yinning
tUscusscd havin g
for children under 12. Carry out IS
a
two-day
Tops
retreat
at a local
available. Everyone is welcome.
state park . Members sang songs ,
POMEROY - The Silver Run then sang to bes t losers and were
Grade School reunion will he held dismissed.
Meetings are held every Tueson ·the school playground from I 10
day
with weigh in from 5 to 6 p.m .
5 p.m. Former students, teachers,
and
meetings
from 6 to 7 p.m. New
family and friends are urged to
members
are
always welcome. For
attend. Come with your memories,
more
information
call Debbie Hill
lawn chairs and cameras. A phoat
949-2763
or
Wanda
Faulk at
tographer will ~ pre~nt for gro_up 992-5638.
pic,tures. Soft drinks wtll be proVId·
ed.
MONDAY
POMEROY - The Belles and
Beaus Dance Club will begin new
fall classes with a free lesson at
7:30 p.m. at the Senior Ci~izens
Center. Any couples wanung to
learn the basics of Western style
square dan cing are invited to
attend. Partners are required. For
more information call 992-294 7.
992-5703 , 992-7261 or (304) 773 5505.

CHESTER - The Chester VolStar Grange 11778 and Star _
unteer
Fire Depanment will hold
Junior Grange #S78 will meet at 8
its
annual
Labor Day celebration
.m. at the Grange Hall on County
~oad 1 near Salem Center. Jumor with chicken, ribs and ice cream.
Grange graduation and first degree Anyone wishing to participate in
in full form will be held. Potluck the parade should contact a departrefreshments will be served follow- ment member.
'(I

Dev Alia
My 18-yarold niece, ·soan: became 1*'1P'IN
aft.er dating ~· for • few
montht. After much agonizing,
Suan decided 10 put the blby up
for IC!qltion. She wanttJd her child
10 have a family lhlt could jWOVide
Iove,suppornnd lllbility.
Soan made lhe mistake of telling
Thomas llbout lhe pregnancy. He
n:fuaed 10 sign lhe ldoptioo papm
llld threatened 10 take her 10 court
in Order 10 pn:veat her from putting
the baby up for adopeion.
·
Susan is now almost nine months
pregnant, and lhe adoption agency
has just informed her dill fedclal
law says if the father refuses 10 sign
the adoptioo papas, she will ha\'C
10 raiae the baby herself or gi\'C it 10
Thomas. Thomas has already stated
that he doesn't want 10 raise lhe child.
He refuses to sign the papers
because it is "his seed,• and he told
Susan not to expect any support from
him.
This is the second child Thomas
has fatheled in one year. He has 12
brothers and sistus, a few of whom
have spent time in prison. Some have
had out-of-wedlock children and
dumped them on the grandmother
to raise.
It infuri8tcs me that the sySiem
supports this jedt. Wait -- there's
more. Thomas plans to sue for
visitatioo rights.
S.... has been kiclced in the teeth
not only by Tbomas, but by 0111'

Goldmark
Wedding Nook
506 Grand Central Ave.
(Betweo11 $obqy""" 1bco &amp;U)

Vienna, WV. 304-295-7878
Need Napkins printed?
We'U do il whik you shop
20% off Wedding and
Anniversary invilalions
and Accessories
Good thru 9-30-93
Must Bring This Ad
Not good with previous or
other on going sales

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS
"1993, Loo Auctla
Tlmeo S.)'ildkat&lt;
Crealon Syndltale'' .

ao-called "justice" sySiem. She p\'C
up a coUege scholarship llld is now

oowelfare.
And what will happen 10 Thomas?
He's free 10 go on his merry way, a
Johnny Appleseed or the '90s,
planting his "seed" wherever he
wants. He's got the law on his side.
- SEEING RED IN OREGON
DEAR RED: I am not so~ that
Thomas has the law on his side. I
don't know of any state where a man
can father a child and bear no
fmancial responsibility. Susan needs
10 ta11c 10 a lawyer- and soon. Please
tell her sbe shouldn't be so quick to
let the heel off the ~
Dear Ann Landen: Can you
handle just one mon: letter 10 "Pat
in Connecticut," who says she has
had it with American junk?
I sliD have the same AT&amp;T phone
I purch.ased from the phone
company when the Bell System
broke up. I have lived in five states
since that time, so my phone has
been through a lot and ha,s never
had 10 be repaired.
_I still wear slacks made in the

United SIIICI wbic:h 1 purcbucd IS
yean 180· I have ctivcn Amc:riciD- ·
made cars Ill my life llld have bed
Vfll'J aoo&lt;1 terVice from Ill the GM.
Ford and Chrysler vehiclea I've
owned. One GM pickuP wu 22
yean old when I ll'llded it in·for a

newer model,

I preecndy drive a 3-xe--old GM
product dill has bed only routiDe

malntenancc. What I am tryin&amp; 10
say is: If yoo take can: of any item,
it wiD be serviceable. -- P.C.S.,
VISTA. CALIF.
DEAR VISTA: I agree that
maintenance is impooant, but an
automobile, typewriter, kitchen
appliance or vacuum sweeper that is
weU-made will last longer than a
piece of junk.
rve R:Ceived many lettm from
readers who say their German- and
Japanese-made cars are far superior
to American cars. American
manufacturers have feh the iinpact
llld promiae 10 meet the challenge.
r111 beUing they will -- otherwiSe,
put a rortt inro 'em. They're dcne.
IS Ufe passing JOII by? Wlllll to
improw: JOIIT social skills? Writ&lt;! for
Ann Londers' lleW booklet, "How to

Malct Friends and Slop Being
Lonely. • ~nd a self-(J(/dTesud,long,
bii.Siness-siu envelope and a check
or money ortkr for $4.15 (llris includes postage alld handling) to:
Frullds,'cio AM Londers, P.O. Box
11562, Chicago,///. 60611-C562. (In
Canada, send $.5.05.)

Library news
There are many lhings going on
at the Meigs County Library this
month.
September is fine-free month,
support your library month and
library card sign up month at the
Meigs County library.
There will be no charge for
overdue materials during the month
of September with the exception of
videos. While at the library signing
up for a library card ask for a blue
ribbon and show your support for
the library.

Yvonne Kay Roush Richardson
will bring her hat collection back to
Meigs County.
Richardson is a native of Meigs
County who now resides in Columbus.
Richardson slarle collecting hats
in 1968 when she attended the Lilliputian fashion show. The show is
sponsored by Brace IV which benefits handicappe~ children.
Richardson was chosen best
dressed that first year and again for
seven consecutive years. The
Board of Brace IV then created a ·
"Hall of Fame" for her.
That first year, Richardson was
wearing her first Jack McConnell
original hat and she continues to
wear only McConnell originals. In
1987, McConnell commentated a
fashion show in Columbus just for
Richardson. Each year he designs
specialhatsjustforher.
Richardson will present her hat
show at the meeting of the Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Dauglhers
~ of the American Revolution mect' ing on September 11 at 1:30 p.m. at
the Grace Epi scopal Church,
Pomeroy. Members are invited to
bring ~uests. The public is cordially invited to the hat show at 2:30
p.m. Please call Eleanor Smith at
992-2639 for reservations.
While in Pomeroy, Richardson
will also 'visit her mother Mary K.
Roush and. her brother Manning
Roush. She is the daughter of the
late Kems Roush.

Mountain State-College has
recently annouced that two local
students were ·on the President's
List for the spring quarter.
Th e students are Cheryl
Lealherberry, Coolville and Denise
Holman, Middleport.

ATHENS - The Guthrie-Story
family reunion will be held at the
A!hens County Fairgrounds in the
4-h building. All relatives and
friends are invited. There will be a
potluck dinner at noon.

1/2 Peck. ........................ s2.

Stanley Prune Plums

Uncbtcbr, fmm wai.wn. CLalmed Ol.anda
Trulu, wide Ncci.vet, ~ wlivcn fran the
Lol ::tea Raidetl. Siped John Ran·

c...

THURSDAY

HARRISONVILLE - Har·
rison ville 411 stated meeting at
7:30. All master masons ":clcome.
Refreshments will be served. Work
in FC degree.

Bartlett Pears

Bushel.. ....................... sl2.98
1/2 Bushel:. ................... s6.98
Peck (114 Bushel) .......... s3.98
1/2 Peck (118 Bushell ... s2.49

III, all of Rutland; N1chole C.
McDaniel, Pomeroy.
d
1
f G_e1ne andG ~ ~p~~t~';.!.~~y !d
am• y, r
•
Linda Griffith, Columbus; RoJ?ert
and ·Brenda Lashley and fal'!IIIY.
Columbus; Kenneth and Shuley
S 10
· 1·
d fam'ly
and
1 ·• Dale
~ au. an
Shad
Angie Bnclcles and sons,
e.
Robert and Ruth Klem ba and
fa mil . Tammy and Brandon
S
y' ·
11 of Cape Coral
amotowllz, a
ff •
Fla ·'Steven and 13arbara Ho man
nd., fami!v· Stephanie Lee and
a
'- •
D·
Robert Hoffman, Chester; •ana
Molden,_ Rutland; Charle;s Mulholla~d, W•ckesv1Ue; Jeanme Russell,
Middleport, R1cha~d Peyton, Jr.,
Syracuse ; Robb1e Calaway,
Pomeroy and Sarah Roush, Mason,
W.Va.

Community calendar

CLJFTON -There will be a. ben·
efit yard sale at the Clifton Taber·
naclc starting at 9 a.m.
·

Naw is the time to enjoy all your favorite fruits at the peak of their flavor. :
You can eat them fresh now or can or freeze them for later.

•on , cornerback, 1nd Ore4 Manu1ky ,

Dallli1o, plac:U:ieker, and David T1\e,
llfety.
NEW YORK lETS: Ro-oipcd Bill
Pickel, taclolo. Sif!ed Alec Millal, 11cklo;
Ktmy SMdd, W16t rec:41i.wr-Jd.ek ,..._
a; Stc\le .Mdcncn, wide ti!Citiva-; Vic:aar
Green, dclorWve bact, and RuA Mc:Cul·
louah, tackle, to tho cleYeiO[II!!IIIlll[llld.
tAMPA SAY. BUCCANEERS :
aw."' 1 Wcldaol,_
olf
wa.ivm from 1hc Pbil~ F.aalt-·

The Barr !amily galhered on the
Carleton Church grounds,
P~m.eroy, on July 11 for a family
p•cmc
Th~ five daughterS of Arthur c.
d the late Opal E Barr and
B
arr fan il'
L
·
•
h
t c•r am •es me
A large picnic dinner was held
.
d .
alb
and memones an p1cture
urns
from years past ~ere enJoyed. Photos were talcen.
.
The Lord's Blessing over the
.
.
b R CI d v
family was g1ven Y ev. Y e ·
Henderson
Attending were Arthur and
Sybil Barr, Middleport; Clyde v.
and Margaret Henderson and famiIy Pomeroy· David C: and Joyce
Ja~ks and fainily; Pauick N. Jacks
and Bridget R. Jaclcs, Middleport;
Paul L. McDaniel, Jr. and family,
Michelle D. and Paul L. McDaniel

SATURDAY

LOS ANG E LES RAMS ; Sianed

Tony Woocb, defen~ive md, and Don
Bract...,....-.
MINNESOTA VIKINOS: R..dlcd
R.., CniJ, """'"'J bet; l&amp;c Tioc oad
B..,.Ncn-"'&lt;y,lifht"""' layiool'ilu-

Barr family holds gathering

shlj)1'rus=.w .I meet at · p.m. Parish annouce~ thiS Y~ ~ mtroat ,Shade R1ver State Forestry duction to the Rite of Christian !"!BUilding on Joppa Road.
tiation for Adults (RICA). TJ:Ie m•·
· RACINE - Racine Legion Post {ial meeting w•ll be held m the
hall betw~n S an,d 7 p.m.
#602 wHI meet at 7 p.m. Dinner church
Anyone
interested m leammg about
will be served at6:30 p.m.
the Catholic Church is welcome to
MIDDLEPORT ·- Evangeline attend.
Chapter 11172 OES will meet at
POMEROY - The 43rd annual
7:30. lnitiantion will be held. Offi- Ours family reunion wil be held at
cers should wear street dresses.
the Senior Citizens Building. Doors
will open at noon. Potluck dinner
ROCK SPRINGS - Salisbu~y will be at I p.m.
Township Trustees will meet at
7:30 at the township,garage.
RUTLAND- The Grover family
reunion will be held at the Rutland
FRIDAY
Fireman's Park starting at noon.

Regular :'27." 40.!
NOW :i19ll',-29'l'

Yellow Freestone Peaches

celebrated an anniversary. Deaths
reported were F~anlc Weaver,
Columb~s , ~nd bmhs reported
were BenJamm J. Hoffman, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Benny Hoffman .
Newlyweds reported were Jane
Hoffman 10 Gregory Haddan. .
Those attendmg were Maxme,
Brent , Jeff and Tara Rose, Ben
Pelle!, Racme; Tommy Weaver of
New Haven, W.Va.; Marcus and
Dora Weaver, Aaron, Evelyn,
Brandon and Jillian Weaver, Alton
and Inez Roush, Letart, W.Va.;
Wilma Abbott, Ch~ter; Erma Martm of West.Columbia, w,va ..
Followmg the reumon , most
went golfmg.
·
.

,l{EE~S~JLLi1E~.,;: -Ql!"thb9Y&gt;'Il;;,- ,. .. - POMBR()'f!"~~~re~ ·~cart

LEVI'S

Niece needs to talk to a lawyer

Weaver family reunion is held _
The annual Weaver reunion was
held recently at the West Virginia
State Farm Museum with Marcus
Weaver leading in prayer before
the picnic lunch was served.
· Following the lunch, a short
business meeting was held. The
present officers were retained for
next year and it was decided that if
there is a fifth Sunday, the reunion
would be held on that Sunday.
Next year's reunion will he held
,Aug. 28 at 12:30 p.m.
The oldest present was Alton
Roush, 88, and the youngest present was Tara Rose, 11 . Birthdays
celebrated were Brandon and Jil!ian Weaver, and Brent Rose, and
Aaron and Evelyn Weaver recently

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

Please take it
PONTE VEDRA, Fla. (AP) There arc thousands of stories
about golfers who got rid of clubs
after a bad shot. .
·
The veteran star , Raymond
Floyd, did it in a unique way.
Floyd was fed up with a balky putter. He and his wife, Maria, took
lhe club 10 a restaurant and left it at
their table with a note attached.
The note n:ad: "If anyone wishes to steal this putter,let him."

YVONNE RiCHA:RDSON

·

Clean Out Your Closet,
Basement, or Garage...
And turn Your Unused Or
Unwanted Articles Into CASH With A

FREE
CLA-S SIFIED AD
This Is Your Invitation To Sell Any Item For $100.00 Or Less
And Advertise It FREE.
Simply Clip This Coupon (Photo Copies Not Accepted),
Fill In Your Ad and Mail It To Us or Drop It Off At Our Office.
Your Ad Will Run For One Week.

Expires September 15, 1993- One _Hem- One Free Hem Per Week.

(NOTE: 15 WORD LIMIT AND YOUR SELLiNG PRICE MUST BE IN YOUR FREE AD)
(SORRY, THIS DOES NOT APPLY TO YARD SALES)

NAME: _________________________________________
PHONE:---------------------------------------MAIL TO: ___________________________________

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769
(Offer Expires September 15th, 1993)

\

�•

\

Ohio

Thursday! september 2,_1993

White House reassures elderly,
poor on health reform plan
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
White House is trying 10 calm fears
among the elderly that Medicare
and Medicaid are being singled out
unfairll to subsidize President
Clinlllll s health reform plan.
Senior citizen groups have
ex,Pressed alarm at reports that
Clintllll's health advisers are eyeing
Medicare and Medicaid for anywhere from $100 billion to $240
billion in savings over the next five

'

•

i

!

years.

Administration officials have
said privately they are counting on
tens of billions of doUars in savings
fr om Medicare and Medicaid to
help pay for coverage of the
nation's 37 million uninsured.
But in a statement issued by its
health reform office, the Whi te
House said, "Anticipated savings
in the Medicare and Medicaid programs ... will come from restraining the growth of all health spending, private as well as public."
''It is wrong to imply that President Clinton would make inappropriate or indefensible cuts in Medicare and Medicaid to pay for health

yard in West Point, Ind. Purdue professor Joe
Hannen identified the fungus as polyporus frondous. The mushroom weighs 40 pounds and is
more than two feel across. (AP)

GIANT MUSHROOM • Haiyin Wang, a
plant pathology graduate at Purdue University,
· examines a giant mushroom at the Arthur
Herbarium in West Lafayetle, Ind ., recently.
The fun~us was pulled from Virginia Emerick's

Public Notice

Imperial Beach: A California Weight control
town awash in Mexican sewage classes to begin
IMPERIAL BEACH, Calif.
(AP) - Imperial Beach has sun,
surf and shops - all the makings
of a hopping Southern California
tourist town. But it also has something ~ keeping visitors away:
Raw sewage lapping at its shores.
With the exception of a few
days when health officials have
deemed bacteria levels low enough
for safety, people haven'tbeen able
to swim in th1s border community
for more than a year be91usc of the
sewa~e from Mexico.

" We're on the bottom end of
everyone's toilet, " said Mayor
Michael Bixler.
Imperial Beach, with a yearround population 26,500, is San
Diego's southernmost suburb. The
skyline of Tijuana, Mexico, can be
seen in the distance to the south.
But Tijuana's sewage can be seen
and smelled close up.
Local officials say the problem
is simple: Tijuana needs to build a
modern sewage system.

-Names in the newsNEW YORK (AP)- Come
Sept. 13 , fans of NBC' s "Late
Night " may still be wondering,
" Who is this guy?" But at least
they'll recognize Conan O'Brien's
guests.
O'Brien, a virtual unknown
when he was tapped to replac e
· David Letterm·an, will have
"Roseanne " co-star John Goodman and actress Drew Barrymore
as guests on his first show.
The l!neup for the rest of that
week, announced Wednesday by
NBC:
Tuesday , Sept. 14 : Musical
group Radiohead.
Wedne sday, Sept. 15: Mar y
Matalin, form er campaign aide to
President Bush.
Thursday, Sept. 16: Actress
Mercedes Ruehl.
Friday, Sept. 17: Actor Dylan
McDermott and singer Jonathan
Richman.
Letterman jumped ship for CBS
and the hour-earlier 11:35 p.m.
time slot. His "Late Show" premiered Monday.
WASHINGTON (AP) - White
House press secretary Dee Dee
Myers celebrated her 32nd birthday
with help from two men in uni form : Colin Po well and Tommy
Lasorda.
Powell, the outgoing chairman
of the Join t Chiefs of Starr, popped
into her office about dinner time on
Wednesda y and sa ng "Ha pp y
Birthday"- off key.
Myers, a Los Angeles Dodgers
fan, later talked to La sorda , th e
lea rn 's manager, during a surprise
telephone ca ll arranged by he r
staff.
" I wish you a happy birthday on
behalf of the en tire Dodger tea m,"
Lasorda said as Myers' staff, listening on a speaker phone, cheered.
"I love you guys," Myers said.
CLEVELAND (AP) A
woman who claimed she developed
multi ple sc lerosis after bei ng
knocked ove r by some chairs at a
Ke nn y Roge rs co nce rt won a
$900,000 judgme nt against th e
singer's production company.
Securi ty guards were escorting
Rogers on stage in suburban Highland Heig hts in 1989 when 35 year-o ld Kathy Hendricks of
Amherst was injured. ·
She landed on her back and
head, and th e trauma triggered the
onset of multipl e sclerosis, her
lawyers said.
"She probably had the MS trait
for years." attorney Eric Kennedy
said Wednesday. "But there is definitely a relationship between the
event and the disease."
The jury returned the verdict on
Tuesday.
Evan Tali k, an attorney for the
Kenny Rogers Production Co., l1as
an unlisted phone number.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Romance novelist Danielle Steel
has gone to court to stop a biographer from using material about her
15-year-old son.
Her lawsuit, filed May 13 but
kept sealed until Tuesday, alleges
Lorenw Benet illegally obtained a
file prepared as part of a 198S cusI

tody battle between Steel and one
of her former husbands, William
Toth.
Benet contends he obtained the
report legally from Toth and said
he wanted it for the light it shed on
Steel's relationship with Toth.
Benet and Vickie Bane, writers
for People magazine, are working
on .an unauthorized biography of
Steel, who has written 47 books.
NEW YORK (AP) - You
could call newspaper columnist
Mike McAlary a real journeyman,
though he's making better than
union scale.
McAlary just left the Daily
News for his third stint at the rival
New York Post. His first column
this go-round appeared on Wednesday, when he wrote about alleged
serial killer Joel Rifkin's confession.
He spent seven months at the
News after leaving the Post when it
was being run by debt collec tor
Steven Hoffenberg. At the time, the
Post was paying him a reported
$275,000 a year. Rupert Murdoch
has since taken control of the Post.
Over th e years, McAlary has
moved from the Post to Newsday
to the News to the Post to the News
and now back to the Post.
The News is threatening to sue
for breach of contract.

September 7

The Meigs County Health
Department will begin a series of
six-week classes for weight control
at 6:30p.m., Tuesday, September 7
and Wednesday, September 8.
Due to the holiday, the class .
will be Tuesday, thereafter classes
will be on Mondays and Wednesdays.
There will be a choice of nights
for the classes, either Monday or
Wedn esday·. Classes are free to
Meigs County residents.
Each class will last two hours.
Classes will include nutrition education, stress management, weekly
weigh-ins, rel axation techniques,
recipes, diet recall sheets, exercise
techniques and other phases of
weight control.
·
.
There will be a limit as to tbe ·
number of people who can be
admitted to each series of classes
so residents should register as soon
as possible. The classes will be
held in the conference room of the
Multi-Purpose Building, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy.
Those wishing to register may
call the Meigs County Health
Department at 992-6626.

Cookbook sale begins

Board of Review, Rm. 300,
236 E. Town $T., Columbue,
Oh,43215. Notice ol_any
ap.,.el ehell be filed with
tho director within 3 cboyo.
Propoood actlone ·. will
become final unleee . a
written adjudication hearing
roqu•t io eubmlllod within
30 doyo of . tho luuanca
dale; or tho director
revleu/wlthdrowe tho

l

o

'!

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'!

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I

'

BE TIE RaT TilLIE Mm.
lttttll,.

cw •

150" boom pulls in distant
signi!IS. Compares to our
48·element VU-190 antenna at $89.99. 11&amp;·111&amp; ••

• 1 alllrlll...,

5Z.87l

18

m1~

hi

24~~
r'!

742·2360
Public Notice

ta

flo Qly IIIII .

71" length-mounts in many
attics. Compares to our ·
25-element VU -90 antenna

·.

j

IIICDVBI

IIAVE'!OO

...................•••

1799
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111'1 .... ,~
1101 ~

Reg. 29.99 While. ~43 · 585
Almond, •.t3·586. Gra~ . •43·587

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Incredible graphics, digital sound and an exciting CD library.
All this plus MS-DOS, MS Works, send-fax/modem and a
built-in MIDI port lor musicians. Powerlullntel 25M Hz 48SSX
processor. 107MB hard drive. IBM., PC compatible.

Speed·dials 20 numbers.

Stereo Speaker/Amp (shown).

Wea1t89.00 in 1t83 Cltalov 125-1650

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~43·757

789

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14

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fill

ldalllllc ~ d
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Solar and battery powered.
With case. Reg. 21.99 165-996

8

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0 0 0 0 I I I

0 0 0 0 I

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0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

IJT 17"

0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 I

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Each records up to 6 hours.

(row's Family Restaurant
228 WEST MAIN

Reg. 7.88 144·490

·

........•.................••.•..

POMEROY

79.99

:;:

~ 111'11 l!clf•• J II
6-foot cord. Comfortable fit for
your personal stereo or portable
CD player. Reg. 11.111 133-962

l~tlll..,~l'll l)\l'l1-,

. . ...

Get busy-MS Works software, Wllh over 100 applications, is installed on the
hard drive. Accelerated
graphics let you race
through Windows applications. 3'12'' floppy
drive, Windows 3.1,
MS-DOS.IBM PC
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125-1096 .

· · Rtg. separate items 1211.18
•

. 125·1830fl96513025
IBU/Atg 1M 18M Corp, Tilt lnllllns4di'-9D 11 llllllll!llr\ Ollll!tl corp

•

:• ···················~··············
,··· · ~· ······ · ················
• On
\laluePIUJ'I' account with llngle·tickl't purctwe of 1200 or ITIO!'I. Minimum montht&gt;t

I

PubliC Notice
NOTIFICATION OF
FORFEITURE PROCEEDING
Bo NOTIFIED that a
lorflllturo proceeding ahell
be conducted on October
15, 19113 at10:9Q A.M. in tha
Common Plaao Courtroom,
Third Floor of the Malg•
County Courlhouoe, Second
1

~ :!:'3io~"l:·glvon

•

·

Plymtnl:8 n NqlllrM. Depending on your 11111 ot rnidera, c:hargn tor llle paym1nt1 may be
llllellld; illhe purell... 11 not paid in full by the due date thown on your January Malement
lnttrtlt ~up to 21% APR , 50C monthly minimum) will app~ from th1 dahl gf purcllaat. 0ttt1 11 Y.ltd

AugUII11-Sepltmbtl 6, t;l3,

...... ..............
'

·

~

· Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter CIOanlng
Painting

FREE ESTIMATES

367 -CbO.Irlre
388-Vlnton
245-lllo GriUicle

379-Wolnul

67S-PL Pleuaol
4S8-l.oon

985-Cbeo~er

576-Apple Grove

· .843-Porlland

256-Guraa Dt.t.
.643-Arohla OUI.

24 7-Le1a1t Folio
949-Raclne
742- Rulland
667-Cooi.We

·

Arnold's
Plumbing,
Heating
&amp; Cooling ·
QUALITY WORK
&amp;GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD
(614) 1192··74741

949·2168
3-16-13-Un

DAVIDSON'S ·
PLUMBING

.j

38904 ......,••
Cnekloatl
MitltlleJOrl, Olllo

614-992·7144

SHRUB &amp; IREE
IRIMaatl
REMOVAL

FREE ESTIMATES
Taka tha pain out of
painting. Let me do It
foryou.
'1/ERY REA$0NABLE
H•"E REFERENCES

,..

614•985•4180

42- Mohile Hom.a for Rent
43- Fanu for Real
......._ Apart....t for Rent
4S- Furaillud Room•
46- Sp110e for Real
47~ Waatecl to R..t
48- Equi.-e~t for Beat

RICHARD ROBERTS
"Ad Speciallie•"
622 Joy Drivt, Gallipolis, Oh.
446-7612
Fax/Voice 446-7612

7~v....

a:4.WD'•

74- Molorcycloo

7r.- Boot&amp; .t MotOn t.. Silo
76- Aolo Par10 .t A&lt;:e-~1 "
77- Au10 Repoir

C.•plllf Eqtoi....

15-- Schoott

a lnalruction

16- Radio, TV .t

52- Sporllllf Cooclo

CB Repair

53-An..,_

17- MiocetlaneoUI

54- Mioc. Merebonclioe
ss.- Buildioc Supplioo

111- Yaulod To Do

-Roofing

V.C. YOUNG lit
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
l-10.1r.!-lfll

WHALEY'S AUTO

EXCAVATING

PARTS

BULLDOZER BACKHOE
and TRACi&lt;HOE WORK
A'I/AILABLE.
SEPnC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITE$,
LANDCLEARING.
DRIVEWAYS IN$TALlED
UMESTONE-TRUCKING
FREE ES'nMATES

992·3838

Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
IIW &amp; •I!IPAirl JOI
AlliiAIII &amp; MIIU

EAGLE
LANES
(Former Mason Lanes)
lrd and P~~~~~troy StrHts

•New Homes
-Garages
-complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

Sidewalks

FREE ESTIMATES

992-7878

985-4473

SERVICE

7/22/93

COLLINS

ENTERPRISES

Painting Services
Interior &amp; Exterior
We Paint Mobile Homes
and Aluminum Siding
•Power Washing
fill ISTUIITIS
5073411..., llklte ....
Lt•1 htt••·
45743

36970 Ball Run Road

Pomeroy, Ohio
GRAVEl,. SAND,
LIMESTONE. TOP SOIL
&amp; FILL DIRT

o•.

' 992-3470

If we don't havo, we oan

(3041 773·5585
WINTER HOURS
Sun.-Thurs. 4-10 pm
Fri. &amp; Sat., 4 pm·?

304-77W533

2nd location cllll Lon Naol
llondor~n.

511019

ADS sure to
~ = 2 Block Lab pupo molo l 1--~:"""'::-:-----'-lwmalo, Solom C.nt.,:,rp;;lntoro 1
Galllpoll I
•
Rldgo oroo, 114-1112-2211. .

Announcements

7

3 Announcements

36358 SR 7

Chester, Oh. 45720

a. VIcinity

Yard Sate

Dotootl Moot Ouyo l Ooil In •--~-----Yout ..... 1-000.a&amp;NOIO Ex· ,G Ill ll
Min.
a po I
Muat Bo II y,., Procall Co. 1102·
&amp; VIcinity

loilalon 4005, SUI Por

1154·7'120.

NOTICE..ny molotoyeloo 0. 4 131 Sloto 81-, Sot,.doy 41~,
wh•._. e~~ught or 1 een on the .1-4,
Clothing,
Microwave
pr..,.rty on tiNI Ridge or /Conputo~~..,,o;.O:.:,r.",.f­
Morvon Rd wAI bo
to tliolulloot o111ont o1 the low. 2 F1mlly: 1 Milo PHI Holzor On
252 wtill• Road, Oft Rt. 180,
4
Gt'lleaway
Saturdoy Only.

011

-utod

112 Pft Bull puppy, to good 2 Fomlly: 111·3niLBobr Thlngo,
hom•, 7DO North Ualn Sl., PI_ Clothing,
Ia.,.
Thlngo,
HouMhold, 1 Cyl. Ford MOior,
PliUiftt .
37341 Addloon Pk, C.ld'ftll Rn,
2 email yellow female cats, ap- SI
prox. I mont~• old, 114 -tw~- IIIII·
2 MI._ Uncaln PIU P181 No,...
11351.
t~up Brlclllo, Ylrloty 01 _ . ,
2 yNr old Oo11110n Shopard, Clath•, loola, Ml•c, Thurs -Sat.
muat lind good homo, 114-tw~3 Family: S.tunloy 4th, Old
7573.
Routt 180, Ev~rMn, ·172
2-whlte r1bblle, I month• old; Skidmore Rood, Wood Toblo, l
11 month old pa~ Chow/part 4 Chotro, NoW Hoovor ·sw-,
Colllo, llmolo; 814417.0130 of- Now Po~able AMIFM CD Sp,., Bpm.
10m, .toano, ClolhM, SprNcH. Cllltlllltl, 1.111111. 5 HP
3 YNr Old Bl'ock Lib, SDido, Gardtn Tillar, 31 Fool &amp;1-.lon
Good Welch Dog, Vol)' Lov.. Llddor, Eloctrtc l'j-lllor,
obiOI IM-44e-3JIII.
DloiiM, Knl••·
To tlood 3nl, 4th, FnHII 1-1. 112 Milo 01
Rt. 35 91. At. 115C11, Rodney 81do

wkll old, 304.137-2511.

FrM yellow cat, female, 1 year

old, 114-112-61168 .
Full blooded CoUio, nlco doa to

1 good home, ,.m111. tn..m.

547W.

.

I ;;;:;,-;;:::;;:::-;;::;-;:::;-;:~;-;:

MuKI Fomlly: 2nd, 3nl, 41~, 1-?
Fn&gt;nt lrvwn'a 1tiA 110. - •
Bel, Roak•, Trunk, . ~
Tobit, Topponnro, Homo lntorlor, Ntmo ....... Clll- To
Adufto, Etoctrtc Logo, 11-.
Avon, Recliner, M..C, N1w .....
Dolly.
;
an. nmo Only: 2 l'lmllr, 111p1
3nl, 4th. Comer ot Rt. Mi, And
Uncoln PUlL

Aodnor VII~ I, lapt 41h, Loot
On LOot St. 0.... Loto
h - Yonl C..fto, N, ....,

-

h01111.

•

llummogo Solo: Flldly, · lop.&lt;
Unltocl
Mothocllll . C~urch, El-h

lombor ~. W, -

Cllc:lo.

~ 1 •n1 1-? ..._ 9

wtll Road. King woodburntr, 2

-

ClolhM, And
h•m• Jynlor And Plue Siz•
Clothing Mloc homo, End 01581

Tootl.

HondoiiO'o.
3nl, 41h, Bolly

8-4-93-tfn

CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

H-1f11

...-.• • • pocj . .

985·4181

OWNER: JoH Wldtwsl.a•

w. Va. 304~31

Ma-d and III$A aoceplorL

Now ullingfllinl,., w llawiiiv

7/31/91/lln

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Wo have • largo otock oleavarlll nama brond and
got 1L
·
OUR NEWEIT LOCATION IN MASON, W. '1/A. IS
OPERATED BY CHRIS NEAL ·

Ma-.wv

9t2-701hl'
992·55U
II' TOLL flEE
l.aOCI-141·0070
DAIWtl, OHIO

Shade River Saddle Shop

w:tDOil

s-t .t Fonilloor

41- Ho.- for Re.• l

Bugle pupe to good homn, 7

~

Hay .t Craia

1~1D1Uraace
l~ .BUiioen TraiDiDf

-lnt.rlor a Extarlor
Painting
(FREE ESTIMATES)

USED RAILROAD TIES
12-30-92-lln

..111211311 mo. pel

Yanl&lt;ld lo B.y

u-.... k

..Q~-Work

-&amp;---, r--l..I..,N""D-A--'$,_-, WICK'S HAULING

We Haul Gravel,

h

-Eiactrlcol and Plumbing

r---

INT~RIOR

II

YOUNG'S

7nJmo.

••INTING
rA

I

·

CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Adclliona

•LIGHT HAULING
ofiREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992-2269

4/29/93,.

Trucking

3;- M..ilo H - (or Solo
33- r ...... r.r s.to
34- B.a-. Bulldinp
35--l.ota " A&lt;: .....
~:a.... 'l'anl&lt;ld

11- Help Wan loci
12- SituatioM Wan.ted

4-- Giveaway
5--H•ppyAd.
6-- Loll and Found
7- Loot and Fouad
11- PuhHo Sale .t
Au.ctioa
9- w.. IOd to Buy

895-Letorl
937- Bufl'alo

Porches,
Patios,

:;;;a,

3- Armouneementl

773-Muon
882-New Dnen

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE
WORK

- -Fiun•hlng
•••••r

1 6

,\ I i \ I " I

GET RESULTS -·FAIT!

992-;Mlddloport/
Pomeroy

614-742-2138

purauont to Ohio Roviood
Coal, Trash, etc.
Coda $octlon 2933.43 and
purouant to an order of
614-698·3290
Judge Fred W. Crow Ill, ol
or
told Malga County Common
Pia.. Court, 11\1 RE:
614•698•6500
PETJnON FOR
FORFEITURE,
e3-CV·186.
7nhfn
Property aolzod:
Monloa .__ _ _ _ _ _
_,.
and .,.reonal propertlee ao
lloted In the Inventory filed r - - -.......,.____.,
In•the above atylad caaa at
BINGO
oalzad from and at the
E"ERY THURSDAY
Robart File 18~1danca ond
•
EAGLES
real proport111 located at
311 South Third Avenue,
CLUB
Middleport, Ohio on or
IN POMEROY
about July I, 1893. A
complete !latina of tho
8:45 p.m.
pareonol proportlea It
Special Early Bird
available at public record
SIOO P""OH
for roviow In IN
-•
REPETITION FOR
This ad gootf for 1
FORFEITURE, 13-C'I/-186, at
FREE card.
tho Comm·on PINI Clerk of
Lie. No. 0051-342
Court'• Office, Third Floor,
t11241921lfn
Malgo
County
Courlhouoa,
-==:::::;;;;;;;:==~
Second $treot, Pomeroy, r
Ohio during normal
RACINE
buollltllahoura.
Said prop•ty wao oeized
MOWER CLINIC
from uld Robart File by tho
WALKE I ALLEY
· . Molgo County Proeocudng
Pttrls 1111 StrYke
Attorney'o Office and tho
Mo 1 ,._,_ Sa
Mol go County Shorlll't
WtiS ""•• WS
Olltca and lito oama Ia hold
WMIIHI•s
by the Mol go Count~
Authorlad: Brlgga It
Proaacutlng Attorney'•
Stratton MTD, RYan,
OHico and Molge County
I. D.C. Repair Center
Bharlll'a Ollloa.
PICKUP and DEUVERY
Any poraon htvlng an
Houre II- M-F 1-3 SaL
ownarehlp or eacurlty
Cloeed Sunday
lnlor'ntln tho property moy
949•2104
- • t tlta torttltura at ollld
4f.!Wn

.. •

Whot - . Mloo. And 1oni0

Sept 111 4nl, t-? lolrr Clolhu,
On Coro Mill Rd.
Adullo, Mlae. 2 Mlln ~- 'tlln4 Fomlll•: 1ot, 2nd, 3nl, ton, 011325.
41~, 142 t...or Oorflold, Clollleo, Sept 3n1, 4t~. N, Kotlol' Dl'ivo,
Bike, Sloroo, Homo lnlorior, Cog Off 0oorgoo C..k. Clothing,
HouM 1 Loto Mloc, Yonl Limo Bicycle,~ c ..no.

SprNGtr.

Outler I Oownopout. 30W75·
11102.

Kltton_o1 _ ~k, black I whlto,
gray. .....,,_,age,
.
Klttono: 3 Moloo, 2 Fe. .IH1 11
Wko. Old For M.,. Into Cell 114-

1112·2334.

985·3406

Mother

318/lln

a..Hrn

e~~t

I . 4 kilt.,.., long

..d. 30W~24.
Pa~ Sjlltz pupplu, 30W75~.l

2440.

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
EXCAVATING
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY
BULLDOZING
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLE~ING
WATER&amp;
SEWERUNES
BASEMENTS&amp;

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Ac.cident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

GENEUL,
HAULING

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Limestone

D.A. BOSTON
EXCAVAIIHG

PYppl•, 11 . ..u okl, malt

a

fimale, 11't0thtr 11 Reglt1trtd

Gonnon oho~-hllr,l14-1112-3177:

chorcool gray,

JohnR.L8nt.o
Malgo County
Pro-'lng Allornoy
(1)2,1,21o

PubliC Notice ·
PUBUCNonCE
Tho Molga County Board
of Ravlalan h• oomplattd
lt. work and tho booka a..·
now open lor public
lnlpecllon •

Illata- County

Board of Ravlalon
(lf27,29,30,31,(9) 1,2,3,5,7,8
toto

Dirt
Gravel
992-7878
7nlt ......

(614)
667·6628 .

!104-

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
· Box 189
Middleport, o•Jo 45760
(614) 843·5264
Bta Moving Solo: 475 Kllllly
...,

St,

New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
checkbook token from
-• of tNCk, p1M10 dlop In
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
mallboxln-r.
FREE ESTIMATES
~: wolot oontalnln.11 lmpor·
tont
po.,o,. ~0111od IJun l.lke
614·992·7643
a - 114-1111 3121, 114471- ~~~- Solo: Lorrr · lloaldonco,
-Plllo,
1310.
!No Suntlar Call•)
Flldly,
lotu,.r.
2112192/tfn

4-19-93-lln

•,

•

-,- •owtn:auw

Route 7 laloW Itt, 211, Lot•
hbr ...... Adult Clolhlng:

"--ng.

tpprOYtd

• , • 1:-r:.w::

992·5432

Cr~

.

MULTIMEDIA

.

311%

Leading

Conoorvancy Diotricl
Salom Twp, Oh
EHoctivo 0.18 08125113
Thle final action not
preceded by· propooad
IICtlon and It appealable 1o
EBR. Donvlllo axlanalon
wolor line.
(9) 2, 1tc

Lighted keypad , redial.

Reg . ii.99

Chapo. 3745-47 and 3746-5
lor requirements.
Fino! Approvol of Plane
ond Spociii~Hono
•

CIIJII"

&amp;8• arr

(Continued from Pege 8)

,

vary II 101M Cllalel/lrar.cNM ttorn.

h .. llpplllr Rt~~O¥al

I I I: \I ' I I I '1 I

2---:- In Me•ory
446-G.WpoUo

SAYRE TRUCKING

NEW-REPAIR

M•icollu~

Fnobo A V.......lao
For S.lo or , _

Ga!Ua County Meigs County M-n Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

Joe N. Sayre

ROOFING

Polo for .5alo

r---------,=,-,-.,.=====-----1 - a..;

Clauifled pages cover the
fol.Wwing telephone e:cchanges ...

Reasonable Rates

Cheshire. Sept. 3-4 - 8-6
Chlldnln'o/aduh clothing, Levi
Docker sl&lt;irts, lamps, Home lnhtrlor,
elac. typewriter.
367·7350

:

prlcn tno'fi" o" 1t10v1 l1tm1

100 p.m. Thursday
1:00 p.m. Friday

HAULING
UMESTONE,
GRAVEL, TOPSOIL_
&amp; COAL

HUGE YARD SALE
Corner of LOcust &amp; Maple St.,

frHht._.u
leavtMtu•

TPII·f'Wl'-'llas• • Wll

l:t1,hl!.:d

Nolieea) "will abo appear ill thll Point Pleannl Regiater and
the CallipoU. Daily Tribune, reachi.ft8 o•llr 18,000 boJB.a

IPECIAL,_.I

~s shlppillo IIlii
llltdWICIO'II2·dlyW!

proc:.dur•

M011day Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thunday Paper
Ff\day Paper
Sunday Paper

'

LIII·PHII.._

19

1/~,.·rf--. l'l \!11,,'
l..,\(li\

\

49~

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

liiii&lt;J'IC l,klltilll

ou&amp;lide the tOW).l)' your ad rwu InUit boa prepaid
• Recehe dilcouut for adl paid in adnnoe.
• Free Ada: Ci•uway aad FouDd ad. 1Uider 15 wordl wUI be
n.n 3 da11 at no eharse.
• Price of ad for aU Capital letten ia doubie prtce of ad cott
• 7 point liae trpo only uaocl
e ,Sentinel. il DOl .r •poDiibJe for error1 after riJ'It day (check
for error• rnt day ad rullll in paper). CaD before ~:00 p.m.
day after puhl~ation 1.0 make correction
• Ad. t.J.t mual be paid in advance are:
Card ofThanb
Happy Ado
In Memoriam
Yard Sale.
• A cla~tlfled adYerlilllmeat placl!!ld ill tbe TIM! Daily Sllntinel
(~&gt;cept CluolfiOd Dilplay, B.. ioea Card or Lep1

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
1:00 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tueoday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday

3/4/931 mo.

SPECIAL PIRCIIAIEI

0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 I .. 0 I 0 0 I

•

!

CLOSED SUNDAY

COPY DEADLINE

1 Ad1

it

E~")''l•~

+ ...,~ .l'-1l/11.'d \\·r: h

POLICIES

'

SAT.B-12 .

8A.M.-5P.M.-

f&amp;A TREE TRIMMING

Choose lrom various
titles, from games to
publishing . &lt;&gt;5·6300·6309

l'illl

. MoN. lhru FRI.

CABLE?

.

Jl,!\11r

an ad
Call992-2156

propoead action. Any complaints, any pareon may
penon may oubmll obtain notice of lurthur
commenlll and/or • meeting actlone, and additional
rOfjardlng any draft action lnlormation.
Unleu
within 30 daye of tho date othorwlaa provided In
lndluted. "Action", •• uaed notlceo of particular
ebove doot not Include action•, oft communication•
receipt of a verified ehall bo . tent to : Hearing
complaint. II a!gnlflcant Clerk, OEPA, P.O. Box 1049,
public lnta(etl oxltlt, a Columbue Oh, 43266-0149
public meoting may be hold. Ph. (614) 644-2115. .Conoult
Aa to any 11CIIon, Including ORC Chap. 3745 and OAC
receipt of verified
(Continued on Page 9)

••
•

\l.lri11.1IL'&lt;I

TG place

Howard L Wrltesel

Hands-free, auto-level recording.
. Built-in mike. Reg. 49.99 114·1\56

lr1 I \'rl'\

&lt; •

Worde Rate Over 15 Word•
15
$4.00
$ .20
15
$6.00
$ .30
15
$9.00
$ .42
10
15
$13.00 .
$ .60
Monthly 15
$1.30/day
$.05/day
Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day all separate ads.
Buain ... Card-...$17.001 indl per momth
BuUetin Board... .$6.001incl! per day

Days
I
3
6

SUPERCOLOR SPECIAl

Shippi~

Jennifer Morgan, Rob , Steffie,
Brittany, Ben and Anthony Jacks,
Rick, Lisa and Damian, Courtney
Tibbetts, Jemery Welch, Sharon,
Matt and Mopica, David Welch,
Jeff and Cody .Welch, Gary Artrip,
Mary Woods, Shawn and Megan
Tibb etts and K.C. and Ryan
Clemente.

RATES

Pubttc Notice

······················· ·· ···················:•

The "NEW" Gold Standard
In Chicken Taste
!1'1 Pl!l(ltilh

Public Notice

Pre-book by Sept. 5 for
2-day shipment the Friday
before Sept. 13. Check
out Express Order at
Radio Shack.

COMING SOON

+)It'Ll'

Clinton intends. to address a
joint session of Congress in three
weeks on his healtb reform plans,
but may reveal beforehand how he
intends to pay for the reforms 1111d
other key details, aides said
The Post reported Wednesday
that Clinton's advisers had coneluded tbey can redirect from $180
billion to S240 billion from Medicare and Medicaid over the next
five years to pay for reforms. The
two programs now cost the federal
government more tban $220 billion
annually.
Medicare took a bigger hit in the
deficit-reduction bill enacted last
month than any other program: $56
billion over five years.
Rep. Pete Stark, D-Calif., the
chairma11 of the House Ways and
Means health subcommittee,
warned on Wednesday, "Further,
massive Medicare and Medicaid
cuts without reform of the entire
health care system will harm these
two key programs and fuel inflation in the rest of the health care
system."

WHY PAY

lhiDoina and
~¥1il·dl\llir 1

Welch family reunion. held
The fam il y of Grace Welch held
a reunion on July 30 in Circleville.
Attending were Janet and Bill
Davidson, Sharon and Gene Wise,
Donna and Bob Jacks, David and
Terri Welch, June Lowery, John,
Pat and Danny Artrip, Gary and
Arvctta Welsh, Tammy Clemente,
Donna, Jarrod and Collon Griggs,

--::-Pu-::b-::ll-c-:-:N--ot-:-lce--

PUBUCNOTICE
The following were
received/prepared by the
Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency (OEPA)
lao! week. Ellectin d - of
llnlll IICilone and l11uance
del• of propoted action•
and of drall IICtione ere
ollltld. Final action• moy be
appealed, In writing, within
30 clayo of the data olthlo
notice, to the.Environmental

~

After many months of collecting
recipeS from friends and family the
Rutland Fire Department Ladies
Auxiliary will started. selling their
personalized cookbooks on
September I.
The spiral bound cookbook will
feature recipes from local residents
on seven different full-color sections . The book contains many
pages of cooking hints along with
several pages oflocal information.
The books will be sold by members of organization and at the Rutland Department Store or Button
and Bows, Pomeroy. The cost of
the book is $5.50. A copy can also
be purchased by calling Kimberly
Willford at 742-2103.

care reform," Health and Human
Services Secreraiy Donna E. Sha!ala said in the staremenL
Me4[care covers the nation's 31
million elderly and 4 million disabled workers. Medicaid covers 31
million poor jleople.
Clinton met Tuesday and again
Wednesday with se nior health
advisers as he strives to make "the
final decisions on the health care
plan, '' White House Press Secretary Dee Dee Myers said.
. The Washington Post reported
today that Clinton decided against
proposin~ eitber mandatory or voluntary pnce controls on health-care
costs. Instead, he will propose government mon itori ng to prevent
profiteering, the newspaper said
quoting unidentified White Hou~
officials.
.
Clinlllll and his aides also deeid·
ed that tbe only new tax to fmance
his health-care package would be
on cigarettes and possibly liquor,
the Post repor ted. The tax on
cigarettes would range from 50
cents to 75 cents a pack.

•The !Area's Number I
Marketplace

Pl. Plellant
&amp; VIcinity

�Sentinel
Pl. Plllllnt

...
-

33

a VIcinity

n . ~. .....

a .,

1993
•

Ohio

-~ 2

41.7'1

••

44

Farms for Sale

Apartment
tor Rent

Fonn

llooy

NEA Cro .. woJd Puzzle

- . La. Hm, 2 IIIIOo F....,_,vW., ToMcco ..... 0011,
Out Bulldlne 135,000, .,... .
1171.

eouth of

Ollloe, . . . 2-11, . . . . .

35

Lots &amp;

tDutclllowll

12 lieu IIIII' crt
11 Woody .......
1ol II !ala . .

1 ocn lolo, AI 2. Aolllon. C1ydo
- . , 30W11-ml.
3 L.oto Soulll - . Flortclo, 3

............
II

OH
81 AI 141. · - - tw
morol-lon.

I''*MF 1ALE. ..._.,, WY
.,_ Rfvoralcle Golf
a.., lopl I, 4 • 1. Offloo Fumi......_Toolo,AirCCOfto

1111 ' · L.cllo of
Yonl Sole, Ft1 • Sothoomo colo
h-, olol lne, Olloo
• - . 4 miiH out R!. enrom ln.
- l o n of AI. 2 • 87.
Yard Sell earner 1tt' Adems,
.. You want samples to throw a~ each other? !"
...
- . Sopt. 2 • 3, 1:00-3:00,1------~---'j.=========~
rolnorlhlne.
• I

_,_,. .

w.rud to ....,., .__ ....,..

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Employment Serv1ces

"Pity llo" londllldo yard ooloSopt. 1 =• 2
3, tam 1111 ' .AI. 1
obovo
o/Gollo llno, oerfrom II
3 family yord oolo, Sopl 1,2 &amp; 3
on Sharon ~loW Rd., approx.
I mi. from CA31, Portiond, follow
~nt, Chlrlle Hoek rooldlinco.
Fwmltwe, boob. 1•, m..c.,
clolhoo Ill slzoo, lnfonto,
chlldr~r-., ment

&amp; WOIMI\II.

11· Help Wan.ted
--::::::::-:::-.!:~:-~:7"~~
AVONI AM oxtnl
M0ner Of want I C.,..r, either
WIY-Goll lla~IVft. 30WI2·284S
or 1.aoQ-112-4351.
AN you lnllnolad .... holDing
....,. mokl tho . - of lholf
noturol bNuty? Conal.- llolng
I

35 Rivorvlow Drln, lllddloport,
Sopl, 2 &amp;3. Roin Concllo.

Coemalolagitl.

laarn lhi

101111 In hllr ..,. olytlng, and
tochnlq- • woll • giving
monlcu- ()poningo 01111 oval~
oblo in Oct 11th clliao.·Onty on,.,M_nt thlo·yaor. Cornool Tho

4 tamlly, •ell Athlrw Co. line
outside Tuppere Plaint, AI. 7,
Solll. . 3 I 4. lllcrowovo, K-5 Adult Educltlon Ctntar, 1~
137oe508orl14-713-3811.
wa\erbld, lg. tan, e.a ..
1115 Gon. Hortlngor, lllddloporl, AVON I AI - · I Shirley
Soptombor \2,3. Homo lnlirior, S,.n, 304-175-1421.
curtelnt, c:lothin;, btiby llemt,
!lobyolllor In my homo,
mlec.
Ponienw .,,.., houre will nry,
A building full of clothing, oil
.a-. Including mena, loft of ·c;arcl.-.1 Frolglll Coniora.Q.T.R.
wom~rw ..rger alus, prac.d to
for • new t•
Nil, nothinG over $3.00 mi!"Y Drt'tl. .Inwanted
Huntcana, WV, mu.t
komt now logo 11111 on, Sopt. I• mlnal
hovo 1yr. O.T. ~. HporloriCI pul~
4, 3 mlleo oouth of TuppoN ing
a von trallor, good Ollrllne
P11lnt on Succeu Ad., otd pay,
modlil oqlilpmonl, Bluo
chun:h o1 top of hll~ wolch 1&lt;&gt;r CrOMloll
IIUI Shlold, Inc., olop all
signa, nln or ahln., Judy pay, loy
ovor pay, brN-n
Wobor. 814-167-1235.
All Yard S.IM MuM Be Paid In ~Y·~=~.:.~
lloyd Acldne,IIOQ.II2N222.
Advonco. Duellno: 1:OOpm tho
diJ' betor. the ad ll to Nn,
lim Ful~11mo P1oy For PMSundoy adllon- 1:00pm Ffldoy, Tima
WOfll All A Chriltmu
Monday
odlllon
IO:OOo.m.
A""'nd
TM
World.
Slturdly.
Domonolrotor, Frao 1500 KH No
Bog Solo· Frldoy I Sat..doy, Collocllng Or 11111-ing, AIOO
3rd &amp; 4th, Huma,w Society a-.ng Portloo, Coli 814-2458031.
Thrift Shop, lliddloport.
DRIVERS.C.rdlnol
Fi...C lime, alx t.mlly, variety, tot- FL.lTBED
low tlgM, 30tH NHCe Rd., Fnlg"' CoiTion hu on
Middleport, Frlda~3rd) I SeiUf· tunlfy "" flllbocl driven lhol lo
MCaftd · to nona! Do you own
day(41h), 9-3pm.
your Own II'ICtor? HaYI you
Gar'IQI ul• Haym•n ruldenct thought abo.- ""Yine your """
bohlnd Pool OHico In tong lot· .troetor? lo bolng o companr
1om. Ttlundl)' and Frldoy, driver whit you ar• lnterHttd
10:00om-?
In? Thin eon Cordlnol todoy at
1..aoo.e214222 •nd • • fDr Tim.
Moving Solo- Sopr. 1, 2 &amp;3 WE HAVE IT ALLI
Roodovlllo, thon movo to SR 124
btlow
Aa.ctnll~
behind Flowor doolgnor nooodod In

·-~-

ear

op,..,..

Nu.,.M Church for the •th &amp;

5th. All hma mUit go, 1110
newly upholatllf'ld coucll &amp; lovt

POrMroy arn, Nnd ,.aume to:
P.O. 8o1 7211F, PomaoJ, Ollkt

45711.
..... 1450, t14-37M153.
Maftl.gtr trtlnua WlftiM for
Pulllno h""'!! ono *Y only, roin Tupporworo $15/hou~y pluo , _
or ehln1, a-curday, S.pl. 4, TuppwwaN. Cor !Ymlahod up&gt;n
II : OOim~? on Rt. 33 bltwHn 7·33 quallllcollon. No . upmoneo
Carryout and 4 ''"• At. 33. Tum noeoooory 114-1'12·23111 uk lor
at tho Pulllno Excovollng algn, Bonnlo.
go up hill to brick houat. Fumlfuro, upright fnoZit', living room MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTIONIST:
aulte whtl r.c:llnarw, carp~~t. Thl1 AcCUNIO Typlol With llacllc:ol
II a remodeling aala, too much Terminology NMdad For FuiJ..
Piialtlon.
WP
5.1
to llol and ovwythlng gooo. No nmo
,...... or phone c•ll• plaa•. Kn-dfl!' Holptul. Excollorll

Sopt. 2.ol\ opprox. 2 mlloo oH

181, Darw n nu.r Whaley'• Auto
Parte. Mena, bop l••n•,
wometw clothing. knlck-knacke,
mloc.

Sopr. 3- 4, tom· 5pm, 2305 3rd

St., SyracuH, Clothn, boom

bo.:, nlntando, blku, Tl computer, tiiiiCope, many other
lttma, ttema priced to Hll or
mlkl u1 an oftlr.
Sopt. 3rd, rood under Pomoroyl

Wortdng Corldlllono And Uborot
F~ngo lonollo. Salory cmanaurate With AbiiHJ. Send

Roouma

To:

llolzor Clinic
Human' Aa~lonl O.Pirtment
10 Jock- Plkl, Golllpollo, Oil
NMdad: Htlr Dr....r, Partlima, NMdt Mantgere LlcarlH,
Coli 614-441-3353 8 A.ll. 11M 7
P.ll .
No E•porloncol S500 To $1100

manr

lllrgroundo, Rock Sorlngo Rd. tem At Homa, • Houre Each On
BoYa and gl~o clolhlng 10.14, Frld•y &amp; Sat ... rday, $5 Hour, 114vkfoo gomoo &amp;toyo.
446-7732.
Union Avenue,

naar Farrell Gas. Olnana Htl,

houoohold llomo, good ochool

Outaldl llle
expanding

··r

rura

naldad for
cable TY

no exparianct1
clothn.
. will train, dopandablo
ctr required, average $400Yard Solo- Frldoy &amp; Sot..doy, $700 por wool&lt;, coli 1-IQO.JIII2.
Seplamber 3&amp;4, 331 Lasley 2378, Mon·Frl.
Street, Wpm. Klda cloth...
progr~mrner,

Part-Time
Aectptlonlat
yard Sal• Saturty, Slplemblr ISK,.tlry Wanted. WMkandJ
4th, tam. ScaMer, desk, misc., Only. Houro AII:OO A.ll. To 4:30
31100 Rock Springo Rd., P.ll. Apply AI Plnoc- Core
Pomaroy, 2 '112 mllal pal1 C.nter,· Phonl Number Ia ·114-

Folrgroundo.
441-7112. EDE.
Yord Sail· Sopl. 3&amp;4. Gi~o Rotoll oloro monogor noodocl,
clothM, C:Polrttlna, comlortara, oomo oxporloneo pnlonad. AJ&gt;ahHII, mut KIIM, queen IIZI
wtter bed, and more. A011 pllcallona m1y bl picked \.IP at
realdance In lalh•n by lira any Dollar Gtner~l Storw. ComPublic Sale
&amp; Auction

Aagl111f, Box C.n, 200 Main

owner. 114-002-

2521. W. buy Mt1t11.
Don, Junk Ml Soli Uo Your Non.
llojor

Applloncoo,

Cc*lr
TV"I,
Atfrlger8tora,
Frw!'f'~ VCR'•, MicrCMI'Iel,

WV

':":':'~--:--.,...--:--,---

-urHy dopoell, no polo; 114-

1182-2211.

0

....

.....,

. . . . .,,

...

mlloo. 3Qol.l7l4m.

I

54

11 COncern" For Your Chlld'o
C1r1. Call U1 For A, Vlall. Infant

Ford Aw 1w IL' luly :
plow.~ pllntor and a~: 1811
loodocl, .......... - . . """ .
d~ll uvll; I N Fordmllogo,$1,11110.~
,
ond bull!~ 12380; 1200 Dovld
Brown wllh laodor $5110 114-

IToddloro 114-411-8221. P chooloro !Sehool Ago 114-44&amp;- 2 Bedroom• Furnlthld, O.poah
T~orlng

In moot oubloclo,
grodos 7-12, coll614-;49-2308.
Wontad lo do- bobyaktlng In my
home on Nichol•• RotC!, Ctr•

Bedroomt,

Av•nutl,

1124

Eatitm

Gtlllpollt,

$350/Mo.

1300 Dopooh'- Rofonncoo, No
Poll, 61H48-;a82.

tlflod old, 614-11112·3807.
For Aa,.. 3bdrm. ho..., Uncoln
wtll da bobyoHUng In my homo, Hill, Pomwoy, ol&gt;ono 614-1112nooonoblo pri- 3Qo1.67S- 3051 or 614-t82-11142, ook far
1704.
Rlek.
wtll do your loundry In my Nice 3 bodroom hou11 In
home, wa1h, dry l Iron, $2.50 Pomaroy, $350/mo., depoah and
por lood, 114-fi2·5275.
,.r.renc:n, no pale, 814.eNo
wtll Houl Small· Loodo Or 10 Ton 7244.
loadt At A

Aeaton~bll

Price.

Loroy Coldwell, 111 446 4851.
wtll holp wHh trontporlotion for

IO . , out Of Malgt County, 614·
8124703.

21

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. t180.47 por month, now 14' wldo
,.commanda lh.t you do bual· mobile hol"nn, lncludll dallvary,
n. . with people you know and compl ..l Ntup, eklrting, ateps,
NOT lo oond monty lhraugh tho !5 year Wlmmty and I month•

mall until you htv• lnveatfgated
the offering.
Loc1l Pay Phone Route: $1,200

lot rent, 1..aoo-&amp;31-8625.

10xiD mobile horne, 2 badroom,

1120 fourth Avo, Gollipollo. 1325
A Wook Potontlol, Prlctd To wat•r and lrash paid 814446Soil. 1.aoo-488-7832.
44l8 after 7 p.m ~

Locol Vending Route: $1,200 A 2 bodroom lrolloJ rot I clop, no
WMk Potentlll. Mu1t Sell. 1-800- polo, AI. 62 N. 1LOCUo1 Rd on
653·Vend.
right, 304-t7ll-1078.
2 Bedrooma, CA, Aerttor Salt
On LJ.nd Contnct. 2' Blockl
From Big Boer. 114-4411-1409 Atlor 4 P.ll.
,

Real Estate
31

2 BR unfurtsh.ct all electric.

Homes for Sale

whh

woodburnar.

At.

2 Ndroom hou•, fuH ba..,. Privlte lot 61W48-2602

monl. 304-675·1488.
3 bedroom, 1 112 bath, garagt,
oqulppod ldtchon Ml bo..
mtnt, rural water, 2.40 ecrM, 10 ·
mllal from town, State Route

!588

2bdrm. trallar, Condor St.,
Pomeroy, $210/mo., $100/dap.,

614-167·3083 aftor 5pm.
:-=-:---::-:.,---:=:-::-:-::3 Bedroom Double Wide Mobile

141. $~900. No lind conlr•cta. Hom., Onto 1211:60 Mobile Home
614-379-2252 anytlmo; (3711-2620 2 Bodroomo, 614.ol48-2003.
or 3?9-22JIIIo~nlngo)
Fuml.t.d Exceptional 2 b.d·
room trallw In Portar •rea 114-

-·-

••a.• ,... '

w-

1-ii8'

Rainbow SWMP«, 2 Y11ra Old,

:;~rWA=~~:.· ISSO, l14-

...·..n'a Fenn, AI a

J04..13J.2011.
c.t11e
Hauling:
Anrlllnl,
An1•hoto. PL.l R i l - ONo,

2ur.

;
0
0

;
,'

PEANUTS

367-7504.
3bdrm. houoo I garogo, Apple
St., Syrocuoo;., 1110 3bclrm.
hoUII on LM
svriCUII;
call Racine Home N1t I Bank,
614·149-2210.
53Q Fourth Avenue, 5 Am., NMr

.,.,..t,

Schools, Cantral Helling, Fancad Yard, Stanar Home fAantal
$31_500, 24 Hr. Nollco, 814-44&amp;-

14ro, 114-446-4365,
8590.

614-448-

Hoi.IH By Ownara: 521 Fourth

Avenue, 3 B~rooma, VInyl,
Nur School, C.Oinll Heating,
Gtraga
With
Apanmenl,

$49.1100. 614-4411-1478, 614-4460360, 614-44H510.
Llkl

New

2

hdroom

HomaJBaaement.

$4,000,DP.

Payfftllnta,

;
,

TOO 616
FOR 1{01.)?
ALL RIGI-IT,
6RIN6 ~OUR
OWN BALL ..

•

I
1

$380.26

Stove,

CINn, Ref~Nncaa,
Aftor4P.II.

44

Compllla home fum~~~~··
Hou,. : Mon-Sit, 1-5. 11
6-

0322, 3 mlloo out Bulovlllo Rd.
Frao Delivery.
Mollohan Corpoto, AI. 7 N. 614446·7444, 9112 Corpol 1410, Vinyl
$4.49 Yd.
New Oak Fumhure: Tabln &amp;

wilt load, •~.

1bdrm. 1p11rtm•nt In Pomeroy
tor r~~nt, 8*ev2•58.
1bdrm.
Avenue,

apartmanl,
Spring
Pomeroy. $175/mo.,

.

G.'

FRANK AND ERNEST

Alfllfo
hoy rolo.L $21 AIIF R odmoolw llloPM. -h.
n'o Form, HI H. good.
~-QII. .
:104..37401 •

•11.

~

Ttt~~fS A,_F~Al&gt;Y A LOT Of INTeF~ST
/
IN MY BAN~ AC.COUNT.

75 Boats • Motora
fOr Sale

TransportatiOn

~ G~T MAl,_ ~V~~Y·
l&gt;AY f~OM FOL.~S

CAN/'
A'COVNiJ

Tan Gallon Flah Aquarium Whh

Hood And Background And Two
Nolo To.l35, 114.ol48-2551.
Thirty chlmnoy btockl, 614,8492281.
Uood riding town moww.

-

Chlnt Etc. Fhver Valley Oak
Furniture, Georgn Crwk Road,

AS~IN6 Wt4~N Tttf'Y
• (.,AN e&gt;&lt;P~CT TO G~T
·ON~ OF MY Cti~C.~S!

WI TI-l

tNTf!£-5T/
•

"

'

~~!!!~~:..:....:.~:=!:.!:!:~;.J;::!~~-.J

I •

.-

Golllpollo, Ohio 614-446-1316.
PICKENS FURNITURE
Now/Uoad . ·
Houtohold fumlohlng. 112 mi.
Jarrlcho Rd·. Pt. Plnaant, WV,
coli 304o675·1450.
SIHpar Sofa, ••c cond, large
bird cago, 15 gal floh tonk

BORN -L OSER

em AA'(()N£
TELL /If.
WAATI\

&lt;H:,(Ji'
THO$ F\)11.1'(
I&gt; llEE.R

~
~~ '?

~N...&lt;.&gt;

Oliva St., Oalllpolle. New &amp; Uald
fymltura, hAl.,., Weltam &amp;
Work boots. 614-446-3150.

w..t.rT

Dryer,

~

dltloilar,

A•trlgarator,

Ctmper

!

!if'=:/

Slzt

Mlcrowtve, 614·

Washer-Dryil', malch~ Ht,
gold, haaVy duty, ••c. ahape.

Saaro Lllla!ylo tnodmlll MJCT
2800, auto. lncllno. 304-6~
2ll22.

$100/dop., no polo, 114-167·3013 Wood bunk bed 11t $100 cell
614-446-8869.
oftor5pm.
lbdrm., furnlohocl opartmont,
v.y clean S2351mo. plue 52 Sporting Goods
dopooH, lllddloporl, ii14-ID2·

OtHV?

i

.V. FrMzar, Air Con·

Color

Wood Burnor Stovo Wllh Triplo
lnoulotod Plpa, 114-245-11227.

55

Grtndl, OH C.ll 114-

1113 Ofdli
2c1r, good -

~

5225.

1114
.

Badroom 2 Bolho, $275&gt;11o.
O.pos{t, Utlllllos, 2 111111 N.
614-388-110110.

·r'M. ClN A NEW DIETOF-

•

-· $20110. :1111-475-

-.:u~ l-1, Alllo,

Tr•ne. PS, P , AC, $100, 114441-2117.

6KtM MIU&lt; 51\NDWICHE:.S.

eut~o. · - · 78

~E ONL-Y TMtNG I !XJN'T

r

--

UKEAE50UT1HE;I&gt;A 15 ...

C&amp;lnplng

THI:' WAY 11-iE= Mlu&lt;.I&lt;Uoe
CO'v"&gt;N MY APN6 WHE:N ·

1'1-IEVR!: ReAL.L.Y ~GOOD.

--;;:-y - --·

EAT THeM.

Equipment

~~~~~~~
11ft. Prowlor tor lllo,
114-'1112·2277.

79

campers a
Motor HOIIIII

Montlily

.......

woo11v

,=..._

37 Rotten
38 Let ltatud

Eut

Pue
Pue

Pue
Allpua

2811.

Fumllhld

Efflcloncy:

There are times when there is only
one card that should be played in a giveo position. The fewer tbe cards, tbe
easrer tb.e play should be to find. But
011 today's deal, tbe 011ly-oae-card moment arrived at trick three. !did by
making tbe winning play, Tor Helness
from Norway was awarded the prize
for tbe best-defended hand at this
year's Generali European Cbainpionsbips.
Against three no-trump, Helness led
a low spade. EaJt, Geir Helgemo, WOII
witb tbe
and king.
returned
. tb,~~~:~
eight
to aee
West's
Now.
meditated for a while before
iDg what was claimed to be
card to defeat tbe contract," the
10.
Note !bat a low heart blocks tbe
suit; declarer just plays low from ·tbe
dummy and wins the trick. But the
lead of the heart 10 leaves East free to
run tbe suit.
A good play, but there are two problems. The lint is !bat tbe declarer can
stU! make his contract - if he places
East witb tbe club king. After winning
witb tbe heart ace, South cashes his
1so1ade and diamond winners, bringing
eVE!fYilDe down to four cards. The
dummy bas tbe J·8 of hearts and tbe
A-Q of clubs. But what does East
keep? U three hearts and one club, a
club to the ace feiiB the
And If
East retains two hearts and twc• cll&gt;bs,
a heart wt endptays East to lead
I~~::~~·~ club tenaee. Declarer's nine
I•
are two spades, one heart, four
1di~~=: and two clubs.
I
Eytbol'ldottir, who was
for tbe Icelandic women's
this lead at trick one. This
defeats tbe contract. Why
she
half tbe award?

'YLCFMK

Saconcl, Galllpolla, Shira Bath,

Utlllllol Poid, ti851Mo. 614-44&amp;4411 After 7 P.ll.

_1J~jl.L_.
ITnnA.V'!I HISTORY; On this day in
1666, the Great Fire of London began.
Over the next four days, the blaze
would destroy 80 percent of the city.
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Cleveland
~~:~~i;';~l917·l. author, is 76; Marge
(1923-), dancer-actress. is
Terry Bradshaw (1948-), football
lst:ar --com~nentator, is 45 ; Mark
Harmon (1951-l, actor, is 42; Jimmy
Connors (1952·), tennis player, is 41;
Eric Dickerson 11960-l, football player,
is 33.
TODAY'S SPORTS: On this day in
1977, American Edwin Mose~ won the
440 hurdles in a meet in Dusseldorf,
.West
beginning a !Cl-year .

•
ASTRO-GRAPH

rooms, AIC, natural gaa fum.ce,
un*rponning, pore"' good
cond, Galllpofls Flfl)', WV. 304-

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

•

1913 14x52 Oakbrook Toiol
tary ogod chlldnn. lo yo.. child Elactrlc, AC, 2 Bedroom.:~xctl·
having dlffloully rndfng? I'm 1 lonl Condition, 614-258
3, Or
qualltred t..eher avalrable 1o 614-2511-1141.

o.n.r.r

114-446-11511,

a

Surgo

Reorranoa letters of rh1
0 four
J(I'Ombled words \ below ro form four wards.

'

. r-r-C...:;U,...:L:...,:H;.:...:.:,A,.:.:N~.;.~

_I I I I 1
1

P E T MY
"My son thinks he's too old
to kiss goodni!)ht" One mother
told her nerghbor. "Well •
~ laughed lhe n!Jighbor, "I kisS
, . . - . . , . . - - - - - - , m y sons goodnighl, provldlld
CI F F 0 E
ll'm awake when they -· - -."
1-:.6,-;:.1....;;.Tl.;...;l.....;;,l-=-~~1:7-i
Complete the chuckle quolod

II I
I
.

.

I 1

G

.

.

by f,fling in the missing words
L......L-.L.......I-...I....;...L-...r you develop from step No. 3 below .

=r- ........ .
Plumbing

Friday, Sept. 3, 1993

a

Heating

The bread .you cast on the waters in hopes

of hl!lping others could come back to you
many lold in the year ahead . Obse rvers
who have your best interesls al heart Will 1M!
watching from the winds.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) Don't leave the
managen1enl ol something which could cost
you money in ihe ~lands of an incompete~t
associate .- II you're indifferent abo ut th1s
matter. you· might have to pay the piper,
Get a jump on lile by understan,dlng the

Fumlohad 3 room ot&gt;lrlmont.
Porlor .,.. on SR 554 lf4.31111.
1000.

Nicely Fumlahod Apartmont,
1br, nut I~ Ubrory, parking,
ant,.l hut, 11r,

Futnllhld offlcloncy, t1B5.
Ulllftloo peld, 'IV1 Fou~h A••,
Oolllpolll 114ool45-4411 oftor 1
p.m.

1111 -

~;.;.;.;;;Eiel;;.;c;;.;.trl;;..a_l_a~- ·'

="

.. Ftroblrd, ilnlad T·
loa~: ,_ - . oliO
Aefrlg. . .IOn
:104.....7811.
1111 Ponlloc Grand Prll, bluo Anid111tlll .,
lll1rtng. ...... ..
faur
· looolol!r
U,OOO •lloo,
VII'/ aooct
concluon,-,_
11100, ......... UDIFitd
Rlclloour
IIIII twl, "'
ovanlngo.
tl\lGO 080, · -·- · ...
....,.........

!::1.

.

"

SCRAM-LETS

..

.
I w'.

..

.

ANS'wiis

. -.pr-

Upside • Jewel · Niece • Degree • WEDDING
An acquainlance told me lhat out of the blue her
i husband asked her lor a divorce. I figure that lhe only
1thing that's needed to gat a d\vorca today is a WED-

DING!
.. ....

.

~ ·~·.:

'

make.
year ahead. Send for your Astra-Graph pre- PISCES (Feb. 20·Merch 20) Today lry nol
dic1ions loday by mailing $1.25 and a long, · to be neither stingy nor foolistl with your
Graph, c/o lhis newspaper. P.O. Box 4465. to say "no", inslead a! lending somelhong to
New York. N. Y. 10163 . Be s ure to state a poorrisk .
your zodiac sign .
ARIES (March 21 ·Aprll 19) A pa~nership
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0cl. 23) There could be •arrangement In which you're presenlly
more strain than usual in a valued relation· involved is beginnin g to lack parity where
ship l oday. For personal reaso ns each your posilion is concerned. II it becomes
party mighl be more protective lhan cooper· one-sided it will be valueless.

work is concerned today. The end res ults of jand begin to promise mo re than it can

ri

And Programmlna "Softwere; Buncly Clo~nol for oolo $280.
Also Runo Applo Ill Software, -only 2 - · 114-446-7'131
BIOI Oltor. 1114-317-oaoll.
Bundy CIIIIMI, E-lorll Con.
dillon, $150, f14.44t..'IMI Aftor e
P.ll. .
.

l

1:--r--.,.-:-r....;.,:---l
5
~

assignments or tasks you resent doing will 'develop. Be watchful.

Wll 1luld ............
... .... - · P.U1 .,

Protecto_r, Sftlt'al AaollcttiOn

,...,.nee ,...
q-.114-441-QD.

I

lmagowrtllr

~::--~~--

- - - - - - 141114 loy

good attitude is· very importanl where your looks like it might lose some of its charisma

Malnt.nance, Palnllng,

pojd, ,.. _ _.., vont - . wtnd""' wllceno1d &amp; oortlflod logglne, Outtn Cloonad Lit"' HouNng,
~ or• 31131
Cornmorlcoi, Rooidlirolll, Sl-:
..-

panekJn Card, Stareo Sound

IHRUTYI

.......
.....
~~:~~y S©~(l1A-~t.trs· ::::

alive.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) An endeavor
SCORPIO (Oct . 24·Nov . 22) Having a lhat has been rather lucky for you recently

tutor vour child 114 4 •• 8228.

Cord,

MFI

·- =~~

sell -addressed, stamped envelope to Astra- possessions or resou rces. You might have

Musical
Instruments

va

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: " I hate violence tnd I hate curling - I don't
welch movt"" with that kind ol etuff. 11'1 ugly.'' - Tina Tu..-.

·tv;~~
!~

$150, 814·368-9262 Anytlmo.

57

y c

f F -X

GHMPFMT

K H M 0 R L .H . '

j

ning Bad $2,000 Bedroom Suitt,

Applo llgo Computor With 2-3.5
Drlvu, Color Monllor, I !log b·

a

LFTTVIRCD

HI f M T f . V K

ilnl~lu£en;:ce:;;s~w~h~ic~h~a-reJt..go~v~er~n~in~gly~ou~in-:t~h:,

mz

CNH

Y.MH

LMYPC

CNHRM

Home

,978 New Moon, 14x70, 3 Md·

6711-21711.

vax

F ARGT

Sept. 2,

If 0 H

J N f

CNHYCHM

Improvement•

10 Satellite Dish Toshiba
Aec1IVer /R1mota, &amp; Cable
107 $2',500
F1rm. 24 Bulb Wollt Tan-

1~11 Palm Harbor, 28x54, loaded
Air ""'""lllono11, Oullor Ampa, Cortlllad child con provldor will whh
opllan•, mutt 111, lncludH
take tare of children In
llolup ond dollvory, 1-800-837·
homt~, full time or par1 time, 1
J &amp; D'a Auto Parte and Salv-., ter echool, relerenctt, Che81er 6125.
0100 buying Junk CON &amp; 1"'""1· lrN, piNH coli 614-115-4212, 1114 Redmon 14x70, 3bdrm.. I,.
:104·773-5341
llory.
cludoo oklrtlnghciolopa, blodto,
Junk Con And Truckl, Running E&amp;R TREE SERVICE. Toe, 5yr. warran1y, meownara lnIIUranca, and 1 Y•r of tr.. k»t
Or Not, ••256-1051.
Trimming, TrM Removal,
rent, all tor only tl771mo., c::all 1.1un11. cars. any oondiUon, 114- TrimminG. Fr• Eatlmate•l I 4- 100-8374231.
lll2·7151
311'71151'Aftor 4p.m.

W.nted 811ncU~ tlmMr, top

81

....

·~

He found
the only card

Rtnch atyle brick, 13 acr91,

Merchandise

IIIOMY

8 1o1M lrtd I

Welt

614-8f4-ol501 Allor 7 P.ll.

54 Miscellaneous

"'-'-'
7r,:lor

2 Eggc•l
3 EUI'OIIHn

I..S, Or

2br, oHicloncy opmmont, oft
Booch 81., lllddloport. 30WI2·

5HarporVIIIey

1 Slnpr

·=.;I

:~&amp;

.

DOWfll

MORTY ""'EKLE.AND
lV~
,..;.;;....:;;,.;.;~~;...:...;.._ _ _ _ _, .--------------,1&lt;

-Ia:=·

1111 front
Chovolto,
Block, brick, Pipao, Win· now
braklo,4$100.
dowe, llntall, etc. Cla ...de Wln- 2422.
245-tiZI.

414 Chutolol H. .....,_

Ford Mlrlno Enalril, llobult Ford Trualt IEilglno, . _
014!.

Building
Supplies

t.,.,. Rio

~~~~~~ · ~--~

....... - Enalne.-- '
-

g:•

I

Evening~: lt13.t.F'f:i.'

Chairs, Curios,~ CurvH Glaaa

Attrlgarator,
2511·1238.

Apartment
for Rent

WJ.IAT l-lAPPEN5
IF I SWALLOW
IT 1

"
" ~~-Kl121,
.....
condltlon~l
tDr...,..
lizlsu-=
s.1 ot o.u c1ubo, 114-4411-MM. 64 Hay &amp;Gtaln
lion,
111
1422I
p.M.
Slartl~ At $20.00;Indlano Mony S.IONS: 'Portable llghtocl arrow
....
~~ot~
..;;;,,.;.:lll::-:-bo-:-lo, 210 ad! '
....
Shapes &amp; Slzn ~Jtartlng AI alan, $321, llg"'ocr ...,.,.,.., ::100=-:::lbo~.-:::b~

$38,500.

81~1157,

f

Drawer Cha.t $44.96; C.r Bad'a,
Bunk Bed'1, Poster Badi. Full
Lint 01 Southwestern VaiN

$5.00. 2 Looollono ·Booldo ~Uio $2!11, non.llgfilad chonr,ablo
Auction Or 4 Miles Out 141.
Jeaar algn, 1261, PlY"*' plain,
Opan 9 A.M. To 8 P.M. Mon ·Sot. froo
IOifON &amp; dollvory. 1.801).
GOOD USED APPLIANCES 133-3453 onyllmo.
Waahers, drv-ra, refrigeratOrS, Sla 8 112 Nlkl Shorlt Football
rangu. Skagg~~ Appllancn, 76
VIne StrMI, Call814-448·1318, 1· CINIO, 125, 114-245-1773.
IOO.oi99-34H.
Soft, Rtcllner, 8 Chalre, Dln.Ut
Tabla
&amp; Doak, Corbin .Snydlir
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Fuml!uro, 614-446-1171.

81

By Plillllp Alder

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62
12x60 2 Bedrooms

OUT!!

:
I

W/aCCIUDrllt, 304-875-2823.

3 Bedrooms, 2 Batht, 2 Car At·
taehld Garage, Outbuilding,
Bidwell Porter School Are~~, 614-

LETS

SUPPER··

1117 Hllrllr lpa:tat•, 1100 :
Evol .. lon ........ 11o1! - .
omp, Evory M-v, Chuck Wllllomo, s- 080, ~or 11+ '
Boddlng ·Twin Moll Sot $89, Full Roollollc oor otono Sst s.1, au..n 1'141 s..i 4 ~~o, IIIII,_, $15, 114-112- =~ Crook TNclllng. 114-246- 115.oi:DJ
'

Business
Opportunity

TH' MINUTE
CHURCH

I INVITED HIM
AN' HIS WIFE
OVER FER .

~

Motorcycles

Hollond 717 Foroge- 1111 Suzuki IOIIT t310, ....,
tor wt bath hood!r Holllncl Shope, ...., • - - .....
m. hayblnd, :s tttJ9 ...-,
eau .,, •••
a.rcat grindlr/ml.:er: AC, no
1111, cornpaantw, 12ft, TrWnaporl 1111 Ha..., Daul I n. •
Uniltod ...........
DIIC. 304-••-m.
=~:-- boiofloo,-._
Merchandise
POLl IUILDINO SPECIAL.
Flnlr. 1114-MWI._
:111'140'8'.
Polnlad
Blaol
llcleo,
1111
Hondo
~- 1 1o . . . .
NSA Wolor Filler With Thrao OoiVII- llool, 18'11'
.
..
51
Stool
Bfldlir
I'
llan
Ooor.
corb.
wariL
••
. - 080. 11+
Yl!lr
Worron!y.
Sold
For
tl80.
Household
Aoklng: 150, Collll&gt;l-44&amp;-1721.
$1,1MM1. EAEI:rio. lion 44H288•
Goods
Plootlc Ionero for portobiii·B~ul~ldoo~~·~1 -~~~~12!·~104~5.;___ 1113 ~ PIO• . _
0201
chongooblo
15!/box. 63
LIV...,.OCk
;; lt;;d~Chjd;i;;;,-1;;
Second
box loiter
lrao. 1~533-3013
-•
·
1
=-~~:-=~~~~:"':':'Hondll Oald hti, Low
'o.fT~.(iwiil(~iO ;;;EP&lt;:is"l 1 anyt,.,
22 mo. old lull ..-1no • Horo 1111.., E - - COi • ....,
'"
'"
Roll BU!IIIY Wfth BoHory I hlnl a.-, HI. walghl 1-bo, -114-4414714.
IIOfar $100, 114-3~114 $11111. ~75-2231.
II. Hondo 4 rt I , M.
OUTSIDE
FURNISHINGS: Aftor4P.II.
21 un~o.~
I ............ ~.!..·--·lon.JOWllo

Wrought Iron Table W/4 Ct.lrsj
Ftn Back Rocking Chlllr $58i
Garden Arch Waw-'• $128.00

Financial

74

281-t522.

114 441 4871.
3

HOW DO YOU
KNOW THAT?

0

&amp; Reference R~ulred, No Pett,

Cl~~~t~~lng

·•,

SUNDAY TH' PARSON
IS PREACHIN' A REAL
SHORT SERMON

240 lntomotlonll trociOr with

lllnCY

eoo.nueor

Opening lead: • 3

BARNEY

Farm Equipment

Ou1IHy And Experience 11 ·The

8224.

Farm Supplies
&amp; L1ves1ock

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

lS •cc 1118

3ol TMnll

Vulnerable: Nortb-8outb
Dealer: South

,

11*'-lor

azw.......,

., 7 s

1112 CliOWiolol . . _ - :

21 llh8de
23Aclon'org.

Ill Wortr.,.•

Cle¥ICe
28 River duck

•u
.KQ1U

U'J· I ·11

57MI e l -

27

tQJ15

1111 Ford " - ILT.
apcl.$5,000•0I0. 211a

Furnished
Rooms

la:c•pt.
Piece olcott
2otzsuon

SOUTH

I

I

Attention: Parenia of elemen-

Elc. f14..256-1231.

'

-

..........
:
...... .

opartmonto,

MEICIW

18~

EAST
tA17
.KQISI
. .. 5
tKI5

~--

3594.

RN ·LPN
Full !Part·Timo

OICorotad olonowon, wall tolo- Str11t, Point P~a.. nt,
phonM, old lampa · Did ther~ 25550.
mornMift, old ctoclc., eNklu.
fumH.... Rl-lno Anllquoo. 18 Wanted to Do

Wortdne

bedroom

O!lo

$2211/m0. lndudoo utllhloo, $100

Roomo far nnt ' wook or """"h.
1....;B_....;w..;.a_nt;.;ed..;...;lo.;__Do..;.__ 41 Houses for Rent
Stortlng ot $120/mo. Cl!!llio Holll.
1 hdroom Houoo C - To
Homo coro "" ,.., lovod ono In Unlv.
Of Rio Orondo, Available
fomlly eoN llorni In Middleport,
Sopt lllh, AppllcoUona_ llel"'l ·
1114-lh-5042.
Taken, t200r'll0. Plua ~.
Look Smllhr homo, auto, ond 114-3~8-~MI.
- - U&gt;ekl npolnd l 2 - - llorni, tv.i ........ otl
ohanaod, vohlcllo oponod. 304- alec,
wooa; ·burner, 1112 Kra
175-AOI.
·
.
orlvote, ourroundad by Chlol
11101 Poulo'e Doy Con Cantor 1 Comotalk, h..Uing &amp; fllhing,
Blook Wool Of HIIC On Jockoon $285. wl$100. dopOolt. 304-137·
Plkl · M·F I A.M. -5:30 P.M. H 2010 or 837·27'11.

Rick PNrwon Auction Company, N1Uonal Company NMda Your 32 Mobile Homes
full time aucUonaar, cornplet• Skllla A1 A Medleal Audhor. Will
for Sale
auc:Uon
amlce.
Ucen8ed Be A11lgnld To Local Cllant
IM,Otdo l W•t Vlrglnl•, 304- Holplltl.
Davtlme
Hours, 1m Windsor, 12a80, 2br, gaa
773-5785.
Banafhs, No WMktnde, 1-800- h•tt, good cond., $5,000. ~
133.0893.
•
882·2658 aft• Bpm. ·
9 Wanted to Buy
Aoutlna mtlntan~n~ and minor 1173 12165 Kirkwood, 2 bod:Anllquee and UMd furniture, no mtchenlcal work on trucks room, new carpet, tumaca I air
it•m too Large Of too ~~m~~ll, will pild vacation &amp; holld1y1, und cond . 3yr~ Old, 10x12 · bldg,
buy one ploco or oomploto gualltlcaUona lo Box C.:l7, cJo lruted deck w! root. ~75houoohold, coli O.by llortln, Pl . PINoont Raglolor, 200 lloln 7'138 Juve rneiMge or 1·304Sl., Pl. Plouont WV 25550
586-2013.
114-ID2·ll141.
Caah for firm trac:tor1, garden Truck Drlvtra, paid v1caUon &amp; 1'l73 Unhopa 121:65 2BA. gtt
IIMtON, lawn tractors 1nd holidays, home WMklndl 1 hut, new carpet,1xtr1 nlc.
_ . . , any cond. :lOW~ eome durlna waH Hnd through out. 17950.00 6144-4411qualltlcttlonalo Point P1uun1 0175
25ta.

Au• lloonl,

.AJJ
tAQIOI

lloriiii-

"JChiUI pert

large livlngroom &amp;ktlchan, 3br.•
pleted 1ppllcaUona lhould be 1 172 bltha. attaeh.ct gtl"'ge, tull
mallld to or dropped off at Dol· baMment, ato111ge bulldrng, 5lar Genen1l Sto,.., 234 Ea• boy polo born, R1 2, rlploy Rd,
Main, Pomeroy, Ohio 45711.
•ml from Pt. Ptaasant. 304-675-

dopl.

8

Rentals

15

'""" .

•Jis

45

45831.

WMkly /Potentlel ProcMIIng
Maaon BridQI,
houNhold FHA Mortgage Rtfunda. Own
ttema, rain date Sap •tth.
HouN. 1-101-141-4503 bt.111.
,..,., 4th, Bam, Hoachlr 24 Houre.
rwaldtnce, 2 ri'llln north of NOHM Aid For IIIIo Slrolto VIe·

Twed~-Frklay,

L.oto • ocnoge "" homo coriolrucllon on Aoyb..n Rd,
rwUDRabte ratrictlona, count~
water, lnfonn8tkM1 mllt.cf on r.
que.t, SOof..I7S..IaU, . . . no
olnglo-tra,_,
.

NOilTII
till
II

n:~~:'.=
ol2 Actor
•» I
44 RMIIAdlr

. 1llallorl
• Lti&amp;UIIoul

PHILLIP
ALDER

Acruge .

lllloo Ffom u..- IHch.
N~ F-lly Orionlod Uvlng,
N,ooo. 11t ue ....
2 L.oto For Solo: Appraxlmoioly
1 Acre kll, • 112 ~,. Lot, 4110
milo out Neighborhood Rood

..
=.... ·-==lint-·

ACROII

rellecl your malice .
1GEMINI (May 21-June 20) More lolerance
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Relax land understanding than 'usual might be
and enioy yourself socially loday. bul don't requ ired when dealing with your lriends
lry to be the center of attention or the princi· today. If you start searching for lheir faults,
pie object of lhe spollight. Give your lriends yours will be more closely examined.
a chance to hotdog ila bil too.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Taking charge
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jen. 19) If lhings go or situations that are beginning to launder is
righl loday you're likely 10 be lhe first one an admirable quality, but today you mlghl
who takes the bows. Conversely, if things carry it 10 extremes instead of leading by
go wrong you might look for someone to e.ample.
blame It on .
·LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Your views won't
AOUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 19) Today when go unchallenged today if you begin to disin a discussion with an achiever you might sect the opinions of associ ates . Debates

!eel inclined to emll&lt;!llish the things you've should be avoided, because they might get ·
done recently. Unfortunately, it cdul~ pro· more healed than Intended.

duce the opposite impression you hope to
\

··

�Plge 12-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

.

Thuradly, September 2, 1993

Iran-Contra prosecutor tried to build case against Bush aides
WASI:UNGTON (AP) - IranConn prosecutors tried to assem·
ble criminal cases against two aides
to then-Vice President George
Bush aft.er concluding that the pair
kept quiet to protect White House
aide Oliver North's secret Contra
resupply network from public
exposure in 1986.
When a plane in North's opemlion was shot down over Nicaragua
on Oct. 5. 1986, Bush national
security aides Donald Gregg and
Samuel Watson "remained silent
as administration representatives
stated that there was no U.S.
involvement in the flight," according to the prosecutors' still-unreleased final repon on the Iran-Con-

tra scandal.

"Despite these acts of concealment, the evidence did not prove"
that Gregg or Watson "committed
chargeable offenses," the report
adds. ·
The Associated Press obtained
600 words of excerpts from the
multivolume report. which details
the roles some two dozen Reagan
administration figures played in the
Iran-Contra arms and money affair
- starting with the president and
vice president.
. The report is in the hands of a
special federal appeals court in
Washington.
The excerpiS obtained by the AP
don't address the question of

whether Bush knew about the
secret Contra resup~ly network.
Bush has said he d1d not know
about it until the scandal became
public in late 1986.
The excerpts reveal that prosecutor Lawrence Walsh investigated
Gregg and Watson "for possible .
false tCStimony" when they denied
knowing that Felix Rodriguez, a
longtime friend of Gregg, was
working in North's opemtion.
Rodriguez had informed Gregg
and Watson of North's involvement in the Contra network, and
~.odriguez called Watson to tell
h1m the downed plane was one of
North's, the repon said.
The excerpts deta,il the intense

interest at the State Department and
the CIA in the close ties the vice .
president's office had to
Rodriguez, who knew Gregg from
their days to~ether at the CIA.
But while CIA, and State
Department officers were aware of
Rodriguez' involvement with
North's operation, "there is no
documentary evidence that links
CIA and State Department concern
about Rodriguez to Gregg or to
olber members of the office of the
vice president."
Word of Rodriguez' involvement with Bush's office, Walsh's
report shows, was passed all the
way up to Secretary of State
George Shultz.

And the report said that after the
Contra resupply plane was shot
down, "Felix Rodriguez became a
maf.! concern."
'He was discussed in the RIG
(Restricted Interagency Group)
meeting on Oct. 8 chaired by
(Assistant Secretary of State for
Inter-American Affairs Elliott)
Abrams," the report said.
Gregg arranged in early 1985
for Rodriguez to go to El Salvador,
where Rodriguez assisted the Sal·
vadoran air force in counterinsurgency operations against leftist
guerrillas. In September 1985 ,
North recruited Rodriguez for the
Contra operation- but Gregg has
testified he didn't lcnow it.

•

North's network funneled
weapons to the ContraS during i
congressional ban on U.S. mili1811
assistance 10 the rebels fighting the
leftist government of Nicarsgua.
The United StaleS sold arms to Iran
in an effort to win the release ot
U.S. hostages and used the pro ,
ceeds of the sales to fund the Con.
tra resupply network.
•
Gregg's lawyer, Judah Best,
declined comment on the excei'JIIS:
'' Wheq the report is finall:t
releitsed, I will undoubtedly havC:
an observation," he said.
;
Watson's lawyer, Jacob Stein,
said be wants to see "the fuU
Walsh report" before commenting·
publicly.
:.

Aspin warns new defense strategy will mean more base closings
WASHINGTON (AP) -.
Defense. Secretary Les Aspm
warned Wednesda}': that additional
base closings w1ll be required
under a new, post-Cold War
defense strat~gy that spares the
and Manne Corps from deep
cuts.

With .the Joint Chiefs of Staff
chairman standing by his side,
A spin unveiled the Pentagon's
five-year proposal that retains a rei·
atively high level of forces and
places added emphasis on develop·
ing modem weapons.
As a
more domestic mili·

tary bases will need to be closed expectedintwoyears.
beyond the next round of scheduled
Asp in's plan is the result of a
closings in 1995 Aspin said He five-month "bottom-up review" of
provided no specifics.
·
the nation's defense needs that won
The most recent round of base President Clinton's approval on
closures shu IS down 130 facilities Monday but still must be accepted
and scales back 45 others
a by Congress.
more
for
'

·
..
T~8 pew srtegy turns ~e milt·
tary
r!Jm countenng the
one-.t•me .ovlet sug~rpower .to
fightmg regmn~ con .•cts, P~OVId·
~ng h~mattanf.n rel~f as It has
one ~n oma •a an acung as
peace eepers.

.

,
. . . ·
Gen. Cohn Powell, m hts fmal
weeks as chairman of the Joint
Chiefs, described how the Cold
War thre~ts of t~e Warsaw Pact
and Sov1ct Un.10n have been
replaced by tern tonal stnfe and.
renegade leaders.

ocS

•'

'
•
•
•

•.

Pick 3:

786

Pick 4:
9389
Buckeye 5: .
11-14-21-22-25

i

Page4

•

. Vol. 44, NO. 11

pumpmg rates and tmproved quaht~ of water from the release.pro~1des no basts for the admuhstrauvc order.
.
Th~ U .S. EPA ~rd~r requues
cessauon of pumpmg mto Sugar
Run, a tnbu~ of Raccoon C~eek,
the only locatt~n where parually
treated water •s bemg releas~d.
Water r~moved from th.at poruon
of the mme has less envmmmental

effect becauSe 'it has a higher water
quality with lower iron content and
nearly neutral Ph levels.
The agency said the water had a
high acid and iron content, was
killing fish and other wildlife in the
creek and could be a hazard to
human health.
Since pumping began, the company has constructed a second
·pond at the Sugar Run release point

PO EROY MERCHANTS ASSOCIATION

FREE DELUXE OPTIONS,
INCLUDING THE EXCITING NEW
LASER VUE STONE DESIGNS.
VALADIUN'"

PLUS

PERSONALIZED
KEY CHAIN WITH
PURCHASE

~©m® o

tJ3ac/(to

L11

Scfwo[

1rnoorn:

Safe
FEEDING QOAT- Jerry Pullins, 4, and
_ &lt;lliiN-$tmdei's,.lO, dqn't s~:,em IIJ?. intim.idated
'by j)ygmy goat B.G. (for "Baby "'Goat") who

By Cheryl Kulaga
Sentioel Ne:ws Stall'
He's quie1er than most dogs,
he stays in his own yard and he
doesn't get into the neighbor's
trash, yet he had problems being
accepted into the village of
Pomeroy.
He's B.G. (for Baby Goat) a
pygmy goat which belongs to
Martha Hall, 252 Union Ave.
Hall got the goat from her
mother as a birthday present
after they saw a man with one at
a yard sale.
Hall said, "I would have
never dreamed of geuing a goat
for a birthday present."
Last winter Hall found that
she had to move her trailer and
her goat She said that when she
was looking for a place to live,
most landlords didn't seem to
have a problem with her keep·
inll the goat. She also said that

•Willits

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INNOVATIVE STYlES • VALUE PRICED

.

CHAPMAN SHOES
~")ISO 3V811Sble

SUNGLASSES

COMPLETE STOCK

NEW ONES IN STOCK

30°/0

OFF

\Y

Pomeroys Quality Shoe Store

KLEENEX CASUAL
FACIAL TISSUES
BOX OF 80

Reg. 79' ONLY .

s9c

REACH
TOOTHBRUSHES
BUY 1 - GET 1 FREE

· ONLY

SJ79

l.SOZ.

$4.95' ONLY

$349

j;A~" __,/lfl!.
(jJ!P ~ ~
.~

STARTING

25% OFF Berkline Recliners.~T.9."J~X .. ~.224

BUTTONS &amp; BOWS

0

25 Yo OFF Metal

;:w

25 0Yo OFF Occas1onal Tables.........
.

1

82300

manynew
styles

From

25% OFF Bedroom Suites..........only

444oo

25% OFF Dining Tables &amp; Chairs .. :!~· 186 00

ssoo

25% OFF Sofas and Loveseats ...Huge S!Jiection

.(ANDY BARS

DRY CLEANING &amp;
UPS SERVICE
AVAILABLE.

REG. SOC

3 10~

S 8 BOWS

Price• good through Monday, Sept. 6, 1993

SWISHER 8 LOHSE

100 E. MAIN

992·5177
POMEROY
IGtrat1~\ Ferrell, Owner
LayawiiY Available

a

·

as low

25 Yo OFF Desks.~ ...................... as

ANDERSON'S
DOWNTOWN POMEROY

I

gi ve him up."

She cited veterinarian David
Krawsczyn as sayin~ the animal
would not be cons•dered live·
stock because he is neutered and
does not produce milk .
Krawsczyn said the goat would
be considered an exotic pet, she
said.
B.G. stands about 20 inches

Trash service to run normal route
Manley's Trash Service will run its normal route in Middleport
and Pomeroy on Monday.

.Street Fest to happen tomorrow
~

The fmal schedule for the Rutland Street Festival sponsored by
:· the Rutland fire, Department and Auxiliary have been announced. .
, The event w1ll be held from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday at the
Rutland Fire Station.
.
· Some of the events and times scheduled are: craft tables and
· bake ,sale 10:3~ a.m.; fisb .fry and other food, II a.m. to 10 p.m.;
. dunkmg machm~ by Metgs Flag Corp, noon; bingo and other
•. tf!Dles. f!OOD; Me~g~ Ban~ I and 4 p.m.; kiddie tractor pull, 4 p.m.
;. IItle !"fist.er ~d Mi~, Prin~ and Princ.ess, 5 p.m.; pies and cakes,
. • 5 p.m., crownmg of L1ttle Mister and Miss and Prince and Princess
:• 7 p.m.; pie ~d cake auction, 7 p.m.
. '
.• There w1ll be a Harley Davidson motorcycle cruise-in during the
: day.
l,:•

::Man held on bench Warrant
(';: Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports that Robert F.
:.Powers, Manchester, is being held in the Adams County Jail on a
··bench warrant issued by the Meigs County Court of Common Pleas
: ·Powe~ is to appear for a Rule 4 bearing before he can be returned
. to Meigs County.
'

·'M 0 t OrCJC
' l h ,/1
e t eJt reported

:

Kenny Ramsey, Pomeroy Pike, reported Thursday evening that

East Main Street
992·3671

on~ August 27 he was riding a 1985 Honda 200 X motorcycle on

Frank Haggy's propeny on Naylor's Run when the cycle broke
Conllnued on paae 3
..
·

~.~
.,

_______;,;,;;,;;,;;,;;;,;;,.;;:;..:;;;:;::.:;,_....,._____.J
)

(

when she approached Middle·
port Council about the goat they .
told her that as long a&lt;: he dido 'I
"bark or howl too loud" she
could keep him in Middleport.
Hall said she then found out
the goat was considered Jive·
stock and could not be kept
within the village.
Hall said she knew of a num·
ber of pepplc who kept livestock
pets in the village lilce donkeys,
sheep and a pig. ''To me it just
wasn't fair. It would have broke
my heart if I would have had to

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

Utilities, wardrobes,
Cab1nets......... bases and chinas

•

BOYS
SWEATERS

DO

•

25% OFF Sectionals................ As

~

PRICE
WINDSONG
SPRAY COLOGNE

~

.

113COURTml'
. POMEROY
(}PC!
992·2054
(0

Baeii·To·Sehool
Savings At
TIMEX WATCHES

weighs about 35 pounds ... full·g·rown. Martha
Hall keeps the exotic aoim3.! ..as a pet at her
Pbmeroy resiileoce: He ifoesli'l bark or bowl;t
Hall said.

Pygmy goat perfect
pet for Pomeroy woman

At Chapman Shoes
Choose school shoes from
•Nike
•Reebok
•Dexter

A Mason man was murcleled and
his body found near the Mc:Ciintic
Wildlife Station Public Shooling
on Potier's Oeelt ROlli, ac·
to local law enforcement
Officials are loolcing for
lhc dead man's vehicle.
Norntan Ray Laudennilt, 28, of
Mason was found dead Thursday
1110rning in a cll!I)Jcbed, according
to Mason COU!Ity Sil&lt;lriff Ernie
Watteraon. He said the sheriff's
department received a call approximately 9 a.m. that the body
had been found.
Aher an initial examinalion by
Mason County Coroner Dr. Breton
Morgan, the body was lllltcn to lhc
Stale Medical examiner in Charles·
ton. According to SJt. G.L. Clark

=

IT'S· BACK·TO·SCBOOL Tl
AND THE POMERY MER·c
ASSOCIATION INVITES YOU TO SHOP LO

ROCK BOTTOM
PRICE!
.

which allows more of the imn sedi·
ment to drop out before it is
released.
Extensive monitoring by eco·
logical experts shows that Raccoon
Creek and the Ohio River have
experienced minimal effects from·
the mine water release·, the company sai&lt;L
The coal company was pumping
8,000 gallons per minute from the ,

A Mu111m.... lno. .....,.., .

mine, offiCials said. The 5,000 gallons ~er minute discharged into
Leadmg Creek is fully treated
while the remaining 3,000 gallons
per minute being pumped into Raccoon Creek is partially treated.
The company can cpntinue
pumping mostly treated water into
Parker Run, a tributary of Leading
Cll!l)k, company spokeswoman BJ.
Smith said .

On Aug. 5, U.S. Disb'ict Judge
Sandra Beckwith granred a temporary restrainin~ order prevenung
the EPA from mterfering with the
pumping. The judge on Aug. 19
~ted. the col!lpany a preliminary
mJunct•on agamst the agency and
federal Office of Surface Mming,
which also challenged the pumpmg.
Continued on
3

p•

Mason man is found
dead of gunshot wounds

•

HIGH SCHOOL CLASS RINGS

2 Sectlone. 22 P...- • oen1a

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September 3, 1993

.· lll!IUmedl•lnc.
.
.

''

A&lt;;~v-.......- - - -

Low IAIIIIpt Ua .w-a., dun
of rain. SatwdaJ, •'P Ia ....

•

By staff an~ wtre reports
, . The U.S. Env•ronmental Pl:otec·
; tton Agenc~ satd Thursday that
~ Southern Oh10 Coal Company was
• •llegally pu!l'pmg w~Ulr.from the
: !looded Mctgs 31 mmc mto Rae: coon Creek,and order~ the compa·
, ny to .parually halt tts pumpmg
operauon. .
.
&gt; .Mea~wh•lc, ~ompany offictals
, sa1d thts mormng that reduced
•

•

Ohio Lottery

Braves
defeat
Giants

.•

tall and· weighs about 35
pounds. The breed comes from
Africa where the goats were
raised for millc and meal. They
were brought to America for
petting zoos because of their
size and the fact that they don't
buu as much as regular goats.
"He's real gentle and sweet.
Kids just love him." Hall said.
In order to be able to keep
B.G., Hall asked to go before
village council to inform them
about the breed and her particu·
Jar goat to see if they would
grant her permission to keep
him.
Hall was placed on the coun·
cil agenda, but before the meet·
ing she received a call from
Councilmember Betty Baron.ick
telling her she could keep the
goaL
Since then B.G. and Hall
have resided, without incident,
on Union Avenue.

No paper Monday
The Daily Sentinel will not
publish Monday so that its em·
ployees may enjoy the Labor Day
holiday. Publication wiU resume
Tuesday.

JobleSS li'nte
at
w.
lOWeSt level in
fWO years
WASHINGTON (AP) _ The
nation's jobless rate edged down to
6.7 percent in August, the lowest
level in two years, as the total numbcr of people employed rose by
:e~~:i~~~.Labor Department
· Despite the drop, non-farm
employment- a number closely
watched on Wall Street - fell by
39,000, with business payrolls continuing 10 sbrinlc in the manufactur·
ing sector and most other induslries
showing little change.
Still, the overall decline in the
jobless raiC- a tenth of a pen;ent·
age point from July's figure- put
the unemployment rate at its lowest
level since July 1991, the last time
the rate was 6. 7 pen:en~

of the Point Pleasant Detachment· bow or ri11e 10 prepare for hunting
West V'll'ginia State Police. Dr. Sam season. Laudermilt W1S last ICCTI
livingston or the medical ex- ' around S p.m. Wednesday by his
aminer's office said I..audamilt was fiance when she.left for wort.
shot four times with a small caliber
"It's a possible ·-;--"{.'
""""""'" Plants
gun. He placed the time of death as said. He stat.ed Laudermilt's truck
being eilhcf right before or right af. and wallet are missing.
Clark said officials are llUJTently
t.er dark on Wednesday.
Watterson said it appeared IQ91cing for I andennilt's 1985
Laudermilt was shot, drug three to ~let S-10 lnlek. It is tW1c
fo_ur feet, lhrough gtaW:ls, to the blue with a red pinstripe. The West
wallcing bridge across the dry Vlfginia license plate number is
creek. The ~t tbcn dragged the ORM-534.
Anyone with information on lhc
body off the side of the bridge and
up the creelcbed for approximately vehicle is asked to contact either
the sheriff's department or the 111a1e
40feet.
police.
Chief Deputy Georlc Plants said
The investigation into the murdel'
Laudermilt, an avid hunter, often
is
contintting.
went 10 the shooting range with his

·syrticlise-couitcilreaches t~litative­
agreement on out-of• village water
By Kathryo Crow
Special Correspoodeot
At the request of the Syracuse
Board of Public Affairs, a tenlative
agreement was reached in regard to
placing taps arid water meters to
residents ou!Side the village corporation when Syracuse Village .
Council met Thursday night.
Meeting with council in regard
to the proposal was Larry Ebersbach; water board member.
Several years ago, the water
hoard laid approximately 2,000 feet·
of pipe outside the corporation
(toward Racine) that was never
energized. The board now wants to
activate the line and place taps and
meters to those outside the corporation toward Racine.
·
Those outside the corporation
towards Rose .Valley will receive
melers while Minersville residents
receiving water will be placed on a
metered rate. A meter will be
P.iaced at the Jim Cundiff property,
wh9 is presently gelling water.
However, no impro\tcments will be
made to the Cundiff property.
This was agreed to tentatively
by council pending approval of the
water board's rate structure and if
consttuction costs are not too high.
It was pointed out' that once a
service is rendered, in this case
water, it cannot be discontinued. It
was also noted that to annex prop·
cny, the request must be made by
the property owners.
·
Ebersbacb said placing meters

outside the corporation would bring
more revenue into the town and
save water.
Sampson Hall, who maintains
Lhe park , reported his mower
equipment is broken down and
council agreed to
it repaired. In
addition, counci also agreed to
repair the village dwnp ttuck.
Council went over a list of projects that have been approved but
not completed. Projects include
painting the roof on the municipal
building, tree !rimming and repair
to the town hall.
Council also approved the
mayor's report of $601 presented
by Mayor James Pape.
Jim Connolly, police chief,
reponed he invesbgated one break·

fet

ing and entering with theft, issued
13 traffic citations and one minor
misdemeanor citation for unsightly,
unsanitary property conditions.
Connolly reported the vehicle
was driven 1,183 miles for a 10ta1
of98 hours.
Clerk/l"reasurer Janice Lawson
reported the following balances:
general fund· $1094.80; street construction • $31,396.24; highway •
$5,736.62; ftre • $4,142.05; water.
$13,751. 31; pool· $6,610.80;
guaranty meter • $2,552.94; cemetery· $82.44.
.
Auending were Pape, Lawson
and Connolly and councilmembers
Kenny Buckley, Dennis Wolfe,
Kathryn Crow, Don Shaffer, Jim
Hill and Bill Roush.

Patrol charges 29 under new law
The Ohio State Highway Pauol
reponed that troopers charged 29
people across the stale with driving
under the influence between mid·
night and 5 a.m. Wednesday.
Under the new DUI law, which
went into effect Wednesday, on·
the-spot license suspensions are
mandatory for all DUI offenders
who ICSt above the :10 blood alcohol level or refuse a chemical test.
In addition, vehicle seizure,
immobilization and forfeiture for
repeat DUI offenders are now man·
dated.

Of the people charged by the
Pauol, 22 had not been convicted
for DUI within the last five years
six had a prior conviction withui
the last five years, and one pe111011
had two prior convictions within
that time period.
Fourth time offenders' vehicles
were subject to forfeiture under the
law.
Ohio Department of Public
Safety statistics show 426,398
Ohioans have one conviction for
DUI, 211,280 have two or more
and 14,000 have five or more •

Private liquor stores will be open
on Labor Day, other holidays
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Ohio residents who live in smaller
cities and towns will be able to purchase bottled liquor at many pri·
vately owned stores on most holi·
days from now on, starting Manday.
The Ohio.Department of Liquor
Control said Thursday that this
Labor Day marks the beginning of
a new policy permitting such sales.
The Legislature approved the plan
earlier this summer.
Department spokeswoman
Mari-jean Porterfield said the sales
are limited to stores that have conttacts with the state in communities
of 20,000 population or less.
The new policr also allows
sales on New Year s Day, Martin
Luther King Day, President's Day,
¥emorial Day, Independence Day,

Columbus Day and Veterans' Day.
Ms. Porterfield stressed that the
ban continues at state-operated
liquor stores and that it will contin·
uc in effect for state and private
stores on Christmas Day and
Thanksgiving.
No store is required to sell on
holidays. The policy does not affect
the hours o( sale or Sunday sales,
which are set by other state and
local Ia ws.
S be said private stores were
being allowed to sell packaged
liquor on holidays because most of
them are open anyway at those
times and many seD other alcoholic
beverages, such as beer.
"They (store owners) asked for
it. It's a matter of better customer
service," she said.
Most of the state's 2~8 privately
operated liquor

stores sell other merchandise
besides liquor. Usually, they are in
areas too small to support state
stores, which have full-time
employees and rent, utility bilts and
other operating costs.
Ms. Ponerf.eld said the depart·
ment soon will begin closing stat.e
stores and contracting for private
liquor sales in cities with popula·
uons of as much as 70,000 under a
law approved by the Legislature.
The· department operates 117
stores. That number 1s declining
under a policy of Gov. George
Voinovich's ~nistration to turn
the entire liquor business over to
the private secto(.
•Voinovich said such a move
would save the sll!IC money, mainly
because of salaries, insurance and
other benefits that must be paid to
full-time emplo)1CS.
I~

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