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                  <text>•

15,1993

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WATER WOES - The Meigs County lklard
or Commissioners Wednesday moved part or
their regular meeting into the common pleas
courtroom to meet with approximately 65 area
residents Interested in pursuing grants ror water
service. C. Boyer Simcox (standing), directo~ or
community development ror the Buckeye Halls·

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A .
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The court ruled ~-3 that financial compensation may be awarded
to parents based upon the loss of
companionship, comfort, love and
solace.
At the same time, the couttreversed a stand taken a year ago
and said an injured child also may
recover damages for loss of
parental companionship. comfort,
guidance and counsel.
"We are convinced that the
right to recover for such a loss has
existed in Ohio for some time and.
today. we expressly recognize that
such losses are compensable in

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court:
- Ruled 4-2. with one justice
not participating, that grand jury
subpoena bsiS and wimess records
are not covered by the state's public records law and· may be kept
secret
.
- Ruled 5·2 that local governments may enforce anti-nuisance
zoning laws against landfill operators. Juslices said state law no
longer pre-empts local enforcement
of general nuisance laws against
solid waste disposal site operators.
- Ruled 5-2 lhat owners of
Beulah Park, a horse race track
near Columbus, have a right to
exclude a state-licensed agent representing jockeys from the proper·
ty.

'

The suspect in a Mason County
murder will undergo psychological
evaluation prior to his preliminary
hearing.
David John Francisco. 18. wiD
be evaluated following a niquest by
his court-appoinled attorney Dan
RoD. RoD petitioned Mason County
Circuit Judge O.C. "Hobby" lo allow the evaluation, according to
Circuit Clerk BiD Withers.
The circuit clerk sa!d the judge

granted the request tor the out·
patient evaluation to begin al' the
Prestera Center. Accordin$. to
Withers, Francisco's case waD be
bound-over to the January session
of the Mason County Grand Jury.
Francisco is charged with the
murder of Nonnan Ray Laudennilt,
28, of Mason. Laudennilt's body
was found Seplember 2 in a dry
creekbed near the McClintic
Wildlife Management Area's public

shooting range.
Francisco was arresled September 6 in Baker County, Florida. He
waived extradition and returned to
Mason County September 9: Francisco is being housed. without
bond, in the Mason County Jail.
The preliminary hearing for
Francisco will be Tuesday, Seplember 28; at 2;30 p.m. in front of
Mason County Magistrate Johnny
Reynolds.

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Commissioner Manning K.
Roush formally announced his resignation from the Board of Meigs
County Commissioners during iiS
regular meeting Wednesday.
Around noon. Clerk GIoria
Kloes read a prepared statement
signed by Roush and addressed to
Commission President Robert
Hartenbach and Vice President
Janet Howard Tackett:
"1, Manning K. Roush, hereby
submit my resignation from the
Board of Meigs County Commissioners effective October 1, 1993.
"I have enjoyed serving on the
board since 1983 and have felt it to
be a priviledge to serve the people
of Meigs County."
Indicating he had no conflicts
MANNING K. ROUSH
with the other commissioners,
Roush explained, "Everyone has
new horizons and challenges to
water overnight."
.
look for."
.Afler examining a map of the
"It's been great serving Meigs
County and I had a lot of fun," he county showing ~here . water se~­
vice currently exasts, S1mcox Sll!d
said.
The Meigs County Republican sections look like they could make
Party Central Committee must now good grant projects..
Before applying for grants, you
select and appoint a new commishave
to survey each and every
sioner to fill Roush's unexpired
home
that will receive water, Simterm which ends Dee. 31, 1994.
cox
said.
Areas where at least 5.1
Roush has ~rved on the compercent
of
households are currently
mission for almost 11 yeaiS.
low
to
middle
income are eligible
Discuss water
Commissioners caUed the meet- for grants, he said.
Simcox agreed io set up a meeting to order in tbe Meigs County
Common Pleas Couriroom to meet ing between selected resadents.
with area residents concerned over who will represent the areas without water, and officials.
lack of water service.
"You have to decide to do
Approximately ·65 people from
areas without water service flocked something. otherwise you'll never
into the courtroom to meet with C. have water," he said. "You can get
Boyer Simcox. director of commu- it if you want it bad enough ...
nity development for the Buckeye
Personnel matters
Hills-Hocking Valley Regional
Vacant positions within the
Development District.
courthouse were also discussed and
Most of those present live in it was brought up thai the custodial
areas located near or between exist- position vacated by David R. Paring water systems. Simcox pointed sons would not be fined until the
out some of the steps the residents beginning of next year, if at all.
must take to get water but cau·
Commissioners. also expressed
tioned, "you're not going 10 get interest in using workers serving

••

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~··

..

•'

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through the depanment of human
services, some of whom it was dis-•
cussed possess secretarial skills. It n
was pomted out this option would "
be cheaper than hiring new employees because they would be."
working for money they already ,
receive from the county.
In addition, commissioners :·~
mentioned problems with some·
county employees who come to
work late and leave early.
·~
Also. in personnel matters, the
commission received a letter from ·
Michael Swisher. director of the
Meigs County Department of
Human Services, stating that for-· ·
mer County Court Clerk Patricia L.
Wolf, Pomeroy, and David R. Par-.
sons, Racine, were hired by the
department as income maintenance
aides (I) and ihat fonner Clerk of
Commission Mary E. Hobstetter,: ·
Rutland. was hired as a public
inquiry assistanL
The three had recently resigned
from their positions in the Meigs
County Courthouse.
Other matters
In other matterS, commissioners:
- Tabled the decision to purchase a copying machine for the ·
recorder's office pending further
discussion with Recorder Emmo- ·
gene Hamilton:
-Approved an easement granting the Leading Creek Conservancy District access to the Meigs,·
Motel near Reck Springs.
- Approved resolutions allowing the withdrawal of Athens and
Hocking counties from the AthensGallia-Hocking-Jackson-MeigsVinton County Solid Waste District
and authorizing the district to pay
Athens and Hocking counlies
$25,000 now and $25,000 at a laler
date for a total of $50,000.
- Discussed the recent vandal· ·
ism at the Meigs County Dog Shelter and asked Dog Warden William ·
Dye to try lQ fmd fencing material.
to replace damaged fencing.
Present throughout were Harten·
bach, Tackett, Roush and Kloes.

.----Youn ters view Solar System-

Fire victim reported intentions

ROUND
CHUCK
OFF

Ohio." said Justice Andrew Dou~las, who wrote the majority opinaon.
Chief Justice Thomas Moyer
disagreed with the court's 180degree turn from its earlier ruling
that denied damages for a child
based on comfort and 011\ilr factors
that make up the legal term
parental consortium.
· ''The ease with which the
m·ajority has discarded a decision
of this court, one that followed the
majority view in the country, is not
a good sign for judges. lawyers and
others who look to the Supreme
Court not only for pronouncements
but for stability and predictability
in the law," Moyer said.
In other action Wednesday, the

Murder suspect to undergo tests

Boneless
Sf-' f Ll/\1

Hocking VaHey Regional Development Dlslrict
answers questions while (seated, rrom left) Clerk
of Commission Gloria Kloes, Commissioner
Manning Roush, Commission President Robert
Hartenbach and Commission Vice President
Janet Howard Tackett look on. (Sentinel photo
by Jim Freeman)

:Court expands damage
:awards for parents, children

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--

Roush resigns from
county commission

Box

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, September 16, 1993

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A Gallipolis man who died
Tuesday after apparently setting
himself on fare made at least three
phone calls to infonn a relative and
authorities of his intel)tions. a
report from the Gallia County
Sheriff's Deparmtent stated.
Within a half-hour period.
Tommy E. Kerwood. 52. 2074
State Route 7 North, called his
mother, the Gallipolis Police
Department and the sheriff's
department and told them he
planned to douse himself in gaso-

line and set himself on fare.
Kerwood 's alleged suicide may
have been in reaction to a domestic
dispute, as his wife Judy filed a
domestic violence complaint with
the sheriff's department shortly
before the fire.
Deputies were preparing to pick
Mr. Kerwood up for the charge
when the Gallipolis Volunteer Fire
Department received the call.
. Sheriff James D. Taylor said the
department was "extremely reluctant" to enter the subject's home

LocaJ .briefs - - -

Deputies probe theft report

Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reporiS that deputies
took a theft report Wednesday evening from Vincent Gray, SeDers
Ridge Road. Portland.
Gray reported his trailer had been entered Tuesday evening
between 6 and 7 p.m. He reported a Hoover portable washer was
taken as well as some wall ornaments from the living room.
Arl investigation is continuing. Soulsby said.

Vandalism reports investigated
Deputies of the Meigs County Sherifrs Department are investigating three vpndalism reports.
Homer Cole Sr., Tuppers Plains, reported Wednesday evening
that s?metime during the night someone apparenl)y backed a pickup
truck mto her yard ll!ld spun out leaving tire marks in the grass.
David J. Beegle. Jolmston Road, Racine, reported Wednesday
around 5 p.m. he was southbound on U.S. 33 when an object struck
the hood and windshield of his vehicle.
Joe "~" Thoren •. Pine Grove Road, Racine. reported Wednes·
da,Y mommg thai he discovered his mailbox had been kicked. A foot
pnnt was on the mailbox and several other boxes had been dam·
aged.

before establishing what violations
were made. The department needed to justify making a forced entty,
he added.
.
Taylor said the department has
dealt with Kerwood on several
occasions and he has threatened to
kill himself before.
County Coroner Edward Ber·
kich confirmed Wednesday that the
cause of Kerwood's death was

'\

incineration.

Three trucks and 24 firefighters
responded to the alarm, which was
the 203rd call,of the year.

Man airlifted
to Columbus
after wreck
A Middleport man was transported by emergency helicopter
early this morning after losing control of his vehicle and striking two
utility poles, the Gallia-Meiss Post
of the State Higl)way Patrol reported.
:Randy Bunce, age unreported,
was transported by LifeFlight to
Ohio State University Wos\lital
where he was admitted and as in
good condition.
According to the accident
report, Bunce was eastbound on
State Route 124 in Sutton Township when he failed to negotiate a
Continued on page 3

,

.,.

. Youngsters at Pomeroy '
Elementary School saw stars
Wednesday.
A portable planetarium,
called "Star Lab," was at the
· scbool yesterday living stu·
dents a cbance to learn about
tbe Solar System, constellations and, or course, stars.
. Phil Potter ot Mobile Pro·
ductions Inc. said tbe Star
Lab, a baUoon-llke tenllnflat•
ed by a simple ran, is trans·
ported from scbool to scbool
to teach children about
astronomy, the study qf stars.
and other objects lncludln1
planets, comets and qu8SIIrs.
Children enter the Star
Lab throu1h a tuonel and are
seated around a projector.
Once situated, they are treated
.to a slide presentation about
the solar system and are then
shown the stars and eonsteDa·
lions through use or a special
projector.
Above, youngsters are
' ' .

•

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sbown listen In I ' to an intro.
duction by Potter .while otber

students are sbown here entering the Star Lab.

.~ .... --· .. ----··---- · -·--- ----·
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�'

~commentary
The Daily Sentinel

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, September 16, 1993

Letters to the editor
Passing the buck

veiy different from when I worked
at the then very white house, more
than a quarter of a century ago.
Things can change. Can they
change in the Middle East? Perhaps.
There are no "umpets , no
anthems, as the official party
enters. And here lhey are. C!intQn.
Rabin. And Ararat Ararat? At the
White House?
I am asking myself, "Why is
this happening in America? "
Because we are lhe only supeipower around. Because we me the only
universal nation. Because we are
the only nation that can offer legitimacy. We should be proud.
President Clinton is giving a
fine speech. There is much from
the Bible in it He has been lalkin2
a lot about religion lately. He credits those who went before. including Jimmy Carter, here in the audience. And Israel's late prime minister, Menachem Begin, the tough little hawk. His Likud party is now
resisting the moment , at least

I FOUNDTHE
· PROBLEM... 'THI&gt; NEEDS
TO BE
To YOUR WALLET.

~H~R-~

Don't charge demo derby drivers

ByTOMRAUM
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - A little over a month ago, President Clinton
couldn't coax a single Republican vote for his narrowly passed economic
program. This week he presided over two days of bipartisan extravaganza
at the White House.
)
It just shows what a difference a change of subject can make.
The gala gathering of former presidents for the sendoff of a free trade
agreement and lhe signing of a Mideast peace accord helped clear some of
the poisoned partisan air hanging over Washington after the protracted
and nasty budget battle.
To be sure, the North American Free Trade Agreement is in deep trou·
ble on Capitol Hill. And the peace pact between Israel and the Palestine
Liberation Organization signed at the White House this week was not
engineered by the Clinton administration. It just happened on Clinton's
watch.
But Washington is a town where symbolism matters. And for two days
this week, Clinton was able to bask in the kinds of powerful images that
count
Clinton played to supportive bipartisan audiences both days. And he
was even able to produce three former presidents - Democrat Jimmy
Carter and Republicans Gerald Ford and George Bush - to praise the
proposal for free trade with Mexico and Canada.
"Now I understand why he's inside looking out and I'm outside look. ing in," Bush said in a playful nod to the persuasive abilities of the
.Democrat who ousted him from office.
Whether Clinton can turn the events of this week to llis political advantage with Congress remains to be seen.
Foreign-policy triumphs rarely translate into votes, as Bush (Persian
Gulf War; the breakup of the Soviet empire) and Carter (Camp David
peace accords) could quickly testify.
And ex-presidents don't have much clout with lawmakers despite the
exclusiveness of !heir club. Still, Americans are generally fond of former
chief executives. And having the ex-presidents all trumpeting the trade
pact could help Clinton get the public's attention.
Carter even lobbed a shot across the bow of Ross Perot, one of the
trade agreement's most outspoken critics, a move that would have been
too politically risky for Clinton .
Carter called Perot a wealthy " demagogue ... who is extremely careless
with the truth" in claiminQthe vact will suck 5.9 million American jobs
south of the border.
.
.
.
ln moving first on the free-trade pact, C~nton can at least ~ut distance
from lhe partisan stalemate that accompamed the deficit-cutung .debate.
After all, Bush.began the negotiations on the pact and it comes w1th considerable bwlt-m GOP support.
. .
.
· Clinton's risk: losing the trade agreement and alienaung Democrats m
the process, making it harder to put together a winning coalition on health
care overhaul. ·
·
.
' "It would be a disastrous political situation if he gets rolled by his own
party on this," said Ben Wanenberg, senior fellow at the American Enter·
'prise Institute and a Democratic advocate for the pact.
EDITOR'S NOTE- Tom Raum bas covered the White House for
·The Associated Press since 1989 and bas reported on government and
politics since 1973. ·

.

')

•

•

momentarily.
.
I'm thinking that hawks can
make things happen, remembering
the late Sen. Henry M. Jackson,
" Scoop," who did as much as any
American to make Israel strong
enough to reach Ibis moment
And here is Yassir Arafat, on
the platform. At lhe White Ho~se.
No pistol, no hols'7", ne~y anired
in his dress khak1s, a httle man,
almost pudgy, speaking in Arabic.
His words hardly matter. He's up
there, shaking hands with I~ael 's
Prime Minister, Yitzhak Rabm, lhe
war hero.
Who grabs the moment. Hi ~
deep voice rumbles: "We lhe sol·
diers who have returned.from battle
stained wilh blood; we who have
seen our relatives an~ friends killed
before our eyes; we who have
attended their funet'llls and cannot
' look in the eyes of their parents: we
who have {ought against you, the
Palestinians - we say to you
today, in a loud and clear voice:
Enough of blood and tears." Rabin
pauses, and thunders: "Enough!"
And he,' too, turns to lhe Bible:
"To everything there is a season
and a time for every purpose under
heaven: a time ·to be born and a
time 'to die, a time to kill and a time
to heal ... a time of war and a time
of peace."
It is marvelous media, a phenomenal photo-op. That's all right..
Media matters. The world moves
on symbols, sometimes.
·
· And then it's over. I am lalking
to a 14-year-old Palestinian boy.
from Nablus, present at the ceremony as part of a "Seeds of
Peace" program, together withIsraeli and Egyptian young people.
I am shaking his hand. I wonder:
When he grows up will that hand
hold a grenade? We chat, and conclude. "Salaam," I say . .
"Shalom," he says.
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fel·
low at the American Enterprise
Institute, is author of. "Tbe First
Universal Nation," published by
The Free Press.

~~

What Dr. Kevorkian is doing right
My friend, a grand and wonderful man in his early 70s, is a Baptist so unwav.ering. in his beliefs
that he sees most issues in stark
black-and-white, no gray areas.
Such was his feeling about Dr.
Jack Kevorkian, the retired physician who assists the terminally .ill
in suicide. Kevorkian, he said, was
simply wrong, wrDDj!. wrong. That
is, that's what he S8Jd until recently. A disc in my friend's back
degenerated to the point where, he
says, in the days before the doctors
decided what to do, he would have
gleefully welcomed paralysis of his
lower body if it would have just
stopped his tonure.
"I can understand why somebody would want to end that kind
of pain," my friend said after successful surgery halted his travail.
"And I can understand why someone else would feel compelled to
help another person out of such
misery. I'm not saying it's right,"
he added, looking out his picture
window at a row of Holsteins.
"I'm just saying I can sure understand it."

His conclusion surrrised me.
This wasn't the kind o talk I was

used to hearing from him - a
wavering of what he considered a
grave moral wrong - although I
have learned over tliC yeacl that he

Sarah Overstreet
is a man of reason and compassion.
I had been similarly surprised a
few days before when I was pressing the car radio buttons and caught
Paul Harvey, whom I'd always
considered staunchly traditional
and conservative, deliver an impassioned defense of Kevorkian. Say
what you will about the doctor,
Harvey said, but only Kevorkian
has stepped forward to help
patients who say they can bear no
more. While the political and medical establishments abdicate and
look the other way, Harvey added,
Kevorkian risks prison to end the
agony of others.
Next I picked up a newspaper
and read that the Michigan D.A.
prosecuting Kevorkian is simultaneously asking for repeal of the law
under which the doctor is charged.
Prosecutor John D. O'Hair, a member of the State Commission on

Death and Dying, told The New
York Times that he plans to propose a law that would "allow terminally ill people tO choose to end
their lives, m a medically approved
manner, if they are given six
months or less to live:"
I wasn't so surprised a few years
ago when television journalist
Betty Rollin acquiesced to her
mother's wishes and helped the
woman, who was suffering with
terminal cancer, to gently end her
life. I remember a close friend's
mother dying slowly of cancer, trying to retain her hallmark sense of
humor and to delay the begging
that happened every hour near the
end: "PLEASE, it MUST be time
for the next shot! ... Why doesn't
this just hurry up and get over
with?" Faced with what Rollin's
mother asked of her, I don't know
that I could have responded differently.
How much more charitable it
would have been to just give my
friend's mother the drugs she needed·.to ease her pain, even if it ushered her from this world a few
hours or days sooner. Instead, she
was given just enough to bring
brief periods of relief before the

torment began again.
American physicians are caught
in the netherworld of chance and
possible prosecution, not daring to
give a pain victim enough narcotic
to ease suffering lest it unwittingly
cause deat)l in and of itself. People
die in anguish simply because we
fear the happenstance of a drug
reaction gone further than we anticipated.
How ironic that as John O'Hair
works to enact more humane laws
that deal with terminally ill people,
he faces Jack Kevorkian in court. If
he were terminally ill, O'Hair told
the Times, he wouldn't have a
"moment's hesitation" in seeking
a doctor's help to end his own life.
He added that lhe idea of anyone
telling him "that I have to endure
what I don' t want to endure" is
"terribly offensive."
If Jack Kevorkian has raised our
consciousness about how we deal
with the terminally ill, and what
rights they have irrespective of
what we may want for them, he has ·
done this ~ountry a service.
Sarah Overstreet is a syndicated writer for Newspaper
Enterprise Association.

Friday, Sept. 17

out to undermine the. parental CTA's fear of choice of competi·
choice initiative, but actually pro- lion, really is a damning indictment
vided fodder for voucher suppon- of the state's public schools. For if
ers who argue that private schools the government-run schools were
not so wretched, if their students
performed on par with kids at private and parochial schools, the
public teachers' lobby would not
be so terrified of parents abandonare cheaper than public schools).
ing them.
California presently spends
Take a look at higher education.
$5,200 per child for public schools. No one sees anything wrong with
With vouchers pegged at $2,600, the government gi-ving parents
the state's taltpayers will save grants (which are vouchers of a
money with each child who leaves kind) or loans to apply toward their
the public schools for a non-public kids' education at either public, prischool.
vate or parochial colleges.
A lot is at stake for both sides in
San Diego State University
the voucher fight. Both advocates doesn't worry about the Catholicand foes of Proposition 174 agree run University of San Diego
that if school choice passes in Cali- siphoning public .funds. The Unifornia, it is almost certain that simi- versity of California at Berkeley
lar.Jnitiativcs.c.v.cntually will pass . does ,not fret about losing students
in many other states throughout the to private Stanford University.
country.
The public schools don' t have a
To the minds of the crA and its monopoly over higher education.
confederates (among others, the Why in the world should they have
Democratic Party establishment a near monopoly over primary and
and the· public employees unions), secondary education? It would be
a state constitutional amendment fine for the government to preserve
that guarantees parents a choice of its dominion over K-I2 education
where their children are educated if the public schools were turning
will be the death knell for public out smart kids. But by nearly every
schools.
measure of academic achievement,
When you think about it, the American kids are dumber today
than they were 30 years ago.
Just this week, the Department
of Education said that nearly half
' Today's Birthdays: ' 'Candid Camera" creator Allen Font is 79 . of the adult population is functionActress Lauren Bacall is 69. Blues singer B.D. King is 68. Former Irish ally illiterate. What else can we
Prime Minister Charles Haughey is 68. Clergyman-author Rev. Roben expect when lhree-fifths of Ameri·
Schuller is 67. Actor Peter Falk is 66. Actor Ed Begley Junior is 44.
can youngsters either drop out of
Thought for Today: "Somewhere the Sky touches the Earlh, and the school or graduate with an educaname of that place is the End." - African saying.·
tion that is below the seventh-grade

MICH.

Joseph Perkins

Today in- history

"'

•
lroledol71•1

IMansfield lee· I•
IND.

W.VA.

Ice

Sunny Pt. Cloudy Clovdy
C1993Accu·Weather, Inc.

Via Ai.aCiat9d PrMs GrsplicsNet

------Weather-----Extended forecast:
Ohio
Saturday
through Monday:
Tonight, partly cloudy. Low 55A
chance
showers Saturday.
60. Friday, mostly cloudy with a Lows 50-55. of
Highs
75. Pair on
slight chance of showers. High 70- Sunday and Monday.70•
Lows
45-55.
75. Chance of rain 30 percent.
. Highs 70-80. .
Soutb ·Centr~ll

--Area
deaths-Grace Ellis
Major Henry
M~or Henry, 76, of Point
Pleasant .died Wednesday, September 15 1993 at Pleasant Vall
Hospiud.
'
·
ey
He was a retired welder on con·
struction; a u.s. Anny veteran of
World War D; an avid hunter and
fisherman and the co-owner·
/operator Of the Th-Endie-Wei Res-

Grace Hamilton Ellis, 80, of
Columbus died Sept. I, 1993 at
Grant Hospital in Columbus.
Born at Racine on June 26,
1913, she _was the daughter of the
late Dr. Wilbur Silbey Ellis and
Sarah Margaret Hayman.
She is survived by two sister&amp;,
Ruth Aurilla and Bessie Jane Ellis,
along with numerous nieces and
· nephews. Mrs. Ellis graduated from
Pomeroy High School in 1929 and
from Christ School of Nursing in
Cincinnati in 1934. She spent her
working years as a remstered nurse
.. at Child(en's Hospital in Columbus. She was an active member of
Board Street United Methodist
Church of Columbus.
Burial was at Greenwood Cemetery, Racine,.on Sept4.

Audra Hayes

· Audra E. Hayes, 80, of Shade,
died Wednesday, Sept. 15, 1993 at
her residence.
Born in Meigs County, she was
the d3ughter of lhe late Hollie and
Edna Carsey Hawk. She was a
member of the United Pentecostal
Church in Nelsonville.
She is survived by two daughters and sons-in-law, Yvonne C. •
and Floyd L. Bricldes and Ladonna
G. and James W. Boyd, all of
Shade; a son
and daughter-in-law, Hollie V. and
Linda S. Hayes of Shade.; seven
grandchildren, seven step-grand·
c~ildren, 14 great-gran.dchildren,
rune step-great grandchJldren, one
great-great-grandchild, and one
step J!l'e&amp;t-great grandchildren; and
one sJSter, Grace E. Richardson of
Alhens.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in dealh by her husband,
Garold Hayes and a son Ronald
Hayes.
'
'
Funeral services will be held
Saturday -at 1 p.m. at the HughesBlower Funeral Home in Athens
with Pastor Ivan Pullin, Jr. official·
ing. Burial will be in Burlingham
Cemetery . Friends may call at the
funeral home, Friday 6 to 8:30p.m.
. ·
·
,

,

marrzage [lCenSeS
level? If the public schools can't do
any better than this, they deserve to ·
be abandoned.
Here's a dirty little secret which
you 'II never hear from lhe California Teachers Association: A public
school teacher is lhree times more
likely to send his or her children to
a private school than a parent who
earns a comparable income. The
public school teachers know better .
than to consign their own progeny
to an inferior education.
What vouchers would do is
level the educational playing field
for parents who haven •t the means
to shop around for the best schools
for their children. It would be a
boon, say, for poor, inner-city parents who presently are slaves to the
public school system - who have
no choice now bur to send their
· kids to ramshackle, crime-ridden
schools where they learn next to
nothing.
It is almost immoral to have a
system of education in Ibis country
where some children learn to properly read and write and add and
subtract in good schools, while oth. ers either drop out or graduate
functionally illitenite from bad
schools.
Proposition 174, the parental
choice initiative, would do muGJt to
redress this unjust double standard
·in California. If the public teacher's
lobby successfully quashes the
measure, it will be a victory for the .
sorry status quo.
Joseph Perkins is a columnist
for The San Diego llnion:Tribune.
·

By The Auoclated Press
River in IOUtliut Ohio. TempmSkies will be partly cloudy llnl lowered into the SOl.
•
tonight and Friday, with a chance
Record hilh tem~ture 96 in
of showers in the southeast Friday.
1897; recmlfow 40 m 1916.
Lows tonight will range from
SunriJe Friday at7:14 a.m., sunthe upper 40s nonh to the mid SOs act 117:37 p.m . •
south. Highs Friday will be from
An.lld tile natloa
Rainy,
cool weather returned to
about 70 to 75 degrees.
Skies were to be panly cloudy the East today. while the chilly
this afternoon, with high tempera- temperatures that brought early
tures ranging from about 65 to 70 frosts IQ the 1101thml Plains rose.
degrees.
A high J)l'eSIUre l)'lletJI moving
A cold front moved through the east brought clouds and cold
state Wednesday and caused weather from the Northeast across
cloudy skies, tool temperatures and the Mid·Atllntic lUtes. RAin was ·
raiJr.
forecast .from southern New EngThe cfondy skies lingered dur- land southwest to the Florida paning the night The rain gradually ' lwldle.
came to end in most places, though
Highs were expected only in lhe
drizzle still lingered near lhe Ohio SOs and 60s across most of the

Aecu-Weather• forecast for daytime conditions and

C OUp[eS iSSUed

For want of a good education?
The powerful California Teachers Association is girding for the
mother of all ballot fights this
November. It is prepared to pay
any price (its war chest is expected
to top $14 million) and bear any
burden to preserve its monopoly
over the education of the state's
nearly 6 million public school cllildren.
"There are some proposals that
are so evil that they should never
even be presented to lhe voters."
So wrote Del Weber, president of
the 235,000-member strong public
teacher's lobby, in a cr A newslet·
ter a year ago.
The "evil" proposal to which
Weber was referring is Proposition
174, the Parental Choice in Education Amendment If the initiative is
approved by California voters, parcots will be able to enrpll their chil·.
dren in the public school of !heir
choice or in a private or parochial
school.
If they choose the latter altema·
live, the state will provide them a
$2,600 voucher that will apply
toward their child's education .
That's roughly the average tuition
for a private school in California,
according to an analysis by the
Southwest Re$ional Laboratory
(which, interestmgly, originally set

Temperatures will stay in 70s over the weekend

OHIO Weather

From battle, stained with blood ...
Ben Wattenberg

Trade, Mideast pacts let
Clinton show bipartisanship

The Dally Sentlnei-Psge-3

}

Outside the White House, on the friend. came up to say helto. I
111 COurt StJeet
day of lhe signing, we pass a group looked around and the Arabs had
of teena11e girls, Orthodox Jews, vanished.
Pomeroy, Ohlo
DEVO'BD TO 1HE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA • dressed m green plaid skirts and
The sky is blue, the weather
white blouses. They are from the
Beth Rivkah school in Crown
Heights, in Brooklyn, up since 3
a.m .• to tr.avel f1ve hours, to
demonstrate against the Israeli'
Palestinian peace agreement. I ask: balmy. We are soaked in sun .
ROBERT L. WINGETI
"Why are you against it?" The There are no planes overhead .
Publisher
answers come: " Ararat is a terror- There are many things the White
ist," ' 'there is blood on his House cannot control but the flight
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW
hands ," "now Arafat and the pattern isn't one of them. A heliGeneral Manager·
Controller
copte{ approaches, working a lazy
Arabs can exterminate lhe Jews.''
. ·I am entering the South Lawn. perimeter over the White House
LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
An Arab from Gaza comes up to ~unds. A wise guy says: ''I hope
words. All letters are subject lD editing and must be signed with name,
me. smiling, and says, "Shalom! It's one of ours."
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
The first appearance of an offiIt's wonderful." I shake his hand
should be in good taste, addressing issues, DO\ personalities . •
cial on the stage is a junior diploand say, " Salaam."
On lhe White House grounds, mat who sets down a pitcher of
the crowd is coming in. Across the water and several glasses. I am
way I see a neatly stenciled sign wondering: Did someone test the
'
that reads: "Israel and Palestinian water?
What an array Of dignitaries, all
Delegations." I remember a time at
. a U.N. Conference in Mexico City, so proud! And so many blacks!
talking to a group of Arab officials, Gen. Powell. Gov. Wilder. SecreI
called
the
litter
control
and
when an Israeli diplomat, an old tary Brown. Rev. Jackson. How
Dear Editor,
they
never
answered
my
call.
I am not critizing any persons
I then called the health depart·
but the system.
ment
and they told me to call the
Wednesday morning· Day One
' Early this morning, someone hit state highway department and lhey
and killed a deer and put it on the told me they couldn't pick it up
side of the road almost in front of because it was on a county road.
I then called the division of
my home on Eagle Ridge Road,
CONNECTED
wildlife
in Athens and was told all
Racine.
I called the Meigs County Sher- their men were tied up and couldn't
iff's Office and was told they come for a week but I could dispose of it myself.
·would pick it up.
Well, I knew it wouldn't last
Thursday • Day Two
that
long for it was already swelled
Nothing was done so I called
up
and
ready to burst so I had to
them again so they said they would
dispose
of
it myself.
try and contaCt the county wildlife
Well
now
the state says they
officer.
own
them
at
least
when it is time to
Friday • Day Three
buy
a
lic
ense
to
hunt them and
No action. I called the county
wildlife officer's home and was arrest you if hunted illegally. Well
told he was out of town on busi- if they own them then they do all
year long.
ness.
Well that's the way the system
I then called the county highway
garage and was told they couldn't works.
Virgil Walker,
pick it up because they had no
Racine
landfill to take it to.

Lawrence, Billy Dean and Pirates
Editor,
In regard to the recent Meigs of the Mississippi while we had an
County Fair, I would like to know Elvis impersonator.
why the drivers for the demolition
Elvis passed away, as we all
derby are charged at the gates to know, he will remain in our hearts
enter the fair plus they pay an entry forever but we need to let him rest
fee to run their cars. These drivers in peace.
are the entertainment for the
Country music is listened to and
evening. They bring in a very large enjoyed by all age groups today.
crowd.
·
Trunk back a year ago when Lionel
These drivers spend long, end- Cartwright brought in such a·large
less hours preparing their cars and I crowd. This should prove lhe bighave yet to see i~ our local paper ger the name the bigger the crowd
where the heat winners and feature
Penny Brinker,
winners were even recognized for .
Pomeroy
their effon.
Gallia County does not charge
Editor's note - The Daily
their drivers to get through the Sentinel attempted to get the
gate.
names of the ·various heat winI would also like to know why ners in the demolition derby,
Gallia and Mason County can have however the names were not subtop entertainment such as Michell mitted to the fair board office by
Wright, Mark Callie, Tracy demolition derby organizers.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

rhuradily, September 16, 1993 ·

The following couples were
recently issued marriage licenses in
the Meigs County Probate Coon of
Judge Raben Buck:
Gary Neil Curtis, 24, and Gwendolyn Sue Gibeaut, I8, both of
Pomeroy; William Todd Snowden,
31, and Angela Kay McDaniel, 23,
both ofPomcroy; Michael Joseph
Eblin, 18, Rutland, and Robin
Renee Imboden, 19, Pomeroy.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 113-Ht)
Publlahed every llternooa, Mood., throuab
Friday, Ill Court St., Pomrray, Ohio by the
Ohio Volley l'llblllhlDI Company/MulUJDOdla
Joe .. Pomeroy, Ohio 4$769, Ph. !192-2rl6.
Seooad claM P*IIC paid. It Po!NI'Oy, Ot!lo.
1be Allociii.Od Pr&lt;u. aad lho Ohio
Newspap!f Atloeillion, National Adwrtialna

Reprueulallve, Braohlm Newapaper Sales,
733 Third AveDue, New York. New York
10017.
POSTMASTER: SeD.d addrets chaoaec to The
Daily Sentinel, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
4S769.
SVISCRIPilON BATES
87 Curltr or Motor Roule

oae woot. .................................................$1.60
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PRICI
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SUttlcribtn aot d•ht.q to pay tbe ani• ny
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oa a three., lix or ll month b•il. Cadit will be
pven carrier ac:h week.

No IUblerlptiou by mail penntacd ID weu
where home Clrriet I«Vice II available..
Mall Sub.crlptlons
bo•klt Melp County
13 WetlcJ................................................$21 .84
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IS -

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21 WMI&lt;I!.........................................$46.50
52W-... ................. .....................$8UO

t

~ October 23, 1917 in Gal·
lipolis Ferry, he was 8 son of the
late B F d Sadi Bell (Ha
en · an
e
e
t·
field) Henry. He was also preceded
in dealh by a brother, Leland Henry
and a sister, Evelyn Henry.
·
·
iii
He is Survived by hJS w· e,
Louise (Johnson) Henry; a stepdaughter, Eloise Harden of Point
Pleasant; two brothers, Archie .
Henry of Gallipolis Feny and Pat
Henry of Thmpa, FL: fol!1' sisters,
Norma Fowler of Point Pleasant,
Helen Null and Phyllis Beckner,
both of Gallipolis Ferry and
Eleanor Jarrett of Pncinnati; a
step-grandson;
a
step-great·
grandson; and several nieces and
nephews.
Service will be held at 2 p.m.
Saturday, September 18, at the
Crow-Russell Funeral Home in
Point Pleasant wilh Rev. Glen
Rowe officiating. BurialwillfoUow
in Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
Visiting hours will be held at the
funeral home on Friday from 7-9
p.m.
·

Mary Samuels

.
. .
Mary Ahce W1lham~ Samuels,
60, of 580 West Mam Street,
Pomeroy, d1ed Mond}ly. SepL 13,
1993, in Presbytena~ ~ospttal
Pittsburg~. Pa. after a bnef Illness.
Born m Pomeroy, she was the
daughter of the late Charles A.
Williams and Willie Tomlin·
Miller. She was a graduate of
Po~eroy ~gh .School and attended
Oh10 Umversuy. She worke~ at
Ohio University untll her reuremen! ~v~ral years ago. Her mt?"·
bersh1ps mel uded. Mo~nt Monah
Baptist Church m Middleport,
National Organization for Women,
National Stroke Association, Meigs
Senior Citizens, and lhe Providence
R~gular Missionary Baptist Associabon.
,
In addition to her parents she
was preceded in death by foot
brothers, Henry, Kennelh, Kitrel
and Charles Wan Williams, who
was her twin.
She is survived by a daughter,
Suzy Green, PhD, Nashville,
Tenn.; three sisters, Nina Dixon of
Pittsburgh, Pa., Jewell Welch and
Sarah Hull, both of Pomeroy, and a
friend, Hollie Green, also of
Pomeroy.
A memorial service is planned
for 2 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 2S, at
Mount Moriah Bapllst Church in
Middleport with the Rev. Gilbert
Craig officiating.
Ms. Samuels donated her
remains for medical education and
research to the Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine. ·
Memorial contributions may be
made to the American Heart Asso·
ciation, American Diabetes Association, Central Ohio Diabetes Asso·
ciation or the National Stroke
Association.

and from New Orleans west .to interior California, reaching into lhe .
90s on Florida's gulf coast, in
southern Texas and in the desert
Southwest
Temperatures dipped into the
upper 20s Wednesday for the first
time this season in scattered pans
of Nebraska, northwestern Iowa
and west-central Minnesota, where
lhe spring and early summer rain
drown«1 some crops and put others
on vulnerable late schedules. _
Galveston, Texas, had a record
low on Wednesday of 62, compared wilh 63 in 1979.
High temperature for lhe nation
Wednesday was I 02 degrees at
Lake Havasu City, Ariz.

Youngstown ·classes called off due to strike
By The Associated Press
Striking teachers forced
Youngstown school administra·
tors to cancel classes for high
school seniors while officials
asked a judge to limit lhe nom·
ber of pickefs.
A mid-morning hearing was
scheduled before Mahoning
County Common Pleas JudgeR.
Scott Krichbaum.

School Board President
Anlhony Julian said the panel
decided Wednesday night to
delay an effort to hold classes
for the district's 853 seniors
until the maner of picket limits
is resolved.
Substitute teachers staffed
schools in tl\e 14,000-student
dislrict on Sept 8, lhe first day
of lhe strike. But schools have

been closed since.
Administrators had hoped to
resume classes for seniors to
keep them on schedule for grad·
uauon, but canceled lhe plans
wben about 200 strilcera blocked
buses that were to take adminis·
trators to the school.
District spokesman Chuck
Zilla said there were no reports
of problems this morning.
'rhe 9SO-member union
struck over salaries, seniority
and job security.
··
School strikes in northeast
- Ohio have resulted in the arrests
of one teacher and four students.
Andrew Hamady, SS,
Youngstown teacher, Was~
ed on a disorderly conduct
charge while picketing. He later
was released on his own recognizance.
Four high school students in
lhe Springfield Local district
near Akron were arrested Tuesday after they walked out of
classes to support striking bus
drivers.
·
· In the Switzerland District in
Monroe County, a federal medi- .
ator is scheduled to meet with·
both sides Friday.
Switzerland's 235 teachers
called half-day strikes on alter·
nating days over differences on
the duration of a health care
plan. They walked out Monday
and Wednesday but worked

Pomeroy man seeking
$10 million in lawsuit
A Pomeroy man fJied a $10 mil·
lion suit recently in the Meigs
County Court of Common Pleas
against his former wife and her
alleged boyfriend.
Gary Snouffer alleges his exwife, Sara Snouffer, acted in concert with her alleged boyfriend
Danny Zirkle, both of Pomeroy ,
and surreptitiously poisoned him
from September to December in
1989 with the intent of taking his
life.
As a result, Mr. Snouffer is
seeking a jury trial and judgment of
$10 million plus costs.
A similar civil case filed in
November of 1990 was dismissed
after attorneys for Mr. Snouffer

failed to indicate a judgment
amount sought.
The following lawsuits were
also filed recently:
- Roger and Mary Shoultz,
both of Racine, are seeking jud~­
ment of $27,100 from Loretta Rellmire, Pomeroy. The suit stems
from an automobile accident on
Nov. 2,1991.
- Farmers Bank and Saving
Company, Pomeroy, is seeking
$4,690.90 plus interest from Kevin
E. Brooks; Chester.
- Home National Bank,
Racine, is seekin~ a total of
$5,374 .26 from Vmcent Gray,
Portland, and Belinda Gray,
pomeroy .

Pomeroy Mayor's Court

Man ...

Seven defendants forfeited costs for failure to comJJiy; Tommy
bonds and 10 others were fmed this Lane, Jr., Pomeroy, $63 and coon
week in lthc court of Pomeroy costs for driving under ~uspension;
Jackie Smith, Pomeroy, $2S and
Mayor Bruce Reed.
court
costs for failure to appear;
Those forfieting bonds were
Gary
Arnold,
Pomeroy. $63 and
~arion K. Arnold, Pomeroy, $83
court
costs
for
no
operator's license
for operating a vehicle under sus·
and
$60
and
coon
costs for failure
pension; Brent Arnold, Pomeroy
to
comply;
Beatrice
Williamson,
Route, $63 for a stop sign v;iolaPomeroy,
$150
and
coon
costs for
tion; John .Bentley, Syracuse, $68
·
no
.operator's
license;
Loretta
l.au·
for speeding; AnthOny Adams,
Racine,
$20
and
court
dermilt,
Racine, $108 for open container:
Brian Connolly. Reedsville, $45 for costs for speeding; David Haggy,
seatbelt violation and $63 for Jr., Pomeroy, $63 and court costs
speeding; Christopher Catlet, for driving wilh permit only: Dale
Reedsville, $108 for open contain- Riffle, Pomeroy Route, $25 and
er, and Ronald Jones, Pomeroy , court costs for failure to appear,
$120 for distruction of Pomeroy $63 and coun costs for open container in motor vehicle and $63 and
Police Department property.
Those fined were Donald court costs for failure to comply,
Estonc, Pomeroy Route. $63 and and Robert W. Riffle, Pomeroy
court costs and one day in jail for Rout e, $123 and court costs for
di sorderly by intoxication; Ron public intoxication and $63 and
Capchan, ~omeroy,. $63 and coon court costs for failure to comply.

Continued from jiage 1
curve and struck a utility pole. The
vehicle then struclc a second utility
pole and went over an embank·
ment
The vehicle sustained heavy,
disabling damage and was towed
from the scene. The accident is still
under investigation.
According to Ohio Power Company spokesman Ernie Sisson,
about 1,192 customers in the Syracuse area were without power for
more than 2 1/2 hours as a result of
I he accident.

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Servi~e
responded to seven ealls for assiStance Wednesday and early Thursday morning.
Units responding were 1:2S p.m.
Middlepon to South Third Street
for Gladys Walburn who was trans·
poned to Veterans Memorial Hospital; 4:44p.m. Pomeroy to Gilkey
Road for Audra Hayes who was
dead on arrival; S:47 p.m. Racine
to Nonh Broadway for Leda Mae

Release reports ·
The Middlepon Police and Fire
Departments have recently released
statistics regmding lheu August
activities.
Tbe Middleport Fire Departments answered a total of 56 calls
during the month including nine
frre and rescue and 47 Emergency
Medical Service calls . Vehicles
were driven a total of 1139.3 miles.
A total of 141 man hours in frre,
EMS and rescue training were also
logged by members of the department for the month, Kenny Byer,
frre chief reported.
The Middlepon Police Depart·
ment made 53 arrests, served 147
meals to prisoners, investigated
eight accidents, drove cars 20 and
21, 5423 miles, used 439.7 gallons
of gasoline, collected $629 from
parking meters and wrote 245 parking tickets during the month.

veterans Memorial
Angela Duckworth, Ronnie HughWedesday' admissions: Helen es, Nicholas Bailey and Shane
Jeffers, Syracuse; Ernestine Rose.
Williams, Rutland; Gladys WalSept. 15 blrtb: Mr. and Mrs.
burn, Middleport and Roy Fox, John Grimm, son, Albany. Mr. and
Pomeroy.
Mrs. Shane Pierce, daughttr, GalWednesday discharges: Linda · Iipolis.
Brunty, Racine.
KANAUGA DRIVt: -IN
FRi. lAT. IUN.
Holzer Medical Center
STEPHEN IONCI'I
Sept. 15 discharges: Jamie
NEEDFUL 'fH!NGI R
Jones, Michelle Alley. Kenneth
AND
Scitea, Michele Smith, Scott Jones,
ROBIN
HOOD:
MEN
.. TIGHTS Ntl
Russell Johnson, Sandra Thacker,
Rosa Coughenour, Rhonda Neeee,
-~-

Tuesday and again today, Super·
.
· intendent Rich Edge said.
Officials in lhe 3,3QO.pupil .
district have closed schools all
day when lhe half-day strikes_
were planned.
In the Springfield Local
schools, the 24 members of
Ohio Association of Public
School Employees Local 530
walked out Tuesday after the
school board voted to subcontract busing services to an out·
of-town company.

. . StQcks
AmBle Power ....~............. 39 112
Ashland Oil............................. .33
AT&amp;T ............................... .59 SIS
Bank One .................................41
Bob Evans .......................... l8 118
Channing Shop ..................11 7/8
Champion Ind.................... 13 1/4
City Holding ..................... .33 3,18
Fedet'lll Mogul ...................25 3/8
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................45 1/4
Lands End ......................... .37 718
Umiled Inc................................21
Multimedia Inc..................JS 1/4
Point Bancorp ..........................14
Rax Reslalll3nt ..................... 1132
Reliance Electric............... l8 112
Robbins&amp;Myers .......:.............:19
Shoney's Inc ......................2ll/8
StarBanlc ...........................34 518
Wendy Int'L........................... 1S
Worthington Ind................29 7/8
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by
Kemper Secunties, Inc., of
GaUlpolls.

SPRING VALlEY CINEMA
446-4524

..

7

-

•
A Long Bottom woman was

treated for injuries Wednesday

aftcrnoon after her vehicle ran off

the road, the patrol reported. ·
Melissa D. Dailey, 25, 60564
State Route 124, was transported
by private vehicle to Jackson General Hospital in Ripley, W.Va.,
where she was treated for lacerations and abrasions and released.
According to the accident
report, Dailey was southbound on
State Route 124 in Lebannon
Township when her vehicle went
off the nght side of the road and
struck a ditch and an embankment
No citations were issued. The
vehicle sustained heavy, disabling
damage and was towed from the
scene.

EMS units respond to seven calls

----Hospital news-----

. '

northern states, even the Northeast.
where scorchins heat baked many
areas on Wednesday. Records
highs were set in Bridgeport,
Conn., which hit 8S degrees, break·
ing the record for the date of 81 set
in 1969; Newark, NJ., which hit
92, compared wilh 91 in 1942; and ·
Portland, Maine, which hit 90,
compared with 87 in 1941.
Only Washington state was
expected to escape today's cold,
wilh highs predicted in the 70s.
Pans of Montana were expeCted to
see highs only in the 40s.
Across most of the rest of the
country, highs were forecast in the
70s. Highs in the 80s were predict·
ed along lhe southeastern shores

Crowder who was transported to
Holzer Medical Center; 6:04 p.m.
Middleport to Rutland Street for
Helen Williams who was transponed to VMH; 9:02 p.m., Pomeroy to
Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilita·
tion Center for Roy Fox who was
transported to VMH; 11:47 p.m.
Racine to State Route 124 for Jerry
McPherson who was treated at the
scene; 12:45 a.m. Syracuse squad
and fire and Racine squad to State
Route 124 for an automobile accident, transported was Randy Bunce
to VMH. Bunce was flown to Ohio
State University Hospital at 2:19
a.m.; 4:57 a.m. Racme to State
Route 338 fpr Clara Adams who
was transported to HMC.

THE

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'

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�•

·,

Sports
school of late, bas put together sea·
sons of around .500 the past several
seasons. Last year, Wellson was 4·

6.
According to Barr, that's a mental plus going intp the game.
Last week, senior quarterback
Nick Toth booted a 32 yard field
goal to give Athens a 3-0 lead, but
that was short-lived. Wellston's
Troy Smith scored on ruits of nine
and 10 yards, and Nathan Mollihan
ran 41 yards to paydirt ahead of
Mark Foster, who ran in from the

two.
Wellston rolled up 272 yards on
the ground, 158 of which came
from Smith . Smith, a 5-11, 165
pound junior running baCk depends
on his speed, much like MoUihan, a
115 pound, 5-11 junior running
back.
Laurence Ousely, another running back is questionable due to an
injury.
Wellston has nine returning lettermen, including what Wellston
head coach Paul Blankenship refers

.
to as ''two of the best linebaCkers in fourth win in 15 tries against
the league" in Kevin Coffman and Wahama. The win was also reportMike Jones. Blankenship also edly the fii'St in the last 12 seasons.
speaks highly of defensive end
Eastern quarterback Robert
Scott Cheatham.
·
· Reed was lost to an injury last
' Barr ha&lt;! the Eagles' jiffy week, but should be back, although
e7;press offense in high gear last Brian Bowen did a great job filling
week, sparked by great u11-front in.
Newland had runs of 80, 85 and
blocking and the swift strides of
senior s~ee\lster Pat Newland. 60 yards for touchdowns in the secNewland s lhree second-half touch- ond half, complimenting an earlier
downs overcame a hefty Wahama lhree yard plunge by Jason Sheets
lead, as Eastern rolled to only its earlier in the.game.

Eastern had 192 yards rushing ;
while giving up 275 total tO",

.

,.. ~

, Eastern will have to have total.:
concentration and regulate its emotional high of last week, but playern
for player the Eagles Stack up even-,
ly or better than its Friday nigh ~
opponenL ·
"
Twenty-eight hours will yield •
the result. Game time is 7:30 Fri .. .
day.

Southern to head no~th to_take on undefated Fort Frye Friday
Scott Wickline's Southern Tornadoes (1-1) will face the Fort Frye
Cadets (2-0) at Beverly Friday
night at 7:30p.m.
Fon Frye coach Sonny Bidwell
is back at the helm after an experimental absence where Jay Long
took over and guided the Cadets to
a 1-9 record last season. Bidwell's
previous stints produced a 4-6 and
7-3 record.
Although undefeated, Fort Frye

has yet to be tested, claiming an
opening night win over perennial
cellar dweller Federal Hocking and
Warren L.oca123-l5 last week.
Fort Frye returns 12 seniors to
the lineup, seven of whom are lettermen from last season's 1-9
sho.wing. Three other juniors lettered.
Fullback Dairell Brooker, a 6-0,
178-pounder, is one of the key
offensive cogs Southern will have
··

to stop. Others are running back
Shane Burchett and quarterback
Chad Huck. Wingback Shawn
Burchett and lineman Ron Se7;ton
are also standouts in their positions.
Fort Frye normally runs out of
anI-formation, but shows other
multiple alignments. In the past
several years Fort Frye has had
trouble holding o~to the ball
prompting c~ach B,Idwell to say
that one of his teams keys to sue-

cess will be "holding onto the football".
Fort Frye's only win last r,ear
was a 9-6 win over Shenandoah.
Southern defeated the Cadets 16-7
and another Southern opponent,
Zanesville Rosecrans defeated
them 25-6. Waterford defeated Fort
Frye 23-7, indicating that 'a Southem win is within reach, should the
troops rise to the occasion,
Last week, Southern's offense

showed signs of great success by
putting 21 points on the board, but
the defense gave up a whoppin$ 37
points. Thirty of those came m a
disasterous second period.
Key offensive plays were a
Trenton Cleland to Billy Jones 26yard touchdown aerial, a Jamey
Evans interception and score of 60
yards and a Cleland to Billy Hendricks 38-yard touchdown pass
play.
. ·
Cleland passed for 161 yards

In last game of home stand,

Meigs to take on_River Valley
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Staff Writer
After suffering through seasonopening shutouts, River Valley's
Raiders and the Meigs Marauders,
the two combatants scheduled to
tangle in Friday night's gridiron
bout at Bob Roberts Field in
Pomeroy, managed to get on the
board for the first time - both
scored in the third quarter- in
home games against South Point
and Trimble, respectively, but the
result was the same- anot11er loss
for each hosL
· The Raiders rushed for more
yards against South Point than they
did against Point PleiiSllllt, but as
Raider boss Jack James pointed
out, " we still didn't crack 200
(rushing yards)."
He shouldn • t feel bad. The
Marauders, after getting 73 net
yards on the ground in their 40·0
season-opening loss to Gallia
Academy, picked up 89 in their4312 setback against Trimble, but it
was still below' the century mark.
But the rushing total wasn't the
only vital statistic that improved
for Meigs, because its pass-yardage
total was boosted from six yards
vs. GARS to 71 against Trimble. ·
Could this be a sign of a maroon
force able to e7;ecute more effeclively under the reins of rookie

head coach Mike Chancey?
"We got a little better, but we
have to keep our head," said
Chancey of his club, which hasn't
tasted victory since Oct. 9, 1992,
when the Marauders beat Federal
Hocking 40-6 in Stewart. The
Marauders haven't had a win at
home since their 16-6 homecoming
win against Miller on Sept. 25,
1992.
Another bright point for the
Marauders seems to be the difference in rushing yards surrendered
between the GAHS and Trimble
games. The Academy picked up
209 yards and scored three touchdowns, compared with the 105
yards and one touchdowns Trimble
got. However, Meigs paid for that
improvement in facing two different passing attacks. GAHS passed
for 67 yards and one touchdown,
while Trimble got 188 yards and
four touchdowns.
GAHS and Trimble scored the
bulk of their points against Meigs
in the first half, with the Blue Devits getting 34 and the Tomcats
chalking up 30. River Valley found
its opponents - Point Pleasant and
South Point - to be deadly in
·either half, with the Big Blacks
scoring 16 in the frrst half and 13 in
the second, and the Pointers recording 24 in the fii'St and 20 afler half-

Meigs' Edmonds among
141ocal top-20 harriers
in Gallipolis Invitational
Fourteen runners - 12 from
Gallia Academy, one from Meigs
and a Gallia County resident
attending Fairland - placed in the
top 20 in various races run in Tuesday's Gallipolis Cross Country
Invitational held on the University
of Rio Grande campus.
· Represented by four haniers in
the varsity boys' race, Meigs was
led by Phil Edmonds, who was part
of a top-20 field that took 1:34 to
cross the finish line from the time
Sardinia Eastern's Nathan Hauke
won the race until Edmonds finished.
Here are the results of the 43
local runners involved in the meet
(F-Fairland, G-Gallia Academy,
M-Meigs)
Varsity girls' race
(5,000 meters)
Team scores - Russell (4 7),
Gallia Academy (62}, Sardinia
Eastern (68}, Logan (84), Jackson
(131}, Warren Local (133), Waverly (184), Unioto (207). No team
scores -Boyd County, Latham
Western, Piketon, Raceland and
Rock Hill.
Individuals - Jessica Strafford
(G), 21:24 (first); Sara Walker (G),
23:55 (12th); Becky Knight (G),
24:30 (16th), Jencie Haner (G),
24:33 (17th); Andra Boggs (G),
24:54 (23rd); Carrie Miller (G),
25:35 (27th); Whitney Adkins (G),
26:49 (36th); Rachele LaBello (G),
28:57 (51st); Gennie Tucceri (G),
30:22 (63rd).
Varsity boys' race
(5,000 meters)
Team scores - Waverly (64),
Sardinia Eastern (75), Piketon (80),
Fairland (88), Logan (137), Boyd
County (148}, Warren Local (207),
Gallia Academy (218) , Latham
Weslern, Russell (both 228}, Ironton (262). Jackson (265) and
Manchester (344). No team scores
- Meigs and Raceland.
Individuals - Seth Montgomery (F), 18:47 (17th); Phil
Edmonds (M), 18:56 (20th}, Crockett Roush (M}, 19:14 (30th); Eddie
Nehus (G), 19:15 (31st); Bo Davison (G), 19:35 (37th); Brett Baker
(G), 20:15 (47th); Matt Champlin
(G), 21:38 (69th); J"od'!_~cDade
.'

(!vi}, 22:14 (75th); Seth Thompson
(G), 22:41 (80th); Mike Parker
(M), 24:02 (85th); Richard Kuhn
(G), 25:27 (92nd); Aaron Salisbury
(G), 25:39 (93rd}.
Junior varsity boy~' race
(5,000 meters)
Team scores- Waverly (64},
Coal Grove (66), Raceland (115),
Rock Hill, Warren Local (both
123), Piketon (125), Logan (142),
Unioto (154) and Russell (168). No
team scores- Boyd County, Fairland, Jackson, Latham Weslem and
Manchester.
Junior high girls' race
(3,200 meters)
Team scores- Russell (44),
Gallia Academy (48), Portsmouth
(68), Logan (89}, Warren Local
(131l) and Piketon (144). No team
scores - Jackson, Latham Westem, Meigs, Raceland, Unioto and
Waverly.
Individuals - Erin Nehus (G),
14:12 (fltSt); Theresa Davison (G),
15:21 (seventh); Susan Facemire
(G), 15:22 (eighth); Candy Sims
(G), 16:07 (17th); Angie Carter
(G), 16:26 (20th); Jessica Walker
(G), 17:45 (30th); Christy CaldweU
(G), 17:49) (31st); Cortney Cromlish (G), 17:50 (32nd); Danielle
Grueser (M), 18:03 (35th); Jill
Lemley (M), 24:45 (58th).
Jun lor high boys' race
(3,200 meters)
Team scores - Boyd Cqunty
(52), Latham Western (81), Gallia
Academy (103), Portsmouth (127),
Russell (138), Piketon (142) ,
Waverly (160}, Fairland (184),
Manchester (201) and Logan (214).
No team scores - Raceland and
Warren Local.
Individuals -Josue Davison
(G), 13:20 (eighth); Cody Cullip
(G), 13:37 (12th); Kevin Walker
(G), 14:30 (23rd); Bruce Beegle
(G), 14:44 (30th), Tyler Burnett
(G), 15:10 (36th); Jezemy Pratt (G),
15:14 (37th); Donovan Davis (G),
17:21 (57th); Walter Straffocd (G),
17:23 (59th); Christian Cassanova
(G), 18:04 (69th}; Adam Greene
(G), 21:04 (80th) ; Aaron Epling
(G), 23:03 (84th).

time.
James was an unhappy soul
after the South Point game, claiming that his charges looked better in
their season-opening loss to Point
Pleasant. And who could blame
him? In spite of the fact that the
Raiders gave up 240 rushing yards
to the Big Blacks, such yardage
netted them one touchdown. The
Pointers barely did better with their
265 rushing yards, but they got
plenty out of their land travels with
silr. visits to the end zone.
The pass was barely the factor
against the Raiders - South Point
had 21 yards - that it was in the
Point Pleasant game, when the Big
Blacks racked up 100 yards and
two touchdowns
,
So what does all of this mean?
Picking a winner is damned difficult here. It will boil down to
which team executeS its game plan.
the best.

Soccer tourney
this weekend
at Rio Grande
Soccer action will dominate
Stanley L. Evans Athletic Field at
the University of Rio Grande and
Rio Grande Community College
this weekend when the Rio kickers
host their frrst tournament.
The Rio Grande-Lanzera Classic
opens at noon Saturday with Lindsey Wilson (Ky.) meeting Tiffin, ·
followed at 3 p.m. by Rio Grande
against Indiana University/Purdue
University-Indianapolis. On Sunday, the Redmen play Lindsey Wilson at noon and Tiffin faces off
against IUPUI at 3.
"For those who are interested in
a high standard of soccer, they will
find it here this weekend," Redmen
Coach Scott Morrissey said.
"These teams have compiled good
records and enjoy the competition
offered by a tournament. We anticipate this wiU be an exciting weekend for them, as well as our pro-

Offense

Offense
Wt.
225
235
191
202
247

Pos.
LT
LG
C
RG
RT

Player
Ht.
56-Brad Belville ...........................6-5
52-Devin Metzger .........................6-0
55-Ryan·Ashworth ......... ,............ 5·10
50-Steve Campbell .......................6-2
76-Mike Bradbury ........................6-2
TE 86-Lonnie Simpson ........... .... ;.......6-0
SE 26-Josh Penweii ......................... .S-10

Yr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
202 Sr.
163 Sr.
152 Sr.
153 Sr.
214 Sr.
174 Sr.
162 Jr.
184 Jr.
153 Jt,

or 5·Jeremy BelviUe ..........................S-9
QB 13-Pau!Covey ., ......................... .5-11
FB 34-Adaln De1Uley ........................ 5-IO
or 45-Mike Cook ............................. S-11
HB 30-Jason Jenkins ........................... 5-9
HB 23-Abe Haislop .............................6-0
or 20-John Carroll ............................. 5-8

Pus.
LE
or
LT
LG
C
RG
RT

TE

QB
WB

FB
TB

Wt.
125
190
230
170
215
200
225
160
135
170
190
170

Yr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.

,,
,
'J

"
·
"
•
)
.t
•
'

Special teams
Kickers: Bradbury (extra points &amp; field goals) and
Simpson (kickoffs). Punter: Simpson
Defense (4-4)
Tackles: Bradbury and Steve Campbell. Ends:
Brad Belville and Tim Campbell (No. 32, 6-0, 179,
r.). Outside linebackers: Haislop Blid Ashworth. lrl'ide linebackers: Cook and Denney. Cornerbacks:
arroll and Jenkins. Safeties: Jeremy Belville and
Penwell.

Player
Ht.
33-Adam Wyatt ....... ..................... 5-5
15-David Fetty ..............................6-0
74-Watt Williams ......................... 6-3
86-Bert Mash ................................ 6-0
53-Corey Seymour ........................6-1
77-S~annon Staats ........................ 6-1
51-Jake Kenned;• ....... ,..................6-2
12-Chad Duncan ......................... 5-IO
10-Brent Hansen ........................... S-9
26-Heath Hudson .......................... 5-9
44-ScottPeterson ..........................6-1
7-Jered Hill ................................... 5-8

.

Special teams
J(icker and punter: Kennedy
.
Defense (5-2)
Nose tackle: Hudson. Outside tackles: Kennedy
and Petrie. Ends: Staats and Mash or Shawn Crcmeans (5-11, 170, Sr.). Linebackers: Peterson and
Tom Cremeans (5-9, 180 Sr.). Monster back: Hill.
Cornerback: Wyatt. Safeties: Tr11vis Curtis (5-8
145, So.) and Duncan.

•
'
!,
•
•

lenge on the field.
"In my estimation, that was a
mental mistake on our pan," Morrissey noted. "We've been dealing
with that for some time, amd it's
frustrating to see how the •game
turned out because of the effort we
gave. To me, it wasn't a 1-0 game.
We baUied back, had some opportunities, but it just didn't fall our
way."
The Redmen and Wittenberg
matched each other for shots on
goal with seven apiece. ·
The Redm~n will be home for
the first time this weekend when

w!th_Lmdsey Wilson (Ky.) meeting
T1ffm, followed by Rio Grande
against RJPUI at 3 p.m.

l!utem Dl•lllon
Tum
W L Pd.
Phll.odolobio ...........l9, S7 .6t0
MonuaL. .............Il 62
SL LoW&amp; ,...............10 6.! .Sl2
Chicaao. ..".............7S n .SlO
Pioub&lt;qh ..............67 78 .462
Floricia "................ .60 as .414
NewYadc ............. .49 97 .336

'l

••

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qqqQ'"

q-

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q-

Hearing Test

q-

Blood' Sugar

q-

LosAngelca ...........74 71
~ATI........69 71

.SIO
.473
.401

34.5
36.5

1.oronso

Lelr.•

~alicll.al Leap.

rI'

.

wr,•

National
CINCINNATI RED : Named Ron
OeNr adviaer tor minor leaJUe field opcnti.ou. Tnlllfmcct Bobby Kelly, OU\·

I
I

•
''
'

,,

!

Friday, September17, 1993
~------------------~.

AVAILABLE! .._..

$229°0 *PER MONTH
•W-.J........,P
U-4.

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TOTAL BEFOUDlSCOUNTS
517,682.00
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Hockey

CLEVELAND CAVALIERS: Nomc4
Leonud ''Truck" Robi1110n nsiatant
eooclL
SACRAMEI!TO KINOS: Signed Bobby HW'lC)', JUud, 10 I aia-yW CCIIU'Ict,
Renounced their riJhu to Anthonf Bonner, Rod Higin• and Kurt Ramb11, forwmb,

1993' EXPLORER

Cnia Milhoooe \OUil phJIIciono.

2 DOOR SPORT

HARTFORD WHALERS: Sianed
K.W. Sm)'lh, lei\ W,, and Doua llouda
1nd Bnd McCrimmon, dlf'oasomcn, to
multi)'fill' c:ontnctl. Anii«1Doed the ftltiro..
mentof Jim AfJVfW, ddcn~C~nan.
MONTREAL CANADIENS: Signed
David Onad,cr, 1d\ wina, 1.0 I lJtmo.)'CUI

Football

COIIttiCL

NaUonal Football Luaue
KANSAS CITY CH~BFS_: Siancd

.

STOCK #30588

P

CY
TOPICS

BY YOUR
SWISHER LOHSE
PHARMACISTS

. San Diego (Benet 1.5·11) 1t Houaton
·(Hunildii4-8),1Jll p.m.
Lot Anael• (Candiotti 8· 7) u Col·
orado {!'r{icd 3-7}, 9:05p.m.

'22,794.00

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Tum

EulemDI.W..

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'To101110 ..................83
New vu ..............Bl
. ' Ballim~n ...............BO
B..........................75 .
0..0iL ...................75
CIJ!VELANJ) .......69
Milwoube ... :........ .62

63
66
66
10
71
78
115

.568
.5H
.548

.m

,514
.469
.422

Gl
2.5
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7.5
8
14.5
21.5

l~:;·c;i;:·: : :::::~; ~ :~i
71
80
115
115

.510
,448
.411
.410

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8
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21.5
22.5

The antibiotic tetrecycllnt may be elleetlv• . 1galnat
Olleopclroela. In aniiiiiiiiUdllallt the state Unlveratty or NYork at Stony Brook, 1 form or the drug not only alowed bon•
lou but helped build new bone.
W1lklng 1nd t1lklng with 1 friend Improved the
communlcellona abllltlel In AlZheimer'• patient• more than
Just talking, r-.ch.,.llt the Unlveralty of Mleml found. The
rhythm or welkii"G helped.

• ••

•

Preliminary ruurch auggull that nllcln may h1lp pr.vant
- · Tnt-tube IIUdlel 11"1 being done It the Unlverllty or

Wednesday's scores
Milwaukee IS, Naw YolkS
Tormta 14, o.mlll
6, Blllimcml5
OUland 15,lolinn-.o 2
T..u 7, &lt;l.llVELAND 4

Kentucky.

•••

In lhe 1111, paople end enlmalt uem to g~ln weight. A llucly at
Qeorgla State Unlveralty found lhlt people aetuelly took In
222 more calorlll 1 dey In thll 111101'1. ·

lloiCIJO I 0, ElroP CiiJ 6 (II Inn.)
Califomil15, Suale 1

Tonlght'spmea

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STOCK •30584

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Wettern Dlvlllon
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SC1ule ....................74
Colifomil ...............65
~................61
Ooldlnd .................!l9

pain In 1 tooth may not be 1 dental problem It 111,
but trigeminal neurelgll, 1 nwve lrrHIItlon, the Joume/ of the
American Dente/ A..ocllltlon reported. An orofeclal-peln
epeellllllt can dllgno• the problem and nmedy lt.

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What II new In medicine? WI haVe the IIIW dnJtlll
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doctor

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..

!:

PER MONTH .·•

R~~~:urrlng

'••
•
•
''

Neal. nmnina back, on

NoUoaal Hoek•! Le.oaut
ANAHEIM MIGI!TY DUCKS:
Named Dr. Ronald Glou1m1n 1nd Dr.

Corchillli,l(Uifd.

Cl.I!VElJ,ND (OrinllieJI-4) II J&gt;oaoil(W.U.I0-1), 7:05 .p.m.
B"""' (Sole 6-2) u Now Yodo (Key
17-5), 7 :30 PJn.
T......, (lleo&lt;F' 17-1) 11 MLnnooota
(TIDIIJI 9-14), 1:05~d

l

·
·

linebacker.

Basketball

'•

I:

TRUCKS

SAN DIEOO CHARGERS: Woivcd
Reginald Davidaon, off'enaive lineman,
1nd Ray SUllen, wide ra:cive:r. Rea:c:hed
injury 1c11lcmont with David Onyson,

ficldc, fnm lndimlpW. of the Amerlc.n
Auociation.
Natlonalluketball.blodaUon ·
BOSTON CELTICS : Signed Chrio

Boaton (Viola 10·1) It New York
(Komicniocki 9·5). 7:30p.m.
Oakbnd (Jimenoz 0:.0) " Minno1ota
(Brunanell 1·1 ), 8~ p.m.
Kanau City (Haney 9-8) at St1ttlo
(lalwoo 16-8),10:05 p.m.

'

ONLY

OVER SO

oon.

fielder, from tho IS- to the 60-day dil·
abled liiL Rccallod Keith Kcasinaa, in·

Friday's games

1

l
•••

STOCK # 30544

rea:erve. Aareed to term• with R.tckic
Shaw, cifa.iw tackle.
PHOENIX CARDINALS: AaiYIIcd
Chuckie Joba1on, de!CIIllive lincm1n.
Waived Mut Tudtc, tlfdw lineman,
'""' oianod him \0 '".!P"etioe oquod.
Prn'SBUROIISI"EELERS: Aped 10
le:mll wkh Bury F01tcr, ruaniDa back, on
l ccntnc:l exuui.CII lbrou&amp;b lbe 1996 IDI·

Ametfian
DETROIT TIGERS: ccaUed Dave
Iohnlon, pitclu:r, hun Toledo of the In·

New Yod:: (fc:mandez 4-6) u Atltnta
. (AYrrJ 16-5~ 7:40p.m.
; Pil~burgh {Miller 0-0) 11 St. Loula
. (U~ 1·2). 8:05 p.m.

I

'"

.388

3.5
16.5
18.!5
2A

Baseball

-.

·
'·
.

•XL Trim
•Headlinet'Ansulation Package
•AMtfl.l Eledronic SlereoiClock
. ·Argen1 Styled Steel Wheels
•4.9L EFII-li Eng.
•5 Speed Manual 010 Trans.
•.P235/75RX15XL BSWA!l-Season
•203 11 P.t 1400/G'mA 5250 LBS
•Brt. Low-Mount Swingaway Mirror

NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS: Re·
ligno4 St.GYe OonloD, CCI\tcr.
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS : Plocc4

, Aodcla (Rapp 3·5) at ChiCIJO (llukcy
: 10-8). 3:20p.m.
· Philldclphia (Rivera 12-9) 11 Monuul
: (M•ttina 14-8),7:35 p.m.
• San Franci1co (~wi!t 17-8) U
' CINCINNATI (R.opu 2-3), 7:35p.m. .

l

Vision Screening

40

Today's games

;

I

Pulmonary Function

lS.s

Houston (Portusal 15-4) 1t Colorado
(Boucnfield S-10),5:05 p.m.
Pittab11rsh (Hope 0· 1) ll Florida
(Wealhm. 2-0), 7:3S p.m.
CINCINNATI (L"'bboro 2-4) ll AI·
tanoa (Smol12.14-10), 7:&gt;10 p.m.
MontrNl (Faucro 10-4) at St Louis
. (Tewubuey 17-8),1~ p.m.

I

Blood Pressure
Cholesterol

.614

.524

·

I

Weight

14.5
2\.5

CUclao 3, Saa Fnncl.co 1
PiiUbwah 8, Flori&lt;lll
Allmoa ?, CNC!NNATI 6
Philaddphi• 6, Now Yodt l
SL t.ow.5, Moobell4
Colcndo 6, H..- 4
l.ol AJocolol5. San Dioao 4

'•
I'

Height

l .l

Wednesday's sc:ores

I

Free T~sting:

!.

nctbacb.

- • Transactions • -

GB

.637

HOUilm ......... .......76 69

Colorado ............... .!19 88
San Dicao ............. .!l7 90

•I
•
•

Meigs County Branch
ISO Mill St.
Middleport, Ohio

'Ihe public is cordially
invited to attend a
Conmcation for. Installation of
'Ihejfonorable f!emal G. 1VJ!e,Jr. and
'Ihejfonorablejamesfi. 1\_hodes
as $ellows of the
&lt;University of {Vo Grande
September 17, 1993
2:00 0'clock
in the
Jline ~ C1Jeiformingfins Center
&lt;University of {Vo Grande ·
1&lt;J,o Grande, Ohio

Adanoa ...................93 ll
SanfnAciJeo ........ l9 S6

Tennis
BORDEAUX, France (AP) Second-seeded Marc Rosset of
Switzerland beat Brian Devening
of the United States 6-1, 6.3 in the
fii'St round of the Bar~ Passing
Shot tournament.

HOLZER CLINIC

:
.
,

Sammy W11k1Dr, comerbtck. kc-•ifncd
Erick Andcnon, lineb~e:ter. W1 ved
Muhamm•d Oliver and Garry Lowil. cor-

..

ChiCI(O (Alvarez 11-1) ll Oaklaad '
(Weld\9·9), 10:15 pm.

Weatern IHYlllon

Sports briefs

Friday
September 17,1993
9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

(Fiomlna 10-3),10:15 p.m.

.sn s.s

I

Health Fair
·

franchises with similar economic Boston.
Currel)tly, NL teams play 13
interests, like the Cardinals. Astros
and Reds.
•
games against each division oppo"This was the logical thing to nent and 12 each against teams
do. This just made sense," Sauer from th'e other division, Exactly
said.
.
how the balanced schedule will
The Pirates didn't analyze continue with lhree divisions rather
whether. moving would help their than two still hasn't been decided.
won-lost record, Sauer said.
"From a balanced schedule
"This is such a long-term issue, standpoint, it really won't affect
it would be foolish to handicap any any nvalries," Sauer said. "Our
perceived competitive faciors," he main concern about the reali$nsaid. "We're a small-market fran- ment was the start of televisiOn
chise and we're going to remain a ~ames and phiying too many games
small-market franchise.''
m the Central time zone. That part
And they would have been a really·doesn't matter now."
small fish in a big pond had they
stayed in the East, with big-market,
Sauer pointed out that Cleve·big-payroU teams like the Braves, land, the closest franchise to PittsMets and Phillies.
burgh, also chose the Central when
The Cubs are the only mcgamar- faced with the same East vs. Cenket team in the, Central, thouj!h the tral decision last week.
Reds have a huge payroll this seaPhillies president Bill Giles was
son and the Cardinals are one of initially disappointed at Josin~ the
the NL's most profitable franchis- cross-state rivalry with the Pirates
es.
.
and the arrival of the Braves, curThe Pirates were initially rently the NL's strongest team.
opposed to leaving the East, but
"It's tougher next year, but in
Sauer dropped his opposition when the long run, it'll be all right," he
American League owners won a said.
continuation of the current balanced schedule during last week's
If the 1994 alignment were curowners meetings in Boston. AL rently in place, Atlanta, St. Louis
West franchises such as Texas and and San Francisco would be the
Oalc1and want to retain the twice-a- division leaders and 'the Phillies,
season visits by the big Eastern .the season-long NL East leaders,
drawing cards, New York and would be the wild-card team.

NATIONAL LEAGUE

•
•
they hos1 the Rio Grande-Lanzera l

Classi~. startinJ! Saturday at noon

At least the NL East has a
chance for some head-to-head
drama as the Philadelphia ~s.
who lead by 5 1{2. garqes, venture
to Montreal this weekend for a
three-game series with the seamdplace'Expos.
The Braves are looking like they
will pull away in ihe race, especially after a comeback in which they
erased a 6-2 deficit entering the

- • Baseball • -

Redmen soccer team falls 1-0 to Wittenberg

A goal at the 60-minute mark in
the second' half of Tuesday's soccer
game between the University of
· Rio Grande and Wittenberg in
Springfield was all Wittenberg
needed to post a 1-0 win.
Rio Grande, which went to 3-2
overall, drew strong individual performances from veteran goalkeeper
Jim Egner, who recorded 12 saves,
and from freshman Kristan Morgan-Jones, "who is definitely doing
a great job for us," Redmen Coach
Scott Morrissey remarked.
The Redmen controUed the flfSt
half of play, and despite some
opportunities, the game remained
scoreless at the half. Keeping his
lineup the same, Morrissey said the
team picked up where it left off.
Wittenberg, however, mounted a
gram."
strong counterattack early in the
Admission to the tournament is half and scored when one of its forfree.
wards defeated a Rio Grande chal-

season.

By ALAN ROBINSON
PITISBURGH (AP) - For the
first time since divisional play
began in 1969, the National League
map will accurately reflect Rand
McNally's. The Pittsburgh Pirates
saw to that.
.
The Pirates avoided a possible
confrontation with the Atlanta
Braves over NL East membership
Wednesday by moving to the new
NL Central, thezeby creating a new
Braves-Marlins regional rivalry in
a big market-dominated East
The move strips the NL East of
its most successful franchise-;- the
Pjrates have won nine titles in the
2S seasons of divisional play - but
more closely aligns teams by size,
geography and economics.
·
The new alignment, unlike the
current lineup that relocates Atlanta
in the West and Chicago and St.
Louis in the East, could have been
dtawn up by a fifth-grade geograpby studenc
· - NL East: Atlanta, Florida,
Montreal, New York, Philadelphia.
NL Central: Chicago,
Cincinnati, Houston, Pittsburgh, St.
Louis.
-'- NL West: Colorado, Los
Angeles, San Piego, San Francisco.
. And, more importantly to team
president Marie Sauer, it aligns •
Pittsburgh with other small-market

,,

Meigs Marauders

bottom of the ninth.
"It was just a big win for us,
coming back from being down by
four runs," outfielder David Justice said. "This team never gives
up and we showed it tonighL"
The Reds' four-run lead was cut
in half with out on Ryan Klesko' s
two-run homer off Johnny Ruf(in.
Jeff Reardon relieved and gave up
a double to Otis Nixon 8nd ·a single
to Jeff Blauser.
That brought on Rob Dibble,
who threw one pitch.
(See N1. on Page 6)

Pittsburgh Pirates decide to go
to NL ·Central in new alignme~t

and two touchdowns in a 12-18
passing nighL
A week earlier, Cleland hit
Aaron Drummer for a touchdown, ··
hinting that Southern has a great,"
passing threat, something that the .
Tornadoes will have to compliment'
with an established running game:
Jamey Smith, Evans, Cleland "·
and Tucker Williams· were the
defensive standouts for the. Toma- ;
does.
Game time will be 7:30.

River Valley Raiders

go. Atlanta hall 3 1/2-game lead
over San Francisco. The two teams
don • t play each other again this

I

~

ey vse

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-:-5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

a

By The Assoc.ated Pren
The Atlanta Braves staged one
of the year's best comebacks for
the kind of victory that usually
makes for championship seasons.
The San Francisco Giants feU once
again in a swoon that usually
becomes part of a,losing legacy.
The NL West is on the vezge of
becoming the league's division
without a pennant race as the
Braves scored five runs in the ninth
Wednesday ni$ht for a 7-6 victory
over Cincii!nau after the Giants lost
their eighth straight, 3-1 to Chica-

and 69 passing for 261 total yards,"

Wahama.

·--·- -·---

.. .... •

·:Braves keep winning, while
Giants
continue losing·ways
.

Page-4

Eastern seeks to utilize momentum from Wahama win
By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
Coming off its biggest win of
the year, or evez more correctly, the
biggest win of the past de~ade,
Dave Barr's Eastern Eagles (1·1)
tal!:e their talents to Wellston,
where they will face the 1·1 Gold·
en Rockets for the first time in
many years.
·
Last week Wellston defeated .
Athens 28-3 after losing to Jackson
i!l the season opener. Wellston ,
touted mainly as a basketball

~--·

------------~--------~----------------------~
IntheNL1

Thursday, September 16, 1993

.

•..-~ ~

Thursday, September 16, 1993

The Daily Sentinel

In coming bout against Wellston,

-

ONtrS28,36900**

�'
Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, September 16, 1993

Thursday, September 16, 199j:

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Sports Probe

Eastern varsity spikers beat Wellston to collect first victory ofseason
Eastern played iiS best game or
the year in defeating the visiting
Wellston Lady RockeiS 15·3, 15·8,
to claim a Tri-Valley Conference
volleyball match Wednesday.
Kathy Bernard led the winners
(1 -6, 1-3) with 15 points and one
ace, while Jessica Karr had four
points and an ace, Jaime Wilson
had three, Penny Aeilcer and Patsy
Aeiker each two and one each· by
Becky Driggs and Wendy Rach.
Driggs was 5· 7 spiking with a
kill, a biock and an ace. Patsy
Aeiker was a perfect 6-6 with two
kills: PeMy Aeiker 1-3 \\lith a kill
and Kathy Bernard 1-3.
Wellston was led by Jennifer
Gregory and Julie Jones with three
points each, Christa Brown two,
Mandy Wittkamp two. and Christy
May one.
Eastern coach Don Jackson said,
"lt was great to finally get a win.
The girls were starting to lose confidence in themselves. We played
well and came close lately, but
tonight we put it together. We
played really hard the. frrst game
and came out flat the second."
"We nedd more desire t kill the
ball when we get our chances .
We're too timid, but getting better.

We had great team work ail night,
but our schedule doesn't get any
easier the rest of the way," said
Jackson.
The Eastern reserves lost a close
one 10-15, 15-6 and 10-15.
Brandi Reeves led EHS with 16
points and 21-22 serving with one
ace; Melissa Guess hit 9·10 for five
poiniS, Jessica Chevalier 8-12 for
five points, Martie Holter 8-9 with
four points and an ace; Mindy
Sampson 3·5 with three points and
two aces and Rebecca Evans two
points.
Guess was 3-4 spiking, Chevalier 3-6 with two kills and Evans 1·
2 with a kill.
Mandee Argabright had 9 to
lead Wellston, Dana Stevenson had
six and Andrea Wyatt seven.
The Eastern junior high team is
off to a good start with only thee
players back from last year. They
are setters Michelle Caldwell, Kim
Mayle and hitter Joanna Gumpf.
First year eighth graders doing a
good job Tuesday in the win over
Meigs were Vicki Adams and Kelli
Bailey. Seventh graders, contribut·
ing greatly according to coach Paul
Brannon are Valerie Karr,

Paul Brannon said; "Together,
the team has achieved more than I
could ever ex peeL"
Eastern de£eated Meigs to claim

Stephanie Evans, Angie Wolfe,
Michelle Buckley, Melody
Lawrence, Juli Hayman, Jessica
Brannon and Angie Taylor.

JV~ga~es

a 5·1 record, their only loss a loss
to Alexander's all·eighth grade
team.

Despite·losing last three Super Bowls, Bills top draw in NFL

T By ~OW~D ~NER ·
of oda~ s quesuons m the world
~~\
.
.
Foomall\~eam. 1n the Nat~onal
• , th
the
draw?,
1t s e .uffalo Bt s. They ve .
led th~ NFL m attendan~e for _the
past f1ve seaso~s. Desp1te lqsmg
the Super Bo.wl m 1991, 1992l!ftd
1993~ the !:!Ills ar~ sui.! packmg
thent 1n at Rtch Stadium m Orchard
Par):. N.Y.
· I ne_ver thought Buffalo would
~ ...d!Bw1~g 80,000 fans a gll!"e,"
aumlts Btlls owner Ralph Wilson,
who was one of the founders of the
old American Football League. His
club made its debut in 1960.
Only 15,229 fans turned out 33
years ago to watch the BiDs !f1 their
h~me ~pener at War Memonal Stadium 1ft Buffalo. The team opened
. Rich Stadium (capacity: 80,290) in
1973. The frrst game at the new s1te
was a sellout
Last season, Buffalo led the
NFL with a total paid home attendance of 630,978. Next came the
Kansas City &lt;;:hi.efs (612,773), the
New York G1ants (608,706), the
New York Jets (603 ,619) and the
Denver Broncos (590,090).

The varsity and reserves will be
to Miller tonight, while the junior .
high Eagles will play home against
Trimble~

f.:JIS llfs

... ~&lt;c_on_tin_ue_d_from~P~~e~s~&gt;_______________________________________
Florida 1; .Colorado 6, Houston 4;
and San D1ego 5, Los Angeles 4.
Cubs 3, Giants 1
San Francisco fmished its homestand 1-8 and has lost 15 of 21.

It became Ron Gaol's 35th
home run, and the three-run shot
capped a comeback that had the
crowd at' Fulton CoUiity Stadium
screaming, chanting and chopping.
•'I'm happy to see Ron hitting
the way he is," Justice said.
"Maybe we can jump on his shoulders the last two weeks and he'll
take us to the National League pennant."
·
Gant took over the NL lead with
107 RB!s, and in his last four
games he has three homers and 15
runs batted in.
"It seems like every .year we
just keep getting better," Gant said
of the two-time division champions
who lost the 1991 World Senes to
Minnesota and last year's World
Series to Toronto.
In the NL East race, Philadelphia beat New York 6~ 3 and St.
Louis downed Montreal 5-4. In
other games it Wl\S Pittsburgh 8,

Mike Morgan allowed three hits
in eight-plus innings.
Rick Wilkins hit his 28th homer
for the Cubs and the other runs
scored on a single by Dwight Smith
and a squeeze bunt by Eric Yelding
as Salomon Torres dropped to 2:2.
The Giants' run came in the ninth
on an RBI double by Steve Hosey,
but Randy Myers sttuck out pinchhiuer Barry Bonds to end the game .
PhiUies 6, Mets 3
The visiting Phillies won their
fourth in 10 games with a three-run
eighth as Cun Schilling (14-6) wen
his sixth straight decision and
remained unbeaten in 12 starts. He
sbUck out nine and walked none
and left after a 35-minute rain

delay in the top of the eighth . sion club. AI Martin hit.a three-fill\
Ricky Jordan's bases-loaded sacri- homer in the sixth for visiting Pitts·
fice fly in the eighth broke a 3-3 burgh and Jay Bell added a solo
tie, and two more runs scored on a shot in the seventh.
single by Lenny Dykstra.
Rockies 6, Astro,s 4
Cardinals 5, Expos 4
·
The Rockies beat Houston for
Bernard Gilkey's two-out single the third straight time and
in the botlom of the ninth ended the improved their record.against them ·
Expos' eight-game winning streak. to 10·2. Charlie Hayes had a clubGilkey hit a 3-0 pitch .from Jeff record three doubles and Andres
Shaw to score Gre!!g Jefferies, who · Galarraga'drove in three runs as the
walked on four p1tches with one Rockies won their sixth straight at
out. The Expos led 4-1 when starter home. Luis Gonzalez went 4-for-4
Ken Hill allowed three runs in the and had two RBls for Houston.
sixth, two on a single by Jefferies;
Dodgers 5, Padres 4
who has six hits in his last two
Kevin Gross won in San DiejlO
. games. Sean Betry singled, dou· for the first lime since 1985 desp1te
bled and tripled and drove in a run allowing II hits in six-plus innings.
for visiting Montreal.
Gross (10-13) also had a two-ron
Pirates 8, Marlins 1
single as he ended a streak of nine
Rookie Steve Cooke (10-.8) starts at Jack Murphy Stadium that
improved to 3-0 against Florida lis saw him go 0-6 since winning for
he allowed five hits in 7 2/3 the Phillies there eight years ago.
innings. He has allowed four runs Padres rookie Dave Staton homein 22 2[3 innings against the expan- red to the second deck.

11:00- 5:00, Sat, Sept. 18
1:00- 4:00. Sun, Sept. 19

**HEALTH CHECK**

**LAPIDARY **
Walter Roush

MIDDLEPORT ARTS COUNCIL

MILL STREET BOOKS

TIME

Boots
Belts
Jeans
Sweaters
Sweats

CHUlJTfflN'S ACTIVITIES

Mary Wise

12:30-1:00

DENVER RICE - Golden Oldies

1:00 PM

PIZZA EATING Contest
Dave Diles Park ·

3:00 PM

TUa-0-WAB. SACX BACES.

&amp; BALLOON TOSS
Dave Diles Park

**BEARS**

Susan Baker

DEE and DALLAS
Country Western

**BASKET WEAVING
Shirley Houston

2:00-2:30

MIDNIGHT CLOGGERS

2:30-3:00

SATIN N' LACE--Pom-Pom Dancers

3:00-3:30

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
QUARTET
G&lt;;&gt;spel &amp;· Barbershop

**

.

**QUILTING **

Farmers Bank

Middl~port

Church of
Christ Quilters

THE FARMERS BANK AND SAVINGS CO.

211 West Second Street, P.O. Box 626
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(614) 992-2136

OHIO · ~~LLEY TWO STEPPERS

Line &amp; Western Dance
4:00-4:30

CJ &amp; THE COUNTRY GENTLEMEN
Country Western

4:30-5:00

BIG BEND CLOGGERS

5:00-6:00

BLITZKRIEG - Rock Music

Something
For
Everyone I

TUPPERS PLAINS OFFICE
State Route 7 - P.O. Box 339
Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783
(614}667-3161
(614 }985-3385

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September

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OF RADIO SHACK

18, 1993

• Stereo Accea80rle• • Autoeound • Computere
• VIdeo Equipment
• Phone• CB and Communication• Equipment
• Electronic Toye • Cellular Phones •VCR•

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tored in a little bit," said Ferentz.
"Actually, it's more the fact th•
Gene's playing pretty well than it Is
concern the other way. We were
planning on splitting time with
them Monday mght, anyway."
The 23-year-old King, who
declined to comment after the San
Francisco game, said Wednesday
that he didn ' t know know what
moves would be made.
Williams, acquired in a trade
. with Miami onJuly 12 for a fifth·
round 'draft pick, hasn't given the
staff much reason to keep him on
the bench.

'·

FESTIVAL QUEEN PAGEAN;T

STARTING AT

Stop by and see us
during the festival

after the first senes following a
costly illegal motion penalty. The
penalty wiped out a third-down 26yard pass to Eric Metcalf that
wculd have put the ball on the San
Francisco one-yard line. The
Browns had 10 settle for a field
goal.
Was King, who was' also pulled
in the Cincinnati game in week.
one, yanked because of the penalty?
"I wouldn't say that was it
specifically, but it might've fac·

Gail Hovatter

CaHish Festival Sale

'

BIG Savings!!!

King, switched from right guard
to right tackle this rear. was pulled

Member FDIC

Carhart
Chippewa
Red Wing
Texas Boots

CHRISTMAS LAYAWAY

BEREA, Ohio (AP) - The
Cleveland Browns could be making
their frrst major lineup change of
the .season for this week's game
agamst the Los Angeles Raiders,
said offensive line coach Kirk Fer·
entz.
Ed King will prob~bly be
reP.Iaced at right tackle by Gene
WliHIIIJls, Ferentz said Wednesday.
. "I would imagine that's what
Will happen based.on the w~y Gene
play~ Mo?,rlaY. n•ght (ag~?"t Sl!"
Franc1~). said Ferentz. He did
a mcejob when he was In there."

** TOI,.E PAINTING **

INGELS CARPET

•

Browns planning changes in offensive line
for Sunday's game against L.A. Raiders

·** CHAIR CANING **

1,2 :00-12:30

Enjoy our Annual Block Party
Lee
Levi
Chic
Wrangler

93 regular season with a total ot
119points.
"When all is said and done •:
Fischler notes, "the Pens ha~e
more talented players at more posi,.
tions than any .other club "
•
The NHL officiall · ets under
way again on Oct 5. Y g
•
(C) 1993
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Ages ,. 7-12

PET PARADE

**

iri the National Hockey League is
still thePitiSburghPenguins.
He believes they learned their
lesson last season when they were
upset by the New York Islanders in
the second round of the NHL playoffs.
•
Pittsburgh, led by NHL scoring
champ Mario Lemieux, had finished first overall during the 1992-

Dave Diles Park
12 Noon-4pm

11:30-12: 00

3:30-4:00

Big Bend Antique
Farm Club

the gu.y - rivaled by Fielder, perhaps- now thought by most fans
to be baseball's best slugger.
• In the NHL, who's No. 1
going into the 1993-94 season?
"Certainly not the Stanley Cup
champion Montreal Canadiens,"
according to Stan Fischler, a lead·
ing expert on hockey.
In the October 1ssue of Inside
SPOrts, Fischler says the best club

CRAFI' DEMONSTRATIONS

·GROUP

1:00-2:00

**ANTIQUE TRACTORS

Blood Pressure
Blood sugar
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Meigs County Hea~th Dept.

Detroit Tigers. Going into the final
full man~ ~f the season, ~em~
system 1~d1cated that Ftelder s
average distMce per home run was
412.6 feeL
The rest of the top 10 (among
those .with at least 15 HRs) in average dis~ per ~run:. No. 3.,
Kevm Muchell, Cmcmnau, 407.8
feet; No. 4. Jay Buhner, Seattle,
406.6 feet; No. 5. Mickey Tettleton, Detroit, 404.5 feet; No.6.
Fran)( Thomas Chicago (AL)
404.0 feet; No. '7. Kirby Puckett'
Minnesota, 402 9 feet; No 8 Derui
Palmer Texas ' 401 7 teet· No 9
Juan GOnzalez' Te~ 40i 2 f~t:
and No. 10., Dliony Tanabuil Ne~
York (AL) ·400 6 feet
'
The IBM Taie of the Tape pro~ measures every home run hit
m the major leagues The distances
are determined thr~gh a grid sysrem. It takes into account where the
ball lands or would have landed
had it not hit something other than
the ground. The measurements are
unofficial.
By the way, Frank Thomas of
the Chicago White Sox was the
IBM Tale of the Tape leader in
1992. Which figures. He could be

OF EVENTS

The Middleport Community
Associ_~tion Invites Everyone
To The 1993 Catfish Festival
Come and Enjoy The Fun I

Quilt Show

"The Bills ~ reaUy a w~s~
New .York. regJo~al fra~ch1se,
explains Wilson. If we ,Just drew
fans from ~uffalo and Ene Coun!Y,
we ~u!'!" t have the crowds were
havmg.
He adds: "We draw 20 to 25
percent of our fans f~om. the
R?Chester (N.Y.) arel!, wh1ch IS 75
m1les from the ~tad1um .... Fans
come to the stadium from all over
west~rn.!'lew York and southern
Ontano.
•Who ilre baseball's most powerful batters? .
Cheap shots don't count in this
league. Tape-measure blasts do.
The. l!st of sll!ggers who have
been hi tung the ball the farthest in
1993 contains a few surprises. Jior
mstance, Andres Gaiarralla.
Accordmg to the IBM Tale of
the Tape ~YSIC!", Galarraga was l;he
leader gomg mto Septe~ber w•th
an average home-run distance of
423.7 feeL or course, he plays for
the Colorado Rockies in the heady
atmosphere of Mile High Stadium.
Can a baseball vanish in thin air'? It
sure can.
Next on the mo~t-P?werfullist
(or 1993 comes Cecil F1elder of the

SCHEDULE

1993 MIDDLEPORT.CATFISH
FESTIVAL
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 18TH
" A Block From Time"

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Open 8·7 Mon- Fri, 8·5 Sal, 1·4 Sun

on the 'T'

DIARolm

·9 ·9 ·9 ,-..,O..V
.....
n••••

-·Euyt

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY, INC.
106 NORTH SECOND AVENUE- MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760

(614) 992·2635• TOLL FREE 800-426·5581
Credit TermsolayAwaysoMasterCardoVIsa

.

'

1! m JIBEDIPTIDI SJI8P#4
m

N. SECOND Avt. PHONI 992-6669 UIIIGLUOOT. 01110

Catlish Festival
.50% off SALE
on Selected:
Colognes
Candles
Baskets
Crystal
Sunglasses
Spring &amp; Summer Silk Flowers
Store hours: 9 am- 3 pm

Y'all Come

I
I
I

I
I

FREE BAG
POPCORN
WITH COUPON
9·180NLY

I II
I

~:;

COLD POP
12 oz CAN
25¢ with coupon

I
I
I

1

9·180NLY

1 I

final summer clearance

ID

Sidewalk 'Savings

brazier®

see

Did you
our Ad
in yesterdays
Sentinel?

__________
;;!~
9·18 ONLY

9-180NLY

1/2 Reductions.
I

II

1!:----------i!l
:;'1
r;:-----,.----;,
1
COUPOII
1 1r;:---------COUPON
I
I
OFF
I MOVIE AENJAL I II 20%
I
ENTIRE
1
94¢ plus tax
1
I
PURCHASE
I with coupon I II with coupon II

Dairq
Queen

SUPER BLOWOUT SALE

SATURDAY ONLY!
r;:----------:;,
1
COUPON
1
I
COUPON
I Jr!----------:;w
I I
I I
I I

Quality Wearing Apparel
for Men and.Women

1993

JOHNSONS VARIETY STORE ·
AND VIDEO RENTAL

MIDDLEPORT

Haue a Blast at the
Middleport
Block:
Party·

I

The

SHOE PLACE
'

I

'•

~----------~ l!:i----------::!.1

•

•

...

.

•
'

'

Middleport Dept. Store
un the 'T'

"

.
.

..
.

-

..
..

Formal Wear
to rent
for Men and Boys

..
.

Bahr Clothiers
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Chuck

Lynn

'

Expert Alterations
for
Both Depts.

.•

•

�'

Thunaday,SepbMnber16,1993

The D-'ly Sentlnei-Page-9

The Daily Se·n tinel

By The Bend
'·

Pomlf'OY

THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The Middle. port Child Conservation League
w.ill meet Thursday at 7 p.m.
Soeaker will be Susan Oliver of the
Meigs County Council on Aging
who will speak on the Senior Citizens levy on the November baUoL
RACINE - Racine American
4gion Post 602 will meet Thursday at the hall. There will be supper at 6:30 p.m. foDowed by t!Je
business meeting and a report from
the 1993 Buckeye Boys State rep.
resentative.
POMEROY - Molly Varner, a
representative from the office of
Congressman Ted Strickland, DLucasville, will bold an Open Door
Session at the Meigs County Courthouse Law l:ibrary from 10 a.m. to
noon.
SYRACUSE • A free immunization clinic wiD be held from 9
to 11 a.m. at the Syracuse Fire
Department for ages 2 months to
kindergarten age. Please bring the
child's immunization record.
POMEROY - Pomeroy group of
AA and AI Anon will meet at the
Sacred Hean Church at 7 p.m. For
more information call992-5763.

NEW SIGN - Eastern High School Student Council m~mbers
took advantage or Tuesday's pleBS!Int weather to display the new
Eastern High School siga instaUed in front or the school Monday.
Painted by Linda GWilan or Chester, the siga was donated to the
school by student cooncil. Here, from left, SheDy Hendricks, trea·
surer; Jaime Wilson, vi~e president; Penny Aelker, president, and
Jessica Karr, secretary, display the new sign.

LONG BOTTOM - The Olive
Township Zoning Commission will
hold a special meeting after the
public hearing at the Olive Township Fireslation for the purpose of
finalizing the Zoning Plan.

MIDDLEPORT - There will be
a weekend revival at Faith Tabernacle Church on Bailey Run Road
starting at 7 p.m. n1ghtly with
Brother David Wedlund, Columbus, as evangelist. Pastor Emmett
Rawson invites the public.

Mll..LFIELP - Boy Scout Troop
333 is having a round and square
da,nce at the Russell Building in
Millfield from 8 to 11 p.m. Music
will be provided by Out of the
Blue. There wiD be pie walks and
raffles.

CARPENTER • The Catpenter
Baptist Church 'Busy Bees' will
POMEROY - Grace Episcopal have a bake and rummage sale
Church wiD sponsor a pre-football from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the towngame dinner at the church from house on State Route 143 at the
junction of School Lot Road.
5:30-7:30 p.m.
LONG BOTTOM - Faith Full
Gospel Church wiD have preaching
and singing at 7 p.m. PI!Stor Steve
Robb invites the public. Fellowship
will follow.

KENO· - Red Bruslj Church of
Christ, Basham Road, will have
Denver HiD of Foster, W.Va. as a
speaker during its 7 p.m. service.
Hill will also speak at the Sunday
10 a.m. and 6 p.m. services.

CHESHIRE - Gallia/Meigs
LONG BOTTOM - A smorgas·
Community Action Agency will
hold a free clothing day from 9 bord dinner and
a,m. to noon at the old high school candidates' night wiD be held Saturday with serving to begin at 5
building.
p.m. at the community building at
Long Bottom. The event is sponsored by the Community AssociaSATURDAY
tion. All candidates are invited to
participate.
Adult meal is $5, chilMIDDLEPORT - C.J. and the
dren
$2.50.
Several meats included
Country Gentlemen wiD perform at
scalloped
oysters
are included with
Vaughn's Cardinal from 7 to 9 p.m.
the dmner as are beverages and
POMEROY - The Meigs Coun- desserts.

-.o721.

4

year-old friend were accused of
breaking into a middle school in
Thomaston, a rural community 50
miles south of Atlanta, and taking
ice cream bars from a cafeteria
freezer on July II.
The other boys were punished in ·
Juvenile Court, but Caldwell was
charged with burglary in adult
court. Superior Court Judge
Andrew Whalen sentenced Caldwell in August after Caldwell
pleaded guilty to burglary.
After a flurry of negative publicity, Whalen said he would reconsider the sentence Oct. 15.

••• , .. 11 ,...

To place an ad

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tueoday Paper
Wedneoday P1per
Thwoday Paper

Call992-2156

SYRACUSE - Deseenclanu of
John and Maggie Wilson will hold
a reunion at the park behind the
London Pool. Dinner will be at 1
p.m. All family and friend are welcome.

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

1 Ad1 oullide the county your ad run• mUll be prepaid

DAY BEPORB I,'UBLICATIC!II

Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

CLOSED SUNDAY

1:00 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00pm. Tueoday
t:OO p.m. Wodnoad.oy
100p.m. Thunday
1:00 p.m. Friday

Receive diai:ount for ad. paid ia advance.
Free Ad.: GiTeaway and Fou..l ad. uDder 15 word. will be
run 3 day• at no charp.
1 Price of ad for aU capital letien i1 -doublo price of ad c01t
• 1 point line type only uted
1 SenliDelil DOlrMpoDiihle for error• after tnt day (check
for error1 tll'tl day ad run1 in paper). CaD bmfore 2:00 p.111.
day dter puhlieation tc. make corrcclioa
1 Ad. that J11Ul be paid iD .dvance are:
Card ofTbODb
Happy Ad.o
Io Memoriam
Yard sat..
' A clauified adYOrlio...oot placed io tho Tho Dally Seatinol
(exeept Clu•ified Dilplay, Bu.~ineu Card or Lepl
Notie01) will olio appoar io tho Poiol Pleuut Ropoar aod
tbe Calllpolil Daily Trilnme 1 ieachlllf over 18,000 homu

SUNDAY
POMEROY - Meeting of Ohio
Vallev Area Ostomv Assn., 2:30
p.m. Sunday at Veterans Memorial
Hospital Cafeteria in Pomeroy ..
Bob RobinowilZ, state representa·
tive of United Ostomy Assn., wiU
speak on new matters on the
national level and Pat Barnett will
display new products representing
the Hollister Co. All members and
interested healthcare persons invit·
ed.
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange #778 will hold a Chicken
BBQ at the Grange Hall from 11.
a.m. to 2 p.m. It will consist of all
you can eat chicken dinner for
$4 .50 including chicken, baked
beans, polato salad, cole slaw and
roll. Drinks and dessert will be
extra.

Tile .. II IIC New TV legislation is changing the face 'of cable.
The. bottom line? You could pay more to keep gelling the
stations you have now, or lose some of the local channels
you've been getting for free .

Whalen said Tuesday he
changed his mind because of inaccurate media coverage. ''The net
result has been to create tension
between the races (that) is an injustice to all concerned,'' he said.
Caldwell is black. His mother,
Teresa CaldweD. has reported getting threatening telephone calls
urging her to drop the case. The
local office of the NAACP also
reported receiving threatening
calls.
Whalen forwarded the case to
the parole board without any recommendation.

The New 1994 Catalog

antenna. B-add a Radio Shack AlB switch, starting at 4.99,
and enjoy the best of both-cable TV and local broadcasts.
Stop by your local Radio Shack and we'll show you a system
that will fit your needs . .. affordably.

OUr 1814 Celelog Is bigger end better til.-.

ever with 191 pav-a ofihe beat In electron·
lea. Pk:k up • copy todeyl Only $2.15-wilh
coupon• worth ove~ 1100 thet c•n be uHd

WAIIII AIIIY
Pirls ... Senb
Mowen -&lt;WI S.W.

w........ .

.' •

·jCLASSIFIEDS!
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

woo

appointed

·Avenue, Middleport, Ohio

1188.88 m .ma

to Ill' 26-BII. .II W-80

II 35.88 .,,_,m

. 45960• .

Robert E. Buck,
Probate Judge
Judith R. Werry, Clerk.
(t) '· 16, 23 311:

2

CHARLES P. BAILEY

It plain to me;
I SCtmeday when I His
tac1 1hallsee;
I SCtm1day from tNra

Were 189.95 In 1993 catalog N-12-1712

SAVE 880

•

CUT 32%
llulf·POWII'III Cllc with
111111111
11'111 - Reg . 21 .99 165-998

I 1hall tree;
For somaday I shall

Speed-rllllng cor111111 with
companrllr circuit for cllrlty

underatand.

Reg. 119.99 143·572

Certified National
Electrical Code
Course- Starting
Sept. 23 In Athens.
For more
Information
contact Instructor,
Warren Connolly,

at667-3551
after 5:00.

====::::::=~
Happy Ads

5

In Memory

died 9-15-92
I Scl1m•dly He'll make
••• 0 ••••• 0 ••••••• 0 0 0 0 0 •••••• 0 ••

servtcea
ttertoi
&amp;
Ext "
h
error
Paint Mobile J.lt~m•r•l

Announcements

Happy Birt•day
To one ·of the
most precious
gifts from God,
My Mom.
Love you,
Sandy

•nd Al~!~~gSldi1~g

•••• m11111u

50714 litter lu..a
- . IlL
. Ieite•, 0.. 45741

················~··· · ······· · ··

EXCAVATING

BULLDO~ 1_!JACKHOE

and TRACIU1UE WORK
AV.AIUSLE.
SEPnC SYSTEMS,

HOME 81TE8111d

TllAILER SITES,
L.ANDCLEARINO
DRlYEWAYSINSTAil£o

LiMESTONE-TRUCKING

FREE ESTIMATES

992-3838

HAULING
SERVICE.
36970 Ball R• Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

992·3470
CUT28%
Clllr . . 11111111

CUT 37%

upwltenltl'lnll

1'11'111111 •••'110 Clll8ttl

OWNER: JoH

'&lt;H£moro

Willi 8-blnd ........

~hal ~sicd£

(614) 992·7474

p 01111
· roy, Ohio

TIIM 11.
REMOVAL
.LIGHT HAULING
ofiREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992-.2269

Blazing 33Ptllz IIHIBd, last

ar•s, Microsoft Windows

Your Size is
• in our score

and MS,WOrkslnstalladl
1

20% off

Chapman Sho~s
Pomeroy's Quality Shoe Store

FRIDAY
SATURDAY
MONDAY

1
1

-

MS Works, with word processing, spreadsheet and database. is already installed
1.44MB 3'12'' floppy drive 1 2-butlon mouse
Fast graphics let you race through Windows
applications faster than some 486SX PCs

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING
n~~.t~lng

• •

1

31904 ........ .
c....lclo..

...,.. o•1o

IN POMEROY
6:46p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 Payo"
This ad good for 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0061-342

P.. .

~QllllG J?OI!I older home.

BISSELL BUILDERS, IN(,
New Homes • VInyl Siding

.

New Garages • Replacement Windows
R00m Addltl
. On8 e R00fl ng

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614•992•7643

__._ C If )
(No S1.....
y a I
2112192/tfn

WATER
HAULING
1625 Gallons
•so ,., load

HAULING'

UMESTONE,
GRAVEL, TOPSOIL
&amp;COAL

YOU WANT IT SOLD,
WE WANT TO SELL IT
. CALL US TODAY!

Call
Ralph It

SAYRE TRUCKING

742·2904

614-742-2138
mo.

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE
WORK
Porches,
Patios,
Sidewalks

992·7878

314m1 mo.

•DOZERS
oBA~KHOE

•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

D.A. BOSTON
EXCAVATING

BRUCE TEAFORD SHERRY RIFFLE

How..l L Wrltesel

ROOFING

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters

·--~~
-PIIonl:
(11•) 1112110

r_.., Stntts

667·6621
4-lll-83·11n

GENERAL
HAULING

F.REE ESTIMATES

949·2168

992-7878

Work

7f1/troo.

101111 IISSILL
COiniiCnON
I oNlew Homea

Plumbing

....... wv

HowMifnpptitA blllfltiiiiMitv

-··old.

RICHARD ROBERTS
"Ad Specialtu.e"
· 122 Jl)' Drlvw, Gllllpolla, Oft.
44e-7112
Fex/Volce 441-7112

I Extorlor
PalnUng
(FlEE E811MATES)

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomtroy,Ohlo
..11H2-41n

*

Lost

o111r1

104 ....

.,.....,

='t~~":"J

c'!t:

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE . ESTIMATES

915-4473
71'12193

,,

~~.'i.:':'...::\"'.:..~~~1:!

=-·

Fo101d: Auatllllln
,Or
Gorrnon
Pollee UghtShaphlni
Brown And

or ochoo.lo,
emaU hwollato,
buoluoa.
nga 1vallble In Food
lllnagomonlond Cot.~... COli
now. Clo• hotlno Od. 11th.
Tho
Adul Ed_.lon
Contor, 1•
800"837-uoa,
114-711:1'3811.

~~~-/0\lnd In COn-ry Aroo,
Dork )-1802.
Brown, Young, Nouterad,
1

Eam Fui~Timo Pay Far Port·
Tlmo Work -'!1 A Chrlat~

Found: 2 molo black ond lan

~. Utart Folio vlclnHy, ~14-

241-2181.

Found: ton puppy, H woou
old, Braodway 81., Mlddloport,
,,. 1182 111111.
Loot onloplomhor llh, """atblv
..
tn Pornoloy: blecll
· hand-Mid Z..y roclo with
numboro 317 on hock. II fvund
p1oaoo eall114-8112·7311·
l.Oit: coan doa. ara of Bowmana Run • llacl,., bladi •
whho,
2'135. hao
- collar llog, 8-11.

Kr-··

Loot: tn the Poklol Cadinuo
Aa:'w'n LoMrgo·~~~~~acRk...
-~I~:
371-2242, I
-3221.
Loot: Pocluogo 01 Important
Popare From Banki!GIIIIpollo)
-COW IM 388 _(39.

7

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Thura, FH, Sat, N, Pitc.d To
Solll
181h, 181h, L.a11 Clothn, Mlac,
Etc. Hanly Muma, 1 Mila WOII
Of Rodn-v on 588.

~~rotor.T!:. 1100 ~:'I:;

Colloatlng Or Dollverlng, Aloo
aooklna Par11oo, co11 .,,...2....
8029
'
·
Expt- llodlcat Socrot1ry,
No Wookondo, 01 Shift Worll,
Apply In P1roon, Modlcol Ptou,
131
Stoia · Rout1 110, Golllpolla,
8:30-5.
FLATBED
DRIVERS-Conllnol
Frolahl
COrrtoro
an cppo&lt;tunfy for tlatbtd hu
driver.
that Ia
MCond to non.f Do you own

your own troetor? Hovo you
thcughloboul
bUJlng your -n
lrt1C10r? 11 being a compeny
driYir wltlt
are lnterwtMI
In? Th111 cal COnlln11 today 01
1-II00-921l-a222 and eok tor Ttm.
:W:.:E~H;,:AV:..;E;,.:IT;.:A:::L:.:L:..l- - - Tho G1111o -llolgo Communhr
Action Alfllncy'o - . Ena'lr

rou

AUIItanoe Program H11

n

lmmodlltl Oponlng For A
Roaordo Ctork nntallii - A t
ho Control Olllco tn Choohlro.
Thll Poahlcn Roqulr11 An lndlvlduol Who Wookl Wall Undor
Pr...ure And Muat 81 S.nahlve
To The Ne.c18 Of Thl Law lncoma. Computer And BookkooJ1lng Ex-ce R1qulrad. Muat
Type Ill Woi&lt;l1 Por Mlnuto. Exptrlance With Federal Pr~r11m1

Do1lred. Ability To Worti Woll
Wllh Otho11 A Muot. Thla -~
R01d AcrCMI From Coon Club, lion 11 For Approx. 8 Monlhl/40
Friday ~5, Refrigtrllor, Anll- Hout'l Pwr Week. Minimum
quo, Olohol &amp; Tonlioo.
Educotlon Roqulromont 11 High
ALL VanS !Iaiii Muat Bo Paid In t:::l'~a o;;:~~~~hl:a ,::a~~
Advance. OEAOUNE: 2:00 p.m. Apply At Tho 011111 -llolgo CAA
lho day bola,. lhl od Ia ta run. Conlrol Olllco In Choahlro, Clitia
Sundar adhlon • 2:00 p.m. No lolot' Than Sapl-bor 27,
Frldoy. Mond1y adhlon • 2:00 1993. For Furlhor lntormallon,
p.m. 8oturdoy.
Call (114) 317·7341 01 (114) 1112·
Clay TownhouH: Friday, S.tur- &amp;828. An Equel 0pportunh1
3 Family Gorogo Salo: On Kriner

a.e,

Sterto•, Guna. Avon

Ruby Rldi Houoohald home,
Much More
.
Garage Salt: Dlbblt Orlvt, 16th• • Nl 00 h&gt;
181h• r~,
~n Soloctlono,
Loti ur Ooodlnl Antiquo
Rtproductlon Glauwar.. ·

(61 ..)

Limestone .
Dirt
Gravel

Down1pouta
Gutter Cllllnlng
P•lntlng

1-fl-~-

(Former Maori lan•)

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

1

Cord•.

=moro, Mlddlo~ • -

day,

7171 mo.

CARPENTER SERVICE

1304) 773·5515

-

-L.ollhor
..._
..
-n.
2141
1-I-I.=DI00::..;:812=1:1=-I3JI.:::;..~--­

Good lor kindling, alloy _c:9",.:
boluueon - h ond lyCIImaro A;. YOII Into-ad In holplng
In Mlddllpol1.
alho11 . . . Ill ol lholl
Kmono, 7-1 Wooko Old, Black A n11u111 baouly7 Conaldor being
Wlllto 8tllpod, Phone: IM-4"'- 1 •-alliglll. Lum lhi
2411.
lltoot tn hair core M,Ung, ond
tocmlq- 11 • giving
~haired k1Hon1. :104·77S- mlnlcUIII. o-tng8 MIN ovall'
able In OcL thh ctoa Only.,.
plao, 1 milo, 1 lomato, lwko. IOIIment thto yeor. Cenlacl Tha
~ •• 7• ·-·
Adua Educotfon
1.- ' " ~·-·
13114108orl14-'7114111.
Pupplao, I mootty
poJ1 AVON . I AU - · I ShirtChow,
woou Colllo,
old, 473 ..____ ~-· .,

1J4 Mia. Off 218 On lngalll Rd,

R..aonablt Rates
Joe N. Sayre

•s-te-IJIS.tln

anti

Br-

lox 189
Ml..ll...
.. ,.
. rlr OLio
45760
•
(614) 143• 5264 611 ...3111n•

Woodlklmg ONLY 110.000

Syrac- 1958 frame bedroom, 1 bllth home.
&amp; alect~c heat.
. 1 112
water. City Mwar.

.25-1623

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health ~

12-30-112-lfn

CLUB

Vacant land- JA.t1'08• in Racine Area. Good
lhur1ti"' land orgoodiltall'll'iite. ONLY$14,100.00
Pomeroy:
floors,

Chester, Oh. 45720
985-3406

USED RAILROAD TIES

EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES

Vacant Lind- 3.30 .ac111a with two gao wlllto.
water wells. Paocaful salting. Live vary
ASKING ONLY $8,500.00

li&amp;: -.W.. erM - -

::x

~::::::::::::::::::::~
!:~=======:::!======-===SHIUI &amp; Till

IIIGO
Everyday l ow Price

.

=~~~~~: ~.fi11:. 1 ~.r..::.~~c:=::r.~ t.:-...':t

VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFI!AENCES
614·915~4110
1112/1311 mo. pel

Thla hom• Ia allordablell It nHde ftnllllad
flnl•""" .. thalia done looka gAtaUilt hu 4 ~~~:=~
two batha. Located in Middleport. C
laoot•.. lo Olo18S.
ON.LY 1.12,500

p....,._.'lloll Mer ·•

1,1 _ Help Wllntecl

Rocky Ra Hupp, DaC.U. • Agent

FREE ESTIMATES
Take the p11ln out of
painting. Let me do It
for you.

Reg. 119.91120-301

fiM

IM-379-UO.. ·

CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
36358 SA 7

To Good Homol

8-&amp;-4111

QUALITY woRK
•- GOOD ..
a'TES
.,.
""'

LINDA'S
PAINTING

48-c'-tll
CB Wllkle·lllkle

IIWAI8lll
I'll' 1111111•

Employment Serv1ces

Shade River Saddle Shop

1111

: CUT 26"

Prized season after season for quality, value and out of the
ordinary comfort. Elegant pump and cimeless T-strap
with broad breasted heels and roomy toe box have
padded insoles, cushioned arch support and
silky-soft insoles. T-strap has puckered
vamp and elastic gored strap.

-·

Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

1m1101

1D·clt. sc.-.

Air Condltlontrt, Oultar Ampa,

Elc. 114-251-123ll

GENEUL L
. IFE and
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY

Wid.•-

211 Eaat IICOnd StrMt
p......, or. Ohto, wae
Ce1.)81243211

Reg . 17.99 N43·S17

Oon~ Junk hi Soli Uo v- NonWorking Motor Appll1ricait,
Color
TV'a, Aolrlgorataro,
FiMur., VCA'I, MicrowaVe~,

Arno ld I
Plumbing,
Heating
&amp; Cooling

·r

GRAVEl.'SAND,
~==::::::=:~_!::;=~==~~~ LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL
Real Estate General
&amp; FILL DIRT
Doria

Anllq- end uood furnhu,., no
omau, will
b&lt;ly one ., com~•
ltwolllold, COil Oaby lllrlln,
lt4-ll82·'114l.
Wonted: a- Hoaa, 250 -310
Pdo, 10 !loa To A Yoor Old. COli
Anytlme,lt4-381-7114.

ftom toO llrp ar too

Walled To Buy: Blinding limber • Pine, can 81ar1 lmmodlally, Good - ... 114-311-

4128/lln

DAVID ARNOLD

985.4181

:::;;;;;;;;;;;.;~~

~

Wanted to Buy

Pupploo, par1 ...,.. par1
·Old
Allor I P.M. 114Chow,
304-C75-5361.
4411-1119.
Wlnltr onion 101, to gin oway. Cardinal Frolght COrrlero.O.T.R.
304-175-7822.
Drtvers wantid for • new ,.,..
Wood from pOrch floor, oomo mlnll In Hurrtcona, WV, muM
con bo Uood tor bulldlnt with, have 1yr. O:T.R. oxporlonco pul~
1 1182 121
"' ·
6
&amp; Found
Ctooo 81"' Shlokl, tno., atop ott
pay, lly ov• pay, - - "
Aduft- B~ndlo Bour, ooro ~~:"'C:: ~..:..~=
;:".., ~~~Nctowbrook eau&amp;oyd - ... -..21l-1222.

949·2104

ENTER,-RISES

------3

PubliC Notice

PICKUP Md DEUYERY
Hour• Ill- M-F 1-3 8aL
Cloled Sunct.y

l

992·2Hi6

'loabella R. Powell, de'·ceaoed, lata of 1408 Powell

fl'lnlllll'lll---...
tt• 48·111•11 W-1811

AutboriDCI: Brlgga 6 ·
Slnltlon MTD, Ry.n,
I. D.C. Repair Cenler

992·701J.,
tt2·55SJ
or 1011 flEE
1•100-MI-0070 .
DARWIII, OHIO

' Executor of the eotate of

hlt•••••clty
.........-Cilllltll..

MOt. ·

4 puppl... 112 Colllo, 112
Shaphard, long hair, 114-9854211.

RACINE
MOWER cu•c

PillS

Mel go County Probato
, Court, C.e No. H040, Ruth
,. An~ Do·wtar, 1339 SE 46th
: Lano No. 5, Cape Coral, FL

I.Onl·l'lllll•ll&amp;• ,...

446·4514 -1·100·766-4013

9

.,.-,,...----:-.....,..,:-,.:....-

Words
15
15

WHILIY'S IUIO

. 33904

1110-watt c. 11181klll'llatallln 1 111111
Rog. 79.99 m -m '
.....••••

CHRISTIAN'S CONSTRUOION

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL

~ the

III'ECIAI. .
Plllt:llUE 1

Gray, 1 T'DI!OIIO 114-446-2201.
3 Killlrw : 1 llock Moll, 2 Yollow
F«ndta, e Wkl. C!~i , Bilek
F - . I llonlho uoa, 114-441?QM lliluan I-1DP.M.
a 8m.IN Mbl l,.ad Pupploa,
Claad With Chlldron, 114'381-

Llfttlme Guarantee. -

H......,n, w. vii. 304~31 •
Maolorcllrd and VISA acceplld-

· On SepiHibor 2, 1893, In

on your very next •urchiSe.

woOdgr•ln InteriOr.
Colora: Light Oak, Dark Oak, Ch1rry.

• 304-77)-5133
2nd Location call Lon .....

Tile llltdlal: Simple as A and B. A- install a Radio Shack TV

obstetricians recommend that
women get two ultrasound scans
during pregnancy, one between 15
and 22 weeks and a second
between 31 and 35 weeks. They
cost about $200 apiece.
"That's a lot of money for a
baby pictlire." Ewigman said.
The research was conducted on
15,151 pregnant women in 109
obstetrical and family practices in
six states. The results were pub- '
lished today in the New England
Jollfllal of Medicine.
The women were randomly .
assigned to ·two groups. In one,
every woman got two routine
scans. In the other, ultrasound was
used only if a doctor felt it was
necessary.
Forty-five percent of the women
in the group denied routine ultrasound ended up getting at least one
scan during their pregnancies.

.
112 o.m.n tlllophanl Pupptoo,
I wu ~ Woonod, 1,._
1531, I 14
;71172.
zCulo Cuddly Km- Fer Adaplion. 10 Wko. Old, 1

We have a J.rge otoclt ol HVWOI1111111e brencl lira llld
lfwa don't J.n, we-. get IL
OUR NEWEll LOCATION IN MASON, W. VA. IS
OPERATED BY CHRIS NEAL

I

et.llll'l

tor I P.M.

Rate Over 15 Word•
$4.00
$ .20
3
$ 6.00
$ .30
6
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 as separate ads.
Buoln- Card ......$17.00/lndl per momlh
BuDetln Boarcl.... .$6.00/lndl percbly

Days
1

AU.IUIII&amp;IIOIIU

Up'l CM't

n, ....... U$7

1

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

C8bla fl88

yea

f---'-_:._-~..-.-

1

I I

~rl111 ••••

GlvNway .

1 Oray • 11o1o ~' 1
llo!glo !log, 1 . . .
- -- Dilolatlori Noodo Ta
Go Ta Homo That Dooo Nol
Hove Chlld11n. 114-441-7282 A~

Unt.ll ()c;tober 11t: Buy 1ny ..-pl-menl
window 1nd receive FREE - BelutHul

FRIDAY

Accused ice cream bandit allowed
to attend school pending hearing
By JOAN KIRCHNER
Associated Press Writer
ATLANTA (AP)- An lith
grader sentenced to three years in
prison for stealing ice cream bars
will be allowed to stay out of jail
and in school until the parole board
reviews his case.
"There is no reason to bring
him into the system and start that
process before the parole board
makes a decision," Corrections
Department spokesman Andy
Bowen said Wednesday.
Dehundra Caldwell of Roberta,
his IS-year-old brother and a 16-

Why ~ay hlth ••t-ef-tew•

Frame Repair

.Ultrasound unnecessary
for most pregnancies
By DANIEL Q. HANEY
judge its age and growth and spot
AP Science Writer
birth defects and other problems.
BOSTON (AP) - The practice
Many assume that routinely pro·
of routinely giving ultrasound viding such II test will mean safer
scans to all pregnant women is not pregnancies for.aU women, not just
only unnecessary. It may waste those at high risk. However, until
more than $1 biUion a year, a land- now •.this seemingly common sense
mark study concludes.
idea bad never been rigorously testResearchers found that 80 per- ed. The new study concludes other·
cent of all mothers-to-be are at wise.
·
such low risk that they do not need
"The ~sychology and culture of
ultrasound. unless problems arise.
America IS that tb do something is
"Doctors using their judgment _ .to do good, and that is not always
about when to order ultrasound the case," said Dr. Frederic D.
tests results in just as good care as Frigoletto of Brigham and
doing it routinely," said Dr. Women's Hospital in Boston, a coBernard Ewigman of the University author of the study.
of Missouri-Columbia, principal
The nationwide experiment
found that 5 percent of babies
author of the study.
Ultrasound has become an delivered to healthy, low-risk
essential tool for steering women women have major problems at
through difficult pregnancies. birth, regardless of whether routine
Sound waves produce an image of ultrasound is performed.
the fetus that can help doctors
Typically, family doctors and

SALEM CENTER • Star
Grange 11778 and Star Junior
Glllnge '11878 will hold their annual
hayride and wiener roast beginning
at 6:30 p.m. at the Grange Hall.
Members and guests are asked tobring hot dogs, snacks and. drinks.
Buns will be provided. All' mem~
bers and interested persons are
invited to attend.

TV
IS
CHANGING
Going
Gat Local

Rick Poa-. Aucllon Company,

'1ull tlrM auctioneer, ODIIIpl•l
NMce.
lie tnnd'
~PJ ouod And Low lnlefWIIt auction
IN,CIItlo I Woot Vlrtlnla, :104llaloO;
773-1711.

Specializing In Custom

TUPPERS PLAINS - A round
and square dance will be held by

Publlc Sale

8

&amp; Auction

Do You Want A llojor Cndll

------Community Calendar------ty Retired teachers will meet at the
Meigs Museum at noon. Mike Struble will speak on the making of
charcoal in the Pomeroy area. For
reservations call 992-3887.

--

c.ntt 1M c.&amp;tl, NO P'OIIItm,

Pag.....S

the Tuppers Plains Veterans of.Foreign Wars Auxiliary Friday from 8
to 11:30 p.m. CJ. and the Country
Gentlemen will provide the music
and callers will be Red Carr and
Melvin Cross. Everyone is invited
to attend.

--------

3 Annoui'ICII'IIentl

Thursday, September 16, 1993

:.t

1\n·lOIIfl('[ 'llt'l'l'&gt;

-

Employer.

Nallonll Publlohlrig Firm N-1
People To Label Po.tcardt .
From Home. $800/Wk, Sit Your
Own Houro. 1·1100-l'I0-7377, (1.41
Mln/18 Yrotl Or Wrllo: PAASE·
T
s
33 • 111 · ncotnway, N.Awor1
IL80542.

�'
P.ge 10-The

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
53

BEATIIE BLVD."' by Bnaee Beattie

Help wanted

.11

j•

1993

· Thursday, September 16; 1993

KIT 'N' CARL VLE® by Larry Wrlpt

Mlscenaneoua
Man:handl•

72 Truckl for Sale

NEA Crossword Puzzle

"l

ACROSS

~tf(

,

PHILLIP

loeJ/DIJ

ALDER

Aw.. I '-All)
WA~

. ,~ ~llli!y."

(.-

NORTH

t-tf.ll

.J98
.KJ
t K9 8 5
.AKJtO

EAST
•K s
•to 9 8 H
t64
·9 ~ 32

AQt061 2

18 Wanted to Do

~s

1181 - · Floro, $2200. worr.
lonnlna bod, 2t bulb, St-.
304-17I-137W.

Q732
Q

sourn

.75

• AQ6 2
t AJ tO
764

•s

Vans&amp; 4WD's

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: West
Wool

1M7 PIIC mobi~ home, 2 bedroom, goo hoot, 13Citl0, 614-1492301oller 4pm.
.
Hcimo """'lor your lovoll ono In tm tllxiS mobllo homo, 2 bodra,:~
In lllddlopofl' room,
rontod lot, 82500, 8141
-2.
'1112-2367.
lnl-oxtorlor painting, """ :::,m=-;No=w-;11;-:oon=-,::12:-•--::11:::-,-,1::14-:palnllng. hondWuh hoi»oo • 1112 .;~ 141 •
mobil - · ...... jobo. .,..
exp., exc. Nfa. FtM Htlmataa. 1.,_ Homatt• trallar1 12dS, 3br,
304-171-4833.
olun, total eleclnc. 30W75o
llloo Poulo'a Doy Con Coni• t 1724•
Blocll Wool 01 HIIC On olookoon 1182 Ooltbrook 14xllll Mobllo
Plko M.f I A.M. -4:30 P.ll. H 11cimo With WI-, Dryer,
Qualfty And Exparle- 1o Tho Control Air, 2 Bodi'CICIIM, &amp;
11 Conoom For Your Chlld'o Pt!rch, E,qra Cloon, 114-446c.lro. CoU Uo For A Yloh. Infant 1382;

2t

01 Qrgee Portable Sawmill don,
haul your lotto to tho mfU juot
.. uSO.W71-tll7.

..,. -

p,..
chooloro /School Ago 114-441-

8224.

Fllrmont, 14x70 W/16118
-m~~~ 3br,1 llalh, 12114 out·

'

Wontodon
to dollobyolltlng
homo
Nlcholio
Rooil In- my
tlllod nurooo old, 114-l'lz:ilo7.

~.

TGIII el.utrto, rural

..

~~~~hoo=,.=·;B14~-215:~1~147.~,304~

to echOot, have ,.,.,.!OM,
boforo I oftoor oct-1 6 full limo.

1114

Fo~monl

14x70 3 BodWID blbyoltln my ~. • - roomo... 1. Both, 18x18 Addloon,
121::14 OUibullcl~ Tolal Electric,

Rural Wotor, 112 Aero. 1~304-1~
1147.
Will C.. l'or E-lY Or llln- 111a8 Shul1z mobil ho.,., 2br, 2
dlcoppod ...,,_, In lly Hcimo, bolh, uklng $14,Citl0, oorloua
114-W1-8000.
WID do houoo oloonlng, Ill·

t 304-1~7111.
Woman _.,_ ct.nlng of
offlcM • 11 or.1 , part ''me work.
par1ot

114-~3421.

Financial
Business

21

IT'S ALL

on

114 Uti 8227.

/TockUI,.

Pass

Opportunity
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
r.comnwnd1 tMt you do . .
n... with .,.opla you know and
NOT to oond monoy llwo;;;;j, tho
moD until you how lnvoiiTsjilod
tho ollarlng.
L.ocol V.ndlna Routo: t1,200 A
Wool&lt; PolontiOI. lluot Sol. 1-BQO.
155.0364•.

Real Estate

1-•::;;:::-111

calla only. 304-t71-1883 attar

Spm.
1114 Rodman 14x70, 3bdrm., Includ• aldrtlng1 atape, ~ock1,
5yr. warranty, notniOWnera In·
auranca, and ~ rur or fr11. lot
renl, all tor only "771mo., c1R 1·
100-837-3236.
s.. OCIWa, ran..d, 70112 mobllo
homo, largo pclo oorn, IVOI collar, tool .tied, many nn ttama,
$3000 .down, $23,000 Arm, 10'Jio
$265.1mo., land contract, caU
Polly, 814-M2·11042 lor doiiiiL

LOWE ElY!!

mila out Neighborhood Rood
Off 9t Rt 141. 114-448-3431 lor

qulrod. 814-448.0338.
FumloMd, 3 Aoomo I loth,
Cloon, No Poto1 lloforoi1CII I
Dopoolt Roqui1Wa.l14-441-1511.
Groclouo living. 1 ond 2 bodroom apertmenta at Vlllaae
M1nor

This ne~opsr wll not
' lalo&gt;Ang~ acoopl
aa.&lt;enlsemeris for real estale
IMllch Is In Ylolallon of tho
law. Our readers are hereby
lnlonned lhal all dwollngs
adYarllsed In lhls newspopsr
819

avalable on .., equal

oppcrtunlly bulB.

31 Homes for Sale

2 bedroom houu, full ba. .

mont. 304-e75-1488.
3 bedroom home In Rutland,

4S

Furnished
Rooms

Aooma for rent • ••k or motWh.
s::~:J ot $120/mo. Gollla Holol.

1580.

Real Estate
Wanted

Rentals

tached Ge,.ge, OU1bulldlng,
Bidwell Potter "School Area, 6~

317-7504.

304-875-31134.

448~380.

Antiquo golvonlzod (Gom) woll
pump, bUutiiUI lown or flowor
bed ornament, 140, 814-IIS.
4401 01rly momlngo.
Antiquo Povlng Brick!, Excol·
lont Condhton; \400 co 1,500,

tte 822L
•
Ato~ 2ioo Incl.- (oyatlck ond

81t

peddle control!.,. and 8
;:a,'"r IJIMOO, $25, 114-182·

47 Wanted to Rent

lathroom white enClosed
hootar lor bonlo IJII, QOOd con-

r~erchandtse

51

lanlo re.an•tor end rtm, $50,

a••

dillon, U .OO, 114-141-:822.
Boar "Whllo Tall" Compound
Wllh Slghto, Qulvar, Arrawo And GIOva. $50, 814-44..
7375.
Booutllul Wadding Gown With
O..achable Treln. Size: 8,
llllchlng Angartlp Voll, Brldol
Bouquet. Alto Junior Brld...
mekta Tea Length Orne Pink,

Household
Goods

91zo 14, Two Frowor Glri Dros- , Whho Tao Longth, Slzoo 4
Ano I . 114-441-3775.

3po uctlonll, recllnee on ende,

BRut)' ulon equipment· hyd..
raullc r.cllnlna ch•lr, dryer, ata·
tlon with bowl; mirror, mat, 304·

oxc cone!, $100. linn. 30W7&amp;6365.
Antiquo ook cllni~L":" toblo
w/S cholro, bullal
7&amp;-22110.
VI'RA FURNITURE
114-448-3158 Or 114-4411'4421
'10 DAY SAME AS CASH
OR RENT~.OWN (NO DEPOSIT)
01Jl1110E
FURNISHINGS:
Wrought Iron Table W/4 Chl.lraj
Fan Back Rocking Ch•lr $.58i

Boddlna -Twin Man Sot $81, Full
$911 So1,_ Ouoon $141 Sot; 4
2 Bodroom Houao, Nlco Condl, Drawtr .,;hat $44.15i Car hd"1
tlon, 1126 Socond, Galllpollo, No Bunk Bod'o, ~&gt;&lt;&gt;Mar Bodo. Full
Llno 01 Southwootom Voooo
Poll, 1285/Mo. 814-4411'23QQ.
Slartlng At120.00; 1nc1,.. llony
2 Bodrooma Fumlahod, Dopoah Shapa'o &amp; Slzo0 Sllrtlng At
&amp; Rolaronco Roqulrod, No Polo, IS.OO. 2 L.ocollona ·llaoldo ).uto
814-4411'48711.
Auction Or 4 lllloo OUt 141.
Good, ciNn, 2bdrm. hom1, with Opan I A.ll. To I P.ll.llc&gt;n -Sot.
baslmenl, ltorage roam, Nnt or Choir 6 boooboenl hutor, US
lea11 with optlori to buy on con~ -h.
30W75-1QIQ.
tract, Pomtroy, 114-etl-7244,
Couoh and choir lor oolo good
oondhlon oaklng $100. 614-44142 Mobile Homes
&gt;1844.
for Rent
For Solo- gold living room choir,
10x60 mobile honw , 2 bedroom
cloon, .u.-114-11112-7207.
120 Fourth A.., Golllpcllo. l32il

Brick Ranch, 3 Bedrooms, 1 112 2 &amp; 3br. trailer In Hendlrson,
B•tht, Full BaHITitnl, 2 Car HUD 1Ccep1ed. 304-875-1872 at-

All oock quill, $36, 814-14112853.
~A-;;MIFM;;::;;;-;8;-;Tro;:::c;:-k--;;Phon=~
og~ro
::p::;:
h
Radio With Spookoro, 825, 614-

114-~·77211tllor 3pm.

41 Houses for Rent

Mx70, 2 bedroom, air cond,
raflrence required, Sandhill Rd,

Bill or umgor 304-U2-3425.

~pocoo lor ront otllllng ot
SIS/mo., 114-1112·2117.

Garden Arch W•Y'• $121.00

4416 after 7 p.m.

Alr ooncltlonw 2 bed• w/
tra..O..L., onlortolnmont cenlor.

46 Space for Rent

Creek, equlppH wf e'-Ctrlc
hNt, AC, TV, microwave, patlo,

36

I Polr Whho Aluminum Shut·
t-, All For Only $7!, Coli 614448-8147.

AHondo llodlum Dlopoublo
With Contlnonl Brtolo 16 To A
Box Cool 185, Soli lBO 61W568855.
.

mol"'lntormll:lon.

double .lol:, garden, cellar, ou1·
buildings, lmmodla1o ponaoelon, $13,500 OBO, 814-'M2·2502. water and trash Plld 11......a.

3 -Badroomt, 2 B1th1, 2 Car At·

Rlvw.lae

Aportmonta In Ill-port. From
$202. Coll814-812-aa&amp;D. EOH.
North 4th, Mlddlopofl, 2 - ,
0 Hic-lleii2"'Js:rrtmonl, clop I ,.,,
304
•
•
One
bedroOm
IJ)Irtrnenta,
$221/mo. lncludoo utllhloo, $100
-why dapcell, no poto; 1141112·2218.

$13,!100. :JOW'IS-44117.

""lch-

and

Compolto, Bigfoot Pork, Rocoon

SEVERAL 7· ACRE PARCELS:
llolgs Couroy, Salom Twp.,
$850J acA. Remot., beautiful
lond; woodo, pootu,. ond hlllo.
Coli lor good mop. 1-e14-5938545, Alhono,OH.

-3o4-

0no
boar a· mlnoturo
donkey.
773-5878.
Roglotorod
Zyr.
old
~hbrocl Flly,, light bly
wlwhho llocklnao, prlcod to 1887 CA 10, UCIIIInt condition,•
0011. 304-171-3030 ~ or 304- call.1'14o812-3202 after 7 p.m.
'
671-3431 ovonlngo.
=,.::BB~SUz=u:::ki;'-R::;M::-:,80::',":1860,:,::;'-;=,.,.!laB-,:
Klw...ld 250 Tectitt. 1110;;
both In oxcollont condhlon, 114-o
141-2241.
'
1881 Kawauki 1KX'121, o:cellent~
Toom 01 Droh lluloo, Nomooo a condhlon, aoklng $1400, 114-\
La~ Wagon, lllko Ollor 114- 1112-1422.
·
, 1

central hill. air, .-eferwnca ,..

utllllr building, covorod dook,
boAt doole; a..... to crook,

All ,.., oatatt lldYort!Uig In
Ifill nowopaperiiMibjod IO
lho F-1 Fllr Houalng Ad
ol 11168
Kllogll
lo odvorlloo •any pref..nce,
lmtallon or discrimination
baood on rac&lt;l, color, relglon,
OOX 18JT'illat slliiUS or national
origin, or any tnention to
make any SU&lt;h preloronce,
1m11111on or dls&lt;:rlmlnallon."

Fumlallod Apartmont,

24 acre farm In RUtland. 111
well, lara• blm, trult trw•,
ramodeleit living quar1er1, m~nr
building k&gt;to pilcod on lnopocllon. no land controct., 114-~22007.

1 AcM lot, &amp; 112 ACre Lot, 4110

~ Crook Trucking. 114-241-

1br, next to Ubrary, perking,

Stooping roomo whh cooldng.
Aloe trallar apooo. All hook-upo.
Coli ..., 2:00 p.m., 304-7735851, Mooon WV.

2 l.olo For Solo: Appi'Oxlmololy

Houllng:
Anytlmo,
An,.,...._
PLA RlllobcHo Ohio,
Evory Monday. Chuck WHIIamo,

114 U8 U11 After 7 P.M.

Nlcoly

Gu cook 1tove, fair cond., $100.

304-171-4133.
GOOD USED APPUANCES
WllltoiWL. dryoro, rorng.ottn,
rongoo. , . . _ Appllanooo, 'N
Ylno Sl-1 pilll-7388, 1·

800-419-34n.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
GoiWgtL HardWood Roora, Big •_•..,r,..
5pm':-._-::-:-::-.,.,--:-:::-:- Comphomo lumlohlnv~.
Back t'OrCh, 8 ACI'II, NNr :.:
H.M.C. 160, 814-448-1810 Ahor 5 2 Bedroom Mobllt Homo In Go~. Houro: M....s.t, 9-8. 114-4411'
pM
lla Countr, $250/Mo., PIUI 11322, 3 mlloo out Bulovlllo Rd.
· ·
Utllhloa, On 218, Roloronco~ fi'M Delivery.
Houoo &amp; 8 112 ••-· out olcllr Dopooh Roqulnod, 114-1183-4801
Living 100111 ouno, $125. Colloo
llmha, ciOH to Khoola &amp; Aher I P.M.
a ond tib~ 1410. All vory good
ltorM , email barn, fenced, 3br.,
Bod
CA
R
So
llr~'~~~~ flmlly room I kitchen, 2
rooma,
, entor
le oond. 304-1111-4101.
~ Ill I &amp; dl I
2 112 On Land Contract. 2 Blocko
to nna
llollohln Corpaeo, Rl. 7 N. 114v
ng
n
ngroom,
From
81ft
·BNr.
114-448-1408
Atblthl, utllttr room, 2 car garagt,
•
448·11144, lx12 Corpat $10, Vinyl
1125,000. 304-8~2241.
Ill&lt; 4 P.ll.
lUI Yd.
AVI Pt
2br, tl'lllltr W/WIIhtr I drytr,
Houu, 1 Aero ' "onroo
PICKENS FURNITURE
~ ..7188. ·• · ~
•c. 304-l'T.I-5248 onytlmo.
Ploounl, WV, 814-44
NowiLiaod
Small Mobllo Homo Upt&gt;Or Houooltolcl lumlohlng. 112 mi.
Route '7, QAIIIDOIII, Reltrwnce &amp; olorrlcho Rd. Pt. PI-nt, WV,
Dopoolt Roqulrod. 814-44..3710. ..uso.wl'B-1410.
Th,.. bedroom, Ill electric, one Ouoon ....
$100. 304child, no pt1t1, 1240/mo., New 178-1214 onytltno.

wot-.

Haven, 3Q4..882~488 .

l'T.I-1181 ohor 4:30pm.

Boy'o Hulty 12 opaod blko good
condhlon, llko n-. $4S, 814885-4405, bought lor $121.
Burnt Or•nge VInyl Co1.1ch,
Colonial Styli, GOC&gt;d Condition,
175, Coli 614-448-3375 Ahar 6

P.M.

Canning Jare_,JMostly Quar1a),

AKC roglalorod Cock• lponlol
pullllloo, ttoo, -., - ·

Moving: Hoovy Duty WhlrliJOOI
Waohor l D.Yor 2 Yuro Old,
$300; Raol Nlco 4 Pc. Bod-.
Sullo $400· Nlco Oak Dnk,
$150; Nlco Upright Froour $178.
814-2411'5182 Aftar 8 P.ll.
NES gam•• Jllwa, Fuanadu,
Willow, Pro Racing, WhMI fgr..
luno, more, $10/01., 614-1112·
32111 ohor4:00.
Old Slngtr oloctrtc -"1 ..,...
china, port•b~, MUI rune, $10,
614-1112-522\

111011 &amp; chomplon &amp;looillno, t~44-:~roody
togo,AI:hlna.
....,.
•

........

Portoblo Goo G~ll, $15, 114-4411'2380.
Proctor

MIIN_g e, 40 Ft. loa Tl'alter, 11 Ft.
Alum. Dump, 114-(48-8038,
Flr~pllce

scrNn and tooll,
braao, $50, 814-112·2871 ahor
5pm.
llrowood oil a01oonod roady lor
wlntor $36. 304-175-e821.
Fl-ood Pnopore For Wlnlor.
WIN 8o s-onod Whon Cold

Transportation

fl7! ••- - .
AHontlon Hunt. .l AKC
BrlHnoy Spaniol pupo, ohoto 6
wonnod, $110. 304-458-1U7.

71

pu-. -

AuiOS for

Sale

=-::::::::::-"7"':::::::-'=:::::::
1175 llovortc, 4 doo• 23,000

81-

Nowlt huntlftt - ·
olghta, ....
otoblfzor a ....- . 4111111. 30-Wl'B-1470.
I

.,...

111111

6 Weird

2 Sllppory

7 L,o,.. volllc:le

ftlhll

3 Rltt

8 R••owh:\

wrtnklel
8-11

pertlclpent
4 BriUihNevy
abbrevloUon
5 ActreiiSUB

OOWN
· I Future IIIYI.'

d i l l _I

='.....

10 King Dftld'a

Eall

Pass
All pass

FRANK AND ERNEST

TODAY'S

St,~fp ANI&gt;
t&gt;ll~AMS

"
1m Olclomobllo Cutluo, v.e,
Auno Good,__!llMiv Nood LIHio
Weok, 13011, UIIO 114-441-1601.
1871 Iuick Elootra, vory good
oond,· Clean, one owntr, mult
~J- t1,200. 304-17..1134 ohor
laM' II.

&lt;.-

BORN LOSER
,..

Soccer Shon, Boye Bill 0,
Good Condition, $5, 8 -

'
~

~'1. lHOOIY, I 5€£ YOOV€. GOT' A

br1nd rww never u..d, $20. 304875-5880.

Rocking Chtlr, Eorty A-lcon
$125, 11'1-441-8212.
Rollaway bod 6 25" color console TV, both 111ed, d1WI2·21'M.
Ronco lood dohydrotor, now
complola wnh o c c - ond
noclpoo $70. 814-441·1240.
Shroddor, $100, 814-182-8282.
Skill Clrculor Sow 7 114 ln. 2 1/8
H - P.- $40, 114-44B-2157.
SmoN lllrn&gt;nod Chony Wonlrobo
In Good Conclhk&gt;n, $75, Phono
Atror 5 P.M. 814-441-8720.

50 HOW CO/I'£
. £V£11:( W.. 'TOO

t-IE\.1 w.. !

Ell)'( ~~

.. .

~

fl/.X.K?

DATE..BOOK
Sept. 16, 1993

1183 Buick Conlury, PS, PB,
autotMtlc,
blown
tnglne,
IIOO.OB0,304-578-2808 or 1~
4323.
1184 Dcxtf'l Ornnl, Nn Brakee,

&amp; Exhau.c, RUnt Good, Auto,

114~411253.

1i84 Qf)dge, 250 cuatom van.

low mlloT., loodod. 114-38~

-

Sorophono, lxcollonl Conditlon, 080, 1-..lJM.

oflor p.m. -lcdoyo.

1iM
M•cury
llt1tfonW1gon, IHI
good, 114-114~1.

-.1210.

Solmor ClutniA,,!!.•
3 1111.
11t 111 0114 or .-.11

Full llao lruclc mo111 boil:
oot w/2 -od ...
boroo, $100. Tommy ~
Ill-.
'"" Ford ........ 1""!f;
1. .,t300.~·..
\J

- r. . . . . . ..
whoa

rollltoro -

tan

-

Today is the 259th
day of 1993 and the
88th day of summer.

lrucll!

AND WINTHROP

111111t,
AA~~= 304-.

ole. D
372-3132 or 1

.•• ,

I

.... truck- •• 4" ... '

114-M:I•llll,

Marqula

I

I ...... :

campers&amp;

l'

Motor Homes

1

11112 E.Z Rldor Tow Dolly, Now,
$760 Firm, 114 318 1116.

I
I

•• 11, Nne 79

6UP~ TH~AI&lt;E

LD15

OF THINEiO IN UFe "THAT
ARE-~ Tl-W-1

SCHOOL ...

e.t.JT r!M AFI&lt;AID II= I
MetJT'O.IlH&amp;V., Ii..L ea
9TRLIO&lt; I!IY UaHTNINcS.

I

''
t";t·
tr.!.!'!'.t_!XC. cond., UOOO.
:

21 112ft. 1181 llomod

58

~~

Fruita &amp;

1185 Ford Etcort, 2 door, Ita""

Vegetables

doni wl AC. 304.C78'2115;

118S Pontl1c 1000, 4 door,

prtftl

38
38
41
43
45
47

1111.

. I

Serv1ccs

.......

54 W•gocl
57 Carno
58 Acct.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

CelebritY CipMr cryprogrameare cre~ttd rrom QUOt•tlons by famou. peopte, I)Ut and P!'Min1.
Each len« In lhe dptw ltand1 1of another. Today'• r;Jw: D 1QUM1 P.

'V

NUJP

&amp; L1vestock

Wood or -1 otovo lor a
IJirogo, $30, 114-1!18-5438.
Wood ~l'!il!!'i Top I lolllo Goo
Stove, ~1521.
Woodbumer Fire PIHe lnMrt
$100,1144413178.
8280, CD Ployor
$75, Ouoan Wot0111od tiiO, Colt
114-258-1'N1.

w-.._

POLE

BUILDING

IPECtAL.

30'x40'1'•. Polntod atoot lldo!t

- - Stool Roof, tl'xl
Blool llldo• 3' lion o-.

1m Chow Plok-Up, st...g~

·15,881. ERECTED. Iron llulld.o1-IOWII2-1045. .

AJr,

nn Whool c.-

Coilcllllon, fl,4i0, 11im--.
i

M U

AVEV UF VE L
MWKNS

lor your
pred•clions today by
mailing $1.25 and a long. sell-addressed.
ASTRO-GRAPH
slamped envelope lo Aslro·Graph . clo lhis
newspaper, P.O. Box 4465, New York. N.
Y. 10163. Be s ur~ to state your zodiac
sign.
BERNICE
. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Usually 11's nolloo
to try to miK business with pleasure, but
BEDE OSOL thwise
is shouldn't be true in your instance today.
Business opportunities could come through
persons you're pals with socially.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) II lhere is
somelhing ol importance yo~ are anxious 10
finalize. IJY 10 get il done loday. even il il is a
bit inconvenient to do so. Tomorrow you
might be less lucky.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) •
Something lor which you've been hoping, bul
_
Frldoy, Sepl. 17,.11193
haven't been able to bring into being yet.
In lhe year ahead joint venture s c ould mighl be a lot closer a he r today. Ooh'l lorprove 10 be especially benelicial l?r you sake your expectalloos.
financially . The ones which are a pl lo be CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) There are
lhll' besl producers will have s omething , definilelinks beiWeen youtlinances and your
un[que aboul them.
repulalion loday. People will wanl lo do busi·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) New vita lity ness wilh you. because ol your integnl)' and
might be breathed lnlo your econO!ftiC con· credit&gt;lily.
ditions as olloday. S ituations !hat previ· AQUARIUS (Jan. 20•Fob. 19) Success Is
ously produced obstacles may now begin probable loday in developments you person·
lo .gene rate opponunilies. Gel a jump .on .a lly manage or control. Don't dilule lhis
lile,by understanding the inlluences whiCh aspecl by delegating aulhonl)' to ineffective ·
arll' Q\)verning you in the year ahead. Send associates.

'

M

K E

UVAKE

TJBa-OMVP

UXFKKB

SK

DGKPNXVEL .

BJMGE
L J G M .B P

AXGMEJH.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION; "I thin k housework is lhe reason most women go

to th.e office." -

-

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1908, General Motors was found ed by
entrepreneur William Crapo "Billy"
Durant.
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Francis
Parkm an (1823· 18931 , hi storian ;
Lauren Bacall (1924-1, actress, is 69;
B.B. King 0925·), singer-guitarist, is
68; Peter Falk (1927-), actor, is 66 ;
Elgin Baylor 0 934-1, basketball star·
coach-executive, is 59 : Mark McEwen
(195 4-1 , weatherman , is 39 ; Robin
Yount Cl955 -), baseball player, is 38:

I

Heloise.

I

KYTTON
2
I I 1"

II

From The
Notice
Department: Men usually dislike it when women drive from
L.
the back seat. Women hate it
r-~:-:::--:-:-::--::-::--1 when men sit at the dining
C I VD0 E
room table and --- to -···.

t--.-A_Q;-T-.-U_,.R,....-~
1 I I 15 ~
- L. ......J.-.1.-.1.---'. .;.,

I

I
e

I

I0

r-TI6
: -TI-TI-::,-,Ir-.,lr--1
Complete lhe chuckle quoted
.
.
.
.
.
.
by filling in the miuing words
.__......_....__._...__.,__. you develop from llop No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED lETTER S I
IN THESf ~QUARE S

3

• '
I"
•

Bestow - Mauve - Judge - Soften - USED TO
"I don't think I look thirty, do you?" the wife asked
her husband as she gazed into the mirror. Without thinking the husband replied, "No dear. but you USED TO!"

PISCES (Feb. 2Q.March 20) Greater possibilities for gains are li kely today from sources
you seldom tap instead of through your usually channels. Howeve ~ lry Ia reap benefits

lrom bolh.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll19) Two unassocialed individuals who have been lucky lor you
Previously might prove to be lucky for you
aga in today. The c ir cum stanc~s could
unusual.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Today lhere
could be more opportunity around you lhan
usual where your·career is concern. Breaks
could come through contacts who have pow·
ertul affiliations.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) TJY Ia parlicipala
in activities loday lhal have lnendly elements
ol compelilion. You should do well and may
eve~ outshine one who usually gets lhe best
ol you.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Shining condi·
lions &lt;Nef which we have no control sometimes places us at a severe disadvantage .
However, today unexpected chaloges lend to
worl&lt; lor your benelil, so roll wilh lhe punch.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Your boner qualities
will be much in evidence today, but your best
asset will be your sales and promotional ,
s kills. You're adepl al selling big ideas lo '
olhers.

2

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS-

III I I

-

258·1318,114-317·7025 Evonlnga.

HJMGU

UVAKE

Home

Waro to buy: topo ollV "War Qamo W-llng", Sundoy
1111, will pay 820 pluo $8 IO&lt;
11ollvory. 304-"2~431.
·
'WATER LINE SPECIAL: 3/4 lnoh
200 PSI $11.15; 1 Inch 200 PSI
$32.50; Ron EVIno EntororiJackoon, Ohio, .1.8Q0-837·0621.
WATER STORAGE TANKS
Abovo And Balow Gr-.1 FDA
Approved For Patable Wlll:er.
Ron £\lint Enterprilla. Jackeon, Ohio, 1-100-137-11121.

A H

-':...~- "

''

ttlm

IICiddelo

Minor Ropoln, 114-311-

___ _____.,.'-··.\,l

Farm Suppl1es

BalkttHN

49 Light pink
wine ·
51Witlclt
53 Seize

flooutllul family cor, oYOry .,.
tlon, 3.1 v.e, $1800, 114-1112-1711.

614-1112-23117.

Laao

48 Egyptlen

%1 R. Motor Hom., $2,100, Finn, :

-

Agile
Parcel of land
Gr•
Haolen

•

'

. '·

Silex touter oven,

btlllt

32 NoiHI
35 Neg111Ye

By~lllpAlder

No sooner had I written last week's
column in which a four-spade contract
on a 4-2 fit was the only making game,
than I came across today's deal. It occurred during the team event at the
Icelandic ljir Championships, held in
Reykjavik last February.
WI-1AT IF IT BECOMES
Were North and South beginners•
Far from it. They were two of the
FOND OF ME 7
greatest players ever, Italians Giorgio
Belladonna (North) and Pietro
Forquet.
So what happened• Well, West's
opening bid of two diamonds was the
so-called Multi. It usually hides a
weak two-bid in hearts or spades. Belladonna made what be thought was a
natural overcall of two no-trump, but
he had forgotten an exotlc.partnei'ship
agreement. They play that this bid
shows interest in hearts. Forquet liked
the idea of hearts, of course. Belladonna raised what he thought was a fivecard suit because clearly West held
spades, and Belladonna didn't have a
stopper tbere. (At the other table in
the match, tbe first two bids were the
same, but South just raised to three
no-trump. East led the spade king and
the defense took tbe first six tricks.)
West led his club. Forquet, despite
the paucity of trumps, had no trouble
In winning the first 10 tricks: four
hearts, two· diamonds and four clubs.
"God is still an Italian," observed
'
Belladonna with his characteristic big
'
smile.
Note, though, that if West had been
an Italian, he would have led a low
,..
"1·. spade. On the third ro~d of. spade~,
GLN)YS SMS TH£ (.Ol~ 13(}(1( i East discards one of hts mmor-su1t
Mfo¥.£:J HER LCO&lt;. Tfii~N£R
cards and the contract cannot be

om

II
WI
18Aofar- know
21 Anglo-Saxon
lettar
23Demon
25 Group of nine
21 Brldet on the
Rlver27 Silkworm
28c.-nre
3D Too bitt
31 Kine of

•

$~MIN All

Oolt T - Stlcko, aho-,
· IIOI'IJIII'O
1117-2011.
' Farm,. Rl. 38, 304-

XI

•

mlloo, 260 IV, outo., ·P~B oxco~
oondhlon, 12100 0 0, 514m.a71o.

cell f114..112·5158.

oobro

'(OU KICK TI-1E f:lALL,SQUEEZE
IT A FEW TIME5 ...

-

W•thu Arrh,.. , o.nverld, 114-

Four bud whoola wllh tlreo,
700111 8;PIW ~ho Ford, Chov.1 ·"'
Dodp, S110~amark naer
mow.r, $250,
s..t3M.
Fuai &lt;&gt;11 tonk, m goilon, 110,
614-"7.C1l8.

.,

23Q Quad 81101'1 Four - - ··I
$100,114-388.82111.
,.,_.....,
___
':-or-cw-c:-lo,"'"7fra-mo-o-rid-::
motor far parlt, no whMia, $21,:
lh4-367a7728 after 2pm,
o' I

Uood,

blnch, 01~ Whh wood,
Woldod Wlro Cogoa 3'x5'
mesh !nllf'te In ...t, 8 y11r1 Two
Hanging With Foodoro.L Watar
old, 185, 114-18&amp;-4418.
TrouJihl For Chlckono 11tobblto,
Doole Choir, Solod B•rr Dnp t15 Eoc:h, 114-318-8184.
Fryor, Portoblo Ughloo Sign, Undorcount• Whi~DOOI cloh~·7558, IM-e82·7125.
woohor $45. Bath Oink, vonhy
Dn&gt;p-ln Eloctrlc Rongo, Gold, and ~~~~~ 140. h12 MW cllliorpM
$40. Lalllcoll. 814-367-'11101.
180, 1~411'1410.

Englno 210 Cummings Low

11M READ\', MAI':CIE,I:!UT BEFORE

132~.

AKC Pullllloo llllnlaiUIW
Colllol Sobto Arid Whdo, 1 Wko

DuCOr)l

Dulclmor Ercollont Condition,
N - Two Slrlngo With Coao,
1881 Coli 4 To I P.M. 114-4411'
0110.
'

1111 .....

OLD USED BRICKS (ALREADY Booalo
old, 136
CLEANED), 1200 BRICKS, $180. -fi. 304-4~17113 allefllpm.
304-e75-'lil47.
'
eo--~'""·- old,
Ono 220 oloctrlo hootor, ..a. seo: 304.a711-20711.
614-182-2878 aftar 5pm.
Oalmollon Pupploo, AKC ~1:­
On• llandard . ..ZI And.,.... torod, I Woojco Old, I
llidlng glaN door with ecreeri, 8422.
woodon volanco, vortlcol ololh. Floh Tonk, 241S Jookoon Av..
blind ond docw ohutt-, 114- Point P-nt, 304-171-2013,
' 141~4110.
lui llno Tloplcol ~ .....
' Qrogon Troll Momorlol . - omolhnlmll01nd •
Plooo 11269 El T&lt;&gt; Au Coin You HAPPY JACK ALOI IAN
Grade, 110, 114-246-111501.
· ohocko ooratohlll(l, klllo llooo,
Porlocll&lt;&gt;n Gu llloflng Stovo, and -hoo lrrltilod olein lor
65,000 BTU $50, 11Utl 3800, ===tRlPuGO!~ _Daproaoy• .!!~.
~~
814 441 314a.
·
ll2.zcM. I'EI
au~··· ,~
Polyootor llotortol A Vculoly 01
Lanalho IWidlho &amp; Colora $1.00
Per l'ard, 114 4te 1547 Aft• e.

$3.00 DOzon, • -258-1821.
Ch~otmoo 1-, $15. 304-675· 8161, 814-448-2380.
1484.
Sword, approx. 3 loot long,
CONCRETE SPETIC TANKS, ltncy blado, with ..... roll
1,000 Gallon, $325; Now JET Bot good candhlon, $7!1, call 814(No Sond Allor Roqulrod) 1112~583.
$1,40; Ron Evana EnterpriHI, Toppar For Long Bod Pick-Up
Jackoon, Ohlo1-800-837-8528.
$75, Coli 11.r-3BWSBI No
Convaloconl Wolkor Commodo AniWW Lleve MIAIQI.
180 Both, Coll814-245-1448.
Trudmlll, vory good cond~lon,
c.- Country Sklng And manual, $25, 81~112·3041.
Rowing Erorlco lllchlno $50, Two .Men Water Sclmp Boat
114-21111-11314.
Wllh Trolling MDior 1360, 114no.z=or:-:o:;:loot::::;:rlc;:-;:lood::-:;::g:;:~n::;d:::or:-:,$;;;2:;;-0, 388-11~ .
114-1112-30711 niomlngo boloro Two 111'11 with whllls, $20 aech,
10am.

lw=

tallii
~~-so.:cl•n
Nmovod, 4
1

24hr. • ..ront...
or 30482-2131 1nytlma. ·
AKC R-lllor .......... Gor-

Two bedroom tralllf In Racln1,

52 Sporting Goods

-

Cottlo

Fumlohod Aportmont 2 BodtooJM, M1 Second Avanuei 0.1llpollo, 82115/U&lt;&gt;. UIIIHioe Pokl,

I

Lots &amp; Acreage

80 - H..

111 Small dog
112 Compllapt.
&amp;3 courd' 64 Frul drlnlta

The six-card fit
es again

33 Farms for Sale

~

4.

ZNT

I Pallnd'l WIIIH
5 Son Of JICOb
9 Solemn
promiH
12 App11r
13 Period of
Umt
14 Alrlelll
·native
15 - wall thlt
andl won
16Ytl- 17 VIctory
oymiiOI
18 llao - tung
18 Soullttrn
bltckblrd
20 Require•
22 Twice
24 Oklahoma
city
26 TV frog
29 W1lllllg
(2 wdo.)
33 Cover (I
PICkl81)
34 Article of

Opening lead: + Q

NOW I'M
AN "IT" I!

PATCHED UP,

Nortb

,...., .......... .......

lewelry
36 l , Romon
37 OWn (Scot.)
38 EnUct
31 Ponce de ~ Of medicine
42 RoHbuoh
pll'tl
44 Rl¥tr In
llelalum
48 Thallhlng'a
47 Shoota
50 FollOwer of
(lUll.)
52 Coli - doy
55 S.mt (prtf.l
58 lltrlnt 111ft
58 Former Ruollln ruler
58 Foret

Lila Goes On (CCI

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Page

12-The Dally Sentinel

Braves
rally to
top Reds

•

•

Young father indifferent to child . ;
Dear Au LaDders: Our son,
wbo is in his early 20s, has fathcled
a child wilh a young lady who lives
in 8DOihct slare.
Prior 10 knowledge of "Dee's"
prqnancy, "Boyd" bad inlelided to
break up wilh her, .0 appam1dy, true
love was not pan of lheir relationship.
Allhispoint,Deeham'tdemanded
any fiiWICial assistance, probably
because she realizes tbat Boyd
doesn't ba~ much to offer. She
would, however, like for Boyd to be
a pan of tbeir ebild's life, if only to
show up a eouple of times a year,
like Christmas and the child's
binhday.
~baby will soon be a year old,
and Boyd has expressed no interest
in seeing him. We offered tO buy
him a plane ticket, which he refused
to accept. Even though IXc chased
our son shamelessly, Ann, we
llelieve he is being unfair by ignorihg her and their child.
Apparently, Boyd is trying to
forgethismistake,butweareafraid
he won't be able to live with himself
years from now if he continues to

PROCLAIMING CONSTITUTION WEEK - To honor the
signing or the U.S. Constitution more th~ 200 years ago. Pomeroy
Mayor Bruce Reed signed a proclamation rec:ognizing Sept. 17-24
as Constitution week while Mary K. Yost, constitution week cbair·
woman of tbe"Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter or the Daughters or
tbe American Revolution, looks on.

Beat of the Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich
It' s only September but the
Meigs County Bikers are looking
ahead to Christmas and have
scheduled.their annual Toy Run for
Saturday, Oct 2.
The run benefits Meigs County
children during lhe holiday season.
This year only new toys will be
accepted and the group asks that
participants avoid stuffed toys. The
ron is being held early, of course,
to to try to ensure decent weather
for bikers coming in from a distance to take part.
·
Those taking part will meet on
the Pomeroy -parking lot leaving
Kelly's Komer at I, going to the
Blue Tartan in Middlepon, then out
Route 7 to the Mizway and then to
the Watering Hole where a pollock
dinner will be held. Several local
bands will be on hand to play for
the party. Containers will be placed
in local businesses later for residents who don't b,ike but want to
help with the toy project. By the
way, participants in the run who
don't want to get involved with
toys can make a cash c:ontribution
of $5 instead of giving a toy.
In the past eight years the bikers
have donated thousands of dollars
in gifts and money to several county agencies and local communities
for programs involving children. If
you need any more info, please call
742-2081.

··

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS
"l993, Loo Angd..
Tim .. Syndleate

Creoton Syndicate"

".....

beha~ as if Dee and his child don't

exist.

We don't know if we should send
a birthday girt to lhe youngster or
not. We. are unc:omfortable about
establishing any kind of bond or
relationship under the ciR:umstances.
We've encouraged Boyd to get
counseling, but he rce~· Please
advise us. _ CONCERNED PAR·
ENTS IN MD..WAUKEE
DEAR CONCERNED PAR·
ENTS: I hope you will send a gift
and be a put of your grandsoo's life.
Just because Boyd is behaving in an
immature and irresponsible manner
does not mean lhat you must cut
yourself off from your grandson and
his mother.

Does Boyd realize tbat he is
,obligated by law to suppon his
child? If not, aomeone should tell
him. He aiiO .-15 to undtnland
how important it is for him to
accept his 1011 - bolh for die child's
sake u well as his own. Boyd baa a
bit of growing up to do. Let's hope
it happens soon.
Dear Ann Landers: This is tbe .
first time I've disagreed witb )'llU in
all the years I've read your c:olumn.
Dear heart, your response to
"OI;Iahoma" was c:ompleldy offtbe
wall. The writer was absolutely
COITCCI that the way Americans dress
isa disgrace. Millions of us arc·sick
and tired of seeing people in malls
wearing tank tops, shon shorts,
cutoffs 8hd sandals, with lll8lted hair
and dirty feet. They arc in airpa'IS
and supermarkets and, yes, theaters
and churches as well. Where is their
pride?
The bride is barefoot. Even the
II(H'IIlled movie stan arc a dispace.
Notbing is glamorous anymore.
Celebrities appear in see-lhrough
lq)S and gct·ups tbcy would ha~
been mcsted for 10 years ago. This

opened a new car washing facility
in Columbus to try his hand as an
entrepreneur. The establishment is
named for his parents and is called
the JVL Car Wash. As a part of the
grand opening, Jerry passed out
some sporty white caps to cuS·
tomers and sent along several for
Vinas to give to friends. We wish
Jerry well in his new enterprise and
hope this is the start of a whole
chain.
Dr. James Witherell and Dr.
Ernest Villaneuva donated their
services to provide physical examinations this year for the youngsters
of lhe Big Bend Football League
and lhe league's cheerleaders. Kids
taking part in league activities are ·
fifth and sixth graders. The exams
were conducted in the Home
Health Care quarters located in ·lhe
Meigs Medical Building adjacent
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

I don't know how many of you
get to see "Ideal" magazine which
in August published a poem written
by Mrs. Owa Haycook. formerly of
Syracuse.
MEMORABILIA STOLEN · The dress that billowed up to
Mrs. Haycook is now 96 and is
Marilyn Monroe's waist in "The Seven Year Itch," and a pair or
confined to a nursing home in
matching shoes were among several items reported stolen Tuesday
· Bradenton, Fla. She is the mother
from a warehouse in New York. also missing were several letters
of Don. Joe and Dr. Roger Quisenbetween Monroe and Lee Strasberg, her mentor and acting coach,
berry, all formerly .of Meigs Coun·
police said. The dress, shoes and correspondence were part or a
ty, and a step-mother of Tommy
large cache of memorabilia from Strasberg's esltite, bequeathed to
Bowen, well-known Pomeroy area
If you're a Blennerhassett Island resident
him by the actress. (AP Photo/Malty Zimmerman)
enthusiast you might be interested
Here's how the poem goes:
in visiting the island on the weekMy
end of Sepl. 25 and 26.
-Lane
A Civil War encampment and
I long to live at the end of the
"Women's Health: You do Have and well ness for healthy living.
battle will be staged w1th demon· lane,
·
·
a
Choice"
is the theme for the Some of the things which impact
strations of battles, drills and ·
At the top of the wind swept South District Health Conference heallh include age, sex and herediweapons handling taking place. hill.
to be held on Sept 21 at the Soutb ty. Other factors, however, are
Reenactments of the battles will be
Away from the world of greed District Extension Center, Jackson. more controllable, like nutrition,
at 2 p.m. both on Saturday and and gain.
This health program, designed environment, obesity, exercise,
Sunday
with sternwheelers
Where all is peaceful and still.
for
the general ·public as well as hypertension, stress, smoking, alcoinvolved for amphibious activity.
Away from the busy marks of agency representatives. will take hoi and drugs. the agents pointed
Period dress will be worn and man,
place at the South District Exten- out.
authentic campsites displayed. On
Where the waves of traffic beat, sion Center, State Route 93, JackPresenters and topics include:
top of that "Abraham Lmcoln" will
Just let me live at the end of my son, on Tuesday, 8:45 a.m. to 2 "Women at Risk: AIDS and Relat·
be on hand to address and review lane,
p.m. A $4 registration fee provides ed Conditions", with Job Borchard,
the troops. On Saturday night, a
In a peaceful, quiet retreat.
.
morning refreshments, lunch, and a Planned Parenthood of Southeastperiod ball will be held. Also feaAtop a hill, close to the sod,
packet of materials. Pre-registration em Ohio; "Generic Drugs: Making
tured will be medicine man shows,
In solitude and silence and the IS requested with Deanna Tribe at Choices:", with Dr. Daniel Mari ..
horse drawn wagon rides and tours whispers of God.
the South District Center in Jack- zoo, Ohio University College of
of the Blennerhassett Mansion. The
son
286--2177, or Cindy Oliveri, at Osteopathic Medicine; "The Living
event is hosted by Co. F of the 17th
Amazing that someone 96 could the Meigs County Extension Will: What Does it Mean?", Doug
Virginia Cavalry.
pen that isn't it? And I'm still try· Office, 992-6696.
Cowles, Attorney in Family Prac- ing to write a simple sentence. Do
in
tice. Gallipolis; "Pre-paid Funerals:
Women's
Health
Month
Jerry Lee, son of Vinas Lee of keep smiling.
September
focuses
on
prevention
Why
Is This a Choice?" Jay
Racine and the late Jake Lee, has

Prizes in the fourth annual chili
cookoff, which will be held Oct. 9
as part of the Sternwheel Festival
in Pomeroy, will be awarded in two
categories.
·
In lhe corporate class, fmt, second and third place winners will
receive trophies and copper-plated
chili pots while winners in lhe individual class will receive prizes of
$100, $50 and $25.
A $10 entry fee will be charged.
Chili cookoff rules are:
I. No ingredient may be precooked or trented in any way prior
to the preparation period which
will begin approximately one hour
prior to the cpokoff. The only
exceptiOQS are canned or bottled
tomatoes, tomato sauce. peppers.
pe~r sauce, bev~es, broth and
gnnding ami/or mixmg of spices.
Meat may be pre-cut or ground but
not treated in any way. All other
ingredients must be chopped or
prepared during the preparation
period.
2. The cooking period will be a
minimum of three hours and a
maximum of four hours. Cookoff
time is 11 a.m.
3. Teams may have a maximum
of four members.
4. All team members involved
in preparation or handling of chili
must show proof of a current negative TB test.
5. Each team must cook a mini·
mum of two courts of chili. one of

Conference focuses on women's health

LOS ANGELES (AP) Eighty-year-old actress Loretta
Young is in love with an older
man. She married costume designer
Jean Louis, 85, a friend disclosed
Wednesday.
"Both our families are delight·
ed, too," Daily Variety columnist
Anny Archerd quoted Miss Young.
The couple were married Friday
at the Church of the Good Shepherd in Beverly Hills, said An:herd,
who is a friend of both.
Miss Young starred in nearly
100 motion pictures, winning an
Academy Award as best actress for
" The Farmer's Daughter" in 1948.
She appeared on television fmm
1953 to 1963, first as host of ' 'The
Loretta Young Show '" and later
" The New Loretta Young Show,"
winning three Emmys.
Her often-satirized entrance at

Free clothing Day
The Gallia·Meigs Community
Action Agency will hold its free
clothing day for low income persons on Friday, Sept. 17, from 9
a.m. until 12 noon. The agency
clothing bank is located in the old
school house building in Cheshire.

Moore, McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, Gallipolis; "Feeling Blue?
Or Is It Depression?" Dr. Nancy
Graham, Woodland Centers. Inc.;
"Exercise While You Sit:" Who
Said You Had to Get Off YoW' Butt
·to Exercise?", Rebecca Culbertson,
Ohio State University Extension,
Gallia County; and "Eating Fruits
and Vegetables for the Health of
It", Deanna L. Tribe. District SIX'·
cialist, Ohio State Universuy
Extension, South District.
The annual conference is a project of the Ohio State University
Extension and the Ohio Health
Council and is funded in part by
the Women's Health Program,
Bureau of Maternal and Child
Health, Ohio Department of
Health.

----Community Calendar--.,- -

the beginning of each show, in
which she swept dramatically into
a room in a high-style gown. is one
of television's most enduring
images.
Louis won an Oscar for "The
Solid Gold Cadillac" in 1956.
His other credits include "Born
Yesterday" in 1950, "From Here
to Eternity" in 1953, "It Should
Happen to You" and "A Star is
Born'" in 1954, "Pal Joey" in
1957, "Judgment at Nuremberg"
in 1961. "Gambit" in 1966 and
"Thoroughly Modern Millie'" in
1967.
.Miss Young was briefly married
to actor Grant Withers before filing
for divorce in 193 I. In 1940, she
married broadcast executive
Thomas Lewis. They divorced in
1969.

SUNDAY
!aires at 2 p.m . Everyone is weiRUTLAND • Descendants of come.
Charles Hysell and Oscar Hysell
RACINE • Morse Chapel
will hold a reunion at the Rutland Church of Racine will have its
Fireman Park at 12:30 p.m. Bring
own table service and lawn chairs.
ROCK SPRINGS • The River
Valley Boys will perform at the
Rock Springs United Methodist
Church at 2 p.m. Rev. Keith Rader
invites the public.
RACINE • A reunion of the
Gideon and Artemesia Roush family will take place at 1 p.m. at Star
Mill Park. Bring and covered dish
and place setting . Relatives and
friends are welcome.
ALFRED · Alfred United
Methodist Church will have its
homecomings starting will tegular
morning service followed by a basket dinner at 12:30 p.m. and an
afternoon program featuring Ange-

Pomeroy

Dedication Sunday
Dedication services for the On
Fire for God Crusade Church, 3003
Mt. Olive Road. Bidwell, will be
held 6:30p.m. Saturday, Sepl. 18.
The Joymakers, Gallipolis, and
the Sounds of Pentecost from Delbarton . W. Va ., will be guest
singers.
The public is inviled.

country is beginllina 10 look lille ..
X-raltld movie and .. unmade beet
"Okllboma" was right on. but yOu
disagreed wilh him. He caDed it die
waymanymillionsofuuceit. Take
aJiolhcr look, Ann. Thc::te ale 100
many slobc out lhcln:, and lhey II(C
an embarrassment to decent people.
-WEST MILFORD, NJ.
DEARNJ.: You win. Thqusands
of n:adcn can't be WIODI· I tbouaht
lhe writ« was beillg III))Ct&lt;ritical,
but I wuiiUMed by tbc number of
people wboagrccd wilh him. Sony,
I was out to llmch Olllhis one.
Gem of tbc Day: Be aware lhat
just because it doesn't glittet doesn't
mean it iJn't gold.
Is life passing you by? WIJIIt to
improve your social sldlls? Write for,
AM IAiukrs' MW /Jookht, "How to

lwmecoming starting with a
potluck dinner at noon followed by
a song service at 1:30 p.m. Everyone is welcome.
·

Pick 4:

2772
4-9·17-20-27

Vol. 44, 110. 101
Mulllmedl•lnc.

By CHARL.ENE HOEFLICH

Sentinel News Staff .
Work is continuing on repair of
lhe underground electrical distribution system at the Soutbern Ohio
Coal Co.'s Meigs Mine 31 as the
level of water in die mine c:ontinues
to drop.
. B. J. Smidt, public affairs direc·
tor for American Elcclric Power,
said Friday morning that about 875
million pllons of wa~r has been
pumped from the mme at thiS
point. The 110 employees called

which will be judged. More would
be appreciated for sale of samJ!IeS
to benefit next year's competition.
6. Team members arc responsi·
ble for supplying all cooking utensils, etc.
··
7. Contestants are permitted to
set up their equipment, decorations
and other facilities any time after 8
a.m.
8. All ingredients. except perishable products, must be displayed.
Excess ingredients may be displayed to preserve secret recipes.
· For additional information or an
application contact Jay and Sherry
Warner at 992-2528. .

back earlier this month are worlci!'g
on a staggered schedule on repwr·
ing tbe underground electncal dis·
tribution system and a.Iso the
underground water PUI!IPJ.ng systems. .
.
SIT!tth sa1d that .all of the
machmery and belt ltnes ul!d~rground. are po~eted ~Y. ~lectnc•ty.
Sh~ satd that m the mlllal_exploration ~Is of water wh1ch tbe
pumps d1d not reach w~re found,
~ that.as soon as electncal power
IS established, tbe company will be

The West Virginia State Farm
Museum will have a chicken
barbecue Saturday, Sept. 18, and
a gospel hymn sing Sunday,
Sept. 19.
The meal will .c:onsist of
chicken, baked beans, c:ole slaw
and a roll for $4.50 per plate.
Serving will begin at noon and
continue until all chicken is served. Beans and cornbread will
also be available.
All buildings will be open
Saturday, and c:ountry music entertainment will be provided.
The Old Time Gospel Hymn
Sing Sunday will start at noon
and continue until 5 p.m. Those
attending should bring a lawn

chair.
The museum is located four

!Diles north of Point Pleasant,
JUSt off S.R. 62. Admission is

free.

. "We are la!dng it slowly. checkmg small sectwns of the mme at a
time and making sure each section
is fully explored and determined to
be safe before anyone enters an
area", said the AEP public affairs
director.
"We expect that it will lake the
fu1160 days permitted, until Sept.
27, under the Ohio EPA order to
remove the water," Smith said.
Southern ~hio Coal Co. initial·
ed tbe pumpmg operation July 30
after receiving approval from the

REPLACING ROOF • Workers for the Meigs
County Highway Department were busy. Thursday working on a new roof for the h111hway

..

\

. I

garage. Here workers .prepare the surface for
new roofing material.

Traffic to
Randolph reappointed be rerouted
to fill Teaford's term
Saturday

Julie Randolph was reappointed
to fill the unexpired term of
resigned Racine Village Councilman Carroll Teaford at the village's regular September meeting.
Acting on the advice of Prosecuting Attorney John Lentes, the
position was .declared vacant after
Randolph's first appointment
because she was not registered to
vote within the village.
Council also disregarded all
action laken at a special meeting
he)d in August Lentes advised that
since Randolph bad not been legally appointed at tbe July meeting,
any meeting held where she made
tbe quorum would not be a legal
meeting. At the special meeting,
Randolph was the third member
present
It was also noted that all council
meetings, under provisions of the
Sunshine Law, are open to the public and require public notice.
Another section of law provides
that all members of council be notified at least 12 hours prior to any
special meeting.
Council approved a resolution
changing the name of the fiscal
officer for tbe Ohio Public Works
projects from former Mayer Frank
Cleland to Mayor Jeff Thornton.
Council approved the tbird read-

ing and approved amendment to
ordinance that residents do not
have to pay half of the cost for
sidewalk repair when any grant
money is used for tbe work. Council also approved sec:ond reading of
an ordinance requested by the
board of public affairs to aulhorize
them to expend an amount of more
than $1,000 for repairs to the water
well.
An ordinance to increase the late
charge for persons failing to pay
water bills received its first reading. The ordinance would raise the
late charge from $7 to $20. In addi·
tion. the rate for restoring service
that had been shut off due to delinquent payment would be increased
to $20 for business hours and $40
for after-business hours. The second reading is expected to be held
at the Sept. 20 meeting.
In otber matters, council:
- Approved the payment of
$50 for video tapes for Thornton
that will qualify him to conduct
mayor's court.
- Discussed blocking off sections of streets for the St. Jude
Bike-A-Thon scheduled for Sept.
25.
- Authorized posting ads for
bids for replacing the firehouse and
Continued on page 3

A Pomeroy woman was trealed for minor injuries Thursday after
she pulled into the path of another vehicle, the Gallia-Meigs Post of
the State Highway Patrol reported.
Linda Kay Patterson, 46. 131 Laurel Stteet. Pomeroy, was transported by Meigs County Emergency Medical Service to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she was trealed and released.
According to the accident repon. Patterson pulled from a private
drive onto ,County Road 20 in Salisbury Township into the path of a
northbound vehicle driven by John M. Jeffers, 16, 34497 Rock·
springs Road, Pomeroy.
Patterson was cited for failure to yield. Her vehicle sustained
heavy, disabling damage and was towed from the scene. Jeffers'
vehicle sustained moderate, disabling damage and was also towed
The patrol also investigated a deer-vehicle accident Thursday.
Roger L. Foster, 46. 36 Brookside Drive. was southbound on
U.S. 33 in Bedford Township when he struck the deer. No injuries
were reported. The vehicle sustained light damage and was driven
from the scene.

Flowering Kale • Flowering Cabbage
Fall Bedding P1111sles
· {Plant Pansl11 HOW lor
Beautiful

•.S.ale 3D mtnule delivery
• Cttrryout available

Gavin work to block S. R. 7
The section of State Route 7 in ffont of tbe Gavin Plant in
Cheshire will close for about one-half hour starting at 8 a.m. Sunday, Ohio Department of Transportation officials announced today,
The road will be closed so tbal Gavin workers can conSifllct a
conveyor over tbc roadway.
· .
.
.
Local drivers should plan to taice an -alternate route. Trucb wtll
have to wait until the road reopens, but emergency vehicles will be
allowed to pass through, District 10 Public Information Officer
Nancy Yoacham said.
.
.,

2NEWSUBS!
'

Philly Steak and Meatball
·Lunch Special·
$

4 99 .

. e

•.

Ohio EPA. Court action to stop the
pumping by the u.s. EPA is still
pending.
.
On Sept. 9, u.s. District Judge
Sandra Beckwith temporarily
stayed a u.s. EPA order that would
have stopped the pumping from lhe
mine into Sugar Run, a tributary of
Raccoon Creek.
Briefs are to be submitted to the
court by Sept. 23. Further action by
the u.s. EPA in district court is
precluded until then.
The u.S. EPA has appealed

J~dge Beckv:'itb's ruling to the U.S.
S1xtb Curcun Court of Appeals m

Cincinnati. The agency IS asking
for permission to enforce its order
against the pumping.
"We are disappointed tbat the
U.S. EPA is appealing the district' s
court ruling. As has always been
the case, So~~ern Ohio Coal is
ready and w1lhng to discuss any
reasonable Pr~?PDSals as we work to
meet all requrremen':S of the Ohio
EPA order. We beheve the U.S .
EPA's continued intervention is .
unwarranted."concluded Smith.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) pute, which began May 10, centers ton on Thursday said criticism by a
- · The head of West Virginia State on job S!lCurity.
spokesm311 for some of the nation's
Police criticized a coal company's
"We get a call that there are largest coal operators that he has
handling of alleged strike-related trucks being firebombed and peo- not been effective in controlling
violence on picket lines.
ple being held at gunpoint and con- strike-related violence was misDeputy Secretary of Public sistently when we get to these guided.
Safety Thom Kidc said Charleston- places, people are standing around
"I'm·doing alii can to enc:ourbased Eastern Associated Coal Co. and no one knows what hap- age both sides to come ~gether.
has exaggerated problems and pened,'' Kirk said.
People begin to point'fiilger~ther
forced state troopers to answer
Kirk said other. companies and than take on the responsibility
calls ·not as serious as the company UMW supporters also have caused themselves," Caperton said. "The
reponed.
strike can only be solved by the
problems for state police.
"It's like yelling wolf, but if we
Police will investigate strike- two parties involved."
get 100 of those calls a day, we'd related calls that seem exaggerated
On Wednesday, B.R. Brown.
still have.to go out on them," Kirk and will prosecute those making chairman of CONSOL Inc. and
said.
chief negotiator for the Bituminous
them, he said.
The United Mine Workers says
Coal
Operators Association, criti"I don't know where he's commore than 17,500 miners are on ing from," said Eastern Associated cized Caperton for what he said
strike in West Virginia and six spokesman Teny Whitt.
was the governor's inability to deal
other states. The union says tbe dis·
Meanwhile, Gov. Gaston Caper- with demonstrations by members
oftheUMW.

Organiz~d

labor going all
out to defeat N.A.VTA proposal

Traffic for tbe Catfish festival
Saturday and for faving on North
Second which wil begin on Monday will be rerouted, according to
Bill Browning of the Middleport
Police Department
,For tomorrow's festival activities, from approximately 7:30 a.m.
to 7 p.m., North Third Avenue,
usually one-way, will be open to
two-way traffic. Motorists will be
directed from North Second where
vendor booths will be operating
onto North Third. South Third to
Main Street will also be a two-way
street
.
Residents of both North and
South Third are being requested
not to park on the street since that
will impede tbe traffic flow. There
will be no parking on North Third
from Mill to Walnut Street
On Monday work on the paving
of North Second to Mill will begin.
Motorists are asked not to park on
North Second . Traffic will be
maintained and flaggers will be out
to direct motorists. The work is
expected to be completed next
week.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Orga- · tariffs and other barriers to trade
nized labor has made a fight and invesunent among Canada, the
against the North American Free United States and Mexico.
Trade Agreement its top priority in
Democratic congressional
Congress this year, and its lobbying sources said some unions are
already has gained tbe upper hand threatening 10 withhold campaign
for tbe opposition.
contributions from lawmakers who
"We'll spend whatever we have vote for the agreement
to spend," said Thomas R. DonThe labor blitz began in earnest
ahue, secretary-treasurer of the during Congress' August recess
AFL..CIO.
and took NAFTA supporters by
Unions plan town hall meetings surptise. Backers of lhe.agreement,
with lawmakers in their districts, led by President Clinton, did not
rallies at plant gates, radio spots launch their campaign until this
and billboards in 80 congressional week and acknowledge they are
districts. .
scrambling to catch up.
It appears that the labor moveAFL-CIO lobbyist Tom Owens
ment, seeking to regain lost politi· said 40 to 45 wavering lawmakers
cal clout, will withhold money as have committed to oppose NAFfA
well as spend it in a bid to defeat since the labor campaign began.
the trade pact that would eliminate
Opposing the agreement has

been eased politically by t!Je fear
among workers in this country that
their jobs might be moved to Mexico and by the anti-NAFTA campaign of former independent presi:
dential candidate Ross Perot.
For labor. the issue is not only
iiS members' jobs but also iiS own
credibility. Suffering from years of
declining membership and a string
of legislative setbacks, unions see
the trade issue as a way to regain
political strength.
The pact ne~otiated by President
Bush has spill the Democratic
Party and the environmental movement, normally allies. It also has
created unusual alliances, like the
opposition of former presidential
candidates Patrick Buchanan and
Jesse Jackson, usually antagonists.

United States seeks
greater acceptance of Israel
WASHINGTON (AP) - Hoping to keep the Middle East peace
momentum alive, the Clinton
administration is moving quickly to
promote greater acceptance of·
Israel - both political and economically - among Islamic countries.
One U.S. target is the42-year
Arab economic boycou of Israel,
which is designed to disable
Israel's economy and to end what
Arab countries regard as Israel's
illegal occupation of Palestinian
land.
State Department officials said
Secretary of State Warren Christopher is expecled to press for li start
on easing the boycott during meetings with Arab foreign ministers
later lhis month at the U.N. General
Assembly.
The officials said Christopher is
considering a trif to tbe ¥iddle
East in October -i he believes his
presence will advance U.S. objectives in the region.
Weakening of the boycott was
one of four goals outlined Thursday by State Department
spokesman Mike McCurry as
administration priorities now that
Israel and the Palestine Liberation
Organization have agreed on a
framework for peace.
He said the administration also

woman injured in wreck -

JUOIIJDY. ..

A Multimedia Inc. Newopaper ··

West Virginia State Police leader
critjcizes coal company's actions

--Local briefs--

992·2124

6" sub, bag of chips and
LARGE PEPSI
11 • 1 DaiiJ

able to remove that water tbro~gh
the underground water handhng
facilities.
As for when additional employees will be called back, Smith said
the company "expects to call back
additional employees to help with
the rehabilitation of the mine, but
that it is too early to predict when
that will occur".
She emphasized that the greatest
consideratton at this point is for tbe
safety of the employees as they reenter the mine.

Bush running
for governor

Barbecue, hymn
sing scheduled
at farm museum

2 S.Ctiono. 12 Pogoo 35 centa

Pomeroy·Middleport,
Ohio, Friday, September 17, 1993
.
.

Repair work continues at Meigs Mine 31

Cflndda, send $5.05.1

AUSTIN, Texas (~) - How
about Gov. George Bosh? No, no;
not that George Bush. George W.
Bush, the former president's eldest
son, who's made it pretty clear he's'
planning a bid for governor in
1994.
"I will run because of my c:ommitment to Texas and my concern
for its future," the Republican said
in a stiltement Wednesday, the day
he filed papers with the Texas
Ethics Commission to set up a ·
campaign committee.

Low tonight In 50s, cloudy.
Saturday, &lt;loudy, high near 70.

•

11$6Z.Citicago,lll.60611~62.(/n

6Y21nch Pot._.:• .__.s2.49 EACH OR 6 FOR $13.00.
.a Inch Pot........-...-...---·-..-}3.•59 EACH oR 3 FOR s1 0.00
Bob's Has AGood Selection,
resh From Holland ••• Tulips,
Crocus, Daffodils &amp;

752

Page4

Mal:e Friends and Stop Being
Lonely." Sefid a se/f-odt/rwed, long,
busiMss·size envelope and a cited:
or mone"J order for $4.15 (this ifleludes poSitlge and hmtdUng) to:
Frknds, c/o AM l..dNlus, P.O. Box

Hardy Fall Garden Mums
In Over 20 Vibrant Colors!
Now Is The Time To Pklnt Your Fall Flower

Pick 3:

BuckeyeS:

Prizes posted in chili cookoff

Loretta Young -marries
desi~ner Jean Louis

Ohio Lottery

Thursday, September 16, 1993 .

Pomeroy-MiddlePQrt, Ohio

WILLIAM COOK

Cook files petition
William C. Cook Of the Park
Road, Shade, filed for one of the
two open Bedford Township
trustee positions.
The seats will be filled from a
slate of five candidates in the Nov.
2 election.
A native Meigs Coumian, he
graduated from Pomeroy High
School in 1968. He has been a resi.dent of Bedford Township since
·1971. This is his first time to seek a
political office.
Cook is the son of the late Mr.
""~ M ... rhorlM" rnntc.

•

one official.
Earlier this month. after the
Palestinian self-rule plan was disclosed, the Arab League offered its
endorsement but said the group 's
boycott of Israel would remain in
effect until all occupied Arab territory is returned.
But U.S. officials believe an
opportunity for weakening the boycott is at hand not only amon g
more moderate members of the
Arab League but also among the
many industrialized countries that
have not taken a strong stand
against the boycott. U.S, law forbids American citizens from honoring the ban.
Israeli officials estimate the
boycott costs the country $3 billion
a year - the same figure Israel
receives in U.S. assistance annually.
The administration also is using
its aid program as a lever to promote lhe peace process. The State
Department disclosed Thursda~
that President Clinton had waived
restrictions on security auiatance
· 1o Jordan and approvad a $3"0 million aid package.
Congress had petialized Jordan
for iiS refusal to go along with U.N.
sanctions against Iraq following the
fall .
"We have tbe best opportunity Iraqi conquest of Kuwait.
in years to head this one off," said

is encouraging broad international
support for the agreement and also
is urging countries hostile to Israel
to establish normal relations with
the Jewish state. One potential candidate in this category is Morocco,
which welcomed Israeli Prime
Minister Yitzhak Rabin for a visit
while he was en route home from
Washington this week.
McCurry said the administration
is also seelcing to eliminate what he
described as the "unhelpful language" about Israel in a number of
U.N. General Assembly resolutions"
approved over the years.
·
Other officials, asking not to be
identified, said Arab opposition has
normally succeeded in overriding
American opposition to such resolutions.
There are often 25 to 30 antiIsraeli resolutions each year and,
said one official, "we want to see
this number greatly reduced''
The Assembly also routinely
approves Arab-sponsored calls for
an international peace conference
on tbe Middle East.
officials
say any such conclave would tum
into an anti-Israeli circus, and they
are optimistic tbat pro-conference
Arabs may not get their way this

v.s.

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