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OH POint Pleasant, WV .

'

Octotier

1993 •

Braves
capture
NLWest
crown

Scientists Will combat
~.
Caribbean screwworm
.

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NEW LICENSE - OMo Ambulance Licensing Board Executive Director Robert Feiltberlnabam presents Gallia County emergency MedIcal Center Director Robert Bailey wilb its new licensure from the Ohio Ambulance Licensing ·
Board for Advance Lite Support level service.
Also pictured, to Bailey's left, is Gania County
Commission President Harold Montgomery,
and to Featheringham 's rigbt, Commissioner

Kennelb Farmer. Started by tbe state lbls year,
!be 11ew llcenllna procedure requires services to
be Inspected l!y a state ambulance Inspector anjl
the highway patrol. According to Bailey, the .
EMS has met and exceeded tbe requirements set
fortb by the new state licensln&amp; board. Bailey
said lbe state Inspected vebldes, equipment, general record keeping,.drug and medlcatioDS, cardiac beart monitoring equipment, and personnel
records.
·

Feed grain acreage reduced
sorghum. The reductions for barley
and oats were zero in 1993, with
the zero reduction requifed by law
for barley.
·
USDA lowered. the acreage
reduction for corn because com
stocks entering the 1994-95 marketing year are expected to. be
about 810 million bushels lower.
That is due to reduced yields and
lower harvested acreage caused
largely by flooding in the Midwest.
Stocks for grain sorj!hum were
expected to be 84 milhon bushels
lower.
Despite the projected shorter
supplies, some had sought a higher
reduction for com. Sen. Bob Kerrey, D-Neb., had ur~ed no less than
a 7.5 percent reducuon.

WASHINGTON (AP)
Prospects of a lower com harvest
. this year prompted the Agriculture
Department to reduce the acreage
that fanners must remove from
production in order to qUalify for
farm program benefits.
The department announced on
• Thursday
a 5 percent acreage
reduction program for com but no
reductions for other feed grains in

1994.

The nwnbers represent the percentage of acres that growers must
take out of production to receive
benefits. The program is intended
to manage feed grain supplies.
The 1994 percentage is down
from 10 pen:ent this year for com
and down from 5 pen:ent for grain

)

Despite concerns about a shorter
crop and frost damage, com prices
are still low because demand for
com, espeeially in the expon market, remains sluggish.
Other interests, including lbe
National Grain aild Feed Association, argued for no reduction, say-·
ing the grain could be sold overseas
if the government did not,prop up
the price.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Agriculture Departtnent has accepted an additional I million acres of
highly erodible and other environmentally sensitive land into the
Conservation Reserve Program, or
CRP, bringing the total to :!'6.4 million acres.

Grain producers to put additional
95.4 million bushels in reserve
pledge 1992-crop feed grains
intended for the reserve as collateral for a nine-month Commodity
Credit Corp. price support loan.
During the inilinl signup period
that ended April 30, producers signaled intentions to plAce 374.5 million bushels of feed grains in the
reserve.
Because the intentions from
both the original and additional
signups are below the 900-millionbushel authorization, producers
may place the entire quantity of
1992-crop com,. grain sorghwn and
barley they designated in the
reserve. However, a producer's
stated intention does not obligate
the producer to place the feed
grains in the re8e!Ve.
·
The FOR loan rate will be the
same rate as the nine-month loan

WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S.
feed grain producers intend to
place an additional 95.4 million
bushels of 1992-crop corn, grain
sorghum and barley in the FannerOWned Reserve, or FOR, the Agriculture Departnient says.
The produc;ers w~ required to
me lbetr additional intentions to
enter those three commodities in
the neserve with their local office of
USDA's Agricultural Stabilization
and· Cqnservation Service by Aug.
31.
Producers also were required to

U. S. catfish ·

net down
WASHINGTON (AP)- U.S.
catfish producers had 149,440
. acres in production on July I, down
6 percent from a year earlier and 10 .
percent lower than in 1991.
"The reduction in acreage is
mostly aitributable to an extended
period of low grower prices." said
a recent repon on aquaculwre by
!be Agriculrure Departtnent" s· Economic Research Service.
However, it said, processor
inventories are down from the previous year and grower inventories
at the beginning of the third quarter
were estimated to be lower in
almost every size.class.
"This is expected.to.put up'Vllfd
pressure on prices 'at the farm and
~r levels,'' the report said.
'Prices also !'{ill be suP,P.Ofled by a
pi&amp;up in the economy ;• ··

WASHINGTON (AP) -The
government's chief barometer of
future economic activity leapt I
percent in August, the best gajn of
the year, signaling a pickup from
the disinal fii'SI half.
The lndex .of Leading Indicators
flashed its most positive sign since
December, when it rose 1.7 percent, the Commerce Department
said today. It was the third consecutive increase, foll9wing slight
gains of 0.1 perce111 in both.June
and July.
·
July had previOusly been reported as a 0.1 percent drop. And the
Augus\ advance .was slighlly better
than the 0.8 perCent rise anucipated
by economists.
Ten of the index's 11 forwardlooking indicators rose, the first
time that many were up since
December 1986.
,
The various changes. left the

Mound Plant
pays back

saJ.es ·taxes
"

J

rm:

year because be · satd _the U.S.
. Deputment of Energy wanted to
do die right tbing.
'
' . EG&amp;:G ~tes the Miamisburg
;p18nt for the Energy Depanment,
,inaki.ng 'triggers · for nuclear
weapons and power s~urces . for ·
spili:e pobol. )' • , _ _:.
'J'he IIJ "ymcnll IOIIUw"" Stale
~=
M6uiMI in !9116 arid 1990
· lba
'tldd lbe facility 'owed ·
· ·taM~, · •BCmle JohDII!lD of the

.

1'111 ~..U•....,..'s office. · .

.-. , . 1'be lllte' .,cei\1d, $J2 .milliDlt
· o£ the beck laltes, while Mol)t·

·

coup
· tr and the county's
Trldsit MchCritY $« 11\e .
'. '
.

Stain

Release

'·sau
'I
'Yd.

$595,._
'

·· NEW CO.ERCIAJ.

TOLL FREE
1-1100-543-4814

~-2518

VINTON
Gallia County lllaplay Ywd
Jay a Joe Moore, Mgra.
165 lolaln St. - 388-8603

LEATH.E R *RECLINERS

BY I~BERKLINE

I

EVER!!

NAFTAin
Ohio visit

Today'1 conltmporory olu1io, . by
~~no. Juml!o '!lifl ~1¥-!tUiile . , ·
tho d~op paddod pll~WI and ,
ll!odiliod Uphoillll8d wlngi: Wide TClJihion comlorl ChOoto flrlgortip, .
Tciuc.'.i.lotiont Walowaye Roclintr
or TouchMolionl Roei&lt;-A-I.ou'9or.e

m•~

Chaise Lounge · ·
a.tc-..'ca,.lll ltflot . )
Recr........ SmoochActiOn Wolowaye ·
Tee tUatlorft

·-·.

1 S ctlon.10 " - 35 _ ..
A Multlmtclllno. ,._.,..,...

High speed
chase ends in
•
river rescue

JOHNNY APPLESEEDS - Pomeroy Elementary was swarming wltb little Johnny
Appleseeds Frlclay as klndergarteners and rwstgraders finished up a lengthy section on apples.
Yoangsters•dressed like Johnny Appleseed, wore

pans on their beads and ate arplesauce prepared tile day before as part o a cooperative
learning activity involvin&amp; Jamie Blaettnar's
ftrst grade class and Becky Trents kindergarten

class.

Bob Evans Farms to host
23rd festival this weekend
Craftdem()nstrations to highlight event
'Live-eniertainment 'wid nearly
140 craftpl:rsons in colonial dress
.demonstrating early American
crafts will come rogether on DeL 8,
. ~ and 10 at the 23rd Annual Bob
Evans Farm Festival in Rio
Grallde.
Open .daily from 9 a.m . to 5
p.m., the festival is held on the
grounds of lbe 1,100-acre Bob
Evans Farm in the rolling hills of
southeastern Ohio. Continuous
country, bluegrass and gospel
entertainment add to the old-time
atmosP.here.
Slc1lled craftspeople, demonstrating tools and techniques devel-

.. -

·-*·~.

/&gt;':11:

•

A Licking County man was rescued from the Ohio River and
arrested early Sunday morning following an Eastern Avenue high
speed chase which damaged a
police cruiser.
Stephen W. Divis U, 22, Warsaw, faces charges of felony fleeing
and eludinJI. driving under the
influence, driving under suspension
and improper passing.
According to Chief ROj!CJ Brandeberry of the Gallipohs Police
Departmeni, officer Greg Frazier
saw the suspect's vehicle use the
center tum lane to pass anolber
vehicle on Easlem Avenue near the
Ohio River Plaza.
.
Suspecting the driver was under
the influence, Frazier began following Davis' vehicle and attempted to pull him over.
The suspect reportedly refused'
to stop and Frazier began pursuing
Davis at a high rate of speed. Other
offtcers and Galli&amp; County sheriffs
deputies joined the pursuit and
auempted 10 block in the fleeing
suspect's vehicle. Frazier estimated
lbe minimum speed of lbe chase
was 65 miles per hour.
The chase continued ended near
the )li-Lo Oil Company, wbere the
suspect suddenly Stopped, shifted

- ... ,.._ •••••

into reverse and struck the front of
Frazier's cruiser.
Davis ' vehicle then went over
an embankment and came to rest
near the river. Davis and his passenger, Chris Himebrick, 19, Jackson, then fled on foot.
The Jl8S$Cnger was captured first
and taken into custody. Davis
auempted to escape by jumping
into lbe river but suffered from
hypothermia and was unable to
return to shore uDder his own
power.
Three officers rescued Davis
from lhc river and he was taken by
Gallia County Emergency Medical Service to lfolzer Medical Center
wbere he was treated for hyjlotbet- ·
mia and released to police n1stody.
Himebrick was not.. charged and
was later released.
Frazier sustained minor injuries
in the collision, but did not seek
treatment. The cruiser sustain'ed
modcnue damage.
Thirteen officers and deputies
assisted in the incident.
Brandeberry credited the cooperation of the two law enforcement
agencies with the anessful anest.
.. We're glad 10 see that (cooperation)," he said. "We seem to act
thinJ!S done when we wade -~

~" '
oped more !ban' a hundred years own mi!SCOIS. Biscuit 'n' Gravy. '
ago, offer their handmade wares for
A!imission is $5 per car, and
sale;
primitive camping is available for
Demonstrations and exhibits are the entire weekend for $20 .
a part of the festival, too. Tijere is a Campers who arrive after 3 p.m. on
lumberjack show. border collies Saturday will be charged only $10.
herding sheep and ducks, team pen- Friday. Oct. 8, is Bus Day.
ning and sorting, horseshoe pitchTour groups are encourag~ to
ing and more. Several contests add come that day, but buses will be
An anonymous tip to Gallipolis Brandeberry said this morning 'that
fun to the Festival including hog admitted free throughout the week- police Sunday evening led to the police responded to Mottnd Hill
calling, com shelling, an egg toss enc_I. The Bob Evans Farm is open seizure of several baggies of marl- Cemetery on an anonymous tip. As .
and the International Chicken. Fly- datly from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., joana and some stolen street signs. they aJ?proach_ed, the suspects
mgMeeL
Memorial Day through Labor Day. No arrestS were made, but one man attempUng to hide some items as
The children's area will feature For more information on the Farm was issued a summons to appe8! in they approached, he said.
a ~ay bale maze, a story teller, a or Fann Festival, write:
cowt and three others were c1ted.
· The off'Icers conlllcted the Gallia
}lC(Ial llliCtor pull contest, a pettin~
Matt
D.
Oxyer,
18,
Honeysuckle
County 'Sherifrs Oepanment and
The Bob Evans Farm, Route
zoo and visits from Bob Evans
588, P.O. Box 330, Rio Grande, Drive, Cheshire, was issued a sum- received assistance from ·s heriff
mons to appear in coun for posses- James D. Taylor and deputy Shawn
45674, or call (614) 245-5305.
sion of stolen property.
Burton, who handles the drug dog
Ciled were Cindy C. Burton, 24, Gamblec.
'
39 Chillicothe Road, Gallipolis, for
The dog reacled while searching
possession of marijuana; Patricia the outside of the suspects' vehiM. Oxyer, 33, Route 1 Cheshire, cles, giving the officers probable
for possession of marijuana and cause to conduct a SC~Weh.
on a Green Township road, accord- by a car in a three-vehicle accident improper transportation of a fire . Officers recovaed several stRet
ing 10 the county sheriffs off~ce.
on Int.erslale 71 at Interstate 670 in arm and Lucas B. Oxyer, 21, 2122 s1gns stolen from Cheshire TownBOWLING GREEN - Driver Franldin County.
Addison Pike, Gallipolis, for pos- ship, drug panphema1ia, a fire ann
Celina E. Davis, 71, and her husFINDLAY- Paul G. Sams, 50, session of marijuana and posses- and about eight sandwich bags of
band, Chester P. Davis, 72, both of of Wayne. motorcyclist struck by a sion of drug paraphernalia.
manjuana.
Findlay, when their car was hit by a train on a Hancock County road . .,r- Gallipolis Police Chief Roger
.
train at a crossing in Wood County.
GEORGETOWN- Bradle~c
•
TOLEOO - Robert H. Sexton Hensley, 3 months, o~Cincinnati,
II, 22, of Liberty Center, in a two- passenger m a two-vehiCle BCCident
'J
'r.
car collision on a Lucas County on Ohio 32 in Brown County.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The for 12 killings that occurred after
road.
.
HILLSBORO - Dylan Wilson, Supreme Court today refused to lift Illinois enacted its death penalt
WEST JEFFERSON - Scolt 18, of Georgetown, passenger in a ml;Ss murderer John Wayne Gacy law.
Y
Henderson, 25, of Columbus, when one-car crash on a Highland Coon- k s death sentences for the sex
The Supreme Coun refused to
the stolen car he was driving went ty road. .
lcillm_gs .of 33 young men and boys hear two previous appeals by Gacy
out of control on U.S. 40 in Madi- FRIDAY NIGHT
10 llitDOts.
.
in 1985 and 1989.
'
son County while being chased by
COLUMBUS _ Alander Sim.The court., wnhout commen_t,
In !he appeal acted on toda ,
a State Highway Pattol cruiser.
!DOOS, 18, of Ashville, Tenn.. driver rejecled. GII!=Y s argument that h1s Gacy ~ lawyers said the ·u'/
SATURDAY
10 a one-car accident on Interstaftl sente_ncm~ jury ~as given unconmstrucnons were unlawful ~~
COLUMBUS - Lori Wright, 71 in Franldin County.
suruUonallnstrucbons. .
they c~ted a reasonable -chance
28, of Columbus, pedestrian struck
Gacy, aform~ hoilding contrac- jurors mtght not realize that a sintor,_was convtcted m 1980 of gle juror could bloclt Imposition f
0
k1lhng 33 young males between the death jJenalty.
1972 and 1978. Twenty-seven bodlhe jurors returned all 12 death
1es were found buried in a crawl sentences within two hours the
space under his home in suburban appeals court noted, adding "They
Ch~o.
mliSt have been in agree~nt from
A JUry sentenced him to death the outset."

Tip leads to seizure
of marijuana, signs

Fifteen people killed on Ohio roads over
Perot decries weekend, including six in Cincinnati crash

LOWEST PRICES

F..,.l''d•

All
Remnants'

MOSCOW (AP) - Hard-liners
surrendered today and left lbe Russian \)IU'Iiament with their hands in
the au after a full-scale assault by
tanks and commandos loyal to
President Boris Yeltsin.
More !ban 300 lawmakers and
supporters marched out of the
.burning building in single ftle and
· were loaded onlll waiting buses.
. Sniper fire ran$ out from inside
the so-called Whtte House as the
· hard-liners gave up their 14-day
defiance of Yeltsin 's decree dissolving parliament lind caiiing new
elections.
·
The surrender of the Yeltsin
opponents, some wearing militarystyle fatigues, ended a 10-hour
8S88ult by army infantrymen. para,troope.ls and and Interior Ministry
troops backed by tanks and
armOIN personnel carriers.
During the seige, ·streaks of
orange flame erupted from the barrels of the T -72 tanks as they
pounded the white marble office
building. Papers came floating out
of the shauered windows, followed
by hea-ry black smoke.
Soldiers dragged away bodies
while machine guns blasled from a
neighboring hotel and apartment
house . No accurate count was
·available, but Yeltsin's military
adviser, Gen. Dmitry Volkogonov,
told reporters that hundreds may
have been killed inside. He did not
give the source of his information.
A U.S. Marine was bit by a
stray bullet at the American
Embassy, across the street from the
White ~- He I'{BS repor_ted in
stabli)coltt 't · Oft.l .aJCn•IIJI~~
tal. AboUt 400 ~ employ!lCS
took shelter undergroiDid.
The hard-line leaders, Vice
President Alexander Rutskoi and
parliamel)t speak« Ruslan Kbasbulatov, remained inside the burning
building.
.
Yeltsin's defense minister,
Pavel Grachev, arrived in a limousine during a lull in lite fighting
and began negoliatiitg on a bridge
over the Moscow River with a
group of hard-liners who came out
of the White House waving a white
flag.
Russian TV said Grachev hand·
ed the parliament supporters a
piece of paper that was believed to
be an ulumatum Ill give up or face
destructioo.

c.n

•

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, October 4, 1993

Hard-liners
su"ender

MONUMENT CO.

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'Ca~ting

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Mulllmedl•tno.

LOGAN

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Kicker:

Low tqqbt Ia 40s, ?art!)'
&lt;loudy. TUHday, sunny, blflb In
60s.

~ Vol. 44, NO. 112

you a largt _selection of Rock of
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sugar-producing and exporting
countries,'' it said.
Australia is down 6 percent to
4.1 million. tons; South Africa is
down 19 percent to 1.3 miUion
tons; and Brazil is off 2.0 percent
to 9.4 million tons.

·POMEROY
Mel go County .Dioplay Ywd Nelor
Pomoroy-Maoon Bridge
Jam• A. Buoh, Mgr.

Pick 3:

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Make your choice
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C..coiD-"iWII._~

6 colors ltr
stock.
$795
. n.

•• \

globall992-93 crop but 1.4 million
tons below consumption expected
for 1993-94, the repon said.
"The production outlook indicates a deterioration in the Southern Hemisphere due largely to
drought affecting several leading

Corilfon Rest ·

·F~ r.r. SA J.E

Endless
Wonder

cal entomology ~h for ARS.
By flooding an area with sterile
males, S(;ientists can· suppress Hy
populalio.ns because lbe eggs subseqlienlly released by females don't
hatch into larvae. That strategy,
~eloped byARS scientists it)·the
1950s, led to eradication ·or the
screwworm in this country in 1966.
. Tiie screwworm forecasting systern will build on similar models
developed by ARS researchers for .
the lone star tick and mosquitoes
that transmit malaria, Bram said.
. Sublethal doses of radiation are
given to &amp;exually srerilize millions
of adult male screwworm flies.
They are then released to breed
with wild females. Eventually, the
population dies out as more and
more wild females lay sterile eggs
that fail to hatCh..
,
That strategy also wiped out the
screwworm in Mexico by 1991 and
wits used to halt a Libyan outbreak
several years ago.

Thai. In Stock... Speclal Order Colors

MEIGS ~.RPET .&amp; ."

.,.

., ·DA.,YTON, ~hio (AP.) ~ The
operator of die Mound nuclear·
W't!81J0ill pl_anf ,h8s paid OhiO and .
1~ gov&lt;m~ment agencies $15.7
million in ~k saleS taxes.
Jim Walton, ·spokesman for
EG&amp;G Mound Applied TechnOlogies Inc., said Wednesday !bat '!P
until about a year ago Mound patd
no sales taxes on equipme[lt and
Olher iJems.
.
Mound argued that. ·it was
eUnlpt from state and local taxes
t I d!' it WU buyinti .limn lhc fee!· 1

feial ~
',. ';
' ' IWalton-..............
JOaJ -:• '-"-•""' ball llladil
1.
.
y
t ~ die SaleS IIUS IIIORilban a

By MARGARET SCHERF
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Global consumption of sugar will outpace production in the 1993'94
crop year anti cut stocks to their
lowest level in four years, the Agriculture DeparUnent says.
''However, world raw sugar
prices are relatively slable as harvests begin this month in Europe,"
a recent report by the Economic
Research Service added.
.
Global consumption is forecast
at 112.9 million metric tons, up
marginally· from the revised esttmate 'for 1992-93.
"The lack of substantinl yearto-year growth is due 10 a significant drop in sugar use in the Russian Federation and elsewhere in
the former Soviet Union and CeniralEurope, as well as slower consumption growth in China and
India." the report said~
.
. • 'These developments offset
strong conSUOII!tion growth in
many populo,us developing countries such as Pakistan, up 4.4 percent to 3.8 million;· Indonesia, up
4.4 percent to 2.6 million tons;
Brazil, up 2.7 percent to 7.6 ~~til~
· lion; and Mexico, up 2.8 percent to
4.5 million."
World sugar production for
1993-94 is forecast at 11 1.5 million
metric tons, about the same as the

index at a seasonally adjusted
153.1. up 3 percent from a year ago
and up I. f percent from three
months ago.
The report, intended give a
sense of the economy's direction
six to nine months in advance, fits
with anal_)!sts' belief that the economy, whtle not exactly roaring
ahead, is clearly expanding at a
faster pace than the anemic 1.4 per- •
cent annual rate regis1ered from
January through June,
Most believe-the economy now
is gro)Ving somewhere betw~n a,·
2.5 percent and 3 percent rate· as
measured by the fros, domestic
product, the total o gocids and secvices produced in the United
States. Th!lt's slow by historical
standards for the early s1ages of llfl
expansion\ but about double the
. rate of the fust half.

,.

(AP) -

I

World sugar stocks dipping to four-year
low as consumption outpaces production,

Leading ind~x makes best
gain of year in August

Oper~tor of .

T,_

rate. The FOR loans will mature 27
months from the date the regular
loans mature, but producers may
repay FOR loans any time before
maturity without penalty.
· Randy Weber, acting executive
vice president of the Commodity
Credit Corp., said producers will
earn -storage payments for feed
grain~ pledged as collateral for
FOR loans at an annual rate of 26.5
cents pei- bushel.
Stoq~ge payments will be earried
until .marli:et prices equal 91' exceed
95 percent of the current established target P.rice.
Interest will accrue when market
prices equal or exceed JOS·percent
of lbe current target price.
The current target prices per
bushel are $2.75 for corn, $2.61 for
gmin sorghum and $2.36 for bar. ley.

.

'
Hqp- screwworm in tlie Caribbean. Other
ing to ICJCW up the mating actiYi- · research included in the project:
ties of !be screwworm, scientists
- A new type of trap to· moniare working on a computer model tor screwworm infestations on
to predict outbreaks of the.pest that Caribbean islands or native populacould lbreaten 'livestock in the lions in nearby countries. The. sciCaribbean.
enlists want to increase the effecThe computer m9del wil,lllliCk tiveness and lower the cost of the
and forecast screiVWOilll population existing standard trap.
densities, ba$ed on the weather, the
- An attractant, called an artifipest's life cycle, animal popula- cial wound, that could be usj:.d to
tions and other data, say the Agri- - lure screwworm flies to traps.
culture De~t scientists.
ResearcherS say they alread)' have
That will help them determine determined the basic chemical
how many sterile male flies need to cm.nponents for an attractant.
be released to eradicate !he pest, . · - Genetic studies at the agensays an article in the September cy ' s Lincoln, Neb., lab that will
issue of Agricultural Research characterize sc.rewworm populamagazine, published by USDA's lions in the Caribbean, Central and
Agricultural Research Service.
~oulb America.
The computer model , which
Open wounds in warmblooded
developers expect to complete mammals attract screwworm flies.
early next year, is part of a cooper- When larvae merge, they feed
ative effon between ARS and the inside the wounds and can cause
Food and Agriculture Organizanon the mammal 10 die, ·said Ralph A.
of the United Nations tri conttol the Bram, head of veterinary and 'mediWASHINGTO~

~

Ohio LQttery

Puah-IIIIIIGIIIIocllnlng

J

5c011tn • .
.sttck,'

&amp;Up.

•

By The Associated Press
A fiery CincJnnati-area crash
that lcilled six young men increased
Ohio's weekend IJafiic death toll to
15, according to the Slate Highway
Patrol and local law enforcement
agencies.
,,
The traffic deaths were tallied
from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight
Sunday.
The dead:
SUNDAY
CINCINNA11 -. Keith Doyle,
19. and James Wessler, 17, of
Crosby Township; and Kevin Coulter, 18, James Luken, 18, Aaron
Lewis, 20, and James Smith, 19, of
Whitewater Township, all in
Hamilton
when their car
sauck a
and
ftre

CLEVELAND (AP) - Ross
Perot urged supporters in three
Ohio cities to continue their fight
against the Nonh American Free
Trade Agreement and do everything they can.to defeat it.
The 63-year-old Texas billionaire visited Cleveland, Columbus
and Oxford over the weekend, promoting his United We Stand America group and criticizing American
trade policies.
He told a crowd of about 2,500
at a rally Sunday night in ~leve­
land that the proposed trade paet,
. which would remove tariffs on
ROOds traded between the United
l:tates, Mexico and Canada, will
result in American jobs going south
of the bolder.
"Our big companies want to go
south to make more money," Perot
told the cheering crowd at the
!nremationalEiposition Center.
He said lifting the tariffs on
Mexican good.s will only m~ke
low-w114e MexiCO more attractive
· 10 American companies.
Perot said lbere is not enough
support now in Congress 10 pass NAFI'A.
"That sucker's dead ·i f they got
10 Vole Monday," Perot said.
Perot said' he wasn't bothefed by
criticiSm le~led at him by ·fanner
U.S • .presidents who support
. NAFI'A.
·
"I've been call¢ ev«Ything but
a drive-by .shooter,'' Perot said,
adding !bat criticism of hil anlj... MEIGS HOMECOMJNtrROYAi:rY ·The
NAFTA'crusade has driven up
sales of His book ·about the pro1993 MI.IP HlJb Sdloal ha••coml•l queen, Jb)'
O'Brleti, ce•fer, erowne- 1t PrJday _!l_lc~t's
poeednde piCI. ' .
.
Diet Pior, 69, attended the
MeJai-Aieapcler pme 01 Bob RobertiJIIeiA Is
Cleveland rally and said he does
pletund lien ~ IHr CQUit Staii!Jinl front are
not iiuclealllltlid why anY American bower alrl. AIJioa· Woods, daapter ~ Mr. and
Mrs.'C'hrls. Woodl, and crown burer, Dru
would itipJIOtl
NAFI'A.
'
..

.

·~-

.

ourt re•ects Gacy's anpeal

r---""-Local briefs--Residents report UFO
Several residents reported seeing an unidentified flying object in
the skies above Tuooers Plains Sunday evening.
"A lot of people were out loolcing at the object," said Sheriff
James M. Soulsby who described it as having red, green, blue and
white lights. Some people reported seeing objects falling from the
floating object, be said.
The sheriffs otftce checked it out and determined the object was
a variable star, Slid Soulsby.

Eastern board to meet

""

The llast.em Local Board of Education will meet in speeial session Wednesday &amp;I 5:30 p.m. at the high school library to approve
cootracts for l gas line tie in.

.tteed, - ol Mr. and Mn. Tom iteed. Tile attendulllllld tMir fiCOI'II, pictured left to rl&amp;bt are
Brld Aadenotl whq eseorted Danlelle Crow,
Jeff Tracy wbo escorted Lee HeDderson; the
qaeea -'ed by Jared Stewart; H~tber Hud_tiWI ted b;p Kevil! WJaobrey, IDd Tracy Fife
eiCGl ted by Juon WitherelL

Man cited for DUI
Jef&amp;ey E. Brumfield, 40, Route I Bidwell, was ciled Thursday
night for driving under the influence. failure 10 drive within marked
lanes and no seat belt, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway
. Patrol reported. It was his third DUI offense.

�..

•

Monday, October 4, 1993

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pvmeroy; Ohio
DEVOTED TO 11IE INTERESTS OJI' 11IE 11£{08-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETfERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less lban 300
words. All letten are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and lelepbone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
1boutd be m good taste, ~ssing issues, not personalities.

Legislature in uproar,
reforms likely
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - The House is expected 10 pass this week a bill forcing lawmakers to disclose all their income and requiring lobbyists to
repon eve~ penny they spend to uy to influence legislation.
The Eth1cs and Standards Committee scheduled a hearing Tuesday and
a vote after another hearing Wednesday, clearing the way for floor action
Thursday when the House meets for a one-day session.
Both parties rushed to endorse the bill last week in the midst of an
uproar over $500 speaking fees collected by Rep. Paul Jones, D-Ravenna,
chairman of the Health and Retirement Committee, outside his district.
Several members had asked Speaker Vern Riffe, D-Wheelersburg, to
strip Jones of his chairmanship when Jones voluntarily stepped down
pending an investigation by the House Ethics Committee.
The Senate scrambled to announce a bill silljilar to the House proposal
and ildopted at a midnight session a rule banning honoraria for its mem-

bers.

..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, October 4, 1993

~-Dayton Daily News reported Thursday that Jones requested and
reoeived $500 from a colleague, Rep. Rhine McLin, D-Dayton, for making a speech in her district last spring. Ms. McLin has not confirmed or
denied the story.
]ones, who did not return repo~rs· calls last week, asked the ethics
committee to investigate him and predicted he will be exonernted.
Accepling speaking fees is not illegal, but an amendment banning them
is expected to be added to lhe House bill Ibis week.
It also is not against the law ·to solici! honoraria although Riffe said he
thinks it is unethical and should be prohibited.

Today in history
By The Associated Press
Today is Monday, Oct. 4, the 277th day or t993. There are 88 days left
in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Oct 4, 1957, the Space Age began as the Soviet Union launched
Sputnik, the ftrst manmade satellite, iniO orbit around the Earth.
On this date:
In 1777, George Washington's troops launched an assault on the
British 111 Germantown, Pa. The attack lost momenrum, and tile Americans suffered heavy casualties.
In 1822, the 19th president of the United States, Rutherford B. Hayes,
was born in Delaware, Ohio.
In 1887, the ftrst issue of the International Herald Tribune was publiShed as the Paris Herald Tribune.
In 1931, the comic strip "Dick Tracy," created by Chester Gould,
made its detiuL
~
In 1940, Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolihi conferred at Brenner Pass
in the Alps, where the Nazi leader sought Italy's help in fighting the
British.
In 1958, the fust trans-Atlantic passenger jetliner service was begun by
British Overseas Airways Corporation with, flights between London and
New York.
In 1965, Pope Paul VI became the first reigning pontiff to visit the
Western Hemisphere as he addressed the U.N. General Assembly.
In 1970, rock singer Janis Joplin, 27, was found dead in her Hollywood
hotel room.
In 1976, Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz resigned in the wake of a contrOVersy over a joke he'd made about blacks.
.
In 1978, funeral services were held at the Vatican for Pope John Paull.

Berry's World

Tuesday' Oct. 5

Accu-Weathe? forecast f~ daytime conditions·and high temperalllres
MICH .

DOE should clean up its own _n uclear !~less
Lions on private industries caught
polluting, nuclear bomb makers are
still exempted from almost aU en vironmental safeguards. This loop-

B

Y JTDCk Adnderson
an
) "ichael Bz"nste•n
1Yl~
•

hole has made the Department of
Energy, which operates the nuclear
complex, America's most prolific
polluter. DeFazio is currently spon·
soring a bill which would make
DOE responsible under the Clean
Water Act and the Environmental
Protection Agency.
While DOE readily admits 'its
nuclear facilities do not comply
with federal standards, they maintain they're doing all lhey can to
correct the problems. Much of the
damage was done long before cor.
rective laws were passed, they told
us. Since then ._pj~E . has avoided

regulatorycompliancebyl'ustifying
their mess in the name o national
defense. No.w environmentalists are
calling·for DOE's compliance with
lhe government's own regulations.
At the Hanford site, comprising
an area half the size of Rhode
Island, investigators in the Office
of Technology Assessment found
an underground plume of contaminated water stretching 122 square
miles and moving toward the
Columbia River. Hanford is also
home to 177 underground storage
tanks, most of which have been
filled with contaminated waste
since the early 1940s.
DOE officials told our associate
Andrew Conte they believe some
of these tanks have started to leak
into the ground, making Hanford
.. "one of DOE's top priorities."
Perhaps that's also because of a
track record that includes oourin~t
mor~ than 200 billion gallons of
hqu1d wastes 10to unlined, open
dirt retainers at the site. Environmeqtalists charge that this water

. 5Y~TEM WoRK,
ALL THAT I~ NEEDED IS THIS ...

U!!S,~

-

th~ps into the ground

water

AND THI~
-

DeFazio admits that getting his
bill approved by Congress would.
be "tough" to say lhe least. N_pr
has he received much help from tile
ceo-sensitive Clinton administration. When he wrote a letter recently to Energy Secretary' Hazel
O'Leary, he received a form letter
in reply to thank him for writing.
BOMB SCARE - Senate
Minority Leader Robert Dole (RKan.) met with Mexican President
Carlos Salinas de Gortari recently
to explain how explosive the
domestic debate in the United
Stales had become over the North
American Free Trade Agreement.

Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writers•for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Anyone can _have middle-class values
New York City has the nation's
largest school system and now has
a new chancellor of the schools Ramon Cortines, most recently in
impressive charge of the San Francisco schools. He was greeted with
·an attack by Victor Gotbatun, a former powerful labor leader and currently on the New York Bpard of
Education.
What Gotbaum said gets to the
core of the battle for the futllre of
public education in this counuy. He
represents all too many principals,
teachers and taxpayers who believe
that the poor, particularly the children of single parents, are "different" than middle-class kids
because their parents do not have
middle-class values. Canines' middle-class values, Goibaum charges,
"are not reptesentative" or what's
in New York's school system.
In attacking Cortines, Gotbaum
said that lhe majority of the board
of education, who selected
Cortines, ·were "enamored of middle-class, two-parent families with
children who don't have sex." And
so is Cortines.
(Everything else aside, the
notion that teen-age children of
middle.,_class, two-parent families
don't have sex indicates that Gotbaum has been watching too many
reruns of 1950s TV sitcoms.)
Ramon Cortines answered Gotbaum in his customary civil man-

"

ner: "I do believe that the parents
of our children in the schools,
regardless of their cultural or
socioeconomic background, do

Nat Hentoff
believe in values and want their
children to be taught values that are
shared by other parents. We get
caught in the wrong place when we
think that because someone is poor
they have a lesser value system. All
parents want their kids to read, 10
write, to learn discipline and proper
work habits and how to cooperate
and work wilh others. To be participating citizens.'··
The patronizing Gotbaum concept that poor parents and their
children have "different" values
sometimes leads some educators to
insist that those kids have diffe,..nt
"':ays of lear!"in~ . The research
director of a b1g c1ty school system
has said, for instance, that "any
tests that emphasize logical, analyt·
ic methods of problem-solving will
be biased against minorities."
If certain teachers believe that
cerlain kinds of kids cannot learn in
a logical, analytic way, !hose children will be .foreclosed from
careers that require this ~proach to
problem-solving. Such limiting of
children's futures is done not only
by some white teachers, but by a

number of black teachers as well.
Unwittingly, both white and black
teachers who do this are racist
because they are stereotyping children because of their color and
class. ·
As for the focus on how ''different" single parents are, it is both
patronizing and destructive (the
two often go together) to say that
single parents have values that are
far from those of two-parent families.
I have been reporting on schools
for some 40 years and it is utterly
clear to me that the vast majority of
single parents do not expect different kinds of achievement from their
kids than other parents. At school
board meetings, I have heard single
parents who are locked into lowlevel jobs demanding better education for their children so that those
kids can move up in the-society.
Victor Goibaum's remark about
middle-class children not having
sex was meant to emphasize that
lower&lt;lass children have sex and
that Cortines does not understand
their extracurricular need for protective devices. When he came to
New York, Cortines was criticized
because in San Francisco, he
objected to the distribution of condoms to schoolchildren regardless
of whether their parents wanted
their kids to have condoms.
Cortines insisted that there be a

parental option. So do many
African-American, Latino, white
and single parents in New York
City.
When a parent ~livers his or
her child to the State be educated, that does not mea the parent
abdicates all responsibility for try'
ing to shape the child's values.
Cortines' predecessor, Joseph Fer,
nandez, lost his job because he was
arrogantly disdainful of parents'
wishes concerning their children's
sexual values. Fernandez insisted
that parents have no say in whethet
their kids should have condoms,
and he was brought down when
largely poor and working-class parents, including many single parents, objected vigorously to his disdain for their values - their middle&lt;lass values.
Much is said-·abou•·· neiam.ia•
this country, which obviouslyremains pervasive. But there is also
widespread class prejudice by·
which people who are not middle·
class are re~arded as inherently_
"different.' And, however that·
distinction is intended, the result is .
that they are treated as if they're
inferior.
Nat Hentorr is a nationally
renowned authority on the First
Amendment and the rest or the
Bill or Rights.

The future starts to look lean _ _~--a

My generation, which came of aid Celente told The Orange Coun''As result of the restructuring tivity Fate of I percent. And thanks
age in the 1950s, is on a downhill ty Register, "The Industrial Age is of US Widget, I left Widget on to lhose productivity gains, AmerieconOjlliC slope and . sliding fast. ending. All the systems are break- Aug. 31, 1993. Since the merger of can products are competitive in
That ·may not soun~ surprising to ing down and that means disap- Engulf and Widget in April 1992, world markets again. Against that
younger Americans, who read the
12 of 13 Widget vice presidents are background, more downsizing is
· "
inevitable.
.
actuarial tables and misread the· u 0
pas~ but it is a shocli to us. What is
.L.LI
~
gOI!~jijn;t .,;.e got fun," my classIn lhe face of such projections, it
even more important is that our sit- _ .............:.·
mate concluded • .It's a kind of is temg,ting to emulate the Luddl. uatlon is fast becomin~ the national. poinunent and disillusionment for "fun" which has become very ties, t ose 19th-century En~lish·
rather than the generauonal nonh. . the people who grew up in·the 50S. familiar to my generation. There men~ who believed the solution to
Everyone who reads the news: Tllese people believed in the Ozzie are just over 21 million Americans their job woes was lo wreck the
papers or watches television knows and Harriet way of life. That con- aged 55 to 64. Of these, 13 million machines which had displaced
the raw facts and figures. Ameri- cept is dead." .
_
are working, 3 million are retired them. That wasn't and isn't the
Just bow dead was illustrated in and ,about 5 million are in "olher answer, but answers t1Jere must be.
ca's giant corporations are "downsizing," gOinJ "!ean and mean" to a recent membership survey by lhe activities." "My generation will be Th~owing people _on lhc ash. heap
increase effiCiency in order to meet· American Management Associa- the permanent victims of the whtle ~hey are sull producllve is
foreign cotnp~tltion in ·the· new tion of New York. It found that rest;tucturing of the American CC9fl- not mo~ally pr politically acceptglobal economy.
·
lilmost half of its 870 member com- omy," a California-man told his able. If loya.lty up no longer
Wit~ manufacturing employ- panics had 'cut .their wodcforce this local newspaper.
implies \1 reciproc!llloyalty' down
ment dropping by 3 million work- . year, with the redui:tioriS averaging
That helps,.explain why the in the jobJ11Brlce~ government must
e~ betweeli 1979 and 199Z, blue- 10.4 percent. According to' ihe
United Auto Workers Union is do more to,take up the . k .
'
collar employees were lh,e first 'to as!oCiatjon, more lhan half of lhose concentrating its current contrict
In part, that is what a national
go. Then white-collar, middle·man- laid off were middle managers, talks with the big automakers on health care system is all about But ·
agement types began to feel the ax.. supervisors and technicians, the . preserving the jobs and SaJ8rieS of there should ·also be otlter gua'ran- :
Today. ii can be safely said th8t the kinds of workcts tradiiionally pro., Its currennnemberuatlter than on ~ bridges between forced earl)' :
only. people who feel secure about tee ted. from layoffs in past down, · JlrtSerYingjObs for the nex1 8-.-.- . ~ll~ements. and th~ kic~-in .of :
!hell' future are die super-ijc~ and ,. turns:
uon. Labor's crisis is in lhe here Social Secunty. 'The mtegrlly and .
thOIC who don't keep up wit!' _t.he
Move up the income scale a and now, as Detroit's Big Three vesting of private pension systems ·
~ws. . 'I
. ·
notch and the story. is no less keep sheilding \Wikers !il a nc.ver• . must be, more thoroughly insured :
Rolll!'g '¥iJusunents !0 changed .sflU1(ing. As class secrecary of my ending struqle to become more or guarantee4 by government than .
· econom1c clt'Cumslafices are noth· college class, I hear regillatly from competiti.ve w1th Japan.
· .
~Y are n\)W. More attention and ;
ing new in. American or world his- classmates around the country
Detroit is bot alone. Manufac- · funds should be allocated to the ·
' tory. ~evolutionary ch~\'ges ill Three who have bOen evicted fro~ tiuen .eut.275,000 wortm over the rettaining of dis(:il~ workers.
.
empi!'Yment ~IIUns and wotldng -~hat bad seetlled to be safe ~tiel . past yeau:, llt!;onling to"recent stud'
· Hoddlng Carter Ill, former ;
con4inons have been wrought pen- m upper and middle management tcs. Thanks jn ~ .to such cuts,
State l)epartme11t spokes111an .
odically ·sin~ l~e dawn of -the · wrote within :me past two month~. • With an atlen4ant investment in and award.·wlnnlDI repilrfer; edl· . .
IndUS!rial Re}'Oiun~.
.
Eight ·have done so over lhe
ne~"uipme!U and ~meihods, . tor llbd }lubliJber,.ll.,...._l
B~t. to UJII!entaild hi~ 1s not year. The following excerpts
mannfa:J:uriqg protl!lctlvity rose 111 MaiiiStreeJ, a Wuhlliat!in; J).c .• , .
to mmtmiie 1ts effects m ·the here one letter are illustrative (names a rate of 5.3'percent, compared to a baaed teleVIsloo production com· .:
and now. As trends forecaster Ger- . are cl!anged for obvious reasons):
fall in the overall "'!liuess produc- pany.

dd;ng Carter Ill

-=------

~Ey,

61\RNEy·,
6/\Rt(EV.
...

...

J::

\.

\

..

ot :

4· '

.

-(1-

bel6w.
.
At another s1te, 20 miles north
of Cincinnati, DOE has released
more than half a million pounds of
uranium into the air and water,
raisin~ f\ldioactivity levels _in near·
by drinking wells to 250 tunes the
level considered safe. In December
1991, DOE released contaminated
water from a nuclear reactor into
the Savannah River 10 South Carolina.

Dole noted that right-wing conserv'atlve commentator Pat
Buchanan, former presidential candidate Jerry Brown, consumer
advocat~Ralph Nader and civil
rights leader Jesse Jackson were all
vocal opponents of the accord.
According to sources at the Mexico
City meeting, Salinas retorted:
"That's a Molotov cocktail."
Dole, one of NI\FfA's key supponers in the Senate, alSo informed
Salinas that there weren't enough
votes in the House to pass the trade
agreement, but at least 38 out of 44
Republicans in the Senate supported it. "He is now aware of the
depth of opposition, but he doesn't
want to give the appearance of
being a supplicant," said one
source present. "There's a great
deal of national pride there."

AND TO MAKE
TH~C; NEW HEALTU{ARf

.

It was a curious atmosphere, given that more serious ethical questions
have been raised in the past without a rush for reforms. ·The Legislature
has been debating campaign reforms several years without passing a biD.
Some said Jones' problem is like the proverbial straw that broke the
camel's back, and is serving as a catalyst for action on deeper reforms.
Senate President Stanley Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, said public mistrust
goes beyond honoraria, which he and many others have accepted in the
past without controversy.
He said the displeasure was reflected last year when voters overwhelmingly limited lawmakers' terms to eight years, and that the flap over Jones
is re-enforcing their concerns.
Riffe predicted passage of what he called landmark ethics legislation
tl)at wiD ease concerns about lobbying disclosure, conflicts of interest and
outside income. "Let's get it done," he said.
Aronoff said, "I love this institution. If it takes tough medicine to keep
it healthy, I am willing to take the pill."
]ones admitted he accepted a Toledo health-care group's honorarium
of $500- $1 less than 11\e amount that must be reported. But he said he
returlled the money and declined payments of $500 each from four other

OHIO Weather

Page-2- The Dally Sentinel

WASHINGTON - Locals tout
it as the ''waste capital of the
world ." But it's not the U.S.
Congress nor an abandoned landfJJl
in Mexico City. Ralher it lies in th•
pristine state of Washington, a sordid monument to Cold War excess.
It's the Hanford Nuclear Reservation, and for decades it has built
bombs in frantic competition with
the Soviet Red Menace. Now that
the nuclear arms race has subsided,
the cleanup poses political chatlenges as daunting as any arms
race.
"We're not doing much better
than the Russians" in terms of
nuclear cleanup, Rep. Peter
DeFazio, D-Ore, told us. "They
(the Russians) dumped a whole
bunch of waste into a mine and
ulumately ... (there was) an explosion.and it_destroyed an area of the
Sov1et Umon and l'¥"ed 11 mto a
nuclear wasteland. We ~~tually
have that threat at Hanford. .
In an age when laws hke the
Clean Water Act place tight restric-

Pomeroy...;..Mid.d leport, Otllo

..

•

IToledo I 66' I

IMansfield Iss• I•
IND.

Youngstown

-~
•lcoiumbusls7•

·I

The Daily sentinel-Page

3

Cooler temperatures forecast for Thesday
By The Associated Press
The record high on this dale in
flooding. A cold front will move south of Columbus was 89 in 1959. The
Rain fell early today in Key
Ohio tonight. Clouds will linger record low was 29 in 1987.
West, Fla., and San FmnclSCO.
over the east, along with a sli~t ·
Sunset IOnight at 7:09 p.m. SunA fast-moving col&lt;! front movchance of showers. Decreasmg rise Tuesday at 7:32 a.m.
ing East from the Great Lakes
cloudiness will occur across the
Around the nation
slateS was expected to scatter light
west Lows should range from the
Clear skies and fair weather
showers across parts ol the
mid-30s over the northwest, where covered most of the nation early
Appalachians and the Northeast.
scattered frost is possible, to the today, with some rain on the West Showers were possible across
mid-40s over the far south.
Coast and in Fl~da.
upper Texas and the Gulf Coast
High pressure will build over
Thunderstorms were forecast to states.
the region on Tuesday. Skies will rumble from the Pacific Ocean
On Sunday, sun covered most of
be partly to mostly sunny.lt will be across the West Coast and into · the nation keeping temperatures
a cooler, with highs ranging from Nevada. Heavy thunderstorms also above normal, except in the Norththe mid-50s over the northeast to were expected to pound Southern east where it was 10 to 15 degrees
the upper 60s in the far south.
Florida, perhaps causing some local cooler than normal.

In southern Texas, lhunderslonn
winds damaged uees and deslroyed
some property in Sabinal, and damaged trees and power lines at
Uvalde. Heavy rain caused some
flooding in Hawaii.
The nation's high temperatute
Sunday was 107 in Lake Havasu
Citr.. Ariz., and Palm Springs,
Calif.
Highs today were fcncast in the
70s and 80s for most of the nation
with some 60s in the Northeast. SOs
in the upper Great ~ states and
90s in some areas of the Southwest.

P.A. Denny cruises slated
W.VA.

KY.

~,~,--~1!~~-·
Showers T-srorms Rain

FTvrrlBS

Snow

Ice

Sv?"y Pt. Cloudy Cloucly

~. Auoc'-t.d PretJs GrapNcsNet

01993 Accu-Weather, Inc.

------Weather----Southern Oblo
Partly cloudy early, then
decreasmg cloudiness. Low in the
. m_id-40s. Tuesday, mostly sunny
wull the high 65-70.
Extended forecast:

Saturday - 9-11 am . with
boarding time at 8:30a.m. Race
cruise at 2 p.m. with boarding time
at I p.m.
T1ckets are $10 for adults and
$8 for children and are available at
Clark'~'Jewelry, Banks Construction and the Meigs County Chamber of Commerce office in
Pomeroy, Valley Lumber in Middleport and Bob's Market in
Mason, W.Va.
For more information, contact
Cheryl Thomas at 992-{;763.

The following cruises on the
P.A. Denny stemwheeler have been
scheduled for the upcoming Big
Bend Sternwheel Festival in
Pomeroy.
Thursday - Senior Citizens
Cruise from noon to 2 p.m. with
boarding time II: 30 a.m. Tickets
are available through the Meigs
County Senior Citizens Center for
$8.
Friday - 2-4 p.m. with boarding time at 1:30 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.
with boarding time at6:30 p.m.

,Meigs announcements

Wednesday through Friday:
Fair and warmer. Lows in the
mid-30s to low 40s on Wednesday Class trip meeting slated
and hi~hs in 70s. Lows Thursday
A meeting of all Eastern High
and Fnday in lhe mid-50s to low School seniors and their parents
60s and highs in the 80s:
interested in the class trip has been

scheduled for Wednesday at 7:30
p.m. in the high school cafeteria.
Masonic Lodge to meet
Pomeroy Masonic Lodge 164,
F. and A. M. will meet Wednesday
at 7:30p.m. at the Masonic Temple
in Middleport.

:-----Area ·deaths----William Walters

FrankHelm

Mary Bayles
Mary Viola Bayles, 87, of Middleport, died Saturday, Oct. 2,
. 1993, at Holzer Medical Center in
Gallipolis.
.
Boril in Pomeroy, Aug. 8, 1906,
:s]le was the daughter of the late
George and Uphmia Piatt Batey.
.She was a homemaker and a mem,ber of the Meigs County Senior
Citizens.
She is survived by a daughter
and son-in-law, Virginia and Donald Payne of Huber Heights, three
grandsons, Danny, Dale and Douglas Payne all of Huber Heights,
and several nieces and nephews.
Besides her parents she was preceded in death by her husband,
Clyde Bayles in 1976, two brothers, James and Ben Batey, and two
sisters, Bessie May .Quillen and
Celia Hite.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at II a.m. at lhe Fisher
Funeral Home in Middleptl!t, with
the Rev. lames Keesee officiating.
Burial will be in Rock Springs
Cemetery, Pomeroy. Friends may
call at the funeral home Monday 7
to9p.m .

Ralph Van Meter
Ralph Thomas Van Meter, 80,
of·Clifton, W.Va. died Monday at
the Pleasant v alief Nursing_Care
Center.
Born June 27, 1913 in Clifton,
he was the son of lhe late Harry
and Maud-Stewart Van Meter.
He is survived by wife Loretta
Lee White-Van Meter of Clifton;
one son Myron Dale Van Meter of
Tucson, Ariz.; one daughter Janice
Van Meter of Tucson, Ariz.; one
brother Bill Van Meter of Clifton,
W.Va.; three sisters Lucy Johnson
of Milton, w. Va., Kathleen Van
Meter of New Haven, W.Va: and
Josephine Justice, of Clifton; five
grandchildren; several great grandchildren; and several nieces and
nephews.
He was preceded in dealh by
two brothers Leonard and Raymood Van Meter.
,
Van Meter was a retired .armer
and construction worker.
Services will be held I p.m.
Thursday at the Fogleson Funeral
Home with Tim Vaughn and Titus
Lehman officiating wilh burial at
Qraham Cemetery. Friends may
call from 2 to 4 p.m. and 1 to 9
g.m. Wednesday at the funeral
ome.

Frank Helm, 75, of Wilkesville,
died Sunday, Oct. 3, 1993 at Huston Nursing Home in Hamden.
He .was born on 1an. 9, 1918 in
Wellston to the late Harry and
Geotgia (Buckley) HeJm).
This World War II U.S. Army
veteran, who was a member and
past commander of the American
Legion Post 476 in Wilkesville,
was a former mayor of Wilkesville,
a retired typeSetter for McBee Systems in Athens, a member and
elder of W~esville Presbyterian
Church and a member of the
Wilkes Grange.
He was preceded in death by his
fust wife, Betty (Walburn) Helm,
and twO brothers;
Survivors include his last wife,
Mary A. (Strausbaugh) Helm,
whom he married on ]une 24, 1%7
in Wilkesville; one son (David
Helm of Snellville, Ga.), two
grandchildren, four •stepchildren
(Manon Camfbell of Gallipolis,
Hughie "Lariy 'Ogdin of Pomeroy,
Del L. Ogdin of Langsville and
Ann TriJW of Lancaster),- 14 stepgrandchildren, four step-greatgrandchildren and one brother
(Paul Helm of Denver, Colo.).
The funeral will be Wednesday
at 1 p.m. at Wilkesville Presbr.!m.an Church, where the body w11llie
in state one hour before the service.
R~llv. Kffia~ Puckuriale':landUITbeim Tvripp
w1 o ICUite. B
w
at mton Memorial Park, where American Le$ion Post 476 will conduct
full military honors.
.Friends may call McCoy-Moore
funeral Home Tuesday from 2 to 4
p.m. and from 1 to 9 p.m.
In lieu of .flowers, memorial
gifts may be given to the Wilton
Civic Association, c/o Mrs. Jane
Ann Bums, treasurer, Wilkesville,
Ohio45695.

J. Howard McCoy

Long-time Middleport merchant
William (Bucky) Walters, 70, of
Middleport; died Sunday, Oct. 3,
1993, at the residence of a daughter
in Athens.
Born J.an. 5, 1923, in Middleport, he was the son of Ruth Jones
Walters of Columbus, and the late
Guy Walters.
He was in business in Middleport for more than 51 years . He
served on Middleport Village
Council for 18 years, was a veteran
of the U.S. Army and a Middleport
High School graduate.
Besides his mother, he is survived by his wife, Sally Goodwin
Walters of Middleport, a son and
daughter-in-law, William Doxie
and "Brenda Wal!er$ of Hamden, a
son, Tommy Ray Walters of Long
Bottom, a r_:t.:ter and son-in-law,
Penni and
mir Jeric of Athens;
two daughters, Melanie Walters of
Pomeroy, and Sally Moore of
S11o\\lville; II grandchildren, 1
great-grandson, a sister, Betty
Buskirk of Columbus; three brothers, Jack, Sam, and Richard Walters, all of Columbus, and a fatherin-law, Charles Van Cooney of
Middleport, and several nieces and
nephev.:s.
Besides his father, he was preceded in death by a sister in infancy, and his mother-in-law, Gertrude
Van Cooney.
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at I p.m. at the Fisher
Funeral Home in Middleport. The
Rev. Phillip Allen will officiate and
burial will be in Rh&gt;erview Cemetery. Friends may call at lhe funeral
home on Tuesday from 5 to 9 p.m.
Memorial contributions may be
made to the Athens Area Hospice ,
P. 0. 873, Athens, Ohio 45701 .

Court appoints
Judge Cox

J. Howard Mc_C oy, 85, of
LANC.'5TER, Ohio (AP) Coolville, died Sunday, Oct. 3,
The
Ohio Supreme Court appointed
1993, at Camden Clark Memorial
two judges to a panel that will
Hospital in Parkersburg, w. Va.
He was born on March 30, 1908 decide the case of a man accused of
· spen,er,
" w. va., a son of lhe killing a Lancaster policeman.
.m
The trial of John Wesley Fra·
late Kenneth and Carrie Davis
zier,
30, of Lancaster, will remain
McCoy. He was retired from lhe
before
Judge Joseph Clark of FairCoolville Mill after 30 years of ser·
field County Common Pleas Court.
The Supreme Court on Friday
vl~.urviving are his wife of 65
years, VirJ!::ia Nestor McCoy, two appointed Judge John Martin of the
sons and
ghters-in-law, Joe and Fairfield County court and retired
Alice Crites of Coolville, Melvin Judge Donald Cox of Gallia Counand Ester Mae Nestor of Grove ty Common Pleas Court to join
City; a daughter and son-in-law .clark. Cox now lives in Columbus.
No trial date was set
Frances and Wayne Chambers of
Frazier. who was being held in
Columbus;
and
a
sister,
Hazel
J·
the Pickaway County jail, is
McCoy Crites of Ravenswood.
charged_
with aggravated robbery
He was preceded in death. by his
and
two
counts
of aggravated murparents, a brother, Homer McCoy,
The Daily Sentinel
der.
He
is
accused
of shooting Offiand an infant sister. ·
(~SPS 113-Nt)
cer
Brett
Martwood
during a chase
Funeral services wifl be held
Publilbed every lltuDooa, MoDdty lbroap ' T
d
1
after
a
convenience
store robbery
Frida!'. 111 court st., Pomoror, Ollio by me ;
ues ay at 1 p.m. at lhe WhiteFeb.
21.
. Ottio V~ky Publltlllna eo-riMultlmedla • Blower Funeral Home in Coolville,
IDe., p.,..,.y, Ohio •s769, I'll. 1&gt;92·2JS6. : with Pastor David Kaczmarski offiIf convicted, Frazier could be
-.,., '"" - · pold "Po~~~~n~y. Obio.
• •
B
.
.
sentenced
10 death.
; c1atmn· unal will be in the
On
Wednesday,
Frazier waived
~,.p.!""~:,'~"'t.~r~ .I Coolv1le Cemetery. Friends may
his
right
10
a
jury
trial,
six days into
ReprmDUIIY&lt;, Brlllllm 1&gt;1-opa' s~. . call at the funeral home Monday
jury
selection.
733 Third Av'""'· New Yort. 1&gt;1•• York ,1 (today) 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
10017.
'·
.--'""':
. ..' ' " " ' : ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . , . . . - - - .

More Americans
pushed into poverty

Dinner to be held
A steak dinner will be served by
the Ladies Auxiliary of the Chester
Volunteer Fire Department at the
.frrehouse Sarurday from 4 to 6 p.m.
The menu will consist of steak,
mashed potatoes and gravy, green
SUITLAND, Md. (AP) - Lin- today to release poverty and
beans, cole slaw, roll, dessert and
gering
unemployment amid a slow income statistics for 1992, the ftist
beverage. The cost is $5. Reservarecovery
from the recession pushed run year or the economic recovery
tions can be made with Cleo Smith,
hundreds
of thousands of more and the last year Republicans were
985-3521 lnzy Newell, 985-3344,
Americans
into poverty last year, in the White House.
or Elsie Folmer, 985-3871.
In 1991,35.7 million Americans
analysts say.
lived
below the poverty line, the
The
Census
Bureau
planned
Fall rummage sale
number since 1964. Altohighest
The annual fall rummage sale of
gether,
14.2
percent of lhe populaEleanor Circle will be held at
llion
was
poor,
the highest rate since
Heath United Methodist Church,
1984.
Main and South Tnird, Middlepon,
Robert Greenstein, executive
Thursday, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
director of the Center on Budget
and Friday, 9 a.m. to l·p.m.
The followin$ actions for
~licy Priorities, a Washington
divorce or dissoluuon of marriage and
pubhc
ISSues group, projects lhe
were filed recently in the Meigs 1992 poverty
was near 15 perVETERANS MEMORIAL
County Common Pleas Court of cent, putting rate
the
number of poor
Saturday admissions - Nelson Judge Fred W. Crow 10.
near
the
1962level
of 38.6 million ·
Watson, Pomeroy; Nan Moore,
Gina Phillips, Middleport,
the
combined
effect o't
"
It's
divorce from Virgil Phillips, MidMiddleport.
higher
unemployment,
a sharp
Saturday discharges - James dleport; Christina L. Bryan.
in
long-ttnn
unemployincrease
Rickman, Pomeroy; Merle Davis, Pomeroy, divorce from Derry
Rutland.
Bryan, Middleport; Albert Holman, ment, a continued decline in wages
Sunday admissions - Verda Racine, divorce from Beckie Lynn and sharp cuts in a number of states
Bailey, Middleport.
HolfiJan, Racine; Sherri Ann Chap- in basic; safety-net programs."
Sunday discharges- None.
man, Racine, and Monte Dale
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER Chapman, Pomeroy, dissolution;
The Rutland PTO will meet 7
Oct 1 dischuges - Zachary Jeffrey S. Jones, Pomeroy, divorce
Fulks, Herman Sisson, Marie Mori- from Jill M. Jones, Charleston, p.m. Tuesday at Rutland Elemenarty, Julie Mecham, Presley Roush, W.Va .; Keitha Ann Hunt, Long tary not tonight as reported earlier.
Myrtle Lego, Wilbur Kirk.Joop; Bottom, and Robert Lee Hunt, All parents are encouraged to
attend.
Myrl Gibbs, Myra Martin, Phifip Long Bottom, dissolution.
In
addition
the
following
Snoddy, Janet Smith, Mary Hope,
Oscie Boalcin, Henry Cook, Mary divorces were granted: Healher A.
Hartley from Floyd A. Hartley·
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
Miller and Kamala Maple.
Angie
Lorie
Apperson
fro~
446·4524
....
Oct. 2 discharges - Bobbie
Eaches, Bumetta McGowan, Mary Dwight 0. Apperson Jr.; Jody M.
Arnold, Ethel Smith, Donnie Gardner from James W. Gardner.
Also a dissolution was granted
Adlcins, Frank Helm, Mrs. Thomas
to
William
J. Stone and Carla J.
Young and son, Jeanne Belville,
Stone.
Francis Trapp, Kristin Hughes and
Bryan Swan.
Oct. 2 birth· Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Parsons, daughter, of Point Pleas·
ant and Mr. and Mrs. Brian Salle.
daughter, of Vinton.
Oct. 3 discharges - Franklin
Chester Harry Gorrell, 54,
German, Cynthia Zerkle, Mrs. Jack Coolville, and Donna Jeanne Con?arson and daughter, Goldie Wall - ley. 49, Pomeroy, were granted a
marriage license recently in the
brown and Paul Floyd.
Oct. 3 births - Mr. and Mrs. Meigs County Probate Court of
Timolhy Kern, daughter, of Port- Judge Robert Buck:.
land.

Divorces and
dissolutions

Hospital news

Co"ection

7

Couple receives
marriage license

''Me? Become a foster parent?
No Way!"
Believe it or not, this was once the feeling
of many people who are now and have
bet!~n successful foster parents. Making the
can be difficult. But it can
to many rewarding experiences- and
knowledge that you're doing something
that really matters.

· ·· ~

POSTMAS'I'ER.: Send llddreu clwla- lo The
o.tly Set~tinel , lll Court SL, Ponwoy, Ohio

~

Big Band
Sterawh•l

01.!169.
S~ISCIUPTJON

RATES

lr c.rrhr or Motor lout.
011c w.u. ........................................- ..... Jt.60

Olio M -..............................................16.9'
Olio Y..-.... ,.................................... - .. 51120

Oct. '7, 8, ... ·

Sullo&lt;rlbtn DOl deliri .. to pay liJe twrl«llll)'
rtmit· tlld¥tDOe direci to 1bt DIUJ Stlt1MI
oa o
or ll...,lh ~- C!ocllt wiD be
...... "'bl&lt;llpdoll by IIIII!

J&gt;lllllltted Ia . . .

-llome--11~
lpllo&amp;
•
•

......

I

- .... c...,. Jli.U
.
.13 Weeb.. .............................................
26 -

.........,..................................... .$411~

PurchiN y~r P~. O.ny Boet CruiH Tickets now at the
• .- ·
•
Following: .
··
·
·
Clllrk'a .18welry, Valley Ll.lmber, Banke Conatructlort, Bob's
Martc.t In liMon, Melp CO. Cllamber of Com_m. ·

. S l -:........................................, ...$14.76

.

The Meigs County Department of Human
Services needs caring adults to provide
temporary homes to children of all ages.
Financial reimbursement, training, and
case management are provided by the
Agency.

. Festival

SINGLICOPY

·
PlUCK
Oolly...................................- ...- 1 1 C...g

-.m
&amp;1... - - . . -

COOK-~FF PRIZES -Jayk~ Warner, son or Jay and Sherry
Warner, diSplays some or the pr1zes to be awarded in Saturday's
Chili Cook-orr at the Big Bend Stemwheel Festival. In the corpOrate dass, first, second and third place winners will receive trophies and copper-plated chili pots while winners in the individual
class will receive prizes of$100, $SO and $25.

Help us make th.e most important
investment we can- our children! Call now
992-2117 for information.
.
.

Adub- 10.00 Children 8.00

c-.

.
O!tltl&gt;l• . . .
13 -~ .....;.;.. , .............. ;.................. .$:13.40
a Woola! .............,...............:...;...... MS~

's.v..-.1.. Crul- -llble

Call Cheryl 'lhclmU at 1182..-rl3
~~~·~~--~· ~----~~ &gt;L~A~.~~~~--~~•.~----------~~--------------~
. &amp; : ! -..;........ - .................................

.

/

.

u

.,

�Sports

•

: llonqay,October4,1993

The Daily Sentinel

Dodgers·hammer Giants 12-1 to give Atlanta NL West crown

By Tbe Asioc:ialtd Press
Once the San Francisco at Los
Angeles game started, the Atlanta
Braves were hardly on the edge of
. their seats after a f~w innings.
After beating visiting Colorado
. 5-3 Sunday at Allanta, the Braves
sat back, relaxed and watched the
Los Angeles Dodgers rout the
Giants 12-1. San Francisco's loss
. gave Allanta the NL West title as
both teams entered the final day of
the season with 103-58 reconls.
If they tied, a playoff game was
scheduled for tonight at San Francisco's Candlestick Part. Instead,
the Braves can rest.
. "Three in a row is~" man. afer Bobby Cox said m the midst
o a boisterous champagne celebration of the Braves' third straight

Benson, Evans lead RG teams to sweep of home invitational
University of Rio Grande runners Chad Benson and Bonnie
Evans led the way for their teammates to sweep the men 's and
women's college division races
Saturday at !he 23rd Rio Grande
Cross Country Invitational.
The victories marked a continuation of the Redmen and Redwomen winning streaks in the three
meets the teams have competed in
so far this season. Benson, a senior.
from Glenford, finished the men's
race in 25:55, while teammate
Chris Smith, a junior from Ashland, was second at 26:11. Evans, a
seuior from Kingston, finished first
in the women's race in 18:41.
"It's all of a mauer of working
together, and we saw that in our
athletes during those races," veteran Rio Grande cross country mentor Bob Willey noted about his
teams, which have combined for
some of the best performallces seen
at &amp;he school in recent years.

Willey was pat!icularly pleased
with !he packing skills shown by
the teams. Scott Wenger, a freshman, finished third for the Redmen
behina Benson and Smith wilh a
time of 26: 16, while Hidemitsu
Maeda fifth in 26:34, Mark Bennett
was seventh in 27:02, Chris Rowland 11th in 27:18, Condy Richardson 14th in 27:32, and P.J. Chadwell 15th in 27:46 to show a Redm.en plurality among the top 15
runners in the race.
In other results, Terry Andel&amp;lll
161h in 27:56, Frank Bucy 19th in
28:21; Andy Godwin 20th at 28:27,
Corey Whalen 21st at 28 :39,
Danny Hayes 23rd in 28:49, Brian
Lutz 25th in 28:59, Jeff Roberts
29th in 29:33, Chris Holt 30th in
29:51, and Jeff Kotasek 36th ·in
31:27. The race drew 58 runners.
Rio Grande won with 18 points,
followed by Lindenwood (Mo.),
53; Cumberland (Ky.), 59; Bellarmine (Ky.), 131; Columbus State

'

In the NFL,

22:01; Bill Turkovich, Galhpohs,
24:17; Laura Moog, Rio Grande,
24:50; Dave Neely, IPFW, 24:57;
Dave Walker, Rio Giandc, 26:20;
Anne MagiD, Chillicothe, 26:38;
Cecilia Cooper, Waterford, 29:26;
.Debra Sullivan, Gallipolis, 31:35;
Erik Rodgers, Rio Grande, 31:40;
Glen Prall, Gallipolis, 34:22.
Local high school results
Local high school resulu were
as follows:
Junior high girls -Erin Nehus,
Gallia Academy, first, 12:49;
Theresa Davison, Gallia Academy,
12!h, 13:54; Susan Facemire, Gal.lia Academy, 14th, 14:02; Candy
.Simms, Gallia Academy, 26th,
15:08; Christy Caldwell, Gallia
Academy, 35th, 15:35; Angie
Carter, Gallia Academy, 38th,
15:41; Court)ley Cromlish, Gallia
Academy, 42nd, 15:53; Jessica
Walker, Gallia Academy, 50th,
16:05. Meadowbrook was fllSt with
55 points, Gallia Academy third
with 88. The race drew 113 runners.
Junior high boys- Josue Davison, Gallia Academy, 14th, 12:12;
Cody Cui lip, Gallia Academy,
31st, 12:48; Kevin Walker, Gallia
At East Rutherford, N.J., Cun49ers 38, Vikings 19
Academy, 54th, 13:26; Bruce Beeningham broke his left leg in the
At San Francisco, Steve Young gle, Gallia Academy, 65th, 13:44;
second quarter as he moved around was woozy from four sacks and Jeremy Pratt, Gallia Academy;
in the pocket and was hit by Mar- three roughness penalties.
78!h, 14 ;08; Donovan Davis, Gallia
vin Washington and Scott
Ahead only 24-19 with 11:34 Academy, 871h, 14:31; Tyler BurMersereau.
left, Dexter Carter had a 22-yard nett, Gallia Academy, 891h, 14:52;
Bubby Brister relieved and led punt return and Young led the Nin- , . Walter Strafford,·Gallia Academr.
the Eagles back from a 21-0 deficit. ers (3-2) on a 56-yard, seven-play 9Isr.. 14:59; Nate Hemby, Galha
New York (2-2) went ahead 30-28 drive. Carter added a 72-yard punt Academy, 98th, 15:28; Christian
on a safety, but Eric Allen inter- return wi!h 4:46 left to wrap up the Casanova, Gallia Academy, IOO!h,
cepted a pass by Boomer Esiason win against !he Vikings (2-2).
15:36; Adam Greene, Gallia
and returned it 94 yards for the
Cowboys36, Packers 14
Academy, 107th, 18: 17 ; Aaron
winning score.
At Irving, Texas, recently . Epling, Gallia Academy, 109th,
Chiefs 24, Raiders 9
signed kicker Eddie Murray tied a 19:55. Beavercreclc was forst overAt Kansas City, Joe Montana club record with five field goals, all with 63 points, Gallia Academy
was 7 -of-9 for 68 yards and two Troy Aikman was 18-of-23 for 317 ninth with 242. The' mce drew 173
touchdowns before gening hwt.
yards and a touchdown and Emmitt runnell.
Marcus Allen, playing against Smith scored on a 22-yard run and
High School Girls Divisi'M II
his fanner teammates, scored on a bad 71 yards in his fllSt stan of the
4-yard run for his IOOth career season.
Dallas improved to 2-2; Green
touchdown.
Kansas City (3-1) is tied for fllSt Bay dropped to 1-3.
Bills 17, Giants 14
in the AFC West. Los Angeles (22) had 16 penalties.
At Orchard Park, N.Y .. Jim
Seahawks 31, Chargers 14
Kelly threw an B-yard touchdown
At Seattle, Rick Mirer had to pass to Pete Metzelaars wilh 2:27
leave the game in the opening half left to put Buffalo ahead, and
with a sprained left ankle, but Bruce Smith sealed the win by
replacement Dan McGwire threw sacking Phil Simms on fourth
his fllSt NFL touchdown pass to down as the Giants moved downBrian Blades with I 0 seconds left field in the last two minutes.
The Giants (3-1) had four
for a 17-7 Seatde lead.
turnovers,
twice as many as BuffaBlades had 10 catches for 132
lo
(3-1).
yards for Seattle (3-2), and Mirer
Broocos 35, Colts 13
was 25-of-40 for 282 yards. San
At
Denver,
John Elway ihrew
Diego dropped to 2-2.
two touchdown passes and staked
Denver (3-1) to an early 28-0 lead

CommunitY CoUege, 139; and Indiana/Purdue-Fort Wayne, 144. The
victory was even sweeter for &amp;he
Redmen in that they had bested
Lindenwood and Cumberland, both
among the top 20 cross country
teams in the NAIA last week.
In the women's race, Evans left
her competition in the.dust with her
filSI place finish, with Dawn Vaile
of IPFW fmishing second in 20:18.
However, !he third and fourth place
spots were captured by first-year
Rio Grande runners Robin Egelboff
and Adrianne Harris, as Egelhoff
po~ted a. time of 20:33 and Harris
firushed m 20:37.
.
Following them were Angel
Robinson, lith in 21:49, and Jennifer Beyer in 13th place in 22:16.
The race drew 22 rumers.
·
Overall team scores put the Redwomen first with 32 points, followed by IPFW with 38, 68 for
Cumberland and 73 for Lindenwood.
·

Open race results
. The meet, sponsored by Bob
Evans Farms Inc., drew nearly 70
hijlh school teams from Ohio, West
VIrginia and K~tutky, as well as a
number of unauached runners who
competed in the open race.
Mark Cline, Chillicothe, a Rio
Grande student and assistant to
Willey's program, won the open
race wi!h a linle of 16:56, followed
by Mickey Grass of Huntington
East in -17:06. Other results of the
event, which drew 25 runners, follow in order of finish:
Chris Williams, Rio Grande,
17: 19; Anthony Callahan, Rio
Grande, 17:20; Mike Schoudel,
IPFW, 17:48; Chris Anderson,
Bainbridge, 18:36; Bob Bozer, Rio
Grande, 18:42; Terry Kizer, Mount
Healthy, 18:48; Larry Ritchie,
Marietta, 18:54; Rich Haft, Rio
Grande, 19:17; Mike Kennedy,
Meigs, 19:31; Harrv Nehus, Gallipolis, 19:41; Iris Black, Dayton,
20:24; Angie Malone, Gallipolis,
20:42; Ken Holley, Gallipol_is,

Saints, Eagles unbeaten after five weeks' play
By CHRIS SHERIDAN
AP Sports Writer
Five weeks into the season and
only two teams remain ·undefeated
- the New Orleans Saints and !he
Philadelphia Eagles.
Staying that way will be easier
for the Sainu !han it will for the
Eagles.
New Orleans upped its record to
5-0 wi!h a 37-6 domination of the
Los Angeles Rams. The Saints
have next weekend off before playing Pittsburgh, and their next tough
challenge dOesn't figure to come
until Week 11 against Green Bay.
The Eagles will have plenty of
tough challenges before then
because they'D have to play wilhout Randall Cunningham. The
quarterback broke his left leg in

Philadelphia's come-from-behind
35-30·victory over !he New York
Jets.
Saints 37, Rams 6
At Anaheim, Calif., the Rams
(2-3) kept it close for three quarters, but New Orleans scored 20
points in the fourth.
With the Rams (2-3) trailing by
10, but in possession of !he ball at
the Saints 35, Rickey Jackson
sacked Jim Everett to force a fumble and Wayne Martin recovered,
and the Saints scored on a 30-yard
touchdown pass to Patrick Newman to extend the lead to 23-6.
Tyrone Hughes then returned a
punt 74 yanls for a touchdown and
Derrick Ned scored on a 35-yard

run.

Eaeles 35, Jets 30

Riverside Golf CluJ? to host
tournament set for Saturday
12.5-11.5 and 16.5-13.5 margins.
The points totals are accumulated at the rate of One point per
match wit half points awared for
matches that are tied.
The 1993 Riverside team consists of Ty Roush, the Riverside
professional, Tom Woods, 1993
champion; Gary Bates, runner-up
in 1993 with a playoff; York
Ingels, runner-up in 1993 with a
playoff; and Bob Greene, four-time
club champion.
Others on &amp;he team are Bob Kincaid, 1993 Riverside open champion; Foster Grinstead, 1993 sen1or
champion; Gary Roush, Davie
Reed, Jeff Arnold, Lance Repp,
Ron Spencer"and two players to be
picked by the team captain.
The 1993 Cliffside team consists of r.ofessionat Mike Haynes,
Don Swisher, 1993 club champion;
Bobby Shoemaker, 1993 runnerup; Rusty Saunders, Ohio University golfer: Ron Jackson, Howard
Baker Saunders, Steve Carter, Ron
eighth-graders Ellis, Foxy Grant, Danny Cox, Ron
Toler, Charlie Adkins, Brett Epling
defeat Meigs 20-6
a-':1 two players to be picked by the
· CI11Iside team captain.
Gallia Academy took scored 20
Fans are admitted free of charge
ftrst quarter poinu and went on 10 beginning at 8:30a.m. daily.
defeat the Meigs Marauder eighth~ fOOiball team 20-6 on Sept.

The Riverside Golf Club in
Mason will be hosting the 1993
River Cup Matches on Saturday,
Oct. 9 and SundBy, Oct. 10. The
annual event ill a very competitive
group of golf matches between
Rivcnide Golf Qub and Cliffside
Golf QUb of Gallipolis.
'111ueries started in 1989 with
the idea ~oming from the Ryder
Cup matches between the United
Stata and Europe being used as a
format
A two-man alternate shot, two
man scramble and 12 singles
matches make up the format for the
event, exacdy like the Ryder cup
with the exception of the scramble
segment which was added 11&gt; last
year's event in Gallipolis.
Althou~h Riverside won the
first event m a landslide win, 18-6,
Cliffside took the' second annual
event in 1990 wi!h a 13.5-10.5 win.
Riverside has claimed the last
two events in two tight batUes by

· GAHS

Southern reserves
win four-team match

~

Oblo River
W L
Team
Vinton County .......5 0
Nelsonville-York ...4 1
Wellston .................4 I
Belgre ....................3 I
MEIGS ...................O 5

Hocking River
EASTERN .............3 2
SOUTHERN ..........2 3
Trimble ..................2 3
Federal Hocking .... 1 3
Alexander .............. I 4
Miner .....................0 5

14

PF PA
201 23
165 65
125 56
105 62
36 162
132
87
82
48
93

58
106
166
133
141
8 177

Friday's scores
EASTERN 52, Hannan 6
Alexander 22, MEIGS 14
Chesapeake 29, SOUTHERN 20
Vinton County 50, Jackson 14
Wellston 39, Miller 8
Nelsonville York 50, Trimble

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSUUNCE

YOUR IIIDEPEIDENI
IIIIlS SERVING
•IG,COUIIY
SINCE 1161

.

Iteserve football-at home wolh·
Alexander .
VolleybaD·at home with Eastern

Tuetdlly

Complete M~icai/Surglcal Care
For Ear, Nose ~ Throat

Seventh-grade football at Gallipolis

wedaelday

PrldaJ

.

Vmity footbiD-at Wellston

Jobn I. ada
..

'

-

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

CINCINNAn .. o 4 o .roo n 89
W.temDIYWoa

0 .7lG 102 65

0 .7lG 66 49
0 .1100 92 73
0 ..100 66 . 63
0 .500 (;I 94.

NA'I10NAL CONFERENCE
EuOenno.rW L T Pel. PF PA

Pbi!adelpbl• ...... 4 0 0 I.&lt;XXJ 112 H
, I(,Y. O!lata,._. 3 I 0 .7lG 13 S4
D.llu~~""'M"-· 2. 2 0 ,500 19 12

~

W............... I 2 0 .333 76 (;I

1'11...,;,............. I 3 0 .250 64 76
II 90
ODcaso ............ 2 2 o .500 10 53
Miru8ol.l ......... 2 2 0 .soo 51 12
a.- Bay......... 1 3 o .zso 10 n

BONNIE EVANS

1 3 0 .2SO 54107

- a.s-.w...........
l 0-

0 llOOO 13&lt;1 74
SM ............. 3 2 0 .1100 12:1101
L.A. Ram. ........ 2 3 o .400 n 106
Allua\l ,.,.,u .. ,..,, 0 '

0 ,00() 91 152

Swlday'•.:ores
au..so6,AdontoO
Deaoit 10

..

T.~~~~p~

a.,._n.

ICoono Cily :14, L.A. Roidon 9
Da:Mr :Jj,lndi••palil ll
San Pranci:ac:o 31, Mi
lXI I'
New 0r1ooao 37, L.A. R,... 6
Ad1•""b*ia 3!, N.Y. JculO
Scottlo11,S..~···
Bllll'olol7, N.Y. CJionu 14
Open da'-: CINCINNATI, CLEVELAND. Hou.tlon, PiuabWJb, New Ena·

OW

land,Phomi.t

ToDight's game

AVAILABLE

WuhinJIOilat Miami. 9 p.m.

Next week's games
s.u,., Oct: lf

Orica

m.

at PhiliCidpbb, I

CNCfNN'Anot~Waui!r.l pm.
DaDuat~p.m.

Miami ..
1 p.m.
N.Y. Oi...u at Wubinpon. 1 p.m.
Ttmf~- Bar u ~. 1 p.m.
1

•

Son,.,..ot~,4pm.

New En&amp;l.IDd • PhotaU. 4 p.m.
N.Y. kuatL.A. Raiden, 4p.m.
Ocnvw. em.
7:l0 p.m.
Oped date: AtlanLI, LA. Rama, New
Orleono, Soni'Dn&lt;ioco, Dotooit, S..W.

a.,.

MODdaJ, Oct.ll
HtJuam ai Bufl'l)o. 9 p.m.

AP Top 25 college poll
The Top 2S te~nu in Tho Auocialcd
Pm• J 993 colleae football poll, with

ftrtt·plau vote~ in puaubeea, recorda
tluoush 0... :Z. """ pa;nu ......, "" 2!1

CALL
NOW

pointl for • finl·place vote ~ane
pcarn !or a lSth-pUce voce, and · in
\bc~pol[:

Team
W-L-T
I. Floddt SL (61) .... .!1·0.0
2 Alabama (1) ..........5·0.0
]. Miami ...................4-0::0
4. Noue Dame ..........! ·O.O

THIS SPACE
$16.00

Loot
..... WHk
1,541

I

1,473
1.407
1,368

2
3
4

l . Florido ................. .4-D-4 1.21l

5

6. Ohio St. ................4-0.0
1. Nebnlk• ............. ,4-0-0
1. Penn St. ............... ..5·0-0
9. Midlipn .............. l-1.0
10. OkWK:Irru ..... _, ... .4-0.0
11 . Ttm.llllee. .... :......4-I.O
12. Amon~ ...............l-0-0
13.
).1.()

1,203

7

1.140

6

!.091

9

1,040

I
10

w""""""' . . . . .

14. Tc:wA&amp;M ........1-1.0

IS. Noflh Cuolina ....5-1.0
16. f'..!ifomia ........... J -0-0.
17. LouU.W. ............5 - ~

11. V;,pdo ...............l - ~

''

992~2 · 156

12

746

IS

742

14
16
17

584
.571

m

~

380

22

22. Aubwn ................5·D-4
23. 5 -..............3-1 -1
:14. w... Vi!ptit ..... .4-D-4

2!1
214

23
13
2:1

20?
·l2

MaJ' or college
football .scores

Ala.-8-!lwn 31, Mi1eo 6
A1abtma 17, Sou&amp;h Catalina 6

~31,8"'*""1113

,.
·1

Call By 2:00 P.M. ~rld•y for Sunday Edith•~

'

'L

•·

J

Auhum 14, Vandc:ibih 10

CaL-·~
Yole21
Cilodoi6:Z.
U.Mcllae
7
ea.- :10, N. C..00.. SL 14
Do.-.. 35, OJoillooO Z4
Ddtwue St. jS, Betbuno-Cootman 26
Jlladda 3&amp;, M·s! ~\oi St. 2A
l'laoido IL 51,~ Tocll 0
Ho....S U. 32, ......... AAM 13
""""'*
21, W.ri . . 0
LSU 31,U!i, ill. 17 h

Lauilian.l Tech 17,Aitmlu St.3
"""""""SL 34, S...Cudln.o 7
Miomi 30,-... S...0....1
SL 21, 'f--Mania 21 (01')
K c.rdiu Mtf 31,1Jioony 30
HE Loui&amp;i.w26, NW • m 1riv• 2A
Nanh c...&amp;na .,, r .....El Puo 39 •
...... 1 0 . - 1

"""'"r

p· crd.24.~21
SW' rfif··l!, Soudt.a ..._,
21, Nidlotlo ,, 6
Scouohom U.14, - · Volley St. 13
r..._ 52. nut. t9
t

T-T..b15,A.... Pcoyl7

ur.a..- n. ....,holt 31
r..., Sl 56, Oiuleo1ao Soulbom o

Tulane 27, No'Y 2!1
Vqinia _.1, CIUo 7
w. Co..w.. 23, Punnaa 20
W. Kat"""y 12,1odosonYilloSt 7
W'illWn ol Muy49, VM16
y...., ...... St 26, E. Km""*r 22

Midwest

. I
. ,f

(

-

way they started

iC with a win. Hal Morris had fOlD'
hiu, includinla homer, u the Reds
oven:ame a diree-run deficit to beat
Houston.
Tbe team dial Qllelled die seuon
with a win and tfie NL 's biggest
payroU finisbed 73-89 -111 expenditure of roughlY $586,301 per win.
The Astros wm SS-77.
Cubl 4, Plclnl1
Sammy Sosa bit a two -run
homer in the first innin&amp; his 33rd,
and Twk Wendell allowed four hits
in seven-piWl innings to earn hi.J
fii'SI major league victory 11 Chicago (84-78) beat San Diego.
The Padres finished lut in the
NL West at 61-101, six games
behind the expansion Colorado
Rockies and 43 games out of fllSL

2A, Iowa 7

For West
. Ariwoo31,SoullomCol7
Cal Polr-SLO .53, Soncma St. 13
California 42., Orqm41
E. WuiUn-36, W- Sl. 22
ldoho :IS, Ullh 17
JdahoSL .59, MaN, Colo. 10
MGiduul 31, Boi. SL 24
N. Arizon123, Mmtana St. 20
NcYadl49, UNLV 14
New MClioo 41, Hawail14
NoaoDomc41,SIInfonl20
0....,. St 30, AD2ooa Sl. 14
SlliW)'''Col.l7,CSU.OU.. IS
uc Dovil45, l!umbald&lt; St 9
Wuhint10DS2.SanJOieSL 17
Sti:Z. Pocific u. o
Wyarnin&amp; 31, Ait Force 11

. .....,.n""""'

Pet.

.599
.510

.5n

.519
.463
.395
.364

n,.,,..

.642
.6l6

.52;!

.500
ASl
.414
.3TI

95

101
.

1- 30o w-p
I.Mii&amp;hSS,~IS
Louli¥111o29,.1'11toboqb7

23
26

kl.aluCity4, TAM I
c.JjfoaUa., Oaklmd 3
1

NL leaden-llnlll

BA1TINO: Oolaznaa. Colando, .370;
G•F· S10 Diop, .!51; J~criet, St.
I....ow.. .342; BonU. Saa F,n ru. .336;
Or-. CJUooao. .32!1; B.,...U. .3~ l'luzo, LaoAJoadoo, .311.
RUNS' Dy....._, PblloddpbU, 143;
B-S...P 1=,129;!loiu,A.........
Ill; 1\lolldl!,Adooll.lll; B~. Atlala. 11~ W.U Willimll, Sm FnDcilco.
lOS; D. llo!lUto. -~. 104; OrisIOID, Moaueli. 104.
RBI: 8GMa. S~rt Fr .ro, 123; Jua..
a.., ""-, I~ Gom, Al1oaoa, 117; Pl...._ Loo Aoploo, 112; Mlu Williom'
Son ·Paaoilco, too; Daultoa. Pbilodol·
pltia, 105; Zollo, Sl. LouY. 103.
IDTS: D7blr•.t.. Pbildelphi•, 194;
Or-.
19&gt;; ' - 'SL
·
1U; I. Qlaqo,
Betl.l'lao""""'
117;·
loll'"
.....
Lomo, 116&lt; 8"-, Atlaall. 112; Boodo,
Son Fo ·- III; llutl«, !,j&gt;o .......
Ill.
DOUBLES ~ Hayu, Colondo, 4!;
n,t.o.l'loilodciJ&gt;IUo 44; a;.o.-. Coi....Oo, 43; B;gia, - · 41; Gwynn,
Saa D~o, 41; Gilby, St. Loui1, 40;

o-.
Califurrs, -....

GB
3
10
13
22
33
31

1
19
Z3

' 31

37
43

ca on u.~np,

.w.;....u.-.,

n;:m•

a£VEI.AND, t14; c.

Ill.

T-.o. 211:

Chicq04, s.n DAeao t

.

40: - r...., ""'*""

a..40:
Minqerota, 39; Orift'ey Jr., s ..nle, 31!
Surboff, Milwaukee, 31; Greenwell,

a....... 31.

'RIPLES: L. Jobn1011, CUca1o. 14;
Con, Chiea&amp;o, 13; Hulle, Teut, tO;
McRae. ICan.ua Cit,., 9; T. Fernanda,

Torvato, 9: Lof\.oo, CLEVELAND, 1:

-~-

.

110MB RUNS' 0oouioz. Teua, 46;
Orllf.,-1&lt;, Seottle, 45; Thomu, au..,..
41 ; Bolio, CI.I!VELAND, 31· Nm.....,
Tu.u, 3'1; Ptl..m•, To11, 13: Carler,
T-.to.ll.
STOLEN BASBS: Loftoo. CUMIt.\ND, 70: II. Alomu, T - SS; Pok&gt;
ot1o, Colifomil. S5; 11.11'"'
, r ......
t&lt;&gt;, 53; CWtio, ColilooUo, 41; L - - •
15; Whlto, T - . !11Prl'aiJNQ (17 d"sf-): Oumln,

cw-.

POMEROY, OHIO
. 614·992·6614 .
1·800·837·I 094

1993 CHEVROLET
CAVALIER

1993 CHEVROLET
CORSICA

$8,999oR
$199

$9,999oR
$199
PerMo.

With NO Money Down.

With

60 months.

60 months.

1994 510 PICKUP
~ $10,299
UpTo
500 rwst B1yer
$9,799
•
n~~~e

12451

t«l Money Down •

See D•ler lor Detalla

~

1993 CHEVY
CAPRIC&amp;

was$23,206
NOW 19,995

~

1993 CHEVY
BERETTA

1993
GEO STORM

was•13,271
IIOW 10,995

\

$9,999

"""'mentll flguNd on 7.76% APR lor 80 montha ·

.106, SA1j·- -1:1.5, .706,
-4.36: R. o~t.Uoc~;leanl.. 19-1, .70ol,
3.:14: -.,Boltloo- 14-6, .100,.

DON TATE CHEY.·OLDS.·CAD.·GEO

.

=•r,.-:·~"6.~:

ALotandlDp-ftnal

PerMo.

.,.IIX.. •nd title , _ not lncluct.d.

ST&amp;IDOUTI: Ill-,S.Oule,

. .:.:;. .

.DON TATE CHEV.·OLDS.·CAD.·GEO

r
- tH..I:M. '"" """*-· Now
Yoolt. 14-4, .111, 4.63; ltOJ, Now Yoolt.
4.46.

EulonDITu'"
W L I'd.
:t·T---...............95 61 Jt6
NewY. . ............. II 74 .543

NFL games ...

a..,.,

CLEVELAND, 100; Olenul, Toronto,
·100; ll Alomu, Tora.no, 192; LoltGa,
a..BVElAND. 115; ~ Ni- •••
I'M; F.,..... Doood. 112.
DOUBLES: Olontd, Toroato, .54;
White, Toronlo, 41; John Vahsntin,

11-6, .750, 3.00; Bore, Clli..so, 12-S,

CINCINNA1l7.-4
LooAnsolooii,S..Ft,ncioool

0...7,~0

-~1 Boft'~20

IZ
21

New YCldl: 2. Dll:nlit I
Cllcqo 4, aJ!VI!U.Nll 0
T..-11, llallimano 6
Miy OCI 7, s.a.Je 2

troit. tl.1;
O..U.

New Yooit t, F1ooWo 2
Dinl .
t
11. I., ... 2.PbiloHplllt 0

:W::2i7~~~~t" 6

I
I0

RUNS ' ........... r...,, 1:14; Moldor,
Toronto, 121; I.Afton, CLEVELAND,
116; IVblro, r_., 116&lt; R. 11a1c1enan,
Taranto, 114; Grilflll)' Jr., S..ule. 113;
I'IUllioo. Dott-oO, 113.
lllU: Bolle, CLEVELAND. 129;
'J'homtl, Oaica&amp;CJ• 121; Cada-, TOMrto,
121; Gonzalez. Teu~, Ill; Piddet, 0..

NL 'atandlacs-ftnal

19

.SIO

DAlTING: Olerud, Toronto, .363;
Molitor, Torooto, .332; R. Alornar,
Toronto, .lU; Lafton, CLEVELAND,
.32:5; Baera•, CLE:VI!LAND•. 321;
Thomu, Chica1o, .317; Ornnwell,
Bmtcm, .315.

- • BasebQIJ • -

aNaRNA11 ........ 73
C&lt;&gt;knao ................ f»
s.. ~ ..............61
•.. . dlYtsfae Wle

61

76 .531
71 .519
10 .506
91 .-431
91 .431
94 .420

AL leoders-IIDal

w"'"-

l-Atluolo ............. I04 5I
San Pt• =it= . ~...103 59
................. 1!1 .TI
Loo ........... 11 11

26

.-.oo.

Southwest

w......

.426

t..wii,;f;:...

CiooUmoli 22, l\4oo IS
Orunblina St. 49, Prairie View 0
Howtcr~ :M, Baylor3
Oklahc:.n• Sl 't1, Tau Ch.ri&amp;tia.n 22
TeUJ 5.5, Rice 38
TCUI A&amp;Mll, Tu11Tech 6
r .... Soulhom 39, KoollVillo 26

10:1

93

3S; Planrier, Sua Oiep, 34; BcrWla. New
Y.... 34.
STOLEN BASI!S : Cur, Floridt., 51;
~. Moatreal, S3; NUoa, Atlanta.
·47; D.
~·46; JdFm...
SL Loa;., 46;
'
Mm...O. 43&gt;E.
y ...... Colond0~2.
PITCHINO (1 ~docilicm).: Portuaal,
Hou.ltOD, ll..o4, .111. 2.77; T. Greene,
~·· 16-4,
3.42; B.vine.
Allant.a, 22-6, .116, :t-20: Butkect, Su
Pna~.ll-1, .759, 3.6S; Avay, At·
I.wo, 11-6, .7l0, 2.94; Sorill. Son fnooU.
co, 21·1, .7:U, 2.12; Faaaero, Mmtral.
12-S, .706, 2.29.
S'I'RilCEOUFS ' Rijo, CINCINNATI,
227; Smoltz, Allanta, 208; 0 . Maddu,
Atluolo, 197; SdOIIinJ. Pbiladolpl&gt;io, 116&lt;
Har11i•cb, Houlton, liS; Beou, San
!Mao.l79; T. 0....... Pbiloddphia, 167.
!AVES : Myers, Otica1o. .53; Bock,
San francil.co. 48; Harvey, Floridt, 4S;
Wcaclond,- 43; Mhclo Willlomo,
Philadelphi1., 43; Lee Smith, St. Louis,
43; SWIIm. A.tlaJM, 'D.

Mordl.e.d St. 23, SE Miaouri 21
N. lllinod 45, S. lllineU I S
N. JoWl liJ, SW Miuour:i St. 14
Ohio St. Sl, NonhMA~m 3
otJahoma 24,IOWI SL 7
S. Caro1iM St. 34, Jtcbon St. 33
Soulhcm Meth. 10, Miuouri 10 (tie)
Volponioo 3S, Son Dloao 2.'l
w. Illinois 17, lllinad !t. 12
W. Michipn 21, Kan 21

v.-... . . .. .

10
15
19

.332 and Roberto Alomar went 3- game.
for-4 with five RI\1§ to fmish wilh
Bmrers 6, Red Sox 3
a career-high .326.
Boston and Milwaukee played
Scott Brow (I-I) allowed four 14 innings at Fenway Park in a
fonn.'"
. hits and four runs in six innings for game featuring five double plays,
Ryan threw more nc.-hitters (7), his forst major-league victory.
45 players, 13 pitchers, 24 strikestruck out more batters (5,714) and
Yankees 2, Tleers 1
outs and 15 walks. Pinch-hitter
playel! more yenrs (27) !han anyMike Stanley· s single wi!h one Dave Nilsson hit a twc.-run single
hodye~.~tting53majorl~
out in the ninth inning scored with the bases loaded in !he 141h,
reconls. His baseball career lasted pinch-runner Spike Owen from and 811olher run scored on a wild
longer than the major league life of second base with !he winning run pitch. Catlos Maldonado (2-2) w~
Arlington Stadium, where the at Yankee Stadium. Bobby Munoz the winner and Paul Quantrill (6Rangers began playing in 1972.
(3-3) was !he winner as New York 12) was the loser as the Red Sox
Kevin App1er (18-8) gave up finished second to tht Blue Jays in closed with their sixth straight
fOlD' hits, Struck out 10 and walked the AL Easl a.t 88-74. Tom Bolton defeat.
one in eight innings and finished (6-6) was !he loser.
Twins 7, Mariners 2
with a l~gue-leading 2.56 ERA.
Angels 7, Athletics 3
Kent Hrbek drove in four runs
Jeff Montgomery fmis(led with a
Mark Langston '(I6-11) struck with two homers, Kirby Puckett
perfect ninth for his ~lrsave, out eight to increase his total to bomezed and Kevin Tapeni (12-15)
tying Toronto's Duane Ward for 2,001. Bobby Witt (14-13) was the allowed six hits over 7 1/3 innings.
the league lead Steve Dreyer (3-3) loser at the Oakland Coliseum Tim Leary (11-9) was the loser at
was the loser for Texas, which fin- despite pitching an 11-hit complete the Metrodome.
ished second in the AL West, eight
games behind Chicago.
Wblte Soli 4, Indriins 0
--Sports briefs-The Indians lost more times
Ba.baD
than not in Qeveland Stadium, so a
NEW YORK (AP) - John
(Continued from Page 4)
defeat in the stadium ' s finale
Olerud, Paul MOlitor and Roberto
to end Indianapolis · four-game Alomar became the first teammates
seemed fitting.
- Before 72,390, Jason Bere (12- road winning streak.
since 1893 to finish 1-2-3 in a
The Colts (2-2) cut the deficit to league batting race. and Andres
5) threw seven shutout innings .
Charles Nagy (2-6) was the loser as 28-13, but &amp;he Broncos used a trick Galarraga, .370, became the forst
the AL West champion White Sox play late in the third quarter expansion team player to win a batcompleted a three-game sweep in wide receiver Arthur Marshall's ting title.
their tuneup for the AL playoffs 30-yard touchdown pass to feUow
Olerud, .363, became the rust
receiver
Derek
Russell
to
wrap
Toronto batting leader, and Juan
against Toronto, which open Tuesit up.
Gonzalez of Texas became the first
day night at Comiskey Parle.
Buccaneers 27, LioDS10
AL player since Jim Rice to win
Blue Jays 11, Orioles 6
At
Tampa
Bay,
the
Bucs
(1-3)
consecutive home run titles (46).
Joe Carter became the 25th
Barry Bonds of SID Francisco
"lajor league player to homer twice scored as many poinu as they had
in one inning when he connected all year and Reggie Cobb ( 113 won his first NL home run and
twice against Ben McDonald (13- yards) rushed for more yards than RBis titles with 46 and 123, and
Alben Belle of ClevCiand won tile
14) in the Blue Jays' eight-run sec- &amp;he team had accumulated all year.
AL
RBI title with 129.
Bears
6,
FalcoDS
0
ond at Camden Yards.
At
Chicago,
J\tvin
Butler
had
Len
Dykstra of Philadelphia led
Toronto became ·the first club
field
goals
of
52
and
48
yards.
The
the NL in runs (143), hilS (194) and
since 1893 to have teammates fmish 1-2-3 in a lea$1!C hatting race. Bears (2-2) stopped Atlanta (0-S) walks (129). Molitor led the AL in
John Olerud left woth a .363 batting on downs with 1:25 to play after . hits (211) the second time in three
average; Paul Molitor closed at the Falcons drove to the Chicago 8. seasons, and Rafael Palmiero of
Texas innms

Sat~ Frmdlco, 31; McGriff', Atlanta. n;
q..., Atlonll. 36; Piazzo, Loo ..........

Ind.iaaa St. 'IT, E. WintU 24
x.n.u 24, Colone» St. 6

7$
71
17
91

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worst Be8SOIIS the

ate he get a hit like !hat his last
time up," Ryan said. "It was one
of the few times I can honestly say
I was happy to see George in uni-

New Yolk, I.
HOMI! RUNS: Bcodt, S1n Fnnc:aco,
46; JuNce. Ahtlu, 40; Matt W'illiama,

Indiana 23, MinneiOUI 19

Sll.ouil ................ r7
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PluhWJh .............. 75
FloriJio ................... 64
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'JlUPlES: ~
13; Butler,
La.: Anplel. 10;
· · PbH•Ae!phia,
9; I. Bill, Plahuollt. 9; E. YGWII. Col·
ou.4o, I ; MaJtm. fl[a.burp. I; 0*--m

Drake 41, A\WI'II 14 ,
E. Mid!iaon IS, MionU, OIUo 7
Hilo.dolo 29, aw.r 1
Illinci.l21, Punhac 10

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Manka! ................ 94 61

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Milwaukec ............. 69

SUDday's ~~tores
Milwtukee6,BOI&amp;GD 3 (14inn.)

-:IO.Oeo.DaiO

Sunday'ollnales

-~3!,$,.......29

c::.l&amp;*t7,ColumbltZ4

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Apptlachitn SL 20, B. TCilllelsu St.

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16
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CLI!VI!LAND .. 3 I 0 .750 79 66
Pllllburp ......... 2 2 0 .500 92 7l
........... I 3 0 .2:10 II 79

dugouu.
·'
· Brett, the only playa to win batting titles in three decades, finished
with a .305 career average.
Brett, 40, announced Sept. 25
tll8l he was retiring. Ryan, 46, said
before the season this would be his
last year 'and made his fmal appearance on Sept. 22, when he tore a
tendon in his elbow at Seattle. Tbe
two took out their team's lineup
cards to a stinding ovation,
"I thought it was only appiopri-

,-au................... 94

TO'lWCII Sc. 11. Cmnocd.cut n
W•&amp; V'q:inia
VUJinia Tech 13

PP PA
11 60
60 57
65 7S
119 12
Nn&amp;&amp;land .... o 4 o .roo 51119

Dcma ............. 3 1
K.ouu City ...... 3 1
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LA.IWien ..... 2 2
S.. Jlleco......... 2 2

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Boft'o!o.............. 3 I 0 .7SO
Miomi ............... 2 I 0 .667
lndionopol;, ...... 2 2 0 .500
N.Y. Jcu ........... 2 2 0 .500

.

31,11oly

Ru""'

In the NFL ...

..,.

~

... PIIIIIItlfl.
• Clll10f.171.1144 firlnl. • lllllaffAnaiiMiillia••
......., of Aef!lil PPO &amp;ti..ntiMot•l PPO .

Mmmuh,NJ. 44,SL r.c.r't42

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Amy3l,Ab&gt;a I•

.... Ill.,[, •..•
'

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

:._ • Football • -

FOR.MORE INFORMATION

.

Cross COUJIIry al Alexander
~ VollcybaD'U·Galli8 Academy
. . . Tlllll'llla:J
VolleybaD at Wen.ton
Freshman fooiball-Marietta at
home
Ei&amp;bth-grade football-Belpre at
home

By The Asioc:!aled Press
appearances as players in the ~
George Brett went out with a Kansas City Royals' 4-1 victory
hit, Nolan Ryan 'left with some over the Texas Rangers.
.more applause, and everyone left
"It was as emotional as I've
Arlington Stadium for good.
ever gotten on a baseball field,"
Baseball fans also said goodbye said Brett; who was 1-for-4. "I
to aeveland Stadium on Sunday. knew it was my last one. I was nerThe Indians and Rangers will move vous. I was shaking."
-to new stadiums next spring, but
Brett singled off Tom Henke
two of baseball's greau won't be leading off the ·ninth, prompting'"
running across the new grass
Ryan to tip his ·hat and players
Brett and Ryan, a pair of future from both teams giving him a
Hall of Famers, made their final standing ovation in front of !heir

BULLJTIN BOARD

IN THE

·are,

•

T~Bay .... ~ .

.

were

Mell 9, Marlins 2
New York extended iu longest
winning streak of the year to. six
games by beating Florida, but finished 59-103, The game was called
in the bottom of the ninlh following
a 76-minute rain delay.
Even expansion Florida (64-98)
fared better than the Mets. But the
Marlins faded at the end, losing
their last six games.
Expos 3, Pirate~ 1
Lou Frazier drove in three runs
with a pair of singles, and hometown favorite Denis Boucher (3-1)
allowed three hilS in 6 2{3 innings
as Montreal (94-68) concluded a
hot second half by beating visiting
Pittsburgh (75-87).
Reds 7, Astros 4
The Reds ended one of their

Goodbyes to Brett, Ryan, two stadia mark last day of season

Doboit .............. 3 2 0 .600

CHAD BENSON

NL West tille. "This was the the second time Iince divisional
old rigbt-lwlder wbO hasn't bad a
toughest one. We had to win· so play IJes!m iJ! 1969 thai.'-DI
winning record since 1985. Gross
many games, it was unbelieVIIblc."
even comg mto the final day. In . pitched a six-bitter for only his
The Giants' loss gave• the 1982, Milwaukee beat Baltimore
third complete game this year .
Bravei a trip to the playoffs 8pinst on the last day to win the AL East
Rookie
Mike Piazza hoinered twice
J'!liladelph18, stsrting Wednesday
A• they have each day this and drove in four runs for the
rught at Vetmns Stadium;
weekend,. the BraveS went ahead Dodgers.
"They just beat our brains out · early.
"
ttoolde Salomon Torres started
today," Giants manager Dusty
'Giavinc (22-6) won for the for the Giants and feU to 3-S.
Baker said. "I'm proud of our eighth lime in nine Starts, allowina
Card.lalls 2, Pbillles 0
guys. I have nodling to be ashamed thr~ runs and siX hits"ln 6 2/3
Terry
Mulholland answered the
of and IIOIIC of OlD' guys have any- innings with four strikeouts and
only
nagging
question f~M:ing the
thing to be IL!h8med of.··
one walk.
McMichael pilehed playoff-bound Philadelphia, lhrowTom Glavine won his 22nd the fmaltwo mnings for hiS 19!h
mg four strong innings in the regugame on the final scbeduled day of save in 21 chances.
lar-season
finale in a loss at St.
the regular season, but didn't know
Al Los Angeles, the Giants were
Louis
(87-7S).
The Phillies (97-65)
if Atlanta's 104-58 record would never in the game, trailing 7-1 after
wrapped
up
a
dominant
season in
be good enough until hours after six innings.
which
they
set
a
league
record
by
the game.
The Dodgers, who lost the lint
spending
181
days
or
all
but
six
Atlanta and San Francisco three games of the series, counted
began the day in a tie for first. only on Kevin Gross (13-13), a 32-year- days - in the lead.

In AL affairs,

CentraJDI'tlllo8

(See NFL on Page 5)

• ·Gallipolis seared less then two
minutes .into the contest when the
This week's games
Blue Devil fniJback broke Altr a 35Soulhem slipped past Meigs to
Friday
yard run off rig!lt taCkle. It dido' t win a four-team golf match last
~lpre at Magnolia (W. Ya.)
tate the Mlrauden long to he the Wednesday at the Meigs County
MEIGS at Wellston •
contest on the first play from
Golf Course.
Vinton County at Nelsonvillescrirnmise after !he Devil touchSouthern and Meigs tied for the York•
down Matt Williams circled around top spot wilh 74s, but Southern was
Trimble at Alexander •
right eild md raced 65 yards for the able to win the match on the tie
MiDer at Federal Hocking •
toUChdown to tie the score at six.
breaker. Point Pleasant came in
· Gallipolis used a pair of two- third with a 178 an.d Gallipolis
Saturday's game
yard runs to increased the lead to carded a 196.
EASTERN
at SOUTHERN
20-6 at the half. Williams had a 60Bubby Austin of Point Pleasant
yard touChdown run called back in
was match medalist with a 40. • - conference game
the fOID'Ih period, and Meigs. had a
Meigs scores were Travis Grate
late dri~e stall inside the Blue Dev(41), Mike Franckowiak (42), Jerils' 10.
rod Douglas (4S),Jeremy Hanson
Williams carried the ball 11
(46), Jerod Cook (49) and Scott
times for 103 yanls, and Chad HanMitch (59). Other Meigs golfers
8011 carried four times for 28 yards,
not playing in the match included
while AJ. Vaughan added one for Matt O'Bryant (41) and David
five yards. Marauder q118J1«back
(45).
Btld Davenport was four for·JO in ·· Heighton
·111 Secon• St.,. P011eroy
For Southern, Matt Bradford led
the lit for 13 yards. 1be Mal)luders
the way with a 42, wa&lt;~ followed by
coughed up the ball three ~ .los­
Mason Fisher (43), Ryan Hill (44),
ing all three.
Brian Anderson (45), R~ Norris
I
(49) and Jay McKelvey (52). .
MHS sports schedule
The Marauder reserve team
ended the season wi!h a record of
8-4.
ToclaJ
Golf-TVC match at Wellston
~~)

- Jessica Strafford, Gallia Academy, fourth, 20:30; Sara Walker,
Gallia Academy, 21st, 22:3JI;
Becky Knight, Gallia Academy,
23rd, 22:42; Jencie Haner, Gallia
Academy, 24th, 22:44; Andra
Boggs, Gallia Academy, 25th,
22:45; Carrie MiUer, Gallia Academy, 35th, 24:00; Michele Davison,
Gallia Academy, 43rd, 24:33;
Whitney Adkins, Gallia Academy,
49th, 25:13; Rachele LaBella, Gallia Academy, S4!h, 25:44; Gel)nie
Tucceri, Gallia Academy, 65th,
29:50. Caldwell was first overall
with 47 points, Gallia Academy
fourth with 97. The race drew I0 I
runners.
High School Boys Division II
- Eddie Nehus, Gallia Academy,
26th, 18:20; Breh Baker, Gallia
Academy, 27th, 18 :23 ; Phil
Edmonds, Meigs, 28th, 18:25;
Crockett Roush, Meigs, 30th,
18:27; Chris Roehker, Gallia
Academy, 36th, 18:41; Bo Davison, Gallia Academy, 53rd, 19:15;
Matt Champlin, Gallia Academy,
84!h, 20:15; Aaron Salisbury, Gallia Academy, 87th, 20:19. Waverly
took fir~t place overall with 63
points, Gallia Academy was eighth
wi!h 226. The race drew 145 runners.
Other Division II teams that
competed included Piketon, Eastern Brown, Fairland, Circleville,
Wheelersb~. Warren Local, Russell (Ky.), BIShop Hanley, Alhens,
Maysvolle (Ky.), Hillsboro, Jackson, Washington Court House,
Ironton, Hamilton Ross, Edgewood, Portsmouth and Unioto.
Division I teams at !he meet included Caldwell, Marietta, Ripley,
Worthington-Kilbourne, Reynoldsburg, Harrison, Huntington
(W.Va.) East, Logan, Moeller, St.
Charles, Mount Healthy and
Columbus Independence.

.

TVC standings

The Daily Sentinel Pag• 5

:After Braves' 5-3 win over Rockies,

Monday, Octob~r 4, 1993
Page-4

·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

________j

·

HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 9:00-8:00
Sat. 9:0D-4:00; Sun. 1:00.5:00

..

OPEN-SUNDAY

\

l

�Page

6 The .Dally Sentinel

Monday, October 4; 1993':

Benefit~

of Social
Security direct deposit

By ED PETERSON
Social Security manager in
Atbens
. Social Security· is trying to
mcrease the number of beneficiaries who use direct deposit.
Research conducted for the Social
Security Administration indicates
that beneficiaries who have their
monthly checks deposited directly
into their bank accounts are 16
times less likely to report problems
with their benefits than those who
are receiving P¥ checks.
When you use direct deposit:
•you won 't need to worry about
your checks being lost,
stolen, or misplaced;
• you can be away from home
without the worry of a check
sitting unprotected in your mailbox; and
• you won't have to make a spe·
cia! trip to your bank or
stand in line to deposit your

checks.

Huffman relaysf1
Hungarian\ . ;j
exper,zences ;:
'

'

Currently about 20 million Social
Security beneficiaries take advantage of direct deposiL But that represents only about half of all current Social Security beneficiaries.
One of our goals is to ensure benefits are delivered on time and to the
right place, and direct deposit helps
us do tbaL
For more information about how
to begin direct deposit of your
monthly Social Security check call
Social Security's toll-free number,
1-800-772-1213, any business dsy
between 7 a.m. and 7 p.m. When
you call, have your Social Security
number and your checkbook, bank
statemen~ or any papers that show
your bank account number handy.
You can also ask about direct
deposit where you bank and the
bank's service represen1ative can
help you enroll on the spot.

• ham p alace
Buckzng
•
tours turn a k zngly
$3 .3 millionpro-Fit
'J
l

Bll'aTI•

'I

EAQLEB
1:4 p.m.
Bpeolll e.1y Bnl
$100P&amp;¥0fl
Thll mgood for 1
FREE oan:l.
Uc. No. 0051-342

To place an

· Call99~-2156
MoN. thru Fat. 8A.M.-5P.M •• SAT.B-12
1

:

Dear Ann Landera: I hope you
haven't closed the door on the
subject of closet smolalrs M:auoe I
would dearly love 10 stare my views.

h~=!~~
years ago when he stopped We baYc

~=:~~=

the factlhat I am forced to live wilh

Ann

ouiSidc intereSts that she is unable awful things to him. I wish' I could
to share? Maybe she is lonely and lake those ugly words back. I am
l9oldna ror a lillie excitement, like aorry now lhat I ~ him
sneaking cigarettes without getting III'OWid.
:
caughL
.
.
MaStic, N.Y.: Ijuslread about the '!
Why doesn\ he let his wife know woman who is a closet SIIIOker and
he's aware of what she is doing so am mad as·the devil. Why should a ,
they can get their relationship back grown woman have to sneak.bebindJ
on an honest basis? •• MR. X
her husband's beck to do anytltiDg'l
. From Dallas, Ore.: lam 71 years If he were a n:al man, he'd putlhe
old and have been a widow sinoe uhnys beck and tdl his jYifc abe
1990. ·~· and I were married should go ahead and .smcke if abe
for 48 years. He Slll'ted to smoke feels like iL They will botb feel
when he was 16 and quit 10 years beaer and the lll81riage willl)e a.lot
ago. But it was too liuc. The healthiel'. - rM FOR OPllN AND
damage had already been done. The ABOVEBOARD
cancer had invaded his liver and
DEAR OPEN AND ABOVE:
bones.
Your .signabR is my philosophy.
By the way, my son is a heavy Thanks to you and all who wrote.
smoker like his dad, and it worries
·' ·
me sick. lfs no use telling peOple 111
Do )'ON have q~~esrioiiS aboiu SIIJC,
stop. It's an addiction. My hands'get bUI 110 OM to talk to? AM IAiulers'
shakywbenithinlr.aboutlhis.Ihope booklet, "Sa and tM Ttrn-Ager•
you can read my writing:
is friJIIJ:. and to tM poitrl. Stlld ~
Maninsburg, W.V: My husband self-addressed, loflg, lnuiMss-~
fooled me about his smoking for tflvelope and a cMck or lfiDU)l
years. He told me hi! had quit, but der for $3.65 (tliil illcllldq pon111
after he died, we found piles of and lrandli11g) to: TWII, ~~~.;;~
cigarette butts in the basement 1 Lmtders, P.O. Box JJS6i, ._
even caught bim smOking the day Ill. 60611-0562.' (/11 CmtadD
bef01e b«: dic4, and I ~ ~ $4.45.)
'

Times Syndicate

Creators Syndlcatt''.

.L..-------...;.....J

''The queen said she was well all these feelings at this Slage of my like this woman, what do we do?
By AUDREY WOODS
satisfied with the amount raised for life. Please dlln't tell me to aee a We increase the tax on the pact.
Associated Press Writer
LONDON (AP) - Summer the restoration of Windsor Castle shrink. In the fllSt place, I can't Does that make any aenae? I'll leave
tourists who Oocked to Bucking- and very pleased with the results," afford iL In the second place, I have it to )'0!1. Sign this - A SMOKER
ham Palace for a peek at the royal spokesman Dickie Arbiter said Sat- no desire 10 dredge up the hou01s IN LAFAYETI'E
~~-~lhat~m~
DEAR LAFAYETI'E: The mail
lifestyle raised the kingly sum of ~The palace will open to IOurists this monstrouS habiL
$3.3 million to restore fire-damgenerated by this subject has been
for the next four summers. Profits
I did quit smoking once for six . multi-faceted and very informative.
aged Windsor Castle.
The profits were 25 percent are expected 10 rise now that the weeks. During tbat time I M:ame Keep reading foc more:
higher than royal planners had mOOllfi:hyhas invested $150,000 in severely depressed, ~ all lhe
hoped when the 56-day experiment .· hard-weanng carpets to protect the · tmible IIIXielies I experienced as
Dear Ann Landers: This is for
began in early AugusL
royal parquet floor from millions of an abused child came back to haunt the gentlemall whose wife is a clo8et
While Queen Elizabeth ll spent foo~~da
me. I probably could have stayed smoker. Perhaps it' he tried to look
1 000
1
60
the summer at Balmoral Castle in
loom=~~ ~k the off cigarettes if I had ~ed to at il rrom bet point or v1ew. he would
Scotland, about 377,000 people percentuof
palace tour.
~ol or drugs as a substiblte, but aeelhings differently.
toured the palace, helping to repair
Maybe lhe chooses not to smoke
For a $12 ticket and an hour's I deculed not to try.
up to $60 million in damage to
in
front of him because of all
wait
in
line,
they
viewed
Old
MasLast
week,
a
74-year-old
woman
Windsor Castle from last Novemthe
negative comments he has
ter
paintings
and
18
gilded,
brocadwas
arrested
for
trying
to
shoplift
a
ber's fare.
ed
state
rooms
that
few
commoners
pack
of
cigarettes.
Instead
of
made
about smoking, and she's
The vacationing queen th&lt;ew
ever
see.
,
helping
pathetic
tobacco
"addicts"
ashamed she can't quiL Does he have
open the palace doors after a public
On their way out, visitors spent
outcry at initial
to have taxan average $10.50 at a souvenir
shop that featured mementoes such
as $30 neckties and $83 necklaces.

MW\ ...

ode,.......,

od.......,...,,

Cltu•ified p1J6el cover 1M

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GaDia County Me•- Co., .....,
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, The silver river below is flowing and the pines look mighty fine
As a rising sun over yonder
reflects into my eyes
. And. the sky is getting brighter
silver nver starts to shine
And joyful tears start falling like
rain falls from the sky
·

.
.·v ean ]OlnS
0

Church staff
•

-

' , Hillside Baptist Church h~s
recently hired John Dean of
Pomeroy as inside maintenancy
I!JIIe!in~L ·
.D,ean, has. already headed up
- y projeCts concerning the new
• balldiliB and other ~edec:oration
jobs, bas been a member of the
i:llllldlliact Februaly 1992• it on
Ill&amp; 1011 J!o1!11 l!id is a member
~the lliJtllal poup The Panllken.

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~!£

MYCELEX-7

CREAM

7"

INSERTS 7'S

.

"""" ., 4"
riNAl.~r

WHITE RAIN
Gli.LETrE
SENSOR

CARTRIDGES
10'S·

.

Rim AlD ACC.PTS ALL
MANuFACTURIIR'S .
co~~s.
~

•

'

!

of"""-

For the Rite Aid Pharmacy _nea~ you...call 1·

HAIR·CAREA

STYUNG ' . ,
PRODUCTS •l
50Z.T0150Z l' ~

. . i

••

......WY

(3041773·5515

.

949-2168
3-11-11-1111

----.---..11

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
-Aiom Add110111
-4utawW...
-Etootllat IHid Plumbing
-Aiollng

...
.GENEUL
HAULING
Limestone
Dirt
Gravel
992-7878
7nllrno.

olnlorlor a ~Exnllr"'for""·

PalnllntJ

1114 Ford EODIIOitne V... It
hao b"n uoed ao ·an
(FREE E11111A1Et)
ambulanoo. H• 12,000
V.C. YQUNG Ill
1111._ 011 II. Can b e - at
992-·1021
401111L llreet, ..... " - ·
..... 5
B. . mu.t be aubmltltcl by
Plimeroy, Ohio
Octo..... 1tll, - wll be .._ _ _ _ _."';,1;,;,0~12;,:1111;;.:,(
o)llnld Dotober 14, at 7:00
p.m. Bid opening II otoaed
IDp flo ptlttlo. W. luM tltt
Public Notice
right
Of ..... . . ,
Of all bldl. lend your ....
Tho Polio f_o r oatd
to IMit Haven E.ll.l. Box
Etodon
wttf opon at 1:30
107 Now Haven, W. VL
Lm. and 1'01111ln open until
7:30 o'clock p.m. ol uld
(10)4,1

to--

...

a,.-oftltt

Public Notice

WICK'S HAUUNG
SERVIa

&amp;

FILL DIRT

992-3470
OWNER: Jeff Wlcbnlt.-

&amp;11QI9

TIIM•••
IEMOYil

oUGHT HAULING
oflREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
12-30-91!-lfn . '

1l

oold - -

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFI •IHI
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

Shade River Saddle
CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
ancf BALl,. GLOVE REPAIR
36358 SA 7

·.WATER
HAULING

Chester, Oh. 45720
985-3406
"
3/8/1fn

BISSELL .BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

M.EE ESTIMATES
614·992•7643 I
(No S1111Hy CDII1)

36970 laD R• Road
Pomeroy, Ohla
GRAVEL, SAND,
liMESTONE. TOP SOIL

SHIII&amp;TUE

PUBUCNOTICE
..DUilliiAL LOADER
FORIALE
Tho Boord of TNt'-" of
Orange Townahtp, llolgo
County, Ohio, on. for by ooolad bfd ono t
lntornodonol tnduotr a
Loodn, llodll 1424. lollal

BEllER
THANA

GARAGE·FUL
OF STUfF

.

Middleport, Oltlo 45760
(614) 143·5264

HAULING
UMESTONE,
GRAVEL, TOPSOIL
&amp;COAL

3f41131 mo .

pill.

OUR NEWEST LOCATION IN MAlON, W. VA. IS
OPERAlEDBYCHAtl NEAL
304-773-653J
2nd l.oclllon cillt Lon ·Noel
ltendorwor, w. Yo. ~1
IIM--.IIIIIIVIIA _.,llld.
~

lox189

,.,...,,..,.,lltll......

614-742-2138

If .. don't hew,- -

Rocky R. Hupp, D.c.u. •Agent

WINTER HOURS
Sun.-Thurs. 4-10 pm
FrL &amp; SaL, 4 pm-?

Rtuonable Rate•
JoeN. Sayre

w. ...... a tarp-- of_.,.. -brand . . . and

2/12J92/tfn

RES.IDENTIAL
CONCRETE
WORK

~
~

VUIIOD.

Porches,
Patios,
Sidewalks
992-7878

RICHARD

".A.d Specialriea"

7f71

WIW.EY'S AUTO

•DOZERS
oBACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

PIUS
Specializing in Cuatom

Frame Repair
IIW&amp;WIIPIIUJOI '

D.A.IOSTON
EICAVAnN&amp;

auuuaa•o•w

H2·701Jor
992·5$51
or TOU FlEE
1400.141 0070
IAIWIII, 0110

(614)

667·6621
4-111-&lt;13-lfn

1625 Gallons

7131191nfn

•so ,., .....
Call
Ralpll AI

742·2904
till mo.

LINDA'S
PAINTING

ROiaER:TS ·1

522 Jay Drivt, Go1Hpdi1, Oh.
448-7612
Fax/Voice 448i-7812

ROIEIT IISSELL
CONRRUCnON

GUN SHOOT

-Newttomes
-Garages
.Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

EVERY SUNDAY
AT I P.M.
RA'CINE GUN QUI
Factory a.ike,
12g.-geHiy.
Begln•l•g Oct. 3

FREE ESTIMATES

915·4473
7/'l2/93

eno 1tc

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING
'Piumhlng·-

•....•.
.;;Jjj
· ••··~r.

ARNOLD'S
PLUMBING,
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

'

....

QUALITY WORK
&amp;GOOD RATES

31904Ludi••

AHANDF,ll
OF CASH

IN RE8ATE •

IIIII P•••(IJ Sti'Mh : ·

111211311 mo.

~,... ,

........ 300

45GRAMSOR

FREE ESTIMATES

614·915·41 ao

·: LMry Wlluung, torm ttva

50'S

Rim AID PHARMACY.
ACc.nB JIOST MAJOR
,_SCRIPTION PI •NS.

FURTHER

;for . ..IIOanl
011
.,.. foiiG&gt;orN .......
·· Kallr Hyoott, term llv•

.,....

Painting

i..anttl)

Marketplace
Public Notice

Down8p0uta
Gutt.rCieanlng

FREE ESTIMATES
Taka tho pain out of
painting. Lit me do It
for you.
VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

; ol Poillwoy appoinll lf!o
•foftowlntllnil\1ilu* •IIIII

ALKA-SELTZER
PLUS
·
COLO &amp; COUGH OR
NIGHT-TIME MEDICINE

IT

EAGLE
LANES
(Former Muon

SAYRE TRUCKING

I

Qlllt-

1m1101

·AEIOLVED that " " . _

Cold&amp;Cough

your predou." memOries to !he expens!

,'Wotor Dlllllol tor tlttlMnofll
•of lllo Vltlaga of , _ _ , .
;ud tho v~~· of
•llfdlllp 111 and
....
;. . - .. ..., M lpUIIIed
;In Nld petition ondfor
~. . . . . . .t IIOdtfaallon .of

~P•:r""

Plus

Free 2nd Setof3112' OR4' Premkln Film
Processing Prints with fNer'f ro1 proc : ssedt
Cl'ooos'1 Kodalux Processl1g for finer delaif,
llhsrper images and optimum color. .

BAYER
SELECT

MOTRIN IB
''" 419
'"'', 1, 0
TABLETS
.......
OR CAPLETS HR .....,. -

NEW-REPAIR

··n;-eo.rd of True- of•
Oran. . T-nllhlp r••~•
tho rlallt to waive ony
lrrogulartll'a end/or.
tnfonnllltloo and to rofool
IIIII II bldl.
of lllolloerd of
of Ortngo

~ BE IT FUA1HER
·.AEIOLVID flat ""V...
·of l'olillfOY Ioiii wtlh die
)Vlflago of Mfddloport and
, ........ 11111 n1o • P atkWI
•wllll tho lltlga County
: c.mmoll ,.._ Coull lor
•fonnotlon of lhl 1111 Bind

A lku 5eltL"r

Premhun Quality Prin1s .
Tru~

:'~=

1"

ROOFING

lo· wllll no wurontl• or ,
~- txpr..aed or

··CREST
""
TOOTHPASTE ''""

'HewriLWdltsel

,;:':~= . .

:...
VII=

ASSORTED
COLORS

c-VIdua.

numbarGIJU.
···
haled bldo wltf bo '
_.,ltd until Oololo• 1,
1tll at 7:10 ,.... ....
witt •• oponod at tho

·orwllf... of ... vllogMio
: or1111n1z• auoh a dtatrfat;

dream
in history lhere· were legends the books fo life ate.true
T11ere were people in those hislOry books just like ole and you
·
They made this country what it
is a nation proud and strong . .
They never gave up the?, stood
. their ground they're place I
on
·
·

J

Auto and CIA Auto

-·

'rovfdod
lt•u•ry;-'
·P0111.., ...lr• to Join

$3.39

~·
Po...-oy
Homa.

7'rr
FUA1HEA
RESOLVED lllal all lonna

: PcMaaOJ I h
• II a RID II lty
urgent an. tltt lnlllal ..,_ a.ltd
. ...... lor tltt •lllllllhl111111 above ohatf be ttvo year
: of a better 'pubtlo water
· oupply oyato111 whloh
.: OMftOt lte lllnol'llo.-y 0r
• fuolblt
lly flo
' 'lllllialllll
. wrt!AIAI, ...
1 !&gt;I

COKE &amp; DIET COKE

~y·u Jllmernber the man ;...ho
never gave up and carried out his
~or

t1ruoa Rood, ltnn -

· WHiRUI

I'm so proud of what -I see
somday I'U write a song
And direct it to the hall or fame
where it belongs .
My name will be right along
with the re$t in Nashville Ten-

JOHN DEAN

Over 15 Woftlo
$4.00
$ .20
$6.00
s .30
6
15
$9.00
$ .42
10
15
$13.00
. $ .60 .
Monthly
15
$1.30/day
$.05/day
Rates are for conlleC\ltl.. runs, broken up days wilt be
charged for each day u oeparate ads.
Rate

ooncluotacl to lllo IIIIa• of
lllo paved road tur!act.
lntoroetod portl11 may
comment at a pubflo
IIHtlng of tho llotga
County Comml•~ on
Ootobor 20, 1111 at 2:00
, ... 10 be IMklll tltt Molgo
County Court Houoo,
. . . . .,., ONo.

.

Legend Mountain .
by Gilbert. L. Fitzwater, Jr.
As I sit here on legend mountian
staring up at a rainbow sky
Taking in all the sights of nature
it's a picture right bef01e my eyes
I feel like a soaring eagle flying
free in a breeze up hi~h
It sure feels good m these mountains it brightens up my life

1:00 PJII. Solurclay
1:00 PJII. MCIIday
1:00 p.m. Tloaaday
1:00p.m. Wedn-y
100 p.m. Thunclay
1:00 p.m. Friday

-·

Poet's comer

='U~~~ is Rachel Wil-

Woftlo
15
15

(10)e, 11 210

Lee birth

announced

MOI1day Papor
Tuolday Papor
Wednoaday Paper
Thwoday Papor
l'lklly Pap.
Sunday Popor

Dayt
1
3

with 12yrs.

DAY JBilORI PUBLICATICJII

Public Notice

New officers
introduced at
PTO meeting
The organizational meeting of
the Syracuse PTO was held recently at the school. ·
Introduction of teachers and
new PTO officers for the 1993-94 ·
school year were presented. om;
cers are Sharon Hubbard, president; Tim Curfman, vice ~ident;
Becky Amberger, secrewy and
Debbie Ball, treasurer.
The fall canival was discussed.
Sherry Harris wil organize this
DUSTYNLEE
along with volunteers nee(jed to
help. The carnival will be held on
Nov. 6 from 5 to 8:30p.m.
Other progams for this year are:
,,
- The Campbells Soup label
program wil be co-chaired by
Deanna Sturgill and Nina Yost.
-The annual membership drive
Larry and Christi Lee, Shade, is in prograss. The class who signs
announce the birth of t!tier son, up the most members will be
Dustyn Tyler Lee, on August 17 at awarded a small prize.
Holzer Medical Center. He
-Homeroom chairperson
weighed 6 pounds and 9 ounces Tammy Chapman and Paula Cotand was 20 inches long.
terill will organize class parties.
Maternal g~andp,!lrents are
Attending a play in Parkersburg
James and Conrue Quivey, Shade. . was also discussed. All parents are
Paternal grandparents are Larry and urged to attend and get involved
Cora Lee, Pomero-y. Maternal with the school. The next meeting
great-gran,!Jpafents are James and will be on Tuesday, Oct 5 at 7 p.m.
Helen Qu1vey, Pomeroy. Paternal
,

COPY DI!ADLINB

p.,.ol

od,....

sneak:

ANN LANDERS
"1993, Loo An&amp;d"

ad.:....

*•·

Smoking proves to be more than just a.habit l
.---......,--..,-- -

,\de OQbMie \l. 001111.ty JOUr

' Receiq dllcclwn for ad. ~ la ad.,.aaee.
° Fno Ado: Ci-way,oad Fou..t
15-wo..!o wilt he
nua 3 da7a at DO
' Prlc• of ad for d eapitalleuen l1 clo.dol. prille of ad ooet
• 7 polat liM typt ••I)' .....1
' S..tiael io ool .,.po..U.Io lor orron o1tor lint day (chock
for orn&gt;n llrrt day
lo popor~ C.U Won 2:00 p.;.,
day .Cter pubUoaUoa. to •ake eonecliob
• Adt tb.t •nut lt. paW Ia adnaee are:
Card of Tlo..W
Happy Ada
Ia M. .oriara
Ytrd Sd•
' A claulfiod
plooed bo tho n,. Da~r Smdnot
(ueopt Cluoll'..d Dl.play, B u - Card or Lop!
Notlceo) will aloo appoor lo tha Pobot Ptouut R.p1or ....1
&amp;be CallipoU. Ddly TrilnUie, ~ldnt •..-_. 18,000 hoiUI

her parents. members of the Alfred:

,

CLOSED SUNDAY

POUClES

sracf~ests were Heidi Huffman and,
UMW.

Rlchanlllloore
hal Joined our
Richard OO'TIUID

IN POIIEJIOY

workl

the lead down East Main Street In Pomeroy
despite Saturday afternoon rain. (Sentinel photo
by Cheryl Kulaga)

-noM

CLUI

Heidi Huffman who was on !!!
teen mission project in Hung&amp;rY:
over the summer reported on heq
experiences at a recent meeting .o{•
the Pomeroy United Methodist\
Women held at the church. ·
~
­
The Meigs High School ~tuden
showed slides in conjunction wi
her presentation, and Pastor Sharon
1
Hausman spoke briefly on the
or the young people in the mission
field.
During the business meeting!
plans for the festival of sharing
were fmalized.
.
I
A potluck dinner preceded the
mee~ng with Isabelle Wolfe giving
TOY RUN - Tbe Meigs County Bikers Asso·
elation Toy Run takes otr with Santa Claus in

of Ravenawa ad

EVERYTHURIDAY

lt!Mrt.

Olllo
44

DAVID ARNOLD
(614) 982-7474
POMEROY, OHIO
1112MIIt

UCINE
MOWEl CLINIC
WALIII AllEY
Parts •Ill 's.m.

EXCAVATING

BUllDOZING

Mowen - Gall S.ws

WMdtalm

Authorized: Brlgga &amp;
,.stratton liTO,_ Ryan;
I. D.C. Repair Contor

PICKUP ·llld DEUVERY

. tlcltn l6o M.f' N Bat.
CIOHCI Sunilay

tU·HO•

· ·

�•••
Page

8 The Dally Sentinel
BEAtTIE BLVD.T" by Bruce Beattie

Anr,ouncements

Monday, October 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page
Mon•~Ocw~~r4~,~19~9~3~~~--------~-------------2~~~~~~~0~h:~==~~~r===~~--~====~~~~~~~~~

KiT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry-Wright

Apanment

The Dally Sentinel

for !;lent

'

.BRIDGE

NEA CrQs•word Puzzle
. ACIIOII

AllroaJOIIolo~ln
lhlo no_.,~ .,bjod
thoFodolaiFIIr~Ad

to

"' ' 968 ..illch • •la!lal
1o ~MMfttlll•anJ p..wanc..
lrnbdon 01 dlcnlilllliiilllon

l!flcNto
_,

Forwl
Old V....
A
C:.M Todoy
fGr -- . .
ISpNoda And Mucll M«ell 1IOW11-4111 Ed. 11011,
Por llln. MUll lo 11 l'ro, Pl'ocall

c:a.eo2-..11120.

Wlnlod: donated

lOrna for
Frwdorn Rood R...,roo c.nt.r
- l n g - T-.
~-.:;A mloc., 210 E. Main,

l&lt;nowlng~

NOKDI

oot

Giveaway

Nlce a•raiJi apartment, oonwnlerl for 1 f'IN'8on, clean, fu,...

L": -.

bldroom

._II,

..,.rtnwnta.

45

tt017
EAST

,, '

l.o&lt;~~p...a..,

e

""''"'""'"

I·L:=========-E:===::~::=::::===

-----1 54

Furnished
Rooms

Musql

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

1

Instruments

~mt.

PEANUTS

1187 Chevy S/41on pick.... 'l lldo
In Cllll~, 11 112ft., ~oHM wl

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

opUono; ..... 104 11:14t1t:

LE:A~&gt;I::, 'I'Oll

DON'T Hl'l,ll:
TO TELL ME EVER'(
LITTLE DETAIL!

1HI Ford Aa,_ XL't 4 cty. I
apd. lleO To Appnor.to,

Rick Poar0on Auction Company,

full lime IUcllanMr, oom.,..1
1uctlon
ltrvice.
UceniMd
= · a W01t VIrginia, 304-

$4,2110 010. 2111277

a

Jackoon Avo. UlOd
henta. Cflfta, II)Ot'ta Clrdl I~

manthty atu.

All Vord &amp;olea Muot so Paid In 9 Wanted to Buy
Advance. Doldllnt: 1:00pm tho -:-:,---,--,.,--,:.-..day before the ad Ia to run, Anllque• 1nd uNd furniture, no
Sunday edhlon-- 1:OOpm Frkfay, Hem too llrgt or too amall, will

FRANK AND ERNEST

buy one piece or complete

coat'

12

SPORTING~

Situation

Wanted
SomSomooviMo'l-•rmybut&lt; comfla~ booldo 8ln-

St_ato ~oved Nut'll Aide,
l&lt;loklng
Memo Co10 Work,
614-441
Aftor 2 P.M.

18

_,,...,==""=,.:="",:....-:-"'R TREE SERVICE. Topping,

Trimming. T,.. hmovll, Hed~
Trim=. FrN &amp;tlm•t••l Sf+
34!7Aftlr 4p.m.
a.-1 llolmonanco, Pa~
YIRI Work Wlndowo W
Gunon CINnod Ughl Houllng,
Commoric!ll, R01ldonllal, Stove:
G8Drftli POrtable Sawmill, don"l
houl ,..... loao to lho mill IIIII
coii!IOW'lS-1~7.

Have room for peawontl car• In
my homo for lldloo, IOIOON!ble,

814-1411-2321.

· --""-'"...._..._.....,......,._
Tlliljod,iyl 74 Motorcycles

Wom.n, lnflln1e
S.Ctrlc Stove,

Employment Services

T~ State Tnil S o - t"''ptng.
lrimmlng, lrae - . , , , Olump
NII'IOVaf. lirw ...11n11-. I'M112..zm n no lr.w.r, ....

mn1tgeon rMChlne.

Will llo: - llooolng
Choroo,
Cloonll!ll.
11Uo11ng,
Flaar, lnqulr. At: Box 1o6; eli
ClliiiDOIIa Dally Tr111uno. 838
Thlnl Avenu., Oelllpoh, OM

AVON I All - · I Shl~oy
ape.
..., 304-e75-1421..

4111:n.

chair,

Rentals

-.ntal Door-To-Door Optlonol.
1.aotlo'M-4738.

c.. •at,lwlng, pllJpon.

4 P.M: On w - y . AU

eon-

~1148.
.
olclnmonta
· ·2322,
Or 814 - 3831.
-~~- oooto,IIO, lllzo
modlum a i!"Go.- hOO - · For· ... 2 ..._ ....
114-ti2-'II'JII.
pn&gt;..molllv 410 ..._ ooch, 814-

21

teOO,I~I.

·

1182 Sl- Wlntl GLIIIO,
laot~ ~~~~ ...tdiO ..... .
lrunk, ...... un. a ....ooy......
miiNga, t10110, -.,,.._
11117 Vlllllllha VZ12I Plpo,

Mollohan Furnburo &amp; C:.rpoto,
41 Houses lor Rent
At. 7, N. 614-448-11144 lx12 Cor·
WATER UNE SPECIAL: 114 lnoh l'l~,llo lklndoy CaiiL
3 Bedroom Homo, Allochod pat sao. VInyl M.u.
11
~~"· No Poll, 014200
"" Ron
"'-":
, - E......-,
2110 P11 with
""" ,....
- tmo.
~tooolorcl
~M~-._
...,
PICKENS FURNITURE
t32.10;
E.Oan,old Horalorcl
--• M'l;,::~.tt=:
....-..Ohl.. 1~ .
3 Bodroomo, 2 Batho, CA. H...-d NowJU.od
flomlahlng. 112 ml ' ;:::::=.::::..::::;=:~:=::..=.:=:::
Flraploco Dlonwaohor, $IOOIIIo
:=-~~
0oo0o11 Roqui!Od, 814. 441 4232 ~r~~. Plouant,
814-44e-21111.
ApPOOoocl fGr ·- ·
3 Badroomo, _'-tod: At. 14\ In AUCTION
82
Contonary, MOCWo. Ratoronoo 011.. !II., Clallpolla. a Uood
a Depoett.IJ14 ue eiee.
tumK..o, hNion, WIOiorn a 56
BUilding
Spring ValloJ • 3br brick 1 112 Work bootl. · - ·
Supplies
bilth8, bl11mtn1, carpott, UOO ~R 1r1
t
L.
or,
omgon or,
pal'ftiO..... -.nd~ Color 1.V.
I'MZot, All eon; BlOck, brick, Dl- wino
~~fe'IJ,iACKBURN R LTV 1238
dll1oM. r, Mloroon.., 114-211- dowl, lint•, ota. Claudl W111o
ton, Rio Or-, OH caM 114- ·
241 112 L
Wl01inghouoo
Froot
Froo
42 Mol)lle Homes
Rolrlalillor Wllh leo llobr &amp;
SSI
lor Rent
Matcfilllg 30" Eloctrtc . Stove .::56~..,;P::;at~S·:i:fo~r::::;~'i::::-:
5500 For Bolh Witt . Soporoto, 1 112 v- Old a- 0oao. 1
2 Bodraom Mobile Homo, 61C- 114o2411oltOV.
'
Bluo 'l'loli 11M, 1 Wllbr
441-4257, 114-44f.0722.
Wonder bumlg 11... Fomoto, 1 Wolkw llolo, Running
2 B o d - CA, Rontor SolO , . _ $100.00 OBO call: 114- a Troolna. 814 Ul3113.
On Lind Cont-. 2 Blocu
Frono Bla Boor. 1114-441-1401 A~
tor 4 P.l!f.
Goods

wv.

~~ponlng

=

=.~~

col-·-·-·
64

Hay &amp; Grain

J- Com"""''"'

Alfolll/Oroaa Hay rollo. J21.
= r · a Farm, Rt. 38. 304-m

patlolatova, holto
2000 "!1, ft., !Oiall $1700, uldng
tl~ lti!k)rgln F1rm, Rt. 31. ~
11374018.
Hov._!I&lt;IUI.=, boleo, $1.10 1 up.
304;..7W'-

~-

71

=

""::::-:i:Aut~o-7a~fo~r:i-Sa-i-:1-::e~::­
ll53 Wlllyo

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5i'~~ ~~:..~ 0,.: P:o~

r•

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tH~ING T~ltOUcitl

tMwAu.

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i

e

•
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~

H~ IJ~

VfkA'J.
BOB?

I E.VEN t.O!&gt;T w:N..Y It-t TlE
CAt-tC1'r' ~lf.IE.!

-n.

=•'=''t..

~l

6 Enllrtalcler

2--the
ground floor

7 llllcrooc-

••+

- aum.c

lenl

8 Frulll

tHolelo

llhe-ta
11 llebrow
monlll

It SwiMmer

10

21-111*&lt;

-..

24tlurrowtng

25 IMgelllrcla
21UNII
27 Not JOUnr
28Aitlc

29 Put 011 "-d

' 30EidMIIUc-n
ofMnoJenc:e
32 llaturlty
35 Teboo Item
3t -T...tung
40 Aulhor

You are in your semi~ crulsln' down
I-95, when over the CB radio you ret·
o-ve41 Con,_
ognlze your call sign.
42 South Amorl"Come in Trump Coup, Backward
canlllknil
Finesse here. Over. • "Roger, Back43 Future ettys.'
ward Finesse. Trump Coup here.
Over. • "Time to solve a bridge pro~
44c-,
Iem? Over." "Roger."
-G~h•
45 A!IProech
You throttle back to 65 as the dum47 ChMM
my and your hand come over the
48Gr.... .,...
airwaves.
"You are in lour 'llpades and West 1
lfftnnltl¥o
leads the club 10. How do you plan the ._..._...,~I..
52 CircUit
play? Over."
Delighted that you bid only one
spade, not two, because you learned so
Qlucb more about the defenders'
hands, you analyae the situation. It
'TZAAYZ
MROGXNU
JNNGtB
looks as though West has led a singleton. But what would that mean? \'ou
W Z D D Z T
X D ~U A
N P D
DEAU
can't handle a 4-0 trump break, so assume West has three spades. East
HNXD
APSX
IN . EYDDYUA
A
must have six hearts, so West has
three. That would give Wut six ella·
DTYFJZ.
(ONJPHUYXD)
monds, and probably be would have
rebid two diamonds. So it looks aa
MYH
HPTTRI.
though Wut must be 3-3-&amp;-2.
PREvious SOLUTION: "I'm very prOUd 10 bo a P'-'tlhl a1 a 11m1
Now the way borne is clear.
_ , 10 many """wkablcl playa.,. being _
_.. - Tony I I -.
"1 play low from the dummy. Over. •
"East wins with the king and
WOit
switcbes to the diamond two. West
wills with the ace and returns a dial .. i'-4 lllr CLAY
POLLAN
mond. Over."
·
O
Rearrange leners of the
•Alter winning, I play a spade to
four scrambled words be·
dummy's king. Allumlng the queen
low to form four words
doesn't drop from East, I ruff a diamond lD hand and finesse the spade
RH0 ccs
jack. Over."
·weu played, Trump Coup. This
f
deal was reported by .Huuaarlan Gabor Szots. Since be pve no one credit,
I thlDk be was the declarer. Over.•
tl 0 0 u B
'It was lucky West opened the bid-

.._

II

00 60ME1l-11N&amp;
WR:)N6':/

76

NO ...

I~

'INHERE I L.IVe.

8udalt TNi&amp;i lnhM, Ulld I
robuTit, Ill ty_ _lllrtlna ......
OWMr 114-24UI77, "l144Jt..

:ma.

Home
Improvements
IA""'HT
WATEII'ROOI'INO
Unoondltlonol
- . . .....,_,
8\lllnll!110.
Local.-.
Call 1~ O i ' - $ Wli!M'IMooiiO!g. leo
I
1171.
'

o:.:t·

downtown

ASTRO·GRAPH

lllckll-rt, Qontral J...i1 a llr, ••
utiiKiea lncl.-,1210/mo., t1C10

cally perfect tor you. Mall S2 and a tong .
self -addressed . stamped env elope to
Matchmaker. clo this newspaper. P.O. Box

"-"··-~I

BERNICE
BEDE OSQL

1NI RenauM E...,.,. Till, Int.,.
lor, l!9!ly Motor, AI 1ft Elloallonl
Cold" .ni...,... .MIIFM C..
Mile 1111'10 lnalwtt One
'h'lbll

llo.-.
.
.
t'3:

· ~r
82

......-

:-'.:'.:t.:;' To~
Good. "llllrJ
$4 :Ill. aau""'
,. PM.
--.::;,._'.,... 1111 Rulli

Pl•-blouo
&amp;
..... ROV

Heltln11
•

-~OnlO...

1tl7 ....._ qhtqor ,.., '8alo.

"""'
'

11117 .-

121 LX, IO,DOOml.,

=-=-~

'Bi~hday
Tueaday; Oct 5, 1893
Your probabilities lor gre8ter mai8rial secu·
1ity are very strong lor the year ahead .
Your 'chart shows once you get on track,
this will have a long range effect.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) Your chances
lor success Will be greatly enhance~ today
il you truly believe '" whal you're doing.
Conversely it you try to sell 01 promote
somelhlng .ltlat isn't.meaningtul . it could !all
lial. Know where tp look lor romance and
you'll find il. The Aslro·Graph Matchmaker
instantly ·reveals which signs are romanti·

84

-.-.-·. .. . . ......
Cloolb......1L11

your contacts 1nt1mate.

TAURUS (April 21).May 20) Trying Ia help

be some changes occumng today wh1ch

another today could turn out to be mutually
profitable Arrangements where you are
primarily lookmg out fOf' your own interests

23 : Doc . 21)

might not pay the same dividends .
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) This is a good

Partnership arrangements should work out

day to discuss your personal aDjectives

SAGITTARIUS

Dolo .... . ~=!-..----

~. PI, PI, PW, pow;
8ailo,- CoMrol; P-r
~
c..

4465. New York. N. Y 10163.

events. instead ol fighting the tide .

Grilli ...

114 441 0482.

tuoo.-

1

(Nov.

advantageously lor you today 9ven thoUgl'1 with fri8nds you know SOCially. They could
there's a chance Someone other than your - be more recept1ve than usual and willing to
self will be calil!lQ the shots.
. help you in your endeavors. ·
.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) There are

CANCER (~une 21·July 22) Ello~s you

Indications you might do something impre§. expend on behalf of others today will be
sive·loday, because once you locus oh an duly noted and applauded. even !hough
objective . you are not likely to settle tor your reasons for helping wasn't focused on
second best.
· a claim.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 211-Feb. 19) In develop. · LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You have !he abiliments tod~y where you feel you'll have to

ty today to sway groups to your way of

&amp;Ker1 your authority, don't be reluctant to · thinking, especially lilt inVOfves a progresdo so. Persons w1th whom you're invoi~Jed sive project 011. ventura that hB.s exciting
will welcome your steadying influence.
elements.

PISCES (Feb. 211-Morch 20) Don't be dis· VIRGO (Aug. 23·Stpl. 22) Give priority
mayed today if you feel you've gotten off to · today to situations which are meaningful to
a bad start. Being a stretcfl runner is your you careerwls.e or financially . Ral~gate
greatest asset and when others begin to your other Interests and activities temporal·
tire, you'll be just QettinQ your sec.ond wind . ty to the rear ranks .

•
I

ARIES !March 21-April19) You 1e likely Ia
be more effective tOday dealing w1th others
on a one-to-one bas1s than you will be in
cop1ng w1th commmee s or groups . Keep

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) There could
will work out to your ullimate benefit once
all of the factors are exposed . Flow w1th

= · - D O e l l ..... Col
. oGmAftwiP.II: .
,.......... Coo!!..; Good Condlt)on.4 Cyllndlr, 4 Door, 11444~.
.
.

,... a.n-

I
I rI I
I
I

I I I

~· on anything," the fellow told
...=~·=~·~·~~·=~·~me . "In fact. we are so incom,..
palible, we can't even agree
L E WV E I
Ito get a-······'"
5

Cl ••1 .. OOUI, ...

o.n.,

I'

••••

vUH0 C
Our neighbors were very in·
1:-.,--,-T--.---l ; compatible. "We earn agree

'NHY:? DtD'IOU

OpponunHy

1p11rtmtnt

I

75 Boats &amp; Motor8
for Sale .

Business

1bdrm~

'~~::;~' S@\\g{}lA-~~!fs·

cr.x

Wanlod 1o llluy.. grtlllnd . . _
ror 'II Fonl ...,_ n•,,. -

lpm.

TIME

-

RhMCetlc

5 Truck

I Hllwlllan

Pass
2t

v....,. rr 100,-..
IIIII-, atOQ, ~ID.
';.
For Pay 011, 114-241 ll!lf... ·
· ·

lOll

1112 Comito, block with ......
- - lnlorlor, 1111-la,
11,181 ll!llll. lronl ond
- . . . . IOkfng 11500....~1;4-M..
2100 clayo or.,..,....... lllor

RIAL

57 Woory
58 llllftoral

1110

Serv1c cc;

CLASSIFIEDS

. a-t

DOWN

3_,
4 Anclenl J -

10 Group Ol

I

BORN LOSER
~

Transportation

Financial

AVON CHRISTMAS Bolio AI

Wott! Or Homo. Avengo II 414
Hourly. Ptuo Fantutlc [Mo.

8-c- .Cl -·- :

..

VoH boa. Hkoi .now, so bollltno
cludod, 'Jn5,81414t:I077.
Ocl. . 7, 11N, AI I P.M. All --,,....,~=__;=--:-=~
Stroller, ltobybod, Wllbr, h~ iod. Ca1Jio l.ooOplld stoning At 1111 R~rune ••collonl,

"'¥,

Kin' Acrooo Aoodo,

63

V\

GOODS
STORE

8o1~ McG-1101! ........... ~~
. J;! Colt
."''.*.~~~'!!·"'""""

,sw~~NITURE.

At

•

~..ii.Ord.~":"'.!::: I ::-~:-:bll::-~~~.1:. _::~-::2~~:-~~old~.-=.,:=4-::1:-4
..

W
. anted to Do

114;441-1111.

411&gt;1111, 11-1, JN.

28~d••.

IPflnl

H Wife of JICob

r;Jr.li:Ir•1

--

llowtrw,
Mit.tumit
O..ler
~~~~~~~~ IPACII
ptlancoo, tlahlng
clothing,
..o,
for rent, day-week-

Saturdly.
ha•lhold, cell O.by Manln,
Vord oaleo Oct. 1,. 2, I 4, the l-·lll41.
Mora Farm on ~R 7, men'e, DlcaratH IIIDMWIN, wall tllleo
womon'o ond chll&lt;lron'a clolhoo, pllonol, old lllmpo1 old thor·
toyo, booU, o"-. wlmor momotoro, otd olocu,
onllquo
cooto, motorcyclo, Mddlo.
tumHuro. Rl-lno Amlquoo.
Oct- ...., Stalling M-r Ruoa - . , owner. 114-11112obove Eulllm Hla~ Sohool, 2521. Wo buy olhlloo.
wCMMn'l
children- aclull Don'1 Junk hi s.u u. Your Man"•'hi
loo. -~:00
clot
•.;.::::::"'lo=m='-7-~:..:...:::'·-:--:':"':' 1Wortdng ,..,....
Applll,_a,
:=
Color
TV'o
~
Tuooclay
and
Wodntoday, FrooZII'O, YCR'o, Mlciowo..a,
Joh.-'o. 4th 81100!, Roclno. • •• Condl ·---- w-~--Sowing mochlno In CODOnol, now t...,....,
-··
carpot otll on rotl, dlaheo, Homo l)ryoro, Eto. SM-211-l23B.
lntilrlor, dn~pa, clothing horn Grill and bumpM' for '88 Ford
newborn lo 1duh1, eto.
Bronco 11, !14-112·5053.
' I Ill'~·a Auto Pa~
ond 8olv:2o
Y.rd ..1. ~-•·v and w~
·-·
_..
""
nooday,
Rockop~nga
Rd.,
aloo
buying Junk~-...,. a true 1.I
- o y , mloo.ltoma.
304·773-a343.

lo~Mmec~llle

k• r-11otl·l

41....,

Pt. Ploo10nt F!oo Morkot, 2401

10:0011.m.

27

dewlco

ar.n•

By Pbllllp Alder

1
11fna.

edttlon

Pass

-

24lluourlng

courtoc-

51 Guldo'a high
nole
li3 GMIIc
114S..InAIII
55 Famoue
uncle
5I Aclreaa-

Ul'Jl'J
lJULII...I UI...IUU U.:.JU
lJI.!lUU Ll:-.li.!JU L!JUU
::JUL!JL!JU:-J:.:.J UUL!JUU
I.!JU '.J ULJ..:..
.:.J rJ u u l.J lJ rJ l.J cJ l~.H.li.!J
W:-Jr.Jl.J l.!lLJ'.JU U~l!l
lJlJI.!l l.!ll.!JUlJ l!JlJUW
l!JUUI...Il..:JUU .:.Jr.Jl!JlJll
lJUU UC!JLl
.:.Jr.JlJLJW lJUULli.!JUU
U.:.Jr.J l..:Jl.JULJ ~(1LJI.J
UU LJ UU~~ LJLJUr.J
L:J l.!J lJ I.!J

To pass the time
on the highway

1111 Ford Wrecker Wllh Winch,
Good Condition, 12.100. ,,..

I' MondiY

Pass

blloVocl

20 lhlp'o clorlc

~ l.!J l.j U

te "1111 Ul .......

"'*to.

1m Hon lruok _ _
1

Bailey

••

It

.lollnoon
4e Clblnol
50 llrou(lltl

COtiiPOIIIIon

41 OM (SciiL)
42 ltouHhokl
god
43 -a.

A1111••

NorGI

Opening lead:

!!LOOO ICiual mlooo, $1100, 814..-.4841.

Farm Suppl1es
&amp; Livestock

WHt

2t

A HEADACHE?

72 Trucka fOr Sale

Soatli

111111k•

31 llociiC.. .
lllfftl

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: Weat

3f Drutl IICJ·
37 Curvy letlot
3f Unlock

3e=

23F....,..ogcy.

tKQ
+QHI

.._

3511eMblll

llolrt
14 Oltt.hom•
City
t51ntehcl
1tlllofm• 17 limo--

+Ka s

••

1113 by H!A, IN!.

. MIZ. LEDBETTER--HAVE YOU
GOT ENNYTHING FER

~

ltlbltance

8- Colada

22Netau..

SOUTH
tJt09876

BARNEY

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

5 C.U.tlc

·~

tJI2

32 Coaii33P34Haut ..lll
effort

hill

.Q.l08752

Comptotly Fumllllod mobile
home, 1 mile below Clalllpoll.,
ovonooldng river. · Dopoolt, No
Polio, CA,Ifoal.l14 441 0331.
~urKy
poto: $100
SIC1225/mo. lnclud• no
UIUKiea,
2
.;.;.;.'.::2t8;;;.;...

Yard Sale

......

tAJ76

FOR IAI.E·1fll CINwr
truok, pOO,

nlohod, 101cty by Ocl. \
$18Simo., plut1 $150 youu pay ualrtc. ~. .

OM

7

1

•us

=·

ac:oepl

advertlsemerts lor real 811a18
Is In vlolallon ol the
law. our_,..,.. heroby
lnlonnod that all dwellngo
advertised In this newspaper
818 avalable on an equal
CII'POftuRty basis.

~

12

tAK2

This Mwsp- wll

...

1 EgJPU.n

Ad-··
13-=-~­

baled on loco, COlor, rolglon.
IU lamiiiJ alllu1 or national
origin, or llfllnlentlon to
lll8ke llfl OUCh proleronce,
Imitation or claalmlnatlon.'

a."

4

PHILLIP
ALDER

9

TnnAV'~

HISTORY: On this day in
the Soviet Union launched Sput·
I, the Earth's first artificial solei beginning the Space Age.
!TtODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Jean FranMillet 0814 -1875) , artist; Ruther·
B. Haye s 11822· 1893) , U.S.
jpresiderrl; FrMeric Remington 0861 0amon Runyon 11884·
Bu sier Keaton

I1--r,-=-,.,,6,...T"I..:.,.,,7;:-TI-1 0
1--1..-.L.-I.._,L_-.1.--..1

e

Complete the chuckle quoied
by f.ll,ng ,, the misstng wordi
you develop from step No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS I
IN THESE SQUARES

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
, """
Helmet · Cable • Hence · Wholly · W1'\NT to BE
Overheard al atrport: "Modern airline travel is great
II the weather is bad you can be flown faster than sound
hundreds of miles from where you WANT ta BE."

�'•

.

Ohio Lottery

The Dlt(ly Sentinel

By The Bend

Dolphins
defeat
Red skins

Monday, October 4, 1993
Page-10

. .·.

.· ~

Homecoming, features singing program
Alfred United Meihodist Church
held its annual homecoming on
September 19. Regular Sunday
school and worship service were
conducted in the morning. A basket
dinner was enjoyed by those
attending at 12:30 p.m. with Rev.
Sharon Hausman giving thanks.
The afternoon program was
under the direction of Sunday
School Superintendent Lloyd
Dillinger. The program opened
with the congregation singing,
"When the RoU is Called Up Yonder" and prayer by Rev. Hausman.
Alfred Choir san§• "The Land
Beyond Tomorrow and "What a
Day That Will Be".
Anaelaires from Lancaster was
the featured singing group. Their
songs included, "He is Here,"

"Free at Last," "Move to Glory
Land," "I Read the Back of the
Book," "Still in the Fire," "Lord,
I'm One Lost Lamb" and "Old
Glory Stil(Stands".
The Boyles family sang, "Jesus
is Lord of All" and Florence
Spencer sang, "That Old · time
Preacher Man",
Angelaires concluded the program by singing, "Grand Family
Reunion." "For Every Cross." ""Til
the Storm Passes By" and ''There
Rose a Y,tmb". Rev. Charles. Gas·
ton gave the closing prayer.
Churches represented intluded
Belpre Saint Marks, Tuppers Plains
UMC, Tuppers Plains Christian,
Orange, South Bethel, Athens
Richland Avenue, Chester, Hemlock Grove, Minersville, Grimm's

Chapel, Morning Star, Zion, Keno,
Marietta, Wellborn, Florida and
Lancaster.
( Those attending from Meigs
Coupty in~luded susan Pullins,
Kathyrn Windon and Amanda,
Debbie and Abbie Chevalier,
Wilbur and Dorothy Warner, Clara
Follrod, Nina Robinson, Nellie
Parker, Charlotte Van Meter,
Richard and Florence, Gertrude
Robinson, Melvin Tracy, Osie and
Clair Follrod, Kathy, Stacie and
Alan Watson, Dan and Shelia
Spencer, Kirt, Daniell and Tiffany,
Tim Spencer, Marilyn Robinson,
Sandra Massar, Judy Jones, Marlene Donovan, Mildred and Rubal
Caldwell, Annie Calaway, Kay
Ann Burke, Etta Commins, Betty
Chevalier, Doris King, Lloyd, Ruth

Page4

'
.
and Debbie BJOOke, Edna Hannan,

Philip Boyles, .Doroihy Smiih, Sara
Caldwell, Sarah Yost ana Mary
Bentz.
Those attending from Athens
County were Doris and Lloyd
Dillinger, Russell and Eloise
Archer, Kaihy, Nicole and Kyle
Essman, Geraldine Merrill, Charles
Gaston, Mildred Shumway, Helen
Swartz, Marilla Elliott, Jackie, Erin
and Judy Brooks and Clarence
Warner.
Others attending were Eleanor
Boyles and Bob and Janet Robin·
son, Belpre; Walter Morris, Parkersburg; Kate and Ray Rodehaver,
Wellborn, Fla.; Lee Ann Pick,
Alma
Swartz,
Columbus;
Williamstown. W.Va.; Gerald and
Norma Swartz, Marietta.

RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST

I 64th anniversary
to be celebrated

MONDAY
RACINE · Racine Village
Council will meet at 7 p.m. at Star
MiUPark.

RACINE'- There will be a regu, lar meeting of Racine Chapter 134
The Rutland Church of Christ their names as charter members. · Order of Eastern Star. Officers will
wiU celebrate its !64th anniversary They were Elder Elijah Rathburn be elected. Refreshments will be
with a homecoming on Sul)day, and wife, Polly, William Sargent serv~ following the meeting.
. Oct. 10.
and wife and son John, Franklin
Sunday School will begin at Downing and wife, William Parker
SYRACUSE - The Sutton
9:30 a.m. and the worship and and wife Betsy, Selah Williams and Township Trustees will meet Moncommunion service will be held at wife and Mother, Gideon Barker, day at 1:30 p.m. in the Syracuse
: 10:30 a.m. A basket dinner will be May Bolton and John Humphrey.
Municipal Building.
· held at noon followed by an afterThe ground on which the church
noon service it 2 p.m. Guest minis- now stands was deeded to the
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleter will be a former minister, Brad trustees of the Church of Christ on port Garden Club meeting schedHenderson, and there will be spe- Oct 20, 1885 by J. N. and Clarissa uled for Monday, Oct. 4, has been
cial singing by Wesley and Crystal Rathburn. The trustees were Still· postponed until Nov. I.
Henderson.
man C. Larkin, William Parker II,
The pastor, Eugene Under- and W. R. Bailey, according to
wood, invites the public to attend church records.
the observance.
Ground where the parsonage
The First Church of Christ in was built was deeded to the Church
Rutland Township was organized of Christ Sept. 6, 1919 by the RathNov. 8, 1829 in an old log cabin burn heirs. The basement was built
belon~ to Elder Elijah Rathburn
and the church moved to the center
located m a field just across the of the lot in 1939.
creek on the Happy Hollow Road
The present building was built
and dedicated on Aug. 7, 18~3 by
north of Rutland.
There were about 30 present at J. C.' Zollar, President of Hiram
that first meeting. Fifteen signed College.

VALLEY FORD -The Board of
Trustees of Columbia Township
will meet at the Columbia Township Fire Department at 7:30p.m.
LETART FALLS -The Letart
Township Trustees will meet at 6
p.m. in the office building.
POMEROY - Meigs Band
Boosters will meet at 7 p.m. in the
Meigs High School Band Room .
All band parents are welcome.
TUESDAY
REEDSVILLE - The Olive
Township Trustees will meet at
7:30p.m. at the Shade River State
Foresrry Building on Joppa Road.
RUTLAND - PTO meeting at
Rutland Elementary, 7 p.m. All
parents encouraged to auencd.
POMEROY • Fraternal Order of
Eagles Auxiliary #2171 will me.t'.t
at 7:30 p.m. A potluck dinner will

Vol. 44, NO. 113
Multlmedl•lnc.

POMEROY • Drew Weber Post
CHESTER - Pomeroy Order. of
#39 will have its regular meeting at
Eastern
Star 186 will meet at the
8 p.m. Dinner will be served at 7
Chester
Masonic
Hall aL 7:30 p.m.
p.m.
Election of officers will take place.
MIDDLEPORT - There will be Officers should wear street dresses.
a beginners ballroom dance classes
WEDNESDAY
at the Middlepon Arts Council at 7
p.m. Cost is $7 per couple. Instruc·
PAGEVILLE ·Scipio Towntor will be Gerald Powell. For more
ship
Trustees will meet at6:30 p.m.
information call 992-2675.
in the Pageville Township building.
DARWIN f The Bedford TownMIDDLEPORT • The Middlde·
ship Volunteer Fire Department pon Literary Club will hold its first
Committee will meet at 7:30 at the meeting of the season at 2 p.m. at
town hall. The public is invited.
the home of Mrs. George Hackett,
Jr. Mrs. Dwight Wallace will
MIDDLEPORT • There will be review "Shakespeare of London"
a revival at Weslyan Bible Holi- by Marhette Chute.
ness Church on Oct. 5 - 10 starting.
at 7:30p.m. nightly with Rev.
MIDDLEPORT - Beginning
Randy Neville from New York. Counuy dancing at Middleports
Pastor John Neville welcomes all.
Arts Council. Cost is $7 per couple.
Instructor will be Gerald Powell.
REEDSVILLE - The Olive Call 992-2675 for more informaTownship Zonin~ Commission has tion.

malia, Critics co~ tend t~e
_
INiii!OnJ ~ fost s1glit·of, 1ts .
tarialfhiiss~ri 1o
'siarving Somalis in·its determinatiort to
hunt down and crush Aidid which.
it blames for the deaths' of 61
peacekeepers since June.
Paul Watson of ihe Toronto Star
newspaper told NBC·TV today that
Aidid spoke angrily for about half
an bour Monday night in only the
second radio broadcast since he
went into hiding in June.
"He said they (Somalis) should
do everything in their power to
defend tliemselves," Watson said
from the Somali capital.
·
Watson said Somalis appeared
generally unconcerned about the
200 extra American troops and
umkli ordered into Mogadishu on ,
Monday.
The heavy losses in Somalia on
Sunday led Defense Secretary Les
Aspin to order about200 more U.S.
troops into the countty, along with
two aerialj:unships and several
tanks and fighting vehicles. The
current U.N. force is 28,000,
including 4,700 Americans.
The U.S . serviceman's body
was dragged ihrough the streets of
the Somali capital at the end of a
rope, surrounded by cheering,
dancing supporters of Aidid.
'

reea

-..

Catherine Elizabeth (Katie)
Woods, daughter of Tom and Lisa
Wonds, Middleport, recently celebrated her first binhday at home
with her parents, grandparents
Keith and Dolly Woods and sister
and brother-in-law Missy and Jesse
Howard.
A, Barney theme was carried out
with cake and balloons. Sending
cards and gifts were Eva and
Danny Howard, Mark, Gwen and
Morgan Hall, Joe, Kathy and
Michael Malesick, Mitch, Jeannie
and Jason Allen and Ron, Jane,
Amy and Haley Rigsby.

Homebuilders plan banquet
Plans for the 54th annual banque! were made when the. Home
Builders Class of the Middleport
Churcb of Christ met recently at
the church.
· Committees named were Dorthy
Roach,. Flo Grueser and Clarice
Erwin reservations; Gene and
· Dorothy McDaniel, Elsie King and
Dorothy Baker, decorations; Glen
and Katherine Evans, Willard and
Nettie Boyer, Lester Bowers and
Loretla Tiemeyer, program.
The meeting was called to order
by President Dorothy Roach. Clay
Tutlle lead the opening prayer.
The secretary and treasurer •s
reJOIS were read and approved.

Bill Grueser, Clarice Erwin,
George Nash, Roger Gilmore,
Stephen Low,. Albert Martin, Mary
Tiemeyer, Ashley Roach, The Car·
rie Jackson Family and the Gene
McDanial family were reporle(1 in
need of prayer.
Devotions were given by D6rthy
Roach, Katherine Evans and
Rosanna Manley. The officers were
hostesses and Frank lhle had the
closing prayer.
Refreshments were enjoyed by
Katherine and Glen Evans, Flo
Grueser, Dorthy Baker, Bonnie ·
Smith, Dorthy Roach, Geneva and
Clay Tuttle, Thelma Boyer, Nettie
and Willard Boyer, Gene
McDaniel, Hazel and Bud Wilson,
Loretta Tiemeyer, Lester Bowers,
Elsie Xing, Frank lhle and Rosanna

Second
birthday
celebrated

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) -After
. the bloodiest battle yet for U.N.
· forces in Mogadishu, fugitive war·
. lord Mohamed Farrah Aidid made
:· a rare .radio broacast telling Soma. lis to "do everything in their power
. to defend ihemselves.''
. Italian state television reponed
. that Aidid claimed 300 Somalis
· were ltilled and 500 wounded in the
· latest U.N. offensive against his
compound in the Somali capital. •
: The United Nations, meanwhile,
· sought the safe rewm of an Ameri·
:can helicopter pilot and a Nigerian
: peacekeeper captured by Somali
. militiamen and implored them to
:treat the captives humanely. Other
·Americans were also feared cap:tured.
.
At least 12 U.S . Army soldiers
were killed, 78 wounded and six
· reponed missing in Somalia after
·the latest round of fighting with
·forces Joyal to Aidid.
· Con~erns for the safety of the
captured U.S. pilot and the six
missing Americans were heightened by photos and film that
showed the brutal display of the
body of a U.S. serviceman in
Mogadishu on Monday.
The battles began Sunday with a

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DRIVER SOUGHT - Workers examine the
wreckage of ·a 1982 Toyota pickup truck near
State Route 338 Monday afterooon. Tbe state
highway patrol is seeking the vehicle's driver,

who fled the scene after iojuring another driver
and then rolled the truck over an embankment.
(Sentioel photo by Dennis Wolfe)

Ex-Mason County woman
fiound dead in Charleston

,
.
. .
. ,
Charleston. W.Va. pohce 1den- ,ammer s office, the Gazette..I~JlQ~-,
lifted the body of {woman found ted.
partially clad and over a wooded
A passer-by found Stafford's
hillside Saturday as a former body about 11:45 a.m. Saturday
Mason County resident.
about 25 feet down a hill in the
The woman was identified as 1600 block of East Woodland
Mary Jane (Perry) Stafford, 34, Drive. He had stepped over the
formerly of Point Pleasant and now hillside and was alerted by the
of Washington Street East, Charles- smell of the decaying body. police
ton.
. '
spokeswoman Sgt lvin Lee told the
Accordmg to the Charleston Charleston newspaper.
GazeUe, police said the woman had
The man flagged down a police
been murde~. She was identilied officer, who foun~ Stafford'~ body,
Monday. Pollee refused to release nude from the waiSt down.
the exact cause' of death even
Stafford was found wearing a
though they have received the multicolored sweatshin, and had a
results from the state medical ex· gold ring with three hearts on her
.

.
.
, Qihtnng.Jln&amp;u.__ •. _, _ ......
Authoriues'bave not determined
exactly how long the body had
been there, but from the deteriorn·
lion it had been there for at least
several days, authorities said.
Stafford attended Point Pleasant
High School and was the daughter
of Charles F. and Betty Perry of
Point Pleasant. She is also survived
by three children who hve m Pomt
Pleasant, Craig S., Jonathan, and
Kristina Stafford. .
Funeral service w1ll be Thursday,
I p.m., at the Wilcoxen Funeral
Home.

U.S. poor increases by 1.2 million
CLAY, W.Va. (AP)- High
school senior Bill West sees no
future for himself in the state where
he grew up.
He wants to be a welder or a
game warden, but his experience
confirms what new census figures
show: High unemployment and
poverty have hit West Virginia
hard.
"I don't really want to leave,"
said the 11·year-old West, who
plans to study out of state when he
graduates from · Clay County High

School. Bu~ he added, "I can't get
the kind of job and get the kind of
life I want here."
The number of poor Americans
grew by 1.2 million in 1992, the
Census Bureau said Monday in a
repon that found an underclass that
is disproportionately young and
without health insurance. And the
South had it worse than any other
region.
The bureau said there were 36.9
million poor Americans last year,

accounting for 14.5 percent of the
population. That was up threetenths of a point from 1991, and the
highest poverty rate since 15.2 percent in 1983.
The 1992 poveny line for a fam ily of four was $14,335. For someone living alone, it was $7,143.
In the South, the poverty rate
was 16.9 percent, compared with
14.4 percent in the West, 13.1 percent in the Midwest, and 12.3 percent in the Northeast

r---Local briefs

Jim Freeman
Sentinel News Staff
Parking problems at the Meigs
County Public Library and the roof
on the old Pomeroy Junior High
School building were among the
topics discussed at Monday's meeting of Pomeroy Village Council.
In .addition, Pomeroy Councilwoman Betty Baronic)&lt;: returned 10
her seat on council after suffering
from a fall on July 31.
Regarding the problem with
parking at the Meigs County Public
Library, Mayor Bruce Reed said
parking is definitely needed. "It's a
great service they provide," said
Reed.
Councilman John Blaettnar also
brought up the possibility of placing a crosswalk on the street in
front of the library.
In another discussion about
parking, this time involving the
Pomeroy Municipal Building parking lot, council agreed that people
could continue to )l3!l&lt; cars on the
concrete slab behmd the building
until next spring instead of paving
over the slab this year.
Blaetmar reported that work on
the roof of the old Pomeroy Junior
H1gh School building is ahead of
schedule. Council agreed .to buy

Sniper killed in Moscow
MOSCOW (AP) - Soldiers
hunted for snipers and other hardliners still resisting today despite
the defeat of President Boris
Yeltsin's opponents when government forces stormed parliament.
Yeltsin moved to consolidate
power as prosecutors considered
charging top opposition leaders
with treaSOn.
Snipers in buildings around the
shattered parliarnem building - its
top floors burned black - fued at
soldiers and fuefightJ:rs hours after
most hard-liners surrendered. A
soldier was killed and another
wounded in a clash with gunmen
early today in central Moscow.
officials said.
Several snipers were killed or
arrested, the Interfax news agency
reported. Defense officials said
they could not confirm the repon.
The unrest is the culmination of
a nearly two-year battle over the
policies of post-Soviet Russia .
Yeltsin' s opponents, including
hard -line legislators, nationalists
and former Communists, contend
his reforms are harming the coontty and should be slowed down.
Up to 200 gunmen escaped from

the. parliament before it was taken
by government forces, Russian
news repons said. Smoke was still
rising early today from the charred
building, known as the White
House, as the capilai emerged from
its firSt night under military curfew .
Yeltsin, clearly inspired by his
forces' swift but bi.oody victory,
moved to ughten h1s grip on the
government. He firetj two provincial administrators who had backed
parliament leaders in their defl8DCC
of Yeltsin's decree dissolvmg the
legislature and calling early elections.
Russ ia' s regions were reported

quiet today with little sign of suppan for the vanquished hard-liners.
The sun:ender of lawmakers and
their supporters seemed likely to
allow Yeltsm to move ahead with
plans to elect a new parliament in
December and pursue long-frustrated economic reforms. But he still
faced daunting challenges in his
effon to transform Russia's economy and society.
In a sign of confidence ,
Yeltsin 's office sai d he would
depan Monday on a scheduled visit
to Japan.

A Ponland man was sentenced to prison on Monday on a charge
of breaking and entering.
Sky Flynn was sentenced by Common Pleas Court Judge Fred
W. Crow III to the maximum possible sentence of 18 months in
prison on a charge of breaking and entering as charged in a March
26 indictment, said Assistant Prosecuting Attorney Christopher E.
Tenoglia.
The indictment charged Flynn with the breaking and entering of
a hunting cabin on Sharon Hollow Road, owned by Norman Hamlin
of Dayton. Flynn had earlier entered a guilty plea to the charge.
Flynn was ordered to ~rt 10 ihe SEPTA Center in Nelsonville
for enrolbnent and compleuon of the SEPTA alternative sentencing
program. Upon completion of the program, Flynn will be placed on
five years probation, Tenaglia said. He was also ordered to pay
prosecution costs of$750 and restiwtion of $100.
. Flynn was represented by Auomey Steven L. Story.

You can'ttop the comfort, quality and styl~ of an
Action recliner. And you can't top .the price unless
. you get one free. Choose any of the styles shown .
Pay the regular price ... get another of equal value
.FREE! There's a catch. Offer ends soon!

If you don't need two, tell your
neighbor or bring a friend and
share the co~t and the savings!

Manley. ,.

Dance cruise slated
The second 1111nual Meigs County Chamber of Commerce Dance
Cruise on the P.A. Denny stemwheeler will be held Thursday from
8-11 p.in. with the Crossover Band as entertainment
Ticket! are $25 per person and $45 per couple and a limited
number of tickets are available at the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce office.
For more information, call992-5005.

Driver sought by patrol

.

and 'ltooald Bachtel, Diane and
Ronnie Bachtel, Kayla Bachtel, ·
"Wcodl Collins, Tina RoaGh, Sbelly
Wolfe. Trina Bachtel; Kaodi Bach· .
• tel, Violet and Ill'Oid Limbert. Sue
Lolcar; Sbain and Joshua Lascar, ·
Christy and . Mike YounJ..IDd
Allllley Cremelna-

RUTLAND

JUSTIN BACHTEL

742-2211
'
Four Miles off St Rt~ 1 on St. Rt. 124

C~~~;:~~~~IKI~CKED-OFF- Pepy Deicher, project directot
for 1
In Preveotloo (VIP) program, was in Pomeroy
M011d17 afternOOll to dlt:c1188 tbe ftd ribbon campaign plaooed by
the 0b1o Parellta ror Dru1 Fr~ Youth. J'[aoned activities include a
peer·preventloa workshop at Meip Hl&amp;b School on Qct. 13 and a
red ribbon'raU)'Il the Pomeroy Munklpal Auditorium on Oct. 20.
Here, Delcbtl' displays one of the ribbons promoting the campaign.

1-800-831·821 'Z
In Downtown Rutland

The GaUia·Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol is seeking a
driver who ·caused an accident which injured another driver, fled the
scene and then rolled the truck over an embankment
Injured was Joan L. Pickens, 46, Ponland, who was transported
by Mcif!S County Emerg~y Medical Service wVeterans Memorial Hospital. From VMH she was transferred to Holzer Medical CeoContinued on page 3

MODEL BOAT GIVEAWAY - A feature of the Big Bend
Sternwheel Festival will be the giveaway or a detailed model or tbe
~ternwbeeler Boonie Dee. The original Bonnie Dee is homeported
1n Pomeroy and is owlied by John and Bonnie Dennis. The lroal
was formerly the Abigail J . out of Marietta. The model was con. structed by G.B. McClintock Jr. who bas constructed other models
for the sternwbeel festival. Tickets are avail\lble at Clark's Jewelers, Sweet Greetings Bakery, Carpenters Local 650 and attbe
sternwbeel festival. Here, McCUntocl! displays tbe model which is
also oo display at Clark's Jewelers.
\

I

drip molding 10 help complete the
project.
Baronick indicated she has
received complaints that nowers in
the Beech Grove Cemetery are not
being put away quick enough and
arc being disposed too close to the
graves.
Reed indicated that he plans of
meeting this week with Sheriff
James M. Soulsby and Prosecutor
John R. Lentes 10 discuss the possibility of consuucting a new jail in
the county.
In other action, councilmembers:
- Approved the mayor's report
of $5,125.
- Approved a bid from Willard
Durst 10 purchase propeny on Cave
Street for the price of legal fees and
delinquent taxes.
- Discussed the purchase of a
facsimile machine for the village to
be placed in the water department
office.
.- Agreed 10 make parking free
Fnday and Saturday for the Big
Bend Sternwheel Festival.
Attending were councilmembers
Baronick, Blaeunar, Scou Dillon
Bill Young, Thomas Werry and
Larry Wehrung, Clerk Kathy
Hysell and Reed.

Man sentenced for B&amp;E

Justin Bachtel recently celebmted his lecOIId birthday with a party
11 the liome of his paternal grandparents, Ronnie and !&gt;lane Bachtel.
Pop, cake and ice cream were

ICfVcd.
In auendence or sending gifts'ifO
twO patties were Tberesa Lambert

AMultlm.cll• Inc._,....,

Library parking
problems main
council topic

U.S. death
toll climbs in
:Somalia

canceled its regUlar meeting due to
a lack of quorum.

1 Section. 10 PogH 35 c""ta

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, October 5, 1993

· new.
~:.~~~~·.:!:ka::~~~e~d;~.~!!~
debate over the U.N. m1ss1on

Woods first
birthday
celebrated

KATIE WOODS

stan at1 p.m.

Low arouml 40, clear.

Wednesday, sunny, high In 70.:

I

Community calendar
Commuoity Caleodar items
appear two days before an eveot
and the day of that event. Items
must be received in advance to
assure publication in the calendar.

Pick 3:
342
Pick 4:
8277
Buckeye 5:
3-5-14-21-28

(

·'

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