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.'

'
WltdnesdllY. October 6, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

••

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Southern Ohio Coal Company
officials said today that anolher 70
laid-off employees bave been
recalled as rehabilitation of ihe
Meigs No. 31 mine progresses.
The action brings the total num·
ber of recalled employees to 180.
Some 120 remain. on layoff, company officials said.
Jim Tompkins, Southern Ohio
Coal vice president and general
manager, said steady progress has
been made in exploration and ini·
tial rehabilitation or the mine.
"We continue to systematically
explore new areas of the mine," he
explained. "Our rust rasJc in those
areas is to establish ventilation 10
ensure employees' safety as they
enter !he mine. This work is done
by our specialized teams."
"As expected, isolated pockets
of water remain underground:"
Tompkins uid. "That water will be
pumped to the treatment facilities
on the surface. In ·80me areas, sedi·
m~ from the water that had been
in die mine also must·be mnoved."
r;;.:oc Recallc4i~w~k. s;rews,,;are
··~'I!!Didi!li" ~JIIlliti&lt;M), cbdtiols' lind
repairing. the• ulid'ergrbllnd rail
transportation aod belt conveyor
systems, he said. Meanw.hile, the
electrical distribution substations
and transmission cables are being
restOred and a computerized air
quality monitoring system is being
extended throughout the mine as
exploration continues.
"All or these systems are mutually dependent," Tompkins said.
"In other words, we can't move
ahead to the next area of rehabilitation without .all these systems being
established."
He added that the company was
fortUnate that it was able to get the
water removal process staned as
quickly as possible.
"It's a good thing that we were
able to get in hen: when we did,"
he observed. "All our equipment is
electrically powered and is very
susceptible to water damage." ·
He noted that 33 of the recalled
/' employees will work at the Meigs
Division coal preparation plant and
associated faeilities 'which will
begin operating on two shifts to
process coal from the Meigs No. 2
mine.
"We are.on the road 10 getting
all of our employees back to
work," he said.
·
Approximately 300 employees
were idled after water from an
abandooed mine entered Meigs No.
31 on July
Some 110 employees were recalled Sept. l;l.

PLASTIC
GlLLOII .

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ASST. DANON YOGURTS a oz. 59'

GOLDEN RIPE

hiquita

Tomato

Soup

nanas

(
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Umlt 3 with
$10 or more
additional
purchaaa.

lO'A OZ.

CANS

LB.

c

IDAHO POTATOES 10 LB. s1.99

TENDERBEST BONE-IN

CHOICEs

·Bone
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Steaks

99

RoundS
Steak LB.

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WHOLE STICK.

USDA CHOIC

Mt.

Cubed
Steak

Ml. DEW, DIET OR REG. . . -

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Pepsi Cola oa1o: 12 Pa~k~~~.7

9c
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HAGAN

udge or.
Cream Bars

12 cr.

VELVET ASST. FLAVORS
3 LBS.
OR

LB.

MORE

Sugar Free v.GAL
SAVER POPS
Ice Cream VELVET SUPER
..
SNYDER'9.5-10. OL BAG

Potato Chips

Commission
tables approval
of waste plan ,

'

ORANGE JUICE

18 ''·

1.99

2.!3

n:

'

PAVING PATH- Walkers and jocgers
using the hair-mile walking path ·at Racine's
Stllr MID Park shOUld soon notice Improvements
to the path made as part or a cooperative effort
between the Letart TowDship llollrd or Trustees,

:-

e,l,,.

'•

"

Moderate damage was incurred ·
to the Roger Hysell home on
HyseU Run Road in a foe Wednesdaynight
Rutland Fire Chief Bill
Williamson reponed that the fire
started when grease left on a stove
in tl\e kirchen ignited. The ftre was
confined to the kirchen, with cabi·
nets, a light fixture, and stove being
heavily damage. There was smoke
damage throughout the rest of the
one story frame structure.
Rudand firemen responded,with
three pieces of rue equipmeiiralid
the em(,(s_ency squad and 14 fire·
men. They were on the scene for
about 45 minutes, Williamson
reported.

GRADE ·'A'.

LB.

••'
Eff1C11ve Thru

•

'

I

NOVEL WAY TO ANNOUNCE ; Santa took tq tile strffts
WedllndliJ with 1ncken fOI' the ltlcb an4 Nort'- Pole Dyers for
their falkl to Ill* t'-lt $anta II.about to d"" bundlel p( IIIOIIJY.
ID SOtathtMtern Oblo. He . . . . witll Emma PaUIII, ~tn~t. or
hbpla. Blak In Middleport,.pvltlt bat tile word lbllt .,.yoli!' 011
Chridmu Club savlnp will be macle oti Oet.15.
,

past. The Ford was the lowest bid
received.
After discussion, commissioncn
·approved the purchase of the Ford
with the optional spreader and air
conditioner at an added cost of
$780.
According to Eason, the truCk
wiU be deliver¢ in January.
Afterwards, !he commission discussed the need for an air condi·
tioner for the truck but took no
actioo.
Eason also reported work on die
highway garage roof is progressiilg
mcely.
Following a meeting with
Recorder
. . Emmogene Hamilton
comm1sstoners agreed to pun:haSe
a new Canon NP3050 copier for
the recorder's office from Poynter
Business Products of Marietta for
$5,655.
· Commissioners agreed to make
the purchase through Fanners Bank
at 5.5 percent interest instead of
financing through Canon at a rate
between 12.5 and 15 percent
Delivery of tlie copier is expected early next week.
. Tbe ,commission also made a
resoluuon stating, that effective
immediately, no overtime will be
.'""" . ~«*
p;u.d -1¥1-.·,.,.~.pqol'
deJIII'Illlent head and the commis·

.

sion.

.

A previous resolution, made
before the current commissioners
took office, stated that courthouse
~mployees must take days off
mstead of receiving overtime pey.
The new resolution came about
as a result of the commission hav·
ing to approve ovenime pay for
county employees and will also
help the commission document any
overtime work performed.
In other actioo, commissioners:
- Met with Ruth Fryar of
Pomeroy to discuss extending
water lines to ihe Douglas Road

area.

- Approved a new fonn from
the auditor's office for money
transfers and requested all transfers
requests be submitted on the new
fonn.
- Paid weekly bills in the
amountof$75,689.46.
P!esent were Hartenbach. Tack·
ett and Clerk Gloria Kloes.

zoning meeting slated

SOMETIDNG DIFFERENT • IDdlviduals coming into Mid·
dleport to solicit ror gifts, or money will no longer go to each busi·
ness, but instead will be directed to the Middleport Community
Association's cen!ral distribution program being handled at t11e
Middleport Department Store. Here Jason Ingels, left, and Tom
Dooley, Association president, review the one-stop donation pr~ .
gram which goes into elfect this week.

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) - An
American soldier was kiUed and 12
others wounded in a mortar attack
. by Somali militiamen on
Mogadishu's airport, the. United
·Nations said today.
Three of !he servicemen were in
serious condition and were beiqg
nown to U.S. base in Gerillally
·for treatment, Maj. David Stock·
'f'ell,. the chief U.N. military
spokesman, .saii1 in ·an interviey;
from Moiledishu.
1
• · The tJiiited Suites, meanwhile,
said another American .s oldier
wounded. in w~ellend fighting in
Sonialia died «xJay at a U.S. mili·
. tary bospital in Landstuh,l, Ger·
many, where he was flown for
treatment. · , .
·
Stockwell sa1d two mottar
rounds foil on the seaside airport
late Wednesday in the' latest of
almost nightly grenade an!l mol\ar

a

WHOLE

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs County Board of
· Commissioners Wednesday morning tabled a decision to ratify a
solid waste plan for the new Gallia·
Jackson-Meigs-ViniOn Solid Waste
District
Kenny Wiggins, director of litter control and recycling in Meigs
County, met with the commission
asking them to. ratify the plan. The
four county district was formed
when Athens and Hocking counties
were released from the AGIUMV
Solid Waste District.
Commissioner Janet Howard
Tackett said she has not received a
copy of the plan and wanted to
review it before making a decision.
Upon questioning from Tacken,
Wiggins said the plan "is in the
best interest of all citizens in all
four counties."
"It addresses education, recyclin~. refuse hauling and landftll
moru10ring." he said. "It's a good,
working plan."
Tackett and Commission Presi·
dent Raben Hanenbach agreed to
meet with Wiggins at 10 a.m.
Wednesday to discuss approval of
• the plan.
·, Jbc ~B was the flJ'SI meet·
, ing tiel!! :since the retipation of
Commissioner Manning Roush on
OcL I.
The Meigs County Rep~blican
Central Committee is meeting at 7
p.m. tonight at Rutland Civic Cen·
ter to name a successor to fill
Roush's unexpired tenn. The meet·
ing is open to the public.
Following the meeting with
Wiggins. the commission met with
County Engineer Raben Eason to
discuss the purchase of new tan·
dem-axle truck for the Meigs
County Highway DepartmenL
Eason recommended the commission purchase a Ford LT8000
from Tri-State Ford Truck Sales in
Cincinnati for $59.672 and also
recommended the purchase of an
optional V-box spreader for salt
and cinders at a cost of $4,720.
The two bids received met or
exceeded the specifications, said
Dave Spencer, highway department
administrator. We've got good ser·
vice from Tri-State Ford in the

,..---Local briefs--

Another U. S. soldier killed,
12 are wounded in Somalia

TYSON HOLLY ·FARMS

toUmH

in the past.
.. ·;wljat Ibis m~·aid.J;loo~y.
"is that meR:hanrs ·will not' Have io ·
say 'no' .anymore. Everyone will
get something.
To the merchants it means that
whoever gets the gift certificate
will come to Middleport to shop."
What !he program does, according to Dooley, is say "we support
you, you support us."

Hysell home
damaged byfire

•

'

·,

· A new way Of h!!'l"'ing individ· , ., Jl~ containing several ·
oafS and orpnlzitlooswoo·coiilo:'-''Bill' .
-u-vetiCCii ~­
inro MlddJeibt solidtiilg money or WliCn soineone collecting 'g1fts or
merchandise has been put into money comes into town to solici~
place by the Middlepon Communi· that individual will now be referred
ty Association.
to the Middlepoo Department Store
'y#. is called a central dislribution where the .envelopes will be given
pfligmm, and appears to be advan· out. This will not, however, pre·
tageous to both the solicitors and elude solicitors from making indi·
the partiCipating merchants.
vidual contacts with merchants
According to Tom Dooley. who have .supported their programs
Association president, about 20
businesses are taking part. Most
have contributed gift .certificates, a ,
few have put money into the pro·
gram.

!5

AIIII'Vethe

tbe village of Rac:lne anci the Racine Park
Board. Improvements include the paving and
rolling or the path around the park. Here, Letart
Township and Racine residents observe tbe
p~viog work Tuesday morning.

Middleport group to begin
·one-stop donation program

•

FRIERS ·

2Snllort&amp;.14,.... • - . . .
Allulll ' Inc. II' F f

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, October 7, 1993

'More
•
mzners
return
to work

w.,, ,;,••.,,

Limit One
With $1 0.00 or more
additional purchaae.

Low In mld-50., door.
Fr!Ciay, partyly cloudy, blp 70.

280112

-Pages4·5

Val. ..... rjo. 115
Multi.,...• Ina.

r

'

PUMP.KINS

PURE CAN·E
SUGAR
On~ 5!~

-

Pick 3:

triumph
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..

auackS on U.N. positions.
.The attack came as President
Clinton reportedly decided against
pulling troops out of Somalia and
settled on a plan that will send
1.500 to 2,000 more soldiers !here
quickly, followed by a certain date
fora wi!hdrawal.
Stockwell declined to identify
· the dead and wounded, but said
some were army Rangers and the
o~ wer&amp; suppon persooneL
The .fmner mtemational airport
has becoine a logistics center for
the United Nations and houses the
1,300-strong·U.S. QuiCk Reaction
Foite and 400 Rangers.
. Attacks on a Ranger unit and
two compWe5 of the Quick Reac·
lion Force. atnobil\1 infantry sroup.
kiUed 12 US iloldiers and wound·
· ·ed 78 more'iii Sllilday's fighting in
so11them Mogadishu.

The Meigs County Regional Planning Commission will hold a
special meeting on Oct. 14 10 consider the zoning ordinance proposed by the Olive Township Board of Zoning Appeals.
The meeting will be held at 1:30 p.m. at the Meigs County Pros·
ecuting AtiOmey's office at 117 W. Second St., Pomeroy.
By statute, the planning commission must meeti10 consider the
resolution and to make revisions or recommendations, if any, in
order for the resolution to be placed before Olive Township v01ers
in February, 1994, according to John R. Lentes. president of the
planning commission .
This will be a public meeting and public input and comments
will be taken. Anyone with interest in the zoning issue is encour·
aged to auend.

Woman jailed on charges
An Antiquity woman is being held in the Gallia County Jail following an incident at a neighbor's house Wednesday evening.
Stephanie k. Coqley, 31, is being held on charges of assault and

resisting arrest. according to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
Soulsby said deputies served Conley with a summons around 6
p.m. 10 appear in Meigs County Court to answer assault charges
nted by Mr. and Mrs. Milford Bowens Sr. of Portland.
Around 6:45 p.m., Conley was at the neighbor's house when
Milford Bowens Jr. appeared. Soulsby reported. When Conley saw
him, she allegedly picked up an iron poker and struck him twice once oo the ann and once on !he leg.
When deputies arrived, Cooley admitted striking Bowen because
he had trespassed on her property. Soulsby said. While talking to
deputies, she saw Bowens sitting on his front steps and began
yelling and threatening him wi!h bodily harm, be reported.
When pJaced under arrest. she jerked loose and started to enter
the residence, deputies ·said. She is being held pending a hearing in
Meigs County Court.

Commissioner to .be appointed
The Meigs County Republican Centrat Committee is meeting at
7 p.m. tonight 11 Rutland Civic Center to name ~ successoc to fill
the unexpired term of Commissi~ Marining Roush who resipled
Oct I.
The centtal committee will meet to review any applicants lild.to .
Continued on paae 3
0

•

•

�•

7

·Commentary
ROBERT L WINGE'IT
Publisher
~ARGARET

LEHEW
Controller

LET11!RS OP OPINION are wek:ome. They should be less than 300
words. All letten are oubject 10 editing and must be signed with name,
lddrel1 md telepbDOC number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
sbould be in good lalte, addreuing issues, not penonalitiea.

Abortion issue 'political
mine field' in health reform
•

By WALTER R. MEARS

AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGlON -Looming later in the heBlth care debate. the abortion ~stion has the~ of a deal-breaker. At best, President Ointon

sees uas "a big political minefield."

WASHINGTON (NEA) - In
deciding to radic~y e:~~paod the
amount of the rad1o spectrum
reserved for "personal communi. aervtces
. ... ('1.e., cellular sercabOIIS
vices), the Federal Communications Commission has started a
multi-billion dollar stampede for
conuol of the next generation of
wireless communications.
·
After years.qf.debate, by a close
2-1 vote, the FCC decided to set
aside an additional 120 megihertz
chunk of Jhe radio spectrum· for
new cellular services. This is more
than three times the amount of the
radio band now available for ceUular providers.
The most controversial part of
the FCC's complex decree is its
decision to divide up the continental United SlateS, and Hawaii, inlll
47 ••market uading areas" centered around major cities, many of
which cross state lines. For example, the trading area centered
around New York City includes
much of New Yort state, Connecticut, New Jersey and parts of Pennsylvania and VermonL
.
Two companies will be awarded

OHIO Wcat h c1
FrldtV, Oct. 8

Thursd.y, October 7,1993

Accu-Weather' fon:c:ut for

competing licenses to provide ·a ble to build profitable systems.
The FCC's Andrew Barrett
range of wireless services in each
of these large· ~. Then, in addi- thought so, and thai is .why he
tion to these two licenses; the mar- 'voted against the plan . " In an
attem~ to make everyone happy,"
he s11d, "the majority has fash·
ioned a consensus decision wlili:h I
believe has serious flaws.·' ·
ket trading areas will be further
But FCC Chainnan James Quelsubdivided into 492 "basic lrading lo and Commissioner Ervin Dugareas,' • corresponding to si~le gao, who voted for the pllln, did so,
m~litan areas. Up to .five
·- they said, believing the ~ comtiona! companies will be licensed peution there was the Wider r&amp;n$;e
10 provide specific kinds of service of services would be made availin each of these areas.
able to consumers at the lowest
This plan has left many in the price.
industry unhappy. Some industry
The gold-rush aspect of the proexperts suggest ilial there will he so cess comes from the decision 10
many license holders that many of award the new licenses to the highthe resulting systems will be est bidder. Starting in June 1994,
incompatible with each other.
the commission will begin an aucThen, too, many of the larger tion process t)tat will eventually
companies i:n the telephone and · award more than 2.500 new licens ~
· cellular industry hoped for what es, and hopefully raise some $10
was called "big PCS," relatively billion for deficit reduetion.
few licenses for very large JICO·
Between now and next May,lhe
graphic areas so they could qwckly FCC must formulate rules for how
fashion national systems. Many the licenses will be awarded. This
believe that slicing up the country could well become a difficult prointo so many small· areas with five cess as unhappy companies and
licenses each will make it impossi- industries try to get the rules

Robert}. Wagman

1

.

Congress just rejected Clinton's call to end the barriers to government

fiiWICing of abortions for poor women, ~h date .back 17 ~ears.
Now the issue is an wtavoidable, and nsky, ptcce of hts program to
overllaul the whole hcaJJh care system.
·.
.
.
So the adminisuation opted for low-ter handhng, anttsepucally
labeled as pregiWICy-related services. ~inton s proposed ~niversal h~th
insurance system
include aboruon coverage, but w1thout adverus-

would

ingAt four of the five congressional hearings. on Hillary Rodham. Clinton's opening round for the health plan, abortion was hardly menuoned.
Then, on Thursday, Sen. Bob Packwood, a Republican ally, got blunt .
about iL
.,
"It's not enough just to include it as II s offered and say to the
Congress · 'Take yoor choice. I'll Jake the bill either way.'
"If he• wants funding for abortions, he will have to fight for funding for
abortions, and I will help him," Packwood tllld the first lady.
But that won't help with the cautious .Strate&amp;&gt;: th~ White House chose .
on a troublesome piece of the plan, basically leavmg tt to Congress.
There's sure to. be a ftght, and the administration ~oes~'t want.to
empilaiJizc tbat now, Jnferring to stress the consensus pomts m the Clinton plan, like universal coverage.
The Sena!e has just voted to renew the reslriclions on Medicaid funding of abo!lions for the poor, except in cases of inceSt, rape, or to save the
life of the mother. That happened Tuesday, when the Senate voted 59-40
to reject a pqlOSIII Cinton made early this year to lift the ban.
The pm~idellt hadn't J]l'eSSed the issue. The House already had refused
to end the rmrictions, 2S6 til 171.
Those numbers don't bode well for a heallh plan that would include
health insurallce for abortion, with the government paying indirectly by
bsidizing cov~ for the poor.
.
·
su While the public (,pinion polls reflect majority suppon for abortion
rights 1110111 people say they don't tall dollars used.
·
nW's lbC dilemma awaiting rtJe health plan. Clinton said the day after
Jll~it.lll it dla.l indim:\ly.. gov9"'=nl money would be~ to support
aboltiona fill ~women. .•
.
He s81d poor ~le whose health expenses now arc paid under Me_dicaid would instead JOin a health illSIIIlllllle J?.lan. and could get abortion
coverage. ••.. Jf our plan goes through, it wi!J '!e impossible to ~
out the public and lhe private funds, the ~ediC8ld and the other people,
he !!'~It will probably become a poli~ football bec81;~ so mii!Y people
feel 111 suoogly about it," Clinton smd when the abortion quesuon came
up in TIIDP8. Fla., on SepL 23.
So when it comes up, Clinton explains abortion .coverage as an e":!e~­
sion ·of what already exists in the health insurance system. H~ .w d 11
would be ·JBI of a universal health insurance program because 1t 1s now
covered by most private plans.
. .
Not tMrY
cover abortion, and lhere wo~d be a religtous
extq)lioll fill
itals and do!;UXS opposed Ill lhe ~ So a ~an
Ill a fiiJiily could choose an insorance plan that does not mclude abortion.
But that IIOpS short of the argument that will be repeated in Congn;~
on ahonion and health care: universal coverage would extend what 1s
available in private plans to lJOI!I' women who aren't insured now, and
would uae IDliiC tall money to do tL.
.
.
While the distinction between direct government fmaocmg and msur·
aoce subsidieS won't persuade ardent abl!rtion foes •. some ~'?'!rats
think it may make taougb difference Ill gam congressiOnal majOnbes as
part of an overall health plan.
.
On the other hand, Senate Republican Leader ~ob .Dole sa1d that
might fmd the issue a deal breaker, and put II aside for separa!e

=would

=:.

Bpi that would risk voteS on lhe other side of the issue, and not only

among Democrats. Packwood said he would have trouble supporting a
didn'I include abortion coverage.
PlanMthal
a candidate, Clinton promised that abortion coverage would be part
• of national health care.
.
Now the problem is delivering with&lt;lut risking a roadblock.

EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. ~ears, vice pmlcknl and columalsl ror Tbe As10dated Press, bas reported oa Washington and
nallonal politics ror more than 30 years.

Sarah Overstreet
the process? And if he c:an't, where
will lhF money come from to pay
for his plan?
Since the speech, I've been SID'prised - given the confusion I'd
felt readin' news analyses - to
feel a cauuous optimism. Never
have so many well-educated people, outside of a wlllld war, applied
this much effort 19 solving a problem.
Nor have I ever seen people ·
from so many walks of life begin to
educate themselves so quickly on a
subjecL Reporters' iltterviews with
viewers who watched the president's speech showcased folks
from an amazing variety of ciicums\ances, tossing off terms like
"~0." "health alliance" and
"fee-for-service," and statements
that shpwed lhey understood the
concepts.
.
The health care problem strikes
a deep chord with virtually every-

... AN~

~0\1-\~fl. 'TI'\I~C:r, WH'f
1S 11'" 1 ....&amp;."\, Mo~E. OFTE 1-l
it\~~ ~. WOMIN R\t:JE ON
1~€. ~EA1t Of= 1',\oro~c.I(CL..E&lt;;

?.

-

In committee chambers made say. ~ith genuine sincerity and
bright by TV's spotlights, Ameri- veracity. But her presence in lhese
ca's extraordinary first lady out- meetings can also be inhibiting,
shined her interrogators on health they concede. It Is the one minus
care and tamed or at least tempered
her most caustic critics in
Congress.
But you have to slip inside the
inner sanctums of the West Wipg that comes with the package of
of the White House to grasp the pluses lhllt is the unprecedented
full extent of the unprecedented role the CliniOIIS have forged: Call
influence that Hillary Rodham.. it first lady-first adviser. It is a
Clinton wields within die govern- higher calling than McLarty Ill any
menL Let's join a rcceilt meeting of otlier adviaer can poSsess.
·
President Clinton's senior staff,
"There arc lim~. I must admit,
already in progress.
when it is a bit intilnidating to have
They ate gathered in the Roo- her playing the role she plays,"
sevelt Room, discussing various says one of the president's top
important matters. They are, as ·. athink~viseveersn. ~~LartyileSt!lftnfhJ1!bel~~ebrys
they refer 10 each other: "Mack"
,.,..
IS..• 1 ""'
and "George" and "Dave" and ~ . Clinton's uniQUe role, they
"Howard" and "Carol" ... and aCJd, in the words of one adviser:
"~. Clinton." Mack- Thomas "But thal.is a small price to pay for
~cLarty, the president's old friend the
large value that she brings

:rlnu

one, because almost no one feels
safe anymore. Ten years ago we
may have thought that only the
unemployed, Jhe bomeless and t!te
"prccxisdng-cond.itioned" need
worry. But we've just spent a
decade watching co-workers as
high as CEOs be given pink slips
by one hand while another hand
took away the health insurance.
Oor sons and daughters graduate
college and find only low-wage.
no-benefits jobs. We've made
. wage concesstons in exchange for
promises of fuiUre security, only to
have oor companies cut health and
retirement benefits a..few years
later.

· ~ybe it is our common experiences that so compels us. Whatever
the reasons, the health care dilemma stirs us past carping and l'tetting
and into the recognition that we are
also respot1sible for helping to find
a solutioti.
By appointing a task force of
national expens to study the isSue
and come up with recommendations, President Clinton has forced
the shadowy specifics of the induStry out onto lhe table and into the
light. There voters, legislators,
economists and health care profes·

•

C';

h~ m~

An cnor Jill llllde in editing a
submiuion by ·J tillsiile ~apti s t
Church in Monday' • Dli!y Sentinel, JOlin Dean w• not lUred by
tho. church. He was brO!llbt on
staff. The Daily Sauina1 rqrell the

• IColumbu's l77o I

enw.
ST
.,... Sterll·
wheelers P.A. Deuny, left, and Prlnceu Margy
arrived In Pomeroy late Wednesday aflemoo11
tor this weekend's Big Bend Sternwheel Fest!·

vaL Here CJII]ookers watcb as tile two boats liae
up for tle approaclt to the l'olileroy lnee. (Sen-

Continued from Pille 1
vote to select the person to be appointed to fiU lhe Vlicimcy.
The meeting is open to the public.

•

-----Weather-----Saturday through ~onday :
A chance of showers or thunderstorms Saturday and Sunday. Lows
45-55. Highs 65-75. Fair on ~on­
day. Lows in the upper 30s to low
40s. Highs 55-60.

South-Central Obio
· Tonight, mostly clear. Low 5055. Friday, partly cloudy. High 70.

15.

.

Extended rorecast:

-Meigs announcements __
,Revival
.
Ash Street Free Will Baptist
.Church, Middleport, will have a
,revival Oct. II - 16 at 7:30p.m.
with Evangelist Paul Thompson
Jrom Cincinnati and special
mnging.

Planning Commission will hold a
special meeting on Thursday, OcL
14 at 1:30 p.m. in the Meigs County Prosecutor's office, 117 W. Second St._ The commission will consider !fie zoning ordinance proposed by the Olive Township
Board of Zoning Appeals. Anyone
.World Mission Conrerence
interested in the zoning issue is
· Hope Baptist Church, Middle- eliCOtOIIged to attend.
pan. will have World Mission Con·
ference Week·staring Sunday at II RadDe VFD to have BBQ
a.m. with Grady Evans. There also
The Racine Volunteer Fire
be speakers Sunday - Wednesday Depanment will have ·a chicken
at 7 p.m. Missionaries Dauane BBQ on Saturday, Oct. 17 begin.Kuykendal,
Korea;
Mike ning at 11 a.m.
Humphreys, Gerald Pinkston and . ',
Carol Humphreys will be the Rutland PTO craft bazaar
spealcers.
The Rutland PTO will have a
craft
bazaar with their fall festival
Planning commission to meet
on
Nov.
13. Tables arc $5 each. To
The Meigs County Regional book a table
or for more information call Kimberly Willford at 7422103.

Area death

sionals an) wranjlling with ii. Joornalists arc breaking down the complicated components and ~yzing
them in vernacular we und(ntand,.
Commentators talk about the
president having to "sell" h!/1
health care plan. But I think
they've chosen the wrong verb.
He's not go~ to be able to sell .a
lemon to. an mformed consumer,
and the consumer is becoming
more informed every day~ Millions
of Americans have collectively
decided we should find a way to
make health care accessible and
affordable for everyone, but we
must fuad it in a way that does not
cripple us ftnancially.
..
If there is ooe thing the majority
of Americans agree on, it's that oor
present system of providing healt)t
care is a whopping mess. A few get
rich, a lot of us get soaked and
some of us gel nothing. If votell,
industry experts and legislator6
have the will - and I think we do
- to hammer this out until we
arrive at a way to ren&lt;l'late the sys'tem, the president won't have to
sell it. We'll buy it gladly.
·.
Sarah Overstreet Is a syndl.:
cated writer for Newspaper
Enterprise Association.

Fred Harrison
;. Fred Glenn Harrison, 49, Homewood ·Drive, Bidwell~ died Tucs"illly, Oi!tobet'S; "1'993' It his resi·llence. He was a self-employed
·truck driver and a member of the
Point Pleasant, W.V.a., Moose
.Club.
• Born Sep~mber 16, 1944 in
Gallia County, he was the son Of
Homer Harrison, Bidwell, and the
late Hazel Laothom Harrison.
•·· Survivors include his former
Wife, Janet Saunders, one son, Bret
·Harrison of Bidwell; two brothers,
Richard Harrison of Bidwell and
John Barnes of Racine; three sisters, Carolyn Lamben of Patriot,
Donna ~cNamara of Delaware and
Joyce Ward of Henderson, W.Va.,
lind three gr&amp;1111l:hildren.
· He was preceded ·in death by
four brothers, Homer Harrison, Jr.,
lltoger Thomas Harrison, Bobby
lllean Harrison and Jerry Francis
Harrison.
·· Friends may call6 to 9 p.m. Friday at the Waugh-Halley-Wood
Funeral Home wbere services wiU
be held 1 p.m. Saturday with the
Itev. Wayne Har'tison officiating.
Burial will follow in Macedonia
Cemetery.
Pall bearers will be Jact Lane,
Prank ~cGuire, Steve Crouse,
Danny Richard and Bob Harrison.

·Chamber v! Commerce to meet
There wiU be a generaiiDenther;,~: ·
· · fill the ~,..,....
u.:ft•..c;:Oun ty
•!'P
maet!DI
Chamber of Commerce Tuesday,
OcL 13 at 7:30 Lm. at the Senior
Citizens Center. The topic of the
meeting will be the senior citizens
levy.
Hunter Sarety Course offered
There will be a hunter safety
course offered OcL 13 - 15 and 20 22 from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. at the
Coolville Lions Club. For more
information or to register call Bob
Pullins at 667-3831, Ed Rood at
667-6348 or Ed Wigal at667-6657.

Sweat ahlrt P.alatlnJ. clasl offered
Marilyn Meier will •h sweat-

shin painting Monday, OcL 11 at 7
p.m. at ~iddlepon Arts Council.
Please bring your IIWll sltirL Paints
and Brushes ·will be provided. Cost
is $10. For more information Call
992-5983 or 992·2675.

Reporter seeks local haunts

W~yand~ymorning
by units of tbe ~eigs County

Emergency Medical Service.
: At 2:36 a.m .. the Pomeroy squad
t;enl to Second Street for Tammy
Thomas who was transeorted to
' ·

-

-

.

~

The Daily Sentiuel

'

I

(tliP8 2Jl.M)
Pub~ ••.., ............ lllo..S.y lhnN&amp;b :
J'rjdoy, 111 Court St..-,. OIIIO'bj tho •
'Oillo Voll&lt;r Publillllll ~yiMulllmedla
'lA&lt;:., Po.-y, Oblo 4!769, Pto. 992-2156.
.- -........ pold "Po"*"f. Oblo.
.
'1o1omb«: Tile _ .................... Ohio
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«.epnHIIIIII... Bnobam Newtp- Sileo,

' .Y33 Third Aveaue, New· Yort. New York
10017.

PosTMAS11!R: S.od lddreH ~ m1'11e
.,D!IY S.lllael, Ill Cowt SL, l'oiMOJ, Ohlo
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Ma~ found innocent in jury trial

A Belpre man was found innocent on a misdemeanor assault
charge during a jury trial Tuesday in the Meigs County Coun of
Common Pleas.
Reggie Johnson, 34, was cleared on charges after a 25 minute
jury deliberation. He was accused of assaulting Eddie Dean Place,
also of Belpre, in Tuppers Plains on Aug. 4.
Johnson was repres~ted by Attorney Steve Story. The state was
represented by Assislant Proseculllr Charles Knight

Probe theft complaints
Deputies of the ~eigs County
gati~ two reponed thefts.

Sheriffs Depanment are investi..
Shelly Paving reported Monday morning that someone stole the
battery, tools and automatic controls from a paver parlred near the
intersection of state routes 338 and 124 in Lebanon Township.
Steve Tracy, Pomeroy, reported Sunday that his 1992 Yamaha
Warrior 350 all-terrain vehicle was stolen from a Rock Springs residence. According Ill the repon, subjects parked a vehicle on U.S.
33, cut the fence and dragged the ATV back to U.S . 33 where it was
loaded onto the vehicle.

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Probe hit-skip wreck
A hit.sJcip accident at the Bank
One drive-through Tuesday afternoon remains under investigation
by Pomeroy Police.
"
Nancy King, 22, Long Hollow
Road, Pomeroy, reponed to police
that she pulled into the· drivethrough behind another car. That
car. backed into her car and then
pulled from the lot without stopping: King said there was light
dam~e to lhe front end of lhe 1977
Firehud she was driving.
There were no citations in an
. accident near the intersection of
East Main and Lynn Streets at 2:30
p.m. Monday. Sandra Southern, 21,
of Shade was stopped in traffic
when her 1993 Pontiac was hit in
the rear by a 90 Ford driven by ·
Kimberly Roush, 19, ~ason, W.
Va. There was light damage to the
Southern vehicle, and no damge to
the Roush car.

Board to meet
The Meigs County Board of
Elections wiD meet at lhe office on
Mulberry Avenue, Pomeory, at
4:30p.m. Wednesday.

Two cited on littering charges
Two Pomeroy men were cited to appear in ~eigs County Comt
on charges of littering. Cited were Jimmy Hawley, 35, and Dennis
Riffie, 36.
Accordin~ to a report from the Meigs County Sheriffs Depart·
ment. depuues investigating a liUering complaint found lhat two
individuals were dumping old tires from a pickup truck on Dark
Hollow Road, Pomeroy. Working from a license plate number,
__ ~~tiemJ~.=rv~hiclt:and questionel\.thUpbjec~ who ~!~!nit:.,.
Deputies advised the two picked up the old tires.

Deputies investigate accidents
A Chester man was cited on charges of driving under suspension,
no registration plates and failure to control following a two-vehicle
wreck on Skinner Road Tuesday around 4 p.m.
According to a report from lhe Meigs County Sheriff's Depanrpent, Dayle Brooks, West Shade Road, was southbound in a Mazda
pickup truck when the tie-rod end came loose causing him Ill lose
control of the truck which went across the roadway and suuck a
nonhbound 1993 Chevrolet Blazer driven by Carolyn Smith, Skin·
ner Road, Pomeroy.
No injuries were reported and light damage was listed to both
vehicles.
·
A Coolville youth's vehicle sustained modemte damage in an
unrelated deer-car wreck on State Route 681 near Tuppers Plains
Tuesday around 8 a.m.
According to a sheriffs deparunent report, Jason L. Carlellln, 17,
was westbound in a 1987 Pontiac and struck a deer which ran into
the roadway.

Office open Monday

Hospital news
VETERANS ~~ORIAL
Wednesday
Admission: Ernest Triplett,
Synicuse.
Discharged: Lisa Tagel.

, ·•

.The Photo Pl•ce
.101 High Sliltf ·
POMEROY

TONIGHT

HARD TARGET •
STAAl1NQ FRIDAY

FREE WILLY..
ONE EYENIHO SHOW 7:3D

AlllfiSIIION $1.50 441H123

I, 1 I

,

,

W O RKH O H S f

Excellent
Selection of

Veterans Memorial Hospital; at
11:51 the Middleport unit went to
High SJreet for Judy Anspach, also
Jaken to Veterans: and at3:16 p.m.
the Syracuse squad went to Foorth
Street for Ernest Triplett who was
also transported Ill Veterans.
At 2:3li p.m. the Pomeroy squad
went to Rolland Ill State I!.oute 124
for Helen l,'lryant, who was transported to Holzer Medical Center;
and at ?:02 the Rutland Fire
Department went to Hysell Run
Road for a structure fire at the
Roger Hysell residence.
Thursday morning the Rull1111d
squad went to ~ei11 ~ine 31 for
Terry George who was taken to
Vetetans, at 4:34 am. lhe Rutland
unit went to Route 124 for Thormao Hamling. also taken to Veter·
aos, and at 6:44 a.m. the Middlepen squad went to South Seventh
Street ror .~ary Lyons, wlio was
liken ID die Holzer Medical CenJer.

.r..........~,.c~a~ Qa

COLONY THEATRE

The ~eigs County Board of
Elections, located on Mulberry
Avenue, Pomeroy, will be open for
business ~onday, despite the
Columbus Day observance. The .
office will be conducting businesss
duri!tg the regular hours, 8:30 a.m.
to 4:30p.m.

Men's

Sweaters
•Pullovers
•Sleeveless
-cardigan
Mens Levi's
Prewashed

•19'5·*3800
• rlO ·~washing

\\-'t·

H~.·nt

,.. Doll,~

boo-otsorl2-boolo.Cndllwtllbo

.

Sentinel reporter Jim Freeman is seeking infonnation for a Halloween feature story about haunted sites in Meigs County. Readers
who know of such places and would like to share their stories can
contact Freeman at 992-2156.

;squads receive eight calls
Eight calls were answered

SPRINL VALli v f IN!fn~

tinel pbolo by Jim Freeman)

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

but 11 li-ght~year 11go when the
·
.
. By The Aaoelated PrUa
.
.. ;
~&gt;-•bliclm turned their 1992 con
, Today is Thursday, OcL 7, the 280th· day of -1993. 11iere are 85 days
·
;ion into a week of Hillary
I~ in the year.
· ·
·
·
.· .
~~:r- "Hillaty" was their
Today's Highlight in ~t . · ·
'
.
· .·
. . :,
.
~ithet of cliOice. All that
On Oct. 7, 1m. the second Battle of Saratoga began Jluring the Amer,. :
seem~ tol'gotten in ~er perfor- . , i&lt;ian RevolutiOIL The Bri~ forces, under.General Jolui llwgoyne; sur- :
mances on Capitol Hill, as she
rendered 10 days later.
· .
• -'
.
On this
', ,
'
.... ' .
prlisellllie Republican tdeas
on
. clatC: ,
hCa1dl care and cbanned old coats
. In 1765, the SU!ffiP ACt~ convened in New YOlk to draw up ·
like Suom Thurmond('' Amen"
colonial · YatJGeS •• Bnallnd.
.·
.,. · · ·
:
• .llid, after one of
n'
In 18Jr.'autbor
l'lle djcd in Baltimore auge 40. .
:
mumble obl!lr~ona)~
: ·
In 1868, Cornell tin!~ wu iDauglll'l1ed in Ithaca, N.Y·.
··
, ton spcth
.
· · .
lJutj:! acrou che Potomi\C
In 1940, Artie Shaw ind hil On:bestri recooled Hoagy CanbiChael'i :
, Horconlritiutiolis- 'vateand River,
'*IOiddays,W!Iit'Cnot
"Stardllll"·f'orRCAVictor.
•
.
· .
~
pu~li~ ...,., ~!}_like her. ~ar 'the. foqoata1. In a ihameful plllderin&amp;
In 1~9, the Republic ri East Oamany.was fot!Qed.
· • ~· :
greatest asset of Bill Clinton's lly: a pol wlio 1mQw1 beatz, former
., In 19S4, MJriai! ~ }lecame lbe.ftnt blaCk singer hired by Jhll
White HOuse, ienlor staff advisers Elhx:ation Secretary William Ben- . MetropO!ilin ()pela Company iit New 'YOlk.
. .
·:
or a plan is deviled, it is often Mrs.
cr
h ··'d
.. ,:~~~~ ;oi~g'ioe;ol~~~~:no~
thal?"lli".When will wette. bow
~~~own·
' ~~'...~shesio'-ffi
. ersUy
...,..jia Jiis own Cuu,...,. bets. From time .to .ti,me, :wben
' or Carol or
George or Howarll
so..meono .pronn~e~, som_ethin ... a
coi!CigUO m~ respond this Ta ,a
bad Idea bec•nle of such...nd-such.
It~ aot happcti when Mri.1=!1in·

ConleJilef't.:a-'·

Correcti()n

nett, who'd like ihe Republican thirig far grtater- forging a compresidential nomination, appeared plex, era-defining new policy,.
before the Concerned· Women for uanslating it into comprehendible
America, a group of 1,150 conscr- English and selling tt coast-tovative Christian activists, 811\1 (as coast. No first lady ever did that
quoted by The Washington Post) before.
called ~rs. Clinton the nation's
Then the King-oLcable-talk
"new nanny .... She thinks she mentioned that Mrs. Roosevelt
knows what's best for us .... 1llor- even wrote a weekly newspaper
oughly Modern Millie has taken column from the Whue House and
over." (Then he said: "She asked if Mrs. Clinton might stan.
deserves not to be patronized.")
writing one too (nevermind that :
The other night, as the premier · this is an already overpopulated ·
guest on CNN's new "Larry King crafl). Replied the fustlillly: "If .
Weekend" show, ~rs. Clinton anybody asked me ~\!.~~ght" . :
demorred as King noted that she
Say what? Now .tuwuy Clin~ ·
had been compared to Eleanor has gone too far! Why doesn't she .
Roosevelt. "Well, to me it's an host a cable ;rv talk show ...:..
honor," she said. "I don't know maybe opposite ·Larry King on ,
that I deserve it." ln truth, she CNBC?
··
most certainly does. She has in her
~artla Schram is a S1!1dlatted ·
way already accomplished some- writer ror Newspaper Eaterprlse .
Assodatloa. ,

10
rs"'~df..~=~~~=
t~h:=.;~·usanalong . ·Today
nally. For, whe.n an idea is hatched · way. It seems.not jusl a year ago

-

changed in their favor.
:
In preliminary rules the com~
mission has published, it has decided ·that companies with sufficieril
financial strength will be allow~
to bi4 for more than one license ia
a basic trading area and also for a
martel trading area license, whi~~
could well overlap a smaller basiC
trading area.
No company, bowever, will he
allowed to acquire frequencies
totaling more than 40 megaherlz - :
which is 60 percent larger than corrent cellular licenses.
·
To make .sure a company has
significant financial strength, the
FCC will require a large, non,
refundable deposit Ill enter the )lid·
ding, and then immediate full pay~
ment if a bidder is successful:.
Small and minority-owned businesses will be allowed to pay over
alongerperiod.
•
In another controversial decision, companies currently holding
cellular licenses will be allowed to
compete in the auction for additional licenses, but will be limited
to acquiring only an additional 10
megihertz over the 25 megahenz
they already hold. Critics of thi.s
decision say that giving cunent
license holc!Crs more spectrum will
leave them controlling too much.
But cellular companies say the
additional spectrum will allo~
them to offer a· broader range of
services, including wireless data
transmission.
Congress will now probably get
involved in the process. Both the
House and Senate will hold
detailed hearings on the PCC"s
announced proeess, and lobbyists
for most of lhe competing players
arc already hard at work trying ti&gt;
convince key members of the
House and Senate communications
panels to order changes..
'
By the lime the auctions begin
next 1une, both the map and the
process may be very differenL
·
Robert Wa110an Is asyadlatted writer for Newspaper Entetprise Associatioa.

Mrs. Clinton eclipses Mrs. Roosevelt
Martin Schram

Berry's World

-\

insure every legal resident in the
country without a major tax
increase AND save an extra $91
billion 10 slice the budget defiCit in

Holler ~leal Cetlter
Oct. ' cll•d•arau: Tabitha
Leona Hdb
Gibson,
Mn: lopr
and son, :AliCe Sprlfue, Jo~
John lOll, HuJb Jardan u4 Miry
JohntoD.
Ocr. ' blrti1: Mi. and Mrs .
Donil McCoy, dllapta:, Gallipoiis. Mr. llld Mn,ll.rl!: Petry, diiuihter, Malon. W.Va.
.
.",

MCH .

For health care, prognosis is good
Watching President Clinton
deliver his health care speech, I felt
the same emotions I'd experienced
listening 10 him on the campaign
trail and at the Democratic Convention, creating his vision of "the
way things ought to be" (apologies
to Rush Limbaugh):
Emotion No. 1: Excitement It's
thrilling to hear a politician setting
. actual dnvllioes by which to solve
some of our messiest problems,
rather than just spouting the custom&amp;r)' campaign buzzwords and
rhetoric.
•
.
EI!IOiion No. 2: Pride. This was
the altar call to everyone who grew
up believing that a just society
Jakes care of its disabled, elderly,
poor and simply not-so-lucky. The
past two administrations simply
sang "Ia-la-Ia" a little louder every
time the calls for medical help
grew too annoying.
Emotion No. 3: Pear. If he
doesn't pull this off righr, this
could really be bad. Even our fore·
most economists and industry
experts can't agree on what to do
about health care. So whom do we
believe? Will President Clinton's
proposals create the ~other of All
Bureaucracies? Can he really

Hospi..lnews

Page-2-The Dally Sentlne)
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio:

Ruling starts rush for wireless services

111 Co~ Street
Pomuoy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THB l!n'ZRB81'8 OF THB IIEJQ8.11A801'f AREA

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•

•

The Daily Sentinel

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Ohio

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�'•
.

Sports

Thursday, October 7, 1993

.

rhe. Daily Sentinel

Thursday,. October 7, 1993
P~~ge

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In NL playoffs,

Batiste's lOth-inhing single

..

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LooAn ........... 0 I

0
Sanlote ............ (J 1 0

2
2
I
0
0
0

6
6
4
0
0
4

2
2
2
0

2 I
l 2
S 2

0
0

0
2
2

4
4
4
0
0
6

0
S
:3

Wednesday's scores
N.-. J.,..y 2. Tam(JI Bay 1
S,lie
Noiotral•, Hanlon! 3
Ao~Wa.f, Cllicqo4, do
Winn11"16,
4
E'
'on 3, San JOM 2
Vancouver 5, Lol An&amp;des 2
~ $, Otllwa

w.......,.

Toolchl's £limes
B..traJo 1t Boa:tm, 7 :35p.m.
Manrreal. u Pi.a.aburah. 7:3S p.m.
TaqttB9'atN.Y. lanpn, 7:35p.m
Dai1U 11 T«odo, 7:35p.m.
Floddl at St. Louia, 1:35 p.m.
San J011111at CaJa&amp;l')', 9:JS p.m.

a.• of

at the Syracun

the
Nat. .e.wlth
· ·Ev.ist
Wm• Toler!
Od. 5111-lOth
.
7:00p&amp;
-

and Mike Donnelly, left wing. to a oneyear contract. lolned Breu Seguin, cen·
ter, from PhQCni._ of the International
Hockey Lcaauc 1o Pon Wayne of lhe

!-frankfort Ade111 (12) l4· 1 ..............2fJ7
2-Windham {4) 16-0 ........................... 199
1-Snrilhville (S) 14-0 ......................... .1 92
4-Lonin Catholic (I) 14-J .................. 92
1

3
3

Ottawa .............. DO I
Queboo .............. 0 0 I
0 I 0

Pts~

Team

CARHARTT
,.. ,...... . '1

IIIL.
OTTAWA SENATORS : Chimed
Francoill..eroux, de.!en~cman, off waiven.
&amp;om the Edmonton OiJc:n.

.

"

. ..

PITTSBURGH _PENGUINS : Signed
PelCr Ta&amp;'dnaui, defen~~n .

College

Set-ond tO: "t !:Springfield Local 42.
12 {tie)-B1inbridge Paint Valley, Belpre
40. 14-W•u•eon (1) 37. 15-0mille (I)
l4 . 16-Hwon (I) 31 . 11-Pember'lille Eutwood 30. IS -Defiance T inor• 2S . 19Navarre F1irlce1 24. 10-Bioomdale Elmwood 19.

·'
t
~rh.llrt

ALABAMA: Promoted Debbie. WnJat to usiJtant athletic director.
ARIZONA: Su•pal)d.d Claudiu•
Wri_a.ht. ccrncrbt4, f« iu Oct. 16 pne
agam~t Staaford foUowina hia arre~t on

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~ LoreCit'e!uckcye Trail (4) 14-0 ... 141
4-Kidmn
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6-A&gt;chbold 9-2 ................................... ! ll
1-Fort RCCOYCtY 10-1 ........ ...................91
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- * Transactions *Auto racing
NASCAR WINSTON CUP: An-

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Division IV
Team

HOOVERe
EllterM
En(trgy Efficient
Upright Vacuum

who had a 3·1 record against
Toronto in the regular season. "We
definitely had our chances and
couldn't capitalize. But ~ve Dave
Stewan credit We had h1m on the
ropes but he made the pitches when
h~ had to. In the sixth mning, I was
s•ttmg ·on the bench and thought
~e' ~ score and do s&lt;ime damage. It
didn t happen, again."
·
.. Because of Thomas' tricep ·
IDJUry, Pasqua has started at first
(See ALCS on Paae 6)

- ~:v$139.99*

i

'

M1DDLEPORTDEPARTMEN1 STORE

Oct3 for c&amp;Jl)'ina• conc:ulcd weapon.

pitcher." Schilling responded.
1 The Phillies lOok a 1-0 lead in
the fJtSt on Lenny Dylcstni's double
lind Mariano Duncan's RBI single . .
:r"he Braves tied it in the third with ·
•wo out as srarter Steve Avery douJlled and scored on a double by
Otis Nixon over the head of Pete
~ncaviglia, who was playing shal'ow in left.
; Atlanta moved in front 2-1 in
lhe fourth when Gant singled, raced
)o third on a single by McGriff and
!Scored on Justice's sacrifice fly .
!The lead lasted until lncaviglia hit
Ji two-out home run in the bottom
.of the inning.
: Philadelphia went ahead 3-2 in
~e sixth when John Kruk walked
;r,yith one out nd advanced to third
1Jn Ho!Uns' double. He scored from
:U.ere on Avery's wild pitch.
! In the ninth, Mitch Williams
~allred the leadoff batter Bill Pecota, who then reached third on
:Batiste's error. P~cQta . eventil!llly
.)cored on an infield out to tie the
ame.
In the lOth with one out, Kruk
oubled and scored on Batiste's
~ine sh~t down the left field line.
.
~ Williams (1-0) got the win and
;t.fc:Micbael (0-1) the loss.

• Lightweight

EF

White Sox 'loaded the bases on·singles by Frank Thomas and Robin
Ventura and a walk to Ellis Burks.
uauon.
"I got out of it with a l)ope and
Teams have come back from a prayer on each hitter,'' said Stewtwo losses in the playoffs l,lefore, art. who is 7-0 lifetime in AL playbut no team· has ever rallied to win offs with a 1.99 ERA.
after losing the fust two games at .
Stewart got Dan Pasqua on a
home. Against the Toronto Blue short fly to center, Lance Johnson
Jays and Dave Stewart it seems to pop out and pinch-hitter Warren
nearly impossible. · '
Newson to bounce back to the
·
With Stewart getting out of a mound.
senous sixth-inning jam Wednes"Frustrating," said Fernandez,
day, the Blue Jays escaped with a
•3-1 victory to take a 2·0 lesd in the
~best-of-seven AL playoffs.
: The series now shifts to Toron•to' s SkyOome for three games
:beginning Friday, and the Blue
:,Jays need Dilly two victories to
·advance to the World Series again.
: "I'm sure'they're not feeling
;too good ri~t now," said Toronto
.manager C1to Gaston, "but base;ball is a funny game. It can tum
•around on you overnight. We feel
$10.00
good but we can't take them for
;granted."
REBATE
: It was Stewan's gutsy pitching
.and the continued futility of the
White Sox, who stranded 23 run,ners in the two losses, that keyed
'the sixth inning.
· With Toronto holding a 3·1 lead
:having scored a pair·of unearned.
r._ns off )oser Alex Fernandez, the

;NLCS...
·
I
(Continued from Page 4)

• Bare fiOOf cleaning
• Quick &amp; easy bag change

ScoreiJoard

:Blue Jays hand White Sox 3-1
loss to take 2-0 lead to Toronto

'

THE RIGHT TOOL FOR
FALL CLEAN-UP

STERNWHEELER

-

·

By JOE MOOSHIL

- As customary, Schilling left a
seat vacant in the stands for his late
father, Cliff, wiih whom he was
exaremely close.
What would his dad have said
about his gilt-edged petfonnance?
' 'You ~ave, up two · to the
(SeeNLCSoa

game. I would have understood if
the top of the lineup was coming
up (in the ninth), but it was the bottom.
"But it's the mana~er' s decisian,' • Schilling said. ' And w(len
they tied it, I just wanted to win the

-

CHICAGO (AP) - The Chicago White Sox are in a desperate sit-

/gives Phils 4-3 win over-Braves
By RALPH BERNSTEIN
PHn.ADEIPHIA (AP) - Kim
Batiste was sent in as a defensive
replacement and almost tbrew the
game away.
It's probably poetic justice that
Batiste redeemed himself not with'
his glove but with his bat
Tbe Philadelphia Pbillies' utility
infielder's RBI single in the lOth
inning Wednesday night gave lhe
Pbils a 4-3 victory over the Atlanta
Braves and a 1-0 lead in their bestof-seven National r.e..me playoff.
Game 2 tonight features the
Phillies' Tommy Greene (16-4)
against Atlanta's Greg Maddux
(20-10).
Batiste said he was hopinJ! for a
chance to atone for a ninth-mning
error that set up Atlanta's gametying run. On a potential double
play, Batiste lhrew the ball into
right field.
"After lhe error I said, 'Oh,
God.' After the hit I said, 'Thank
you, Jesus,"· Bastiste said. "I was
hoping I'd get a chance (for
redemption) and I did. I was thinking hard about it as I went to the
plate."
Phillies mana$er Jim Fregosi,
who put Batiste mto the game in
CARRIED AWAY- Philadelphia's Kim
the lOth inning or Wednesday night's National
the ninth for sometimes erratic
Batiste (band raised) Is carried orr the field by
League playorr opener against the visiting Atlanta
fielding Dave Hollins at thin!, tried
Braves, wbo Ieist 4-3. (AP)
teammates alter getting the game-winning hit in
10 soften the misplay.
"It's the toughest thing in the
game to go in for defense,"
Fregosi said. "The only thing you
can !lo is mess up.
"Ir you make the plays, that's
llrlday's games
Baseball
- * Baseball *Now Jmoy •t WubinJtan, 8:05p.m.
Natlonallaaut:
what
you're out th~re for .... He
N.Y. WandenatEdmooton,9:3S p.m.
CIDCAGO CUBS ' Fired lim Lefobwent
from
goat to hero il! a couple
Amerkan League
Octmit at Anaheim., 10:35 p.m.
..-re, manager.
Wedatldly'a KOre
SAN DIEGO PADRBS : Fired Mike
of heart beats."
Toronto 1, Chica1o 1. Toronto tuds
Roukc. pitchin,s OOKh. Siped Mav Ret·
- * VolleybaU * Batiste said or his errant throw,
tenmund, batting coach; Rob Picciolo,
leriei2-0
Fridoy
bench COAch; and Dan Racti.Jm, tint bue
"I
maybe rushed myself too much
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Tho dWd
Chicago (Alnrez IS -8) It Toron~o
coach, lO contneu .for the 1993'-94 ae..
anp
caused a bad throw . I had a
weekly
Ohio
Hif.h
School
VoUeyball
(Hen&amp;aen t9-9), 8:12p.m.
·
Coachea Auoci•uon poll•. with school,
Saturdly
pretty
good grip on iL''
,.._ record md kltl.l points (flllt-place volcl in
CUc~ao (B~ 12·5) at Tctront.o (StOtBasketbaU
He
said he got nothing but
parcntheaes):
Llcmyl1' 11 ·12). &amp;:12p.m.
National Basketball Assoc:laUon
·
encouragement
from his teammates
Sunday, ()d. JO
CHICAGO BULLS : Announced the
Division I
Oticap at Toronto, 4 :10p.m, if nee:·
retirement of Michael Jordan, guard.
after
the
miscue.
Team
Pas •
...uy
DENVER NUGOJITS: Siancd Rodney
"I couldn't have felt better
Tuesday, Ott.l:Z
1-R?CkY Riv. Matnific.tl (1) 13-1...... ~7
Rog~. forward.
TormtO 11 Chilll.go, 8:12 p.m., if nee:·
2.-Cin. Mmheral'~en::y (10) 13-2 ..... 22A
when you have 22 guys on the
INDIANA PACERS: Si&amp;nod MitcheJJ
l-Piquall-0(1) .. ............................... 157
Andmon, guard-forwud; Je~n Pri~cau,
"'''11 Wednesday, Od. l3
bench telling you to put it behind
guard; and laekie Robinlan, fmward .
Toru~to at Chieaso, 8:12p.m., if nect=:.~~~.~~~--~-~-~~:::~:::::: :~
you.
You have to feel comfortable.
NEW JERSEY NETS: MalChed lhc
eual:)'
••• ~
..ChWieolllo (I) 11-8.----··-·117
Milwaukee Buck~' offer 1heet to Dwayne
of guys were saying, 'Don't
A
lot
7-Meouw(l) 12-1 .............................. .1 II
.
Schinttila, oeoter.
I·Cin.
Uu
....
Aoad.
(l)
14-1...
......
....
99
worry
about iL You'll 'eta chance
PHOENIX SUNS: AJrud to te.rml ·
Nadonal Leoq:ue
9-Minofi.W liUdUGa (I) 11 ·1 ............ :11
wilh Rod Hiuinl. forwud.
to
win
it,' which I did.'
Wednadly'a KOrt
ID-WOOiaVillo SoUih (I) 12.0............... 00
PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZERS '
Philadelphia 4, At\anta 3, 10 irutinp,
Phillies
starter Con Schilling.
Named Jim Paum offcmive akilk coach.
Philadelphia lclda &amp;ais 1-0
S•Oild lfz ll.l.opn 51. 12-Celina
martelous
through the first
was
T•lobl
(1) 39. 13 ~SUiw (1) 35. 14-WOOile:r 34.
Nallon.t Ba1ket.ball Luau•
Atla~na (Macldur.l0-10) at PhUadd·
eig.ht
inl)ings.
ije
gave up seven
lS.CiD. Mt. Nrue Dame (2) 33. 16-CanNBL: Nuned Michael 1!. Doyle exccu·
phU (o..a.. 16-4), U2 p.m.
.
hits,
ton MeltinlCy 2.8. 17 -0ahaMa-Lineo~
two
runs
and
struck but 10
. tive vice preadent and dircctar of mutet20.18-Euclid 19. 1'9-WeRCb.tai.akot~
before
leaving
with
a
3-21ead.
'"&amp;·
Phlb~ (Mulllo~d 12-9) 11 AtII. 20--Newuk 16.
lanta (GiavtM 22-6), 3 p.m.
was
overpowering,
Schilling
Football
Su•daJ, OcL lt
Dh1sloo n
striking out the first five batters to
Nallon1l Football Leaaue
Philadelphia U•cbon ll-11) u AtTsm
~ATIJ\NTA FALCONS: SlRned, Ernie
lan\.1 (Smollz 15-11),1:19 p.m.
equal
a playoff record.
1-NOlWali. (19) 1~ .......................... .286
M.unU,.,OcLll
Jonm;, delcnllivc end. Plarocd R1ck Bryan.
2-Bcdey
(2.)
14-0
.........
_
....................
194
His
fastball reminded observers
Philadelphia at Atlan\a, 3:07p.m., if
defensive end, on injlltedauerve.
3-Salem (4) 13-0 ... .............. ................ 190
,_,.,.,
of
Nolan
Ryan in his prime. He
GREEN BAY PACKERS : Signed
4-0e. Hts. Beaumilnt (2) 15-0 ........... 140
w.-..,,&lt;kt.u
Paul Hutchirtl, taclde. Waived Brtlt
checked
the
r?wer-hiwng middle
5- Thornville Sheridan (3) U·l----115
Allanu. ll Pbiladelpbia, 3:07 p.m. or
Collins,lincb•ckcr.
•
6--SPJ]ndidd
Shlwnco
14-1
.................
95
of
the
Braves
lineup - Ron Gant.
NBW
YORK
JBTS:
Waived
Don
I : 12 p.m., if ...-.uy
1 -l"~adge(l) 13-0 ............................ 92
nwlday,O&lt;LJ•
Jonc.t~,linoblc&amp;or.
Fred
McGriff,
David Justice and
8-Cin. St. Uaula(l) 9-2 ............. ........... 80
Atllnta at PhiladeJphM , 8:12p.m., if
PlllLADELPIDA EAGLES: P1•ced
9-Akmn
Hobin
(I)
~
.........................
76
Terry
Pendleton
- with just ·two
._,.,.
Fred Bameu and Jeff Sydne:r, wide relll-Ht&gt;bbu.l 13-2 .................................. Jfl
\_'
cci"Yctl, m injumd ~
hits in 18 at-bats. .
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS : S igned
-*NHL*Second 10: 11-Sunbwy Big Walnut
"That's the ley to beating this
Jeny Rice, wide rbcciva, w a dmlc-year
6S. 12 (tie)-A1ht1bull Edgewood, Cin .
conuact ulcrllioo lhfou&amp;h 1hc 1997 au·
.
club,"
Schilling said, who didn't
Roser Bacm (l) S7. 14--Lima Buh (l) 40.
EASTERN CONFERENCE
want to come out of the game.
1.5-Wilminpxt 39. 16-Kenering Altet 38.
Atlan.Oc Dlvllkln
11-Brecknille 36. IS -Clyde 32 . 19·
Team
W L T Pta GFGA
"I couldn't argue any harder if I
Hockey •
Fairview Put 21. 20-Lebanoo 25.
NcwJency ....... 1 0 0
2 2 1
Nadonal
Hocker
Leaaue
was
trying to get out of the electric
Philadelphia .•.... 1 0 0
2 4 3
LOS ANOp KINOS: Sisnecl Jim·
florida .............. 0 0 1
l 4 4
DlvlsloniD
chair,"
he said. "I felt it was my
my Canon, oeQie:r, to I lW~)'e&amp;f OOI'Ib'ICI

In AL pl4yoffs,

,1 •

1992 CHEVY

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Winless Meigs heads west ~o take:on once-·beaten Well~ton

-~

•

Pegr 6 The Dally Sentinel

By DAVE IIAIUUS
Setlllllel CCNiUJI DDdeat
The Meigs Marauders will try
and lnak into tile win column for
lbc first time Ibis season when tbcy
ttavel10 Wellston 10 try aild defuse
tbc Golden Rockets.
Wellston (4-1) has wins over
Athens (28-3), Esstem (14-6) Federa! Hocking (44-13) and Miller
(39·8). The Golden Rockets lost
their first game of the year to
ardlrivalJtdson by 8 26-0 111811in.
Wellston is led by junior tail·
bact Troy Smith, the 5-11, 165pound junior has gained 696 yards
10 102 carries for 6.8 ylllds a carry.
Smilh picked up 208 yards of those
I

I
i

I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~offensive line at IaCkie.

ylllds in tbc win over Eastem
Lawrence Ousley also is ~threat
for lhc Golden Rockets. The 5-11,
180-pound junior has picked up
220 yards in 46 C8lries for an average of 4.8 yards a carry. ,
Jason Weiland returns for hi~.
third·year as tbc Rockets'~ at
qu~ack. The 6-1, -tS5-pound
senior. has connected on 12 of 37 in
lhe air for 32%.,He has lhrown two
IOuchdowns and six interceptions.
On defense tile Golden Rockets
are led l)y big Scott Cheatham.
Chealham a 6-8, 275-pound senior
is one of lhe best defensive ends in
the area. Cheatham also anchors

top fonn Ibis week. He didn't see
action on offense last week because
of an injury.
.
.
Toll! Cremeans d1d a good JOb
filling m last week. The 5-9, 180pound senior picked up 36 yards in
seven carries. Hudson, a wingback,
also llad a ~ood game, picking up
30 yards tn three carries and
pulling in tvio passes for 31 yards
including a sensatiooal diving catch
in lhe end :rone for the Marauders'
second touchdown.
Tllis will be lhe ruSt conference
game for either team in the new
TVC alignment Bolh are members
of the Ohio Division. If it's any-

Rose rambles in Montpelier's win vs ..Archbold
By RUSTY MILLER
AP Sports Writer
David Rose did everything but
inflate lbc ball in Montpelier's surprising 54-12 victory last week
over Archbold in a battle of unbeatens.

Rose carried 17 times for.272
yards and scored on runs of 48, 62,
67 and three yards. He had two
olher touchdown runs totaling 159
yards called back because of penal·
ties.

Rose also threw a four-yard
touchdown pass and returned an
interception 53 yards for another
score. It was the most points
allowed in John Downey's 15 years
as the head coach at Archbold,
which had permitted only 21 points
in tile first four games combined.
Other running backs also left
lheir mark around lhe state: Anthony Gary of Akron Springfteld piled
up 327 yards on 32 carries and
scored on runs of 20, 21, nine, 79
and 27 yards in a 48-34 victory
over Minerva; Cardington's Ken
Garee went over 1,000 yards on the
year u he rushed for U!9 yards and
two rouchdo\IIIIS in a 28-14 loss to
Marion EJain.
Sycamore MQhawk's Brian
Jenkins rushed for 235 yards on 37
carries and scored all lhe points in

Eastern-Southern
forecast coming
The Eastern Eagles (3-2) will
invade their Ohio River counter- ·
pa11S, the Southern Tornadoes (2·3)
Ibis Saturday evening at 7:30 ·p.m.
on Roger Lee Adams Memorial
Field in Racine.
·
Southern, gaining several sec·
ondary points in the Region 1~.
DivisiQII V swe compu~er poll, tS
in a tie for 15th place in the ~on
despite a touaUoeuoOieiJinb
last wedc. Ealtem, c:laiming a 52-6
win over Hannan, is in a tic for
18111.
Southern has ·10.5 points to
Eastern's 10 points. Eastern will ·
have two more secondary points
added 10 the tally at the end of the
season. Those points are not cur·
rently counted because West Virginia schools began play one week
prior to the Ohio seas~m. T~u~.
only points counted while Ohto s
season is in will be added until lhe
end when the tallies will even ouL
The additional poiniS would put
Eastern 14th in lhe region as lhings
nowstand.
,
A preview of Saturday's game
will be in lbc Friday issue of The
Dally SeiiiiMI.

GABS, Meigs spikers
split doubleheader
Gallia Academy and Meigs split
a volleyball doubleheader Wednesday night in Gallipolis.
The varsity match saw the Blue
Angels (13-3) win 15·3, 15-11 in
part behind eight service points
from Jamie Humphreys and seven
from Brandi' Munn. At lhe spiting
line, Mindy Pope (11-12) and
Misty Coleman (10-11) had eight
kiDs each, wilh Coleman getting a
blockpoinL
Meigs was led in offense by
Chrissy Taylor's six poiniS.
The reserve match saw the
Mmudcrs win 13-15, 15'11, IS-s:
Kristy Carter and Valerie Spence
had eight points each to lead the
Angels (7-7).
•
The Angels will head 'to River
valley ionight.

a 13.0 win -over Fostoria SL WenElsewhere, Bill Shoffner comdelin ; Toledo Woodward's Pat pleted alll2 of his passes for 218
Munn ran for 267 yards and scored yards and five touchdowns and
on runs of 43, lhree and 24 yards in backup Dusty Lenz (whose career
a 43-24 win over Libbey; Kahleem ·. goal is to be a photographer) comMaxwell of Athens gained 278 pletcd both of his for 46 yards and
yards on 2S carries, scored twice anolher score as Sidney beat Clay·
and had another long run nullified ton Northmont, 48-21; fullback
by a penalty (the fourth this year Heath Hutchinson ran for two
erased by a flag) in a 21-14 win touchdownsandcaughtapassfora
over PortsmO\IIh Notre Dame.
third, while quarterback Chad
Justin Gail scored four times Barnes threy; four touchdown passand gained 181 yards on 22 carries es in a 12-for-13 effort in Gallia
in Nelsonville-York's 50-14 victo- Academy's 53·6 victory over
ry over Glouster Trimble; Jeff Cheshire River Valley; Zanesville
Fisher ran for 253 yards on 25 car- Rosecrans' Chase Thomas comries and scored on runs of 6, 25, 33 pleted eight of nine passes for 278
and 4 yards in Painesville River- yards and four touchdowns side's S0-0 blowoul of Ashtabula tnCluding scores of 72 and 45 yards
Edgewood; and l.icArthur Vinton to Dusty Rock- in a 47-16 win
County's Jason Snider picked up over Marion Calholic.
.
I77 yards and scored four times in
Cam Miller had thrown for only
a 50-14 win over Jackson.
77 yards all seasoo but hit all three
Springfield Soulh lost to Cenrer- p~~;sse~ for ~7 yards on the fi.nal
ville 62-54, but it wasn't lhe-fault drive, mcluding a 12-yarder as ume
of Chris Wallace or Dee Miller.
expired for the winning touchWallace completed 19 of 25
passes for S25 yards and seven
IOuchdowns, and Miller had seven
receptions for 293 yards and three
touchdowns.
As in ·last week's 65-64 Goshen
victory over Norwood in six overtimes, lhere were unbelievable stats ·
on both sides. Only this game
didn't require any overtimes.
Centerville's Derek Cummins
had five kickoff returns for 166
yards. All five gave the Elks the
ball inside lhe South 40 and all led
to IOuchdowns. He also had a 27 ·
yard punt return to set up another
· score.
CenterviUe, which trailed 48-30
at one time, also recovered two
onside kicks which led to touchdowns.
Wallace has lhrown for 1,476
yards and 20 touchdowns in five
games after passiilg for 2,100 yards
a year ago.

lhing like lhe last four meetings;
fans are in for a whale of a contes ~
' . I,.ast season f!!e Golden Rocketa
slipped past Metgs 9-0 at l'ornelcy:
In 1991, Wellston defeated t~
Marauders a _30-29 ~h. a 26-yat¢.
field goal as tunc expired In 1999;·
lhe Marauders defeated Wellstor.
32-29 on a 70-yanl tou,chdown paii
from .Jere~y Phahn 'IO Terry
McClutte wtth 47 seconds left. lit
1989, Frank Blake scored from \~~
yards out in· the fourth overtime
giving Meigs a 25-19 victory.
~~
T4tis week's contest,should ~e·
no diff~t. .
Game ume IS 7:30p.m.

..

..

down, as Millersburg West Holmes
beat Coshoctoo, 24-20; Columbus
Grove quarterback Sco11 Palte completed just 7 of 16 passes for 60 .
yards and one totichdown in a 47. 7
win over BluffiOil, but he caught
almost as many as he completed in
taking three interceptions as a
defensive back; and Wauseon 's
Cory Griggs tossed four touchdowns passes, upping his season
total to 13, and rushed for another
score in a 46-7 victory over Bryan.
Kettering Fairmont linebacker
Tony Homan has now intercepted
eight passes and returned four for
touchdowns; sophomore Dan Stultz
set an Orrville scllool record with a
52-yard field goal in a 27-11 win
over Medina Buckeye; and Arling- .
ton's Greg Johnson ran for two '
touchdowns and blocked an extrapoint attempt wilh 18 seconds left
to preserve a 21-20 victory over
Arcadia.

o

...'
..•
I

,.•... .

. DPEH.I~'AJE•.a:OO I'.II.

~

-~

• Florida SUllo
Fretno State
• Georgia
Toth

' Geoft

• Haw'
' Indiana

• Kanlas SUllo
'Me~~~·
Mlc:ll n
• Navy
• Nevada-Las Vegas
• North Carolina
North Carolina State
Northam lllinoil
·Notre DWM

Ohio State
Oklahoma
Paoll!c
!)urdu a

• Rk:a

•
,•

--=
.......

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WIN I C...

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11 010618,111 020818,
11'1030605

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992-2342

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on new Pri~m ·
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Con~u mc r fll'l~ .ale~ ll!l.
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O[PT.

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A&amp;T

• Illinois

Texas
• Oregon State
o Minnesota
T.C.U.
East Carolina
' Oregon
Atkan s a$
Houston
SW louisiana

Brigham Young

New Mexico
Cincinnati
• California
Arizona Slate
Louisville
Central Michigan

Northwestern
• Texas-8 Paso

"'
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2()

' SW Miuourl
A~bamot

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30

21

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NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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21

McNeese
• Oarunouth
Charteslon Southern
Florida A &amp; M

SW Tua•

•
·

· Pace

31
20

• Cal Slele Saaarnenlo
• SE Missouri
libef'ly
• Duquesne
Southern lllinoi1
Delaware Stale

20

27
35

7HE

•
•
•

Indiana Slata
Nicholls Slate
Colgate
Well T8 XU
Brown
Sien.
Maina
S.F Austin
Cal lutheran
Morgan State
Traas Sautntrn
Georgetown

25

"

.........

Slate

' Columbia
V.M .I
Rhode- Island
• Tennessea-Uamn
Weber State
Southern Utah
Austin Peay

23

992-3322

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32

Slate

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1111'11 ,_.
..11111'111

BOB

Other Games - East

10
1Q
21
13
20
16
23
16
7
16
19
12
18
14
20
17
21
16
17
10
21
21
10
10 '
13
17
0
6
14
25
10
7
14
14

8
7

13
16
27
15

27
19
22
17
10
13
13

••
"
12
12

• Alh ed
Ame rican lnlernalional

20

• Cillrion

33
11

Dickinson, Pa .
E asl.ol ro ud~ rg

""'

' Edinboro
• Indiana U . Pa.
Mtd dlabur~

Millersville
MOfavian
Plymouth
Shp p ery Rock
Southern Connecticut
Susquet\anna

' TUIII

13
13

2J

7

22
12

• F r an k~ n I
rahal
• Chayruty Sl alt
Loct. Havan
Shippen sburg
Sacred Heart. Conn .

"

26
21

"

2B
17
31
26

• Amrwtrs1
l&lt; ucz to wn
lw coming
estern Conntd lcut
a111om1a Slate, Pa
"ngl ie ld
l ebanon vau e ~
Bowdoin
Alla nw. N Y
Colby
• Manstie ld
Dela w011e Vall e ~

,.
,.
Batu
"
Other Games - Midwest

' Union. N.Y.
• Wu.lewan
West Ches ter Sta111
• Wide ner
• Willi&amp;m&amp;
• Worct~ shu Tech

'""'"

• Ash land
' Augustana, Ill
' Ba ker
Ba ldwin -W11IIdce
' Blll lhany. Kan
Ci fra l Co lt e gt~ , Iowa
' C nlral t.l 1~sou ri

'C

D hance
• Doane
' Ea s! Centra l Oklahoma
Evangel
• Ferris
• Fon Ha~ s
' Grand Va Hey
Ha st 1ngs
' He idelberg
' HillSdale
' llllnots Wesley11n
Iowa Wasle yen
Ke nyon
MISSOU ri Southern
' MIISOI.I ri Valley
Monmouth
' MOI'ningside
' NE Missouri
' Nebraska Wes te~ a n
North OakCMa State
• North Dakota U
Nonhern C o~ra d o
· NW Missouri
·Onawa
' PittSburg
· Ripon
' SE Oktal'\oma
Norben
SW MinneSOi a Sl ate
Wabash
• Washinton u .. Mo
wa~ne
ate , M~t h
w a ~oe Slate. Neb
Winona Stale

· s:.

"

S l law re nce
• lltuu:a
BbomsbUI' Y..

3
3•

• Lowa a
'
•
•
•
•
•

2J

31

34

36
2B
31

Norw tch

21

• Adr1an
Saginaw ~a lle 1
North Cent ral
William Jewell

3J

• 011erbelt'l

21

Pan handle
• William Penn
SW Bapti51
Gflnne ll
• U t Sr Joseph
Northweste rn , Iowa
Sou\h9rn An.ansas
' Uid -Ame rica
St. Francis , Ill
Uen
Nonhern Mich1gan
• Uidland
C~i tal
In ianapol11
Wheaton
' linde nwood
' Ca se-Reserve
• Uiuouri Wester n
Cuhler..Stoeklon
• Uliooie C ~ge

"

."
""

30

2B

27
29

27
2B
24

"

33
17

29
28

"
"""
33
17

29

"2620

"
"
,,,,
31

Nebras~·Omaha

Erhporia State
Do M
' South Dakota Slate
U ankato
• South Dallota U
Washburn
Kanu s Wesleyiifl
lrolissc...ri-Aolla

17

Beloit

24
27

Ou achila
Lake f orell
0
Bemodii
• Fr&lt;11nklm

25
38

't.lor1hwood
' Kearll9y
• Uinotti&gt;Oia -Morric

35

A hOOt~s

Other Games - South &amp; Sou\hwest
Alabama A &amp; M

•
""

Uorehoun
' Savannah State
' lr.tethod isl
' Wingat1
Prasbyt 1riln
Arkansas-Pif141 Btutl
' Abilene Chflstian
West Virginil Tech
Mars Holt
Haritpden-S)'Ciner

24

25

Albany, Ga.
Bndgewater. ~a
Ca rson-Newman
'Catawba
' Ce ntral Arll.a nsu
Central Oklaho ma
· Concord

17

10

20

9

. t fdn

16

'E m ~ Henry
f alriRoi'tt
f e'yoetNvtlle
' Gle nville
• Hampton
• He nderson
' Ho ward Pa ~ ne
' Jacksonville Sta le
langston

"

6
27
20
10
0

"6

•

12

Le r.oir- Rh~ ne

16

• livingston

17
14
7
7
\9

M a ryv~le

23

"3

10
22

26
35
23

,,
"37
45

34

"
••

;;

' 'f(HI Yifo~Aio~ Stale

. • NOnh Caratina Cenrr.,
WeslllbtJr1y
Vir~mia S tatt~

28

29
23

"
""'"
20

'

27

' U oorris Brown
NE Oklahoma
Norlh Alabama
Ra ndolph-Macon
SW O klahom a
'TeKaS A &amp; I
' Tu§kegee
' IJaiOosta
' IJi~i nia Unioo
'W IDI'd

""'

22

27

21
27
25

'
•
•
•

31

C lar~

36

Ta rle!on
B zabelh C~y
l eea McCrae

20
3J

Other Games- Far West

' Adam s Stale
' C•l Poly
Cal-Davis
Chadron
'Humbok;t
laVami!
• Uontana Tech
Og:idpntal
• We11em New Mu •co
Western Oregon
Western Stale

"

7
17
27

"
•

26

17
12

""

I

2J

29

"
28

•
•

"

28

•

27

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20

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PRO FOBECIS7

(Monday)
**BUFFAL0 ........,...........31
HOUSTON............. 24
Afte.r thUliiPIJi$ the Bills 27-fto end the '92 regular $eason,uie Ollers made history with the greatest
· collapse ever,l011ing the rematch 41-38. For there-rematch, hold on to your hats.
·
(Ooen date: Atlanta, Detroit, L.A. Rams,
Orleans,,San Francisco, Seattle)

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l ane
G.;Hdnei -Webb
West Ge Ofgia
Tenne ss.ee Wt slayan
t.liles
Harding
M i ~sl ssippi Coltega
Wt~S ie m Maryland
Arkansa s Tech
Easr Ta us

10
20
6
7
13

••CLEVELAND ............. 24
MlAMI ................... 21
This shapes up as one of the jlest games of the week, with the Browns having resied a week and the
Dolphins breathing heavily after battles with Buffalo and Washington. Miami won by four last year.
'
DALLAS .......................... 26
**INDIANAPOLIS 20
These two teams haven't played since 1984, the Colts' fttst season in Indiana. The Cowpoys haven 'tlost
to Baltimapolls since the 1970 Super Bowl , though they' re new to the Hoosier Dome.
**GREEN BA¥ ............... 22
DENVER ................ l7
CHESTER. OHIO
In 1970, the last time they met, the Broncos were 22·13 winners. After two tough road games. the
.__..;,9.;;;8.;;;5i.-tiii3;,;3;,;0;.1;.,;0;;r~9;;8;;5;.-3.:;3;;3;.0;,.-l Packers may cut loose at home, but whether either team is a playoff contender remains to be seen.
r
**KANSAS CITY ........... 33
CINCINNATI ......... l6
A different Cincinnati beat a different K.C., 21-17, in their most recent matchup in '89. Defenses like
the Bengals' should help Joe Montana to a few more memorable passing perfonnances.
**~.A. RAIDERS ............ 28
N.Y. JETS ............... 27
Here's another pair that hasn't butted heads in four years. Then, neither team made the pl ayoffs: this
year both have a shot. With road games before and after this one, L.A. needs a win more.
•*MINNESOTA .............. 30
TAMPA BAY .......... 14
The Vikings beat the Bucs by silt the first time they met in '92, then blew them away 35-7 in the
rematch - lhelr fourth straight win in this series. T.B. isn't any better, and may be worse.
••PHILADELPIDA ........27
CHICAG0 ............. 23
Believe it or not. the' Bears have won six straight over the Eagles since ' 83, even when Philly's been a
Mason • Point Pleasant • New Haven superior team - like their last game, a 27-13 Chicago upset in '89. The streak will end.
••PHOENJX .................... 20
NEW MEXICO........ ?
Member FDIC
The Cardinals h~ve Won silt of ihe seven times they've played the Patriots. most recently 24-10 in '91.
Bolh (l:ams may finiSh last In their divisions again, but Phoenix is out of N.E. 's !"ague.
SAN DIEG0........... 27
**PJTI'SBURGH ............ 29
Your Local
The Chargers haven't beaten the Steelers .In Three Rivers Stadium in II years, and Pittsburgh has won
the last four In this series. For the Steelers, off to a rocky start, this Is a must-win.
**WASIDNGTON .......... U
N.Y. GIANTS ......... 20
Dealer
Are the GlaDIS for real? Can Redskin QB Cary Conklin keep Washington in contention until Mark
Ryplen.ret:\lmli? Even with the 'Skins at home, Isn 't this pick an upset? More like a toss-up.
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· Texas Tech
• New Mexico State
l)lnsburgh

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Alkansa.t State
' Midligan State
Air Force
Cal State Northfidge

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1199't I Pm• ~eu Dri1·c.

Prk:"

Kansas

,.

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San Diego StatB

Iowa

Lambuth
Northern Ari1ona
27
' Northeas!ern
38
Valpar1i110
Maris!
26
Samlord
23
' East Tennea11e
14
• 'JiUanova
24
• W&lt;~shinRton &amp; l ee
28
' Evans v1le
28
' Jame s Uadilon
30
' ChiCIIgo
22
Tennnse.$ate
27
POf1tand Slate
Buflak&gt; lJ .
' 23
Appalachian State
33
Wntern Carolina
Mi&amp;siuippi 'Jalley
'Cl)l'nel
24
Bucknell
27
Yale
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Miami
• Colorado State
Southern Mi11sissippl
Mal'flard

34
20

25
21

State

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42
27
33
28
24
30
20
23
27
22

34

•"•
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SAVESl.OO I

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• Rutgers
• Ohio u.
Miuouri
Clemson

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Boston U.
' BUller
' Central ConnectiCUI
• Centtal Fklrkta
Citadel
Conneaicut
Davklson
Dayton
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MULLEN MUSSER
INSURANCE

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31
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22
30
27
25
34
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OFFERING PRE-NEED
COUNSELING AND
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Ben H. Ewing - Director -..

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Southern California
· Tennessee
·Texas A&amp; M
· Tulane
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• U1lth
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Fall and·Winter
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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

of WOIIIJOI Wearing
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ESTABLISHED IN 1913

saa9··

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THE HARMON FORECAST

Thurs., Oct. 7- Major Colleges- Dlv. 1·A
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• OkJahOma State
Sat., Oct. 9

108 Mulberry Ave. • Pomeroy, Ohio

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.

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MIDDLEPOU, OHIO

EWING FUNERAL HOME

... .). . . . . . . .

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•

HOMEMADE CORNBREAD AND ~
SOUP BEANS.................................................................... $1.99
WED., 9CT. 13
CREAM CHICKEN ON HOMEMADE BISCUIT
lilllhtcl Potllaltlncl Gravy ........................................... $4.25
TMURS., OCT.14 LARGE BOWL OF CREAM OF BROCCOU SOUP
STACKED HAll SANDWICH........................................... $3.24
TUES., OCT. 12

Prescription
Shop

992-2635

OCT. 8 I I
tlol Butllrlcf Roll ..................'............................................. $4.25
SUNDAY, OCT. 10 HOII~ED PORK &amp; DRESSING
•
lilllhtcl PolliO.• &amp; Gravy, G- Bnn1 wllh llultoiiOIIII
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•
•

BAKED STEAK, IIASHEO poTATOES &amp;GRAVY

Football93

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and RADIO SHACK

SPECIAL
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.S upport These
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Businesses!

..,,

.0
4
....
........

The Dally Sentinel-Page 7

INGELS

ALCS...
(Continued from Page 5)
blise With ThOmas being the DH. It
vias an opportunity for P~ua to
make up for a poor season with a
.205 average and only five home
runs.
Instead, he had to defend himself. 1n addition to mating the fU'Sl·
out in the sixth inning, he struck
out to end the first with runners Qll
second and third after the White
Sox had tied the seore 011 a basesloaded wild pitch by Stewart
He also was involved in two
fielding plays that led 10 a pair of
unearned runs.
Paul Molitor kept up his good
hitting for Toronto, lhough. Mter
four straight hits in Game 1, he
added two more in his first at hats
for a playoff record six straiglit.
Molitor doubled with two outs
in the fourth and scored on a single
by Tony Fernandez, who took second on lhe throw. After an inrentional walk 10 Ed Sprague, Pat Borders heat out an infield single and
when Pasqua failed to stop Joey
Cora's poor throw, Fernandez
SCOied on tbc error.
Borders extended his postseason
strelik to 16 gmes, one shon of the
record by Hanlt Bauer of lhe .New
York Yankees, all of which came
in World Series play..
The fans, . who had booed
Pasqua most of the game, turned it
on mana~er Gene Lomont in the
ninlh innmg. Wilh two ouiS and a
.runner ~m f~ tbcyte.!Janted for ~o .
Jackson. But Lamont stayed wtth
Coni, figuring he ltad •.a bettet
c.hance to get on base to get
Thomas to the plate.

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

s

passes have come the last two
weeks. His favorite receivers have
been _Cluld J?uncan (5-10, 160, sr.)
Tra~ts Curus (~ -8, 145, so.) and
semor co-captaJ_n H_catll Hudson.
Duncan pulled m stx passes last
week for ~2 yards· and a touchdown, Cwus caught two JlllllSCS .for
23y~ and had a 63-yard sconng
rccepuon called back.
.
The .~ud~r ground gllll!e ts
led by JUniOr tall~ _Jared Hill, a
5_-8, 170-pound JUnt_or who h_as
ptcked up 314,yards tn 69 cames
an avera11e of 4.6 yards a carry.
Scott Peterson, 8 ·6- 1, 190-pou~d
semor fullback, should be back tn

'The improving Marauders are
coming off.lheir best pe~onn~
of lhc year-. a beartlnaking 22-14
loss 10 Alexander. In lhat contest
the Maraudc-;s were on the short
end of I! 14-0 IJC?"C at ihc ~and
battled back to Ue the game m the
second half on two Brent Hanson
touchdown passes. .
.
Hanson IS~ of lhc reasens for
the Marauders unproveme~L The
~-9, .135-pound SOPhom~ IS commg off a 11 of 16 passmg perfor~for 114 yards. On the year
Hlinso~ has C!lmpleted 23 of 56
(41 %) tn lhe atr for 252 yards ~d
three touchdowns. Alllhree sconng

T hursday, October 7, i 993

Thuraday, October 7, 1993:

915·3307

�. .
Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, OCtober 7. 19937

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

Legislati_on unveiled to shore up troubled pensioi?- plans
WASHINGTON (AP)- The
Clinton administration unveiled
legislation Thursday designed \a
shore up financially troubled pension plans that threaten the retirement sccwity ·of millions of worlcers and retirees.
"The financial secwity of thousands of Americans covered by single-employer pj:n_sion plans is at
risk because theu penSIOnS are
und~rfunded," Labor Secretary
Robert B. Reich told reporters.
An underfunded plan does not
bave the assets necessary to pay.for

its promised benefits.
Reich said the underfunding has
grown from $27 billion in 1987 to
an estimated $45 billion last year
alMI ''poses an unnecessary and
unacceptable risk for workers and
retirees.''

The underfunding also j~par­
dizes lhe Pension Benefit Guaranty
Corp., the go~mment insurer.. It
already faces a $2.7 billioo defiCit.
The proposal would double the
insurance premium for ihe most
troubled plans, which Reich said
"would guarantee increased

Fall

NOW THRU OCT. 9th ·

WATCHES

$2.195

f~Or.4

NOW

$59

95

2 Year Warranty

. '·· ·. · ~'·"~·~ 0• ~ii/.1:-LRY ·. u. · 52·5~

.~D--~~~nP :~w~,....~ .~-f&gt;"~·, . • . ··'·"···· ·
STERNWHEEL BOAT TICKETS ON SALE

I

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992·;!054

YOUR PROFE~/ONAL JEWELER
. . - ..

Sternwheel Weekend Sa\lings!
,.

TIMEX
WATCHES

COLD
POP

Compl«e Stock

27C CAN

30% OFF

STOYER
PECAN DELIGHT
CINDY Ill .
2'~0Z.

ONLY

REG. 79'

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55 c

CARLETON
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CARDS
..
.
&amp;WRAP
~

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40% OFF

SliP BEAD,.IFU.L'
POMEROY D;DRI G-

·EROY

Don Johnson, Thomas Theiss and
Charles Yost.
Celebrated Sculptor
EXETER, N.H. (AP)- American sculptOr Daniel C. l'rench, bam
here in 1850, is best known for his
worlcs "The Minute Man" a1 Concord, Mltss, and ltis Lincoln statue
at lhe Lincoln Memorial in Washington. D.C.
'
After attending Massachuseus
Institute of Technology, French
studied with sculptor J.Q.A. Ward
in New York City. His fust com-.
mission, at age 23 , was for the
Minute Man.

tb nual Big Bentl
Slernwheel slival
October 7, 8 &amp; I
·,

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DESIGNER IMPOSTORS

FRAGRANa BODY
SPRAYS 2.s oz.

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REDEEM It-~ IS COUf"'N FOA .. fREE PAIR Of CONCEPTI' SMAATED P£AAl E~
NO P\.IACHASE NfClSSioA'f'

MASTER~

•

JEWELERs,.

1(&amp;C JP}WEL'E1?S
Your sensitive ear care professionals.
Pomeroy

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9th
.

9:30 a.m.· 2:30 p.m.

.

·'

Saturday,·· Oct. 9

HERBS • CRAFTS • REFRESHMENTS

Crafts and.concessions open

9 a.m.- ~·Ia~ ra~liig ci:te\\i,;~_i by Amedcan Legil!. ~

11-11-P.A.Denny,)qr'IJi!i~ .b: :,··:· ·
,
· :
',,
9:30- fire !ruck parJI_de .~.egiris In PomerQy ti~~hes , at Mason; ·

W,_Va.,le'f'ee }

-&gt;;

..

.:

--~--,-.·:::::_:_·

, ·_, :._. _..

10- SK Walk !Jegi 0~ at]\fason lnee finishes Po"!eroy_leve,e ... ,
10:30- SK Run begins'ilt MilSon levee finishes Pome~ily le~ee · &gt;
11- M'hisll~ blowing·contest ·: ·,. '
• · :· ·; : · •. ·• ··· · · •· · /f.·'·
Jl-11 :30 - ·Awards ceren!Oriy Pon~eroy Elementary Art Contest
ll-4 -p.m.-ChilicookoiT ·' &gt;··
':
. .
.
II :;10-1 p.m . ...;_ Mark;Wood. ~un- Show l/2 _hour, I hou_r . ~all~.ns
1t:4S a.m.- SK Ritn,Walkawurds "eremo~y · · · · ·. ·
12:30-1:15 p.m.- O~nver Rice and his toilet seat guitar
1 - iloard P.A ; Oenriy forrace cruise
... 1:30 ,...; Sternwbeell&gt;o~t- parade
.
. .
2-S..;.. Sternwheel boat races und awards ceremony
5:30- Captain's dinner
,
. . . ·.·.
· •· ·· .· '
6:30- Puppet show at Pomeroy United Methodist Church ,
parkin~: lot
'
•
.
·
6:30- Ohio Valley Two Steppers
7-8 ....:_Shady Ril'er Shurflers
8-11- Crosso&gt;er II and
9:30 '- F'ire10ork.s displa)'

In The Large Mini Park
On Court Street

WELCOME
STERNWHEELERS

20%oFF

Sponsored by the

Pomeroy Merehanlll Association

All CHilDREN'S DRESS AND

CASUAL SHOES

Other events

CBAPMA

Cnalt shu" and luncheon at !he rrinil)' Church on Thursday,
Friday and Saturday. .
·
. •· . , . .•.
Ft"'''r
show
at
Meigs
Cpunly
Library
in
Pomeroy
o'l
Saturday,
'
'
..
,·
··-·
- ..
9·5 p,m.
.. , . ·
. . .
. •
Htrbal Han-est/CounlrJ; Fair and refreshments in 1\!ini:Park'
on C?uriStreet, Salordayfrom 9-5 p.m .··
' . '

~-&gt;,.

SHOES

.

' .

'

&lt;··&lt;.• · .

.

POMEROY'S QUALITY
SHOE STORE

. ·.':'-'

AO e•·enlS ~1ke place on the_Pomeroy levee unless othetw•se·
specified.

Recliners

20%off

•ONLY 6
TO SELL

.lW~lCOA1E.: ~TE'N'H;E.EL~R.S ·
., 'WITH FESTIVAL SAVUIC$ ·

All -Fabric

Weltome Sfernwheeler

..,

.OFFICE SE,RViCE:&amp;SUPPLY
112 WEST MAIN STREET
. POMEROY, ()HIO 45169

FRIDA~

*DI:appery

9·5-&amp; SAtuRDAY I 0·4

. ALL FABRIC

. 3 days only

199."

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•

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FABRIC. SHOP
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POMEROY

992-2284 ,•
'

'·

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IN
CHICKEN TASTE

FLOWERS FOR EVERY OCCASION
Fresh, Silk, Dried and Polled Plants
"FLOWERS SAY
IT BETTER"
- ~.

~

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1-800:..433-6203

. .

CROW'S
RESTAURANT
PtQt~eJUJU f~ SkefJ . FAMILY
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992·5432

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•

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"·"~uos ·····*FC
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OFf '

(CI14) 992·6454

(614) 992-6455

tOIIUTTEIINUT

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_..... .
-

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Let your bank for life
serve you!
Order a Taco's In A
Bag from our booth .a t
the Sternwheel Festival.
All proceeds benefit the
Sternwheel
Committee.
.r

.,.,_,..._._~·

ZEIU 30fPEN.'SETS
COME IN.FREE DEMONSTRATION

STANDARD

A

"YOUR GIFT

HEAOOIJARTfRS·

as··

SALE

THE NEW

Enthusiosts

STOP IN AND SEE OUR FULL
SERVICE
ROWER SHOP
..

.SCRIPTO SnCI PENS
50~ 0FF
CALUGRAPHY .PENS
REG •.1.39NOW99 4
sri..oIOOIS
SELECT G~pUP PENS &amp; PE,CII:S .:·

*Qudt panels

~PRICE

..~Ffewa~
.

- AT , .

lnduding
*Halloween
*Cahco

•ASSORTED
STYLES ·

Sill

-Earrings were created just lor

llontirt' on levt!e

11,1993

DERSON'·s

· De your 801! ttch or break out when you wear ean1ngs?

HERBAL H-RVEST

PRICES
GOOD
THROUGH
MONDAY,
OCTOBER

Your Cholet

sr

Pl3nning Services. His topic is "As
the Family Whirls." Eberhard is a
member of the Nati·onal Speak~rs
Association and the Ohio Speakers
Forum. He is a motivational seminar leader and humorist.
Awards to be presented during
the banquet include Outstanding
Cooperator; Goodyear Farm Family, S~H Judging ~wards, Hay
Show Awards, Affiliate Membership Certificates and special activities for the 50th anniVersary of the
Soil and Water Conservation Service.
Also, election of two supervisors will
held
banqueL

D ) t:~. IIIJ-·--

*569

ONLY

Reich said. "There is a broad consensus on the Hill that something
fundamental must be done."
He estimated that enactment
would result in underfunded plans
increasins their funding from 55
percent now to 90 percent in 15
years.
.
The legislation also would give
the PBGC more flexibilio/ to deal
with corporate transacuons rhat
threaten pension funding. The only
remedy now is to terminate the
plan.
And it would require companies
to give employees understandable
explanations of underfunded· pensions and PBGC guarantees.

..

.

Soil, water banquet slated October 19

•

'

BUY 100, GET 100 FREE

REG.

'

Reich einphasized the recommendations would not affect pension plans that are fully funded and
that those plans would continue to
p•y a Oat $19 premium per participant
~- Companies with underfunded
plans now pay an additional premi,000 in
u·m of $9 for every
uliderfunding, up to $53 per participlnt, for a total of $72. Martin
Sl.ate, PBGC executive director,
said the legislation would nearly
dOuble the ·total premium for the
worst underfunded pensions, pushing it-up to $140 per panicipant.
• _ "I believe the proposal will get
mong_ suppon in the Congress,"

•••

5 GRAINS

$3.111

-

continued,fromp811ea

"Most workers relying on these
underfunded plans are not even
aware. of the risk they face," Reich
said. "They only'findiout when it's
The Meigs Soil and Waw: Contoo late, when their company is in
servation District Annual Meeting
trouble and their pension plan is - and Banquet wiU be held on Tuesterminated because it was underday, Oct. 19 at 7:15p.m. at Eastern
runded.''·
High School.
The baked steak meal will be
Pearl Harbor Commander
served by the Eastern Band BoostHENDERSON, Ky . (AP)- ers and tickets, costing $7 are
American naval officer Husband available for Soil and Water ConEdward Kimmel ( 1882-1968) com- servation District Supervisors
manded the Pacific Fleet when lhc Charles Yost Tom Theiss Marco
Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor on Jeffers, Joe Bolin and waier ConDel:. 7, 1941.
servation District Office and staff
Adm. Kimmel, who had been · Mike Duhl, Opal
, Blair Win:
named commander in chief in don and Greta
Tickets must
February 1941, was relieved or his be purchased by
12.
command 10 days after the attack
Speaker for
and retired from the service.
will be Ron

•••

BAYER ASPIRIN
ONLY

J

The PBGC insures 65,000 su-.;,
gle-employer; defined-benefit pen,",;
sian plans covering ~o_re tba~ 3~~
million workers. Offtcta1s satd 8:;
million 'people are in undcrfund~
plans.
•··
The PBGC guarantees_ I;IP toe
$29,250 a year per )llan Pll!"c•pa~:·
Some workers and re!trees - ·~~
underfunded plans remrun at ns~~
because PBGC:: guarantees some."
times do not cover aU benefits the."
spon~oring companies
had;:
promised
~Continued on page 9

1

,;~

I

Legis{ation...

The Dally Sentlnei-Pape--9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

BIG BEND STERNWHEEL

'

employer, no union, wants to put
mor~ money into their funds ."'
David Ccnncr, who deals with
pension issues fpr the American
Association of R~j.tired Persons,
said the recommendations would
go a long way to restoring the full
runding of pensions.
.
"It also was·good that (the task
force) rejected attempts to limit
benefit gWIJlllltees which bad been
suggested," he added. "We
thought that did not make sense,
since the whole reason for the
PBGC is to protect benefits.''

•

'!huraday, October 7, 1993

·~

'.

Savings

CHARMS

· Director Karen Ferguson of the
Washington-based Pension Rights
Center said the non-partisan consumer advocacy group was encouraged by the !Wsuranct the PBGC
was not on the brink of crisis.
.
"The big news is that there ls
no crisis; the sty is not falling,"
she said. "That's important
because during the Bush adminis!raHon, the talk was all about a llJ?t·
payer bailout"
The proposals themselves are
modest, but important and probably
controversial, she added. " No

·_: pg ERQW
WBLCO I
NWiBELRS
s
• ••
R-IRBILIS

WELCOME STERNWHEELERS

STERNWHEEL BOAT

financing of underfunded pension
plans" at the same time it reduces
the PBGC defiCit
It also includes requirements for
faster and more certain contributions io underfunded plans.
"PBGC's responsibility for
benefit payments under those plans
is spread out over a number of
years," Treasury .Assistant Secre·
tary Leslie B. S·amuels told the
news conference. ''So we still have
time to reverse the trend of everincreasing deficits before the
PBGC becomes a crisis.''

,•

'

"-~

221 WESI Mllll

POMEROY

Your Bank fn~. .
~
~

._._. "'--1

Farmers Bank ...
&amp; Sov•n gs Company
211 Wilt s.c-1 Sh11t
P.D.Io1626
, _ , OH. 45769

614-m·2136

·-7

P.O.IoxUt
............. 011.4S7U
614-667·1161
. .

�. .

.

· •'

The Daily Sentine~~-

By The Bend

•The Are·a 's Number 1
.Marketplace

Thursday. October7, 1993L
'
~
J'
Page-10;.

......, .
--===========:::::;;;;;;;=;;-:::~:--;:-:---:--:---:-~-::--:-::----:--:--_;__·
Beat of the Bend.

Reader feels Ann 'out in left field' on advice

Dear An Landers: I don't have
a problem. Life ia wonderfUl for me
- but I sure would like 10 know if
the same ia- aue for 110111e of lhe
people who have wriaen 10 you IMI'
the yean .- Why don't you do a
"Whalcver Happened To ... • column?
Many of us have grown up
feeling closer to you lhan to 10111e
of our friends and relatives.
Relatives move to Florida. friends
change jobs and move to California.
But you are here for us CVfZY day, ·
come rain or shine.
At least 20 )'Cirll 180. a IQder
, wrocc to ask whether she should
marry .. auto mec:hanic. She was
. 1
professional woman in her 30s. She
said she loved "Harold" but was
worried about what · her friends
would say if she married a man with
grease under his fingernails.
·
It would be great 10 know that
they did get married (as you lldvised
ller to) and lived happily ever after.
If she.didn't marry Harold, rd like
to know what happened to her ..
and to him.
m bet a great many ocher readen
would be (asci~·· .... to 1
abou1
~·......
earn
the happy (or not so happy) endings
to the life's stories lhal people have
written to you. How ahout it, Ann?
•• CURIOUS IN HOLLAND,

0 0

by Bob Hoeflich

home to enjoy
life
style of George and Kiny and their
daughter, Missy, their sons, Bill
and Steve Dallas, and their families. Both Bill and Steve have two
children. The California life style
includes swimming pools in the
back yards, beautiful gardens, hot
tubs-just like the resons.
Wh•leadein Calshifornia, Juan~ l!lld
Caro1 m ll oppmg ex
uon ·
to the famous Rndeo .Drive in L.
A., and also Juanita's 85th birthday
was observed during the vacation
period. Joining the group for a few
days to really make it all special
were Carol and Butch Bachtel, former residents, and their children,
Jeremy and Katie, who reside in
Phoenix, Ariz. Quite a reunion!
Wouldn't it be great if we all
No bothersome vacation prob- had a Kitty and George Dallas in
lems for Mrs. Juanita Bachtel and our lives?
her daughter, Mrs. Carol Tannehill
,
The annual Bissell chili-soup
of Middleport. No Sir! Their vacation is worked out for them every supper wilt be held this Saturday
beginning at 6 p.m. at the Hayward
year-and just about cost free yet
residence on the BashanJuanita and Carol recently Bissett
Keno Road.
returned home from their annualThe event has grown over the
a trip to California. Every year,
years
and as always, friends and
Juanita's son-in-law and daughter,
are cordiatty invited to
relatives
George and Kitty Dallas, former
auend
the
evening's activities. MICH.
Meigs residents, send along airline
There
will
be
plenty of food and a
DEAR CURIOUS: Thanks for
tickets to Jaunita and Carol as a
goodly
portion
of
entertainment
those
kind words and for that
gift. Juanita and Carol new in to
intriguing
suggestion. rm pulling OUl
Los Angeles where they were met
Although at one time tuberculo- a call to all readers who have
by family and driven to the Dallas
sis was pretty much under control, wriuen to me over the years. It
once again it is on the rise.
doesn't matla' how long '80· plea
Since it is such a terrible dis- write igain and let me know if you
ease, I did want to remind you that took my lldvit:e and how it turned
a free tuberculosis skin test is avail- OIIL
able through your local tubercula·
Address your letter to: Ann
sis office. The test is to detect Landers, P.O. Box IIS62, Qlicago,
exposure or possible infection with m. 60611 ~562. and please write in
Meigs 't:ounty high school tuberculosis. The local tuberculosis large leam on the envelope: HOW
juniors and seniors are invited to office is located on the second floor IT ruRNED OUT. I wiD print the
pailicipale with students across the of the Meigs Multipurpose Build- most interesting ~ses.
state in the fllSt round of Ohio Uni- ing on Mulberry Hetghts, Pomeroy.
Dear Ann Landers: I usually
versity's 47th Annu81 American Tests are given on a walk-in basis · agree with your lldvice, but on
Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays,
History.Contest OcL 11-22.
and
Fridays. Office hours are 8 to this one, you were really out in left
The fust place winner receives a
fteld.
12
noon
and 1to4 p.m.
four-year, full-tuition tcholarship
My husbaad could ·have written
to Ohio University and a copy of
And isn •t October's bright blue the letter by the man who was ready
the book, "The Eisenhower Presidency" written by Chester Pach, weather .something this week? . to leave his wife of 43 years
you
tw:ause of her nagging. Ann, show
director of the university's Con- Should help to
temptnry History Institute.
Second prize is a one-year
$1;500 Ohio University scholar·
ship. Third.and fourth place winENTRY DEADLINE: OCTOBER I 1,1993
ners receive one-year $1 ,250 scholarships to the university.
The multiple-choice test will be
compleled by students at their local
schools. First round winners wiD be
llliiiOIUlCed in November.
Those eligible for the final
round or competition, to be held on
the Athens campus Dec. 2, include
the highest scorer in each of Ohio's
88 countiel and all county scorers
in the 99th peK:Cntile, or the second
or third highest scorer in the 95th
percentile in the county.
Outstanding High School
Awards of $250 and $150 will "go
to the two schools with the largest
number of winners in the contest's
two rounds.
Ohio University's College of
Arts and Sciences, History Department and Admissions Office, ~n­
sor the contesL Professor of History Marvin Fletcher serves as conEnter the Peoples Bank Stock Picking Contest!
test director.
WIN $500-just PLACE 5 publicly traded stocks
A couple of Middlepon ladies
you might want to know about.
Mrs. Nan Moore, retired Mid·
dleport High School teacher, has a
broken hip as the result of a fall.
She's undergone. surgery and is a
patient at Veterans Memorial Hos·
pi tal in Pomeroy . Mrs. Moore
loves hearing froin friends and her
many former students so you might
want lo zip a card along to her.
She'D be 93 this mooth.
Then there's Beulah White who
will mark her 92nd binhday this
coming Sunday. Beulah has been
preuy active and even sang in the
choir or the Middleport First Bap.
list Church u. mil a eouple of years
~- Calds will reach ller at 211 N.
Ftfth Ave., Middlepon.

nassed wili tune hiJ wife ouL This

Ann
Landers

means she has lost her llldience. The
wise woman "suaests.• IIIII if she'•
really clev«, she makes him think it
was his idea. Thanb fur wrilins·
ANN LANDERS
Gem of the Day: A fitther, seeing
"1993, LooAna&lt;les
hiJ
aon's report c:ant, loakcd ldieved
Times Syndicate
as
he
said, "Son, with lhe8c grades.
Creaton S)ndlcate"
one thing is cenain. You couldn't
me a nagging wife, and 111 show possibly be cheatina.•
Loltuolrw? Tllh ciwrge of your
you a husband who will not listen.
lift
tuld IIU7I It III'OIIIId. Write for
111 bet that poor woman has been
AM
Landers' M1&lt;! booklet, "How to
trying her best to help her slob or a
Makt
Fritllds aruJ Stop Btlllg
husband all these years, and she
Lonely."
Send a ulf~d.IDrag,
hasn't given up on him yeL If a wife
didn't ~ about her husband, she

•'

0

' .
.
biLriMs.r-siu tll~~elopt and a check; ·
"

or moM)' order for $4.15 (litis ill·; •
eludes postf!gt tuld ltaltdU11g) 10: •
Frkllds, cloAMLtwl.ers,P.O.Boz•'
11562. CIUcago,tfl.60611.(!562. (lra r.

Ignacio Vogelius, a Youth For
Understanding International
Exchange Student from Argentina,
is looking for local host family for
the 1994 semester. Ignacio wm be
arriving in January and hopes to
find a family soon so that he wiD
have lime to write to them.
Ignacio describes ~imself as
very responsible and prudent. He
J)lays football and rugby on weekends and likes to go fishing on holidays.
He has studied English for more
than eight years and earns good
~rlldeS . Ignacio's main academic
tnterests are Biology and Geogra·
phy. In· the future, Ignacio's is
thinkin&amp; of becoming either a veterinarian 01 a lawyer.
The 'family that hosts Ignacio
will need to provide room, meals
and a place 10 study as well. as
undemanding and guidance. He
brings his own spending money
and insurance.
Other YFU International
Eltchanae students are also available to be mau:hed with interested
Ioca1 r.mllies:1YFIJ students come
fruni '20 countricsinclud,ng Germany, Finland, Sweden and Spain.

To place an ad

The continenlJI( shelf is the part
of a continent that is submerged in ·
relatively shallow sea at gradually ·
increasing depths, generally up to
about 6do feet below sea level. The
continental slope begins at the
point where the descent to the ·
ocean bottom becomes very steep. .

Call992-2156
MoN. lhru FRI.

Attends funeral

Rc"Cordthepriceofcachstock
:u th{' close of husiness

Octoher8. 1')9.\and fol·
low yo11r portfolio

throu~h
Il&lt;'Cem. her :II.
1&lt;)!).\. Peoples Rank

.;,

t

A'""-~

~- ·.
~,

day ar&amp;er publieatioD to make correction
• Ad. that mUll be paid in adnnce are:
Cord of Tlionkt
Hoppy Ado
Ia Memoriam
Yard Sa.le~
• A ehwifted advertillemeat placed ia the The Daily Senlioel
(except Clu.if-1 Duplay, Bu1inea Cud or Lqd
Notice~) willal.o appear ia tiM Point Pleannt Rqilter and
the Gallipolil Daily Tribune 1 rucbins over 18,000 bomet

LINDA'S
.PAINTING
·

&lt;-{

"\ . -~

if"-'\.,,"' '&lt;~:.../

.

WATER
HAULING
1 1625

'

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Complete rules. list of stocks, and Contest fonns
available at all Peoples Bank locations.
Marlena

1\thens

Belpre

373-3155

593-7761

423-7516

Middleport

NelsonvUie

992-6661

753-1955

Lowell
896-2369
The Plains
797-4547

742-R•daad

lUte

895-l.el.art
937-BulTolo

$

7-

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8-- Public Sale 4:

AuthoriZIICI: Brlggo '
Stratton MTD, Rpn,

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''A.d SpeciaWeo"

GUN SHOOT

DAVID ARNOLD
(614) 892-7474
POMEROY, OHIO

&amp;22 Jay Driw, Gtlllpolio, Oh.

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7122193

4/29/93

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MON. THRU SAT. 11-5 PH 446.0322

'•

3 MILES OUT BULAVIUE PIKE

•

•

Faran Bureau
laauaiMHti•l
Octohr 12, 1993
7:14P.M.
Eastn Hlgk Scllool
Atdltorl111
Steak Dltuler $5.00
for adllts
$3.00 for ckldres
bterttismeat
For Reservatlols
Cal992-2403

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE
WORK

Help Wanted

Licensed RN's
3 to 11 Full and
Part Time and 11·7
Ralief needed at

Porches,.
Patios,
Sidewalks
992·7878

Overbroo~nter

New Competative
Wage Package
Apply in Person
To
Linda Briggle
Administrator
Overbrook Center
333 Page St•
Middleport

Everyday Low Price

7fT 1

flliatodtl

LMnMn ....

742·2360

SAYRE TRUCKING

TRAILER SITES,

LAHDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALlED
UMESTONE-TRUCKING

992·3838

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

card 11'1 -In .. ,.................

~················

tl Local
bus video speeds
up screen re&lt;;lraw,s -a must
:
today's demanding applications
tl MS·DOS 6, Windows and MS Works are
already. installed 125·1832

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liiiYII' Will

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...... " ·" 183·1020

•

'

Ohioan Toni Morrison wins literature prize
: STOC:ICHOLM,, Sweden (.\!')
- . ~en~ nov~list and essa~tst
Tom ~o~son, cued for wnun.~
prose wtth the luster of~!"&gt;'·
Wl)n the 1993 Nobel Prize rn bteratll!C today. .
, The, Swedish AC!Idemr_ awarded
th): pnze to Mo!ftson who, tn
novel~. characterized by viSionary
fo~e and J)(!Ciic impon, gives .life
to,&amp;!' e~nbal aspect of Amencan
re81ity.
!The prize is wonh the equivaleAl of $825,000.
:Morris.on, 62, born as Chloe
Anthony' Wofford in Lorain, Ohio,
was the second of four children in a
b*k wOrking-class family.
·She made her debut as a novelist
in. 1970, with "The bluest eye,"
an):l so(ln gained attention for her
"qpic power, unerring ear for diaIogue and richly expressive depicti()ns or black America," the
academy said.
;The academy had not reached
M(Jrrison by the lime the prize was
·announced.
Monison "delves into the Jan.
gufsRe itself, a language she wants
:~::to. fr.om the fetters of
ra ," the acadt!my said, "and she
'
' ~ With the Justa' or poetry~ .•:. &gt;!~•. ·'·
. ..._,__
iShe won the 1988 Pubtzer mze
fo( ficlicin, a year afler publishing
"Beloved," in which she widen~
het themes of the black world m
lifb and ~~lend, r~rst descri~ in
thd.,t97&amp; Song «1f Solomon. .
One.Cjlll debght tn her untque
' ., .~e ~hriique," the .academy
saill·· .VIO'IR$ from book to book

.

'•

and developed mdependently even
thou$h its roots stem from
~ilbam) Faullmer and American
wnters from further south.
"The lasting impression is, nevenheless, sympathy. humanity, of
the kind which is always based on
profound humor,'· the academy
said.
Morrison has written six novels,
"each of them of great interest,"
the academy said.
, Over the past decade, the 18
academy members- writers, literature professors and linguistshave searched the worJd to honor
poets, playwrights, novelists and
essayiSts.
Morrifon was announced as the
90th winner at the I p.m. SJroke (8
a.m. EDT} of a golden clock in the
207-year-old academy's 18th-cen·
tury headquarters.
.
The academy has a stockpile of
nominated poets, primarily Irish
poet Seatnus Heaney and Belgian
poet, playwright and film director
Hugo Claus, who writes in Flemish.
·
British writer Doris Lessing;
Joyce Carol Oates and Thomas
Pynchon amon$ American novelisiS; a,nd Cat!adian writers Robenson Davies and Margaret Atwood
ate known nomlilecs.
Morrison was not considered a
likely winner this year in media
speculation.
·
From 1901 to 1992, the literature prize. had been awarded ·85
limes shared five limes and withhelil ieven times. Western Europe
dominated the prize with 59 wtn-

-

.,

ENTERPRISES

ners. France had 13, and the Uniled
States 10.
I•Pitinlit'KI Services
The literature . prize was
Interior &amp;
endowed by Swedtsh inventor
Paint Mobile
Alfred Nobel, who also established
and Aluritinum Siding
prizes in medicine, physics, chem- JoPo•wer Washing
1stry and peace, to be awarded next
Fill UJIIWIS
week along with the Nobel Memo- 50734 ....., ......~~.
rial Prize in Economics It was
45743
established by the Swedish Central
. 985·4181
Bank in 1969.

I.e•• ..,...,.....

Newsft'l/ers
The same grape-Oavored chemical used in bubble gum and soda
pop is proving to be an effective
repellent of loud, messy Canada
geese on golf courses, says National Geographic.

(Former Mason lanes)

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Adcltlono
-Gu-Worlt
-Electrical ond Plumbing

•-.wv
(304) 77.3·5515

12-3!&gt;92·Un

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Pmting
(FREE ESllMATES)

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

sat., pm-?
,.,.....,.,..
....,.,

GENEUL
HAULING
-.

36970 Ball R111 Road
P-ay, Ohio
GRAVEl,. SAND,
LIMESTONE. TOP SOIL

.1042-t

CLEANUP WITH

&amp;

etASsmAos

•.

Limestone

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FILL DIRT

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992·3470

992·7878

OWNII: Jtft YM•.._ .

Bill GO

C

Fri. &amp;

SERVICE

Pomeroy, Ohio

.....

WINTER HOURS '

Sun.-Thurs. 4-10 pm

USED RAILROAD TIES

-Roofing

r-...,- Strtt!s

3rd and

oi.IGHT HAULING
-FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992-2269

7nl1rrD.

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE .....
ACCIDENT INSUUIICE COMNIIY

EVERY THURSDAY

EAGLES
CLUB

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

IN POMEROY

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • A1ent

$100 Payoff

lox 189

This ad good for t
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-342

Mhhlleport~

o•1o 45760

(614) 843·5264

HOlE SITES-

mEE ESTIMATES

••

EAGLE
LANES·

SIRUI&amp; TilE
TRIM••II
REMOVAL

Joe N. Sayre

SEPTIC SYSTEMS,

Mon itor sold separately

. ·• LGCII bus video and

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AVAILABLE.

El«trkal .!t Reloipnotio~
General Haulin&amp;

53-An'"J54-- MMe. Merchandiae
SS-- Bullcliac Supplie~

Special Early Bird

EXCAVATING ·

por
PIUJfthinc &amp; He.tia1
Excavalins

sz- Spon;.1 G....do

3141113 1 mo.

•New Homes
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Stop &amp; Compare

614·H2·71

47- Wantad to Renl
48- Eqwipooent

614-742-2138

ROIERT IISSELL
CONSTRUCnON

Middleport, Oklo

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

h

1 II

HI \I \ I '

Reasonable Rates

tl121111fn

EICAVATIIIG

~

I

w..too~ ... a..,
u-...,k
Hay a Craia _
Seod4: Forti._

34.--- BllliDNI Buildiap
3S- Lo .. 4: Aereop
36- R•l Eatate 'l'..led

11- HelpWootod
12- Situatioftl Wanted
13-- luuraace
14-- Buineu Trainiftl
15-- School• &amp; l•truction
16- Radto, TV &amp; CB Repair
11- MilceUa.neou
1~ Wanled To Do

HAULING

ARNOLD'S
PLUMBING,
HEAnNG &amp;
COOLING

Mowm • CHI!t Saws
WMdetdll's

I

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45-- Furnilt.ed Room•
46- Space for Rent

.30

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UCINE
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4-111-93-Hn

773-M.....,

882-New Ua..n

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.U- Houeu for Renl
4Z- Mohilll Hom• for Reat

Auction
9- Wanted to Buy

667·6628

33- Fu. . for SaJe

Over 15 Wordo

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00

15

32- Mot.U. Ho.• for Sale

576-Applo GrvYO

647-Coot.IDe

CIA.SSD'IEDS
GET RESULTS · FASn

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baa the crltll:l

11 .~ --85·18,1
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379-Wol-t

4- Giveaway
5- Hoppy Ado
6- Loll and Found

•

1118 IIUIIm8dla PC thlt

wu 11199.00 In 1993 eo1111011 025·1650

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Monthly 15
$1.30/day
$.05/day
Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.
Business Card...-.$17.00/lnch per momth
BuDetin Board.....$6.00/inch per day

8

"-'·

---·-

I
3
6
10

Words
15
15
15

M1mo.

II I' .....

.(

Dayo

Factory Cltoke,
12 gaqe o1lyo
3
742,2904. ~.•,....feg(nJtng PC!·
ltW 1tc

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.La_ "'·'

'1111s contest requires no Investment.
'.
The l'eoptes Stock Picking Contest is S[!Onsor&lt;'&lt;l
'· '
by Pt'Oples Bank Discount BrokerJRe Se~ice. Ask
for a complimenta~ fc&lt;" schedule. Peoples Bank
brokerJgC sernces are otlert.od through Olde Discount
CorporJtion. M&lt;·mber SIPC. NYSE. NASO. Funds arc not
FDIC insured.

Gallons

· •so ,., lo•d

,,.&lt;~~''!&gt;.:#''~-'. ·

J. .. ... '.;":

(614)

367-a-hl ..

I \I : \I ~'

992-MI..Iopon/

RATES

oOOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

D.A. BOSTON
EXCAVAnNG

446-Golllpollt

DAY BEPORE PUBLICATION
1:00 p.m. Saturday
t :00 p.m. MCIIIday
I:00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wedne9day
100 p.m. Thwoday
1:00 p.m. Friday

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wedneoday Paper
Thursday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

11121h/1 mo. pel

""·,o"'
,~ ·

Belly Frazier of Middleport,
Cbn and Ma-vin Knder of Racine,
and·Butchie and Cirolyn Jewell of
Muon, W. Va. attended funeral
llerYi~ for Olarlei·Bealmear,Jr.,
S9, of Baltimore, M!l. Mr.
.,...,_ dicld on Sept, 24, 1993.
Robert McDiniel of MiclillcJUt.
a br.cuher-in•law~ was~fe to
aaend dUe 10 illness.
·· .

••

: 614·985·4180

~~·

·
t~ \
will periodical!\
',
t.::,· ·'
...&lt;~
publish [!Onfoho
'l!:iJ
. _.,~&lt;' ·
performance repons ·~ lilt·~
·
&amp;"
identifvin~. leaders hy
6rst nUllle and last
ICJ ..
·I
inilial on I~ .
z.4 a.· •
., .

INTERIOR

· FREE ESTIMATES
T•kethe flllln out of
JNilntlQg. Let me do It
,
for you.
:VERY REASOIQBLE
·HAVE REFERENCES

:\

' "'. . · ' \
. ' ":;;!'

SAT.S-12

• Ada outaide the county yoqr ad I'WM mull be prepaid
• Rocei•e di.tcouat. for ada paid in adwanee.
• Free Ad.= Giveaway and Found ad. under 15 wonl• will be
naa 3 day• at. ao dr.arJ•·
• Price of ad (or all eapitalletlen ia double price of ad coal
• 7 pOint lint trp• oaly ued
• Seatiad b not n.pon~ihle for erron alter fll'll day (check
for enofl fnt day ad run• ia pal\fl'r)~ Call before 2:00 p .m.

did, the stubborn, hard-headed
.iat'ka•ses we are married to would
not be able to hold down a job or fit
into decent society. If 1 didn't keep
after my slob, he WOUld never take a
shower oc change his socks.
111 bet thousands of othcl' women
would like to see you reli1ICI your
lldvfc:e and reD that complaining
husband 10 be thankful he has a wife .
who cares enough to nag him
• CHAlU.OTili, N.C.
DEAR CHARLOTTE: You are
com'JCI when you say, "If a wife
~'t ~ about her husband ... "
buttt'sthatwortl"nag"lhavetrouble
with. The man who feels he is being

:y._ ,.~,.. · ~

'\)

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

CLOSED SUNDAY

' POLICIES

wtves saved our ~th. but if we

Select 5 puhliclv tr.tdrd stock.&lt; from our list of compani" and place them in .
an imagina~ [!Onfolio. We'll tnd the percenta~e g:tin/lo" of all entries for ·
11 weeks and a~&gt;1lrd $500 to the top performer. $250 tn
S&lt;'Cond place winner and $100 to the
A
.
third place finisher.
.A'f'(~ ~~
;&gt;'

Help County Muon Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614. Area Code 304

wouldn\ bother to nag.
.It would be easier if we nagging

in an imaginary portfolio and SHOW outstanding
perfonnance over the fourth quarter.

~~

GaU!a CoWJty

.~!

CIJNJda. uruJ $S.Il5.)

History
·contests set
Oct. 11-22

Agrentinean
student needs
local host family

Clauijied page• Cotler the
follou.ins te~phone e:lfchange••.•

,•.,. ... AUTO

..,_........
PARTS

Specializing In Custom
Frame Repair

Bill's nrs

BISSELl BUILDERS, INC •

of R.venswood
•nnouncu
Richard Moors
has Jcilned our staff.
Richard cornea to us
with 12 yrs.

New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

experience at
Pomeroy Home •
Auto and CU Auto

614-992·7643

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
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ESTIMATES

(No Stlllltty Calls)
2112192Jtfn

Coma VIsit Us.

Shade River Saddle
Announcemenls

CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR

3 Announcements

and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
36358 SA 7

Chester, Oh. 45720
985-3406
3/&amp;'lfn .

Ill 111111 &amp; . . .DI

tj2-701S or

The earliest known wrist watch-

or 'IOU flEE

Howani.L Wrltesel

ROOfiNG

NEW - REPAIR
Gutters

Do

The most popular dogs registered with the American Kennel
Club are Labrador retrievers, Rottweilers, cocker spaniels and Ocrman shepherds, in that order.

···

wnapouta
Gutter Cleaning
P•lntlng
·

FREE ESTIMATES

·

'949-2168

According to Euripides, the
Greek tragedian, "Cleverness is ~----.!~~~
not wisdom."
I•

Gomo? eon T"""'r F"'

W. hav• o lorp otocltolo_.t """'• br- tku end

II wo don't ...... - - pt IL

OUR NEWEST LOCATION IN MASON, W.VA. IS

OPERATED BY CHRIS NEAL .
30t-'77Um · .
2nd Looolo n ooll Lon NMI
W. V..J04.475-3Dt

-VIlA;;;..,..

s-..
·
n ,. '

~Sprlllds And Much ~ ....
~-1a ut 5071, tz.ft

Per Min. Must a. 18 Yra, Procatl
Co. t102-1114-'1120.

Giveaway

2 mill n~bbll•,
17&amp;-2411.

140t-ltl 0070
IARWIM,OMIO

A frog that lives in the Amazon
rain forest secretes mucus !hilt is
used by Indians who believe it
. makes them better hunters, and
something in it may one day be
used to h~lp treat brain diseases,
accooling to National Geographic.

Chrlot

Spone Fanal Old You ..... A

4

tt2oS5SS

es are those made by Jacquet-Droz
and Leschot, of Geneva, Switzerlana, dating back to 1790.

Clwlotlon
Doling
· "HIIIolna
a.n.. '
lion Sli!j~l"'
lind Owtotlon
Panntr~. · Call1 aoo 0»15tt.
.
F - In

Clf1ll dwarf.

304-

�•.

Page 12-The Dally Sentinel
Lo11 &amp; Found

6

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BEATTIE BLVD.'" by Bruce Beauie

32

KIT "\ ' C.\IU . \ U . • h1 l.arr1 \\r(l:ht

~l"!ment

44

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Thurada , October

71

for Rent

Foonl: l'ornllo Huolcy Shl"'onl
llllx, 1-2 , _ Old, R1. ?, 211

Aroo.IM-44f-1131.
Foonl: Larvo malo mixed doQ,
SA 241, tan &amp; ·~ack with whlfe
morklngo, 114-HS-4355.
found : Smell Bilek a Ton
puppy, Found In Tho Shrine
Club A,... Will GIYMWIY II Not
Clolmod, 014-44~711.
Loll: BliCk IIIIo Dog; Wlll1o
erOn en., B-n And fill One Eor Up One
Down, Picked Up Oct. 111 Frarn
775, PotrlcO Rd. Nome: Dulco, II
liMn Coli, 114-3711-2434.
Loot: Horolonf Cow Weighing
Appro1. toO lb. In C.nctnary

$7,450, FrM

0175.

s.t.Up, 614-446-

45

LA*: AEWARD-2 Larve rtd Pit
Built, Rt. 62 Soul:h, OCt. 3. 304a
2
S75-50 1.
Lolt: Yellow male Cllt, antwert
10 " AB", nNr Spruce Avt. 304·

fvt&lt;l'll"fvRE"

1~

Mlil&lt;!i

.Jf#:b_

"Gone shopping .. back in $350."

1-:==:::::======:-r==========i

el4-m:

1189 Camaro, 43,000 mu.., air,
crl.llta, Ult, Mop, 57800, 614·~-

7,

·--

Dr-.

==-:::-'--=--:.=--:-:::::-

tno....

,...,..nc•

·==..

bft,.

t..':'i:

•e..

=

••blllllted

M
.
d ' .

:=

Mu'cl:J:

I

42,000 Miln, $6,200, 614-379-

•0

1

~~~T

110,000, 304-675-3634.

F~
~~~'~"~'~"~"~'·~'":::::;;==r.~~======~~
~56..:.......:...P.;:et.::S:.f:.:.o;.;.r..;:S:.:a:::le:...._ :ue:.:.~.origlnol

t9
+ sH 32

SOUTH
+9 2
• K 5 32
t KJ5
+AJ 8 7

,

54 Miscellaneous

.'

Merchandise

:-

Register~~~:~ Lh..a Apto,

24 Welt. bulb Suntana tanning
bed, whh fl.. tennar, hn laa
·th1n !Ohre. on b1.1lba, WOflla ax·
eel lent, $1800, 614-lll2-3802.

AMiey wood -'.ave wt blower.
304-1175-7113.
.
a,,., chllln11 &amp; eproklta to tit
•I~ any cnalnuw. Sider'• Equlprnanl, Henderson, WV. 304-"'
175-11121 or t-800-:zn.3g17.
Caller 10

box,

brartd

MW,

$39.15, 614-1192-11166.
Commodore I4C Keybof,rd,
Calor Monhor, Prtnter,
•
Softworo, 614-448~303. Or A~
11r2 AI 614-446~311 .
.
CONCRETE SPETIC TANKS,
1,!'00 Gallon, 1325; Now JET Bot
(llo Sond Allor Roqulrod)
$1,485; Ron Evana Ent•rprlaH,
Jackson, ONo 1-800-S37-o8528.
Foil Clooroncot 11ft World Book
Encyclopedia Ph• :1 Volume
Diction~• 1419 Save: $2411
Eaay Twme. Margal'll Piera,
304-1175-3775.
.
Fh-- For Solo: Plcl.Up
Load Or Dump Truck Load, We
Deliver, 614-441-410~ 814-4410151.

H2-3M9.

JO 440 dozer,3 axle traller,1V7D

dump,SI,BOO

tandem

flrml

614=367--7780 '"" epm.

Waler._d, Couch, Ch1lr,

looks I runa grNI, $7000

). 304-4!58-171!1.

•

Condhlon, $35; 114-446-1uo2.
Power Well Red J11p Go. 2 112
Mll11 An Hour S:SOi Playschool
OrWim Doll HouH 145, Uka
New, 614·245-5887.
R&amp;S FumHure; Maaon WV, now
buying camplete ho"Mhold
tumlahlng.. new • uHd anti·
qu•. Now buying Illata. 30417:J..5341.

Aullltlc car 1111'10 pc!IWII' Imp,
80 walla, IIU naw, 141, I1'-H2..
2:154.

Refrigerator. 304....,.5112.
Sam Somerville'• new army trH

bark camflauge, beside San-

dyvlllo Pool Olllco, Fri·Soi-Sun,
noon~pm, Olher daya I hours.
304·273-6655.
Snapper I'Hr line ratatiUer. 304...
875-7163.
St•t, 4" C Channel lbearn,
pr.cul lor car trailer, $250 . 30+
875-5815.
Two 10-apeed · Mountain bik..,
114-1192·11113.
Warm Mamlna Coal Stove, Alao,
S.ara B'-ck Poroefal Woodburner, Extra ,Nice, 614-311'·7530.
WATER LINE SPECIAL: 3/4 Inch
200 PSI t1U5; 1 Inch 200 PSI
132.50; Ran Evane EnterpriMe,
Jacbon, Ohio, 1-800-537-0528.
WATER STORAGE
TANKS
Abova And Balow Ground FDA
Approved For Potable Water.
Ron Evan• Enterprls11, Jackaon, Ohio, 1-800-537-&amp;528.
Wood And Coal Bumer Stove,
114-145-8151.
55

Building
Supplies

Block. brick, aaww Dlpea, wln-

.doWII, llnlels, etc. ct.uda Wlntera, Rio Gr•ncl•, OH Call 614·

:2.::4":..""'::.;::.21:;.._ . - - - - - 56

Pats for Sale

1 112 Yur Old Coon Doc. 1
Blue Tick Mil'-, 1 W'al~ar

Femal•, 1 W1lker Male, Running

1 Tralng, 81......,3413.

Groom 1nd Su~ly ShoP-Pet

Grooming. All breeds, atylea.
Julio Wo6b. Colll14-.o231.
2 Boogie dogo. 304-e75-7163,
.t.KC Grut Dsne, BOlton Terrier,

ShellloL Cclllo, Spitz, Chow.
114-441 -0404.
PuPPJ
AKC R Ill od Box
pp1
lg .,
., ·pu
•t.
2 Nmaln, qry naaonably
priced. 304-e75-1043.
AKC
Reglater.d • Brtttney
Spanlal~~~hote l wor·
ed t1
1-••7.·
m •
·
AKC Roglsto,.d Chow Cllow
Pupploo, 11!0 Eoch, 814-4468323.
AKC Roglolorod Gorman Silo~haired Pofnltlre, an thola and
wormed, tlsaiH .. 114·1112·2141.
"
CFA R=stlrod Hlmaloyon ·kit1ofd, fiiO,

••looo.

''"""-'.!'"
1114-w:&lt;-6114 .

Golclon DollciOuo tppiH. Open 304-175-11281.
'•
Soturcloyo only.
73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
Pumpklnl · for aale, cell after
Sp.m., Williams Farm, Syrac'--a, 11m Ford F150 4x4, 4opd,
114-H2-118110.
84,170ml, lOOM n.:k hitch,
good tlr-. mechamcal readY,
11&amp;85. 3Q4.875-2582.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

11178 Chevy Pick-Up 4x4, 350 4
Barrell, 11&lt;f-441..0210.
1f18 Dodg• Tred~~~man ·100
Cargo Van, auto, miiJl)' extr11,

61

tiOOO, run1 IXC. 304~75-7151.

Farm Equipment

.,74=.,..;.M_,o_,to:..;r,;c.:,yc;le.;s~,.-­

1 Row · Mounted Ford . Cotn
Excellent CondHianl
$500. 814-446-1062.
IFall Ford N•w Holland Sale. 408
Dioc blno, ,$10,500. 411 Dloc blno
wl awlvitl hhch demo, $11,500.
570 Square baUar, $10,500. 640

1887 Yamaha VZ125 FMF Pipe,

Kfi90St TI101&lt; Mlkunl II mm
Clrb. O'Neil

ura, New Spoc:k-

lis And Clloln, SI,OOO, 114-4411260.

11110 Yomoho lrT 100-'- 3100ml.,
Ilk• now, S2900. 304-6ro-31110.
demo., $13,300. 848 Round 1993 Suzuki Katan• 100 Only
bollor, hyd. wrop. 110,IIGO. 40 823 IIIIH, Llko Howl W1U Soli
Forage ~ower, 1000 RPM, For Pay Off, 614-245-9101.
$3500. 305 SlUrry lf11Mclor1
IOOOgll., $eiiGO. Brillion 8 1113 Yomoho lrT 350, porfoct
packer/Neder, $5500. 4630 Ford cond., only 200ml., mu• Mil,

Round balar, auto wrap, $12,200.
8$0 Round blher, auto wrap

$2800 010., 304-8'75-3111 ... ".

meaa•g•.

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
1986 Bayllner 11 1/2' ,Cuddy
1012.

•

lau Boat, M" aluminum, ..rna;.

5 11211p Joh.,_,, tool
SPECIAL controllocl lrolnng ,....or, clllp

v hull,

POLE BUILDING
30'x40'9'. Painted SIMI Sldle1 cycle banery, •ncttor., oara,

Oatvalume Sleet Roof, 15'xB running Hghll, nre txfll:tgulatw,
Still SllclorJ..-1' Min Door. carplled, lloh &amp; dopth ftnclor,
B$5:!!:,666!!!!!~·~E:!R~E!"~
100!;;.!!1~ron~-Hono--l
wlbolat 304~75-1731.
covtr, trallll' Included,
1-1101F352·1045.
,
$1215.
!ulldort
.;,.64_,_..:..H;::ay!..,.:;&amp;..;:G::.:..ra:;l..:..n- - I
Hoy, ....,,,. .boloo, 11.50 I up.
304-675-3eeQ.

76

Auto Pans&amp;
Accessories

·.

Budgll TronamiMiono, Uaod •
Round NIH.of hay. $7 per bile, robull, oll!ypeo, ... ~Ina .. m ;
800 pound baiH, Will' load, Clll owner 114·245-5177, 'l14-3'7'1P
114-MI-2201.
2135.
Wenled to bur· grill ond bumper
Transportation
lor "88 Ford Bronco 11, 114-11!12-

---------·1
71
Autos for Sale

FIT!!

11053.

.

.

Llnor Ally, Good Condhloo·
Removed 11181 Dodge 112 StiOil

Ford Torino; 1m Dodge
Challenger, Nice Car11, Sea On

: ~IGHT$

..

I

I

noo . .

Today
is the
280!h
day
of 1993
and
the
16th day of fall .

1178 Ctlevllte lor ula, $300,

114-940.2391.

,.,_==-.:-:=:-:*':4::Jndoii

..
.

.

Plumbing &amp;
Healing

'~==.,.,....;.,;...~.,..,.__,...,...

Electrical &amp;
. Refrigeration

.'

liiiii

TODAY'S HISTORY: On (hi s day in
1826, the first railroad in the United
State s . three miles lon g. was com pl eted in Massachusetts .

TODAY"S BIRTHDAYS: James Whitcomb Riley 11849-19161, poet: June
Altyson 11917·1. actress. is 76: R.D.
La ing fl 927-l, psychiatrist-author, is
66: Am iri Baraka 0934 -1, poet·drama·
list. is 59: Thomas Kenealty (1935·1,

writer, is 58·

Campers&amp;
Motor Homes

"F
, u-101mon • ~rng And Coc&gt;tlnil."
lnlllllollon And lllnrlco. RSEII'
Ctnltlocl. Rtlllfon!lol, Cotnmor-,
clol. 114-2118-1111.
.

84

I _.. ---...

I

'.

1080 Corvllto, $8!100. 304-1175- 1973 28 Ft. Dodge Motor Home:
Fully Lot~, 4:1,000 Mllea,
6411.
$3,500. 8M-440-G047.
1982 Buick Le Sebra, fair cond.,
2 new front tlrH, rune good.
Servrces
Jullul Cochran, 304-175-5110.
2223 Jeckaon Ave, Pt. PllaNnt.
1882 Ford Fl!lrmonl 302, 2 81
Home
Speed, Tranamlaalon, 1500, 114441.Q211.
Improvement•
1882 Orand Marqule, lrade lor
BASEMENT
small tractor or 1111. 304-871WATERPROOFING
3215. ·
Unconditional . llfet:lm. gua,.n~
1983 Pontiac Trans Am, T·Topa, 1M. local reter.nc• tumlahact
Block, G- Condllion, f2,400; Coli 1-IIQ0-217-0571 Or 114·231, .,
RO(IIro Wllorpraoflflg. E•' '
1983 Como..O 4 Cyllnclor, "uto, 0488
.
t1,200; 1180 Plymouth Horizon, tlbllthed 1975.
Good eonc:'~~· 24,000 Mllea, Curtla Home lmprovemenla. No
11 72, 114-258- Job Too Big Or 'Small, Y'11rs EJ:.
$3,200, 11
0251.
Ptrilnce On Older !Naw~r
Additlona, Foundallont
11114 Chevy Covollor Typo 10. Homn.
Rooting, Kl1chlno /llilhl. rn:
44,000 Millo, Auto, AC, 11,850, aured,
l=rN. Eatlmatea. 114-367·
llo-371-27211.
0511.
.
l
1914 otde CuUau Supreme, 2
door, PS, PB, excellent concU· Dovlo Sowing Mac,.; And
UonJ runo grill, $34115, 614-1112- Vacuum Cleaner ~~ p:,...
3114.
,. PICk'UP. And Doii..Y, GoGrgH
CIHk ROad, 614-441-aa.. '
1185 RIIUiutt Encore, Tan. Inter·
Rcn'o TV Sorwlco, lpaellllllng
~.:~/'3!':;1~11 :'rJMCIIJ: In Zlnhh alto MI'YII::Ing rnotl
Httl Stereo Included, One ocher brandt. HaUM Cl)h, aleo
Ownefi, Reliable, Cirelli 011 oomo IPollonco "!P!ilra. wv
304-671-2SII8 Ohio 114'&lt;441-2404,
1111
1s
~- 1.,
~~ . _ - • .,100. -n
Soptlc
Tonk Puno&gt;ing _$80, Gctlllo
I
l.fJ31 All.ltl P.M.
Cc.
ROll
lNTEAPRISES
IHI Chow. Spoctrum, 11U Joe..,, EVANS
OH 1.8fl0.4374521. '
Conquest Turbo. 304-67Uilll.
11• Oldomobllo 111111 11, Will bulkl plllo ccv.wo, dockt
lfO\IGhaM, PS, PB, PW, Pow.r ac,kfrr-'~
or ':'""'r~or'' putk'-Jup ¥!n
1 '" ng. v1
hata. Clllnll• · ContrGI, Power
1'1
' -•• Et •MIFII • . . ~--· oo3:.;;41:..:.;5;:;2;;_.- - - -·- - -

-~ ~~ on.""g.';; "
lloiiGitl t;or, Nood To 111111 82

aAG:PIPE J..ESSON5 .

FOR A WHILE.

78

79

ITis GOT SOME1H lNG 10 00 WITH
MY DADDECIDINS-10"\"AKE

MY NOM AND 1 ARE GO!N51D LJ\IE. WllH MY e!AANDMA

372-3133 Of 1-81)0.273'9321.

Camping
Equipment
WHkenda, $1,500 Each, 114-446.::123:::5·c.__________ l1971 truck campor, 1 112H,
1175 Mecury Catn1t GT, 302 Mountalnear,
Mlf-conlal~
4apd. 304-87&amp;.377".1.
aiMpa 4~ •rnllm radio atove
.:,::::;::::::~:..::.:.::_.,....,::--- 1 refrigerator, furnace, tOitee, cs:,'
1tl78 Ford MuM•ng. rebuUt 1111• AC I DC lights, large ctoHt
175-71o9.

Ucettd

60MHW11t

role

81 Not wet
82 Stopped
63 Kind of curve

DOWN
1 Slippery
2 Willow
3 Ark builder

· 4 Brlckworit
5 Foodecrap
8 Ftr..rf!J
owners' org.

7 Hindu

crmball

8 Glect.l rldgo

I Actor AoiMirt

::~:~~, ~©ttg\}lA-L££~s·
O

N•w gas tanks, ona ton truck

304-8~~.

(pot!.)
59 Untopnt.-

II

whHII_. nullatore1 lloor mats
lie, 0 o R Auto, Ripley, WV. ~

glna 1 111w IIIWI, brikn, battary, $10i5.
fieaae!.. end muHitr, $500. 304-

ll1lp contrect
58 Etamally

. The second of this year's Bols
Bridge Tips comes from the friendly
Dane, lb Lundby. He says that our
main aim in playing bridge, as it os
only
a game, should be to have fun. llllrl-+-PEANUTS
Lundby described the play in today's deal. It occurred during the jour- ll...-+--1-10 - 1
l T~ INK A MUSI C 130)( 15
nalists' event at last year's World llr..-+--1-~OW ABOVT ~ALF OF A
Wl-lAT SONG DOES
Championsbips
in Salsomagj!iore, ItaT~E MOST ROMANTIC
PEA~VT BUTTER SANDWICH?
IT PLAY ?
ly.
Lundby
was
sitting West, playing 1'--'-.1..61FT T~AT A BO'I' CAN
witb
fellow-Dane
Peter Lund. North
GIVE TO A GIRL ..
was Alan Truscott, bridge correspondent of The New York Times. The deCELEBRITY CIPHER
clarer will have to remain anonyCMbrfty Cipher cryptggrMna are crMtld rrom quotttiOnl by flmOul ~ Pllt and......., .
mous.
Eadl ..tt• W. IMI;Ipttw SIMds klr anottwr. rtltl6ly "' t::!W: Keqruat, P.
After a simple - Stayman auction
·o C F D J P LA WHJHYGCDIJ OM
that began with a weak ne&gt;-trump,
West led a diamond. I - I mean, the
C F H
I G M C
declarer - won in the dummy and
S J H
C F G C
B G J
L G PH
played a heart to the king, Lundby
G
dropping the queen. Now came a low
IDNDJW
OJV
MZXX6YC
G.
heart, West playing the eight South
wondered if West was trying to get
KGLDIA
V S D J W
C F D M . '
into the newspapers. dropping the
~E-~fS TI'IAT FIRST AME-NDM~f\IT
from Q-J-10-8. Just in case,
(IGYCISJDMCI
HVTGYV
S Y HI
HISTORY MUSSUM
/
~VE-fi!Y80DY'S ALW AYJ TALKING
ISouth took the unsalety-play of finess- PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "'I'm a modern-dey vaudevilllon,M and
that lido ot·
dummy's nine.
me has been locked up." - (Actorldirectorl Robert Townsend.
ACOuT.
two top spades and a diamond
giLL
not necessarily in that order.
1
I wr•uid have left South very red-faced.
'(~ AH. Tl1f"Y S~OULl'
r:{).
good
old
East
switched
to
a
club.
JUST MAKE- f"V~~ygol&gt;Y
Edited lty CLAY I . POUA~N~::::::-~===-~
Ltmdl&gt;y took Ibis unfortunate turn
SHUT UP
events with equanimity.
Rearrange letTers of
He related another deal on which
four scrambled words
AIWUT Hlf FI,ST
low to form four words
West held A-K-Q of diamonds alone,
·0:
AMfflll&gt;ME-NT!
lead
against
four
hearts.
At
every
••
I~~:~ table, West cashed his three dia·
SIONAL
I•
tricks and declarer took the
. When Lundby was the declarer,
..BORN LQSER _ ___,
•
1
1
led a low diamond out of turn.
~1-10\.J Jo\\X.H FOR 1\
TWO tJ.l(t:~
AA£ YOO!&gt;UR£
:~~~if.~able
to bar a diamond lead,
made an overtrick for a top.
r1 Y o 1 w
·~T/\0:. Of ~NCAI(£S? '
ARE.
TH/\T~ wm:LF
comment? "That's all right,
ffill(£ ARE.
rnCY.£ PRICE~
I n'1rh1er. I'm not sure I'd have found
. dja.111_ond lead any~av ."
~ 150 fOUR
OONim£
RE T T A
A marriage is on trouble
ARE. $t.OQ
~--.-....---r.~,......-l 0o·'-_ when the husband begons to
wonder what happened to the
.
.
girl he marned and the wife beOct. 7, 1993
r--::--::--:---,,----, gins to wonder what happened
9 E 0 ~1 0 Y
to the --· she ----·-.

1

1m

54 •pprtntlc•

By Phillip Alder

'78 ·eutlau., 2 door; '&amp;2 Old' Bid, 4x4, Othlr Models? &amp;14FINnu: both for 1600, not to ba 446 -207'1.

IOid HPirtl~ly, &amp;14-M.8-2711.
ll53 Wlllp Jeep, original 4cyt..,
44 GumbO mudcloro, 51000 080,
814-611f.l227.

lllghth

41- UlucMr
53 SeltM. 811br.

The top priority
is enjoyment

Of

Cobin lnboord, G- Ccndltlort,
Loll Oi EKirool $7,100, 114-448&gt;

both good cond. 304-2"7'3-4215.

ExcOI!anr CondRionl Loo1co
Ftoh Tonk, 2413 Joe- Avo. ,Good, Allilng: 8':4J711. 114-4.,._
428 "ftor 1·1111 M.
Point P-111, 311oH75-20113, 1,:::::;.:_:·c:;:.::··:;
· ~·:.:r·=.··;::-:,;.·--:--:hill Uno Troploal lloh" blnlo, "tN7DodaolhlcfoW2Dr. A~o,
omono-.lo ond ~uppl110.
AC, 44,o&amp;l Millo, ..2,i00, 1143711-2'121.
HAPPY JACK ALOE 11AN I::.::.:::::__ _,_....:._--..,...
choctco ocrotchlng, klllo flooo 1N7 OnincMiil, 2 lono oiiV.,
end -~~~· lrrholed lkln lw ...,_,, AC, ATi..I_I,OQflml., "A-I
doge. ~mp IPfiY, I!IUMnl Conrllllon", t4""' 080. 304::,~~FEED. SUPPLY, 114- :,175-;;:~J~aot~.
1~ lludi ID LX, ·IO,-.,
Rlbbfto, Y""!19 lrlldlng Polro, - · oond., •. IIOW .
""'- ·woo110o, • L.opa, 114- 11111, Bopd; iililrp - ·
• 304388...... . .•.
,
.:411;:...:11111=··...:.__~--.

,

org.

34 Funorolltem
36 lrolond
37 Arabian

411 Folowfnv

I'LL HAVE ME
A LAFFIN'

ftn1!·

Appl. . ju.t ott Rt. 143, one mi.. Chevrolet, Ford, Oodg• plcku)
aouth of C.rptntll'. Aid and beda. Short or long. NO rust .

loveHat,
Aecllnar, CoffM • tractor, 55~, 8x2 tran1.,
Tabla, 2 End Tabln, :Z Lampa, $'18,500. K"'" Service C.ntw,
Stoto Rt. 87. 304-1115-36711.
$300. After 8 P.M. 114-441-3823.
Now HOIIInd 351 gdnder/mlxor,
King Wood Stave, With Magic
HHt Blower . t175j Stihl Ch1in
Now Hollond 7h. hoy bind, 120.
Saw, 081 F1rm loll $150, 114-- tranepon dlec., Dearborn forage
446-3040.
disc., all good condition. 3()4.
273-4215.
Klng..CO.I wood llove wlb~wer,
goaet eha~, Hell Queker gun Oliver 1800 tractor, lnlamatlanal
Farman 856 tractor, bolh gat,
~ floor tum~ee, modet(off
Kitchen Table 4 Chal'!1 Fair

'

304.a75-541t

21 Proftt on
bank acct.
23 Epoch
24 01 empiro
28 TV't
lalclnghora
(2 welt.)
32 lloldow
33 Non-prolll

Kid-

45 Ftderal-.ey,

TICKLED?

$4,200,OBQ. 256..277
•
11t1 Chivy 9-10, Lo.tdod, bl011
Clean, 614-441-He4.
.
'11t1 Toyoto 41&lt;2 pickup hpd,
omnm cau., dlrwc:llonal rlmo,

Vegetables

dey
15 Pllnt part
1711oflatr"
18Cowae
peroon
·
19 Irregularly

43Jauplapr

Opening lead: +4

I SHORE WILL BE
TICKLED WHEN l CAN GIT
BACK ON MY FEET 1!

1988 Ford Ranger XLT. 4 ely. .~
apd. Mult SN To Appr.crat~t,

Picker,

Flrawood Pr.pare For Wlnt•.
Will Bo S-oned Whln Ccld
WHther Arrlvu, Delivered, 614256-1318, &amp;14-317e7025 Evenlnga.
For Sal• Unkten UST HOD
••tlllhe r.eelver with tan 1001
dlsh,l14-fi2-8879.

Kin;

1m

BlondoL __!Ioldwln ~one, goocf
ccnd., ...o. 304"'7 31178 "
Conn trum~, ~ood condition,
11250•114" 2-20 ·
58
FruitS &amp;

Pass

BARNEY

Hon truck, dual whHia,
88,000 selual mlln, tl500, 114-

Musical
Instruments

II PenDOint

Eat I
Pass
All pass

Pass

femall, 72 Trucks for Sale

1 yur old, apayed, 111 ahott,
houaebroh, 1200, 114-H2-628D.

57

West

miiH, &lt;'!I

.-o Meillc,.

41 et.mency

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

88
ThundertJird. _ut::h-cVI:rP,
:,For::....:.:;So:.:lo=-=,=-=-:P-:;Iy_m_o

COlli.......

31 Own(kol)
plcbn

4 - Carlo

notched

+Kt051
• J 10 6

Load~.

614-446-235'1

fi.~IJ

E-\S'f

19i1 Ply. Acclaim 4 Dr., ALIIo ,
AC, 32,000 MUat, $5,200, 614·
2 113&amp; Ford plckupe, .1 strMt
rod, 288 4spd, othlf orlglnalllit
btad V-8, not running, boll~

$85/mo., IM-992·2187.

f't:oR iiiE£!:: . He:~ P.£W
\I.!AmiJG l&gt;iL HIS LIFt fOR
HIS FIV£ li11k.UTE') CT FAMt

2721.

Mobil home lptcn for rent.

-·

NORTH
+Q 7 6 3
• A 9 71
tA Q7
+KQ

.EEK AND MEEK .

11407.
.
1SI90 Plymouth Le1.1r, Auto, AC,

46 Space for Rent

Sat'"·

--·

.

" on•"

14Catl--

Mlloo, $1,850,

3711-2728.

304-1175-119114.
•urance, and 1 v-r of tree lot SpaeH for rent at1ttlng at
,.nt, 111 for only $1177'mo., call 1·

s....r~,ooo ·

1 GorMan tor

12 WWitorea
13 Tape1try

1981 Plymouth Hori~ . 4 Oooi~

Slorllng It t1201mo. Gollll Hotel.

111M Redman 14X70, 3bdrm., In•
clud" sklnlng 111pe, bk»ckt,
1
5yr. warranly, nomeownen In·

PHILLIP
. ALDER

1111 Chlvr a_..
&lt;JJ.
113,000ml., $3,000. 304..75-1171;

5

,_!"--""',

.--..-

MoFC£

Furnished

ors-55118.
1 " 8 0 0
-:.:..:"'::3:..7-3::2::38::·c.__ _ _ __
Pomeroy,
12
Situation
No Hunllng 0t Any Kind, No
Custom Built 1984 Nathut 47 Wanted to Rent
Tr..penlng, No Mcoorbikoo .,
Mldelleport
Wanted
14x70 All EJ.c:trlc, Kh-Din LR,
t-o rent• 2 or 3 bedroom
Motor Vohlcloo 01 Any Kind.
&amp; VIcinity
Twa Bodroomo Bolh, All Larv• Wanting
Raymond Smhh.
Charlft L Richardt, Looking
Roomt, Appl1anc .., C.lll~ howe, In CIHn end good c:ond ...
For A Udy To Llvt In For n.rr Fant, CA, FA &amp; Rear P1ti0 tion. pr.ler prime Mttlng, 114..One nn'• trMh It MOI:hlr Board, Non Smok«, 814-446-- Covtr•s 8x10 Shtd Plut Small 882-2428, If no answer plu.u
7
'fard Sale
0110
cloo'nl
.::.u,.-clol,'oOctfo
. 71 3411.
Shod, II Up On Cllolco Lo1 In t..q rnMIIQe on machine.
"'V
•n
Quell CrHk. Very Qood Cond~
thru Soturdoy, Oct. . GIOI1 18 Wanted to Do
uon. 614-24W246.
Merchandise
Gallipolis
Bond, Ohio, 1 112 m1111 bolow
Rhch11 Bridge.
•
E&amp; R TREE SERVICE. Toootng,
51
Household
&amp; VIcinity
ou Gen. Hlrtlngor. lllddloporl, Trimming, Tr• Aemo"11, HedGe 33 Farms for Sale
Trimming.
FrH El11mateel 61'4·
1121 S.Cond Aven•, Oclober Oct.
6-1,
IOIMihlng
lor 367-7i57 After 4p.m.
Goods
O.xter1 Ohio, Meigs County,
11h, 81h, 1-4, Roln c.,...ored.
1·..
;-::-';;",..on-:'""::·,..,.--:-:-::-;:--.,-;-;--:~ala Dy owner, SD beautiful
VI'RA FURNITURE
Malntenanc•, Palntlng1 acr.., 2 hou ..., My tltldart,
32 Chilllcattw Road, Thurlday, All Ylrd S.l• MuM . S. P•ld In Genen~l
114-446-3158 Or 614-448-4428
Yard Work Windows W..hea 513-254-5088.
Frldoy,
s ..urclllua_-;Chlldren
Advance.
O..dllrw: 1:00pm the
'90 DAY SAME AS CASH
,
day beloN the ad t. to run, Guttarw Cleaned Light Hauling,
CIOttt., Curtalna.
, Toys, Sundly edition- 1:OOpm Frkllly, Comma~lcal, Raaldlntlal, Stava: Free gaa, 31 acrH, 4br. hou.a, OR RENT-2.QWN (NO DEPOSIT)
65 aerea crop &amp; putura, price
Oultts And Cr~~tt8.
Mondsy
.tHk»n
1D:00a.m. &amp;14-4....1658.
,.duced. Homaatud B•nd,
G.orges
Portabla
Sawmill,
don't
OUTSIDE
FURNISHINGS:
5 Fomlly Gorogo Solo: Frkloy ISo~hl~rda;;Y::_·=====~~
Broker. 304-882·2405.
And llltunlly -.? 11101 And
Wrought Iron Table W/4 Chal~W;
haul your laga ta the mill ju•
1Q4 .Uncaln Ptko In Nonhup. 8
Public Sale
Fon Bock Rocking Chi~ $118;
Cllll 304-I?S-1957.
Garden Arch W1y'1 $129.00
Old Drop Lilt Tobie, aurno,
&amp; Auction
Mlaa
Paula's
Dsy
Car.
Cantar
Boyo Clolhoo, IIWI a Ladl10
cto~r.o, "" sr.., Lampo, Rick P11raon Aucllon Company, 11-F I A.M. -6:30 P.M. Quality 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Beddln~·Twln Matt
Full
Loving Carl Far All Children
OlaiiWire. DriDII, hfttdl,
$119 So Ouoon 5141 Sat; 4
full time auctioneer, complata Our 11 G01l. Part-Tim•, Full·
Drawer
h•M
~.95;
Car
8ed'1,
auction
aervk:1. UcenHd TlmeL Fad. Aaalatanca Avallabla. Property of Roy Joe Fox, Clll- Bunk B.t'a, Poater Beds. Full
WY 80~~:100 lot Sold to
71h, llh1 tlh.l...Cl!"hoo, Homo ln- 166,0hlo &amp; W•t VIrginia, 304- ~II r-or lnfannallon Or VIsit. In· lon
hlghnt
bidder. Reply to: Box LIM Of Southwltllem VIIH
773-5785.
flint
JTocldllr
614-446-6227.
Pretlllor.._ ~rl ""'".!r llloc, 1 IIIIo
Startln;g At 120.00; Indian• u_.ny
WMI noaney, I P'lnn.
School,
SchO!'fogo,
B&amp;A 423, GJM, Roclno OH 45Tn.
Shipe 1 6 Biz." Starting_ At
School, 614-446-1122{.
7· ACRE PARCELS: 15.00. 2 Locatlane ·B•icle ~uto
ALL Yon! Soloo a. Pold In ~9....,.-..:.W:.:.a:;_nt~ed~:=::tO=B:;:uy!:::--::: Private Homa Wfth Room &amp; SEVERAL
Molp Ccunty, Solem Twp., Auction Or 4 Mllaa Oul 141.
Actvanoe. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. Anllquea 1nd UNd furnhure, no
$6SOI acre. Remote, blautHul Open I A.M. To II P.M. Uon -Sat;
the lilly belore the ad • to run. lt•m too llrge or too. smsll, will 8011rd Avallabla. F1.1ll cara For l•nd; WOOda, pett.ure and hills.
Olubttd
Or
Eldarly.
15
Y11ra
Sundly edMion ~ 2:00 p.m. buy one ~ or complete
.Call for good map. 1-114-193. EIICfrlc Rongo 30" Whl1o, $85;
Fridn: ~ edllton • 2:00 hOWiehold, c111 Olby Manln, Experience, Exc:allent R~eran­ 8545, Athena,OH.
G•a ·Aange 31" 171; Dryer KenciO, 014-256-107V.
p.m. Sohlrcloy.
114-!m-11141.
mo,.. 175i Wa1her o.e. $95;
RetriCor Hot Point Almond,
Big Four FomiiY Go- Solo: Decorated Monewart, wall tal• Trl State lrH Slrvlca· topping,
Like
, 1 YNr Wamntr. 1295;
Rentals
Crilo, Clolhoo, 'royo. Bodroom ph.,._., old lampe, aid thlf'· trimming, tl'll rtmOYal, atump
Roldgorstor Wltlrlpool, Froll
Group And Dlhor Mlac lomo, rnomet.,.., old Clocks, anelque removal: Ff'M nttmi1H. 614F-;Whl1o, Nice 5115·\ Hotoolnl
Rlln Or Shine, 1111 Conlonory tumlt••· Alvwine AntlqL~~a. 992-2312. II no ar.wtr, leava
W11htr. Dryer Set, L ke New 1
Rood, Golllpollo.
Yur Warranty, 1201 Each;
Rute Moore, ownar. 614·892- I ,"'"':;;;;::-::-:•g'::oC:o-;:n.:,""':=::chC:l,.,no;;::.-;;;== 41 Houses for Rent
Skoggo Applloneet, 71 Vlno
Will bllwlh In my Pl. Pleasant
Clrpor1 Solo: 1041 Slcond 252t. We buy eetatea.
2 Bedroom House For Aenl In StrHf, Gallipolis, 814-448--7:398,
A - Thurodl Frlcloy, .5, Don' Junk hi Soli Uo Your Non- homo. 3ff4-1175-6485.
Golllpollo, 814-146-4069.
1-80~H-34tl9.
Clol.hlng, Adull AI SIMI, &amp; MIIC Worldng Major AppUanc11,
Colo&lt;
TV'o,
Rotrlg-oro,
2
Or 3 Btdroom HOUH In Gal· Ganeral Elaclrlc Wisher &amp;
Frnancial
llpollo 1375/Mo. Dopool1 &amp; Dryer, $275 Sll, Good Condl·
Churcll Bonofl1 Gorogo Solo: FrHura, VCA'a, Ulcrowavu,
Air
Condltlonerl:,
WuMrt,
R•t.rancee R•qulred. 614-251- lion, 614-44&amp;.1012.
OCt- 7111, 8th, tlh•.t-6. 152 Dryoro, Etc. 814-251-1231.
8520.
Dlbbllllrlvl, Roln Or :mini.
21
Business
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
2br., 1m111 houH, h.tmlshed, Walhara!. dryera, rafrlgeratore,
-Solo: ~ 4111, ThiU Grlll ond tiumpor lor '88 Ford
Opponunlty
panlal uUIItln paid, HUD ap- l'llrtgH. :skag911 Appll1ncn, 71
8th, f.2 IIIIH Out 218, Vorilly 01 Bronco II, 614-1112-5013.
VIne Slraet, Call 614-446·7388, 1·
proved. 304-175--6512 ~fter Spm.
INOTlCEI
J &amp; D'a Auto Partl and Salvage, OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
800-499-3491.
Solo: At. 218 I AI. 7 at.o buying lunk c.rs &amp; truck1.
recommends that you do bua~ 3 B.traam Hou•i\ Rodney
Soulfi, 1017, 10111/83 ThUIS, Frl, I 304-173-15343.
nen witt! ptopll you knowr and 1400/Mo. O.pMit &amp; eferencH GrMn Electric Frigidaire Stove
$75; Tappan Mlcrowava, $25;
TH15.
Junk car~, any condhlor), 814- NaT to sand money ttvougn the R~ulrad, Aher 6 P.M. 614-245-o Coli 814-1192-3149.
1259.
mall uncu you have lnveatrgated
HH nomo, ClcOhlngLlilac. homo, 1112·'1553.
the olforlng.
.
Chon _., Con .. AIOiorod,
3 Bedrooms With BIHment, 7 Houh Sai•Mu.t S.crtllce Ap~lng For Lind. Flulblo On
Kenmore
SA 1&amp;4, 114 Mile Above Llndllll Amounl
Ulln N. On 160 From Holzer ptl•nc:...
Locol
Per
Pllono
Route:
t1.200
CION To Good Rood
$150. GE electric
Rd.Oct.W.
Wlth Wiler Souroo. Sind A WMk Potential. Priced To Madlcal Center. Reference &amp; waaharldryer,
Dllpoth Required, Available r~~nge, Ilk• new, $100. Kenmore
R..,..,.. To: CL.A 288 c/o Go~ Soli. 1-1100-188-7V32.
... trT.,n~tor, $78. 304-115-2213
Larao Yllld _ , F":"I.(ely, •
Nov. I II, 414-446-0195.
Upollo
Dolly
Tribune,
S25
Third
? fran Skllfllo,
odo,
after 6 Fri. or au day S•t.
Loco! Vlndlng Route: t1,200 A
Avonuo,
Golllpollo,
OH
4113t
Curtains, • Lo1:1 Morel Mll11
Week Potentlil. Muat Sell. 1..eoo. For Aenl: 3 Bedrooms Houle,
LAYNE."S FURNITURE
Galllpalll City Llmhe, O.poah
GolllJIOIIo on St. AI. 7.
Wonled To Buy: 800. To 100 lb. 153•Vond.
Aequlr.d, Na Pita, $3951Mo. Compillle home fumlthlnga.
Bull
And
Pony,
614-245-5482.
On ~ Ptko Jull 011 141 AI
Houre: Man-Sal, 1-5. &amp;14-448&amp;14-441-4823.
Cont._, 3rd Trallw On Loft. Wonred To Buy: Junk Auloo
0322, 3 mllu out Bulavllla Ad.
Real
Estate
N~ :1 badtaom houM tur rant
ThYN 7th. Frl .h, LoU Of With Or Wllhocl Motoro. eon
FI'M Delivery.
·
In Pl. Plouont, 614-1192·5858.
Ev~hlog,CI&gt;oopl
Larry LIVIIy. 014-388-11303.
Living Room Suit.., 2 Place,
Unfurnlehed 2 bedroom houaa, Never Used, $498; Value Your
October 7th, •h, Frtct.r, Satur· Top Prlcoo Pold: All Old U.S. 31 Homes for Sale
de~
and l'llfiiFIIOCM ,.. Prlco, Only $275, Cooh And
cloy, 131 Joy Drivo, ~. Vory Colno, Gold Ring~ Sliver Cclno,
Silo ,. Clollilng,
Gold Colno. M.b. Ccln Shop. 1 112 ....... brick ho- qul.-.d, no lnalde pate, &amp;1~­ Carry, 614 886 nn.
Jockllo, Gowno. Etc.
wlcarport, tl.lll lllze baaement 1 :1090.
151 Slcond Avenue, OalllpoU•.
Mollohan Furniture &amp; C.rpeta,
Thorml Gird wlndowl, IIIII
Voice
01
Hopo
Chun:h, Wlnted . tO buy: UHd moblll doon,
AI. 7, N. 8M-446-11144 lx12 eo,..
42
·
Mobile
Homes
hMI
pump
WIAC,
atorage
p11 $80, VInyl $4.49.
Klnlll!ll•. Oct- 8th, llh, w, -1&gt;4-440-0175
bUilding, corner 101, M7,0CRI.
Loll 01 Clllldrono Clothing.
for Rent
Moving: Mu• Sail, Kenmore
WI-: 300 4x4 llonclo, IIi! or 304-67U8114.
Yllld • Boko - · 5 Fomlly: 3 - · oxcollont lhlpe, 614-742· 10 Mllea From Holllt"l Out State 2 Bedroom Mobile Homa, 614- EIKtriC Stove, GIIU Front,
Mlllli £111 From Bob Evans 3802.
Coromlc Cooklop 1175;. Super
Roull teo 7 Acroo, 11/L HouN 446-4 257. 61~46-0722:.
Fonn on St Rt. 1511 Toyo,
Slnglo Wllorbod, Mlrrorod
With
3
Bedroomo,
2
Bl1ho,
Clolhoo, Fumlu"' kOiu., Etc.
Holdboord, 1200; 014-388-11140.
2
Bedroonw
Loc.atlld
On
Bladen
Flreplec., Full BIIMrMflt,
OCt. tlh, •1, Roln Or Shine.
Employment Services Stone
Olit~tehld
Garage, Building, Road, 114-256-8180.
PICKENS FURNITURE
117,000. Cotll After 5 P.M. 814- 2 Bedrooms, Furnished, 1 Mite
Yard Sale Oc:l. 1. I, I. 11U
New/Uaed
388-9710.
s-.1 Avo. Gollloollo, Ohio
From Gllllpolill, la!'Qt Private HouMhokl lumlohlng. 112 mi.
Auto: 11110 Font thu-rblrd 11
Help Wanted
3 Bedroom HouH On Graham Lol, 1230tfllo. Security O.po~h. Jerricho Rd. Pt. PINNnl, WV,
School Road, WIN Conaldtr Rtfwlnctll, 1'14-448~236. 814- call :J04..175·M50.
(-. - ": buyw mllll
"'"""· $400.00). HOUHhold: AVON! All llrMI. Nood ntrl Land Conlroel, 115,000, 114-4.,._ 446-2581.
SWAIN
Patt/panl, d.._, ~. lnOMJ' ar 1t'lnt • c1,..r, lhhlr
3 IHrDOT_. 2 Baths, No Peta, AUCTION I FURNITURE. 12
ctochlng {lnlnl, WCNNR8, In- WIY---CIII ...,ltyn. 304-482-2645 8323.
flnll, IOddloro). plcturo
or I-81JO.m-11356.
Olive St., Galllpolla. New &amp; Ulld
5 room hou11, 2br., 2203 N. IM·387•74H.
aiiiiiWI,., record1, t.fnpt,
Main, Pl. Pltaaant, .. , Ia, C.nten11ry 4 mil• from Oal- fumHure, huter'll, Wntem &amp;
lioodcroft rllndoor, Western AVON I All Arloo 1 Shll1oy 115,500. 304-1195-3345.
Work boot1. 614-441-3151.
llpolla1 2 bedroome, Wlter tur..
...,.._.bocockl-olhor
bookl, Spooro, 304-el'S-1421.
nl•h.a,
$240
Mo.
No
pets,
AC,
W11hor'r Otver, Rtlrtgarator,
llfl~o&lt;lnll, brlc-brlc, mlxor, 24 AVON CHRISTMAS Sollo AI Ct•n. 2br., garage, baMmlnt, 114-148-11038.
Color .V. J!rNHr, Air Conplilcll chilli ...vtce w/utrl and
1 depoalt, no peta.
meny ~~~trYing p~ec .., wall Wcwll Or Home. AVII'IIGI $8 -114 304-675-5102.
dKkMI!Ir, Mk:rowave, 114-2.51·
Trail• JCamp~~r Lofl For Rent, 1238.
mouniMI rn~p.zln~~ rack, toya, Hourty. Pt.. Flfttutle Di•
Clou
To Gavin, Call 614-446dlaplq' Mind, ,._vr duly buck· coun.. l Door·To-Door Optlontll. FOR SAL£· 2 bedroom ~ 1 , 28n.
112 acre In country, RaciM 1m,
111, weight bench w111tg nn, 1.aoo.14:z.4731.
53
Antiques
much miK:. Antique.; oak offici
COOK WANTED
new double fMIM IIH-In win. TWo bedroom tr~~llar In Racln~,
lu~ ot 1111. Rlwerlnl Antlqw1,
·
Mind, ........ grinct.r, grMn PlnlcrMt Clrt C.nter II LDok· dowe, full baNIMI111 1 outbullcS- call 114·982-5858.
1124 E. Main 9t,..t, on At. 124
cannlng jllr., wlr• Mil jaf'l, ~
For A COok Whh One YNr lng, NIY to hMt, Nl4 oil fur·
1
-•- ::-:oro,
Pomeroy. Houro: II.T.W. 10:00
I,_.,., dl ~.
Olo10ry Exporlonco In noco, $25,000, 114-M.2140 o~ 44
Apartment
a.m. to &amp;:00 p.m., Sun*y 1:00
qulnh comlorlor,
limp, Holllhcoro SOiling. Mllll Bo ,t·=•~5::~::o':'p".m:7.'---::::::-::-:-c-=:Ia 1:00 p.m. 114-H2-2S2e.
·
for Rent
t'~. ewroio=or&amp;l~=.:!i Abfe To Work Some W•ktndl 1House In Mleon, WY, Horton St.
1150'1 floor limp. ooli And Holldoyo. S~loory 3 bodroomo, 1112 bllhl, lull 1 • 2 bedroom apartm'"'' In 54 Miscellaneous
o•tary NHmtnt wlflmlty room, houH Pomeroy, clo. to lown, $175tobll, Anchor Hoekl- .. ,... Sklllal Knowhwlg•
Merchandise
eu~· __. dlthle, 1~ eewtna
Ill• ~';:e.~~ comp...ely cai'JM"ed\o60x200 101, 1225/ma., apptlancee fumlahld,
- " " " llonclo, Gllllpolle lllllk ,., .Thlo Poolllon. High School . gorogo, corpc"lol~1 ' Ill hoot 114-!m-11333.
1 Meal Caa, Runa Good; 1 Pop
bo411o, Fronch 1G0 (IJMQ'o Gtocluoll Pro-. Apply In pp I olr cond,
173-5885.
1bdrm. apartmant In Pomeroy caui Cola Hu .New Ul'tll· 1
~-~Sibloyomoll•lt=., r.r:dlllr,-&amp;:: '-rMn .I:DO A.ll. To 4:30P.M. 014« Ranch Style Home, 7 tor ,.nt, 8M-H2-5858.
Hobart DJgRor Scoloo; 1 DJglt11r
,_
•- W-cloyo. EOE.
Roome, 2 Bllhl, U11111y R0otn,
caah Aaglster. Come a.. &amp;
2bdrm.
apte.,
total
electric,
a~
1
rornolnlnJI RMIII • " - ·
Front • Bock Porohol, 2 Cor
lor IIIII priill. Tormo: Cull- Drl..,. -ed. llralghl truck, Ootached GtroJII, Llr[ll Yord, ptlanc.. tumlahed, laundry lllu An o~~or, e14 441341111.
no ehtcllal All A!. flnal. no cllu D licence, current P~· 13 Acret, Loelted: lulavllle room taciiHin cloae to ech~ 14 wlrlclcaw. and lltorm wlr.towt,
retundl or eiCihansa-1 Coml Cll,
1010
Br01ctway
've, Pike, (OIIIIpoUI), $48,000. &amp;14- In town. AJ)ptic;Uona a"allabte
.nd
1 tr11nc1 we· wUI be Pai'Hraburg, 304-e75-f113 Sa... 441•1724•
at: Village ·a,...n Apia. 148 or reaeonabte, 11~-1111.
-!!II lOt you! Phono: 114-4.,._ Sun.
15, 2 block Foley Bell ...
Cllll14-lt2·3711. EOH.
.,S E'llrJCI"it Ill W*omef
Elm ....., 0 hour, Hll Avon for A.-.e: ti,SOO CUh Rebate On
off 1ann tractDr, 42"
·
11500; pro .... Oat.._
7th, ttta, llh. Knick Chriatmu. FrM gift al lllg~ All Slngt. Homte In Stock,
wr-11r, uoo; 11110 Soobul'fl
I.ICJ0-713-11111 acceu
_,nllln
SIOII
Point
; i DlhlRr ft omo, 11422
Pl
....nt, WY,
3044'75-1400.
Jukabox, U.OO; LC. Srnttfl
IE••rwn on Hemlock d.
.
double bar,.ll, $300; 8'14-St2·
2021 Chllhlm, Gollloot1!1 3
lOll aft• 5JI'II.
Eliay Work! Excellent Pay! A• Bectroomi, Centrel Alt. vinYl
Pt. Pleasant
•mble Producta At Horne. Cell Siding, Foncod Front, bt,50b,
2 glue top Dlnett1 Slit, 1
Tall
F-. 1-800-467-5566. Ext. 114-446-2205 Appointment Only.
Smlll, 1 Large, IM-388-12t1.
&amp; VIcinity
)13.
Aelldence
Or
24'x32'x10'· OM 3' entry door,
3 F1mlty Yard Sat.: 2211 Jetter· JOIN A WINNING TEAM 11 1 Slat.ty
Apartrn..nta. Garage ADartmenl,
ono 11110 olkf!ng dO!!', gutter,
oon A.... Fri. &amp; fill., Ool. I a I .
... dtr In tts, flnanc111 llrvW Full LDI. 14 Orape, C.lllpolla, Brick duplex apt. wl lg~ yard, .,...ed
prlco, 114100; """48xiiilfeftl, bllrHI 1 memblr of our Auction Novomboi Olh, 014-245- IXC. nel'hborhood, Wllklng dl• Onl 3' ontry d-. ono 1Zx10
4 Fomlly Yord - : 2110 Jock· conaumer
trnancee tHm maana 5203.
tance
0 IChOOII, groc•ry, llkflng door, gu1111'0, oriCfed
eon Ava Oct M. JNM, tools,
having 1 ~ place to ttarl.
dNgatol'tl, hosphal I" chur- prtqe, te500; other alua and
d - i. much moro.
AN you Nlf.motlvated, UHf\&gt;
chM, 3br., 1;. eat-tn khchtn, full optloill IYIIIoblo. P,.c~
Fll'll Tlrne Thte Y•r, Yard Salt: t!Y&lt;I lnd onloy doollng wflh
-monl WI loundry hookupe. POll Fntml . Bullclo1;J14-n2f/1 -.y Dr.,- Howon, OCt poopfl? A ploolonr poroonalfty
304475-117111 doyo, 304-882-311119 31141 lob or 304-173Jolt.
w.ninga.
7-.1, 1:00-2.:1norein ooncolo. lind ~ phone oklllo oro o
mUll.
RMponalbUitiea
lncllllll
25 ln. Zenith Color ConMte
....-.r
,joono.
Ettlclency lptrtment, relannca, !_221; 1•10 SOlid Blko, Exolllonl
ICUvldel rtllted to.crldlt. aalaa,
Pade 1111: -nos .._duabioolt IOOOUIM: 1Mnaatmtr4 and aaclopooh, nc pill. 304-675-5182.
cona., l3~i 1 Pt. Clrhartt
Or., Sit. Oct. t, I :QO.??h ~· For lmmedlate con.
Fim
Holur
ADirtmente, Cowtralla 125, Ill• 3li ..verat
1111111010,
Cllrlllrnu
omo, llcMr1110n contiCf Kowln Sml1h,
Collo • Jockoll, Slu -.10, $5 '
Bocond Avon111, Gollfpotlo. 114- 510
1--2111. EOE. ,IIIBIH, Non' Eoch. 114-!m-5135, 405
All r.a111111e l:dVenlslng In
441-1800
Senior,
DiMblod,
•
lllnOiolng
lnd
drug
~- ..,_
PIJII
St., lllddlopon.
R - Bolo: llldlo«&lt; Awe,
IIlio . . . _ lotubfad lo
Hondlcoppod 1 a 2 Bedroom
Thurollf., t:Q0..4:00, cat .,.
leyl. gu Hobo~ wllUnhl. Aonto k11ed On Adlustod :100
1111 FICiocaiFolr Housing Act
IACOme. Some Renlal All'-" dol',
' 11000 wllh lroll'!i 3
)Oono, -111110, gun rock, · ut. lnluranco 011oo poroon
of 1968 wNch molcol UllogOI
1cn1voo, unrtcwmo, drooow, mloc. 'watUct In an
Sllll Avallobll. FIIHA ton cheln llolof, hOO; ,_ VIC1 o - 'anY prot._, 1111Ce
proP.ooty I coouony "'l"ilC!! lu1f
Buboldlzed, HUD ColllllcotH tor c~!~J toroh • Rgulatora,
lmlllllon or chcrlmlnollon
or pt~rl tlma, tnllnlng pn:roufi11d,
AcCIIIIed. 014-441-1800, Eqllll 1171• .
Vlclor 00fribln1Uon
Pomeroy,
._ ovoJnll commlnlon lot * - d on raoe, color, relglon,
Houalng Dpportunl1l11.
I
.whh
-ull1ot~·,
liot-112filii 3 rnontho. Send ........ to:
MX famllalllllus or nallonaJ
·~
Mlddlllpon
Fumllihecl EfftclOnc:r $185/llo. 071.
Atlcruhor, P.O. loa 1071,
Oflgln, or '"'!' -..IJ&gt;!lto
.utiJHI.. Paid,
120 Fo~o~nh
lllrillll, Ohio 457110.
&amp; VIcinity
Av..,...L Oolllpollo, 14 4411 1111 110,000 BTU Hill Nsturot OM
-~~~~ LUCh proMrenco,
Fu..-,10 • Rog. 11,etll, Solo:
Ahor 7 P.M.
•
lml1atlon or diiiCrimlnlllon.'
tl.ON, lnii-IOn Avolloblo,
'
Fumlahocl olllcloilcv opt Pl. 114 Ill 1308.
Ptu..,.~llltloo pofd, tt81imo. I Pc. l.lvlng Room luMo, Uko
~ ..7s;,,.3,
-.1275, OM~41 2141.
Fumlahod, 3 ROotnl I IIIN, Applo llo . Computor, 121K
Clonlp Thumloy lind
Cloon, No Plio, Rlllr1n01 •
'llcloJ.
Hi!-1:00, ""
t;;'l;t~:.'~
-7oo"Ma.
Dlpooh Roqulroa. 114-44•1811.
~--"o ld I lor t•- loornl
.... • .. Oat. tch, 10-2p.m., 2311
Graclouo IIYlng. 1 end :i flld.
l:co~~or. ~oondR~
lie ., rry"'""""'
.
""'"' lpl~- 11 VII- ,Groll ChrillmH . gl':i,olll loo'
lienor
lnd
Rlvwalila
Ylld 8olo- Thurodly, '1111 I
$100, olllro monitor,
; II cu.
API~ mont• In lllddllport. From
,......, 1tJ1. .... N1l1t1nc., ,
ft . uorlahl - · t100 080;
$202. CoiiiM.fl92·11851. EOH.
Roule 114, 1yrtCUMi I ttl t
014-fia:all02 IVInlllgl.
.

...... .

\&gt;A(I.IIJ. I N~Eb

Roome fDr rent • WHII: or month.

837-oo25.

ACIIOII

1117 Plymouth Horizon 4 Door,
Aut'!!..._A~2,000 lllln, 11,150.114-:m.
.

1992 14x70 Mobil Home, 3br., 2 6'M-43-15SO.
bOih, CA, 8l11 dock, 114,500. "'==:-::-'-'-''---:::--"77304-77'3-5730.
SIMplna roon~~ whh cooking.
AIIO lraller ap~~e~. AH hook--upe.
1993 Palm
Harbor 28168 Call lftll' 2:00 p.m., 304-773doublt'Mde, 3 bedroom., 2 56SI, Muon WV.
btlt~~'..t den wh.h tirepl.ce, 1-I00-

Area. JU 441 4053.

The

Autos fQr. Salo

2721.

Rooms

1tt1 Cleyton mobil home, Mx70,
3br., 1 112 bath, exc. cond. 30+
675-Stil

•

Ohio

4

!:'!!'

Anne St, Ponteror .,..., 114!1112-6t15.

1993

1993

1117 llllrcury Lrnx,' I lick Wlt~
Groy lnlorlor, 4 S - . SIIOO, Njo
Answ• J.,av. ilnMge, 11+
2!58-11111.
1117 pty. DUatit 2 Dr, Auto, AC,
67,000 ....... 11.119. 114-37'1-

t13fi.:IO JIIC' month, - M' wldo
LlrJII I br. ope~mont 1 olr
mobllo homo. lncludu oldlllng1 n. .l1!lg, lumlahld •ttcnen,
ttapa, compl«t eet-up al1d 11250/mo., dopcolt roqulrod. 3114.
delivery, I months lot rant, 1· •
175-4132, I:OO.S:OOpm.
800-1137-111125.
Fumlahod mobile
10 1 50 mobUe home, 11100, Cconplolly
homO, 1 milo bo10w GolllfiOIII,
Syracuu, 114-112-1732.
ov..-rng ri ..r. DopooN. No
12155 tra/ter w/ 12HO addiUon, Poll, CA, HUI. IU 441 osllfi.
YlfY aoocf oond., malle otter.
One bedroom •DMmentt,
304-1111:!·33117.
$225/mo. tncoud• utliRioo, t1oo
1216!1 Unltop11 2 Bldrooma, Gas aecurhy de..-n,. no pata; 114Haat, Like New Through Out fi24211.

Foonl: Collloo' Sheperd puppy,

7

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I

I r I' I
I
~
I' I'
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:
,
,
.,,-..,,.-..
r::-TI
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I

Comp le te th~ chudde quoted
L.-.l..--1.-..J.L...L.
__J.,--1.
by ltll.ng in the m•u1n9 words
you de~&lt;elop lrom step No 3 below

$
€)

P~INT NUMBERED

IE TTERS IN SQUA RES
UN SCRAMBLE FORI
ANSWE R

•

SCIIAM-LETS .ANSWERS
Hermit - Rally - Point - Rafter - FOR THAT

My brother is a big coward when it comes to goong
. to a dentost. He frnalty worked up the courage to call
·· for an appoontment and he needed a shot of Novocaine
FOR THAT!

R7

(
•'

ASTRO-GRAPH

!Ion s toaay by mail1ng Sl 25 and a lor.g.

ARIES (March 2t-April t9) Today"s ObJeC·

se ll -addressed . stam ped enve lope lo
Astro·Graph. co ll'liS newspaper. P 0 . Bo~

li-ves shouldn 'l oe merely to ge t the JOb

4465 . New YorK . N Y 10 163 . Be su re to

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

slate your zod1ac s1gn .
SCORPIO (Oct 24·Nov. 22) You musl be
carelu l tOday nol to establiSh one se l o f
rules tor subord1nan1s and anothe r set of

ru les for

8

.;

..
'I
'

'lt:HJr

n».~rfhday

-all

your ~ ell

II you 're diSCO\Ie red

doing lhts. 11 could cos1 you your creditabtil·
ty.
~
•
SAGinARIUS (Nov. 23· Dec. 21) ·~hals
in il lor me" shouldn't be your pnmary moll·
va110n today . because you m•ght have to
deal Nith perso ns who are ,ust as se ll ·
.;;etV•ng. All will want. none w1ll give .

CAPRICOR.N (Doe . 22-Jan . 19)
Friday, Oct. 8 , 1993
Diplomatically back off today if you're con·
Exctltng and 'unexpected de velopni ents franl9d by a person who nas much mare
could De 1n the offing tor you tn the year ~uthonly and is m a Stronger position than ,
ahead, Be careful not to lei events over- you are. You can't w1n 1n a lopsided match . .~
wllelm you ·loI a. poinl where you don'llake AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Fob. IS) Usually
full adVantage of them
·
you're the type of person who lnes to th1 nk
~IBRA (Sept. 23 -0ct . 23) Eve ryo ne . ahead. bullhiS may nor belrue today. You
including yourself . mlghl be at odds fO(J'ay might not make allowance s lor potential .
regard•og a choice of. an objective . This obvious problems .
a1111ude wont gel anybody anyplace. Geo a PISCES (Fob . 20-March 20) Doni gel
Juh1p ·tont'lffe bY understand ing the lnllu-· involve~ tqdity wilh an 1nd•v1dua1 who d1dn't
e&amp;:es which are goveming you in th'e year · deal openly .W1th you m a past endeavor.
. ah:aad:• Sen&lt;:t for your Astra· Graph predic· This leopard hasn't changed hislt.ler spots.

••

done . t&gt;ut 10 do a good JOb Tasks per ·
formed •n haste mtght be worlhless or have

to be done over
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You mtght not
be as deta rled consc1ous as you should be
today and thrs could lead to mtstakes and
problems Small factors cou ld be more stg·
n111cant than us ual.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Some thing in

whtCh yoi.J ·re presently involved could Mve

p o~r prospects for generat1ng a prof1t. You
m1ght not bel1e11e th1s rs true. so 1t's best
you seek expert adv1ce
CANCER {June 21 -July 22) You mighl
have tenoenc1es to be a trifle too head·
strong and unyielding today _ Th1 s could be
counterproductive for you and oonoy1ng tor
others
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) II you lack sell·
assurance today this co uld make 11 possi·
bte lor a stronger personality to dominate
you and plan your course of action. ~is/her
agenda may not ~e rve your best interests.
VIRGO (Au~. 23-Sept. 22) II you1 budge!
is a bil tight at this time . It's best nol to pal
around with friends who can afford to do
tl'1 1ngs you can't It could make you leel
inlerior.

at rhe tmprov

. The Loti

�•

\

October7 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Community calendar
THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS : The Tup·
pers Plai_ns VFW 9053 Ladies Aux·
iliary will meet Thursday at 7 p.m.
at the post home. District 12 presi·
dent will be a guest
CHESTER • The Chester Town·
ship Trustees will hold their regular
meeting at 9 a.m. at the Chester
Town Hall.
MIDDLEPORT • The annual
fall rummage sale of Eleanor Circle
will be held at Heath United
Methodist Chun:h, Main and' South
Third, Middlepon, Thursday, from
9 a.m. to 3 p.m. and Friday, 9 a.m.
to I p.m.

EARLY DETECTION • Karen McCall, right,
, Certified Mammography Technologist, and
Marilyn Dill, x-ray technologist, prepare the

mammography. equipment at Holter Clinic
Jackson County for National Mammography
Week, Oct. 18th rough 22.

Breast cancer day observed

f

October 19 has been proclaimed
the first National Mammography
Day in American history.
The objective of this day is to
encourage millions of American
women especially under served
populations and older women, who
are at ~test risk for breast cancer
to receive, sign up for, or make a
commitment to get a screening
mammogram.
As an incentive, Holzer Clinic
in Gallipolis and its Branch Clinics
in Jackson and Proctorville, ·will
discount their mammogram s 30
percent Oct 18 through 22.
"In past years, more than 46,000
women died each year from \lreast
cancer. Early detection could nave
saved as many as one third of
them," said Saied M.K. Hojat,
M.D., Holzer Clinic Radiology
Deparunent Chairman. "Mammography plays a crucial role in that
process, because it can fmd a breast
tumor up to two years before it can
be felt by a woman or her health
care provider."
"Far too many women die need-

lessly because\hey did not find
their breast cancer soon enough ,"
he said. We know that following
mammography guideline s can
change tha~ and hope that National
Mammography Day will encourage
millions of American women to
sign-up for a mammogram, he said.
While a woman should consult
her physician on the timing of her
first mammogram, experts agree
that regular screening mammograms are the most effective means
of fmding breast cancer early. and
are crucial for all women over age
50.
According to the American Cancer Society, the benefits of regular·
ly scheduled mammograms should
be supplemented by these simple
·m.easures:
•See a health care provider for
regular clinical breast examinations.
•Practice monthl y breast self·
examination.
For more information contact
Holzer Clinic at446·5289.

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

POMEROY · There will be a
spaghetti dinner with the Meigs
High School football team from
5: 15 to 6: 15 p.m. in the high school
cafeteria . A small donation is
required for all you can cat
"

NELSONVILLE • A meeting of
the newly formed Southeastern
District Democratic Club will meet
at 8 p.m. at the Quality 1rul, Dinner
may be ordered from the menu. A
constitution for the club will be
adopted and ail agenda for the next
year will be discussed. All
democrats are invited to attend.
POMEROY · The Pomeroy
group of AA and AI Anon will
. meet at 7 p.m., at Scared Heart
Catholic Church. For more information call992-5763 .

p.m. for children ages 2 months to
kinder~arten ~~,&amp;e . Please bring
child's tmmunization recOrd. •

.

.

POMEROY • Th e r ~ will be a
class at 7 p.m. on the basic techniques of hoe down square dancing
and a class at 8 p.m. on country
line dancing. at the Middleport Arts
Council. Cost is $7 per couple.
Gerald Powell will be instructor.
For more information call 992·
2675.
RUTLAND · 'The Rutland
Township Trustees will meet in
regular session on at 6:30 p.m . at
the Rutland Fire Station. The public is invited to attend.
POMEROY · Th e Tr ini ty
Church, will sponsor a luncheon
and arts and crafts sale during the
Sternwh eel Festival. Oct. 7 • 9.
from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily.

sing featuring "Ch ~ral &lt;;Jospel
Group," "Forerunner, Mar'!' Sell·
ers and Junior and Rita Whtte w1U
begin at 3 ·p.m. Following the sing,
refreshments will be served. Pastor
Roy Lawinsky -and the CIJngrega·
tion invites the pubhc.
RUTLAND • There will be a
dance at the Rutland American
Legion Hall from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.
with music my Pure Country and
Then Some. The public is invited.
CHESTER · There will be a
steak dinn er spon sored by the
Chester Volunteer Fire Department
Ladies Auxiliary from 4 to 6 p.m.
at the station. The cost of the meal
which includes baked steak,
mashed potatoes, gravy, green
beans, cole· slaw, roll , desert and
drink . is $5. For reservations call
Cleo Smith at 985 -3521, ln zy
Newell at 985 -3 344 or Elsie
Folmer at 985-3871.

FRIDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS · Round
and square dance will be held Fri day, 8 to 11:30 p.m., at the Tuppers
Plains VFW 9053 hall. Music will
be by the True Country Ramblers.
Caller will be Red Carr. Public
invited to auend.

BURLINGHAM · Modern
Woodmen of America will be hav.
ing a potluck dinner at 6:30 p.m. at
the Woodmen Hall. All members
and their families are invited.

.

RUTLAND · There will be a
revival at the Rose of Sharon Holiness Church Oct 8 · 17 at 7 p.m.
nightly with Rev. Elbert Barrow
and special singing. Everyone is
welcome.
·
SATURDAY

POMEROY • There will be a
DANVILLE · Weekend services
PERI meeting at 1 p.m . in Meigs
will
be held at the Danville Chw ch
County Senior Citizens Center. All
of
Christ
at 7 p.m. Saturday, and
members are urged to attend.
10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. Sunday.
TUPPERS PLAINS · Glenna Denver Hill of Foster, W. Va. will
Riebel, RN, will be having a free be the speaker. ·
community-based immunization
POMEROY • The Pomeroy
clinic at the fire department from 9
to 11 a.m. for children ages 2 Seventh-day Adventist Church will
months to kindergarten age. Please be hosting "Visitor's Day" starting
bring child's immunization record, with Sabbath School at 2 p.m-.
under the direction of Rodney
REEDSVILLE · Glenna Riebel, Spires. There will be children and
RN, will be having a free commu· adult classes and a report of the
nity-based immunization clinic at church' s mission in Liberia will be
the fire department from 1 to 3 given by John Snyder. A gospel

CELEBRATES BIRTH·
DAY • Jamie Michelle Simp·
son, daughter to James and
Margaret Simpson, celebrated
her third birthday recently at
a party held at her home.

POMEROY · There wil l be a
Herbal Harvest and Country Fair
sponsored by the Pomeroy Merchants Association and the Herbal
Harvesters' Society in the mini park on Coun Street from 9:30 a.m.
to 2:30p.m. In case of rain , the fai r
will be held in Anderson's.,
RACINE • Homecoming will be
observed at the Morning Star Unit·
cd Methodist Church Sunday. Worship service will be held at 10 a.m.;
Sunday school at 11 a.m., a carryin meal at 12:30 ard afternoon services at 1:30 p.m. with Jan and
Kathy as featured -singers. The Rev.
Kenny Baker invites the public.
CLIFTON · There will be a benefit hymn sing with special singing
by New Vision Trio at Clifton
~~~~~~~le Church. Everyone is
POMEROY • A bean dinner ,
sponsored by Pomeroy Elementary
PTO will be held in from II a.m. to
2 p.m. in the inini-park on Court
Street

~~6~16~~6~j6~f6~fd~fd~~6~

'..:

Family
Medicine

ACQUISITIONS FINE JEWELRY
OF MID-DtE·P\ORT

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of
Medicine

[Editor's note: October 10-16 is care specialty. Ho..:ever, Db.s can
l'jational Osteopathic Medicine be found in all medical fi elds Week. This column is our way o( from pediatrics and internal
medicine -to psychiatry and neuroadding to the celebration.]
Question: I've noticed the leners surgery.
"D.O." after your name in my local
Question: Are there any differpaper and that you work at an ences between what you do and
osteopathic medical school. Could what an M.D. would do?
you explain the meaning of these
Answer: M.D.s and D.O.s are
similar in many ways, but there are
terms?
Answer: Osteopathic medicine some important differences. The
is a distinct discipline within the osteopathic philosophy says that
healing arts. Doctors of osteopathy, the doctor is not a healer, but a
or D.O.s, are licensed to practice facilitator. augmenting the body's
medicine and surgery in all 50 natural ability to heal itself. Osteo·
states. There are 32,000 D.O .s pathic medicine is based on the
nationwide. They use all accepted philosophy that the body is an
methods of treatment and diagnosis interrelated whole, that no one part
- including surgery, drugs and of the body can become diseased
radiation.
without disturbing other parts. The
Andrew Taylor Still, a surgeon D.O. feels it'-s necessary to treat the
in the Union army during the Civil person as a whole, not just the_speWar, founded the osteopathic pro- cific organ that may be malfuncfession. He began t!te fust osteo· tioning at the time.
One of the differences between
pathic college in Kirksville, Mo.
JUSI over one hundred years ago M.D.s and D.O.s is that an osteo·
in 1892. Today. there are 16 osteo- pathic physician's training puts
. pathic colleges in the United States. more emphasis on the interrelationMany of these are Slate suppo,ned, ships between different body sysincluding schools at Mtchtgan tems. The muscles and bones
State, North Texas and Oklahoma together are known as the muscuState universities and here at Ohio loskeletal system, and the role it
plays in health and illness underUniversity.
· Question: What kind of training score osteopathic precepts. D.O.s •
use osteopathic manipulative treat·
do doctors of osteOpathy have?
Answer: Before being admitted ment, or OMT, as a means of
to a college of osteopathic improving the functioning of the
medicine, students are required to musculoskeletal system and, indi·
complete a four year bachelor· s rectly, other body systems. It is the
degree. Their undergraduate work osteopath's use of manipulative
must have included training in bioi· treaunents that is the most conspic •
ogy, chemistry, physi~s and beha-:· uous difference between M.D.s and
ioral sciences. Once m osteopathic D.O.s.
medical school, it takes four more
According to recent figures
years of intensiVe study to obtain a from the American Osteopathic
Association, 53 percent of D.O.s
D.O. degree.
. ·.
In our progiam at Oh10 Uruver- are family phy&amp;icians, and the
sity, studen.ts sllef\1\ their fust two remainder are in other specialties.
years in basic science c6urses such Among M.D.s the situation is
as microbiolog-y, pharmacology; reversed. The vast majority are
immunology. biochemistry and practicing in specialties other than
endocrinology. During this time family medicine. The best statistics
students also take courses in the available - from the American
various body sys~. study human Acadl!my of Family Physicians - ·
anatomY and have their ftrSt patient show that only 12 percent of M.D.s
contaCts under close faculty super· are now in family practice. So,
vision. Then students devote their· there are some differences ~ween
final two academic years to clinical M.D.s and D.O.s, but we also have
training in hospitals and_doctors' much in common.
offices where they refme theu
skiDs in diaf!OSCS 811!1. D?ttnent of
'
a wide vanety of medtcal prob· Ground B.lrds
FORT MYERS, Fla. (AP) Iems.
NotaU
birds live in trees.
After ·-recei viol! his or her
Burrowing
owls, which dwell in
degree, life D.O. will complete a
small
earth
tunnels,
about 8 or 9
one-ydll' internship. The new doc~
inches
lorig,
with
longer
legs than
tor can then le.faliY "hang out his
tree
owls,
rounded
wings
and a
.or her shingle, but most ~e two
short
tail.
They
feed
mostly
at
dusk ·
. to five moie years of re1udency
on
small
mammals
or
insects.
training - most often in-a primary

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